know. a new study shows expressing the anger could cost you but not so much for the guys. they can go off wait, am i going off? you better tone it down. i better tone it down. plus our #oneluckyguy. eric bolling joins us at the top of the hour. jon: i go off all the time and it hasn t hurt me. that s the study. it is not fair. jon: watching at the top of the hour. thanks. time now for the fox 411 on jon stewart the comedian taking his final bow from a stage where he spoke to a generation. jon stewart taped his final the daily show after 16 years of needling pretty much whoever he felt like needling. julie banderas here with more. we supplied him with a lot of work, didn t he. jon: yes we did. we made his career. emotional night for jon stewart, made a career bashing politicians and fox. past host of daily show fixed with bittersweet memories making a name for himself through
the hair doesn t make them who they are. it is time for us to move beyond. [applause] jon: talk about with our media panel today. judith miller is a pulitzer prize-winning investigative reporter and author. ellen ratner, bureau chief for talk radio news service. both are fox news contributors. we want to move away from the who won, who lost kind of thing and talk about how the media are covering the aftermath of debate or the debate itself and the aftermath. ellen, i know you were there in the press room in cleveland last night. what is your takeaway? my takeaway we now know there have been studies done in previous elections that say that press coverage actually does influence people. so why hasn t the media this time around looked at what was going on in the press room last night when frankly a lot of people were laughing and enjoying what donald trump had to say? so i actually think that there is going to be some, media critical of him but i m not so sure that that influences peopl
jon: u.s. marshals finally nab a prison escapee who spent more than three decades on the run. they found willie lee austin living near fort lauderdale, florida. he was serving time in macon, georgia, when he broke out of prison in 1981. authorities learned austin, now 60 years old, was living in florida under an alias. they took him back into custody. jenna: fox news exclusive. iranian military leader designated a terrorist by the united states, first iting russia in spite of a travel ban. some big questions what he was doings there. national security correspondent jennifer griffin breaks this story on soleimani. he is an iranian special forces commander, the head we should say of the irgc. he is the one who violated sanks met with russian leaders including vladmir putin. soleimani is tied to many acts of violence bense the united states. he is absolutely responsible for killing many americans. i would say the last two years i
what happens, joe, mark, do you go out for coffee after this? is this normal day in the office? i know you guys are friends. you bring it all to the show, jenna. bring it all to the show. afterwards we shake hands. i know you will. great to have both of your opinions. no matter which way you see it is historic day. we take it all in have you back as we always do. thank you to you both. thank you jenna. thank you joe. jon: some new developments on the search for a missing baby girl as her father is shot and killed by california police. how they found him and where his six-month-old little girl might be. plus wisconsin governor scott walker might be a latecomer to the republican race but he has been consistently strong in the polls. we ll talk to our political panel about his campaign. we want to hear from you about the top story of the day. do you support the nuclear agreement that six world powers reached with iran today? our live chat is up and running. go to foxnews.com/happe
called the kidnapping a hoax. five days later the san francisco chronicle gets another communication, demanding police apologize for calling it a hoax but three months later comes a major twist. june 8th. matthew mueller was taken into custody for home invasion. on june 13th he is arrested for the kidnapping of denise huskins after the police and fbi find similarities in both cases. let s bring in lis wiehl, fox news legal analyst. diana eisman, former prosecutor and defense attorney. lis, the stories don t get much weirder than this. everybody, the police and fbi included dismissed this as a hoax because the ransesome demand was $8500. seemed paltry and insignificant. now they re saying it was real deal. but, on the same day jon look at the timeline, she was found, march 25th it was a hoax. how could they have done that? how could they have done it so