Unless they started later, the length hasn't really changed for the past four years. But they always end some time close to six in the morning in Germany.
Fewer commercial breaks would be nice
I actually really enjoyed this show.

The speeches are always boring because they're basically just a list of "Thank Yous" but I thought it was bearable this year and I really enjoyed the "in between". Maybe, for the sake of shortening the whole show, they could have cut them but I liked the messaging. They addressed a lot of issues that people need to be made aware of and a lot of issues that many don't want to hear and prefer to pretend they don't exist (not talking about you but generally) But they need to hear it and the Oscars give the actors the platform to do that.
Maybe it'll inspire TPTB to hire actors who don't have a history of assault?
Someone has to start and someone has to lead. It might as well be Hollywood.
Why? I think she wanted to honor every woman and recognize that they have to work twice as hard as their male counterpart to be where they are today. I don't think it was her intention to show how few of them there are but she did so, too, and I think that was very important to see.
We live in a world that likes to make us believe that sexism doesn't exist anymore. That men and women are equal. That is not the case and I think the only way that this can change is if people are shown over and over that it's not.
One of the reasons I loved "The Post" and wish Spielberg had been nominated for Best Director (and gotten it) is because he managed to show through his directing what position Katharine Graham was in. Those scenes when she walks towards a door and then the door opens and she is faced with a room full of old men in suits are brilliant. They show exactly what it's like for her and I think they are much more than history. I think this movie is eerily timely on more than just the 1st amendment issue and I don't think it got the recognition it deserved for it.