Byline: New York City — July 2025
In a stunning and emotional moment on live television, Fox News host Greg Gutfeld revealed that he had planned to send his daughter to Camp Wrenwood — the very Texas summer camp where 27 girls went missing during last week’s historic flooding. But what stopped him? A dream that, in hindsight, feels chillingly prophetic.
Speaking candidly during a segment of Gutfeld! on Monday night, the host said:
“I don’t usually talk about dreams on-air. But this one… it shook me. I dreamed something was pulling the kids into the ground — like water was crawling. I canceled the trip the next morning.”
Audience members and even panelists sat in stunned silence as Gutfeld paused to collect himself, his voice cracking with emotion.
“My daughter was packed. She had her little sleeping bag ready. If I hadn’t said something that morning… she might’ve been there.”
🛑 A Last-Minute Decision
Gutfeld and his wife reportedly had reserved a spot weeks in advance for their daughter at the Texas-based summer program, known for its outdoor education and Christian values.
But after his dream, he said he woke up with what he described as a “physical sense of dread.”
“I walked into her room and just said, ‘We’re not going.’ She cried. I felt awful. But I had to trust that feeling.”
One day later, the flash flood hit.
😢 National Outpouring
The story — now circulating widely on social media — has gone viral under the hashtag #GutfeldDream, with thousands of users praising him for trusting his instinct and expressing heartbreak for the families of those who weren’t so fortunate.
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“Sometimes a parent’s intuition is the strongest radar we have,” one commenter wrote.
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“Greg Gutfeld just became every parent watching this,” another added.
💬 Critics and Supporters Weigh In
While some skeptics online have questioned the timing of Gutfeld’s revelation, most reactions have been overwhelmingly supportive. Child psychologist Dr. Margo Levinson explained that premonition-like dreams are not uncommon among parents under stress — especially when safety decisions loom.
“Whether subconscious processing or divine intervention — what matters is that he listened,” Dr. Levinson said.
🔚 Final Word
A dream.
A daughter spared.
And a nation listening to the what-ifs.
Greg Gutfeld’s revelation adds a haunting new layer to the Texas tragedy — and serves as a powerful reminder of just how fragile the line is between ordinary days and history-altering moments.