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Rachael Leigh Cook's Super-Rare Outing With Her Two Kids Shows Which One Is Her Mini-Me

Rachael Leigh Cook's Super-Rare Outing With Her Two Kids Shows Which One Is Her Mini-Me

Yahoo27-07-2025
Rachael Leigh Cook's kids just made a super-rare appearance alongside her, and we can't get over how much they both look like their mama!
Earlier this week, Cook shared a series of photos of her and her kids at the Freakier Friday premiere. She shared the photos on Instagram with the caption reading, 'Any day I get to see @whatsupdanny is a good day, so I had the very best time at the #FreakierFriday Premiere! The kids and I are big fans of the original and naturally had measured expectations, but this iteration delivered and then some, @disney does it again. Go!! ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ '
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You can see a photo of them at the premiere below:
In the photos, we see Cook continuing the cottagecore vibes in a vibrant, floral orange gown from LEO LIN. But along with Cook, we see her two kids, Charlotte and Theodore, alongside her. Charlotte looks like a Barbiecore princess in a pale pink dress, and Theodore looks quite dapper in his dark suit!
Now, both of her kids look so much like her in these photos; and we seriously can't wait for more adventures from them!
For those who don't know, Cook and her ex-husband Daniel Gillies, with whom she was married from 2004 to 2021, share two children together: a daughter named Charlotte, born in Sept 2013, and a son named Theodore, born in April 2015.
In a previous interview with Entertainment Tonight, the Psych alum shared how co-parenting is going, and it's going a lot better than expected. 'I don't find that part any more difficult than when we were parenting-parenting,' she said. 'It's pretty cool to be able to divide responsibilities [50/50]. I kinda recommend it.'Best of SheKnows
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Disney earnings are coming Wednesday. Here's what top analysts expect
Disney earnings are coming Wednesday. Here's what top analysts expect

CNBC

time2 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Disney earnings are coming Wednesday. Here's what top analysts expect

Walt Disney is on the docket to release fiscal third-quarter results before the stock market's opening bell Wednesday, and most analysts expect the entertainment giant to once again beat Street expectations. An LSEG survey shows analysts, on average, estimate that Disney will earn $1.47 per share on $23.73 billion in revenue. Those results would correspond to earnings growth of 1.5% year over year, as well as a 2.5% rise in revenue when compared to the year-earlier period. The low-single-digit growth comes after Disney's fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue beat analyst expectations, boosted by better-than-anticipated subscriber growth for the Disney+ streaming platform. In the March quarter, Disney saw revenue growth in all three of its business segments — entertainment, sports and experiences — and selectively raised some of its fiscal 2025 guidance. Since the start of 2025, shares of Disney have gained almost 7%, trailing the S & P 500 by a hair. DIS YTD mountain DIS YTD chart Heading into June quarter earnings, most of Wall Street is bullish on Disney, with some analysts pointing to potential catalysts in Disney's parks and experiences segment. LSEG data shows that 28 analysts covering the stock rate it a strong buy or buy, while five give it a hold and one rates it underperform. Here's what analysts at some of Wall Street's biggest banks are saying before Disney's latest earnings report. UBS: Buy rating, $138 price target UBS recently raised its price target to $138 from $120, implying upside of nearly 16% from Disney's Monday close. "We expect F3Q results to highlight resilient demand at the Parks and similar improvement in [direct-to-consumer] profitability, supporting a continuation of double digit earnings growth. We're looking for revenues of $23.3B and segment [operating income] of $4.75B, up 1 and 12% y/y. We expect Disney to generate EPS of $1.59 in F3Q (+13% y/y) and $5.89 for the year, or 17% growth vs. guidance/Street at 16%. We remain constructive on the outlook for F26 given underlying trends at the parks, new cruise capacity, strong content pipeline and inflecting margins in DTC with upside from full control of Hulu." JPMorgan: Overweight, $138 JPMorgan recently increased its price forecast to $138 per share from $130. "We're updating Disney estimates ahead of F3Q earnings. For the quarter, we raise our segment operating income 1% to $4.56b on the shift of some Linear Networks expenses in F4Q; for the year, our [segment operating income] reduces marginally to $17.8b (+14%) on lower [content sales and licensing] contribution. Our EPS is now $1.46 for F3Q and $5.80 for F25 … From a financial perspective, we're comfortable with our F25 EPS at $0.05 above guidance, and see room for a modest increase to the outlook driven by multiple segments." Wolfe Research: Outperform, $139 The firm's price target, recently raised from $120, is roughly 16% above Disney's current price. "We raise revenue to $23.6B (prev. $23.3B) reflecting less bad advertising declines at linear networks, which we previously modeled to bake in a macro-slowdown, along with better results at Content/Licensing primarily driven by Lilo and Stitch. We keep Experiences revenue of $8.9B unchanged reflecting intra-quarter management commentary that trends at the parks remain positive … We model $1.52 of EPS (prev. $1.50) on better operating results." Morgan Stanley: Overweight, $140 Analyst Bejamin Swinburne's new price target of $140 , raised from $120, implies upside of 17% ahead. "If the macro backdrop remains healthy, we see Disney generating healthy double digit adj. EPS growth in the years ahead. Thanks to growth in its Experiences and Streaming businesses, it is poised to have rebuilt its pre-pandemic earnings base and hit new heights by FY27." Citigroup: Buy, $140 The bank raised its target price to $140 per share from $125 in early July. "Consensus estimates call for fiscal 3Q25 segment operating income of $4.55 billion, EPS of $1.48, and 1.4 million Disney+ net additions. We expect Disney to report EBIT relatively in-line with the Street, EPS modestly below consensus, and Disney+ subs slightly ahead of consensus … We expect management to reiterate components [in] its FY 2025 outlook." Bank of America: Buy, $140 "Exiting last quarter, DIS raised FY25 EPS guidance to $5.75 following a strong earnings beat. We believe this increased guidance is highly achievable as DIS was reporting earnings around the peak of uncertainty related to tariffs which limited visibility. Moreover, while DTC is expected to be an investment year, we believe there will be some discretion around the magnitude of spend, and momentum thus far in the parks (a key concern heading into the year) should be positive for underlying fundamentals." Rosenblatt: Buy, $140 "At Disney, core parks are benefiting from launches of new cruise ships, and should also benefit from the pending launch of the new fulsome-priced ESPN streaming service, helping support a historically premium valuation relative to growth … Overall, we have confidence that Disney can fare somewhat better than its guide for 16% Y/Y growth in adj. EPS to $5.75 (we model $5.93) in F2025. Our $1.63 estimate for F3Q25 is 12% above consensus." MoffettNathanson: Buy, $140 "We are increasing our F3Q 2025 forecasts driven by higher Entertainment revenue (+1%) and EBIT (+9%) estimates, primarily to reflect the stronger-than-anticipated box office performance of Lilo & Stitch plus continued improving DTC profitability … Relative to consensus, we remain slightly behind on our FY 2025 revenue forecast but ahead on EBIT as we believe Disney will exhibit stronger expense control. For FY 2026, however, we are -2% below consensus on revenue and -1% below on EBIT, culminating in a -3% EPS lower forecast. We continue to take a more conservative approach to the impact Epic Universe could pose for FY 2026 (vs. FY 2025) for Walt Disney World, as well as attempting to factor in the macro uncertainty from higher tariffs." Jefferies: Buy, $144 In June, Jefferies analyst Ed Alter upgraded shares of Disney to buy from hold and raised his price target to $144 per share from $100, implying nearly 21% upside from Monday's close. "We upgrade DIS to Buy for 4 primary reasons: 1) Now see limited risk of a 2H25 Parks slowdown from Epic Universe/Macro. 2) More positive on FY26 Cruise upside, JEFe $1B+ rev uplift. 3) Continued DTC margin expansion (0% FY24 to 13%+ by FY28E). 4) View next 6 months content & sports slate favorably, including ESPN DTC launch, Zootopia 2 and Avatar 3. DIS has failed to grow Op. Inc FY16-FY24, but we believe this dynamic is set to change."

‘Glitz, Glam, and a Damn Good Time' Review: A Wealth of Amusement
‘Glitz, Glam, and a Damn Good Time' Review: A Wealth of Amusement

Wall Street Journal

time2 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

‘Glitz, Glam, and a Damn Good Time' Review: A Wealth of Amusement

America's Gilded Age was a period characterized by massive income inequality between a superwealthy plutocracy (think Astors, Morgans and Vanderbilts) and an increasingly restive workforce. There are obvious parallels to today, including the propensity of the superrich to throw epic parties breathlessly reported in the media. In 'Glitz, Glam, and a Damn Good Time,' however, Jennifer Wright argues that those late-19th-century parties were about more than conspicuous consumption. They allowed a smart, glamorous extrovert to shed some of the stuffy constraints of her era, acquire a social power that would increase her family's prosperity and be a model for others. Marion Graves Anthon, or Mamie, as she was known, was a barely literate and rather plain young woman whose family had fallen on hard times. Her only assets were her natural wit and aplomb, but in a twist worthy of Edith Wharton, these were enough for her to snare a suitor who, according to his own family history, had been born 'with a silver spoon in his mouth big enough to be called a soup ladle.' As a young man, Stuyvesant Fish had rejected his patrician father's choice of law as a suitable career and went to work for the Illinois Central Railroad. Mamie enraptured this rather dull, Columbia-educated man, and in 1876 they married. They were a devoted couple. 'He thought she was a hoot,' Ms. Wright tells us, 'and she loved that he was a constantly amused audience for her jokes and adventures.' The Fish fortune multiplied. But while 'Stuyvesant seemed to sense that railroads were going to be huge,' Ms. Wright suggests that 'Mamie seemed to understand that extroverted, exciting women who loved the spotlight were the future.'

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