Keke Palmer fired up her Instagram this week with the energy of a post-credits reveal. The fourth weekend of “I Love Boosters Movie” is here, and she has questions for the audience.
“We’re coming up on weekend four of @iloveboostersmovie… who’s seen it already?? Who’s seen it TWICE?!” she posted on Instagram.
Two questions. One hype machine. That’s how you run fourth-weekend promotion.
Most theatrical marketing campaigns are done by week four. The trailers have run their course. The press junket is a memory. But Keke Palmer is still out here like it’s opening night, rallying the audience with the energy she’d bring to a packed fan convention. That kind of star-driven push can genuinely shift numbers late in a run.
The repeat-viewer callout is a smart play. Films with a second-viewing culture stick around longer in theaters. They build the kind of word-of-mouth that converts fence-sitters into ticket buyers. Asking “who’s seen it TWICE” isn’t just celebrating the die-hards. It’s planting the idea in everyone who hasn’t committed yet. It’s Avengers-level audience mobilization, done from a single Instagram post.
Repeat viewership has powered some of the biggest theatrical success stories in recent memory. Films that get people talking about a second visit tend to outperform their opening-weekend projections over time. Keke Palmer is clearly trying to tap into that same energy.
The post drew nearly 2,000 likes. For a film heading into weekend four, that’s a solid signal the audience is still locked in. The conversation around “I Love Boosters Movie” hasn’t closed.
Staying in active promotion mode this deep into a theatrical run isn’t something every lead does. Keke Palmer’s presence in the promotional cycle for “I Love Boosters Movie” at week four shows real investment in the film’s success.
Fourth weekends tend to be the last real wide-release window a film gets. After this point, most titles shift to smaller screens or on-demand. Keke Palmer knows that window is there. Her callout this week reads like someone determined to fill every remaining seat. That window won’t stay open much longer.
Summer theatrical competition is intense. New releases keep stacking up, and films have to fight for every screen and every weekend. Keke Palmer showing up at week four, asking for her audience by name, is the kind of thing people notice. It builds loyalty. It makes the film feel like an event worth prioritizing.
Her message was short and direct, but the intent couldn’t be clearer. First-timer or planning a return visit, the invitation is open.
No autopilot. No coasting. Keke Palmer is still out here in week four fighting for “I Love Boosters Movie,” and that Avengers-level commitment? It tracks.
“I Love Boosters Movie” is in theaters now.
