tv Varney Company FOX Business June 23, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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>> the fbi was interfering with the corruption investigation and interfering with the election. they were told to slow walk this investigation. they were stalled at every point so that nothing would come out before the election. >> if you remain nervous going into summer and put money into short term treasuries, you should be prepared to roll them when they come due. >> amazon is underappreciated and they're the largest cloud vendor out there. >> remain offense and i have don't fall into this at this point. >> illegal immigration doesn't stop at the boarder and boarders into the community and bring withs it the crime. stuart: frankie vallie. lauren: that's on my play list. i love him. stuart: at your age? lauren: of course. good music is good music.
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stuart: all right, everybody, it's 11:00 eastern time. june 23rd and look at the markets. we're coming back a bit, not much and dower double figures nearly 200 and nasdaq down 150 points and show show me big tech and last time we which he could, they're all down and amazon down, apple, meta, microsoft, alphabet, all of them on the downside. 10-year treasury yield, where is that this morning? it's moving down just a little at 3.74%. lots of selling on wall street this morning. now this. first thing to morning, i'm up earl clement see the coverage of last night's steak dinner for indianapolis ya's prime minister. i thought it was important to bring india close tore us as china turns hostile. then hunter biden popped up, his father, the president, invited him and hunter duly did the rounds meeting and greeting the
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gitterratti. they revealed financial and lit columbia corruption been the biden family with hunter and his dad in the mid and will maybe the president feels he's above it all and doesn't have to say anything about the corruption of the fbi, irs, or double standard of justice. the need ya will always be -- media will always be there for him. roll tape. >> they're vowing to get to the bottom of the sweet heart deal and two-tiered justice system. >> they want to use this on a daily basis to make the point about their perceived grievance of a two-tiered justice system but there's one for the elites and one for everybody else that he's being treated differently because his name is biden. there's no evidence of this being the case. >> two-tiered system of justice. what a bunch of bs. stuart: okay, i don't think it's going to work. the president and media will try to look the other way. there's nothing going on here and offer excuses for
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corruption. he may stay with the basement strategy and may try to walk away from questioners, but it will be hard to keep up the silence in the face of proof of corruption. it's a presidential election and before the election, we get president harris but if they let him run next year, he probably loses. what a dielemma. third hour of varney starts right now. stuart: the fiery tammy bruce is with us on this third day of summer. >> hour later than usual and more like a kiddy, i don't know. stuart: not going to calm down. that's a fact. the media will try to make everybody look the other way and basement strategy coming into play.
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think it's going to work? >> i don't think so because when you do it the first time, you have the benefit of like a sneak attack. nobody knows what's going on. stuart: that's right. >> we can fake them out and americans especially after afghanistan and that debacle is they realize, wait a minute, we were shmucks and we got tricked and you can't do it again. americansdon't like what happened and we will believe you and take -- we ere on the side of optimism, you can't do that again but what's interesting about the clips is that the democrats have for generations arminged that there is a two-tiered justice system. at the local level for people of color, for the poor and they are correct. there's a reason i was on the left. it's because there are some things in the country that need to be fixed and that two-tiered justice system is part of it. what we normally don't see is that it isn't just for people at the local level or just for the
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poor. it really is also -- it really is about for the rich, for the powerful. you see it manifesting in county courthouses, jails, at the state level, and at the federal level. so everybody watching those particular programs will hear their favorites talking about the unfair justice system, which is part of what the black lives matter movement was in part about. was that people are getting a raw deal and now they're saying that doesn't exist. people -- it's a lie. they adjust themselves based on what they want politically, and americans across the board, hispanics, blacks, women, ga gays,ed straight white men saying we all deserve better and we do. >> last one and i'm out on a limb here and i think the democrat wills get together and tree to ease the president out before the election f. they do that you end up with president harris and if they don't do that, biden loses. how's that for a scenario?
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>> i think that there's -- it's interesting because if they manage to ease him out, i think that they know that kamala harris, you saying before the election can't win the election. if they're going to be moving out biden, it's about moving both of them out. i don't think that they have the wear withall to do it and they're diluted enough and look at policies. they have no idea or connection with what's happening in the country and believe they can do the basement strategy again and we've all learned, everybody leonard and the democrat who is were lied to, the republicans who were, you know, just frantic. that can't happen again. no one's prepared for that and we'll see this is where trump and desantis and the republicans working together, and i know they can do it because they both
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love the country and republicans love the country and they'll have to step up and work together. stuart: tammy bruce on a friday morning, can't beat that. thank you very much. >> my pleasure. stuart: look at the market and we're almost 90 minutes into the trading session friday morning. i have a lot of red ink there and coming back a little and dow down more than this before and little more than 200 and nasdaq taking it on the chin and down more than 1%. bring in jonathan hoenig. one of our favorite guys actually. >> you're always one of my favorite guys too, stuart. stuart: you always give us an exotic investment. i'll start there. give me an exotic investment you're making that may be good for our viewers. >> stuarts looking at places that are working and places that are succeeding and even given today's weak environment anded about the emerging markets and working all over the board and one that's in my eye is vietnam. it sounds pretty especially tear ick and out there, but there's t
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free market paradise, it's more free than china so the businesses are going there. over at capitalistpig.com we own vnm and despite the selloff to have emerging markets as one part of your portfolio. stuart: that's good for a guy reich you. you're a fast action trader in and out all the time and look. you are, aren't you? >> stuart, the real money is not mad on fast acting trading but the real money made over the long hauls and even look at ai this year, wasn't like it was one day or even one week that has caused all the ai gains so as an investor, you want to be in for a long period of time and don't buy before maria and sell after kansas city chiefs cue toe and own for -- cavuto and own for a couple of months and probably more than a year if history is any guide. stuart: are you holding onto
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gold? >> i own gold, but i think it's a bit extraordinarily weak. it's a great example. you want to be a long term investor, especially with something like gold and seen commodities across the board take it on the chin and expectations for the chips act below slowed and i own gold but a great example of not wanting to make it all or none and weakening in today's environment. stuart: give it to me. >> don't sell yourself short, stuart. i'll give you two more quick names and one is a safe bet and concerned about interest rates and the fed is almost promised that they're going up, jaaa, this is a fairly exotic bet but it's an etf that owns what are called chat colonoscopy la tech rised loan obstructing cerumenls and sef, this is an etf that
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goes up as banks go down. stuart, keep in mind it was just a couple of months ago we were talking about bank failures across the board and a lot of names are starting to weaken so i own sef for my customers at capitalist pig. stuart: exotica from capitalist pig. jonathan, you're all right. see you again. lauren is back looking at movers and in fact, why don't you look at this whole group of big tech because they're moving. lauren: as a sector, tech is the worst performing sector today down a percent and investors worrying about recession and i can prove it with the data. we got flash pmis on manufacturing and contracted again, services not contracting both slowing down. so there's a consumer worried and jay powell saying we're going to keep raising interest rates and the nasdaq is up 28%
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this year. bank of america said technology saw $2 billion in outflows this week alone and that's the most in ten weeks. so maybe the ai bubble is bursting and cs, i is down 9%. lauren: ai is gloss jim jordan and new and fresh and taken all the names up drastically. c3ai up 230% this year and can't keep going to the moon and all this hyper-around 34% and it's at $34 now no and going to 16 and da vivid son said the tail winds baked into the stock. >> going from georgia bank, no
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wonder it's done. did you see this? i'll show it to you, a shoplifter breaking in with a blow torch. new york city and france's governor threatening companies and cut prices or face financial angsts. all right, we're all over it. a new poll shows hispanic voters favor republicans over democrats on key issues like crime, public safety and the economy. we're going to deal with that right after this. ♪ good luck. td ameritrade, this is anna. hi anna, this position is all over the place, help! hey professor, subscriptions are down but that's only an estimated 15% of their valuation.
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>> well, new data shows where migrants are going after their cross our southern border. william laginese. you know what you're talking about. where are they going? >> stuart, first of all, border app rehe thinkses are still exceeding -- r apprehensions wih a notice to appear in court. in the last three months, 88,000 moved to five cities, new york, 39,000 followed by la, chicago, houston, and miami around 11,000 each. the remaining 296,000 scattered around the country to more than 2,000 different counties. most are transported not by republican governors but nonprofits, contracted by the federal government and paid for by taxpayers. new york city says it's going to spend about $4 billion this year
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on sheltering migrants, many from venezuela who don't have relatives to share housing. >> so basically the biden administration has laid this crisis at the feet of every single city across this country. we literally are going to see every city in the country feel the same effects as those directly on the border. >> some migrants commit crimes and many police departments however have stopped even collecting data on legal status and ice largely stopped deporting all but the most violent convicted felons and if you look at this chart under cram, ice issued 14,000 detainers a month under president biden, 3,000 rebounded slightly to 6,000 detainers on migrants with criminal his histories. >> this administration has not only said we're not giving you any money for enforcement
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activities but any money we're giving you, we'll carve out and specifically tell you don't you dare use it for enforcement. >> the bottom line, stuart, we have about 100,000 migrants being released into the u.s. every month and sources tell me about half do not show up for all their court appearances. back to you. stuart: all right, william, thank you very much. we have a poll that finds hispanics lean towards republicanning on issues like crime and the economy but democrats are still winning among hispanics on abortion, climate and immigration. daniel garza is with us and the president of the libra initiative. daniel, what proportion of hispanics voted republican ten years ago and what proportion of hispanics voted republican today? >> generally latinos were voting 25, maybe 30% for a great candidate in the past. stuart: for republicans, 25%? >> about 25 to 30%. now you're looking at like
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40-45% and sometimes the majority like ron desantis won the majority latino vote in florida and you've seen a spike and put democrats on their heels and need the minority coalition to come together. stuart: hispanics coming to republicans on issues like crime and what else? taxes and the economy maybe. >> the economy, look, stuart i think you know that there's a lot of frustration on the part of americans as well as latinos when it come tots high cost of everything from gasoline to food prices and everything. now it turns out that credit has become very expensive as well because of the high interest rates. folks that are locked in at 2.5 rate in a house, they're going to stay there and don't know what's happening in the market. because of reckless spending of government, it's spiked the price of everything and we're having to pay that high cost and also credit has become expensive. access to capital. capital. stuart: this is what i don't
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understand, hispanics are winning a-- democrats are winning among hispanics on the issue of abortion, climate, and immigration. that surprises me. i thought hispanics were very much pro life. >> so, you know what's been fascinating about this is republicans almost refuse to engage on the issue of abortion. i think they have the better case to make and measure aligns with the latino community, but they're silent almost on the issue when it comes to the community. on the other issue like climate change, look, the democratic party and democrat candidate haves been imposing this agenda on them for the longest time, almost unabated, and there's aggression on fossil fuels for example. latinos impacted the most if you reduce the quantities of domestic oil production and cheap and reliable and fuels our homes at a cheap price and it's also very reliable for latinos so this war, this esg investment that's very deceitful to the
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folks who pensions and retirement funds that's attacking fossil fuels is pernicious and that agenda i think needs to be defended unapologetically within the latino community without remaining silent on the issue. stuart: if next year, biden versus trump, does trump get 45% of the hispanic vote? >> yeah, if he speak tots issues on education and healthcare and the economy and how he's going to reduce the price offer and defend the freedoms of the nation in the constitution, i wouldn't be surprised. stuart: daniel garza for the first time in a long time sitting next to me in new york statement thank you, daniel. all right, hispanics have become the largest democratic group in one state. ashley webster will tell us which state we're talking about. ash. ashley: stu, that would be the state of texas and they've updated the official population estimates and shows that hispanic texasens made up 40.2%
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of the state's population last summer edging out non-hispanic white texans making up 39.8%. now, the latest data also shows most texas children, majority, will soon be hispanic and estimates show that 49.3% of texatexans under the age of 18 e indeed hispanic and the numbers show that hispanics living in texas are disproportionately poor and hispanics more than twice as likely as white texans to be living below the poverty level and less than half as likely to have graduated from college with a bachelor's or master's degree or higher. no doubt about it, demographics in the lone star state changing rampantly. stuart: thank you, ashley. remember with our viewers, ferby, the bug eyed toys from the 90s are making a comeback and even more retro toys are making a comeback this summer. nostalgia is in.
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madison alworth telling us all about the throw back products that i canning us to the past. we'll be back. ♪ more shopping? you should watch your spending honey. i'm saving with liberty mutual, mom. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. check it out, you could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, i'll look into that. let me put a reminder on my phone. save $700 dollars. pick up dad from airport? ohhhhhh. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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stuart: time for this day in history. american built, this is amazing. on this day, june 23rd, 1931, aviators wily post and harold gatly took off from new york aronthe first flight around the world in a single engine plane and returned eight days later. they did it and now you know. don't forget to watch american built mondays, 9:00 p.m. eastern only on fox business prime. you got to get back to the markets this morning. red on the left hand side of the screen and ashley is with us telling us what the french are up to. go ahead. ashley: where do i begin. no, start with the roaders report telling consumers goods companies like kelloggs, coca-cola and nestle to cut prizes because of the sanctions they could face. 75 companies face fines if they fail to follow through and all
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being done because they're being strong armed because prices have gone up by as much as 10% in recent months as we know with inflation now the french are saying to these companies, cut your prices now. also this the world's first olympic e sports week kicks off in singapore today. stu, you're going to be glued to your tv and more than 100 athletes from around the world are expected to compete in virtual sports events like mobile archery, tic tac toe and more live in person version of the creation of international committee. cocoa prices on the rise meaning chocolate price hikes are likely to follow. this is a very important story. that's due to the supply not keeping up with command. experts say from harvesting and cocoa futures risen about 21% just this year. that's going to hurt my bottom
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line. stu. stuart: that's an investment i missed. ashley, thank you. ashley: yes. stuart: some companies are capitalizing on nostalgia. they're bringing back old products that adults love when had they were children. madison alworth at malibu barbie cafe in new york city. matt son, is that place all -- madison, is that place all about nostalgia? reporter: it's all about nostalgia and all about barbie, we're all barbies living in a barbie world and i'm in my barbie box with the barbie makeover because this is what this popup and this summer is all about. all these brands are looking back to make more. you see when you come to a place like this, it is full of people all in pink, all dressed up. it takes $40 to just get you in the door. that's just for entrance; right? talking about money, you're all paying $40 and that doesn't include the drink that barbie has and eilean will make for me here. that's on top of this. i'm going to cheers crystal and
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amy with our sparkly pink drink and they bought shirts just for this event. thank you, guys and that's what we're talking about with money, this movie and barbie coming out in july. that had $100 million budget. that's what we're hearing and estimating $55 million for opening weekend. barbie is not the only throwback film and indiana jones coming out as well as mission impossible. all of the movies, what's old is new and millennials have money now and we're ready to spend on things like this and in spaces like this. it's not just movies but also toys and seeing mattel bring back a lot of race cars and we're seeing brands like mcdonalds bring back the grimace shake and all big money. barbie is old, she's about 60 years old and had a real peak in 2018 and in 2010 sold back because of technology and now as you can tell, there's barbie fever here and mattel is hoping for a barbie bump this summer. i see a lot of moms here that
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are like my age or a little older growing up with barbie and bringing their girls to play with barbie here as well. all in pink and all this stuff means big bucks for retailers as well. gaffe and blooming dales partnering with barbie and mattel and some of the items are sold out and more than a month away from the movie. i'm having the time of my life, finally living my malibu barbie dream all the way in new york, stu. back to you. stn, i think you're a good sport and i'll leave it at that. look who's here now to join us on this friday morning. kennedy is here. >> look at my retro spirit, meredith. stuart: it's mtv. >> sure is. stuart: are you nostalgic and egotore get into this? >> i'm a living throwback. i love the 90s and can't get enough of it. stuart: living through-back, i like that. throwback. i like that. what do you have >> i got you
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this gift basket with hot wheels flames and a new show where they'll make a life size hot wheel car. you've got lovely boo berry cross-appeal and that's very -- cereal and i don't know if it's gluten free. nope, no good for me. then the monster smash. the barbie gal pal. here we are. stuart: i want you to stay there because there's something coming up for you. >> i'm excited. stuart: you should be. hasbro getting into 9 90s throwback trend. ashley, what are they doing? ashley: bringing back fergy, the messy four and beady eyes and voicebox loaded with gibberish
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and had no off switch if you remember and come on randomly and creepily at any point, had no off switch. it was by the way banned by the nsa and pentagon over fear it is could record and repeat words and conversations. that turned o out to be false. anyway, hasbro releasing a new generation of furbys 25 years after original was hatched and now version is in a variety of cocolors and whimsical features and modes and lights and dance moves. sign me up. it's available on amazon for $69.99 and available in other retailers by july 15th. i can't wait. stu, ken difficult stuart: i know you can't wait. i just know that . ashley, thanks very much. kennedy still with me here in new york city. i'm nostalgic and like to bring back the beatles for my grandchildren. it works, they know the words to a lot of beatles songs. >> wonderful. stuart: do you miss furby?
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>> wasn't i wasn't in the furby zone. i was born in the 70s and furby lovers born in the 80s and if adults have them, that's a nostalgia that's a little creepy and i remember people complaining that for urby didn't have an off switch and it was like possessed and wake up in the middle of the night and blood pressure and you'll scream and set your own house on fire. that was the only way to deal with furby. stuart: i'm nostalgic for the days before computers, faxes, cell phones. anything else? gps. all that. >> you don't like gps? >> well, i miss the days when you didn't have it. >> i don't. stuart: didn't know what you were missing. >> ever have a thomas guide and i remember driving in the california freeways in 1990s trying to find in my volkswagen bus how to get to redondo beach and take the p 10 and catch the
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10 to the 5 touchdown pass the 605. stuart: you sound like sponge bob sports fan. >> square pants. stuart: yeah, whatever. >> who lives in a pineapple under the sea kennedalia. stuart: kennedy, we're through. >> are you break up with me? how sad. stuart: you'll probably be back. listen to this one, i don't get this, people making -- more people making $200,000 a year are moving to florida than any other state. wait till you hear how much those coming to florida from new york or california are going to save, quite a lot of money. reason desantis visited san francisco this week and said the city has collapsed and even the mayor does not disagree with him. watch this. >> is what he's saying untrue though? >> well, i don't know because i don't know what his experience was. stuart: we'll follow that one for you and we will be back. ♪
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stuart: nasdaq down over 1%. a headline for you on "the wall street journal" and reads as follows, the root causes of san francisco's disorder. alicia finally wrote that in the journal and joins me now. i view the word collapse to describe san francisco business and cultural collapse and am i being too strong you think? >> i think you're being too weak. if you visit san francisco, you visit them and it's possible to get around now a days and anecdote last week of shelby steel and his sons and he was
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hosted by bloomburg news and people on the audience were asked, well, how many you have had been burglarized in about 40% of people raised their hands. this is a city that's not just like in collapse and it's essentially, you know, a train wreck. stuart: san francisco's dire straights, we've known about this for some time. granted it's getting much, much worse in the last couple of years but they've always been in this straights but their politics never change. are they always going to be uber liberal? >> i think it is a serious problem. i'd call it a brain drain and you have a lot of wealthy and same people moving out and the
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city has lost about 7.5% of its population in the last -- since pandemic began and that's more than any other city and a lot of these people who are leaving, it's never been served but these people are independents and moderates and also high earners and the kind of people voting to moderate the city's politics and elections and meantime you have people coming in as london breed acknowledge they're attracted to the city's open air drug markets. politics and move in and take control of san francisco. is that wildly not going to happen? >> that would be interesting and i would be acknowledging failure of san francisco's policies and in fact the state policies and it's not just san francisco and part of the problem is that they
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de-criminalize drug use and shoplifting up to $950 worth of things and the city's struggling because in part because of that initiative so it's not just the city's problems but it's the state problems and i have no confidence that the progressives in sacramento can do any better fixing the san francisco problems than the progressives in san francisco. stuart: i call it had a collapse and maybe you're right. maybe i'm too weak on that . okay. alicia finally, wall street journal. thanks for joining us and we'll see you again. the west field mall being closed down and it's a big mall being closed down. what's she going to do with the space, ashley? ashley: it's huge, talking about 1.5 million square foot retail and office center in downtown san francisco that mayor breed
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said could be among other things turned into a soccer stadium. it's interesting; right? crime, homelessness and surging drug crisis and we know that's the problem and led to mass departures of reta retailers ann order strum pulled out and -- nordstrom pulled out and they're going to abandon them all due to "challenging operating conditions". florida ron desantis made florida part of the presidential bid shooting the campaign add falling apart and absolute mess and leftist policies are responsible. well, mayor breed responded. watch this. >> places like san francisco have been the norm so we need to turn that around. >> i don't know what his experience was. you know, people are taking what they're seeing in videos and seeing in terms of a snapshot and elevating them. but the people who actually live
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in the tenderloin have businesses in the tenderloin, who are experienced at that, those are the people we should be listening to. ashley: get this, breed claims recent policies have resulted in a spike in arrests but, you know, critics claim really? the city is battling a fentanyl crisis and office vacancy rates hit 31% and are rising. stu. stuart: collapse by any other name. thanks, ashley. you've got to see this. one shoplifter found a creative way to get past those security cases at walgreens in new york city. he used a blow torch to health off theblastic and shoved boxes of items in his bag and made off with nearly 500 worth of skincare products and no arrests have bye bye bye made at this time and he used a blow torch. got it. show me the dow 30, please. we'll see a lot of red. plenty of selling today. that's true.
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we have six winners and 24 lo losers at 33,667. friday feedback is next. ♪ and i remember kind of thinking like, "oh my gosh, i think we could be sisters." because i think we looked... yes. right. yeah. and i don't think at that time- i think you're the one to tell me that we had the same birthday. yes. it's really unbelievable when you think about it, because it's been, like, really over 20 years that you were my mother and father's banker, you became my banker and now fran is in her third year of college and you're her banker. it's so unbelievable because i'm just 20 years old. [laughing]
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♪ stuart: nostalgia, i remember it well and that's the beach. orange beach in alabama. doesn't that look great. 86 degrees. i just love it. let's get on with it. friday feedback time. ashley is with us, lauren is with us. let's go. this comes from al. since you started your broadcast in korea, what's the best and worst advice you ever got. let's give that to lauren. lauren: oh, me? don't ever change. don't become a different person when the light goes on. worst advice? i don't know. stuart: okay, ashley. best advice? ashley: yes, worst advice with someone with an accent like you, whatever, this sticks in my mind, someone said with an accident kent like that, you'll never get a job in this country
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in television news and i've worked in montana, california, arizona, wisconsin, tennessee, and i've had a great time in every community. it has been an incredible experience so ignore people who want to be negative. lauren: can i add one? i was told to die my hair blond. stuart: oh. okay. lauren: never did it. stuart: don't do that. lauren: too much upkeep. stuart: this is from gene, i like this, when a reporter jeff flock and madison alworth do a live report in the morning and afternoon and presumably must remain in location the whether or not he will time, what do they do for several hours in between. that's for you, ash. what do you do? ashley: spend a lot of time trying to make the next report more interesting than the previous one and changing it up. there's a lot of challenges. you can be in the middle of an orange grove and nowhere to go to the bathroom so these are logistical things to think about. that's why dyna reports are the best. out of elements and have comfortable seat, food, coffee and a bathroom. we love dyna reports.
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stuart: i never move out of the studio. how about you, lauren? lauren: ashley gave a good political answer. work on next report or story for the next day. whistled see like some -- when i see some of our other florida reporters in shorts on the beach, they probably go surfing in between. don't have to worry about their hair or makeup. ashley: if only. if only. lauren: i said not you, ashley. stuart: this is coming to us from john. with all of your and your associates combined years of broadcast experience, do you ever get nervous or stage jitters before you go on the air? i'll start, no, i don't get nervous on television but if it's a live audience, i'm really nervous right before i start the speech. how about you, lauren? lauren: i can't predict it. sometimes i get nervous and comes on me fast and i'm shocked by it. stuart: ashley? ashley: yeah, that's good u lauren. cameras come on and you're on and get amazing energy and that's for sure.
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stuart: i get nervous before donald trump and that's the way it is. what's the riskiest adventure can you share and remains on bucket list? i'm out of the risk taking business these days. so i'm not going to do anything in the future that's truly risky. the riskiest thing i did was hitchhike around the world for four years. that's what i did and it was a big risk. cage out all right. lauren: sky diving in south africa and love it had so much and tried to do it in new york and weather grounded and only went once and i'd do it again. stuart: ash. ashley: got to go in f16 fighter jet, the thunder birds, which was amazing but i did throw up. just want to throw that in there. lauren: ho how was your neck? ashley: sore. i lost about five pounds in sweat but it was an amazing experience.
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stuart: bet you wouldn't do it again. i understand these things. got to go. time for the friday trivia question and here it is. how many people are estimated to have lived on earth? 97 billion, 107 billion, 117, 127 billion? in the whole history of our planet, how many people have lived on this earth? the answer after this.obbl ♪ turkey! rude. who are you? i'm an investor in a fund that helps advance innovative sports tech like this smart fitness mirror. i'm also mr. leg day...1989! anyone can become an agent of innovation with invesco qqq, a fund that gives you access to nasdaq-100 innovations. i go through a lot of pants. before investing carefully read and consider fund investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com. your wyndham is waiting. ♪ when bucket lists need checking... points need redeeming...
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♪ stuart: big congratulations to our producer kate and her husband john, they were married last weekend in a beautiful ceremony in chicago. beautiful pictures. we wish them the very best to the happy couple. we miss them. we did ask how many people are estimated to have lived on earth. the choices are on your screens right now. it goes from 97 billion to 127 billion. lauren. lauren: i'll take the high one, 127 billion. stuart: is ashley with us for this? yes, ashley, what you got? not there, okay. [laughter] lauren: no answer. stuart: it's the 97 billion, that is my estimate because it'- lauren: oh, there the he is. stuart: ashley, what have you got? ashley: 117, 117 billion. stuart: you knew that because it just popped up on our prompters. no -- [laughter] that's it for me, "coast to to coast" starts now. ♪
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