tv MONEY With Melissa Francis FOX Business October 6, 2014 2:00pm-3:01pm EDT
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game time will bring to the situation. dierdre: got it. i should have looked you up when derek jeter was playing his last home game. brad gift. -- griffeth. gametime founder and ceo. "money" starts with melissa francis. melissa: thanks so much. much striking out in a battle against isis. a critical city on the turkey-syria border as terrorists gain ground. a sure-fire sign of a jobs recovery. numbers have one economist feel we entered it the promised land. not everyone is believer. coulda-shoulda,. charlie gasparino and anthony scaramucci weigh in. just in time for october. how you make sure you fit into your halloween costume. isn't that what you worry about all the time? even when they say it's not it is always about money.
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dierdre: melissa: the fifth american invecked with ebola is back on american soil. the nbc cam ran man is being treated at the nebraska medical center in omaha. meanwhile, we're hearing reports of a spanish nurse currently being tested for the deadly disease. it is said to be the first case of ebola contracted outside of west africa. that is why that is significant. bring in today's panel. fox business's charlie gasparino. anthony scaramucci, key bridge capital. a fox business contributor. >> great news. melissa: along with david asman from fox business as well. let me ask you because this show is called "money." does this have a chilling effect somewhere this economy? will we see con companies blaming this? will we see airlines blaming this. >> i don't think yet, melissa -- melissa: but it is getting bigger and bigger. >> fear is there but we have the health care system to digest and
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maintain it. i honestly believe that. >> but the health care system is controlled by the government. that is farther 6 the problem. the government has been so inept with every crisis it faces now they're involved. we've seen so many misspeaks. first it was never going to come here. then when it came here, they said it wasn't easily transmittible. >> there is no question, david is right about the questionability of the government being shot but if you look at the way this disease spreads, a lot of it has to do with unsanitary conditions in west africa. a lot of is the way they're put together. melissa: we're taking precautions here in the u.s. latest thing i woke up, they said they will not pick you up in ambulance in new york city if you have a fever. if you answer some of the questions incorrectly, they will not come pick you up. >> my brother is an icu specialist. he is a doctor much he has phd and md he will tell you every hospital in new york is on high alert right now. they're taking extra extra precautions but some of those precautions will help minimize an contain the disease. i'm with you on this thing.
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i think american hospitals, if this ever will get solved, this issue i hate to say it this way, americans, american doctors are going to have to do it. >> look what happened in the hospital in dallas. they first turned the guy away. he answered incorrectly that he was in africa and sent him away. >> that is different issue. the issue mistakes will be made. guess what will happen? more infections out there. three traders last couple weeks asked me do i know more about ebola. melissa: talking about it in the markets. >> they are talking about it. >> black swan events. not quite there yet. >> i agree. melissa: the fizzle in hong kong. pro-democracy protest in the financial hub are beginning to fade now as schools reopen and government employees return to work. the real question is, it was so seemingly out of control. it was so blown up last week. now it is coming down. why? what happened? >> because the chinese government is great at infiltrating their enemies. they have spent decades doing that.
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they realize how important hong kong is to their own future. the future of the chinese economy. it was beginning to get out of control. my suspicion a lot of people in hong kong have been either threatened or coerced or convinced to go back to work, to go to school. there is group called united front. it's a chinese front group. that is the correct name. that is the main mainland china niece front group in hong kong. they have been doing a lot of persuading of those people. melissa: physical persuading we read over the weekend. pro-government. >> talking to a great guy mark stein, works for media conglomerate. he says a lot of things going on behind the scenes. we'll see if there is successful. >> tianamen square crisis management 25 years and counting. they have had a full generation to understand how to deal with these problems. and this unrest. they have contained you on the internet. they have isolated you down. their biggest risk about china it is like a czechoslovakia or poland, vis-a-vis russia.
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meaning in terms of hong kong having that independence and freedom. but they have done a very, very good job here and i suspect this will go away for a while. melissa: another big story. tesla shares moving full-team ahead. the automaker is expected to announce the first steps towards automated driving on thursday according to "wall street journal." investors liking this news. more evidence that this is direction we're going in. now all the carmakers are saying it is not 10 years away or 20 years away, it is right on the horizon, automated cars. what do you think? >> i can't see it. automated cars. melissa: they're all doing it. >> sound like to me it's a fad. demaio: what everybody said about the internet. i don't know. got out of college, we'll send each other letters through the telephone lines. >> you think people will not be driving their cars? melissa: there are too many companies investing in right now. >> they will not be driving cars. i spent last week at a place called singularity university at
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nassau aims research center in palo alto and saw these cars in action. google has a factory out there developing it. tesla has a factory out there developing it. melissa: even cadillac. everybody. >> it will save, a $2 trillion industry. it will save time. it will save energy. >> i'm with charlie on this though. >> why does it save time? >> why does it save time? you wouldn't behind the wheel. melissa: i tailgate and cut people off. >> i'm with charlie. at some point, something happens with cars. something always goes wrong. somebody takes off, hand off device or whatever. there is going to be an accident. people will be sued. that will put a big -- melissa: there are accidents today. we're all crashing each other into every days. >> wit lawyers can crush this movement in a flash. >> i'm taking other side of this. say 20 years from now people will be asking -- >> tesla is saying five or six years. >> i'm saying 20 years, fully acceptable. we're saying why did we let humans drive a two-ton
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projectile. melissa: i agree with you. hillary clinton might be gearing up for another run but her husband who has the pull. this is according to new "wall street journal" poll. former president bill clinton is still the most influential politician. >> he knows him. start with him. they're friend. melissa: what do you think? >> he is, like or dislike president clinton he has done a great job. melissa: everybody loves him in retrospect. >> both sides of the aisle. remember the last budget surplus for the united states was fiscal year 2000. $237 billion budget surplus as a result of his policies. like him or dislike him. he figured out how to triangulate congress and work with them. >> hillary is not bill. everybody agrees bill did a very good job with the economy. saul alinsky radical, hillary care, all the issues from the past my differentiate her from bill. >> if she wins the nomination and wins presidency, republicans have to hang up bodies.
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she doesn't have mojo and personality. when she comes across on television very pedantic. melissa: what do you think jeb bush is running. >> i don't think jeb bush is running. melissa: really. >> you think rom any will run. >> i said it on the show. i don't think jeb will run. think he is so i toying wit. i think they're sending feelers out. at end of the day i think there are family issues where he likes where he is currently. good for him to talk. >> bush trump christie? >> if rush runs? if bush and chris at this going in the primary. >> jeb bush gets nomination if he runs. governor romney will not run if jeb bush runs. i don't think governor christie will make it in prime time. melissa: so yelp me. one los angeles craig's list ad is, offering quote, qualified reviewers $7 for each fake review that they go ahead and post on yelp. this is incredible. this is the ad they put up on craig's list. copy comments and place a five-star review for business we ask you to place it for. that's it. you get paid for each review we
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send you and place that becomes recommended and -- >> someone who is sold books i've been approached by pr people, do you want to hire this one outfit that will go out and post reviews for you? melissa: yeah. >> that is why you believe half of what is on internet. melissa: not even. >> it is the wild west of -- melissa: if you belief yelp is the punch line. >> if you're writing, charlie. >> thank you. melissa: seems like there is evidence after evidence but still it is sites like yelp. they shake down business for money in order -- >> two of the worst restaurants i have ever eaten at in manhattan, there is a lot of competition for that, why recommended by yelp. demaio: yeah, see, there you go. >> i don't trust them. melissa: i will end on that note. i feel about that too. danger signs in the job market not speaking one economist. he thinks we have reached the promised land. we'll get with his argument and fight with him a little bit coming up next. plus the golden state turning a parched shade of
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melissa: september jobs report gave the economy a little sigh of relief but many americans are just not feeling any better. my next guest however is looking on the bright side. in an interview with the "wall street journal," pnc chief economist stuart hoffman said we finally reached promised land, self-sustaining, self-enforcing economic recovery. stuart joins me now. a lot of people took note of this over the weekend and it has been blowing up everywhere. a lot of folks disagree with you. what evidence are you seeing? >> well, i'm seeing evidence, of course the august report but now, nine months of job growth averaging 225,000 a month. and interesting that is true if you look at the payroll or the household measure. i'm, you know, we still have a wand ear little while but i really think the economy is self-sustaining expansion. those jobs were all full-time jobs. they were ride spread across
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industry including some of the higher paying ones in manufacturing and construction. that's why i think we're close to where we want to be. melissa: when i put up on twitter we would be doing this segment i got hammered from a lot of folks who said, there are just so many millions of people who have, if this is the recovery, who have gotten left behind. we're looking at itt now on the screen. there are 7.1 million people in the country right now working part time, who need and looking for full-time work in order to make end meet. there are, labor force participation rate at historic lows. if it was, if the participation was what it was when the president came into office we have an unemployment rate of 10.1%. median income has fallen. there is huge swath of people who have been, millions and millions, who have been left behind. what about them, stuart? do they get packed back up as you see this economy recovering? >> well, first off on the participation rate, there is lot of demographics going on. aging of the population.
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we haven't seen -- melissa: doesn't explain the 7.1 million who are part time and desperately need full-time work. >> right. that is normally around five million, if you look in best of times. i'm not saying that there aren't individuals who want to have full-time work that can't find it but we have, more people working now. we have fully recovered all the jobs lost. wages are steady at 2%. we certainly need to see that grow a bit faster. i think we will. but i would say, while the economy is not fully healed, it has been a very good job for itself around i expect over the next year we're going to go further and further into lowering unemployment, fewer people working part time to full time. melissa: the swath of people who had good middle class jobs, now in retail industry, now working part time, see no hope of working full time, oxford study i saw this morning 47% of jobs could be made obsolete by automation and by computers over the next two decades. all those people getting left behind, do they stay where they
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are? what do you see happening to them? >> well, two decades in changes in automation is a long-run trend that the economy is going, has been dealing with, two decades ago we didn't even have the internet or it was in its infancy. now we have, tens of thousands, maybe millions of jobs related to that. as people have had to training and skills. so i don't want to distinguish, i want to distinguish between the next five, 10, 20 years, has happened over past year and next couple of years. i think we will continue to see more and more people get jobs that didn't have them, graduate from school. i think we will see unemployed people getting jobs and part-timers going to full time, if that indeed what they want to do and think we'll see wages pick up from 2% to 2 1/2 to 3%. and unemployment rate continue to decline. melissa: stuart, thanks so much for coming on the show. you created a lot of buzz for this. we appreciate you take taking
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time to talk about. >> my pleasure. melissa: my panel's reaction. charlie, anthony, david are back with me. what do you think about this. >> one thing hasn't been talked about, cost of doing business is still enormously high in this country. first recession in my lifetime, instead of lowering tax rates and lowering regulations we increased both. so the cost of doing business, until we get supplyside moving, the actual producers have more leeway to produce more we'll not have hiring we should have. >> thing he is overlooking is the u 6 unemployment rate is 11.8%. participation rate is at a low as of 1978. no wage growth. melissa: he said demographics. says part-time people will find full-time work. >> melissa, academic silo. you have to go into the middle. country and see the deficit. >> wall street silo. from a wall street economist standpoint, right? >> i'm not picking on him. i'm sure he is brilliant guy. tough go out into the field and
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see what is going on in the country. >> from wall street standpoint he makes a good case. metrics are showing very low inflation. >> market is going on. >> yes. and slowly-improving economy but people aren't working as. so wage pressure is down. the markets love that. inflation is down, right? the markets love. that the fact is that more people are, with these, those high u-6 number, the fed can keep printing number. that is why he likes it. >> president's trickle down economic policy, the president always criticizing for that, that is what he has. he thinks keep the stock market high, that will trickle down. doesn't work that way. >> who made money this economy or fortunately? >> 1%, without question. >> that guy's bank. melissa: we would like nothing more than stuart hoffman to be right, this is self-sustaining economy. just doesn't feel that way. most of our viewers don't feel that way. i wanted to reconcile what was really going on. >> in asset reflationary
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scenario the ped fed has produced, political by-product is fraying of society. separation between haves and have-nots. we have to address that. >> ebay is doing it. why not hewlett-packard. investors love the split strategy today as shares of hp soar. let's go to nicole petallides on floor of new york stock exchange. nicole. >> complete reversal. paypal wasn't going to split off paypal now they are. hewlett-packard wasn't going to break up. now they are. break down what is going on with hewlett-packard in particular. you will have hp, inc. and hewlett-packard enterprise. hp, inc. will be computers an printers. hp enterprise will be services and hardware. meg whitman will take that over. both companies will have about the same size. more than $50 billion in annual revenue. they say this is important now to remain competitive to be more of a niche company. back in 2011 when it was first suggested, at that time the company was not healthy enough to split up according to meg
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whitman. melissa: nicole, thank you so much. aig seeking compensation from the financial crisis. who is who is in the 2008 bailout in the hot seat this week. wall street wants them to pay for their mistakes. leader of the pack no longer? kim jong-un's actions are speaking louder than his words. do you have too much money? ♪ she's still the one for you. and cialis for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any allergic reactions like rash, hives,
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they're nearing default again. according to the report, greece will go bust sometime in the next 15 months! too bad you can't pay back loans with baclava. ruler kim jong-un has been noticeably absent. he hasn't been seen in public since sent 4th. when kim jong-un nowhere to be found, north korea's number two made a surprise visit to south korea, leading to unprecedented round of peace talks. keeping an eye on this one. germany, at love folks called out sick. more than 6 million people gathered in oktoberfest in mine fix. they drank impressive 6.5 million mugs beer. that is impressive. don't get your leader hosen in a bunch. police report ad drop in crime. they were happy drunks. three of the most prominent government officials during that time came to testify. they are taking the stand in
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hank greenberg's lawsuit against the u.s. government over the handling of aig's bailout. greenburg argues that the government robbed aig shareholders of $40 billion. former u.s. treasury secretary hank paulson's testimony wrapped up earlier today. we are still waiting to hear from former fed chair ben bernanke and former federal reserve bank of new york president tim geithner. charlie and anthony are back with us. charlie, you have been following this very closely. >> i'm probably the only reporter to have reviewed their sealed depositions in the lead up to the case which have. melissa: are you not supposed to see sealed depositions? >> you're not supposed to. as journalists you're supposed to. i have write written about this. >> glad charlie is on our side. >> thank you, anthony. i don't think we'll see any great revelations from any of those three. particularly during the trial. i think they're so lawyered up. there is so much legalese -- melissa: amazing they would be dragged in to be put on the stand.
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what is the significant of that. >> shows there are friendly judge. hank my win this. this judge is very friendly to him he believes in property rights. he looks -- melissa: being stripped of value by the u.s. government. >> the u.s. government bailed out goldman sachs and all the big banks, really without taking equity stake, without taking major equity stake in those terms. bailed out aig, by wiping out shareholders, taking huge equity stake. that is disparity what david boies will seize upon. if you read the sealed depositions, i think it will come across, but will come across in court, it's a different ballgame, these guys didn't have any idea how important aig was to the financial system. regulation itself is almost feckless by design. if hank had no idea -- melissa: basically they don't understand, what this proves to you. government regulates things it doesn't understand. >> hard thing to regulate. >> i do think, going through the legality of this thick, a --
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thing, little bit of revisionist history that it was most successful. at the moment of breach, $180 billion to go into aig to staunch the blood flow, melissa, impossible for anybody else to do that other than the federal government. he has great lawyers. >> remember what his point is. we, you gave enough money to bail out all these other firms without taking, without wiping -- melissa: without wiping out shareholders. >> screwing us. >> will lehman brothers sue them next week? >> i agree with you. >> i think it is water under the bridge. >> i agree with you. no offense to hank. this is a very confusing time. sometimes you just throw money at things. melissa: yeah. as isis gains footing across syria, many are still questioning the effectiveness of our quote, coalition. even late-night tv is getting in on the joke. "piles of money" coming right up. >> mr. president, much has been made of the coalition you assembled but it sound like america is bearing the brunt of this campaign. >> hey, steve, that is just how we roll.
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melissa: intense fighting between isis and kurdish forces near the syrian border town of kobani. the terrorists reportedly dangerously close to capturing the city near the border. fox news's greg palkot is there. greg? >> we've been pushed back 2 1/2 miles bit turkish military from the syrian town of kobani over there. you see a plume of explosion there from an impact. we can see and hear all the action going on there. you can hear it right now between the isis terrorists and the brave kurdish defenders of the town. as we watch all the action over there we're watching some tanks of the turkish military lining up over on that side, on that hillside, with their tourette's trained on the town, ready to move in if they decide to. again fending off the
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terrorists, we estimate two to three thousand kurdish fighters plus family and supporters. they're estimated weapons are light, ammunition is low and they are desperate. there was a report of a female kurdish suicide attack by isis. they confirmed another one hitting two terrorist positions. we've been watching the last several days, isis tanks and vehicles and guns moving around freely. as for those turkish tanks, they are certainly defensive. we watched stray shellsder fromt inside of turkey. five people were injured here yesterday. not yet offensive. turkey seems very reluctant to get involved in this battle, even with terror on their doorstep. melissa: greg. melissa: thank you. an integral part of our mission against isis and terrorism is incredibly small but highly elite team. the fbi hostage rescue team has been deployed to nearly 1000 missions since its creation.
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not much is known about this skilled group. joining me is colonel bill cowan. a fox news military analyst. we have chris harmer. senior naval analyst for the the institute of the study of war. thanks for both of you joining us. i want to focus in particular because the fbi budget doubled since 9/11. 8 dal billion. we focus on money spent, sometimes wastefully, not so much on positive things being done. this seems to be one of them. the domestic equivalent of the navy seals team. colonel cowan, why do we need them? >> well the seal team and delta, both are highest, most proficient counterterrorism operations can not operate within the confines of the united states. so the hostage rescue teamed formed back in the early 80s was the mirror image of delta force and seal team six and able to take on missions here within the continental u.s. but they bill also valuable forever seas missions since the events of 9/11, melissa. melissa: chris, tell me a little
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bit what specifically these guys do. these are truly exceptional men and women, who operate behind the scenes. most people, we see movies about navy seals, this and. that we don't know about these folks in particular. what can you tell me about them. >> the hostage rescue team as colonel cowan said is essentially a mirror image of delta force or navy seal team six. they have the ability to operate in the domestic confines the united states where active military don't have that legal authority. in this war we're fighting with isis, the lines between law enforcement and military have gotten fairly blurred. so the hostage rescue team has been active in several missions overseas, syria, iraq, other places around the world, assisting the front line military personnel specifically in the hostage rescue mission. melissa: they also serve the purpose, colonel, going over, to where a seal team might go in and essentially to kilt target, with these folks they're going in to try to get them so there could be legal repercussions.
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when you're talking about the terrorists on the other side. they could possibly get information or even retrieve them so they can come back and face trial, right? >> that's exactly right, melissa it is the purview of justice to bring people back here. our seal team six, our delta guys would rather go in to totally eliminate the target, reducing risk to their own people. hrt takes extra risks when they go to try to capture somebody instead of trying to eliminate them and working alongside military partners, delta and seal team six on overseas missions, they need to accomplish what the military need to do with the civilian group support them. melissa: we have to focus in on hostage rescue, right? >> we always have to focus in on hostage rescue and the american military mission we have hostage search-and-rescue. this is subset of hostage
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search-and-rescue. it is incredibly difficult and incredibly expensive but incredibly value. same skills go towards rescuing a hostage can be used to capture a specific terrorist. as colonel cowan said much more difficult to capture a terrorist than kill them. much more valuable to capture terrorists than kill them. you exploit the intelligence aspect. who do they know, what do they know, where they have been. much more valuable to get the guy live than kill them. melissa: gentlemen, thank you, we appreciate it. less than an hour president obama is set for a briefing on ebola. we'll tell you how hospitals are bracing for the worst right now. plus diamond are forever but salvefy screen? not so much. -- sapphire screen. why apple may be to blame for one company's downfall. smart money coming up. so i can reach ally bank 24/7, but there are no branches? 24/7 it's just i'm a little reluctant to try new things. what's wrong with trying new things? feel that in your muscles? yeah... i do...
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go national. go like a pro. so ally bank really has no hidden fethat's right. accounts? it's just that i'm worried about you know "hidden things..." ok, why's that? no hidden fees, from the bank where no branches equals great rates. >> i'm melissa francis with your fox business. gt advance getting hammered after the company announced it's filing for chapter 11 bankruptcy. they're the makers of sapphire glass that everyone thought apple would put in their iphones. this time it's for their theme park the walt disney company backing a one and million dollar to help troubled. the paris theme park hasn't made a break -- gone girl raking
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>> president obama's expected to meet with white house officials and cdc director tom in less than 30 minutes. the president has said to be receiving an update on the ebola outbreak in africa. and discuss the administration's plans on combating the virus going forward. as the fifth american inif he could with ebola arrived today, medical hospitals are ramping up their efforts against the deadly virus. fox news' doctor, dr. marc siegel joins us to give us an inside look as to how hospitals are preparing for the worse. >> if there's a suspicion of ebola, how do we confirm that a patient has it? i'm a practicing physician to see what measures they are taking. i spoke with dr. michael fellowships medical director of infection control.
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and he says there's a multilayered system of protections in place to quickly identify patients at risk for having ebola. if a patient with a fever and flu like symptoms has recently traveled from west africa the question for ebola is raised. there's a possibility of exposure, the patient is isolated. staff dons gowns, masks to protect themselves from the virus. >> we have the ability to decontaminate any patient, person, any specimen, anything that's going to our lab, anything that's moving through the hospital so there's no cross contamination. >> if an ebola patient is properly identified, vital transmission is unlikely. you need a significant exposure to vomit, diarrhea or blood to become infected. >> what are the tests they do when they believe in? we all know the story of that one patient in texas who was released and he had it.
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>> you know, cdc testing can take a few days now melissa, local health departments have been designated to perform a more rapid test. you can see it here on the screen. here at the public lab are atory, they're doing a mock ebola testing. now, a real case would be done after scullings with the doctor. that rapid test is the same one that the department of defense is now deploying in west africa. whenever testing is done, isolate the patient, contain the patient, keep from preventing spread of this dreaded killer. >> thank you so much for that report. our liz claman of what she has to come. >> of course, we are following any developments with ebola because one could argue it's keeping a cap on what could be a slightly better market at the moment. we're pretty flat right now. but we're also watching
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something as we head into the jaws of the nba season. an unbelievable deal. this is a nine-year deal that the nba has struck with disney for an unbelievable amount. $24 billion. we love commerce, we love capitalism. who will get that cost past down to them. what will it mean to the players, the owners, the fans, will your prices of tickets go up or will they be kept down because, of course, the nba will be linebacker getting so much researcher. we're talking to jim gray, and, of course, brad. it's a huge business deal. it spreads to other sports other than basketball. how many times have you been in that one dead spot for your cell phone while you travel on your commute. how is it possible that i crews ship floating hundreds of miles away thanks to low range
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satellite gets perfect i have with. we've got the company, steve collar is the ceo he has outfitted that crews ship that is an ultimate expression of saying we can give you wife anywhere even if you're floating hundreds of miles out there. (?) i need him to get to 57 on the highway, that's the drop spot for me. >> ninth and madison is where i lose it. halloween, you can eat healthy or risk bursting out of your costume. plus, a little of southern discomfort. ole miss gets blindsided with a heft fine. a run for your money next.
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melissa: whether it's on wall street or main street, here's whose making and losing money today. starting with buffalo wild wings. taking a spicy burn of the a downgrade. higher chicken wing costs partially to blame for the change. ceo sally smith probably needed a cold one she owns 72,000 shares meaning that she lost about $300,000 talk about a wing and a prayer. okay that was bad. making money on some pricey real estate none other than hilton worldwide selling the chain to a chinese company for about $2 billion. there is a catch though. hilton will continue to manage the landmark for the next 100 years. and losing money, but winning the big game, how about the ole
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miss rebels. fans rushed the field after an upset victory over top ranked alabama bringing down the goalpost and leaving to a 50,000-dollar fine from the southeastern conference. that's about two bucks a kid. don't they do that at every huge upset. >> shepherd smith was there. he was on top of it. he's responsible. melissa: so just when you thought it was safe to follow your heart, finally subway has the reality check for you. you guys are eating burgers? summer is over. you got to stay in shape for all the costumes. you know like attractive vikings warrior. and foxy pull back. melissa: ladies, you need to keep it tight if you want to be a foxy pull back.
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david asman is back. bruce, subway is getting a ton of criticism for this. what do you think? good move, bad move? >> first of all, foxy fullback, really? you want to be a sex symbol in the nfl. melissa: i know ladies aren't loving the nfl. >> to make up for it, are they going to put jared in chip and detail. >> hold your shock meter for a minute. this isn't an ad for women. it's for guys. (?) >> bottom line is guys have -- have an ability to take these things better than women do. in fact, if anything, they're going to be looking at this ad. it's not meant for women. it's meant for guys. i know it's politically incorrect. melissa: let me ask because all of our men in the studio stared at the costumes as they went by.
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does david have a point? was that ad not for me after all? >> no he doesn't. you love to watch it. i love to watch it. i've got a 5-inch foot long joke i'm afraid to make. that's not the point. this is a diet product. this is a low cal product. it's a miss. melissa: dom nos is making it even easier to score your favorite pizza. it released a new ad highlighting its virtual assistant in its new campaign as if we needed to make organized pizza more fun. don't make it fun and easy to order a pizza. bruce, help me. >> first of all, they've had an app that allows you to use your voice to order the pizza for years, it's called the telephone. millennials don't want to speak suspect if you can text your order, it
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would make sense. (?) melissa: my 7-year-old loves to talk to his phone and do things. >> this helps productivity. productivity is one thing the economy has going for it. it keeps wage inflation down and this means you don't have to have somebody answering personally all those calls the way you used to. again, you have these automatic signals. i don't know what algorithms they use, but they get these automatic word signals. melissa: dom nos is the genius for making it fun to order pizza. they had the button on the fridge. they have this meter to watch online where your pizza is when it's coming. they found another genius way to make it fun to order pizza. the dire situation in california, we have some shocking images that expose the total devastation left behind
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melissa: so summer it feels like just a distant memory. temperatures are dropping around the country. have you seen this though? black bear refusing to embrace the fall. he goes for a dip in a pennsylvania family's backyard. he found a beach ball, and he popped it. it's still summer. what are you talking about fall? i'm going to have one last swim in the fall. they immediately voted it and posted it. that is so cute. >> you would love to hug a bear, i don't think you should. melissa: they wisely stayed inside the house and took a video. >> these bears are getting very close. folks who live in new jersey see them all the time. melissa: thank you. much more serious new satellite images from
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nasa showing the devastating impact of california's megadraught. janice joins us now. >> incredible pictures 100 percent of california is into a draught. 95 percent severe to exceptional draught. severe in this area. ninety in is it a anna. tomorrow not much better and unfortunately, it is so dry here (?) so the fire danger is critical. we are going to see temperatures plummet a little bit wednesday through thursday, but the dryness continues president draught is really incredible. historic levels. we are watching this tropical storm summon hoping to get some of that moisture. nothing to bust that draught unfortunately, it's going to be a really tough year for folks in southern california. melissa, back to you. melissa: thank you so much.
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another big story in the news today. chinese hackers posing a major impact. david, what do you have come up. >> this is a company and a guy who has been warning us about hackers for a long time. now, that alibaba is here. we have to be concerned about how deep they are getting into our personal records. we had the fbi director on 60 minutes say, there are two kinds of big companies in america, those who are being hacked by the chinese and those who don't realize they're being hacked by the chinese. it's happening all over. the question is: what are we doing about it? melissa: absolutely. and the point they made it's hard to quantify what it costs, but it's in the billions. and many chinese companies are trying to take shortcuts and steal information from all kinds of companies in the u.s. >> and, meanwhile, our companies are losing
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dramatically. there is the guy who is going to be on. melissa: thank you so much. that's all we have for now. i hope you're making money today. market is just about flat. count down starts right now. liz: melissa, i'm just checking all of the news that is breaking on ebola with, and, of course, we will get that to you in just a minute. doubling down on nba disney and timewarner agreed to pay more than twice what they are paying right now to keep showing basketball games. will it mean even bigger salaries for nba superstars, but more importantly, what about your table bill? tickets you want for the game. we're getting the answers. financial crisis, the biggest players in the melt down six years ago testify in a landmark lawsuit over aig's massive bail out. former secretary paul wipingis
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