This page is built for fast news viewing: the live player starts in seconds and the listings alongside it show exactly what is on now, what is coming up next and when tonight’s key segments begin. Times are shown in UK time and the grid refreshes through the day, so you can drop in during a breaking story or plan around a scheduled interview without guessing.
What you will see here
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A live channel player with quick start and stable playback.
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A simple Now, Next, Later strip for instant context.
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Concise blurbs that explain each hour’s focus so you know whether to join now or come back later.
How the day usually runs
News channels follow a dependable rhythm. Mornings concentrate on headlines, live hits from correspondents and the first wave of politics and business. Late morning and early afternoon deepen the agenda with interviews and analysis. Late afternoon resets the day with updated headlines, then evenings lean into long-form reporting, prime-time discussion and investigative pieces. Overnight returns to rolling coverage, updates and international stories.
Regular programmes and staples
Across a typical week you will encounter a rotating mix of the channel’s signature hours and franchises, for example:
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Fox & Friends and other breakfast-time blocks with first look headlines and live guests.
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America’s Newsroom and The Faulkner Focus for late-morning reporting and interviews.
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Outnumbered and early afternoon bulletin hours centred on developing stories.
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The Five with multi-voice discussion of the day’s biggest topics.
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Special Report with Bret Baier for in-depth political reporting and on-the-record interviews.
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Jesse Watters Primetime, Hannity and Gutfeld! in prime time for analysis, conversations and culture coverage.
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Late-night updates such as FOX News @ Night, plus weekend fixtures including Fox News Sunday.
Line-ups change with the news cycle, but the structure stays clear: headlines at the top, context and debate through the evening, updates overnight.
During breaking news
When a major story develops, the schedule can flip to rolling coverage. The guide on this page adapts quickly so you still see the correct Now, Next and Later times even if planned segments move. Look for “live update” tags in the blurbs; those indicate continuing coverage rather than a standard hour.
Picture and performance
On supported devices you can expect high-definition video, crisp studio graphics and steady motion for live shots and press conferences. Streaming typically runs a few seconds behind over-the-air reception; that small delay is normal and helps keep playback smooth on variable connections.
Availability and compliance
Programme availability can vary by region and by rights. If you travel, access may change based on your location or device settings. In the UK, watching any television channel live whether on a TV platform or via a streaming player requires a TV Licence. On-demand viewing is treated differently; live channels fall under the licence rules.
Start watching
Press play to join the live channel now. Use the schedule to see whether the next hour brings a major interview, a deep-dive report or a panel discussion, and plan the rest of the evening around the stories you care about most. All timings are shown in UK time for clarity.