| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before Jan 1, 2027 | 98% | 91¢ | 99¢ | — | $6K | Trade → |
This market asks whether an official movie adaptation of The Summer I Turned Pretty will be publicly announced within the current calendar year. It matters because an announcement signals studio commitment, affects fan expectations, and drives downstream casting, production, and distribution activity.
The Summer I Turned Pretty began as a popular young‑adult novel series and later received a high‑profile television adaptation, which increased demand for additional entries in the franchise. Studios and streaming platforms commonly evaluate successful TV IP for feature‑film adaptations, spin‑offs, or movie continuations when audience interest and commercial potential align.
Prediction market prices aggregate public information and participants' expectations about whether an official movie announcement will occur this year; they change as news and signals arrive. Use prices as a real‑time summary of market beliefs, not as definitive studio plans or guarantees.
An announcement generally means a public, verifiable statement from the studio, distributor, production company, or rights holder confirming a film adaptation is in development or has been greenlit; secondary reporting should be corroborated by an official source to be considered definitive.
Statements from the studio or streaming distributor that holds the show’s rights, the production company, the principal producers, or an official release from the author or their representatives are the most influential; reputable trade outlets reporting direct quotes from those parties often serve as reliable confirmation.
Renewal can shift priorities: an active multi‑season commitment may delay or complicate a feature‑film project, while a concluded series can free rights and scheduling for a movie; however, studios sometimes pursue both TV and film projects in parallel depending on strategy.
Watch official press releases, reputable trade coverage quoting studio execs or producers, casting/agent announcements, filings or registration of new projects, evidence of financing or distribution deals, and public comments from the author or show creators.
Typically, an official confirmation that a movie is in development or has been greenlit counts as an announcement even if no release date is provided, but final adjudication may depend on the market's event rules and the wording of the public statement.