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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  January 26, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST

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(♪) (♪) (♪) book in the hotels.com app to find your perfect somewhere. >> he hasn't shown up to any of the previous debates. why would he? he's beat her in iowa, new
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hampshire, and he's going to beat her by 30+ points in south carolina >> if joe biden just instituted the wait in mexico policy, that we'd see a 70% reduction in the flow of illegals to our border. he refuses to do that. >> got to ask yourself, do americans and europeans want to buy a chinese-made car? it would be a big push. >> the reality is americans know donald trump, he's not a new person on the scene, we know what he stands for, we know what the media is doing. stuart: in case you didn't know, it's raining in new york city. lauren: just wanted to make sure you knew that. home sweet home, mott crue.
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i remember the band but not the song. plenty of green on the screen, especially for the dow industrials and up 150 points, well above 38,000. last time we checked on the big tech, they were all higher, same story again and amazon 159, meta 395, apple 194, alphabet 152 and microsoft is at 405. the 10-year treasury yield going up 415. how about that. now this, it was tucked away in the personal finance section of "the wall street journal". it's the story of generational change and money. as the headline says, six out of ten parents provide financial help to their adult children. adult being defined as up to age 35. mom and dad have always given financial help to youngsters when they could afford it, and now the help extends much later in their children's lives. this is what happens when
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inflation raises home prices and rent and grocery bills and don't forget, student debt is around your neck too. all the folk haves either paid off the loans ryan higgins didn't take on much debt in the first place. during the pandemic lockdown, the kids came home and didn't want to leave, they couldn't afford to. 57% of youngsters under 25 now live at home. copping to older children, many can't afford to buy a home without parental help. 20% of first time home buyers got help with the down payment from mom and dad. interesting point here, there's an increasingly wide wealth gap between young adult children and baby boomers, 60 somethings and up and benefit enormously from the long stock market rally and big gain in home values. in other words parents these days can afford more help. so how do the kids feel about living at home? mostly positive, but 32% said it negatively affected their sense of independence, 24% said it interrupted their social life. say that again. parents seem to like the experience though.
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74% said it improved their relationship with their children, 55% said it had no affect on their financial situation. fascinating, especially if you're a baby boomer with a lot of young adult children. there's someone in the studio that's dying to get into this discussion. it's friday and it's jimmy failla. >> great to see you. stuart: great to see you. you're a dad, is there a cutoff point of an age where you don't help? >> is this something i've never given a lot of thought because i was one of the people that moved out of my parent's house at a really young age like 32. stuart: really? >> no, i didn't but i was there in my late 20s, but i was a bit of a gambler in my 20s and betting on sports. now i only gamble when i eat chicken kabobs in time square. i'm trying to teach my child to be self-sufficient and it's a hard thing as a parent because you want them around u but your ultimate responsibility to them is to prepare them to live in a world that doesn't involve you.
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you know, so it's good to have the resources, but i think those resources, there's an old addage about you want to help your kids enough so they'll do something but not help them so much that they do nothing. stuart: right. >> i think that's the thin line here for a lot of parents is the pandemic took away the personal responsibility from a lot of people. they're like, we're going to shut it down, let the government hand it will from here. when you lose that yawnier supra aural headphones and day-to-day -- inertia and day-to-day drive to build your own thing and comes to the detriment to your kids and when is lincoln getting out, the minute i tank my saturday night show and money dries up. all right, kid, get a job. stuart: my day, it's you're 18 and you're out. i left at 17 as a matter of fact. >> they couldn't stand you, i get it. being their walleye, it would have been 12. stuart: okay, listen to this, president biden's first week of campaigning was full of protests and, yes, gaffes. got a little montage for you.
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watch this. >> don't mess with the united states unless you want to get the benefit. frankly donald trump and maga republicans including the women hollering. used to make beer brewed here, it is used to make brew beered here [inaudible]. stuart: i'm sorry, jimmy, but that's painful. there's no way he can be the president for another five years. >> i agree. when the american president speaks at the united nayses, they're not southeast supposed to translate him remarks to english. there's other language. that's our reality. you're watching him and i say this not as a conservative but a american. okay, this is unprecedented. we're living in a time where we have a president that maybes the sign language interpreter shrug. think about that. my wife works with a school kids with disabilities and she's
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adept at signing. i said what would you sign? i'd mike the sign for google because i'd have to look up what he said because there's no sign. the idea this is okay five minutes from now let alone five years from now is a joke. there's no way he can do it. stuart: another good one for you. >> i love it. hits keep oncoming. stuart: why not. michigan's governor gretchen whitmer released a bizarre video about her plan to reduce the cost of community college. >> hi, governor whitmer, how is it going? >> hi, professor potato, i want to share yukon gold news with you, my best spud and every michiganer deserves to go to college without frying their bank account and i'm so excited to announce an appealing plan. >> this year we will work together to make the first two years of community college tuition free for every high school graduate. that isn't small potatoes. that's a big deal. >> later, tator. stuart: you realize that
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gretchen whitmer was almost the vice president of the unit of america, you know that, don't you? >> i realize that was supposed to be a promotion for community college but a promotion for legalized weed in michigan. if someone was stoned to dream up the talking potato commercial. someone was stoned to green light it. it's scary to think that she was almost the vice president, but it's not surprising. i mean, we can all watch kamala harris and realize she'd be nobody's first choice but essentially when all of that and the 2020 election was turned upside down in the month of george floyd protetests and bece trendy not to go with and end of meritocracy and gretchen whitmer, i think of her in terms of peak spl sen seizure disorders head and shoulder above kamala harris but harris is second in line to the president and dei initiatives put less qualified people in position ifs that's the priority. we both know there were probably 10 million black women, african american women that could be a great vice president, but the
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priority wasn't find ago great one. just finding one. this is why we're getting the bill for that now. stuart: always great to have you on the friday. you get my fridays and weekends off to a good start. >> you're buttering me up, varney. stuart: it's called flatter reigns leading. thanks, jimmy. back to the markets and i like the look of that green there. gain for s&p and nasdaq, minor gain and up 100 on the dow. jonathan hoenig with me. microsoft and nvidia account for half of all the stock markets gains so far this year. is that kind of market concentration dangerous? >> yeah, it's concerning, stuart. look, the market has been much and as you're eluding to, only a really small handful of names, microsoft, nvidia, and if you throw in facebook, now meta, you're talking about 70% of all the games coming on just a few number of stocks and, stuart, people might say i don't own those stocks. if you own the s&p 500, you do.
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technology now accounts for about 30% of the s&p 50 and only done that twice. once was now and once was in 2000 from which a points in the paint technology underperformed for the better part of a decade and real reason for concern and only tech that's been holding the markets up. stuart: never seen anything like it before. as a matter of fact i've been covering this for many years. it's friday and this is >> i'm looking for things that are doing well and off to the screen and stuart: you always bring us an exotic investment on a friday morning and here it is. if the variable rate preferred etf, wait a minute. i'm told that yields 7.5%. tell me more. >> yeah, if yields group, it could go up more, stuart. things off the radar screen and preferred stocks, which people think are very sleepy like your grandpa's investment, breaking
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out to new highs and yield anywhere from 7% to 9% this. is a fund that does well because the debt it owns is variable rate kevin if rates go up, this fund can outperform and we own it at capitalistpig.com and it's a great place too hide out tevin tech weakens and this could do well. stuart: definitely exotic and i'll give you that. jonathan hoenig, always comes through. thank you very much, jonathan. see you soon. >> you will. stuart: lauren is looking at the movers and i'm lacking at intel, that's really moving. lauren: yeah, weak forecast taking down intel and some of the other chip stocks today, k la corp. down 6%, amd, micron, even nvidia and ai is booming for many of those napes. intel playing catchup or worse, being left out? stuart: tell me about visa. lauren: yes, i believe after the bell yesterday their revenue forecast for this quarter disappoints and revenue grows and single digits compared to 11% growth a year ago and that contrast with american express
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and hey has a higher income consumer. stuart: okay, back to the cruise line. lauren: yes, concern carnival is down and they're warning their operations could be impacted by the tension in the red sea. stuart: that's interesting. lauren: stay tuned. stuart: got t thanks, lauren. coming up. migrant crisis causing home values to plummet in texas border towns. we'll have a realtor from eagle pass describing what he calls the war zone. microsoft announced layoffs months after acquiring activision blizzard. telling you how many people are out of a job at microsoft. lawmakers in florida want to ban social media for children under 16. while steve hilton doesn't even have a smart phone, is he in favor of the ban or a step too far? steve joins us next. ♪
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stuart: florida one step closer to banning children under 16 trust worthy using social media. it claims that social media is like digital fete fall to children. dadanaplea mcnicholl is here. >> florida is take ago step further by passing legislation to protect kids from social media saying it's addictive and dangerous and those opposed say this legislation sun constitutional. lawmakers -- unconstitutional and lawmakers cite u.s. surgeon general warning spending more
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than 3 hours a day face double the risk of mental health problems and even though the florida bill isn't specific about which will the for the purposes it'll target, it's focused on sites with addictive features designed to cause excessive and compulsive use. >> when it cops to social media, we are seeing in the state of florida it's a harmful product. it is a kin to a digital fentanyl and we're going to restrict access to in the same way we restrict access to touchdown kansas city, to drive ago -- tobacco, driving a car and alcohol. >> it looks toexisting accounts of $delete accounts of anyone under 16 and opponents are slamming the legislation saying it goes against children's first amendment rights to free speech but takes away parent's right to make decisions for their children. >> the pans purchase the phones and pay for the phones and should have ultimate decision making ability to say what their
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children has access to and what they don't. >> now the florida bill needs to pass in the state senate but leaders have signaled they're supportive of the idea and expect it to be signed by governor desantis. several other states have social media-related age verification and recently new york city mayor eric adams declared social media a public health threat and, stuart, this conversation is not going away any type soon. stuart: no, it's not. danamarie, thank you very much indeed. bring in steve hilton because he doesn't even known a smart phone. look at his age. are you okay? i'm sure you are okay with a ban on social media for children under 16, you like this, don't you? >> i kind of. little me explain. first of all, the argument that was put there that it's free speech, completely propost-roush and we accept age limits on -- preposterous and we accept age limits and saying children have
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a right to see sexually explicit movies or pornography is ridiculous. age limits is of course necessary. putting it on social media sites is the wrong target and shows these legislators in florida, whoever is pushing this, they're really not understanding technology and that's the trouble when politicians don't know what they're talking about try to weigh in. clearly there's a harm from the addictive properties and not just social media platforms and all sorts of things online that are now accessible to everyone through the smart phone. the real target is not the individual platforms because they can put this ban in and the platforms will comply, big ones anyway and very visible and regulated, but other ones will pop up like whack a mole. the real target should be the smart phone itself, the device that allows children to go on the internet un-supervised. that's what needs to be the target. age restriction should be on having a smart phone in the first place. stuart: what about my right as a parent if i want my children to go on social media.
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suppose i think it's a go ahead thing and my kids can hand it will and i can monitor it. what's wrong with that? >> good for you. nothing, and that's why i wouldn't ban the social media platforms. then in that situation, you as a parent do that and at home and want your kids on any of the platforms, do it at home supervised on the laptop or home computer or something like that. the problem is the un-supervised access and kids sitting on their own when they're away from home and accessing violent pornography, see that all the time. getting addicted and affecting their mental health and here's the point about that, it's not just about individual parents because the decisions of everyone affect individual parents and most don't want them to have smart phones and most can't resist a social pressure. when all parents are in the same situation with an age restriction, they'll welcome that, i'm sure. stuart: moving on, homeless
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people in california resorted to living in caves and people in sacramento clement claireed the camp was 20 feet below street level and some of them were fully furnished and you're working on a ballot initiative to fix the housing crisis there. how do you fix this? >> yeah, let's point out this story and it's no longer just about the most famous pictures that we've seen and downtown san francisco and the areas like this and catastrophic failure to have a sensible policy mental health and drug addiction and all of these things and housing is just one part and it's mainly not about the homeless people but regular working people now. in california who contested i can't afford to get on the housing letter and prices are so high, rents are so high that housing costs are the number one reason that people are leaving
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california. it's been approved by the attorney general to get signatures and do that right now. anyone watching in california, help us fix this, go to calhomesnow.com and get those signatures and get it on the bat lot and we can make a dent in the terrible problem. calhomesnow.com. stuart: go for it, steve. always good to have you on the show. good man. see you later. >> thank you, stu. stuart: staying in california, there's one lawmaker that wants to control your car's speed. okay, ashley, how would that work. work. ashley: yeah, all new vehicles sold in kansas city chiefs equipped with a device that stops them from traveling over 10 miles per hour from the speed limit. it's the brain child of california state democrat scott weiner saying, look, something needs to be done to tackle the
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growing number of vehicle fatalities across the u.s. and especially in california. traffic fatalities in the golden state increased by 22% from 2019-2022 and the lawmakers says wreck less drive asking a huge problem citing california highway patrol issuing drivers going over 100 miles per hour in 2022. the plan is getting a lot of pushback on social media with one critic saying "just when you thought california couldn't possibly get any crazier. stu. stuart: i second that. thanks, ash. coming up, alaska airlines had to ground their boeing max 9 jets after door plug blew off on the flight. the grounding only lasted three weeks but cost the company millions. we'll tell you exactly how much it cost them. one realtor in texas says the city of eagle pass looks like a war zone in a third world country and he's blaming the migrants. he'll tell you what he's been
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qataris l stuart: app the markets, dow is up 100 and modest tiny gains for nasdaq and s&p closing out the week. big tech, that's another story and they're all doing pretty well. i don't see a single loser amonarchies them. amazon, met taxer apple, meta, all up. 10-year treasury yield going up today and up some more, 414 is where it's at. as for bitcoin, last time we checked it was struggling at 41,000 and that's where it is now 41.7. check microsoft and they just announced big layups in the video game division and stock at 405.29. ashley: yeah, roughly 1900 people or 8% of the video gaming staff and cuts reflect redundancies of the activision blizzard and microsoft said the layoffs mostly represent activision employees and
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institute less than is% of the total work force. microsoft gained more than 10,000 employee when is it bought activision for 75 billion. that's the biggest deal and imagine in the nearly 50 year history and not just microsoft dulling out the pink slips and several companies in the video game sector announced layoffed last year including electronic arts, epic games and uni soft entertainment. stuart: thanks, ash. crisis at the boarder and deadline day in texas and state must hand over authority to the feds today or face the consequences. matt fin joining us flat configuration -- matt finn joining us from eagle pass. doesn't like look governor abbott is going to budge so what happens now? reporter: right now, governor ab lot has not budged -- abbott has not budged and texas national guard has full control of the property and texas has not removed any razor wire and texas installing additional razor wire
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and fresh video to show you and deadline that the biden administration issued to the state of texas asking texas to indicate how much it plans on turning back over to the federal government and texas attorney general tells me as it stands, this is the no plans to cooperate with the deadline or remove social security serving as a border wall here. >> walls and fences work everywhere. there's a reason that peeled people build them and a reason they're working. they make it hard for people to get across and our fellow government isn't trying to make it hard. we can see that and not only trying to protect the border, we try to do it and they stop us. reporter: texas in the third week of seizing shelby park and banning biden border agents and defying the first deadline last week to reopen this park and now after the supreme court ruled in the biden administration's
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favor, the u.s. government issued another deadline today. the biden administration has made it clear it wants full access to shelby park, nearby boat ramp and international bridge. texas says border patrol had access to the boat launch and the rio grand river behind me and this question of whether this may amount to physical altercation and so far the texas attorney general and national border patrol council say that's very unlikely to be hard pressed to pit them apogean the border agents. stuart: thanks very much indeed. my next guest is near that park in eagle pass, texas w his wife and baby daughter. he says the area looks like a "war zone in a third world country". i'm joined by carlos herrera. describe what you see in eagle pass. what does a war zone look like? >> well, stuart, thank you for
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having me on the show. i live in the downtown area and maybe about five blobs from shelby park and all this sun folding and on a daily basis, what i am seeing is military trucks, texas state troopers, florida state troopers going down the street on maybe every other five minutes and it, when you go down to shelby park and if you visit across the bridge, the international bridges, you can tell where these containers and razor wires are placed, and you can tell that it is a complete difference from what we are used to seeing in eagle pass maybe in the last year or so. i do participate with a nonprofit here in eagle pass and
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we do hold a annual festival that helps race funds for the community for people that are in need anding have a camp there that we can't use anymore at the moment. who knows when we can use it again. really jeopardizes and puts us back on the drawing board where we can make this festival and this festival is annual and we've been doing it for 20+ years. stuart: that interrupts that. now, you're a realtor. how much are home values down in eagle pass? how many have they dropped? >> well, the home values are competitive right now and the reason why i say they're competitive is that home sellers are trying to compete with the market in the sense of not how they can sell a house but it's a matter of where the house is.
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if the house that's close tore the border where all this sun folding, it's a bit more challenging to sell that property. stuart: are all prices down? are people having to cut the price of their home to sell it? >> well, very slightly. now, we -- the thing is we do have -- this is very interesting, we do have border patrol and florida state troopers and state troopers and national guardsmen that are coming into eagle pass, and they are taking up housing and the rental markets are just on fire and also buying homes as well. we don't know how long this is going to last. stuart: i guess that counter balances it then. you look like a war zone and have the national guard coming in to rent the properties. carlos, i'm sorry, i'm out of time, but thank you for joining us and we wish you the best of luck in eagle pass. see you later. >> thank you. stuart: wall street journal editorial board statement and says we'll know soon if
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republicans really want to solve the border crisis. ashley, does the editorial board think congress can get a deal? ashley: well, they think republicans should think about the implications they've done and journalist says the gop game is play ago danger outs -- playing a dangerous game with the boarder and thinks giving up on a border security bill would be a self-inflicted gop wound and goes onto say that president biden would claim with cause that republicans want border chaos as an election issue rather than actually solving the problem. in turn, voter anger then may overtime biden to the gop and public may have a point and a shadow of donald trump in the background. the journal says that republican lawmakers are hesitant of backing a border plan and by the way aid to ukraine for fear that trump will trash them for it. but the journal says "better to
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act now than to fail and live with the consequences. interesting. stuart: yeah. would you trust ai to book your next vacation? some ken polcaris started to implement the new tectology and making your trip planning smoother. how that might work. the boeing max 9 jets cleared to return to the skies but after recent string of disasters, are passengers comfortable flying in one? we'll have a live report from chicago's o'hair after this. o'hare after this. ♪ you know, when i take the bike out like this,
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money that cost the airline. ash? oh. the video froze, okay. no big deal. let's move on. we're going to take you now to o'hare international airport in chicago where kelly sebari is standing by and she's been asking fliers about to get on board of boeing max 9 jet how they feel about it. kelly, are passengers okay with these boeing planes? reporter: sewer, we're getting mixed reviews and has to do with how in the know people are about this news, which could be good for bo's publicity and one woman told me before her flight this morning, she did in fact check to see if it was a max 9. take a listen. >> yes, i did. >> what do you find out? >> that it's not the one that was caught up in the whole
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scandal of the pieces coming off the plane. >> i feel like that's kind of a wakeup call with like the safety procedure and i'm going to be reading and double checking the rules and what to do if that happens. .i alaska air completed rigorous testesting and will start to ren max nine planes to service today and all comes after a tough couple of would he bees for boeing when the door panel blew off mid flight on an alaska airline the flight three weeks ago tonight and alaska and united are the only two american carriers that use the max # and shared fleet acts for 70% of all the max 9 jets in use. for this reason, the two airlines introduced flight waivers for those feeling anxious about upcoming travels. if you're flying through alaska soon, their waiver will run through the end of the month and united's waiver through nights of january 2nd. >> search engine chaos lets you
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use a filter that filters out flights for the max 9 as well and interesting for anxious travelers and this is all happening as boeing's ceo david calhoun is on capitol hill doing damage control and says in the name of transparency and responsibility. stuart. stuart: ashley, how much did the blowout of the door plug, how much did that cost alaska airline? how much? ashley: yes. right around $150 million, not cheap. that's a big hit of course for a smaller airline like alaska, the reported an adjusted income of 38 million in the last quarter and p 65 of the planes on the fleet of alaska, it's the second most 737 max jets in a fleet only behind united so this is an airline hit hard.
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alaska says the first though of the grounded jets will be back in service today, they hope, with more planes added every day as reviews are completed and each aircraft is deemed air worthy. the airline says it could ultimately past the cost onto boeing and alaska fully expects to be made whole for the profit impact of the grounding but there's no details of what kind of compensation plan will be agreed upon. but it's a big hit for a small airline. stu. stuart: sure is. another one, travel companies using satar official intelligence and how travelers customize vacations. how does it work, ash? ashley: well, travel planners say ai can actually create customized travel itineraries just like that in a matter of seconds. travel complete with mapless and links taylored to specific interest and travel booking services like expedia and trip adviser already offer their own itinerary building products but
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those by the way are based on reviews and hotel pages but other companies like atlas guru uses generative ai to verne rue hundreds of reviews to help in the travel planning and bobbing process. now, travel experts say no one will book an international trip based on output of algorithm alone, but they say ai can provide a highly tailored starting point s yes, it's another area in which ai can really, you know, cut through all the tape if you'd like with all the reservice connected and have give it to you in record time, interesting. stuart: i'd like to try it, but i don't know how. okay. i'll try. it's that time, you know, what's coming, the dow 30. get a sense of the market. about -- what do we have? 20, four, six, eight. 12 in the red. i can't count. the rest are in the green. don't go anywhere, sports fans.
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♪ thanksgiving stuart: that's hey st. louis, it's in mississippi and 61 degrees there and now, ladies and gentlemen, it's time for friday paid-back. first one from doc. stuart, how old were you when you bought your first stock and what was the company you bought into? good year tire and rubber, and i was 24 years old, i they felt yeah, 246789 that's it. lauren. lauren: honestly i don't remember. i have not a clue. stuart: okay. lauren: i'm sorry. stuart: ashley. system of articulation ashley: mid 20s, disney. stuart: good call. i made money on that . you still can't remember?
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lauren: i can't remember. stuart: this is from joel, it would be very cool if you, ashley, and steve hilton stage a british invasion of gutfeld. come on, man. would you watch gutfeld if it was all british accents? lauren: dude show. four men, three british accents. i'd watch it. stuart: very nice. okay. lauren: no, sorry, okay. you're the first guy. stuart: we're now in discussion of wanting to be rich. this is from joe. wanting to be rich is a good thing as long as they're willing to work for it. okay, i can get along with that one. i help my children if there's a work ethic and make good use of the money. let's move on. this is from roland. there's nothing wong with the obsession of chasing the mighty dollar and most people their problem begins when they catch it. that's a good one. i wonder about youngsters that
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don't want to get rich. don't all americans want to climb the food chain? what's wrong with that? ashley: yes. lauren: i always say money doesn't buy happiness but it makes life easier. ashley: yes. stuart: i'm determined to give it a try. i'd like to see if it makes you happy. what about you, ash? what do you think about the youngsters? ashley: i could never live the life i live here back in the uk. there's just no way. this is a country where if you do put in the hard work and, you know, the rise if you like is there. it doesn't come easy and there's per happen as bit of luck. if you want it, it's there to go and get it. that makes america so great. stuart: got to stay in the game till about 75. ashley: yes. stuart: this is from eric if the younger generations are obsessed with becoming rich, why do they register and vote for democrat who is are promoting socialism? look, we're all auditory systemsistic when we're --
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idealistic when we're young. lauren, you're still young. lauren: oh, man. i'm going to echo what jamie dimon said last week i think. he said i have a democrat heart and a republican brain. i feel like that's kind of how a lot of young people are. stuart: would you like to add to this, ashley? ashley: they say if you're not a liberal when you're young, you don't have a heart. but if you're not a condition servetive when you're old, you don't have a brain. that's -- conservative when you're old, you don't have a brain. that's kind of true. stuart: from deb, what ceo or business leader would you like to interview and have on your show? elon musk. you were going to say that, weren't you. lauren: elon musk. what would the first question be? i know. you have to engage him a little bit; right. stuart: would what i ask. lauren: what would we ask elon musk? question one. stuart: what would you ask him? ashley: what hasn't been asked. that's a good question. when he was the first person i
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thought of but then think everyone talks to elon musk and has a headline a day and do someone like richard branson to be different. stuart: richard branson, okay. i'm moving on. this is from doug, i'm guessing you were a john lennon fan but what was your favorite album? it was actually rubber sole. that was a mix of songs that was put out in britain, the album called rubber sole and appeared in america and mix of songs were different and not called rubber sole i don't think. lauren: ashley. ashley: i'll go with abby road purely because it has here comes the sun and i think something in there, i think they were george harrison songs but they were brilliant. stuart: know nothing about at beatleing album? lauren: correct, what's an album. joking, joking.
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stuart: thank you to everyone for the friday feedback. now time for the friday trivia question. good one. how many innings was the long estime jordy league baseball game -- long estime jordy league baseball game, 22, 26, 28, 20? the answer when we come back. .. - [narrator] this house is a generac house and you're just the person to keep it running
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that first time you take a step back. i made that. with your very own online store. i sold that. and you can manage it all in one place. i built this. and it was easy, with a partner that puts you first. godaddy.
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stuart: beef with break we asked how many innings was the largest major league baseball game ever who just think i know but we start as usual with ashley. ashley: i can't imagine 26 or 30 so i will go with 22. lauren: i will take 26. stuart: so well i. i have a vague memory. it is. it was 26. the game was in 1920. between the robins which are the los angeles dodgers and the boston braves. it lasted four hours, it got down. 26 innings. thanks very much, see you against that is next monday, coast-to-coast starts. julie:in

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