Trump's legal team offers peek at strategy as opening statements set to begin and more top headlines

Good morning and welcome to Fox News’ morning newsletter, Fox News First. Subscribe now to get Fox News First in your email. And here’s what you need to know to start your day …

COURT KICKOFF – Opening statements in Trump’s historic criminal trial set to begin today. Continue reading …

CHAOS AT COLUMBIA – University president orders virtual classes as anti-Israel protests take over. Continue reading …

YALE UNREST – Anti-Israel protesters reportedly arrested as police close in on occupation. Continue reading …

‘GRAVELY CONCERNED’ – GOP congresswoman demands Columbia leaders take action against ‘severe and pervasive’ anti-Israel protests on campus. Continue reading …

ACCEPTING BLAME – Israel’s military intelligence chief resigns over failure to prevent Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack. Continue reading …

HIDE THE HANDBOOK – Katherine Maher’s past conduct flies in the face of NPR’s own policies. Continue reading …

‘THERE IS HOPE’ – Military veteran embraces ‘new service’ of helping others after Parkinson’s diagnosis. Continue reading …

 

POLITICS

‘CAMPAIGN ARM’ – Top Republican accuses federal agency of helping Dems in crucial 2024 swing state. Continue reading …

NEW TERRITORY – Supreme Court to hear Trump’s bid for criminal immunity with historic trial underway. Continue reading …

‘I WAS APPALLED’ – Fetterman hammers ‘a–hole’ anti-Israel protesters, slams his own party. Continue reading …

THE DEVIL’S WORK – DeSantis challenged by Satanic Temple co-founder to debate on religious freedoms. Continue reading …

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MEDIA

‘FOLLOW THE MONEY’ – JK Rowling defends doctor behind bombshell transgender report. Continue reading …

‘TERRIFIED OF THEIR RABID CORE’ – ‘Vicious’ antisemitic attacks turn Democratic party against Israel. Continue reading …

WORRY WART – Dem governor concerned about ‘overindulgence,’ ‘obsession’ with Trump’s hush money trial.  Continue reading …

‘TROUBLING NUMBERS’ – NBC correspondent sounds alarm for Biden after outlet’s latest poll. Continue reading …

  

OPINION

HENRY MILLER, JEFF STIER – Earth Day 2024 is a mix of woke and political correctness. Continue reading …

MARK MILLER – Supreme Court can fix the homeless crisis that the government caused. Continue reading …

 

 

IN OTHER NEWS

‘NOT CREDIBLE’ – Idaho murder suspect attempting to ‘muddy the waters’ with ‘very weak’ alibi, expert says. Continue reading …

TRASH TALK – Former Colorado player takes shot at Deion Sanders’ program on his way out. Continue reading …

AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – How well do you know American pop performers, popular pups and more? Continue reading …

‘NOBODY KNEW’ – Actress says she used crystal meth in the ’80s as a weight loss method. Continue reading …

BIRD CLEANS HOUSE – Unimpressed with the decorations in his nest box, a bird was determined to do some rearranging. See video …

 

WATCH

MARK LEVIN – Biden has been awful for America. See video …

ALICIA ACUNA – There’s a significant lack of humanity that’s happened. See video …

 

FOX WEATHER

Frost and freeze advisories for Monday, April 22, 2024

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Will California have a 'superbloom' this year? Here's what to know about the flower spectacle

  • Carpets of yellow, orange and gold flowers are spreading across Southern California’s deserts.
  • This year’s blooms are not as vibrant or abundant as last year’s “superbloom,” which followed drought-busting rains.
  • Superblooms occur when desert stretches transform into dense wildflower fields due to dormant seeds germinating after seasons with over 30 percent average precipitation.

Carpets of yellow, orange and gold flowers are beginning to cover Southern California’s vast deserts, the Bay Area’s dramatic bluffs and even near Los Angeles International Airport.

But do they add up to a “superbloom”? There is no single definition of the event, but so far this year’s blooms haven’t been as vibrant or abundant as those that took over swaths of California last spring following drought-busting rains. This year, too, the state received ample winter rains.

After especially wet winters, bursts of color may appear in the spring, drawing droves of visitors to California and other parts of the Southwest to glimpse the flowering fields and pose for pictures.

CALIFORNIA’S MASSIVE SUPERBLOOM SEEN FROM SPACE FOLLOWING HISTORIC, DROUGHT-ENDING RAINS

Here are some key facts about the natural spectacle.

California superbloom

Overlooking the Pacific Ocean, flowers bloom in Mussel Rock Park in Daly City, California, on April 1, 2024. Carpets of tiny, rain-fed wildflowers known as “superblooms” are appearing in parts of California and Arizona. Their arrival draws droves of visitors who stop to glimpse the flashes of color and pose for pictures. (AP Photo/Haven Daley)

WHAT’S A SUPERBLOOM?

Scientists don’t agree on any one definition. Across California and Arizona, there are stretches of desert that can quickly transform into dense fields of wildflowers, since seeds lie dormant in the soil and then germinate and blossom at around the same time.

A recent study found that such widespread blooms, which have been visible by satellite imagery in some years, take place after seasons with greater than 30% average precipitation, said Naomi Fraga, director of conservation programs at the California Botanic Garden, east of Los Angeles.

DOES THIS YEAR COUNT?

No, according to Fraga. That’s because there isn’t a huge diversity in the flowers that have blossomed in places like California’s Death Valley.

This year’s blooms aren’t as large or as dense as wildflowers in past years, she said.

“When I think of superblooms, I think of a bloom that is so extraordinary, that’s a once in a lifetime event,” Fraga said, adding that the wildflower display this year “still makes a beautiful show.”

Last spring, early April visitors to Southern California’s Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve were treated to dazzling orange displays of the state flower. But around the same time this year, the fields were absent of the orange blooms, with the reserve’s officials posting that the window for an impressive show was becoming “increasingly narrow.”

In Death Valley, one of the driest places on earth, stretches of desert are dotted with gold thanks to sunflowers that emerged after an especially wet winter and spring.

Whether that constitutes a superbloom is “really in the eye of the beholder,” said Evan Meyer, executive director of the California-based nonprofit Theodore Payne Foundation, which works to preserve California’s native plants.

WHEN DOES IT HAPPEN?

April is typically the peak month for spring wildflowers, but in high-elevation places they can continue to blossom later into the spring.

Superblooms generally refer to low-elevation desert regions, Fraga said.

“It’s much more geographic than seasonal,” Meyer said. “Spring in the mountains hasn’t started, and in the low desert, it’s past its peak.”

When temperatures rise in the desert, the flowers can quickly dry out.

HOW DOES CLIMATE CHANGE AFFECT THE SUPERBLOOM?

Experts say it might be too soon to tell.

Climate change is making precipitation patterns more erratic, but the effects on wildflowers could play out over decades or even centuries, Fraga said, since seeds stay dormant in the soil for long periods of time.

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Southern California received heavy rain last summer, unlike its usually dry summers, which she said probably stimulated flowers to germinate out of season. Winter temperatures also were higher than average, so many of them were able to stay in bloom through the spring season.

“That made for a very unusual bloom,” Fraga said.

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Former Colorado player takes shot at Deion Sanders' football program: 'Don't want to play for clicks'

Cormani McClain, a five-star recruit to Colorado last year, is leaving Deion Sanders’ program and throwing some shots on his way out. 

McClain, the top-ranked cornerback in this past year’s high school class, per 247 Sports, who entered the transfer portal to find a new collegiate home, posted a video on YouTube Saturday where he discussed the Buffaloes’ program under Sanders. 

“I feel like I just don’t want to play for clicks. I actually want to be involved with a great leading program that’s going to develop players,” McClain said in the video, which was titled “Next Step.”

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Cormani McClain looks on field

Colorado’s Cormani McClain during the Arizona game at Folsom Field in Boulder on Nov. 11, 2023. (Jamie Schwaberow/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

McClain added that he wants to “change the narrative surrounding my name and be a part of a real and great program that’s going to impact me to the best of my ability.”

Sanders recently commented on McClain’s departure from his program, where he had a subtle shot himself at the corner. 

“I’m always in prayer for our young men, and I want the best for them,” he said in an interview with DNVR. “I pray to God that he goes to a program that challenges him, as well as hold him accountable and develop him as a young man.

DEION SANDERS NOT WORRIED ABOUT COLORADO’S NUMEROUS TRANSFER PORTAL LOSSES: ‘WE’RE GOOD’

“Unfortunately, we weren’t the program that could accomplish that, so preferably he understands that this is the second go-round and get it – go get it, man, because he has a tremendous amount of talent. But he has to want it.”

Sanders’ comment infers that McClain didn’t give the best effort last season, where he had 13 total tackles and two passes defended in nine games. 

Cormani McClain waits for play

Cormani McClain of the University of Colorado Buffs prepares for a play at the line of scrimmage against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Mountain America Stadium on Oct. 7, 2023, in Tempe. (Bruce Yeung/Getty Images)

As for McClain’s comment about not wanting to play for clicks, the Buffaloes were certainly a massive headline at the beginning of the college football season after defeating then-ranked TCU, a team that made the national title game the year before, and going 3-0 to start the new campaign. 

But the headlines only got worse, as Colorado struggled, going 1-8 after their hot start and finishing last in the Pac-12. 

Sanders knows how much the transfer portal can take away from a program, as 12 players entered before the spring window opened. The total for the Buffaloes reached 26 after 14 more entered the portal since that window came around. 

However, Sanders has benefited from the portal, too, adding 86 new players, 53 of whom were transfers, in his first season. 

Cormani McClain walks

Colorado Buffaloes cornerback Cormani McClain makes his way through the tunnel for warmups before playing the Oregon Ducks at Autzen Stadium, Sept. 23, 2023. (Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

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Losing a player like McClain, though, with his high ranking, is a tough one to swallow. 

With the Pac-12 dissolving entering the 2024-25 collegiate season, the Buffaloes will be joining the Big 12 Conference.  

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Tennessee preschool teacher charged with bringing gun to school, threatening colleague

A Nashville, Tennessee preschool teacher is charged with bringing a gun to school and threatening one of her colleagues, police said. 

Sheneca Cowart, 29, is charged with assault, threat of mass violence, and two counts of carrying a weapon onto school property, Nashville police said. 

Sheneca Cowart

Sheneca Cowart is accused of threatening another teacher with a firearm, police say.  (MNPD)

The preschool, The Academy of McCrory Lane, is located on Newsome Station Road. Witnesses alleged that Cowart threatened to retrieve a firearm and threatened another teacher and the school after an apparent argument, police said. 

NC STUDENT CHARGED WITH ASSAULT AFTER ALLEGEDLY SLAPPING TEACHER IN VIRAL VIDEO

Rapid School Safety Team Officers arrested Cowart on Thursday. Officers recovered a firearm from Cowart’s purse and a second firearm in the driver’s side door of her vehicle. 

Cowart is being held in lieu of $37,000 bond, police said. 

Cowart’s arrest came a week after Republican lawmakers in the state advanced a proposal that would allow some teachers to carry handguns in public schools. 

The Republican-controlled Senate voted 26-5 to pass Senate Bill 1325, which allows a teacher or faculty member that meets certain requirements to possess and carry a handgun or firearm on school grounds.

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In order to carry a handgun, they must have a handgun carry permit, have written authorization from both the school’s principal and local law enforcement and undergo 40 hours of handgun training. The worker must also not be prohibited from purchasing, possessing, and carrying a handgun under the laws of Tennessee or federal law as determined by a background check.

Fox News Digital’s Lawrence Richard contributed to this report.

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Is the East Coast on the brink of a major earthquake — and are we prepared?

The earthquake that struck the East Coast earlier this month was felt by an estimated 42 million people and luckily caused little damage, but what are the chances of a bigger, more powerful quake striking the area? And if it does, what could it look like — and are we prepared?

The April 5 phenomenon was a 4.8 magnitude earthquake centered near Whitehouse Station in New Jersey, which is about 40 miles west of New York City.

Shaking was felt from Washington D.C. to Maine, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and it followed a much smaller, 1.7 magnitude earthquake in New York City on Jan. 2

Earthquakes are rare along the East Coast, with the most powerful one in the last 100 years hitting in August 2011, clocking 5.8 on the Richter scale. It was centered in Virginia and felt from Washington, D.C. to Boston.

4.8 MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE STRIKES NEW JERSEY, SHAKING BUILDINGS IN SURROUNDING STATES

Earthquake East Coast April 5

A man walks through Lower Manhattan moments after New York City and parts of New Jersey experienced a 4.8 magnitude earthquake on April 5, 2024.

Before that, an earthquake in South Carolina in 1886 is understood to have measured between 6.6 and 7.3 on the Richter scale. There is no definitive measurement of that quake since the Richter scale has only been around since the mid-1930s, but the tectonic shift still killed 60 people.

Professor John Ebel, a seismologist in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Boston College, tells Fox News Digital that when quakes start breaking 5.0 on the Richter scale, damage begins to occur. 

For instance, the devastating earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria last year measured 7.8 and resulted in the death of nearly 62,000 people as tens of thousands of buildings were either destroyed or severely damaged.

California’s Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989, meanwhile, measured 6.9 and caused 69 deaths, and the 1994 Northridge earthquake in the Golden State clocked 6.7, killing 57 people. Thousands more were injured. 

“As you go above magnitude five, the shaking becomes stronger and the area over which the strong shaking is experienced becomes wider,” Ebel says. “So if you get a magnitude six, the shaking is ten times stronger than a magnitude five. So had this month’s earthquake been a 5.8, rather than a 4.8, then we would be looking at damage to unreinforced structures in the greater New York City area.”

1989 San Francisco earthquake damage

The front of an apartment building in the Marina District in San Francisco is ripped off after a quake erupted in October 1989. (Photo by JONATHAN NOUROK/AFP via Getty Images)

“Now I have to qualify this and say that in the past few decades, New York City has had an earthquake provision in its building code while New Jersey, New York and Connecticut have all adopted some version of earthquake provisions in their building codes,” Ebel explained. “So modern buildings that are put up today will actually do quite well, even in strong earthquake shaking… If you have a magnitude 6 or even a magnitude seven.”

In terms of the Tri-state area, Ebel says that the region has had smaller earthquakes, but it’s been spared anything that’s been significantly damaging.

An 1884 quake in Brooklyn did cause limited damage and injuries. Seismologists estimated it would have measured in the region of 5.0 and 5.2, while a quake jolted Massachusetts in 1775 in the region of 6.0 and 6.3.

WHAT TO DO DURING AN EARTHQUAKE AND HOW TO PREPARE

“In 1884 there were things knocked from shelves, some cracks in walls that were reported, particularly plaster walls, which crack very easily if a building is shaken,” Ebel said. “There were some brick walls that had some cracks and people panicked because of the very strong shaking.”

A magnitude five earthquake hits the tri-state area once every 120 years, says Ebel, who penned the book “New England Earthquakes: The Surprising History of Seismic Activity in the Northeast.”

Map of New Jersey earthquake epicenter

A map shows the location of Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, which the U.S. Geological Survey reports was the epicenter of a 4.8 magnitude earthquake on April 5. (Fox News)

“The question is, can we have something bigger? And in my opinion, yes we can,” he said. “We can’t predict earthquakes, and we don’t know when the next one is going to occur, but we do have a low, not insignificant probability of a damaging earthquake at some point.”

Ebel said that the April 5 earthquake has left seismologists baffled since it didn’t occur on the Ramapo Fault zone, highlighting just how hard it is to predict the phenomenon from occurring. The Ramapo Fault zone is a series of small fault lines that runs through New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Spanning more than 185 miles, it was formed about 200 million years ago.

“Right now it’s a seismological mystery,” Ebel said. “We have some earthquakes in our region where we don’t have faults mapped. But that’s even true in California. Not every earthquake occurs on a known or mapped fault in California, so there are still a lot of seismologists have to learn about the exact relationship between old faults and modern earthquakes.”

Ebel noted that buildings aren’t the only thing to consider when earthquakes strike. In the California quakes, overpasses crumbled while the electrical grid can go down too, causing electrical surges and fires.  

Earthquake damage in southeastern Turkey

Local residents walk in front of a destroyed building in Nurdagi, southeastern Turkey, on Thursday, Feb. 9. (AP/Petros Giannakouris)

Toxic chemicals were knocked off of the shelves of a chemistry building in 1989 and the building had to be evacuated, Ebel said. 

“And you think about hospitals and some industrial facilities having that situation,” he explained. “So you have these things that are not catastrophic necessarily, but are going to be a real problem.”

And an earthquake doesn’t necessarily have to rattle land in order to cause destruction.

A jolt out at sea could trigger a dangerous tsunami, like the one on the edge of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland in Canada in 1929. It was felt as far away as New York City.

Waves as high as 23 feet crashed on the shore, according to the International Tsunami Information Center, with up to 28 people losing their lives. 

“A tsunami is not necessarily a very high probability event, but it’s one that we have to think about also,” Ebel says in relation to the East Coast.

The Fukushima nuclear accident in 2011 was triggered by an earthquake and subsequent tsunami.

Tsunami-Japan-2011-boats

Damage caused by the 2011 tsunami is seen from a hill overlooking the city of Kesennuma.  ( Phillipe Lopez/AFP via Getty Images)

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Ebel says a tsunami similar to 1929 could cause a storm surge along the lines of Hurricane Sandy in 2012, where 43 people died in New York City. 

“The threat of an earthquake is not as great as in California, but it’s something that we have to take into account and have emergency plans for and have building codes for,” Ebel says. “Our state and local emergency management agencies in all the northeastern states do earthquake planning — what we call tabletop exercises — where they pretend an earthquake occurs.”

“So those kinds of preparations are made on a regular basis,” he concludes. “Building codes are constantly being reevaluated and approved, not just for earthquakes, but for fires and chemical spills and all kinds of things. So we’re getting more prepared all the time.”

Marina Beach in southern India after tidal waves hit the coast in 2004. 

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Mass shooting at Memphis block party leaves 2 dead, others wounded: police

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A mass shooting Saturday night during a block party in Memphis, Tennessee, has left two people dead and six others wounded, according to police.

Memphis Police responded at 7:19 p.m. Saturday night to a shooting in the 2400 block of Carnes Avenue in the Orange Mound neighborhood. 

Officers found five victims with gunshot wounds — two males who were pronounced dead and three other victims who were taken to the hospital in critical condition.

TENNESSEE WOMAN GETS LIFE IN PRISON FOR KILLING 4 PEOPLE OVER CUSTODY DISPUTE

Police tape at a crime scene

A mass shooting Saturday night during a block party in Memphis, Tennessee, left two people dead and six others wounded. (Getty Images)

Interim Police Chief CJ Davis said at a news conference that police are working to locate the suspects who carried out the shooting. She said police are aware of at least two suspects who opened fire during the block party.

Multiple crime scenes near Carnes Avenue and Grand Street were cordoned off while police investigated the shooting. The Memphis Fire Department sent multiple ambulances to the scene.

MEMPHIS COP-KILLING SUSPECT IDENTIFIED AS OFFICIALS CALL FOR TOUGHER SENTENCES

This file image was posted to the Memphis Police Facebook page on May 15, 2013.

Officers found five victims with gunshot wounds, including two who were pronounced dead. (Memphis Police Department)

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According to police, the shooting happened at a block party that did not have a permit. Between 200 and 300 people were in attendance.

The incident remains under investigation.

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World Anti-Doping Agency says why Chinese swimmers were cleared despite positive tests for banned substance

Twenty-three Chinese swimmers were given the OK to compete in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 despite testing positive for trimetazidine, a banned heart medication.

The World Anti-Doping Agency said that the swimmers’ tests had come up positive due to “inadvertently being exposed to the substance through contamination,” a claim initially brought by the Chinese Doping Agency.

“Ultimately, we concluded that there was no concrete basis to challenge the asserted contamination,” WADA’s senior director of science and medicine Olivier Rabin said in a news release.

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Swimming lane markers

General view of swimming lane markers at a pool. (Simon Bruty/Anychance/Getty Images)

The WADA said there had been “misleading information” that was spreading in the news, which led to their response.

The WADA said it had been given a tip by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency as early as 2020 — before this case arose — about allegations of doping cover-ups in China but that USADA never followed up with evidence.

However, the WADA says they “reviewed this case thoroughly” and “concluded that there was no concrete basis to challenge the asserted contamination.”

U.A. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart called the news of the Chinese positive tests “crushing.”

“It’s even more devastating to learn the World Anti-Doping Agency and the Chinese Anti-Doping Agency secretly, until now, swept these positives under the carpet by failing to fairly and evenly follow the global rules that apply to everyone else in the world,” Tygart said.

China swim team

China relay team celebrateing their victory in the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay final during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Tokyo Aquatics Centre.  (Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

OLYMPIC STAR KATIE LEDECKY HOPEFUL TO MEET CAITLIN CLARK: ‘SHE’S GREAT’

But the WADA says it “followed all due process and diligently investigated every lead and line of inquiry in this matter.”

“The information provided to us by USADA and others was reviewed on each occasion in line with our normal procedure, and assessed according to the criteria stipulated within our Confidential Source Policy,” said Gunter Younger, the WADA’s director of intelligence and investigations. “The data held by us clearly showed that there had been no attempt to hide the positive tests as they had been reported in the usual way by the Chinese authorities. Therefore, based on the available information and a lack of any credible evidence, the threshold for WADA I&I to open an investigation was not met.”

China swim team after winning medal

China celebrating their gold medal during the medals ceremony for the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Tokyo Aquatics Centre. 

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The 30-member Chinese swim team won six medals in Tokyo, including three golds. Many of the athletes still compete for China and are expected to swim at the Paris Olympics this summer.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Jodie Foster being cemented in Hollywood won't persuade sons to watch her films: 'They don't seem to care'

Jodie Foster continues to rack up accomplishments in Hollywood, but her two adult sons “don’t seem to care” about her films.

At Foster’s Handprint and Footprint Ceremony at TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on Friday, the award-winning actress and filmmaker spoke to Fox News Digital about being recognized and permanently cemented in Hollywood, which her sons Charlie and Kit aren’t too interested in.

Foster’s sons, whom she shares with ex Cydney Bernard, are fans of her HBO show, “True Detective,” but that seems to be where they draw the line. 

Jodie Foster and two sons

Jodie Foster says her two sons “don’t seem to care” about her movie career. (Getty Images)

“Probably not,” she said when asked if her sons would watch her other projects. “Sadly, probably not. They’re very blasé about my career. They don’t seem to be terribly interested.”

JODIE FOSTER FELT PRESSURED TO SUPPORT FAMILY AS A CHILD STAR: ‘THERE WAS NO OTHER INCOME’

However, Foster noted that Charlie and Kit were fans of “Silence of the Lambs,” which debuted in 1991, and 1976’s “Bugsy Malone,” which she starred in as a child actress.

WATCH: Jodie Foster can’t persuade her sons to watch her films

“They don’t seem to care very much, sadly,” she continued. 

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Foster fully supports her sons following in her footsteps and pursuing a career in acting. “Acting is a result of a lot of other things, too — about thinking and reading and wondering and curiosity. So, that’s a part I get a hand in and try to get them inspired in life,” she said.

Foster explained that she has one son who is pursuing a career in acting, and her other son is a scientist who “definitely does not want to act.”

TCM honors Jodie Foster

TCM honors Jodie Foster with a Hand and Footprint Ceremony at TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on Friday. (Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for TCM)

During her big day, which was presented by Turner Classic Movies (TCM), Foster couldn’t help but remember her mom and what she would have thought of the ceremony. Evelyn Ella Almond passed away in 2019 at the age of 91.

“My mom, I kept thinking about my mom today,” Foster said. “Because my mom would have really loved this, but she also would have been mad at me because she would’ve said, ‘Why didn’t you do this earlier and why are you not wearing high heels?'”

WATCH: Jodie Foster says cementing her hands and feet in front of Hollywood’s TLC Chinese Theatre was a ‘childhood dream’

Foster said she got a pedicure so that she could put her feet into the cement on Friday.

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She told Fox News Digital that being honored in such a fashion was a “childhood fantasy dream” that she had as a child. 

Jodie Foster Hand and Footprint ceremony

Jodie Foster says being honored with the Hand and Footprint Ceremony was a “childhood fantasy.” (Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for TCM)

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“We would go to dinner, and then we would come up here and try to put our feet in the cement and measure our feet, so it really does feel like a childhood fantasy,” Foster said. “It doesn’t even feel like it’s related to my work as an actor. It feels like it’s more about being a kid and wanting to be remembered somehow for what I did.”

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White House defends Biden's claim his uncle was eaten by cannibals: 'We should not make jokes'

During his visit to a war memorial near his hometown in Pennsylvania, President Biden appeared to imply his uncle was eaten by cannibals after his plane was shot down during World War II.

“He flew single-engine planes, reconnaissance flights over New Guinea. He had volunteered because someone couldn’t make it. He got shot down in an area where there were a lot of cannibals in New Guinea at the time,” President Biden said. “They never recovered his body.”

On Thursday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre acknowledged that President Biden’s maternal uncle, Ambrose Finnegan, who he refers to as “Uncle Bosie,” did die in WWII when his plane crashed into the Pacific Ocean, but confirmed he was not eaten by cannibals, as Biden seemed to suggest on two separate occasions during his visit on Wednesday.

When asked about his comments on Friday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre claimed the President was having an “emotional moment” when he made his remarks.

BIDEN’S FALSE CANNIBAL STORY DESCRIBED AS A SIMPLE ‘MISSTATEMENT,’ ‘OFF ON THE DETAILS’ BY THE MEDIA

President Joe Biden

President Joe Biden speaks to the National Action Network Convention remotely from the South Court Auditorium of the White House, Friday, April 12, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

“The president had an emotional and I think a symbolic moment. He had an opportunity as president to honor his uncle’s service in uniform. He had an opportunity to be there as president, you know, to speak to people that put their lives on the line on behalf of this country,” Jean-Pierre said.

She went on to explain what Biden’s comment meant.

“So his uncle, who lost his life when the military aircraft he was on crashed in the Pacific after taking off near New Guinea. The president highlighted his uncle’s story as he made the case for honoring our sacred commitment to equip those we send to war and take care of them and their families when they come home,” Jean-Pierre said. “And as he reiterated, the last thing American veterans are or the last thing Americans should be called are suckers and losers. And those types of words should not come from a commander in chief, as we have in the past.”

Jean-Pierre’s last statement was in reference to former President Trump, who President Biden claimed called soldiers “suckers and losers.” 

Trump was alleged to have made the comments as he was set to visit the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery during a trip to France in Nov. 2018 while he was president.

The allegations, sourced anonymously in The Atlantic, described multiple offensive comments allegedly made by Trump toward fallen and captured U.S. service-members, including allegedly calling the World War I dead at an American military cemetery in France as “losers” and “suckers” in 2018.

JOE BIDEN LEFT OFF TIME ‘100 MOST INFLUENTIAL’ LIST FOR FIRST TIME IN PRESIDENCY

WH Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and President Joe Biden

During Friday’s WH press briefing, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to comment on the overnight unrest in the Middle East. (Getty Images)

“This is more made up Fake News given by disgusting & jealous failures in a disgraceful attempt to influence the 2020 Election!” Trump wrote in a post on Twitter about the comments made against him. 

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told “Fox & Friends”  that he was with the president for a good part of the trip to France. “I never heard him use the words that are described in that article,” Pompeo said.

Former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders tweeted that she was part of the discussion about visiting the cemetery. “This never happened. I have sat in the room when our President called family members after their sons were killed in action and it was heart-wrenching. … I am disgusted by this false attack.”

Fox News’ Peter Doocy continued to question Jean-Pierre about President Biden’s comments about his uncle, acknowledging that Second Lieutenant Ambrose Jay Finnegan was a war hero, but stating that the Pentagon said, for unknown reasons, the plane was forced to ditch in the ocean. 

“Both engines failed at low altitude. Why is President Biden saying he was shot down? There’s no evidence of that. And why is he saying that his uncle was eaten by cannibals? That is a bad way to go,” Doocy questioned.

BIDEN TAKES HEAT OVER GAFFE URGING AMERICANS TO ‘CHOOSE FREEDOM OVER DEMOCRACY:’ ‘GET THIS MAN OUT OF OFFICE!’

Biden and Trump

Smith told podcast host Patrick Bet-David he’s “ashamed” that Democrats haven’t found a better candidate than President Biden to beat Trump. (Biden photo by Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images and Trump photo Mario Tama/Getty Images )

“He lost his life. It’s not. Look, I’m not, we should not make jokes about this,” Jean-Pierre said.

Doocy reiterated that it wasn’t a joke, but said again, that is what Biden said. 

“I mean, your last line is, it’s for a laugh, it’s for a funny statement. And he takes this very seriously. His uncle, who served and protected this country, lost his life serving. And that should matter. You have a president that lifts our U.S. troops, our American veterans every day. Who thinks about them? Who actually thinks they’re all heroes? And they are,” Jean-Pierre sparred back. 

Doocy asked one more time why he used the term “cannibalism” as Jean-Pierre gave her last comment.

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“I think you’re missing the point. The point is you have a president that lifts up American veterans, who lifts up our U.S. service members. And that’s what matters. He understands how critical and how important it is to be commander in chief,” Jean-Pierre finished. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Olympic organizers announce plans to use AI in sports ahead of Paris games

  • Olympic organizers unveiled plans on Friday to integrate artificial intelligence into sports.
  • The International Olympic Committee shared its AI plan, including identifying talent, personalizing training and improving judging fairness.
  • IOC President Thomas Bach voiced the need for Olympic leadership in embracing AI responsibly.

Olympic organizers unveiled their plans Friday to use artificial intelligence in sports, joining the global rush to capitalize on the rapidly advancing technology.

The International Olympic Committee outlined its agenda for taking advantage of AI. Officials said it could be used to help identify promising athletes, personalize training methods and make the games fairer by improving judging.

“Today we are making another step to ensure the uniqueness of the Olympic Games and the relevance of sport. To do this, we have to be leaders of change,” IOC President Thomas Bach said at a press event at the former London Olympic Park, which hosted the summer games in 2012.

‘UNCONTROLLABLE’ AI SYSTEMS COULD TURN ON HUMANS, REPORT WARNS

“We are determined to exploit the vast potential of AI in a responsible way,” Bach said.

Thomas Bach

Thomas Bach, IOC President, speaks at the International Olympic Committee launch of the Olympic AI Agenda in London on April 19, 2024. Olympic organizers unveiled their plans on Friday to use artificial intelligence in sports, joining the global rush to capitalize on the rapidly advancing technology. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

The IOC revealed its AI strategy as it gears up to hold the Paris Olympics, which are set to kick off in just under 100 days.

The IOC’s AI plans also include using the technology to protect athletes from online harassment and to help broadcasters improve the viewing experience for people watching from home. The IOC earns billions of dollars through the sale of broadcast rights for the games.

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The local organizers of the Paris games have already sparked controversy with their plans to use artificial intelligence for security, with a video surveillance system that includes AI-powered cameras to flag potential security risks such as abandoned packages or crowd surges.

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