a minivan. bill: close quarters for people inside. oxygen limited and complicating the effort to get them home safely. dana: the submarine s last known location is 400 miles off the coast of new foundland. bill: officials lost contact an hour and 45 minutes into the sub s descent on sunday morning. it s 13,000 feet. the deepest ocean recovery mission ever. dana: this is what we know. there are five people on board. they departed sunday morning. the coast guard is leading the search with help from canada. the passengers are estimated to have 45 hours of oxygen remaining. bill: the third voyage for this mission. the third year they ve done this now. pass passengers pay to see the titanic. dana: the coast guard is working to reassure passengers families. officials are mobilizing every resource possible. we re working very closely at this point to make sure that we re doing everything that we can do to locate the submersible and rescue those on board. the location
elton, lovely to see you, lovely to talk to you. congratulations on the book i ve thoroughly enjoyed it. there s something that s not in it. i came to watford with leicester city a long time ago around 79 80 and one of our players got a terrible gash in his leg and was carried off and had to have stitches in the dressing room and you went down to comfort him. do you have any memory of that? i don t. that was me. really, i don t. it was you? it was me. and you came down in the second half to see if i was all right, and that s something that s always stuck with me. and it was a very special moment, yeah. you ve got the book, watford forever. why now? why are you doing that book now? i was approached byjohn preston, who wrote the book, and said, it s a really interesting subject and i thought, yeah, it has i haven t really talked about it and i wanted to get my side of the story out because i think we weren t given enough credit for what we did. and also, i think wh
. we have that tape tonight james straight ahead. also, congressman james comeer r with an update on the latest on the biden syndicaten sy and family business dealings. this is getting very interesting. the wallgetting s are beginning. to close in on joe biden. bun. r xplai losifirst, is biden in danger of losing the firstt prim two primaries or the first caucus and the first primary in 2024? now, while he does holold a d ad over the rest of the democratic fiels, now,toughe survey despite a tougher than expected challenge from robert f kregula junior, herl is regularly now 2, polling at 20 21%. that s a real number and marianne williamson is at o 10%. that s a lot of democrats thatat don t like joe biden sident new axios report saying the president is in danger of losing both iowa and new hampshire. now, this is self-inflicte miw,d. after his team indicated he might not even appear on the ballot. be in biden wants the first primary to be in south carolina. obviously, to me, a
lets you pay off your high-rate debt. and you can save $500 a month. nobody takes care of veterans like newday usa. john: pentagon press secretary pat ryder will give an update the first time on camera since lloyd austin s secretive hospital stay. both sides of the aisle demanding to know how was president biden in the dark for days before learning a top cabinet member landed in the icu. sixth in line to the presidency, he is, hello, john roberts in washington. a jam packed first hour. here we go again. sandra: good to be with you, sandra smith in new york. breaking in the last hour, this incident, now forcing the white house to launch a review of protocols for cabinet secretaries, if you can believe that. secretary austin is still in recovery, we are told in walter reed, and the pentagon is not offering any information about that elective procedure that originally sent him into the hospital but ultimately landed him in the icu. john: even the deputy defense secretary d
and said, it s a really interesting subject and i thought, yeah, it has i haven t really talked about it and i wanted to get my side of the story out because i think we weren t given enough credit for what we did. and also, i think when you read the book, it s about the sense of community that s not really in football any more not in the top six or anything like that. it s gone from football a bit, but not with the lower clubs. but i just love that sense of community, and that s what football must never lose. you started your interest in football when you were very young. very young. your dad brought you here. yeah, my dad brought me here when i was about six, five or six. but i also used to sit on the touchline at craven cottage because my cousin, roy dwight, played for fulham in the same team asjimmy hill, bedford jezzard, johnny haynes, tony macedo. so, i grew up watching fulham a lot as well but this was my local team and then, when roy went to nottingham forest,