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MLB top prospect shares hilarious moment with veteran who robbed his home run after four-hit MLB debut
Detroit Tigers top prospect Kevin McGonigle seems pretty comfortable at the major league level, but one veteran doesn't want him too comfortable.
McGonigle made the Tigers' Opening Day roster, and he showed why he deserved it by notching four hits in his MLB debut.
McGonigle was back in action on Friday in San Diego against the Padres, and in the top of the second inning, he launched a ball to deep center field that traveled 403 feet. However, Jackson Merrill leaped and robbed McGonigle of his first home run.
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In the bottom half of the inning, after Merrill doubled, McGonigle appeared to compliment Merrill on his catch, which Merrill thanked him for.
But that did not come before Merrill joked about McGonigle's big Opening Day.
"You got four yesterday!" Merrill said to the rookie.
McGonigle became the 21st player in MLB history to have four hits in his MLB debut and the first to do it since J.P. Arancibia in 2010.
Merrill's home run robbery provided a boost early on, but McGonigle got revenge with a game-winning two-run single in a four-run eighth inning for Detroit en route to a 5-2 victory.
The Tigers choked a double-digit AL Central lead last season but still managed to get to the American League Division Series after defeating the same team who overtook them in the standings in the Cleveland Guardians.
The Padres played more October baseball as a wild-card team as the Los Angeles Dodgers took another NL West title before repeating as World Series Champions.
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Father of slain 20-year-old killed by illegal immigrant issues stark warning after Sheridan Gorman killing
The father of a 20-year-old woman killed by an illegal immigrant in Illinois warns more innocent people will die if policies don’t change following the death of Sheridan Gorman.
Loyola University Chicago freshman Sheridan Gorman, 18, was shot and killed while she was with a group of friends at a Rogers Park pier on March 19. 25-year-old Jose Medina-Medina, the suspect in her death, is an illegal immigrant who the Department of Homeland Security says entered the country in 2023, and apprehended then released into the U.S. under the Biden administration.
During a court hearing on Friday, prosecutors revealed that Gorman found Medina-Medina hiding behind a lighthouse. When she alerted her friends about the man behind the lighthouse, Medina-Medina began chasing them, and that's when prosecutors say he fired the gun, which struck Gorman in the upper back.
In January 2025, Joe Abraham's daughter, Katie, was killed in a hit-and-run crash that involved an illegal immigrant in 2025 in Urbana, Illinois. Katie Abraham was killed when Julio Cucul-Bol, an illegal immigrant, crashed into her car and then left the scene. Cucul-Bol was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
COLLEGE STUDENT'S ALLEGED MURDER BY ILLEGAL WENT EXACTLY AS DEMS ‘INTENDED,’ HOUSE SPEAKER SAYS
Joe Abraham told Fox News Digital that there will be more victims dead if Illinois doesn't change its immigration policies.
"I am speaking out because I know there will be more deaths and more victims. Not everyone dies, but there are innocent victims every day. And that's why I'm speaking out. Because these policies are so reckless, so radical, so extreme," he said. "There's no balance to it. There is no consideration for anything."
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He said that the murder of Gorman and his daughter, Katie Abraham, are "very parallel" and show how immigration policy in Illinois needs to be changed.
"One was a point-blank murder shooting. The other one was a reckless person who was driving on the influence. But the difference is they were both violent. They were both done by people who shouldn't be here. They were done by clearly people who were not here to better their lives," Joe Abraham said. "They were clearly done by people who had severe diseases, like in Katie's case. Her killer has HIV and is being treated now that he's incarcerated, but Illinois did nothing to help him."
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Joe Abraham says his daughter was a "beautiful person" with a "sharp wit."
"She was so personable. Her personality was so engaging, made everyone feel seen, heard, cared for, compassionate, fair-minded. She loved the water. She was a water polo player. She was a competitive swimmer. Did that all through high school. She had her whole life ahead of her. And see, you know, like a sponge, she soaked in life, every piece of it, and she was only 20. We still had so many plans ahead of us that were, you know, that are just gone because of reckless policies," he added.
Similarly, Gorman was described in an obituary as someone who "had a way of making people feel seen, valued and believed in."
"People often say someone 'lit up a room' or had ‘inner and outer beauty,’ but in Sheridan’s case, those phrases fall way too short. She radiated something even greater—a rare and unmistakable warmth, a spirit that was vibrant, compassionate, and full of life. She was funny, kind and deeply loving, with a heart that made space for everyone," her obituary states. "She loved fiercely—her family, her friends, her community and her faith. She brought people together, lifted them up and made the ordinary moments feel extraordinary simply by being in them."
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A police source told Fox News earlier that the shooting was an apparent ambush, adding that the suspect was reportedly wearing some kind of face mask or covering.
After the shooting, Medina-Medina was spotted on security camera in his apartment building lobby waiting for an elevator, and wasn't masked. A building engineer told police he knew the suspect who had a "very distinct limp and gait."
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Pictures of the suspect's face were sent to a police database, and information from U.S. Customs and Border Protection identified the suspect as Medina-Medina.
When Medina-Medina was in Colombia after his mother moved there with him from Venezuela, he was shot in the head, which resulted in the loss of a portion of his brain and skull, leaving him to relearn basic functions, his attorney said. Medina-Medina's attorney said that he has the brain development of a child and cannot read or write.
Medina-Medina's attorney also said that he suffers from epilepsy and still has bullet fragments lodged in his brain. The murder suspect turned himself in at the Texas border in 2023, where he was held in detention before being released. His attorney said that Medina-Medina requested to be sent back to Colombia, where his mother had moved to, but was transported by bus to Chicago.
During Medina-Medina's time in a shelter, he contracted tuberculosis, according to his attorney.
Iran-backed Houthis open third front against Israel as Tehran seeks leverage ahead of talks
The Iranian regime-backed Houthi movement launched two missiles at Israel on Saturday, creating a third front for the Jewish state in its current war against the Islamic Republic and its other terror-proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Houthis said they "targeted sensitive Israeli military sites" with a "barrage of ballistic missiles." The IDF, according to YNET, said it intercepted both a cruise and ballistic missile fired by the Houthis on Saturday morning.
Nadwa Al-Dawsari, an expert on Yemen and an associate fellow at the Middle East Institute, told Fox News Digital, "This is now fundamentally about the survival of the Iranian regime. The intervention of the Houthis and other Axis members is determined by the IRGC-run Axis of Resistance Operations Room. The Houthis have already demonstrated their ability to withstand intense U.S. and Israeli airstrikes. For both Iran and the Houthis, ‘winning’ is defined by survival, not decisive victory."
IRAN CONTINUES FIRING MISSILES, DRONES AT NEIGHBORING STATES, WITH MULTIPLE INTERCEPTIONS REPORTED
She continued, "The strategy is to prolong the conflict and raise the cost. The Houthis are uniquely positioned to do that, given their ability to disrupt critical maritime routes and open additional pressure fronts. If escalation continues, they will likely resume Red Sea attacks and could expand pressure toward KSA [Kingdom of Saudi Arabia]."
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Houthis were engaged in a war before the Biden administration reportedly forced the Saudi government to stop its military strikes on the Houthis. Biden had also delisted the Houthis as a foreign terrorist organization only for the Trump administration to swiftly reimpose the terror designation on the Houthis in the early days of his second term.
Salman Al-Ansari, a Saudi geopolitical analyst, told Fox News Digital that "The Houthis appear to be acting under heavy pressure from Tehran. Iran wanted them involved two weeks ago, and this attack looks more symbolic than strategic. It is part of Tehran’s effort to improve its position in negotiations with the U.S. by showing that it still has cards to play beyond Hormuz."
He added, "The Houthis do not control the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, but they can still disrupt shipping in the Red Sea. At the same time, they seem to view Iran as a dead horse and are cautious about betting too heavily on it."
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The Houthis are fanatically anti-American and anti-Israel. The official slogan of the Houthi movement (Ansar Allah) reads, "Allah is Greater. Death to America. Death to Israel. Curse on the Jews. Victory to Islam."
The Houthis control most of northwest Yemen. They expelled the internationally recognized government from the capital, Sanaa in 2015.
The Houthis joined Hamas in its war against Israel in mid-October 2023, after the terrorist movement in Gaza invaded Israel and murdered over 1,200 people, including more than 40 Americans. A Houthi drone killed an Israeli civilian in Tel Aviv in 2024.
Michael Szanto, an international relations expert, told Fox News Digital that, "Iran has already been badly hit by the United States and Israel and all supply routes between Iran and Yemen will be cut off by U.S. forces. This means that Yemen will lack the supply lines to maintain a sustained offensive against Israel, though it still likely has large stockpile of missiles and drones."
He added, "The Houthis are making a major strategic mistake by once again provoking Israel, which will try to finish off the terrorist threat in Yemen. The Houthis have proven themselves to also be a menace to the Saudis, the Emiratis, the U.S., and the world."
Saturday's attack happened hours before a spokesman for the terrorist group threatened that it's "fingers were on the trigger."
Arnold Schwarzenegger passes bodybuilding torch to lookalike son Joseph Baena
Like father, like son — and a bodybuilding legacy in the making.
Arnold Schwarzenegger was spotted stepping back into coach mode as he trained his son, Joseph Baena, ahead of his first bodybuilding competition — signaling the next generation may be ready to carry the torch.
The seven-time Mr. Olympia winner, 78, was seen working closely with Baena, 28, inside the iconic Gold’s Gym in Venice Beach, California, where the bodybuilding legend once built his empire.
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But this time, Schwarzenegger wasn’t the one posing under pressure — he was fine-tuning every detail from the sidelines.
In the video obtained by Fox News Digital, the "Terminator" star carefully adjusted Baena’s positioning, ensuring each muscle hit just right.
After a session of pumping iron, Baena went shirtless to show off his increasingly sculpted physique, flexing his biceps as his father corrected his angles and form — even helping him lock in one of Schwarzenegger’s signature poses.
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Schwarzenegger, dressed casually in a black T-shirt, shorts and knee-high socks, watched closely as he coached his son.
Onlookers quickly gathered as the pair moved through each pose with precision, drawing a crowd inside the gym famously dubbed "the mecca of bodybuilding."
The "Dancing with the Stars" alum has recently showed off his fit physique and fitness routines in behind-the-scenes training videos on his social media.
WATCH: ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER TRAINS LOOKALIKE SON JOSEPH BAENA AT GYM AS BODYBUILDING BUZZ GROWS
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Baena has been carving out his own path — from acting roles, including the 2024 action thriller "Gunner," to landing a Men’s Health cover — while navigating inevitable comparisons to his father.
"It's been a huge growth year of me finding out who I am and really being secure… confident… no matter what the challenges are, what the comparisons are," Baena previously told Fox News Digital.
Still, he’s acknowledged the pressure that comes with the name.
"The message that I wanted to get across was, there’s a lot of people out there with very accomplished parents… and it’s scary. It’s scary to get compared to these giants, and to have the feeling like you need to live up to these expectations."
Tiger Woods' DUI arrest sparks demands for accountability
Tiger Woods' arrest on DUI-related charges has prompted debate over whether the champion golfer should face a suspension.
Woods' Friday crash is the fourth major car incident for the professional golfer since 2009. In 2017, he was found driving under the influence of multiple prescription drugs and asleep in his car, stopped in the road. He said it was due to a reaction to the pills.
"I don't like sugar-coating things. And the way I look at it, there's got to be some sort of punishment or withdrawal or some sort of a suspension from the game," Mark Lye, a former PGA golfer, said Saturday on "Fox & Friends Weekend."
Woods was taken into custody in Jupiter Island, Florida, where police said he was driving at a "high rate of speed" when he clipped another car, causing his vehicle to roll over. Authorities said he registered a 0.00 on a breathalyzer, ruling out alcohol impairment, but refused a urine test and was charged with DUI and property damage.
"I’m just wondering where that discipline that he's learned to convey on the golf course is [going to] take hold in his personal life. Obviously, he's got demons going on," Lye said.
Lye called for "accountability" for Woods and questioned whether it is time for a stricter suspension from the game. Lye noted that contracts for professional golfers often include a "morals clause" and warned Woods could face further consequences if no action is taken.
Lye isn’t alone in his concern for Woods and those around him, however. Doug Bell, a PGA Tour announcer, said he’s thankful no one was hurt.
TIGER WOODS STEPPING BACK INTO COMPETITIVE GOLF AS MASTERS LOOM
"It's troublesome to see what happened yesterday. It is a pattern that has developed," Bell said.
"Let’s hope this leads to something positive for one of the great athletes and figures in this world that we've seen in a long, long time," he added.
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Bell suggested Woods take some time away from golf as a productive next step in recovery.
"He’s dealing with something that we don't know what's going on inside his head, the pain that he's in from all the surgeries," Bell said, adding that stepping away from the game "might be the best thing."
Woods was released from jail Friday night. In a mugshot released hours after his arrest, his eyes appeared red.
President Donald Trump weighed in on the arrest of his "very close friend," noting the star athlete has had some "difficulty."
Woods’ team did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.
500 groups with $3B in revenues are behind the #NoKings protests and communist call for 'revolution'
A network of about 500 groups with an estimated $3 billion in combined annual revenues is behind the coordinated nationwide "No Kings" protest Saturday, including communist groups who are using the day to call for a "revolution," according to a Fox Digital News investigation.
According to a copy of the permit for the "flagship" march in St. Paul, Minn., Indivisible, a national well-heeled Democratic political advocacy organization funded by billionaire George Soros, is the lead coordinator for the protest.
But Fox News Digital has also identified key participation by a network of radical socialist and communist organizations funded by Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and acvowed communist living in China.
Over nearly a decade, Singham has financed a constellation of activist institutions that promote revolutionary socialist politics and frequently collaborate in protest campaigns, including the People’s Forum in New York, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition and CodePink, whose co-founder Jodie Evans is married to Singham. These groups work closely with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.
They are all sending members to the protests and one group said they plan to bring a message of "revolution" to the protests.
On Friday evening, at the corner of N. Fremont Avenue and N. 37th Avenue in downtown Minneapolis, members of the Twin Cities chapter of the Party for Socialism and Liberation packed a car with stacks of bright red protest signs they had prepared at the Dream Shop for Saturday’s demonstrations. They are part of the Singham network and co-sponsors of the St. Paul protest.
The posters read "NO KINGS. NO WAR." with "PARTY FOR SOCIALISM AND LIBERATION" printed at the bottom. Activists stacked the signs upside down with their wooden picket handles attached as they loaded them into the vehicle, preparing to distribute them at the next day's main protest at the state capitol in St. Paul.
'NO KINGS' CALLS ITSELF LEADERLESS, BUT ITS OWN INTERNAL DOCUMENTS TELL A VERY DIFFERENT STORY
Across the country, similar preparations have been underway among socialist, communist and Marxist activist groups from the Singham network that have openly discussed using the demonstrations to spread what they describe as revolutionary organizing.
In New York, the People's Forum called on members to join the New York #NoKings protest. It's an organizing hub in the Singham network and sent Americans to Cuba in recent days to defend the communist regime there.
In Washington, D.C., Party for Socialism and Liberation called on supporters to assemble as part of a "Socialist Contingent."
In Grand Rapids, Mich., the Freedom Road Socialist Organization instructed supporters to gather at the Rosa Parks Circle stage at noon as part of what it described as the "Anti-Trump Contingent."
Freedom Road Socialist Organization activists have previously led aggressive demonstrations targeting Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations in Minneapolis. The group has an image on Instagram, using an upside-down triangle symbol that Hamas used to mark targets during attacks in Israel.
One message said, "People everywhere are becoming increasingly hostile to the Trump agenda, and more sympathetic to revolution. Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines, it's the time to go out and join the people, get our revolutionary message in front of them, and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people's movements." Communist leaders talk about "people's movements."
Posts circulating among socialist activist networks also explained "Why socialists should mobilize to the No Kings protests this weekend."
"It’s the time to go out and join the people, get out our revolutionary message in front of them and turn a day of protest into long-term gains for the people’s movement," one message said.
In Detroit, activists from Anakbayan, an organization aligned with communist movements in the Philippines, joined other groups within the Singham activist ecosystem.
Posts circulating from activists associated with the Denver chapter of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization included imagery referencing the Red Army Choir, Soviet symbolism and historical figures including Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong.
The Maine chapter of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, working with activists connected to Democratic Socialists of America and the ANSWER Coalition, called on supporters to join what organizers described as a "Unified Leftist Contingent."
The message instructed activists to meet at the southwest corner of Montgomery Park, declaring that the contingent would stand against "imperialism, capitalism and state violence."
"These systems don’t fall without pressure," the message said. "We are here to organize, disrupt and build power to win something new."
The network’s messaging for the #NoKings echoes Singham’s own rhetoric describing the United States as a form of "fascism" and advocating organizing strategies rooted in Mao Zedong’s doctrine of a "People’s War," which calls for revolutionary movements to embed themselves inside broader political struggles and radicalize them from within.
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That strategy helps explain why the socialist groups are mobilizing inside the much larger demonstrations organized by mainstream progressive organizations, experts say. Large protests create massive audiences and national media attention, allowing smaller ideological movements to spread their messaging, recruit activists and build momentum for campaigns that extend well beyond a single day of demonstrations.
CodePink circulated graphics tying the protests to anti-imperialist messaging.
CodePink called for members to join demonstrations in cities including Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco and New York, linking the protests to opposition to U.S. policy toward Iran, Cuba, Venezuela and Palestine. Actress Jane Fonda joined a CodePink protest some days ago, protesting the war in Iran, and she will be at the St. Paul demonstration today.
One CodePink poster reads: "NO WAR. NO IMPERIALISM. NO KINGS."
In recent weeks, the group has supported Venezuelan strongman Nicholas Maduro, the late Iranian Ayatollah Ali Khomeini, President Xi Jinping.
Adriana James-Rodill contributed to this report.
New York heiress Belle Burden says ex-husband refused to give their 12-year-old a bedroom after divorce
Belle Burden nearly lost everything in a dramatic divorce, but for her, the hardest part was the fallout her children faced.
Burden, an heiress who shared the story of her split from hedge fund executive Henry Davis in her book, "Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage," made a recent appearance on Molly Sims' podcast, "Lipstick on the Rim," where she spoke about just how much her three kids were affected by her ex-husband's actions.
Two of the children weren't as immediately affected by the aftermath of the divorce — their oldest was staying with friends, and their middle child was in boarding school — but their youngest, Burden said, "really wanted a bedroom" at her father's new apartment.
"She was sending him links on Pottery Barn for her room," Burden explained of their daughter, who was 12 at the time. "And he just really held firm about he was done with that stage of his life where he would parent a child in that way, with homework and dinners and all that kind of stuff."
As she recounted in her memoir, Davis told her that he wanted a divorce after she discovered he'd been having an affair. They'd been married for 20 years. He eventually moved into a two-bedroom apartment, then turned his spare bedroom into a home office.
"That's been the hardest part of this, and the most lasting part," Burden admitted.
When Sims and her co-host, Emese Gormley, expressed disbelief at Davis' choice, Burden added, "I should be clear that it's not a circumstance where he moved across the country and had a whole new family. He lives blocks away from us. He keeps in touch with the kids. He's very kind and sweet with them. But he was very clear that he was not going to do the day-to-day, apply to college, all that kind of thing. And that really was like a switch going off."
In her book, Burden explained that when their children were young, she devoted all her time and energy to raising them while Davis focused on his career, often joking, "I don’t do bath, bed or homework." While he didn't deal with the daily work of parenting, he did pay attention to them, she wrote, taking them on special outings and trips regularly.
But in one of the conversations they had shortly after he left her, Burden wrote that he told her, "You can have the house and the apartment. You can have custody of the kids. I don’t want it. I don’t want any of it."
Burden had her lawyer send Davis a custody agreement, one that gave them each 50/50 custody, assuming he "would have realized his mistake" in not seeking more time with their children by then. Instead, she wrote, he "returned the document stripped of all his time, including vacations, holidays, weeks during the summer. He included only dinner on Thursday nights."
She admitted that she believes he genuinely thought he was being "selfless" by not formalizing the agreement and that he argued their children were old enough to decide for themselves when they wanted to see him. For bigger moments, like when their son had surgery, she said that he showed up, but "for everyday issues, he responded with irritation."
Sims asked Burden during her podcast whether Davis had ever spoken to her about what happened and why he distanced himself so firmly from her and their children.
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"The only things he's ever said were right at the beginning," she answered. "He said, ‘I felt like a switch went off. I feel like a switch has gone off.'"
About a year after the split, she said she texted him late one night seeking answers. "And he said, ‘I wish I had an answer for you. It’s not your fault. Something broke in me.' And that's the most I've gotten. And that's where my head has to rest."
She said that when she thinks about it, she envisions the switch going off, "but also like he was playing this role of husband and father, and he wanted to play it, and he was all in. And then, like an actor on a stage, he just was like, ‘I’m done with this role,' takes off the costume, leaves the stage and can't do it gracefully."
Sims asked how the children are coping with not having Davis in their lives as a true father figure, and Burden said, "They are amazing because they love him, and they're protective of him, and they're actually very good now at reaching out to him to do things that are comfortable for him, like going to a hockey game or something like that."
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She said they're "wonderful in navigating that," but added, "For me as a mother, I think the biggest challenge for me is to acknowledge their reality, to say ‘this is what’s happening, this is unusual, that you do not live with your dad' … So I would say to my 12-year-old, ‘Your dad, I don’t know why, but he can't create a home for you right now. And that has to do with him, and that's not you.'"
As for Davis' reaction to the book's release, Burden admitted that she's heard he's "not happy."
She first published a snippet of her story in an essay for a column in The New York Times, which he had to sign off on — she said she thought "he didn't really see anything wrong with the narrative, like, you're a man, you're allowed to leave in this way." But now that, as Sims put it, "the whole world, every woman in America hates you," he's "surprised."
"He said, ‘I don’t think I come off well in this,'" Burden shared.
Patriots' Super Bowl appearance was no fluke, team legends say: 'They're for real'
The New England Patriots were supposed to be "mid," as Rob Gronkowski told Fox News Digital, but instead, they looked like the Pats of yesteryear.
New England stunned the football world with a 14-3 record and going all the way to the Super Bowl, led by second-year quarterback Drake Maye.
Sure, New England perhaps benefited from an easy schedule in the regular season, and in the playoffs, they faced Jarrett Stidham instead of Bo Nix. The Super Bowl was not pretty, as they took a beating from the Seattle Seahawks.
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But Gronkowski and one of his former teammates do not believe the 2025 Pats were any sort of fluke.
"What the New England Patriots did this season was incredible. And they're just going to keep on building on that from here on and going into next year, I'm sure they're going to be making the playoffs on a consistent basis now," Gronk told Fox News Digital. "That's the expectation. They got the quarterback, they got the coach, they got the ownership, they got the foundation now, and you're going to see them competing at a high level every single year now, which is great for Patriot fans."
The Patriots have simply built the next generation of success, and Gronkowski sees the same in Infiniti and their newly-released QX65. Gronk and Julian Edelman were on hand at Grand Central Terminal in New York for the unveiling.
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"I've always been about showing up at big moments and putting in the work behind the scenes, and that's what stood out to me with the Infiniti. They're really being intentional about how they move forward and what they're building next. That's how you got to be as a football player, as an athlete, you got to be very intentional and in order to stay at the top of your game and be able to compete at a top level. And that's what Infiniti is doing."
"I was fortunate enough in my career to play in a lot of big moments, and that's exactly what you see with the Infiniti," Edelman added. "How they are so detailed and have a purpose for everything that they do. When you look at the design of the car, the back, the interior's spacious, very detailed. I mean, it's just something that's been so cool. It's been a fun experience."
Edelman, too, is "very confident" that the new-look Pats are here to stay.
"Anytime you got a head coach, a quarterback, an owner, and a GM working together and unison, it seems like every free agent they signed had a big moment, big role on the team. There was a lot of great things that happened."
Edelman did warn Patriots fans to temper expectations just a bit and not expect another 14-win season. However, he does expect a more sound product on the field.
"it's time on task. You know, time on task with the quarterback. Get him ready with the offensive line, getting that offensive line kind of fixed up and get them working together more. I mean, they're a young group. So I'm really excited for the Patriots this year," he said.
"I think they're for real. They may go out and not have as many wins, but I think they're going to be a better football team this year."
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Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: David Spade slams Newsom and Bass, Howie Mandel calls out Kelly Ripa
TINSELTOWN TURMOIL - David Spade slams Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass over ‘terrifying’ Hollywood downfall.
COMEDY CLASH - Howie Mandel calls out Kelly Ripa’s backhanded compliment in tense live TV moment.
COMMITMENT PARADOX - Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn never married, deciding 43 years ago to 'have fun until we don't.'
FRONT YARD RUMBLE - 'Reacher' star Alan Ritchson allegedly caught on video throwing punches at neighbor as his kids watch.
ROYAL ISOLATION - Princess Beatrice 'distraught’ as Epstein files name her parents, fuel marriage rumors: expert.
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SURVIVAL MODE - Josh Duhamel says he's now 72% ready for a zombie apocalypse at his 'doomsday' cabin but fears AI robots more.
VENUE SHOWDOWN - Rio mayor bans Chappell Roan from performing in his city after fan incident controversy.
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INTIMATE RULEBOOK - Heather Graham slams ‘awkward’ new reality of Hollywood sex scenes.
BREAKING POINT - Thomas Rhett admits fame led him to 'living a double life' that nearly destroyed his marriage.
POP CULTURE CHECK - Think you’re on the pulse? Take the Entertainment Quiz and find out!
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JD Vance says he was 'obsessed' with UFOs, believes aliens are actually 'demons'
While discussing the mystery surrounding UFOs, Vice President JD Vance, who is Catholic, said he believes what people think of as aliens are actually "demons."
While interviewing Vance, conservative commentator Benny Johnson asked the vice president, "You gonna release all the UFO files?"
"Ah, we're workin' on it," Vance said.
He explained that when he took office he "was obsessed with the UFO files" but ended up being busy with other issues.
Vance asserted that he will "get to the bottom" of the matter.
"I don't think they're aliens. I think they're demons anyway," Vance noted.
Prompted by Johnson, Vance later elaborated on his view.
"Well, look, I, I think that celestial beings who fly around, who do weird things to people — I think that the desire to describe everything celestial… to describe it as aliens — I mean every great world religion, including Christianity, the one that I believe in, has understood that there are weird things out there, and there are things that are very difficult to explain," he said.
"And I naturally go — when I hear about, sort of, extra-natural phenomenon — that's where I go to is the Christian understanding that, you know, there's a lotta good out there, but there's also some evil out there," he continued.
UFO SECRET FILES, DRONE SWARMS AND NUCLEAR-LINKED SIGHTINGS STUN EXPERTS IN 2025
He added that he believes that among "the devil's great tricks is to convince people he never existed."
Last month, President Donald Trump said he would order the release of files pertaining to the issue of aliens and UFOs.
EXPLOSIVE NEW DOCUMENTARY PROBES ‘80-YEAR GLOBAL COVERUP’ OF UFO SECRETS
"Based on the tremendous interest shown, I will be directing the Secretary of War, and other relevant Departments and Agencies, to begin the process of identifying and releasing Government files related to alien and extraterrestrial life, unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), and unidentified flying objects (UFOs), and any and all other information connected to these highly complex, but extremely interesting and important, matters. GOD BLESS AMERICA!" the president declared in a February Truth Social post.