Ohio State and Michigan will write another chapter in their storied rivalry when they face off Saturday at noon ET at Michigan Stadium on F...

Ohio State looks for revenge against Michigan in high-stakes edition of The Game

Ohio State and Michigan will write another chapter in their storied rivalry when they face off Saturday at noon ET at Michigan Stadium on FOX. 

Last season, the game didn’t have the highest of stakes because Michigan entered the game at just 6-5, but it turned into a classic. Michigan upset Ohio State 13-10, and the two teams brawled after the game when Michigan players tried planting their flag on the Buckeyes' field. 

Ohio State’s loss nearly knocked the team out of the College Football Playoff. Instead, Ohio State made it as a lower seed and went on to win it all. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

However, the Buckeyes enter Ann Arbor with revenge on their mind. Ohio State, after winning eight straight over Michigan from 2012-2019, has lost their last four against the Wolverines. 

The teams' first recorded game against each other was played in October 1897, and Michigan won. The stakes this year couldn’t be much higher. 

The No. 1 Buckeyes are 11-0, but a loss to Michigan would knock them out of the Big Ten championship game, drop them lower in the rankings and give them their first five-game losing streak to the Wolverines since the 1920s.

NORTH CAROLINA'S BILL BELICHICK AVOIDS QUESTION ABOUT LATEST JORDON HUDSON DRAMA

Michigan enters the game at No. 15, and a win over the Buckeyes would bump them into the College Football Playoff and maybe give them a chance at the Big Ten championship game. Michigan could only get into the championship game if they win and Oregon loses to Washington.

A loss to Ohio State would knock Michigan out of the College Football Playoff for a second straight season. 

Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin will look to continue his strong play in his first career game against Michigan. The sophomore has completed 79.4% of his passes for 2,832 yards with 27 touchdowns and four interceptions in 11 games this season. 

Michigan freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood is also getting his first taste of The Game. The 18-year-old has completed 62.2% of his passes for 2,166 yards with nine touchdowns and five interceptions while rushing for 322 yards and five touchdowns. 

Michigan leads the all-time series 62-51-6 over Ohio State. 

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



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/gZTxnIH

American servicemembers will be able to enjoy holiday favorites this Thanksgiving , thanks to the work of the Defense Logistics Agency's...

Military reveals just how much turkey shipped globally to ensure American troops enjoy Thanksgiving meal

American servicemembers will be able to enjoy holiday favorites this Thanksgiving, thanks to the work of the Defense Logistics Agency's (DLA) Troop Support Subsistence (TSS) team.

This year, the military has secured more than 380,000 pounds of traditional Thanksgiving food and holiday treats in one of DLA's largest annual efforts, the Department of War announced. The department explained that varying numbers of troops across the globe impacts the ordering process, which is done with precision.

"Holiday requirements are like fingerprints in that no two are alike," John Sheehan, TSS director of customer operations, told DOW. "The ebb and flow of one holiday item to the next is based on the fluid troop requirements and preferences from year to year."

FIRST LADY MELANIA TRUMP AND USHA VANCE VISIT TROOPS' FAMILIES IN FIRST JOINT VISIT

This year, military dining facilities are set to receive 152,626 pounds of turkey, 124,022 pounds of beef, 66,054 pounds of ham, 38,081 pounds of shrimp, 6,512 cans of sweet potato, 15,282 cases of pies and cakes and 792 cases of eggnog, along with other holiday treats.

6 FORGOTTEN THANKSGIVING DISHES YOUR GRANDPARENTS ACTUALLY SERVED AT HOLIDAY TABLES

Army Chief Warrant Officer 4 Shemika Harris, a TSS military food advisor, said she was "absolutely impressed" by the DLA's work to bring Thanksgiving to servicemembers across the globe.

"They approach each holiday with a sense of pride and purpose knowing that these meals mean far more than just food," Harris told DOW.

This week, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth called troops around the world, including some in the U.S., to wish them a happy Thanksgiving and to thank them for their service.

DOW said that during one of the calls with troops, the video option was not working, so Hegseth quipped, "I can hear you loud and clear. In my mind's eye, captain, you are a staggeringly handsome individual, as are all two dozen of the incredible sailors behind you."



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/YUl1pC2

Rebecca Romijn's husband, Jerry O'Connell and John Stamos playfully put their yearslong feud to rest. O'Connell and Stamos pose...

John Stamos and Jerry O’Connell bury the hatchet after yearslong rift over Rebecca Romijn

Rebecca Romijn's husband, Jerry O'Connell and John Stamos playfully put their yearslong feud to rest.

O'Connell and Stamos posed together for a photo featuring the "Full House" star's wife Caitlin McHugh.

"First @zohrankmamdani and @realdonaldtrump Then me and @johnstamos You are up @russian_kremlin & zelenskyy_official," O'Connell captioned the post.

O'Connell, Stamos and McHugh were together to celebrate Howie Mandel's birthday. The "Deal or No Deal" host commented on the post, writing, "This is what I do. I bring people together. You’re welcome."

REBECCA ROMIJN WAS ‘BLINDSIDED’ BY EX JOHN STAMOS' ALLEGATIONS: 'DON'T REALLY WANT TO HELP HIM SELL HIS BOOKS'

The photo came as a shock, years after a feud began between Romijn, O'Connell and Stamos over comments the actor made about his ex-wife in his memoir "If You Would Have Told Me." Stamos shared details of his failed marriage to Romjin, who he was married to from 1998 until 2005, in the book.

After her divorce from Stamos, Romijn moved on with O'Connell. The two share twin daughters together.

Stamos has also since moved on, marrying McHugh in 2018. The two first met on the set of "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" in 2011 but reconnected romantically years later.

While everyone had seemingly moved on with their lives, Stamos brought up past wounds in his 2023 memoir.

JOHN STAMOS' EX-WIFE REBECCA ROMIJN ADMITS TO CURRENT HUSBAND SHE MISSES 'A LOT OF THINGS' ABOUT HER EX

While promoting his memoir, Stamos opened up about how he felt "emasculated" in his marriage to Romijn as she found Hollywood success while he struggled in his career.

"I think that she outgrew me," Stamos said during an appearance on "The Howard Stern Show." The "Full House" star noted that he could have tried harder to save the marriage, but things ended up falling apart. "I didn't work as hard as I should at anything."

Stamos also revealed he was "shattered" by the end of his marriage for years and admitted he looked at Romijn as if she was "the Devil."

"In my mind back then, she was the Devil, and I just hated her. I couldn't believe how much I hated her, and it ruined my life," Stamos told People magazine. "One of the steps in AA, the fourth step, is you lay out all your grievances, everything that people did to you. And then I said, 'Oh, she did this, she did that, blah, blah, she did blah, blah.' And then my sponsor goes, 'Now what part did you play in that?' And I go, like, 'None.'"

After writing his memoir, Stamos had a change of heart.

"You start thinking, it's like, 'Oh, she wasn't the Devil. Maybe I was as much to blame as her,'" he explained. "It was very public, and that was very painful. I didn't write much about that, but it's hard."

LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

O'Connell told Andy Cohen that he didn't read the memoir and Romijn didn't have "any interest" in diving into Stamos' book either during an appearance on the Bravo star's radio show in November 2023.

"There was an interest in my household," O'Connell allowed. "But it’s so funny, after hearing his interview beginning to end on ['The Howard Stern Show'], any interest of reading the book went away."

The claims made by Stamos did make things "awkward" with the couple's twin daughters.

"My children are 14, and they see what we see now," O'Connell said at the time. "There's no hiding, there's no more keeping things from them. It's pretty crazy when your kids come out for breakfast and go, 'Hey mom, your ex has a book out and called you the devil. What are your thoughts?'"

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER

Romijn had claimed she was "blindsided" by the way Stamos portrayed their marriage in his memoir.

"I was very surprised by all of that, incredibly shocked actually," she told Entertainment Tonight in January 2024. "I was sort of blindsided by it. But you know, I don't really want to help him sell his books based on those headlines. So that's all I really want to say about it."

Much hasn't been said since, until the now-infamous photo shared by O'Connell.

For Romijn and Stamos, the playful photo might mark a fresh chapter.



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/ix3nMdV

For months, Americans have voiced frustration over the stubbornly high cost of living. But economists say a more troubling shift is emergin...

Weakening incomes add new strain to households already hit by high prices

For months, Americans have voiced frustration over the stubbornly high cost of living.

But economists say a more troubling shift is emerging. Consumers are increasingly reporting that their incomes aren’t keeping up with the financial pressures they face.

Joanne Hsu, director and chief economist of the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers, says the change is showing up more clearly in recent readings.

"Consumers have been expressing frustration from high prices consistently for the past several years. What makes this season different is that consumers are also increasingly mentioning weakening incomes as well," Hsu told Fox News Digital.

AS THE HOLIDAYS APPROACH, THANKSGIVING BECOMES TRUMP'S ECONOMIC TEST

"This year, they are reporting pressures on their pocketbooks from multiple sources."

That sense of mounting pressure is backed up by recent analysis. 

According to the Bank of America Institute, inflation has risen faster than middle- and lower-income households’ after-tax wages since January 2025.

As a result, nearly one in four U.S. households is now living paycheck to paycheck, a number that has grown during the past year.

NEARLY 1 IN 4 AMERICAN HOUSEHOLDS LIVING PAYCHECK TO PAYCHECK, REPORT REVEALS

What that means is that the erosion of purchasing power is pushing more Americans to the edge of their budgets, making it harder to keep up, let alone get ahead.

That growing strain presents a political challenge for President Donald Trump, who returned to the White House on promises of greater affordability. He is now confronting voter doubts about whether he can deliver.

A Fox News national survey shows 76% of voters now rate the economy negatively, up sharply from 67% in July and 70% at the end of former President Joe Biden's term.

Trump’s economic approval has also slipped to a new low, and his overall job approval has climbed to record levels of disapproval, even among voters who have historically backed him.

For now, the daily reality for many Americans remains the same: Prices feel too high, paychecks feel too thin and confidence in the future is fragile. 

How quickly that changes and whether voters give Trump credit for it may determine the tone of the country’s economic and political debate in the months ahead.



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/Sven628

FIRST ON FOX: A nonprofit patient rights advocacy group is urging President Donald Trump to take immediate action to enhance price transpa...

Patients’ group urges Trump to take on healthcare ‘fat cats,’ demand real price transparency

FIRST ON FOX: A nonprofit patient rights advocacy group is urging President Donald Trump to take immediate action to enhance price transparency of healthcare costs as the White House weighs a new healthcare proposal. 

PatientsRightsAdvocate.org, (PRA), a nonpartisan group focused on enhancing systemwide healthcare price transparency and quality, is calling on the Trump administration to take steps to improve on informing patients what their healthcare services will cost as the White House prepares to unveil a new healthcare proposal. 

"You recently articulated a compelling vision: Americans, not insurance companies, should be in control of their healthcare dollars," PRA founder Cynthia Fisher wrote in a letter to Trump Tuesday. "Empowering people directly is the most effective way to restore fairness, choice, and accountability to a system that has too long served corporate interests instead of the American people."

Specifically, Fisher urged Trump to take steps through the Department of Labor to ensure that employers that provide healthcare receive full access to claims, payments to providers and a rundown of fees so they can facilitate lower costs that result in lower fees for their employees.

TRUMP'S SHUTDOWN IS JACKPOT FOR BILLIONAIRES WHILE WORKING AMERICANS PAY 

Likewise, she encouraged Trump to back the Patients Deserve Price Tags Act spearheaded by senators Roger Marshall, R-Kan., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo. The measure would require hospitals to provide the actual prices of approximately 300 services and would require providers or facilities to craft a detailed itemized bill of each separate item or service. 

"By doing this, you will deliver a system in which patients, employers, and unions — not the insurance and private equity fat cats — hold the power," Fisher wrote in her letter. 

These efforts would build on previous actions from the Trump administration, Fisher said.

NEWT GINGRICH: THE SIMPLEST WAY TO MAKE AMERICAN LIFE AFFORDABLE AGAIN 

For example, Trump signed an executive order in February ordering the Treasury, Labor and Health and Human Services departments to enforce transparency regulations, which would require hospitals and insurers to share the actual prices of healthcare, rather than estimates. Additionally, the order requires the agencies to require hospitals to work toward making healthcare prices more uniform across hospitals and insurers. 

It remains unclear when Trump will release his healthcare proposal. Media reports indicated that the plan could be released as early as Monday, but White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt did not give any indication on the timeline. She told reporters Monday the issue is a priority for the president. 

The potential healthcare plan comes as Republicans grapple with extending Affordable Care Act subsidies about to expire at the end of 2025. The issue was a sticking point in funding negotiations that led to the government shutdown in October.

VANCE SAYS TRUMP ADMIN HAS ‘GREAT’ HEALTHCARE PLAN COMING, WANTS TO WORK WITH DEMS: ‘POLITICS BE DAMNED’ 

Although Democrats refused for weeks to back a measure without a provision to permanently extend the Affordable Care Act subsidies, they eventually got behind a short-term spending bill that does not extend these subsidies by the end of the year. 

Even so, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., agreed to a vote in December on legislation that would continue these credits.

Regardless, Americans want more precise information on their healthcare costs. According to a September poll from Echelon Insights, a Republican-leaning poll and data firm, nearly 90% of U.S. voters support enforcing regulations that would require hospitals and insurance companies to provide the exact prices from the get-go. 

"The data I’ve seen is crystal clear: If President Trump executes on this affordability action by forcing hospitals and insurers to reveal actual prices upfront, the American people will overwhelmingly support it," David Kochel, a Republican campaign strategist, said in a statement to Fox News Digital Monday. "This isn’t just good policy, but a potential game-changer heading into 2026 and beyond. By tackling one of the clearest pain points in surprise medical bills and hiding pricing, Republicans can shift the narrative on healthcare, win back trust and deliver real results that voters can feel."



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/4LblU2o

The 50-year-old man facing federal terrorism charges for allegedly setting a woman on fire aboard a Chicago train last week had repeatedly ...

Chicago train attack suspect repeatedly violated curfew, movement restrictions, records show

The 50-year-old man facing federal terrorism charges for allegedly setting a woman on fire aboard a Chicago train last week had repeatedly violated his court-ordered curfew and movement restrictions stemming from a prior violent offense case, court records show.

Lawrence Reed had been ordered onto electronic monitoring on Aug. 22, when Cook County Judge Teresa Molina-Gonzalez denied a prosecution request to keep him jailed on felony allegations that he knocked a social worker unconscious while at MacNeal Hospital’s psychiatric ward.

During that hearing, transcripts show Molina-Gonzalez told prosecutors: "I can’t keep everybody in jail because the State’s Attorney wants me to."

According to the newly filed document in that battery case, Cook County electronic monitoring records show Reed repeatedly violated his curfew and movement restrictions in the days leading up to the alleged Chicago Transit Authority attack on Nov. 17.

BLUE CITY SUSPECT WITH NUMEROUS PRIOR ARRESTS FEDERALLY CHARGED AFTER ALLEGEDLY SETTING WOMAN ABLAZE ON TRAIN

The logs detail multiple instances where Reed left his home with his ankle monitor without authorization, returned late, or triggered "escalated alerts" indicating prolonged or serious non-compliance. 

The violations span several dates, including Nov. 9, Nov. 12–13, Nov. 14–15, and Nov. 15 again, with additional alerts on the night of Nov. 17 — the date of the alleged CTA attack.

Reed was riding on the city’s Blue Line L train at around 9 p.m. Nov. 17 when he approached a 26-year-old woman from behind and doused her with gasoline from a plastic bottle, according to a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives arrest affidavit.

DUFFY IDENTIFIES CHICAGO TRAIN VICTIM AS 26-YEAR-OLD BETHANY MAGEE WHILE BLASTING CITY'S 'CARELESSNESS'

The woman managed to fight Reed off as he attempted to ignite the gas, then ran from one end of the car to the other while Reed continued to chase her, the affidavit said, citing surveillance video from the train. Reed subsequently ignited the bottle, approached the victim and used it to set her on fire, prosecutors said.

Records show some alerts continued into the early morning hours of Nov. 18, roughly three hours after the incident occurred.

Reed’s approved movement schedule under electronic monitoring allowed him to be out only during limited windows: Sunday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

CHICAGO TRAIN ATTACK SUSPECT ORDERED BY JUDGE TO REMAIN IN CUSTODY AHEAD OF TRIAL

Reed was taken into custody Tuesday morning with burn marks on his hand and wearing the same clothes as the suspect seen in surveillance footage carrying out the attack, the arrest affidavit said.

The victim, later identified as 26-year-old Bethany MaGee, suffered severe burns to her face and body and remains in critical condition, according to authorities.

In April, after the Chief Judge’s Office took over the countywide electronic monitoring program, Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke reportedly warned staff in a memo that the office was not prepared for the responsibility and described the program as "a serious threat to public safety."

CHICAGO TRAIN FIRE ATTACK SHOWS WHY ‘DECARCERATION’ POLICIES ARE PUTTING LIVES AT RISK: EXPERT

A spokesperson for the Cook County chief judge's office declined to comment to Fox News on the monitoring violations by Reed.

In a separate filing late last week that Fox News also obtained, Cook County prosecutors moved to revoke Reed’s pretrial release in the August aggravated battery case based on the new federal terrorism charge. If their request is granted, Reed would be held without bond in the county case, regardless of the status of the federal proceedings.

Reed’s next court date in the Cook County aggravated battery case is set for Dec. 4.

In federal court, U.S. District Judge Laura McNally — who on Friday ordered Reed detained pretrial — has not yet set a next date in the terrorism case.

Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner and Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/RLDix4A

A former TV anchor-turned entrepreneur convicted of stealing millions of dollars in a COVID-era fraud scheme will spend the next decade behi...

Former TV anchor heads to same prison as Ghislaine Maxwell after $63M COVID fraud conviction

A former TV anchor-turned entrepreneur convicted of stealing millions of dollars in a COVID-era fraud scheme will spend the next decade behind bars at the same Texas prison camp as infamous sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell

Earlier this year, a federal grand jury found Stephanie Hockridge, 42, guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. On Friday, Hockridge was sentenced to 10 years in lockup at a Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas, the New York Post reported. She was also ordered to pay over $63 million in restitution.

Hockridge was convicted "in a scheme to fraudulently obtain over $63 million in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans guaranteed by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act," according to the Department of Justice (DOJ).

Hockridge co-founded lender service provider Blueacorn in April 2020, ostensibly to help small businesses and individuals secure PPP loans during the COVID-19 pandemic, the DOJ said. She previously worked as a TV news anchor for KNXV in Phoenix, the Post wrote.

GHISLAINE MAXWELL GOES FOR STROLL AT NEW MINIMUM-SECURITY PRISON AS FORMER TOWNHOUSE HITS MARKET

Screenshots of internal messages within Blueacorn show Hockdridge instructing staff to prioritize what were known as "VIPPP" clients over regular PPP borrowers.

"To get larger loans for certain PPP applicants, Hockridge and her co-conspirators fabricated documents, including payroll records, tax documentation and bank statements," the DOJ wrote in a press release. "Hockridge and her co-conspirators charged borrowers kickbacks based on a percentage of the funds received."

SHE HELPED NORTH KOREA INFILTRATE AMERICAN TECH COMPANIES

Hockridge, however, claimed Blueacorn was a "sincere effort to support small businesses" during the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Post. 

The PPP was implemented to provide small businesses with funds to keep their workers on payroll, hire back employees who may have been laid off and cover applicable expenses like rent, utilities and mortgage interest during the pandemic. 

Maxwell is serving her 20-year sentence at the same prison camp in Bryan for her role in a scheme to sexually exploit and abuse multiple minor girls with Jeffrey Epstein over the course of a decade.

Theranos fraudster Elizabeth Holmes and former "The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City" star Jennifer Shah are also serving time at the same facility.

Neither Hockridge’s attorney nor the Federal Bureau of Prisons immediately returned Fox News Digital’s requests for comment.



from Latest & Breaking News on Fox News https://ift.tt/u1wHhCL

Health For Child