tv MONEY With Melissa Francis FOX Business November 11, 2013 5:00pm-6:01pm EST
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melissa: al annoying is it to throw your water bottle and all your liquids every time you to security at the airport. one company in ohio is about to change all that because even when they say it's not it's always about "money." ♪ so if you're like me and sick of ditching your water bottle for hitting airport security, good news is on the way. a new liquid scanner will make it possible for travelers to bring approved liquids test security and on the plains. being tested in london, have not come stateside, but this is a
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great threat think we can all get behind. with me now, one of the creators of this new liquid scanner, the research center's scientists west berkeley. thank you for coming on the show. this is rolling out in london as soon as january. tell me how it works. >> what we created was a scanner that could differentiate between the threat items that you would not want to security or benign adamsite your water or wine or liquor that you may be bought at the duty-free shop. our systtm is going to use this to technologies to analyze liquid. one is the rf paul's and the other is an ultrasonic scanner. recombine those two technologies to give us a pass or not pass results. melissa: it looks like -- where are looking at video along side of you. it looks like he's still have to take the liquids out of your bag and put them through individually. >> sure. so this version of the system, you have to measure up the
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bottles one of the time. can be combined with other systems to speed things along that maybe could be integrated into the air chair machine. melissa: any possibility that -- i mean, the brass ring that we are all after is tabled to be put with liquid you have it your bag, you know, through, you know, the extra machine without having to take it out or larger bottles which is what it looks like. is that a technology at can be combined with what your mission is doing? >> absolutely, and in some of the airports in europe that is exactly what they're doing. there are some extra machines now available that can scan fur liquid explosives, most of those of their relatively high false alarm rate. so those systems, you know, any liquid that would alarm on those systems within the past to a system like ours to avila resolved.
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melissa: right now if your to security and have a baby bottle or medication to was something like that, the ticket over the side and wave a wand or something over that detects whether there is something inside that is supposed to be there. i was what you're doing different from that? >> our system is much more comprehensive than that. it can scan liquids in any container type. you leave them in the container. do not have to open anything, but anything down into the liquid. we can scan bottles that are plastic or glass, metal containers, and then any type of liquid, you know, that might be in there, i really thick liquid like honey or it can be, you know, just water or something of that nature. melissa: i understand you're in talks to bring technology like this to the u.s. is that tsa looking at it? where do we stand? i am ready. >> we are, too. we are working with tsa, both -- so there are two organizations
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that can approve the question is for use in airports. one is in the european union, and the other is tsa. they have, you know, somewhht different processes for giving certified and well we have been certified, we are working closely with the tsa and up to be certified in the near future. melissa: is there a lot of competition? >> there are other companies out there. most of them are european-based. really company that is -- that as the system was designed and engineered, and manufactured in the united states. there is competition, but our system, we believe, is far more versatile than those other systems. we can do, as i said to all of the container types, some of the other systems are limited to this type of container that they can do. so our's is far more versus tile you know, it gives great results.
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in the airport trowels we have done -- everyone has been very pleased. melissa: what does a machine like this costs to mecca was looking in a recent study. so many people would fly more if it was not such an incredible hassle. a 2010 study said among average fliers they said they would take three more flights per year if the household was decreased. for business travelers and other studies, led to pay up to $70 to reduce the travel time by one hour at the airport. and because ostensibly there could be some sort of surcharge. would it cost to give machines like this that it's so that weakest opinion acquitted? >> well, each airport in each system is a little different, but we are always competitively priced with a competition most of these airports are extremely cost conscious and based apollo
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real putting up their we're being selected in a large number of airports. melissa: can you tell us what to expect for the testing phase? no. >> we don't really want to. melissa: thank you so much. dressed in technology. >> in queue for having me. wrist consultant. >> it is pricey. you know, to be fair, it is in the testing phase. i don't think they necessarily know. it is an extra cost. was it worth to us. plus, we love it when you get to the other side you have to buy another bottle of water because you just read your first one. i don't know of the profit
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incentive is there. the setting that aside. >> principally it is personal in terms of the aesthetics of the bottles. opaque versus transparent and so forth. my concern is one based on content. he on the internet there was literally dozens of different variations rekeyed readily available house over commercial items like higher your broadside and tank. melissa: that makes me feel like all of this is meaningless. it makes a deal like the security measures we get through the airport undesigned to make us feel like something is going on. much of what they're doing is preventing to dissuade the ten or 12 minutes until the flight
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attendants bring you all water. measured to wait ten of 15 minutes. melissa: it is the lines. kucinich before it is about people not flying as much as they would. he looked at the lost money out wonder if it is worth it. we allow to turn our ipads on and all that stuff. ttey just changed the rules. you can get on to my kids can play the entire time, you can do e-mail, and it makes you feel as if the safety regulation, why was it not sick before but it is safe now? wonder how much of this step is effective in a much of it is overkill and they're appealing it back now as a result of travelers not traveling. >> this may shock you, but i
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have an opinion on that as well. sticking with the fluids. my issue is this. these mad bombers, very creative , the committed. this is what they do 247. it is aiden 68 hour week. i would not want on a cost-benefit analysis a for the benefit of saving time of line and green fluid on and so forth, if just one man bomber gets through with a hydrogen peroxide take some not matter which is brewed at the westin has not been programmed with to make just is not at that stage yet. cutting edge recipes that it is being developed. melissa: thank you. all right. speaking of flying to my "money" has been flying around the world. first to china. shoppers went crazy during the country's anti valentine's day holiday. levitt. today was seen those they. being alone rather than celebrating your love.
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like all holidays has become as an excuse to shop until you drop . now it is the single biggest on-line shopping day anywhere in the world. can you believe that? transacted sales. a tiny fraction. over to spain, blackstone, using the expertise to replicate its successful rental and by there. so far the world's largest private equity firm has brought 18 apartment buildings from the city of madrid for $1,703,000,000. blackstem xecutive says building a business from scratch without a single employee in buying something like what hundred 50 million in loans requires a learning process. i would say so. adding to the gaza strip, marine forces foiled an attempt by residence to smuggle across
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egypt in a fishing boat, and a car, boat, an example of the new length local smugglers will go to add that the egyptian army as you love more than 1,000 titles. this bogglers dismantled a hyundai's sonata and sailed toward gaza before being intercepted. it tried to jettison it away. it sounds like a well executed plan. up next, want to make a lot of money without stress. my staff is not changing carriers. no like this. did you enter your would it -- business. back with the four finalists. you want to know who will win? you're not sure who that is, to stay tuned. more "money" coming up. ♪
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and get my car. when i had in my hand yesterday morning. melissa: is in that would you feel like every day at work? who wants that kind of stress? not me. and we came across a list of high-paying jobs over low stress, knew it was a "money" stalker. not sure i buy the work environment. let's bring in our best free panel, radio talk-show host monica crowley, a psychologist and the "wall street journal" run a dagger. looking at this list, and we have been having fun with this in a commercial break. seems like they fall into three categories. math and science, computer is one terry anything academic, and the other one is anything with teeth. i mean, the dental hygienist, the orthodontist to mesa -- what did you think of this list? >> i get the dental hygienist in the orthodontist. because the orthodontist, it is
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a very specialized care. they don't have to deal with cavities. they send their patients suffer root canals and so on. they're just making nest on ccld-spirited intelligence to and i know several of them, there thing is camino what might want to become a dentist because i know of the responsibility of the malpractice costs that goes with it. i want to go ahead and spread a little water. >> i disagree with that. i think that being a dental hygienist is incredibly stressful. nobody wants. they know they will come scrapes on your teeth. everyone ac. why is this is free? not that i hit my ddd all agendas. actually a highly stressful act. you are transferring some of the stress. you can speak to this billransfe distress in dealing with the general public. >> i saw this and that there were all of these things listed up was like, aren't they most likely to commit suicide? it turns out, their third most likely to commit suicide. five times more likely than
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average because no one wants to get to the dentist. how is that stress free? >> you are working in such a confined space. in the case of an orthodontist and what you are with a bunch of crying kids to do not want to be there that no one braces, whenever it is. >> what they may be looking at is the whole idea of liability. you don't have much liability as a dental hygienist for the honest. some of these other things you pay a dear price of the do something wrong. melissa: the stock of some of the other things. economists, a lot teacher of any type, start, mathematician, although stress high-paying jobs . an economist, 91,000 on average. you never have to be right. is like predicting the weather. you could have 20-20 hindsight and the canary the mayor and the people what they should have done. revise everything they say. >> a lot of these professions, listen, a lot of them are solitary. a lot of them are professors doing research, not dealing with
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the general public. >> self-contained. >> of they are sort of a loan, mathematicians, although i find that very stressful. so i. melissa: not be good. >> but if you're working alone, although being isolated can be stressful. melissa: suicide in. >> but i think if you eliminate the general public and all the stresses the go along with that you might -- melissa: be an astronomer for $96,000 on average, a petition for 100,000. not a bad career.@ i was terrible at man appeared however, i think it is all the more reason to encourage people to go into math and science with their kids. >> that is right. always opportunity. >> less fear, and if you have less fear it is less stressful. we're all afraid of math and science is and so on. the one that really worries me at is the computer and information systems manager. now, evidently there are not talking to the folks who put together -- and i am for it, but
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there were not talking to the folks who put together the obamacare website. melissa: my concern is that some of these mainstream low stress that they are accidentally high stress depending upon what to do with it. there was system, if you're managing a computer informations systems manager by is and it constantly going down and everyone always various? that does not seem most dressed. >> fix my computer. need immediately. at this mad this is the most important thing in all company. >> with a system that you put in does not work. >> it depends on a you work for, your direct manager is, what company your income what type of industry. can be much more stressful. really depends. >> also interesting that stress can be in the eye of the beholder. i like a bat as that stressful thing, but a mathematician might think it is the most therapeutic thing possible. melissa: that is true. and the reason why we are talking about this is these are low stress jobs that pay really
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well. i was surprised. we all paid a fortune for our braces, but at the same time is said that with health insurance in this and that all the doctors are getting squeezed. was surprised that an orthodontist average general salary is $186,000. if it is really a stress-free job, that is pretty good. a lot teacher. it is a professor. i don't know why they voted like that. $100,000, on average, although you're paying back loans. >> making a hundred thousand dollars an hour, working. i'm sorry. a freudian slip. that is what i am paying my divorce attorney. but the point being that they are in the university, making his money. not out there practicing law. you're looking at is the balance, making pretty good money, not great money, but you have a low stress. melissa: stresses in the eye of the ball there. and that any job almost below stress if you de -- i don't know, if you are doing yoga at
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your desk, taking a deep breath, you are someone who is always letting things roll off your back. serious. never stressed. never rude to people in the building. the rest of us are snapping. it is a facade? >> you coulter out. >> i have had a really stressful day. but i do think it is how you manage it. karzai agree. >> you cannot control what is coming at you, your job or anything else. >> that's right. >> some people react better or different ways. melissa: we have to go. good job. having a great rest of the day. are you ready for the super bowl commercial finalist? we told you about the chance for small businesses to win their own spot. back on who is going to play with the big boys. and apple has some big news today, but they're basically admitting. all the details with the author
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♪ melissa: what did dog treats, toys, eggs, and compos seven common? all finalists in the competition to win a 30, second commercial. what will be ed do for the lucky small business when it? an entrepreneur himself, moderating the competition and joins us now. a key for coming back with the finalists. i don't even want to touch that. what does this company -- >> this is called terry poop. the tubes, i proved my plants.
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three guys, all related to my two out of work. over a couple of beers they said, what can we do? it took a byproduct of the cows and made other less fertilizer. melissa: so is it order list? >> i don't know how they do it, but i swear it is odorless. melissa: trying to sell an online? >> selling it in stores. obviously they want to get the commercial because i'm sure home depot in a server and everyone will carry there price. melissa: to pick them just because it is so funny to say what they are? >> 8,000 employees into a devoted. the commercial for prove during the super bowl. >> from what i hear drama going as well as they have before. >> give me one more. >> this is a company called locally laid, they guy who got downsizing corporate america and decided to open a an egg farm word is all locally laid eggs.
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three mortgages on his own, he@ and his wife for doing it and the brother, working 100 hours a week and are at max capacity. melissa: a free range healthy eggs. as the big sale. >> lower in fat. melissa: and the folks tell we have to give these guys ago. >> i mean, you know, employees voted a notice of to america. we have the four finalists in america gets to vote. melissa: tell me about the dougie trees. i don't have a dog, but i am fascinated. >> a couple, dating, living together, the boyfriend was brewing beer at home. melissa: wait, brewing beer at home? >> i have never done it. you know, it's that thing, i guess. melissa: in the bathtub. >> says. make it at home. all of this spend barley. the dog loved it. melissa: was the dog drunk all the time? >> i guess there is no alcohol
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in the spent barley. they're actually a double by humans because it is all natural. melissa: i will let you try that >> a great company. i went and visited their home. the workout of the house. she quit her job, life savings on the line, on this. melissa: is he still brewing beer in the tub? >> they're going to a local brewery, and the brewery is giving it to them. melissa: not for long. i think february will say they want a little cut of it to be tell me about this. >> this is a young lady, getting her engineering degree. she said, want to create a game that helps young girls giving courage to go into engineering. all the toys are dolls and baking. this is a game that will help propel grows into the future of engineering. melissa: i can see how they would all make good ads. something funny about all of
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them. they are small businesses, so you have to wonder about the exposure of that area super bowl commercial. can they really handle the volume that might come in as a result? @% and that is the great thing. brad smith has committed to seeing them succeed. we will put a team together tell guide them to make sure that they can really take advantage of the suburbs into the. melissa: we cannot wait to see who wins in with the head is like. thank you for showing us. a want to get some great commercial concept. he is bringing his expertise to bear on this one. what did you think? would jump out at you? what that is burning in your brain and a? >> i love all of them. the one of the organic dark trees cut talk about a first world problem. my dog server place to get that snack is the cat's litter box. it. melissa: at think you're confusing two of the items there. the barley is like to spend
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barley from the year. the poop-related item was a fertilizer. >> low, i love that. i just love this idea of selling dog treats made out of barlee made from a year. i can see a great ad where we show a bunch of dogs walking around and having these great snacks. melissa: that will be good. what else jumped out as you. >> the whole litter box problem. i love that one. i think you could do great stuff with that. this one you can really hit the3 are strings of americans because we love to see the travails of farmers be due to a day in the life and show our it is, getting a break of dawn, milking cows, backbreaking work. we have reduced one of the problems. you can come to the farmer, take a ) of his nose becauseewe have
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odor-free fertilizer. i love that. melissa: that is great. >> when i heard locally later was thinking of businesses in my office that have nothing to do with chickens are eggs or breakfast. exactly. but basically what you're doing here is running a spot for chickens. all these chickens in this great environment laying in the sun. working in the tourism industry, take some of that footage and replace the people on the beach is the chickens and have a lot of fun with that. melissa: i love your ads, all fantastic. i assure there will steal them. you say that this is not necessarily a home run for these companies. what was worried about. they're on a national stage. it could backfire. >> of course. let's be honest. they're doing this because it is good for into it. the message it puts out there is that we care about small-business is, make a difference is small businesses,
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can help you grow your business. but think about these businesses . the advertising legend. what he said was, nothing can hurt bad product faster than good advertising. i'm not suggesting these products are bad, but out the they have the distribution and production capacity? will they do with the as? would they be better taking the money and putting it for research, but in the money on facebook and non google plus and the faces to the place where people confine them. it seems to me that even though they love it. c'mon, let's face it, and would not want to be on the super bowl. if you're spending my money during the most efficient and effective by. melissa: anyway, it will be very interesting to watch. those were great ads. thank you. melissa: have you heard the
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rumors about apple and its next big thing? my first thought was, that is so on apple. wait until you hear. inmate "money" today? maybe the news saying should be heard days. keep watching to find that to it is. piles of "money" coming up. ♪ the most free research reports, customizable chas, powerful screening tools, and guarante 1-sond trades. and at the center of it all is a surprisingly low price -- just $7.95 in fact, fidely gives you lower trade commissions than schwab, td ameritrade, and etrade. i'm monica santiago of fidelity investments, and low fees and commissions are another reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. now get 200 freerades when you open an account.
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already made the announcement. >> i get it. first of all, we know now that they're doing this just because there have been reports. these reports are nine about 99 times out of 100. furthermore, apple is never first to anything. a reminder, there were not first to the portable music player, not first to a smart phone. as a matter of fact and they have been late consistently, lake and better. melissa: how promising is a curve by phone? i don't know why i made my phone to be curved. there must be a reason. >> you give more real estate and a smaller device. a bigger phone and a smaller form. being able to hold the phone in your hand. it is kind of hard to do as you get up to five and 6 inches. and we're talking about phones on that scale and size. td the curse of that it fits in your hand and you get a big screen. melissa: a great point, although
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it is rumored to be still smaller. the funds would be the benevolences. so larger than the current, but smaller than samsung's. >> apple has been fairly public about not liking the very large size screens. the funny thing is that apple is adamantly against something right up until the minute that it is for something. so they said there were not going to make a bigger one than they did. they said they would not make a bigger ipad command they did. i see it likely that they do go up. but when they're ready, when they think they have something that will be better than the competition. melissa: what is the bigger message? we keep hearing this story. we thought it was crazy. never seems like everyone is getting in on the game. is it about the bendable screen, plastic verses glass? >> it is about having the
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trendiest thing. right now it is trendy because we don't have anyone setting the bar. everyone is jumping at technology. apple to apple was rumored to do a smart watch. then of course at the end of the day without steve jobs we don't really have a market leader in terms of direction. we are getting jumping side to side and up and down and even from apple not a lot of consistency. at least with regard to the leaks and announcements. i don't know. we once again kind of need somebody to show this market direction. melissa: go ahead. >> i will say, yes, sure. i agree in the sense. i disagree in this is that we cannot go to town with every legal roomer. apple tries things out, they do prototypes. they have done less good at keeping secrets.
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now we get some of these leaks. not necessarily. i would point out the most interesting thing to me has been the increased use of sensors. that is extremely interesting. we can already see that they're moving in the direction of more sensors. i believe this is where they're going and believe that it will be very interesting to have more sensors on more facets. melissa: what does that mean for the consumer? that it can tell the difference between how hard you're pressing the surface? >> exactly. so when you think about the possibilities, they're using in now for basic stuff like security, fingerprint authentication. what if you can train your telephone, press down this much for one thing, harder for another, and press down really hard when you want a siren to go off saying, leave me alone. the making of the details, but this is pretty powerful. melissa: the pretty interesting. you're fantastic.
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thank you. >> thank you. melissa: you can i get away from the fact that real estate is getting hotter and hotter. this blew me away. high-end home listings of 315%. it is time for another edition of flip this. don't go away. at the end of the day it is all about real estate money. ♪ [ male announcer ] how can power consumption in china, impact wool exports from new zealand, textilpruction in spain, and the use of medical technologin the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 70% of our mutual funds beat their0-year lipper average t. rowe price. inst with confidence. with investment information, risks, fe and expenses o read and consider carefully before investing. with investment information, risks, fe and expenses sometimes they just drop in. always obvious.
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♪ melissa: flips this and make some money. high-end home clips are up a whopping 350% from last year. get in and get out. we have a person to tell you exactly how to do it. a guy who literally wrote the book on this. author of find it, fix it, flip it. the key for guarding tess. pretty blown away by these statistics. and you could the category of properties worth between two and $5 million is that just because no one was doing it last year?
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or is it really accelerating? >> it is really accelerating. a lot of reasons for that. most of that, three-quarters of all of the flipping in that category, from two to 5 million on up and there in five metropolitan areas. what is going on in those markets? we are seeing a huge price increase. a very hot time to buy. according to etruria trends was angeles alone has gone up 22 and a half percent in home sales price is in one year. so right there just buying a property and all the you will make money. it. melissa: buying and holding it to make sounds like the city's are in california. there is a bubble in california again. >> here is the difference. in those cities you have very stable markets because they're is a limited supply.
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not a lot of new construction going on in downtown manhattan or in los angeles. there are no lots. of people are doing are buying older homes, bringing them into a study for century and those people weren't -- new construction, new homes and a willing to pay for it. there has been a lot of international money coming into those areas. melissa: a big component. even in the category of one to $2 million, flipping there is up 42% as well. >> again, the supply and demand is forcing pricing gap. people going in, buying existing homes, mainly in areas where there is not a lot of room for new construction. selling them at a premium. melissa: is someone is watching in the want to get involved, what is a mistake? here are trying to plug something cheap but that is
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over? >> i would say it is not over, but you have to be very careful because we're all seeing the statistics. going down about 13%. what's happening in those markets, we have run out of the drop dead great distressed property deals. we have run out of the foreclosures. the short sales that were a slam-dunk for flipping. now a little bit harder to find and also in those price ranges interest rates are going to start creeping up. it ill be harder for people to get mortgages who were buying those houses. you have to be a lot more careful and you have to make sure that you're getting asset a good deal, not over capitalizing command being able to sell it for a price that someone can buy . melissa: thank you so much. good stuff. just in time for thanksgiving, one innovative farmers. turkey's taste better. might involve giving them a little bit drunk.
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it is a busy deerfield spare change. do they look happy to you? you can never have too much "money." ♪ as a business owner, i'm constantly putting out fires. so i deserve a sml business credit card with amazing rewards. with the spark cascard from capital one, i get 2% ch back on ery purchase, every day. i break my back around here. finally soone's cognizing me with unlimited rewards meetings start at 11, cindy. [ male announcer get the spark business card from capital one. chse 2% cash back or double miles on ery purchase, every d. what's in your wallet? i need your timesheets, larry! see who does good work and compare costs. it doesn't usually work that way with health care.
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♪ melissa: it is time for a little fun with "spare change." move over, beer lovers. this thanksgiving there is some competition in town. a farmer is now feeding is turkey's pier. that is right. he says some as cold brew enhances the birds, making them better, juicier, more flavorful. here to chew it over in a fox business exclusive is the turkey farmer that swears by the method , jumper ready. how did you come up with this idea?
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>> well, i tell you, and third grade i was not thinking of doing this. we were rebuilding in '93. at the end of the day one of my workers but beard down by the fence area. one of the birds whatever, not to can overcome and started drinking. as when it started. melissa: did he look really happy to my taste ... later? added his side that this was the path you wanted to continue down? >> well, thinking about affects the rest of us, help. i was raised on birds in the beginning back in the 80's. to have something to do with my children at the time and a little hobby. just put to into together. the bird has a short life. francis@foxbusiness.com jolly. and did some investigating. trial and error. a strict diet. melissa: trial and error, what was the error? what went wrong? >> we lost a few, and animal
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rights group called and everything else, but we had everything all cleared up now. melissa: while. going to be mad at me for laughing. i definittly was not laughing. the university of new hampshire says the beer is not actually make a difference in the flavor of the bird. we have not tried it yet. do you think it makes a difference? >> all up and down. they're fit for kings and queens. melissa: how does it change the cost structure? is it instead of something? you giving it to them as a tree once a week? how does it change their regiment along the way? >> like the rest of us, too much too soon, it can be detrimental. in a strict diet. the latter part of their life they enjoy it. i put it up there. they drink it right up. they come right to it. melissa: i bet.
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i hope to you not let them operate any heavy machinery. attractors for them. i am afraid -- i hope they do not topple over. and sandra totally sold out for the year. your turkeys are gone. do you have plans to expand and do more? are you taking orders for next year? >> we will see how it goes. m been doing for so long. all over the net and what have you. you know, one line i have for radio stations, whatever, well, we are at the body of the night. guys down at the end one to the rum and coke. they drink beer. he will take the orders for next year. melissa: looking at turkey's right now that i understand now live right next to you on the set. bowl of beer in front of them. they're not taking the beer. are they already drunk? have they had their fill? >> they did before they -- a fully loaded them up.
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they had their ration. they are a little looking around wrestling her father's, making herself pretty for you. tom here, he is doing all right. melissa: all right. thank you. maybe they know when the weather finally, i have my limit today. and on a more. thank you so much. >> there you go. melissa: up next, you may "money" today beeides those turkeys. he made many millions, but he is still fitted into 140 characters the answer right after this. you can never empty many tractor keys. ♪ welcome back. how is evything? here's nothing like being your own boss! and my customers are really liking your flat rate shipping. fedex one rate. really makes my life easier. maybe a promotion is in order. good news. i got a new title.
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you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pieaker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person we you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪ >> wall street or main street hater cruz who made money tonight. everybody who bought trader -- twitter covering it surged more than $0.74 on
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the debut but the stock has been under pressure. analysts are upbeat about the microbe's lobbying company outlook. the foundee owns more than 22 million shares he made over $27 million. also amazon won a legal disputes against ibm with the cia amazon will now host of private cloud inside the data center. earlier this year they had opposed the contract in the end amazon one despite the $54 million less. l.a. public schools began at and ipad program to help students to played 30 games and with homework but after this to be the first trip to 5,000 they discovered they
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were hacking the security features with twitter and u2 and facebook and now they are killing the program entirely. i hope you made money. the willis report is next 87 to nights on the willis report. the question of the obamacare website will be fixed as promised. but the real problems will just begin. airlines using in-flight wife died to get your information. where do they draw the line? are you ready for the holiday shopping season? don't buy another thing until you see our users guide. tonight. the "willis report."
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