Trumps split screen: A two-hour virtual conversation between the president and Fox and Friends
Washington Post:
Early Tuesday morning, President Trump tuned into Fox and Friends.
For several days, Trump's staff kept him away from television cameras. He spent the weekend hidden away at his private Florida club, then returned to the White House to privately sign a new travel ban and allow others to tout the release of long-awaited health-care legislation, while his aides attempted to defend his assertion that former president Barack Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower in New York City. The president's address to a joint session of Congress last week, a rare victory for the chaotic White House, was a distant memory.
On the Fox News Channel's popular morning show, it was National Pancake Day and the three anchors sat on a white couch and ogled three towering stacks of pancakes drizzled with syrup. (This is the biggest stack I've ever seen in my life, co-host Brian Kilmeade declared.)