tv Bloomberg West Bloomberg January 8, 2016 11:00pm-12:01am EST
11:00 pm
emily: i am emily chang and you are watching "bloomberg west." to let's get started with your him first word news. major indexes saw their worst weekly declines in more than four years. the s&p 500 ended the week 6% himthe s&p 500 ended the week 6% lower, one of the worst starts of the year in history. oil has reached its lowest level in more than five years. mexico says a fugitive drug lord has been recaptured. mexico's president tweeted, "mission accomplished, we have him." this after el chapo escaped from him one of mexico's most secure prisons using a mile-long tunnel that opened in his cell shower. president obama vetoed legislation to repeal the signature health care law, as expected. this was the first repeal to
11:01 pm
him clear both houses of him him him congress and make it to the president's desk. in to the president's desk. an it would have also cut funding for planned parenthood. the odds are growing that someone will win saturday night's $800 million powerball jackpot. but if no one matches all the numbers, the next drawing is expected to soar past $1 billion. him him emily: i am emily him him chang and this is bloomberg west. him him coming up, a bloody week on wall street finally him comes to a close. him him the nasdaq fell 7% over
11:02 pm
him the last five days. him but a hail mary from melissa him but a hail mary from melissa him meyer? him yahoo! now considering an outright sale of its core is in his proxy investor threatens a him fight -- after an investor him him threatens a proxy fight. him threatens a proxy fight. first, to the lead. another day in the red for u.s. stocks leads the major indices him with their worst weekly him declines in more than four years. the dallas raised more than 1000 him and points. him julie hyman has -- dow erased more than 1000 points. him him him him julie hyman has him this report. him this report.
11:03 pm
him him julie: worries about global growth persisted, particularly after a volatile overnight session in china. him all three major averages sharply lower on the week. the dow and s&p having the worst starts to a year ever. the nasdaq did not, but it is lower for the seventh straight session, the worst streak since in 2011. the individual stocks that contributed the most to the s&p him him 500's losses were all him technology. app all continuing to decline on persistent worries about iphone demand -- apple continuing to decline on persistent worries about iphone demand. twitter closing at a record low and falling every single session of the week. netflix, one of the other himnetflix, one of the other highflyers from 2015, also lower on the week. technology not in new and market carnage. -- immune during this market carnage. him emily: yahoo! in the
11:04 pm
him headlines again. and him him the company changing course and now considering an outright sale of him its internet core him business instead of the him spinoff. him and on wednesday, marissa him mayer was threatened with him him the possibility of a him proxy fight unless the company makes significant changes to leadership and strategy. joining me now, an analyst from bluebird intelligence and the him head of our global him and him technology coverage.
11:05 pm
him technology coverage. him what is happening? him him brad: nothing official. but the calculation has changed himbut the calculation has changed internally. him him look, this is a death by a thousand cuts. the stock was down last year. himthe stock was down last year. they have this accomplished activist investor, off the bow, a new letter this week. and him we always knew it was likely for the business to be a him sold. him we thought alibaba would be first. him first. basically, time is running out. this has gone so long, the market keepsim him market keeps voting skeptically and cynically about marissa mayer's chances. i think across the board, they are fearful of having a proxy fight and losing. emily: we have mentioned buyers him like verizon and at&t. you focus on yahoo!'s core him business. what does this mean?
11:06 pm
him andwhat does this mean? >> if you look at the stakes in alibaba, the core business is in him negative or close to him zero. emily: there are different him opinions out there. him >> yahoos business is so him him diverse that some companies might find value in him pieces of it. that is more appealing to somebody like verizon. yahoo! sports or yahoo! news might be more appealing to a publisher or the business can him unity. him in community. -- or the news community. all this is doing right now is raising serious concerns about talent retention and acquisition and decreasing the chances of recovering the core business. him >> how practical would it be him him to start parceling him out the different pieces,
11:07 pm
even from just a technical perspective? >> we see the interest from him different parties. him what interesting is that him him everybody knows that if him him you buy yahoo! as a him him whole, you might not be able to get value out of it. him be able to get value out of it. if that was the case, they would've done it themselves. him him that is one way that yahoo! can actually realize him the best value it can get for its core business. and emily: they have also been asking for changes in core management, attacking, presumably, marissa mayer. we have been talking to a lot of people about this. one person said she is to blame. him take a listen.
11:08 pm
>> if you look at the results of the last three years, they have been disastrous. there is a steep decline in the core business. if you let that go on for a few more quarters, there will be no more core business, therefore no him more value. this happened under marissa is a -- marissa's watch, and it has him him him him to stop. him emily: another person told me on the same day that he has a him lot of confidence in marissa mayer. in take a listen to what max had to say. max: she is the hardest working ceo in silicon valley bar none. there is a gap between the next hardest working and marissa. she is also a smart product person.
11:09 pm
if you look at the success yahoo! has, genuine success, the him credit to take, which the press really never gives her credit for, the product development, the shift to mobile, the opening of new revenue streams is tremendous. there are challenges and they him himthere are challenges and they will take a while, but i him doubt there is anyone out there better qualified to deal him there better qualified to deal with them. brad: i think it's clear that marissa mayer is the last ceo of marissa mayer is the last ceo of yahoo!. she came in with a lot of credibility and had to leeway -- had leeway from the shareholders. there is not another act for yahoo! the chips are stacked against companies that cannot innovate. if she can't make it work, probably no one can. emily: thanks so much for popping by today. another developing story we're following, texas instruments and analog devices have both decided not to pursue and acquisition of maxim integrated products for now. him they say neither
11:10 pm
11:12 pm
emily: president obama has announced a new counterterrorism him task force charged with sorting extremists use of social media. representing washington, the attorney general, the director him and attorney general, the director of the fbi, and the director of national intelligence, among others. representing tech, executives from apple, twitter, facebook, microsoft, and linkedin. josh earnest discussed it in the him daily briefing earlier. take a listen.
11:13 pm
him josh: we cannot allow him terrorists or extremists him to use online communication him is some sort of safe haven that is beyond the reach of law enforcement or national himenforcement or national him security. that certainly means that there himthat certainly means that there him are some complicated issues to work through. the solutions are not himthe solutions are not necessarily obvious. what is obvious is that there should be some common ground. him emily: what exactly him him is that common ground? him him joining us to
11:14 pm
him weigh-in is the former homeland security secretary, michael chertoff. thank you for joining us. brad stone is still with me as well. one thing we do know is that terrorists have been using these platforms like facebook and twitter and sending direct messages. but why can, and more importantly should -- what can, and more important a should, companies like facebook and him twitter do that they are not doing? him him him secretary chertoff: him i think a lot of these companies do look at what is posted online and if it is clearly inciting terrorist activity, they will take it down. statements that might be viewed as sympathetic to terrorists him could fall under the first him him him him him
11:15 pm
him him him him amendment. the government has to recognize that there has to be leeway for what is protected speech under the constitution versus what is actually incitement to violence. brad: ever since the snowden revelations, we have seen again and again that users of this him technology are reacting very poorly to any hint of -- we have him seen tim cook talk about encryption. what do you think will change him attitudes at the big tech companies? secretary chertoff: there is a strong security reason to have encryption and you don't want to compromise that. what do you do when people use various kinds of social media in him various kinds of social media in order to advocate violence or engage in trafficking in child pornography? as we speak, when companies find him child broader fear similar material, they take it down. there is not a problem with things that are outside the protections of free speech, taking them down and reporting them. but that's a different himbut that's a different compromise than having security or encryption be weekend. emily: tim cook said last month the reality is if you put a
11:16 pm
backdoor in, the back story is for everybody, the good guys and the bad guys. him i think that is what you are alluding to. but if the companies don't let the government n, aren't they in charge of deciding what is him terrorism and what is not? can they really police all this him him stuff, and should they him be? secretary turnoff: first of all, him i want to be clear. him i do -- secretary chertoff: first of all, i want to be clear, i do work with some of these companies. him i think a backdoor does compromise security. him compromise security. a dutch company wrote a letter saying they would not be in him favor of degrading encryption for precisely that reason. on the issue of social media, i himon the issue of social media, i think we can have a cooperation about what is inciting violence. him him i think you have to be careful about not trying to him him write a set of rules him that will wind up, for him example, taking down him statements that might be political but don't fall outside
11:17 pm
him the protections of free speech. him we have to be careful we him don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. him with the bathwater. brad: considering the attacks in san bernardino were conducted by a married couple, how relevant do you think the discussion is him around encrypted him communications to that kind him and of attacks and threats him we are seeing today? secretary chertoff: it's a great point. if you look at the brothers in the boston marathon bombing, and him the boston marathon bombing, often you have people who are not using e-mail or telephones to talk. they are talking in the privacy himthey are talking in the privacy him of their on bedrooms. unless we are going to require everybody to put a wiretap in your own bedroom, they are not going to because, encryption or no encryption. the good news is there is other
11:18 pm
data out there, made a dead in -- metadata, financial connections that are very helpful and identify people who are risks in terms of terrorism. him there are many tools him there are many tools that him technology furnishes that don't impinge on people's rights him him or only in a very small why a -- very small way, and give law enforcement a lot more tools than we had a few years ago. emily: by the way, we got a him statement from facebook him about this meeting. him about this meeting. they said we explained our policies and how we enforce them. facebook does not tolerate terrorism or terrorist propaganda and we work him aggressively to remove it as soon as we become aware of it. bloomberg reported on this him situation in texas last may. to terrorists attacked a cartoon him exhibit of the prophet him mohammed.
11:19 pm
the fbi is saying one of those terrorists exchanged 109 messages with a terrorist living him overseas. they can i get access to the him content of those messages him because it was -- cannot get access to the content of those him messages because it was him encrypted. is there any way to improve that? secretary chertoff: the government has ways to decrypt him things that are encrypted. they also have ways of getting himthey also have ways of getting him information once they apprehend somebody. but the telephone communication was not encrypted. him him if you use -- if you knew somebody overseas was a terrorist and they were having 109 conversations with somebody in the u.s., that's a pretty good red flag that that's someone you should take a look at in the u.s. i understand in law enforcement him wants to use him every tool possible, but we don't organize society to make everything else subordinate to
11:20 pm
law enforcement. in this case, copper my thing on encryption is going to hurt innocent people, and i -- compromising on encryption is going to hurt innocent people, and i think that's part of the problem. him him emily: secretary him him chertoff, always him him great to have your views him here. thank you so much. coming up, a special sit down with the french economy minister. manual mccrone joins us next. -- emmanuel macron joins us next. ♪
11:22 pm
11:23 pm
without having to switch banks. joining me now is someone who probably disagrees with that assessment, the minister of him economy for france. he has been at the electronics him show where more than 200 french companies are him represented. him emmanuel macron is him him meeting with some of the him finest minds in silicon valley while he is here. hundreds of french startups at ces. you guys have seen an explosion himyou guys have seen an explosion in tech innovation. what behind this? him emmanuel: we create every year now 1500 startups. that's a big explosion indeed. emily: why though? emmanuel: innovation is part of the french dna. him we did not convert this energy into business. i think the new generation is much more pro-business by creating startups. now, they are starting startups in france to launch a business. we have launched a series of him pro-business measures to help them. him help them. him him him him that's a big
11:24 pm
change in the french landscape. him now we have startups everywhere in tech, health care, and a lot of industries. him all of them were at ces, and him they got more than 19 awards with a lot of new him awards with a lot of new him innovation. him him brad: minister, first, i want to compliment you on your red rooster on your lapel. it's very nice. him him him him him emily: it's a symbol of french
11:25 pm
technology. brad: the ride sharing startup goober has had a difficult time in france. -- uber has had a difficult time him in france. they portray france as hostile to innovation. him him him how do you see it? emmanuel: that's wrong. himemmanuel: that's wrong. look at the reality. the u.s. is one of the first markets for uber. they use it. but they did something not completely compliant with the law. him they are a big success in france and
11:26 pm
changing a lot of things in him mobility, hiring a lot of people, but the issue was -- brad: the executives went to jail. him him emmanuel: they didn't go him to jail. they perfectly knew it was him against the law, him they were asked to stop the him service, and him they decided to do so. you have to be extremely precise him on these issues. uber is a big success in france and we love uber. i love uber because they hire a lot of people. him him him and him i have
11:27 pm
11:30 pm
emily: bloomberg news just him learned that sam alton will be replaced. it is for the y, nader program him -- combinator program. he came up with google's. in. sam alton takes over as the president. he will be a will to do more of everything, he tells me. he is over polygram and jessica him livingston. brad stone, head of the global technology coverage, obviously very interesting changes. i spoke with sam, he tells me it is a promotion. he felt it was overdue, that him he felt it was overdue, that was a joke.
11:31 pm
him and and him and this is how they have been operating for a while. y combinator spokesperson likened it to the google alphabet. him alphabet. him >> it is the iconic start of school. people look up to it. him him him the head of y combinator gets a lot of him him combinator gets a lot of attention. brad: it's scaled -- it scaled in an amazing way. him lots of companies -- not just software, hardware
11:32 pm
companies, all sorts of things him going through the process. him we will see if the direction changes. the question is, is the climate him in silicon valley changing. if that happens, and the him optimism deflates, does y combinator need to change? emily: they have a fellows program, speaking of how they have built out this him have built out this organization. him i spoke with jessica livingston with paul graham, she him livingston with paul graham, she said when they first started it, it was very small and in him it, it was very small and in former -- informal. we had to add structure, but it him still works. him him in fact, in most ways, it is better then when we were small. >> it is interesting because y combinator, people love it. but others still criticize it. brad: the list of successes, him they have been leaning on him for a while. there is airbnb, stripe, but in himthere is airbnb, stripe, but in him terms of the real successes, the number is small. him successes, the number is small. emily: big changes at y him combinator, even though sam
11:33 pm
alton remains president in a different way. we will be right back. ♪ emily: the world's most wanted himemily: the world's most wanted drug lord, el chapo is back in custody after a him shootout. emily: the world's most wanted drug lord, el chapo is back in custody after a shootout. the arrest comes six months him after his brazen escape from him him one of mexico's most him one of mexico's most secure risen through a mile-long him him him risen through a mile-long tunnel. the event has been closing out himthe event has been closing out him today.
11:34 pm
joining me now, the editorial director, victor. what is the latest you can tell him us? him victor: basically, we him already know -- he tried to escape again this time from the marines that were hunting him in northern mexico. let me tell you what we have confirmed. at 4:00 in the morning, mexican marines, with assistance from u.s. intelligence, particularly the dea, they zeroed in on the safe house he was in and some of his gunmen. after 4:00 in the morning, about 10 minutes later, a shootout started. he of managed -- he managed to him evade the marines. him his gunmen were all him killed, five people were him shot. el chapo ran into a sewer. him we already know he likes to do that. he likes to go underground. we have seen from other situations involving him. him he emerged blocks ahead. he commandeered a vehicle.
11:35 pm
him he made a run for it in the vehicle. him he wound up in a motel on the outskirts of the city. him that is where he was finally him caught. him caught. he tried one last time to evade the marines. him him evade the marines. him this time he was not lucky. emily: what is the consensus on him extradition? what are politicians saying him him about sending him to the u.s.? him victor: that is the big him question. that is the big debate that has been sparked by the apprehension of el chapo. at this point i can tell you the house the senators majority leader has called for the immediate extradition of him to him and the u.s.. he argues we cannot hold this criminal. we have to remember, he has escaped from maximum security prisons twice already. on the other hand, we have the him and minority leader calling will him for him to be jailed here in mexico.
11:36 pm
he has to do his time here on him and mexican him territory. there will be a big debate. there will be pressure from the him unit state. -- united states. we had some who were very angry after his last escape. this will be a big debate. what will happen to him? he might go to the u.s., sometime soon. emily: sounds like coming from a him him netflix series. thank you so much. coming up, we will talk about y combinator founder, paul him graham's recent controversial essay. him what he says startups are causing inequality. him causing inequality. we will be back. ♪
11:39 pm
emily: now to y combinator him founder paul graham's recent him him and controversial essay and the uproar in silicon valley him and his argument that him economic inequality is him actually a good thing. him his main points are -- you cannot prevent great variations in wealth without preventing people from getting rich. you cannot do that without being -- preventing them from starting him startups. within hours, his essay got a him slew of responses. we're joined with mark suster. him him him thank you for joining us. him thank you for taking on this topic. you wrote a response in which him you said, you do not him celebrate income inequality. him you said the celebratory nature of this conversation felt
11:40 pm
him tone deaf, and seem to ignore the rules that that those him ignore the rules that that those -- ignore those without him privilege. him i wonder does it change him anything for you? mark: i think, first of all, i him am a venture capitalist. him i find the same companies paul funds. my goal is to create disruptions. those disruptions should be positives for society. i will give an example, uber is something you can view as a negative or positive. the huge positive is not only providing a much better service him than a traditional taxi, but also taking drunk drivers off of the road. i think it has been positive. we also look at the downside, himwe also look at the downside, him what happens to drivers who get disrupted? him had we provide health care, him him retraining, and him himaining, and him
11:41 pm
him retooling? him the biggest point against paul and his essay is that it should not be about celebrating him inequality. of course inequality exists. him we live in a democracy that is capitalist. him him is capitalist. we need to figure out how to address the issues of poverty. address the issues of retooling the rest of the economy that is left behind by the digital privileged. emily: a lot of people found his him him him argument him objectionable. him that is one thing. him others out there said it was patently untrue. there is no an -- relationship between startups and inequality. they do not go hand in hand. do you think there is a relationship. him this is a huge issue for the
11:42 pm
him entire country, potentially and this election as the tech him economy explodes and people get richer? mark: let's say this, the tech economy is hugely important for job creation. it is hugely important for innovation overall. it is hugely important for the united states and our competitiveness in the world. i agree with those things. of course tech itself, the people who are getting extremely rich are very, very small number of people. him why would i hold those people up as an example of him inequality? you get a whole bunch of false arguments that we suddenly need to protect this class of people. his post was very reminiscent of tom perkins's post which came a year before saying, they are coming for us because they are him rich. him i think he has invented an him evil boogie man who is him coming for silicon valley. will coming for silicon valley. i don't see that happening.
11:43 pm
it is not only tone deaf, but i him also called it colorblind. him it ignores the fact him we are leaving behind him african-americans who are dealing with high incarceration rate. -- rates. they are dealing with gun him violence and lack of educational resources. him they're dealing with a nonnuclear family unit. we are dealing with 13 million himwe are dealing with 13 million latino immigrants in him this country that also need to be able to get the tools and health care they need. i do not know why -- as a friend himi do not know why -- as a friend said, it is like we are of 20 touchdowns in silicon valley, and still spiking the ball in the public's face. why would you do that, paul graham? emily: let's take a slightly him less extreme interpretation. him interpretation. potentially he is saying that him inequality is a necessary evil of startups. him it is not to be celebrated, but perhaps it is a fundamental
11:44 pm
outgrowth of the startup him ecosystem. him is that true? mark: we have a capitalist himmark: we have a capitalist society. the fact that mark zuckerberg him him gets extraordinarily him rich by creating facebook -- i don't think anyone has a problem with that, myself included. i was a start up onto for new or -- start up entrepreuner. him to write a philosophical argument that says inequality is good. him it was the tone he chose. him he said, you do not want to him him and hunt me, i am the hunted, for me. him hunted, for me. i am like, cry in your own beer, paul graham. you are not the hunted. him mark: let me tell you what is happening if i do not assign a label. what is happening is right that him and markets, which is what venture capital is -- we fund him and him private companies
11:45 pm
and him and him and that one day him will become public. him there is a direct him him relationship with the him companies we invest in, and the value of public markets. public openings these are buying him himpublic openings these are buying our companies before we become public. private investors have been overpaying in terms of valuation for companies for the last three or four years. him him him him we have been in him a tech bull market since 2009. him 2009. it has been unabated. that correlation between private market valuation and public market valuation, we have been him market valuation, we have been able to look the other way for a few years. you're not like to be able to look the other way. you're going to see the correction. it is already happening.
11:46 pm
you have seen it with fidelity him him doing the markdowns of him him the late stage private investments. that market shifted dramatically himthat market shifted him in q4.y him the public does not know this himthe public does not know this yet, but i can tell you that him yet, but i can tell you that venture capitalism massively slow down in q4. -- slowed down in q4. him they're lowering the value -- valuations for startups. we invest in early stages, him before companies have profits, and usually before they have large revenue. we are typically investing $2 him million to $59 in the early stages. it has not had a huge impact on the early stages. in the later stages is more him where you see it. emily: ok, thank you for joining us. thank you for being brave enough to take on paul graham. by the way, we did reach out to him, he declined. he did not feel like live television was the appropriate form -- forum. a story that we are watching --
11:47 pm
drones were huge at ces this year, but one cavity in particular is getting a lot of him buzz before it goes on sale. this is the lily camera. him it is capable of taking hd him video. the toss it -- you toss it in the air like a frisbee. it is available for preorder at him the moment for $799. the company has booked $34 him and him and million in presales. it was not all fun and games in las vegas this week. the maker of the one wheel electric skateboard called in federal marshals to shut down the booth of a country making a similar product. -- company making a similar product. josh: we are here at the consumer electronics show in las vegas. a booth had a hoverboard product and federal marshals showed up and sees all of the rich and ice. -- merchandise. the manufacturer, a chinese company, was accused of encouraging on a patent of one we'll. it is a start of that introduced a similar product several years ago at the show. one we'll says the company is
11:48 pm
will just making their same product cheaper. having them at the same show damages the reputation. him >> we have patented on the u.s. and internationally on both the design and function. we engaged our ip lawyers because we heard there were him going to be knockoffs appearing. him appearing. we went through the formal u.s. legal process to get a temporary restraining order against one of him these companies that is him him trying to sell a knockoff. him knockoff. josh: there have been concerns about low-quality hoverboard catching fire, hurting people. him this company felt if there him was another on the market him that looked exactly the him same, it could hurt its own him same, it could hurt its own sales. >> knockoffs do not have the same double of engineering. many times the companies do not understand what they're building. that is damaging to the market as a whole. ♪ emily: that was josh for las vegas. coming up, i realize racks to him riches story, how a vietnam
11:49 pm
11:51 pm
emily: alibaba sports just signed a contract for nfl him signed a contract for nfl broadcast rights in china. this agreed to his company -- a company spokesman. alibaba had a joint venture with and him ad him him him chinese private cap -- equity form. at the same time apple and himat the same time apple and google are vying for nfl rights in the u.s. according to reuters, the him and him and him company are
11:52 pm
seeking digital rights to live and him him stream games next season. last year, they live stream for free, drawing 15.2 million viewers worldwide. he is not your typical silicon valley founder. tri tran grew up in a decade him after the vietnam war, 50 miles southeast of ho chi minh. him now he is in charge of the popular food delivery service. him him it is brad's's latest and story in bloomberg him businessweek. tri tran is with us in the him studio. him you got a huge response. him you got a huge response. him >> people reacted to the story. him tri tran: it recounts our journey, and your journey. what kind of feedback as you get? tri tran: thank you for having me. basically, the welcoming reception of people reaching out to me, a lot of them offer numerous, but also minority population. the via anime -- vietnamese community, my own parents and their network of friends and
11:53 pm
him him him colleagues have been him welcoming. they understand the struggle. they can relate to the struggle that they have gone through. starting at the company is also him a challenge of its own. people recognize, that is incredible. emily: it is a compelling story, him giving -- given the immigration debate. you have people like mark himyou have people like mark zuckerberg on one side, pushing for h-1b says -- h-1b visas for people like you, and then you him have people like donald him trump. tri tran: this is the land of opportunity. it is true. my parents recognized the future for their own children was not indian on the -- in vietnam. it turns out that hard work does pay off. him i think that is the story him him that is related to me. him brad: you have been here from his 30 years. him you have been in silicon valley for many years. why did you decide -- i don't know if i asked you this, why
11:54 pm
him him him did you decide to share the story now? is it because of the immigration him debate? the express of many immigrants, himthe express of many immigrants, particularly muslims him him him are encountering him hostility. him hostility. tri tran: i had forgotten, maybe startups were reserved only for the selected few. i feel like hard work is more of himi feel like hard work is more of a fundamental ingredient to make this work. sharing that story i think would be more genuine. that would be more genuine than himthat would be more genuine than saying, work hard. him emily: do you support donald him trump? him tri tran: not really. it is more like, get people -- himit is more like, get people -- immigrants like me, a chance. to interview to the economy just like anyone. -- contribute to the economy him-- contribute to the economy just like anyone else. him brad: you talk to hillary clinton about the creation of a new kind of employee, not 1099 contractors, not w-2 employees, but something in the middle? what would be good for your business?
11:55 pm
tri tran: we classify our delivery team as employees. for us it is clear. himfor us it is clear. the point i made with hillary him him him him him along with the other executives and founders of other startups would him founders of other startups would be, maybe there is an opportunity for companies to him have a need for a different him kind of classification, him and where employees get to him him be more flexible. right now instead of going to a clipboard to change a shift, you can do it on the phone. that is what we can do with our him staff. him him him him him
11:56 pm
him i feel like that might be a good alternative, instead of always having only these existing choices. emily: i've used mumcher several timesy. sprout? sprig? how many can there be? him him tri tran: food is him him diverse. him people eat a lot of him different kinds of foods. him him that is the beauty him of life. him that allows a lot of different companies to exist. him him we all pick and choose him him our own ways on how we do it best. we thought if we have the option to cook the food in 15 minutes or less, and your own home would be the way most people would find fitting for their needs.
11:57 pm
him emily: as a working mom, it has saved me. tri tran, founder of munchery. himtri tran, founder of munchery. thank you. thanks to you, brad stone, with us for the hour. be sure to check out the latest edition of "bloomberg businessweek" on newsstands now. read brad's story. have a good weekend. ♪ him
12:00 am
85 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Bloomberg TVUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1756827142)