After decades at the Dolby Theatre, the Academy Awards will relocate to the Peacock Theater in 2029. The move signals a potential shift in how the Oscars are produced and presented, with a larger, more modern venue. Also, maybe they're finally admitting the old place had terrible bathrooms.
The Dolby Theatre has been synonymous with the Oscars for so long that this feels genuinely significant. That red carpet, those stairs, that stage — they're burned into our collective memory. Changing venues isn't just logistics, it's psychological.
Is this just about space, or is the Academy trying to reinvent the show for a new era? The Peacock Theater is bigger, more modern, and frankly, better equipped for the kind of production the Oscars have become. But bigger isn't always better when you're trying to make television feel intimate.
Here's my theory: they're planning to actually make the ceremony fun. The Dolby was designed for prestige and gravitas. The Peacock is designed for spectacle. Maybe the Academy finally realizes that three hours of self-congratulation needs better staging.
The Oscars have been in a ratings freefall for years. Every year, they promise changes. Usually those changes involve different hosts, shorter speeches, or moving categories to commercial breaks. Maybe what they actually need is a venue that doesn't feel like a gilded mausoleum.
Or maybe this is just about money and logistics, and I'm reading too much into it. But the Academy wouldn't uproot decades of tradition without reason. Something's changing.
In Hollywood, nobody knows anything — but sometimes changing the furniture is the first step to changing the party.

