![]() "We all went and saw the film in the theater as a group, which was really sweet and really cool. When Jurassic hit the big screen in June 1993, one of his classmates organized a group trip to the theater. Thankfully, not all of his peers were jerks. "It's really weird that I ended up playing more bully characters on screen when, in real life, I was the one that was always tormented." "I think it's totally what a kid of that age who’s being a punk would say." Despite a memorably snot-nosed performance, the actor says he was often the subject of bullying in his own youth. "I think it's a really funny line," Hertford says when we bring up the six-foot turkey argument. A six-foot turkey would be nightmare fuel." RELATED: Jurassic Park turns 30: How That Dino Death Led to Wayne Knight Showing Up Purple to the Seinfeld SetĬalling a vicious predator of the late Cretaceous period a "six-foot turkey" sounds funny, but YouTuber "SharkandDinoman" makes a very good point in the comments section of the video below: "That kid has no idea how scary. "My first thought is, ‘That’s a cool a movie.’ It’s like my third thought that I’m like, ‘Oh, yeah…I’m f-in' in the beginning of that. ![]() "Whenever people bring up the movie, it’s not my first thought that I’m in it," Hertford tells SYFY WIRE over Zoom in honor of the movie's 30th anniversary this month. That is until he's terrified into silence by a talon-wielding Alan Grant ( Sam Neill). He has met so many superheroes today, batman, Harley Quinn, storm troopers and still everyone will say he is the biggest hero in the room because he has got a big fight in him.The name "Whit Hertford" may not be immediately recognizable, but if you've seen Jurassic Park(if, by some miracle, you haven't seen Jurassic Park, go watch it on Peacock this instant), then you know him as the bratty kid at the Montana dig site who underestimates the ferocity and cunning of velociraptors. "Everything we make craft and build goes towards other families and it is also celebrating this amazing boy who is a superhero. "The reason why this fun day is taking place is to leave a legacy for Milo and help other families by raising money for an adapted caravan so families with terminally ill children can have a holiday. He still has a lot more time on this earth. "They said he would have two, maybe three, weeks in January so Milo has defied all the odds and is still here today to prove everyone wrong. Stephen said: "In December he was taken into hospital and given a very short life expectancy. The youngsters celebrated his 11th birthday on June 3 and this weekend loved ones gathered at an event organised in his honour at Parks Sports Centre in North Shields. ![]() READ MORE: County Durham lads devastated after holiday scam sees them left without Magaluf hotelĪt the end of last year, Milo's health declined and his mum and dad, Stephen Browne and Laura Davidson, were told the time they have left with him is limited, but he has continued to defy the odds The condition causes Milo to suffer from seizure and respiratory problems and he is unable to talk or eat, sit or stand without being fully supported meaning he needs 24-hour care. Milo Browne, from North Shields, suffers from a rare degenerative condition so unique it is known only as M3BHA and there is no diagnosis. A little warrior who continues to beat the odds has celebrated his 11th birthday with friends and family.
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