tv Varney Company FOX Business May 8, 2015 11:00am-1:01pm EDT
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chicken and biscuit market chain, about 100 billion dollars based on that surge in the stock you said there. don't forget to watch me on the fox news channel today. please join us, and now it is my pleasure to to say it over to stewart who joined us at the top of this show. it was so great to have you. it's all yours sir. >> thank you for giving me a huge rally to talk about. we just really like that. and there is this. a british election over there a jobs report here, neither of them good news for president obama. good morning everyone. it's friday. in britain cameron's tax cuts, spending cuts win and win very big. the tax the rich, spend more money, they lose very big. not the election result that president obama wanted. back home, the jobs report not what the president wanted either. modest job growth at best. a real unemployment rate still in double diligence, and the
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labor participation rate that is 12 points lower than britains. add it up, please. they're not working very well, are they? i've got one more headline for you. the saudis want to bomb, and they've got the money to buy one. friday we're about to begin. ♪ you know, i think we can have either trup he wants or drum roll or something because it is friday. will you please look at that. the dow industrial is up 260 points. the gallery here, it was at best an immediate mediocre jobs report, is there any chance that the interest rates will rise next month? i doubt it and that's the key reason why the do you is up 258 points, i thought we were
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on organic local farmed food, yet the fried chicken trade starts trading on the nasdaq and it's up 20 -- 29%. at $24 don't forget the biscuits everybody. fried chicken. now take a look at shake shack. now, the reason we bring this on for you is that yesterday that i can shack took a huge tump as that chart shows you. why? because they were selling 1,000 times future profit, that's the pe ratio. we don't deal with that a bit much on this program, but that's a tad high at 1,000. taking on the chin, shake shack. yelp is considering selling itself it's struggling with growth, the market like that because who knows what they will pay for it and up she goes this morning on yelp. okay. the price of oil. it'sal 58.61 this morning. got it. price of gas. got that too.
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2.65 a gallon, and that's up again overnight. 2.65. breaking news for you. a small plane crashed into a highway in georgia. look at it. this is i285 into cab county, all lanes closed in both directions. four people were killed. this is a piper pa32 aircraft crashed onto i285 in georgia. you're looking at live pictures of a tragedy either. all right. take a look at this. this is the labor participation rate in america. 62.8 percent. that is a generational low. what's the labor in america? 74% -- oh, let me repeat this. the labor rate in america 62% in britain 74%. mary is here. starting with you.
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what counts, happened in britain counts here because the left over there got clobbered, and then some, and i think that reflects badly on the america. >> yeah. of course it does, and, by the way, stewart, it's not just britain the entire sphere is now run by conservative parties if you think about it, australia britain, and canada. >> sure. >> now, those numbers that you just put up. why is that a case? why are more people working in britain? because he reformed welfare he cut tax rates and he's allowing businesses to take risks to invest, to grow, to hire. >> yeah. >> that's right. >> he did what republicans wanted to do here. >> correct. and look at how the markets in london reacted. >> exactly. running on a campaign of tax tax, tax spend spend spend. go on off to the big bad banks, more regulation voted for the conservatives. >> did you know david axlerod the man who engineered
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president obama's campaign, he did over to britain and was a close advisor to the socialist. >> didn't effable well? >> by the way, no longer the leader at the party -- >> yeah, but isn't that kind of a delicious defeat, he practical committed a political -- against his brother. >> yeah. >> -- >> hold on a second. i don't know if the audience knows this. there's two brothers. >> that's right. >> they both wanted to be the leader. >> yeah. >> david and ed. >> the communist i can't get a word in. >> it's a big day. >> decaf is the answer. >> never heard of it. >> cameron is now forming a government. it's not a coalition government. >> no. >> he's gone an absolutely majority in the commons. >> yeah. >> that's a big deal. >> it's slim but majority. >> first time since 1997. . >> what do you think of this? there's going to be a
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reprimand in 2017, on whether or not the britain stays in the european union,an the zone,. >> much like germany who steams like its supporting all of southern europe, the uk does too. it would be bad from the trade point of view, but i do think there's a very nationalistic peeling in the uk right now and i think that could lead for a -- >> right into it actually because we have with us mary, who is ideas on immigration are somewhat different from a lot of other people's. >> really? >> you do not free immigration in and out of britain don't you. >> i've never said free immigration. you're always putting these words in my mouth no, stewart with a had we want to view immigrants they're not a
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commodity like oil and gas -- >> what do you mean? we're productive. so let's have an immigration system that let's people go out temporarily let's have a immigration system that let's people take on their skills, there are ways to structure this but yeah, -- >> okay. the boards so that all these people from other countries came into the uk, which had the very, very loosest benefits system of all the countries. >> have you been to a public in the uk? you get served about i a very nice polish girl. >> who doesn't speak english who can't has been smiles. >> shame on you. >> no. >> oh, my god stewart, when was the last time you were in london? outroar order something, they just stair at you smile and say yes. >> next subject. >> growling at you. >> the wall street journal that's your -- this is real -- i think this is huge story. saudi arabia considering getting a nuclear weapon of their own.
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>> yeah. >> in response to iran's nuclear program. i think that's just awful news. >> well, this is the real news of the iran nuclear deal. >> yes, it is. >> in selling that we're going to stop iran for ten years we're going to create a nuclearized i would say east. and this as a president said when he took off the goal to -- last words. >> because of the obama administration the saudis don't feel they have the guardian of the us behind them, and then you're going to have turkey and egypt also getting nuclear weapons too. it's a dangerous situation. >> lots of headlines. we're going to get to them. in case you missed it. >> this friday morning we're looking at mcdonald's globals sales because they sell 6% more in april, don't even 2.3% has a lot to do to fix its imaging get customers back into the restaurants mcdonald's revealed a turn around plan it shares this morning. are up almost 2%, but so is the overall market.
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a candy bar maker says it supports the government propose to include added sugars on nutrition labels. what are added sugars? they're put during the processing, so they're not natural, and it's the latest company to be health cautious and transparent with customers. and despite that, the government will run a deficit for the fiscal year. huge spending increases on entitlement programs like medicaid. >> lauren, thank you very much indeed. big, busy do a day. tom brady speaking out after he genuinely knew of the balls, he was asked if the scandal would take away from the patriots super bowl win. >> absolutely not. [cheering and applause]
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because we expender achieved everything we got this year as a team, and i'm very proud of that and our fans should be too. >> that doesn't affect the super bowl, they would have won it anyway, and fox news contributor joins us on the line. sir, i am told by just about everybody that tom brady faces serious suspension. is that the case you see it that way? >> well, i don't know. we're going to have to wait for the commissioner and troy vincent to handle that for the nfl . >> what do you make the call? i'm sorry to push you on this, but will you make the call that tom brady did something wrong. >> no. i'm not going to make that call. i'm going to leave that to the people who just those judgments, i'm not the judge and jury and i haven't sifted through all the evidence, everybody has an opinion, and they will make their own opinions, but you're asking me to make a judgment, and i'm
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not willing to do that . >> will you make this judgment that there's intense hostileity as a team, and that's been there wyatt quite a long time. >> that seems to be quite obvious, and i think, you know, part of it is earned. it was a proven problem and the patriots have been fined and appropriate action has been taken for that, and that's the trail that they have left and probably why they're in this position now. so yes, if this were the jacksonville jaguars or it occurred earlier in the season footballs were heated, that's not against the rules we don't have that commotion going on over that. caroline wab nobody's bothering the tightens or the banthers. >> i hear that. thank you jim we appreciate
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you being here on a busy day. >> thank you . >> now this. saudi arabia if the obama administration let's iran get a nuke, they'll have to do the same thing. and they have the money to do it. it's a mid-east arms race. judy miller on that next when cigarette cravings hit, all i can think about is getting relief. nicorette mini starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. anytime. anywhere. i never know when i'll need relief. that's why i choose nicorette mini.
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>> look at this, ladies and gentlemen, friday morning up 261 points, it was a lukewarm jobs report at best, therefore an interest rate hike looks very unlikely. up goes the dow 262. now this. the wall street journal reporting saudi arabia is going to have a nuclear weapon in response to iran. call this one right here on varney and company. roll tape. >> nuclear run the other countries in the region have a
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stockpile, and within several years' time, you're going to have a middle east, the one place in the world they shouldn't be allowed to play with matches they're going to have nuclear weapons. >> more on this from fox news contributor, judy miller. welcome to the program. >> hi, . >> this is almost inevitable. if iran has been a program everyone else is going to get a program. >> look, i think the momentum behind nuclear weapons programs in the middle east is a direct result of the lack of confidence in obama. >> right. >> his ability to craft an agreement with the iranians, which is not only going to contain their program but stop it. right now we're talking about an agreement with the -- it would last between 10 and 15 years. the saudis say hey we're going to you say that time to catch up. they've already ordered two nuclear reactors from south korea and from france this year. now, they declare that it's
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for a peaceful program and the saudis initially add here to the line that they want a nuclear free middle east, but we can see the way this is going. there's no confidence in the americans ability to prevent iran from getting a bomb. >> they don't necessarily have to create their own nuclear program. they have 7250 billion dollars worth of foreign reserves. that kind of money buys you a bomb from pakistan or north korea if you've got that kind of money available. >> yes. >> and that's short notice bomb. >> yes. >> but that was always saudis thinking, but now when the pakistanis this past year said we're going to remain neutral in this contest in yemen between the iranians and the saudi world we're going to be neutral, the pakistanis sent the sought the ease a messages the saudis received it and said maybe we've got to develop our own independent channel and not rely on buying a bomb from saudi arabia. from pakistan.
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sorry. >> there have been several cometators within five years there will be a nuclear incident whether it's an explosion a bomb, whatever, it's a nuclear incident in the middle east. now, that to me is flight fill that flat out frightening. >> it's why obama focused on the program. the problem is we haven't seen the deal yet. the saudis, the everybody who is mimicking them, they say we have got to have the confidence that iran can be stopped, and right now they don't have it. >> everybody says, including the president that iran will keep their industry, the center fuges will keep on spending. >> absolutely they will. >> and they can convert to weapon grames uranium in two or three months . >> it depends on the agreement. if you do have vehicles that applies to all the suspect facilities, even military
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facilities, if you have robust inspection -- >> do you think they're going to do that? >> well,. >> do you think they're going to agree to this? >> the tie tolla said "no," but joe biden said if it's "no," then there's no deal. and also pro propel the saudis -- >> if the next president is much more strong-willed, a strong leader and reassures the saudis that, look, we're on top of this would the saudis back down needs to circumstances. >> i'm not sure they would at this point. you know, saudi arabia also has new leadership. they've got much more aggressive pro american leadership but on something like this that's a national security issue it may very well be. i hope that the nuclear jeannie is not out of the bag but i can't be certain at this
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point. >> thank you very much for being here. >> thank you . >> time is money. we say it all the time. so we bring you three stories very quickly. the man who can 3d print a gun, published the instructions online, the feds went after him and he's on this program. and an app that lets you broadcast whatever you want from anywhere you are. a popular mom blogger tells her sons she doesn't need gifts on mother's day. she just wants their love. i'm with her. she's on the show. 12:45. it's been called the poll intsunami, millions of people suffering spring allergies the green ease are blaming climate change. yes, we will deal with that. next. but first this. the new york city police officer brian moore is now underway. officer moore was shot in the head saturday. he died two bays relevant days later inspect. now blue
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said oh, it's too low. we don't want that. investors love it because they might get a better price. it's up 10%. and the pollen tsunami is upon us and yeah, you're right the greeners are blaming climate change. would you care to tell us what this is all about. >> well, look, it's spring and there's allergies out there and of course let's blame climate change. research says that we have a double wamy because we have a cold winter, which means that the tree pollen is late and now it's over producing pollen to make up for lost time, and the fact that there's more carbon in the air, and it releases more pollen -- >> so if you go back to the source. >> yeah. >> the source is an abnormally long cold winter, and that's the result. >> that's right. last year was the pollen vortex again the result of climate change.
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other research will tell you that the rate of pollen or the amount of pollen in the area, no greater if you go back 40, 50 years, you'll see pretty much the same. so not so sure on this one . >> and i think it was a shortage of rain. >> yeah. >> that had something to do with it. >> yeah, the drought in california doesn't help . >> but that has nothing to do with climate change. >> no. >> have we nailed this down. >> yeah. i think you can make anything because of climate change . >> anything. >> my tie. >> just look at it . >> not so great. >> forced by climate change right there. >> and patriots quarterback he's been labeled a cheater and he responds to that. will the nfl bench him? what brady has to say for himself coming up next. [cheering]
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rates will not raise next month. are you in with me on that one? >> i am . >> an eagles linebacker in the house. what do you think about the dow jones industrial, what douse? >> excited. >> well, i'm always glad with my financial advisory when he tells me that are things going up in my favor. >> that's a very good -- i think a round of applause. let's continue with the broadcast. look at the price of oil please. very narrow trading range recently. we've got up a little bit this morning. 59.2542. the price is gas up a little bit, not much, but enough to put it at 2.65 for national average. and, by the way, gas has gone up for 24 straight days. cheapest gas in america still in the cheapest two plays in virginia. >> long way to go. >> you can't use credit for that one. >> the business sports story of the year, the nfl says
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patriots quarterback tom brady was quote generally aware of the deflated balls of the nfc championship game. he held a news confidence yesterday, he sounded unrepented. >> i can't usually say those things. but -- i don't have really any reaction jim our owner commented on it yesterday and it's only been 30 hours, so i haven't had much time to digest it fully but when i do, i'll be sure to let you know how i feel about it . >> okay. now come on in, philadelphia eagles linebacker thanks for being with us. >> of course. . >> now everybody's down to me, who is down on tom brady but as a complete outsider to football was all he did is what other quarterbacks do,
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pick the ball, squeeze it, and use the one you like. >> the thing is that he's arguably the best of all time, so he would know whether or not there's a change, he would know whether or not there was a change to the footballs. >> the whole world is going milligram down on him. >> yeah. >> i've heard people saying you've got it suspend this guy for a season or six games or something. isn't that harsh? >> it's setting a precedence, when he was playing for the cubs they suspended him for eight games because it violates the integrity of the game and again, in this situation, if found guilty would have violated the integrity of the game. >> violated the integrity of the game, that's a little strong, isn't it. >> it's true. >> it's true. >> really? >> absolutely. it was a wet day taking the air out makes it easier to
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grip it's cheating, stewart. >> two british guys talking about football. [laughter] >> i love it. >> we've got nerve i'm telling you. we've got a lot of nerve here. but i think there's an element of hostileity here to the patriots and to palm brady. i mean i heard somebody on fox today call him pretty boy. >> yeah. he has a stigma from having a beautiful wife to three or four, five super bowls, so people do want to see him fall, but if found guilty the nfl has to make a statement. >> is this an embarrassment of football? >> not a total embarrassment but it can be. it can become a downward slope similar to how it has a steroid use never want to see it tainted in any shape or form. >> a rod hit home run 661. >> yeah. >> that surpasses in the home run hitting list, but the
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yankees are not going to pay him the 6-million-dollar bonus for crossing that milestone. and you say? >> i think it shouldn't because their contract was coming in marketing a rod. >> yeah. >> last year he was suspended because of pd usage so i don't think they should be forced to pay him 6 million dollars. >> why is a linebacker so even handed? so fair and balance? always willing to see the other side. >> because it always coming down to the bigger picture, if they let him slide what's that do to the game? more what does that to tom brady or a rod? what does that do to the game. and if you mess up the game or football or baseball, now you're talking about damaging all of sports. >> would you have a play at patriots. >> they're a winning organization, but i'm happy where i'm at at philadelphia. >> if you didn't play for the patriots, if you were on the
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roster right now for the patriots, would you guess that tom brady has solid football? >> if i was on the roster for the patriots, i would say you better not suspend him. i need that man. >> he's an honest man. by the way the dow is up 264 points now. >> great to hear it. >> come on the show any time you would like. >> linebacker for the eagles; right? >> tell me again what the linebacker does. >> had he run fast and hit the ball carrier. >> i can run with that. >> i'm calling the jobs report moot mediocre at best, chief of staff is right here. first of all paul, i want you to come strayed for me wage growth that's a very serious subject. what does the labor departments report tell us today. >> it tells us that the wage growth is up 3 cents for workers in america and last year the average increase was about 2.2%.
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so while that's a good number, and i don't want to knock it, it's not a number that indicates you're going to have strong growth for the rest of the year, and it's certainly not on the pace where you see a robust economy where it's continuing adding month after month, year after year in a lot of growth cents per hour for workers. >> i'm not out on a limb on this one. i'm simply saying that today's jobs report just was not good enough. 223,000 new jobs; okay. but where his the 400,000 a month or the 500,000 a month that we got on the ronald reagan? what's wrong here? what's going on? >> you drew an analogy to he would not lan, i think it impacts the economy. if you take a look at today's jobs number. it's important for us to not get conditioned that 223,000 jobs is a good number. if you drill into that nobody, more than half of those numbers are in three sectors.
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professional services, health care and production. and if you take a look at health care it's specifically in areas like hospitals and very few of those positions are not supervisory and not management, meaning if those things contract, these can go. so while we apply the job growth, you want to see the economy more people coming into jobs being created so that those working part-time 6.6 million into more full-time jobs. >> every spring i hear the same thing. just wait. we're going to get back on truck to robust recovery in the summer and the fall and the winter. here it comes boys, don't worry. here it comes. what's the chance of that happening this year. >> i don't think it's a good chanced and i think one of the audiences to look at this is young american. take a look at right now. almost 14 percent of mel inials are unemployment, and you have almost 1.8 million
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678 who are not counted at all. so when you see these aspirations coming and you hear all the great jobs, you've got to reality, and the reality is that there's not enough people to pull people off the sidelines and employ young americans. >> before you go, i want to repeat a statistic which we ran earlier this morning. the labor participation rate in britain with a private enterprise government is 74% in america, it is 62.8%. you've got 20 seconds to make a comment. >> well, i tell you what. from an irish man to look at england and say there's an example, when i've got to tell you policy makes a differencing on the economy it does here today. in england it's positive, here negative. >> well, sittings right here, not bad i would say. thank you paul. >> i'll take the odds. >> all right. [laughter] >> you know, everybody's jumping on the eat healthy bandwagon. there are fried chicken train. they went public today.
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>> your fox business brief room, big run-up on wall street, the dow up 261 points at 18,185. that's a gain of nearly 1.5 percent. the s&p 500 up 27, the nasdaq up 62. all the major averages up more than one percentage point. on the dow, take a look at the leaders here. in fact, all 30 names on the do you have green arrows, they're buying everything, including bowing, home depot, groupon, and microsoft, all those more than 2% each and microsoft up 1.9 percent. aol a monster, you can see aol is a winner, monster beverage to the downside. they were taking off goldman sachs, and take a look at the shade shack and it's down another 5.5% today.
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that's different. sales if he will last month globally and in the united states. sales are down for nine straight months inside america. do they really think that the hamburger is going to bring them back? not sure. and then there's a restaurant chain, certainly fast food, it's called freshy, and it is all about healthy food. they are challenging mcdonald's. freshy has what? 160 locations in 16 countries. you, sir, have just pulled off a pr marketing genius stroke because you have written a letter to mcdonald's saying put me. put freshy in mcdonald's stores and i'll help you sell a lot of good stuff. that's a pr victory if i've ever heard one. congratulations, matthew. >> it's funny. i probably sent it to the wrong northwestern hindsight in 24 hours of publishing the
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letter, the amount of customers who have e-mailed me personally saying let me be the first pilot test, it would be incredible if i could actually -- all my kids had a happy meal, i could eat something healthy from a freshy i probably should have addressed it to the franchisee instead of the customers. >> you did it deliberately because you wanted to secure mcdonald's, and you did it very successfully. >> honestly this is dead serious. i've got a check here for quarter million dollars, i will put it into the mcdonald's escrow account so that if i'm wrong, they will get their money back guardian. this is not a joke, this is about obesity epidemic around the world and we have a solution for it. >> well, you want to freshen the image and you're kicking them when they're down, and freshy you sell a lot of salads wraps and smoothies; is that correct. >> and ken waugh and among
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other things, yes. >> and you wouldn't be caught dead selling a hack berger. >> no. it's not our business, it's for splurged meals and shake shack and quite frankly you can make a huge business doing those things, and practically justing you should be eating healthy more often than not i eat a berger with the best of them. . >> are you geared to millennials. >> at the age of 33, and i'm the oldest person on our management team. >> really? >> we had about 110 new franchise partners. half of them are millennials and so it's interesting. it's millennials partnering with millennials serving millennials, so it is quite unique about our business model . >> okay. i think i've got this right. you've got 160 outlets worldwide at this point. what's your target? i take it you're expanding? >> well, we're opening a few stores every week. so we'll top about 110
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restaurants, compare that to 1,000 locations that mcdonald's will open in this calendar year, and you can see we are one of the fastest growing brands in from 0 to 100 and 100 to 200 and yet we have such a long way to go . >> may i ask what your average check size. >> it's about $8 . >> that's about $2, $3 higher than mcdonald's; right? >> it sure is. and yet we still have menu items that you can get into our restaurants for about $5. you know, as you start to add proteins and other gourmet toppings, you can get that check up but if you want to eat healthy, you can get in for a big mac happy meal . >> what's your top selling item. >> it's amazing. the top five selling items come from five different categories it's a soup, a kale base salad a keen waugh bowl a burrito that uses
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whole wheat tortillas, and i think that's quite frankly how it has evolved. >> yeah. >> ten years ago it was spinach and rice and now we know it's kale and ken waugh and five years from now we'll know it's totally different and we want to lead that charge, to be innovative around healthiness . >> you're 33 years old be i think you just pulled off a pr advertising cue not only you skewed mcdonald's, i just gave you a four minute commercial. are you a public traded company. >> as a franchise model we are privet held company which we enjoy being. and i just have to say. this is not about skewing mcdonald's. we admire -- >> i know. >> and have made an iconic brand, and we admire them . >> yeah, it did quite deliberately. well done.
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when are you going bub? >> right now we're just really happy spending all our time thinking about health and wellness . >> how big of a piece of freshy do you have. >> well, the nice thing i opened the store when i was 23 years ol' my parents gave me enough money to open the first store, so i've been able to grow this and hold a significant stake in the company . >> 50 percent? >> at least. . >> sorry i didn't hear. >> yes. . >> at least 50 percent majority owner. you're going to be a very wealthy man. if not already. 33 years old ceo of freshy. we appreciate it. >> thank you for having me? >> yes sir. >> mom and dad is very proud. . >> sure. that's very good. excellent stuff. he is billed as the most expensive living artist. jeff coons. his art sells for millions. we have one of his pieces on set. here it is. >> how much will this go for at auction? we'll tell you in a moment.
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that goes on sale next week and look who's here? going to tell me why jeff coons is the most available living artist. >> he's one of those rare breeds of artist who has mass appeal. i mean the entire world looks to jeff coons because he just revokes scenes of childhood and bitter progress had& his work truly international truly global, not only here in america, but also europe, the middle east, and asia as well . >> okay. so describe this. >> okay. >> this is a small train. >> yeah. >> this is -- this is the engine of the train. it's made out of stainless steal, even though it has this beautiful silver finish, the stainless steal protects a 5th of inside the engine.
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if it's broken, it's destroyed. nor has value. >> really? i better not touch it. >> no. >> how much? >> our presell estimate is 2.5 to 3.5 million dollars. >> wow. >> and the world record price for the most expensive work by a living artist which was sold last november at 58 million dollars. >> have we got a picture? >> yes, we do. is that like balloons. >> no. >> that's the gold. >> that's the brilliance of jeff coons he makes you think that that's what it's executed out of. he's a master craftsman . >> so this goes onto auction. >> auction. >> just across the street. >> and you're looking for 2.5 million dollars. you're looking for more. >> always. >> what is his take out of that? 10% or 15%? >> i believe it's 12%. it depends on where it ends up. >> well, i hope you get 5
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million for it. >> thank you . >> sarah, everybody from christie's, if you're not careful, ashley will show up for the auction. thank you very much. >> thank you . >> tom brady getting a lot of criticism and top of the next hour we have the guy who called him a pretty boy who should be suspended. yeah brian is on the show in a moment. plus the man who 3d printed a gun, he put the plans on the internet the government came after him for that, and he's fighting. well, he's on the show on this next hour. powerful hour two. two minutes away.
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happy to see david cameron win very big and i believe president obama was a big loser. think about it. obama adviser david axelrod was an election adviser to the british left. he took obama's message over it there tax the rich, spend more government is the answer. that message was soundly rejected. that could mean trouble for the left over here. the jobs report came out this morning, it showed participation in the workforce at a generational low, 63% actually 62.8% in america. look what it is in britain, 74%, that is an all-time high. that is what you get when the private sector is turned loose, something else to take away from the british he election. all government all the time doesn't work. and the brits god bless them, rejected it.
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stuart: i think that was the ho-hum jobs report means it is unlikely interest rates will go up next month. that is why the dow industrial average is up 273 points as we speak. and then this. who needs help the? the fried chicken chain. ingles started trading on the nasdaq. to the big conservative wing in britain, steve goslin did washington is for ceo of office depot. is bad news for president obama in america. would you draw the same parallel?
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>> if you look historically over the last 30 or 40 years the u.k. elections have led the u.s. elections and you see the first to move right, the u.s. follows, the reagan/factory and the blair year we move to the left this could be a harbinger of things to come and i think they have proven over there under cameron that focusing on the long term, getting their economic house in order and focusing on job creation has been good for the economy and good for the people not big government, not lot of spending not redistribution and i think people are going to pick that up here and i hope they do because we are stuck in an economic quagmire right now. stuart: let's look at today's jobs report. we got reaction from the white house earlier today, it was a solid report that it was moving in the right direction. would you go along with that? >> 223,000 jobs were created. it was forecast they are
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calling this the goldilocks jobs report, not too hot, not too cold they won't raise interest rates, they marched down by 33% and in average over the last four months below 200,000. this is not cooking. we are sitting here creating a little bit as we go. the problem with it is almost all the jobs created last month were part-time and mostly in sectors like construction that are seasonal. this is not the kind of job you want to create. it is not a good strong long-term outlook. stuart: let's have the long-term outlook for the rest of this year. do you think at any point any month this year we will get to, say, 300,000 new jobs a month? >> it is possible but if they're all part-time jobs and for a lot of people second jobs is that really a measure of strength? i think if you look at the gdp numbers in the first quarter and take out the inventories we're
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down-1/2% and numbers for the are projected to be close to 2% which is almost nothing. that feels like zero to the u.s. economy. i don't have -- i don't think everything is as positive as it looks and i think the policies of the highest corporate tax rates in the world more and more regulation, higher minimum wages, these are the kind of things that are creating stagnation and businesses are not investing and innovating. stuart: ceo office depot thanks for joining us on a big friday. let's get to today's other top stories warren has them in headlines in case you missed it. >> isis is getting very sophisticated using social media to radicalized thousands of individuals and have them attack the united states. the terrorists are first trolling the net for disturbed people then switching to encrypted communications to recruit them. like finding an invisible needle in a haystack he says.
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the fbi knew hours before the cartoon contest attacks but one of the gunman might show up. that man, elton simpson had been investigated previously for attempting to join a terror group. the wall street journal reports saudi arabia is considering nuclear-weapons. the reason is a lack of confidence in president obama and his ability to craft a nuke deal with iran. here is judy muller on the show earlier today. >> right now we are talking about an agreement with can to 15 years, the saudis say we are going to use that time to catch up. >> for some of iran's rivals in the middle east that is becoming a deadline for them to develop nuclear weapons of their own. stuart: thank you very much. the nfl says the patriots probably cheated by deflating football's. quarterback tom brady was generally aware of what was going on.
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box and friends host brian kilmeade is here. i have been watching you. you called him pretty boy. you called him pretty boy, you said he should be suspended for six games maybe as season and dana arena who was also on fox and friends of this morning said brady had been very badly damaged in his public persona. >> kind of a nickname for him because he married a super model and is quite pretty and attractive but tom brady is the best overall most successful athlete of his generation. he is an unbelievable football player who was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth, never starred college, never had a job earned his way through, that is the story of tom brady to win four jenna the inches he tripped himself up by not only seemingly if you read the report is not probable, it is definitely two equipment managers referred to tom directly in negative terms take
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air out of the ball to make, happy and skirt the rules without palm knowing about it. stuart: don't all quarterbacks after a bucket of balls and pick the one they want because it is inflated the way they like it or it feels right? >> we went through this. the whole thing the referee is supposed to be the quarterback has a look at it the day before at which time the referees look at it and no one will touch it. this video tape of the taking of these goals going into the bathroom and coming out and they are all down. even if joe heisman or joe montana says it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. it matters to tom brady enough to be involved in this. he lied to us for 45 minutes if you read this report and the many other times and follow ups between a rod flying, pacquaio lied about his injury and tom bray line there has got to be some accountability. to get that $50 million of the public don't you have to be candid and played the game fairly? stuart: getting beaten up here
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because you know what you are talking about. >> you don't need to know football to know someone is not being candid. i am not calling for it. i am telling you judging by what the league has done i expect four to six gains gets benched. the team will sanction a draft pick and maybe even funds. they didn't allow mcnow lee, the self-declared deflated to get interviewed at number 2 he didn't turn over his text messages or his e-mails. that is lack of cooperation. stuart: i am going to call this special music for you today to play for you. ♪ happy birthday ♪ >> 8 you very much. it was yesterday. stuart: this is a picture from your birthday party is that? celebration last year? that is you from last year? now we have been having fun all week with microsoft that new website that guess is your age. i was not happy with results but said i was 76.
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look at you. >> 46. stuart: you look 46. >> i am heartened by that that is five years shy, if you chop off the toe and counted the rings i would be 51 so this is certainly nice. you have a lot of technology you. stuart: incredible. >> this is the most well produced segment i have seen in the history of fox. i am honored. stuart: i want to tell you one moment you did something brilliant yesterday on fox and friends. you walked down fifth avenue with donald trump. i don't think we have the video. i wish we did that you walked down the street with donald from. you did a candidate interview. people recognize him on the street. that was brilliant television. >> thanks for saying that and for writing that. i want to get people that are famous and get a slice of their life so let's interview them in the middle of their life so we did with donald trump and heavyweight champion we want to do some others. "imus in the morning" when you see some any standard issue interviews, you sit at a desk like this and ask questions and
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they don't really answer. you walk down a tree with donald trump and all kinds of things out of the guy. >> who calls for him? blue collars, average everyday people. look out, you can laugh if you want. i do not discount him. stuart: everyone you came across like him. was it a picture of him? we have the video. there you go. that was incurred. >> we were in and out 30 minutes what two or three box and brought the neighborhood to its knees. that is with security. that is how famous he is. stuart: i see security guys in the background. cavett dozen people there. >> you can't discount my thing because i certainly attracted different class of people. stuart: interview is over. happy birthday. >> thank you, nice of you to do that. stuart: it is called periscope. it is an apps you download on your smart phone. lets you broadcast any live event from anywhere you want and
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it got one reporter banned from the pga tour. full intriguing story next. ♪ ♪ ♪ if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? at 62,000 brush movements per minute philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before giving you healthier gums in just two weeks. innovation and you. philips sonicare.
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will look a per-share price of monster beverage. they make monster energy drinks down 8%. two investment firm is down on the stock ended down it goes. remember the rash problem, nickel in the band made people's wrists turn red and itchy. doesn't look like it hurt them that much they filed for an ipo. how are they going public. >> even employees we will say that but the nickel component, people are e.g. and scratchy. i think that was once the tv show. they settled the class-action
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lawsuits, they had to known standing personal injuries but the bottom line is applewatch. stuart: this is where a boat computer technology? fitness and health monitoring. all these fish bits and others, you don't sing government of the future because of the apple watch? apple watch knocks them out of the business? >> most of the people have been the most skeptical about apple watch they all agree on one thing. even the apple watch for fitness tracking the apple watch is it. >> that is a big statement. that wipes out lot of free -- >> i see you in central park with an apple watch. stuart: didn't apple watch have problems with people who had a tattoo or? >> a lot of people have a popular stock pattern tattoo on their wrist and apple watch
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indeed, president obama by the way it has been known to wear that. stuart: having gone rid of the nickel component, how much does the new one cost? >> costs $250 and is called the surge. they have figured a little bit of the metal to be inside versus outside so that everything that touches your skin is supposedly skin friendly so fewer rashes people have worn in prototypes saying if you wash your hands as hopefully people do that can be read and irritating. stuart: when do we see you next? >> 1:00 p.m.. >> do the math here 44 minutes away. "risk and reward," dierdre bolton 1:00, thank you so much. >> stephanie, she had her press credentials fool's after she is the apps periscope.
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she was live streaming a golf event. the pga has banned it from covering any golf matches for the rest of the year. this is not the first time the periscope apps has caused problems. a lot of people use it to illegally stream the mayweather zynga. i think this is a very big story because all kinds of events from sports to just about anything you could go there and stream on to periscope and anybody outside the event can watch for free. >> they do. i was one of many people who watch the pacquaio mayweather fight on periscope with 10,000 other people. stuart: so golf wants to ban it. >> exactly. you can maybe what they can do is do what they did -- they can say no periscopeing at events which the nhl has said that if people want to find ways to sneak in will be very hard to
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shut down because it is happening live. >> you have a tiny camera hooked up to your smart phone and stream away. >> what is the difference lava in a photo and video? how will you tell the difference? >> it is a dilemma and something the industry hasn't faced before because this is happening asynchronous leave. is happening in real time. we are used to dealing with copyright complaints after something that already happened but when something is happening in real time and someone can view it as happening it is a more difficult thing to solve. stuart: the quality of the video you are going to receive. if you watch the fight on periscope and you did it was lousy video. >> i could see what was happening but it won't be as good as to any in by a peruvian. the experience of being with a bunch of strangers in someone's living room virtually was more exciting than a lot of aspects of the fight. the quality is not going to take away from being their wives but for sporting events where they
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want ticket sales. stuart: it is the huge problem. thanks very much. i will break in to give you a live look into washington d.c. in honor of the 72 anniversary of the day victory in europe day, 50 world war ii era planes flying in formation over the nation's capital. you are looking at it happening now. a huge crowd of people, many veterans from world war ii emigrated generation gathering on the national mall to watch the event. we thought we would bring you that because that was the greatest generation and celebration of the e day. i remember it almost from my childhood. david letterman says one of the main reasons he is retiring from the late show, he just can't make those online videos we see from his late night competitors like this one from jimmy kimmel. >> at least a few of them have come together to tell us
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specifically what they would like this year. >> i am a mom. >> i am a mom. >> and i am love my family. >> i love you. as i really do. i appreciate your sweet little homemade gifts on mother's day but i have to be honest. they are terrible. >> what the [bleep] is this? don: letterman cannot compete like that in the digital age. >> he is not part of the youtube generation, doesn't speak the language jimmy kimmel and jimmy fallon. stuart: does he just not know how to do it? does he just have the right material to do it? or he doesn't like it? >> it is a combination of all three. the quality has change, he is still very funny man, but if you look back to what is getting views, jimmy kimmel and jimmy fallon have far more viewers on youtube than they do live on their show each week and that is a big component of the shows some of the fact that his comedy
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doesn't translate as well to the sound bite kind of digital medium on smart phones. stuart: he is out good bye, incredible. thank you for joining us. we appreciate it. rapper ja rule saying he likes hillary for president giving his full support. melissa frances did the interview and she is up next. ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms? i sure hope so. with healthcare costs, who knows. umm... everyone has retirement questions. so ameriprise created the exclusive confident retirement approach. now you and your ameripise advisor.... can get the real answers you need. start building your confident retirement today.
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stuart: there is a rally, a nice one in british bank stocks up significantly after the conservatives swept to victory in the british election. banks look good. melissa francis, she looks good too. [laughter] she had an interjewish with ja rule -- interview with ja rule. it absolutely caught fire on twitter, and here's why. listen to this. >> i like hillary. >> yeah? >> i like hillary. you know, it's crazy because, you know, i also, i also think jeb is a good, you know candidate as well. but, you know, i'm democrat -- >> you're a democrat? okay. >> so i would vote hillary. stuart: i was fascinated how that was really picked up on twitter and exploded. >> i think it was trending number one at one point yesterday. allall the major publications picked it up, "the washington post," huffington post and all
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over online which i thought was interesting because it's ja rule, let's face it, he hasn't had an album for a while. but it really exploded and i think people were sort of making fun of the idea. it's not lost on me who ja rule wants for president? why do we care about that? stuart: it wasn't as if he banged the table and said i'm for hillary, this is the way to go. it was kind of a tepid endorsement. >> a bit. but he knew who the other candidates were, he was pretty well informed. what i think it tells you is there's actually more interest in this election than we think. we know we're interested in it because we're engaged and we're in it's, viewers are obviously -- television and viewers are engaged. i think the rest of the world and social media and millennials and ja rule's fans are engaged as well. stuart: he is a celebrity. i know that name. and what did he think about the
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political goings on of the day. >> yeah. stuart: and that is an interesting level of interest in the forthcoming election which we don't know about. it's not the pundits saying something that's picked up. no, this is a celebrity picked up on social networks, and you did it. >> for that in particular. and he said a lot of other things in the interview that could have gotten traction. we asked him about baltimore, he has a new credit card that's out, but people seized on the idea of who he was backing in 2016. to me it says that they're talking about this issue. stuart: okay. melissa, a coup -- >> yes, thank you. stuart: thanks very much -- >> watch me at 2 p.m. today. stuart: 2 p.m.? this network? >> that's right. "money." stuart: then we have a mediocre jobs report. liberals take on carly fiorina, herman cain is next.
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stuart: i bring you breaking news out of the middle east. the "wall street journal" reports saudi arabia will begin a five-day ceasefire in yemen but it doesn't start until tuesday of next week. they'll keep up the bombing for the next few days x then they'll quit on tuesday. that just in. if we also have this: saudi arabia is looking to start its own nuclear weapon program in response to iran's.
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herman cain joins us, as he does every friday morning. i see this as a really, really damaging, dangerous development in the middle east, and i'm sure you do too. >> i do, stuart, because what the middle eastern countries like saudi arabia are saying, they're saying the same thing that the united states senate is saying. they don't trust president obama senator kerry and this administration to come up with a good deal. so what the middle eastern countries are saying simply is we don't believe that the united states is going to be able to suppress iran's nuclear ambitions. we want to be in the game. that's what they are saying. stuart: i think it's extremely dangerous, the idea of nukes running around the middle east. i'm really shocked at that one, i really am. >> yeah, i am too. and you're right, this is a nuclear arms race that's not good for the middle east and not good for the world. this is why if the united states was showing the proper
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leadership on suppressing iran's nuclear ambitions, we wouldn't have other countries in the middle east saying, hey, we better get in this game to protect ourselves. stuart: terrible legacy. >> yes. stuart: britain's prime minister, david cameron, he's won an absolute majority in the british parliament. i say that victory over there was bad news for president obama over here, because the left in britain were soundly defeated, and they proposed policies very similar to president obama's policies in the united states. >> you're absolutely right. stuart, you know this being originally from britain, but you're a u.s. citizen now the british voters are not stupid. they didn't fall for the labour party's rhetoric which is very similar to the democrat party's rhetoric here. it not only sends a message rejecting president obama's narrative here, it also sends an encouragement to conservatives and republicans in this country that when people have the right
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information, they will make the right decisions. that's what that vote did in britain, and i believe that it could happen again in 2016 the way it happened in 204. stuart: i do want to talk to you about carly fiorina. she's getting slammedded for the layoffs that did happen under her watch at hewlett-packard. you've got to experience running for and as a lead -- president and as a leading business match. you were ceo for godfather's pizza what's your take on slamming of carly fiorina for what she did in business? >> the people that are slamming her don't understand that as a ceo, sometimes you have to reduce the size of company before you grow the size of the company. in an interview that she did with katie couric katie couric conveniently didn't happen about what happened after those layoffs when she was responsible for significantly adding to the
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payrolls and significantly improving the profitability of that company. she conveniently didn't say that. but do you know the best part of that a slam that she got from katie couric in my opinion? kudos to carly fiorina because she laid a smackdown on katie when katie tried to say you said some very unkind things about hillary clinton when she's been secretary of state and senator. carly put it in her face and said, "titles don't mean a thing accomplishments mean something." kudos to californialy fiorina, i think she's going to be just fine in handling herself. [laughter] stuart: i think you're right. herman cain, we appreciate it, sir. thank you. >> it's my pleasure, stuart. thank you. stuart: then we have the designer of a 3-d printed gun. he posted the plans for it on line. then the state department came after him. now he's suing the feds for violating his constitutional right. that man is cody wilson, and
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he's going to join us momentarily. oh he's now. see, see, i confused myself there. very sorry cody you're on. you're live right now. [laughter] okay, take me through this. >> stuart, wow. [laughter] stuart: you have the software, the plan for a 3-d printed gun and you put it out there on the internet. the feds came after you and said, you can't do that. why can't you do that? >> yeah, stuart, thank you for having me. the director of the trade controls claims that the united states has exclusive intellectual property over all technical data and objects related to munitions, related to firearms, the u.s. government claims it owns exclusively. stuart: well, is that true? [laughter] >> whether it's a legal fact or not, i think it's something interesting to our audience and something that's bewildering to a nation that thinks it has both a first and a second amendment. stuart: now what did they do to
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you? they said, you can't do that, we're going to fine you, put you in prison you're under arrest? >> that's right, all that stuff. they leaned on me really, really hard and intimidated me with these letters and directed me toward this overwhenning process -- overwhelming process. of course, i'm just an individual. it was meant to just kind of squash me, rub me out, you know. but basically, i was able to build a legal team, and i was able to say interesting, i don't think i should have to ask you permission to be able to put things on the internet that i develop privately. stuart: so you objected and said the constitution is on my side. where does it stand at the moment? i think you're going to be in court for a long time. are you? [laughter] >> i think so too. yeah, i'm frustrated, of course. for two years i wasn't able to conduct the activities of my corporation. but right, we just filed in the western district of texas, in federal court and we expect, i think, to make this a very significant battle that will have shakeouts and consequences
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for both first and second amendment jurisprudence. stuart: who is paying your legal bills? [laughter] >> stuart, i'm able to pay my legal bills so far. you know i'm prideful, i don't like asking other people for help. i conduct a business, i sell a product to people, and as i'm able to, i try to support the legal team myself. stuart: now if i were to get these plans and i did a 3-d printed gun, what exactly is it? is it plastic? i mean how does it work? >> a lot of 3-d printing these days is in plastic yes, stuart. but basically the core technology is just compute rated manufacturing. the government is asserting that all technology and data related to any form of manufacture of gun guns is their exclusive property. they just happened to latch on to me because i had the news regarding 3-d printing. stuart okay. we just put up a shot of various components. i take it if you put all
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those -- there, you can see it now. you put all that lot together, and you've got a gun. you literally 3-d print it? that's it? >> that's right, right. there's several different technologies and ways of getting there. some are more expensive than others and, of course there's other techniques. there's so many different ways to skin this cat. stuart: i think you're going to break some legal ground with this one, i really do. that's a breakthrough of what you're trying to put out there, your product, your plan. cody wilson, come back again and tell us exactly where the legal fight stands, please. okay? >> you bet sir. thank you. stuart: up next a popular mom blogger tells her sons, don't get anything for me for mother's day, just show me love instead. i'm really on this lady's side. she makes her case next. ♪ ♪ the real question that needs to be
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♪ ♪ >> i'm nicole petallides with you fox business brief. stocks about 20 points off the earlier highs of the day but still looking great for the bulls out there 256 points to the upside for the dow jones industrial average. 18,179. the s&p up 27, the nasdaq up 60, sitting right at 5,006. we're watching materials lead the way today. all sectors have had up arrows,
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dupont, newmont mining doing great, most things up more than 2%. bo jangles, southern food founded back in 1977, they had the $19 ipo, well, 31% to the upside. mcdonald's reported smaller than expected fall in its worldwide sales. right now it's up about 1.5% at $98.31. it's also worth knowing that the vix, the fear gauge, is down about 14%. buy everything, that's what they're doing.
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stuart: and here you have the share price of cure rig green mountain, it has rebounded a bit, took a huge hit yesterday. it cut its outlook, and its new machine only takes k-cups. uh-oh that locks you into their coffee. a lot of people don't like that. the ceo says he's going to change it. tiny rebound for keurig. here is john layfield coming in from bermuda, keurig down, is that a buying opportunity for a guy like you? >> i think it is. every company makes mistakes, but good companies realize that and make a transition and cover up those mistakes. the ceo came out and admitted they made a huge mistake here. they had unbelievable backlash from the consumers and they're correcting it. i think it is a buying opportunity here. stuart: that's very good john, very nice of you. [laughter] and then we've got mcdonald's. sales are down again as you know. they're betting on an updated
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hamburglar ad to help them be cool again? would you buy mcdonald's stock at 98 john? >> no i wouldn't. this is not a growth stock. it's got a 3.5% yield. if you want it for that, buy it. the problem is like the bev companies -- beverage companies. you can only make so much coca-cola. that doesn't work with fast food restaurants, and that's where mcdonald's has gone. they've gotten away from it it's hurt their profitability. stuart: there's a fried chicken chain bojangles. they started trading on the nasdaq today, and that thing is up 30%. this is fried chicken. this is not health food and all that fresh stuff. this is fried chicken. so john, would you buy bojangles at 24? >> stuart as a good southern boy we believe colonel harlan sanders of kfc is one of the greatest leaders of all time.
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this is just another fried chicken and biscuit place. i don't buy the up 30%. i would not be a buyer here. stuart: is there a kfc in bermuda? >> there is one. i actually ate at it for the first time yesterday in months. kfc somehow got grandfathered in. stuart: john, thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: mother's day, that's sunday you know? millions of people will spend a lot of money on gifts, meals and spa days that kind of thing. but there's one mom who says mother's day has become too commercial. she wrote this: stuart: that is from sheila quirk, mary tyler mom on a web site called chicago now. sheila, welcome to the program.
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>> thank you for having me, stuart. stuart: i want to tell you that i 100% agree with you. [laughter] >> hooray! stuart: i do i do. so many days, so many holidays, so many commemorations in our society are just excuses to buy stuff. they're overly commercialized. i'm 100% with you, sheila. [laughter] now make your case again. >> so my point is really this, stuart, that mother's day is about sentiment and it's about my privilege of being a mom and raising my sons. and it's about the love that we share between us. stuart: yeah. >> on a day to day basis. every day when i'm cooking dinner, when i'm picking my older boy up from school, when i'm sort of trying to chase after my little toddler. that is what the day is about. stuart: well, am i a killjoy if i say nah, don't buy anything,
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just write a letter express your love. am i kind of an american killjoy? because i think people do, they feel good when they give because it's a positive statement. i love you mom look at this. >> absolutely. if you are a killjoy then we can be killjoys together and we can enjoy one another's company in our sentiments here. i just feel like so much of the emphasis is about buying. and i have two young children, and i don't wish to send the message that how you show and demonstrate love is about how much money you spend -- stuart: yeah. >> -- or get your father to spend. stuart: i think you're very bad for america's economy but good for our culture. [laughter] i've got a large family and one thing that i did like to encourage my children to do on mother's day was write a letter to mom expressing -- >> absolutely. stuart: -- true feeling. and those letters have been
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kept, and they are very valuable to us. do you agree with that? >> perfect. and especially to see the development of a child as they learn and day that grow and how their love changes for their mother along the years what a gift that would be every year: but then the chewlative effect. so i salute you. i think that's fantastic, stuart. stuart: you must remember this, i'm a lot older than you, but i've learned a few things. there are cycles in the relationship between parents and children it goes up and goes down. there's all kinds of things happening in this world. sheila, we like your idea, and we really respect it and, sheila quirk thanks very much for taking time to be with us today. thank you. >> thank you for having me. happy mother's day. stuart: i'll wish that to all mothers in our audience. it's sunday, you know. john stossel's next. he says all politicians are liars. that's an interesting segment. [laughter] here he comes, he's looking grim.
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roll that funny tape. >> hi i'm gil full bright, the people who run my campaign made this commercial and i'm in it. this campaign? it's not about me, it's about crafting a version of me that'll appeal to you. a visit of random worksites with paid actors pointing at things. as a conventionally attractive yet curiously still family. i'd do anything to stay in office. my name's gil fulbright but, hell, i'll change my name. i approved this message. stuart: mr. fulbright is not a real person, by the way. that's just kind of a spoof and john toes to el, who is very real is here now. the use of the word "liar," i think, is a bit strong. >> yeah. they don't generally lie although there are exceptions but mostly they twist words. enhanced interrogation -- stuart: torture. >> spending cuts. [laughter] we want to spend $12 billion this year, we're only going to
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spend $11 billion, so that's a billion dollar cut! [laughter] draconian cuts. stuart: how about welfare? it's not welfare, it's a safety net. >> right. and people don't like welfare, but they like a safety net. they talk about a safety net. and president obama, the democrats, oh free, free college tuition, free obama phones, food stamps, housing vouchers. we're forcibly taking your money and giving it to somebody else. stuart: your whole point is this spin means we should have less government, less politicians in our lives. that's always your theme. >> that's always my theme, it's really just how they do it. i'm not very good at it. frank luntz points out to me, nobody likes privatized social security accounts but they like personal social security accounts. stuart: all the words you use. >> it's what they hear. stuart: but it is important, isn't it? >> it is. stuart: if you're a politician and you want a specific policy
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and this is what you want you've got to frame anytime the right way. i don't -- frame it in the right way. i don't see anything wrong with that given the nature of our society. >> no. and we just have a lot to learn to frame the good ideas as well as the bad guys frame ideas. stuart: do you think the democrats are better than republicans? >> i think so. stuart: you've never taken sides before. you've always been john stossel libertarian himself -- >> i don't take democrats or republicans, but i watch what hillary's gotten away with over the years, and it's appalling. i mean she did exactly what brian williams got fired for. she misremembered being -- oh, yeah we had to run from the plane to get to the car. nobody calls her on it. stuart: misremembered. sorry, i don't recall. >> oh, i say thousands of words a day. sometimes i misspoke. she didn't misspeak she lied. she made it up.
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modern health care... by connecting every single part of it. for as the world keeps on searching for healthier... we're here to make healthier happen. optum. healthier is here. stuart: its a i was 76 and a look at you. you look 46. >> i am heartened by that, five years shot. if you chop off auto and counted the rings i would be 51. this would be nice. >> this is the most well produced segment i have seen in the history of fox. >> of course he will come back on the show. brian kilmeade is the highest working guy on television. it is three hours on fox and friends on fox news and goes straight to a radio studio and
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does another back-to-back. for a guy of 76. dierdre bolton. >> can't believe that. markets are soaring. the dow is up by triple digits, unemployment near seven years ago. president obama is in niketown pushing for the specific deal in oregon. the deal would create thousands of american jobs. david cameron be elected as britain's prime minister. a big win for conservatives. >> i have just been to see her majesty the queen and i will now form a majority conservative government. >> we will tell you what those results will mean for you and your money. tom brady making his first comments on deflategate since the skating nfl report. president obama making these
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