Concertgoer joins Post Malone on stage to play “Stay”

Concertgoer joins Post Malone on stage to play “Stay”
Concertgoer joins Post Malone on stage to play “Stay”
Courtesy Live Nation Entertainment

One lucky Post Malone fan got the opportunity of a lifetime when the “Circles” rapper noticed the sign he was waving around during a concert.

The Grammy nominee shared a TikTok video from his concert in Stockholm, Sweden, which captured the moment when he noticed a fan holding up a massive sign that read, “Can I play STAY for you?” Post was down for the impromptu collab and waved the man up on stage.

He hooked the fan, who’s named Alfred, up with a guitar and asked him to play a few chords to see if he was legit.

“Sounds good to me,” the singer remarked while puffing on a cigarette. He then happily dove into his 2018 track but not before adding, “I f***ing love you, Alfred.”

“This lovely gentleman wanted to come on stage during my show and play guitar,” Posty captioned the clip and added of his fans, “I f***ing love you guys.”

Alfred has since commented on the video and told the “Sunflower” singer, “Thank you for the best night of my life [praying hands emoji] love u bro.”

Post is gearing up for his first tour in two years, which will support his new album, Twelve Carat Toothache. His tour kicks off on September 10 in Omaha, Nebraska and wraps November 15 in Los Angeles, California.

General ticket sales are available to purchase on Live Nation.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Former White House lawyer Pat Cipollone agrees to transcribed interview with Jan. 6 committee: Sources

Former White House lawyer Pat Cipollone agrees to transcribed interview with Jan. 6 committee: Sources
Former White House lawyer Pat Cipollone agrees to transcribed interview with Jan. 6 committee: Sources
Alex Wong/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Former White House counsel Pat Cipollone has reached a deal with the Jan. 6 committee to testify in a transcribed interview Friday, according to sources familiar with the matter.

The deal comes after the committee issued a subpoena to Cipollone last week after talks to have him testify publicly were not successful.

Cipollone was one of the few aides with former President Donald Trump the day of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and has significant insight into events before, leading up to and after that day.

The committee has frequently referenced Cipollone during public hearings, saying he was one of the advisers around Trump constantly telling the former president he was concerned that his actions could put him in legal jeopardy.

Cipollone was not expected to fight the subpoena, as discussions between he and the committee investigators was cordial.

Following the subpoena last week, a lawyer familiar with Cipollone’s deliberations told ABC News, “Of course a subpoena was necessary before the former White House counsel could even consider transcribed testimony before the committee. Pat Cipollone has previously provided an informal interview at the committee’s request. Now that a subpoena has been issued, it’ll be evaluated as to matters of privilege that might be appropriate.”

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Travis Barker photographed outside recording studio following hospitalization

Travis Barker photographed outside recording studio following hospitalization
Travis Barker photographed outside recording studio following hospitalization
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Bud Light

Even a stay in the hospital isn’t enough to keep Travis Barker away from the music. 

People obtained a photo of the Blink-182 drummer leaving his Calabasas, California recording studio Tuesday, exactly one week after he was first admitted to the hospital with what he called “severe life-threatening pancreatitis.”

Also on Tuesday, Barker tweeted, “7 days in the hospital,” seemingly suggesting that he’d been discharged. He added, “Grateful for so much.”

Meanwhile, Barker’s also been getting back to business on his Instagram, posting Stories teasing upcoming collaborations with blackbear and renforshort.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Queen + Adam Lambert presenting livestream concert event, ‘Rhapsody over London,’ this month

Queen + Adam Lambert presenting livestream concert event, ‘Rhapsody over London,’ this month
Queen + Adam Lambert presenting livestream concert event, ‘Rhapsody over London,’ this month
Courtesy of Hollywood Records/DMG

A special presentation of a concert that Queen + Adam Lambert played during the current European leg of their Rhapsody Tour will premiere July 24 via the Kiswe global streaming platform.

The event, dubbed Rhapsody over London, features Queen and Lambert performing in early June during their 10-show run at London’s O2 arena. The 28-song, two-and-a-half-hour concert was documented with 26 cameras and a crew of film technicians over 100 strong.

The presentation, which only will be available until July 31, will also include a live Q&A with Lambert and Queen’s Brian May and Roger Taylor speaking backstage before the next-to-last show of their European trek in Tampere, Finland.

Four ticket packages are available, and fans who purchase tickets will have the chance to submit questions that the band members may answer live during the Q&A. Questions must be submitted via video by July 19.

All packages include the O2 concert, the July 24 Q&A and a pre-show pass to watch the 2019 documentary The Show Must Go On: The Queen + Adam Lambert Story. The Show Must Go On will only be available for viewing on July 22 and July 23.

Some packages will also offer a video-on-demand bundle that will give viewers access to the world premiere of the Queen + Adam Lambert concert film Summersonic – Live in Japan, the band’s 2020 concert flick Live Around the World, a 2020 livestreamed Q&A event that featured Lambert, May and Taylor and promoted Live Around the World, and a feature called Meet the Press that compiles highlights from the group’s various press conferences over the last 10 years.

Tickets for Rhapsody over London can be purchased at Livestream.QueenOnline.com.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Many Black children are dying by suicide, doctors say: Understanding the why — and how to help

Many Black children are dying by suicide, doctors say: Understanding the why — and how to help
Many Black children are dying by suicide, doctors say: Understanding the why — and how to help
Quintin Lamarr told ABC News that he struggled with bullying as a Black, gay teen growing up in Milwaukee. – Leslie Andrews

(NEW YORK) — Quintin Lamarr first began having thoughts of suicide when he was around 16 years old.

Now 26 and an advocate and volunteer with the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Lamarr told ABC News that about a year and a half of those suicidal thoughts culminated in a mental health crisis that led to his hospitalization. During that time, he said, he was dealing with continued grief over the death of his father along with more recent bullying he faced as a gay Black teenager growing up in Milwaukee.

He didn’t find the support he needed at school, he said, and as the only child of a single mother who was busy trying to provide for the household he ended up spending a lot of time alone.

“I just felt like I had no community. I had no love. I had no protective energy around me,” Lamarr said. “It just felt like ‘nobody wants me here.'”

His experience is shared, at least in part, by many other young Black people.

The suicide rate among Black youth has been increasing along with the number of suicide attempts and the severity of those attempts, according to the most recent Youth Risk Behavior Survey from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, released in 2019.

That report, tracking suicide trends among students ages 14-18 over the previous 10 years, found that of the 8.9% who reported attempting suicide, Black youth were among the populations with the highest rates of reporting attempts, accounting for 11.8%. By contrast, white youth accounted for 7.9% of those reported attempts and Hispanic youth accounted for 8.9%.

The study found there was an even greater difference in reported attempts by race among female students: Black female students accounted for 15.2% of those reporting attempts, white female students made up 9.4% of that population, and Hispanic female students accounted for 11.9%.

A separate report from the American Academy of Pediatrics tracking suicidal behavior in youth from 1991 to 2017 found that Black youth experienced significant increases in suicide attempts over that period. And among Black kids ages 5-12, the suicide rate was found to be twice that of their white counterparts in 2017.

“What we’ve been seeing over time, and it’s been over a long period of time, is a significant increase in the number of Black boys dying by suicide,” said Dr. Tami D. Benton, psychiatrist-in-chief at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and president-elect of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

Experts told ABC News the disproportionately rising rate has a variety of underlying causes, including lack of access to mental health care, lack of awareness around symptoms of mental illness, social stigma and medical and structural racism.

More broadly, experts said, Black children and teenagers deal with some of the same mental health stressors as other young people — including anxiety and depression — and see some of the same challenges in getting caregivers to recognize what is really going on.

“A lot of people are just now learning that the unfortunate reality for a lot of Black youth is that they are dying,” said Dr. Christine Crawford, associate medical director for NAMI. “And a lot of that has to do with the fact that mental health conditions are often underdiagnosed or are not adequately treated for the conditions that they have.”

Dr. Jeffery Greene, an adolescent medicine specialist at Seattle Children’s Hospital, said that while lack of access to care is a contributor, the growing Black youth suicide rate is “multifactorial.”

“Of course, just the stigma of being labeled as someone with depression or anxiety limits the ability to get patients in to see their provider,” Greene said. “The racial injustices in this country over the last few years becoming so overt has also contributed. And, honestly, my personal feeling is in talking to teenagers, it seems like there’s a feeling of lack of hope for the future.”

Racism plays a role

Crawford said the utilization of mental health services among Black youth is lower than among other groups. There are several reasons for this, Crawford said, including “clinician bias and racism,” which can get in the way of diagnosis and become a barrier to treatment.

Structural and systemic racism also play a role, Crawford explained, as Black youth are more likely to attend schools and live in communities that are under-resourced and unable to provide mental health support.

“We need to acknowledge the fact that racism does lead to some of this and contributes to some of the bias. But that’s a hard thing to talk about — a hard thing for people to accept,” Crawford said. “But once people acknowledge the fact that it has an impact on what it is we’re seeing in mental health with children, especially Black children, that’s the only way that we’re able to strive for change.”

“We have to recognize the problem in order to adequately solve it and address it,” she said.

Racism in daily life also presents complications, with a study from the CDC released earlier this year showing that reports of experiencing racism were higher among students with poor mental health.

“We do know that the trauma that is experienced by racism can certainly result in mental health symptoms,” Crawford said. “We do see that people who have experienced various forms of racism, such as microaggressions, such as discrimination, are more likely to experience pretty significant psychological distress.”

Lamarr, the advocate, said that the bullying he faced as a boy — not just for his race but his sexuality — contributed to his own struggles.

“I’ve always had insecurities about things, just because growing up — being dark-skinned, being flamboyant, living in my truth, being part of the LGBT community, you always are criticized,” Lamarr said. “There was always a sense that I was holding back or I wasn’t always fully myself.”

Importance of historical context

In addition to social factors influencing mental health struggles for Black youth, Crawford said, it is possible that their symptoms are dismissed by health care providers.

“There’s often a tendency, especially for some white clinicians, to automatically assume that a child is presenting a certain way because they’re Black and because they’ve experienced a lot of trauma. But all of that can be true and they can also be experiencing symptoms of depression,” Crawford said. “We need to make sure that we’re taking both things into account — some of the external environmental societal factors that may be exacerbating mood symptoms — and we also need to know that there are treatments that exist to provide support for depression.”

Crawford cites a history in psychiatry of dismissing Black people’s mental illness symptoms.

“We do know that depression was a condition that was not diagnosed in Black people because the field didn’t think that Black people’s minds were sophisticated enough to experience an abstract condition such as depression,” she said.

It’s important, Crawford said, “to appreciate this historical context and how we’re continuing to see the ramifications of all of that in the present day.”

Depression can look different in kids

Age as well as race is a factor in mental health — indeed, the two can intersect. Symptoms of depression can present differently in children, including Black youth, than they do in adults.

Benton, the president-elect of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, explained that most frequently Black children are diagnosed with “externalizing disorders,” which are characterized by “acting-out behavior.”

“The assumption is not that Black youth can be depressed or suicidal. It’s that they tend to act out more than acting on themselves,” Benton said. “And that’s just not true.”

Sometimes depression in children is not recognized by parents because of differing presentation, Crawford explained, and there can be a misconception that depression stems solely from external problems and stressors.

“I try to remind my families, my caregivers, that depression — major depressive disorder — is a medical condition,” Crawford said. “It doesn’t necessarily have to be because something bad happened to you, and therefore you are depressed and therefore you are very sad and crying in the corner.”

She said for some people, and especially kids, they feel depressed because “it’s a biological condition.”

Crawford said that depression for this group may look more like irritability than sadness. Children with depression may also demonstrate quick mood fluctuation. Refusal to attend school, lack of interest in typical activities and excessive sleeping are other warning signs.

“These are symptoms of depression that can look different in kids [and] that are often misinterpreted as being something else by their caregiver,” Crawford said.

The pandemic effect

Since 2020, as America’s children have been feeling the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting social isolation and disruptions, mental health has been even more of a concern for health care providers and experts.

“I’m seeing that the symptom presentation [of anxiety and depression] is certainly more severe. I’m seeing that there’s a 31% increase in emergency room visits for our youth,” Crawford said. “And that often is reflective of the fact that these kids are presenting in a state of crisis, and having thoughts of suicide is certainly a mental health-related emergency.”

As for access to care, Crawford said, “We’re all booked. The waitlist to see a psychiatrist is incredibly long. The same thing is true for our therapists or social workers.”

She said the growing demand for services has been encouraging because more people are reaching out for care. “But it’s also quite concerning, because there’s certainly not enough of us to meet this growing demand. There’s only 8,300 child psychiatrists in the entire country. And that’s not enough to meet this demand that has been just kind of amplified by the pandemic.”

Decreasing the stigma — and recognizing warning signs

Greene, the Seattle Children’s doctor, said he hopes efforts to decrease the stigma around mental health will enable more young people to access care and receive a diagnosis, if one needs to be made. An increase in identification of mental illness would also help, he says.

Lamarr’s own struggles as a teen resulted in his mom calling the police and having him admitted to a hospital.

Such a crisis can be any situation where a person’s behavior may cause them to harm themselves or others, according to NAMI. It may also present as someone being unable to care for themselves.

Warning signs can include the inability to perform daily tasks (like bathing or brushing teeth) as well as mood swings, isolation and abusive behavior to oneself and others, according to NAMI.

After Lamarr’s hospitalization, he told ABC News, things began turning around.

He spent three days in the hospital before starting outpatient treatment and an anger management class, and he eventually transferred to a new school program.

“I was 16 at the time and I remember thinking ‘I need to get out of here. I need to start over, start fresh, try again,'” he said.

Learning how to talk about his feelings during treatment was key, he said.

“It turns out sometimes all you need is just the outlet to let off steam or to just open up, or to just be honest or be candid or vent,” Lamarr said. “Sometimes when we have so much pent-up frustration or we have so much pent-up anger or we have so much grief or so much pent-up emotion, that we really don’t get to release. … We always are constantly trying to be strong — we break.”

“And that’s all it was for me to be honest,” he said. “It was just so much just pent up, so much going on, so much that I never really truly dealt with. I never knew how to deal with grief.”

Protective factors for Black youth

In addition to decreasing stigma and increasing access to care, Benton said there are protective factors for Black children that can help maintain mental health. Strong positive ethnic identity is one, she said.

There’s a lot of research to support that as a protective factor, Benton said, “If you’re Black, and you feel good about yourself, and you feel you identify your Blackness as a positive thing, it’s protective of all kinds of things.”

Other protective factors, she said, include support from families and communities, community engagement, strong school connectedness and focus on academics.

She also said that among Black youth, “church was a big factor. So people who were engaged in a church community and had that sense of connectedness tended to do better.”

Mental health as public health

In terms of creating better mental health outcomes among Black youth, Benton said it’s about prevention and many of the determinants of future challenges are social.

“The reality is poverty, violence, poor schools, the absence of adequate mental health resources for people who need it — all of those factors contribute to what we’re seeing with kids right now,” Benton said.

The impact on young children, she said, primarily among minority groups and those who are growing up economically disadvantaged, is “disproportionate.”

“It will not likely be the case that we will decide we’re going to redistribute everybody’s wealth and nobody’s going to be poor anymore,” Benton said. “I don’t think that’s the solution — though that could be helpful.”

The major issue, Benton said, is making sure kids have access to adequate nutrition, a place to sleep without fear, regular pediatric healthcare, social-emotional learning in schools and engagement with nature.

“We all know that those environmental factors actually change the way that people feel and the way they think, and it contributes to emotional health. So I think addressing many of those social factors is really the key,” Benton said. “And you don’t need to do that at a psychiatrist or psychologist’s office. You can do that at home, at the Y, on a sports team — the people that are most effective in prevention are people at schools and people in the community.”

“More of a public health approach is what we need around mental health,” she added.

As for Lamarr, “It’s been a journey to get to the point where I really feel like I deserve to be here,” he said. “I’m here for a reason. I have a story to tell. I’ve made it out of the darkness. And now I can be a help, really, to other people.”

If you are struggling with thoughts of suicide or worried about a friend or loved one, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 [TALK] for free, confidential emotional support 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Kamala Harris makes unscheduled trip to Highland Park after parade shooting: ‘We should stand together’

Kamala Harris makes unscheduled trip to Highland Park after parade shooting: ‘We should stand together’
Kamala Harris makes unscheduled trip to Highland Park after parade shooting: ‘We should stand together’
Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP via Getty Images

(HIGHLAND PARK, Ill.) — Vice President Kamala Harris made a previously unscheduled trip on Tuesday night to Highland Park, Illinois — the site of a deadly mass shooting during a Fourth of July parade the previous day.

There, she expressed her grief at what the community had just endured and reiterated the federal government’s support, not long after she again urged for more widespread government action to address gun violence.

Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff spent about 30 minutes in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park after she spoke earlier Tuesday at the National Education Association’s annual meeting.

Addressing teachers in Chicago, she elicited loud cheers when she said: “We need to end this horror. We need to stop this violence. And we must protect our communities from the terror of gun violence. You know I’ve said it before, enough is enough.”

Reflecting on the “19 babies and their two teachers” killed in an elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, in May, Harris told the NEA educators that the shooting was “the most recent reminder” of “the risks that our children and our educators face every day.”

“Teachers should not have to practice barricading a classroom,” she said. “Teachers should not have to know how to treat a gunshot wound. And teachers should not be told that lives would have been saved if only you had a gun.”

She called on federal lawmakers to ban assault-style rifles, saying, “Congress needs to have the courage to act and renew the assault weapons ban.”

“An assault weapon is designed to kill a lot of human beings quickly,” Harris said. “There is no reason that we have weapons of war on the streets of America.”

Nonetheless, there is little prospect of legislators taking up such restrictions: Congress just passed a modest, bipartisan package intended to reduce gun violence, and Republicans say more laws violate the Second Amendment.

In Highland Park later Tuesday, Harris met with local politicians and law enforcement near the scene of the shooting that killed seven and injured dozens more. (A suspect has since been taken into custody and charged with seven counts of first-degree murder on Tuesday.)

The vice president embraced Mayor Nancy Rotering and told her, “I’m sorry,” upon arriving in Highland Park. Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Illinois, and state Sen. Julie Morrison joined Harris. Her office said she was invited to Highland Park on Tuesday during a morning call with Rotering.

Harris took some time to shake hands and meet with individual law enforcement members, including Highland Park police officers.

She visited the town near the scene of Monday’s mass shooting. According to the press pool, bikes, strollers, toys and lawn chairs were still visible in the area — detritus from those who fled the attack.

In brief remarks, Harris offered the country’s condolences and resources on behalf of the administration, saying, “We’ll continue to put all the resources that the mayor and the chief and others need in terms of the federal assistance, so the FBI, the [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives] are here.”

“From President Joe Biden and our country, we are so sorry for what you have all experienced … This should never have happened. We talked about it being ‘senseless.’ It is. It is absolutely senseless,” Harris said. “I want for you that you hold each other tight as a community, that you know that you have a whole nation who cares deeply about you and stands with you.”

As the vice president spoke, about 100 local residents had gathered nearby, according to the press pool.

“This is an incredibly tight community. I know that,” she said, “and this person will be brought to justice. But it’s not going to undo what happened.”

Harris also said the administration’s focus had not strayed from guns. The White House will “deal with what we need to deal with” in terms of who has access to assault weapons.

But her attention was on the local community.

“We’ve got to take this stuff seriously — as seriously as you are, because you have been forced to have to take it seriously,” she said. “The whole nation should understand and have a level of empathy, to understand that this can happen anywhere, in any peace-loving community. And we should stand together and speak out about why it’s got to stop.”

ABC News’ Ben Gittleson contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Parkway Drive releasing new album ’Darker Still’ in September

Parkway Drive releasing new album ’Darker Still’ in September
Parkway Drive releasing new album ’Darker Still’ in September
Epitaph Records

Parkway Drive has announced a new album called Darker Still.

The follow-up to 2018’s Reverence will arrive on September 9. It includes the previously released single “Glitch.” A second cut, titled “The Greatest Fear,” is out now via digital outlets.

“When Parkway originally started out, we all were trying to push ourselves to do more than we possibly could,” says frontman Winston McCall. “What you hear on Darker Still is the final fulfillment of our ability to learn and grow catching up with the imagination that we have always had.”

Here’s the Darker Still track list:

“Ground Zero”
“Like Napalm”
“Glitch”
“The Greatest Fear”
“Darker Still”
“Imperial Heretic”
“If a God Can Bleed”
“Soul Bleach”
“Stranger”
“Land of the Lost”
“From the Heart of the Darkness”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Watch Coldplay’s puppet-filled video for “Biutyful”

Watch Coldplay’s puppet-filled video for “Biutyful”
Watch Coldplay’s puppet-filled video for “Biutyful”
Parlophone Records Limited

Coldplay has premiered the video for “Biutyful,” a track off the band’s latest album, Music of the Spheres.

The clip, which is streaming now on YouTube, follows The Weirdos, a band of puppets created by Jim Henson‘s Creature Shop.

If you’ve seen Coldplay live on their ongoing world tour, then you may recognize lead Weirdos singer Angel Moon, who’s joined frontman Chris Martin each night to perform “Biutyful.” Martin also brought Angel Moon and The Weirdos on stage during his recent appearance on The Tonight Show.

Coldplay is currently on tour in Europe. Audio from the band’s July 17 concert in Paris will stream live via the Music of the Spheres World Tour app.

Music of the Spheres, the album, was released last October. It also includes the single “Higher Power” and the hit BTS collaboration, “My Universe.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

BLACKPINK to release new music in August

BLACKPINK to release new music in August
BLACKPINK to release new music in August
YG Entertainment

Top K-pop girl group BLACKPINK will release new music in August, according to their label, YG Entertainment.

The release will start “a continuous large-scale project which will extend through the second half of the year,” according to the label.  In addition, the group plans to go on “the largest world tour in the history of a K-pop girl group” before the end of the year.

BLACKPINK, who’ve collaborated with Dua Lipa, Selena Gomez and Lady Gaga, hit number two on the Billboard 200 with their 20202 debut release, THE ALBUM. They’re the first K-pop girl group to have an album sell a million copies, and they’re also the most-subscribed music act on YouTube.

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“Everyone is fascinated with bad guys”: Christian Bale goes from Batman to “butcher” in ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’

“Everyone is fascinated with bad guys”: Christian Bale goes from Batman to “butcher” in ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’
“Everyone is fascinated with bad guys”: Christian Bale goes from Batman to “butcher” in ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’
Marvel Studios

Thor: Love and Thunder hits theaters this weekend, and for Christian Bale, the film gave him a chance to pivot from playing a beloved hero, Batman, in Chris Nolan‘s Dark Knight trilogy, to this film’s heavy: Gorr the God Butcher.

The character begins as a devout man, whose god failed him and his people — particularly his daughter — and he gets the chance to get even. Soon, he begins a galaxy-wide vendetta against all gods, including, of course, Chris Hemsworth‘s titular god of Thunder.

“It’s a lot easier to play a villain than it is to play a hero,” Bale enthused at a recent press event. “Everyone is fascinated with bad guys immediately, and then the beauty of it is that Taika can make it bloody hilarious and really moving as well,” referring to writer-director Taika Waititi.

Bale adds, “I don’t know if it’s pushing it too much to say ‘sympathy’, but certainly you sort of understand maybe why this guy is making awful decisions, you know — and he is a monster and he is a butcher — but yeah, there’s possibly a little understanding of why he came to be that way.”

Thor: Love and Thunder also stars Natalie Portman, Tessa Thompson, Russell Crowe, and Chris Pratt and his Guardians of the Galaxy pals. It opens nationwide July 8.

Marvel Studios is owned by Disney, parent company of ABC News.

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