Tag: brings

  • FCC chair brings receipts on Biden admin’s ‘expertise in incompetence’ in blistering message to Buttigieg

    FCC chair brings receipts on Biden admin’s ‘expertise in incompetence’ in blistering message to Buttigieg

    Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr slammed former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg for claiming Trump administration “incompetence” is putting Americans “at risk,” pointing to a multi-billion dollar project under the Biden administration that he said yielded no results. 

    “You worked for an Administration that got $42 billion to connect millions of Americans to the Internet,” Carr said in an X post on Saturday responding to Buttigieg. “1,163 days later, that Admin exited without connecting even 1 person & without turning even 1 shovel worth of dirt.”

    “If we need expertise in incompetence, will reach out,” he added, accompanied by the peace sign emoji. 

    Carr was responding to a message Buttigieg posted on Friday that took issue with the Department of Government Efficiency, which has become a common target of Democrats as Elon Musk and the DOGE team work through federal government agencies in its quest of extinguishing government fraud and overspending. 

    FCC COMMISSIONER HITS BIDEN ADMIN FOR $42 BILLION IN UNSPENT HIGH SPEED INTERNET FUNDS

    Federal Communication Commission chairman Brendan Carr has opened an investigation into radio station controlled by left-wing billionaire George Soros. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    “Incompetence in Washington puts every American at risk, no matter how you voted. No one should be happy that the DOGE team – the same folks who randomly published classified U.S. security information online today – wants access to your bank account & Social Security numbers,” Buttigieg posted to X on Friday, referring to accusations DOGE posted classified information to its website, which the White House has refuted. 

    FCC LAUNCHES PROBE INTO NBC NEWS PARENT COMCAST ‘TO ROOT OUT INVIDIOUS FORMS OF DEI DISCRIMINATION’

    The Biden administration in 2021 approved a $42.5 billion provision in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that was directed to a program intended to deliver internet to underserved and rural areas of the nation. Four years later, however, the program has not connected users to the internet, the Washington Policy Center found in a report last year. 

    Biden, Carr, Buttigieg

    Former President Biden, FCC chair Brendan Carr, and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.  (Getty Images)

    States were required to submit plans to the federal government by 2023 related to the investment and deployment of the internet services. Former President Joe Biden, upon the states submitting their plans, celebrated the internet initiative as similar to former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s 1936 Rural Electrification Act, which brought electricity to homes nationwide. 

    “What we’re doing is, as I said, not unlike what Franklin Delano Roosevelt did when he brought electricity to nearly every American home and farm in our nation. Today, Kamala and I are making an equally historic investment to connect everyone in America — everyone in America to high-speed Internet by — and affordable high-speed Internet — by 2030,” Biden said at the White House in June of 2023. 

    Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg speaks during a press conference on June 28, 2021, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg speaks during a press conference on June 28, 2021, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Carr has frequently taken issue with the $42.5 billion program, including citing it in X posts before President Donald Trump’s election win in November, and the president subsequently appointing the Republican FCC commissioner as chair of the government agency. 

    FCC CHAIR SAYS IT’S ‘REALLY CONCERNING’ THAT A SOROS-BACKED RADIO STATION EXPOSED UNDERCOVER ICE AGENTS

    “In 2021, the Biden Administration got $42.45 billion from Congress to deploy high-speed Internet to millions of Americans,” wrote on X back in June “Years later, it has not connected even 1 person with those funds. In fact, it now says that no construction projects will even start until 2025 at earliest.”

    Joe Biden

    President Joe Biden speaks about his administration on Dec. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

    Carr explained to Fox Business back in June that while the funds were allocated to states to deliver internet services through the program, the Biden administration was at fault for the lack of progress. 

    “There’s no question that the 2021 law put some process in place, but the Biden administration decided to layer on top of that a Byzantine additional set of hoops that states have to go through before the administration will approve them to actually get these funds and start completing the builds,” Carr told FOX Business in an interview in June. 

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    He added that while some high-speed internet projects had connected people during the Biden administration, none were funded through the $42.5 billion allocation from the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program. 

    Fox News Digital’s Breck Dumas contributed to this report. 

  • AJ Brown brings Lombardi Trophy to young Eagles fan recovering in hospital after Philadelphia plane crash

    AJ Brown brings Lombardi Trophy to young Eagles fan recovering in hospital after Philadelphia plane crash

    Philadelphia Eagles star wide receiver A.J. Brown did not wait for Friday’s parade to celebrate winning the Super Bowl with fans. 

    Brown visited the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia on Wednesday with the Lombardi Trophy in hand to visit with 10-year-old Andre Howard III, who heroically protected his sister from debris after a medical transport plane crashed in Philadelphia late last month. 

    Andre Howard III, a devout Eagles fan, heroically protected his sister from debris after a medical transport plane crashed in Philadelphia late last month. (Andre Howard Jr./Lashawn Hamiel)

    In an open letter to Brown shared on Facebook, Andre’s mother thanked the NFL star for the “love and support” he showed her son. 

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    “Thank you for being a man of your word. By great surprise on this day my son was beyond grateful to meet you,” he message read. “Caught us all by surprise. For Someone ‘(ANDRE)’ my son who usually talk so much, you had him smiling from ear to ear and Mute.

    “I felt his heart pounding through his chest. The amount of love and support you gave being so patient and calling Saquon Barkley for him was beyond appreciated. Thank you for everything and bringing that WIN home for ‘TRE’ the world’s greatest SUPERHERO.”

    Andre Howard III underwent emergency brain surgery and one of the first questions he asked his dad when he woke up was if he had missed the Super Bowl.

    Andre Howard III underwent emergency brain surgery and one of the first questions he asked his dad when he woke up was if he had missed the Super Bowl. (Andre Howard Jr./Lashawn Hamiel)

    A.J. BROWN SAYS WINNING SUPER BOWL ‘WASN’T WHAT I THOUGHT IT WOULD BE;’ LOVE FOR GAME ‘COMES WHEN I DOMINATE’

    Andre and his family had gone out for donuts the night a medical transport jet crashed into a Philadelphia neighborhood, killing all six people on board. His father, Andre Howard Jr., said they were in the car when debris started hitting the vehicle. 

    Howard saw his son in the backseat covering his sister. 

    “I turn around — there’s a piece of metal sticking out of my son’s head from the plane,” Howard said.

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    Andre, a devout Eagles fan, underwent emergency brain surgery and one of the first questions he asked his dad when he woke up was if he had missed the Super Bowl. He had not. 

    A.J. Brown called Andre Howard III his "hero" in a post on social media.

    A.J. Brown called Andre Howard III his “hero” in a post on social media. (Andre Howard Jr./Lashawn Hamiel)

    Brown responded to photos of the visit posted by the NFL, calling Andre “my hero.” He said before the big game that he would be “playing” for Andre on Sunday, with hopes of visiting him soon “with some hardware.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • RNC brings on new senior leadership to ‘work around the clock’ to support Trump agenda, elect Republicans

    RNC brings on new senior leadership to ‘work around the clock’ to support Trump agenda, elect Republicans

    EXCLUSIVE: The Republican National Committee has staffed up with new senior leadership to support President Donald Trump’s agenda and work to elect Republican candidates “who will fight to Make America Great Again,” Fox News Digital has learned. 

    RNC Chairman Michael Whatley brought on a slate of new senior staff at the GOP — all bringing campaign expertise stemming from several election cycles and experience in the private sector. 

    RNC CHAIR WHATLEY VOWS TO BE ‘TIP OF THE SPEAR’ TO PROTECT TRUMP AFTER COASTING TO RE-ELECTION VICTORY

    “After a historic victory in 2024, taking back the White House and securing majorities in both chambers of Congress, Republicans are just getting started delivering on promises made,” Whatley told Fox News Digital. 

    “As America enters the new golden age under President Donald J. Trump’s leadership, I am thrilled to announce our extraordinary RNC team, who will work around the clock to support President Trump’s agenda and elect Republican candidates who will fight to Make America Great Again,” he said. 

    Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley is interviewed by Fox News Digital, at the RNC headquarters in Washington D.C., on Dec. 12, 2024 (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

    The RNC has brought on Mike Ambrosini to serve as chief of staff. Ambrosini previously served as the director of the RNC’s State Party Strategies. He also served in the first Trump administration and held roles in Congress, the private sector and served as the executive director of the Michigan Republican Party. 

    RNC officials told Fox News Digital that Ambrosini is “the perfect person to bring everyone to the table, navigate challenges and implement a winning strategy.” 

    Whatley also brought on Rob Secaur as the new RNC political director. Secaur served as deputy political director for the 2024 Trump campaign, after serving as an RNC regional political director. 

    SENATE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE CHAIR SPELLS OUT HIS 2026 MISSION

    To run messaging, Whatley tapped Zach Parkinson as RNC communications director. Parkinson served as the RNC’s research director and deputy communications director, overseeing the GOP’s opposition research and rapid response efforts. 

    Parkinson also provided research to the Trump 2024 campaign, served as deputy communications director for the Trump 2020 campaign, and worked in communications and research roles at the Trump White House from 2017 to 2019. 

    Meanwhile, to run GOP finance, Mallory Gerndt has been elevated to finance director from her current role on the RNC finance team, where she has served since 2017. 

    Gerndt was the deputy finance director for the RNC throughout the 2024 election cycle. 

    RNC officials told Fox News Digital that Gerndt has a reputation for “setting and meeting fundraising goals to help deliver for President Trump’s America First agenda.” 

    HOUSE GOP CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE CHAIR MAKES 2026 PREDICTION

    Whatley also announced Zach Imel as RNC data director. Imel served as director of external data & voter contact for Team Trump during the 2024 campaign. Previously, Imel oversaw RNC data efforts during the 2022 and 2020 cycles. 

    Whatley also brought on Brent Brooks to serve as digital director. Brooks, according to GOP officials, has played “a key role” in raising millions of dollars and developing the “VotePro” campaign portal, which the RNC billed as a “crucial app that empowered millions of Republican voters to get involved, take action, cast their ballots, and win in 2024.” 

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    As for RNC efforts across the nation, Whatley has tapped Tom Smithfield to serve as state party strategies director. 

    Smithfield served as state party strategies deputy director during the 2024 cycle and as deputy national field director in 2022. Smithfield also served as deputy state director for Trump Victory in Pennsylvania in 2020 and for the Pennsylvania GOP in 2018. 

    Whatley told Fox News Digital that as Trump “delivers on his promises,” Republicans plan to also “look to the future.” 

    “The RNC will play a pivotal role,” Whatley said. “Our team will continue to grow the party, get out the vote, secure our elections and keep on winning.” 
     

  • Celebrity real estate agent brings ‘small-town’ Tennessee life roots to big city business

    Celebrity real estate agent brings ‘small-town’ Tennessee life roots to big city business

    Celebrity real estate agent Taylor Middleton has no regrets about leaving her small-town life behind to embrace the fast-paced world of New York City. 

    Middleton, who was raised in Nashville, Tennessee, moved to Manhattan after graduating from Vanderbilt University. Since launching her career in 2013, Middleton, who is starring in Netflix’s new reality series “Selling the City,” has closed over $500 million in luxury real estate sales. 

    During an interview with FOX Business, Middleton recalled her experience when she first relocated to the Big Apple.

    “Growing up in Nashville – and it was such a small town when I grew up there – and then moving to the big city, as they say, as soon as I landed here, it was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m with my people,’” Middleton said.

    “Selling the City” star Taylor Middleton left her “small-town” life in Tennessee behind to embrace the fast-paced world of Manhattan’s luxury real estate market. (Netflix / Fox News)

    “People who are go, go, go and so driven and ambitious,” she continued. “And it was very empowering and exciting for me because so much of my community in Nashville – and I love them so much – but so many of my friends were having their second, third, fourth child and were married and living this country club life.” 

    ‘SELLING SUNSET’ PATRIARCH NAVIGATING A REAL ESTATE ‘DEATH KNELL’

    “Which, if I’m being honest and candid, I always – I wanted that for myself,” Middleton added. “And I felt very different and apart from [that]. And so when I came to New York, it felt like, ‘Oh my gosh, everyone is living such independent, different, unique paths and exploring different things.’” 

    “It felt like anything was possible. And so it invigorated me to do more.”

    WATCH: CELEBRITY REAL ESTATE AGENT TAYLOR MIDDLETON REFLECTS ON LEAVING SMALL TOWN TENNESSEE LIFE FOR BIG CITY

    Middleton noted that succeeding in New York was similar to building a winning team in professional football.

    “You can play up or play down to the team that you’re playing against,” she explained. “So when you are surrounding yourself with people who are smarter, better, more successful than you, it just – some people may cave under that pressure. But for me, I really thrive in it because it inspires me to do better.”

    Middleton, who Netflix dubbed “the Southern belle dominating NYC’s luxury real estate scene,” told Fox Business that she originally hadn’t envisioned embarking on a career in the industry. However, she recalled that she had been “obsessed” with real estate from an early age.

    selling the city cast photo

    “Selling the City” is a New York-based spin-off of Netflix’s hit show “Selling Sunset.” (Netflix / Fox News)

    taylor with jordyn and abigail in the office

    The new show follows the professional and personal lives of top-selling agents at the luxury real estate firm Douglas Elliman. (Courtesy of Netflix/© 2024 Netflix Inc. / Fox News)

    “It’s funny because my parents moved around a lot [when I was] growing up in Nashville, and I always thought that they made horrible real estate decisions,” she remembered. “So, literally from the age of 8, I was calling up our real estate broker at [Nashville-based real estate firm] Fridrich and Clark, going, ‘Hey, Whit. Taylor Middleton. I just saw that there’s an open house coming in the paper. And so if you could take my mom and my dad … and he’s calling my parents, like, ‘Are you guys in the market? And they’re like, ‘No, stop taking her calls.’”

    “‘Like, this is ridiculous,” she said with a smile. “So I always was kind of a real estate junkie. But then moving to New York, it wasn’t actually my plan to get into real estate. I kind of fell into it, thankfully and luckily. Just being super naive, thinking, ‘OK, I’ll figure this out, I’ve got this.’”

    Middleton explained that she saw unlimited potential in a real estate career, which appealed to her since she was unable to work for many years due to a long battle with Lyme disease. 

    “I had a lot of lost time to make up for,” she said. “And so not having a ceiling was very compelling, and anything that’s very entrepreneurial, I’ve always loved.”

    WATCH: ‘SELLING THE CITY’ STAR TAYLOR MIDDLETON SAYS SHE WAS ALWAYS A REAL ESTATE JUNKIE

    “Selling the City” is a New York City-based spin-off of Netflix’s mega-hit show “Selling Sunset.” The series follows both the professional and personal lives of the ambitious realtors at the Manhattan branch of the firm Douglas Elliman as they “navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City,” per the streaming network.

    In the show, Middleton candidly opened up about her marital woes and her past struggles with Adderall addiction. While speaking with FOX Business, Middleton explained that her efforts to overcome her substance abuse issues had given her the drive to succeed in New York’s challenging real estate market.

    “Each person’s method is different for cracking the Big Apple,” she said. “And to me, there’s a phrase in recovery that I always stand by where it’s like, ‘Don’t miss the miracle. Don’t give up before the miracle.’ And I think that that’s what sets people apart who make it in New York or who don’t.”

    “And for some people, it’s just not for them,” Middleton continued. “And that’s all respect there, too. But for me, it’s like you just have to keep going — during the markets where you make no money, during the years when you make no money.” 

    “If you have that belief and confidence in yourself, if you just keep going — and the universe is also telling you you’re on the right path — then it’s going to work out.” 

    selling the city jordyn, taylor, jade and gisselle walking down the street

    Middleton is starring in the show alongside seven other agents at Douglas Elliman. (Courtesy of Netflix/© 2024 Netflix Inc. / Fox News)

    Middleton, who numbers celebrities, CEOs and other wealthy individuals among her roster of clients, told FOX Business that she had recently closed her biggest real estate deal to date. The TV personality was part of a development team that sold a Manhattan penthouse for just under $17 million.

    “That was definitely a team effort. I did not do it alone, but that was a big milestone sale for me,” she said.

    FORMER ‘SELLING SUNSET’ STAR WARNS FLORIDA’S HIGH CONDO PRICES TURNING INTO ‘BIG ISSUE’ WITH RETIREES

    While closing transactions with high price tags is always a cause for celebration, Middleton explained that the sales she has found most rewarding were often those she made by establishing strong personal connections with her clients. 

    “It’s not about even the sale number or the deal volume, it’s about the relationship,” she said. 

    the selling the city cast at a work meeting

    The show follows the agents as they “navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City.” (Courtesy of Netflix/© 2024 Netflix Inc. / Fox News)

    Middleton recalled meeting a couple who rented an apartment that she listed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Though she had not represented the pair in that deal, they stayed in touch and reached out to her when they were looking to buy a property in Manhattan.

    “We ended up finding them the most amazing apartment that worked for them and their family, where they started having kids and then their parents ended up getting a pied-à-terre” here in New York,” Middleton said.

    “They’re originally from the South,” she continued. “And so to be able to work with multiple family members on multiple deals, that’s the most rewarding, because you become really ingrained in a part of the fabric of these people’s life decisions. That’s the most rewarding part, where people feel comfortable enough with you that they refer you to family and friends.”

    eleanoria and taylor in nyc

    Eleonara Srugo recruited Middleton to join Douglas Elliman. (Courtesy of Netflix/© 2024 Netflix Inc. / Fox News)

    In addition to Middleton, the “Selling the City” cast consists of seven other Douglas Elliman real estate agents, including team leader Eleonara Srugo. Srugo, who has drawn comparisons to “Selling Sunset” patriarch Jason Oppenheim, executed Douglas Elliman’s biggest real estate deal of 2023 after selling a $75 million listing. 

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    The New York native is ranked among the top-selling real estate agents by sales volume nationwide, according to her biography on Douglas Elliman’s website.

    During her interview with FOX Business, Middleton recalled that she was working at another firm before Srugo recruited her to Douglas Elliman. She hadn’t anticipated that her new gig would lead to reality TV fame, but she jumped at the opportunity to be part of the series when it came along.

    “I joined [Srugo’s] team and then from there, all of a sudden, this show is coming about, and it was just kind of like, ‘OK, I’ll take both,’” Middleton said with a laugh.

    WATCH: ‘SELLING THE CITY’ STAR TAYLOR MIDDLETON SHARES HER SECRET TO CRACKING NEW YORK’S LUXURY REAL ESTATE MARKET

    cast photo of selling the city

    “Selling the City” is currently streaming on Netflix. (Courtesy of Netflix/© 2024 Netflix Inc. / Fox News)

    Though she noted that starring in a reality show was uncharted territory for her, Middleton told Fox Business that being part of “Selling the City” was “amazing.”

    “It was such a great experience,” she said. “But it’s like the wild, wild West. There’s no manual for how to do it and how to balance it all — all the personalities and everything like that. Overall, 95% of it, I would do it again in a heartbeat. It was fantastic.” 

    “I feel like I learned so much about myself, and it was really fun, and it’s cool to be able to share your story, your professional life,” she continued. “It’s a highlight reel.”

    “It was very positive.”

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