Gabrielle Union could finally bring her to the sequel

In 2020, "Bring It On" celebrated its 20th anniversary, bringing the cast together for interviews and giving them plenty of time to think about the future of the Toros and Clovers. According to Union, she's not the only one curious about their characters' future.

"We all better revisit it," Union told Comicbook.com, continuing:

"During the pandemic, around the 20th anniversary of 'Bring it On,' we were all, you know, together all the time doing these signs and talking about the movie and the making of the movie and all of our wild hijinks, but yeah, so we got really serious about 'we should update this', you know, like bringing it up to where it is now."

Union kept up the hype a few months later when she spoke to Entertainment Tonight, saying this for the supposed sequel: "I've heard a lot of takes over the years , but I hear some really great takes from some big-name writers that are very surprising "Bring it On", baby, the gift that keeps on giving."

Naturally, she didn't drop any names - leaving us all to spiral and speculate on who these renowned writers might be - but she did at least bring up another possibility for the Isis perspective with a teenage daughter: "Imagine if his daughter was, you know, a top athlete from Jackson State, Hawthorne State or Hampton. There are so many forms of cheerleading that we can't celebrate. The possibilities are endless." To that, I say yes, please. The idea of ​​Union seems to be consistent with the spirit of the original "Bring It On" in a way that none of the sequels didn't quite understand. I'm crossing my fingers that this stage of development will be much shorter than 50 years!

Gabrielle Union could finally bring her to the sequel

In 2020, "Bring It On" celebrated its 20th anniversary, bringing the cast together for interviews and giving them plenty of time to think about the future of the Toros and Clovers. According to Union, she's not the only one curious about their characters' future.

"We all better revisit it," Union told Comicbook.com, continuing:

"During the pandemic, around the 20th anniversary of 'Bring it On,' we were all, you know, together all the time doing these signs and talking about the movie and the making of the movie and all of our wild hijinks, but yeah, so we got really serious about 'we should update this', you know, like bringing it up to where it is now."

Union kept up the hype a few months later when she spoke to Entertainment Tonight, saying this for the supposed sequel: "I've heard a lot of takes over the years , but I hear some really great takes from some big-name writers that are very surprising "Bring it On", baby, the gift that keeps on giving."

Naturally, she didn't drop any names - leaving us all to spiral and speculate on who these renowned writers might be - but she did at least bring up another possibility for the Isis perspective with a teenage daughter: "Imagine if his daughter was, you know, a top athlete from Jackson State, Hawthorne State or Hampton. There are so many forms of cheerleading that we can't celebrate. The possibilities are endless." To that, I say yes, please. The idea of ​​Union seems to be consistent with the spirit of the original "Bring It On" in a way that none of the sequels didn't quite understand. I'm crossing my fingers that this stage of development will be much shorter than 50 years!

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