tv Trish Regan Primetime FOX Business December 14, 2018 11:00pm-12:01am EST
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much staff. john kelly exiting the posted at the end of this year. the house won't return until next tuesday. they will have days to reach a deal on the border wall. trish: president trump just maiming a temporary replacement for the replacement for john kelly. mick mulvaney knows our economy in and out. in just moments, conservative author jerome corsi joins me exclusively with break details you will only hear on "trish regan primetime." he says he has fresh proof robert mueller and his team are retaliating against him because he says he's daring to take them
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on. including suing mr. mueller for $350 million. stay tuned for dr. corsi here. and another "trish regan primetime" exclusive. socialist venezuela on the verge of collapse. nick lapse maduro my sources tell me may only have days left as president of the country. the man venezuela owes the most of money to is here. bernie sanders and alexandria ocasio-cortez listen up. breaking night. president trump picking budget hawk mick mulvaney as acting chief of staff. good timing considering the government shutdown is looming. you want somebody who understands the economy?
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chad pergram joins us with the fast-moving developments. fill us in, chad. reporter: he's a former south carolina congressman who came to washington in the tea party wave of 2010. he declared if usual a lobbyist who never gave us money i didn't talk to you. if you are a lobbyist who gave us money i might talk to you. he insisted the gop leaders defund obamacare in order to fund the government. mulvaney opposed a 2013 budget compromise authored by paul ryan. he also opposed other government funding efforts. mulvaney led the shutdown caucus. because some sources on capitol hill say they believe the chances of a shutdown have increased because mulvaney will be the acting chief of staff
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whispering in trump's ear. how the shutdown goes could be for mulvaney. trish: adam johnson, i am starting with you. you are salmony guy. mulvaney is a money guy. what are the challenges regarding a shutdown and spending for the wall. >> people start to dot their their is and cross their ts, follow the money. he knows where we can get the compromise and where we can get the votes. trish: do you think a shutdown is happening? >> i do. trish: does this further that.
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>> he's a fiscal hawk and he's loig to the president. his personality is not overbearing or overwhelming. i know members of the freedom caucus are happy. my husband spoke to somebody from senator rand palms staff and they said city was a tremendous pick. trish: i know the democrats don't like anything the republicans do. robin, i know around good sport and try to see things fairly. how do you think about this appointment? >> i think it's a good wish. this is why democrats need to get behind this in was so much controversy when he was first named director omb because as congressman he said it was a joke. but he continued obama's 100 investigations. he actually fined wells fargo
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$500 for what they did that was beyond the pale with consumer loans. trish: i like hearing this from you, robin. now you have a democrat guy, robin was a democrat strategist last time i checked. you said we have to give him a chance. you say he's likeable, amy? does mat buy him any likability in terms of the democrats in congress? >> i would hope so. it seems like it would be somebody easier to work with. he wouldn't have to be reintroduced to the west wing. the players know how to work with him. i see this as a big win. this is a positive. trish: what happens nextally speaking if you have a -- economically speaking if we have a shutdown. >> it's only just now starting
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to trickle out with the partial shutdown. so many of the functions of government have already been funded. you are talking about potentially, this waits boils down to. homeland security and department of interior. those are the two departments that will be most of affected. homeland security is an issue. but as far as vets getting paid? no problem. as far as the usual functions of government, food stamps, medicare, medicaid, that is funded. trish: amy, adam, and of course robin biro. breaking developments on the story we have been following on "trish regan primetime." conservative you a thorp, author dr. jerome corsi says he has proof the feds are trying to
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harass and malign him. he's on set with exclusively what he calls new evidence of wrongdoing by mueller's team. and another exclusive, "trish regan primetime" learning tonight venezuela's socialist leader nicolas maduro's regime could collapse in a matter of days. the news you will only hear on this program straight ahead. i'm ken jacobus and i switched to the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy. and last year, i earned $36,000 in cash back. which i used to offer health insurance to my employees. what's in your wallet? dependability award for its midsize car-the chevy malibu. hi.i just wanted to tell you that chevy won a j.d.power
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trish: breaking tonight. conservative author caught in the crosshairs of robert mueller's russia probe facing new allegations about a cancer fundraiser. he's fighting back with his response to this. the daily caller's report entitled mueller target raised $25,000 in charity to pay cancer doctor who doesn't appear to exist. the story comes on the heels of corsi's lawsuit against the feds. he believes this article was planted as a hit job on his character.
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he's calling on the reporter to be a witness in his case. joining me is dr. jerome corsi himself. you saw the headlines there in the "daily caller." what was your reaction? >> i was outraged. we can prove without doubt that this is an illegal leak from the special counsel to chuck ross. trish: the reporter that reported this story saying that basically this was a hoax. your cancer fundraiser. >> there is no other place this could have come from, the mueller grand jury. chuck ross the reportered told me he got the information from robert mueller's special counsel. trish: the reporter himself? >> yes, he said i have this information from sources close to and directly from robert mueller's special counsel it's direct proof of an illegal leak
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from the grand jury. trish: you are saying this is not true. and it's a real doctor. >> the doctor is true. tommy sigler is a real cancer blair. trish: so tell us all of it. >> corsi nation took on the case to raise $25,000 for tommy sigler. the doctor is an israeli doctor oncologist and a picture with me in it. so you can document that tommy sigler and i know each other. he was treated for cancer. we raised money to help him with the operation. $25,000. i know the doctor. the doctor is real. the doctor exists. he's an israeli oncologist and
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injur --and surgeon. trish: the reporter is saying he couldn't find him. >> that's great. they are not very good at this i will guess. they bring my family into this all the time. cancer patients and my family. i find this attempt to slur me which comes right out after i just published the e-book. trish: this also happened after you were on the show. you were on the show the other night and what happened the next day? >> this article begins to break and my e-book we featured it on the show that my e-book would be available. it's on amazon. "silent no more," the inside story of the horror story of the mueller witch hunt. i'm sure mueller is dropping this zwroir to damage my family and defame me. trish: i haven't looked into any
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of this. i talked to you and you tell me it's not true. if it's not true, why wouldn't they come after you? >> i got not a penny. it was a gofundme account. corsi nation which i broadcast and live streamed this case and prpro d promoted it. all the money went to the gofundme account. that can be documented. trish: where did the money go after that? >> it went to tommy. we have photographs of tommy in the hospital. tommy in the operation. i met tommy. this slurred my family, too, talking about cancer victims in my family that the doctor was assisting. let's talk about me. i have an operation for spinal stenosis in 2008. i have had pain enormous taking medicine the doctors created has
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relieved the pain. trish: the same doctor you are referencing? the same doctor. trish: in your view the reporter is someone who should be questioned because you believe this information which was untrue, but the story that's been told here was actually told to him by mueller's team. >> mueller's team is investigating everything about me. they want to find a crime. my attorney put the reporter on notice today that he is now a witness that will be in my criminal complaint before the department of justice on mueller's special prosecution efforts and in the $350 million lawsuit that we have in the federal district court. a hearing will be held on that january 3. trish: they said mueller's team didn't leak. they were iron qulad.
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>> they leak like a suv. >looks like you asieve. they damage me. they are starting to investigate my family. they are investigating my work with cancer patients. i find this especially offensive given how closely cancer affected my family. trish: have they contacted you. >> no. and they have not contacted my attorney. they are doing everything they can to harass my life and destroy my reputation. this is a slur that originates in mueller's special counsel. we, prove that it's a leak this reporter chuck ross. we have emails from other leaks where the special counselor has been meeting with reporters in a restaurant in washington, d.c. across from trump international hotel to leak grand jury information. i think the mueller team has
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been investigating areas of my life unrelated to anything to do with russian collusion because they hate me so much. especially for the appearances on your show and also for this e-book which now lets you read inside mueller's witch hunts what it felt like by me to be under this gestapo tactics. we are going forward with the $350 million lawsuit in the district court. this reporter will be called in. he'll be under oath. we'll opinion him down that he got this information directly from mueller's grand jury it's a total slur on me and my family. an intimidation tactic. trish: we appreciate you coming on and telling your story. >> thank you for the opportunities. your show has been of great assistance.
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this has been -- i have to answer questions, is dad going to be arrested on christmas day? is dad going to be in prison? i can't say no. they can come in here and put me in hand kifs after the grandle jury met today -- they could put me in handcuffs after the grand jury met today. i am 72 years old. i never committed a crime. i have never even had a parking ticket. i couldn't give mueller what he wanted and he pressured me to give him this information. i can't connect roger stone to julian assange. they can argue this all day long. but they won't accept the truth of what i told them. trish: are you scared? >> i'm angry. my faith drives me here. i may be put in prison by these
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brute for the rest of my life. one year in federal prison might kill me. but i'm so determined to bring to the american people my personal witness as jesus is my lord and savior. i'm not here for an earthly purpose. my purpose is to bring to the american people that the justice system is run by politically motivated hacks known as the mueller special counsel. trish: we'll see what happens. >> we certainly will. trish: the special counsel's office firing back against claims that the fbi act inappropriately when two agents questioned national security advisor michael flynn without a lawyer present. and without warning him that lying to the fbi is a crime. a sitting national security advisor, retired lieutenant general and 33-year veteran
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knows he should not lie to federal agents. wow. shouldn't he have had a lawyer? wouldn't that have been the right way to do things? this you go in bet that meeting. before the interview, former fbi director andrew mccabe and others decided the agents would not warn flynn it was a crime to lie to the fbi. they wanted flynn to be relaxed and they were concerned that giving him that information could adversely affect the report. even former fbi director james comey said this was not the usual approach. watch. >> i sent them.
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[laughter] >> something i wouldn't have done or maybe gone the away with in a more organized investigation -- more organized administration in the george w. bush an administration or obama administration. i thought it's early enough, let's just send a couple guys over [laughter] trish: joining me, john leu. they send investigators over there, they don't bother to tell him make make sure don't lie. it's possible to misspeak. if he understood the pressure of the situation maybe he would have been more careful. somewhat you are seeing is a friendly argument between the prosecutor and the defendant's attorneys on whether he does a little bit of jail time or no jail time. anybody who is a criminal
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practitioners knows you don't have to tell somebody it's a crime to lie to the fbi. that's a red herring. trish: you go over there, you question him. you don't give him a lawyer. we all has americans should know you can't lie to the fbi or lie under oath. if he thinks it's a casual, friendly conversation and they say what were you doing on this day or that day. trying to recall all those things. if you don't understand the scrutiny and the importance of those answers, being extraordinarily accurate you could find yourself in what they call it entrapment situation? >> what's really going on here, and you can see it in the statement of facts in his information which is a voluntary plea document. there is a paragraph about fara. foreign agents registration act. a violation. not only did he not file it. but he made three material
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misstatements. trish: that has nothing to do with russia collusion which is the frustration. >> let me make a point. they found a lesser charge for him to plead to, and that was this violation. that was a qulab raw tough effort between two celts of attorneys to find a lesser charge to plead guilty to. if he wants they will go back and charge him with the farra. but what you are seeing is a giant red herring. >> i am afraid i disagree. i read closely document that was filed today. it seems to me that general flynn did not know or realize he was being interviewed for a criminal investigation. trish: dwiends kinds of an important thing to know. he's the national security advisor. part of his job is to talk to the head of fbi about things like whreeks which is what they were purportedly investigating. i can see why general flynn
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didn't bring in a lawyer. he probably thought he was talking with people sent over by the director of the fbi to try to figure out where the whreeks were coming from from highly classified conversations occurring between our government. trish: they got themselves a big problem. we are dealing with an overreach. you heard where corsi explain his situation. he feels mueller's team has gone way too far. you look at what's happening here. you have got a special prosecutor with a blank check to keep going and going and digging and digging. approaching general flynn and not him specifically and not helping him understand the parameters of this thing. >> i think what's really important to keep in mind, you just alluded to it a few seconds ago. this doesn't advance the ball in the jurisdictional point of the mueller investigation. was there a conspiracy between
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the trump campaign in 2016 and russians to violate the federal campaign laws? reading the documents we saw today, i think general flynn might have made a mistake and pled to the charges to protect his son or the foreign registration act. i think he's taking a bullet for his family or son. but i don't see the ball being forded here. trish: that's the problem with all this stuff. there doesn't seem to be any there there. you know the expression. show me the man, i'll show you the crime. we are dealing with a bit of that. thank you both so much. "trish regan primetime" learning exclusively socialist nicolas maduro's days are numbered. when a socialist is in charge of
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♪ muck. trish: breaking tonight, "trish regan primetime" has learned exclusively that venezuela and its current regime are on the brink of collapse. possibly days, weeks, months away from a potential change in leadership. this is according to my sources. venezuela president nicolas maduro -- the successor, by the way, to hugo chavez -- has just a matter of days left until his government will no longer be recognized as legitimate by the
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rest of the world. his six-year term as president, the one we had recognized as a fair election, it's up. 27 days. the clock is ticking, señor. after january 10th, he's no longer the president of venezuela as far as we and the rest of the free world are concerned. good! [laughter] you might be at home thinking, okay, venezuela's so far away, what does it really matter? well, i'm setting the record straight tonight on this, because it does matter. this is a country that's just two and a half hours away from a flight from miami. and it's an adversary to the united states of america. why do we have an adversary so close to us in our hemisphere? russia, china, iran, they're all active in venezuela, which means they have a launch pad right at our doorstep. in fact, two russian nuclear-capable strategic bombers, what did they do? they arrived in venezuela on monday. that's not good. so we need to stand our ground.
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we cannot recognize -- not that we ever would -- any regime that's not legitimate, one that wants to court our enemies. maduro knows this, and it's making him very nervous. so nervous that he's even accusing the united states -- specifically john bolton, i think -- of an assassination plot. the assassination stuff is ridiculous. however, i'll tell you, nicolas maduro should be nervous. this man has driven his country into a deaths institute, miserable -- destitute, miserable state, exiling anyone who dares to disagree with his politics. he stole every american business' property in the process. but his time is up. we will no longer recognize his regime by january 10th. new tonight, we have learned the people venezuela owes money to, the creditors, they plan to show no mercy. meaning, if maduro can't pay his bills, then his chances of
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staying in power there as a socialist grow even slimmer. i'm joined tonight by the man who is tightening the screws on maduro, the chairman and ceo of graylock capital. venezuela owes him and his associates a whole lot of money. hans, welcome. it's good to have you here. i know you want to get paid back, obviously, all you guys want to get paid back, although you did invest in venezuela debt, so you must have a stomach of steel. but in order for you to get paid back, you need to see venezuela get out on its own two feet which i'd have to think means no more maduro. what's your thought? >> when maduro came out and accused bolton of planning an assassination, he also seemed to be asking plaintively to have a discussion with our president. the pressure the united states has been putting on to the sanctions seems to have worked,
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and i think it's up to us to see how much of an appetite there is for transition in venezuela. certainly, on the street there's a lot of appetite -- trish: the people of venezuela, are they over it? they're sick of his regime, and they're probably sick of starving. >> venezuela has traditionally been one of the richest countries in latin america, traditionally one of our larger trading partners especially with oil. and there's no question that given the destitute nature of the economy right now, the best option for the country would be to normalize the relationship with us and recognize business interests and bring u.s. companies back in. trish: well, and we want to be there because there's a ton of oil there. i've spent time in venezuela, and they have this amazing, really thick oil. you could put a coffee cup upside down, and nothing's going to come out. but it's extremely valuable, but only if you get the technology,
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by the way, to get it out of the ground, which american companies do have. but they kicked us all out. why should we even want to go back, hans? >> if we don't go there, the chinese, the russians, the iranians -- trish: they already are there. >> i have a friend who just came back, and he said he doesn't recognize the country, you know? there are iranian, russian planes at the airport there. so clearly -- trish: that's -- >> -- legitimate reason for the sanctions to be in place. and the question is for us as a country, i mean, we need to put our interests first, obviously. clearly, we want to be paid back, and i think we can align our interests with american countries when the venezuelan government decides that they're going to stop playing around -- trish: which would be a win for the venezuelan people too -- >> absolutely. trish: if they had some investment there, they might actually not be struggling so severely. so let me ask you this, the deadlines looming, the free world will no longer recognize
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maduro as president. so what does that open him up to? >> i think it opens him up to quite a bit of additional u.s. actions. trish: meaning? >> runs the gamut. there's a lot of different rurals, but quite honestly i think it opens up an opportunity for us to see who is ready to walk away from this failed socialist experiment and come back into the free world. trish: within the regime he has. other people will say, okay, i'm defecting. by the way, you just met with the former head of the supreme court in venezuela -- >> right. trish: -- in exile in miami. >> right. there's a government in waiting, and obviously, any kind of transition would have to incorporate that or just, they'd be the people that replace the current government. what's interesting is i think at some level the venezuelan government now realizes they need to do business with the u.s. trish: yeah. it would be logical. i don't think that the chinese,
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given the economic pressure they're under, or the iranians or the russians, frankly, are going to be it. the u.s. is still it. >> to your point, the u.s. companies are the best in the world in the oil industry. we're the only guys that can really refine their product. trish: maybe they'll start getting some sense. we'll see. >> i hope so. trish: hans, good to see you. an alarming new report, chinese hackers reportedly targeting our military. they gained access to top secret military information. and switching gears and apparently genders? there's a push to make santa gender-neutral. what do you think of that? tweet me, i want to know @trish underscore regan. we're going to have reaction to the whole santa thing coming up. see you here. ♪ ♪ (vo) 'twas the night before christmas and all through the house not a creature was stirring, but everywhere else... there are stores open late for shopping and fun as people seek gifts or even give some. not necessarily wrapped with paper and bows,
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but gifts of kind deeds, hard work and cold toes. there's magic in the air, on this day, at this time. the world's very much alive at 11:59. and just like you, the further into winter we go, the heavier i get. and while your pants struggle to support the heavier you, your roof struggles to support the heavier me. [laughter] whoo. [crash] and your cut-rate insurance might not pay for this. so get allstate, you could save money and be better protected from mayhem like me. mayhem is everywhere. so get an allstate agent. are you in good hands?
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order to steal top secret, classified military information. i can't say that i'm surprised, including missile plans. this is what we need to be prepared for. adam johnson is back here with me. he's spent a lot of time studying the economy in china itself. we also have defense priorities senior fellow lieutenant colonel danny davis with the military aspect of all of this. i mean, they're trying to hack into our military. like i said, i don't think we should be surprised, colonel davis, but i to think we need to be taking the appropriate measures to guard against it, and i'd also say we need to be very clear in telling them to stop, as in stop yesterday. [laughter] >> right. right, that's exactly right. and i think the first onus is on us, because we know, as you said in your opening there, this is not a surprise. i mean, we know they're trying to do that on a daily basis, as are countries across the world. but it's on us to do our very best to the hard listen our
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security, and there's a disparity between the contractors and the department of defense networks, and that's a bit of a vulnerability we need to look at. and one of the downsides of, you know, sending out contracts to do other things that used to be done internally, there's a different standard for the networks, and it's harder to secure them. that's got to be our top priority. we've got to secure what we have and also worry about diplomatically and otherwise talking to the chinese and making sure they know we're not just going to sit passively by. trish: the problem, adam, is that the chinese have been upping their military spending while we have been reconstitution our military spending. it's changing now, but if you look back throughout the obama years, we consistently reduced our military spending. and, you know, i worry that if we're not careful, one day we'll wake up, and we'll be france -- >> right. trish: i mean, they have good croissants and everything -- [laughter] but we'll be france, and they'll be the united states of america. >> it's almost a little sneakier than that, trish, and that's really why this company has come
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under the microscope, right? the ceo, who is arrested in canada? you know, think about, right, we have an alexa in our living rooms. then there are companies like i said -- yahweh, in theory, maybe they can actually hear what we're all saying. you see what i mean? trish: whether it's our personal lives or whether it's military secrets, i mean, we clearly, colonel, we've got a problem here. and nobody has bothered to address it. i mean, i will thank the president for taking this topic on head-on in a very vocal way, in a way that no president in modern history has been willing to do. will it pay off? >> well, we certainly hope that it does. and that's why it's incumbent on us to actually take the proactive measures to make sure.
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i mean, the congress and the president has provided more than enough funds to get things done, and honestly, we've got to do our part within the military to make sure we're putting that money where it needs to go to protect our systems because we can't be having our, you know, missile systems out there -- trish: no, but you know what? it's not just that, and adam broadened it, it's everything. whether it's alexa in our homes, your military systems, we have to get a handle on the china threat. >> absolutely, we do. >> the good news, trish, think about it, we were able to shut down the iranians and figure out they were spinning those centrifuges. so don't count out the u.s -- trish: oh, i never would. [laughter] we are good. >> yep. trish: thank you so much. adam, colonel, thank you. a brand new survey finding a good amount of people think it's time for santa claus to get a makeover, and get this, some say santa should actually be gender-neutral or a woman. you know, i did a paper on this
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trish: we have breaking news coming ino us right now, everyone. a federal judge in texas ruling obamacare is unconstitutional. texas judge ruling obama unconstitutional, leaving 20 million americans' health care maybe in limbo here. the judge ruled that the law's individual mandate is unconstitutional and that because the mandate cannot be separated from the rest of the law, the rest of the law is also invalid. so this just breaking right now. we're going to continue following. we will have more developments as they come in. switching gears, some brand new online survey shows that over 25% of people asked say they should rebrand santa as
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female or gender-neutral. [laughter] gender-neutral. this is the same santa modeled after st. nick, a person -- as i told you -- who actually existed. i remember this all so well because i wanted to prove he existed because a lot of kids in fourth grade thought he didn't, and i said, nope, you're or wrong. he was a real historical figure, and actually, you can trace it all the way back. there's quite a history there, but he originally, apanel, had given three young women dowries in their stockings, and from there the legend grew. and from there the sense of saint hood and st. nick grew. so he was a real person, and i tell you that he was a he. and, by the way, the whole class understood that santa was real after that. [laughter] joining me right now, most invitational speaker -- motivational speaker larry winget.
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larry, you know, look, gender-neutral? i don't really think of santa as male or female. i think of him as a jolly old man, and i'll tell you what else, larry, e -- i think of him a little bit as a spirit. so what's your -- >> i agree with you. i agree with you, he is a spirit, and he does personify giving in every way, and i do think it's interesting that when you want to talk about santa claus, you find an old guy with a white beard to do it -- trish: have you ever gotten to play it? besides on the show tonight. [laughter] >> you know, you're absolutely right. trish: coca-cola did that. let's not forget. they branded the kind of image that you see today. and that's why you've got, you know, the big white beard and everything. but, look, st. nick was a real person. >> yeah, and he did kind of evolve over the years into a big fat guy who rides in a sleigh pulled by flying reindeer, but he didn't evolve into a woman. that might have been a step too
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far. [laughter] trish: they've got -- [inaudible] though. >> there is mrs. claus. you know what's interesting, we're trying to change all the historical figures. smoky the bear was a historical figure, and just because you find a bear scary doesn't mean it gets to be smoky the bunny rabbit. [laughter] trish: we're in interesting times, harry, and everybody wants -- larry, and everybody wants on to be included. merry christmas ahead of time. >> thank you. trish: we have more "trish regan primetime" next, stay here.
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where's tommy? i thought he was with you? no jack! (sfx: piano plays "twinkle twinkle little star" tommy? (sfx: audience laughing) don't stop. keep playing. (sfx: pianist playing masterful duet) here we go here's the fun part they seem to be the very foundation of your typical bank. capital one is anything but typical. that's why we designed capital one cafes. you can get savings and checking accounts with no fees or minimums. and one of america's best savings rates. to top it off, you can open one from anywhere in 5 minutes. this isn't a typical bank.
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this is banking reimagined. what's in your wallet? >> happy birthday, mom. >> hi, mom. i hope you have the best birthday ever. >> thank you, mom. i love you. >> thank you for everything. >> i love you, mom. >> happy birthday. >> happy birthday, mommy. >> oh, my gosh! ♪ happy birthday, mommy. ♪ happy birthday, mommy. ♪ happy birthday, mama -- trish: oh, my gosh! [laughter] oh, my gosh, you guys! oh! [applause] thank you so much. thank you! i had no idea. thank you to the whole team, and thank you to my little ones. i had no idea how you ever did that.
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thank you so much. i appreciate it. i really, really appreciate it. that was the elizabeth and alexander and jamie who are just, you know, everything to me. and my husband, james. and, yes, i had a birthday yesterday -- look, i'm going to get all teary-eyed. i was in texas giving a speech there at trinity university and met so many wonderful people in san antonio. and flew back home after seeing the alamo with my little girl, 6-year-old jamie, yesterday. i don't know how you guys even did that video or when you made that video, but thank you so much. i really, really -- and i've got a cake! oh, my gosh, a cake. thank you, it is my birthday. you know, as i get older, i don't care. [laughter] i'm proud. and that's how we should all feet. thank you so much to all of you. i hope you have a wonderful, wonderful weekend. thank you to my little ones for that extremely special birthday wish. maria bartiromo's wall street week begins right now.
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♪ ♪ >> from the fox studios in new york city, this is maria bartiromo's "wall street." maria: happy weekend. welcome to the program that analyzes the week that was and helps position you for the week ahead. i'm maria bartiromo, thanks for joining us. coming up, i'll be speaking with the chairman and ceo of motorola solutions. greg brown is my special guest this weekend to talk china. but first, deirdre bolton is standing by in the fox business newsroom with all the big headlines. door deere thanks, maria. it was another rocky week for markets, volatility reigned supreme. in the end, all three markets finished in the red, down for the second straight weeks. two major factors in the mts
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