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Christie Brinkley: Case Closed!

Christie Brinkley (Associated Press)

Christie Brinkley (Associated Press)

Looks like I won’t be taking any more trips to Long Island anytime soon.  Christie Brinkley and Peter Cook’s divorce trial was settled today.  Brinkley gets sole custody, while Cook gets “parenting time” and a $2.1 million payout from Brinkley.

As a reporter, I found it fascinating to be inside the courtroom for Brinkley’s testimony.  I saw her cry several times on the stand as she talked about the end of their marriage.  Cook seemed composed during Brinkley’s testimony, but he sobbed on the stand when admitting to use of internet sex sites.

This was an interesting case to follow, but for the sake of their children, ages 10 and 13, I’m glad it’s over.  FOX talked to New York divorce attorney Stacy Schneider (who is not involved in this case) for expert insight.  She tells us, “It seems [Brinkley’s] strong arm humiliation tactics unfortunately worked for her - but it wasn’t in best interest of the children in the long run. Could be very damaging that their father was humiliated that way.”

Brinkley says today is a “very bittersweet moment, because it really is the death of a marriage.”

I’ll be reporting on this story all day on FOX News Channel, so tune in for more scoop.

It’s a Girl! Nicole Kidman’s Baby News

Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban Oscars 2008 (Corbis)

Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban Oscars 2008 (Corbis)

Congratulations to Nicole Kidman! The Associated Press confirms the Oscar-winning actress and her husband, country music star Keith Urban, welcomed Sunday Rose Kidman Urban this morning.

I interviewed the star late last fall at a premiere. I remember that she was self-conscious about her dress, explaining to me that it was tight because of a cheeseburger she’d just eaten. Turns out that belly bulge may have actually been a baby bump!

I saw her again on the red carpet at the Oscars in February, and she was wearing so many diamonds (1,399 carats!) that I forgot to glance down and see her belly for myself! I’m still kicking myself for that one — but come on, who wouldn’t be blinded by that many diamonds?

Anyway, she now has something more precious than diamonds — and I wish her all the best!

Iraq Pack

By David Mac Dougall

Today is the 20th time I’ve packed my bags for a trip to Iraq. By now, I should be an expert packer, but I’m not. I’m often guilty of leaving things to the last minute or simply telling myself “I’ll pick that up at Heathrow airport” and then forgetting what it was I needed to buy.

Apart from all the usual clothes, DVDs, books, toiletries and (seemingly) miles of assorted cables, plugs, adapters and chargers; I usually take out specific items requested by my colleagues at the Baghdad Bureau.

This trip there’s a “Starbucks Scotland” mug for Eric Stewart (who takes many of the amazing photographs which accompany my blogs). There’s also laundry powder for Anita McNaught and since I know she has cravings for dark chocolate too, I also packed a few bars (which hopefully won’t melt on the way to Iraq!) Producer-extraordinaire Nicola Sadler always enjoys British potato chips – and though I didn’t quite get round to buying any yet… I’m pretty sure I’ll pick them up at Heathrow airport…

The point of this blog, really, is to remind readers that it’s not just us journalists who appreciate a few creature comforts. Our military men and women serving in Iraq (and Afghanistan, and elsewhere) love to receive boxes in the mail too. In the scorching summer months especially, items like sun-block or extra toiletries can be really appreciated – or try sending something fun to remind them of home. Any parcel has to be addressed to a named individual, so ask around in your communities and it won’t be hard to get the name & address of someone in a war zone who would really appreciate something from home (just in time for the 4th of July!)

Packing Creature Comforts for Iraq

Unsung Heroes of Fatherhood

Father’s Day is this weekend. And I’m embarrased to admit I was slightly blindsided. Afterall, ads promoting dad’s special day have been on televsion, in magazines or the newspaper ads practically since the Monday after Mother’s Day. But I’d like to think that I’m like many people, who thought we had at least couple of weeks left. But alas, it is the final stretch.

This time of the year one could call the Triple Crown of gift-giving, after the horseracing equivalent: The Kentucky Derby, The Preakness and The Belmont Stakes (I won’t digress about this year’s Big Brown mystery). The human version of the Triple Crown involves Mother’s Day, Father’s Day and the obligatory wedding this time of year that most of us will either attend, decline to attend or send a check or gift to.

All these days honor life’s most precious relationships. They’re relationships bound by love and commitment… and two of them are bound by the Fifth Commandment, “Honor thy Father and thy Mother.”

Honoring Mom is a no-brainer. A mother is the child’s lifeline, its source of nutrition and comfort for nine months in the womb, and then protection and comfort and food after birth. The mother-child bond creates this innate response in us to pay homage to her.

But honoring Dad is a little different. The father is the first “other” in a child’s life. The first person the baby knows other than the mother. The first ’stranger’ a child will learn to trust. But fathering today has lost much of the luster and prestige of the “Father Knows Best” years. However, it doesn’t mean fathers are any less important. In fact, according to the experts, a father’s involvement in a child’s upbringing is critical.

“Men have their own repertoire of parenting skills that’s different from the Mother,” says David Blankenhorn, author of Fatherless America and The Future of Marriage. To paraphrase Blankenhorn, he says while mothers generally nurture and protect, and fathers are more risk-takers and tend to be less afraid of danger. A child needs both parenting styles as part of a balanced upbringing. Blankenhorn, who also heads “the Institute for American Values”, says children who have fathers living in the household grow up to be more comfortable with strangers, and are more willing to engage in the larger world. Girls with fathers involved in their lives have a better self image and often make better relationship choices. While boys with fathers, good fathers that is, will be more respectful of women.

And statistcally speaking, when fathers aren’t in the household, the results can be disastrous for the child. According to the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, 90 percent of homeless and runaway children are from fatherless homes; 63 percent of youth suicides are from fatherless homes. Fatherless children are twice as likely to drop out of school or repeat a grade, and were had the highest odds of winding up incarcerated. Also one of the leading indicators that a child will live in poverty, is whether or not he has a father in the household. In America that would be about 38 to 43 percent of children.

Now that I’ve painted a grim picture of the state of fatherhood, let me give some examples of men whose very lives offer inspiration.

Mark Forrest is an Irish Tenor who lives in Virginia. Years ago he gave up dreams of stardom and his name in lights on broadway, after his son was born with a severe defect and lived only five days. He began a spiritual journey that included the creation of the Faith & Family Foundation, an organization that raises money for special needs children. Mark sings full-time and produces his own albums. He and his wife now have seven boys ages 1 to 14, two of whom are blind and deaf. He says “burying a child caused me to look at what’s important” … “Life’s become so busy. What’s it all for?” Mark sings only on weekends and is always home for his sons Monday through Thursday. He no longer has dreams of becoming a household name, but only of “being the best father I can be.”

Michael Scalfani, is a retired car salesmam from Staten Island, New York. He’s been married 50 years to his wife Angela. They have three sons and six grandchildren. They volunteer as marriage preparation counselors at their church. Mr. Scalfani says the father’s No. 1 priority is to keep the family together, to communicate with his children the values they’ll need in life and to live out those values. He says “the role is really being there” just “being there for them.”

And finally Chris Bell of Sussex County in New Jersey. He’s a married father of seven children, one biological, six adopted. Five of the children have special needs. Chris opened and runs Covenant House, a series of homes where young pregnant women who’ve been abandoned by their boyfriends, can come and live during their pregnancies. Chris says the bottom line is, “kids need to be loved.”

These men are just a few of the hundreds of thousand of unsung heroes of fatherhood. Men who love their families and believe its a privelige to sacrifice for them. These men who would have it no other way. So this Father’s Day, salute dad for a job well done!

 

Twenty-Five Feet in 25 Years

I’ve just returned from St. Petersburg, where I was the alumni speaker at Canterbury School of Florida’s graduation ceremony.

I’ve always felt indebted to this small school for the dedicated teachers and generous financial aid that gave me a truly unique and comprehensive education.

With 24 graduating seniors (three more than my own Class of 1983), I expected this small and intimate event to be profoundly sentimental for me, but not so significant for Fox News. That is, until I found out the other guest speaker was veteran anchorman John Wilson from WTVT, Fox’s powerhouse station in the Tampa Bay Area.

Now Canterbury’s Fox/student ratio was 1 to 12.

Adding to the coincidence, John Wilson was the speaker at my own high school graduation which was held at the very same location.

Estimating the distance between the speaker’s podium and the graduating seniors sitting in the front pews of St. Peter’s Cathedral (where I sat listening to John Wilson 25 years ago), I joked that I had moved only 25 feet over the past quarter of a century.

The students had obviously changed and only one of my original teachers was still on the Canterbury faculty. Although, I was delighted to see in the audience, Ms. Donna Fowler, a former Canterbury teacher who helped me conquer my fear of math.

Names and faces had changed, but not much else — not the dedication of the teachers, the love of proud parents, or the dreams of a new graduating class.

I remember my own dreams from graduation night 25 years ago — dreams of becoming a broadcast journalist as I listened to John Wilson describe his profession in a single word: “awesome.”

Listening to John speak a quarter of a century later, it’s obvious he is still passionate about his career. I’m following my own professional dreams and was grateful to be able to return to, and thank, the school that helped make it all possible.

In this case, moving only 25 feet in 25 years is a good thing.

First Pitch Surprise!

Many of you new to this blog may not know that I am a huge baseball fan and have covered many a story that crosses over to the news side of things. So when I find a baseball story that becomes news I do my best to cover it and this one takes the cake for our national pastime. Last year we covered military opening day with the San Diego Padres and no other professional team goes as far as they do to support our men and women in uniform. While covering the Padres on this occasion and a few others, we became friends with their PR staff’s which include George Stieren and Warren Miller. They just had their colleague Erik Meyer send me the story and video of 11-year-old Brad Warnick, joined on the mound by mother Irene and 8-year-old sister Ashley, who thought they were just representing the USS Midway Museum in San Diego in honor of their fathers service in the Navy. BUT…..dressed in full Padres catching gear behind the plate was Petty Officer 1st Class Rick Warnick, their father & husband. Petty Officer Warnick is part of the crew currently deployed on the USS Nimitz, scheduled to return next month. Warnick was flown home early to surprise his family on the field through cooperative efforts of the USS Midway Museum and the Navy. This video is what it’s all about.

UPDATE: Rick Warnick has left a great note on this blog, so scroll down to find it. Also, his wife had found out the night before and kept the kids out of the loop. Watch closely, you’ll see the emotion in the Brad and Ashley’s eyes.

Back in the Spotlight: Tatum O’Neal Busted for Drugs

Actress Tatum O'Neal

Academy Award winner Tatum O’Neal has been charged with cocaine possession. Click here for the full story.

Court paperwork obtained by FOX News states O’Neal had two baggies of cocaine in her pants pocket when police arrested her Sunday night. Sources told the New York Post that when arrested, the actress claimed she was “researching for a part.”

We’ve been following this story all day, and will have more tonight on FOX Report at 7:45pm ET.

In the meantime, we want to hear from you. Click “comments” below and tell us:

— Are you a fan of Tatum O’Neal’s work?

— What are your feelings on the number of celebrity drug arrests we’ve seen in the past year? What does it indicate about the Hollywood lifestyle?

— Do you have any sympathy for the actress?

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