It’s a division no one saw coming — and it’s sending shockwaves through the conservative media world.

Jeanine Pirro and Greg Gutfeld Get Upset When Jessica Tarlov Accurately  Notes Abortion Rights Are Popular on 'The Five' (Video)

For years, they stood shoulder to shoulder on screen, presenting a united front and echoing the same hardline views that energized millions of Fox News viewers. But now, in what insiders are calling an unprecedented fracture, two of the network’s most recognizable veteran anchors have turned on each other — publicly, bitterly, and with no signs of making peace.

What happened to cause this once-solid alliance to shatter? And what does it mean for the future of America’s most-watched cable news network?

Here’s what we know — and what the network isn’t saying.


A Partnership Built on Politics… and Personality

For nearly a decade, Greg Gutfeld and Judge Jeanine Pirro were seen as part of Fox News’ ideological dream team. Their appearances on The Five often felt more like rehearsed repartee than real discussion, with both anchors riffing off each other, delivering takedowns of liberal policies, and rallying behind Donald Trump during even his most turbulent moments.

“Greg and Jeanine had a natural chemistry,” one longtime Fox producer told The Daily Insider. “They were both brash, unapologetic, and wildly popular with the base. Viewers loved them together.”

But sometime after the 2024 election cycle, things began to change. Quietly at first. Then dramatically.


The First Public Signs of Trouble

Fox's Jeanine Pirro named co-host of 'The Five'

It began with a moment that, at the time, seemed minor.

During a heated Five segment in early 2025, Gutfeld interrupted Pirro as she began launching into one of her signature rants on the “lawless chaos” at the border.

“Can we just stop pretending it’s 2019?” Gutfeld snapped. “This isn’t about lawlessness. It’s about bad policy and broken leadership from both parties.”

The exchange stunned viewers — and Jeanine, whose expression briefly betrayed her fury before she pivoted with a stiff smile.

But for those inside the studio, the tension was unmistakable.

“He humiliated her,” said a source familiar with that day’s taping. “And she didn’t forget it.”


Ideological Drift — or Strategic Distance?

Though both anchors remain firmly on the right, recent months have shown subtle, but unmistakable, divergence in their messaging.

Pirro has continued to double down on cultural grievance topics — from book bans to “woke tyranny” — often veering into fire-and-brimstone territory. Gutfeld, meanwhile, has shifted toward a more libertarian tone, even calling out Republicans for hypocrisy on personal freedom and “selective outrage.”

“He’s not exactly going soft,” a Fox staffer clarified. “But Greg’s trying to brand himself as an edgy independent thinker. Jeanine sees that as disloyalty — or worse, self-promotion at the expense of the team.”

And the fallout has been very public.


Trading Blows — Subtle and Not So Subtle

On a March 2025 broadcast, Pirro appeared to take a veiled shot at Gutfeld, mocking pundits who “act like comedians and forget their roots in real journalism.” Gutfeld, never one to let a jab slide, responded days later during Gutfeld! by opening his monologue with: “Let’s talk about what happens when courtroom drama becomes cable drama. Spoiler alert: it’s not Emmy-worthy.”

The digs haven’t stopped since.

On social media, fans of both anchors have begun choosing sides, with hashtags like #TeamGreg and #JusticeForJeanine popping up on X and Truth Social. Some are calling it “Fox’s Civil War.”

“They used to finish each other’s sentences,” one veteran makeup artist at Fox shared. “Now they can’t even look each other in the eye in the greenroom.”


Rupert Murdoch’s Silent Dilemma

Insiders say network executives are growing increasingly concerned about the feud — not just because of the optics, but because of what it could mean for the brand.

“This is a house divided,” one executive-level source admitted. “You’ve got two anchors, each with huge followings, tearing each other down on the same platform. That’s not sustainable.”

There are rumors Murdoch himself has tried to mediate — allegedly inviting both anchors to a private meeting in June. But according to one source, “It didn’t go well. Neither one is backing down.”

The result? The once-regular pairings of Gutfeld and Pirro on The Five have now become rare, carefully scheduled events. Producers have reportedly been instructed to keep them apart on high-stakes segments — especially if the topics involve immigration, Trump, or foreign policy.


Viewers Divided, Ratings at Risk?

Some longtime Fox viewers are eating up the drama. Others? Not so much.

“I used to love watching them together — it was like family dinner with two loud cousins,” said one fan on Facebook. “Now it’s just awkward.”

Another viewer wrote, “I’m done with the backstabbing. If I want drama, I’ll watch reality TV.”

Early summer Nielsen ratings show a slight dip during episodes where either Gutfeld or Pirro is absent — suggesting their individual appeal may not be as strong when separated.


Can the Rift Be Repaired?

At the time of writing, neither anchor has directly addressed the feud. But if recent broadcasts are any indication, the cold war continues.

Gutfeld, ever the provocateur, recently said: “The only thing more dangerous than a leftist meltdown is a conservative grudge. Trust me — I’ve seen both.”

Pirro, for her part, delivered this cryptic sign-off during a recent segment: “Loyalty means speaking truth — even if it makes enemies.”

Are these final warning shots — or opening salvos in a longer battle?


What Happens Next?

Fox News has weathered plenty of storms in its history — but rarely one that pits its own stars against each other in full view of the audience. As the nation heads into another tense election season, all eyes are on how — or if — the network will mend this very public split.

Will cooler heads prevail? Or is this the beginning of a permanent fracture in the Fox News empire?

One thing is certain: in a media landscape built on conflict, the most explosive story may be the one unfolding behind the cameras.