tv Cavuto FOX Business December 31, 2013 8:00pm-9:01pm EST
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watch us grow. my name is sydni and i'm your dividend. for being with us. we will see you tomorrow. ♪ ♪ neilhe >> the election countdown is on and people are fed up. welcome, everyone, i am neil cavuto. a big election year coming up. voters are angry with both sides and the third party is getting ready to give them a piece of their mind. so what you think of this? >> well, it's good reason. >> yes, it is crazy. i don't think anyone fully
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identifies with either party and both have taken the position that they have to be pure. neil: it's an ideological extremes. exactly. and i think that that means that i would love to see this, whatever it may be, that really says that parties and people don't have to be perfect. let's just go out there to resolve the problems the one you haven't been actively involved with the political classes. so why not? >> well, if the time. it's not so much money but time. there has to be something you're willing to commit all your time to. >> but if you're frustrated enough. >> yes, unfortunately about 10,000 other things going on. and i've been support others who say they are going to take the first step. and some other folks have
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approached me and i'm more than willing to listen. and this includes one went to commit resources and time doing what you think about someone who is targgted by the irs. >> i don't look at these things, not purely about this going through. it's not a scandal. side that and it goes to the purity. >> when you have 10,000 instances come you can call the pattern when it's not a pattern. i'm not trying to dismiss what anyone is doing on either side.
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more importantly, you know, if you go out and accomplish things, it still doesn't matter. we're going out there and congress is doing things, all of those things become something that falls to the wayside. when everyone has to be so pure with everything that they are doing, they like to victimize themselves because it helps them confirm their purity. look at me, i have been picked on. >> you are a big supporter and you have expressed restraint. and so what did you mean? >> he is smart enough to understand what is doing and to understand what he wants to avoid. and i generally support what he has done in a big way. and i think we live in an area where there is so much technological opportunity and
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advances. neil: should you have been on top of that? is that too much for it asking? [laughter] the one you are mr. internet star. now there are signs of abuses. >> these is. >> i don't see it as that big of a deal. my business tour has to compete and i still have to do things. if you think that my mailbox is
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protected, they're just not as much privacy as people like to expect. particularly in an area where i would rather be protected beyond the latest with instagram, the nasdaq, so many of us come "the washington post", "new york times", amazon. again and again. >> it may well be. but it is still under attack.
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neil: america loves a comeck and mike tyson is trying to make a big one. not in the rain, but outside of pl neil: mike tyson outside of the ring. he explained to me how he was going to do it. >> i was very lucky. and this includes the right place at the right time and i'm looking at people interested in my life and then you always say
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the one you have started developing a fiery attitude. he started laughing at yourself. i think you are very comfortable in that. because you didn't take yourself too seriously. >> yes, i had to take myself extremely seriously as a fighter and you know, that time right before a fight when you're standing toe to toe, you have a serious look. and you would scare people right there. we had all sorts of battles to fight. >> yes, i didn't notice until about a week ago. and i did know know what the words were and i didn't know what it meant.
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i was angry and i had a lot of resentment working on and i found out late. >> the one hundreds of millions of dollars and how much is left now? >> i'm so broke and ugly that it's not even funny. [laughter] >> no, you're not. >> i am broke. i'm not broke like that, but i am broke. i can't buy a plane or bow like i used to. neil: does it kill you? when you look at all this? >> are you a millionaire? >> i don't think so. >> on the million or that i pay my bills, no, i'm not. >> they are the only ones that
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will work for me. [laughter] >> you would never do the george foreman thing, you've had enough stun. >> if i was at that come he would be able to interview me. >> what you think would be going on? >> i wish that i could still do that. i wish i could still fight on 50 years old. and that is an inside job and that's something that i wish that i could do and i would do it at the drop of a dime. >> i think that my demeanor shows that they have no reason to be afraid of me now.
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and i don't want anyone still scary about me. neil: could you do me a favor and to speed up bill o'reilly? [laughter] >> that was bad of me to offer. >> my family -- they were so part of this that they wouldn't even let me do that. and if i put on bill o'reilly, they leave the room. neil: mike tyson, it is such a pleasure. we thank you so much. it is amazing watching you. neil: without espn. fox sports looking to become number one. looking and looking to regis philbin to take them there. he is coming up next. with the spark cascard from capital one,
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neil: regis philbin, sports guru? it is true. espn is getting rattled because regis is rumbling. right now he is the star of fox sports one. and here is the latest plan to take over the universe meant i have always loved sports and there were times in my career over the years when i had a little sports show here or there. and i enjoyed it very much. we would always talk about sports and my cohost -- they wouldn't always listen to me. [laughter] neil: you joke about yourself
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i'm hoping it can be done. and you know, instead of athletes, we have to set some entertainers in there as well. i ave a guy coming up next wednesday on the show who played defensive back and looking and we are having a pretty good football situation. and all of a sudden on my schedule, it's the first game that we played. i thought, we have to get bill cosby on the show's. neil: i think that was part of the strategy. and you have eight pretty impressive role in all of that.
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so how do you think this is going to go and it sounds so similar but what fox news experienced. espn rules the roost, does it bother you? you just move on? with the same? >> no, i haven't heard that. people are interested in seeing how we are going to approach it. what we are going offer is a mix of sports and everything else. neil: but it's all about the programming and you had the big draws with the connections already and there's a lot you can do with that. but was that by design? espn, the sports and events define it. it's about personality? >> i really didn't expect to be
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working with five other people, but they have some interesting people in there. and they have the denver broncos, and it's just terrific, neil: anyone you think will be a problem? >> no, not at all. i know one guy that the former tennis pro and they flew in a gallup name georgie thompson from england who is into soccer. do you know much about soccer? >> not really. neil: it's interesting. it's big with the kids wanted young and you're absolutely right. they are playing soccer and everywhere you go they are playing soccer. and so the emphasis is on soccer and we talk about it every day.
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neil: one thing that i've always been impressed of your career is that you are a survivor, but you are a nice guy as well. and usually people who survived, they usually have an evil quality to them. [laughter] >> and you have done it again. and he seemed to do what you do and you love it. >> thank you very much. neil: you have logged more hours than anyone in tv. >> nope, i didn't write that and they check it carefully. but it did become that much and i never thought in a million years and nothing. i would look at television and it's like, what can i do? i don't have that big
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broadcasting voice and i had no talent. so i left and i was in my room and i used to hang around with two older greens and there are two tough guys. and they were right on the battlefield. but anyway, he said, what you want to do with your life now that you are leaving and i said, well, i would like to be on television. but i don't really have any common and we have great actors and he got right up in my face and he said, don't you know you can have anything you want to do anything you want in this life? and i said that i would like you
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>> added paul lai interviewsy with bill gates of the one that is most meaningful and consequential he worries a lot about the good we do ash the country from washingtonntr that does nothing at all for our country. bill gates has some choice words for debt forces more foreign-aid. >>of first of many was not
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well drafted and had goals to keep friends of the cold war. it sending money their side versus our side now it is very metric driven. katy take cheaper vaccines and save lives and by saving those wise to avoid the upo population grows and instability that lead toa shoot a huge national security issues like nigeriaies , yemen, if we triplewi population we will have a huge cost and instability. the humanitarian and a national security argument pointed to one of the more measured parts of the entire budget. neil: do would draw a line i know you met with secretaryen
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of state john kerry but we don't know if that's the case say and what use itd will go to?? >> once you get to countries in that are better off. but how do they use their relationship? with the previous regime that is a counter reaction? but what we are focused on and what we have chosen to take the more money i have and what born buffett ist ha given work in the same area of aids, malaria cover vaccines, a part of that is delivery we say it is so wonderful to take our own money to join in on polio
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eradication, overtime with malaria to be a partner with the u.s. government that i get to see on a regular basis. neil: your money appears to be impractical and and your foundation and i am sure no small measure because of you can't malinda but the u.s.u track record is icy and globally efforts after disasters, mccall said to question like if the money gets to use the recipients i am sure you are familiar tople billion raised by governments and private enterprise if i was recentlya there but unless imus something it was disastrousi gripe with poverty and famine and abuse. that is what worries me you
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write the number of children that die every year those living in extreme poverty cut in half. i do see examples that is not the case. >> you should have gone to haiti before the earthquake. >> i did. >> it was a very tough place before the earthquake. of lots of that did not get spent to restore things back to that situation.n. so there's you just make up for a huge setback.t so you choose to have the population with the growth there the numbers could not be clear. my money that goes to aids is the same pot as the u.s.
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money. my money that goes to the of foundation for taxation -- vaccination is in the samer th pot under the bush to administration it went from us very tinyg a part to now over half for those neglected diseases and that half death is that we haveve e expertise that i will vouch for completely because we look at the numbers all the time. neil: i think very smart folks of they wanted to give any money to a charitable effort would give it to you and your foundation because you do get bang for the buck and warren buffett a fan of higher taxes in the and government doing and spending more but when he had his druthers he chose to commit what ever he has before and after to the
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foundation and not the u.s.w government. [laughter] that tells you we have the private sector that ist the biggest and phenomenalno with anything it could do with the diseases of the rich and is a fantastic.we some things like education or justice h where a government comes and is only a part but it tends to be more innovative more delivery program so there is a complementary role soom we take our expertise for whatn we know and to the common view. i am the biggest fee and because fa is like a venture capital of spendinge sometimes you take on things like having teachers have
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more feedback but those programs may or may not succeed.i i've of all three sectors in its approprrate role and i is am trying to make sure his money is well spent. that is my full-time job. neil: i just know themeon advocate trying to get the government to do mored when he had his druthers for the government or for hugh he chose you instead death. >> that's true. we need to find and close the gap we need to figure how to close the gap because it is fund with a good impact but each sector you
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need to wake up to do bettery every day how you balance the budget is as challenging and everybody has opinionsut about that. neil: if i can go back to philanthropy and whether or not fair of our worries about the few charitableay foundations that whether we get the impact the rich pays more taxes do you worry about that? >> philanthropy is very important and the united states is unique it is not just the richest to give it is even more impressive for those that are not rich are so ungenerous.
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looking state by state utah do is 5% of did, where it is to present elsewhere.re it is a broad movement. certainly there could be some cutbacks but you don't want to run tax rates up with the balance said you have to pay for them at some point.y neil: you thinko we have that balance now?h >> no. we are running a higherning deficit. there is an important argument how do you phase it
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in fat balance and think of that as a stimulus to the economy. the big thing is the of medical cost it is to not target is the government peyser the system pays but it is good the governmentrnme projects those increases. are there things that coulds be dead forth more innovation and cost production?e we have not seen enough thinking and what i see about medical health stuffor in the four countries is a justice of ver the -- suggested it is not zero some citizens verses government. neil: do you envisiongove to go back to management with dayda to day rolls or is the foundation enoughti to keep
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you going the rest of your life? >> i certainly message being full time. i get to spend 50 percent of my time but my full-time commitmentfu is to the foundation with polio eradicated and then we can focus on malaria, tuberculosis, legge tt said childhood death rate down from 7 billion may be down at 3 million over 15 years. neil: i think your friend has said they want to give it all way. with your three children had you you told them that is your goal think if they look for a huge inheritance it isn't a coming?t co >> we have talkedmi about the vast majority will go to the foundation. with warren buffett all of
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his is spent with said 10s an years after his death but they are to spend it down his in his children but ours is that up after we are gone and our foundation will spend the money within 20 years our kids are excited. klay will get a great college education and some support so they are very .ucky neil: but do any of them have to worry? >> not at all. not gigantic levels hundreds of millions or billions of dollars it is not good forac the kid or society. neil: suzanne somers is here to offer me fitness advice? i will teach her a thing about working out.
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>> argue fabian's us a neil cavuto? >> he is not have the. he is not that big of ao deal. >> he looks good.. >> what do you mean? i have been hitting the gym and lifting weights just waiting for suzanne somers and she joins me not toom long ago to say she had ideas death to get kids healthy and in shapede. you don't have to hitsome someone over the head. >> fitness centers are great to have kids play. they don't go out to play any more.fu obesityl i wrote to a booker i think i have theb answer isd not how much we eat but eating chemicals of liver has no way to process that
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so is the body's wisdom toat keep it away from thes chemicals and the more chemicals you take some more fat me a that you store. neil: you are 66 years old. >> 67 next week.rs neil: you look great. >> notyo to be younger than my age.e [laughter] but sometimes it is not just it' what you eat but it is the hormones could you inject yourself? >> first of all, women are accelerating in beijingagin because of thaw toxins and stress. we are more complex. chemically.yo to live with of woman to know what i mean?
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neil: i would never say that [laughter] >> says she is hot and cannot sleep and why can i not hold in my stomach. so you would never quite inferior fuel into your car c but when it goes below then normal moles you would put in the oil or you run it into the aground when we decline with hormones.ho neil: you getrm into that a and you don't blame them but how do people say i needl hormones? >> doctors you do this, theyo are real doctors by the way but they realize the limitations of standard of care at forever health.comlth
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you can go to that web site they route you for the qualified doctor near euroct they give that a prerequisite for blood testhe. neil: there is no danger like frankenstein?no >> i have been doing this i have had cancer. neil: you argue if you were aware you would not have gotten it. >> i don't think so. neil: you said that in your book unless you live. [laughter] >> i did not lie. [laughter] i don't think i would have gotten cancer if i knew then but i knew i a have estrogent dominance. like all the fox girls but the depletes of for just thrown first that is the
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anti-carcinogenic component of our whole model -- for model 70. when you don't have the cancer protector part you are left unprotected. was very low and did not know its. if women read this it would be like changingen -- life changing. >> what is the percentage? >> i own is. [laughter] when you are an entrepreneur you throw things against the wall and hope thoughtazi something sticks. neil: you look great. i am too young for this. is the name of the book. >> i always in my ear that you came in and it made me love you. neil: the new number people want is 780 and above now
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neil: and pd does not matter if your finances are not ugly. the new poll credit scored dating.com is much to people based on credit score you would never guess who's profile became. jonathan hoenig. fabulous crusader. tuba player. the perfect credit score is year. take a look. jonathan, . [laughter] it to make a huge difference if you value your credit you will not have a lot in
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common with someone who is careless with there's. how they treat their money tells you if they value contracts, long term, trustworthy. i have a score below that i will not date nothing to do with their parents i think it is a great idea. neil: i think you are purchasing a and you should feel free to open up.[la but is it a sign of our times that things aresign getting more than skin deep? >> tough times in the economy right now. this is better they of the sugar daddy web site. neil: you are right but ate ri least you can look for someone your own age. the economy is hurting and two incomes are better than one event it may be shallow
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but to in comes are better than one. neil: but it does say something that before we get serious we want everythingt but the bank statement. neil: essentially it is the same. >> not unreasonable weis decide what is important to luxor personality or money? neil: aicher up liking than. you could set the of music to a the to but. -- tuba. you want to pick your great on what is criticallyorta important.
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neil: that is the credit score. >> this is aboutm compatibility. you will not be happy long-term with someone who is on a fitness kick who is not compatible with you.s leisure or health we seek people out we are compatible .ith neil: not that comment withstanding. [laughter] >> i don't think this is about compatibility. neil: you based your future mate whether she has a goodit credit score because that says more about her they and kindness, the id decency? >> it does say a lot.pe people who respect money also respect themselves. neil: if you are in lovein with monday you are not in love with her.
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if you are more obsessed with assets obs then she will be a paid in the asset. >> look at donald trump's 1991 his credits for wasd. low. neil: you will all miss a diamond in the of groth youo moneygrubbers. >> i don't think this is necessarily about compatibility but things pop up including the sugar daddy web site. neil: what about somebody with us tonight -- nice smile? somebody who likes the scary movies?t very people have the right to choosec money or not and iknw think this shallow economy could affect their
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relationship. neil: i have to leaveo but we will have to stick around. the final hours we are witnessing it as we go. jonathan will lead to the show. good night. [ male announcer ] this store knows how to handle a saturday crowd. ♪ [ male announcer ] the parking lot helps by letting us know who's coming. the carts keep everyone on the right track. the power tools iroduce themselves. all the bits and bulbs keep themselves stocked. and the doors even handle t checkout so we can work on that thing that's stuck in the thing. [ female announcer ] toda, cisco is connecting the internet of everything. so everyone goes home happy.
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kennedy: the teams that we adore her and knowing no bonds. and the players and teams and owners and fans, when they cross the line. concussions and subsidizing stadiums, we are in it to win it. tonight, the topics that go through our heads. we are "the independents." it is time to playball. hello, i am kennedy. i have matt welch
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