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tv   MONEY With Melissa Francis  FOX Business  February 5, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm EST

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meantime another superstar right here. melissa francis. "money" starts now. melissa: please don't stop. thank you so much. job delusion. why one of the biggest research groups out there is saying the unemployment rate is a big fat lie, just in time for tomorrow's new number. plus jordan takes charge. fresh airstrikes killed dozens of isis fighters. while over in rue crain, more calls for the u.s. to supply arms. of russia's warning of colossal damage. plus there is seemingly no end to the measles fallout. california is one step closer to enforcing vaccines california. brian williams fire storms. yikes!. veterans are angry at so-called lies in his war stories. some are calling for him to quit. even when they say it's not it is always about the truth.
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melissa: the dow right now seeing triple-digit gains seeing a boost from pfizer's acquisition of hospira. volatility in the oil market continues. prices rebounding in a big way today with concerns over production in libya being cited as a reason for the spike but we all know it is really about the technical trade. here now to discuss it our very own charlie gasparino. todd starnes from fox news radio and david asman host of "after the bell." let me ask you about the market, charlie real quick. what do you think? oil drove driving action but so volatile. >> been volatile for months and much of it is the oil trade. as you know, market during the financial crisis, the market was completely contingent on bank stocks. if bank stocks went up, markket went down. reason for that because we were in financial crisis. now the market is coupled with oil prices. we'll see -- melissa: shaking off concerns about the ecb. shaking off concerns about greece.
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>> that is the point. all about what the ecbers all around the world will doing what fed is doing what all central bankers is doing. that is what we're moving oil. you and i had a fight about what effect central banks can do with oil prices. that is why oil prices are crazy. they don't know how much more money will be printed. whenned fed will lift rates that is affecting volatility. melissa: having a lot to do with dollar. jordan launching a series of strikes that killed 55 militants including a senior commander this comes after the release of that brutal video showing a jordanian pilot being burned alive. here at home republicans and democrats alike pushing for more military aid to jordan. 26 members of the armed services committee signing a letter urging administration to step up its efforts. todd, i know you have a lot of thoughts about this, specifically what would the president do if american were burned alive. >> great question you raise. subject of one of my
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commentaries. i like this guy clint eastwood, john wayne hybrid. melissa: will get in the fight. >> putting on combat boots because they killed a jordanian. when they kid an american, president obama put on golf cleats and went out golfing. king abdullah doing what needs to be done. a lot of americans are afraid at end of the day if in fact they incinerate american president obama may not do anything. quite frankly the based on way he handled this day one it is as if he doesn't give a damn. melissa: they do have an american woman. >> they do have an american woman. we're relying too much on king of jordan. most jordanians are not palestinians. they're not all behind the leader. he is a king. he doesn't have universal support. how far can we go buying a force to defeat isis of the we have to be more involved. melissa: charlie. >> i will say this the american people don't want us involved in another war over there.
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and you know listen, i thought you made a great point. king of jordan puts on boots, president obama goes golfing after the last beheading of an american citizen. those are optics that are horrendous. this is bad situation but, there is no way that american people right now, and markets are saying this. they want us involved. >> i'm talking about special forces guys in the front lines directing airstrikes in a way that hasn't been done. that's different. >> that's possible. melissa: here on our own turf yeah i do. "fox news poll," 70 80% think there will be an attack by isis on your own soil. >> what do they say about sending troops overthere? melissa: i think we need to go kill them. i don't know about boots on the ground. >> you do know. they say zero. they don't want it. polls show, the polls show -- >> special forces guys ahead of enemy lines i think public would support that. >> you don't know. the public -- >> they did after 9/11 charlie. that is how we got the taliban out of power in afghanistan.
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>> this is not 9/11. it is 2015. >> what melissa say we may be facing another 9/11. isn't it better to nip it in the bud now. >> yes but sell that to the american people? >> i think the president has to do it. and he hasn't so far. i don't think the president is willing to. >> we've been through years and years of war. you're telling me americans want another war. >> we want to stop another 9/11 before it happens. >> 9/11 was whole other issue, david. >> maybe be a redux. >> i agree. not the same issue. melissa: new poll find 66% of people in new jersey christie is putting presidential ambitions above his role in governor. no. the first time a politician ever done that. >> i see even from country club republicans who i talk to all the time, absolutely no appetite for chris christie to be the republican nominee. there is -- melissa: todd, what do you see?
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>> ken langone we point out still beating bushes for this, but nobody wants this guy to be president. melissa: todd, you have a huge following. what do you think? >> he tries to present himself as populist sort of guy but the bombastty doesn't play well in the southern states. what was latest story. they're going after him because he likes living high life. >> "new york times." >> you but know what? i didn't see them going after president obama when he was dining chewing on the weenies at $1,000 a pop. >> that would be racist. that would be racist. >> but here's the problem with christie, you're saying the south doesn't like him and more traditionally conservative states don't like him, the northeast republicans are not getting hine him. i just don't see i don't see if you can't get more than ken langone, former head of home can depot to support you you're done. >> good point. melissa: get on to the most important story of the day. i have to force you guys to talk about this one.
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here it goes. 24-year-old hannah davis, better known as derek jet ear es girlfriend. >> whoa. took down the bottom banner. melissa: "sports illustrated" swimsuit issue only because charlie gasparino wouldn't do the cover. he was going to. >> you made me sick to my stomach. >> come on, now. derek jeter's girlfriend. good job, derek jeter. >> i tell you -- melissa: got a little bit quiet all of a sudden. >> he was stomach blink over his words. >> i came back from the super bowl and got to hang out with tone my romo a little bit. i was part of his entourage. a friend of mine got involved. jerry jones was there. >> was chris christie there? >> john tatum. friend with them. good friend of mine. i saw tony romo's wife. no better looking woman than that. melissa: that is what you're bringing to the conversation? >> just better looking. melissa: hannah davis and
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"sports illustrated." want to be clear, tony romo's wife is hot. >> look at both of these women by the way. melissa: for anyone keeping track at home. >> tony romo's wife was off the charts. >> you're obsessed. >> not obsessed. >> todd, would you like to weigh in on the "sports illustrated" "sports illustrated" conversation. >> there is good-looking girl works in our bodega. melissa: we run the gamut here. that was a lot of fun. i have been saying this one all along. bright shining employment numbers that the government keeps touting is a total lie. i've been calling foul on this one from the start. i will discuss it with the man who crunched numbers on it himself, gallup ceo jim clifton is next. apple raising some eyebrows, not only driving minivans, but minivans strapped with cameras. what the heck are they doing with those? more money, lots of truth coming up. ♪
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♪ melissa: it is exactly what we've been telling you here on "money" for years. the government jobs number is hocus-pocus. it is masking the number of people who have seen their good, full-time job disappear and then they have been forced to replace that job with a low-paying part-time job. the government says a job is a job, what are you complaining about? one major ceo says no. the says the number of full-time jobs as a percent of the population is the lowest it has been in decades. i spoke with the jim clifton ceo of gallup a few moments ago. why is it that we've seen so many full-time jobs disappear? what's the problem? >> that is real clear. that is an easy one. there is only six million businesses in america. you will read 26 million. that is not true. there is only six million. of six million, four million are
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mom-and-pop shops. now you're down to two million. that is fragile ecosystem. 500 new businesses have to start every year because 400,000 close up. so we have a net of 100,000. that is what feed that real meat rainforest, call it two million active business in the united states. those lines just crossed, melissa. i don't know why more economists don't report this but now we have 400 less than 400,000 starting and 500,000 dying. so startup and that is the most reliable place you can find new, good, full-time jobs which is what everybody wants. not crappie part-time jobs. melissa: you say there are not enough new businesses starting up or not enough what is the missing? not enough new businesses starting in this country that is basically the problem is? >> it is of the one other problem too. that is the two million between the employment sizes of 4 and 100, those have stopped growing. they stopped sticking their neck
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out. there are -- big business is doing well. only 1000 companies have 10,000 or more employees. the number is lot smaller than people think. we're a country of small an medium-sized businesses than large. the small and medium-sized stopped growing because they have wind in their face and lost optimism. startups and small and medium size. that is why we don't have middle class. melissa: why have they lost their optimism? >> we meticulously track this with wells fargo. what they say is, they say regulations. that is the first, really which ones? first one out of their mouth is health care and second one is environment. melissa: wow. so what does the government have to do from here in order to create more jobs? >> i think one of the things is, i don't think, don't know if it is government or cities or states. a lot of variation. some cities are doing really well other cities are really tanking. but if you look, the cities that are more entrepreneurial, we have put billions and billions of into innovation. it is really hard.
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our gallup analytical teams have looked and looked and looked. we love innovation, we sell innovation. hard to find new jobs coming out of innovation. i think it is possible the u.s. government carrying leaders like you and me are absolutely wrong where jobs come from. jobs don't come from innovation. innovation doesn't have any value until a customer is standing next to it. we missed that customer standing next to it. until we start businesses, put a lot of intentional development on rare entrepreneurship, business models, and rare rainmakers, i don't think it will come back. now, but i'm very optimistic. if america, believes that and intentionally turns, we could turn it around very fast but this whole thing is definitely going the wrong way right now. melissa: all right. that was the man himself. he is making waves all around the country right now with this report. let's bring in the panel for reaction. we have fox business's own charles payne. kennedy is with us as well. we wanted to drill down with the numbers with him, every time the jobs number comes out i always
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ask how many new johnson are part-time and full-time bureau of labor statistics they don't separate that out because they don't want to know the truth. >> they know the truth to your point -- melissa: they don't want to share the truth. >> they don't want to share the truth. so much spin. this stuff has been around for a long time. i've been talking about this, writing about this for a very long time. i think most important thing is the atmosphere. he sort of touched on that a little bit with respect to environment where it's sort of nuturing. i don't think people realize how many businesses were created during the great depression. this is ironically the time people normally in the history of america -- melissa: can't find a job so make one for themselves. >> right. melissa: he is saying, you're saying people aren't doing that right now. >> they are not doing that. not going into their garages and coming out with hewlett-packard. >> that is critical ratio we saw before 2008. before 2008 there were 100,000 m.o. businesses created than died. and what he is saying there are 470,000 that die and only
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400,000 new businesses that are created. and that is the american dream. that is full participation in the economy when you create your own business and find some success there and people are so frustrated by economy. if you dig further into the article, it says that small business owners shut their businesses because of taxes and healthcare, even if that may not be the case perception is so powerful they shut down. melissa: all of this is the reason why as the white house and people on left and proponents of big government come out and say look what we've done and look how much better the jobs picture gotten when we've been here. people at home are saying why do i feel so awful? why am i poorer than i was before recession? because instead of having goodful time jobs are created in part created by good businesses they're taking these other jobs. you can never support a family on what you make at mcdonald's. >> you could put small businesses out of business by raising that minimum wage. melissa: that's a great point. >> you can price them right out of the market.
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>> adp out yesterday. small businesses dwarfed the amount of job creation than large businesses again. so not uncommon. happens all the time. here's the thing also people want it's a risk. you are taking a risk when you start a business. for that risk you don't want to be beaten up by your president, you don't want to have higher taxes. you don't want to be demonized because you actually took a risk, took money thaw saved for 15 years belt-tightening and borrowed from family and borrowed from friends and sunk it all into this thing. if it does come out great you have created jobs. you should be put on a ped tell, not beaten down. melissa: celebrated. >> great commercial at super bowl, guy looking at spreadsheet. you are not enjoying the game right now. that is, that is my husband. my husband's has a small business. that is that sweat equity you have to deal with. melissa: celebrate those people. >> they're being pushed out of it. melissa: absolutely right about that. charles, you have a huge event live from the world money show
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in orlando at 6:00 p.m. you are going to host a question and answer with audience of 700 people. 700 people live in front of you. >> 700. melissa: my goodness the! >> can't wait. by the way my record is 3,000. melissa: wow. >> i can't wait. people are starting, people want more, we know this they're afraid. intimidated. they don't trust but they understand. my whole message has been this thing. hey, invest in great american companies first and foremost. forget about the hijinks and shenanigans in washington and demonization. people don't know where to turn to. i'm hoping i can answer a lot of people's questions. i'm pumped up. melissa: i will check that out. >> i will be dropping my girls off at gymnastics. melissa: also great! we celebrate that! excellent. the measles outbreak is spreading. we're not spreading that. don't think you're safe because you had your vaccine. we'll tell you everything you need to know to protect yourself and family. when to get your booser is shot. a lot of people were tweeting me
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an asking me about that. i want to answer for you here on the air. we have a doctor coming up. most peel would want to look for this dental giant. one man wouldn't recognize it if it fell into his lap. do you ever have too much money? ♪ kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. when the moment's spontaneous, why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. 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
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at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda.
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melissa: market rally, pushing averages for the year. oil major story. let's to to nicole petallides on floor of new york stock exchange. nicole, what is driving the trade? >> we're watching certainly green across the board. that is what we've been seeing all week long. as a matter of fact the dow is
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up almost 4% as we speak. names like disney chevron led the way. as far as what we're seeing green, it is energy, materials health care all green. you mentioned oil melissa which is at 50.76 here this afternoon. that has been volatility and volatile trade. yesterday we saw the big selloff of.7%. only saw --.7%. it rallied back today. melissa: thank you very much. since california measles outbreak, there are over 100 reported cases over 19 states. many believed that measles is disease of the past. cdc warns if people remain unvaccinated it could become a disease of the future. manny alvarez, health care. com managing editor. wow, that is quite a title. after we talk about this people tweet me and email, facebook, they want to answer this question, if i've been
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vaccinated, am i safe? >> depend when you got the vaccine. as i say vaccines are not forever. they fade away. if you have a vaccine as a child -- melissa: how many years? >> measles, for instance you take your initial vaccine about four years later, you take the booster shot. by end of two vaccinations you have 90% protection you want high 90s. melissa: for how long? >> good decade perhaps. melissa: that's it? >> do i think that my measles now is that protective, perhaps not. melissa: should we all get a booster. >> we should always be getting boosters of different vaccines. you have tetanus boosters. you have the vaccine for people over 65. all these things need to be given. grant you, if you have full immunity and in your 20s 30s, 40s you will not have problem getting meese especially if you had booster shots while you were a child. melissa: cdc is warning individuals to get immunized california lawmakers are seeking
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to end personal belief vaccination exemptions. 4states have laws that allow people cite religious or philosophical beliefs not to get children vaccinated. i think that will be a big fight. >> could be, could be. other states have very strict rules. look, i don't have any problem with religious ground, okay, fine. you have religious ground. that is your belief. we'll not go there. but for philosophical ground, i think, i think therefore i am. that is not where i'm going. there is a lot of misinformation out there on the internet. that is my problem. when you have bloggers writing buptkus stuff on things not real, like saying that the world is not round and you believe it then you are really putting the whole world in danger. melissa: one of the big things in new york, i read this in the post, they were saying a lot of parents don't want to do vaccine they say their kids are allergic to eggs that is how they get out of it. >> that is medical reason. if you're allergic to eggs, get
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ready to say this that every time you get vaccine. almost all vaccines have egg protein you can be allergic too. you're putting misinformation in somebody's chart. that is dangerous. melissa: thank you for clearing that up. >> thank you. melissa: we want to help people. u.s. weighing a major move in ukraine but russia warning the west to stay out or else. speaking of russia the pentagon playing doctor with vladmir putin. the diagnosis that could explain some questionable decisions. "piles of money" come right up. ♪ i've been called a control freak... i like to think of myself as more of a control... enthusiast.
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melissa: making promises it intends to keep jordan responding swiftly to the isis brutal murder of a captured pilot. that country ramping up their
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strikes killing 55 militants in just one day after king of bela promised a harsh war against the terrorists. connor has more. that's right, across the country we have heard government officials and king abdallah promised a harsh response. we have seen that that response is holding true. a number of airstrikes has been launched on the isis controlled area in syria, that is a stronghold there, and an area that we believe that muath al-kaseasbeh was being held when he was executed by isis. the exact number of airstrikes that flew over syria is unknown they are putting the number at more than a dozen or so which by jordanian standards would be a lot. what we don't know is who were the targets and what were the targets and how successful that they were. we also don't know if jordan is
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able to keep this pace up for more than one day or so. there's a lot of talk about expanding the military campaign against isis, nobody has really defined now. earlier today king abdallah met with the family of the pilot. it was a significant moment where the king really went down to this important tribal family and really showed a sign of unity, not only how important tribes are but the military is to the country and to the king. the next step in the really larger question is what happens next herriot all the talk about taking the fight to isis, a really has one significant problem, but jordan has a great intelligence capability here and they have a decent air force, but they don't have much of a ground force your or a strong or powerful or large ground force. so the jordanian military will be very hampered to try to extend the military campaign and
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left the united states and other countries do so. so for now it appears that it could be an extended or large campaign but nothing more than that so far from what we are seeing here. melissa: they do so much for that report. months after the cease-fire tensions between russia and ukraine are as bad as ever. at the kerry of state john kerry meeting with ukrainian president and top officials earlier today reiterating the administration's preferred resolution to the ongoing fighting. >> archways is diplomacy. our choice is a peaceful resolution. melissa: just a short while ago john mccain had firmer words of his own. >> the united states must act with urgency to provide defensive legal assistance to the ukraine. melissa: todd and david are back. thank you to all three of you for joining us. they are talking about the call
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for legal aid, that is anti-air tank mortar weapons. do you think that we should supply that? >> i think that we should have supplied a long time ago. in fact, all of -- they should have drawn more of a line as to where russia could not go. because vladimir putin is going to bush, he is in educated military officer, he is going to push this as far as he can and he is basically playing our leaders. melissa: okay, let me be an advocate. for the other side. they have already won do not get involved, this is not your battle, we are spread thin as it is, we have conflicts around the world and peoples they were not doing enough elsewhere. why get involved two. >> this administration is all about the optics. this president won't even defend our borders, what makes you think that he will support other countries? this morning i received e-mails from one of my readers who lives
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in kiev. he tells me that people there just don't believe that america is going to come to their defense and protect them. melissa: david should we? >> yes, i think we should, we have to realize that the sanctions are affecting what could happen, not only that but the price is affecting them, the price of oil is affecting the standard of living more than anything else, i think he is a kgb animal therefore he is more portable. but now is the time if we're ever going to have any pushback we have to face it and that is much more effective than any sanction. melissa: does that mean the same to you? >> we need to start looking at the way that we fight wars. the middle east is unconventional war. the way you fight, that is the
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play to support. they should be supporting an inch so should the other european countries because i believe what you are saying about the quality of living. but the quality of living for vladimir putin is not changing. melissa: what should we do? >> it's a european country they should be over there helping, we should be doing this. it's either us or nothing. if that is the case we need to take a look at how many supporting people we can put over there and what capacity we can put people who can drive this force forward and be a force multiplier. melissa: you agree with that? >> i think that we do. i think that the american people understand we have to support the allies and we have to have their back. we saw what happened with israel will be don't believe the administration is really supporting netanyahu right now in the american people are fighting back. so i think they will support
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some kind of a limited engagement. melissa: girl star allison williams. we have the story. and then ryan leaves in hot water about a story that is a little too good to be true. plus, see to believe why this might be just the thing to keep your kid out of trouble. every moh on t >> all that and more coming up ying on time. and then one day you tap the bumper of a station wagon. no big deal... until your insurance company jacks up your rates. you freak out. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? hey insurance companies, news flash. nobody's perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance.
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melissa: i am melissa francis with your fox business brief. america's number two health insurer has been hacked and millions may have been affected. anthem says that 80 million former and current customers may have been targeted. no credit card information was accessed in the attacks. and resigning from sony it ain't me paschal is stepping down. but she will remain with sony as a producer. and the oldest man in the world celebrating his birthday, a former teacher living in japan 112 years old. he was 66 when neil armstrong walked on the moon. good for him. that is the latest from the fox business network giving you the power to prosper.
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3rd and 3. 58 seconds on the clock, what am i thinking about? foreign markets. asian debt that recognizes the shift in the global economy. you know, the kind that capitalizes on diversity across the credit spectrum and gets exposure to frontier and emerging markets. if you convert 4-quarter p/e of the s&p 500 its yield is doing a lot better... if you've had to become your own investment expert, maybe it's time for bny mellon a different kind of wealth manager ...and black swans are unpredictable. melissa: a scandal rocking the nbc news anchor brian williams, he admitting he was not in a helicopter during the iraq invasion of 2003.
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>> i want to apologize to my set i was traveling in an aircraft that was hit by fire, i was in a following aircraft. we all landed after the ground fire incident and spent two harrowing nights in the desert. melissa: let's bring in our panel. joe, what do you think of this one? >> i think he is under fire for saying that he was under fire. [laughter] there are so many things that can happen here. the bottom line is that if he doesn't look at the ratings that williams brings then, he's number one, he has been for a long time, profits are very good and the nbc nightly news if she has any integrity, then his days are numbered. melissa: you think this is career ending? >> the apology is now under
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fire. he says i was in the helicopter behind it. people that were there, witnesses say that that is not true. they said he was an hour behind in flight time and that would be like you being in the car in front of me in washington dc and i am back in baltimore. so when you are a network anchor, it's not like you are a politician. credibility is everything this is a chair that was occupied by brinkley and homely and chancellor and brokaw. and if he is not believable, i don't see how you can keep him employed. >> i am the photo. [laughter] >> this is actually the second disaster that the williams family has the following them.
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and i'm with joe. credibility is the number one thing. melissa: a lot of it has to do with the explanation in what he said afterwards. because he said maybe i lied about something in the past but to say you contemplated it, a lot of times coverup is worse than the actual crime. >> here's the thing, it's not like a night at the jersey shore and i forgot what i was this was the equivalent of losing your virginity. you remember that moment when you're under fire in a helicopter in a war zone. you don't conflate that are misremember it, you made it up. melissa: you are the media expert. do they lose viewers or money over this? >> i think that they lose viewers over it. this lives with him forever. any time he opens his mouth and shares a story, people say there
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is brian williams the liar. would they ever say that about jennings or someone else? no, they wouldn't. at the very least he has to go on permanent vacation for a month or so. melissa: stay where you are, gentlemen. checking in with cheryl casone it. >> we have a lot coming up. we're going to be looking ahead after the bell that is earnings from twitter and go pro. can they grow the business? can they make money? also we will hear from linked in. we will be talking about colleen taylor to give us a preview of the next hour about those earnings as well and then katy perry. will she sign a multiyear deal with a company called glue
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mobile. that is all the rage. all the kids are doing it. she and kim kardashian could be the two potential winners when it comes to glue mobile, we will have them come on and talk about that. and so we will be having all of that and more. melissa: thank you so much. have you seen this? a barber in melville, georgia offering a free benjamin button special to misbehaving kids. saying if you want to act grown you can look grown as well. he actually dated his own son and saw his grades improved. here's a picture of a guy with a giant humpback whale because he can't get off his phone. i am guilty of tweeted, i might
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miss the whale but as far as a haircut goes, i'm afraid my kids would say that's great, i liked it. it's pretty funny, what do you think? >> i did last year, it wasn't good for the broadcasting world. [laughter] so i have a 15-month-old daughter so i can't quite relate. >> i have actually been to georgia, there are town slogans. i haven't been to this barber but i like this guy. i think the problem is they have a lot of kids with nice haircuts but they have bad behavior. [laughter] >> when i was a kid my mom put the ball on my head. melissa: did that make you behave better? >> no, i certainly had to flip the switch. melissa: on a serious note there. okay, don't forget to tune into
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our new program with jamie colby "strange inheritance." it's an awesome show and i watched almost all of the episodes. coming up next the perfect present for anyone on your bad side this valentine's day. you can never have too much money
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stay. melissa: major averages trending positive for the year, don't forget about oil being down 4% i am joined by scott. thank you for joining us.
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it seems like we are up a little bit. >> following the money this time around. yesterday they came back off bonds and oil and we will see a little bit more of a healthy rally there. ultimately this guaranteed trade will be returning at the end of the year. and that is why you are seeing them all move this way. melissa: thank you, thank you. now for a little fun with spare
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change. the perfect way to say i am over you, buddy, this valentine's day. melissa: thank you for joining us, my hat is off to you. the show is about money and making money and that you have found a very clever way you say nothing says i have moved on then adopting a charming madagascar are kissing cockroach. i love it. we let them know with this giant cockroach. >> absolutely, we wrote him a note saying this is from someone
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you love or someone used to love the vast majority have been sending them to people that are there current valentines. >> we have been surprised at how many people love bugs. some people say my boyfriend's nickname is roach, my girlfriend is a scorpio, can i send her a scorpion. so that has then a completely overwhelming response of all the people who love bugs. melissa: how much money have you raised? >> we have a year-round adoption animal program and all the money goes to money to care for the animals at the zoo. so we usually get maybe 200 hits
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a month, this time in february 40,000 heads and they say maybe i don't want to get something for my acts, maybe i want to give something for my current lover, so they go and get a penguin or with whatever they can. melissa: why not the xor everyone. tim, thank you so much. apple. how they are planning world domination one at a time. we will have that and more upnk no br next for sure it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason.
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it could've been brenda.
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at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. >> apple trying to take over the world one product at a time. the tech giant is in talks of entering the cable arena along
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with apple registered mystery bands. google cars are very own nicole petallides is back with us. what are the vans with the cameras doing, nicole? >> i'm digging into these two topics. your iphone. iwatch whatever they're called. we are looking what they're doing now. you talked about cable. people are feeling bullied. they want to figure out a way around it. tim cook in an interview recently said television is so stuck back in the '70s. what they are doing now is talked to the content providers instead of having to deal with the distributors. so they would provide it much like we heard from dish in january. they said they would have ten channels. twenty bucks a month. that's the first story. the second one you mentioned these events. what are these vans? they are vans reportedly driving around california. some reports maybe in new york as well with vans that are not labeled. they are owned by apple. no comment by apple.
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but they have sensors or cameras. are they beefing up their map or trying to battle google for a self-driving car. that's what we need to find out. melissa: yeah, really interesting stuff nicole. thank you so much. that's all we have for now. here's cheryl. >> melissa francis, thank you so much. the interview amy wasn't preparing for her. we'll tell you what it will ultimately mean for the beleaguered movie studio. a hacking scandal that has nothing to do with sony but affects tens of millions of patients. we'll take a look at what it means for anthem. the provider of injectable drugs is being bought by visor for more than $50 billion. a good fit for its pharmaceutical business. shares soaring on that news. right now, take a look at the stock up

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