WATCH: The Oscars Go to YouTubeThe end of an era, the start of another: what now as the venerable awards show heads to streamingSubscribe on Apple PodcastsWatch on YouTubeThrow one more blockbuster deal on the pile before 2025 comes to a close. Today, the Academy announced it struck a landmark agreement to begin streaming the Oscars on YouTube starting in 2029 — in addition to making YouTube the official home for a wide range of other Academy events. The Oscars have aired on ABC for more than 50 years, but the network’s contract with the Academy was up in 2028; the question for years has been whether the Academy would continue trying to make the Oscars work on broadcast despite years of declining ratings, or embrace the leap to digital and try something new. The Oscar-YouTube deal is the perfect intersection of beats for Like & Subscribe’s Natalie Jarvey and me, so we hopped on Substack Live earlier today to talk about the implications of it all, what might come next and the many questions that remain unanswered, including:
Listen to me and Natalie discuss it all, and if you still have questions — and we still have plenty! — send my way: katey@theankler.com. I’m doing a special live mailbag episode with Christopher Rosen on Friday at Prestige Junkie After Party, and we’ll definitely get into all this. Subscribe here and don’t miss it. Got a tip or story pitch? Email tips@theankler.com ICYMI from The AnklerThe Wakeup WBD stiff arms PSKY again — what’s ahead Why Bell Media Execs Went All in on Heated Rivalry — and How the Bet Paid Off CEO Sean Cohan and VP content Justin Stockman tell Lesley Goldberg how the gay hockey drama scored globally and without financial partners Buh-Bye, Blowout Bash: Hollywood’s Lean Year Crashes the Holiday Season Invites dry up, checks are split, the $400 Wally’s gift basket is gone, writes Nicole LaPorte. Says Erik Feig: ‘Efficiency is the word of the day’ 5 Burning Questions Hollywood Should Ask After Trump’s AI Executive Order From guilds to Gavin Newsom: Erik Barmack on what studios and creatives need to reckon with now Hollywood 2026: Collapse or Comeback? Let’s Talk Odds Richard Rushfield finds reasons for actual hope as we stumble and bumble into the new year Hollywood Took Your Job. The Holidays Can Help You Get Your Next One Advice from top leadership coach Lacey Leone McLaughlin on navigating parties, family and awkward questions when your career is anything but jolly Need to Sell a Film or TV Show? Just Add Christmas Reps and filmmakers tell Ashley Cullins how a Yuletide twist can turn any story into a greenlight Hollywood’s Breaking Faster Than Film Schools Can Teach It. Inside the Scramble to Keep Up Professors are rewriting syllabi on the fly as studios melt, algorithms rule and screens go vertical, Elaine Low reports Rob Reiner and a Terrible Weekend Richard on the murder of the director and his wife A Writer’s Guide to Loving the Netflix–Warner Bros. Deal Joel Stein wonders, what’s the worst that could happen? TV in 3: HBO’s Horny Hockey Hunks Go Viral; CBS Showrunner Scramble Plus: Starz’s Shohei Ohtani home run Ellison’s Warner Bros. Bid: A One-Man Toxic Spill Our newest studio chief’s debut keeps getting worse, Richard writes When Mickey Met Sam Altman — and What It Means for Every Other Studio Now Scorched by the Streaming Wars, Bob Iger won’t let Mickey Mouse be steamrolled by Big Tech again, writes Erik Barmack Small-Town Theaters vs. Studios: ‘It Doesn’t Feel Like the Industry Wants Us to Survive’ Cinema owners tell Matthew Frank the two-week mandatory run for movies is crushing them Rob Reiner, Hollywood Mensch; Emily Blunt on the Emotional Toll of The Smashing Machine The Oscar nominee also tells Katey Rich about the great note she got from Christopher Nolan Delroy Lindo on the Sinners Note Ryan Coogler Gave Him That Changed Everything Plus: Dreaming of Sundance and next year’s contenders (already) 🎬 Rob Reiner’s ‘Towering Career’ Remembered Katey, Richard and Christopher Rosen examine a memorable life 🎬 New from Ankler Studio! Joel Edgerton Had Twins. Train Dreams Channeled His Emotions About Parenthood Main Character, our video series about the best lead performances in film & TV, debuts with the Australian star 🎧 Kate Hudson Is Still ‘Game for Anything’ The Oscar nominee tells Katey about her ‘Aries’ energy facing ‘tornado’ Hugh Jackman in Song Sung Blue 🎧 Charlie Hunnam: ‘Purpose is Derived From Doing Something Very, Very Difficult’ The Monster star earned rave reviews — and award noms — for playing serial killer Ed Gein. But he tells Katey he’s got his eye on a next act More from Ankler MediaNew from Natalie Jarvey’s creator economy newsletter: The Kindness Influencer Biz; a Creator Economy OS; MrBeast’s Survivor Collab SCOOP: Netflix and iHeart Near Podcast Deal; Videos Would Be Pulled From YouTube Andy Lewis’ latest IP picks: A Beef-Like Revenge Thriller & The Secret History meets Alice in Wonderland Granny vs. Goliath, a Real-Life Reacher and Blade Runner for the VR Era |


