- EntertainmentThe Wrap
Sony Won’t ‘Make the Mistake’ of Releasing a $200 Million Movie Until More Theaters Reopen
Sony Pictures Entertainment Chairman Tony Vinciquerra doesn’t think releasing a major $200 million film in limited theaters, with limited capacity as the country reels from a global pandemic is a smart thing to do. But in 2020, everyone’s taking chances. “What we won’t do is make the mistake of putting a very, very expensive $200 million movie out in the market unless we’re sure that theaters are open and operating at significant capacity,” Vinciquerra said during Bank of America’s 2020 Media, Communications & Entertainment Conference. His comments came as Hollywood struggles to get its hands around the recent release of Warner Bros. “Tenet,” which grossed $20 million in its opening weekend in the U.S. (without New York or L.A. theaters showing it). Is that good? Is it what the industry should expect right now for a $200 million film that has been touted as the movie to reignite the movie going crowd? There doesn’t seem to be an answer. Right now, at least as far as Sony is concerned, Vinciquerra said they’re interested in learning as much as possible. Also Read: Jonathan Majors, Glen Powell War Film 'Devotion' Nabbed By Sony for North American Rights “You’ll see a lot of...Read original story Sony Won’t ‘Make the Mistake’ of Releasing a $200 Million Movie Until More Theaters Reopen At TheWrap
- BusinessMotley Fool
Saudi Arabia Just Crushed U.S. Crude Oil Prices Again
Global oil demand is faltering, and Saudi Arabia just slashed prices to two of the world's biggest customers.
- PoliticsABC News
Georgia secretary of state alleges up to 1,000 cases of 'double voting' in primary, runoff elections
Georgia's top election official said Tuesday that there were up to 1,000 potential instances of voters casting two ballots -- one by absentee ballot and one in person on election day -- across about 100 counties during the June presidential and statewide primaries and the August runoff elections. None of these cases have been fully investigated or tried.
- CelebrityCosmopolitan
Carole Baskin Will Make So Much $$$ if (Nay, WHEN) She Wins ‘Dancing With the Stars’
Carole Baskin is about to be so rich.
- TechnologyUSA TODAY
Privacy alert: Your iPhone is tracking everywhere you go: Here's how to find the setting
There’s still a map deep within the settings of your iPhone that tracks everywhere you go. Kim Komando tells you how to find it.
- U.S.Associated Press
Teacher deaths raise alarms as new school year begins
O'FALLON, Mo. (AP) — Teachers in at least three states have died after bouts with the coronavirus since the dawn of the new school year, and a teachers' union leader worries that the return to in-person classes will have a deadly impact across the U.S. if proper precautions aren't taken. AshLee DeMarinis was just 34 when she died Sunday after three weeks in the hospital. A third-grade teacher died Monday in South Carolina, and two other educators died recently in Mississippi.
- PoliticsCBS News Videos
Video Former FBI agent Peter Strzok: "There are things that I know" that would harm Trump's reelection campaign
Former FBI deputy assistant director Peter Strzok says he and others are aware of classified information that could hurt the 2020 Trump campaign if it became public. Strzok led the FBI's 2016 investigation into Russian election interference before he was ousted. His new book, "Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of Donald J. Trump" details his time at the FBI and his concerns about what the U.S. currently faces. He joined CBSN to discuss.






















