tv FBN AM FOX Business February 22, 2019 5:00am-6:00am EST
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north carolina. it will start anew including primaries. but justice is being done. lauren: it is friday, february 21st. here are your market movers. president trump gearing up for a meeting with china's top trade negligence other arenegotiators. congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez back in the spotlight, defending her green new deal cow claim. once again, they are not adding up. and who do you love more, your spouse or your pet? one new study claims it can prove where your heart really lies.
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lauren: here's how you money is moving. growth worries slamming stocks yesterday, looking for a comeback this morning. the dow and the nasdaq looking at what could be their first down week all year. european markets are trading at this hour in the green, take a look at the ftse, it's up 17 points. theresa may expected to ask the european union for a three month delay on brexit. and the shanghai composite in china really rallying overnight, jumping almost 2% as we enter this day two of high level talks between washington and beijing. cheryl: so much going on, everybody. welcome to "fbn: a.m.." good morning. i'm cheryl casone. lauren: tgif. i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: there is a lot happening to watch today. we are watching shares of kraft heinz this morning. the stock plunged more than 20% in extended trading after the company said it received a
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subpoena from the securities and exchange commission about its accounting practices and that is not all the bad news here, folks. kraft heinz also reported a $12 billion net loss for its latest quarter and they slashed the quarterly dividend. company looking at selling some of its brands. kraft and heinz merged back in 2015. warren buffet's berkshire hat hadway is the largest shareholder. lauren: president trump is due to meet with china's top trade negotiator today as officials from both countries hold their second day of high level talks in washington. this meeting comes ahead of the march 1st deadline, one week from today. for higher tariffs on chinese imports, which the president has said is not a magical date. cheryl: which markets seem to like right now. let's get the latest on all the trade talks from hillary vaughn in washington. >> reporter: good morning, cheryl and lauren. we are entering the final day of high level talks between the u.s. and chinese delegation, trying to work out a deal to
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avoid the march 1st deadline for a new round of tariffs on chinese imports. china and the u.s. are making meaningful progress and are reportedly in the sprint phase of negotiations, ramping up to a face-to-face meeting between president trump and president xi jinping. the chinese foreign ministry confirming both sides reached principled agreements on major issues and reuters reports there are six memorandums of understanding that are being drafted that address a number of issues, including agriculture, opening up market access for other u.s. companies, like car manufacturers and u.s. banks. there's a memorandum focusing on technology, limiting forced tech transfers and stopping intellectual theft and ending cyber theft. there's an agreement that would stabilize chinese currency. the new york times reports officials realized the chinese delegation repackaged old promises and tried to a pass
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them off as concessions to please the president. that has some not happy and more hawkish over the language that's going into the memorandums of understanding, looking for substantive commitments that are enforceable. the white house says they want structural changes out of these talks. the chinese say they blocked off march 26th through 29th for a face-to-face meeting between the two leaders. the u.s. has not confirmed that that is when the meeting is happening. lauren and cheryl. lauren: one week from today as pressure builds to end the issue by the march 1st deadline. chinese will be held accountable on a range of issues including trade and also cyber security. >> we won't fall into the same pitfalls. they made commitments on cyber and other things which they have not honored. that's why the enforcement
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mechanism. if you talk to ambassador lighthizer or secretary mnuchin, they will tell you the heart of the discussions surround enforcement mechanisms. lauren: let's take a look at where we are with gus gako, gus, happy friday. thanks for joining us. we just heard from secretary of state in that sound bite so it's all about enforcement. but it's also about timing, right? >> yes. when we look at the way the agreements, at least what's been leaked, it seems as if we're looking at currency that's being limited in terms of being able to have flexibility there. if you lower your currency, you're able to cheapen the pricing of your products. so you can get around some of the things that have been put in place for trade. you really have that framework being set up. that's what we're understanding right now. so you have the rules of the road. it's going to be things that are the -- the devil's in the details. so the next levels. as you peel back the onion, the new things that are put into place that show this is what we're going to do, these are the repercussions once you have this
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put in place, if you don't apply the rules as you're supposed to. so you want to have fair and free trade but you also want to have the understanding of what's going to happen if those things -- if those areas are broken through. lauren: i also wanted to talk to you about what's going on with huawei. the chinese company, accused of espionage. we need european allies on our side, perhaps not to use some of their products. doesn't seem to be happening throughout europe. >> most of the larger players have agreed they would limit or not use huawei's equipment. if you're looking at the u.s., you want your bigger trading partners that you're doing transactions with to be on your side. and i think the europeans have just as much concern on china as we do and unless there's a unified front you're not going to get any type of a pushback in terms of china agreeing to any of these. if everyone's on one side, the coalition will force china's
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hand. lauren: the president tweeted yesterday, i want 5g, even 6g technology in the united states as soon as possible. it's far more powerful, faster and smarter than the current standards. american companies must step up their efforts or get left behind. there is no reason we should be lagging behind. i didn't even know we were working on 6g technology but where do we stand with 5g. >> right now you're just starting to implement it. verizon implemented it in a number of cities as a test. china's also working as fast as possible. have you to remember, think of this as a road and think of trade on a road. well, you're looking at the internet and if you have 5g, always on, basically spurs new technology such as self-driving cars, being able to monitor things, so it adds another level of trade, another area for gdp to expand through. think of cell phones years ago when you first got them and how embedded they are into our culture. right now, 5g is just on the cusp of being the next cell
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phone. lauren: we're right there, the next cell phone, as you put it. gus, good to see you. thank you. >> thank you. cheryl: now to what's happening with north korea. a new fox poll finds that 49% of voters still favor military action to prevent kim jong un from continuing to develop nuclear weapons. but that's down from 53% in april of 2017. lauren: president trump is preparing to meet with kim in vietnam next week. blake berman at the white house with the latest. >> reporter: with less than a week until president trump heads to hanoi for his second summit with the north korean dictator kim jong un, the trump administration acknowledging thursday they are not sure of north korea's long-term intentions. a senior administration official telling reporters, quote, i don't know if north korea has made the choice yet to denuclearize. the reason we are engaged in this is we believe there is a possibility north korea to make the choice to fully denuclearize and that's why the president assigned such a priority to
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engaging with them. in an interview, the secretary of state, mike pompeo, suggested he's hopeful one day north korea will denuclearize. >> i remember i was a young soldier patrolling the east german border in 1989. no one anticipated that the wall would come down on the day that it came down. i'm hopeful that the world gets a day like that here as well where no one expects that north korea will take this action. >> reporter: the white house revealed that before president trump heads to vietnam, mike pence will head to colombia as the administration continues to express their support for juan guaido. cheryl: venezuela's former mill you tri intelligence chief is pledging support for guaido. the retired general is urging the government to receive u.s. humanitarian aid, millions of people are leaving venezuela on
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foot now. trish regan's going to be traveling to the colombian capital for an interview with vice president mike pence, that is on monday. lauren: house democrats are preparing to introduce a resolution challenging president trump's declaration of a national emergency. nancy pelosi saying the measure would, quote, move swiftly. it could get a vote in the full house by mid-march. the big question is what happens in the senate if they pass it. cheryl: some other headlines for you. an irs employee facing charges for allegedly leaking president trump's former attorney michael cohen's bank records to michael afteavenatti who represents stoy daniels. banks usually file these reports when they see questionable transactions. several advertisers halted
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spending with youtube. youtube has come under scrutiny over content that exploits children. pinterest reportedly ready to hit the market. they have filed confidentially for an initial public offering. they're seeking valuation of $12 billion. the model 3 is no longer being recommended by consumer reports, citing reliability issues. the news sending tesla shares to the lowest level in a month. taking flight, israel's historic moon mission launching last night on a spacex rocket. it will be the first lunar landing for israel, joining the united states, russia and china all with previous lunar landings. lauren: let's check futures. they're looking good this morning. we're hoping for gains today to avoid what could be the first down week of the year for the dow and the nasdaq, dow futures jumping a third of 1%. we're seeing similar percentage increases for all three major u.s. averages. coming up, alexandria
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ocasio-cortez she's at it again, this time defending her green new deal's reference to cow flatulence. >> we've got to address factory farming. maybe we shouldn't be eating a hamburger for breakfast, lunch and dinner. lauren: we'll take a look at the green new deal's calls to end agri business. jussie smollett returns to the set of his hit show hours after being freed on bond. the fenewthe newcharges he couln the hate crime hoax tha. you're watching "fbn: a.m.." ♪ the biggest thing -- and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company,
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(butcher) we both know you're not just looking for pork chops. you're searching for something more... ...red-blooded. right this way. you thirst for adrenaline, you hunger for raw power. well, you've come to the right place. the road is yours, dig in. cheryl: democratic congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez is at it again. she appeared on showtime last night where they asked her about one aspect of her green
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knee deal. green new deal. it asked her about cows. >> i get questions about cow farts. i think that's a reference to your green knee deal. >> we need to take a look at factory farming, period. it's wild. cheryl.lauren: banning affordae energy, rebuilding every building in the usa, a guaranteed job for everyone, eliminating air travel and 99% cars and just some of the gems in there, her office has backtracked on some of these but doug mcelway looks at how the green new deal could affect agriculture. >> they is no fixing our economy without addressing the racial wealth gap. >> reporter: for sceptics of climate change, the rollout of the green new deal was a tell, a
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tipoff to an unspoken agenda. >> we always knew climate was -- >> reporter: many democrat whose support a climate change agenda saw the rollout as absurd. >> i read it and reread it and i asked ed markey what in the heck is this. >> you just add up the promises there, it's clear it's unaffordable. it's clear it's unrealistic. >> reporter: some hope from the excesses of the green new deal, more moderate voices emerge. >> the climate debate has been driven by the edges of each party. >> reporter: thesome are pushing for promising technologies like carbon capture and storage. >> until responsible people like senators manchin start to enforce against the edges we will continue to yell at each other. >> reporter: some question whether there's urgency at all. the greatest scientific
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breakthroughs in history have broken with consensus. >> i take a real hard look at climate model output and can demonstrate that these models are too sensitive to carbon dioxide and the real world is not spiraling off into some dangerous territory of climate. >> reporter: michael kriton looked back to the turn of the last century when people, quote, didn't know what a radio was, airport or movie or television or a cell phone or a jet, an antibiotic, an mri, icu or what ibm was. he went on and on and ended with now you tell me who can predict the world of 2100. his point was that models only carry the present into the future, that the creative genius of individuals who bettered life in the past will do the same in the future. cheryl, lauren. cheryl: thank you. aoc isn't just defending her green new deal, she's taking more heat over celebrating
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amazon's pull-out of new york city. after this billboard was put up in times square, criticizing aoc for costing new york city 25,000 jobs, the freshman congresswoman responded with a tweet. few things effectively communicate the power we built in fighting dark money and anti-worker policies like billionaire funded groups blowing tons of cash on whack billboards and she writes this one is funded by the mercers. that tweet prompted the job creators network to respond with more billboards. they say hey, aoc we saw your whack tweet and this billboard cost $4,000. you cost new york 4 billion in lost wages. ouch. lauren: indeed. still ahead, facebook under fire once again this time for targeting kids and their parents' credit cards. and there's a new colonel in town, how an '80s action hero is not protecting kfc's secret recipe. you're waifing "fbn watching "f"
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cheryl: facebook under fire yet again. this time under investigation by the ftc. lauren: tracee carrasco joins us with more on that. hi, tracee. tracee: another investigation with the ftc. internal facebook documents reportedly revealed it was knowingly tricking children into making in game purchases and made refunds almost impossible to receive with a complicated process. now, 16 consumer groups called on the federal trade commission to investigate whether facebook engaged in unfair and deceptive business practices in violation of a major childrens privacy law by charging children for purchasing made without parental
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consent. facebook says it dishave safeguards in place regarding the minors' purchases and has dedicated procedures for requests. lauren: the fast food wars continue. who is coming out on top. tracee: burger king features its mascot in a white suit as the kfg, like kfc, the king of flame grilling in honor of their new sandwich. the voice over states when it comes to flame grilling, a king outranks a colonel. kfc introduced robo cop as a colonel sanders stand-in. take a look. >> what's the secret recipe? >> if i told you, i'd have to kill you. tracee: that is colonel robo
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cop, given the task of pro t protecting and transporting the secret recipe to a nuclear-proof location. kfc says it's in the event of an apocalypse. we can still enjoy kfc. cheryl: how many colonel sanders have we had? lauren: allot. rebareba mcentire, jason alexander. cheryl: let's take a look at how we're wrapping up the week. dow is up 92 in the premarket. we'll see how we do this week. it's been a rough week. s&p up 8 and-a-half, nasdaq up 27 and a quarter. coming up next, the white house say it's not sure if north creea intends to denuclearize.
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what does that mean for president trump's summit with kim jong un. who do you love more, your spouse or your pet? a new study thinks it found a way to tell where your heart, tracee, really lies. you're watching "fbn: a.m." ♪ if you could see me, whoever i am. ♪ it's not like movies. guess what day it is! huh...anybody? julie! hey...guess what day it is? ah come on, i know you can hear me. mike mike mike mike mike... what day is it mike? ha ha ha ha! leslie, guess what today is? it's hump day. whoot whoot! ronny, how happy are folks who save hundred of dollars switching to geico? i'd say happier than a camel on wednesday. hump day!!! get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. with expedia, i saved when i added a hotel to our flight. so even when she grows up, she'll never outgrow the memory of our adventure.
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lauren: let's get you caught up on global market action. the dow is fighting for gains this week, hoping to mark its ninth upweek in a row. the dow is up 90 points, nasdaq gaining 27. global markets are monitoring signs of progress in the u.s./china trade talks. european markets showing strength. the ftse is up 25 points, the cac up 17, the dax up 48. let's go to asia, rally mode, the shanghai composite gaining almost 2%. there are hopes that a trade
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deal averts basically a doubling of tariffs one week from today. cheryl: markets are going to be watching what's happening today. it's the second day of high level trade talks between the u.s. and china. those get underway this morning. there is pressure on both countries to reach a deal to end this punishing trade war. james roberts, a research fellow for economic freedom at the heritage foundation is here. good morning to you. the question here is from the chinese side, there have been some reports that all the chinese are trying to do here is to make big pr promises about buying agriculture, but they're not going to make any promises to the u.s. about intellectual property theft, forced technology transfers, nontariff barriers in china for u.s. companies. where are we? >> well, that's exactly right. that is the problem, one of several problems, really, which is that even if the u.s. and china reach agreements and it's good that they're continuing to talk, but agreements on those
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issues would be difficult to enforce in china. the issue of compliance. so that's one issue. although continuing to talk and president trump has indicated he may defer the march 2nd increase in tariffs to 25%, if progress continues. that's good news for american consumers who are already paying more because of the 10% tariff that's were levied last year. so i think these are issues that are not going to go away, are not going to be resolved soon. this issue of the united states insisting that china not manipulate the yuan, their currency, as a way to blunt the effect of any additional tariffs in the form of export subsidies, that's also very difficult for the u.s. to enforce in china and we've always at heritage opposed efforts in the past to legislate action against chinese currency manipulation. it really gets to a larger problem that we analyze every year in our heritage foundation index of economic freedom at
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heritage.org/index/china. cheryl: okay, good promo. >> that is really these are big problems. cheryl: the other issue is that with regards to these negotiations, you've got north korea coming up next week. that is also a china issue on the side and huawei. let's get to north korea. secretary of state mike of pompeo was on with maria yesterday. she asked what can we expect with north korea. i want you to listen to what he had to say. >> you have to remember where we came into this. we came in when missiles were tested, nuclear missiles were tested. we haven't had tests of those types of system for over a year now. we've had the return of remains of americans. cheryl: okay, but again, empty promises. north korea. have we really seen some big result from the singapore summit because from what we're told by the administration, next week will be kind of the same game plan, the same kind of --
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they'll have a dinner, a meeting, a photo op. does that get us anywhere with north korea? >> it's questionable whether it does. we're skeptical as you say. there haven't been tangible results. the claims of success from singapore were exaggerated and premature. there's been no progress by north koreand an koreand denucl. there's concern in washington, seoul and tokyo that president trump may agree to some proposals from north korea that may seem beneficial on the surface but contain hidden perils. secretary pompeo is correct to pursue pragmatic diplomacy, maximum pressure and sustained deterrents in order to resolve long-standing north korean threats. cheryl: james, thank you very much for your perspective. >> thank you. lauren: housing continues to hurt. existing home sales are down three months in a row, falling to an annual rate of 4.9 million units last month. that's the lowest level in three years. let's bring in business
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development leader mitch rochell. good to see you. >> good morning, lauren. lauren: you look at this data, prices, they're still going up but at the slowest pace in seven years. is that a good thing? >> it's not a bad thing. i've said before, affordability is the biggest challenge in the housing market. if prices are going up at a slower pace, that's actually good. it may let some people in the housing market that feel that have been left on the sidelines. lauren: what about first time holtimehome buyers. there's a study that says millennials want a home but can't afford one. they'd go to jail for a week in order to get a home. >> the fact of the matter is, this has been a long story for a long time and they're slowly creeping in. the biggest challenge is -- one of the silver linings in the study that came out the other day is more supply is entering the market. so we're sitting in february,
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we're about to hit the home buying season in a ki couple of months. if more baby boomers put their homes on the market and there's more supply, that's going to be good for millennials. the thing that is freezing them out is more of a lack of supply than it is price, per se. lauren: mortgage rates have come down since the start of the year. the 30 year fixed is 4.35%. that should help as we come into the spring home buying season? >> i was worried about where rates were headed. that could have been a bigger problem. but right now rates being where they are, which is roughly around the same levels they've been for the last several years, bouncing around by maybe a quarter of a point, so it's not an interest rate issue. it's really a fact of the matter of do you have the down payment, do you want the home, and is there something to buy. lauren: as we talk about how democrats are moving very far left as we gear up for 2020, their proposals, specifically the green new deal, what
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challenges do those pose to the housing industry? >> i don't think that -- by the way, the framework of that agreement of the deal doesn't have a lot of meat tot it. maybe meat's not the right point there. but the fact of the matter is, some of the rules that they're talking about probably have a bigger implication on office space and commercial real estate than housing. lauren: why do you say that? >> they're talking about making sure that all buildings are green, but that could leech into the housing market. if you start putting more and more requirements on builders, that make it very difficult for them to eek out a profit, they're not going to add to supply. we've seen that before with local regulations where they put environmental constraints on what home builders have to add to houses, and when they start doing that the home builders just respond by saying we can't recoup that price, we're not going to build those homes. that contributed to why we have low levels in the market in
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terms of new houses. lauren: we saw in new york city, you attempt to change out some light bulbs from incandescent to l.e.d. lighting, how many union workers and what expense is it to change one bulb, it's nearly $2,000. you add that up. every building in the u.s., mitch, good to see you, have a great weekend. >> all right, lauren. cheryl: lot of buildings. lauren: lot of money. lot of jobs. cheryl: exactly. here's some other headlines making news this morning. the father of the alabama isis bride is suing the trump administration to bring her home. the family wants to affirm she is an american citizen after secretary of state mike pompeo said she was not. she was born in new jersey, but the government claims her father was a diplomate at the time which would bar her from american citizenship. she is begging to come back to the u.s. with her son after joining isis in syria in 2014. well, the trump administration making a change to its syria
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policy. the u.s. will now keep a small peace-keeping force there with about 200 troops. this is a shift from the initial plan to withdraw all troops from syria. and the european union says it expects british prime minister theresa may to request a three month delay to brexit. the two sides have been negotiating for two years. brexit deadline was previously set for march 29th. maintaining his innocence, jussie smollett appearing in a chicago courtroom yesterday. prosecutors allege he reshareholderrehearsedhis own a. prosecutors say he was seeking publicity and was upset by his salary. the police superintendent admonished smollett and his actions during a fiery news conference yesterday. >> this announcement today recognizes that empire actor jussie smollett took advantage of the pain and anger of racism to promote his career. cheryl: smollett's attorneys say the actor was trade by th by
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the system, saying due process was skipped. he went to the set of empire where he reportedly apologized to the cast. lauren: did they accept his apology? cheryl: i don't know. lauren: look at this, futures are looking good, dow is up almost triple digits, nasda. nike has explaining to do after this player's sneaker ripped open on the court. how much the fail is costing the company and the bizarre excuse some are giving for the exploding shoe. and it was one year ago that our next guest was on this very show, talking about how to avoid heart disease. when not even six months later she had her own brush with death. we're going to talk to dr. kelly powers, she's going to share her story with us and her new lease on life and her advice for others. keep it here.
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when it comes to so,type 2 diabetes,.. are you thinking about your heart? well, i'm managing my a1c, so i should be all set. right. actually, you're still at risk for a fatal heart attack or stroke. even if i'm taking heart medicine, like statins or blood thinners? yep! that's why i asked my doctor what else i could do... she told me about jardiance. that's right. jardiance significantly reduces the risk of dying from a cardiovascular event for adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease. that's why the american diabetes association recommends the active ingredient in jardiance. and it lowers a1c? yeah- with diet and exercise. jardiance can cause serious side effects including dehydration. this may cause you to feel dizzy, faint, or lightheaded, or weak upon standing. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. symptoms include nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, tiredness, and trouble breathing. a rare, but life-threatening, bacterial infection in the skin of the genital area could also occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction.
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symptoms of an allergic reaction include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. other side effects are sudden kidney problems, genital yeast infections, increased bad cholesterol, and urinary tract infections, which may be serious. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. so, what do you think? now i feel i can do more to go beyond lowering a1c. ask your doctor about jardiance today. cheryl: dr. kelly powers appeared on this show last year to talk about the importance of heart health with lauren. >> i think this is the biggest thing that most people miss, is that just following up with your primary care, going to your doctor, making sure you're going for yearly exams. lauren: annual checkup. >> stress exams, if you feel you're suffering from a heart attack which is a myocardial
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infarction, go to the e.r. cheryl: we are now joined again by physician and surgeon dr. kelly powers. after you sat there with lauren, kelly, august of 2018 you yourself ended up in the e.r. >> watching that segment, it still gives me chills. i cannot believe it. cheryl: me too. >> i'm talking about subtle signs, especially in women, different signs we miss and here i am, a health commentator and a doctor and i'm missing my own subtle signs. lauren: how did that happen? >> i was misdiagnosed. one of my messages is to be your best advocate, to fight and say that no, i want the extra test, i want the echocardiogram. i presented with shortness of breath and chest pain in early 2018. i was told it was stress and acid reflux and i feel like so many people say acid reflux. cheryl: we're friends and you went to three e.r., aroun and ey
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e.r. turned you away and said you're fine. >> eventually, august, everything came to a head. the shortness of breath and chest pain and back pain -- it was a weird back pain. so many americans watching right now have back pain. it's hard to differentiate whether or not it's just back pain, it's take an advil, go to yoga. it can be a heart problem, heart disease, heart failure. what i was diagnosed with was pericard eye iitis. i had multi-organ failure. i was diagnosed by accident because i was diagnosed with a gallbladder that was failing. the terthe plan was to take it n the hospital. my surgeon was great. he felt something wasn't right. he did an extensive pre-op workup and that led to detecting
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the heart which had 500ccs plus of fluid around my heart. that was subsequently leading to the other organs that were failing. cheryl: i want to talk about devices real quick. i want to say real quick is that you also were your own best advocate and you got yourself transferred to a different hospital for better care. you ended up at columbia. >> columbia is great. the heart failure team -- i was 39, in the heart failure team, icu at columbia. people around me were in their 80s and 90s. lauren: what advice would you give to other people watching this who never think it would happen to them? is there a certain device they could use? >> there's something to be said about the wearables. i think the future, technology that's advancing, heart rate
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detection, rit arrhythmia, it cn detect heart attacks. what i had, the pressure, the technology and the studies that are out there, if you're wearing this you can either send yourself to the e.r. because something doesn't look right on the apple watch or at least have a compiled data that your doctor can see and monitor your ebbs and flows. cheryl: we're getting so many stories of these devices saving people's lives. kelly, i love you. i'm so happy you're alive and here and can share this story with us. >> you helped me so much. thank you. cheryl: thank you for coming on and sharing such a personal story. i hope it helps people. >> i do too. thanks for having me on. lauren: when we come back, we'll show you how your money is moving this morning. dow, look at this, kelly, you're good news for investments because the dow is now up over 100 points. a hockey player giving new meaning to a face-off. the incredible goal he scored with his face. and fashion h designer carl
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and the army taught me a lot about commitment. which i apply to my life and my work. at comcast we're commited to delivering the best experience possible, by being on time everytime. and if we are ever late, we'll give you a automatic twenty dollar credit. my name is antonio and i'm a technician at comcast. we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome.
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cheryl: welcome back. so shares of nike dropped 1% yesterday after one of their shoes ripped apart, injuring a college basketball superstar. lauren: what video. we played it multiple times. what is the latest, jared max? >> zion williamson is doing okay. his coach said preliminary reports on his knee injury optimistic. wednesday against north carolina, perhaps basketball's most promising young player since lebron james, williamson
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tore through the sole of his nike sneaker. he was diagnosed with a knee sprain. is it possible the shoe was worn out? nba players change sneakers every three to five games. it appearit appears zion have we all season. more nba players where the pgs than any other signature shoe. around 40 of them, in addition to several top college programs like duke and kentucky which is why pauwhy paul george pressed r answers, wanting to know what went wrong. jim baihaime will reportedly not face legal charges, accidentally hitting a pedestrian, killing the 51-year-old man. he passed field sobriety tests.
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he said he is heart broken and sends deepest sympathies to the family. remember calvin johnson from the lions? he retired before 2016. the man known known man was givy approval to operate a medical pot dispensary in suburban detroit. we've seen a hockey puck just go off a face, a true face-off. justin williams scores a goal with his face. cheryl: oh, that's not how you want to score a goal. >> the puck hit him in the face and got by the florida goalie. the panthers still won. lauren: does that hurt? >> you don't see that. i think the line of the movie fargo, i got shot in the face. he got shot in the face and scored the goal. lauren: thank you very much. happy friday. cash jared's sports reports on fox news headline 24/7.
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sirius xm 115. cheryl: if you plan on taking a vacation and hitting the beach, you'll want to hear the next report. what you need to know before you put on your sunscreen. and who do you take more photos of, your significant other or your pet, jared? >> or yourself. i love seeing instagram feeds. some people have so many photos of themselves or pets like. cheryl: what does it say about jared max, cheryl or tracee carrasco. it might say a lot. stay tuned ♪ living in america. ♪ eye to eye, station to station. ♪ livingf in america. to make you everybody else... ♪ ♪ means to fight the hardest battle,
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lauren: the snow has disappeared in new york city and before you hit the beach this summer, sunscreens might not be as safe as it seems. cheryl: tracee carrasco has got that story. how much have we been fooled? tracee: many of the sunscreens contain chemicals that may not be safe for us and have been falsely claiming better sun protection for years according to proposed regulations from the fda. if passed, the fda would require more testing on sunscreens and raise questions about most of the marketed active ingredients in sunscreens. two ingredients are recognized as safe, zinc oxide an titanium dioxide. it doesn't mean the sunscreens on the store shelves will be pulled off. it just means that the manufacturers might have to change their formulas. cheryl: quit lying to me. tracee: exactly. cheryl: i'm a very white person. i get burned easy. who is the rightfu rightful heio
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carkarl lagerfeld's fortune. tracee: accordings to a fortune magazine, lagerfeld said his pet was an heires living a lavish lifestyle with care taker. lauren: is it possible we love the pets more than human beings. tracee: a new study finds 65% of dog owners admitted to taking more photos of canine companions than their life partner. 47% of people admit it's harder to leave their pet for a week than a human partner. 57% greet their pet before anyone else in their home. cheryl: guilty of this. milo, of course i take pictures of milo.
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i love my cat. i gave the producer several pictures to put on tv. he's a happy cat. lauren: i wanted to name my son milo but i couldn't. cheryl: there's duke. tracee: lots of pictures of duke. cheryl: where's the pictures of your fiance, trace? tracee: i take the pictures of duke and send them to him. that's why i have more pictures of duke. lauren: she's all excuses. cheryl: prove the story correct. let's sends it over to maria bartiromo. "mornings with maria" starts right now. maria: good morning to you. of course i agree with all of that. happy friday everybody. i'm maria bartiromo. good morning to you. it is friday, february 22nd. your top stories right now, just before 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. the u.s./china trade talks making their way to the white house now. president trump set to meet with china's vice premier. the deadline is one week away. spy in the sky, the shocking new report that some airlines have cameras on their planes that you didn't know about. we will tell you where they're found. and the ipo market heats up,
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pinterest reportedly filing for an offering, making it the latest unicorn to eye the public market. we have all the details. controversy on the court, duke losing a star player after his shoe splits. questions rising on whether he should wait out the season so he could go pro. "mornings with maria" begins right now. ♪ it's finally friday. ♪ i'm free again. ♪ i start my motor running for a wild weekend. ♪ it's finally friday. ♪ i'm out of control. ♪ get the working blues and let the good times roll. ♪ i got a little sugar baby down the road. ♪ later all night, we'll be
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