logo
‘Jaws' New 50th Anniversary Release And Documentary Get Better With Age

‘Jaws' New 50th Anniversary Release And Documentary Get Better With Age

Forbes5 hours ago

Hollywood icon Steven Spielberg's Jaws was released 50 years ago today and quickly became the highest grossing movie in cinema history. The filmmaker's career, the summer blockbuster, and our modern obsession with sharks all owe their existence mostly to Jaws, and a new anniversary release (including documentary Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story) all prove it just gets better with age.
American actor Richard Dreyfuss (L) and British actor Robert Shaw (1927 - 1978) hold ropes while ... More leaning off the back of their boat, 'Orca,' in pursuit of the giant Great White shark in a still from the film, 'Jaws,' directed by Steven Spielberg, 1975. (Photo by Universal Pictures/Fotos International/Courtesy of Getty Images)
Jaws - Trial By Water
Spielberg began shooting in May 1974 on Martha's Vineyard, insisting on real ocean locations for authenticity. The eight-week shoot ballooned to 159 days and the budget soared from $4 million to nearly $10 million.
Every day brought new woes, as rough seas wrecked shots, boats drifted into frame, equipment failed, and the mechanical shark seldom worked as intended. There were actually three 'Bruces' built, but saltwater corroded their innards, causing one shark to sink and others to fall apart. 'We never fixed the shark, and it was a total disaster,' Spielberg later admitted of those early trials.
Faced with constant delays and a creature that wouldn't cooperate, Spielberg improvised. He and co-writer Carl Gottlieb were rewriting nightly to work around the malfunctioning shark, slashing its screen time and letting imagination fill the gaps. Spielberg's ingenuity under duress helped transform a B-movie creature feature into white-knuckle Hitchcockian suspense.
Yet during the shoot, Spielberg felt anything but confident. Morale was low among a crew stuck at sea for months, many far over schedule and far from home. The director himself was anxiety-ridden. He feared he'd be fired at any moment for the budget overruns and delays, so much so that he refused to leave the island even on weekends. 'If I left the island I was certain I would never come back,' he recalled.
At one point, Spielberg even suffered what he thought was a heart attack on set. It was actually a full-blown panic attack, brought on by stress (as he reflects now, 'We didn't have words like PTSD then' to describe the toll). When the final scene wrapped, the 27-year-old filmmaker was convinced his career was over.
Of course, Spielberg's fears proved unfounded. Instead, Jaws's torturous production forged a filmmaker. The young director's trials by water taught him hard lessons in resourcefulness and resilience. He emerged with a mastery beyond his years – a fact noted even at the time. Despite his youth, Spielberg 'showed a maturity behind the camera that belied his years,' one critic later observed of Jaws.
In the decades that followed, Spielberg would never again face such a loss of control on set or such financial jeopardy. Jaws's success granted him creative latitude for life. But he also never forgot the experience, always saying Jaws made him a better director and helped exorcise some personal fears. Spielberg noted that perhaps Jaws was even his own fear of water incarnate.
Five decades on, Spielberg participates fondly in 50th anniversary retrospectives, able to laugh about the nightmare shoot that minted his legend. As he says in the Jaws @ 50 documentary, making the film involved 'naive people against nature,' and it taught him 'you're gonna need a bigger boat' in more ways than one.
Jaws Births The Blockbuster
Before Jaws, the summer months were a Hollywood dead zone typically reserved for B movies or ignored entirely ('why go to the movies when the sun is shining?' as one writer put it). Jaws turned that wisdom on its head.
Universal Pictures had boldly decided to market Jaws as a must-see summer event, even delaying its release to June so that 'people were in the water off the summer beach resorts,'producer David Brown noted. They blanketed television with millions of dollars worth of ads – an unprecedented blitz at the time – and plastered the now-famous image of a monstrous shark and swimmer on posters, paperback covers, and merchandise everywhere.
Tie-ins ranged from Jaws-themed clothing to beach towels to hilarious toilet-seat covers. Jaws was everywhere before it even opened. The tagline 'See it before you go swimming,' was a dare that became a cultural catchphrase. The strategy worked beyond anyone's expectations.
Audiences flocked to cinemas, especially the new multiplexes in shopping malls. Many returned for multiple viewings, bringing friends in tow. An event movie mentality was born. Jaws became the highest-grossing film of all time after a record debut and months atop the box office charts.
By the end of that summer, the 'sleepy months' had become prime box-office real estate. As screenwriter Carl Gottlieb later observed, Jaws's release proved that selling a film 'as a phenomenon, as a destination' could yield massive returns. It's a lesson Hollywood would take to heart.
Jaws - From Popcorn Hit to Classic
On its 10th anniversary in 1985, Jaws was already enshrined as a pop culture icon that spawned imitators and its own lesser sequels, as audiences' appetite for sharks remained strong. Meanwhile, directors like James Cameron and John Landis were citing Jaws as formative, and products from toys to theme-park rides continued to rake in money and prove the films' continued popularity. At 10 years old, Jaws was demonstrating its generational staying power.
The 25th anniversary in 2000 saw Jaws celebrated in fan circles and by a new generation of filmmakers. Although initially some critics turned up their noses at the film as low-brow entertainment for the masses, by 2000 Jaws was almost universally lauded and the film frequently landed on 'greatest movies' lists.
The 30th anniversary in 2005 brought JawsFest to Martha's Vineyard: a large fan gathering that featured cast reunions, location tours, and panel discussions with Jaws scholars. Hundreds of fans descended on the little island.
By the time Jaws's 45th anniversaries rolled around, society was locked down in the Covid pandemic's first year, terror gripping communities worldwide. And once again, Jaws proved its relevance. With indoor cinemas mostly shuttered, drive-in theaters sprang up across the country, and what was the top draw? Jaws, of course, sometimes in double features with Spielberg's Jurassic Park. You can read my own review for the film's 45th anniversary release here.
Now, for the 50th anniversary this year, Jaws is getting the full treatment. Martha's Vineyard, forever synonymous with Amity Island, is hosting commemorative screenings, Jaws-themed concerts, and a 'shark in the park' event.
The Academy Museum in Los Angeles has opened a special exhibit featuring the last surviving Jaws shark prop (restored to its former glory). Notably, there is the brand-new aforementioned documentary Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story. And of course, there is a 4K UHD special edition home release of Jaws for the 5oth anniversary, including the documentary, which I'll discuss more below.
Jaws And Me Five Decades Later
Jaws turns 50 the same summer I turn 55. Jaws is my favorite film, encompassing my feelings as a young wide-eyed child seeing it for the first time at a drive-in (talk about larger than life, especially for a small kid) and then rewatching it endlessly on TV and VHS until the tapes wore out.
Much of my early years revolved around my love of comics and films, with Jaws, Taxi Driver, Star Wars, and Superman being among the biggest focuses of my attention and remaining long-lasting favorites and influences.
In my teen years, I was more interested in music and other pursuits, and aside from a handful of films – including The Terminator, Aliens, Witness, The Right Stuff, Platoon, Die Hard, and Raising Arizona – mid- and late-1980s cinema is mostly something I rediscovered in college when I went back to see what I'd missed.
In those first few years, Jaws represented a grounded realistic portrayal at immense scale, horrifying and thrilling and funny, at once seeming like ordinary everyday life and yet also mythic and consequential. My small mind grasped much of that, even if in simplistic and more limited form.
But as I grew up, and as I watched more films and read more comics and spent more time on boats and in life itself, Jaws seemed to grow and take on new relevance. It revealed itself to me in different ways, and in turn helped me also think about its themes and the world in different ways as well. It is one of the films that most made me dream of making my own movies, and its been an immense influence on my own approach to dialogue, pacing, and sequencing when I write screenplays.
I personally think of Jaws as primarily a suspense thriller with horror elements, rather than an outright horror movie, but I won't argue with anyone who puts it in the latter category. Interestingly, the extent to which it leans more toward thriller or horror often depends on which themes and perspectives are at the forefront of my mind and interpretations while viewing it, including any subtextual social relevance I bring into the screening.
Mark Travers' excellent 50th anniversary piece about Jaws notes the way ambiguity enhances our fear by letting our own minds fill in the horror-blanks, so to speak. This is similar to the same reason I'm a fan of zombie films – they're less about the literal particulars of zombies than whatever the zombies come to represent in the minds of individual and collective viewers. Zombies are a metaphor for whatever terrifies and threatens us, be it pandemics or nuclear war or climate change or civil war, the living dead are an empty slate upon which we write our own nightmares.
Jaws is a perfect early example of this, within a more refined context as Travers discusses. And the way the shark is more menacing and more terrifying when we don't see it speaks to a point Robert Patterson's Bruce Wayne makes during his opening narration in Matt Reeves' The Batman when he says that because he could be anywhere, scared villains see him everywhere.
Jaws - The Legacy Lives On
Half a century after it first made audiences cry and popcorn fly, Jaws remains a powerful force in pop culture.
Its legacy is seen every year when summer movie season rolls around. Its DNA is present whenever a filmmaker holds back a monster reveal to build suspense or a blockbuster balances character moments with eye-popping thrills. Its cautionary themes about respecting nature, heeding warnings and science, and finding courage are as relevant as ever. And in the simple act of scaring people out of the water, Jaws achieved a kind of immortality that few works of fiction ever do.
Modern viewers are still struck by how Jaws, despite launching an era of big-budget popcorn spectacle, remains a relatively modestly human-scaled thriller at heart. Compared to today's CGI-filled epics, Jaws was a mid-budget film that relied on character, suspense, and primal fear more than flashy effects. When the time for effects did come, the realism and selective use made them all the more impressive and scary.
In fact, many argue Hollywood took the wrong lessons from Jaws, that studios focused on 'bigger boat' spectacle rather than what truly made the film great – its tight storytelling and craft. The real keys were suspense, relatable characters, and Spielberg's deft directing.
Thus, while Jaws undeniably gave Hollywood a new formula for summer hits, it also stands apart from the very blockbusters it inspired. Jaws would thrive in any era.
Indeed, the modern masterpiece Godzilla Minus One from writer-director-VFX Supervisor Takashi Yamazaki is heavily inspired by Jaws. The film reflects the best sort of inspiration from Spielberg's film, including the power of character-driven storytelling, suspense and anticipation, and a brilliant vision from its director.
If you want a particularly great 50th anniversary of Jaws, the new 4K UHD edition and the gorgeous Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color make for a perfect pairing. Then watch the anniversary documentary Jaws @ 50 (either on the excellent physical home release, or when it runs on National Geographic/Hulu/Disney+) for insightful and revelatory conversations with cast and crew, including Spielberg's conversations about his own reactions and lingering traumas over the many years and decades after making Jaws.
For Spielberg and the cast and crew, it probably seems astonishing that a film made under such duress could endure so powerfully. But perhaps it's precisely those challenges that made Jaws great, the creative solutions and on-the-fly brilliance born from chaos and necessity.
Jaws transcended its humble 'summer thriller' origins to become a classic. Despite the great Roger Ebert's own glowing review, many of his contemporaries couldn't all see of its greatness, with many dismissing it as nonsense or mere shock entertainment. But time has vindicated Jaws. Today, it is firmly entrenched as a historic turning point in American cinema, dissected in film courses, and beloved by filmmakers and audiences alike.
From its metaphorical depths exploring fear of the unknown and the perils of greed and hubris, to its lasting impact on filmmaking and pop culture, five decades on Jaws remains a timeless masterpiece reflecting changes in Hollywood and society, even as it continues to scare new generations out of the water.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indiana Fever's Sophie Cunningham Turns Heads After Exciting Personal News
Indiana Fever's Sophie Cunningham Turns Heads After Exciting Personal News

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Indiana Fever's Sophie Cunningham Turns Heads After Exciting Personal News

Indiana Fever's Sophie Cunningham Turns Heads After Exciting Personal News originally appeared on Athlon Sports. To say that Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham's popularity has skyrocketed among WNBA fans of late would be an understatement at this point. A testament to this fact is how the veteran has now amassed over 1 million followers on TikTok and over 740,000 followers on Instagram. Advertisement According to a report by Jacob Feldman of Portico, this massive development represents more than 700,000 new followers on TikTok and over 250,000 new followers on Instagram. This huge jump comes right after Cunningham grabbed all sorts of headlines for her actions in the Fever's 88-71 win over the Connecticut Sun. That matchup turned out to be quite a testy affair between the two teams, with Cunningham getting herself involved in one of the most contentious moments in the game. Cunningham was ejected late in the fourth quarter for a flagrant foul 2 on Sun guard Jacy Sheldon, who, for her part, was involved in an earlier incident with Caitlin Clark. Fever fans loved how Cunningham appeared to retaliate on behalf of Clark after the Indiana superstar was poked in the eye and shoved to the ground earlier in the game. The supporters showed their love to the 28-year-old on social media, and the fact that Cunningham has earned close to a million new followers on TikTok and Instagram combined serves as proof of the same. Advertisement Naturally, the only way Cunningham would celebrate the big news is by posting a new dance video on TikTok. Cunningham's celebratory dance has since blown up on the social media platform, amassing close to 500,000 views in five hours, as of writing. The post has also drawn all sorts of reactions from the fans. "New Tik tok followers just paid her WNBA fine," a comment read. "Sophie!!!!! you are everyone's new favorite teammate, we love YOU," another said. "1 million followers and sold out jersey…what a time!" a supporter wrote. Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham (8) during a game.© Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images "Heck yea. Protect your players when the refs won't," a reaction read. "Do not stop being the enforcer for the Indiana Fever/Caitlin Clark. Please don't let me down. I'm counting on you," demanded a fan. Advertisement "700k overnight is INSANE 🔥" said another. Cunningham isn't exactly a WNBA superstar, but there is no doubt that her status on social media has seen a significant surge over the past few days. As for her basketball, the 6-foot-1 guard is averaging 6.4 points, 4.3 rebounds, 1.1 assists and 1.3 triples in 22.6 minutes off the bench. Related: Sophie Cunningham Draws Strong Reactions From Fever Fans After WNBA Punishment Related: Indiana Fever Make Historic Announcement During Valkyries Game Related: Warriors Player Turns Heads After Taunting Caitlin Clark During Fever-Valkyries Game This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 20, 2025, where it first appeared.

Beyond The Gates Recap: Nicole Chooses Herself Over Her Marriage
Beyond The Gates Recap: Nicole Chooses Herself Over Her Marriage

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Beyond The Gates Recap: Nicole Chooses Herself Over Her Marriage

Beyond The Gates Recap: Nicole Chooses Herself Over Her Marriage originally appeared on Daytime Confidential. On today's Beyond The Gates recap: Police Station: Jacob tells his father about June's case and the clean up crew. Elon says how proud he is of his son when he gets a call and walks away. Just then, Smitty arrives to see Jacob. He asks if they can go elsewhere as what he has to share is about a police officer. Specifically, he has come across information about one of their officers being on the take, as Elon listens in. Jacob reluctantly agrees to head out and the two exit. Elon makes a call to meet up with someone in their regular place. Anita and Vernon's Mansion: Vernon enters and is screaming at someone on the phone about losing the young waiter. He promises the person on the other end will pay the price. Vernon plays the piano when the phone buzzes. He picks up and says, 'what now?!' When he hears Anita's voice, Vernon apologizes and tries to cover. He asks about The Articulettes and she says things are going swimmingly. Anita wonders what Vernon isn't telling her but he continues to cover. Fairmont Country Club: Martin catches up with the young waiter who finally admits their connection from that dreaded night. He says Martin's friends in high places kept him comfortable for a while but he's back to make certain he pays for his sins. Martin wonders the sins of which he speaks, and the young waiter speaks loudly about a dark night on a back road several years ago. Martin asks how much to make him disappear. The young waiter says he has lost the last two years of his life while everyone else pays for Martin's sins. He notes when you are black royalty everyone else cleans up your messes (another race-based comment). The young waiter says he must speak for his brother who is no longer with them (a clue!). He says Martin should trust him as his day is coming. With that, he storms off. Garland Memorial Hospital - Lobby: Vanessa walks in talking to Joey about their next connection. As they hang up, Doug walks up. She says will be meeting with Joey in empty homes for sale. He tells his wife to make sure she cleans up the bedroom. Vanessa wonders why he agreed to work with Joey when he's clearly not comfortable. They move out of the main lobby where Doug says he never wanted Vanessa to agree to anything illegal to pay off his debt. She thinks his displeasure has more to do with Joey than the legalities. Doug says he knows his wife is attracted to the danger Joey brings. She says she has a plan to learn everything about Joey and will cover her ass. Doug gets snarky before apologizing. Vanessa warns him not to judge her as he is responsible for their current situation. Doug wonders where their marriage will be when all is said and done. Garland Memorial Hospital – Ted's Office: Nicole arrives to say he got the flowers, and she says there's no need to continue to send them as she doesn't take them home. Nicole has actually arrived for them to consider revising their living trust and medical proxies. Ted wants to move back in so they can save their marriage before it's too late. He wants to somehow show her that he is still worthy of her love and trust. Nicole just can't with Ted and says these are things she needs to do for her. Ted goes on and on trying to convince her to give their marriage another chance but finally concedes defeat. Nicole says she has practiced the words, 'I forgive you. Please come home.' However, she doesn't believe them and can never say them. Nicole can't forget what he did with Leslie, the lies he told and how it all makes her feel like their history together is completely false. She says Ted broke her. He is trying to save their marriage while she is trying to save herself. With that, she gathers her papers and exits. Orphey Gene's: Smitty talks about the puff piece on Marcel and Jacob realizes he thinks his partner is on the take. Jacob immediately freaks because Marcel is his partner and their careers are linked. Smitty says it's why he came to him directly so they can review the evidence together. Smitty shows him the information about the connection to Joey and Jacob says it's all speculation. Smitty continues with the information about the house and boat in the Carribean and Marcel's plan to move there after retirement. Jacob counters none of that is a secret as he tells everyone. Smitty continues by discussing Marcel's bank records noting a recent $5,000 cash deposit… leading Jacob to remember seeing Marcel and Joey's handoff a few months prior. Smitty notes another deposit of the same amount two years ago but for half a million dollars. Smitty realizes Jacob knows something and tells Smitty about the handoff he witnessed. However, his father said it was a part of an undercover operation. Jacob says Marcel being dirty is one thing. It's a whole other thing if they're talking about his father, the Chief of Police, also being dirty and lying to his face. Smitty apologizes for the position he's put Jacob in. Jacob thinks if his dad is involved in all of this, Marcel is playing him. Smitty asks Jacob to think back two years. Were there any big investigations that suddenly dried up? Jacob admits he was on patrol back then but would have heard about anything wonky. Jacob still wants to maintain the possibility that everything is a coincidence. Smitty bets his journalist instinct that something happened two years ago that benefitted Marcel to the tune of 500k and maintains the link is through Joey Armstrong. Joey's Gambling Pit: Marcel and Elon meet up and discuss how there's been a hack into his bank accounts from an unknown computer. They both know for a fact Smitty is responsible. Elon recounts how Smitty just told Jacob about his suspicions before they left the precinct together. Just then, Joey walks in. The three men take a seat and play cards. Joey makes digs at how bad they are at the game but they are more worried about their current situation and how they shut it down. Elon says he will try to throw his son off the scent. Marcel thinks Smitty is still a problem and is willing to take him out. Joey thinks violence is never a proper solution and wants to deal another hand. Elon says he's out as life is enough of a gamble these days. Just then, Vanessa arrives on the scene and Joey introduces her to the police chief and detective as his gambling buddies and her as his business partner. With that, Joey pushes the two men out Anita and Vernon's Mansion: Martin walks in and Vernon says he was right to fill him in on the latest. Grandpa is not thrilled his grandson disregarded his orders and confronted the young waiter. Vernon says he made a call and confirmed the dreaded night from two years ago has come back to haunt them. Martin notes the young waiter's words and tone of voice saying he wants to destroy them. Vernon sets his jaw and says that will never happen. Vernon tells his grandson to mind his business and simply let him know when the young waiter approaches with his demands. Garland Memorial Hospital – Lobby: Doug leaves Vanessa in his dust when Nicole walks up. She asks if her friend is ok and Vanessa says she is living the life she wants to live and everyone else can kick rocks. With that, she dramatically makes her exit. Previous Beyond The Gates Recap: Endings As Ted leaves the hospital, he spies Nicole who turns her back on him. Joey pours Vanessa a martini and says they need to establish some boundaries for their new relationship. He thinks there are topics to avoid but she wants to know everything. He knows if she knew everything about him that she would quickly disappear. Vanessa thinks he should try her. Jacob doesn't know how he's supposed to go back to the station and pretend he doesn't know what he does. Martin knows it's a problem and hates he gets to go home and simply spend time with his family (little does he know). Vernon tells Martin he will take care of the family as he always has. Martin asks that his grandfather never lie to him again. He needs to be apprised of everything his grandfather knows. Vernon agrees and Martin exits. Afterwards, Vernon grabs his phone, calls someone and says, 'he's back.' Keep checking back for the latest Beyond The Gates recaps! This story was originally reported by Daytime Confidential on Jun 21, 2025, where it first appeared.

Wordle hints today for #1,463: Clues and answer for Saturday, June 21
Wordle hints today for #1,463: Clues and answer for Saturday, June 21

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wordle hints today for #1,463: Clues and answer for Saturday, June 21

Hey, there! Welcome to the weekend. We hope it's a fabulous one for you. If you're looking for some help with today's Wordle, you've come to the right place. Here's our daily Wordle guide with some hints and the answer for Saturday's puzzle (#1,463). It may be that you're a Wordle newcomer and you're not completely sure how to play the game. We're here to help with that too. Wordle is a deceptively simple daily word game that first emerged in 2021. The gist is that there is one five-letter word to deduce every day by process of elimination. The daily word is the same for everyone. Wordle blew up in popularity in late 2021 after creator Josh Wardle made it easy for players to share an emoji-based grid with their friends and followers that detailed how they fared each day. The game's success spurred dozens of clones across a swathe of categories and formats. The New York Times purchased Wordle in early 2022 for an undisclosed sum. The publication said that players collectively played Wordle 5.3 billion times in 2024. So, it's little surprise that Wordle is one of the best online games and puzzles you can play daily. To start playing Wordle, you simply need to enter one five-letter word. The game will tell you how close you are to that day's secret word by highlighting letters that are in the correct position in green. Letters that appear in the word but aren't in the right spot will be highlighted in yellow. If you guess any letters that are not in the secret word, the game will gray those out on the virtual keyboard. However, you can still use those letters in subsequent guesses. You'll only have six guesses to find each day's word, though you still can use grayed-out letters to help narrow things down. It's also worth remembering that letters can appear in the secret word more than once. Wordle is free to play on the NYT's website and apps, as well as on Meta Quest headsets and Discord. The game refreshes at midnight local time. If you log into a New York Times account, you can track your stats, including the all-important win streak. If you have a NYT subscription that includes full access to the publication's games, you don't have to stop after a single round of Wordle. You'll have access to an archive of more than 1,400 previous Wordle games. So if you're a relative newcomer, you'll be able to go back and catch up on previous editions. In addition, paid NYT Games members have access to a tool called the Wordle Bot. This can tell you how well you performed at each day's game. Before today's Wordle hints, here are the answers to recent puzzles that you may have missed: Yesterday's Wordle answer for Friday, June 20 — TAUPE Thursday, June 19 — CURIO Wednesday, June 18 — MUNCH Tuesday, June 17 — PRANK Monday, June 16 — PETTY Every day, we'll try to make Wordle a little easier for you. First, we'll offer a hint that describes the meaning of the word or how it might be used in a phrase or sentence. We'll also tell you if there are any double (or even triple) letters in the word. In case you still haven't quite figured it out by that point, we'll then provide the first letter of the word. Those who are still stumped after that can continue on to find out the answer for today's Wordle. This should go without saying, but make sure to scroll slowly. Spoilers are ahead. Here is a hint for today's Wordle answer: An open area in a forest. There are no repeated letters in today's Wordle answer. The first letter of today's Wordle answer is G. This is your final warning before we reveal today's Wordle answer. No take-backs. Don't blame us if you happen to scroll too far and accidentally spoil the game for yourself. What is today's Wordle? Today's Wordle answer is... GLADE Not to worry if you didn't figure out today's Wordle word. If you made it this far down the page, hopefully you at least kept your streak going. And, hey: there's always another game tomorrow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store