It’s been a while since we reported that Fox News host Sean Hannity was divorcing his wife Jill Rhodes, who he had been married to for over twenty years. Now, steamy rumors have been swirIing that he is dating “Fox & Friends” host Ainsley Earhardt, and while they won’t confirm it, they aren’t denying it either.

Page Six reported that the rumors have spread like wildfire ever since Hannity, 58, and Earhardt, 43, were seen together during Iockdown near his home on Long Island, New York. Both sources are single, which has only added fuel to the fire in terms of the rumors.
The rumors started because Sean lives on Long Island, and Ainsley rented a house in the Hamptons during the pan demic, one source said. “Sean has a studio at his home, and Ainsley has been using his studio as her remote broadcast location for ‘Fox & Friends.’
They are 100 percent dating, a second source said, with a third adding, They have been quarantining together in Oyster Bay. They have been seen together in the area. Both Hannity and Earhardt reIeased statements through the same Fox News spokesperson in which they refused to confirm the rumors.
I do not discuss my personal life in public,” Hannity said, with Earhardt saying in her statement, “Right now I am focused on raising my daughter. As anyone at Fox News will tell you, Sean is a wonderfuI person and whomever he chooses to date will be extremely fortunate.
I am not dating anyone, she added in a follow-up statement. Earhardt divorced her husband, Clemson University quarterback Will Proctor, back in 2018. Together, they are parents to a 4 year-old daughter named Hayden. Hannity had been married to Rhodes since 1993, and they are the parents of a son, Patrick, and a daughter, Merri Kelly. Though their divorced was only just confirmed, friends say they had actually been divorced for over a year.
Sean and Jill are committed to working together for the best interests of their chiIdren. Amicable agreements were entered into over four years ago between Sean and Jill, Hannity and Rhodes said in a joint statement.
They maintain a close relationship as parents to their children. Neither will have any further comments and ask for the sake of their children that their privacy be respected.
Gang finds unusually spiky creatures in nest – takes a closer look and jaws drop when they realize what kind of animals they are


There’s now hope for a species that was on the point of extermination.
A group of experimenters in Australia is thrilled after their sweats to propagate the species feel to have succeeded.
lately, ecologists at the Mt Gibson Wildlife Sanctuary in Australia made a stunning discovery.
In the sanctuary, they set up a waste of invigorated and spiky little brutes.
But these are n’t just any brutes. They belong to the species “ western quolls, ” which are a specific type of marsupial carnivore.

Preliminarily, the species was scattered throughout Australia, but since the first Europeans began colonizing Australia, the population of the species has dramatically declined.
currently, the western quolls, also known as chuditchs, are only set up in the southwestern corner of Australia, and only in small clusters.
This species of marsupial grows to about the size of a cat and plays a significant part in the ecosystem. They help control populations of lower pets, as well as certain reptiles and catcalls.
New stopgap
Over the once many months, experimenters have been working to introduce the marsupials to the Mt Gibson Wildlife Sanctuary, an area where they had preliminarily been defunct.
Now, with the recent discovery of baby marsupials, it’s clear that the experimenters have succeeded. It seems that the creatures are thriving there and have no issues reproducing.
“ Through regular monitoring, we can see the quolls are doing well at the sanctuary and encountering the first poke
youthful is a positive sign that they’ve acclimated to the new terrain, ” said Georgina Anderson, AWC Senior Field Ecologist.
“ One quoll that we’ve named Aang is a regular at camera traps we set up at the release spots. He’s one of our largest and most striking quolls with a personality to match – frequently making rounds of multiple spots to collect the funk we use as lures and dismembering our bait drums, ” she added.
Ecologists at Mt Gibson, on Badimia and Widi Country in WA, have made an lovable discovery The sanctuary’
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