Tag: Reveals

  • WWE star JD McDonagh hits head in high-risk move during match, reveals extent of injuries

    WWE star JD McDonagh hits head in high-risk move during match, reveals extent of injuries

    WWE star JD McDonagh revealed he will be out a few months recovering from injuries sustained in a tag-team match on “Monday Night Raw.”

    McDonagh and Dominik Mysterio teamed up against the War Raiders, Erick and Ivar, in hopes of capturing the WWE World Tag Team Championship. 

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    JD McDonagh soars through the air against Ivar during WWE “Monday Night Raw” at State Farm Arena on Jan. 27, 2025 in Atlanta. (WWE/Getty Images)

    At one point in the match, McDonagh launched himself off of the middle rope and moonsaulted in an attempt to knockout one of his competitors. McDonagh connected with Ivar, but he hit the back of his head on the announcers’ table.

    “McDonagh is lucky he doesn’t have a damn broken neck,” Raw announcer Michael Cole said on the broadcast.

    Indeed, McDonagh was lucky he did not break his neck. He did suffer a few other injuries during the match though.

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    “First off, thanks to everyone for the messages and the concern. I’m good,” he wrote in a post early Tuesday morning.

    “I’ve got a couple of broken ribs and a punctured lung, so I’m going to be out for a couple months. All things considered, it could have been a lot worse, so I’m grateful for that. 

    “See ya in a bit.”

    JD McDonagh in December 2024

    R-Truth defeated JD McDonagh after crashing him on top of a table during the “Miracle on 34th Street Fight” at WWE “Monday Night Raw” at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa. (Reese Strickland/For the Register / USA TODAY NETWORK)

    McDonagh had been in the Judgement Day faction with Mysterio, and Finn Balor since he arrived on the main roster and even served as a tag-team champion with Balor at one point.

    He performed in WWE NXT UK and WWE NXT for a time before his call-up and was an NXT cruiserweight champion. Pro Wrestling Illustrated named him one of the top 500 singles wrestlers in 2019.

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    He has also competed in British Championship Wrestling, Fight Factory Pro Wrestling, NWA Ireland, Over the Top Wrestling, Progress Wrestling, Pro Wrestling Zero1 and TNT Extreme Wrestling.

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  • Jayden Daniels’ mom reveals why Commanders rookie remains single heading into NFC Championship

    Jayden Daniels’ mom reveals why Commanders rookie remains single heading into NFC Championship

    Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels will soon take the field for the biggest game of his football career.

    Daniels threw a pair of touchdowns during last week’s win over the top-seeded Detroit Lions to help Washington secure an upset victory and advance to the NFC Championship for the first time in more than three decades. 

    Many players from both the Commanders and the Philadelphia Eagles will likely have the full support of their significant other for Sunday’s big game. But, don’t expect a girlfriend to be rooting Daniels on from the stands – according to his mother.

    The young signal caller and leading offensive rookie of the year candidate’s mom, Regina Jackson, recently suggested her son is not dating anyone.

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    Quarterback Jayden Daniels of the LSU Tigers and his mother pose with The Heisman Memorial Trophy on Dec. 9, 2023, in New York City. (Gus Stark/LSU/University Images via Getty Images)

    Jackson shared some concerns she has for her son amid the Heisman Trophy winner’s stellar rookie campaign and his rising NFL stardom.

    COMMANDERS VS. EAGLES: NFC EAST RIVALRY BY THE NUMBERS

    “Girls, them girls.” she responded when asked about what she worried about as Daniels prepared to make the leap to the NFL in a clip posted by Amazon Prime Video from the streaming services docuseries “The Money Game.” The series explores how college athletes managed opportunities that arose due to the advent of name, image, and likeness (NIL).

    “Some girl out here, she’s got a Jayden Daniels wall and her mama says, ‘Hey honey, you’re going to be the one to get ‘em.’ And I know that sounds crazy, but I guarantee there’s someone who’s trying to get their hooks into Jayden Daniels,” Jackson said about women who look to her son for financial gain.

    “So thank god he got a mama like me because it ain’t happening,” she added.

    Regina Jackson hugs her son Jayden Daniels

    Regina Jackson, mom of Jayden Daniels of the Arizona State Sun Devils, celebrates a 42-23 win over the UCLA Bruins at Rose Bowl on Oct. 2, 2021, in Pasadena, California. (Harry How/Getty Images)

    Former Eagles running back and FOX Sports co-host LeSean McCoy commented in apparent agreement by saying, “Sound like my mom lol the MOMs KNO.”

    Daniels did not appear to be shocked by Jackson’s remarks 

    “I bet she did say something like that,” the former LSU star said as he smiled and laughed. This was not the first time Daniels spoke about his mother’s efforts to make sure her son has a trustworthy group around him. 

    Jayden Daniels vs Lions

    Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels throws a pass against the Lions at Ford Field in Detroit, Jan. 18, 2025. (Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images)

    “Nothing gets past my mama,” Daniels told Boardroom in December. “She reads people, she doesn’t want to put people around me that she doesn’t feel will benefit me.”

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    The Eagles will welcome the Washington Commanders to Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday. Kickoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. ET. On the AFC side, the Kansas City Chiefs host the Bills in the second conference championship game of the day. The winners from each of those contests will meet in Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans.

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  • LA real estate agent reveals No. 1 reason why Pacific Palisades residents won’t return

    LA real estate agent reveals No. 1 reason why Pacific Palisades residents won’t return

    After making a shocking prediction that up to 70% of Pacific Palisades residents won’t return to rebuild and live in their homes, former “Million Dollar Listing” real estate agent Josh Altman is explaining exactly why.

    “They’re not going to not return because they don’t want to return. Of course they want to go back there… They’re not going to return because it’s simple math,” Altman said on “FOX Business Live,” Friday.

    “I don’t believe they’re going to be able to afford to rebuild with most of the people that are heavily underinsured, with the costs of construction, lumber, steel. We’re talking about a $1,000 [per] foot building in the Palisades and in Malibu.”

    Southern California has been grappling with a surge of wildfires since Jan. 7. Over 50,000 acres have been scorched, 28 people have been killed and upwards of 16,000 homes and buildings have been completely lost.

    L.A. CELEBRITY BROKER IS HOLDING WILDFIRE ‘BAD’ APPLES ACCOUNTABLE, URGING THEM TO ‘GET THEIR ACT TOGETHER’

    President Donald Trump declared a national emergency Friday after touring the devastation in Los Angeles with residents who were personally impacted by the disastrous event.

    Former “Million Dollar Listing” star Josh Altman argues that the main reason why up to 70% of Pacific Palisades residents won’t return to their homes is due to expensive insurance and buildings costs, on “FOX Business Live.” (FOXBusiness)

    Early estimates put the total financial loss of the wildfires in the $50 billion range, according to AccuWeather and JPMorgan. Leading up to the fires, several insurance companies either fled, stopped writing new policies or reduced coverage in the Golden State.

    “And that’s on top of getting a construction crew to show up to your site when there’s 16,000 structures that have been burned between houses, schools, commercial spaces. It’s a disaster,” Altman expanded. “That’s what I’m saying, I don’t know that they’ll be able to do it with the insurance.”

    Newsom signed off on a relief package where the state will spend $2.5 billion to help with wildfire recovery. But Altman wants Newsom to take his response a step further by removing bureaucratic roadblocks that make building homes in California timely and costly.

    “The recipe for success is going to be cutting the red tape. Building a house, the process in California, which is just wrapped in red tape, is absolutely impossible: a year to get permits; you’ve got the Coastal Commission, which could be another two years. It’s time for the governor to start cutting the red tape. We got to move forward as a team,” he said.

    “There’s been a lot of ordinances and a lot of things on the state and local level that have to go. The mansion tax, that was the worst tax that was ever passed,” Altman continued. “Get rid of it for all the people who lost their houses. The wildlife ordinance, get rid of it. Start cutting the red tape. That’s how we’re going to get back to being [a] strong Los Angeles.”

    The real estate expert, who spoke ahead of the president’s visit, hoped Trump seeing the devastation with his own eyes would lead to more federal aid and assistance.

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    “You have to see it. I have walked the Palisades, I have walked Malibu. It is way worse in person than you could ever imagine. Hopefully that will open up funding on the federal level.”

    Critical fire conditions waned across the region, Friday, with isolated pockets of rain expected over the weekend. The beneficial rain will peak in coverage Sunday, but could trigger mudslides in burn-scar areas.

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    Fox News’ Stepheny Price and FOX Weather’s Chris Oberholtz contributed to this report.

  • Brand featuring Caleb Pressley, formerly of Barstool, reveals boozy ice cream collaboration

    Brand featuring Caleb Pressley, formerly of Barstool, reveals boozy ice cream collaboration

    Peanut butter fans everywhere can now enjoy the rich and roasted aromas of one of the most popular spreads in the world while also enjoying a buzz.

    Chica Chida, a peanut butter agave spirit made with allergen-free extract, has partnered with Tipsy Scoop, a brand known for its liquor-infused ice cream, to release “Peanut Butter and Jealous.” The flavor, appropriately named for the heartbroken and envious, launched just in time for Valentine’s Day.

    “Tipsy Scoop is obviously known for their boozy ice cream, so what better way to use this?” Sam Hirsch, co-founder of the brand, told FOX Business. “It came together pretty naturally.”

    UNCONVENTIONAL USES FOR PEANUT BUTTER THAT WILL AMAZE YOU AND BE SURPRISINGL USEFUL TO YOUR DAY-TO-DAY

    ‘Peanut Butter and Jealous’ is made with peanut butter ice cream, liquor-infused grape jelly and Chica Chida agave spirits. (Chica Chida; Tipsy Scoop / Fox News)

    Swirled with liquor-infused grape jelly, the peanut butter ice cream combined with Chica~Chida was blended to evoke a sense of nostalgia. Each pint contains 5% ABV.

    “When I was briefed on a potential collaboration, I was super excited about it,” Hirsch said. “It was a no-brainer for us.”

    Chica Chida is crafted in Tequila, Mexico, using espadin, a species of agave.

    “It is not technically a tequila, because we’re not using blue agave,” Hirsch told FOX Business.

    The unique flavor was crafted as a product designated for the shooter category, though the taste has sparked creativity among mixologists.

    TEQUILA AND MEZCAL: WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?

    Caleb Pressley, Chica Chida liquor split image

    Former Barstool interviewer Caleb Pressley joined Chica Chida as the celebrity face of the brand. (Chica Chida / Fox News)

    “We get so many emails, so many videos, so many images from all around our territories of distributions,” Hirsch said. “People have adopted this seriously in cocktail culture.”

    Among the most popular recipes using Chica Chida are peanut butter and jelly shots, peanut butter espresso martinis and spiked hot chocolate.

    Chica Chida teamed up with former Barstool interviewer Caleb Pressley to serve as the face of the brand.

    “I’d never heard of anything like it before,” Pressley told FOX Business. “It tastes great. It’s in its own lane. Every single person that tries it, loves it.”

    DRY CLIMATE IN CALIFORNIA IDEAL FOR FARMING AGAVE, MEETING DEMAND FOR SPIRITS

    Pressley recently announced his departure from Barstool to launch his own production company, Bill Joe Productions.

    The podcaster’s biological father, Billy Joe, was a NASCAR driver who passed away when Pressley was just a child. Pressley met his stepdad, Bill Lee Joe, when he was six years old.

    “My stepdad stepped into my house and really became just an awesome father for me,” Pressley said. “I never felt a day like I didn’t have a dad. He was just a super rock-solid foundation for me and my brother.”

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    The production company is named after a combination of his dad’s names as a tribute to both of them.

    “Peanut Butter and Jealous” is available online and in New York City and Washington, D.C., stores until Feb. 28.

  • Shohei Ohtani’s ex-interpreter impersonated Dodgers star to push through 6-figure wire transfer, audio reveals

    Shohei Ohtani’s ex-interpreter impersonated Dodgers star to push through 6-figure wire transfer, audio reveals

    A four-minute audio recording was disclosed by federal prosecutors Thursday that shows Shohei Ohtani’s former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, allegedly attempting to push through a six-figure wire transfer from one of the Los Angeles Dodgers’ star’s accounts by impersonating him. 

    Mizuhara has been convicted of defrauding Ohtani, the National League MVP and world baseball superstar, and the recording, obtained by The Athletic from the Department of Justice, is a key piece of evidence. 

    It was mentioned in a court filing, which also had prosecutors recommending a nearly five-year sentence for Mizuhara and an order to repay Ohtani, according to The Athletic. 

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    Ippei Mizuhara pleaded guilty June 4, 2024, to bank and tax fraud in a sports betting case and admitted stealing nearly $17 million from Shohei Ohtani. (AP Photo/Eric Thayer, File)

    Mizuhara, who is scheduled to be sentenced Feb. 6, pleaded guilty to bank fraud and filing a false tax return after stealing almost $17 million from Ohtani, who he was best friends with for years, in June 2024. 

    The recording was obtained from a bank, assistant U.S. attorney Jeff Mitchell told The Athletic, and it supports prosecutors’ claims that Mizuhara would call banks to arrange wire transfers. 

    Prosecutors added that the recording was edited to redact bank names and the name of an “unindicated co-conspirator.”

    FORMER SHOHEI OHTANI INTERPRETER PLEADS GUILTY TO CHARGES IN SPORTS BETTING CASE

    In the recording, Mizuhara clearly states his name is Ohtani after the bank agent asks, “Who am I speaking with?” Mizuhara bypassed the bank’s security measures and changed Ohtani’s account information to include his own email and phone number.

    So, when the bank agent asks Mizuhara to perform a two-factor authentication using a six-digit code sent to a phone number, he can do so because it’s going to his phone instead of Ohtani’s. 

    The recording shows Mizuhara matching the numbers, which allows the agent to work on his request, a car loan for $200,000.

    “Now recently, we’ve come across a trend of fraud and scams, so we have been monitoring the online transactions closely to make sure our clients are not the victim of either,” the agent says first. “What is the reason for this transaction?”

    Ohtani and interpreter at conference

    Shohei Ohtani and Ippei Mizuhara of the Los Angeles Dodgers during a press conference at Dodger Stadium Dec. 14, 2023, in Los Angeles.  (Rob Leiter/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

    Then, the agent asks “Ohtani” what his relationship to the payee is, to which Mizuhara says, “He’s my friend.”

    “Have you met your friend in person”” the agent responds. 

    “Yes, many times,” Mizuhara answered. 

    Mizuhara said he stole from Ohtani to cover “major gambling debt,” which he said in a brief statement after pleading guilty. 

    “I went ahead and wired money … with his bank account,” Mizuhara said in the statement at the time. 

    Prosecutors asked that the restitution amount bet set at nearly $17 million for Ohtani, though it was noted Mizuhara is unable to pay that back to the All-Star. Another $1.1 million in restitution is being sought by the IRS.

    Ippei Mizuhara looks up

    Japanese interpreter Ippei Mizuhara attends a press conference at Dodgers Stadium in Los Angeles Dec. 14, 2023. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images)

    The ex-interpreter’s winning bets totaled over $142 million, which he deposited into his own bank account and not Ohtani’s. His losing bets were around $183 million. He did not bet on baseball.

    There is also no indication Ohtani bet on baseball. 

    The Athletic reported the court filing says that, between December 2021 and January 2024, Mizuhara placed around 19,000 bets online through Matthew Bowyer, his bookie who also pleaded guilty to running an illegal gambling business in August 2024.

    Mizuhara’s debt was up to $40.7 million. 

    “His years-long theft of funds from Mr. Ohtani and the myriad lies he told to Mr. Ohtani’s agents and financial advisors to cover up his theft represent a calculated betrayal of the very person he was hired to help,” Mitchell wrote in the court filing. 

    Ipphei Mizuhara talks to reporters

    Ippei Mizuhara, the former interpreter for Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani, arrives at federal court in Los Angeles June 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

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    “To summarize how I’m feeling right now, I’m just beyond shocked,” Ohtani said in a statement on the matter last year. “It’s really hard to verbalize how I’m feeling at this point.

    “I’m very saddened and shocked that someone who I trusted has done this.”

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  • ESPN analyst reveals how ex-colleague’s Obama comments became point of contention

    ESPN analyst reveals how ex-colleague’s Obama comments became point of contention

    Sage Steele, in a lawsuit against her former employer, ESPN, accused analyst Ryan Clark of refusing to work with her due to opposing political views.

    Clark admitted recently on “The Michele Tafoya Show” that part of the accusation wasn’t false, but he felt the need to clear the air.

    Tafoya asked Clark about the lawsuit, which alleged Clark refused to work with Steele after she made controversial comments on former NFL quarterback Jay Cutler’s podcast in 2021.

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    ESPN analyst Ryan Clark broadcasts from the field before a game between the San Francisco 49ers and New York Jets at Levi’s Stadium Sept. 9, 2024, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)

    On the podcast, Steele reflected on an appearance on “The View,” in which she said Barbara Walters “ripped me” for saying it was “important” to label herself as biracial.

    Steele said Walters then brought up that former President Barack Obama, who is biracial, chose “Black” when filling out paperwork for a census.

    “I’m like, well, congratulations to the president. That’s his thing. I think that’s fascinating considering his Black dad was nowhere to be found, but his white mom and grandma raised him. But hey, you do you. I’m going to do me,” Steele said on Cutler’s podcast.

    Clark said he disagreed with Steele on many political topics, including her vaccination stance and Colin Kaepernick’s protests, but he had “no issue” with her being a conservative.

    “Sage Steele being a conservative was, like, the worst-kept secret at ESPN,” the former Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back quipped.

    However, her comments on Obama were the “only” thing that “offended” him and prompted him to speak with a producer at ESPN about hosting a segment together.

    Sage Steele at Trump rally

    Sage Steele takes the stage during a Donald Trump campaign rally at Lancaster Airport Nov. 3, 2024, in Lititz, Pa. (Getty Images)

    3 PEOPLE CHARGED WITH SELLING FORGED JASON KELCE MEMORABILIA

    “As a Black man who understands that no matter what President Obama decides to check off as his race, he’s going to be seen as an entire country as a Black man. He’s going to be viewed if policemen say, ‘The suspect is a Black, tall, slender, light-skinned man,’ President Obama would fit that description,” Clark said. 

    “He’s also a man that was married to a Black woman. He was also a man that was raising two young Black daughters. And I felt that was disrespectful to say, ‘Why would someone with that blood running through their veins want to represent that culture?’”

    Clark admitted he told a producer he wanted another host, Matt Barrie, to “conduct my segment.”

    “Because what I know is this … chemistry is a large part of TV. It’s a large part of our ability to be able to entertain. And I didn’t want my discomfort with what she said to show on screen,” Clark said.

    Clark said it was a one-time thing with Steele, and they were able to “work … in a very cordial way” until she left ESPN. He added they no longer speak, “but I obviously wish her all the best in all her endeavors.”

    Ryan Clark at Jags game

    ESPN’s Ryan Clark chats with colleagues on air before a game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Jacksonville Jaguars Dec. 4, 2023, at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla. (Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

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    “She now has found a place where, entertainment-wise, she feels like she fits, she feels like she has a voice and she has a passion. And I feel like we all should be entitled to that, whether you agree or disagree.”

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  • Eli Manning reveals Knob Creek partnership ahead of Super Bowl

    Eli Manning reveals Knob Creek partnership ahead of Super Bowl

    NFL legend and former New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning has teamed up with Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey brand Knob Creek to offer Super Bowl fans a limited-edition bottle ahead of game day on Feb. 9.

    Manning, opposite Knob Creek’s master distillers Fred Noe and Freddie Noe, personally selected Eli Manning’s 2025 Bold Pick, a single barrel bourbon.

    “I got to go down to Kentucky and handpick this bourbon,” Manning told FOX Business.

    PEYTON, ELI MANNING LAUNCH PREMIUM BOURBON SWEETENS COVE AT $200 A BOTTLE

    Two-time Super Bowl champion Eli Manning partnered with Knob Creek to release a limited-edition bottle of bourbon. (Knob Creek / Fox News)

    However, the whiskey aisle in your local stores will probably be bare of this booze as the release is exclusive to locations special to the Super Bowl champion himself — the New York Metro area where Manning played professionally, his hometown of New Orleans and sports hub Los Angeles.

    The youngest Manning brother expressed his pleasure in collaborating with the Noe father-and-son duo to craft a unique flavor while diving deep into the history of the brand.

    “It was an unbelievable experience,” Manning said.

    Bold Pick is said to taste of toffee, honey, dark stone fruit with hints of dark chocolate and finish with spicy cinnamon, black pepper, brown sugar and espresso.

    ELI MANNING SHARES HIS DAD’S FUNNY TEXTING HABIT IN SOCIAL MEDIA POST

    Eli Manning sipping on bourbon

    Manning traveled to Kentucky to work alongside master distillers Fred and Freddie Noe to hand select Bold Pick. (Knob Creek / Fox News)

    “It’s just perfect for celebrating the big moments and wins in your life,” Manning said.

    Frigid weather conditions in the South, Midwest and East and Sunday football are the perfect excuse to stay inside and sip Bold Pick on the rocks, according to Manning.

    Manning’s Bold Pick is “patiently aged for a minimum of nine years in American white oak barrels,” according to a Knob Creek press release provided to FOX Business.

    The suggested retail price is $59.99.

    Manning, with his older brother and former NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, will return to the action-packed Pro Bowl as head coach again this year.

    “It’s been a lot of fun coaching the Pro Bowl these last two years,” Manning said. “Especially beating Peyton these last two years.”

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    Knob Creek Eli Manning's Bold Pick Bourbon

    Eli Manning’s 2025 Bold Pick is a single barrel bourbon by Knob Creek. (Knob Creek / Fox News)

    The two-time Super Bowl champion will coach the NFC contingent, while Peyton will team up with the AFC, aiming to end Eli’s winning streak on Feb. 2, a week before Super Bowl LIX.

    “I know Peyton’s been studying,” Manning said. “He’s brought in experts on all these skills challenges to try to get some extra information.”

    As for the Super Bowl, the Manning family will be together in New Orleans on game day, where they will stay with their parents.

    “I don’t even have to get a hotel,” Manning said. “We’ll probably be on Bourbon Street, so it’s a good opportunity to drink a little Knob’s Creek bourbon as well.”

  • Karine Jean-Pierre reveals mom’s cancer diagnosis — and why she kept it secret

    Karine Jean-Pierre reveals mom’s cancer diagnosis — and why she kept it secret

    Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the podium in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday. 

    Jean-Pierre, who chose to keep her personal life private while working in the Biden-Harris administration, revealed a private health battle that put significant weight on her and her family.

    Jean-Pierre recalled attending the Bidens’ first state dinner in December 2022, saying it was “the first time the administration felt a dinner was safe to host since the pandemic began.” That evening Jean-Pierre was accompanied by her mother, who told her that it was “the happiest day of my life.”

    The state dinner was the last time Jean-Pierre “recognized my mother as the woman I grew up with.” Unfortunately, things took a turn, and just a couple of months later, her mother was diagnosed with stage II colon cancer. Jean-Pierre found out that her mother was sick while visiting Poland with then-President Joe Biden.

    “My mother has always been a private person. When she finally acquiesced to reality, she told me: ‘Don’t tell anyone. Do not tell the president I have cancer,’” the former press secretary wrote.

    WHITE HOUSE REPORTERS REFLECT ON COVERING RECLUSIVE BIDEN, WHAT THEY HOPE FOR IN COVERING TRUMP

    Then-White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 30, 2023. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

    Biden was supposedly “one of only a few people at the White House” who knew about what Jean-Pierre’s mother was going through. Jean-Pierre said Biden “showed up for me” during the difficult time.

    While navigating her mother’s care alongside her siblings, Jean-Pierre was driving to New York “every weekend I could to see my mom,” only to return late at night to catch “a few hours of sleep” before heading to the White House.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on April 9, 2024 in Washington, D.C.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on April 9, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    Despite serving in a very public-facing role in the Biden-Harris administration with her “second full-time job” coordinating her mother’s care, Jean-Pierre explained that being a “private person” is only one of the reasons why she did not make her mom’s cancer battle public. The former press secretary said she was also working under the “weight” of being a “first.”

    “I’m the first Black press secretary. The first person of color press secretary. The first openly queer press secretary. The first Haitian American immigrant press secretary. The first press secretary to be all of the above. Being a first meant that my responsibilities were beyond those in the job description, the load heavier. I bear a certain responsibility to the communities I represent,” Jean-Pierre wrote.

    KARINE JEAN-PIERRE’S MOST MEMORABLE MOMENTS OF 2024

    Jean-Pierre also claimed that she believed sharing her mother’s diagnosis would have been seen “as an excuse” because “society doesn’t allow women of color to be vulnerable at work. When you’re a first, you don’t get the benefit of the doubt.”

    Jen Psaki and Karine Jean-Pierre

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre took over the role in May 2022, when Jen Psaki left for MSNBC. (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

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    During her time in the White House briefing room, Jean-Pierre faced criticism for a series of embarrassing and controversial moments.

    In one of her more infamous moments, Jean-Pierre accused the media and others of making “cheap fakes” that made Biden “appear especially frail or mentally confused.” As the American people wondered if the commander in chief was capable of carrying out the duties of his office, Jean-Pierre was gaslighting them by chalking it up to “misinformation” and “disinformation.”

    After Biden spoke out against Georgia’s voting laws, dubbing them “Jim Crow 2.0,” Jean-Pierre raised eyebrows with her claim that “high turnout and voter suppression can take place at the same time.”

    Jean-Pierre was also tasked with walking back denials of the possibility that the president would pardon his son, Hunter Biden. Once the president issued his son’s pardon, despite repeatedly vowing not to do so, Jean-Pierre explained the pivot by saying that the “circumstances have changed.” She also placed the blame on then-President-elect Trump, saying that the president was trying to protect his son from Republican “retribution.”

    In May 2022, Jean-Pierre took over for her predecessor Jen Psaki, who served as Biden’s press secretary for nearly a year and a half. When handing the reins over to Jean-Pierre, Psaki called her successor a “remarkable person” before listing her qualifications for the position. 

  • Nick Saban reveals ‘biggest mistake’ of illustrious coaching career

    Nick Saban reveals ‘biggest mistake’ of illustrious coaching career

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    Nick Saban is arguably the greatest college football coach of all time, having won six national championships with Alabama and one while he was at LSU.

    Saban, who finished his career with 292 wins, does not seem to carry a long list of regrets over the course of his career. He left coaching on his own terms last year following an incredibly successful era with the Crimson Tide. 

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    ESPN analyst Nick Saban before the game between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the Penn State Nittany Lions in the Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on Jan. 9, 2025. (Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images)

    He did, however, admit in a recent interview there was at least one thing he wished he could have back – jumping from LSU to coach the Miami Dolphins. Saban famously left the Tigers after winning a national championship to coach the Dolphins for two seasons. He then claimed he would not take the Alabama job but eventually did so anyway.

    He said on “The Pivot” leaving LSU for the NFL was his “biggest mistake.”

    “I think sometimes you have to learn about yourself,” he told LSU alumnus Ryan Clark, ex-Dolphins linebacker Channing Crowder and former NFL star running back Fred Taylor. “And you might think things … When I left LSU, that was probably ‘professionally’ the biggest mistake that I ever made,” he admitted.

    OHIO STATE NATIONAL CHAMPION JACK SAWYER LEANING ON FAITH AS HE GEARS UP FOR NFL: ‘KEEP TRUSTING HIS PLAN’

    Nick Saban with the Dolphins

    Nick Saban is introduced as the new Miami Dolphins head coach at the Dolphins practice facility in Davie, Florida, on Jan. 4, 2005. (Jason Parkhurst-USA TODAY Sports )

    “Not because we didn’t have success in Miami. I enjoyed coaching in Miami. I found out in that experience that I like coaching college better, because you can develop players personally, academically, athletically and all that a little more than pro ball, even though I loved the status of coaching in pro football and the kind of guys you coach, and you’re coaching in the best league against the best players, I loved all that.”

    Saban added that his agent, Jimmy Sexton, talked to him about leaving LSU. Saban said Sexton posed the question, “Do you want to be Bear Bryant or Vince Lombardi in terms of his legacy?” Saban said he answered he wanted to be more like Bryant but chose to go the NFL route anyway.

    Nick Saban with LSU

    Head coach Nick Saban smiles as Chad Lavalais, #93, and Stephen Peterman, #72, kiss the ADT National Championship Trophy after winning the 2004 Nokia Sugar Bowl, defeating Oklahoma 21-14, in New Orleans on Jan. 4, 2004. (Douglas Collier-USA TODAY NETWORK)

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    Saban will mostly be remembered for his run at Alabama, but his stint in the NFL may be the only blemish on his resume any football fan could point to.

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

  • CNN’s net worth cut in half between 2021 and 2023, forensic economist reveals during defamation trial

    CNN’s net worth cut in half between 2021 and 2023, forensic economist reveals during defamation trial

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peek in the network’s books that revealed its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023. 

    Young successfully alleged CNN smeared him by implying he illegally profited when helping people flee Afghanistan on the “black market” during the Biden administration’s military withdrawal from the country in 2021. The six-person jury ruled Young was to be awarded $4 million in lost earnings and $1 million in personal damages, and it also found punitive damages were warranted against CNN. 

    Before punitive damages were awarded, both sides had a chance to argue their case to the jury. The plaintiff called acclaimed forensic economist Robert W. Johnson to break down the current condition of CNN’s finances and the network’s ability to pay punitive damages. 

    JURY FINDS CNN COMMITTED DEFAMATION AGAINST NAVY VETERAN, SETTLEMENT REACHED ON PUNITIVE DAMAGES

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week.

    Johnson, who was a paid witness, used the “standard method of economic analysis” that is “used and relied upon by economists to quantify the financial condition” of CNN. He said in a perfect world he would have seen CNN’s balance sheets and income statements, but those were “never provided.”

    Instead, CNN provided 1120 U.S. Corporate Income Tax returns for the years 2021 through 2023. Johnson said he would have preferred to also receive the 2024 tax statement, but he would rely on the information that was provided.

    “We believe them to be accurate, valid and truthful,” Johnson said of the documents he was provided. 

    CNN was worth $4.4 billion in 2021 but dropped to $2.3 billion in 2023, according to Johnson. 

    CNN DEFAMATION TRIAL: EDITOR WHO SAID STORY WAS ‘FULL OF HOLES LIKE SWISS CHEESE’ GRILLED ON WITNESS STAND

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    Before punitive damages were awarded in Zachary Young’s victory over CNN, both sides had a chance to argue their case to the jury. The plaintiff’s paid witness showed the jury CNN financial data from 1120 U.S. Corporate Income Tax returns for the yea

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    CNN’s net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023, according to data shown to jurors. 

    During that time, CNN has had multiple leadership changes as it struggled to attract viewers during the Biden administration. CNN has seen significant turnover since 2021, with high-profile hosts like Don Lemon and Chris Cuomo out the door. 

    Former parent company WarnerMedia merged with Discovery to create Warner Bros. Discovery in 2022. 

    Johnson’s data also showed that CNN’s revenue dropped from $2.2 billion in 2021 to $1.8 billion in 2023. CNN’s net income over the same period dropped from $0.6 billion in 2021 to $0.4 billion in 2023, according to the network’s tax returns provided to Johnson. 

    Washington Post media reporter Jeremy Barr responded to the data on X, writing “these are not numbers we normally get.”

    CNN DEFAMATION TRIAL: PLAINTIFF ACCUSES NETWORK OF FAKING CRITICAL PHONE CALL FOR ‘THEATER’

    A Florida jury found that CNN defamed U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young last week, allowing a rare peak into the network’s books that reveal its net worth was cut in half from 2021 to 2023.

    Forensic economist Robert W. Johnson.

    CNN still had a $424.9 million cash flow profit in 2023 despite widespread struggles to attract an audience. CNN and Young reached a settlement before the jury could decide on punitive damages. 

    CNN dismissed Johnson’s findings. 

    “The numbers represent the Plaintiff’s interpretation of a subset of data as presented in litigation, and they do not represent financial data for the whole of CNN’s business,” a CNN spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

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