(L-R) Damson Idris and Brad Pitt in ‘F1’
Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett Collection
THURSDAY AM: Universal and Amblin‘s dinosaur is a bit louder. Jurassic World Rebirth is coming in with $30.5M opening day, again without Tuesday previews, which is pointing toward a $133.5M 5-day weekend. 3-day now stands at $80M. Oh, no, CinemaScore is a B which is lower than 2022’s Jurassic World: Dominion‘s A-. Jurassics have landed Bs before, i.e. 2001’s Jurassic Park III a B-, the franchise’s lowest grade, and 1997’s Steven Spielberg directed The Lost World: Jurassic Park with a B+. 1993’s Jurassic Park and 2015’s reboot Jurassic World own the top grade As in the series.
Again, fourth highest opening day for a Jurassic movie, and higher than last year’s Independence Day Wednesday starter, Despicable Me 4 from Illumination/Uni.
When it comes to sizing up the best 5-day opening over July 4th, it’s not an even yard stick since the holiday jumps around. Sometimes a Wednesday opener before Independence Day can turn into a 5-day or 6-day opening stretch for a title. For benchmark purposes, Transformers: Dark of the Moon back in 2011 was one highwater mark with $162.6M in its first five days (Wednesday-Saturday), while 6-day through Sunday was $180.6M. Another biggie over the holiday was Sony/Marvel Studio’s Spider-Man: Far From Home which generated off of a full Tuesday opening a 6-day through Sunday of $185M, 5-day of $159.3M.
Our midday estimate for Apple Original Films’ F1 via Warner Bros was off yesterday. The Brad Pitt movie came in with a $4.77M Wednesday, -45% its discount Tuesday of $8.6M and the T-Rex on the marquee. Running cume is $77.3M. The hope is that the Joseph Kosinski directed Formula One movie can keep its engine together with at least a -50% decline over its second 3-day or $28M. The win for F1 is global with a current $200M+ tally.
We’ll have more updates for you as they come.
WEDNESDAY: Universal’s fourth post-Covid July 4th stretch winner, Jurassic World Rebirth, is looking at a $28M opening Wednesday sans Tuesday previews.
That’s a respectable opening day for the holiday, a bit higher than the $27.2M Wednesday opening a year ago registered by Illumination/Universal’s Despicable Me 4, which turned into a 3-day of $75M, and 5-day of $122.6M.
Right now, it’s expected that Amblin’s Gareth Edwards-directed dinosaur romp will yield a $77.5M 3-day, $127.5M 5-day, but long forecasts off of Wednesday openings are always tricky. The swing factor here is July 4th falling on a Friday, and the day alone is typically an off-day for box office. The last time Independence Day fell on a Friday was July 4, 2014, with most movies in the top 10 seeing a hike in their daily box office (very pre-streaming days), while the top movie at the time, Transformers: Age of Extinction, dipped 28% from its previous-day gross.
RELATED: The Movies That Have Made More Than $1 Billion At The Global Box Office
Among opening days for the Jurassic franchise, Rebirth is the fourth highest, but note that it’s only the second time that a movie in the series bowed on a Wednesday, the last being Jurassic World III to $19M in 2001. The top three Jurassic opening days are 2015’s Jurassic World ($81.9M), 2022’s Dominion ($59.5M) and 2018’s Fallen Kingdom ($58.5M).
Jurassic World Rebirth is booked at 4,308 theaters and has the boosted testosterone of PLF screens. There’s no Rotten Tomatoes audience score yet, but reviews stand at 54% Rotten, up from Dominion‘s 29% Rotten.
RelishMix is spotting incredible reach for Rebirth after Uni’s social media campaign, which counts 921 million followers across TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X, 206% above action-adventure sci-fi genre norms. The YouTube viral repost rate stands at 26:1, “which is excellent — plus 219M monstrous views on Facebook, plus the studio has fed over 50 videos into the mix on YouTube which is notably exceptional,” says the social media analytics corp. The movie’s social media star is Jonathan Bailey with his 5.4M Instagram fans. Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali are off the grid.
(L-R) Damson Idris and Brad Pitt in ‘F1’
Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett Collection
Post-Covid Independence Day No. 1 opening wins for Uni include 2021’s F9 ($70M 3-day), 2022’s Minions: The Rise of Gru ($123M 4-day) and last year’s Despicable Me 4 ($122.6M 5-day).
Meanwhile, we’re hearing that Apple Original Films’ F1 via Warner Bros is doing an estimated $6M+ today. The Brad Pitt movie grossed $6.9M on Monday and $8.6M on discount Tuesday. Total running cume through six days will stand north of $78M by EOD.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dozens of federal officers in tactical gear and about 90 members of the California National Guard were deployed for about an hour Monday to a mostly empty park in a Los Angeles neighborhood with a large immigrant population. It wasn’t immediately known if any arrests were made.
Defense officials had said the troops and over a dozen military vehicles would help protect immigration officers as they carried out a raid in MacArthur Park.
“What I saw in the park today looked like a city under siege, under armed occupation,” said Mayor Karen Bass, who called it a “political stunt.”
She said there were children attending a day camp in the park who were quickly ushered inside to avoid seeing the troops. Still, Bass said an 8-year-old boy told her that “he was fearful of ICE.”
Bass showed video of officers on horseback sweeping across an empty soccer field.
The operation occurred at a park in a neighborhood with large Mexican, Central American and other immigrant populations and is lined by businesses with signs in Spanish and other languages that has been dubbed by local officials as the “Ellis Island of the West Coast.”
Among those who spoke with Bass were health care outreach workers who were working with homeless residents Monday when troops pointed guns at them and told them to get out of the park.
Sprawling MacArthur Park has a murky lake ringed by palm trees, an amphitheater that hosts summer concerts and sports fields where immigrant families line up to play soccer in the evenings and on weekends. A thoroughfare on the east side is often crammed with unlicensed food stands selling tacos and other delicacies, along with vendors speaking multiple languages and hawking cheap T-shirts, toys, knickknacks and household items.
“The world needs to see the troop formation on horses walking through the park, in search of what? In search of what? They’re walking through the area where the children play,” Bass said.
Eunisses Hernandez, a council member whose district includes MacArthur Park said “it was chosen as this administration’s latest target precisely because of who lives there and what it represents.”
The operation in the large park about 2 miles (3.2 km) west of downtown LA included 17 Humvees, four tactical vehicles, two ambulances and the armed soldiers, defense officials said. It came after President Donald Trump deployed thousands of Guard members and active duty Marines to the city last month following protests over previous immigration raids.
Trump has stepped up efforts to realize his campaign pledge of deporting millions of immigrants in the United States illegally and shown a willingness to use the nation’s military might in ways other U.S. presidents have typically avoided.
In response to questions about the operation in MacArthur Park, the Department of Homeland Security said in an email that the agency would not comment on “ongoing enforcement operations.”
More than 4,000 California National Guard and hundreds of U.S. Marines have been deployed in Los Angeles since June — against the wishes of California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Last week, the military announced about 200 of those troops would be returned to their units to fight wildfires.
Gov. Gavin Newsom called the events at the park “a spectacle.”
“This is not about going after dangerous criminals,” Newsom said of Trump’s mass deportation agenda. “This is about destroying the fabric of this state.”
The defense officials told reporters that it was not a military operation but acknowledged that the size and scope of the Guard’s participation could make it look like one to the public. That is why the officials spoke on condition of anonymity to provide details about the raid that were not announced publicly.
“It’s just going to be more overt and larger than we usually participate in,” one of the officials said before the raid ended abruptly with no explanation.
The primary role of the service members would be to protect the immigration enforcement officers in case a hostile crowd gathered, that official said. They are not participating in any law enforcement activities such as arrests, but service members can temporarily detain citizens if necessary before handing them over to law enforcement, the official said.
“This morning looked like a staging for a TikTok video,” said Marqueece Harris-Dawson, president of the Los Angeles City Council, adding if Border Patrol wants to film in LA, “you should apply for a film permit like everybody else. And stop trying to scare the bejesus out of everybody who lives in this great city and disrupt our economy every day.”
Chris Newman, legal director for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said he received a credible tip about the operation Monday.
“It was a demonstration of escalation,” Newman said. “This was a reality TV spectacle much more so than an actual enforcement operation.”
Since federal agents have been making arrests at Home Depot parking lots and elsewhere in Los Angeles, Newman said fewer people have been going to the park and immigrant neighborhoods near the city’s downtown.
“The ghost town-ification of LA is haunting, to say the very least,” he said.
Betsy Bolte, who lives nearby, came to the park after seeing a military-style helicopter circling overhead.
She said it was “gut-wrenching” to witness what appeared to be a federal show of force on the streets of a U.S. city. “It’s terror and, you know, it’s ripping the heart and soul out of Los Angeles,” she said. “I am still in shock, disbelief, and so angry and terrified and heartbroken.”
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Copp reported from Washington. Associated Press journalists Damian Dovarganes and Eugene Garcia in Los Angeles; Julie Watson in San Diego; Sophie Austin in Sacramento, California; and Amy Taxin in Orange County, California, contributed to this report.
NEW YORK (AP) — A coalition of doctors’ groups and public health organizations sued the U.S. government on Monday over the decision to stop recommending COVID-19 vaccinations for most children and pregnant women.
The American Academy of Pediatrics, American Public Health Association and four other groups — along with an unnamed pregnant doctor who works in a hospital — filed the lawsuit in federal court in Boston.
U.S. health officials, following infectious disease experts’ guidance, previously had urged annual COVID-19 shots for all Americans ages 6 months and older. But in late May, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced he was removing COVID-19 shots from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendations for healthy children and pregnant women.
Many health experts decried the move as confusing and accused Kennedy of disregarding the scientific review process that has been in place for decades — in which experts publicly review current medical evidence and hash out the pros and cons of policy changes.
The new lawsuit repeats those concerns, alleging that Kennedy and other political appointees at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services have flouted federal procedures and systematically attempted to mislead the public.
The lawsuit also notes recent changes to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. Kennedy, a leading antivaccine activist before becoming the nation’s top health official, fired the entire 17-member panel this month and replaced it with a group that includes several anti-vaccine voices.
Doctors say Kennedy’s actions are making their jobs harder — with some patients raising doubts about all kinds of vaccines and others worried they will lose access to shots for themselves and their children.
“This is causing uncertainty and anxiety at almost every pediatric visit that involves vaccines,” said Dr. Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
And it’s happening after U.S. pediatric flu deaths hit their highest mark in 15 years and as the nation is poised to have its worst year of measles in more than three decades, she added.
HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said Kennedy “stands by his CDC reforms.”
Also joining the suit are the American College of Physicians, the Infectious Diseases Society of America, the Massachusetts Public Health Alliance and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine.
The pregnant doctor, who is listed in the lawsuit as “Jane Doe,” works at a Massachusetts hospital. She had difficulty getting a COVID-19 vaccination at a pharmacy and other sites and is concerned the lack of protection will endanger her unborn child, according to the lawsuit.
The suit was filed in Boston because the unnamed doctor and some others in Massachusetts are among those have been affected by Kennedy’s change, said Richard H. Hughes IV, the lead attorney for the plaintiffs.
The state has figured repeatedly in U.S. public health history.
In 1721, some Boston leaders advocated for an early version of inoculation during a smallpox outbreak. Paul Revere was the first leader of Boston’s health commission. And a legal dispute in Cambridge led to a landmark 1905 U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld states’ rights to compel vaccinations.
“We think it is significant and very meaningful” that the case is happening there, Hughes said.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
The Bradley Beal era in Phoenix appears to be nearing an end.
The Suns and Beal are increasingly optimistic that the two sides will agree to terms on a buyout, league sources tell The Athletic. The move would make Beal an unrestricted free agent.
The goal for the Suns is to negotiate a buyout, waive him and then stretch his remaining salary over five years, which would reduce his annual cap hit on the Suns’ books. The move would not only get Phoenix out of the second apron, a dreaded payroll threshold where only the most expensive teams venture, but also out of the luxury tax altogether.
But the Suns can’t just waive Beal; they need his help.
Because of a quirk in the collective bargaining agreement, Beal, who has $110.8 million and two years remaining on his contract, must give back at least $13.8 million for the Suns to be allowed to stretch him. If he did, Phoenix would then have a dead cap hit of $19.4 million on its books in every season through 2029-30.
Beal, who turned 32 last month, averaged 17.0 points, 3.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists on 50/39/80 shooting splits last season. It may not be so easy for him to find $13.8 million on the open market.
One week removed from the start of NBA free agency, most of the league is without cap space or the necessary exceptions it would take to give Beal that much money on a two-year contract. Various organizations Beal could consider can’t give him that much, either. According to a league source, the list of teams Beal has thought about includes the LA Clippers, Golden State Warriors, Los Angeles Lakers and Milwaukee Bucks.
The Clippers just agreed to a trade that will send shooting guard Norman Powell to the Miami Heat and bring in high-flying power forward John Collins from the Utah Jazz. The deal opens a starting spot at Beal’s position, but because they used the $14.1 million midlevel exception to sign free-agent center Brook Lopez, they can offer Beal only what they have left of the MLE: a $5.3 million starting salary in 2025-26.
The Lakers could find a way to offer Beal the biannual exception, worth $5.1 million in starting salary.
The Bucks have already used up their exceptions and could offer only a minimum contract.
Meanwhile, the Warriors are stuck in a complicated situation with restricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga. Golden State would like to find a sign-and-trade to send Kuminga elsewhere but doesn’t have traction on one at the moment, league sources told The Athletic. If a deal is made for Kuminga that doesn’t bring back any money to the Warriors, then they would have access to the $14.1 million MLE, allowing them to offer Beal more money than the Clippers, Lakers or Bucks. But before offering anyone a portion of their MLE, the Warriors must find a resolution on Kuminga, a situation that could continue to drag.
The Suns could find other ways to dip below the second-apron payroll threshold, set at $207.8 million for 2025-26, about $20 million above the luxury tax. They could negotiate a buyout with Beal, waive him, choose not to stretch his money and then trade, say, Royce O’Neale to another team without taking any money back. But a move like that would still leave the team above the tax. And Phoenix, league sources said, is trying to save tax dollars.
The Suns traded for Beal in the summer of 2023, hoping that he, Kevin Durant and Devin Booker could form a formidable big three. It never materialized. They won 49 games their first year together but were swept out of the first round of the playoffs. This past season, the Suns went 36-46, falling short of the Play-In Tournament.
They traded Durant to the Houston Rockets earlier this summer. Beal could be the next to leave.
(Photo: Harry How / Getty Images)
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