
♒ Aquarius Daily Horoscope for July 2, 2025
Aquarius, July 2 shows up like a lightning bolt in your mental sky. Expect flashes of genius, tech-fueled creativity, and the sudden urge to do something absolutely nobody saw coming. Your originality isn't just welcome today, it's needed. Lean into the unexpected. You're not here to repeat what's been done.
⚡ Energy Check: Electric, Rebellious & Laser-Focused
Your brain is basically Wi-Fi today: fast, unpredictable, and connecting dots no one else can see. Inspiration hits hard, and your ideas have the power to flip the script. Try not to water down your weird. It's your edge.
Aquarius Tip: Don't ignore that random urge, explore it. That's usually where the genius lives.
💼 Career & Money: Think Wild, Act Sharp
Innovation is the name of the game. Whether it's streamlining a system, pitching an unconventional idea, or solving a problem that's stumped the group, your unfiltered thinking is pure gold today. Just don't forget to explain it in Earth terms.
They might not get it yet but they will.
💖 Love & Friendship: Nerdy, Electric, and Totally Your Vibe
You're not here for clichés, you're here for soul-level weirdness. Single? A deep, unexpected convo could leave your heart buzzing. Coupled? Today is great for exploring shared dreams, even the wild ones (especially the wild ones).
Flirt cue: 'If we were a conspiracy theory, what would we be?'
🧘♀️ Mood & Vibe: Buzzing, Brilliant & Beautifully Nonlinear
You're a moodboard of contradictions today and it's kind of magical. Flow with it. One moment you're introverting with your favorite playlist, the next you're launching a group chat revolution. That's just how you roll.
Lucky Color: Neon Green
Lucky Numbers: 4 & 31
Cosmic Playlist Song: 'Electric Feel' – MGMT
Affirmation of the Day: 'I trust my wild mind, follow strange ideas, and create magic from the unexpected.'
💭 Aquarius Thought for July 2:
Being misunderstood is the tax you pay on brilliance.
Keep inventing.
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UAE Moments
an hour ago
- UAE Moments
Your Career Horoscope for July 3, 2025
Today brings a shift in energy across the board, stay alert, follow your instincts, and be ready to act on fresh insight or opportunities. Find daily astrological predictions for all sun signs for July 3. We recommend reading the horoscopes for your rising sign. Aries Career Horoscope When the Moon left your work sector yesterday, this will have left you with a lot more than you bargained for. As well as leaving you with a better read on work and job matters and more emotionally and intuitively engaged and aware, this first visit since Mars returned has been a chance to both tap into and unleash his warrior and competitive spirit. Once out of the box, there is no going back to settling for the status quo. Taurus Career Horoscope While having the Moon in your work sector, along with its friendly aspect to Pluto on the career front yesterday is helping to get your professional ducks in a row ahead of Venus' return to your income sector in two days, your sixth sense will be picking up on change in the air. There hasn't been any planetary activity on the job front so far this year, with the Moon's monthly visits key to staying on track. However, in the second half of the year, that is going to change. Gemini Career Horoscope The lead up to the Moon's return to your work sector tomorrow is an important point in any month for having your antennas up without overthinking things. As the Moon's last visit while Juno is in retrograde motion here and the only visit while the Sun and Jupiter are together in your income sector, there will be a lot of information and insight coming at you over the coming days, with the more space you can clear for it now the better. Click here to follow our WhatsApp channel for tarot readings, love, health, career, and Chinese horoscopes delivered to your phone daily! Cancer Career Horoscope As the Moon makes its monthly transit through your home and family sector it is running the gauntlet, as it one by one clashes with each of the five planets in your career sector. This is something that every four weeks is going to put your work/life balance to the test, but with all five slowing down ahead of retrograde turns, this is something the professional gods are already calling for. Leo Career Horoscope While the Moon formed a friendly aspect to both Venus and Uranus in your career sector before leaving your income sector yesterday and both are just days away from leaving, it is Venus is able to make the most use of this. This has left you with a sharp nose for money just as the planet of money is working to fuel your professional confidence, attract opportunities and steer things in a lucrative direction. Virgo Career Horoscope Two days before Venus is due to return to your career sector, where as the planet of money she will spend the rest of the month fuelling your professional confidence, attracting opportunities and steering things in a lucrative direction, the Moon is helping to give this the best possible start. While the Moon will leave your income sector before Venus returns, as well as leaving you with a sharp nose for money, its friendly aspect to Pluto is giving you an early read on work and job matters as well. Libra Career Horoscope It is not just the money gods that are calling for a wait and see approach ahead of the Moon's return to your income sector tomorrow, but the professional gods as well. As well as returning to sharpen your nose for money and act as a trigger, this first visit since Jupiter returned to your career sector and the only visit while the Sun is there, is going to bring things together from across the income, work and career fronts. Scorpio Career Horoscope By the time the Moon leaves a nostalgic and reflective part of your chart tomorrow, it will have clashed with all five planets in your work sector, something that every four weeks can put how well you know when to keep your work hat on and when to take it off to the test. However, with all five slowing ahead of retrograde turns, the first in just two days, this is something the professional gods are already calling for. Sagittarius Career Horoscope The Moon's departure from your career sector yesterday was always going to leave you with your professional instincts sharp while more emotionally and intuitively engaged and aware moving into Venus and Uranus' final days in your career sector. However, this first visit since Mars' return has both added to and unmasked his warrior and competitive spirit, which can't be put back in the box. Capricorn Career Horoscope With no planetary activity in your career sector, the Moon's monthly visits are more than just a chance to sharpen your professional instincts and become more emotionally and intuitively engaged and aware. This is a chance to check in with your professional compass to check that you are on the right track and if not, make any course corrections. With Venus and Uranus just days away from your work sector, the timing couldn't be better. Aquarius Career Horoscope The lead up to the Moon's return to your career sector tomorrow is an important point in any month for having your antennas up while taking a wait and see approach. While an ordinary monthly visit, as the last while the asteroid Juno, the queen of commitment is in retrograde motion here, the first since Jupiter returned to your work sector and the only visit while the Sun is here, is going to get you inside the inner workings of the changing landscape of this professional year. Pisces Career Horoscope Mercury has only been in your work sector for six days, but since returning he has made three major aspects, one for the first time in three decades and another for the first time ever, leaving you with a lot to unpack. Fortunately, instead of rushing through in 14 to 15 days like he normally would, this smart and practical planet is here for the next two months.


The National
an hour ago
- The National
‘Filming in Abu Dhabi was unbelievable': Brad Pitt says of shooting F1 blockbuster in UAE
There's one kind of victory that's always eluded Brad Pitt. And most people have likely never even noticed. Nearly 40 years into his career, the American actor and producer has left an indelible mark on both film and pop culture at large – with two Academy Awards to his name. But unlike his megastar peers, he's never made a true crowd-pleasing blockbuster. That is, until F1 The Movie. After earning $144 million globally in its opening weekend and boasting stellar reviews from critics and audiences alike, the film is poised to be one of the summer's biggest hits. For Pitt, that would mean he's finally vanquished his white whale. 'I had always wanted to make a populist film – something that just gets better every time you see it. Something that brings people together. And I still didn't understand that this could be that one,' Pitt tells The National. 'You've got to get chills at the end' 'The greatest pleasure – the thing that puts a smile on my face – is seeing families, from kids to grandparents, big groups of friends all going together and taking photos in front of the poster or the car. It's a rarity for film to reach that level of reaction, especially in this day and time. I think the value of entertainment can sometimes be greater than the piece itself. And I think that's happening here,' says Pitt. But to take a truly transcendent blockbuster – one that audiences will return to again and again – there's one moment that matters above all else. 'For these movies to work, you've got to get those chills at the end,' Pitt explains. 'And you don't know if you've got it until you put it all together. Then, you're sitting in the dark and it all comes down to – do the hairs start standing up on the back of your neck or not? And for us, we found that moment in Abu Dhabi.' The moment comes in the thrilling final sequence. Pitt plays Sonny Hayes, an ageing racing driver called back to the sport he once walked away from at the behest of his old teammate turned Formula One team owner, Ruben Cervantes (Javier Bardem). If Ruben's team can't win a race by the end of the season, he will lose everything. And, just as it has in real life, it all comes down to the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – the final race of the year. In many ways, F1 The Movie follows a standard underdog sports formula. But a good formula isn't enough to excite the masses. They have to see something they've never seen before. And for months in the planning stages, Pitt and director Joseph Kosinski were racking their brains trying to come up with what that could be – until their producing partner Lewis Hamilton, the co-record holder for most F1 driver's championships in history, unlocked it for them. 'That last lap came from a conversation from Lewis Hamilton early on, where he describes this sublime feeling he sometimes gets, this spiritual feeling,' says Pitt. 'And Joe developed a camera – this kind of floating camera on the front of the car. And it's an angle we haven't seen. He saves that one for the end to punctuate the spiritual feeling of it all.' 'Filming in Abu Dhabi was unbelievable' To pull it off, Pitt and company spent a total of 29 days shooting in the UAE capital, and even more in planning – both in the spring of 2024, and again for five weeks towards the end of the year, with key sequences filmed during the actual Grand Prix. 'It was unbelievable,' says Pitt. 'It was just unprecedented, the access that we were given, the kindness, the support. We couldn't have had a more celebratory end.' The actor points to the Abu Dhabi Film Commission as well as the Department of Culture and Tourism – 'I was really impressed with [DCT chairman] Mohamed Khalifa Al Mubarak' – as integral in making it happen. 'After nearly three years of filming off and on, the doors were open to us in Abu Dhabi. I can't say enough about everything that Abu Dhabi lends to this film. It really left an indelible mark on all of us. I haven't been able to thank them enough,' says Pitt. 'The Yas Marina Circuit became like our own backyard. We were so spoilt by that track – it's one of the favourite tracks of the season among the drivers for a reason. It's so photogenic. I'm sure it's by design that it's the last track on the circuit because the race starts in daylight, goes through dusk, and then ends at night. You see it in the film. It's an incredible summation – a highlight of where the film was going, too,' he continues. 'And it's the most fun track to drive. It's so fun, honestly. I miss it now. Shooting this specific track at night, with the cutting-edge design, all made it something absolutely sensational that we couldn't even have planned for.' While he wasn't filming, Pitt was particularly taken with the city itself, especially Louvre Abu Dhabi. 'There's a unique language happening there – it speaks to our collective unconscious. It speaks to all that brings us together,' says Pitt. 'I'm really impressed with the country in the sense of how thoughtful the design and growth have been – the thought that's been put into its development. It hasn't been rushed; it's a unique place on its own. As an outsider who has now spent a few months there, I look forward to getting back. And I can't wait to see the Frank Gehry-designed Guggenheim Museum Abu Dhabi when it's finished.' The project means so much to Pitt not only because it's the blockbuster he'd always been waiting for, but also because, in the years he spent making it, he wove so much of himself into it. 'You know, we are who we are. I don't take a lot of time to look back and analyse. But in trying to find this story with Joe and writer Ehren Kruger, studying the teams, the drivers and the principals – trying this on and that on – I think all our personalities got intertwined into it,' he says. Pitt 'would love to' do a sequel with Tom Cruise Variety reports that an F1 sequel is in the works, and Pitt confirms to The National that he's interested in returning – on one condition. 'I would want to drive again, selfishly speaking,' Pitt says, but because the film ends with his character out of Formula One, he's not sure how that would be possible. 'F1 is still the focus. It needs to be on Joshua Pierce – Damson Idris's character – and the rest of the team fighting for a championship. Where does Sonny fit in? I'm not sure. Sonny's probably out on the Bonneville Salt Flats, setting speed records or something like that. So I'm not sure beyond that, just yet. 'Right now, I'm just pleased as punch that something like this can bring people together. That's the power of this kind of cinema.' Pitt says he is also interested in his former collaborator Tom Cruise joining the project – perhaps even as a dual-sequel with Cruise's 1990 Tony Scott-directed racing film Days of Thunder. But he knows that, for Cruise to join, he would have to be driving too. It's a sticking point that stopped a previous project the two had tried to develop – Ford v Ferrari – from coming to fruition. Both Pitt and Cruise walked away from the film, which ended up starring Christian Bale as driver Ken Miles and Matt Damon as automotive designer Carroll Shelby in 2019. 'Tom and I, for a while there, were on Ford v Ferrari with Joe [to direct],' says Pitt. 'This was about 10 years before the guys who actually made it – and made it a great movie. 'What it came down to is that we both wanted to drive, and he wanted to play Shelby, and I wanted to play Ken Miles. And when Tom realised that Carroll Shelby would not be driving much in the movie, it didn't come through. 'So I'm not sure how that's going to work [in a potential F1 The Movie sequel], but we'll give it a go. I'd love to,' says Pitt. For now, Pitt isn't thinking too hard about the next race. First, he'll take a victory lap. 'We were all a bit white-knuckled to see if it was going to come through. We are delightfully surprised that everything that we had aimed for, and then some, came to fruition.'


The National
2 hours ago
- The National
After decades of acclaim, Brad Pitt finally has his blockbuster – and Abu Dhabi helped make it happen
There's one kind of victory that's always eluded Brad Pitt. And most people have likely never even noticed. Nearly 40 years into his career, the American actor and producer has left an indelible mark on both film and pop culture at large – with two Academy Awards to his name. But unlike his megastar peers, he's never made a true crowd-pleasing blockbuster. That is, until F1 The Movie. After earning $144 million globally in its opening weekend and boasting stellar reviews from critics and audiences alike, the film is poised to be one of the summer's biggest hits. For Pitt, that would mean he's finally vanquished his white whale. 'I had always wanted to make a populist film – something that just gets better every time you see it. Something that brings people together. And I still didn't understand that this could be that one,' Pitt tells The National. 'You've got to get chills at the end' 'The greatest pleasure – the thing that puts a smile on my face – is seeing families, from kids to grandparents, big groups of friends all going together and taking photos in front of the poster or the car. It's a rarity for film to reach that level of reaction, especially in this day and time. I think the value of entertainment can sometimes be greater than the piece itself. And I think that's happening here,' says Pitt. But to take a truly transcendent blockbuster – one that audiences will return to again and again – there's one moment that matters above all else. 'For these movies to work, you've got to get those chills at the end,' Pitt explains. 'And you don't know if you've got it until you put it all together. Then, you're sitting in the dark and it all comes down to – do the hairs start standing up on the back of your neck or not? And for us, we found that moment in Abu Dhabi.' The moment comes in the thrilling final sequence. Pitt plays Sonny Hayes, an ageing racing driver called back to the sport he once walked away from at the behest of his old teammate turned Formula One team owner, Ruben Cervantes (Javier Bardem). If Ruben's team can't win a race by the end of the season, he will lose everything. And, just as it has in real life, it all comes down to the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – the final race of the year. In many ways, F1 The Movie follows a standard underdog sports formula. But a good formula isn't enough to excite the masses. They have to see something they've never seen before. And for months in the planning stages, Pitt and director Joseph Kosinski were racking their brains trying to come up with what that could be – until their producing partner Lewis Hamilton, the co-record holder for most F1 driver's championships in history, unlocked it for them. 'That last lap came from a conversation from Lewis Hamilton early on, where he describes this sublime feeling he sometimes gets, this spiritual feeling,' says Pitt. 'And Joe developed a camera – this kind of floating camera on the front of the car. And it's an angle we haven't seen. He saves that one for the end to punctuate the spiritual feeling of it all.' 'Filming in Abu Dhabi was unbelievable' To pull it off, Pitt and company spent a total of 29 days shooting in the UAE capital, and even more in planning – both in the spring of 2024, and again for five weeks towards the end of the year, with key sequences filmed during the actual Grand Prix. 'It was unbelievable,' says Pitt. 'It was just unprecedented, the access that we were given, the kindness, the support. We couldn't have had a more celebratory end.' The actor points to the Abu Dhabi Film Commission as well as the Department of Culture and Tourism – 'I was really impressed with [DCT chairman] Mohamed Khalifa Al Mubarak' – as integral in making it happen. 'After nearly three years of filming off and on, the doors were open to us in Abu Dhabi. I can't say enough about everything that Abu Dhabi lends to this film. It really left an indelible mark on all of us. I haven't been able to thank them enough,' says Pitt. 'The Yas Marina Circuit became like our own backyard. We were so spoilt by that track – it's one of the favourite tracks of the season among the drivers for a reason. It's so photogenic. I'm sure it's by design that it's the last track on the circuit because the race starts in daylight, goes through dusk, and then ends at night. You see it in the film. It's an incredible summation – a highlight of where the film was going, too,' he continues. 'And it's the most fun track to drive. It's so fun, honestly. I miss it now. Shooting this specific track at night, with the cutting-edge design, all made it something absolutely sensational that we couldn't even have planned for.' While he wasn't filming, Pitt was particularly taken with the city itself, especially Louvre Abu Dhabi. 'There's a unique language happening there – it speaks to our collective unconscious. It speaks to all that brings us together,' says Pitt. 'I'm really impressed with the country in the sense of how thoughtful the design and growth have been – the thought that's been put into its development. It hasn't been rushed; it's a unique place on its own. As an outsider who has now spent a few months there, I look forward to getting back. And I can't wait to see the Frank Gehry-designed Guggenheim Museum Abu Dhabi when it's finished.' The project means so much to Pitt not only because it's the blockbuster he'd always been waiting for, but also because, in the years he spent making it, he wove so much of himself into it. 'You know, we are who we are. I don't take a lot of time to look back and analyse. But in trying to find this story with Joe and writer Ehren Kruger, studying the teams, the drivers and the principals – trying this on and that on – I think all our personalities got intertwined into it,' he says. Pitt 'would love to' do a sequel with Tom Cruise Variety reports that an F1 sequel is in the works, and Pitt confirms to The National that he's interested in returning – on one condition. 'I would want to drive again, selfishly speaking,' Pitt says, but because the film ends with his character out of Formula One, he's not sure how that would be possible. 'F1 is still the focus. It needs to be on Joshua Pierce – Damson Idris's character – and the rest of the team fighting for a championship. Where does Sonny fit in? I'm not sure. Sonny's probably out on the Bonneville Salt Flats, setting speed records or something like that. So I'm not sure beyond that, just yet. 'Right now, I'm just pleased as punch that something like this can bring people together. That's the power of this kind of cinema.' Pitt says he is also interested in his former collaborator Tom Cruise joining the project – perhaps even as a dual-sequel with Cruise's 1990 Tony Scott-directed racing film Days of Thunder. But he knows that, for Cruise to join, he would have to be driving too. It's a sticking point that stopped a previous project the two had tried to develop – Ford v Ferrari – from coming to fruition. Both Pitt and Cruise walked away from the film, which ended up starring Christian Bale as driver Ken Miles and Matt Damon as automotive designer Carroll Shelby in 2019. 'Tom and I, for a while there, were on Ford v Ferrari with Joe [to direct],' says Pitt. 'This was about 10 years before the guys who actually made it – and made it a great movie. 'What it came down to is that we both wanted to drive, and he wanted to play Shelby, and I wanted to play Ken Miles. And when Tom realised that Carroll Shelby would not be driving much in the movie, it didn't come through. 'So I'm not sure how that's going to work [in a potential F1 The Movie sequel], but we'll give it a go. I'd love to,' says Pitt. For now, Pitt isn't thinking too hard about the next race. First, he'll take a victory lap. 'We were all a bit white-knuckled to see if it was going to come through. We are delightfully surprised that everything that we had aimed for, and then some, came to fruition.'