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The story behind Carl Weathers' posthumous Super Bowl ad

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The story behind Carl Weathers' posthumous Super Bowl ad

Carl Weathers stands on the sidelines before a Las Vegas Raiders game against the Houston Texans at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas in October 2022. He made a posthumous cameo in a 2024 Super Bowl ad.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images


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Carl Weathers stands on the sidelines before a Las Vegas Raiders game against the Houston Texans at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas in October 2022. He made a posthumous cameo in a 2024 Super Bowl ad.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Carl Weathers appeared in a Super Bowl ad on Sunday night, a moving cameo for the linebacker-turned-actor who died earlier this month at age 76.

Weathers, who played several seasons with the Oakland Raiders in the 1970s before pursuing acting full-time. Over the course of his career he embodied such iconic characters as Apollo Creed in the first four “Rocky” movies, Derick “Chubbs” Peterson in “Happy Gilmore,” and himself in “Arrested Development.”

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More recently, Weathers had been working on a Super Bowl ad for the online gambling company FanDuel, according to a teaser it released in January.

The ad focuses on former NFL tight end Rob Gronkowski’s “kick of destiny,” which he attempted unsuccessfully last Super Bowl.

In the teaser, according to People, Gronkowski is preparing to attempt a field goal for the second year when Weathers shows up on a motorcycle to offer Rocky-style words of encouragement.

After Weathers’ Feb. 1 death, FanDuel, which sponsors the “kick of destiny,” said it was adjusting the commercial but would leave Weathers in it.

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“The family has been very supportive that they would still like to see Carl in the work,” Andrew Sneyd, FanDuel’s executive vice president of marketing, told Variety this week.

Gronkowski attempted the kick before Sunday’s game, but missed again. The final version of the FanDuel ad that aired during the game shows onlookers and celebrities, including Weathers, reacting with disappointment.

“You gave it your all, Gronk,” he says softly, watching on TV in a dimly lit room.

The ad ends with a shot of Gronkowski, mid-practice, turning around to look at Weathers, who is standing with his arms crossed, nodding approvingly. The words “Thank you, Carl,” and the years 1948-2024 appear underneath.

Sneyd said FanDuel had built two original versions of the ad, one to use if Gronkowski made the kick and another if he missed, and that the content “wouldn’t be appropriate for us to do any more” given Weathers’ passing. The company reworked it, with Weathers’ family’s approval.

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Sneyd said the team was “viewing edits through tears.”

“[Weathers was] a wonderful man and he genuinely is an inspiration and had such a positive outlook on the world,” he told the publication. “We want to make sure we try to meet this moment with the respect it deserves.”

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Kumail Nanjiani opens up on his regrets, critical failures and embracing fear : Wild Card with Rachel Martin

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Kumail Nanjiani opens up on his regrets, critical failures and embracing fear : Wild Card with Rachel Martin

A note from Wild Card host Rachel Martin: Here’s my theory about Kumail Nanjiani: He is not a person who is afraid of his feelings. I think he’s the opposite of that kind of person.

Kumail has made his emotional life part of his comedy – whether it’s his deep and abiding love for his wife (as told in the hit movie, “The Big Sick”), his obsession with his cat or the anxiety that grips him in the middle of the night – Kumail’s brand of comedy is often about how we feel our way through living.

His new standup special is on Hulu and it’s called “Night Thoughts.”

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Kylie Jenner Shows Off Figure in Backless Feather Dress

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Kylie Jenner Shows Off Figure in Backless Feather Dress

Kylie Jenner
Ultimate Showgirl with Backless, Curve Hugging Gown
… At Kylie Cosmetics Holiday Party!

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‘Harry Potter’ fans are flying to Broadway to see the original Draco Malfoy

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‘Harry Potter’ fans are flying to Broadway to see the original Draco Malfoy

Tom Felton, left, who played Harry Potter’s nemesis Draco Malfoy in eight films, is now playing him live on stage.

Matthew Murphy/Harry Potter and the Cursed Child


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Matthew Murphy/Harry Potter and the Cursed Child

Almost eight years after Harry Potter and the Cursed Child opened, it has become the highest grossing show on Broadway. Why? Tom Felton, who played Draco Malfoy, Harry Potter’s nemesis at Hogwarts in the eight films, is now playing him onstage.

After every performance, crowds gather at the stage door to get autographs, selfies or just a close-up glimpse of Felton.

Anna Chan flew to New York from San Francisco to see him in the show. “I grew up watching the movies and reading the books as a kid,” she said, “so just seeing him reprising his role as Draco Malfoy is really exciting and just heartwarming to see. It’s kinda like a full circle moment for him.”

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Felton feels the audience’s warmth. “I’m somewhat of a bookmark in their youth on the films,” he said. “To see them as excited as I am to be doing that again on the stage was… well, it’s overwhelming and it still is every night.”

Now 38, Felton spent much of his childhood, adolescence and young adulthood getting his hair bleached blond and sneering as the bully Draco Malfoy in the films. For 10 years, he worked with some of the finest actors of British stage and screen, including Dame Maggie Smith, Alan Rickman and Gary Oldman. Felton — and all the other young cast members — learned by example.

“You know, Alan Rickman making teas for the grips,” recalled Felton, “and Jason Isaacs telling anecdotes, Helena Bonham Carter sort of just being playful. I think that’s something that made the early Potter films very special — the adults around us did not take themselves too seriously. And so that allowed us to be playful.”

Tom Felton, right, with John Skelley as Harry Potter in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, now on Broadway.

Tom Felton, right, with John Skelley as Harry Potter in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, now on Broadway.

Matthew Murphy/Harry Potter and the Cursed Child


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Post-Potter, Felton has written a memoir and has appeared in films and on London’s West End. When he was given the opportunity to play an adult Draco Malfoy on Broadway for six months, he jumped.

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“I do understand the character somewhat,” he said, “although Draco now is a dad.” In the play, Harry Potter and Draco Malfoy’s sons become friends and get into a mess of trouble.

In the first act, he and the older Harry have a wizard’s duel and Felton said that, during rehearsal, he added a familiar line from the films that wasn’t in the script.

“When Harry and Draco first decide, ‘Come on, let’s have a scrap, let’s have a battle,’ I think it just came up voluntarily. I said, ‘Scared Potter?’ Felton recalled, laughing. “And then it was sort of looked over and then someone came back to me a few days later and said, ‘We’ve got it in, your line suggestion.’”

The audience gets to see Malfoy and Potter fly through the air and electrical arcs come out of their wands live onstage. “Every night you can hear or feel, rather, at least half the audience go back to their childhood or older memories,” Felton said. “The first time that they saw Draco and Harry duel. And because this one’s live and in front of your face, it’s just only more exciting, I think.”

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Felton said he’s proud to be part of the Harry Potter World, on film and on Broadway. He’ll be appearing in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child through May 10.

Jennifer Vanasco edited this story for broadcast and digital. Chloee Weiner mixed the audio.

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