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15 great films and TV shows that feature Pride celebrations

15 great films and TV shows that feature Pride celebrations

Yahoo19 hours ago

Netflix; Universal Pictures; FX Networks
(L-R) Sense8; Bros; What We Do in the Shadows
It's time to celebrate Pride once more!
This summer, millions of people around the world celebrate Pride with picnics, concerts, festivals, parades, and protests. Others will celebrate privately, or with friends and family. Some have been celebrating for decades, while others are going to their first Pride this year.
It's an essential time of year, especially when it seems like there's more attacks on the queer community than ever before.
If you're looking for depictions of Pride events in film and television, we've got the perfect list for you!
Scroll through to check out 15 TV shows and movies that celebrate LGBTQ+ Pride.
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- YouTube
Of course, a movie named Pride features Pride celebrations! This 2014 film is based on the true story of a group of lesbian and gay activists who raised money to support miners striking in Wales in the 1980s. The film features the 1985 Pride Parade, where hundreds of miners join the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners as they march.
Read our . Watch it on .
We are all worth fighting for. Sense8 Season 2 is now streaming on Netflix. Watch Sense8 on Netflix: ...
- YouTube
The Wachowski's science fiction series Sense8 centers a group of eight strangers who develop a psychic connection. This early-days Netflix show features a large queer cast and had a few scenes featuring Pride celebrations. In the series pilot, lesbian couple Nomi and Amanita celebrate Pride at a park. In season 2, episode 6, Lito, a closeted actor, comes out publicly during São Paulo Pride.
Streaming on .
www.youtube.com
- YouTube
The series finale of the delightful animated kids' show Danger & Eggs — from creators Shadi Petosky and Mike Owens — was titled "Chosen Family" and featured the main characters going to a Pride festival. Moreover, a trans girl (voiced by Jazz Jennings) performs a song about her first day at school as the real her.
Streaming on .
In an effort to win more votes in Sean's campaign for comptroller, he and Charmaine recruit the vampires to help with their pride ...
- YouTube
Season 5, episode 3 of What We Do in the Shadows — a vampire mockumentary from FX — is titled "Pride Parade" and features the vampires' neighbor Sean organizing a parade in their Staten Island neighborhood after he announces he's running for comptroller. This culminates with the characters singing "It's Raining Men," as a naked Nandor falls from the sky after attempting to fly to outer space.
Streaming on .
It's the Blue's Clue's And You Pride Parade and we need you to sing-along as the 'Families Go Marching' proudly! Subscribe to ...
- YouTube
This special Pride Parade sing-along from Blue's Clues features an animated version of Nina West singing "Families Go Marching" as a parade full of cartoon animals with their queer families walks past.
Stream Noah's Arc: The Movie on June 20 on the Paramount+ with SHOWTIME plan. The stars have aligned. Paramount+ is the ...
- YouTube
The groundbreaking Noah's Arc series about Black gay men living in Los Angeles had a series finale in which the main characters celebrated Black Gay Pride on July 4th.
Streaming on .
Promo for the first episodes of Season 2 of South of Nowhere. all clips belong to the-n and Tom Lynch Co.
- YouTube
South of Nowhere is a teen drama series about a family that moves from Ohio to Los Angeles. In the eighth episode of season 3, Spencer, the family's youngest daughter, wants to go to Pride with her mom, but she is unavailable. When Spencer's bisexual friend Ashley stops by, she convinces Paula to go to Pride.
Streaming on .
www.youtube.com
- YouTube
The American version of Russell T Davies' Queer as Folk follows a group of gay and lesbian friends living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In the second season, the group celebrates Gay Pride.
Streaming on .
La introduccion de la serie de The L Word en su sexta temporada.... Final Sesion.
- YouTube
Seeing as The L Word is all about a group of queer women, it makes sense that they'd go to Pride. In season 2, episode 11, "Loud & Proud," the women attend WeHo Pride and celebrate.
Streaming on .
BPM compellingly combines elegy, tragedy, urgency and a defiant euphoria… It is full of cinematic life" - The Guradian.
- YouTube
This French drama is set in the early 1990s and follows the members of ACT-UP Paris as they figure out how to best advocate for people living with HIV/AIDS. It features the group debating how to best celebrate Pride, with some people wanting to maintain a positive outlook. In contrast, others want to focus on the somber atmosphere created by the epidemic.
Read our . Streaming on .
Jane (Ellen Muth) is a seemingly typical 15-year-old high school student; she's popular at school, does well in her classes, and ...
- YouTube
This Lifetime original movie from 2000 stars Stockard Channing as Janice, the mother of a teen girl named Jane (Ellen Muth). When Jane comes out on The Truth About Jane, Janice struggles to accept her daughter, but eventually, she begins attending PFLAG meetings. The two also go to a Pride parade together.
Streaming on .
From writer Tracy Oliver (Girls Trip), Harlem is a new comedy following a group of stylish and ambitious best girlfriends in Harlem ...
- YouTube
Season 2, episode 5 of Harlem sees the newly out Quinn going to her first-ever Pride festival.
Streaming on .
www.ultimatehalleberry.com.
- YouTube
This Lena Waithe-produced BET series served as a sequel to the 1992 film of the same name. In the season 1 episode titled "Family," the crew goes to Atlanta's Black Pride festival.
Streaming on .
Milk (2008) - Gay Pride Rally Speech Clip Harvey Milk (Sean Penn) gives a speech at the Gay Pride Rally in San Francisco and ...
- YouTube
Milk, a biopic about gay politician Harvey Milk (played by Sean Penn) gives a speech at San Francisco's Gay Freedom Day, where he delivers his famous "My name is Harvey Milk, and I'm here to recruit you" speech.
Streaming on .
Here's the NEW TRAILER for #BrosMovie! Trust me, it looks way BIGGER in theaters. See you September 30. --- Bros In ...
- YouTube
In Billy Eichner's gay romantic comedy Bros, Bobby (Eichner) needs to go to Provincetown to meet with a potential investor for his museum, and takes his boyfriend Aaron (Luke Macfarlane) with him. The visit takes place during Pride Weekend, and the two get to explore the town when it's at its most gay.
Streaming on .

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US Open '25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major
US Open '25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major

San Francisco Chronicle​

time36 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

US Open '25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major

It only feels right that the reigning titleholder at the golf championship that, at least in theory, anyone can win is the player who leans into the role of the sport's most relatable everyman, Bryson DeChambeau. And it only feels right that at the U.S. Open — a tournament built to humble and punish the best in the game as much as celebrate them — DeChambeau earned his title by hitting a shot that virtually no man can hit. A plaque now sits outside the bunker on the 18th hole at Pinehurst No. 2, enshrining the spot where DeChambeau placed his name in the history books with what he called 'the shot of my life' — a 55-yard blast from the sand to 4 feet with the trophy hanging in the balance on Sunday at last year's Open. Defense of the title begins Thursday at Oakmont, getting ready to host its record 10th U.S. Open and a course with a longtime reputation for being as difficult as they come. All of which seems to suit the 31-year-old pro golfer/social media star just fine. His first U.S. Open title came in 2020 at Winged Foot, the course best known for producing the 1974 'Massacre at Winged Foot' along with Phil Mickelson's meltdown in the trees and trash cans more than 30 years later. Then, last year, that bunker at Pinehurst. What would golf's everyman say to his millions of YouTube followers who someday might encounter their own version of the 50-yard bunker shot, widely recognized as one of the most difficult in the game, even under normal circumstances? 'The best piece of advice I give them is, just practice in weird, unique situations for maybe an hour a week, 20 minutes, whatever,' DeChambeau said. 'But try to be different and don't just hit the same stock shot every time.' A history-making shot in a tournament that does not produce them All the major championships have their own personalities. The Masters produces roars through the pines during back-nine charges on Sunday. The British Open is a brittle links-style test where players have to think differently about getting from Point A to Point B. America's golf championship has a reputation for forcing the best players to suffer like the rest of us. As a result, the list of 'greatest shots of all time' at the U.S. Open is a short one: — Ben Hogan's 1-iron on the 72nd hole that helped force a playoff at Merion in 1950. — Arnold Palmer's lash with driver to the first green at Cherry Hills in 1960. — Jack Nicklaus' 1-iron that hit the flagstick on No. 17 at Pebble Beach in 1972. — Tom Watson's chip from the rough on the same hole 10 years later to beat Nicklaus. — Tiger Woods' 12-foot putt at Torrey Pines in 2008 to force a playoff he eventually won over Rocco Mediate. And now, there is DeChambeau's bunker shot. 'When he took this big swing, the amount of confidence that you have to have to hit it that close to the golf ball and not accidentally catch too much ball and send it on top of the clubhouse, it's a very fine line," said NBC golf analyst Smylie Kaufman, whose biggest brush with pressure came when he played in the final group Sunday at the 2016 Masters. 'They work every single day, every week at these facets of the game in hopes they will have an opportunity to try it,' said Notah Begay, also of NBC. 'I think one of the most overlooked things about professional golf is all the calculation that happens on the fly in evaluating certain shots, which way the grass is lying, where the ball's going to land, and on top of all the normal things.' A tournament for everyone could come down to Bryson, Rory, Scottie Maybe the biggest irony is what the U.S. Open officially sells itself as, versus what always ends up happening. More than 10,000 players signed up to qualify for the U.S. Open which is, officially, open to any professional, or amateur with a handicap of 0.4 or lower. There will be good stories to tell among those who went through qualifying to make the 156-man field: a 17-year-old high schooler from Georgia, a dentist in Indiana who used to caddie at Oakmont. The cold facts: The last man to run the gauntlet of local and sectional qualifying to win the title was Orville Moody in 1969. (Lucas Glover went through sectional qualifying only when he won in 2009.) By the time the sun starts going down on Sunday, the tournament almost certainly will come down to a handful of players who virtually all golf fans have heard of. Though Scottie Scheffler is playing the best right now and Rory McIlroy recently won the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam, it's plausible to think that DeChambeau captures the attention of more of those fans than anyone. He recently surpassed 2 million subscribers on his YouTube channel. He is making golf feel like everyman's sport, posting videos in which he makes a hole-in-one with a wedge shot over his house, plays with off-the-rack clubs to see how they stack up and tries to beat a scratch golfer while playing left-handed. All of it sounds nutty, but it all goes back to that piece of advice he offered when asked how to replicate the improbable under impossible circumstances — i.e., a 50-yard bunker shot with the U.S. Open on the line. 'Once you get a stock shot down and you're comfortable with it, go have some fun,' DeChambeau said. 'Do a chipping contest with your amateur friends and throw it in the bunker from 50 yards, or throw it in a bush and see if you can get out. Stuff to that extent has suited my game very well.'

The 10 Best New Movies On Netflix In June 2025
The 10 Best New Movies On Netflix In June 2025

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

The 10 Best New Movies On Netflix In June 2025

Georgina Campbell stars in the 2022 horror film 'Barbarian.' I had a strange reaction as I sifted through Netflix's movie lineup for June. Because while there aren't many 'big' blockbuster movies I expect to dominate the cultural conversation in the coming months, there are quite a few films that piqued my interest more than usual. Several great selections are part of the mix, including a brand new melodramatic picture from one of Hollywood's most prolific auteurs, an animated biopic that's unlike anything you've ever seen before, and a new-ish horror film that took the genre world by storm a few years ago but is still waiting to entice a broader audience. Yes, rock legend documentaries, gritty and goofy B-pictures and unfairly maligned high-concept comedies are on the menu this month for Netflix subscribers—guys, this is a good month. So where do you start with such a glorious mess of options? I've got ten recommendations to kickstart your Netflix watchlist for June. Below, I will list all ten movies, along with plot descriptions, trailers, release dates and reasons why you should watch them. Then at the bottom of the article, I've got a full list of every single movie that will be dropping on Netflix in the month of June. Hopefully you can find you next movie night movie in this bunch. Hsppy watching! Tyler Perry, who's in the middle of a multi-year deal with Netflix that recently gave us movies like A Jazzman's Blues, Mea Culpa and (most recently) The Six Triple Eight, has been on quite a tear as of late, writing and directing several movies and TV series per year. And he's not slowing down in 2025, with the mystery-thriller Duplicity releasing on Amazon Prime earlier this year and Madea's Destination Wedding due on Netflix in July. And just yesterday, the heavy drama Straw starring Taraji P. Henson dropped as well. Henson stars as Janiyah, a single mother who is trying everything imaginable to care for her sick daughter, despite life throwing every possible obstacle in her way. When a desperate visit to the bank turns into an unintentional hostage situation, the day spirals out of control, drawing attention from police, media and a community that never seemed to notice her until this very unfortunate moment. Expect, per usual, a powerhouse performance from the ever-dedicated Henson. Straw will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 6, 2025. Given the home invasion genre's success over the years, it seemed inevitable that Airbnb horror stories would leak their way into movies. And that was certainly the case with Barbarian, a film directed by Zach Cregger that reinvents itself at every turn and constantly keeps you guessing. Our main character Tess (Georgina Campbell) starts out in a situation immediately coded with danger: she arrives at a rental house late at night, only to find it's already occupied by a stranger named Keith (Bill Skarsgård). From there…well, it's best not to spoil anything. But just know that they're not alone in, or around, or underneath that house—look, it's safe to say you won't expect what's coming next. Just know the film is split into three distinct movements, each shifting in tone and perspective, yet all rooted in the same thematic core: the unchecked violence of patriarchy, and the quiet ways women have been conditioned to endure and survive it. Barbarian will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 1, 2025. High-concept comedy is all the rage these days, but one fantastically funny movie that's managed to slip under everybody's radar (plus the film was torn to shreds by critics) has been Get Hard—a truly hilarious play on racial and class stereotypes that uses its absurd premise to create a string of escalating situations that constantly push the fine line between harsh reality and exaggeration. Directed by Etan Cohen, this buddy comedy is built around a fish-out-of-water premise: a wealthy, sheltered hedge fund manager named James (Will Ferrell) is sentenced to prison and hires a working-class car washer, Darnell (Kevin Hart), to prepare him for incarceration—despite Darnell having never actually been to prison. The commentary is biting, for sure, but at the end of the day you come and stay for the real foundation of the film: the chemistry between Ferrell and Hart, who operate on two entirely comedic poles yet never miss a beat with one another. Get Hard will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 9, 2025. Ever since the box-office-busting release of The Lego Movie, the Lego brand has been prolific with follow-ups, from The Lego Batman Movie to The Lego Ninjago Movie. But the company took its biggest creative risk yet with Piece by Piece, a biopic of music superstar Pharrell Williams' life that, surprisingly, didn't get much love at the box office. But critics did love this unique bend on the biopic formula (the movie currently owns an 83% rating on Rotten Tomatoes), so it is probably worth your while. This unconventional 'documentary' directed by Morgan Neville reimagines Pharrell's rise from a musically curious kid in Virginia Beach to a multi-hyphenate powerhouse as a colorful, blocky adventure. You can look forward to (voiced) appearances from the likes of Kendrick Lamar, Gwen Stefani, Timbaland, Missy Elliot, Snoop Dogg, Jay-Z, Justin Timberlake—and more, if you can believe it. Piece by Piece will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 7, 2025. I was absolutely ecstatic about the announcement of a third Now You See Me movie—especially because this time Lionsgate fixed the second movie's fatal error and finally went with the title Now You See Me: Now You Don't. While I thought the second film of the trilogy, Now You See Me 2 (which is also available on Netflix, by the way), was fine, I'm hoping the third movie can live up to the original—a rather campy, tongue-in-cheek film that has fantastic fun with the heist movie formula. This modern day Robin Hood story directed by Louis Letterier centers on four magicians—J. Daniel Atlas (Jesse Eisenberg), Merritt McKinney (Woody Harrelson), Henley Reeves (Isla Fisher) and Jack Wilder (Dave Franco)—who perform a series of public illusions that rob the rich and redistribute the wealth. Leterrier is the true star here, as his direction is sleek and showy, full of whip-pans, swirling steadicam shots and glowing stage lights that constantly make you feel like you're on the inside of the giant con. Now You See Me will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 1, 2025. There are lots of great auteurs working in the horror genre today, but none of them have gotten off to a stellar start on the level of Jordan Peele, who premiered with Get Out in 2017 and dropped his third film Nope in 2022. And pocketed between those two high-concept horror takes was the film many believe to be his best: Us. This genre-bending, sci-fi-horror, doppelgänger-filled extravaganza follows a family—Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyong'o), her husband Gabe (Winston Duke) and their two children, Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph) and Jason (Evan Alex)—that gets caught up in a living nightmare: after arriving at their beach house in Santa Cruz, intruders soon break in—and are revealed to be the family's exact doubles. At that point, every waking moment becomes a battle for survival. These doppelgängers are known as "The Tethered,' and, as part of Peele's ever-present social commentary on race relations in America, represent those who have been ignored, repressed or discarded by society, and their uprising in the Wilsons' known universe becomes a twisted reclamation of agency. Us will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 1, 2025. Even though she's made enormously popular movies like It's Complicated, The Holiday and The Parent Trap, it still feels like Nancy Meyers has never gotten the respect she deserves. For she doesn't just direct box-office-busting romances, but tender, life-affirming tales about the human condition that are decorated with painterly compositions—carefully curated sets that make you feel part of the experience; soft and natural lighting that creates a warm glow; and restrained, sophisticated color palettes that often pop with color. And, as of this moment, the final feature film she's written and directed is just as wonderful as anything else she's released: The Intern. The film follows Ben Whittaker (Robert De Niro), a 70-year-old widower who becomes a senior intern at an online fashion startup run by Jules Ostin (Anne Hathaway), a driven and overworked CEO. Meyers uses Ben as a symbol of quiet competence and grace in a world Jules occupies, which is often overwhelmed by noise and speed. Ultimately, Meyers uses Jules to show that sharp determination in a capitalistic world doesn't shield us from existential turmoil, and at some point we must all confront the emptiness. The Intern will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 22, 2025. I've said it before and I'll say it again: long live the B-movie. Ever since I was introduced to Plan 9 from Outer Space in my film class back in college, I've been obsessed with this strange pocket of cinema infused with such spirited innovation and raw energy that compensates for its clear limitations. B-movies, with their unfiltered creativity and charming imperfections, operate with fewer rules and fewer eyes watching, allowing them to take bold risks and embrace genre conventions without apology—exactly the way I like it. And Plane is a perfect example of how modern films continue that tradition. Directed by Jean-François Richet, the story follows a commercial pilot named Brodie Torrance (Gerard Butler) who must land a storm-damaged passenger plane in hostile territory, only to then lead a rescue mission when his passengers are taken hostage by violent separatists. Butler, as you could probably guess, plays Brodie as an everyman with grit—not invincible or cocky, but calm, resourceful and heroic in an almost superhuman way. Plane will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 12, 2025. I have a strange history with Led Zeppelin. I grew up hating classic rock because my dad would constantly blast it in the family car, and Led Zeppelin was by far his favorite group—naturally, I rebelled, refusing to ever listen to them. Years later, however, they've become an important band in my life, and their music speaks to me in a different way. And their formation story is certainly worthy of a documentary, meaning I will definitely be tuning into Becoming Led Zeppelin. Directed by Bernard MacMahon (who gave us the musical documentary American Epic), this two-hour film offers a detailed portrait of the iconic British rock band, charting their rise from post-war childhoods and early days in the 1960s music scene to their explosive success in 1969. It combines never-before-seen concert footage with personal archives, archival interviews with the late John Bonham and narration from surviving band members Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones. Yeah, I'll tune in to hear from those guys. Becoming Led Zeppelin will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 7, 2025. When I saw Netflix was going to host a collection of Alfred Hitchcock films—a lineup that includes some of my favorite movies ever, like The Birds, Vertigo and Rear Window—I got super excited. Mostly because one of those movies, Frenzy, is such a subversive pick; a complete departure for Hitchcock, a director who had always subdued his sick and twisted characters for the sake of the average moviegoer, but finally decided to indulge the hideous tendencies of the wicked with the goriest, most twisted picture of his entire filmography. The story centers on Richard Blaney (Jon Finch), a down-on-his-luck former RAF officer wrongly accused of being the 'Necktie Murderer,' a serial killer targeting women in London. Where earlier Hitchcock films imply violence merely through suggestion, here he confronts it directly, lingering on the brutality in an effort to make you as uncomfortable as possible—but in the wonderfully provocative ways movies are capable of achieving. If you've got a strong stomach and don't mind dry British humor, this penultimate film from Hitchcock is a great watch. Frenzy will be available to stream on Netflix starting June 1, 2025.

US Open ‘25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major
US Open ‘25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

US Open ‘25: DeChambeau's sand save an all-time memory at golf's most punishing major

It only feels right that the reigning titleholder at the golf championship that, at least in theory, anyone can win is the player who leans into the role of the sport's most relatable everyman, Bryson DeChambeau. And it only feels right that at the U.S. Open — a tournament built to humble and punish the best in the game as much as celebrate them — DeChambeau earned his title by hitting a shot that virtually no man can hit. A plaque now sits outside the bunker on the 18th hole at Pinehurst No. 2, enshrining the spot where DeChambeau placed his name in the history books with what he called 'the shot of my life' — a 55-yard blast from the sand to 4 feet with the trophy hanging in the balance on Sunday at last year's Open. Defense of the title begins Thursday at Oakmont, getting ready to host its record 10th U.S. Open and a course with a longtime reputation for being as difficult as they come. All of which seems to suit the 31-year-old pro golfer/social media star just fine. His first U.S. Open title came in 2020 at Winged Foot, the course best known for producing the 1974 'Massacre at Winged Foot' along with Phil Mickelson's meltdown in the trees and trash cans more than 30 years later. Then, last year, that bunker at Pinehurst. What would golf's everyman say to his millions of YouTube followers who someday might encounter their own version of the 50-yard bunker shot, widely recognized as one of the most difficult in the game, even under normal circumstances? 'The best piece of advice I give them is, just practice in weird, unique situations for maybe an hour a week, 20 minutes, whatever,' DeChambeau said. 'But try to be different and don't just hit the same stock shot every time.' A history-making shot in a tournament that does not produce them All the major championships have their own personalities. The Masters produces roars through the pines during back-nine charges on Sunday. The British Open is a brittle links-style test where players have to think differently about getting from Point A to Point B. America's golf championship has a reputation for forcing the best players to suffer like the rest of us. As a result, the list of 'greatest shots of all time' at the U.S. Open is a short one: — Ben Hogan's 1-iron on the 72nd hole that helped force a playoff at Merion in 1950. — Arnold Palmer's lash with driver to the first green at Cherry Hills in 1960. — Jack Nicklaus' 1-iron that hit the flagstick on No. 17 at Pebble Beach in 1972. — Tom Watson's chip from the rough on the same hole 10 years later to beat Nicklaus. — Tiger Woods' 12-foot putt at Torrey Pines in 2008 to force a playoff he eventually won over Rocco Mediate. And now, there is DeChambeau's bunker shot. 'When he took this big swing, the amount of confidence that you have to have to hit it that close to the golf ball and not accidentally catch too much ball and send it on top of the clubhouse, it's a very fine line,' said NBC golf analyst Smylie Kaufman, whose biggest brush with pressure came when he played in the final group Sunday at the 2016 Masters. 'They work every single day, every week at these facets of the game in hopes they will have an opportunity to try it,' said Notah Begay, also of NBC. 'I think one of the most overlooked things about professional golf is all the calculation that happens on the fly in evaluating certain shots, which way the grass is lying, where the ball's going to land, and on top of all the normal things.' A tournament for everyone could come down to Bryson, Rory, Scottie Maybe the biggest irony is what the U.S. Open officially sells itself as, versus what always ends up happening. More than 10,000 players signed up to qualify for the U.S. Open which is, officially, open to any professional, or amateur with a handicap of 0.4 or lower. There will be good stories to tell among those who went through qualifying to make the 156-man field : a 17-year-old high schooler from Georgia, a dentist in Indiana who used to caddie at Oakmont. The cold facts: The last man to run the gauntlet of local and sectional qualifying to win the title was Orville Moody in 1969. (Lucas Glover went through sectional qualifying only when he won in 2009.) By the time the sun starts going down on Sunday, the tournament almost certainly will come down to a handful of players who virtually all golf fans have heard of. Though Scottie Scheffler is playing the best right now and Rory McIlroy recently won the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam, it's plausible to think that DeChambeau captures the attention of more of those fans than anyone. He recently surpassed 2 million subscribers on his YouTube channel. He is making golf feel like everyman's sport, posting videos in which he makes a hole-in-one with a wedge shot over his house, plays with off-the-rack clubs to see how they stack up and tries to beat a scratch golfer while playing left-handed. All of it sounds nutty, but it all goes back to that piece of advice he offered when asked how to replicate the improbable under impossible circumstances — i.e., a 50-yard bunker shot with the U.S. Open on the line. 'Once you get a stock shot down and you're comfortable with it, go have some fun,' DeChambeau said. 'Do a chipping contest with your amateur friends and throw it in the bunker from 50 yards, or throw it in a bush and see if you can get out. Stuff to that extent has suited my game very well.' ___ AP Sports Writer Ben Nuckols contributed to this report. ___ AP golf:

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