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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  October 14, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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>> that hurricane coming towards her tears significant head winds to it and the american consumers not prepared. >> we are entering a darker period, don't want to see our can't see it. the long-term investor, you need to stick to your plan,
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stay focused, look at your portfolio, know why you on the stock that you do. >> consumers continue to slow, spending more and getting nothing more. doesn't bode well for the consumer psyche are where we are going forward. >> president biden admitting what all americans are known for years which is the second he took office inflation started spiking. ♪ neil: well well well. it was a good time. it really was. most enjoyable. i couldn't find the button you are supposed to press the button to make the thing come down. >> that look of confusion for a moment. stuart: the lady to my left, maria, the president of the network had to show me which button to push. all right.
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11:00 eastern, friday october 14th. great day today as you can see, rang "the opening bell" on the nasdaq and had a good time. >> it was a lot of fun. stuart: we got excited setting up their. >> i loved when they dropped the confetti with the big bang from the confetti gun. stuart: we were there to slippery 15 years of fox business. lauren: we were there from the beginning. stuart: look at that. lauren: we had fun. we when i look like your father or your grandfather. lauren: or my mentor. stuart: let's look at the markets. afraid there's reading call over the place. just came back. literally 5 minutes ago the dow was down 200 points, now it is down 40. i didn't see anything crossing the transom that would account for that and the nasdaq is only down 120, had been down 200. try to figure out what made it come back, big tech, all of it down, microsoft 232, out about
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98, amazon 111, $140 a share for apple. show me the 10 year treasury, that's part of the problem, the yield closing in on 4%, looking at 398 as we speak. now this. the events on january 6th, 2020, one are in the past but the democrats want to keep them front and center right now. they think it gives them political advantage for the elections three weeks away, january 6th was a disgrace and an investigation was justified but the investigation that is still going on is not right. for a start the investigating panel is made of 7 democrats and two anti-trump republicans, that isn't fair, is it? over the summer more than a year after the event prime time tv hearings were held, another one took place yesterday, they want a repeat of the watergate hearings that ended the presidency of richard nixon but
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the hearings fell flat, the ratings never that high, faded. donald trump reportedly says he would appear to answer a subpoena, that would give the ratings a boost but night not go the way democrats would like it to go. the january 6th hearings were a demonstration of trump hatred, the democrats kept it going because it became their most important political asset having failed on the economy, inflation, energy, crime, the border, education, all they had to fall back on was trump, they tried to make abortion the key issue but that hasn't quite worked, they are left with paying trump. i don't think it is going to work, the biden presidency is failing, trump hatred won't bring it back to life. third hour of varney starts right now. ♪ stuart: all right. look who is here. our good friend steve hylton from california.
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will the left's hatred for trump work in their favor do you think? >> no quite simply because of their cuts you made which is in the end people vote according to the impact on their lives, the policies being implemented by the people in charge. one thing after another got worse under biden. we saw some data on mortgage rates, something we don't talk about as often as we talk about inflation generally of course they are connected because it is the high interest rates that had to be implement did to fight the inflation but now mortgages up nearly 7%, 20 year high, the average monthly repayment in the last year has gone up by $900 a month. that is a huge amount for a working family. one small example of the disaster these policies in the space of not even two years.
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stuart: the president was in california yesterday. did he get a good reception? >> he got a good reception from his democrat cronies going out for tacos with karen bass who is running for mayor of la, enmeshed in this disgusting racism scandal in la city council. people involved in that scandal part of a corrupt democratic machine that runs los angeles, she's part of that and the board of supervisors, they are part of the problem, part of the corruption, biden will get a warm reception from them but today he's going to irvine in a district where one of the stars of the democratic party looks like she might lose her seat. they are frightened of that. she is the one with the white ball constantly popping up on screens with a whiteboard in hearings in congress, starve the democratic party. she may lose. that's why he is there.
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they are worried. stuart: hope springs eternal for california but i do want to ask about liz truss in great britain who fired the finance minister, chancellor of the exchequer. bring us up to speed what this means. >> this is a disaster for her and the cause of low taxes, low regulation, progrowth agenda you and i feel is so important. liz truss has thrown her chancellor under the bus, implementing her policies and reversed one of the centerpieces of the program which was not going ahead with corporation tax increase, she abandoned the principal, abandoned her closest colleague. i don't see how she can stay in office and more important for us in america it is a real
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setback for anyone arguing for what our economy needs which is less tax, less regulation, pro growth policies, people can point to the uk, if you important that you get financial crisis. the financial crisis in the uk was caused by the pension fund's risky financial schemes and poor interest-rate decisions by the bank of england over the years, poor regulation by the bank of england but those trust's ineptitude and total lack of principle has undermined the progrowth philosophy and i am really angry about it. stuart: hate to see that progrowth philosophy undermined anywhere in the world, we are watching your show the next revolution sunday at 9:00 pm eastern on fox news. back to the markets now. where are we now? the dow is down 60, nasdaq down one hundred 27. time to bring in jonathan koenig. are about this time yesterday the dow was down 500 points. some people say maybe that was the bottom.
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what do you think? >> we need a balance, the amount of negativity, pessimism out there. inflation is bad but also front page news, the pessimism of the average investor is almost near all-time highs for good reason, we talked about it, worth 8% last month after month, year after year caused by everyday americans feeling it. the fact is stocks and gone down so far so fast bonds too we were due for a bounce, we saw yesterday we might keep those gains today. stuart: amazon's primarily access. was a bust? >> major bust. stocks rallying today, financial insurance, rather than technology stocks, as interest rates go up, tech stocks go down. that has been the case but amazon especially is suffering, can't underestimate the importance of amazon, america's famous website, it is the
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economy, 60% of all online shopping yesterday, earlier this week, got their prime day, interim prime day, every analyst says it is a bust, consumers spent 40% less this time than they did previous, much less overall as far as number of transactions, the consumer is tired and inflation is different. stuart: why do you of all people like lufthansa, the german airline? >> you need to look off the radar screen and talk about not just big names that make up the indices. i think the euro is gone too far too fast, one of the most undervalued names that could pop as a bid which i don't think it will. stuart: i always think of you as investing in exotica someplace. stuart: >> they say investing is like hopping, you have to go where the action is.
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stuart: have a great weekend. see you soon. we've got movers and kroger moving down significantly. >> kroger is buying their smaller competitor, albertsons, for $25 million, they want to take on walmart which is a big player in gross lease. . what is with rivian? lauren: it is down 5. 5%, they had several recalls with her new pickup truck, it is bad news after bad news. stuart: i'm reading the prompter and i like the sound of this. caterpillar waves mandatory retirement age 65 to chairman and ceo. lauren: what else i like is stocks have been decimated this year but caterpillar is down 11% comparatively, that's not so bad. they are welcoming, one
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director, 75, to be on the board, makes sense they would do leadership as well. stuart: i'm glad -- lauren: 65 is young. . 74 your macs -- stuart: i know 80-year-olds who could beat me at tennis. mark wahlberg has ditched california to give his children a better life. we will tell you where he's living now and his plans to create hollywood 2. oh. new poll shows new york governor kathy huchul with a 10 point lead over lee is eldon. how come? the state is a mess. that is whether migrants shocked to find out they are being shipped back to mexico as part of an agreement between the white house and venezuela. griff jenkins has the report from mexico next.
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stuart: what is this? marky mark and whomsoever. that is vegas. we are playing that song fourier reason because mark wahlberg, who is the same person revealed he moved his family out of hollywood. lauren: he went to summerland, nevada and is standing up to hollywood's anti-business policies. >> after this gubernatorial election, tax credits for the
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state, build a state-of-the-art studio and make this hollywood 2.0. became here to give ourselves a new start for the kids and lots of opportunity here. lauren: he said you know me for being an actor but i've not done that many movies, i want to work from home and also have a shoe factory i want to build and another one for my sports apparel business. he bought a huge sprawling mansion for $8 million. it is on the market for $87 million. i mean. i looked at pictures. stuart: that would be a capital gain. harry potter, author jk rowling is not afraid to express her unpopular political views. someone asked her how she sleeps at night. what did she say?
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ashley: she says she sleeps just fine, thank you very much, thanks to her hefty stacks of cash. the author has been labeled by critics as a ter f, trans exclusionary radical feminist. for her beliefs. enters faced death threats since her remarks, one twitter user saying how do you sleep at night knowing you have lost a whole audience from buying your books? rowling responded with some sleeping emojis and fired back saying i read my most recent royalty checks and find the pain goes away. her net worth has been estimated, she's worth an estimated 50 million, to one. $2 billion, she can sleep very well. stuart: and she does, i am sure. quick check of the markets. down one hundred 76 for the dow, one hundred 92 for the nasdaq, plenty of red ink.
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to the border, vice president harris visited texas this week but never made it to the border. joy villareal, mayor of the town in texas, were you surprised the president off the border again? >> thank you for having me on your program. happy seventeenth birthday to how -- our son, love mom and dad. stuart: happy birthday. >> the borders are prioritized a fundraising event over immigration and border security. to be fair to the vice president, for decades both political parties failed to prioritize the broken immigration system on the backs of the american people and most regrettably on the taxpayers dime. it is time for us to address and strengthen our asylum laws,
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immigration laws, visa programs, overstates the account for half of the population living in the us illegally. and visa overstays talking about almost a million visa overstays annually. multiply that by 5, 6, 10 years and what do we do? it is not for us to take action. stuart: is it time for us to build the wall? >> we already have a virtual wall, we have the latest technology. is incredible. border communities are in favor of securing the border, the question is how, what's the right technology? we have every conceivable law enforcement initiative to secure the border and utilizing highly advanced technology. stuart: i never heard a democrat say secure the border for real whether it is a wall or whatever you secure it so people don't just walk across, no democrat will say that.
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>> it is absolutely critical. border security is absolutely critical and we must exercise caution against our global enemies exploiting the broken immigration system. immigration and border security can coexist. what do we mean? we cannot close international trade. stuart: that's not what i'm talking about. under donald trump the number of immigrants coming across the border was down down down. as soon as president biden gets in, open the border and you've got 200,000 a month. i am terribly sorry to do this to you but i've got to go because i am out of time but i hope you will come back because i would like to hear more about this. is the key issue. happy birthday to your son, see you again later.
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group of venezuelan migrants shocked to find they were being bussed back to mexico. griff jenkins is in mexico. is this part of an agreement between the white house and venezuela? >> reporter: it is an agreement between the us and mexico to accept venezuelans title 42 back, 200 a day at this point of entry. i'm standing in the middle of the river between the us, eagle pass, but let me me go to my sky drown and lift you up a little bit, we have an active crossing in the distance, the border patrol and their airboat, two boats now, rafts of national guard, a group of 6. justice sector in the span of one week in the del rio sector they had 10,000 illegal crossings or apprehensions as they call them, 3300 known got
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aways, 39 rescues and one drowning in this very area. that's why you are seeing this response along with the national guard rafts. obviously you can see from where i was standing in the river that is pretty shallow but the currents are strong and there are dangerous so venezuelans who have been coming for weeks if not months to get to this point were shocked when i informed them that effective immediately, they would be title 42 expelled back into mexico. here's my exchange with a group of venezuelans yesterday. >> translator: do you know venezuelans returned to mexico now? >> translator: no. we did not know anything. they treat us badly in mexico. we have no one there. it is dangerous. >> reporter: it is dangerous.
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they don't want to be in mexico. they want to be in the us and as you watch the drone shot of border patrol and national guard trying to make sure they don't drown or get into danger they will be processed and released unless there now venezuelan. i mentioned that, this is important, the port of entry between eagle pass, there can be 200 exposures of venezuelans a day so if there are more, presumably those stay. we spent some time trying to talk to venezuelans on this side, mexican immigration would not let us get to them. we don't know where they will go but for now they are stuck on the next can side. one final note if i can. secretary mayorkas traveled to texas, dallas, to talk to law enforcement which is great except for dallas's 6 plus hours from where i am on the border and this is where you should be talking to border officials about what they need. as we head into this fiscal
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year, 14 days old it is even worse than it was last year and last year was unprecedented and record-setting. back to you. stuart: if the republicans win in november that man will be impeached, thank you very much for new york city just appointed its first ever cannabis czar, she said she wants to fight canohphobia. 7 people killed on new york subways this year, the highest murder rate in 25 years. people won't go to the city at work if they are afraid to ride the subways. we will deal with that next. ♪ ♪ at fidelity, your dedicated advisor will work with you
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all-star lineup, charles payne, larry kudlow, lauren and susan, starts at 11:00 eastern. you can set your dvr naps now. take a look at the big banks for us. they are down. lauren: look at jpmorgan. it is friday. too busy reading the morning bell. there's a bifurcation in terms of consumer facing banks and make more money off the loans they'd all out to consumers, mortgages and credit cards, jpmorgan, wells, citigroup which is a valuation, stock underperformed, a third of this year, citigroup didn't put in a great report card but has been
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so cheap, that is why people are buying into it. morgan stanley and a bit of jpmorgan, but jpmorgan had an offset. stuart: what did you have on traveler? lauren: a travel recovery. have you looked at the stocks? delta called the by, as you heard yesterday, some are booming and should last, head into the final holiday, final travel season of the year. norwegian, also a yield play. stuart: you have been right on this. you have been right on this. cruise lines, airlines are recovering. susan: also on yields, and they look more cheap. stuart: crypto remains boring.
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susan: there was outperformance close to 20,000. when you have stocks down, crypto playing a hedge, they trade in tandem, that correlation slightly off today. stuart: a few people waiting for bitcoin to get back to 23,000. they are holding for a while. stuart: come back for friday feedback. new york city subway killings, 25 year high, despite ridership being down. joe borelli is a counsel minority leader. until it stops you won't get people back in these offices.
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>> reporter: the fear of being victim are crime is one of the primary reasons, but midtown offices are less packed than they once her -- these crimes, the benefit if you will, cash bail laws, gifts from the democratic party. they can't seem to stop giving. with cash - baylor raise the age laws, to commit violent crimes on the subway system, from lenient justice systems just months or years prior. stuart: a new marist poll shows new york state governor kathy huchul leads republican lee selden by 10 points. that's an ugly paul. how can selden be so far behind when the state is such a mess?
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>> i don't think he is that far behind. i went to marist college and proud of the whole but i don't think they are right. there are highlights, a new move up to people likely to vote, towards lee's elven, another poll showed leesville than winning in the long island suburb, where all the pundits said he has to win to be the next governor. the planets are aligning hopefully the same way they did for george pataki in the 1990s, the problem is so tangible for new yorkers everything is less safe, everything costs more, no matter how many times huchul says abortion orange mad bad it doesn't change the kitchen table issues. blue one has the governor shown any sign of wanting to end no cash bail? >> she doubled down on it, afraid of the progressive left.
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she was in upstate congresswoman, a centrist and realizes she has to listen to her woke mob to keep her governorship so she has taken a hard tack left and the people who have to pay the price, have to take the subway. we are the ones left standing and the result of this 1-party democratic rule that infests, we have crime deniers in the state legislature and city council where people are saying this is not happening and it is amazing to see despite the fact that everything a person who rides the subway every day can see in terms of vagrancy, homeless people, instigating violent incidents. we had a pack of women in green spacesuits beating up people. that has become the norm, that is the tabloid. stuart: that is a laughingstock, this is a great city.
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brought low by lousy policies. that's my opinion and i think you share it. thanks for joining us. new york city has its first-ever cannabis czar. what kind of job is that? ashley: one tailor-made for snoop dogg, dawson will be leading the cannabis and yc initiative, that will support the development of a thriving and equitable cannabis industry and cannabis entrepreneurs. here's how mayor adams put it. >> waiting for a long time to get this right. not only is a tree going to go with good wind. ashley: in new york it is legal for adults over 20 want to possess 3 ounces of cannabis,
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24 g of cannabis for personal use, anyone walking around the streets of manhattan will be file with the smell of pot. stuart: every time i walk outside the building you can smell it, very distinctive smell, you never miss it. it is always there. all right, we will be back later. we've got feedback friday coming. remember this, it is a designer purse that looks like a trash bag. is that the right thing? that is the actual -- stuart: looks like a trash bag it cost $1,800, the same designer released a new handbag that might be more controversial. we will show it to you, not that one, the other one. forget self driving delivery vans, your next package could be delivered via self flying plane with no pilots on board. grady trimble will show us how
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stuart: in my opinion, that is one of the best airports in america, dallas-fort worth, texas. at terrific airport. it is huge by the way. united airlines finalizing a deal to purchase 100 new wide bodied jets, looking at offers from boeing and airbus, the final deal to be announced in december. one company aiming to get your packages on their autonomous planes. grady trimble in san francisco with the story. you went on these planes. how does package delivery work?
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>> reporter: package delivery would be the same. it is the plane itself that is remarkable and would make package delivery without a pilot possible. this is the plane we were on, a cessna grand caravan the look like any other cessna grand caravan but looking closer you can see the sensors and other tech that allow this thing to fly by itself. we saw a taxi take off and land with no help at all from the pilot. you see the yoke or the controller turning on its own. there is someone on the ground in what they call mission control center communicating with air traffic control and monitoring the flight. right now there is a safety pilot in the cockpit but their goal is to start with cargo flights from one small airport to another without a pilot by 2025.
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>> with this technology, a pilot in the front. >> reporter: eventually passengers will feel comfortable getting on a plane with no pilot and it might come sooner than you think. by the end of this decade. >> down the road you won't be able to get into a small aircraft. >> would it be affordable? >> as affordable on that basis. >> reporter: a number of companies are working on autonomous planes with a pilot shortage and expected to be worse over the next decade. this technology could revolutionize the industry and solve that problem to some degree. stuart: i thought you would tell us they chucked the packages out the window in her
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parachute but that is not the way they will do it. talk about switching gears, that is the trash bag, designer trashbag, that is the old one. a new stylus personal we did show you this before, another $1800. that is a purse. lauren: not a real bag. >> usually doesn't have a strap, clutching a pepsi snack. lays potato chips rating hundred dollars, take the trashbag and it is bigger. stuart: understanding fashion. lauren: why would pepsi do this? it is crude commercialism. don't know if i can defend the trashbag or the potato chip bags.
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stuart: someone in hollywood will walk down rodeo drive. we better move on. great stuff coming up. the dow 30 gives you a sense of the market. there's a lot of selling right now, down 230 points, dow is down 29-8 don't go anywhere, friday feedback, your favorite, is next. ♪ indeed you do. when you sponsor a job, you immediately get your shortlist of quality candidates, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today.
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stuart: that is miami, we need the mayor of miami frequent. i think he wants to be the next president of the united states but he won't say it. friday feedback. let's assemble the team. lauren, ashley, susan, and myself, here we go. matt likes this. no offense but i hope microsoft stays low. we need you working for a long time. give us more eddie ghabour.
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he has been good at has been right and i hope microsoft goes up not so i can retire, just so i can get some money. moving on. susan is wincing at the idea of microsoft. susan: you don't work for the money so i hope we have you for a long time. stuart: i don't work for the money? you don't know me very well. i do. i am a money kind of guy. laura writes i would like to comment on your gig workers story. my hypothesis is if biden reclassified those workers as employees he can claim he created those jobs. am i right? you did the story. susan: if you think about it consumers get hurt because -- stuart: can the president claim -- susan: outrage of people who want to work part-time it be possible in their working schedules.
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stuart: congratulations. bruce right to this. here is a question for lauren. you mentioned your husband was on the list to purchase a rivian truck. susan: it was my cousin. didn't get it yet, supposed to get it for the end of the year. it is in our one the adventure pack. stuart: he has ordered it and it is not there yet. susan: he does a lot of mountain bikeing and they want to camp out. there will be 25,000 delivered this year so that is pretty special. stuart: i think we will move on from your fancy cousin. michael says ever heard of carhart until you mentioned it yesterday. i found carhart shorts in texas, houston, texas. i now own two pairs. you never heard of it. susan: that is not true but i have been looking for it during
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amazon prime day. i got a trucker hat. stuart: did you really? lauren: black for running outside. stuart: you know carhart? ashley: i have lived in montana. everyone has carhart's, the jackets they are wearing and they are great. stuart: would you walk down fifth avenue with carhart's? lauren: don't know if it is because we are talking about it but i'm seeing it everywhere. stuart: i will buy you a pair just to see. lauren: you will buy me something? stuart: i take that back. this is from mark. who is the one guest dead or alive you would like to interview? ronald reagan. lauren: elvis. susan: jesus christ. stuart: you surprise me. susan: probably the most influential person ever to walk this earth. stuart: we are going to talk privately about that. that is a fascinating response, not expected. what about you?
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ashley: tough to follow from jesus christ. how about john wayne? i would love to know what john wayne thinks about the woke culture today. stuart: definitely a few words. >> did you ask me? who would it be? elvis, i said it already. you know my infatuation with elvis. stuart: john lennon would be good. lauren: you never interview john lennon? stuart: the one time i got involved in a news story when i was affected by it was the day john lennon was assassinated in new york. i was the first person to report it, i was working for cnn at the time and reported on cnn and that got to me because i am a beatles fan and john was fabulous and there he was assassinated. i want to thank everybody who sent in their feedback suggestions and thank you very
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much for taking part in this extravaganza. you can stay for the trivia question, 60 years ago on this day the cuban missile crisis began. when did the us and naval quarantine of the island? october 27th, november 7th, november 20th, december 4th? 4? the answer after this. pay for what you need. contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. then i got the dexcom g6. i just glance at my phone, and there's my glucose number. wow. my a1c has dropped over 2 points to 7.2. that's a huge victory. ♪ choosing miracle-ear was a great decision. like when i decided to host family movie nights. miracle-ear made it easy. i just booked an appointment and a certified hearing care professional evaluated my hearing loss and helped me find the right device
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♪ stuart: l.. i'll repeat is question. 60 years ago on this day, the cuban missile crisis began. when did the u.s. end the naval
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quarantine of the island? ashley? >> november 20th, '62. number 3. stuart: susan. >> that was my answer. >> ditto. stuart: i would go with, i'll go with novemberth, why not? if sincest the correct answer. november 20th, 1962. okay. thank very much, folks. -- thanks very much, pokes. don't forget at 11:00 on monday morning we'll have our special show, varney and you. we'll have a lye studio -- live studio audience and an all-star lineup. of course, time's up for me. neil, it's yours. neil: thank you very much, stuart. look forward to you. a selloff going again, interest rates backing up yet again, this sort of jekyll and hyde response to consumer sentiment numbers that come in. the real catalyst is the freefall in bond prices. stop me if y

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