Skip to main content

tv   MONEY With Melissa Francis  FOX Business  June 25, 2013 12:00am-1:01am EDT

12:00 am
governnt, and what federal gornment can do to them. >> thank you for watching america, i hope you have a goodh melissa francis is next. melissa: here's wht's "money" tonight. can you trust the i.t. staff f your company? in the wae of the snwden scandal, they may be the biggest risk to business security and private data. how? plus paula deen's fod empire is burning to the ground, but a top pice manager says she cn still pull it out of the ffire. he has a step-by-step plan to save it. hope she's watching. who made money today? one of the few groups that stand to make money from obamacare. stay uned, find out who it s. even when they say it's not it's always about ""money." ♪
12:01 am
so we start tonight with something yo probably ever think abt, though it stems from th scandals swirling around the nsa leaker, edwardsnow den, we have the latest on that in a moment, but whether you are an employee o the bos, do you know now trustworthy your i.t. departme ? a new spotlight on how system administrators m actually be the biggest threat to the company's securitity and yours. you won't believe what ccompanis faced due to i.t. staffers plotting revenge. joining us is te cunter intelligence officer, john schindl. thanks for coming on the show. >> great to beere. melissa: on computer expert says they are the scariest threat to systems with god-like access the systems they manage. is that an over statement or is it that angerous? >> if it's ot over statement, nottby much. i mean, look, we think i rms of physical security, and tthats ge and how you get on to
12:02 am
systems, but the reality is the force is the worst insider hreat if they go bad, any company, any firm, any intelgence agenccould fae. melis: i read a story about a staffer who was fired and then held hostage the passworto the entire system for almost two weeks. how do you protect youself from something like that? chances are inside a comany, of course, th person who is the head of the i.t. knows more aboutthe computer system than thceo. >> of course. melissa: that's their expertise. there'sthat's their job. >> that's why they are there. melissa: yeah. >> it happens more than companies talk about because it's not flattering to public image when revealed, but, look, the reality is the easiest way to protect against these things is to e judicious about who you let be the sytem administrators. it sounds glib in the light of what mr. snowden is oing, bt the truth is that system.
12:03 am
look, nsa through use of, frankly, appears shotty background investigaons through onractors, found itself in a shoty situation here that they cannot unravel quickly. this threat exists evrywhre. we put a tremenus amount of faith in the i.t work force and syste adminirators bause they are the citical link, and if they go bad, you ot a terrib problem. the simple answer is keepthe bad people out of the company, out of your firm, out the intelligence service in the first place. melissa: how realistic is that? there's reports he worked specifically so that he coud get inside the nsa. we don't know that's true, but that's the latest wrink revealed today. >>well, he said that himself, so i see no reasonot to take that at face value at that claim. the timeline seems right. this is the nightmare scenario. someone skilled in i.t., gets in a position of tremendousax seases, and even thougg, frankly, he filled out some of
12:04 am
the security clearance forms improperly, at best -- melissa: give a le detector test? >> he was undoubtedly polygrhed because of the way nsa like cia, if you have a top secret clearance, you have been polygraphed, but keep in mind, they are questions aout ties to foreign entities. they are asking you about criminal background. they are asking ab really obvious red flags. smaer red flags might not be tripped, and the reality is the u.s. government, unli, say, in the coldwar, really doesn't ask people questions they should. i mean, we you know, we don't want jhadists or neonazis with top seet clearances or working in .t.areas fo that matter. melissa: what do you do as an employee at work? when i lock myself out of the system, call in, give your password, it's clear whether you give them the password or not, they have the ability to go
12:05 am
inside anything you have. how do you rotect yourself at work? >> well, one, at a asi level, don't conduct really importat personal busins on any system that's not permly yours. it's common sense, but we all do it. second of all, be vigilant. no one likes to thik, hey, the guy in e cubicle over or down the hall with the birthday party, is he -- is there a problem there? no one at a human leve wants to think that. i thought that in human intelligence, and every single spy case i was involved in, withouexception, you talk to thecoworkers after, every single pern said, well, yeah, you u know, he was a little odda little strange, buti didn't want to say anything. nobodiments to think that. the problem is soe people are more than straik. it's a free country to be strange, 99% o anything illegal or wrong, but t snowden case shows when yo put this trust in people, you need to know who they are and what the motivations are or consz convinces are disastrous.
12:06 am
melissa: thank you, than for being on the show. come back. >> thank you. melissa: thewhereabouts unknown, and the word is he's in russia after flying o moscow frm ho ko yesterday, they expect the russians to work with us and extra date diet him, yeah, right. they are ignoring the appeal. shocking. here with more is the federal proscutor. , thanks for coming back on the show. always great to have you. >> thanks for having me. melissa: they expct russia to look at all options to put him in a nice baske and send him bk it us. i'm ot buying that for a second. >> you know what? i got a better chance of being named in taylor swift's next single. t's not going to happen, all right? the russians are thumbing their nose at us. i can't speak russian so i don't know what fingerit would be, but you get the point. they will not send hi back for a bunch of resons. melissa: do you think it was
12:07 am
just a total decoy he was thinking of cuba and ecuador? >> no. what think is going on, melissa, these things as is so typical are kind of dynamic in theway in which theyup fold, and so he y very wellave been on -- to -- slated t goto russia, cubb, ecuador. they may have goten there, russians changed their ind. i was involved in extradons with the u.s. attorney's office, and what you 't realize or the general public doesn realize is there's so many moving parts with these thing, the russians could decide not to send him back bause they are angry at the u.s. for pitions we may have taken in cnnection with human rights violations or putin just decided he wants to show barack obama he's not interested. melissa: or mad about the super bowl riig. you never kn what is usetting him at the time. >> never know what it could be, exactly. melissa: where do you think the rereport came from? supposed to leave russia to go to cuba, and there's picres
12:08 am
ouout there of his empty seat on this flight. i think we have it. he was supposed to get on and head out. in your mind, do you tink -- i mean, i ask you this, but was this a decoy? if reporters knew enough to go and shoot e sat on this flight, it's not very convincing he was actually going to do it. >> right, right. c17a, right down to the seat number tt had. tell you what, youhad your guy on earlier, like, that guy ws a spy. firs thing they teach those guys is the art of disinformation. i mean, part ofwhat they do is send out information, knowing it's notaccurate or so that people will kind ofun down the rabbit holes looking, you know, trying to find the guy, and then they move him twhere they want hito be. melissa: where do you thk the best chanceeis to avoid being osecuted by he u.s.? i mean, if you were him or advising him, where does he hang out? >> probablyeither venezuela, ecuador, or cuba fora couple reasons which of nt the leat
12:09 am
of the climate which is better than russia. those countries are a member of the block, they have no lve for the u.s.. that's why ecuador kept the guy from wikileaks in the embassy in london. they don't have interest whatsoever to return the uy unless that changes. you know, next wee, smething could happen, and the countries could need te u.s. assistance or neehelp in some way, and you know who is shipped on the next boat to the u.s., that's mr. snowdwden. melissa: hurting his chanc to be a whistle blower with everythig here's ding, saying, running he's doing and the more he reveals, digging in deeper ancloser to espionae and further fromwhistle blwer? oh, abslutely. he's so far from wstle blower that i'm concerned at this point, forget it. you know, all this stuffcoming out now, his statements that he joined just to get insidethe nsa. part of wha i think you are seeing, melissa, these countries are very low to send people back to t u.s. ifthey think the re ubjecteto the death
12:10 am
punishment. he may be be walking himself toards tree son, our country is slow to d that because once ey o that, none of the countries send the guy back melissa: fred, thanks for coming on. >> thank you so much. take care. melissa:next, when you tell anks they are on thir ow, it doesn't end well. they learn the lesson the hard way, and investors around the world pay dearly for it. three thigs that you can't afford to miss this week as the china mess lays out. plus, facebook needs a, quote, good hacker to tell us 6 million phone numbers have been breached? isn't that teir job? what other person details are slipping through the cracks? more "money" coming up.
12:11 am
12:12 am
12:13 am
12:14 am
melia: it's been manic monday on wall street, had grim numbers early in the day, and the ow down nearly 250 points at session lows before coming back to pairthose losses. that was helped by feet officials makng new statemens, but what looks like a pyramid
12:15 am
collapse in china is not helping. how eep is the selloff? ith us, cina expert gordon chang,n a fox news contributor. john, startin with you, what a wild ride from the movement we saw in the bond market, everyone focused on that as the epicenter of panic and the interest rate on the ten-year up and down selling in the market. what are you watching? >> without question, interest rates have to be first on investors of all sizes. they have not gone up, but at the fastt clii in 50 years, and t's not just junk bonds, but reasury bonds, municipal bonds, corporate bonds. bonds are seen as risk ssets so for investor, tha's on the screen. >> for any investor and man being becau without question everyone tching television right now, you have something
12:16 am
related to interest rates whether it's the mortgage, the car loan, the credit card, whatevever it is, iterestrates spin all the sudden, and this is just e beginning, this is the big deal to you. focus on this, gordon, another huge thing people are watching today is ths collapse going on, and the government says they are starving the banking system in order to avoid collapse, drive out the shadow banking system like a controlled implion rather than a pyramid collapse. doou buy they are in control? >> no, i don't buy it. >> not for a sscond. >> there's nver been an engineered credit crunch in history. melis: would be a neat trick. >> if theydid it, it's wreckless. look at what's happened. youknow, beginning of may,you had the state administration on foreign exchange issue rules
12:17 am
causing 40 illion to leave the stem, and in june, this month, there' been so many criis. two central overnment bill auctions fail, two big spikes, and two waves of defaults in the interbafng markets, it's more and more serious, they the centr bank can't do anythg right now. melissa: how concerned are you about this? >> chnese stocks down 20% plus in six months, the definition of bear market, d its not just china, but emerging markets around the world, and for us domestic investors that used to be strong like commodities, emerging mrkets, for exmp, they are weak right now. it's obvious that the rules, the game is really a changing and leaderare laggers. >> what a the other major things you watch other than interest rates? >> well, i think you really -- ironically, what we'd love to see is real fear. obviously, the market an the
12:18 am
weakness is starting to be some front page news, but we have not seen the massive con pitchlation in stocks r bonds that are down 500 day on massive volume that suggest a belonger, tradeable bottom is in place. we have not seen that. a lot of fear and heitation, but not a major signal that we're off to the races again. >> the final hing, quick, bere back to gordon that you look for is a segment that would be a leader, a group that's going to be a leader? >> yes. that's just it. on a day like today, investors say, well, what's out performing the ack? one day the market's up again, and if it's not commodities on emerging markets, what's it hat leads the market o to new highs? it's uddled picture. melissa: any way this orks out? >> no, can can't. essentially thing what the central bank does is realizing every option makes it worse. they watch itfall down.
12:19 am
when you start to see the products, maturities, the can't al with them. >> sitting at better than 7% growth, which was i decline for them, but so much better than where we ae. do they go to zero, two, five, what happens? >> they are already zero. look at tee orfour, maybe, but once you takous useless production, you get dow to about zer. >> that's a cay cay tas catastre world because we watch that where everywhere elseis not working. >> that's not going to happen now, ad way we see is afailur in china. melissa: thanks o both of you, appreciate theime. time now for today's fuel gauge report. the supremecot dealing a blow to oil refiners not hearing the challenge to an epa approval of the e15 etanol gasoline. can't believe t. it can cause serious damage to cars and trucks, voids
12:20 am
warranties in some models, and a court dismissed the challenge at would stop it frobeing sold. oil futures efinedthe sell off, and heavy flooding in canada is reeking havoc, and it's rising supply cocern canada is theu.s.' largest source for foreign oil helping sh crue more than 1% higher at 95.18 a barrel. more bad newsfor iran. sth korea says they will cut exports by 18% since sanctions began last year. they are one the few makets remaining for crude. it's a blow. coming up, more than 6 million facebook user had their phone numbers leaked to the pulic, and it took a good hacker in order to discor this. where else is faceook asleep at the switch in we have te details. paula deen's empire couldn't look more cooked,,but a price
12:21 am
manager says deen ca still save herself from he deep fryer. he joins us to explain how. paula, stay tuned, you got to see ths. can you ever have t much "money"? [ larry ] youw throughout history,
12:22 am
12:23 am
12:24 am
folks have suffered from frequent heartburn but now, thanks treatg with prilosec otc, we don't have to suffer like they used to.
12:25 am
[l dings ] ♪ [ hse whinnies getting heartburn and then treing day after dayy is a thing of the past. block the acid with prilosec otc, and don't get heartburn in the first place. we've surcome a long way. ♪ [ le announcer ] one pi each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. melissa: wall street or main street, here's who made money. ybody owns vanguard health care systems bought by tenant health care the larger rival, an hospitals are expected to see millions of patients demanding services. news of the eal sent shares help skyrocketing more than 67%. wow, good day for them. congratulations. hoping to make money is the
12:26 am
luxury retailer filing for an ipo k speaking so raise up to a hundredion dollars. they were taken bbck private eight years ago in the filing, and he says it's seeing a surge in demand for the customers. how nice. soon to be spending more money, junk food addcts, twinkies, hooes, and other products rerning july 1th. the equity firm that bought hostess are bringing them out of bankruptcy. they will be rolling again. thank goodness. see, private equity does good things too. all right. facebook facing another setback sure to anger millions of users. the company admiitting a securiy breach tha exposed 6 million of its use information like e-mail addresses and telephone numbers. this is etremely unsettling to say the least. here to say how cncerned we should be,tech guru and "fortune" editor at larg great to have you back, adam. >> thank you very much for
12:27 am
having me agai why did it takea, quoe, good hacker, to bring them o their attention? doesn't they have hack-a-thons? they shuld have everyengineer on the plane working for them. why an outside person? >> take a moment to talk about the word "hacker," it gets confused. they used to be evil people who hacked into your compters and facebook mad the word "hacker" @%pular as the good kind tryin to come a with creative ideas using internet software for services now, facebook as many other companies do has whitehat program encouraging good hackers, hacke who are computer people interested in helping t to say if yo see something bad out there that could hurt us, tell us, we want to know about it. in their defense, people are focused on building products, not necessarily paying attention to the nasty criminals.
12:28 am
>> th ae not focused on protecting information that everyone has wisely or stpidly uploaded to the website? >> you know, i'm not aying that. obviously, they have people whose whol job is to make the platforms secure. we can tak aut whether or not they do a good job but that's -- melissa: that's the original question. how do those people not find that? what else is slipping through th cracks here? >>well, the company like facebook and boring old telephone company. say what you will about the telephone company, they rotected it for decades with their gold plated technology of protecting our information, and i believe facebook, google, twitter, and amazon do a good job and act in good faith, when you give your informaion, you are taking a chance a little bit, and i think you have to thin about what it is you are willing to give thse companies,
12:29 am
they are trying, but they are growing fast they are not as good as the bad guys. >> that's a great question. nobody knows the sector better an you. what have you given to facebook? how much inormation do you ha and not shared with them? i'm going to copy what you do because you're the smartest guy out there. >> well, that's over generous of you, but it's interesing. i'll look. if i rememr correctly, i'm relatively cautious. don't pt my telephone number ormy social seurity number. i lt a public use on facebook see little anddon't et my friends, you now, the frien on facebook see mh either. i'm comfortable with, you kno, who my favorite sports team is or where i grew up,but i don't want them to know my birthday, my telephone number, my child niece name, that hing.
12:30 am
melissa: couldn't agree more. when a site sks too many questions, i say forget it. it's not worth it. i don't wan to tell tha much information. there's certain amount you have to et out to get business done, but like you said, when it comes to your phone number, mae there's a stndard bank, that's the phone number onlinea couple digits off rom what it is, bu that'sa good policy. go ahead, the last word. >> yeah, if you want to use the services, you really are at t mercy to some extent. the perfect xample is like everybody else, i try to use one or two of hree passwords meaning every servce i have has that password, and in theory, they could be bad people and hack into the other services, but if you want to use the services, ve them your password. melissa: thanks so much for coming on. >> my pleasure. messa: you heard how a good hacker brought the breach to ight. how good is a good hacking
12:31 am
business? fox bsiness' jo kent joins me with more. >> who knew hacking is a good business, and wat strikes the interesting facts is th facebook, like you mentioned before,ad a bug for a year, but they didn't ind it themselves. the hacker, slang for ethical hacker, is a new type f industry th's starting to boom. the guy was rewarded with a bounty and acknowledged public by facebook in a statement. this is what they said, "we appreciate the securi researcher's reporto the white hat program and paid out a bug bounty to thank him for his efforts." how much money can you make as onof the good ethical hackers? at google, at least $20,000, mozilla, owner of firefox, started thisidea, they start d $500, and facebook, also, $500, an microsoft, it's
12:32 am
$11,000 and up. now, companies say the most sophisticated the program,the bigger the bty. check this out. microsoftn wednesday, this coming wednesday, ju 24th, is launchinand calling for all friends, haker, and reseahers for direct cash payment program for three bugs. they'll paynow up to $100,000 for techniques that breakthrough proteio built into their latest windows system before that system ev launches. the microsoft securi respone center says it's a way of hearing about prolems as soon as possible and getg out ahead of the pack that could turn against them launching problems against microsoft. they'll hopefully save money. to be clear, the hite hackers, melissa, are college students, programmers, that participate in the all-night hack-a-thon, and it coulde nyone who has the skills to identify a problem. lots of company are usng them,
12:33 am
even nato. melissa: pays to be a nerd. i need it, i need it. >> yes, thank goodness. melissa: next on "money," paula deen responds how notto respond to a public relations dsaster. is all off for the queen of food and her empire? a top crisis manager gives us her rescue plan. plus, hghly paid traders on wal street are thrown out the door all du to some competition. how much deeper will the cuts ? it's all the word on wall street, and you get that rig here. piles ofmoney oming p. ♪
12:34 am
12:35 am
12:36 am
12:37 am
melissa: money is always on the move from fast food is not as easy as it sounds aparently. sharesof sonic taking a tumble after hours. they reported weak fiscal earnings shorttime ago. sonic blames a decline in drive-t through sales how? sonics delicious, people. paula deen cooking up controversy after admitting to use a racial slur in the past. the celebrity chefhas apologizeto the pr problem. thy are far from ver. just today's smithfield foods, the pork proceris dropping deen as the spokeswoman, but the queen of comfort food has more fans than she has buter.
12:38 am
can she save her empire? we are joined now. this will go down as a case udy in how not to handle your pr. this didn't real nee to happ. i mean, it all started in the deposition when they asked her if she use the "n" word, an unlike saying any lawyer tels her,ou know, maybe i can't remember, bu oh, yeah, you know, sureof course. it got worse from there, nd se booked the "today" show appearance, doesn't show, did the apology online which we can show you in a second that made things worse. i mean, did you watch this aad cringe? >> it will be a ase study for a pr disaster, and she and the team brought it op herself. you know, she said it right, she spoke on the deposition, punished for fr it, ust beng
12:39 am
honest, forth going, and i don't think she expected this to be the outco, but the pr nightmare, it was a disgruntled employee at the head of the lawsuit. how nytimes does thisappen in aweek? hundreds of thousands. an employee mak accusation, brings you to court, okay, up to the court do deide. she can make an acknowledgement saying, hey, listen, you know, i don't tolerate any sort of racial disconnect, but, you know, this is up for the court to decide, an we look foward to seeing the outcome of it. don't go to youtube to put out one, tw, three different videos. melissa: right. let's watch the worse defender of the youtube videos, then your reaction what what you would have done instead. watch this apology? oh. >> i want to apologize to evrybody for the wrong i've done, inappropriate hurtful language is totally, totally unacceptable. please forgive me.
12:40 am
melissa: okay, s that didn't work because it was heavily edited. you wondering which she cursingg in between the apology there was slices? what wou you say from here after all thediasters, she's probably at home watching tv because at else is she going to be doing? tell her hat to do to right the ship. >> wel it's tough, that's right. that video was scripted, edited, hastily done, ran, you know, straight off of putting that out there without thinking and took it down and doing another one. she needs to take a step back. came out within the hour, al sharpton reponded, and gve her s blessing aying things were done in the past. we need to judge people on when they are now. paula ha agreed to back on the "today ho," and see al and matt and see those thing, and she's going to take the opportunity, and she needs to e genuine, but not beg. it was over the top. she's not garcia who saythat tiger woods should, you know, with the fried chicken and that,
12:41 am
she didn't try t hurt anybody. she came out on a deposition about her brother, you know, like everybody would go around to defend their family, whatif bill clinton was on th stand. a depositin about his brother. melissaisn't that interestin that al sharpton came out and rt of gave her a pass, and he has a show on msnbc, andnow she's going on this "today" show. huh, interesting. >> you know, here's all sorts of things to look at. look at the food network. they were quick to drop her with the ratings as they high, would they drop her anyway? they didn't sit back to watc anything come out. her other sponsors, v and caesars, randomhouse, and the novo, the diabetes company who have one the bigest things to lose, and with moeymatters, they ar a str pharmaceutical companies. they have a lot on the line, and they are waiting to see what haapens.
12:42 am
melissa: if nbc picks her up, you saw it here first. ank you for coming on the show. >> thank you. melissa:here's the question of the day, will you still buy paula deen products? the overwhelming response was yes. yo bought a bunch f pots thether day, and they were fantastic. th were cheap. they work great. that's what it' about. interesting to follow this and see what happens to th bsiness for sure. like" us on facebook at facebook.com or follow me on twitter @melissaaj fracis. there's high prce employees that are getting the boot,and the replacements are the final insult. it's all the word on wa street, and we hae all the details. at the end of the day, it's all about "money," there was a lot of "ales" in tre. we'll be right back. ♪
12:43 am
12:44 am
12:45 am
12:46 am
♪ melissa: to wha you have been waiting for, the behind the scenes story ll here on "money," and today's word on
12:47 am
wall street, we get the gosip own why traders lose their jobs. maybe you're about to despite the fact firms make big money. what's the deal? whispers are regardless how good the traders are, high requency algorhms do the same for better and less. here's spencer jacob, welcome back, spencer. >> thank you. melissa: what's going o here? we've been hearing about this for a while, computers, you know, you get the algorithm, why do you need the trader? 're seeing a wave now, how come? >> you go to restaurants here in midtown, and it's full of people going out to luch, tey are expensive, leave, they could sue you, need health benefits, and, you know they cost that in a year, and that affects the botm line, and wall street firms, 50% of the venue goes
12:48 am
to compention, for people like that. and traders shouldn't have a difficult timefiguring that out, and machines are better than them for certain functions as least. looking at the -- melissa: i was ooking at the salary of thoswwho create the algorithms becacause it cost something because somebody comes up with that and tests it they make $150,000. mean, they make computer programmers salary, $150,000-200 -- a loot of mone, but significantly less than the 00 to million that a trader makes. i mean, where are you seeing -- is it happening more right now through the end of the year? places where there's more ofit because people could be wondering if they are next. >> well look at how the moey comes into the business and where it goes out. i mean, look at the fund nager industry, for example, doesn't seem like fee have come down. coming down tenth of a percentage point over decades; right? add it up back of the end veal lope quickly. the fees charg today charged
12:49 am
20 years aings it's a difference based o funds under management, it's a huge amount not paid to the street. the street has to save the money somewhere. yolook at just peoole employed in new york city, about 167,000 people that is 12% less than it s in 2007 before t crisis, and they make 2% less. that is lik13 or 14 billion that's not going nto the local economy. i mean, it's -- tht -- everything's being ushed down to, you know, the bottom line. melissa: without question. you report on what you hear out there. are you heaing this from the traders wh know it's coming? are you hearing this from the people getting ready to let the traders know it's coming? >> i'm hearing people who, you know, managing diectors and banks say the only lce growing here in ten years is the i.t. department. that grows eve ye, bu no other department grows because it makes no sense. if they are honest, makes no sense how much i'm paid to be
12:50 am
doing what i'm doing. you know, if you askyourself, am i worth -- melissa: youpersally, i'm worth what i pay. what are you talkng about, this is cazy. >> the tradeers are, you know, don't come cheap. melissa: computers out perform traders. that's rough. >> abslutely. melissa: thanks so much. >> thank you. melissa: appreciate it. the food truck craze is so hot. i guess it was just a matter of time until this hapened. look at that. want to know when dogs are gettin too spoiled? hen they start getting their own food trucks. we'll tell you about it in spare change. ridiculous. did you see that? can you ever have too many doggie treats? i don't know. i don't know. ♪ i want to make things more secure.
12:51 am
[ whirring ] [ dog barks ] i want to treat mo dogs. ♪ our business needs more cases. [ male announcer ] whe do you want to take your business? i need help selling art. [ male announcer ] from broadbanto web hosting to mobile apps, small business solutions from at&t have the security you need to get you there. call us.
12:52 am
we can show you how at&t solutions can help you do what you do... even better. ♪
12:53 am
12:54 am
♪ melissa: it's timfor little n with little monday "spare change." today we are joined by representative me spencer. all rht. first up, a different take on food trucks. siness is booming. in fact, the idea is growing so fast that some are starting franchises. the dougie foo track offers rsions of ice-cream, cookies, other treats. in the beetwo or see it? in manhattan these are everywhere.
12:55 am
the line of the streets. fantastic. >> i have seen them. live in the suburbs outside of manhattan, and there are a lot of dog lovers like myself. melissa: to you have when you carry in a purse? >> the pitbull in the terrier. >> i hav a littl dog a carry in my purse. melissa: and just curious. >> i have not seen this truck, but i have. they're is a woman. the 11 men and. i walk my dog and riverside park. this gorgeous woman. short shorts, goes out and looks for guys like me who have talks. they did not -- they' not really interested. the. melissa: did he just say a gorgeous sexy woman in short shorts teeseven it made to sell
12:56 am
dog treats. melissa: a much steeper pay for these dogreats? you buying the dog treats? >> it's a bargain. >> pretty reasonable. they're going to pay $10 for above. core may food. teeseven -- melissa: this suite of you to move this a segment along. let's move on. in case you have not seen this, walking in a quarter of a mile on a tight rope above of the little colorado river gorge near the grand canyon. this was yesrday. look at that. listen to that wind.nutes. it would have been less ife did not have to stop twice for the wd. 13 million viewers tended yeerday the wants the stock
12:57 am
man. the dare devil says for is next stunt he would like to come here to new york and walk a rope between th chrysler building. don't take the video out. the best part is the end. heumped off. oh, my gosh. makes m nauseous and i want to vomit. >> some people calit break. i think he might just be reckless. i know he is trained and skilled and this is what -- melissa: 304 family members who have died. >> there is a awful video, and i'm sure you can find it. i think it's his great-grandfather who is in puerto rico and died. the thing started to swing in the could noge off. the title on and fell. n't help but thinking of that when i was watching this. mixed feelings. i love the guy and his gets.
12:58 am
you think of what hasappened to his family members. melissa: i'm surprised that read bill did not sponsor this. i heard him talk about his grandfather's passing he said he was simply too old. melissa: one of three or four family members to paris. it was not just an. setting a new precedent for the widely known push present, the fabulous thing that may give t mothers of the children after birth. they go. good work. reportedly he bought a million dollar black dmond. rumors are also swirling thht the proposed, but that is unconfirmed. whato yo think? >> i'm a fan of white diamonds. it. melissa: in the diamond is a good diamond. >> do you think you get ripped
12:59 am
off? maybe it's just a black opal. >> out you confirm that is the authentic gemstone for milli dollars? >> diamonds are easy commitment in this tough. finally the guy dow on his knees and begged her -- melissa: supposedly. >> i don't believe it. not for a second. >> you don't think of follow-through? >> seventy-two hours. >> this is about publicity. melissa: rlly quick. fried chicken, colonel sanders' white suit went up for auction and guess who had the winning bid, the president and ceo of kfc in japan. he paid more than 21 grand f the famous suit and then promptly tried on the jacket and e white strength tiny. plans to put the suit on display in tokyo. what do you think? >> so weird. so japanese. isn't that said japanese? is just sething about the way.
1:00 am
i'm glad theyove baseball, but this kinof stuff. meliss love it to my aids? >> is a fan, good for him. you can afford it. me ♪ >> in the '50s,@ there was a new sound. ♪ ♪ wake up @ >> it had rhythms and lyrics that spoke to us. >> @♪aybellene ♪ why c't you be true @ >> and all across america, radio stations gave us the latest hits. >> @♪ well, you can rock it,@ you can roll it ♪ ♪ do the stop and even stro it at the h @♪ >> there was chuck berry,@ jerry lee lewis, buddy holly,@ and of coue, the king. >> @♪ell, since my baby left me ♪ ♪ well, i found a new place to dwell ♪ ♪ well, it's down at the end of lon

392 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on