executive action on the border crisis as shocking scenes like on the screen become too often. you are watching fox and friends, i m todd piro. carley: i m carley shimkus. the numbers are staggering, 200,000 crossings just this year. todd: the biden admin strigz just closed both crossings this week while illegal activity reign supreme. carley: alexandria hoff has more from washington. alexandria: timing of the letter coincides with influx you were just talking about. in appeal to the president yesterday, speaker johnson wrote southern border of our nation is being overrun and border protection is at a breaking point. i urge you to take executive action to stem the record tide of illegal immigration. speaker johnson called on the president to end catch and release and see a grant parole on case-by-case basis, instead of a sweeping role and see president reinstate the stay in mexico program. the white house says they are doing all they can. it is not unusual, this im
gronkowski spiking rumors that he is planning a comeback. oh, man, you can carley: gronk revealing he s done playing in the nfl. he won three super bowls in just nine seasons of play. everyone will miss him and his antics. rob: the antics will continue. he won t be playing football anymore. coming up, protesters flooding the streets of london over president trump s big visit. the trump baby, we ve seen it many times, expected to be on full display. we re in london, live, with what to expect. it s about time we target the creation of wealth equally for all children in america. my idea to do that is something called baby bonds. carley: cory booker wants to pay for your vote. the campaign promise you won t soon forget, next.
reporter: derrick coleman, living a boy s dream, playing in the nfl for the seattle seahawks. he didn t start playing football until seventh grade, because his mom really didn t want him to. just a normal kid. i was just going out trying to play football. reporter: the dream of making it to the pros began in high school. there he was ranked the number two fullback in the nation by espn. i wasn t really thinking about it so much until maybe my senior year. going out and playing hard. i just wanted to play. reporter: next stop, ucla where he was a running back for four years. his college career ended with a degree in political science. and now the 23-year-old is showing his versatility as a fullback for the seahawks. scoring his first touchdown in the pros earlier this season. he s gotten this far with lots of hard work, and by overcoming something only two other players in the entire nfl have. he is legally deaf. the result of a rare genetic
the idea that he was being made to pay $15,000 for a trip to vegas he didn t go on, that wouldn t surprise you so much, nor would you necessarily think it was all that rough a thing or all that abnormal? well, you know, playing in the nfl, the things that i ve seen, none of it really surprises me. the one thing that jumps out at me is really, the nfl isn t for everyone. there are certain people and i was one of the people, you know, i had these ideas and expectations about what the nfl would be, then once i got there, i saw that it wasn t what i thought. so for me, i see this kid very intelligent kid, you know, his parents are attorneys, he went to stanford and this these expectations about what the nfl would be, and if you look at his career, he really hasn t had as much success as he wanted to have and things have been tough, and i m sure things got out of hand with him and richie, and now we are where we are. i want to play for you some sound of the miami dolphins head coach,