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Fast-food giant experiments with biggest burger yet
SUPER-SIZED ENERGY: McDonald's is betting on massive burgers, viral "secret menu" items and nostalgia to lure cautious consumers in 2026.
GRAPE DECAY: Experts explain how long opened wine really lasts — and the subtle signs that reveal when it's still worth drinking.
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DIET DRAMA: The new inverted food pyramid may reshape the American diet, encouraging more proteins, fruits and vegetables for better health.
UNDER PRESSURE: Cracker Barrel is leaning into nostalgia, bringing fan-favorite comfort dishes back to menus.
SLAW AND ORDER: A budget-friendly vegetable is having a major moment thanks to its versatility and surprising health benefits.
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OUT OF LINE: A "routine refund" spiraled into a frightening confrontation after a fast-food customer allegedly threatened workers.
Packers star calls Bears coach Ben Johnson a 'troll' for his profane outburst
While the game between the Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers ended on Saturday, the war of words has continued in the following days.
The Bears pulled off a remarkable 31-27 victory in the NFC Wild Card round, taking down their bitter rivals, and have made their disdain for the Packers well-known. In the locker room after the game, head coach Ben Johnson made no secret about his feelings toward the Packers.
"Man, f--- the Packers! F--- them! F---ing hate those guys!" Johnson roared into a jubilant Bears locker room.
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Packers star safety Xavier McKinney called Johnson a troll for his comments.
"He’s a troll," McKinney said. "So it’s cool. I’m just not a troll. So I don’t know, that’s just him. But he’s a hell of a coach, though."
Johnson doubled down on his postgame remarks on Monday.
"There’s a rivalry that exists between these two teams," Johnson said. "Something that I fully recognize and I’m a part of. I just don’t like that team."
PACKERS' HEAD-COACHING SITUATION THRUST INTO SPOTLIGHT AFTER PLAYOFF LOSS
Johnson said he even talked with team owner George McCaskey about it, and the coach said the owner is on the same page.
"This is a rivalry and, city of Chicago, Green Bay, it needs to be a rivalry," Johnson said.
The 39-year-old coach has made his distaste for the Packers known since his opening press conference as head coach of the Bears back in January 2025. Johnson spoke about how good the NFC North is before taking an unprompted shot at Packers head coach Matt LaFleur.
"And to be quite frank with you, I kinda enjoyed beating Matt LaFleur twice a year," Johnson said with a smile.
The coaches' interactions after the team’s three matchups this season have been brief. After the Packers' win, in the team’s first matchup of the regular season, the two’s handshake hardly lasted a second before they ran past each other.
After the Bears' improbable comeback in the regular season, the handshake lasted a tad longer, as both coaches patted each other on the arm before going their separate ways.
The handshake after the Wild Card game was even shorter than the first, as Johnson ran up to LaFleur and shook his hand before bolting off.
The Bears' next game is against the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday at 6:30 p.m. ET, when Johnson will have to take on another LaFleur. Mike LaFleur, brother of the Packers' head coach, is the Rams' offensive coordinator.
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'Dilbert' creator Scott Adams dies at age 68
"Dilbert" cartoonist Scott Adams has died at the age of 68, his former wife announced on his show Tuesday morning.
"He’s not with us anymore," Shelly Miles told listeners.
Earlier this month, Adams shared a health update on his podcast "Real Coffee with Scott Adams."
"I talked to my radiologist yesterday, and it’s all bad news — the odds of me recovering are essentially zero," he said. "I’ll give you any updates if that changes, but it won’t."
"So there’s no chance that I’ll get my feeling back in my legs, and I’ve got some ongoing heart failure, which is making it difficult to breathe sometimes during the day," the cartoonist continued. "However, you should prepare yourself that January will probably be a month of transition, one way or another."
Adams first announced his prostate cancer diagnosis on his show in May, saying that he was in pain every day and had been using a walker for months.
"If you're wondering if I'll get better, the answer is no, it will only get worse," he said at the time. "There's only one direction this goes."
Adams was a strong supporter of President Donald Trump, standing out in the creative class with his fervent backing.
Adams began writing and illustrating the Dilbert comic strip in 1989. Hundreds of newspapers pulled Dilbert in early 2023, after he made racially charged comments during his show.
He then launched a new, online subscription-based version called "Dilbert Reborn," which he describes on his website as "uncensored and spicier."
This is a developing story, more to come…
Fox News Digital’s Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.
'Cringe' Soros-backed Philly DA brutally torched for dropping ‘FAFO’ in chest-thumping warning to ICE
Police groups, MAGA supporters and the Department of Homeland Security galvanized around mocking left-wing Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner on social media for his warning to the National Guard and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid President Donald Trump's immigration and fraud crackdowns.
"To ICE and the National Guard: if you commit crimes in Philadelphia, we will charge you and hold you accountable to the fullest extent of the law," Krasner posted to X Saturday, accompanied by a black and white photo of himself wearing sunglasses and the caption "FAFO."
"FAFO" is internet slang meaning "f--- around and find out." It increasingly has entered the MAGA political lexicon, been embraced by Trump, and been used in administration-linked messaging and by prominent Republican allies as a blunt warning to political opponents and foreign adversaries.
Krasner has served as Philadelphia's district attorney since 2018, frequently coming under fire from conservatives for reduced reliance on cash bail, shifts in charging for some low-level crimes, and an aggressive posture on police accountability. Republicans have repeatedly pointed to his office’s bail and prosecution policies as drivers of public-safety concerns, staging high-profile hearings and pushing an impeachment effort that ultimately collapsed in court.
ICE CHIEF TODD LYONS FIRES BACK AFTER AOC ALLEGES RENEE NICOLE GOOD WAS 'ASSASSINATED IN THE STREET'
Conservatives, police groups and leaders and administration social media accounts lambasted Krasner over the message. Krasner’s post came amid a heightened federal law enforcement presence in Minnesota, as a sweeping Minneapolis fraud investigation unfolded and a woman was fatally shot during the increased deployment.
"This embarrassment of a DA regularly gives the velvet glove treatment to murders, robbers, and rapists…what a joke," Fraternal Order of Police National Vice President Joe Gamaldi posted to X, slamming Krasner.
"Unlike criminals in Philadelphia who get their charges dropped by the DA," the National Police Association responded.
The Department of Homeland Security responded with at least two memes brushing off Krasner's comment, including a gif of a person dressed up as a founding father with the caption, "Oh no! Anyways."
"True Clownsmanship," a lawyer on X quipped.
"Note that Larry Krasner has never said FAFO to the actual criminals he’s supposed to put behind bars, and thus his city is garbage. But good posturing you pathetic waste of space," Republican communicator Matt Whitlock wrote.
"this is so cringe, even for a Soros DA," another commented. Left-wing billionaire George Soros was one of Krasner's donors amid his election effort, Fox Digital previously reported.
"It would be news if Krassner prosecuted an actual criminal, let alone ICE," RealClearInvestigations senior writer Mark Hemingway posted.
"LMAO, they try so hard to use social media the way this administration does, and it fails every time," another posted, referring to Democrats attempting to lean into MAGA's often searing use of social media.
"This idiot has never read the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution. Federal law trumps local law when in direct conflict of one another. This post is pure provocative trash," former New Jersey Senate candidate Mike Crispi posted.
Krasner's social media message joins a chorus of Democrats nationwide criticizing ICE and federal immigration law enforcement officials following the fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minnesota earlier in January. Good was shot on a residential street while operating her car. DHS said Good used her car as weapon against the agents before the shooting, calling her actions an "act of domestic terrorism."
Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal also slammed ICE earlier in January as "madeup, fake, wannabe law enforcement," claiming ICE violated both "legal law" and "moral law" following the shooting.
Democrats have rallied against the federal law enforcement officer's actions, with some left-wing lawmakers such as New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez calling the incident "murder," while other Democrats have underscored a push for more accountability of federal officers.
Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz authorized the National Guard be "staged and ready to support local and state law enforcement in protecting critical infrastructure and maintaining public safety following a shooting involving federal immigration enforcement agents in south Minneapolis." Trump has mobilized, or attempted to mobilize, the National Guard to other cities in 2025 as part of his mission to crack down on crime, including when he federalized the Washington, D.C., police force in August.
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Krasner's office did not immediately respond to Fox Digital's request for comment on the mockery and criticisms revolving around his Saturday message.
Iran regime faces 'beginning of the end' as exiled crown prince sees 'golden opportunity'
Unrest in Iran signals the "beginning of the end" for the Islamic regime and a "golden opportunity" to finish it once and for all, exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi said during a Monday appearance on "Hannity."
"They know they're on their way down. The decisive blow can be the game-changer and the knockout punch to this regime…" he said.
"We have this golden opportunity now. The regime is on the brink of collapse. Let's push it over the cliff and be done with them."
Pahlavi pointed to what he described as growing fractures within Iran’s security forces, saying intelligence reports suggest a multitude of military and paramilitary members have refused to carry out orders to crack down on protesters.
GRAHAM WARNS IRANIAN AYATOLLAH: 'TRUMP IS GONNA KILL YOU' IF INTERNAL CRACKDOWN CONTINUES
Those reported fractures, along with sustained public unrest and pressure from the Trump administration, are fueling renewed hope among regime opponents for meaningful change.
"I believe President Trump knows exactly what he's facing and is not buying into the regime's last-gasp attempts to promise negotiations," Pahlavi said.
"Every time they have their backs to the wall, they come back with that line, and nobody’s fooled anymore."
TRUMP HAS THREE STRIKE OPTIONS THAT WOULD AID THE PROTESTERS AND DEVASTATE IRAN
"I don't think this administration is fooled by the regime's feeble attempts to buy time yet again," he added.
"Time is running out, and this is where the people in the streets are saying, ‘We are the boots on the ground. We don't need American boots on the ground. Count on us. We're doing our part. But come to the rescue and help us get rid of them.’"
President Trump voiced support for the protesters in a Truth Social post Saturday, writing that the "USA stands ready to help" as Iran looks at "freedom."
The president also said at a news conference last week that the U.S. would respond forcefully if the regime resorts to mass violence.
"We’ll be hitting them very hard where it hurts. And that doesn’t mean boots on the ground, but it means hitting them very, very hard where it hurts," he said.
Trump cancels all meetings with Iran, calls on protesters to 'take over' the country
President Donald Trump urged the people of Iran to "take over" the country's institutions on Tuesday, saying he has canceled all meetings with the Iranian regime until its crackdown on unrest ends.
Trump made the announcement on social media, vowing that those responsible for killing anti-regime demonstrators will "pay a big price." Iran had previously claimed it was in contact with U.S. officials amid the protests.
"Iranian Patriots, KEEP PROTESTING - TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!" Trump wrote on Truth Social. "Save the names of the killers and abusers. They will pay a big price."
"I have canceled all meetings with Iranian Officials until the senseless killing of protesters STOPS. HELP IS ON ITS WAY," he added.
LIZ PEEK: TRUMP IS PUTTING AMERICA FIRST BY BACKING IRAN INTO A CORNER
Since the unrest broke out, Iranian authorities have killed at least 646 protesters, with thousands more deaths expected to be confirmed. Reuters reported the death toll at 2,000, citing an unnamed Iranian official.
The White House confirmed on Monday that Trump was weighing whether to bomb Iran in reaction to the crackdown.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that diplomacy remains Trump’s first option, but that the president "has shown he’s unafraid to use military options if and when he deems necessary."
IRAN’S ‘DISTINCTIVE’ DRONE DEPLOYMENT SEES DEATH TOLL SOAR AMID VIOLENT PROTESTS
"He certainly doesn’t want to see people being killed in the streets of Tehran. And unfortunately that’s something we are seeing right now," she added.
Iranian authorities have used deadly force against anti-regime protesters and have cut off public internet access in an effort to stop images and video from spreading across the globe.
The protests represent the highest level of unrest Iran has seen since nationwide protests against the death of Mahsa Amini at the hands of morality police in 2022.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz went so far as to predict an end to Ayatollah Ali Khamenie's regime.
"I assume that we are now witnessing the final days and weeks of this regime," he told reporters while in India on Tuesday.
"When a regime can only maintain power through violence, then it is effectively at its end. The population is now rising up against this regime," he added.
Bill Clinton skips out on deposition, Comer says contempt charges moving ahead
Former President Bill Clinton appears to have defied a congressional subpoena to appear before the House Oversight Committee on Tuesday morning.
Clinton was compelled to sit for a sworn closed-door deposition in the House's bipartisan probe into Jeffrey Epstein, but Fox News Digital did not see him before or after the scheduled 10 a.m. grilling.
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., had threatened to begin contempt of Congress proceedings against Clinton if he did not appear Tuesday.
Comer said Tuesday morning, "We will move next week in the House Oversight Committee … to hold Bill Clinton in contempt of Congress."
TOP GOP CHAIR ISSUES STARK WARNING TO CLINTONS IF THEY DEFY DEPOSITIONS IN EPSTEIN INVESTIGATION
DOJ SAYS LAWYERS WORKING 'AROUND THE CLOCK' TO PREP EPSTEIN FILES FOR RELEASE AFTER MISSED DEADLINE
Other lawmakers seen going into the committee room include Reps. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., and Scott Perry, R-Pa.
Hillary Clinton had also been subpoenaed to appear on Wednesday, but likely will not show up.
The Clintons’ attorney sent Comer a letter confirming they’re challenging the legality of the subpoenas issued against them.
"[T]he Subpoenas issued to President and Secretary Clinton are invalid and legally unenforceable. Mindful of these defects, we trust you will engage in good faith to de-escalate this dispute," reads the letter, obtained by Fox News Digital.
Lombardo builds massive $15M war chest in critical Nevada governor showdown
FIRST ON FOX: A Republican governor running for re-election in one of the most closely watched races in the country in a key battleground state is heading into the spring with a historic amount of cash on hand.
Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo, elected in November 2022, announced on Tuesday a record-breaking year-end campaign cash-on-hand of over $9 million after raising an additional $4.28 million in 2025, which his campaign says in a press release is the highest non-election year total on hand of any governor in Nevada history.
Two Lombardo-affiliated PACs added another $5.9 million in cash reserves after raising more than $4.7 million last year, bringing the governor’s total political war chest to $15 million.
The campaign says that with the record haul, Lombardo is in the "strongest financial position of any governor in Nevada history at this stage of the cycle."
DEMOCRATS 'DOOMED TO FAIL' WITHOUT POPULIST ECONOMIC MESSAGE, WARREN WARNS
"I’m grateful for the overwhelming support from Nevadans who share our vision for a stronger, more affordable Nevada," Lombardo told Fox News Digital.
"This record-setting fundraising reflects confidence in our work expanding access to attainable housing and affordable healthcare, keeping communities safe, supporting educators and empowering parents, and strengthening our economy. With historic broad bipartisan support behind us, we’re ready to take our message to every corner of the state and make the case for four more years to finish the job."
Lombardo, who served as a police officer for 26 years and was sheriff of Clark County, was the only challenger to defeat an incumbent governor in the 2022 elections as he edged out Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak and made Nevada the only blue-to-red governor flip that year.
In September, Lombardo warned of the risks ahead if the Democrats retake the governor's office. And he said he's the backstop against what he described as the "woke, California agenda" from Nevada's bigger neighbor to the west.
"I’ll continue to do everything in my power to stop Gavin Newson from imposing his left-wing agenda on Nevada. As long as I’m your governor, I won’t ever accept Californians telling Nevadans what to do or making us pay the price for their bad ideas," Lombardo said, according to an excerpt shared with Fox News Digital ahead of delivery.
Lombardo, speaking at Rancho High School in North Las Vegas, where he graduated and launched his first campaign for governor four years ago, also spotlighted his accomplishments while emphasizing the "unfinished business" to secure Nevada's future.
The Nevada Democratic Party, on the other hand, has tried to tie Lombardo to President Donald Trump, slamming the governor for what they charged was his "embrace of Trump’s reckless policies, all of which have led to worst-in-the-nation unemployment rates, a growing housing crisis, and sky-high costs."
Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford and Reno-anchored Washoe County Commissioner Alexis Hill have both launched campaigns for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.
Why would a city mayor defend a dictator while his own streets continue to burn?
As I continue my walk across America from Atlanta into Alabama, I’ve met countless everyday heroes — hardworking parents, devoted friends, and faithful community builders — who pour their lives into lifting up neighbors and restoring hope in forgotten neighborhoods. Their quiet sacrifices rarely make headlines, but they produce real, lasting change. That is why I’ve been deeply dismayed by leaders back home in Chicago and across the nation who seem far more eager to defend Nicolás Maduro, a brutal dictator whose regime has tortured, starved, and crushed its own people — rather than confront the rampant violence, poverty, and failing schools devastating far too many American communities.
After President Donald Trump’s decisive action to remove Maduro, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson chose not to stand for justice or human rights. Instead, he condemned the move as an "illegal regime change abroad" and claimed it was "solely about oil and power." He even linked it to the "dehumanization of migrants from Venezuela" by the "far right." He has since doubled down through multiple posts on X — as if defending a tyrant who has driven millions to flee their homeland is somehow compassionate.
Why would a city mayor, with no international authority, insert himself into global affairs like this? I understand that local governance may not feel revolutionary enough. But supporting Maduro’s government — with its documented record of torture and extrajudicial killings — isn't solidarity. It’s siding with evil.
WALKING ACROSS AMERICA SHOWED ME WHY FAITH AND FREE THOUGHT CAN STILL WIN
Johnson isn’t the only one. Leftist mayors like New York’s Zohran Mamdani and Los Angeles’ Karen Bass reflect a troubling pattern, aligning with anti-American narratives that prioritize ideological posturing over real suffering and crises within their own cities.
These mayors were elected to fix potholes, improve schools, and reduce crime — yet they spend invaluable time and energy condemning Trump while effectively giving dictators carte blanche. Do they not care about the people in their own backyards? Or are they advancing some international agenda that undermines the American Dream right here at home?
This distraction is painfully evident in Chicago, where our streets are plagued with violence and our children are trapped in underperforming schools. Yet, the Chicago Teachers Union jumped into the fray. On X, they promoted an "emergency protest" against what it called "U.S. aggression against Venezuela," calling to "STOP THE BOMBINGS" and framing the situation as imperialist war.
Their X post urged people to join them at Chicago’s Federal Plaza. The post was co-sponsored by groups like the Anti-War Committee and the Party for Socialism and Liberation. Why is a teachers' union, which should be focused on raising literacy rates and preparing kids for success, rallying for a regime that has crushed its own people's freedoms? And why are taxpayers footing the bill?
It gets worse. I recently saw a Freedom Foundation post stating that the CTU took a trip to Venezuela to "visit with government officials and teachers and tour communes." I don’t even know what "tour communes" are, but what is the CTU doing in Venezuela and, again, why on the taxpayer’s dime?
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This is not about peace. This is about ideology. When politics becomes a false religion, it breeds rage and division, and it pulls us away from the faith and merit that build strong communities.
My walk is about reclaiming that foundation. Everywhere I go, I talk to Americans who believe in earning success through hard work, not handouts or excuses. Restoring merit means teaching trades, fostering entrepreneurship, and instilling values that lift people out of poverty — like the work being done at Project H.O.O.D. back in Chicago's South Side. Restoring merit means believing in America.
At this point, we must be brutally honest. These mayors are not here to help us. Where’s their progress? It isn’t there. They don’t believe in America. They don’t believe in us, the Americans. The reality is that "We the People" have to lead. It’s on us. We have to be the change. We have to step outside our doors and talk to our neighbors and take steps to help, however small they may be.
As I press on with this walk, my faith reminds me that God calls us to justice and truth, not to prop up tyrants or play politics with people’s lives. The American Dream isn't about siding with dictators. It’s about creating opportunity for all, earned through merit and perseverance. It’s about believing in America.
Trump vows day of 'reckoning and retribution' in Minnesota as more ICE agents flood to Minneapolis
President Donald Trump vowed a day of "reckoning and retribution" in Minnesota as the Department of Homeland Security sent hundreds more federal agents to the state this week.
Trump issued the warning on social media Tuesday, accusing Democrats of capitalizing on the unrest to shift focus away from Minnesota's ongoing fraud scandal. DHS Sec. Kristi Noem announced on Sunday that the administration is sending hundreds more Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to Minneapolis this week.
"Do the people of Minnesota really want to live in a community in which there are thousands of already convicted murderers, drug dealers and addicts, rapists, violent released and escaped prisoners, dangerous people from foreign mental institutions and insane asylums, and other deadly criminals too dangerous to even mention?" Trump wrote on X.
"All the patriots of ICE want to do is remove them from your neighborhood and send them back to the prisons and mental institutions from where they came, most in foreign Countries who illegally entered the USA though [sic] Sleepy Joe Biden’s HORRIBLE Open Border’s Policy. Every place we go, crime comes down. In Chicago, despite a weak and incompetent Governor and Mayor fighting us all the way, a big improvement was made. Thousands of Criminals were removed!" he continued.
KRISTI NOEM FIRES BACK AT DEMS AMID IMPEACHMENT THREAT OVER FATAL MINNEAPOLIS ICE SHOOTING
"Minnesota Democrats love the unrest that anarchists and professional agitators are causing because it gets the spotlight off of the 19 Billion Dollars that was stolen by really bad and deranged people. FEAR NOT, GREAT PEOPLE OF MINNESOTA, THE DAY OF RECKONING & RETRIBUTION IS COMING!" he added.
The protests, which have spread to other cities, including Los Angeles, Portland and New York, come after an ICE officer fatally shot 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, who DHS alleges "weaponized her vehicle" and "attempted to run a law enforcement officer over."
Video of the shooting has become a political flash point, with some saying it supports the government’s position that the agent acted in self-defense and others saying the footage calls into question DHS’ explanation and raises broader concerns about the use of force by ICE officers.
TOM EMMER PUSHES BACK ON SUGGESTION THAT MINNESOTA ANTI-ICE PROTESTERS HAVE BEEN PEACEFUL
The shooting remains under federal investigation.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey wrote in a New York Times op-ed that the Trump administration pushed a "false narrative" about the shooting and demonized Good.
"The chaos that ICE and the Trump administration have brought to Minneapolis made this tragedy sadly predictable," he wrote.
"I’ve watched multiple videos, from multiple perspectives — it seems clear that Ms. Good, a mother of three, was trying to leave the scene, not attack an agent," he added.
Minnesota on Monday sued to block the federal government from pursuing further ICE operations in the state.
Fox News' Ashley Carnahan contributed to this report.