
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


FOX Business's Cheryl Casone joined 'Fox & Friends First' to discuss President Donald Trump's offer to air traffic controllers and the chaos with air travel amid the record-breaking shutdown. Fox News' Mark Meredith also reports the latest from the White House.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has become the target of progressive anger after moderate Democrats struck a deal to reopen the government, raising questions about his future atop the conference even as he distances himself from the agreement.
When Hurricane Melissa devastated parts of Jamaica, thousands were left without power for days — a reminder that reliable backup energy can mean the difference between safety and chaos. Where Hurricane Melissa hit hardest, the towns of Black River and New Hope in Jamaica, the destruction is total.
Homes leveled. A hospital in ruins. Families living beneath half-collapsed roofs. Across the island, people are surviving on whatever the land and sea still offer. With outside help slow to arrive, Jamaicans are doing what they’ve always done, relying on each other. This is the reality behind the headlines: the human cost, the courage, and the fight to survive in the aftermath of one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes in history.
By Jermaine McCrimmonFOX Business's Cheryl Casone joined 'Fox & Friends First' to discuss President Donald Trump's offer to air traffic controllers and the chaos with air travel amid the record-breaking shutdown. Fox News' Mark Meredith also reports the latest from the White House.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has become the target of progressive anger after moderate Democrats struck a deal to reopen the government, raising questions about his future atop the conference even as he distances himself from the agreement.
When Hurricane Melissa devastated parts of Jamaica, thousands were left without power for days — a reminder that reliable backup energy can mean the difference between safety and chaos. Where Hurricane Melissa hit hardest, the towns of Black River and New Hope in Jamaica, the destruction is total.
Homes leveled. A hospital in ruins. Families living beneath half-collapsed roofs. Across the island, people are surviving on whatever the land and sea still offer. With outside help slow to arrive, Jamaicans are doing what they’ve always done, relying on each other. This is the reality behind the headlines: the human cost, the courage, and the fight to survive in the aftermath of one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes in history.