tv After the Bell FOX Business November 21, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EST
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hike in december. folks, check it on the screen. i told you to stay with me. witnessing it right now. all major indices, all four of them closing at new record highs. we cued the fireworks. we're about 50 points away from dow 19,000. wow, make that 45 points away. [closing bell rings] volatility index is the lowest since september on thin volume. david and melissa. david: the trump rally continuing and if you're in stocks you're making money today, quite a bit. a record day on wall street. the dow, nasdaq, s&p 500 and russell, small, mid-size stocks, they're all new lifetime highs, first time since march 2015. the dow a little less than 50 points below dow 19,000. i'm david asman. melissa: i'm melissa francis. we have you covered on all the big market movers. what else is coming up at this hour, the high-level meetings coming up today at trump tower
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as the president-elect continues to build his cabinet he sat down with heads of all major news outlets and big name anchors as well. we'll take you there live for an update. police officers targeted around the country. the details on the latest string of ambush attacks. one of the suspects still at large. be prepared for travel headaches after thanksgiving as hundreds of airport workers go on street. where passengers will be most affected. david: just in time for the holidays. back to the markets. the dow ending at a brand new record high as trump rally goes on. blue-chips are up more than% since the election. remember everybody said they would go down? no way. oil getting a big boost. phil flynn, price futures group and from the cme and lori rothman from the floor of the nyse. lori you're watching big movers in stocks today and there were a lot of them. >> there were a lot of them,
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david. last time we saw four indexes close at simultaneous record was march on 2015. the dow, s&p, the nasdaq and the russell. dow leaders you see them on the screen. apple up 1 1/2%. the news on apple, they will replace the iphone 6 batteries that were faulty. exxonmobil, tell you about it oil move today. look at nasdaq leaders. not as many household names which is interesting. speaks volume about strength of this rally that you have got. some companies we don't talk as much about. lumina up 4.6%. talk of takeover for this company. facebook the exception there. reports of exploring a possible premium sports package for those with prime shipping membership in amazon. disney, parent of espn, was down on that bit of news from amazon. i do want to mention volume, even though it is interesting,
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if you look at nasdaq and performance of lesser-known names volume is 30% below the one-month moving average.y shor. not a lot of news to pin decisions on. we'll leave it there. melissa: phil, oil spiking up 4% as opec saga continues. >> it is incredible t continues, i'm telling you. they could make a soap opera out of this because people wouldn't believe it because it keeps going on and on. the latest news at the technical meeting in opec looks like they're very close to making a deal. they are going to have -- talks are going to continue to tomorrow but even iraq and iran say a deal is likely. russian president vladmir putin expects a deal to get done. they're saying all the right things. oil traders are rallying. this is more than an opec story. this is a demand story. everybody says oil is driving the stock market up. to be honest oil is going up and they're seeing economy take off in anticipation of a trump
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presidency. they're starting to see record demand for gasoline this time of year. can't beat that. back to you. melissa: phil, thank you. david: all major indices continue to soar each closing at fresh lifetime highs today. russell 2000, small and mid-cap tech stocks are shining brighter than the rest, closing for the sixth straight session up over 10% since the election decision outpacing all three indices combined percentage wise anyway. joining me for reaction, jason rot tan, lido isle advisors and liz peek "the financial times." this is what the election is all about. this is what trump is said he wants to be doing, giving little guy equal status with the big guy. is it panning out? >> people are confident trump will push through lighter regulation, lower taxes, very stimulative for the domestic economy. the russell two through as an example, about 80% of their
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business is in the domestic economy. the one question mark that looms over the trump bump if you want to call it that for the market is trade. obviously looking at multinational companies we're not really sure how a change in our trade policies might affect them. domestic companies really, most don't have that issue. they are mainly denominated in dollars. they're not going to be worried about a strong dollar impact on exports or translating foreign. honestly looks to me like investors are making sound decisions here. david: jason there is another speed bum i mentioned, the bigger the company and more advisors and accountants to squeeze the little guy to give themselves unfair advantage over the little guy. trump says he is going to stop that but there is going to be a lot of resistance? >> there is going to be a lot of resistance, to kind of revert to your earlier question to liz regarding how trump is causing and affecting this whole stock
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market rally, i think briefly the much larger point everyone needs to consider is that how these foreign countries are responding to trump's rhetoric and potential hyperbole about building a wall around the u.s. from a trade standpoint. china sold off a lot of u.s. bonds which is causing rates to go up f that continues to happen, there may be issues with the stock market rally but for now it looks good. david: liz, the other thing is, very often markets do get ahead of themselves. maybe it is temporary. maybe long term we'll go to dow 20, or 25,000. but right now short testimony has the market got ahead of itself? >> nobody really knows the answer to that question. i would say we've had eight years of an economy unable to break out of one, 2% kind of growth parameters. really we don't know how much pent-up demand there might be. there is a lot of capacity in this economy. though the unemployment rate is
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4.9%, we know there are still 95 million americans in workforce age category not working. david: right. >> there is lots of labor. plants are operating at 80% of capacity. there is a lot of room for accelerated growth. hopefully we'll see that. david: the country is wanting to grow and workers want to come back in and grow. melissa. melissa: advertisers are changing strategy in an attempt to reach the same americans who unexpectedly propelled president-elect donald trump in the white house, realizing they too may have misjudged their target market and out of touch with a large and powerful demographic. liz, so entertaining to me, dawns on ceo of mccanns so many marketing programs are oriented to metro elite imagery. not everyone who wants to buy stuff wants to live in l.a. and new york. shocking. >> they're looking at trump voters specimens in a zoo. who are these people you know?
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do we really understand them? are they like humans, like the rest of us? honestly amazing to me how out of touch the elites are. that is overworked word but let's say thought leaders on each coast is with the middle of the country. they're are a lot of people out there, folks. they don't really all thing the way you do. in terms of what they want to buy and what kind of life-style they want to lead they're not that different from everybody else, but my gosh, clearly we've seen in the "brexit" decision, we've seen in the trumping, people have no idea what a large part of this country is thinking. melissa: jason, it is that's a challenging financial perspective if you're trying to sell products because these are the same people who said, oh, trump can't possibly win. there is no way this man will be elected. these are people making decisions about where to put advertising dollars. how to form advertising campaigns to appeal to people and suddenly it is dawning on them, maybe i don't know a lot
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about the fly over part of the nation. what do you think? >> i may have a totally outlyer perspective here you but i will shoot straight from the hip. i don't really see the connection. i really don't see the connection. i think from advertising perspective how many ways can you sell dishwashing detergent? how many ways can you sell a car? i don't see connection between trump winning and these big advertisers to change everything. melissa: how many ways can you sell a car? they show cars in a sleek metro area with all kinds of metro tastes and what people in l.a. and new york aspire to be. in this case they're saying maybe we're wrong about what people are aspiring to be, or at least we're missing half of the population out there who doesn't aspire to look like new yorker and drive like a new yorker or look like they're in l.a., doesn't respond to the same celebrities. that there is a giant group of people who they're not getting with their marketing and these may be the same people who also voted for trump, you don't he see that connection?
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>> that makes sense from a television advertising standpoint where you're more or less running one ad blanketing every region, blanketing every demographic. i think future of advertising which we're already starting to see is 100% personalized ads relative to whoever is actually watching. that is why facebook is doing so wells because they're providing advertisers with whole new world of data they should use more than blanket ads. in that sense you're right. david: speaking of ads and marketing united airlines introducing a basic economy class are chiefer than coach. you can't bring a carry on under the seat in front of you, all this is fueling what united is calling unwarranted backlash from consumers. liz, never good when a producer of a product starts lashing out at their consumers. >> no, that seems like a rather negative point of view. david: yes. >> i don't think that works very well.
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look, i mean, that seems like a very poor marketing plan to be sure. i have always, i don't know, maybe i'm a alone in this i always really rejected idea that airplanes, people don't make decisions based on the quality of service provided. i know it is supposed to be all about price. i don't really think that is true. i think people are choosing airlines like any other product based on quality of service and what is offered. david: it is certainly bad marketing trying to offer something extra and ends up the customer feels like they're getting screwed. jason, liz, thank thank you verh for joining us, appreciate it. melissa: travel nightmare at o'hare that could disrupt travel across the country. we'll tell you when airport workers agreed to go on strike. david: oh, boy. they made the agreement in advance. president obama delivering ultimatum to president-elect donald trump why he says he may have to break with the tradition of staying silent once leaves office. melissa: my goodness. mr. trump speaking with
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potential cabinet selections as you would expect but he is talking to the heads of all major tv news outlets and big-name news anchors as well. we'll take you there live for details on that. >> he has been talking about transparency and draining the swamp and turning the page in washington, brian. new transformative outsider. this is what outsiders do.
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meeting, david, although kellyanne conway, trump's senior advisor did say a little while ago the idea, sort of to push the reset button after a tough campaign with the media, but didn't go into detail about what they talked about. the big tv network executives and major anchors from networks were here. a major add it the schedule that conway put on schedule. they had a congresswoman tulsi gabbard from hawaii, a democrat and bernie sanders supporter in the primaries. she came here, put out a statement, a combat veteran. talked about syria her and trump and other things i believe we can disagree even strongly but still come together on issues for the american people to affect their daily lives. we can not allow continued divisiveness to destroy our country. former governor of texas rick perry was here. current governor oklahoma, mary fallin was here.
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both mentioned as possible cabinet secretaries. you talked about newt gingrich arriving. ' elaine chu former labor secretary and for former secretary scott brown. she is married to the current senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. a wide range of different types of meetings today. no major announcements. mr. trump hinted we may see some sort of announcement before thanksgiving. we're getting closer to the holiday. i know he and the family are planning to head south this week to spend the thanksgiving holiday in much warmer climate of palm beach at his mara lago resort in palm beach. david: if i could, i would, it is getting colder in new york, connell, i don't have to tell you. you're standing outside. melissa: all the action at trump tower follows a packed weekend at trump international golf course. the p elect meeting with big republican names including former governor mitt romney who
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denounced him during the campaign. we all remember that. we have a former advisor to mitt romney and a republican strategist. you know, it is interesting, because donald trump is doing what a lot of people encouraged him to do after the republican national convention, to reach out to people who had criticized him and kind of bring everyone together and look magnanimous. any idea why he might be doing this right now? >> i think there is a few reasons. one it sends a powerful message that republicans have a unified control of the ghost. now we will have a unified message coming out our policies are really better to create jobs and move the country forward. i also think it shows donald trump to be a secure and confident president that he can meet with someone who criticized him during the campaign. you know hillary clinton had scandal after scandal and no democrat would dare criticize her. they cleared the field for her in the primary by and large. the republican party wasn't that way. to come together afterwards with our president-elect and say here
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is how we will move forward, we see the results in the poll numbers. donald trump has had a double-digit swing in his favorability numbers. i think that continues to increase as we head towards inauguration day. melissa: you're a former advisor to mitt romney. you know the man well. do you think the state department is best fit for him as secretary of state? i think of him as turn around guy. we're a business channel. we cover business background. he is private equity guy. he is great at turning around disasters. is secretary of state the right place to him? >> our foreign policy has been a disaster the last eight years so i think that would be a good place. i would consider governor romney from veterans administration if you're in business you can't believe how bad this has gotten. it is costing people their lives. putting someone like mitt romney in position like that, i would think he would feel a sense of duty to serve both his country and the veterans of his country to turn that around as well.
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our government is an inept, corrupt bureaucracy. hard to see where you wouldn't want governor romney to help fix any part of this to make it better. melissa: do you think that is too small after position for him? to me that is the most obvious choice. you can look in and immediately see how it is being mismanaged and instantly start reorganizing the pieces to put out a better product which is health care for our vets which is incredibly important. when you put the prestige next to that, of that next to something like secretary of state where everybody is vying for it, would he want to turn around the va? >> well, i think mitt romney would find it press teen just to help our veterans and get them the health care and services they earned frankly at this point after eight years of scandal. i don't know what else to call it. it is disasterous. i don't think there are any small jobs when it comes to serving our veterans t would be prestigious in any other term to
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have the best veterans administration in this term as an example to the world how you treat people who serve your country. melissa: amen, i agree with that. sara, see you next time. >> thank you. david: the great thing about the pool of the potential candidates for the job there is such a big number of them. so many people both from the political world, more importantly from the business world. know how the last many business people were in the last administration, not many. melissa: so many people with so many experience and knowledge dying to get to work. they're all coming together. david: donald trump is finalizing his tax proposals but one group in d.c. might be looking to bring all of his hard work to a dead halt. grover norquist here to weigh in on those roadblocks. the war on cops is escalating. nation looking for answers as the shootings keep happening more frequently. >> we're pursuing all leads and
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david: president-elect donald trump preparing to simplify and lower tax rates almost from day one of his inauguration. what about the beltway lobbyists that spent decades molding and shaping tax code into the complex monstrosity it is right now? how will they fight back against losing their special interests? grover norquist, americans for tax reform president and founder who has been battling these lobbyists his whole lifetime joins us now. they have spent their lifetime, grover, developing special deals and cuts certain individuals get but most of the rest of us have to pay for. they will try to hold on no matter what you guys try to do to simplify things, right? >> one advantage we have, is that the corporate rate, the american corporate rate is 35%.
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european average 23%. at 35% rate, any deduction is very, very, valuable. trump wants to take that to 15. you made every deduction worth half as much. it is easier to give up things that are only half as valuable and, the whole approach, both paul ryan's approach, brady ways and means chairman, trump's, very similar, dramatic reduction in marginal tax rates, full expensing this is very pro-growth. david: right. >> if you think i had something over here i liked, the new package is a big improvement. david: the new package as you mentioned there have been a bunch of people who really care about the issue of simplification, lowering tax rates, people like you, and think do, you guys i guess do have a blueprint you could put on donald trump's desk from day one, right? >> absolutely. and it looks a lot like what
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donald trump endorsed and put out during the campaign. there is not a lot of difference between trump's approach and chairman brady and paul ryan's approach and senator hatch on the senate side. so there's, it will take a couple afternoons but you could put them together a lot more quickly than previous presidential elections. david: here's the question that most americans have. how soon before we begin to notice a change in the way we have to pay our taxes and how much we have to pay? >> well, it will take place january 1st, because whatever changes they make will go back to january 1st. it may take them two or three months to fet this get this enacted into law but i'm thinking first 100 days for dramatic tax reductions. we'll know exactly what it looks like within a few months. david: just to be clear, grover, first, most of us pay taxes on april 15th. so april 15th, 2017, we can
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look forward to much simpler tax form? >> yes. but we start living that year, january 1st, 2017. david: that's nice. don't count your chickens before they hatch but still we can look forward to it. grover, thank you very much. good to see you. >> good to see you. melissa: flying after thanksgiving next week could get a little more hectic. 500 workers at chicago o'hare, america's second busiest airport, announced they will strike next tuesday. airplane cabin cleaners, janitors, wheelchair attendants are demanding $15 minimum wage and union rights. one union weapon said they don't expect to shut down the airport but will create a disruption. david: oh, boy. we have breaking news out of japan, 7.3 magnitude earthquake striking eastern coast of japan, near fukushima. there is tsunami warning as residents are urged to flee and head west. as you remember where that nuclear accident took place a couple years ago.
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so they're very concerned about this. we'll keep you updated with any new developments. melissa? melissa: celebrities against donald trump. the un-american message that came out of the american music awards. david: this is awful. melissa: that is coming up. david: no class. plus an attempt to block trump's cabinet appointments, democrats made the rules they are trying to break. that is kind of interesting. we'll give you details next. i love getting more for less.
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wall street. the dow, nasdaq, s&p 500 and russell 2000 all ending with new lifetime highs. this is the first time that happened with all four indices since march of 2015. the dow is 44 points away from hitting 19,000. after that who knows. melissa? melissa: there you go. they may have only themselves to blame, i hate that. democrats are fighting to block president-elect donald trump's more controversial appointments but they might not ebbable to pull it off due to rules they themselves imposes. fox business's peter barnes in d.c. with details. peter, these things always come back to bite you. reporter: what goes around comes around, right, melissa? unless republicans decide to roll the rule back, it will take 51 votes to confirm president trump's 1,000 appointments,
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after democrats vetoed the 60-vote requirement. republicans have majority of 52 seats next year in the new congress plus incoming vice president pence. he can break a tie if it comes to that. jeff sessions named to be his attorney general. democrats charge he has weak record in the senate and civil rights and immigration issues. yesterday the top democrat in the senate chuck schumer warned his party will take a hard look at all of mr. trump's nominees. >> for any of these nominees i think the watchword is thorough, thorough vetting. don't say absolutely not, but they have to answer and satisfy the american people about a whole lot of questions, even if you're a senator. reporter: schumer says to get his vote sessions needs to pledge to run a strong civil rights division at the justice department. the vice president-elect said he is confident sessions will be confirmed. >> this is a man who prosecuted the kkk.
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in his own home sate this is someone who demonstrated personal courage. i think you're going to see, you're going to see an outpouring of support from diverse voices including the african-american community in his home state and across the country? reporter: mr. trump tweeted yesterday, quote, i have always had a good relationship with chuck schumer. he is far smarter than harry r. that is harry reid, the departing democratic leader in the senate. and has the ability to get things done. good news. melissa. messa: all right, peter, thank you so much. there you go. david: well, president obama apparently doesn't plan to go quietly into seclusion like many of his predecessors. speaking at a conference in lima, peru, he spoke about his plans after leaves the white house. listen up. >> if there are issues that have less to do with the specifics of some legislative proposal or battle but go to core questions
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about our values, and our ideals, and if i think that it's necessary or helpful for me to defend those ideals, then i will examine it when it comes. david: here now is kirsten haglund, conservative political commentator. richard goodstein, democratic strategist. kirsten a lot different from gw bush. he basically kept quiet about the agenda of president obama it was clear a lot of it he disagreed with. >> absolutely. this is definitely breaking protocol from presidents prior to him. as he did throughout the campaign when he came out really, really strongly against donald trump and for hillary clinton. that is something that prior presidents didn't do either. so he is isn't really playing by the rules before and now look likes after as well. to be fair he wouldn't mention speak about policy specifics but the american people voted. they spoke and they are now speaking against president
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obama's legacy and everything he did in the last eight years. i think even if he wants to speak up, he does he shouldn't. if he does american people will not really want to hear it. david: he announced richard, that he will. i presume he will follow through on what he says. on what issues specifically and how do you think he will speak up about them, richard? >> kirsten's right, the public did vote and 53 plus% voted for somebody other than donald trump. i'm not contesting that he lost. he won. i get that most people voted for a -- david: what issues specifically. >> i will give you three. i give you three. conflicts. we don't want the united states president look like vladmir putin who uses his power to line his pocket and that of his crony. second, we don't want to have the freedom of religion, we're talking about a muslim registry or ban. people going heil victory in celebration of trump's win. that's a fundamental core issue and third, press freedoms. donald trump talked about the
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changing the libel laws. that he is talking about core principles, not is what is in the tax bill. david: kirsten what happens when he speaks out? does president trump speak, does he tweet -- do we get into another sort of campaign fight? >> yeah, twitter war? david: yeah. >> i don't know. we'll see how president obama operates his twitter account after he is relinquished the @potus account. the other thing we worry about, how we look on the world stage. having a former presidential leader speaking against our country to the current sitting president, doesn't make us look stable or strong what we're trying to get things done. that is another thing he will have to be wise about when he speaks. let's be honest, conservatives and liberals disagree about what some of our core values should be so it will be up to the former president, then former president obama to decide what our core values are? david: right. >> he should follow protocol of every president before him, sit back and let donald trump and
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his administration, because this will be more than just him, focus on forming identity of their administration moving forward. david: richard, who does he link up with? he clearly knows power of speaking with groups and organizations? does he link up with the soros faction? with the democratic national committee? does he link up with anything or does he speak as a loan -- loner? >> i think he doesn't speak up with anybody. organize for america, 13, 15 million people who organized behind obama. does he harness that? that is my going concern. e citizen, if he associates himself with soros or anybody else he gets their baggage. he wants a -- to kirsten's point we have core values. they're in the bill of rights. there is much dispute. >> how that is interpreted. david: bill of rights and constitution itself. we'll see about that kirsten, richard thank you very much. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> thank you. david: melissa. melissa: a push to strengthen
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the iran deal. president obama is considering new measures to fortify the controversial nuclear agreement with iran according to "wall street journal" just two months before donald trump takes office. here is sebastian gorka. he is the author of, "defeating jihad." thanks so much for joining us. as a senior u.s. official argued it is hard to tear up the deal, arguing what he thinks donald trump might be doing because u.s. allies and partners including russia are committed to it but the most important thing we can do is show it is working. what evidence is there that it is working? >> there is lots of evidence there isn't. whether it is hostages. whether it is our naval vessels being buzzed. the fact is whatever this deal was supposed to bring us on the nuclear aspects alone, has been counter mannedded by everything we've seen in terms of the
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behavior of iran and iran's proxies, attempting to fire missiles against u.s. naval vessels. this is catastrophe from the get-go. i understand why the white house would wish to salvage it but there is nothing there to salvage. melissa: in terms of them trying to obtain and test ballistic missiles, they always say, whoa, that was part of a u.n. deal, that wasn't part of this specific agreement. they have violated this specific agreement with the u.s. at least twice with heavy water that they have obtained and used they weren't allowed to. on the flip side, the evidence that it is working, i guess, president obama said we have stopped them on the path to making a nuclear bomb. and i guess if they wanted to support him, they could offer you know all kinds of inspections that would prove that it is working. we haven't seen that, right? >> well, not openly that, we're not allowed to have u.s. inspectors. when there is an inspection that the international inspectors wish to take, we have to give them weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks of notice.
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so it's a farce. it is an utter farce. there is nothing about this deal that substantively puts roadblocks in the way of the irgc or the mull you laws in iran acquiring nuclear capability. melissa: let me ask you about something that happened here in new york before we run out of time this was an arrest that was made here in new york city of a man who express ad desire to use a large garbage truck to attack pedestrians in times square. this is especially worrisome because this was the latest propaganda out of isis, calling on followers to mirror the mass casualty attacks that played out in nice, france. how worrisome do you think this is? >> absolutely. it is not theoretical anymore. this is not hyperbole. this individual was arrested because he traveled to turkey, he traveled to yemen and was contted by isis and was intercepted discussing the need
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for request by isis this kind of mass casualty attack in france has to be replicated in new york. he has been arrested three days before thanksgiving this is how real the threat is to america. melissa: sebastian, thank you for your time. appreciate it. see you soon. >> thank you. melissa: david? david: police officers under attack all over the country. our brave men and women in blue gunned down while on the job. why the uniform is actually now the target. vo: introducing the new motoz droid with moto mods, exclusively on verizon. boom! vo: transform your phone in a snap. with the only next gen network that lets you get the most out of it, because verizon lte advanced delivers 50% faster peak speeds in 450 cities, coast to coast. buy one motoz droid and get one half off, and $300 back. and get 20 gigs of data with no surprise overages, and 4 lines for only $40 each. why settle when you can have it all on verizon? this is where i trade andrs. manage my portfolio.
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david: police shootings all over the country with one ending in the death of a 20 year veteran officer, this following a series of deadly attacks on police in america over the past year or two. fox news's casey stiegel standing by in dallas with the latest. this is extraordinary, casey, to me. reporter: yeah, really unthinkable and these are four different police shootings that happened in four different cities across the country in 24
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hours time. the officer here in texas lost his life. again a 40, or a 20 year veteran i should say of the san antonio police department. the police say the detective, benjamin marconi was sitting in his squad car writing a traffic ticket yesterday morning outside after san antonio police headquarters when a car pulled up behind his and a man jumped out and ran to his squad car, shooting and killing detective marconi in broad daylight. san antonio police released their own surveillance video. take a close look at this. they say the man may have actually visited the police station hours before the crime. they say he appeared agitated about something, although officials will not say about what. meantime, in missouri, two officers recovering after two separate shootings there yesterday. one outside of kansas city, the other in st. louis.
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in both cases police say the officers were shot unprovoked while doing their jobs, and in both cases the suspects were shot and killed by responding officers. if all of this wasn't enough, another officer, a forth, shot during a traffic stop then in florida yesterday as well. the sanibel police officer was treated and released from the hospital and the man who allegedly shot him was arrested. so out of all of the suspects, four different suspects responsible for these shootings, one in custody for the shooting in florida. the one for the fatal shooting here in texas is on the run. and the two from missouri shot and killed by police yesterday. david: attacking people who risk their lives trying to save us all. casey stiegel. hard to imagine this. melissa? melissa: a car jumped the curb at l.a. auto show.
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evaluating seven patients on or near the curb. four sustained serious injuries on the sidewalk. we'll monitor this and bring you any details as they come about. david: that is kind of scary. when the president-elect meets the press, what is going on there? donald trump face-to-face with the quote dishonest media he talked about in the campaign trail. hollywood taking a swipe at the trump family but it is already backfiring.
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media guice. we have dan gain nor, media research vp of business and culture. dan, amazing to me. we're seeing it go on, sort of the way they, the rest of media couches things. let me play an example forou. this is the actual conversation that took place on nbc with chuck todd. let's play this. >> can you eequivocally rule out a registry for muslims? >> look i'm not going to rule out anything, but we're not going to have a registry based on a religion. melissa: okay. so, then nbc watch this, the pr department put out a bite. can you rule out registry for muslims? we put it up on screen, on twitter. they took only the beginning where he said i wouldn't rule out anything. if you followed on twitter, he said wouldn't rule out anything.
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it is fact wally correct. they could have picked out second half of the sound bite. can you rule out the registry for muslims? we'll have a registry based upon religion. is this something to get upset about? >> this is the same network that gave us brian williams and fake news. media are upset about fake news and giving us fake news. it is bad when you are a major network and you're getting called out by the lefty "new york times" and left buzzfeed for doing bad journalism. one of the reasons i think trump called people to meet with them he has to have some attempt to have, to reach out to them, if he can pull this off he deserves the nobel peace prize. melissa: is that the way to solve it? the comby product, people say mike pence is a racist, donald trump is racist, you see what happened at hamilton and
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the cast stand up and attack mike pence in the audience, listen we're trying to be inclusive. just a few moments here we want to spread a message of love and inclusion. we're alarmed and anxious you will not protect us, our planet, our children, our parents, up old our inalienable rights. because the idea has been spread through things like this, they will set up a muslim registry which reince priebus specifically said no to. this kind of perpetuation that is causing backlash. dan, how do we solve this problem at this point? >> well, the only way to solve the problem for the media suddenly start being professional to do their jobs right which isn't going to happen. so you need to work around them. that means, conservatives need to understand, donald trump's seems to be the first person who consistently taken this position as a presidential candidate for president in years, that the media are out to get him. he is right. they are so, that is the lay of
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the land. then, you have to, you understand when hollywood is out to get you that helps your message. melissa: that is totally different. hollywood they're helping you there. dan, appreciate your time. david: here is more proof of that. the american music awards hit a sour note with viewers when celebrities took turns bashing donald trump and mocking his wife melania. take a listen. >> i love my husband. [laughter]. president barack obama. >> i love bruno mars. [laughter]. i don't know what color he is so i can't deport him. ♪ no trump, no kk, no fascist usa ♪ david: here is the thing. eight million viewers. it was the worst ratings for the awards show since tracking began in 1992. so take that hollywood. we'll be right back.
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melissa: one city naming columbus day doing more culturalty sensitive. david: bloomington, indiana. fall holiday. >> spring hol lay. so festive. here is "risk & reward." >> donald trump meeting with anchors and top executives of the media networks, i am liz in for deirdre bolton. mr. trump continues to hammer away at his cabinet picks, he is working at best as he can. after a marathon of weekend meetings. a potential candidate for energy secretary or interior secretary. this all bev the president-
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