tv The Willis Report FOX Business July 27, 2014 4:00am-5:01am EDT
4:00 am
everybody. >> "willis report coming up next. gerri: hello, everybody i'm gerri willis. today on the show, the battle between the billionaire and the beach. we'll take on the big court fight right now over what public property really means and who has a right to it. also today's business leaders share the secret of their success. it is our new segment, called, meet the boss. your users guide to saving money. we'll give you the best tech deals in town. "the willis report" where consumers are our business starts right now. gerri: okay, beginning tonight with a big thumbs up for one of america's big box retailers. our viewers know consumers come here first at "willis report. time and time again we take on companies that do things wrong.
4:01 am
not tonight. after an outbreak of listeria, costco took it upon itself to personally reach out to everyone of its members who had been impacted. it picked up the phone and called customers, even following up by mailing out hundreds of thousands letters. here with details, the chief knowledge officer at kantar retail, shopper insight and consulting company. brian, great to have you here. >> great to be here. gerri: great to say a company is doing something right. we always pick on them when they do something wrong, costco here, listeria in fruit. it took the unusual step. tell us what they did. >> i think you summarized it well at the outset. they did essentially what they always do during recall situation, because they're a membership club they know who bought where. gerri: you have to sign up. they know exactly who you are. >> they do and they use the date very, very responsibly. most of the time they use it for things like this, if there is a
4:02 am
problem or situation, they literally pick up the phone and call everyone could be impacted within 24, to 48 hours discovering it. gerri: that has to be expensive. >> we did quick back of the envelope math on it. average costco is 15,000 customers per day per building. add up and do the math, well over a million dollars in expense and 80 to 100,000 phone calls they had to make in order to clear the situation. gerri: that is unbelievable. i don't think i ever heard of a company doing this. in reality they have no obligation to do it. they have no legal obligation to do it, right? >> none whatsoever. they do all the standard stuff most retailers do in recall situation. they issue letter. hang it up. they go on tv, stuff like that. i think with costco you have very different enterprise. it's a membership club. gerri: we've seen retailers and vendors out there who don't even make a public statement. i mean you know. i want to show you reaction came from consumers on this. there were a lot of twitter foals talking about it.
4:03 am
here is one, thank you, costco for taking time to call me about recalled peaches i purchased. i understand it is not your fault they had cooties i really appreciate the head's up. we have bunch of other ones. there is one from kyle who says, thanks for the phone call about peach recall. too late though. one from ashley, interesting use of shopper data by costco to directly warn those affected by recall. how does this play out with customers? and do you think it resonates postively even though it is bad news? >> oh, absolutely. costco has done this for years, by the way. this isn't new and something they didn't do for this situation. they are reknowned amongst their members for proactive notification of recalls. and, i really do think that, you know you have to pay money to go to costco. you pay the membership fee. and don't have to pay money to go to target or walmart. they expect members do a little more and do brilliant job delivering it in situations like this. gerri: i was interested who made this decision? at what level? is it the ceo who decides?
4:04 am
is it a line manager somewhere? who makes the call that costs a million dollars. >> beautiful thing about costco, either one of those could make decision. i have never encountered a organization where the line employees think like owners of the company. in either situation either one would have done same thing. practically speaking costco has a process doing this. they follow it. that is the important thing. gerri: it is corporate culture. it boils down how people feel what they are supposed to be doing for the company and customer and witness you translate that through the whole organization it pays off. i will mention another story not so positive today. >> okay. gerri: we know about the target breach. and millions of american consumers had all data breached or potential for it right at christmastime. target told people to go to experion to get help. >> sure. gerri: experion is credit company, credit counselor. they rank people on basis of their credit. experion was then breached. so adding insult to injury here
4:05 am
what would have you advised companies to do? you're an analyst. you're a consultant. >> i think they're analogous but not similar situations in that, if the listeria on the peaches was consciously trying to breach costco, on a regular basis, way people try to breach credit card data with every credit card company around the world, it is a much tougher problem in some ways. >> that is true. >> other thing, obviously experion breach happened before target referred people there. experion manages so much confidential data they're constantly under attack. so i think you have to cut them tiniest bit of slack. that being said i think there are two things most important. number one it is foreseeable risk when you have credit card your data could be breached. need process for notifying people. if there is bad news, get it out there immediately. tell people what it is, be honest, fast, do something about it. gerri: kind of like costco did in this case. >> exactly. gerri: not like target did.
4:06 am
target did not get it out. >> i think there are really good things you could learn from costco how to handle stuff like that. gerri: appreciate your time. >> terrific. thank you very much for having me. much appreciated. gerri: from world of retail to the world of flying. one thing gets many consumers unease is flying. 2014 is quickly becoming year of airplane disaster with three separate crashes happening past week aloan of the we took to the cities, streets that is of new york city to find out if recent events make people nervous about flying. listen to this. >> i'm going to hawaii in november. nothing will stop me from going even the flight. >> i don't like to fly. i haven't liked to fly since i was 25 years old. i fly a lot. >> it is fine. at love air in the sky. >> considering every time we flow nothing significant happened. is so there a little bit of nerves there. >> it is pretty high up in the scale for us. >> i arrived at laguardia at 8:30 this morning. i was not nervous at you will.
4:07 am
gerri: people pretty sanguine, right? should we be nervous about taking to the skies? hear to weigh in john rose, chief operating officer of i-jet international. welcome, john, good to have you here. i will start by going over numbers that might make people nervous. we had 719 fatalities or missing persons this year so far. hey, only july, john. what should people take away from this? is this a big number. >> not really in perspective to previous years. it seems to be a little bit above average but it is not a extraordinary amount of fatalities. nature of fatalities and concentration of frequency in the last week making people very nervous. look at those numbers in context then. i. gerri: i mentioned the 719 number which is huge number for families of those people who lost their lives but if you take a look, go back only to 2010, you will see that more people died that year in plane disasters. john, put this in context for us
4:08 am
if you will. if eight million people are flying every single day, how fav are they? what is the proportion of planes that have serious problems? >> oh, it is extremely low. air travel is still the safest mode of transport tearings. and it is essential for the world's economies to conduct business globally. what companies and travelers have to look at other types of threat around their travel. such as what happens to disruptions in destinations such as israel not allowing flights in or certain carriers banning flights in and out of israel. that is creating disruptions and how do they turn to help for those situations are far more prevalent. flying on aircraft is still very safe. you want to do your research, not just the routes they're taking but if you're flying foreign carriers, that are small regional carriers such as some recent crashes we've seen in the last 4hours, you need to know a little bit more about the safety records of those airlines
4:09 am
because they're not the same as major flags. gerri: show people where to go for that information if you want to check out safety record of an airline of the maybe you're flying somebody new. airline ratings.com. airsafe.com. there are lots of places to go. one of the concerns, john, i know people have, what is the route this my pilot is going to take because that was the issue for the malaysian air flight shot down over the ukraine. looked like the pilot might have skirted a dangerous area or certainly was close to it. how can i find out where my pilot is flying? >> well there are several websites, such as flightaware or flight radar 24 that allow you to look what the scheduled routing is for your particular airline enroute. different airlines fly different routes of exact same destinations. so you have to take a look at that and then you can feel better about the routing of. of course.
4:10 am
routing rarely cause as situation what happened in the ukraine, where they are shut down in high altitude by military system. it wasn't rebels praying shoulder mounted weapons. this was not some local terrorist act that is extraordinarily rare. there are 41 conflict zones in the world. the global airlines fly over the conflict zones because almost entirely out of the question is there risk flying 33,000 and above over those conflict zones. what happened in the ukraine is extraordinary situation and should not be taken into account when people are worrying where they are traveling and what routes they're going but it helps with peace of mind to look at those flight routes and understand the airline you're on. gerri: i think that is absolutely right. great advice, john. thanks for coming on the show tonight. >> thanks for having me. gerri: now we want to know what you think. here is our question tonight. are you nervous about flying? log on to gerriwillis.com.
4:11 am
vote on right-hand side of the screen. i will though show results at the end of tonight's show. your voice is important to us. why during the show we want you to facebook me or tweet me@gerri willis fbn. at bottom of the hour i will read what you have t we want to know. we have a lot more to come this hour including our users guide to saving money on technology. next we bring you a new segment, "meet the boss." as we pull back the curtain, this time at good housekeeping magazine. stay with us. ♪
4:14 am
our veterans need you. there are more than 8 million enrollees in health care at the department of veterans affairs. veterans from previous generations and veterans from today's wars challenging medical conditions and more women returning than ever before are redefining how care is provided. serve those who served our nation. bring your medical and health care skills to va. america's heroes need you. visit vacareers.va.gov gerri: person in corner office is often a mystery even forepeople that use them. on "willis report he will meet the boss. what did they learn on the way up? what advice do they have for us now? our first guest is jane francisco. she is new editor-in-chief of good housekeeping magazine. here's what i wonder. so here you are in
4:15 am
new york city. we've got all the resources at your fingertips. you have a fashion department. you have a kitchen, beautiful kitchen all to yourself. it is really glamorous. it like "devil wears prada"? is that your world? >> i wouldn't say that. i mentioned that i love doing this job. part of what i love doing, when i get the opportunity to hear from people about reading something in the magazine that either changed their life, that is the most amazing or made them feel special or offed a problem for them, that is the most exciting part. gerri: what are some things that you read recently that would surprise your readers, that you brought out something for the magazine? >> these days so many ideas i find come from members my team. it is not just me reading everything. it is also each one of them bringing forward ideas. i feel like so much is, i talk a lot about the universal brain and how you absorb information, so you're reading newspaper or for me, sometimes i'm reading it
4:16 am
on my phone, on my may in. or you see something on the news. or you're going through pinterest and looking at images. and i think you start to absorb, in my miss, you start to absorb and see trend. without even conscious think thinking about it. one examples i was given, when, a cover of another magazine, perhaps a competitive magazine comes out and it has something on it that is something you aren't currently working on or actually sent to print, you think, was there a spy? was there someone there -- you know there was not. it is just that the people who are really focusing are picking up cues from awe these different places and it is sort of, part of the universal brain. gerri: will new good housekeeping under you, will it be more modern? >> i think modern is an interesting word, isn't it? gerri: so canadian of you to say it that way. >> well, of course we want to be
4:17 am
modern but i don't mean modern like hard edges. i think fresh at the moment. gerri: you would say to your 21-year-old self, don't do this or should have done more of that? >> i'm pretty sure the best thing i could do for my 21 year-old self would be not to tell me anything. gerri: what? >> because i started my career, i started as an entrepreneur and i started my own magazine when i was in my early 20s. and, i, it shouldn't have worked really. like, all advice would say don't go up that road. i did it anyway because i was naive. and i knocked on doorshat most people would take, no, no, you don't knock on the door. you start down here. i just sort of made the calls, started -- gerri: what was magazine called. >> it was called venue. and it was arts and entertainment, which was focus of interest for me at the time. and, through that process i ended up learning all different elements of the business.
4:18 am
gerri: so what keeps you up at night? >> one of the things i would say, i'm challenged with the is balance piece. i would say that usually, if i wake up in the night and thinking about something, it switches back and forth between home, family, and work. so, i think that is, for so many women, that is, is a big challenge. i think increasingly for everyone, the other piece i think keeps me up at night is actually my digital devices. because when i wake up. then i sort of feel compelled to write it down, type it in, et cetera, et cetera. and, you know, we tell people in pages of magazine not to do that, yet i do. gerri: some day you will leave good housekeeping presumably, for whatever reason. what will you want your legacy to the be? what would you want people to say that, jane, jane did that? >> i think what i believe is possible and i would like to see happen sooner rather than later,
4:19 am
i would like for someone who is 25 and someone who is 55 to finish reading the magazine and think, that was my favorite. to me i always talk about the whole idea of anticipation. i want to build anticipation. so i want people to feel like, i can't wait to crack it open. or i can't wait to get it on my independednt pad and look through it and feel that level of, oh, that was fun. that was indulgent. that was informative. that, you know, solved problems for me. gerri: jane says the women tell here the hard copy of magazine, the actual real magazine, is more relaxing than the online version. they feel like they're taking a break compared to reading good housekeeping on mobile device. now we want you to show in our show, want to fix your finances? "the willis report"'s money coach will help you live on air. each week a financial expert will answer your money questions. just visit my website at gerriwillis.com and email me.
4:20 am
4:23 am
gerri: tonight we wrap up your week-long special users guide to save you money from budget busters to avoid at the clothing store to secret savings tips at your local supermarket. catch all these great cost cutting segments on my website, gerriwillis.com. they're all there for you to watch. we're helping you save money on your favorite gadgets with todd hazelton. he is executive director at tech know buffalo. it's a site helping you get most
4:24 am
out of your technology. that is exactly what we need tonight, todd. mom and dad, school is coming up. they will buy a bunch of technology. other folks buy technology all the time too. do i have to get the iphone 6. >> no. gerri: do you have to have the latest and greatest. >> one of my biggest point, buy out of date especially with apple products because apple is so great, they will release io 8 in september they are great pushing to old devices. go for 4-s free on contract. gerri: i like refurbished with apple. i've done that before. you go to the website, you can buy older versions refurbished. they handle themselves. >> great way to do it. used gadgets. apple side. click on reif you bushed. been there plenty of times. save couple hundred bucks. >> that's exactly right. cheap alternative to laptops and ipad, what do i do.
4:25 am
>> chrome books are great. 229. you don't need necessarily all apps for windows. basically a web surfing machine. it is perfect. i like chrome books. go to amazon. look at best-sellers. a lot of windows 8 machines for 200, 300 bucks. microsoft is bringing prices down too. gerri: windows devices are awesome, think i. >> they're awesome. gerri: nobody talks about it. a great big secret sort of undiscussed. talk about extended warranties and do i need apple care. >> skip that. save money. get a nice protective case. skip the warranty. gerri: for the phone. >> for phone, tablets for computers, you don't need them. gerri: they make a great case selling it. >> they try. i wouldn't fall for that. gerri: no. >> no. i think because you're going to spend couple hundred bucks on product that will cost you 200 bucks with a contract or $2,000 with a laptop. don't need it right now. gerri: what about rewards program. >> target has a great one, red card. get 5% discount buying it or
4:26 am
best buy has reward program get free shipping products over $35. these are great. go into the store to get savings right off the bat. gerri: talking to me in the break about amazon's fire phone. maybe mom and dad considering that for fall? >> skip on fire phone. software is not where it needs to be or enough apps to get going. gerri: last word here for people who are buying technology out there to save money, what would you say, todd? >> buy used. that is best thing you can do. gerri: not like the thing i always worry with apple, after a couple generation it is doesn't work anymore. >> right. but, no apple is great. buy used. they keep it going. and you know, 200 bucks right off the bat. down the road you resell it. i bought ipod touch for $200. sold it six months later lost 20 bucks. gerri: is great. >> resale value on apple products. >> love it. thanks so much for your time. time now for a look at stories you're clicking on foxbusiness.com. stocks sinking ending week in
4:27 am
the red. thanks to disappointing earnings from visa and allison. amazon shares slumped 11% after reporting a big loss while visa cut its full-year forecast. safety regulators are probing three new vehicles. they're investigating whether electrical problem can knock out power to airbags on hyundai sonatas. they're looking to complaints of engine stalling in dodge chargers and other airbag issues in chevy impalas. >> into rupert murdoch twenty-first century fox is getting cash boost in attempt to buy time warner. london's bskyb is buying sister companies in italy and germany, from fox creating multinational european network. that deal is reportedly worth $9 billion. chicken mcnuggets are no longer for sale in honk con. a u.s. supplier located in china was accused of selling expired meats. unsanitary products are another reason they're taken off the menu. those are some of the hot
4:28 am
stories right now on foxbusiness.com. coming up our legal eagles weigh in on a beach battle raging in california. we'll tell you all about it. we head outside looking for interesting and healthy ways to cook chicken on the grill. don't go anywhere. ♪ to buy a car. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. that's never really been possible. but along comes a radically new way to buy a car called truecar.
4:29 am
4:31 am
♪ gerri: it's friday. that means anything can happen, and today we are firing up the grill to show you how to make some simple answer every summer dishes. here is someone you'll recognize who works on fox had show hell's kitchen. >> that night in charge of the goddess know because you two can't hit list? green beans are coming right up. how long of the garnish?
4:32 am
gerri: those wearing year executive chef of love. new restaurant in new york. remember that been. thanks for coming in. an excited. and you -- you know i love to couric proof will serve with chicken barbecue. >> we have a restaurant built on corporate office to of course true principles. we kirk very clean and nutritious. gerri: i love that idea. >> real fear that you can recognize. this is our carolina barbecue. gerri: let's make his barbecue. >> we will start over here. it. gerri: a little winded shoot. that's good. >> baby killed. that we have roasted peppers, tomatoes, cored.
4:33 am
gerri: its bread. >> available and red or white. it tastes a little bit different i find it to be a little bit more than the, aromatic. gerri: i love that. >> simply sauteing this together . tickets says. gerri: i'm from carolina. >> you should be will tell me everything that's in there. gerri: the way i see it is more mostly vinegar. you have more stuff in here. >> vinegar, three different types of mustard, onions, garlic we don't use a ton of sugar. all right. chicken, this love a concoction. >> finish with a little bit of a barbecue sauce right and up.
4:34 am
gerri: i want to make that. >> to the fancy flippant. right here. gerri: put the chicken on top. is that the way it works? >> i got a decisive check in your right to help me with the carnage. you get to do the fun part. gerri: the company that is. the -- >> a on a second. gerri: am i getting ahead of you ? read the top. look. tell these look alike? >> almost identical. if i close my eyes i don't know which one. gerri: are you going to do the burger? >> this particular dish right
4:35 am
here, the chicken patty. it's another one of our inspirational dishes that we have. gerri: chicken kebab not be. >> lots of spices to buy aromatics. gerri: i love it. so as we prepared this because we don't have a regular bond. >> this is the bread that we serve. is 11% whole wheat. is the real thing. we don't use any white flowers. this is where you coven. gerri: ultra not test have a heavy hand here. >> i'm doing my best job. >> that's all we can ask for. gerri: un of coke, not a professional. don't yell at me. >> of trying not to, but up running at a patients with
4:36 am
that's perfect. raises red peppers. this a little bit more course. gerri: can i put tomatoes of? >> spread their right here. >> cold with a cold. that's exactly it. and won't fennel, jalapeno, shredded cabbage, carrots. that is awesome. one okay. it right across here. gerri: you are really spreading it. >> you are tough i don't know if i can cook with you again. >> a little bit more.
4:37 am
unless, crispy to buy refreshing texture. gerri: that may be too much. >> that's a lot at this point. in -- nobody saw it. it's not a flip. kuralt. they're going to roll the top of the bottom. when the end of this. all the way over. that's a close to robo will take it. look at it half and take a taste custom blends. really clean tasting. gerri: one more thing to make? no, we of some repute of going to give this to someone back here. thank you for coming gun.
4:38 am
let's feed the crowd. feed the crowd. a until you, it's a it. the rest of the staff believes there you go. instead there. thank you. [applause] when we come back speed reading. is it legal? we look at the growing dispute in california with private homeowners blocking public access to beaches. can and should they be stopped? stay with us perry to succeed
4:40 am
4:41 am
♪from all the pain ♪i'm so ashamed would it be ok if i sat here? ♪i am beautiful no matter what they say♪ is she serious? ♪i am beautiful no matter what they say♪ what ver! ♪words can't bring me down♪ new irl! ♪words can't bring me down♪ ♪i am beautiful in every single way♪ ♪yes, words can't bring me down.♪ ♪so don't you bring me down today♪ gerri: billionaire venture-capital oysters in a heated dispute over his decision to block public access to the
4:42 am
san mateo county beach. he says it is his land that he can do what every once. the county says otherwise. legal team. to welcome to you both. great to have you. venture-capital. he's very well on the west coast before he bought this i have to say, you can get to that peeks through the property. tell us about that. >> basically the case of a poor, defenseless billionaire. you have to be aware that the whole community was using it for like 60 years to get to the beach below rebel he says, but toward to let that happen any more. he puts up a blockade so that people can't go. he gets sued by a public-interest group. that is basically what the controversy is about. gerri: it is his property. >> the port command of pencils billionaire and bought the
4:43 am
property in 2008 and maintains the exact same policy. he allow public access and charged the same fee, $5 a day, for metaxas as private road apart as private property. in the planning board came in and said he could only charge $2 a day in addition to which you can never ever close that date. it must stay open 24 hours a day seven days a week. he said, but not appropriate. >> he left it the way it was pretty went along with the for a while. it decided not to get a permit to do anything to change the property to the make it legal to block it. gerri: as the have to ask for permission to shed a tear. >> it basically it works the other way. it has been so long that people were utilizing it. it basically became a public trust of made. he gestured at it without permission. he had his own lawsuit which ended up not win again he got
4:44 am
sued by this group. >> the california coastal act provides if you're going to allow private roadway to have public access, one of two things he's to happen. a private individual needs to stand up and pay for liability insurance, maintain the property, or private individual. gerri: surely he can't afford that. >> he knew the score when he bought the property. personally think that he thought this will be different parties going to be able to control it, blackett. that is basically not going to happen. public interest groups that are suing their now. gerri: let's be clear. the public interest groups are a bunch of surfers. >> you are right. >> there are called surf rider. >> it does not matter if he is a billionaire or not. it is his constitutional right. he is up the giving due process.
4:45 am
take someone's property and sales were up, to pay anything. >> has been that way for 15 years something goes on for that long did you buy the property of you have to the others going to be an issue with that. >> the government cannot say, you have to pay all of these costs, 30 grand for liability insurance. expect any responsibility of a civil lawsuit. gerri: liability. as soon as these people are on the beaches of what will it hurt . touted that issue? >> if you have access to oceanfront property and you buy that property you're buying it knowing that there will be a public interest involved. i don't think that a guy like this is just going to be able to say it is costing me too much. it's not the same thing is buying a house of history in order island.
4:46 am
gerri: we have to leave it there. good job. and i am really confused. still to come to be your reaction to the tragedy of this guy's a brother you're changing your flight plan. do you wish you could read faster? it turns out you can't. the secret to speed reading. a demonstration coming up the consumer gauge with the numbers you need for your money. check it out. >> reporter:
4:49 am
4:50 am
of the biggest breakthrough since the quill pen. take a look ahead of this may change the way we read. ♪ gerri: did you get that? the words pop-up magically in front of you. to me tonight, frank waldman, ceo and founder of sprint. welcome to the shell. i just finished a book, and i can't imagine, why would i use this technology? what is alarming to do that i otherwise couldn't? >> it enables you to read on small screens. that's how we started. in fact, you watch their reading of a launch. it's a technology that is very easy to use, easy to learn.
4:51 am
people like it. it's something you do here on the delany to read. gerri: interesting detail here that is hard to pick up. they're is a way you put them on the screen that makes it easy for people to understand what they're saying. >> what we did was combined our displeasure that focuses suraya so you look in one place. that red leather in the two little marks. we position each word and a point where your i can recognize the word. gerri: each word has a specific place where the human brain can do it gets its command and his son the sits on the device. >> that's right. if you are reading word by word traditionally your ice shows from word to word and looks at a certain point in the word to recognize it before it goes to the next. we just put each word in the same place. gerri: why would you call the
4:52 am
company's print? >> well, it's as sprayed of perfume. yeah. it's a way of a string information, and that's what we do. we stream text. gerri: after you come up with the idea? >> i did. and a colleague of mine who is a scientist. he was puzzled why inbreeding have not changed and was looking for innovation. gerri: let me show you, the practical impact and what it does for the technology industries break. you can actually show us what it would look like if you were reading on your watch. you want to show it to us? >> sure i will do is first sure you the fall. the information has to come to the phone first before it can get to the watch. here we are. we have an application that
4:53 am
happens to be e-mail. we can read it simply by tapping its current it will start streaming to you. gerri: you read faster when you look at it this way? >> your focus. you read about twice as fast as you would conventional. gerri: how long would it take me ? >> five to six hours. gerri: that's all? you can read it in a speech you want to. some material you might want to read a little slower. in the bell you might want to rip through the show was the watch. >> this is the ability here on the phone. in the same e-mail available on the watch. as you can see, i can just tap the screen. the inner will stream. the next one and the next one.
4:54 am
>> this reduces by upgrading cost. it has locations for people who want to read a lot of material on a small device. >> on the go, on the subway the information you need on the go. gerri: a question to all when i read a book or even of a magazine article kawai often like to go back and read part of it or make sure render stuttered . is almost like a reference tool. can you do it on this? >> the way that each application works is it has the back button. you can go back a sentence, paraffin. some applications you can go back to a specific word you're looking for. gerri: great technology. interesting. now we want to hear from you. we discussed how yesterday's
4:55 am
crash brings the death toll of major airline disasters to more than 700 just this year. are you nervous flying? eric said this, sitting in houston international. not to worry. another viewer made this point of. tsa continues to search for a little children and old ladies in wheelchairs. you're also weighing in of facebook. not changing anything. you journal anywhere anytime i get the chance. another viewer says no changes, but i don't travel on third world airlines or anywhere near war-torn nations. we will be right back triune nervous about flying? stay with
4:59 am
>> talking about the plane crashes if you are nervous about flying half of you said yes. finally tonight we started talking about consumers' lives better and i want to mention another. the company started deeper inside the human body to figure out why people get certain diseases and how to prevent them they call it a baseline study taking 200 people of food get sick and why only with its capabilities could have such a complex study and i say go for it if the private sector could do that then more power to them. that is set for tonight. have a great weekend we will
5:00 am
see you here on monday. . neil: stick a syringe in it. the health care law is dead. it's flat lining very fast. welcome, everybody, i'm neil cavuto. never thought i would say this about a government program, apparently they can be killed. here is the trick. only if you let them kill themselves. that is what is happening to obamacare, assisting in its own suicide. confusion over subsidies that might not be legal, enrollies that might not be real and care that may not be affordable. this thing is hanging on a tourniquet. it's not only losing enrollees but the who
55 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on