tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business June 19, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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we have barbra streisand from funny girl. what are you going with, ash? >> all great possibilities. i will go with barbra streisand, number four. stuart: me too. that's right. the answer is barbra streisand. won best actress for funny girl in 1969. best original song evergreen, a star is born in 1974. we all now. i will see you tomorrow, ashly. my time is up. "varney & company" is done for now on non-market day. "coast to coast" starts in a couple of seconds. three, two, one. here it is. ♪. neil: all right. markets might be closed but politics are open for business and cash in hand for candidates trying to get more of it. we're told the president of the united states on a visit to
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california today will begin to make good own that idea maybe he can marshall about a billion bucks to raise at a presidential campaign will be more expensive than any other as walter cronkite would say, in american history. if you think about it, every four years, more time passes, inflation, every race is more expensive than the race before. welcome i'm neil cavuto. get right to it with grady trimble on capitol hill what the president is no doubt planning looking for competition over his shoulders. >> reporter: hi, neil. president biden is fresh off endorsement for four of the biggest environmental groups and four of the biggest spending environmental groups. he will meet with tech and climate leaders in northern california where he will most certainly solicit donations from them. those evironmentalists were very good to president bide last time around. back in 2020, environmental,
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green energy groups contributed millions of dollars to get him in the white house. since then he has after awarded them for it. the president steered $370 billion in subsidies for projects in climate laws. at his re-election event, president biden touted his administration's green investments. he was on the attack. >> republicans when they come back to get rid of all the green energy investments, try to stop the plan on infrastructure try to do these things, guess what? they're coming for your jobs, they're coming for your jobs. they're coming for your future. >> reporter: republicans are not the only ones who have taken issue with the president's frein agenda over the past couple of years. some democrats are too but for a very different reason. they say he isn't going far enough on the climate.
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>> the president has given more oil drilling permits even than trump did. the president is doing kind of what a lot of the corporatists do now. they will say the right things. it is like some really good, healthy investment in the inflation reduction act in green energy over here, you about over there you're giving someone permission for oil drilling. >> reporter: president biden is expected to announce $600 million in new climate projects when he is in california today, neil. a little bit 6 spending on the climate and a little bit of raising money on the climate. neil: a little two for one action. thank you, grady trimble following that on capitol hill. julie manchester following all of this, "the hill" national politics reporter. julia, no president has difficulty raising money. jimmy carterrer in his worst throes of popularity was very big on the bank wet set was always able to raise huge sums. sometimes it works to help you
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get reelected. sometimes in the jays of jimmy carter re-election not so much. what you do make of figures early on for a lot of candidates who are not having trouble raising money. ron desantis in the same northern california neck of the woods the president visits in silicon valley, what do you think? >> a split screen with ron desantis and president biden in terms of how much money they're raising. candidates further down the ballot or running for president continue to top previous records in terms of the fund-raising numbers. we can certainly expect that going into 2024. right now it is imperative for president biden to think about this and to be l.a. laser-focused on this, and could be a good chance he goes up against president trump. a former president. he has his own war chest. he has a very bringing
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grassroots fund-raising apparatus. his personal wealth as well. it will be competitive if the two of them go head-to-head. for ron desantis i would say it is very important as well. even though he has very impressive fund-raising numbers, you know still trailing what we're seeing from the former president and president biden. so he is going to want to continue to build his name i.d. and really get as much from donors as possible. neil: it is interesting, seven out of 10 americans are resigned to a trump-biden rematch but they don't really like the idea. that is the way the extraterrestrial forces are sort of aligning but i don't think i ever remember a time in history where that type of an outcome which was what we had last go round, has ever been greeted with this type of reaction. >> you know i think part of it goes directly back to 2020 and how much of a slog that entire
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election was i think for republicans, democrats, and independents. neil: right. >> i think there is so much fatigue. i automatically remember that debate between president trump and president biden where it seemed like the two of them you know, you couldn't get a word in between the two of them. they were talking over each other. it wasn't productive and i think that illustrates really what americans are concerned about. there is also the age factor. look you have president biden who is 80 years old. president trump who is in his late '70s. there are a lot of republicans, democrats, independents, look we want new blood into the party, a new face, younger fresher face, but right now for the hardcore republican and democratic primary voters it seems like they are behind the former president and the president. part of might be because they are seen especially president biden as incumbents here so they're a safe pick but a lot of americans at the same time not happy with this matchup. neil: you know what is interesting, julia? say what you will of
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donald trump's legal problems and all these indictments maybe more to come and other scandals that are being investigated he is holding his own with the president. i know many make a big deal of the fact that ron desantis has a bit of a lead over joe biden again depending on the poll but the former president is hardly and also-ran. he is within the margin of error, when you think of everything that has been going on with him is remarkable? >> it is absolutely remarkable and i would say that maybe a few months ago or closer to the midterms last year you actually heard a lot of biden people and those in the democratic orbit say we would rather run against trump than run against ron desantis. i still think those people in that orbit would prefer trump over desantis right now but at the same time though we've seen president trump play this, you know the issue of the indictments and the legal troubles, you know very much to his advantage and the republican
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primary. my question is though, what do democrats do next? because on the face of it looks like they have reason to celebrate and pop champagne. trump is finally in trouble but at the same time you don't hear president biden really itching to talk about because he knows this is sort of inside baseball for washington and those in the political, media circles. neil: it is. julia, i'm so old i can remember when the carter folks were praying, hoping ronald reagan would be the nominee in 1980. they were far more worried about george h.w. bush. we know how that turned out. whatever you think is the consensus developing as you rightly point out, julia, be careful. always good seeing you. thank you. >> thank you, neil. neil: meantime it turns out that abe lincoln, no bill gates had the same clout at very hour got
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private one with. xi xinping in beijing. benjamin hall in london with how all that sat down. secretary blinken did not know until 45 minutes with the meeting he would be meet with president xi. i have traveled with the president and red carpet is rolled out. the chinese early on said this was in their hands. secretary blinken said the reason he visited it was improving messaging with china, about preventing misunderstanding, the state department went so far they made sure it did not veer into conflict. on the chinese side the theme seemed to point the finger at the u.s. saying they were to blame for recent tensions. president xi said i hope the u.s. will make more positive contributions to our relationship. the chinese foreign minuter is wang, that the u.s. deeded to deeply reflect and not highway
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patrol up the china theory. blinken said the u.s. was not containing china. >> the important things for me to do on this trip was to disabuse our chinese hosts with the notion that we are seeking to economically contain them. we're not. as i said we're not about decoupling. we're about derisking and diversifying. >> reporter: derisking and diversifying that secretary brink ken said was the main theme of his trip. the trip comes against a backdrop of major other concerns and there was no movement on any of these. we've seen chinese planes harassing u.s. planes in the region. chinese warships harassing u.s. warships. the infamous spy balloon that happened a few months ago. the growing threat of taiwan and potential attack on taiwan the chinese fon rin minister said there is know room for chinese compromise and no stepping back. the one thing secretary blinken hoped for to open u.s. to china
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military to military riff channels. china said they were not ready for that. they discussed chinese support for the russians with secretary brink blinken saying the chinese government was not supplying russia but they said they knew chinese companies were clearly were, giving them drones and ships. the question is how close are the companies to the chinese government as well? many interesting movements at the moment. interesting that president xi met with bill gates. elon musk was in china recently. jamie dimon head of jpmorgan as well. china sending a clear message. they're open for u.s. investment and for ridge investment. they will not move at all on other critical issues. neil: they met. they did meet. thank you, benjamin hall following all of that from london. we have rob spalding joining us right now, a former u.s. air force brigadier general, best-selling ceo, war without rules and this is a relationship probably without precedent. general, always good having you.
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i always notice goofy things, sir. you're the international expert. i notice where people are seated versus each other and i noticed with antony blinken he seemed to be at the equivalent of a football field away when, not when they shook hands, guys, at the table itself. make a liar out of me. the other time when he was with bill gates, they were sifting right next to each other. so i'm just wondering what you make of that, or the preference that the china niece leader clearly had for bill gates, not so much antony blinken? furthermore he was kind of acts like "the wizard of oz, where the great oz will see you now, i don't know what came of it, what do you think? >> well, i mean you're absolutely right. secondly china wants to practice -- like they did during their empire and in the case of xi's meeting with blinken, he didn't allow that, until 45 minutes prior to time that they
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meet. so, what did they get in concession? it is important to note that xi xinping said they gave us some things but he wouldn't say what they were. of course blinken was not forthcoming as well. this very of much looks like, i think you're correct, we're genuflecting to klein. i'm concerned what we might have given away to get that meeting to xi. neil: vladmir putin holds talks like this. a lot of that was after the covid nightmare environment in across the globe, he would be at one end of the table and people would be at the other end. xi xinping is carrying that on, in this case with the exception of shaking hands with bill gates, if you see the talks at this long table, that's no way to have negotiations or talk over things. kills me because we were just showing this before but anyway, i wonder what we are to make of that, what do you think?
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>> well, if you remember when reagan was negotiating with gorbachev over the "star wars" plan and gorbachev said hey, you need to give this up if you want a continued relationship with us, reagan closed his binder, got up and walked out. neil: that's right. >> a clear power differential going on in the relationship. and now the power differential is clearly saying you will come to us, china, u.s., you will come to china and you will again you fleck and give us what we ask for or we won't talk to you. remember they were trying to get military to military conversations. i think we need to talk to the chinese. we need to prevent conflict but what we also need to understand it is not just a one way relationship here. they're trying to strip mine our economy and i think we have to be moore more focused how we grow jobs and protect
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productivity and i didn't see that in this meeting. neil: i think with reagan his was in a third party location of course in reykjavik but this of course, if antony blinken walked out, he would have been walking out in his hosts country. where is he going to go? but i understand what you're saying. >> no, i agree with you. this wasn't an appropriate for him to walk out but certainly what i'm trying to say reagan cultivate ad relationship that was appropriate for two world powers. the way the biden administration is treating the relationship we are a second-rate power and they are the world power. that is not the way you get what you want from xi xinping. neil: thank you, general, for your service to this country as well. rob spalding, air force former brigadier general. he is real mccoy.
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getting a lot of cure why is reaction, you know when you hear this guy you will want to keep listening to this guy. doug burgum, presidentialal candidate, north dakota governor is next. ♪. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so... ...glad we did this. [kid plays drums] life is for living. let's partner for all of it.
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♪. neil: welcome back, everybody. show me the money and follow the money because the candidates now that are crisscrossing the country are spending a lot of time at big money dinners and the like. you will see ron desantis raising money in northern california, i believe he is in sacramento. the president of the united states trying to work off his silicon valley friends. biden campaign is not shy saying they hope a billion dollar campaign, money raised to get reelected. that is probably chasm change to my next guest, doug burgum a billionaire, and governor of north dakota and latest to join the stakes. >> glad to be here, neil,. neil: you have at advantage of
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being wealthy individual, very suck questionsful businessman. we harken back to great plains software, worked in north dakota, sold it to microsoft for 4 1/2 billion dollars. you could afford to spend some or a lot of that dough on your campaign. are you tempted? >> neil this campaign is lot more than about money this is about improving the lives of every american and we need a movement of people in support. we are seeing strong support. we've been on the campaign trail for 10 days now. the outpouring of support has been fantastic and we are excited about the messages we're delivering about the economy, about energy, national security. these are topics that matter to every american and we're feeling a great response from people. neil: obviously you need the support from 40,000 plus donors, right? people give you to the money campaign. that is amongst the litmus tests to make the debate or make the first big debate, featuring all the candidates on fox sometime
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in august. do you think you will make that debate? >> absolutely. neil: do you have any concerns that even though you're raising the money you might not have it on the donor side, 40,000 plus? >> well, we announced on wednesday in three days we had donors from all 50 states. so i'm confident. great plains we had over 300,000 customers at great plains. there is a lot of people around our nation that know who we are and what we do and a lot of people have known me for decades. we're one of those anomalies longer you know me maybe the more you like me. so we're really pleased to have all the folks out there supporting us grassroots effort, to make sure people want to see us on the debate stage for sure. neil: still early. we don't have things going. you're not polling great but again many others are not polling that great as well but there is a kerfuffle going on,
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governor, i don't know how you feel about it, where some republicans don't like the idea that the party is locking you guys into supporting whoever the nominee is. some people don't like that. chris christie among them, asa hutchinson, host of others, depending who is nominated no, we won't do that. what do you think? >> well i think of the choices between a republican and joe biden, for me it is easy we're obviously jumped in this race because we intend to be the nominee but when you think about the biden administration being 180 degrees wrong own the economy, 180 degrees wrong on energy policy and 180 degrees wong on national security. we're not talking about course corrections we're talking about a complete reversal. of course i will be supporting a republican but we fully intend that to be the nominee to be me. neil: what about pardoning donald trump if you get elected? >> this is a hypothetical, neil. neil: i have know. >> as a governor we get to pardon people.
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like you combing to my, someone who has not been gone to trial, hasn't been convicted would you pardon them in 2025? as a governor i would never make that commitment. i wouldn't make that commitment right now. 2 wouldn't make any sense. if you want someone to pardon trump, have biden do it. that is legitimate suggestion. we could talk about issues important to all americans. biden loves talking about documents, and so do chinese and russians because it divides americans. neil: colleagues running for high office are saving they would do that? >> well, neil, you're smart enough to understand what that is but from a practical standpoint that just doesn't make any sense. you know, and part of this, again the focus on all of this, i came from tech. let's talk about document management. you have got hillary clinton, you have got pence, you got biden, trump, can't we as a
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country figure out a way to do document management when people leave office? we can focus on economy, energy policy, national security, things that matter to all americans? i think we scan do that. neil: governor you talked about 180 degrees from the economy. he was talking up, coming up after the first weekend of campaigning as announced candidate for re-election. in philadelphia he was crowing about jobs coming back, better than 13 million under his watch. he has been talking even about the stock market that has been bouncing back, notably, that inflation is now running half what it was last year. that is the wind he says is at his back. a lot of people at the white house think that will gain tracks over the next 16, 1month before the election and your economic argument goes away. what do you say? >> i think we're economically headed in the wrong direction. i mean as a governor we see this, they shoved all the biden bucks to build infrastructure. we put out road bids this thing.
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they were not coming back, what does the biden administration saying inflation is half of last year? hay you're supposed to be happy your pay cut is only half of last year. it it it include food and energy. you build 70 miles of road instead of 100, so we're heading potentially towards stagflation because all the federal dollars will keep getting spent and crowd out with high interest rates it is crushing new home building. it is crushing all kinds of private sector development because it doesn't pencil out for the private sector but federal spending keeps on going. neil: yeah. >> whether taxes interest rates, spending, 100%, 80 degrees wrong, you were talking about china, the country the largest importer of energy in the world and we're trying to shut down american energy when we should be selling energy to all of our allies as opposed to buying it
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from our adversaries. if you want economic statecraft with china we have to get our energy game on. that is the way to actually have power. we are a superpower in energy and whoever is the superpower in energy is the one that will rule the world and we're not doing that right now. we're giving up our advantage as a country because we're not willing to use the natural resources that we have. neil: governor, it is always a pleasure. thanks very much for joining us. >> good to be with you, neil. neil: north dakota governor doug burgum. i want to keep you up to date on something that is getting a lot of interest. a submarine being used to take tourists to visit titanic wreckage. one has gone missing. we don't know a whether there are tourists on board. it has not radioed back where it was when it left port earlier this morning. that is all we know. coast guard says there are five people on board. if this is the one we're talking about, a crew member, four
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so-called mission specialists don't know 23 they're thought of as tourists, these submersibles are getting a the love attention because it is a way to look back at the titanic on the seafloor itself. again that one is missing. we don't know where it is. we're trying to keep you updated on this and we'll let you know if we find out anything. stay with us
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because doors were meant to be opened. great job, everybody! ♪. neil: all right. welcome back, everybody, i there is no stock trading today in the united states for juneteenth. the second time this is a federal holiday right now. futures are trading. we're kind of all over the map. much of europe and asia were down. all the global markets particularly our own have been on fire as of late. we'll see how this sorts out. erin gibbs is with us. i always love having erin on, i understand what she is saying and understanding these twists and turns.
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erin always great. this idea it will be jerome powell, two days of testimony this week, will have a lot to hint at what the next move will be, what do you think? >> i think from an investment or market standpoint what we really need to do is take into context where the market sentiment is and right now what we call risk on, which is really like saying the market is sort of a glass half-full person so they will interpret what he says with a more positive outlook f it is more disappointing news they might be willing to brush it off. neil: i think whenever he speaks, erin, he bums markets out. whether fed non-move, right? >> yes. neil: then he started talking, things started taking. they recalibrated the next day, i get that. you can almost play the markets, short stocks as soon as he approaches that microphone. >> you're right. whether congress anywhere, any
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conference, he is very good bumming people out. i think is a great standpoint. neil: i have relatives like this, but i will leave it at that. >> get your buys into today, two days of down market. they will brush it off by thursday. neil: a lot of them, emphasis seems to be will he signal, will we see july hike? seems to have two more hikes this year? >> right. neil: others are building hikes for next year. where are you on this. >> i'm in the camp i think two hikes for this year just because they have had so much trouble getting that core inflation down. >> yeah. >> that is something they're very focused on. neil: you about it is going down. >> it is going down. neil: don't you risk overdoing it like banging the hammer? >> absolutely but the thing is they can turn it on a dime and cut those rates real fast. so hopefully if they're realize they made a mistake -- neil: the expectation we had a little more than a month ago, rates would be cut this year that is out the window, isn't
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it? >> looking at core inflation, the employment market, it is unrealistic to see rate cuts when we're seeing strong labor market, given their mandate, how they like to look at numbers. just looking at the dot plots. we really have to see a sharp turn in opinion for that to happen. neil: dot plot, how the various members of the fomc where they see things going to a man or woman they see them going up, right? >> exactly. probably a couple more hikes. maybe negative news next couple days. neil: we climb that wall of worry, thank you very much, erin gibbs. meanwhile i want to go to alexis mcadams, titanic submersible, whatever you call it, allows people to take a peek at the titanic in the condition it is in on the ocean floor in the atlantic. we don't know much. alexis is trying to get to the bottom of this. what do we know? >> neil, we have been able to confirm there are five people on board the submarine.
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that is one pilot, what they call four mission specsists, what they call customers. this is about the size of a minivan. it disappeared yesterday. it has been off the charts for hours. the people are in small spaces. we can lay out exactly where this happened. this is the submarine there from ocean gate. this launched yesterday for a six hour tour of the titanic wreckage, neil. when they did not return last night they reported it to the coast guard. the coast guard has active search-and-rescue mission for the submarine, 350 miles out from from newfoundland. they are reached out to the canadian armed forces for assistance. this is all hands on deck. this submersible is designed in such a way if it has a problem it automatically floats to the surface. this video of the wreckage of the titanic taken by ocean gate last year. they lead tours to view the
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underground wreckage of the titanic that sank in 1912 after it hit the iceberg. we have not been able to reach ocean gate just yet. others are saying they are exploring all options to bring the crew back safely. they posted information about the trips in the past on the twitter page. that is what r looking at. there is a tweet from june 1st, the company said being in the middle of north atlantic it they had internet connection, thanked the that to starlink owned by elon musk. we reached out to starlink as well. the company advertises seven night veriages to see the titanic wreckage. how much does it cost? $250,000 a tour. that toot titanic shipwreck in 12 miles on the ocean floor. neil: we're keeping track what is happening above the water particularly in the south of
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so you can live your life. that's life well planned. ♪. neil: all right. it is time forenasty weather particularly in the south. we've got a heat wave. we've got tornado damages. we got a lot of folks worried things could accelerate in the next 48 hours. we have ian oliver, thank god, fox weather meteorologist to sort out how bad this could get. good to have you. what is going on here? >> good afternoon. this has been a brutal run over the last several days with the bizarre combination of a jet stream which looks more like heart of springtime weather season back in march or april and brutal, mid-summer like heat plaguing the south. the combination of those two have been generating not just severe weather but high-end severe weather. we had this run, it was four
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days in a row where these storms produced softball sized hail. that in addition to numerous tornado reports. you look at the swath here, over the past three days from the central and southern plains across the south, down into the peninsula of florida, again a devastating run. you look at the june severe weather map. we're into the latter half of june here, well beyond what we would typically see numbers like this, talking about the severe weather reports. second half of last week right on through the weekend, very, very active. we know sadly at least twice over the last several days we've had deadly tornadoes produced by this overall setup. for today, greatest threat zone from the gulf coast down through a portion of west central florida and over to the atlantic side as well we're now tracking one active tornado warning for walton county, florida, we're doing that on fox weather. it is to the east of dest as we look ahead to tomorrow, that threat shifts a little bit farther back to the west.
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louisiana, southeastern parts of louisiana, coastal mississippi. new orleans is included in this. i mention the heat which has been very dangerous in its own right. you look at some of these forecasts, high temperatures today, everywhere you see one of these red locator icons we're expecting a red high temperature. that includes san angelo 110, san antonio, 105, even austin 104. when you throw in the humidity, feels like temperature it really gets dangerous. 110 up to 120. that is 35 million americans that are under some form of heat alert. so the heat related illnesses can set in quickly. it doesn't quist. you look at the forecast for the next 10 days. that is for san antonio. we're in triple digits for the next 10 this is absolutely brutal run. the danger some of that heat is fueling more of that severe weather we talked about. neil: it doesn't end my friend. thank you for that, ian oliver following that.
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also looking how this impacts your travel plans, a bit disruptive i imagine, especially for those out of the south. as you remind me, lee, in this smoke and spoke and peg system we have can affect all regions. what do you see right now? >> i well tell you funny story. i flew back from the to the u.s. from turkish airlines from is stan bull. everything was perfect. great cabin, great food. i landed in o'hare to connect to charlotte, chaos ensued in o'hare. it's holiday weekend. there is severe weather going on. i'm sifting here in pine hurst, north carolina. it is hot. it is spoused to rain in the next few days. it will be worse in the south. you have to expect there will be delays. if there are delays in one part of country whether at lan orlando, somewhere else can lead to delays countrywide. as i say be patient, traveling
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on a holiday weekend you have to expect there will be issues. neil: still holding it will be a busy travel season anyway. expect delays. weather can complicate that. pilot shortages, faa traffic controllers shortages there, there are a lot of complications, right? >> yeah. traveling in america these days is a lot of fun. you never really know what you're going to get. so my favorite tip is generally take the first flight out in the morning. if you get out early, you're generally be less crowded because people don't want to fly at five or 6:00 a.m., annoying, if you get later canceled you have a better chance guesting out that particular day, as somebody flying later in the afternoon or early evening. neil: all right. >> a little planning ahead. get the airline app. try to change your flight if something goes wrong via the app. don't call customer service. don't wait in line at airport. it will save you a lot of time and aggravation, trust me. neil: i know lee, and boom everything is fixed.
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>> neil, all you have to do, my man. neil: thank you, lee. thank you very much. go to taylor riggs with "the big money show." if lee doesn't work, i know taylor works. what do you have coming up? >> neil, i'm doing this segment for you. i hope you're not offended. we have kevin o'leary, a article boomers are addicted to stocks, if they are is that a bad thing? i have will get his answer and relay the answer to you. we'll look at a big a.i. disruptor. we'll look at mckinsey council policy chair. will a.i. comb for our jobs and when? all that at 1:00 but first mower "coast to coast" ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪. >> today i go from just ashley to a.i. ashley on live 95.5. so, let's see how close the a.i. sounds to me. ai ashley calling first taylor swift winner. [phone ringing] >> hello. >> who is this? >> ashley from a.i. live 95.5. neil: a.i. like soil lent green, it's people. a eye is mimicking this women's d.j. voice in oregon almost to the t. it was exactly the sound intonation of her voice. it got me thinking what would i
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do, my colleagues do, whether what we're doing is short-lived. madison alworth looking into that. edward lawrence as well looking into the implications of all of this. madison, what do you make of all of this? >> what i make of this we are short for this on-air life. when you hear an a.i. d.j. exactly mimicking the host, you realize i don't know if i can tell the difference between her and a.i. ashley. that radio station fully employed a.i. ashley. she is on the airwaves three hours every day. would you think viewers want to hear a real person but if you can't tell the difference i don't know it makes much of a difference at all. that listener, won taylor swift tickets, doesn't care that a.i. robot told her about winning, she is just happy that she won. when you look at jobs at risk of a.i., media listed at number two. coding at number one. when it comes to our jobs, i
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think we add more personality. a.i. ashley is flat. i have more tone in my reports i think. i don't know if it will keep me safe in the job for very long, neil. neil: coving is number two vulnerable to a.i.? >> on the lists of jobs at risk, coding, media, paralegals, market research, finance jobs, traders, things where especially paralegals traders, numbers. neil: sure. >> stuff looked at by others of the journalism there is level you need to be to make sure you're fact-checking, but simple things like telling a concert winner they have tickets, yeah i think a.i. clearly can do it. neil: yeah the concert winner doesn't care. imagine if you're a lawyer into coding also into journalism. i mean three strikes you're out. edward, what do you make of this? >> i think we're irreplaceable from my staged point but i don't know if that is going to last. from the white house standpoint they obviously see an issue going forward. the white house has the office
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of science and technology policy that is creating guidelines. they're accepting public input right now until julyth, about the hazards of a.i. at some point later there will be a report about it. we had the ceos earlier in may come hire to google, anthropic, openai, talked about needs for guidelines and guard rates for guardrails for this going forward. it will be interesting toe she how it plays out. one more point if i could. i plugged this into a.i., claude for anthropic a.i., good to use a.i. for d.j. i got pros and cons. own one side, never take a break, consistency. personalize quickly the music needs to go for that mood of that area. on the convoyed talks about that job disruption in fact saying there could job disruption in the entire industry threatening many jobs it says here. lack of trans paren as to who is
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programing the algorithm and algorithm bias. that is what claude came up with. neil: all i know i got an email from viewers said the benefited of a.i. replacing you, neil, doesn't wear stupid jackets like the one you're wearing. guys, thank you very much, i think. this d.j. by the way in other gone madison is referring to. she is keeping her jobe. this is on added element here. that is what think all say in the beginning. we're on top of it. america, it is a cookbook. twilight zone reference. please cult rod serling. more after we this. we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. yay! we got this. we got this! life is for living.
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>> welcome back to "cavuto coast to coast," i'm jeff flock on the beach in new jersey where there is growing concern about the number of whales beached and dying along not only the jersey coast, but all along the eastern seaboard. the concern is around the sea mapping that's going on behind me. the companies that are getting ready to put in wind turbines to generate green electricity. yeah, apparently that sonar is throwing some of the whales' internal navigation off, least that's what some people think, and that's causing the whales to get caught in fishing gear, be struck by ships and the rest. if you take a look at the number of whale deaths, we're now at about 40 so far this year, that's an extraordinarily high number. and if you overlay that with a map of all the wind turbineses now being mapped out there,
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well, there's some particular relationship, i guess you could say, between the two. no beached whales on the beach here at the moment, at least no of the animal variety. neil? back to you. neil: that's kind of wild. all right, thank you very much, my friend. jeff flock following all of that. want to just remind you again markets closed today,s they open tomorrow. but, again, the futures had been down, foreign markets had been down, but this is the week, remember, we get jerome powell testifying before the house and the senate, two different days, so it could be a news burner k. if to that, we go to taylor riggs, "the big money show" coming up right now. taylor: even if the markets are closed, you can guarantee that we are not. we are open. neil, thank you so much. hello, everyone, i'm tyler rigg- >> brian: i'm brian brenberg. jackie: and i'm jackie deangelis. taylor: president biden kicking off a fund
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