tv FBN AM FOX Business October 22, 2019 5:00am-6:00am EDT
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leave it up to the left-wing media. tomorrow sidney powell and general jack keane among our guests. see you have tomorrow. good night from lauren: it is 5:00 cam. here are your top stories at this hour. justin trudeau narrowly holding on for a second term but with a minority government. what this could mean for usmca at home. cheryl: a landmark settlement in a multistate opioid lawsuit but victims' families say it is still not enough. what it could mean for more lawsuits and the churr futures e companies who are paying up. lauren: are the 2020 candidates in disarray. some of the underdogs are seeing their war chest grow. cheryl: and how a heated fast food chicken sandwich fight
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inspired this year's viral halloween costume. it is tuesday, october 22nd. "fbn: a.m." starts right now. ♪ ♪ we got the beat. ♪ we got the beat. ♪ we got the beat. ♪ yeah, we got it! ♪ we got the beat. ♪ we got the beat. ♪ we got the beat. cheryl: and welcome to "fbn: a.m.." good morning. i'm cheryl casone. lauren: hey, everybody. i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: let's take a look at how your money is moving this morning. right now we have red arrows, dow is down 25, s&p down 2 and three quarters, nasdaq down 4 and a quarter. we're getting earnings before the bell from four dow components, including travelers and mcdonald's. lauren: upbeat in asia.
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you have hope that this trade deal will be signed next month. the shanghai composite gaining half of 1%, the japanese market is closed and hong kong market is higher. relief measures being put in of to boost that economy. cheryl: over to europe, dismay as boris johnson is trying to secure the u.k.'s exit from the eu today. that challenge seems daunting. the cac is slightly in the red, german market is higher. lauren: canadian prime minister justin trudeau has been reelected for a second term, overcoming a series of scandals. now trudeau defeated andrew shove. hillarysheer in a pretty close election. he will be forced to seek support from an opposition party to pass any legislation. >> it has been the greatest honor of my life to serve you for these past four years and tonight you're sending us back to work for you. lauren: president trump
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congratulating trudeau, tweeting canada is well served. i look forward to working with you toward the betterment of both of our countries. cheryl: trudeau's win not a big win for backers of usmca. that trade deal between canada, the u.s. and mexico. it actually may be in trouble. fox news learned that the agreement is backsliding as many issues remain unresolved. one source said they thought the deal would be locked in place after the two-week congressional recess but that promise seems further away now. the congressional week has been shortened because of services for the late representative elijah cummings. a meeting between congressional negotiators and u.s. trade representative robert lighthizer is expected to be held tomorrow. lauren: vice president mike pence and democratic presidential candidate joe biden trading barbs over trade during separate appearances in pennsylvania yesterday. biden in a statement says this.
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i know pennsylvania and they will not be fooled by pence's blind promotion of trump's irresponsible trade wars. pence firing right back while speaking to manufacturing workers in biden's home state. >> well, joe, pennsylvanians will not be fooled. [ cheering and applause ] >> they know that the usmca is a win for pennsylvania and a win for america. and it's time you got on board. lauren: and president trump will be in pittsburgh tomorrow where he will speak about shale, energy and jobs. cheryl: as president trump discussed the cabinet meeting, he mentioned something interesting. potential for a deal with north korea. >> as our trade deals start kicking in, these trade deals are incredible, whether it's north korea, south korea, north korea's going to be probably something happening with north korea too. some very interesting information on north korea, a
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lot of things are going on. and it's going to be a major rebuild at a certain point. cheryl: well, earlier this year the president also said there is awesome economic potential for the kim jong un regime if it agrees to give up the nuclear program. lauren: now to the crisis in syria. a five day cease fire in turkey's offensive expires this afternoon. president trump says he is planning to keep a small number of u.s. troops in the country to protect the oil fields. >> i always said you're going in, keep the oil. same thing here, keep the oil. we want to keep the oil. and we'll work something out with the kurds so they have some money, they have some cash flow. lauren: defense secretary mark esper said the u.s. will make sure oil fields in northern syria don't falls into the hands of a resur gent isis -- resurgent isis. cheryl: european regulators to
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bring the 737 max back to flight trials. this is a major setback to american regulators who wanted a coordinated global response on this. taking a look at shares of boeing, they dropped nearly 4% yesterday as several brokerages downgraded ratings on that stock. boeing set to report third quarter earnings, out tomorrow. always remember, dow component, big story. lauren: speaking of valuations, wework, that valuation has fallen to $8 billion, maybe less, this under an offer from softbank. wework's board plans to meet today, they will discuss emergency financing options including a takeover by softbank. it would further sideline the co-founder, adam newman. softbank plans to pay him $200 million in the a takeover deal. cheryl: we are learning about some special arrangements that are going to be made to honor the late congressman elijah cummings. lauren: tracee carrasco here with those details.
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hi, tracee. tracee: representative cummings will be given the rare honor of lying in state this thursday in statutory hall of the capital. a public viewing has been scheduled for tomorrow at morgan state university in baltimore. cummings died last thursday at the age of 68 after complications from long-standing health problems. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu fails to form a government, plunging the government into political uncertainty. now his centrist rifle, benny ganz will try with his blue and white party. he was given a deadline of 28 days. if he fails, israel could hold an unprecedented third election. ups will start delivering prescription drugs to homes using drones. it's teaming up with cvs. the service will day due in one or -- debut in one or two cities in the coming weeks.
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it will deliver medical supplies to hospital campuses in utah. they are trying to keep up with fed ex which last week delivered a package to a home in virginia using that practice. macies' announced they will stop selling fur by the end of the r year. they will soon close their fur vaults and salons. the stores will still sell ethically sourced sheep and cattle fur. cheryl: macy's hand bloomingdales have been under pressure by peta for the last 20 years to get rid of fur. this has been a long-standing battle and they just now decided to make this decision. lauren: i've noticed on instagram, if you follow a celebrity and they have on a winter coat with a fur collar, they make a statement on there,
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before you make any comments, this is faux. cheryl: i remember when i moved to new york people wore fur because of the cold. we'll see how this goes over for them. tracee carrasco thank you very much. lauren: let's take a look at your money and how it's moving. dow is down 21 points, nasdaq giving up just 2. overseas, the moodie mood is . coming up, china and the nba caving to censorship in the last couple weeks. one major hollywood director is refusing to do the same. saying take it or leave it. it could cost him millions. have you ever been accused of this? >> this is getting annoying. what do you do all day long, the black berry. >> she was going to tell me when her break was coming up. >> you're supposed to be talking to me. lauren: we know teens are glued to their phones but what about
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mom and dad? a new study shows more parents are addicted to their phones than their children are. cheryl: if you live in louisiana, you have the cheapest gas in the country, $2.26 for a regular gallon. you're watching "fbn: a.m.." we're invested in you. ♪ ready, ready, ready, ready to run. ♪ al have some fun or the latest phones. no commission. no matter what you trade, at fidelity you'll pay no commission for online u.s. equity trades.
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my hands are registered as leah tall weapons. we get into a fight, i accidentally kill you, i go to jail. >> anybody accidentally kills anybody in a fight, they go to jail. it's called manslaughter. cheryl: well, get this, china has pulled quentin tarantino's once upon a time in hollywood, some say because of how bruce lee is depicted in that movie. tarantino says he has no plans to recut the movie, after beijing pulled it a week before its release in china. chinese regulators have not officially offered a reason for the decision. reports say the daughter of bruce lee filed a complaint. lauren: our next guest says trade talks between the u.s. and china seem to be headed towards a deal phase. president trump weighing in on the status of the talks and seemed pretty upbeat. >> we'll be able to we think
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sign a completed document with china on phase one. then we start working on phase two. and actually things in phase two are easier than phase one. lauren: dominic tavello, president of diversified private wealthed advisors joins us now. they're already he said talking about phase two. is all of this positive sentiment? are we moving in the right direction or are wit we taking o long. >> we're moving in the right direction. china and russia went to war in 1969, it took them until 1995 to sign a treaty. this will take a very long time. phase one will probably happen relatively soon. the balance of this could take years, if not decades to negotiate. so it's just -- you have to be patient. lauren: keeping in mind, you're in it for the long haul. >> long haul. you need somebody that will stay on top of it and keep their feet to the fire. lauren: so trade deal with china pending but we're
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positive. >> positive on that. lauren: trade deal with canada and mexico. mexico ratified the usmca. justin trudeau has won the election. are you optimistic. >> he's going to form with another group to create the plage order. i'm positive on the canadian side. we have politics on the u.s. side. trump will have to push the democrats to get them to -- >> you don't think -- >> not many people objecting to the terms of the treaty. there's minor stuff here and there, there's some politics involved. overall, all three countries seem relatively positive on this one. this one should have flown through. lauren: it's very beneficial for u.s. dairy farmers. trudeau's opposition was saying it's terrible for canada. >> they gave in on this one, mexico too on very important issues, very positive for all three countries to just go forward and let the economies work and help each other, right. lauren: it's interesting. one of the reasons you trudeau
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was able to win for all those scandals was that the canadian economy is humming. so it is positive for all three of us, yet it seems like -- >> it's a black cloud and overhang about it not passing. businesses can get back to work and putting people back to work. this one needs to get done. it's not a difficult one. lauren: earnings and earnings galore. so far, so good. four dow components report today. mcdonald's and ups are two of the companies reporting today. your take on earnings so far. >> we came into the quarter really depressing our expectations for earnings. and on the average, 4% lower was what we were expecting. so the good news is that we're beating those numbers. we're beating them pretty reasonably well. mcdonald's and ups just crushed it last quarter. i don't expect those numbers to be so dynamic this quarter but i do expect them to be better. lauren: is it interesting to you that this is the third quarter now where the expectations were this drastic
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decline in earnings, yet that hasn't come to fruition. >> we were talking a year ago, recession, recession, recession. and the evidence just is not there including going forward the next three, six, nine months. hard to believe any recession in that timeframe. the leading economic indicators are just too positive for that. lauren: dominic, thank you for your perspective. cheryl: let's take a look at what's going on with futures. we have four dow components reporting this morning. this could change the story on your screen. for now, the dow is slightly lower, down 23, s&p down 2 and-a-half, nasdaq is down 3. also this ahead, a landmark $260 million settlement in a historic opioid lawsuit. but is it enough? what this could mean for more lawsuits and for those families everyone is waiting in the wings on this. four ceos now pleading guilty in the college admission scandal. what does that mean for actress lori loughlin to continues to maintain her innocence. keep it here on "fbn: a.m.."
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lauren: the climate change lawsuit against exxon mobil heads to trial. the oil company and new york's attorney general headed for a showdown starting tomorrow over accusations that exxon deceived investors on the calculation of environmental regulation. former exxon ceo rex tillerson is expected to be called as a witness. lauren.cheryl: it would have be first federal opioid trial in the country but a last minute settlement deal was struck. they agreed to a $260 million settlement over the crisis. but there are 2500 lawsuits
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still pending. let's bring in attorney misty maris. the deal that happened yesterday was kind of a big surprise. they seemed to be wanting to settle, these cities, these counties, this tribes. >> abs a lieutenantly. look, there's a big incentive to settle. the reason being, what kind of money is going to be left over after all of these trials. so with respect to these two counties, this could have been an $800 billion endeavor to actually go through the course of the trial if the counties did get at the end of the day what they were looking for in damages. so the companies come together, they have this last minute settlement right as the jury is about to sit down on monday morning and say hey, look, we better control what happens here. get some money together and settle this case because the effect could be a as trough no,. many of the juries in this
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county have been affected personally by the opioid crisis. cheryl: obviously the opioid crisis is a horrific thing that happened in this country. i find it interesting that the drug companies and distributors, the only company in all of this that seems to want to fight this is walgreens. they're like we were just fulfilling prescriptions. why are we -- but why is it only walgreens that's willing to fight back against this? >> you're absolutely right. it's interesting because it's a very complicated legal issue, especially in the contexts of these over 2500 lawsuit that's we're seeing, they involve all sorts of different parties, distributors, manufacturers, every single entity has a different level of potential accountability. but cheryl, as you said, many of them are pointing to the other people that are involved in the lawsuit, right of. so it's not us, it's the doctors that over-prescribed. it's the people that abused. that's all part of what the defense will be. cheryl: i want to get to the college admissions scandal but really quick, how do you put a price on a life as a lawyer.
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>> it's very difficult. there's a damage calculus for each individual, it's loss of services, how much money they were making, who is dependent on them. the narrative in the cases has changed to trying to fund rehabilitation programs for different counties and states to save people. cheryl: teva's giving out the treatment drug for the addiction. really quick, lori loughlin, we've had more parents that are pleading guilty, we have 15. this scandal really looks like it's going to be bad for lori loughlin because she still says she's innocent. everybody else is getting kind of minimal prison time. >> they're getting that low end of the prison time and one of the factors that's being looked at is taking accountability. so the longer that this is stretched out, the more potential jail time is available. also, the prosecutors are cueing this carrot and stick approach, r they're saying we're going to add additional charges so you might want to get a plea now before you get more time that
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could potentially be tacked on at trial. cheryl: they're not letting up on those parents, i tell you. misty, thank you so much. lauren, over to you. lauren: let's take a look at your money this morning. check out the s&p 500. it's within striking distance of a record. it is down just a point right now but sitting above 3,000 and oh, so close to a record close. you up next, president trump calling for an investigation into possible ties between hillary clinton and ukraine. we are live in washington with the president's latest push to root out corruption. and are democrats in disarray? why voters are being pushed to look beyond joe biden, elizabeth warren and bernie sanders. we'll explain coming up right here on "fbn: a.m." ♪ i am titanium we present limu emu & doug
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urging republican lawmakers to stand up to democrat as he urges the doj to get to the bottom of the steele dossier once and for all. lauren: griff jenkins is live in washington with more on the call to root out corruption. griff, good morning. >> reporter: in a wide ranging interview last night, the president defended his ukrainian phone call and he raised concerns that ukraine was involved in russian meddling in 2016 and he pushed for attorney general barr to investigate. >> i heard about ukraine. i've been hearing about it. i heard clinton was involved. i heard they got somebody who wrote the fake dossier, was it out of ukraine. all of the things that happened. and i assumed that the attorney general, i would like the attorney general to find out what's going on. because you know what? we are investigating corruption. >> reporter: the president also calling on his fellow republicans to band together and fight the democrats' impeachment effort harder, signaling out mitt romney, likely the first
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gop senator willing to vote in favor of impeachment. >> i think the rep look, i think that the democrats are not good politicians. i think they have lousy policy. but you don't have the mitt romneys of the world, you don't have people that will go against the party. you have better -- they stick together. i respect that. >> reporter: this as house democrats table a gop resolution to censor adam schiff. schiff tweeting this after the vote. it will be said of house republicans when they found they lacked the courage to confront the most dangerous president in american history, they console themselves by attacking those who did. the next key witness is diplomat bill taylor. we expect he will be asked about text messages and allegations of a quid pro quo. lauren: but again, behind closed doors. griff, thank you very much. for more on all this, we bring in gabby orr, white house
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reporter for politico. we have all these impeachment inquiry push and president trump continues to tout the economy. >> he does. and that's the message that his campaign really wants -- >> the best unemployment numbers, the best employment numbers. we have the best of everything. we rebuilt the military. with all a of the things we've done, regulation cuts, the biggest tax cut in history, so many things, our energy, we're energy independent now, that's why you don't see our boats being blown up over in -- on the gulf. so there's so many things. >>.lauren: you were already responding to what he was going to say so i'll let you continue. is the economy enough to save president trump's re-election. >> it's certainly something that his campaign really wants him to be talking about because they see just in the polling the way that americans essentially prioritize the economy as one of their top issues, if not their top issue. this is something he can communicate to americans at
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every stripe. he can go out into communities that haven't typically voted for republican candidates and talk about unemployment numbers and jobs and all of the things that he has done to sort of boost the american economy and put more wages and money in the pockets of everyday americans. lauren: can you shed some light for us on how hillary clinton is still influencing the 2020 election, this time going after tulsi gabbard, saying she's an asset of russia. can you explain that to me? >> i wish i could. those of us in the media are he very curious about this because hillary clinton has sort of remained somewhat silent for the past year or so. of course, tweeting every now and then. but to go after tulsi gabbard, a candidate in the democratic primary, strategically it doesn't make any sense. it's not quite clear why she would target tulsi gabbard and level the accusation that the congresswoman is a russian asset without any evidence to back that up.
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i can't explain what the reason is there but i do think that in the end it actually boosts tulsi gabbard because she's able to strike back against a candidate who was very unpopular to begin with. lauren: that's the point i was going to pick up on. clinton's comments are boosting tulsi gabbard who is not doing well when you look at the polls and you have this editorial in usa today. and their staff is saying look, you need to look past bernie sanders, look past elizabeth warren, look past joe biden, at tulsi gabbard, amy klobuchar, mayor pete whavmen. what does that say to the status of the democratic party when you have a major newspaper saying look past the frontrunners. >> the editorial from usa today captures what a lot of democratic voters feel outside of the progressive part of the democratic party's base. they want a centrist candidate like pete buttigieg, like amy klobuchar, like some of the others who are on the field who have not had a shot at least at the debate stage or to make an
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impact in the primary polls. it's a risky strategy to continue to boost candidates like bernie sanders and elizabeth warren who can easily be run against by president trump on a capitalist, free market message versus a socialist message and i think that's what you hear this morning about and it's something that democratic party officials are certainly trying to heed but it's not quite clear if those candidates themselves have taken that into account. lauren: if you look at where the money moves, you're seeing amy klobuchar bring in more money, indic ditto for mayor pe. anybody would have to go up against the war chest of president trump's campaign which is $300 million. that's going to be tough to do. gabby orr, thank you for joining us. >> thank you. cheryl: well, mayor pete buttigieg is surging in a new iowa poll but his past is making headlines p. in a surprising admission, facebook's mark zuckerberg said he made personnel recommendations for the presidential hopeful's 2020
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campaign. lauren: hillary vaughn in washington with the details. >> reporter: good morning, lauren and cheryl. facebook's ceo mark zuckerberg admitting he privately advised mayor pete buttigieg's campaign by handing off employee resumes and making recommendations for campaign hires. this is the first time mark zuckerberg is acknowledging he directly involved him of self in a political campaign as facebook continues to face scrutiny over alleged anti-conservative bias at the company. zuckerberg says he made the referrals after his employees asked him to. izuckerberg said he's not endorsing buttigieg. >> when a number of colleagues who i worked with at facebook or my philanthropic foundation were interested in working there, they asked me or my wife to send over their resume and so i did that. i think than this probably should not be misconstrued as if i'm like deeply involved in trying to support their campaign
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or something like that. >> reporter: yesterday zuckerberg announced a new update to facebook that lets users track down money 2020 presidential candidates spend on their services. the new u.s. presidential candidate spend tracker will let users break down spending geographically so users can see what regions candidates are targeting and give details on how much money they spend on each platform. facebook, instagram or messenger. lauren and cheryl. lauren: hillary, thank you. cheryl: whether it's social media or online shopping, put down that smartphone, mom and dad. a new survey found that parents spend more time with their kids and on their skoal phone -- than their cell phones by a tiny amount. 2,000 parents were surveyed. the parents spent 24 more minutes with their kids than they did looking at their phones. 69% of parents feel addicted to their mobile devices. lauren: not surprised at all.
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more topics like this on my podcast. cheryl: let's take a look at the futures right now. as you can see, we've got somewhat of a mixed picture. we're a little flat right now. dow components coming out, technology is coming out today, problem to an-- procter & gambl, mcdonald's. that could change the numbers. seattle is passing a tax that will cost thousands of residents more money to stay warm. the residents hit the hardest could be the middle class and the elderly. we'll explain. and why san francisco just banned city employees from taking working trips or doing business with almost half of the country. keep it here, "fbn: a.m.," we're invested in you. ♪ there's something about you. ♪ beautiful. ♪ i want you to know. ♪ you're my favorite. ♪ does your broker offer more than just free trades?
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there are zero reasons to invest anywhere else. fidelity. cheryl: well, people in the south left picking up the pieces after a deadly storm left widespread damage. take a look at the bird's eye view from dallas, texas where an ef-3 tornado touched down, this is right in the center of a very populous area of dallas. the national weather service confirmed winds topped 140 miles per hour there. lauren: three schools were wiped out and won't be able to open for the rest of the school year. four people were killed during storms in arkansas and oklahoma. let's bring in janice dean. janice, you know, the weather
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impact, what about the cleanup, how is that going to go today? janice: thankfully, the storm has moved eastward so they'll have a few days for cleanup there but it's going to take months, if not years to rebuild some of those areas. incredible, this tornado by the way, the ef-3 was on the ground for three hours and it's incredible that we did not have any deaths in the dallas metro area. so you can see where we have the storm reports, several reports of tornados in texas, oklahoma, towards arc you saw and miss sour -- arkansas and missouri. ef-3 means severe damage. for this time of year, that's incredible. people ask is it normal to have a severe weather season in the fall. it is. we have a primary season in the spring, a secondary in the fall because of the change in the seasons and the powerful cold fronts. the worst of it is really over. we could see some strong, severe storms across portion off portie mid-atlantic and southeast. we'll watch for that over the next six to 12 hours.
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we'll see gusty conditions and heavy rain across the northeast. so that's going to cause some travel delays. then our next storm system moves into the west with some heavy mountain snow and valley rain across the northwest. we'll certainly keep you up-to-date. the pictures from texas, incredible. cheryl: that's my hometown, dallas. a good friend of our family, he lost his home. my sister said cars were overturned and that's the good news. it's miraculous nobody died. very lucky, i have to say to my hometown. lauren: let's move out to california. evacuation orders are lifted after a wildfire closes in on multimillion dollar homes there. look at those images. you can see people running for their lives at the raging fire races towards the ocean view homes. in loss an a less more than 3 -- long angeles, more than 3,000 firefighters tackling that beast. stars like sophia richie sharing
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photos from a wealthy area that is home to celebrities like res witherspoon and matt damon. cheryl: let's head up north to seattle. the latest tax there may hurt the elderly and the middle class the most. the city is adding a new 24% -- 24-cent per gallon tax on home heating oil that will start next year. the move is intended to help make the city carbon neutral by 2050. critics say this will hurt people who can least afford it. it's going to hurt, again, the elderly and the more poor generationses of folks in seattle. lauren: there's not enough time to upgrade your home to new technology. san francisco, blacklisting 22 states that have what the city calls restrictive abortion laws. so starting january 1st, municipal employees can't take any work trips or do any business with companies in those 22 states including arkansas, florida, massachusetts and pennsylvania. san francisco officials say they
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are standing up against states that are actively working to limit reproductive freedoms and are putting women's health at risk. cheryl: let's take a look at how your money is moving. futures have flattened out, i mean literally flattened out. the dow is down a point, the s&p is unchanged, nasdaq is higher by 3. we'll get some earnings today, that could change the story. also, we've got this. you star wars friends out there, it's time to get excited. >> the force is coming togeth together. >> we're not alone. the people will fight if we lead them. cheryl: oh, yeah. the final trailer for the rise of the sky walkers is just out. is star wars going to save a troubled 2019 box office? we're going to talk about it. playing roulette with your pizza. yeah, domino's is out with a halloween pie to treat your
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friends an a trick your enemies. wait until you hear about it, it's pretty l cool. details coming up on "fbn: a.m." ♪ and a little bit of chicken fries. ♪ cold beer on a friday night. ♪ a pair of jeans that fit just right. ♪ and the radio up riswalda. dinner's almost ready. but one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with our renters insurance. yeah, switching and saving was really easy! drink it all up. good! could have used a little salt. visit geico.com and see how easy saving on renters insurance can be.
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what are you doing there, 3po? >> taking one last look, sir, at my friend. lauren: the force is coming back to the big screen, disney releasing the final trailer for star wars, the rise of sky walker last night during monday night football. tickets which went on sale alongside the trailer's half time release, broke the record for the most tickets sold in the first hour, which beat out the avenger's end game.
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the new star wars will include characters like of ray and kylo kylren and luke sky walker. this is the third and final rendition of the sky walker saga. cheryl: i've got to point out, there was a shot in the new trail of carrie fisher. thats was so heart-breaking that she passed away. the way they evolved her character after her death has been i think just such a testament to jj abrams and how well they've done with this. lauren: because he's directing this one. cheryl: he's the guy from lost. he's amazing. lauren: it could save the 2019 box office. cheryl: we are going to need a little cheering up at the box office if this thing keeps going on in britain like it is. parliament is expected to vote on prime minister boris johnson's brexit deal again today. it's iffy, let's put it that way. is the end somewhere in sight. victoria scholar, market analyst
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joins us now. i don't know. i have to tell you, this looks more and more like it is going to be stretched out and stretched out. are we going to hit another referendum? is that the end game at this point? >> well, i mean, we're certainly not ruling out another referendum at this point, or even a general election. that's if a deal doesn't go through and the eu does get an extension. there's a lot of ifs and buts going on. today we have a vote in parliament, two votes, one is on the withdrawal agreefor mr. joht through the house of commons by thursday so it can go forward next week. it's all very rushed. we have to remember, this is a 110-page document that was only published at 8:00 p.m. last night. so there are lots of mps who think we haven't got enough time to properly scrutinize the bill and therefore they could vote against it. really u it all hangs in the balance. cheryl: what is the general sense there? i don't mean to put you on the
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spot from a political perspective. do you feel the average britain just wants them to be over for them to stay in the european union or do you think there's still a fever pitch of those that want to leave and want this to be over and to have that full separation, what does the polling say to you right now? >> i think the sense is that everyone has got massive brexit fatigue. we just want this to be over and done with, whether you're a leaver or remainer, we want to put this behind us and focus on the issues at hand. cheryl: it is something to watch, victoria. thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. lauren: if you're looking for a job, the census bureau is hiring thousands of workers. cheryl: tracee carrasco has that story. tracee: the 2020 census is five months away. the census bureau wants to make sure everyone is counted. it's hiring half a million workers. the temporary jobs will begin next spring. the agency plans to hold nationwide hiring events. the pay could be as much as $25
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an hour depending on the job and where the worker lives. monica lewinsky is now a successful film maker. hbo max has picked up her documentary, 15 minutes of shame. the documentary zeros in on what hbo calls the public shaming epidemic in our cul culture. the former white house intern whose affair with president bill clinton cast a life long shadow over her reputation. burger king is known for crazy halloween burgers. first there was the jet black halloween burger and the green nightmare king burger. this year it has a ghost whopper. it will be available in 10 cities. dominos also getting into the spirit of halloween. dominos locations in japan serving a halloween roulette by savment it contains a -- pizza. it contains a single unmarked
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slice doused in cause with ghost peppers. whoever grabs the secret slice will get a mouthful of heat. p popeye's inspired a new costume. the chicken sandwich was so popular over the summer that it has been turned into a techsies costume. it's a -- sexy costume. it's a one piece costume that looks like a sandwich. it costs $80. cheryl: that's barely a costume. that's tiny. lauren: i hope trick or treating is indoors. cheryl: or for adults only. lauren: we're always told passwords should be long, they should be complex. apparently equifax didn't get that memo. how its password may have contributed to its massive hack attack. and hackers fool amazon and google and are listening once again tour home devices. what are they getting? what are you saying? those details coming up on "fbn: a.m." ♪ it ain't none of your
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16-character password, letters, numbers and emojis somehow add up, we are learning from massive equifax breach which as of now was the worst in the history of breaches because so many people's information that one of the databases was protected by the user name admin and the password was admin which makes me want to smash my face, that's the default password for everything, you log in and says you should really change your password and how that's how were protecting critical databases in the equifax breach, may have had something to do with it. i know i have gotten criticism in the past but carefully listen today what i'm saying, you to mixcharacters and letters and you wouldn't want your password to be password because that's actually the most basic password, password 1, 2, 3 also
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a bad idea, think of something that you know and other people may not know and mix your characters, maybe favorite movie. >> there's a program called last path, generates and save passwords on your internet explore, your browser or whatever. most people don't want to do complicated password because you forget and you do forget them. >> absolutely. average person has 20 to 25 password. you're banking, utility bill, maybe pay rent or mortgage online, a lot of things that you should have password for, fortunately a lot of devies have ability to save passwords, you can use something like dash lane where it's an app that you buy that generates and saves complicated passwords. >> talk to me about what we should and should not say in front of alexa and google home
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devices. >> no. lauren: take them out of the house, they are here to stay. >> we like the artificial intelligence, assistance that you can be baking cookies in the kitchen and say, how many teaspoons are in in the kitchen, alexa. they were able to create some software that you can put on your google home or amazon alexa that would give you your horiscope. >> a new issue that had been discovered. they made it known to google and amazon, potential vulnerability. lauren: tell your guests -- >> have a legal disclaimer on your door. cheryl: great stuff, you can
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catch bret fox news 24/7, siriusxm 115. lauren: let's say good morning to mornings with maria. maria: happy tuesday, everybody, thanks for joining us, i'm maria bartiromo, it's tuesday october 22nd, top stories right now before 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. renewed hopes on the u.s.-china trade situation, president trump signaling progress, optimism gave global markets a boost overnight and this morning we will tell you all about it, here at home earning season gets into high gear, 4 dow components reporting before the bell, travelers and mcdonalds. ahead of earnings, futures searching for direction, dow industrials up a fraction, under 1 point and the nasdaq right now higher by 6. wework emergency bailout, the company board meeting today and decide on recess cue offer, what's on the table right here this morning mornings with maria begins right
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