New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released after his arrest at an immigration courtNew Foto - New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released after his arrest at an immigration court

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander was released Tuesday hours after his arrest in connection with an episode at a federal courthouse in the city, where Lander and his wife said they were serving as advocates for defendants inimmigration court. The Department of Homeland Security said Lander, a mayoral candidate, had been arrested for "assaulting law enforcement and impeding a federal officer." Ina brief statement on social media,DHS said: "It is wrong that politicians seeking higher office undermine law enforcement safety to get a viral moment. No one is above the law, and if you lay a hand on a law enforcement officer, you will face consequences." After his release, Lander denied assaulting law enforcement. "I will not characterize the events, but I certainly did not assault an officer," he told reporters and a crowd of supporters who had gathered to greet him. "We are not going to allow Donald Trump to wreck the rule of law, to deny people due process, and to turn our country into something that doesn't meet its obligations under international law," Lander said. "We are normalizing the destruction of constitutional democracy, and we're not going to stand by and let it happen," he added. Lander is running in next week's Democratic primary for mayor of New York City. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul accompanied the comptroller as he was released and told reporters, "to my knowledge" any charges against Lander had been dropped and he "walks out of there a free man." A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York said there would be no court appearance for Lander, as it continues to investigate the matter. Hochul also called Lander's arrest "total bull---" in apost on X. "When elected officials are being detained without cause, we have to ask: what the hell is happening to our country? This federal overreach cannot go unchecked," Hochul said in her post. "We must meet this moment and protect our rights and values." Follow live politics coverage here Kat Capossela, Lander's mayoral campaign press secretary, told NBC News in an email earlier in the day that "Brad was taken by masked agents and detained by ICE," a reference to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, after "escorting a defendant out of immigration court." Lander's wife, Meg Barnette, during a news conference shortly after her husband's arrest, criticized the Trump administration's handling of cases involving immigrants. The incident marked the latest in a series of dramatic confrontations between immigration officials and Democrats opposing President Donald Trump's immigration policies. Last week, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., wasforcibly removed from a news conferencewith Homeland Security Secretary Kristin Noem. Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, who was then a gubernatorial candidate in New Jersey, was alsoarrested on trespassing charges last monthat an ICE detention facility in the state. Thecharges against him were dropped, but Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver wassubsequently charged with assaulting law enforcementduring the incident. Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan,also suggestedthat California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass could be arrested too. The Democratic officials and their allies have argued that the incidents were politically motivated and criticized the administration's conduct, while the Trump administration has fiercely defended immigration agents and accused Democrats of staging political stunts. In a video posted to Lander's personal account on X, he can be seen surrounded by people, including masked officers in vests labeled with the word "police." At one point, someone can be heard saying "put him in custody," and the men holding Lander scuffle with the comptroller before pinning him to a wall and handcuffing him. "I'm not obstructing, I'm standing right here in the hallway. I asked to see the judicial warrant," Lander says in the video. "You don't have the authority to arrest U.S. citizens asking for a judicial warrant," he adds. Lander was then led into an elevator with his hands behind his back as an aide can be heard asking, "Where are you taking the comptroller of the city of New York?" During her news conference, Lander's wife echoed Democratic criticisms of the Trump administration's immigration policies, arguing that judges were dismissing charges against defendants before being turned over to federal agents to begin the process of deporting them. "This is not the way we deal with rule of law, this is not the way people are treated in the United States," Barnette, a former attorney, said. "I feel really rattled and scared, and my husband is a candidate for mayor, is an elected citywide official, is U.S. citizen," she said. "And all of the other folks in that building are risking having their families torn apart with inadequate explanation. And it's an abomination." She added that a member of Lander's New York Police Department security detail accompanied him along with the law enforcement officers who detained him. Prominent city officials and politicians joined Barnette at the news conference outside the courthouse, including Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, City Councilmember Tiffany Cabán and Assemblyman and fellow mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani. Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, another Democrat seeking the nomination to become the city's next mayor, on Xcalled the episode"the latest example of the extreme thuggery of Trump's ICE." In a statement, state Attorney General Letitia James criticized "the administration's rampant targeting of New Yorkers" and called the episode "a grotesque escalation of tensions."

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released after his arrest at an immigration court

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released after his arrest at an immigration court New York City Comptroller Brad Lander was released T...
FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tipNew Foto - FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip

WASHINGTON — FBI Director Kash Patel said this week the bureau had shared "alarming" — but unsubstantiated — allegations about manipulation of the 2020 election with a Republican member of Congress. "The FBI has located documents which detail alarming allegations related to the 2020 U.S. election, including allegations of interference by the CCP,"Patel wrote, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. "I have immediately declassified the material and turned the documents over to the Chairman Grassley for further review." Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The unsubstantiated claim promoted by Patel, which an unidentified confidential human source gave to the FBI in 2020, during President Donald Trump's first term, asserts that the Chinese mass-produced driver's licenses to be used in a mail-in ballot scheme. Patel linked to an article written by John Solomon, whom Trump appointed alongside Patel in 2022 to represent him before the National Archives and Records Administration on matters related to his presidential records. The article Patel promoted mentioned that U.S. Customs and Border Protection has seized fake licenses that were arriving mostly from China and Hong Kong around the time the FBI received the tip about the election plot. According to a 2020news release from CBP, most of the seized licenses "were for college-age students," a population that has historically sought licenses with fake birthdays so underage students can get into bars and purchase alcohol. No evidence of widespread or systemic voter fraud affecting the 2020 election has been found, despite allegations promoted by Trump and his allies since he lost that year's presidential race. The FBI did not comment beyond Patel's post, referring questions to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Grassleysent a letterTuesday asking Patel for additional information about how the intelligence information report was handled. Patel and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino have facedincreased pressure from the online rightto bring more drastic change to the bureau — and at a time when they have been debunking some of the conspiracy theories they promoted when they were conservative commentators. A former senior FBI official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the bureau produces hundreds of reports every day based on such tips, which do not always pan out. Sometimes they are recalled or edited for a number of reasons, the former FBI official said. Those reasons could be that agents found the information to be false or that the sources of the information had been discredited. A second former senior FBI official, who also asked not to be named, said they were not familiar with the report but said both the Chinese and the Russian governments have spread false claims about fake ballots to aggravate divisions between Americans. The second former FBI official suggested that Patel share "the information with both Republicans and Democrats so there can be a balanced look and heal the country instead of causing more distrust and discontent playing into the hands of our foreign enemies." Rick Hasen, an election law expert, said that Patel's post "might feed the MAGA base" but that what he was promoting was an uncorroborated story of unknown origin "with no evidence that anything actually happened, and certainly no evidence that any ballots were cast or illegal voters were even registered to vote using state identifications." Hasen said there has long been a "cottage industry of people" making false or vastly exaggerated claims of election fraud or portraying administrative errors as acts of malice. While there are occasionally instances of voting fraud, Hasen added, they tend to be isolated and small.

FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip

FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip WASHINGTON — FBI Director Kash Patel sai...
San Antonio Spurs reportedly 'have not been the aggressive team' in Kevin Durant sweepstakesNew Foto - San Antonio Spurs reportedly 'have not been the aggressive team' in Kevin Durant sweepstakes

While there is mutual interest between the San Antonio Spurs and Kevin Durant, according to ESPN's Shams Charania, the Spurs "have not been the aggressive team" in trade talks for the Phoenix Suns forward,Charania reported Tuesday on "The Pat McAfee Show." Charania first reiteratedhis report from the weekend: Durant's three preferred destinations are the Spurs, the Houston Rockets and the Miami Heat. The Spurs, however, aren't on the same timeline as the Rockets and Heat, said Charania, who believes those two suitors are more realistic landing spots for Durant than San Antonio at the moment. "I think they're really going to be stocking their assets for potentially a bigger move, bigger player, someone that may fit their timeline,"Charania said Tuesday of the Spurs, via the "McAfee Show." "But the Spurs have had a level of interest. Would I say that they're among the leaders right now? ... No, I wouldn't." Charania pointed out that the Spurs have quite a bit of team-building flexibility this offseason. They're well-positioned with a potentially generational center in Victor Wembanyama, plus a one-time All-Star and still-27-year-old guard in De'Aaron Fox. Additionally, they have this year's NBA Rookie of the Year, guard Stephon Castle. And San Antonio is equipped with the No. 2 and No. 14 picks in this year's draft. The Spurs haven't made the playoffs since 2019, but they have one of the brightest futures in the league right now, with legendary head coach Gregg Popovichnow serving as president of basketball operationsandMitch Johnson filling his big shoesas coach. Together, with general manager Brian Wright, San Antonio hopes to replicate its longstanding success from the 2000s to the mid-2010s. "They want to have a similar run and be set up similarly to [former Spurs general manager and current team CEO] R.C. Buford and Gregg Popovich," Charania said on the "McAfee Show." "And, in their minds, they have a ton of assets to where, if there's a guy that becomes available that's on that timeline, potentially you go out and make that deal. That's not to say that they don't have interest in Kevin Durant. They do. And potentially they would make an offer, and I'm sure they have discussed different frameworks, but what the other teams are offering is just a little bit more aggressive." Charania mentioned that, even though Minnesota isn't on Durant's list of preferred destinations, the Timberwolves are still a wild-card team to consider. He explained that Minnesota wouldn't be the first team to trade for a player who didn't want to play for them. Charania compared that potential scenario to the Toronto Raptors trading for Kawhi Leonard in the summer of 2018. The Raptors won an NBA championship in 2019, but Leonard still signed with the Los Angeles Clippers in free agency. "Honestly, every day that goes by, I think it's more likely that, if [the Timberwolves are] involved here, it's going to be seeking out multi-team trade scenarios — three-, four-team deals, whether they get Kevin Durant or whether they're just involved in a deal that's facilitating that,"Charania said Tuesday on the "McAfee Show." "But Minnesota is still very much engaged and active in these conversations." Durant, who has spent two full seasons with the Suns, is on an expiring contract worth $54.7 million for the 2025-26 season. After he's traded, on July 6, he'll be eligible to sign a two-year extension worth up to $122 million. If Durant decides to wait six months after the trade, though, that extension could be worth as much as $124 million,per Charania. The Golden State Warriors almost acquired Durant at this season's trade deadline. Instead, Durant established that he didn't want a second act in the Bay Area and would rather stay with the Suns for the rest of the 2024-25 campaign. Durant will turn 37 in September. The 15-time NBA All-Star has previously played for the Seattle SuperSonics/Oklahoma City Thunder (2007-16), the Warriors (2016-19) and the Brooklyn Nets (2019-23). This season, he averaged 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.2 assists per game in 62 appearances. The Suns, despite the highest payroll in league history, finished 36-46 and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2019-20.

San Antonio Spurs reportedly 'have not been the aggressive team' in Kevin Durant sweepstakes

San Antonio Spurs reportedly 'have not been the aggressive team' in Kevin Durant sweepstakes While there is mutual interest between ...
Chiefs star Chris Jones on Trey Smith signing franchise tag: 'It's good Trey didn't take my approach'New Foto - Chiefs star Chris Jones on Trey Smith signing franchise tag: 'It's good Trey didn't take my approach'

It sounds like Chris Jones has some regrets about the way his messy contract standoff in 2023 shook out. The Kansas City Chiefs star defensive tackle hinted at that remorse when discussing right guard Trey Smith signing the Chiefs' franchise tag this year. Smith, who Kansas City still hopes to ink to a long-term deal,showed upto the first day of mandatory minicamp Tuesday. "Well, it's good Trey didn't take my approach," Jones joked after practice before drawing laughter from reporters and then cracking a smile. Jones continued,via KCTV5:"Trey's doing the right thing, man. Don't take no advice from me. I did things a little different. Don't take no advice from me. "Trey, you in a good place." #ChiefsDT Chris Jones talked about how Trey Smith is handling the franchise tag/desire for long-term deal:"It's good Trey didn't take my approach. Trey is doing the right thing ... Franchise tag is like $25 million, right? That's the big bucks."@KCTV5pic.twitter.com/M8jBNk0Ev8 — Mark Poulose (@MarkPoulose)June 17, 2025 Looking for a new contract while entering the final season of a four-year, $80 million deal, Jones held out throughout the 2023 preseason. At the time, San Francisco 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa was also holding out and eventuallysigned a five-year, $170 million deal. Jones was looking for a raise, and the first-team All-Pro and Super Bowl championhinted he was willing to sit out until at least Week 8for added leverage. He started to follow through on those stakes, watching a Week 1 loss to a soon-to-be breakout Lions teamfrom a suite at Arrowhead Stadium. The Mississippi State product finally put an end to the drama, which included millions of dollars of fines, when he agreed to alucrative, one-year contracton Sept. 11 of that year. That short-term solution set the stage for thefive-year, $95 million guaranteed deal he signedthe following offseason. Even though Jones didn't waver in his loyalty to the Chiefs during that saga, he did hold out and create a loud, drawn-out distraction that could have been avoided. Smith has been steering clear of that circus by signing the non-exclusive franchise tag, which will earn the 26-year-old guard $23.4 million unless he agrees to a new deal before the July 15 deadline. "Franchise tag is like $25 million, right?" Jones said Tuesday, via KCTV5. "That's the big bucks. Yeah, he's in a good place. Stay healthy, be ready to compete in training camp, which I know Trey will be, and we're excited to have him around." Protecting quarterback Patrick Mahomes is priority No. 1 in Kansas City, especially after last season's Super Bowl defeat to the Philadelphia Eagles, and the Chiefs see Smith as a key ingredient to that recipe. Smith, a sixth-round pick out of Tennessee in 2021, made his first Pro Bowl last season after allowing only one sack and 34 pressures, both single-season career lows, according to Pro Football Focus. "I think the future plans for the Chiefs is to have Trey around," Jones said, via KCTV5. "He's a pivotal part of our offensive line. To have him back out here — he's superior guard in this league. Could be an All-Pro this year. "His body of work speaks for itself, so we're glad to have him back out. He brings a lot of energy to the offensive line, and it's a good way for us to compete on the defensive line."

Chiefs star Chris Jones on Trey Smith signing franchise tag: 'It's good Trey didn't take my approach'

Chiefs star Chris Jones on Trey Smith signing franchise tag: 'It's good Trey didn't take my approach' It sounds like Chris J...
Padilla chokes up on Senate floor recounting being handcuffed at Noem news conferenceNew Foto - Padilla chokes up on Senate floor recounting being handcuffed at Noem news conference

California Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla became emotional as he spoke on the Senate floor about being forcibly removed from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's news conference last week inLos Angeles. "If you watch what unfolded last week and that what happened is just about one politician and one press conference, you're missing the point," Padilla said. "If that is what the administration is willing to do to aUnited Statessenator for having the authority to simply ask a question -- imagine what they'll do to any American who dares to speak up." Padilla said a National Guard member and an FBI agent escorted him into the news conference. He said he was in the same building for a different meeting. MORE: Democrats condemn senator being pushed down and handcuffed at Noem press conference "I was physically and aggressively forced out of the room, even as I repeatedly announced I was a United States senator and I had a question for the secretary," he said. "And even as the National guardsman and the FBI agent who served as my escorts and brought me into that press briefing room stood by -- silently, knowing full well who I was. You've seen the video. I was pushed and pulled, struggled to maintain my balance." Padilla got emotional, struggling to explain what happened last week. "I was forced to the ground, first on my knees, and then flat on my chest, and as I was handcuffed and marched down a hallway repeatedly asking, 'Why am I being detained?'" he said. "I pray you never have a moment like this," he added. "'Am I being arrested here? What will a city already on edge from being militarized think when they see their United States senator being handcuffed just for trying to ask a question? And what will my wife think? What will our boys think?,'" he continued. Padilla warned about the precedent set by PresidentDonald Trump's deploying Marines and the National Guard to Los Angeles. "What's happening is not just a threat to California, it's a threat to everyone in every state," he said. "If Donald Trump can bypass the governor and activate the National Guard to put down protests on immigrant rights, he can do it to suppress your rights, too. If he can deploy the Marines to Los Angeles without justification, he can deploy them to your state, too," he added. Padilla received a loud round of applause from some senators in the chamber.

Padilla chokes up on Senate floor recounting being handcuffed at Noem news conference

Padilla chokes up on Senate floor recounting being handcuffed at Noem news conference California Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla became emotion...
Trump administration demands action from 36 countries to avoid travel banNew Foto - Trump administration demands action from 36 countries to avoid travel ban

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration has given 36 countries, most of them in Africa, a Wednesday deadline to commit to improve vetting of travelers or face aban on their citizens visiting the United States. A weekend diplomatic cable sent by the State Department instructs embassies and consulates in the 36 countries to gauge their host countries' willingness by Wednesday to improve their citizens' travel documentation and take steps to address the status of their nationals who are in the United States illegally. The cable, which was described to The Associated Press, asks the countries totake action to address the U.S. concernswithin 60 days or risk being added tothe current travel ban, which now includes 12 nations. Of the 36 new countries targeted, 25 are in Africa. It is the latest step by the Trump administration to crack down on those who overstay their visas and tying U.S. entries from certain countries to potential national security risks. Trump has said some countries have "deficient" screening and vetting or have historically refused to take back their own citizens.Some countries condemned the travel restrictionsand vowed reciprocal actions, while some resettlement groups say the ban sows division. State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce declined to comment on the specifics in the cable, which was first reported by The Washington Post. She confirmed that the administration wanted nations to improve their own vetting processes for passport holders,accept their nationals deported from the U.S.and take other steps to ensure their citizens are not a threat to the U.S. "We're looking at providing a period of time, (where if countries) don't get to that point where we can trust them and they've got to change the system, update it, do whatever they need to do to convince us that we can trust the process and the information they have," she said. It was not immediately clear if the ban would be imposed on countries that commit to making improvements and are making progress in addressing them but fail to meet the benchmarks within 60 days. The list includes some countries that have been traditional U.S. partners, including Egypt and Djibouti, both of which have military relationships with United States, and others that long been friendly with the U.S., including Liberia, Nigeria and Ethiopia. Syria, which was left off the initial travel ban, as was Congo, are both on the new list. South Sudan is already subject to a separate travel ban imposed by the State Department, which has revoked the visas of most South Sudanese already in the U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpthis month enacted a travel ban on 12 countries and imposed restrictions on seven others, although no previously issued visas have been revoked. His proclamation instead banned issuing new visas to citizens of the 12 countries. That ban included Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Heightened visa restrictions will apply to citizens of Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. The 36 countries identified in the new cable are: Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Benin, Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Dominica, Ethiopia, Egypt, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Malawi, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, South Sudan, Syria, Tanzania, Tonga, Tuvalu, Uganda, Vanuatu, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Trump administration demands action from 36 countries to avoid travel ban

Trump administration demands action from 36 countries to avoid travel ban WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration has given 36 countries,...
Brad Pitt's new 'F1' movie brings immersive Formula 1 thrills to HollywoodNew Foto - Brad Pitt's new 'F1' movie brings immersive Formula 1 thrills to Hollywood

MONTREAL — When they began working together on the new "F1" movie, Formula 1 living legend Lewis Hamilton was pleasantly surprised to see that Brad Pitt knew what he was doing behind the wheel of a race car. "He had a bit of a feel for it already. It wasn't completely alien. I worked as a driver coach when I was a kid just to make a bit of money on the side, and I had some pretty bad drivers along the way!" Hamilton, a seven-time world champion who races for Ferrari and is a producer for the movie, told NBC News at a media briefing ahead ofSunday's Canadian Grand Prix. "Straight away you could see he had a concept of a driving line." Hollywood has made lots of movies about racing and Formula 1. But "F1 The Movie" — an Apple Original Films film that's being released theatrically by Warner Bros. on June 27 — gives viewers something they've never seen before: a big-budget production filmed alongside racing real drivers and real teams, melding authentic F1 luminaries into the cast while filming at Grand Prix weekends. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Joseph Kosinski hosted a screening Thursday in Montreal for F1 insiders and reporters, including NBC News, before the race weekend and a glitzy red carpet launch event Monday in New York. The movie comes at a time of a lucrativerelationship between Hollywood and Formula 1. The sport's popularity has soared in the United States over the last five years, and F1 executives hope the first-of-its-kind movie will help the international series penetrate deeper into its top-priority market. Pitt plays protagonist Sonny Hayes, a fictional F1 driver whose promising young career was cut short after a horrific crash in the 1990s but who makes the unlikeliest of comebacks decades later with the fictional APXGP team. It's a story of adventure, heartbreak and the insatiable pursuit of glory, with the thrills and dangers of Formula 1 captured by one of America's most famous actors. The character is a daredevil who embodies elements of real-life drivers Max Verstappen and James Hunt, bringing a high racing IQ and a knack for bending the rules to his advantage. He's enlisted in a desperation move by a former F1 teammate-turned-team owner, played by Javier Bardem, to drive alongside a young rookie, portrayed by Damson Idris, who is desperate to prove himself in a car that's too weak to compete for wins. Their team may soon cease to exist if it can't turn things around soon. Pitt was "super open-minded and really dove deep into what it takes to be a racing driver, which was really cool to see," Hamilton said. Hamilton described it as the most "immersive" film ever made about racing, or perhaps any other sport, "in the sense of filming on race weekends." The movie also includes tantalizing on-track visuals and a plot line that taps into the strategic mischief and chess moves that make the sport exciting. And there are crashes. Lots of them, including fiery ones. Pitt "did all his own driving," Bruckheimer said in an interview, having trained for three months — first in a Formula 3 car before he graduated to the faster machinery. "The saddest day for Brad is when he had to step out of the car and we wrapped the movie. I was more relieved than anybody else that everyone was safe," he said. And because it's Hollywood, Pitt's character is part of a romantic plot with Kerry Condon's character, Kate McKenna, his technical director, who's tasked with building him a winning car. "Our ambition was to make an authentic racing film," said Kosinski, who has also helmed films like "Top Gun: Maverick." "And we want it to be a film that works not only for experts like you all who live and breathe this world every day, but we also want it to be a film that plays to people who don't know anything about Formula 1 or other sports. The most important thing, of course, being that we just tell a great story about redemption and friendship and teamwork in this incredible sport." However, F1 junkies are likely to be able to spot some things that couldn't — or wouldn't — happen in real life. Pitt's F1 car in the movie, clearly slimmer than the real F1 cars he's racing, is a Formula 2 car, for example. A driver also wouldn't be conversing with his team boss in the pit lane mid-race through his helmet and the deafening noise. Plus, there are only so many shenanigans F1 will tolerate from one driver trying to finagle the race outcome. "We wanted to find how far can you push it so that you can get right to the edge," Kosinski said, adding that they consulted with Hamilton about how to strike that balance. But the scenes that racing die-hards may question are part of the bargain struck to make the movie palatable to a wider audience, serving as important ingredients in the plot. "What we're trying to do with this movie is, first of all, entertain audiences," Bruckheimer said. "That's the key. It's not a documentary; it's a movie. Hopefully you will be moved by it emotionally." Formula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali told reporters in Montreal that it requires "very F1 eyes" to think the movie glamorizes rule-breaking. "If you look to the audience that will watch the movie, this will be perceived as racing action, authentic fighting," he said. "And that's what will come out. I'm pretty sure of it." Still, there's plenty of realistic dialogue for avid F1 fans to feast on. On Hamilton's advice, Sky Sports commentators David Croft and Martin Brundle, the voices of F1 for British and American fans, are also the announcers in the movie. Croft told NBC News he and Brundle spent 19 hours filming their scenes. His favorite part? Working with Kosinski, Croft said, "a director I've held in such high regard for many years and who it was a real privilege to be working with to create what hopefully the audience will see as a truly authentic F1 movie." The script includes talk of oversteer and understeer, using "DRS" to go faster and sacrificing straight line speed for better cornering. Pitt's character casually drops a reference to "Eau Rouge," and there's a storyline involving the late Ayrton Senna from the 1990s — all of which Formula 1 experts will appreciate. "It's threading a needle," Kosinski said of appealing to both casual viewers and hard-core Formula 1 fans. Apple Senior Vice President Eddy Cue said that when the movie was screened in the United States, "very few people" said they had ever seen a Formula 1 race. "When we finish and we ask how many of you would like to go see a race now, literally every single hand goes up," he said. "And so we think there's a huge, huge opportunity to grow the sport all over the world with this movie. And I think it will do that." Hollywood is seeking to tap into that potential by aggressively promoting the movie all over TV and at F1 races. "We'll see how it grows the sport even more, but it was obviously interesting and nice to get a glimpse already or to see it," said Sauber driver Nico Hulkenberg, who joined F1 in 2010, long before the U.S. boom. "I think the public is going to like it. I think they've captured more angles of the industry, of what teams and drivers do — how much goes into it, especially preparation time and between races. Personally, I liked it. It was pretty cool." After years of stagnating with American audiences, F1 unlocked something special by personalizing the sport to reach new, casual fans. It found a way to transcend the technical side, using social media to make the human faces and drivers accessible to regular audiences. F1's commercial side and its teams became relentless content-creation factories seeking online engagement. That connection, elevated by Netflix's popular "Drive to Survive" series, attracted a newer, younger and more female audience. "It's one of the biggest movies we'll see in probably this decade," said Peter Crolla, a Haas F1 veteran who was recently hired to be team manager forthe new GM-backedCadillac F1 teamnext year. "They have put every ounce of energy they could have done into it. It's the level of detail they've gone to [in] the desire to make it as realistic and to integrate themselves into the sport as they have done. By the end of 2024 we didn't even feel there was an F1 movie being filmed. It was like it was literally an 11th team." Hamilton fondly recalled some of his conversations with Pitt as Pitt was training to drive a real race car for the movie, feeling the G-forces jolt through his body. "Through that process, it was amazing to speak to Brad and see his shock. He's kind of like, 'Jeez, what are our bodies going through?'" Hamilton said. "He'd text me after the test, like, 'My appreciation for what you drivers do is even higher than it already was.' So I hope that reflects in the driving."

Brad Pitt's new 'F1' movie brings immersive Formula 1 thrills to Hollywood

Brad Pitt's new 'F1' movie brings immersive Formula 1 thrills to Hollywood MONTREAL — When they began working together on the ne...

 

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