As always, we like to give you the heads up first....soooooo....
Our Surprise Guest for the first 2 shows of GUTFELD LIVE 2026 is our very own - KAT TIMPF! If you haven't purchased your tickets yet, be sure to grab em!
FEB 28 WESTBURY, NY https://www.ticketmaster.com/event/0000633C01635E79
MARCH 1 MEDFORD, MA
https://www.ticketmaster.com/event/0100637DDB881C7B
Mark has officially put in a request for a Yule log.
Calling all bakers—does anyone have a TRULY foolproof recipe? And I mean foolproof-foolproof. 😅
I’ll be choosing one brave (and lucky) recipe to attempt this weekend before the kids arrive.
The winner gets eternal gratitude… and Gutfeld! merch as a bonus prize!
Help me avoid a holiday baking disaster.😬
Some Christmastime Trivia -
In the early 19th century, Christmas was a dying tradition. It was barely celebrated, often ignored, and treated as a minor religious observance.
By the dawn of 1844, one man had changed the holiday forever.
On December 19, 1843, Charles Dickens published a little novella that arguably saved the spirit of the season.
The context was grim. Britain was in the throes of the Industrial Revolution.
Poverty was rampant, workhouses were full, and children were laboring in factories for pennies.
Dickens himself was deeply troubled by these conditions. He had visited charity schools and read shocking parliamentary reports on child labor.
But he was also facing a personal crisis.
His finances were widely strained. His previous novel, "Martin Chuzzlewit," had been a commercial flop. With a growing family to support and creditors knocking, he needed a hit.
Instead of playing it safe, Dickens took a massive gamble.
He refused to publish his new idea in a magazine serial. He wanted a stand-alone, high-quality book.
He ...