The Breakfast Club - Let The Stream Races Begin (
Episode Date: December 18, 2025YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones, and I love playing music with people so much
that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles
to play songs together in an intimate setting.
Every episode's a little different,
but it all involves music and conversation
with some of my favorite musicians.
Over the past two seasons,
I've had special guests like Dave Grohl,
Lave, Mavis Staples, Remy Wolf, Jeff Tweedy,
really too many to name.
And this season, I've sat down with Black Pumas, Alessia Kara, Sarah McLaughlin, and more.
Check out my new episode with John Legend.
I feel like, in a lot of ways, our careers are paralleled in some ways,
but they just never intersected for some reason.
I know.
Listen to Nora Jones is playing along on the I-Heart Radio,
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Who would you call if the unthinkable happened?
My sister was y'all 22 times.
A police officer, right?
But what do you do when the monster is the man in blue?
This dude is the devil. He'll hurt you.
This is the story of a detective who thought he was above the law,
until we came together to take him down.
I said, you're going to see my face till the day that you die.
I got you. I got you. I got you. I got you.
Listen to the girlfriends, Untouchable, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Stefan Curry, and this is Gentleman's Cut.
I think what makes Gentleman's Cut different is me being a part of developing the profile of this beautiful finished product.
With every sip, you get a little something different.
Visit Gentleman's Cut Bourbon.com or your nearest Total Wines or Bevmo.
This message is intended for audiences 21 and older.
Gentleman's Cup Bourbon, Boone County, Kentucky.
For more on Gentleman's Cut Bourbon, please visit
Gentleman'scuturban.com.
Please enjoy responsibly.
I know he has a reputation, but it's going to catch up to him.
Gabe Ortiz is a cop.
His brother Larry, a mystery Gabe didn't want to solve until it was too late.
He was the head of this gang.
You're going to push that line for the cause?
Took us under his wing and showed us the game, as they call it.
When Larry's killed, game must untangle a dangerous past, one that could destroy everything he thought he knew.
Listen to the brothers Ortiz on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, everybody, it's Chuck and Josh from the Stuff You Should Know podcast, and it's that time of year again when we knuckle down to do our annual holiday episodes.
We collected our best past classic holiday episodes and compiled them into a 12 Days of Christmas Toys playlist that the whole family can enjoy.
That's right.
Maybe you missed it the first time we detailed the history of Beanie Babies, Monopoly, or Yo-Yo's, and a whole lot more.
So listen to the 12 Days of Christmas Toys playlist on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm a homeguard that knows a little bit about everything and everybody.
You know if you don't lie about that, right?
Lauren came in hot.
Hey y'all, what's up?
It's Lauren the Rosa, and this is the latest with Lauren the Rosa.
This is your deli dig on all things, popcorn.
culture, entertainment news, and all of the conversations that shake the room, baby.
Now, today we are going to get into a conversation about TV, about television, or what is left
of television, because as we all know, the way that we consume television is completely different
today in 2025.
Now, raise your hand out there, and of course, I can't see you.
So that means you need to hit the like button, comment below.
yell at me on social media at Lauren LaRosa L-O-R-E-N everywhere.
How do you guys consume what would have been cable television content today?
Because, I mean, if I'm thinking about myself, I haven't had, like, actual cable TV.
Wow, when was the last time I had cable TV?
I think, ooh, I can you remember?
It might have been right before the pandemic.
And even then, I think, yeah, that was a streaming-ish version of it.
That's so crazy.
I don't remember the last time I've paid like a Xfinity or wherever you are,
whatever, you know, city or state you live in,
an actual cable provider to provide, like, TV that you turn on that isn't attached to Wi-Fi.
So, yeah, y'all let me know.
Getting right on into the latest, here's what's going down.
So as I was driving in to the podcast, I began to see this story.
I got a notification from the Hollywood Reporter and, you know, some of the other trades.
Trades are the media outlets that announce like the shows and new businesses and new deals and things like that.
That's what the trades are called.
Shout out to Dame Dash.
The title of this article is Oscars Bolt from ABC to YouTube starting in 2029, the world's highest profile and most watched award show,
which has aired on ABC since
1976 will be moving to
streaming only platform
will be moving to a streaming only platform
as a part of
a deal that also includes red carpet coverage
the Oscar nominations announcement
the Governor Awards and Moore
so not even just the Oscar Awards
show but everything that leads up to
the award so the Governor Awards
the red carpet which is again
I'm sitting here like
I know that they traditionally
air a lot of the award shows on these like you know very cable networkish channels the ABCs
NBC's which all do have their own you know streaming ends as well for the most part or they team
up with a streamer um like I know that NBC does stuff with peacock uh shout out to NBC New York
for who we did a lot of our ditty coverage with in a lot of our coverage that we did there is
on peacock as well but I was surprised to read this because I'm like why wasn't there already a deal
I know when I watch all red carpets and all, you know,
Grammys or whatever award shows just to cover it in news,
I'm watching it via YouTube television.
I have the subscription there.
But when I, even before I had that subscription to be able to see things live,
like actually, like, I'm paying for it to know I'll get it.
I always knew that I could watch the red carpets live because they stream live,
not even just on YouTube, but like I know a lot of platforms now go live on Twitter
and have it set up literally on your Twitter feed or your Facebook.
feed where you could just watch the red carpets from there and it's a whole news broadcast.
So I don't know.
I think the deals are finally catching up with times or something.
But this report says in the news that will send shockwaves across the entertainment industry,
the Oscar ceremony, which has aired on ABC since 1976, will be moving to YouTube starting
in 2029.
So they have some time and will be broadcast by the streamer through at least 2033.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced today, which is Wednesday.
Wednesday, December 17th.
The Disney-owned Alphabet Network will continue to, when y'all hear Alphabet Boys,
you either think about the IRS or the community you don't want to mess with.
That's what I start laughing.
We'll continue to air the Oscars, which has long been the world's most watched awards
telecast through the 100th edition of the awards show in 2028.
After that, the ceremony will be available live and for free to cover to over 2 billion
people around the world on YouTube and YouTube TV subscribers in the United States.
Shout out to me, YouTube TV subscriber.
I signed up a long time ago.
As part of the newly inked deal, YouTube will broadcast not only the Oscar ceremony itself,
which generated over $150 million in revenue, y'all.
This fiscal year, which ended in June, it ended June 30th.
And they'll also be broadcasted a lot of other related content like what we talked about.
The Red Carpet, the Governor Awards.
Yeah, this is a big deal.
I mean, it's a big deal.
but it's like a duh thing and i do know that there were like small things happening again like
i said because you could watch all the like if not majority of the award shows at this point
in the carpets prior to and in certain things via social media platforms live so i know that a lot
of these awards shows they had to because it's literally like get with it or get lost like
if you are not streaming something somewhere digitally at this point you're burnt out
like we are miles ahead of you but to see the official deal go out um this way especially with
the Oscars being such a big like in long coveted show number one I think it shows if I'm being
completely honest it shows that uh Hollywood is a is a little bit more reluctant to give in I think
to where things are going and I think a lot of that is because of the studios um now granted
the Oscars isn't like a major you know studio production uh you know studios typically
lean more into things like big
box office style films and
you know things of that nature but
I was reading about the deal that they were doing
or trying to do and it's very competitive
their you know direct
the opposition is paramount because Paramount
also wants in on ownership
of the entire Warner Brothers one of the
the articles that I read across
one of the trades it was just talking about how a lot
of the studio owners are
like they're nervous
and they're saying that you know
a Netflix or a Paramount
you know, streaming servicer picking up, you know, a big entity like Warner Brothers, it almost
kills the studios because you don't need the big Hollywood studios to do a lot of what we're
seeing on these streaming platforms. Like, I do think that there is, you know, in a perfect world,
there's always a way that you can make business work, right? Because if it's not broke,
you're not going to fix it. So like if you can take, you know, the same initiative power
infrastructure that a Hollywood studio has and lend it to a streaming platform, which a lot of them
do. Like there are movies that go straight to streaming. I know Tyler Perry does it. I know
Amazon does. Like there's a lot of different, you know, platforms that, or Tyler Perry does it
a lot with BT. Plus, he's also done it with Netflix. Netflix has done it with other studios and
toys Amazon Prime. But for them to own such a big catalog of,
content in that way and be able to kind of almost like
throw their weight around even bigger than they already
I mean they're Netflix so it's already possible but for them to do it even bigger
and not need all of the other studios in Hollywood
I mean that's a win win but I think other people are looking at it like this
changes the industry so much because with one big conglomerate like a Netflix
controlling all of that you don't
don't need as much. You don't need as many people because Netflix internally is able to build
out their own production as well too, which is where a lot of the studios come in with bringing
the different production companies that they work with under their studios and the licensing
deals and, you know, things are just shifting and they're changing. And I think what a lot of this
is going to mean is that the antiquated way, right? Because think about the Oscars. The Oscars has
been around since
1976.
The Oscars is so highly
like coveted and prestigious
and like everybody wants these awards.
Everybody turns on
cable television to watch it and
you know, regardless of how you're watching
ABC
at the time, you're watching the Oscars.
It's just one of those like things that you do.
I think that it shows that
as regal
and regarded as old Hollywood wants to remain
it is like although we've come to the end of the road
like they can't fight what's happening
I mean they're already behind
and trying to
you know do things any other way than what we've
saw announced today but when I saw the announcement today
I'm like this took for it like why now
like this is something that should have been happened
but I do know that there's a sense of
if it's not broke don't fix it and I do think
that there's a sense of
it's almost like if you're a clothing
designer and you've been sewing by hand and doing you know cut and sew which is like a very like
you know higher quality intimate process you don't ever want to lean into fast fashion which is you
know where things are like produced very fast the fabrics may not be as high quality but you try
and do your best to make it good right you want to remain like the person who was like taking the time
but then you have all these companies coming in like a fashion nova a shin a teemu all these
Instagram brands who are running circles around you because of the mass that they're able to
produce and put out. You've got to keep up. I think what we're about to see now is old school
Hollywood and just old school everything, old school regimes and entertainment, they've already,
and I think especially since the pandemic with people cutting budgets and creators realizing
how much you could do it less. The old regime of how we produce content for the masses,
whether it's audio or visual there's no turning back after this year like it's you can't
you can't even fake the funk anymore but either way it's good for us right it's good to see things
moving changing presenting more opportunities um you know oscar so white was some years ago now
and they've been working ever since to do better so there's more of that as well because you know
black people be on the internet we're there so yesterday it was announced that the breakfast
Club is heading on over to Netflix. And then YouTube decided they wanted to pull up on the Oscars
and bring the Oscars back home too like a Cheapot. Let's talk about what this means for content
creation, for storytelling. Shoot for me. Let's talk about it. Congratulations to the Breakfast
Club. We talked about this today on the show. The Breakfast Club, along with Bobby Bones Presents,
the Bobbycast. My Favorite Murder, which is a hit crime, a hit original
true crime show there are chelsea uh which is a big podcast that chelsea handler has joe and jada which is
y'all know uh fat you don't know fat joe and jada kids have a show where they sit down and discuss
all things music hip hop culture this is important which is a comedy uh podcast featuring the workaholics
adam devine and anders home and blake anderson um the psychology of your 20s is also another
show that you guys will see in this partnership um on netflix behind the bass
stuff they don't want you to know, which is a curiosity podcast with Matt Frederick,
Ben Bolin, and Noel Brown, stuff you missed in history class, another curiosity podcast with
Holy Frey and Tracy Wilson, stuff to blow your mind, three and out with John Middlokoff,
Buried Bones, a history and true, let me tell you how when I got into podcast and I learned
quickly that true crime podcast tear it up okay take me through that take me through
that where we're going to and eat it up eat it up true crime podcast okay the genre
kills it on the podcast side um but yeah so there's a lot of true crime on this list uh new
of roy and ral are also on the list so yes y'all let me tell y'all the new regime
is here like it is literally here because all of these all of these uh things that i talked about
today from the podcast. You'll still hear
them wherever you originally begin to hear
them. So Breakfast Club, still on the radio
every morning. But
with Netflix coming in as a partner, it's
I mean, you're taking things to new heights.
Like, it's no turning back
at this point. Like, if you were ever to deny
where a streaming was and how it was happening,
how you were going to integrate it in a lot of those, like,
household shows and vehicles,
don't even think about it, just do it.
That's the answer.
So I googled this because I'm like,
I know for a,
fact. When I watch the Oscars, I don't have cable. So I know I watched it via streaming. So I wanted to
understand what their partnership prior to this big announcement of them coming to YouTube fully in
2029 would look like. So according to online research, the Oscars have historically been on
broadcast television, traditional broadcast television, ABC, like we mentioned. But they began
partnering with streaming platforms in a limited capacity. So they did something with Hulu as a part
of a larger Disney ABC corporate structure.
The ceremony was available to stream on Hulu in the U.S.
in recent years, though some live stream viewers
experienced technical difficulties.
They also had some international partners
that they partner with as well.
The YouTube CEO, Neil Mohan,
said in a statement to Deadline,
who was the trade that broke the news,
partnering with the academy to bring the celebration of art
and entertainment to viewers all over the world
or inspire a new generation of creativity.
I told y'all
the new generation of content creator of show producer of what a studio looks like
is here you cannot get around it this is the best time if you are of the new generation
of content creator or even if you don't create content if you um i mean like if you're not
the subject of the content or like the actual person coming up with the idea but maybe you just
work on a team that executes it or whatever and you are young and you understand the streaming
and the internet and you're able to I feel like with our generation because we've been on
we're we're really internet babies and I'm in that like middle point where I kind of remember
when like internet was like there but like it wasn't what it was now so like we had like I remember
when you had to go and like print out your directions to get somewhere so like you didn't
have GPS for real you you could go on maps.com and answer the address and it would tell you how to
get there but it wasn't updating you in real time on your phone or your tablet or whatever i also remember
there only being like a black planet and then a my space and then facebook came and then instagram came i remember
you could only post like i remember you couldn't post video on instagram at all and then you could post
like small like i think it was like 10 or 15 second videos so we got to see the evolution of a lot of
the internet so it's kind of easy to predict i don't know about y'all but for me when i see things like
this it makes me excited because I'm looking at this like it's so easy to predict where things are
going and it's so easy to position yourself in a way where your business can grow and you can learn
you know from the mistakes and the wins of other people around you as things grow because you're
able to keep in mind where things are headed because we've seen this before like we've seen
this evolution some people just late to throw in in the full towel um the the YouTube CEO continues
to say that this will inspire that new generation of creativity and film lovers while staying true
to the Oscar story legacy.
Well, thank you guys so much for joining me today to talk about all things like new and y'all
better get what to get lost or get out the way.
Okay?
I am excited.
I think 2026 with everything that we're seeing in the news is going to bring room for new
opportunity for new things to look forward to.
But also, too, I think like I really just.
And this has been for some years now where I think, especially once the writer's strike hit,
creators and content and storytelling has been in a very different place.
I think people, you know, sadly have had to figure out how to do a lot with a little bit,
which is never good when you're talking about art because, you know, like when budgets get tight,
people lose jobs.
People are not able to do things that, you know, for some creators, like, it's
create or die. Like it's literally what you've lived your life to do and your fallback plan isn't
something that you want to ever have to fall back on. So when things get tight, people shut down
production, shut down studios, people lose jobs. It's never a good thing. But I think, you know,
as we are seeing things like these, these partnerships happen, although traditionally in the digital
space teams are really smaller, I think it just, you know, if I'm looking at the silver lining and
all of this and the big lean towards, you know, all of the big prestigious regimes fully leading
and throwing themselves into the digital space and the streaming space. I think what it will do
is it will create a lane where, you know, with us being able to just turn on our phone,
record and press upload and have a platform, it'll create opportunity in a lane where if you do
that and you do it, you know, with quality, you do it consistently. There's, you know,
There's really, really, really big opportunity in, I keep using the word opportunity,
but there's really big, there's really big room for growth and partnership there.
And it's for anybody.
Like, I'm feeling, again, like the optimistic feeling that I had way before I started doing
anything in entertainment, but I would literally just turn on some of my favorite shows
or see my favorite It Girls on the internet doing things and trying to figure out how did
they do this like how are they living their lives just being themselves and telling stories that
they love to tell and you know everything in all peaches and creams a peaches and cream a lot of
this is highlight rules but you know to be able to be a creator or to work with creators to be
able to tell story is not something that anybody should take lightly and i think whenever we see shifts
in the industry there's two things you can do you can fight it or you can figure out your positioning
your foundation, build it
and let them come. And I'm excited to see
what is built in this new reign
and this new era of streaming partnership
for everybody all over the world
and who rises in it. The cream of the crop
will rise and who rises in it.
And I'm excited to be amongst
the people in it. So congratulations
to the Breakfast Club heading on over the Netflix
and I guess we'll be seeing
you all at the Oscars on YouTube too.
That was a little cheap little plug. Oscars. Invite you girl.
I'm Lauren the Rosa. This is the latest.
with Lauren the Rosa.
My lowriders, you guys could be anywhere with anybody
talking about all of these things,
but you choose to be right here with me.
I will catch you in my next episode.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones,
and I love playing music with people so much
that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles
to play songs together in an intimate setting.
Every episode's a little different,
but it all involves music and conversation
with some of my favorite music.
Over the past two seasons, I've had special guests like Dave Grohl, Leveh, Mavis Staples,
Remy Wolfe, Jeff Tweedy, really too many to name.
And this season, I've sat down with Black Pumas, Alessia Kara, Sarah McLaughlin, and more.
Check out my new episode with John Legend.
I feel like in a lot of ways our careers are parallel in some ways,
but they just never intersected for some reason.
I know.
Listen to Nora Jones is playing along
on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Who would you call if the unthinkable happened?
I said it was y'all 22 times.
A police officer, right?
But what do you do when the monster is the man in blue?
This dude is the devil. He hurt you.
This is the story of a detective who thought he,
He was above the law until we came together to take him down.
I said, you're going to see my face to the day that you die.
Listen to the girlfriends, untouchable, on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Stefan Curry, and this is Gentleman's Cut.
I think what makes Gentleman's Cut different is me being a part of, you know,
developing the profile of this beautiful finished product.
With every sip, you get a little something different.
Visit gentlemen's cut bourbon.com or your nearest total wines or Bevmo.
This message is intended for audiences 21 and older.
Gentleman's Cut Bourbon, Boone County, Kentucky.
For more on Gentleman's Cut Bourbon, please visit
gentlemen's cut bourbon.com.
Please enjoy responsibly.
I know he has a reputation, but it's going to catch up to him.
Gabe Ortiz is a cop.
His brother, Larry, a mystery Gabe didn't want to start.
off until it was too late.
He was the head of this gang.
You're going to push that line for the calls?
Took us under his wing and showed us the game, as they call it.
When Larry's killed, Gave Must Untangle a Dangerous Past,
one that could destroy everything he thought he knew.
Listen to the Brothers Ortiz on the IHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, everybody, it's Chuck and Josh from the Stuff You Should Know podcast,
and it's that time of year again when we knuckle down to do our annual holiday.
episodes. We collected our best past classic holiday episodes and compiled them into a 12 days of
Christmas toys playlist that the whole family can enjoy. That's right. Maybe you missed it the first
time we detailed the history of Beanie Babies, Monopoly, or Yo-Yo's, and a whole lot more. So listen
to the 12 Days of Christmas Toys playlist on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
