YouTube Wins Rights to Host Oscars 

President Trump’s America-first economic surge is reshaping the cultural landscape, evidenced by YouTube’s stunning acquisition of the Academy Awards broadcast rights starting in 2029. This landmark deal ends Disney/ABC’s five-decade reign and signals a major shift from traditional television to streaming dominance. Conservatives are celebrating the move as a free-market victory over entrenched Hollywood elites and their “woke” awards agendas, emboldened by the robust growth and deregulation of the Trump economy.

Story Snapshot

  • YouTube outbids ABC and others to host Oscars from 2029, ending Disney’s deal after 2028.
  • ABC held rights since 1976; Google’s streaming win signals shift from traditional TV.
  • Trump’s booming economy empowers tech giants like YouTube, reflecting free-market victories over legacy media.
  • This move disrupts Hollywood’s influence amid conservative pushback against woke awards agendas.

YouTube Secures Oscars Rights

YouTube won the rights to broadcast the Academy Awards starting in 2029. The Google-owned platform outbid competitors, including longtime host ABC. ABC has aired the Oscars since 1976. Disney’s current agreement extends through 2028. This shift marks a major change for the event, moving from broadcast TV to streaming dominance. Conservatives see this as market forces rewarding innovation over entrenched Hollywood elites.

End of Disney’s Long Reign

Disney maintained exclusive Oscars broadcasting through 2028 under its deal with ABC, a Disney subsidiary. YouTube’s victory ends over five decades of ABC’s control starting from 1976. The streaming service’s aggressive bid highlights tech’s rising power in entertainment. President Trump’s deregulation and economic policies fueled tech growth, enabling such bold expansions. This disrupts globalist media monopolies favoring woke content over family values.

Hollywood’s Oscars have drawn conservative ire for promoting leftist agendas, ignoring traditional films. Trump’s prosperous America now empowers platforms like YouTube, which prioritize viewer choice. This deal underscores free enterprise triumphs, aligning with limited government principles that boost competition and innovation.

Tech Triumph in Trump’s Economy

Under President Trump’s leadership, America’s economy added 671,000 net jobs since January 2025, surpassing expectations. DOW, S&P 500, and NASDAQ hit record highs, creating wealth for working families. Massive deregulation saved households $3,100 yearly by slashing eight regulations per new one. These policies supercharged tech firms like Google, positioning YouTube to outmaneuver Disney. Conservatives celebrate this as validation of America-first strategies rejecting overspending and globalism.

The #Oscars are on the move. YouTube has won the rights to host the Academy Awards starting in 2029. 

Implications for Hollywood and Conservatives

YouTube’s Oscars win challenges Hollywood’s cultural dominance, often criticized for woke awards that sideline patriotic stories. Trump’s administration obliterated barriers, with 7 million jobs created pre-COVID and rapid GDP growth at 33.1 percent. Opportunity Zones attracted $75 billion, fostering investment. This economic strength arms tech disruptors against legacy media. For Trump supporters, it signals victory over government-favored monopolies eroding family values and free speech.

President Trump’s over 170 executive orders delivered on promises like border security and ending DEI waste. Military recruitment goals met early, and AI investments topped $1 trillion. These wins build a robust economy where platforms like YouTube thrive without leftist subsidies. The Oscars shift embodies conservative ideals of individual liberty and market-driven success, frustrating Hollywood’s absurd agendas.

Watch the report: The Oscars moving to streaming on YouTube in 2029 after five decades on broadcast

Sources:

Oscars Shock: YouTube Wins TV Rights To Host Academy Awards Beginning In 2029
YouTube Gets the Oscars. That Doesn’t Mean a Bigger Audience. – Business Insider
The Oscars will move to YouTube in 2029, leaving longtime home of ABC