- ‘Bob Marley: One Love’ Embraces $80M Global Bow; ‘Madame Web’ Musters $52M WW – International Box Office Deadline
- Box Office: ‘Bob Marley’ Biopic Beats Expectations With $51 Million Holiday Debut, ‘Madame Web’ Collapses Variety
- Bob Marley Film Has a Strong Start, but ‘Madame Web’ Unravels The New York Times
- Bob Marley’s Children: Everything to Know PEOPLE
- Box Office: Bob Marley ‘One Love’ Jams to Massive $51M Opening, ‘Madame Web’ Wipes Out at $25.8M Hollywood Reporter
Tag Archives: Bow
India’s ‘Fighter’ Flies To $25M Global Bow; ’Aquaman 2’, ‘Migration’, ‘Beekeeper’ Hit New WW Milestones – International Box Office – Deadline
- India’s ‘Fighter’ Flies To $25M Global Bow; ’Aquaman 2’, ‘Migration’, ‘Beekeeper’ Hit New WW Milestones – International Box Office Deadline
- New Indian Action Movie Jumps Into Box Office Top 10 In Slow Moviegoing Weekend Screen Rant
- Fighter Box Office Collection Day 2: Hrithik Roshan-Deepika Padukone’s Film Registers A “Massive Growth” NDTV Movies
- Fighter Movie Review: Top-notch aerial action elevates a cliched narrative IndiaTimes
- ‘Fighter’ review: Jingoism grounds Siddharth Anand’s air force tribute Mint Lounge
‘Napoleon’ Rides To $21M Global Through Thursday; Now Looking To Conquer $70M+ WW Bow – International Box Office – Deadline
- ‘Napoleon’ Rides To $21M Global Through Thursday; Now Looking To Conquer $70M+ WW Bow – International Box Office Deadline
- Box Office Surprise: ‘Napoleon’ in Close Battle With ‘Wish’ as ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel Eyes Overall Win Hollywood Reporter
- Napoleon Box Office: Day 1 to close at a collection of 2 crore – report IndiaTimes
- ‘Napoleon’, ‘Wish’ take their seats at the Thanksgiving box office The News International
- Box Office: Thanksgiving Turkey Parade Begins as “Wish,” “Napoleon” Get Stuffed Showbiz411
- View Full Coverage on Google News
‘Jeopardy!’ Winners Bow Out of Tournament of Champions Due to Writers Strike – Hollywood Reporter
- ‘Jeopardy!’ Winners Bow Out of Tournament of Champions Due to Writers Strike Hollywood Reporter
- ‘Jeopardy!’ champs vow to boycott champions tournament. ‘If you are out, I am out’ Miami Herald
- Jeopardy! winners refuse to cross the picket line for TOC The A.V. Club
- Ken Jennings Facing Pressure To Take A Break From Jeopardy As The Show Faces Other Struggles Amidst Strikes Yahoo Entertainment
- ‘Jeopardy!’ winners boycott Tournament of Champions over writers strike – The Washington Post The Washington Post
- View Full Coverage on Google News
‘Insidious: The Red Door’ Scares Up Best Overseas Horror Bow Since 2019; ’Indiana Jones’ Moves Dial To $248M Global; ‘Elemental’ Catching Fire Offshore; ‘Fast X’ Tops $700M WW – International Box Office – Deadline
- ‘Insidious: The Red Door’ Scares Up Best Overseas Horror Bow Since 2019; ’Indiana Jones’ Moves Dial To $248M Global; ‘Elemental’ Catching Fire Offshore; ‘Fast X’ Tops $700M WW – International Box Office Deadline
- The Most Underrated Thriller of the Year Puts a New Spin on a Classic Horror Trope Inverse
- ‘Insidious: The Red Door’ Sinks ‘Indiana Jones’ With $32.7M Box Office Opening, ‘Joy Ride’ Stalls Hollywood Reporter
- Patrick Wilson isn’t sure he’d want to direct The Conjuring 4 Digital Spy
- How ‘Insidious: The Red Door’ Locked Out ‘Indiana Jones’ At Box Office & Brought Sony Horror Fare Back From The Dead Deadline
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Cannes Film Festival Confirms Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Will Bow on the Croisette – Variety
- Cannes Film Festival Confirms Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Will Bow on the Croisette Variety
- Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Will Have World Premiere in Cannes Hollywood Reporter
- Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Officially Confirmed For Cannes Film Festival Deadline
- Killers of the Flower Moon by Martin Scorsese at the 76th Festival de Cannes Festival de Cannes
- Martin Scorsese’s Killers Of The Flower Moon headed to Cannes The A.V. Club
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Bengals, Eagles ride high; Bills, Cowboys bow out
Previous rank: No. 5
You couldn’t ask for a better outcome. Saturday night’s 38-7 destruction of the Giants brought the curtain down on a rival in embarrassing fashion while also restoring the image of the NFC’s No. 1 seed as a swaggering juggernaut not to be trifled with. Entering the weekend, it was legitimately unclear which version of Philly we would see in the Divisional Round after a labored close to the season, with lingering health questions around key stars. But quarterback Jalen Hurts looked like an MVP again, and Lane Johnson led an offensive line that blew open holes en route to 268 rushing yards. The idea of the Eagles being vulnerable now seems, well … absurd. “You f—ing saw it, pardon my language,” left tackle Jordan Mailata said, per The Athletic. “It’s just that juice, man. That swag. Jalen’s got a ton of swag, so he’s always showing it out on the field. And his football IQ, just making plays out there. And having the same continuity on the O-line, it’s a fact — a key stat to winning games. … So it helps when you get your star players back, for sure.”
Roger Federer hopes to bow out of tennis in doubles alongside Rafael Nadal | Roger Federer
After spending so many of their best years battling on the biggest stages as they took their sport to unforeseen levels, Roger Federer hopes he will play the final match of his illustrious career in doubles alongside Rafael Nadal, his old rival. “Of course. No doubt,” Federer said after being asked on Wednesday if partnering with Nadal would appeal to him.
“For us to go through a career that we both have had and to come out on the other side and being able to have a nice relationship is maybe a great message to not just tennis but sports and maybe even beyond.”
Having announced last week that he would retire at the Laver Cup in London, Federer said he will be able to compete only in doubles because of the limitations with his surgically repaired knee.
He will play one match on Friday, the opening day of competition, and then he will be done after more than 1,500 matches and 20 grand slam titles since his debut in 1998.
“I was in a very worried, scared place to face the music, the media, the fans and everything,” Federer said. “Being able to talk about it in a normal fashion without getting emotional, just because I know how much it means to me.”
No retirement is easy, but the final stages for Federer have been particularly complicated. His final singles match will go down as a brutal defeat by Hubert Hurkacz in the quarter-finals of Wimbledon last year, his knee giving way as he lost the third set 6-0.
Federer underwent surgery in August and began rehab with the aim of returning to full competition, only for more complications to emerge.
“You start getting too pessimistic. Then I also got a scan back which wasn’t what I wanted it to be. At some point you sit down and go: ‘OK, we are at an intersection here, at a crossroad, and you have to take a turn. Which way is it?’ I was not willing to go into the direction of: ‘Let’s risk it all.’ I’m not ready for that.”
For so long, he was known and admired for how he had managed to avoid major injuries. He said he always thought he would end his career without undergoing surgery, but he has had to come to terms with three knee surgeries since 2020. He says he is not in pain when playing, but the past years have left mental scars that helped guide him to retirement.
Although he thought about announcing his retirement before the US Open, Federer decided he wanted to be present and finish on the right note. The Laver Cup, the event owned by his management company, Team8, was a fitting venue. It is at London’s O2 Arena, where he won two of his ATP Finals titles, and it is in the city that has defined his career after winning his first grand slam title at Wimbledon in 2003 and a men’s record of eight Wimbledon titles.
“Having all the other guys around just felt like I was not going to be lonely announcing my retirement,” he said. “Not that I wanted to hijack this event or anything, but I always feel sorry for players who sometimes retire on the tour, say: ‘I’m going to play one more match,’ then at one point you lose and there you stand all alone.”
In his last event, that will not be the case. “Here I am trying to prepare for one last doubles, and we’ll see with who it is,” he said. “I’m nervous going in because I haven’t played in so long. I hope I can be somewhat competitive.”
‘Bow down to the Fed’ and beware of false market optimism
CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday warned investors against buying unprofitable stocks due to unwarranted optimism about the stock market.
“While I appreciate hope as a mindset, I’m not as confident as a lot of the buyers who are paying up. … We are seeing a level of enthusiasm here that to me feels unjustified. We shouldn’t be going back to a mentality where we like all stocks because so many of them will miss their numbers and still others will hit us with negative forecasts,” the “Mad Money” host said.
“Right now, we need to bow down to the Fed and the forces of inflation. Anything that brings down inflation, including tough statements from [Fed Chair] Jay Powell, will make big institutional money managers more likely to buy stocks rather than sell them. For the moment, that’s what controls the stock market,” added Cramer, who defended Powell against critics on Monday.
Cramer’s comments come a day after the Fed Chair Jerome Powell vowed to take aggressive action against inflation, including possibly implementing half-basis point interest increases, a week after instituting the first rate hike in over three years.
A company that has high stock prices won’t necessarily stay that way in a volatile market, even if it is performing well, Cramer said.
“There are periods, extreme periods, where the economy gets so out of whack that the stock market itself becomes a pariah asset class, a source of funds for other asset classes, so an individual company’s merits simply won’t be reflected in its share price,” Cramer said.
Cramer, who has touted a strategy of investing in profitable companies for months, also advised investors to refrain from picking up uninvestable stocks like floundering IPOs and SPACs.
“Tons of those stocks just aren’t worth much, regardless of whether Powell steers us into a soft landing or a hard landing,” he said.