The closing moments of the Academy Awards this year delivered something viewers did not expect. Just when the ceremony seemed finished, the broadcast slipped in a strange post-credits gag that left audiences doing double takes. It involved comedian and host Conan O’Brien, a fictional office promotion, and an eerie nameplate that suddenly changed to MrBeast. Within minutes, social media lit up with questions. Was the internet’s biggest creator about to take over Hollywood’s most prestigious stage?
A post-credits joke that points to the Oscars ’ YouTube future
The moment played like a parody of Hollywood drama. Throughout the night, O’Brien roasted the film industry while joking about the ceremony’s future. At one point he even called himself “the last human host of the Academy Awards,” hinting at the changing media landscape. The final sketch pushed that idea further. In a darkly comic twist inspired by a scene linked to Sean Penn’s character Lockjaw, O’Brien’s fictional “promotion” quickly turns into a deadly office trap filled with green gas. When the smoke clears, the camera reveals a chilling replacement on the door plaque. The new name reads “Mr. Beast”.The gag worked because it tapped into a real shift happening behind the scenes. The Oscars are preparing for a major broadcast change. From 2029, the ceremony will reportedly move exclusively to YouTube, ending its long partnership with traditional television networks. The joke about MrBeast landing the job suddenly felt less random. If the awards are moving to YouTube, who better symbolizes that platform’s power than its biggest creator?Earlier in the broadcast, the show had already poked fun at internet culture. Actress Jane Lynch appeared in a parody advertisement that looked like a chaotic YouTube pre-roll commercial. She promoted a tactical torch that was supposedly “the same one that “killed Bin Laden””, only to return moments later as a lawyer in a fake class action lawsuit targeting the product.Put together, the sketches formed a clear message. Hollywood knows it must compete for attention in an online world shaped by creators and viral videos. Referencing MrBeast, whose large-scale YouTube stunts often rival television productions, was an easy punchline.For now, fans can relax. The plaque swap was only a joke. MrBeast is not actually hosting the Oscars next year. Still, the moment captured a bigger truth. The film industry is looking toward the digital future, and creators like him represent the new entertainment power players.

