About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of Fox News Highlights - April 21st, 2026 from Fox News, published April 23, 2026. The transcript contains 4,660 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.
"Fox News alert. Bridge and power plant day could now be any day of the week. A fierce power struggle breaking out in Iran. And President Trump showing a lot of patience. 47 says U.S. airstrikes have seriously fractured the regime. So Pakistan asked us to hold off on B&P day until Iran can get it..."
[0:00] Fox News alert. Bridge and power plant day could now be any day of the week. A fierce power struggle
[0:05] breaking out in Iran. And President Trump showing a lot of patience. 47 says U.S. airstrikes have
[0:12] seriously fractured the regime. So Pakistan asked us to hold off on B&P day until Iran can get it
[0:19] together. Tonight there could be a coup. No one knows who's calling the shots. Vance, Witkoff,
[0:25] and Kushner were supposed to leave for Islamabad, but they never took off because the Iranian
[0:31] delegation never took off, which is suspicious because this morning Trump said the gay Ayatollah
[0:37] authorized the deal. They just got the okay to go forward, which I knew they were going to do
[0:42] anyway. I mean, I don't think that ensures they have to negotiate. And, you know, the one thing
[0:48] I'll say is this. Iran can get themselves at a very good footing if they make a deal. They can
[0:52] make themselves into a strong nation again, a wonderful nation again. They have incredible
[0:57] people. But they seem to be, you know, bloodthirsty. So the gay Ayatollah told his ministers wheels
[1:05] up, but the military said, not so fast. We're basically looking at another Iranian hostage crisis.
[1:13] This time they've taken themselves hostage and therefore the negotiations. The IRGC won't agree
[1:20] to sign over the strait and the uranium. And they're the only votes that matter because they're
[1:26] the ones with the guns. The generals are demanding Trump lift the blockade as a precondition for more
[1:33] peace talks. They want to play an economic game of chicken. Iran sees this as a game of endurance.
[1:41] They believe that time is on their side and that ultimately the domestic pressure when it comes to
[1:46] energy markets and the stock market will force President Trump to make a deal that's in their
[1:50] favor. That is not the truth. That is not the reality. The president and his counterparts in
[1:56] Israel have the ability to continue this operation for months if they need to. It's the Iranians up
[2:02] against the clock. The blockades already cost them over a billion dollars. Checks are bouncing and their
[2:08] economies in a death spiral and facing a great depression. Scott Besant says, quote, in a matter of
[2:13] days, Karg Island storage will be full and the fragile Iranian oil wells will be shut in. The blockades
[2:21] turned around 28 ships sailing to or from Iranian ports, most of them oil tankers. And we took custody
[2:28] of a runner sailing in from China with missile ingredients. We caught a ship yesterday that had
[2:34] some things on it, which wasn't very nice. A gift from China, perhaps. I don't know. But I was a little
[2:40] surprised because I have a very good relationship and I thought I had an understanding with President
[2:45] Xi, but that's all right. That's the way war goes, right? And it just got worse for the enemy. The
[2:50] Navy boarded another vessel from their shadow fleet, the Tiffany. How cute. A sanctioned tanker carrying
[2:56] two million barrels of Iranian crude sailing to Shanghai. No bueno. The blockade's ripple effect
[3:03] is hitting Beijing. Choke points are getting squeezed from the Gulf to the Strait of Malacca.
[3:07] It just so happens that we conducted joint naval exercises with the Japanese in the South China
[3:13] Sea. And the army just finished up joint live fire training with the Philippines.
[3:19] Xi's losing friends fast. The president putting pressure on the Middle Kingdom to make its proxy
[3:25] give up the dust. Vance isn't flying halfway across the world to Pakistan for nothing.
[3:32] This could have a salutary ending. What are the chances of that? I think probably two and three right
[3:38] now, 65 percent. They're not sending the vice president over there to walk away again. They
[3:44] really think there'll be a deal. I think there's a two and three chance we get to it.
[3:49] And if you watch primetime last night, General Petraeus also seemed optimistic about a deal.
[3:55] He just didn't think it happened today. And he was right. Our patience may be running thin,
[4:01] but our stockpile isn't. It's not my choice, but it will also hit them. It'll hurt them militarily.
[4:07] They use the bridges for their weapons, for their missile movements. You know, they're trying to
[4:13] move the missiles because we've obliterated most of their missiles and they're trying to move their
[4:16] missiles around even during the ceasefire, which I think was a good thing because we're totally loaded
[4:21] up. We have so much ammo. We have so much of everything that we've like a much, much more powerful
[4:27] than it was four or five weeks ago. So we've used this to restock and they probably have done a
[4:32] little bit of restocking. Over the last 24 hours, we're seeing heavy Air Force activity, major
[4:39] resupplies coming in from American bases in Europe. Plus, the USS Gerald Ford just re-entered the Red
[4:45] Sea. And by Saturday, we'll have all three carrier strike groups, the Ford, Lincoln, and Bush in theater.
[4:52] We might unwrap some new toys. The Marines just unveiled a new shore-to-shore landing ship
[4:57] designed to deliver 800 tons of troops, weapons, supplies directly to beachheads.
[5:04] Getting its last coat of paint is the lead ship, the USS McClung, named after a Marine major who was
[5:11] killed in combat in Iraq, the first female graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy to be killed in action.
[5:18] Our anti-subaircraft, the P-8 Poseidon, has been surveilling the strait from the skies
[5:24] and they're working overtime. So KC-135 strata tankers are refueling them midair. We're locked
[5:30] and loaded. CENTCOM commander Admiral Brad Cooper went to Israel last week where he approved joint
[5:36] plans for a brand new target bank, which include energy and infrastructure and whatever missile
[5:42] launchers the regime dug out of the rubble. The ceasefire gave us time not only to resupply and
[5:48] acquire new targets, but a fresh batch of human intelligence came in. Any leader who poked his head
[5:54] out in the last two weeks is a goner. The alliance has spies all up and down Iran.
[6:01] So the next round of airstrikes will be devastating if it happens. Hard to know exactly what's happening
[6:06] inside the ranks, but sources tell Primetime the military sidelined the mullahs and are keeping
[6:12] the gay ayatollah alive as a figurehead while they assert control over negotiations. They basically
[6:19] have a gun to the head of the negotiators and now everyone's afraid of getting killed, not just by
[6:24] the Americans, but by the Iranian military. It appears that there's already been somewhat of a
[6:30] soft military coup. And as the blockade keeps breaking the country's bank, there could be a
[6:37] coup within the military. The generals are having to decide the best way to hold on to power. Is it
[6:42] in a post-deal Iran or is it in a state of constant warfare? No idea. This would be like if the enemy
[6:51] took out Trump, Vance, and the entire cabinet in 40 seconds, knocked out our entire military plus
[6:58] all of our defense contractors and had North America surrounded with carriers. And then Speaker
[7:05] Mike Johnson was supposed to fly overseas for peace talks and a bunch of two-star generals pulled out a
[7:12] gun and said, Mike, you're not going anywhere. For the first time in a long time, the president
[7:19] doesn't have a deadline. It's unusual for him, which tells me he's going to watch it unfold,
[7:26] feel it out, and a deal or an attack could happen at any minute.
[7:31] And welcome to Hannity. Tonight, we start with this Fox News alert. Now, new reporting tonight,
[7:37] sources telling me that the ceasefire extension in Iran announced by the president that will be
[7:42] short-lived unless a deal is reached quickly. Now, earlier today, the president announced that
[7:47] American strikes will not yet resume and he will allow peace negotiations to continue. According
[7:53] to my sources, mostly this was out of respect for the Pakistani mediators and as a final push for
[8:00] peace for the war-torn Iranian people. The president is also giving more time to Iran's regime to attempt
[8:07] to coordinate and actually communicate with each other, which nobody's really factored in because
[8:12] they're kind of shallow in their analysis. It is not an easy task in Iran these days. Thanks to
[8:18] America's incredible military intel campaign, it's not like any of these leaders are free to just pick
[8:24] up a cell phone and call other leaders in the country without the very real fear of being blown to
[8:31] pieces. Now, we'll have much more on this in a moment. The president just put out a truth saying
[8:36] Iran doesn't want the straight closed. They want it open. They're losing $500 million a day.
[8:43] Now, along with the ongoing schism inside Iran, which frankly is not the president's problem,
[8:48] but tonight we are tracking multiple major breaking stories around the country and across the globe.
[8:53] In Virginia, the race has been called. The yes votes have won out on that special referendum
[8:58] Democrats will use to try and attempt to rig all but one of the state's 11 congressional districts in
[9:05] their favor. Donald Trump got 46 percent of the vote. Now, the wording of this amendment,
[9:10] it was so corrupt, so abusively one-sided and biased, a judicial review is a certainty. Meanwhile,
[9:17] in Florida, a Democratic congresswoman just resigned amid a 15-count criminal corruption indictment.
[9:24] We have a report on that tonight. And also tonight, new details surrounding the deaths,
[9:29] the disappearances of multiple scientists working on top-secret government projects,
[9:34] including UFO-related research. And sad news also tonight out of Mexico, where two Americans
[9:41] purportedly working for the CIA were killed when their car, quote, plunged 600 feet off a cliff
[9:47] and burst into flames. Plus, in a moment, we're going to contrast President Trump's efforts to save
[9:54] the lives of eight Iranian women that are scheduled to be executed to that of a top Democratic senator
[10:01] from Connecticut who is literally cheering for Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard.
[10:07] Senator John Fetterman will weigh in on that. But we begin in Iran tonight,
[10:11] where President Trump offered a short, temporary lifeline to the disjointed Iranian regime,
[10:17] writing on Truth Social, quote, based on the fact that the government of Iran is seriously fractured,
[10:23] not unexpectedly so. And upon the request of Pakistan's prime minister, we have been asked
[10:28] to hold our attack on the country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives
[10:33] can come up with a unified proposal. But this is no cause for celebration. Among the hardline
[10:39] terrorists running Iran because the president has, quote, directed our military to continue the
[10:44] blockade and in all other respects remain ready and able. And the president just put out that the
[10:51] Strait of Hormuz is closed. Iran doesn't want it to be that way. They want it to be open so they can
[10:57] make $500 million a day, which is therefore the reason that that's how much they're losing as it is
[11:04] closed. They only say they want to close because I've totally blockaded it and closed it.
[11:08] The Treasury Secretary, Scott Besson, pointed out because of this blockade, quote,
[11:14] in a matter of days, Karg Island, their storage will be full and the fragile Iranian oil wells,
[11:20] then they will be shut in, constraining Iran's maritime trade, directly targeting the regime's
[11:27] primary revenue lifelines. And breaking moments ago in this new post, let me read it in full.
[11:32] Iran doesn't want the Strait of Hormuz closed. They want it open so they can make $500 million
[11:38] a day, which is therefore what they are losing if it is closed. They will only say they want it closed
[11:44] because I have it totally blockaded, closed. So they merely want to save face. And people approached
[11:50] me four days ago saying, sir, Iran wants to open up the Strait immediately. But if we do that,
[11:56] there can never be a deal with Iran unless we blow up the rest of their country,
[11:59] their leaders included. As Napoleon once famously stated, never interrupt your enemy when they are
[12:05] making a mistake. As we speak, infighting is now rampant inside the Iranian regime.
[12:11] Communication, as I said, nearly impossible, which could in the end collapse on itself. Put simply,
[12:17] they are desperate. Not only was our military beat down, their military beat down,
[12:22] and ours on them, a huge success. But tonight, there is no doubt this blockade is causing
[12:28] massive pain inside of Iran's government. In fact, they are reportedly desperate for President Trump
[12:33] to lift that blockade, which, according to U.S. Central Command, has directed 28 vessels to turn
[12:39] around, return to port, and even seized a belligerent Iranian tanker just yesterday. The question
[12:45] tonight, will economic ruin force Iran's hardline revolutionary guard to negotiate? And just who
[12:53] will ultimately win the power struggle inside a fractured Iran? And by the way, can we get arms in
[12:58] the hands of the Iranian people? That might be helpful. And soon, time will tell. The clock is
[13:03] ticking. The pressure from both inside and outside Iran is immense tonight. Wouldn't you applaud?
[13:28] Good evening, everyone. Chelsea Clinton was the 130th runner to finish the Boston Marathon on Monday.
[13:38] The weird part? All the runners who beat Chelsea were found strangled with finish line tape.
[13:47] Suicide. I know, it was. A senior leader on Greta Thunberg's freedom flotilla is facing allegations
[13:55] of sexual misconduct. Greta expressed shock, saying, I haven't seen any boners ever. Thieves
[14:07] reportedly stole the vintage outfit that Madonna wore at Coachella. So be on the lookout for the ancient
[14:13] relic and her clothes. A Chinese national has been arrested for photographing American military
[14:22] aircraft in Nebraska. Initially, no one had any problems with him taking a million photos because
[14:27] everyone assumed he was Japanese. Oh, you like that one? Well, you know what? You never know.
[14:38] During his most recent fight, Jose Camacho, king of the bullfighters, suffered a very serious injury
[14:46] after a bull gored his rectum. Good news, though, they immediately contacted an expert on gored rectum
[14:56] repair. A little stitching here and there. Stitch. Stitch. The U.S. military seized an Iranian cargo ship,
[15:14] but some believe this was to distract us from the cruise missile they fired at the Popemobile.
[15:20] It's okay to laugh. It's a joke. Okay, it's not that funny. Fine. A massive brawl broke out between two
[15:26] gangs of black teen girls at Whataburger. The winner goes on to face a gang of black teen girls at the
[15:34] Waffle House. Red Lobster is bringing back its endless shrimp promotion. In a related story,
[15:47] guess who just pulled a hamstring doing backflips? And finally, on Monday, Trump's labor secretary
[15:57] resigned after reports of bringing staff members to an Oregon strip club. In her defense, it is the
[16:06] beaver state. Yes. So you never notice when you do a Google search on a story, your search results
[16:19] never match reality. Like say you'll Google Gutfeld's amazing abs. Nothing comes up. How is that even
[16:28] possible? Or maybe you type in Donald Trump and the headlines range from negative to total hysterics.
[16:35] It's like you're reading notes from Kat's diary. Well, there's a reason for this. Tech giants
[16:42] overwhelmingly favor left-wing outlets in their search engines. 73% of articles in the sections of
[16:48] Google News came from lefty sources. Just 1% from right-leaning outlets. On Apple and Yahoo,
[16:55] they offer 2% of righty content. Microsoft, which runs Bing, has only 5%. But Bing and Yahoo, the last time I
[17:04] used them, I just bought a brand new Pontiac Fiero. But you kind of knew this all along. The media is
[17:12] biased. Movies are biased. Campuses are biased. Why wouldn't this be biased too? But it's not just
[17:20] bias alone. It's censorship by omission. Someone comes up with a great idea like maybe voter ID or a secure
[17:26] border or locking up murderers. And it's not erased. It's just buried down the search results.
[17:32] A straight flight attendant would be easier to find. They control what you see first and second
[17:40] and third and so on. And as they bury the good stuff, they put the negative stuff way up front.
[17:48] I mean, I am so tired of all those hit pieces they do on talk show hosts who eat baby horses.
[17:54] You do something once, they brand you for life. So why do they do that? Well, they know their ideas are
[18:02] weak or they wouldn't need to hide the better ones. After all, people aren't really into giving free
[18:07] money to a six-foot-five, 300-pound Venezuelan guy named Lisa for a tit job.
[18:13] But many want to convince you. Wikipedia's co-founder admits his sight has been captured
[18:18] by leftist editors who rate CNN and MSNOW as generally reliable while rating Fox and others the
[18:24] opposite. Right-wing figures are written like villains while Jake Tapper's bio gets fluffed.
[18:29] And under Wiki's hijackers, U.S. border facilities from Trump's first term were added to the list
[18:36] of concentration camps. Hunter's laptop was labeled a conspiracy theory.
[18:42] And they consistently list my height as well below the actual truth.
[18:47] Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. It doesn't bother me, but it hurts. It hurts. But this has been
[19:00] their strategy. Search engines amplified the find people hoax for years and even more obvious lies
[19:08] like Dylan Mulvaney is a woman and Tim Waltz is not. They also buried statistics. According to them,
[19:16] there was no crime wave, no mass invasion of illegals, and Rosie O'Donnell's ass didn't affect
[19:22] the tides. It's part of a plan, really. Slowly, search results get funneled into one carefully
[19:28] curated narrative that keeps your consciousness at low ebb. You stop thinking. You become comfortable
[19:34] sucking up the continuous flow of leftist mush instead of getting ideas with real nutrition.
[19:40] Because when people deliver information that soothes you, there's less need to think. You drifted to
[19:45] passivity. The less you think, the less mental lifting you'll do over time. Eventually, your brain
[19:50] will be softer than Jerry Nadler's boobs. Leaving the thinking to the malicious humans behind the
[19:57] algorithms, a search engine becomes a brainwashing tool, a manipulated pathway to believing in things
[20:03] you would have scoffed at years ago. But it's time to break this spell and give their scam the spot it
[20:09] deserves right on the front page.
[20:20] So the animals don't eat her, co-host of America's Newsroom at the 5, Dana Brino.
[20:30] Remember that pizza crust you threw away will end up being his lunch today.
[20:35] Host of the Loftus Party Podcast, Michael Loftus.
[20:39] This is her first job where she didn't need a hairnet.
[20:42] New York Times best-selling author and Fox News contributor, Ketchup.
[20:44] And in his neighborhood, the storks get frequent flyer miles.
[20:52] Former N.W.A. World Champion.
[20:53] Host of the Loftus Party Podcast, Alex Harris.
[20:55] Dana Brino, congratulations on this fantastic new book.
[21:03] You are officially a novelist.
[21:07] Not an author, but a novelist.
[21:10] That's a big deal.
[21:11] Feels good.
[21:11] We're going to talk about it later in the show, so I'm not going to waste precious real
[21:15] estate here jabbering about it.
[21:17] Because you're going to sell a million books anyway.
[21:20] Why help?
[21:21] You know, do you ever Google yourself and you ever notice that only bad stuff comes up?
[21:26] I stopped doing that years ago and I made my mom stop doing it.
[21:29] Ah, it's always the relatives that send it to you.
[21:32] Yes, and they're like, did you know?
[21:33] And also, in addition, we also deal with all these issues about the AI slop or the things
[21:39] that you click on that say, like, right now, at this moment, my husband has a terminal illness
[21:44] and we're getting divorced, but we're also adopting a black baby.
[21:47] Yes!
[21:50] I have to tell my family, don't click on those things.
[21:54] Yes, yes, yes, yes.
[21:56] You would, I mean, it's so ridiculous, you would never adopt a black baby.
[22:02] Or get divorced.
[22:02] Maybe an Asian baby, but not a black baby.
[22:05] Come on, you don't know Dana Burrito?
[22:07] No, it is kind of weird, though.
[22:08] It's so obvious.
[22:10] But we are too, people are too busy to actually do anything about it.
[22:13] Right, and also, I'm glad you, well, obviously you brought up, like, the Wikipedia thing is,
[22:18] I think, the biggest culprit and, like, the root cause of this, because everybody goes to Wikipedia
[22:23] to try to write their articles, and then those articles get put in the different news articles
[22:28] that go on all the search engines.
[22:29] Yes.
[22:30] And now what's also happening is, like, ChatGPT, where do they get their information?
[22:35] They glean it from the search engine.
[22:37] So the root cause of this is Wikipedia, and there are a bunch of left-wing keyboard warriors
[22:43] who sit there all day long, and have you ever tried to correct your Wikipedia?
[22:47] Yeah, you can't.
[22:48] You can't.
[22:48] But if you're a left-winger, you can't.
[22:51] Yes, we need to chop off all their fingers.
[22:53] That's good.
[22:54] I never said that.
[22:57] I heard that on the subway.
[22:59] Loftus, when you search for local trash can bonfires to keep yourself warm at night,
[23:05] do you get unbiased results, or do they send you strictly to left-wing bonfires?
[23:11] Yeah, that's it.
[23:12] There are always left-wing bonfires.
[23:14] Yes.
[23:14] It drives me crazy.
[23:16] Can't I just have a right-wing homeless bonfire once in my life?
[23:19] Yeah, you can.
[23:20] And I have very limited time on the internet at the library after the incident.
[23:27] Yes.
[23:29] I'm just waiting for the GOP or Congress to wake up, right?
[23:33] Because it seems to happen yearly that they'll pop up like little prairie dogs and go,
[23:38] What?
[23:39] Left-leaning bias in the media?
[23:41] We should go work on a strongly worded letter.
[23:44] And then it never gets printed.
[23:46] It's horrible.
[23:47] I can't believe people still go back to these search engines.
[23:50] No, I think-
[23:51] You know?
[23:51] It's like Hillary's going to win the election.
[23:53] Yeah.
[23:54] Trump is a Russian asset.
[23:55] The shot is safe and effective.
[23:57] COVID started from bat soup.
[23:59] There's a new huge whopper every week.
[24:02] And now these guys are going to be in charge of, like, AI.
[24:06] And that's all we need is, like, giant woke robots killing humanity.
[24:11] Maybe that's what we need.
[24:12] Trump is a Russian asset.
[24:13] What?
[24:14] No, you know what I'm thinking?
[24:16] Sorry I stepped on your joke.
[24:17] You were about to do an impression, weren't you?
[24:18] I was.
[24:19] I was going to do this whole long cybernetic diodyne 2000 thing, and it got lost in the shuffle.
[24:25] Moving on.
[24:30] Will you accept my apology?
[24:34] Accepted, Greg.
[24:35] If I can go through your trash later.
[24:38] You know, Kat, though, this, I mean, he kind of, I use Grok.
[24:44] Do you use Grok?
[24:46] Not as much as you do.
[24:47] Yeah.
[24:48] But I think that, like, AI is going to, could solve this problem as long as it's in the hands of somebody who's not a d***.
[24:55] Well, it's really hard for that to happen with anything, isn't it?
[25:00] Yes, it's true.
[25:01] But I think people can kind of will themselves into any kind of bubble that they want to, really.
[25:06] I don't know, I don't really use search engines anymore.
[25:10] Yeah.
[25:10] I mean, I do sometimes, but it's mostly I'll talk to ChatGPT, I'll look on X, I'll look, I'll look at various, you know, look various places.
[25:20] But I think overall people can kind of will themselves into any kind of bubble that they want to.
[25:26] They can kind of create their own reality by looking at only search.
[25:29] I mean, there's people, I mean, people who think the Holocaust didn't happen because they went on some warm, I mean, to Google's credit,
[25:36] it does say it's real, if you Google that.
[25:38] Yeah, see, Michael?
[25:41] But it's, you know, I mean, it's, if you look up something and you read only one source of information about it or one collection of sources,
[25:51] you can end up ultimately ending up in a different reality than what actually happened.
[25:57] Speaking of a different reality, welcome back, Tyrus.
[26:00] You're out for a couple of weeks doing some live shows.
[26:07] Yes, sir.
[26:08] That's where you find reality.
[26:10] Actually, yeah, you know, it's funny that this is what we're talking about because one of the things on the tour,
[26:15] I always hear a lot of things about us, they always say, hey, is he really that short?
[26:18] And, you know, and, but you clean that up tonight.
[26:22] You clean it up tonight because he's 6'2".
[26:24] Yes.
[26:25] But I've been, on a personal note, my, I've had a fight with Facebook and Instagram and Google
[26:34] constantly, constantly with the fake stuff that they do.
[26:39] But the AI stuff has gotten out of hand to where on Facebook and things like that, especially my Silver Foxes,
[26:46] they're getting money from them.
[26:47] Yeah.
[26:47] Yeah.
[26:48] They're, they're extorting them.
[26:49] They, they sell fake tickets to our shows.
[26:51] They attack.
[26:52] And it's not a small thing.
[26:54] I mean, I had one situation where I had 50 people show up to a show that was sold out with fake tickets.
[27:00] Ooh, I wonder if they'd come to my hotel room.
[27:03] Anyway, sorry.
[27:04] Yeah, because that was bad.
[27:07] But the point is, is like, and I'm like, I've called and Fox's security here, they do a great job of getting them off.
[27:14] But as soon as you take them off, another one's up.
[27:15] There's another one.
[27:16] So what I've decided is, and I thought about it and I talked it over with my family and stuff, I'm leaving social media.
[27:21] May 1st, I'm done.
[27:22] I will have absolutely no footprint, but the argument, hold on, the argument always is, it's going to hurt sales.
[27:29] It's going to hurt you putting it out there.
[27:29] But you know what?
[27:30] People got famous before by word of mouth, and I'm just going to run with it.
[27:33] But, but, but I mean, that's not going to affect the search, search engines reporting on you.
[27:37] I'm talking nothing.
[27:37] I'm talking, it's going to be out there.
[27:39] Yeah.
[27:39] But if, the biggest thing is, if you're not a participant, then you don't have to worry.
[27:44] It's just.
[27:45] But if they, if they've spread a fake story about you, even when you're not on it, you may have to answer to it.
[27:51] When somebody calls you from the Washington Post.
[27:53] They do these all the time.
[27:54] They're like, oh, she's dying and pregnant.
[27:57] And it's like, no, that was like a year ago.
[27:59] But those things are.
[28:01] Those things are like, I'm talking about the stuff that like create an entire like story.
[28:07] Oh, yeah.
[28:07] But they need you to be on to do it.
[28:11] Yeah.
[28:11] They need your social media for people to hit, to steal the pictures, to do this stuff.
[28:15] And when I'm seeing AI of my kids, I've had enough.
[28:18] Yeah.
[28:18] Because Facebook, Instagram, they do not give a damn about, they enjoy, because you don't see it on the left.
[28:25] Yeah.
[28:26] You don't see it.
[28:26] You don't see fake Gavin stuff.
[28:27] And if it is, it's gone right away.
[28:29] Or it's media like, this is rejected.
[28:30] It doesn't meet our standards or stuff.
[28:31] They are fine with having AI videos of me shouting in Whoopi Goldberg's face.
[28:36] I love those.
[28:38] But I did that one.
[28:40] No, I was shouting at Whoopi too once.
[28:42] And Springsteen.
[28:42] But when you shout at Whoopi, she's got you by a foot.
[28:45] No one's afraid of it.
[28:47] All right.
[28:47] When I'm doing it, it looks like I'm yelling at a woman with intent to harm.
[28:50] So I'm done.
[28:51] I'm out of it.
[28:52] All right.
[28:52] Be sure to like and subscribe for all the Fox News latest on YouTube and catch full shows streaming now on Fox 1.
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