tv FBN AM FOX Business April 10, 2019 5:00am-6:00am EDT
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twitter, facebook and instagram @loudobbstonight. thank you for being with us. we will see you tomorrow right here. thanks so much. good night from new york. cheryl: here are your market movers at 5:00 a.m. a major announcement from attorney general barr about the now closed collusion case. the major steps the doj is taking to find out what went on behind the scenes of the russia probe, days before barr says the mule rer report is going to be released. dueling hearings, tech execs testifying on hate speech explodes into anger and steven mnuchin goes head to head with maxine waters. alexandria ocasio-cortez's newest target is outgoing homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen, how she thinks she should be punished for her role at the southern border.
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and how much would you pay for someone's old dirty sneakers? what if they were kanye's? the crazy price tag they are going for. it is wednesday, april 10th. "fbn: a.m." starts right now. lauren: here's how your money is moving at 5:00 a.m. some green on the screen for u.s. stock market futures, recovering after yesterday's steep declines. the broader market just 1.8% away from a record high. european equities also edging higher this morning, that ahead of an ecb rate decision, a some mitt on whether brexit should be delayed and a trade spat with the u.s., the ftse has just turned lower in london. it is down 3 points. a mixed performance in asia as the imf cuts its forecast for
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global growth. welcome, everybody, to "fbn: a.m.." good morning to you. i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: and good morning, everybody. i am cheryl casone. a lot of news is breaking this morning. first to this. attorney general william barr is going to be returning to capitol hill today as he plans to release a redacted version of the mueller report within a week. he's going to testify before a senate panel about his department's budget. but like members of the house yesterday, senators are expected to grill him over the mueller report. lauren: katherine herridge is on capitol hill with the details for us. >> within a week. >> reporter: lawmakers used the annual justice department budget hearing to press the attorney general william barr on the time line. >> this process is going along very well. >> reporter: while democrats want all of special counsel robert mueller's findings. >> it would strike a serious he blow to our system and our democracy if that report is not fully seen. >> reporter: the attorney general made clear he is bound by the law, grand jury material,
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classified information, ongoing investigations and the privacy of individuals not charged will be publicly withheld. >> we will color code the excision from the report and he will provide explanatory notes. >> reporter: while democrats want the full report as soon as possible, some complained barr moved too quickly, releasing a four page letter on march 24t march 24th, documenting mueller's conclusions. >> it is extraordinary to evaluate hundreds of pages of evidence and make definitive legal conclusions in less than 48 hours. i would argue it's more suspicious than impressive. >> the thinking of the special counsel was not a mystery to the people at the department of justice prior to his submission of the report. >> reporter: the special counsel did not find against the president on obstruction, nor
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did mueller exonerate the president. barr and de deputy attorney genl rod rosenstein made the call. >> can you elaborate on what is meant by does not exonerate the president. >> that's a statement made by the special counsel. >> right. >> i report it as one of his bottom line conclusions. >> reporter: barr testified he will review criminal referrals from a house republican. the attorney general warned he will open investigation ifs the evidence is there. barr will be back on the hill for a second round of testimony later this morning. back to you. lauren: thank you, katherine. an administration official says the attorney general assembled a team to investigate the origins of the fbi's probe into the trump campaign. republicans have called for an investigation into the bureau's intelligence practices, so it's like the investigators investigating themselves. cheryl: more problems for boeing following two deadly
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crashes of its 737 max airplane. class action lawsuit is now accusing the company of defrauding shareholders by concealing safety deficienciess in the 737 along with securities fraud violations. the suit claims boeing put profit over people by rushing the plane to market to compete with airbus. boeing didn't receive any commercial orders for the 737 in march, after the plane was grounded worldwide. the company had to cut monthly production of the jet by nearly 20% last week. taking a look at shares of boeing, they fell yesterday, they lost nearly 1 and-a-half percent and this is a stock to watch again today on this new news. lauren: president trump's tax returns are front and center on cap l toll hill. today is the deadline set for the irs to provide the president's returns for the past six years. the irs commissioner could face more questions on that topic today when he returns to capitol hill to testify before a senate panel.
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treasury secretary steven mnuchin telling a house panel yesterday the request for the president's tax returns is under review. >> i think it would be premature at this point to make any specific comments other than as i've been consistent before in saying it is being reviewed by the legal department and we look forward to responding to the letter. lauren: the white house claims the request from democrats is political in nature and democrats will never see the president's returns. cheryl: also in that hearing mnuchin went head to head with maxine waters. things got heated when mnuchin asked to end the three plus hour testimony. he had to make a meeting with a foreign official. >> okay, so we're dismissed, is that correct? >> if you wish to leave, you may leave. >> i don't understand what you're saying. >> you're wasting your time. remember, you have a foreign
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dignitary in your office. >> i would just say that the previous add medicine -- when the republicans, they did not treat the secretary of the treasury this you way. so if this is the way you want to treat me, then i'll rethink when i voluntarily come back here to testify, which i've offered to do. cheryl: all right. well, mnuchin did make it in time to keep that meeting with bahrain's interior minister. there's no word on if he's going to return to meet with that committee. lauren: it was a pretty good exchange. and the fireworks didn't stop there. executives from facebook and google grilled by the house judiciary committee about their efforts to stop the spread of hate speech. cheryl: we've got hillary vaughn on that story for us this morning. >> reporter: good morning. facebook and google both say that combating hate 1350e6 speeh online is a lot harder than it looks, it's not as easy as just taking down an offensive comment. they say there's a lot of work to be done. right now, they're walking a fine line between trying to
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enforce hate speech but also protecting people's rights to free speech. >> content can sit in a gray area that comes up against the line. it may be offensive but it doesn't violate youtube's policies against violence and hate speech. >> we wrestle with it daily, my teams wrestle with it all the time. >> reporter: both companies are using artificial intelligence to stop hat hate speech before it s live. facebook has 30,000 people whose job is to police content online. while google was talking about what they do to fight hate speech, they got to prove it works. youtube had to disable comments on the live stream for the hearing on hate speech because of hate speech that was found in the comments. some lawmakers, though, accusing their colleagues on the house judiciary committee of using the hearing on hate speech to launch their own political attacks. there were a lot of shots fired from across the aisle today, both republicans and democrats
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and even some witnesses on the committee questioning the motives behind the hearing. >> i worry that the true motivation for this hearing is to suggest that republicans are hateful and dishonest. >> i.>> there are some on the pl who tried to hijack the hearing anhearingand attempting to use n opportunity to promote a political position. >> reporter: republicans and democrats on this committee could agree that more needs to be done to tackle hate speech, he'especially hate speech that speaks of white supremacy and white nationalism. some want tlauren and cheryl. cheryl: all right. well, tensions boiled over when conservative commentator candace owens accused ted lou of distorting comments on adolf
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hitler. >> i'm going to let her own words do the talking. >> if hitler wanted to make germany great and have things run well, okay, fine. >> he's assuming black people will not pursue the whole two clip. hour clip. that was unbelievably dishonest and he didn't allow me to respond to it. cheryl: she said it's similar to what's done to president trump to create a different narrative and they are worry worrisome. lauren: one of president trump's strongest allies appears to be headed toward re-election in is israel. prime minister benjamin ne netanyahu hoping to secure a fifth term. cheryl: we have a report this morning from jerusalem. >> reporter: as the exit polls were released last night, the race appeared to be closer than it actually turned out to be. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu will likely serve his
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fifth term as prime minister. with all the votes counted, nearlnetanyahu's party came the largest. this win will give netanyahu a large advantage in forming a coalition government over the next month and-a-half. the prime minister will have 42 days to join with other smaller parties to reach at least 61 seats in the israeli kinesis. during his victory speech last night, netanyahu confirmed he began making calls to garner support from other parties. benny gantz also declared victory last night after seeing a lead in exit polls. he did not rule out working with netanyahu's party once the official outcome was announced. strong foreign relationships, paired with a growing economy, gave netanyahu a large base of support in the race. the election was largely seen as a referendum on the prime
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minister and it is likely to increase his ability to govern. the prime minister is facing charges in israel for bribery and corruption. this won't necessarily be an easy task for him to govern moving forward. with that said, last night was certainly a victory and success for the party and the prime minister himself. lauren, cheryl. lauren: trey, thank you very much for covering that for us. cheryl: here are other headlines making news this morning. today is kirstjen nielsen's last day on the job of the department of homeland security. there is plenty of speculation over who will replace her. this comes as the customs and border protection released new apprehension numbers for the month of march, more than 92,000 folks arrested, back from 66,000 in february. vice president mike pence expected to visit the border in as arizona tomorrow. levi strauss reported a profit in the last quarter before
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becoming a public company once again. they reported a 7% increase in net revenue, an indication that their investments is paying off. the company plans to open 100 new stores over the next year. the stock rose 5% in after hours trading. for the first time ever, we are expecting to see an actual picture of a black hole today. up until now we've only seen simulations of the mysterious space phenomenon. scientists have been observing them with tel telescopes with 2. black holes form when stars break apart. lauren: still ahead, the scam that's range o rocking the natiw indictments coming down in the college admission scandal, the major time that actress lori loughlin could be facing and why she won't take a plea deal. and major medicare scam targeting seniors, details on the operation that federal officials say exploited the elderly and cos cost taxpayers e
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than $1 billion. we'll have those details straight ahead on "fbn: a.m.." keep it here. ♪ tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies. ♪ although i'm not making -- run with us in the unstoppable john deere gator xuv835, because when others take rain checks... we take the wheel. run with us. search "john deere gator" for more. 2,000 fence posts. 900 acres. 48 bales. all before lunch, which we caught last saturday. we earn our scars. we wear our work ethic.
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commit money laundering as well as mail fraud. others have pled guilty and signed a plea agreement. in hoffman's case she's asking for incarceration at the lower end of the guideline. what is next for these actresses and everyone involved in the scandal? let's bring in attorney deborah bloom. this is fascinating. the people report says loughlin and his husband don't want anything that resembles jail time. did if h the others make a goodl making a plea deal. >> in my opinion, yes. you often get lesser time, there's a reduction in your sentence that's calculated by the guidelines. and the judge can deviate from
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the sentencing guidelines. the judge could say here, you accepted responsibility, you only paid $15,000, so i'm not going to give you a jail sentence, maybe probation. we have to compare it to what happened with jussie smollett. he got off with really no punishment whatsoever and we really have an interesting college admissions situation where it's really difficult to get into college and these people were trying to help their children. cheryl: you're saying jussie smollett should have probably faced more serious charges and these others -- we've got may r juror executives in this country, they may be going to jail for something that's not as serious as the smollett case. >> i'm not saying it's not as serious. with respect to smollett, you really don't get punishment often for filing a false police report. i've represented many federal defendants that didn't commit the crime. cheryl: that's a good point. i want to move on. first, boeing, we're getting
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news there's a shareholder lawsuit, this probably wasn't a big surprise once the ceo apologized about the crashes. >> absolutely not. it's about material misrepresentation of fact. i think they can get that here and show that it happened. cheryl: big news out of d.c., william barr, attorney general, this is investigating the investigators. he's saying they want to find out was there conspiracy at the fbi, why did federal prosecutors and the fbi go after the trump campaign after 22 months of the mueller investigation, we're hearing now no collusion, what do you make of this move by the attorney general, and the justice system going forward. >> i think it's a very viable situation. i think it's good to look into. the full investigation report is going to have to be turned over to the house. if you look at the presidents that came from the nick nixon et means they'll have to turn over an unredacted report to the house. currently they're only going to
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turn over a redacted version. cheryl: everyone's so eager to see the report. a lot to go through this morning. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you. lauren: still ahead, uber is buckling up for its ipo. we've got the details on the ride share company's multibillion dollar stock plan. plus this, bob dylan, he's got to serve somebody from his upcoming whiskey distillery. how he's bringing his own style and music to the whiskey business. keep it here on "fbn: a.m." ♪ one bourbon, one scotch, one beer. ♪ well -- i'm working to keep the fire going
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square early in the morning this wednesday morning as we get more details on uber's pretty highly anticipated ipo. cheryl: this is going to be a big one. tracee carrasco has that one and a lot more this morning. this is going to be the wall street story to watch. tracee: people have been waiting for this for many years. youtububer has decided it will l $10 billion worth of stock in its ipo, whenever that happens. according to reuters, it will make this offering public tomorrow so we should get more information then. an ipo of this size would be one of the largest tech ipos we've seen in some time, really the largest we've seen since alibaba back in 2014. uber's reported value, somewhere around 90 to $100 billion. reportedly that's been lowered because of the lackluster lyft ipo. so we are looking at previously $120 billion as the valuation
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there. we'll have to see. early may is speculation of when it could be trading on the new york stock exchange. we will see. cheryl: that's going to be big. so this is interesting. medical professionals be in hot water, the fed in a scam that cost folks $1 billion. $1 billion. tracee: this is a massive medicare scam. yesterday feds raided dozens of locations of licensed medical professionals, companies all in this scam. so these telemarketers were targeting seniors, telling them they could sell them low cost orthopedic braces. once the scammers got the insurance information of those patients, they would then bill medicare, mail the patient these unnecessary braces, and give the doctors kickbacks. so of course this was a massive scheme. happening across several different states, florida, new jersey, texas, north carolina, south carolina, california, new
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york, locations there raided. so this is a big one to follow. lauren: $1 billion. tracee, thank you very much sure targeting the elderly as well. let's take a look at futures. this morning, on your wednesday, we've got green arrows to show you, dow up 34, s&p 4 and three quarters, nasdaq up 11. still ahead, the heads of major wall street banks heading to capitol hill today. can they make lawmakers feel safe enough to not break them up? and before you head out this morning, you may need to fill up your gas tank. is now the right time? we're going to tell you the best day to hit the pumps, all coming up on "fbn: a.m.." ♪ we'll be free. ♪ we'll be free. ♪ yeah, yeah, yeah. ♪
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morning. the dow is up 31, s&p up 4 and a quarter, nasdaq is up 9 and a half. a lot of action on capitol hill today. investors will keep a close eye on politics as well as business. european markets rights now, will the eu grant an extension to theresa may. investors watching that, ftse under slight pressure. asia, mixed bag, the kne he nikd hang seng under a bit of pressure. lauren: pressure on cap l tolll hill today, executives facing off in washington. maxine waters, who has promised to aggressively oversee the financial industry, let's bring in pwc partner mitch rochell to discuss all of this. mitch, good morning. >> good morning, lauren. lauren: seven of the big bank
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ceos will testify together. they are largely expected to say, yes, we recovered from the financial crisis, things are healthier now. so do you agree that the situation, the environment is healthier, mitch, and also, is it healthy enough where this deregulation is warranted? because that's what democrats are going to counter. they don't want all this deregulation. >> they're certainly healthy. if you look at the balance sheet of banks today compared to where they were before the financial crisis, they're certainly considerably healthier. what's interesting is the trump administration worked hard to try to roll back regulations, not just in the banking industry, but many of the provisions of dodd-frank which was put in after the financial crisis haven't been enacted. it will be interesting to see how this committee wants to move forward. i would expect fireworks, if you look at how maxine waters interacted with treasury secretary mnuchin yesterday, suspecting there will be fireworks. lauren: we played the clip,
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mitch. it was good. we can probably expect more of that today. we have some of the big banks reporting this week, jp morgan on tap for friday, cia grou cit? expectations? >> i think the flat or slightly inverted yield curve is going to wreak a little havoc on bank earnings this morning. they need a steeper yield curve to borrow low and lend high from an interest rate perspective. the trading activity, a lot of the lending activity may be slow in the first quarter. so i think the market has priced in the fact that banks may be be underwhelming in the quarter. there'lauren: there's low infln out there. how do you expect the fed to continue to respond to low inflation? >> inflation is one of the two items or two pillars of the
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fed's dual mandate. the other is the job market. what's interesting is they have been making somewhat doveish comments, in fact the vice chair yesterday was commenting that me going above their 2% threshold may be something that we'll see. so i think you're going to see more accommodation out of the fed. the minutes are coming out today i believe as well. lauren: yes. >> i don't think that inflation is a fear anywhere in the market and certainly not in terms of something that the fed may respond to. lauren: as the imf slashed their forecast for global growth, central banks need policy tools where they could respond, should the climate take a downturn. mitch, thank you for covering all those bases for us. >> happy to do it. cheryl: we have big news overseas to bring you. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, a strong supporter of president trump, appears to be heading for a record fifth term.
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our national security and foreign policy expert joins us now. 97% of the vote is in there and -- but still we don't have his opponent conceding right now. how closely should u.s. investors and americans in general be watching the outcome of this election in jerusalem and tel aviv? >> based on a lot of comments here, looks like prime minister netanyahu seems as if he's more confident saying that he's going to win a fifth term. so i would say they should definitely pay close attention to the elections, most likely looks like he's going to fish off pretty strong there. there was a lot of speculation in terms of if he could pull this off. there was a lot of talks on the polls were very tight as well as looking at the several indictments that were coming up prior to the actual elections, so this is definitely going to be a surprise but looks like it's going to be in his favor. cheryl: it looks also too as if
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-- this is history, he's going to be the longest serving prime minister, but this change the game for the palestinians, the fact that he went far right at the end, netanyahu did, and basically annexed the west bank settlements. what does this mean for any hopes that the u.s. had in particular, jared kushner, advisor to the president, that there would be a middle east peace process or deal on the horizon. doesn't that change this? >> i feel that it definitely continues the hard line aspect of what we've been seeing within the last year ofs he's going to definitely be a lot strong rer in terms of not necessarily negotiating with the palestinians. so i feel that this is not necessarily nothing new, it's just they're definitely building on their hard lining aspect of not necessarily working with the palestinians. cheryl: it's interest too as well. it looks also too like this -- what's interesting is benjamin netanyahu is facing corruption
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charges yet he can still serve as prime minister in the middle of the investigation. brexit, the deadline -- i say that in air quotes -- is friday. looks like the eu is going to give theresa may likely going to give her and the brits an extension until june to work out some type of deal. do you see a true end game in sight now for the british to leave the eu? >> no, not exactly. there's been a lot of -- they've been struggling, reaching a consistenconsensus on what is tt going to look like. there's been a lot of political division. theresa may has not been able to build a consensus within her parliament. so she's going into the eu saying hey, i just don't have it and can i get an extension. meanwhile, with the eu, they're not necessarily too happy with the decision due to the fact they have to move forward with
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the european parliament and feel a lot of the political division within the u.k. is going to create issues as far as impacting usual business in the eu. so there's a lot of political tension within the parliament as well as dealing with the european union. cheryl: and the idea that hard brexit i know makes so many folks in the business community very nervous. a lot to cover this morning with you. thank you for being here. >> thank you. lauren: some threatening words from freshman congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez, taig aitakingaim at kirstjen nielseng it isn't should be so easy for her. she tweeted, in stealing thousands of children, refusing to provide info for reunification, she oversaw one of the largest scale human rights violations in history, awarding her a prestigious post is to legitmize and celebrating
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her abuse. she also tweeted, the far right loves to drum up fear aroun and resistance to immigrants. they never talked about what's causing people to leave their homes in the first place, perhaps it's because they would be forced to confront one major factor fueling immigration, climate change. cheryl: president trump seeking to speed up energy projects in the country, plans to sign a pair of executive orders today that would blunt some environmental obstruction. main part of the order would limit the ability of environmental activists and state regulators to use the clean water act to stop oil and gas pipeline projects. meanwhile, if you're looking to save money at the pump p, who isn't, try out monday, folks. gasbuddy.com says monday usually offers the best prices. the worst day to get gas? friday. gas buddy says it's all about
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supply and demand. well, socialist bernie sanders making a surprise admission. he admitted he is a millionaire. sanders says next monday he will release 10 years of tax returns. he's expected to show he's made millions from book sales. sanders by the way is going to be appearing in a fox news town hall next monday. that coincidentally is tax day, april 15th. then there is this one, an american airlines flight attendant recently had an experience nobody would want. matty peters said she was mortified after a passenger bumped into her, she actually sprayed a company ceo with a trayful of drinks. they actually joked with her later and they posed with a lovely picture together. he doesn't look too mad. fans of kanye west know his
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sneakers don't come cheap. an unreleased shoe sample from his first ever fashion line is selling online for a staggering $5,000. this pair is a size nine. if you've got the money and you're interested. lauren: they look worn. cheryl: yeah, they do. a little dirty too. lauren: five grand for dirty sneakers. up next, the health crisis that's spreading across the nation. .from zero or i should say from hero to zero, ouch, the embarrassing attempt to rob a home run that ended in a face plant. yep. there it is. [ laughter ] ♪ come on. ♪ joy, and pain. com. ♪ come on, here we go. ♪ sunshine and rain
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lauren: a measles outbreak continues to grow. new york city is now declaring a public health emergency, requiring that unvaccinated residents in a brooklyn neighborhood get the vaccine or face fine. >> the only way to stop this outbreak is to ensure that those who have not been vaccinated get the vaccine. it's crucial for people to understand the measles vaccine works. lauren: dr. jeanette nishua joins us now. thank you for joining us. we appreciate it.
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if you could quantify the seriousness of the problem. >> so, lauren, measles can be very serious. it can be life-threatening for some people. you can develop inflammation of the brain, lung infections, ear infections, and it's more serious for those who have a weakened immune system, if you have hiv or diabetes or asthma, newborn babies, pregnant women are at higher risk of complications. that's why it's so important to get your vaccines. the vaccine has up to 97, 98% effectiveness in protecting you from getting the measles. lauren: there have been 285 measles cases in that new york city neighborhood this year, that's 60% of all of the cases in the entire country. what new york city mayor bill de blasio is saying, get the vaccine or face a penalty. are there legal ramifications to that. >> there may be. but safety is the priority of the citizens of the community. we've got to protect our
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children. we've got to protect those who are vulnerable. and the only way to do that is get your vaccines or stay home. lauren: the virus is worse than the vaccine then. >> absolutely, without a doubt, 100%. lauren: let's pivot, if you don't mind. yesterday there was the third hearing this year, the senate financial committee grillings some of these drug executives once again about the high cost of prescription drugs. are you encouraged by anything that you heard to basically solve this problem, bring down the cost for patients? >> yes, yes, absolutely. and i'm so glad to see these hearings underway. they're long overdue. and it's about time they are being health -- they are being held responsible and accountable for their actions and unnecessarily raising prices on patients for the pursuit of profit. i have patients that are rationing their medications, rationing incherationing insulit
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last longer. some patients decide whether to buy medication or put food on the table. lauren: what's the solution, doctor? what's the solution? >> from the hearings i'm seeing is rebate reform, either get rid of the rebates all together or pass the rebates, the profit of the rebates all down to the patients. we need to also take a closer look at pharmacy benefit managers, because those are those -- the people that are pocketing most of those rebates instead of passing them down to the patients. so that's really a big problem in addition to transparency and list prices. we need to know what are the list prices, why are they so secretive, why are they hidden. we need transparency. it's important to know for patients, if you have problems getting your medications, there are things you can do. shop around because different pharmacies have different prices. you can also ask your doctor for generics. you can ask your doctor for samples as well. and then when you're at the pharmacy, ask the pharmacist how
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much is it if i pa out-of-pocket versus using insurance, sometimes using insurance is more expensive than paying out-of-pocket. lauren: an informed consumer. doctor, thank you for coming on. >> my pleasure. thanks for having me. cheryl: be your own advocate. lauren: do your homework. cheryl: coming up, the magic is out for the l.a. lakers. magic johnson sent shock waves when he abrupted steps down as the team's president. we've got the scoop, coming up next. and so much for spring. you're looking at live pictures of saint paul, minnesota, courtesy of earth cam, where a blizzard is expected to hit at any moment. janice dean's got details on the bomb cyclone that's coming. stay with us. ♪ had a storm warning. ♪ that's what 24/7 means, sugar. kind of like how you get 24/7 access to licensed agents with geico. hmm? yeah, you just go online,
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cheryl: it is officially spring. that is not stopping a major snowstorm from striking today. lauren: fox senior meteorologist janice dean is here with th the details. janice: here we go again. we have an intensifying storm system that will bring blizzard conditions from colorado to minnesota. we have blizzard warnings in the red. we have millions of folks under winter storm warnings. we could see in excess of over a foot of snow, in some cases, isolated mountains, two feet of snow. so for the next 12 to 24 to 36 hours, areas across the rockies, northern plains and upper midwest will deal with a very big, strong winter storm system, perhaps historic, depending on how low we go in terms of millly bars and the area of low pressure, forecast up to 24 inches for parts of nebraska
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through minnesota, icing and flooding concerns as well. it ain't over yet. cheryl: thanks for being on top of it for us. lauren: i love the blouse. janice: thank you. lauren: tuesday night in sports was all about nba ledge ends saying good-bye. cheryl: let's get to the huge breaking news coming out of los angeles. jared: janice dean just said it ain't over. it's over. 26 hospital26 months since magin returned, before the game magic abruptly resigned. >> i had more fun on the other side. tomorrow i would have to affect somebody's livelyhood and their life. i thought about that. that's not fun for me. that's not who i am. i want to go back to having fun. i want to go back, being who i was before taking on this job. jared: he says i was happier when i wasn't the president. we knew this was coming, dwayne wade has been parading hi parads
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good-bye tour all season. he got salutes from lebron james, a video from form earn president obama who said whenever you got knocked down, you showed us how to get back up, so you showed chicago spirit and did u us proud. >> i'm so joyous. this is going to take some getting used to, you know. tuning in, watching this organization, watching my teammates play out here and i'm not there, definitely going to take a while to get used to it. jared: he scored 30 points last night but the heat were eliminated from the nba playoff picture. unlike dwayne wade, derek nowitzki did not make a farewell tour but last night he made it official. >> fly ball. deep left. back, scales the wall and it's.
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rickand itdrops. jared: after he scored 30 points, he announced this season would be his last. larry bird, charles barkley were on-hand to honor dirk nowitzki. next stop, hall of fame. back in the day we would see something like this on this week in baseball and mel allen might say how about that. watch him trying to catch a fly ball. take my word for it. he's going back. cheryl: we showed it earlier. lauren: face plant. cheryl: we showed it earlier. it was like ouch, he tried to hang on and then he just -- he was gone. lauren: there it is. >> scaling the wall and it drops. jared: and how about that? lauren: jared max. thank you very much. jared: happy wednesday. lauren: catch jared's sports reports on fox news headline, 24/7, sirius xm, channel 115.
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cheryl: the voice of a generation wants to bring whiskey from his own distillery, bob dil dylan changes the face a classic and another film getting the prequell treatment. ♪ you're the one that i want. ♪ honey. ♪ you're the one i want. ♪ s. ♪ s. to inspire confidence through style. ♪ i'm working to make connections of a different kind. ♪ i'm working for beauty that begins with nature. ♪ to treat every car like i treat mine. ♪ at adp we're designing a better way to work, so you can achieve what you're working for. ♪
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cheryl: a h cheryl: a beloved classic is getting the prequel treatment. lauren: tell me more. >> i'm so excited to write what i wrote. i told the producers, i want these lines back. it's automatic, it's systemastic, it's hydromattic and it could be coming to a theater near you. cheryl: that's great. >> oh, we're going with that sound. reports say there could be a prequel to the 1978 film that would he focus on the summer fling that danny and sandy had before reconnecting back at school. the writer telling the summer night story also wrote aladdin. we reached out to our sources to see if genie will be playing the role of zuko. lauren: i feel like this won't sell well. cheryl: lauren, stop now. no, no. cheryl.lauren: it's ruining a .
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>> grease two ruined the classic. cheryl: that was a wrong movie. lauren: speaking of classics. bob dylan, what do you have? >> the times definitely are a-changing with this singer's new merchandise. ♪ the times they are a-changing. >> there we go. he's got a new whiskey. heaven's door spirits, they announced plans to open a nashville distillery in 2020. there will be a restaurant, whiskey library and performance venue. cheryl: good for him. van halen, the tequila business. >> sam m sammy hagar, why not. booze is big money. the only thing it doesn't survive is prohibition. lauren: i survives that too basically nashville is a perfect spot for it. cheryl: thank you.
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great to see you. >> it's good to be back. i was on the road for two weeks. lauren: you forgot you were on the road. >> because i was drinking heaven's door spirits. no, i wasn't. maria: good morning, everyone. happy wednesday. i'm maria bartiromo. it is wednesday, april 10t 10. the global economy in focus, we're waiting on several key data points, the march consumer price index this morning gives us an indication of inflation at the consumer level. the european central bank decision and the federal reserve minutes coming out today, all market movers. what it means for markets around the world this morning. and then this, on the hot seat, the ceos of the largest banks in america headed to capitol hill this morning. we have a preview of what can be expected at a fiery hearing. and then democrats are ramping up scrutiny of the industry, we'll be previewing it. uber facing towards its ipo, could be one of the largest of all time.
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