tv MONEY With Melissa Francis FOX Business February 26, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm EST
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rd. three arrested in new york trying to launch lone wolf attacks as the fbi reveals isis related investigations in all 50 states. conflicts of interest. hillary clinton representing the u.s. as secretary of state but taking millions from those countries for herself. hmmm. gearing up for the apple watch. an exclusive invitation unveiled. wait until you see the big splash it is making in "vogue," famous for being famous and now even more well think. the kardashian clan's record-breaking new tv deal. even when they say it is not especially for them, it is always about money. melissa: the identity of a masked killer who has become the shrouded face of isis may finally be exposed. "the washington post" reporting that "jihadi john," who acted as executioner in at least four of
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the beheading videos is mohammed emwazi a kuwaiti-born briton who enjoyed a prosperous upbringing. new details emerging about suspected terrorists on u.s. soil. one of three brooklyn men arrested by the fbi on terror charges, operating maul kiosks around the u.s. here to discuss all of it, charlie gasparino, david asmen, "after the bell." mike baker, founder of diligent intelligence. start with you. what do you think about the terror suspects? >> europe dealing a lot more with this problem than we have. it is making a big splash because it is on our own turf. religious individuals, also frankly psychotics and nutjobs out there but we're seeing an up surge in efforts to join the islamic state. one primary reason finally after jonesing for it for
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generations they finally can say we've got our caliphate a growing caliphate. that is what is exciting both the base and i said all the psychotics looking for something to latch on to. >> not because they don't have a job. this guy apparently "jihadi john" came from middle class or upper middle class background. nonsense the state department says they're jihadists because they don't have a job. >> a lot of financing of 9/11 a lot of rich guys. this story and economic angle is fascinating from this standpoint. the obama administration believes you ever jobs program for targeted terrorists it somehow might prevent terrorists. you can't make that up. it is so absurd yet they use an economic angle here. you were in the agency. have you ever heard of that before? >> no. what i want to do is fine and live in alternate universe that the president and secretary kerry and others have created. they want, they want the world
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to look like this. i honestly believe it. at certain point, do you think they really think if they talk about enough that is what we will have? melissa: talking about immigrants from somalia in the u.s. and unable to a simulate and find a job. so as a result they're joining isis. >> there is positive, there is positive news here. that is they caught these guys. there are still enough guys like mike baker out there and thank god commissioner bratton. frankly if new york city did not have commissioner bratton, if they relied on mayor de blasio to go after the bad guys i wonder if they got them. >> why do those guys leave somalia. this is the economic argument. the media has not held the obama administration accountable for this. the economic argument is so inane and childish. they left somalia which is screwed up country, economically and other ways for a better life in the u.s. somehow u.s.'s fault for not getting them better jobs and that caused them to be isis. >> what they're trying to do is what they have been trying to do for some time by minimizing by
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talking at academic level. yes there is political angle to it diplomatic angle economic angle. you solve the problem with all those. it's stupid. not a strategy for national security. melissa: move on to the clinton foundation admitting it violated an ethics agreement with the white house taking money from a foreign power while hillary clinton served as secretary of state. remember they said it never happened while she was in office. turned out it did, the foundation accepted $500,000. >> that's wonderful, algeria. melissa: in clear breach of a deal with the obama administration. algeria one of seven foreign governments that donated to the foundation that clinton led while she was in the state department. >> remember, this is this is a woman who first of all made $100,000 on cattle futures. >> because she read "the wall street journal." >> because she read "the wall street journal" this is woman who mysteriously lost the billing papers for a bankrupt s&l in arkansas.
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and then, oh suddenly they appeared. i happen to know there was a draft indictment written against her for that obstruction of justice. that is what the prosecutors were calling it. never brought forward because of monica lewinsky. she has a past that will catch up with her. melissa: saying this happened before she was in the state department. then it stopped. came back on afterward. now reporters are digging into it. they found that was not true. >> i think i might have alerted you and everybody else here this will be the clinton foundation will be the gift that keeps on giving. why is that? i think you were out last week correct? melissa: yeah. >> we had debate last week me -- melissa: beginning of this week. >> but we had a debate about the clinton foundation one of our guests said it is noble charity. this is the epicenter of the clinton's crony capitalism. people that gave to this, by the way, goldman sachs her buddy lloyd blankfein, who repaid her in many other ways. i they expect to get repaid when she gets into office. that will achilles' heel for
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hillary clinton. melissa: providing clean water and mosquito netting for people in africa. there are many ways for the goldman sachs, they don't need to give to the clinton foundation. melissa: by virtue of doing -- >> playing devil's advocate she is democrat. her name is clinton. and i, i don't believe honest god, i said this earlier the clintons are where investigations go to die. i don't believe this will be the issue that it should be. that it should be. i don't recall it will be. >> baggage behind them for decades and they get away with it. >> you know what what the problem generally is, right like "wall street journal" goes too far. this is about crony capitalism. much subtler going to jail for bribing somebody. talking about quid proquote. >> nothing subtle about a draft indictment. melissa: expanding power to regulate service providers.
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rules passed by a 3-2 vote as expected. the tally split along party lines. just what we need let's get the government involved. that is the solution. regulate the internet. that will solve all the problems. >> you remember the head of fcc forget his name, obviously obama appointee. >> tom wheeler. >> was he gentleman commented about the washington redskins, how the fcc did not want the word washington redskins said over broadcast television not caib broadcast. think about this, is the fcc really want to get into this? yes. why? because they want to regulate every part of it, including -- >> hold on. hold on. making a speech, charlie. this is not the fcc, this is the obama administration. in fact there is parallel, one of the commissioners said there is parallel fcc within the white house. this is unprecedented. supposed to be an independent commission. granted -- >> wheeler is frontman? >> more than even wheeler himself apparently objected to
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the degree which the white house was writing rules. >> initially. initially. then he backed off. that. >> initially he backed off it. >> he backed off but other commissioners are sticking with their story. i have one in the 4:00 story. melissa: i was about to say you have a big interview coming up. tell us about that. fcc commissioner michael o'rielly on "after the bell" 4:00 eastern time. >> michael o'rielly is one of two pubs. they balance it three of one party and two of the other party. michael o'rielly is one of the dissenters. is very focused about the -- >> are they going to lose or win? >> they won today. 3-2 vote in the favor of the new rules. >> it is over. >> not over at all by a long shot. last two times they tried to do they lost in the courts. they may lose again in the courts. melissa: apple sending out a coy invitation for spring forward event on march 9th where many suspect the apple watch will -- get it time spring
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forward. see what i did. already a centerfold. "vogue" featuring a 12-page ad for apple's newest accessory. look at that very sleek and very lovely. big ad in "vogue" which charlie reads all the time. charlie never gets dressed without looking at "vogue." magazine ad rate $189,888. >> for one ad. melissa: for one ad. >> full page? my company might -- melissa: single ad can fetch almost $200,000 for little apple watch. what do we think? >> don't they have plenty of money to spend on ads. >> you're not wearing a watch. charlie, you're not wearing a watch. melissa: i want one and i don't wear a watch. great point. >> close to the dick tracy watch i'm getting one. melissa: me too. just another reminder to charlie gasparino, your secrets are not safe at work, my friend. this is according to a new "harris poll." about one in 10
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people have stumbled across information at the office that could get one of their colleagues fired. got to find the list. >> what could get me fired? melissa: let me tell you. got it here. >> on my twitter page. that is my biggest problem. melissa: you say everything that could get you fired. so none of it is a secret. 62% heard conversations with people complaining about the boss or other workers. only 62%. >> i love my boss. i love bill shine. melissa: we all do. >> rupert murdoch. melissa: love him. >> roger ailes? melissa: heard conversation about layoffs or firings of someone else. 22% of conversations have heard conversations about someone else's compensation. 18% have heard conversations about someone lying to the boss. uh-oh. 11%, have heard conversations about setting up a coworker to fail. that is really malicious, yikes! >> that last one, sounds like cnbc. melissa: uh-oh. >> wait a minute. >> i run a company, that is information intelligence and
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security company, right? melissa: yes. >> what do we do? we provide information not readily available to public. >> steal information. >> to law firms and others. no, we don't. some people refer to it as information gathering. people should be this runs counter to our business model this is selfless act i'm engaged in. melissa: go ahead. >> people should be very very aware of everything they're doing in the office. sled everything you've got in your office. sled pieces shred pieces paper. amazing what people throw away in office environment. amazing how lose they are. >> i was thinking about that. melissa: charlie is perfectly safe. >> imagine a paper shredder in charlie's office. >> running all day long. melissa: that was fun. >> make it clear, our bosses are great here. melissa: yeah. isis, the terrorist group capturing more than 200 christians in syria. personal story from a family inside of the country.
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stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. why pause the moment? ask your doctor about cialis for daily use. for a free 30-tablet trial go to cialis.com melissa: unsettling news out of syria as we learn the number of christians captured by isis in recent days climbed to 220. that is more than double of previous reports we heard. the abductions began on monday when isis took over 11 villages in northeast syria. the region between syria and iraq is latest battleground by the radical group. i'm joined by the president of the american islamic forum for democracy. thank you so much for joining us. let me ask you a simple question. i asked you this before because you're somebody who left syria a long time ago. why are people still there given how dangerous it is and now as it seems how likely you could be
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captured and killed? why do people stay? >> well i mean, look at this assyrian families are being tortured and been captured. it is called syria because of the assyrians. they were there long before islam existed. it is their country. the diversity of syria makes it successful. if it becomes homogenous and islamic militants create a islamic state of radicals it will no longer exist. their very identity, their soul this battle within the soul of islam, it will be surrendered to inhumanity, to evil. they won't do that where will they go? it is their country. it is a syrian, kurdish, sunni islam moderate. those are part of the syrian national identity and they should not surrender to these militants. why the free world needs to bake up. melissa: is your family still there? >> my family is still in aleppo and damascus. people forget the first people that were tortured and oppressed
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were sunni muslims who rose up. assad bonded with shia militants of iran. you have two jihadist elements each side of sectarian battle. in the middle are minority, and dissidents savaged through the middle east es specialspecially syria. melissa: have you talked to them lately and have they told you what it is like right now? >> it horrific. barrel bombs into the neighborhoods. the hostage taking. evil being done through isis, especially in the northeast and towns where isis is based, turned something prehistoric. it is medieval savagery. they're fighting for existence to stay out of the fray. trying to survive. we talk to them as much as we can through skype and internet phone. sometimes we can't communicate. melissa: what do you think will happen to the christians that are captured and what do you think the point is of capturing them? >> they have many goals.
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one is basically use them to raise their base, jihadists to say this is war against christianity as we saw with savage videos with the cops being beheaded. they were going to rome against crusaders. their magazine is based on a town in northwest syrian area where es can to logical where islam would reign over christians. this is part of end of times these militant islamists believe will make them dominate. cleansing of minority assyrians call deannes is part of their narrative. if we have any hope for moderates to win out we can't allow pluralistic of syria to lose. we pray for them they will ransom them enslave them or kill them. melissa: zuhdi, thank you for your thoughts. our prayers are for you and your family.
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thanks for coming on. >> thank you, melissa. melissa: crude is down about 6%. losses accelerating on pressure from rising inventories in the u.s. we're just about 15 minutes away from the close of trading. we'll keep a close eye on this. a few stories on our radar. russia is threatening to cut off gas to ukraine by end of the week. gazprom refusing to deliver supplies until it receives payment. ukraine is struggling financially as it awaits funds from a new bailout. united continental shares falling after it urged pilots to stop making mistakes in the cockpit a leaked safety memo gave examples when pilots put lives of passengers in danger. danger at the doctor's office. how a deadly bacteria now spread to outpatient clinics. cdc using a major warning on this one. melissa: issuing a major warning. plus meet the caregiver the future. how robotic bears are helping
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bus stop cultural center, peasant-style homes. there is field of horses and cows. does sound lovely. land be in japan where scientists created robotic bears to act as caregivers. they are called robears. get it? designed to lift patients from the bed into wheelchairs. it also helps elderly people, keeping them steady walking around. japan is suffering from shortage of care workers. that will solve the problems. all of those eyeballs, not much to show for it. google shelled out a billion bucks for youtube but still not making a profit. go figure. here with me simon constable of "the wall street journal." chad morganlander, stifel-nicolaus. no profit in sight. >> no profit. they have to mix it up. i live on the web some ways professionally. the treich to try to make money off it. melissa: that is the trick. >> maybe they need to start doing things they haven't done
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before. they clearly need ads, somewhere. maybe subscriptions. maybe people need to pay for feed. melissa: one of those things. my kids are little. they love youtube. working on parental controls. make sure they're not wandering off. >> that is a losing battle. melissa: don't say that. they want information. look for how-to video on youtube. how do they make money. >> hold on a second. they bought youtube for 1.5 billion. revenues of five billion. they will move to six or seven billion over the course of the next three to five years. we all know that. now they're putting, investing a tremendous amount of money into youtube, hence reason why their profit margins are razor thin. not that the business model is flawed. they're reinvesting back into the business. melissa: do you buy that? >> you know, one of those things, if you're getting revenue of one dollar and spending two that is a loss to most people. but the question, if you reallocate expenses back into
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investment. you say that is not spending that is investment. it can look different. depends how you do accounting. >> as a portfolio manager, high return on invested capital business, you want to reinvest back into that business especially cost of capital is very low. that is how you make tremendous amount of money and youtube is winner. melissa: keep an eye on it, thanks guys. deadly bacteria typically found in hospitals is lurking in outpatient clinics? some people could be exposed by going to a local doctor's office. dr. manny alvarez joins me. senior managing editor of foxnewshealth.com. this is air filing. it is a super bacteria. it is found on patient chairs and exam tables. infecting millions of americans a year. 15,000 deaths attributed to it. most terrifying alone. purell won't protect you. help me. >> hospitals have to report infection rates. we keep saying there is a lot of different kinds of bacteria that have been created over the last
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couple of 20 years or so. the one we're talking about, you get cdifsl, a bacterium wants to be in your body. difficult to eradicate. gives you diarrhea. you can die from it. hospitals have to report rates of cdifficiles. doctors offices do not. half a many people are having it. 150,000 people got cdiffiless from visiting the doctor's office. melissa: let me interrupt before we run out of time. purell won't help you. the problem too many people take antibiotics becoming immune and killing off good bacteria? >> that is how you get it. once you take a lot of antibiotic you destroy natural bacteria in your gut and it gets created. one it is in your body you can
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infect other places like hospital furniture. this is why it is so difficult to eradicate it. melissa: how can i protect myself? soap and water? >> 10 days, 12 days you start having diarrhea you have to go back and see if the c-dif or antibiotic very powerful if you get diarrhea from it this could be reason. melissa: put myself in giant ziploc bag next time i go to the doctor. maybe that will protect me. >> we have to clean doctors offices better. melissa: instead of a ziploc. that makes sense. dr. manny, thank you so much. >> you got it. melissa: antiques road show with heavy drama. if you love "strange inheritance." it premiers tonight at 9:30. raking in the cash. kardashian clan got a whole lot of money. i didn't think it was possible. piles of kardashian cash coming
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[vet] two yearly physicals down. martha and mildred are good to go. here's your invoice, ladies. a few stops later, and it looks like big ollie is on the mend. it might not seem that glamorous having an old pickup truck for an office... or filling your days looking down the south end of a heifer but...i wouldn't have it any other way. lo ok at that, i had my best month ever. and earned a shiny new office upgrade. i run on quickbooks.
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that's how i own it. melissa: check out today's oil trade. crude ending down more than 5.5%. losses accelerating as u.s. oil inventories hit the highest level since august of 1982. up 8.4 million barrels from the previous week. look at that trade. the e! network is keeping up with the car dash shuns. the family signed a record breaking 100 million-dollar deal to remain with the channel another four years. this is according to page six. nbc universal spokesperson telling "hollywood reporter" saying the report is grossly inaccurate. means it is off by 100 bucks. here is fox news's julie banderas and founder of gossip david.com. thanks to both of you for joining us. what do you think about the figure? >> definitely not $100 million. look at current deal expiring
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signed 2012, three years $40 million for three years. melissa: who can even live on $40 million! that's horrible! >> 40 million to $100 million is extremely extreme. melissa: i don't know about that. because the brand has exploded. they have zillions of followers on twitter, instagram, everything else. within the demo, the all-important demo what people in television care about, the young people, they own it, right? >> but i would take it with a grain of salt anything you hear about these deals. first of all e! is extremely quiet. people sign confidentiality agreements worth millions of dollars. melissa: you don't think the kardashians don't like press? they wouldn't leak that out? >> they leak information to "tmz" certain things they want to get the record straight on gossip but don't. melissa: i want to say for the record, your sister is executive producer. >> we all work for her? melissa: tell her.
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you're not a brunette. that was originally a, need to be fix that. much cheaper to go back. >> i remember nine seasons ago she worked on keeping superries, and take series. she did the hamptons and new york series and miami. melissa: why have they captured this audience? i watched the show, so boring. >> they're like modern "brady bunch." they're modern day "brady brunch." >> comparisons to modern day "brady brunch" but at the end of the day they're very aspirational. the demographic is into kim kardashian. all the girls and teenagers. having worked at these magazines and working with sort of different aspects of their family you see if that demographic, aspirational. everything they do. really quickly, this comes on heels of a huge deal they signed with whale rock industries to do a huge digital program. melissa: you can see yourself this one of them. no matter what. different shapes and sizes.
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we have to go. appreciate it. millionaire mortgage sucker is man looking to un-- mort zuckerman to inload the "new york daily news" enlisting lazard asset management to buy the paper. he owned it since 1993. a sale isn't guaranteed and looking for sales in u.s. and europe. they averaged daily sales of 300,000 sales in december of 2014. that is big news. nice run for the nasdaq. we're closing in on 5000. nasdaq has closed a record 12 days above its open. a first since 199 it. go to nicole petallides on floor of new york stock exchange. with more on that trade, nicole? >> exciting time for the markets. 5000 markets, psychological level goes back to the tech boom internet boom of 2000 the year 2000. as you can see we're at 4968. not too far off that level. lifetime highs on the russell.
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got pretty close on dow and s&p as well. let's look at a big mover. that's sears. they had good news with a smaller loss in the latest holiday quarter. they have been cutting costs. eddie lampert is certainly working hard on this one, closing stories, reducing inventory. the worry their cashing levels are slipping and sales are slipping. how will they reignite the sales? you can only do as many cost-cutting measures as you possibly can do. the stock is down 5.25%. melissa: nicole, thank you very much. do you like "strange inheritance" you just can't get you have. my new show tonight is "unpacked" is just that. jonathan towers president of towers production makes all the magic happen. this is like antiques road show but you put family drama and baggage behind the scenes.
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unpacked we get to see scenes you left out that ended up on cutting room floor. let me play one for awe and get story behind it. >> she was helping a singer out of the car. the car was empty and the taxi driver took off and the strad was in the trunk. my father paced the lobby entire night. and 5:00 in the morning, the soviets invaded czechoslovakia. this was august of 1968. we were told we have to immediately leave the country so we didn't have the strad. they prevailed on the taxi driver to bring the strad back. everybody was waiting in the taxi driver and bus took off. melissa: you have phenomenal story about the $6 million strategy various. it was slowed loaded in in original episode? you have that many great stories, jonathan? >> we have to pack them and you
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unpack them. we have different jobs here. that did not make it in the suitcase, that story. but a lot of good stuff did, as you know. melissa: amazing. jamie colby is always polite when she talks to the families. i get to come along in "unpacked" and ask questions she is too polite. one for example, most unusual episode coming up and it is about this hoarder in illinois, who is a little bit nutty and he died and he left millions of dollars behind to two out of work actors, who he had never met. was that the strangest story you encountered along the way? >> it definitely is top several. i mean you know why did this guy leave this money to two actors he never met? by the way how did actors feel about getting inheritance, turns out quite sighsable one, how did they feel about that? that is one of the things we looked into. melissa: one of the things i love about unpacked, the show
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you and i do together, on 9:30 tonight, i get to ask you, what were the people like in real life? were they congenial and as nice about splitting money as it was on tv. we always seem to ask you. seems families play nice on the show. do they play nice on the real life? >> not everybody, no. it would be boring if everyone were nice. a lot of people are quite open about disputes that occur. they want us to know about them. the interesting thing when people talk about their own family, their own inheritance, own parents or grandparents it means a lot to them. it is extremely heartfelt. i think that is what is really shines through all the time, whether there are disputes or not. melissa: jonathan, thanks for coming on. i'm a huge fan of "strange inheritance." i love watching it. it will air 9:00 p.m., followed closely at 9:30 by the premier of my new show "unpacked" where we dig down on some of the dirtier details of
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"strange inheritance." it's a lot of fun. tune in. heated debate on capitol hill as janet yellen fights back as house republicans accuse her of favoring the other team. lebron james unleashes his papa bear slamming colleges trying to snap up his 10-year-old cub. at the end of the day, it is all the money i guess. ♪ tigers, both of you. tigers? don't be modest. i see how you've been investing. setting long term goals. diversifying. dip! you got our attention. we did? of course. you're type e* well, i have been researching retirement strategies. well that's what type e*s do. welcome home. taking control of your retirement? e*trade gives you the tools and resources to get it right. are you type e*?
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the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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>> melissa: i'm melissa francis with your fox business brief. morgan stanley says it will pay more than 2 1/2 billion dollars to settle claims it may have helped trigger the financial crisis of the department of justice accused the bank of turning bad loans into risky mortgage-backed securities. jonathan gruber has been asked to step down from a massachusetts health panel. the obamacare consultant previously made remarks on so-called stupidity of the american voter. you remember that he has drawn widespread criticism after this. oreos becoming even more experimental. look at that look look! these pictures suggest that a cotton candy oreo hmmm, is in the works. golden on the outside with pingish filling in the middle. i can't wait. that is the latest from fox business, giving you the power to prosper.
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>> whether it's on wall street or main street here is who is making money today. lebron james and his family. his 10-year-old son has already been approached by college coaches who think he's going to be a big star. you think? yeah, i bet you're right about that. some schools offered lebron, jr. a full scholarship already, like they need the money. dad doesn't see the positive
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side. he says they need to back off from kids at a young age. and house republicans accuse janet yellen of bias. oh, no. it centered on the fed chief's comments on income equality and some are saying you're sticking your nose no places you need to be. that's a little rude. earlier today, stuart varney put this question to the congressman, isn't income inequality to the unemployment. >> that's a fiscal issue up to the congress not the federal reserve. that's what we would expect mrs. yellen to be saying if not pushback from congress. melissa: and simon, i'm not sure how i think about this? doesn't someone have a bias one way or the other? >> except me i'm completely level. melissa: you're just a liar if you don't admit it. >> the comment was a bit rude.
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the federal reserve has-- >> the congressman's or janet yellen's to the congressman. okay. >> look the federal reserve has created some of the income inequality by bolstering the financial markets with the huge liquidity program. melissa: a ton of it. >> nonetheless, janet yellen it's in her right to make a comment about it because household income hasn't grown over the last years-- >> does it show her bias. >> no. melissa: talk about it as a problem? i'm not sure i believe she's left of center, but i'm not sure talking about income inequality which as you point owed was caused by the fed. >> i think it was caused by the fed. if hard work would get you out of income inequality that's not a problem. part of the reason fed caused that is because of congress acting so badly and bailing out companies that were broken. melissa: i'm not sure we solved it, but it was fun.
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no need for a trash can here. meet the woman who spent two years without throwing anything away. it's the tutorial you hope you never need. the lowdown how to survive a plane crash. more money coming up. [ male announcer ] whether it takes 200,000 parts ♪ ♪ 800,000 hours of supercomputing time 3 million
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lines of code, 40,000 sets of eyes, or a million sleepless nights. whether it's building the world's most advanced satellite, the space station, or the next leap in unmanned systems. at boeing, one thing never changes. our passion to make it real. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ when it comes to medicare, everyone talks about what happens when you turn sixty-five. but, really, it's what you do before that counts. that's thinking time when you ask yourself, how do you want this to go? see, medicare doesn't cover everything. only about eighty percent of part b medical costs. the rest is on you. so, get started on an informed decision. [ male announcer ] consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans these plans could help pay for some of what medicare doesn't. that could
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rest is up to you. so, call now request your free guide, and explore the range of aarp medicare supplement plans to choose from based on your needs and budget. sixty-five may get all e attention, but now is a good time to start thinking about how you want things to be. [ male announcer ] go long™. >> surviving a plane crash, 15 people made it out alive after this terrifying crash in taiwan. thanks to some well-trained rescuers who knew exactly what to do. look at that wow! we are getting a firsthand look at the facility where navy seals flight crews and police officers trained for flighted aircraft emergencies. fox's rick leventhal shows us this is scary stuff. >> they have 100 facilities like this one in the world with
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an aircraft simulator and a dunk tank and this is the only one they'll set it on fire with people inside. we saw them do it yesterday at survival system usa in connecticut where they've trained 140,000 people at this facility how to escape an aircraft crash into the water and how to survive once you've gotten out of the submerged cabin. police officer, navy seals and u.s. and foreign military civilian aviation and air rescue and even oil rig workers who spend time over water. >> and people who have ditched aircraft, the only thing that isn't realistic is the impact the sensation of rollover and inrush of water was very realistic realistic. >> the way to get better to escape is practice doing it. there have been countless examples of crashes at sea some survive and some didn't, including the crash of a u.s.
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marine transport capital in california, 18 marines on board only 11 survived. so survivals systems usa, more people learn to combat the disorientation and fear and checklist to keep you calm and find your way out. they dunked me seven times, flipping upside down underwater, sometime in the dark with rain and wind machine you're in an eight-point harness, you have to wait for that and unbuckle it, make your way out, holding your breath. >> the toughest part is when you're flipping and knowing that you have to wait for it to settle. you can't do anything until the motion stops. so, you're upside down, but you can't do anything yet so that's the toughest part. >> waiting for it to stop so you can then go through the procedures. >> definitely unnerving, melissa, but i feel more capable today than yesterday
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getting out of one of these things, if it were to crash into the water. melissa: rick, i'm blown away. that looks so terrifying you knew it was an exercise and you were there to train, but i still cannot imagine, how scary was it? >> and, well, very to be honest, i don't like being in a confined space, underwater strapped in fortunately trainers were there standing by in case i had issues. i did. one time i went to push the hatch out of the window and the arm was three feet higher than i should have been i was up against the wall instead of the glass, and you're disoriented underwater. melissa: i hope you're getting hazard pay, better you than me. thank you so much for that report, wow. >> thank you. melissa: headed into the last hour of trading. let's check with liz claman and see what she has on the show. liz: i'd be clawing at the
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walls. rick is brave. you've got to be brave to hear this story we lead with. your money in your cozy bank account could be about to be attacked. yes, one of the top regulators on wall street struck fear on the entire street after he announced that there will be an armageddon type attack that could come through the cyber links. we're bringing in two experts, including one melissa, who goes by the name hacking dave to talk about whether this is just scare tactics or what you need to do if the banks won't or can't to protect your money. these two guys you need to hear from them. it's very serious story and, of course, regulating the internet, it's about to happen. guess what? the billable hours are getting racked up as all the lawyers are descending to fight it. these three, the vimeo ceo puts high hd videos on. how does he feel or peterson
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from the writer's guild feel about it and how mid stream there was a change about net neutrality. melissa: i was tweeting and that's what you caught me doing. life without trash. how one entrepreneur can fit the garbage produced in two years into a single mason jar. come on! you have to listen how she did it. at the end of the day it's all about money and i'm thinking a lot of composting. ♪ in new york state, we're reinventing how we do business so businesses can reinvent the world. from pharmaceuticals to 3d prototyping, biotech to clean energy. whether your business is moving, expanding or just getting started... only new york offers you zero taxes for 10 years with startup ny business incubators that partner companies with universities,
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>> saying no to waste. how a 23-year-old entrepreneur can fit all of her trash for two years into one single mason jar. here now is lauren singer the founder of trash is for tossers. everything you've thrown away is in the jar right there. >> everything i haven't thrown away. melissa: that's a good point. to me the biggest champion
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would be shampoo, conditioner and soap. >> everything i use every day i make it toothpaste soap. melissa: and how do you get that without throwing things away that it comes in. >> i buy it raw, and pack-free. melissa: why are you doing it? >> reduce the amount of plastic i was using and turning into a zero waste life style. i wanted to live in alignment with my values taking care of the environment. melissa: you're raising money and people contribute to what you're doing, raising $41,000, using that money in order to start a company in order to create products that don't have waste like shampoo, you smell fabulous. it's working for you. what has been the hardest part and challenge? >> the biggest channels are one past my ego realizing i can be better and live more
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sustainability sustainability. and making my own products, i didn't know how to make deodorant. melissa: you passed the test lauren, thanks for coming in. that's all we have for now. thank you, liz claman. liz: thank you. let the legal challenges begin. cable and broadband giants lining up to sue. after the federal communications systems says no more charging more for faster internet speeds. it will be regulated like a utility. some content companies are cheering and others are huddling with their lawyers, already racking up billable hours. fear racking wall street after a prominent new york financial regulator warnings that an arm arm armageddon type attack is coming on your bank account. and two experts are coming one going by the name of hacking dave. how to protect your bank account if the
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