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Fox News
4 days ago
- Health
- Fox News
Fox News' Mike Tobin completes risky Everest climb and shares details of high-stakes summit
Fox News Senior Correspondent Mike Tobin has completed one of the riskiest feats in the world: climbing Mount Everest. Along with a team, Tobin hiked the mountain in the Himalayas, reaching the highest point on Earth. Tobin was back on the channel, joining "America's Newsroom" on Friday from China to share the details of his experience. "Some people say weather-wise, it was one of the best summit windows they've seen in like 20 years," said Tobin. "And you compare that to the other people who climbed this Everest season, most of them got beat up on the summit." He said that his team saw people going down the mountain with "big black mittens on," indicating that "they were covering up frostbite damage." Tobin shared that when he reached the summit, it was a little bit cloudy. "I'm very well aware that 90% of the accidents happen on the way down and so you're tired, you're a little hypoxic, and it was a moment of concentration for me," said Tobin. "I wanted to make sure that I didn't let up because we still had a long way to get down to advanced base camp." In 2023, 12 climbers were reported dead while five went missing following 478 hiking permits issued by Nepal, according to Reuters. "I was just trying to think, 'Keep your head about yourself. Don't make any mistakes, don't turn what's otherwise going to be a celebration into a tragedy.'" About 700 to 1,000 climbers attempt the summit each year, with success rates ranging between 60% and 70%, according to Climbing Kilimanjaro. "Keep your head about yourself. Don't make any mistakes." Tobin said that he "certainly was spooked at different times on the climb," sharing that it hit him when he came back down on the second step. The second step is on the northeast ridge of Mount Everest, one of three major obstacles. He said it was a bit "odd" as he "was pretty enthused on the way up," but added other team members shared that the moment was spooky for them, too. While in the "death zone," Tobin participated in the 22 Pushup Challenge to raise awareness about the issue of veteran and first responder suicide. "The only way you survive the death zone is to get in and out of there as fast as you can before the sand runs out of your hourglass or before the oxygen runs out of your bottle," said Tobin. The "death zone" is an area above 26,247 ft. on the mountain; the air is too thin to support human life without supplemental oxygen. "It was kind of an add-on to the climb … You've seen some of the different events that people have done as far as the 22 push-ups in recognition of veteran suicide," said Tobin. "I hope that a troubled guy out there somewhere who was looking at suicide as a reasonable response to his troubles will realize that someone took the time to do that in a perilous situation and reconsider before he hurts himself," he added. Tobin credited his wife for keeping him on track during his preparation leading up to the hike. "Between work and training for Everest, there really wasn't any time, and she ran the house and made sure I got fed." He shared that the training process was pretty arduous. "I did crazy kinds of training, like I'd take the sandbags that our cameramen use, and I put them in a backpack, and I ran up and down the Indiana Sand Dunes for hours at a time," said Tobin.
Yahoo
13-02-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
'Truly providential': Trump made promise to Marc Fogel's mother moments before Butler assassination attempt
President Donald Trump met with Marc Fogel's mother on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania, and vowed to bring her son home if elected, just before an assassination attempt nearly took his life. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., was there for the meeting between Trump and Malphine Fogel before the president took the stage. "The president survived the assassination attempt on July 13 in Butler, and he fulfilled his commitment to Mrs. Fogel that he would get her son home," Kelly told Fox News Digital. "It is an incredible, providential story." Mother Of Freed American Hostage Marc Fogel Thanks President Donald Trump: 'He Kept His Promise' During the rally, after his meeting with Fogel's mother, Trump was showing off a chart highlighting how illegal immigration skyrocketed under the Biden-Harris administration. As he turned toward the chart, he was hit by a bullet that pierced the upper part of his right ear by the now-deceased would-be-assassin, Thomas Matthew Crooks. Trump credits the chart for saving his life. Kelly likened the situation to the classic movie "It's a Wonderful Life." Read On The Fox News App "The theme of the movie was that George Bailey was very frustrated, but he was given a glimpse of life and what would have happened if he hadn't been there – if he hadn't been born," Kelly recalled. "And if I go back to July 13, this is all providential." "Mrs. Fogel has a chance to talk to the president, and she talks about what is happening to Marc. The president vows to get him home," Kelly continued. "It is a take-off of 'It's a Wonderful Life' and the opportunity, or the dilemma, that if you were never born, what would the consequences have been?" "If President Trump did not survive the assassination attempt on July 13, Marc Fogel wouldn't be home today," Kelly said. Fogel, an American teacher from Western Pennsylvania, returned to the United States late Tuesday, after Trump secured his release. Fogel was arrested in 2021 at an airport in Russia for possession of medical marijuana and was sentenced to 14 years in a Russian prison. American Marc Fogel Released From Russian Custody Kelly told Fox News Digital that "it is all about faith." "Having been there and witnessed it, I think to myself, 'Oh my goodness, that tiny fraction of an inch, or whatever it was, is the difference between Marc Fogel being home and Marc Fogel not being home,'" he said. "Between making a promise to his mother and being able to keep it, as opposed to making a promise and never getting a chance to fulfill it." Malphine Fogel recalled the Butler meeting with Trump on Fox News Channel's "America Newsroom." "I met with President Trump, and he was just as cordial as he could be," she said. "He told me three different times, 'If I get in,' he said, 'I'll get him out' and I really think he's been instrumental." Malphine Fogel told Fox News that "it was a total surprise" when she heard from her son from the Moscow airport. "So, that meant that (they) had taken him out of the prison to Moscow.... The last week or so, for some crazy reason, I had a better feeling about things, but I hadn't heard from him in a week, so I thought that was odd and when he called… it was just a total shock," she said. Meanwhile, Kelly told Fox News Digital, "There is a certain time in people's lives where you realize you don't have forever, you have right now, and you need to get it done." "Politically, there is no one on either side of the aisle that could look at what happened with Marc Fogel and not somehow say, this is truly providential – this is not a political move," Kelly said. "This doesn't do anything for the president. He's already elected. He did this to keep a promise to a mother in her mid 90s – the only thing she wanted to see before she died was her son one more time." Kelly added: "This is a promise made. Promise kept. It is truly providential. It is. It is a wonderful life."Original article source: 'Truly providential': Trump made promise to Marc Fogel's mother moments before Butler assassination attempt