beating a hundred million miles an hour. shepard: ernie there s medication for that. i hope you ve had a fantastic day. i hope we didn t hurt your vibe having you here. thanks so much. listen to this guys for those of you watching on my network television stations on the fox news channel on satellite and cable, all around the world, the total eclipse of the sun which began on the west coast of the united states and finishes on the east coast of the united states is finished. totality is over! the first family came out and the watched and now has gone back inside. we the all kind of enjoyed this together. nothing really changed. but we got a nice break, didn t we? for those of you in our broadcast station thanks for tuning n we ll return you to our local programming where we ll continue analysis and looking at the sun. i m shep smith on fox news new york. now it s just us in cable land. just me and you, time to take
pretty cool. shepard: awesome. [ crowd noise ] shepard: it s amazing. awesome. look at em. look at. that how would you describe these two? just awesome. what do you guys think? [crowd noise] what do you guys think? so loud they can t even hear us, shep. here comes the sun, now shepard: here comes the sun. you can chew that up. you know what? we saw the eclipse. no disappointment. it was worth the trip? absolutely. are you going to be back here again in 2024? if i m alive. [ laughter ] that s the spirit. what do you think coming from st. louis? definitely be back. [ laughter ]
how are you doing mom? hello. give us one word to describe this lunar eclipse, if you will> shepard: it s a solar eclipse, by the way. this young lady said wonderful. now we re getting into walking room only shepard: matt, i made a mistake. it s not beatrice, it s beatrice nebraska. i should have known that because my friends in holly springs would say beatrice, but i thought it was an accent kind of thing. beatrice nebraska, pictures courtesy of kwch, kwch television. it was a what was it? a total eclipse of the sun. gosh they re still writing for the 3:00 news. it was total, but as you can see from the shrimp effect there of the orange circumstance u collar thing there that at this time no longer a total eclipse. we re on the back end of a total
when you are supposed to be having a having a what? total eclipse of the sun! shepard: they won t do it. so here it s a little darker than usual. but it s not like dark! jonathan i here it s really dark where you are, though. [crowd noise] y oo h oo. go tigers. shepard: speak jonathan, you re amazing. i m talking to you. shep this is amazing. shepard: like i said. we are watching the moon totally cover the sun. what was a daylight crowd here has now turned into, it looks like an evening concert. everyone holding on up their phones, and you can see right now i can see a planet up in the sky, not dim enough yet to see any stars. but it looks like we re probably
can t be more excited. tell me about the light, the eclipse, it s kind of leery, isn t it? it looks leak you re looking through sunglasses, it s a weird sensation. that s a great way to describe it. right now the light is as if you are looking outside on a sun lit day with some very powerful sunglasses. shepard: watch all those cameras in the background right there. they re all getting repositioned. we re going to go back to the staging area. back behind the stayed studio. this is a studio on the 12th floor. i don t know, i ve been right here as you know. we ll be back in time for charleston without any doubt. i want to see what s happening in new york. come on. this is the way. this is the back entrance. we have a service elevator. this is patricia, she s the greatest assistant.