tv Varney Company FOX Business July 17, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. >> even if you are 100% ahead of everybody, get out there, de debate, kick everybody's but, donald trump we want to see
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that. i want to get my popcorn out, it's not a show. they are destroying hollywood by trying to commoditize town. he barely get by. >> you're arguing a lot of the bank executives saying were cautious, people are using their credit cards more. households are feeling stressed. >> there is a good chance of a financial crisis if we continue. we get caught academies in a lot of trouble. we should be cutting the tax rates, not raising them. ♪ stuart: i did hear the words manic monday? doesn't seem terribly manic. the market is reasonably quiet. not that much going on. if you look at sixth avenue right outside our window, it's very quiet. on the market, dow is up 50,
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nasdaq's up 66, s&p up 8. modest gains pretty much across the board. check the big board, the big tech that's just one winner and nasdaq doing well and there's one tech winner, apple, 192 there and microsoft coming back down a bit. it's at 345, 344 now. al wow. get is down, amazon down, meta is down nearly $3. check the 10-year treasury yield. that's coming down a little tiny fraction. it's down to 3.38%. now this. very brief period the government handed out roughly $5 trillion worth of covid relief. why are we surprised when massive amounts of taxpayer money go missing. we should know by now that government brock seizure disorderses are not the -- bureaucracies are not the best way of districting cash. as part of covid relief, congress set up pandemic
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response accountability committee and studied how a small portion of the money was spent. what a mess. ten agencies spent 2.6 billion in six communities on 89 programs. they didn't have the data to track where it all went, incomplete records. why are we surprised. to qualify for covid unemployment money, all claimants had to do was submit a name, date of birth, address and social security number. open season for fraud. the small business administration estimates that 17% of the $1.2 trillion distributed went to fraud. that's $200 billion. the whole pandemic bailout was riddled with mistakes and political favoritism. for example, 122 billion went to the schools, some of it unspent. even now. gigantic bailouts for democrat-run states huge. yet it continues and the democrats keep on spending by
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the trillions and threatening more inflation. why do we think this time spending in the future will be any different. why do we it think that? third hour of varney starts right now. charlie hurt is joining me now. democrats are married to the idea of just spend, spend, spend no matter what you spend. i think it's going to be a disaster, what say you? i'm so glad you're highlights this. >> it was important to step back and remember this and all with the best of intenses and the claims of the best intentions and when the federal government spends trillions of dollars that we do not have, you can't be surprised when it's riddled with corruption, of course we're also suffering under the massive debt and the inflation, and the question i ask all viewers, how
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much of this money did you see because you're paying for every penny of it and you will be and your children will be paying for it for decades to come. please remember that the next time you vote for a politician who does this kind of thing. stuart: never changes, does it? government bureaucracies are maybe one of the worst vehicles in the world to distribute trillions of dollars. >> as the great maggie that . er said, everyone loves socialism till you run out of other people's money. stuart: that's right. that was 40, 45 years ago but she's right to this day and that's a fact. >> it's still true. stuart: yes, it is still true. over there and over here and florida's governor desantis, he's calling out trump for failing to follow through on campaign promises, how about that. roll tape, please. >> he promised to drain the swamp. it got worse. he did not drain the swamp. he promised to have mexico pay for a border wall. they did like 50 miles of wall. there's massive expansive still
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there. he said he was going to eliminate the national debt. they added almost $8 trillion to the debt in four years and i have no interest in attacking donald trump or any of these other candidates personally and i think we have to rise above that and focus on the issue. stuart: desantis is getting a bit more combative. all right, charlie, i read your op ed and comparison so president harris. why? >> well, just to be clear, i don't know that i would compare desantis specifically to harris, but i do think that the way the campaigns have been those two campaigns have been portrayed in the media are very similar and back in 2019, kamala harris was going to be the next best thing and voters are going to love her and fast forward to the end of that year by 2020, before the first primary was had, she had crapped out of the race. she couldn't keep going. she ran out of money, she never
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appealed to voters and we have been through the past year with governor desantis, the media has especially the conservative media portraying him as next greatest thing. he was the one to beat. they've built up his campaign and said that voter votes will e him because he's trump policies without tram and what we've seen over the last couple months is hiss popularity dropped since getting into the race. i don't put too much emphasis on polls these days because it's still early and i also don't, you know, put too much emphasis on maneuvers in campaigns but he has had to eliminate staffers and he's -- his own staff has acknowledged the rollout has not gone exactly as they'd anticipated and the question has to be, what is ron desantis a figment of the media's imagination. people who are desperate for an analternative and regular voters
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she's not going to take on trump in the primary. stuart: two comments in the primary and for one, biden not going to be the can date for democrats in 2024 and number two, this is trump's republican nomination to lose. you say? on bindi would have said six months ago that it was about 80% chance of being the nominee and we've seen such a preptous decline in the mental abilities that now i'd put it at 50 or lower and maybe keep going and trump there's no signs at this point that ron desantis is connecting with voters out of
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florida and not connecting with voters outside of florida. >> he thinks the democrat nominee is susan rice. i thought that was a joke, what say you? >> that's surprising. i hadn't thought about that and i think that would be better than kamala harris for them. stuart: we have fire on the show this morning. there's not much fire in the market but there's a lot of fire in politics these days. charlie, thank you very much for joining us. as always, great stuff. appreciate it. >> great to see you. stuart: the markets are not exactly flat, a little un-inspired and that's my opinion and dew up 50 and disease knack up 70 and s&p up 8. i'll take it. jason chaffetz with me now. >> it's a done deal pretty much but the fed has likely one more
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bullet in the chamber and i wouldn't break out the champagne bottles. it's sort of like running a marathon and that last mile is really hard and the same holds true with respect to teaming inflation and good news is rolling recession has become rolling recoveries and cpi moving in the right direction and the fed remembers the 70s and the fits starts with respect to improve it and if i answered your question and one more rate hike and remain there in the balance of this year and first half of last year. stuart: that's week i thought i figured out that the interest rate cycle had come to an end that inflation is trending down and i jump back into the market and i bought big tech and bought uber. did i do the right thing? >> you might be a contrary
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indianapolis day torr. with all due respect, i don't think so. i don't think the market is falling off thefully and the path of least resistance likely to the upside albeit modesty and we're at 140% of historic average of s&p right now and that's elevated and we know the magnificent 7 or 8, euphoric really have driven that and really it's other parts of the market but what i would do with what you bought is consider call options and consider selling calls versus the s&p and some of those one off names. those option premiums are really, really rich right now and you can sell those calls, sell someone on the right to buy your stocks at a predetermined price and predetermined point in time and bring in that option premium. you could cushion the blow to the downside should the market trade lower. stuart: getting awfully sophisticated on me there jason
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katz. thanks very much indeed, jason. >> yes, sir, thank you. stuart: some individual stocks that are moving starting with netflix and we have a solid gain today after the dutch bank raised price tag to $475 a share, it's $452 right now and it's up another 2.5%. netflix reports after the bell wednesday. nvidia still on a hot streak. one analyst at citi says the stock could head towards $600 a share, $454 right now and up an astonishing 212%. so far this calendar year. ford motor company down after announcing their cutting price of electric f150 lightning truck by $10,000 and ford back to $14 a share much the economy get ago boost from taylor swift, really? her era's tour is such a big deal it was named in the fed report. trump thinks bidenomics is a bunch of bologna. roll tape. >> china is eating our lunch, take a look at deficits we have.
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china is eating our lunch. stuart: we'll see what steve forbes has to say about that. steve will join us after this. ♪ what if we live to 100. i don't want to outlive our money. i keep eating all these chia seeds. i could live to be 100. we work with empower, even if we do live to 100 we don't have to worry. eh, not worried. take control of your financial future to empower what's next. hi, i'm jason and i've lost 202 pounds on golo. so when i first started golo, i was expecting to lose around 40 pounds and then i just kept losing weight, and moving and moving and moving in a better direction.
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monday morning. the statue of liberty and 82 degrees but doesn't look very sunny. president biden calling himself the most pro union president in history and union strikes are piling up under his watch. edward lawrence of the white house, what's the president doing about this wave of strikes, if any,. >> they've been butting in on some and letting them play out and more work stoppages in the first term obstructing cerumen pace for that and the first term of the previous two presidents and we know the actors have joined the writers at the moment in the latest strike in hollywood and now the numbers don't lie in just 30 months or two and a half years president biden has seen 54 work stoppages and that matches four years of former president obama and just about matches the first four years for former president trump and the president says -- this president says he's the greatest union president in modern
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history. >> i make no apologies for being labeled the most pro union president in american history. i'm proud of it. i'm proud of it. you know where i stand. i make no apologies and i mean this sincerely and this the most pro union president in history. >> literally united airlines agreed to a preliminary deal that would give pilot as 40% pay raise and this follows the string of large pay increases following union strikes or threatened strikes, rail unions threatened to strike and receive contract withs a 24% pay increase in california. workers in cedar sinai medical center have about an 18% salary increase and workers at university of california school system or college system had arrases of 20-40% after a strike and former president trump told our maria bartiromo that unions see dollar signs. >> the top people in the united
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auto workers are unfortunately largely dishonest people and they're wined and dined by the democrats and you mo who supports me are the people that work, the working people because they know i'm right. >> as you know when you talk about increase in pay that's passed onto goods and services and end up paying for that wage inflation and it's sticky and could be prolonged longer if the big increases in salary keep coming. stuart: got t thanks, edward. steve forbes joining me this morning. biden is indeed the union president and pro union president. let's get that straight. that's for sure. unions are doing exactly what the president wants. is it going to damage the country. >> purr mill is the 1930s and they took off in the late country and massive work stoppages and the inflation,
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lockdowns and people falling behind and it's no real surprise you'll see with more turmoil and big one that's coming up is ups and if they go on strike, there's going to be national implications and edward said they prevented a railroad strike last year with a big settlement and we'll get more of this. the cure for it as we've discovered in 19 70s is progrowth policies and stop inflation and wages start rising again naturally and the labor strike goes down and by the way, last year labor union participation is the lowest level since they've started recording those numbers. just a tad above 10% and the private sector is above 6%. inflation at the moment is declining. stuart: down to about 3% at consumer level and has it picked up again because of strong wage demands and strong wage increases and not really. >> no, but the key thing is getting them right and getting them humming again and ronald reagan and tax cuts and
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deregulation and low and behold, good things happen. it's a long ways away and get that past 2024 and get that back from being a little younger and ronald reagan did it in the 1980s and this worked. may take a year or two and 1980 big deal and 1924 hugely important election. going the reagan way or social way. stuart: there are things with the 1970s and you and i remember them very, very well. extreme inflation and kind of out of his depth and the economy that wasn't performs and income with ronald reagan and i guess you're hoping for something similar today in 2024 and who's the conservative and more with the republicans. >> we'll get a good feel for it next month when there's the first debate and debate following and so far the candidate haves put forth a reagan escambia kind of flat form like in 1980 and forward looking and great to criticize what's been done and what will
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you do in the future and they've been concerned about foreign policy in the early 1980s and u.s. weakness and getting crisis around the world and who's got a foreign policy as well the way reagan did in 1980. stuart: donald trump really slammed bidenomics in his interview with maria. watch this interview. >> you know what bidenomics is, huge inflation, huge problems, lack of respect all over the world and china is eating our lunch and take a look at deficits we have. china is eating our lunch. stuart: bidenomics is him is a disaster. is it that bad? >> it's pretty bad. when trump left office and biden took office, guess what, inflation was low. the economy was growing. the pandemic was receding and guess where we are today.
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weakness and drift and that kind of drift is what has people worried and that's why robert kennedy out of nowhere is rising up. because it's a protest to the establishment. stuart: if we don't reverse course in 2024 election and bring a free market and open market. take over much of europe and china take over in the south cry that sea. it's awful. it's etched in sand and what more comes and watch it is away. stuart: etched in sand, i'm going to steal that line too. steve forbes, thank you very much indeed. >> thank you. stuart: next case, artificial
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intelligence makes its way into the dating scene. match makers are enlisting ai tools to help them with pick up lines and vet potential dates. one inspire hope flenser created chatgpt clone of herself that talks to perspective dates and charges $1 per minute. karen made $72,000 in the first week she launched. one dating site created virtual dating coach named laura. she will suggest date ideas and help people navigate online dating. they'll move ai and will generate pick up lines and witty banter. now you know. wipe out at tour de france, riders falling down like dominoes and we'll explain. memedia mogul has an idea to end
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stuart: time now for this day in history, american built. this day july 17, 1955, disney land in california opened to the public for the first time. 28,000 people attended day one. and 90 million fans watched live coverage on tv. now you know. don't forget to watch american built tonight starting at 8:00 p.m. eastern only on fox business. here's the fox business prime lineup for the week. american built monday, historic battles for america tuesday, followed by how perk works wednesday, cops thursday and friday. all right, exactly two hours of
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market action this monday morning. here's what we have, a modest gain across the board and dow's up 60 and i like the look of nasdaq and up 84 points as we speak and that's 0.60% and s and, up about a quarter of 1% and tesla with another nice gain there and up $5 to 286 is the level and first cyber truck invaivailed in austin, texas, or the weekend and that stock is up 133% so far this calendar year and they report wednesday. eli lily applied for the full fda approval of alzheimer treatment by the end of the year and no joy for them on wall street and down $1.80. mission impossible dead reckoning opening in theater this is weekend. take a look, roll it. >> ethan, this mission of yours is going to cost you dearly.
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stuart: there you go. tom cruise's latest mission impossible installment took in about 56 million between friday and sunday and lower than some projections and number one at box office and sound of freedom was bumped down to no. 2. still on hollywood. production at standstill, writers and actors still on strike, first time it's happened in marathon 60 years. what's the latest on the contract talks, bill? reporter: stuart, good morning. former ceo of paramount issuing a dire warning for hollywood believe if this strike goes into the fall, this industry could face a total collapse and no new programs next year and prescriptions would get cut and revenue would totally dry up and that's last friday and actors with sag-aftra joining the
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strike and joining writers from writers guild of america and the writers asking for a guaranteed number of writers per room and increased pay and regulation of use of artificial intelligence in the writing process and actors with sag-aftra want increased minimum pay rates, more streaming residuals and guarantees from studio and production companies on how exactly artificial intelligence is going to be used. these strikes are expected to cost the industry billions in losses but strikers say it's necessary. ting not viable to have a living at all especially in a city like los angeles. >> at a certain point, just say who's going to determine what our value is. well, look at these thousands of people. we're determining what our value is. reporter: and these hollywood strikes are having impact on adjacent businesses like the
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wooden nickel providing lighting and other equipment to production for decades now and the strikes have essentially wiped out half of his traffic. >> all the camera people, all the grips and electrics and they're all suffering. every day i'm get ago call or resume sent to me, hey, it's slow. got any work there? sadly i have to say to them, we're not hiring at this time. reporter: again, this is the first time in more than 60 years that hollywood's writers and actors are on strike together at the exact same time. as for the studio companies, the union calling the demands unrealistic and back to you. stuart: thank you, bill. former hollywood chief has ideas on how to end the strikes in hollywood. roll it. >> this will have devastating effects if it's not settled soon. and the problem with settlement
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in this case is there's authorities and both the executives and both paid actors take ago 25% pay cut and difference between those that don't. tomi lahren narrowing the difference and the executive paid actors and taking a 25% pay cut and i don't think that's going to happen and however every time there's an award show, they preach about equality and preach about the underprivileged and everybody paying their fair share. will they pay their fair share? i don't think .s this is a really complicated situation, stuart, as we know. there's a lot of people here who are not making a lot of money in this industry. you feel for those people because they probably do deserve a little more. it's also challenging when you bring in everything else.
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these hollywood actors that are making millions and millions of dollar as we just discussed and i also can't help but think about people that work in, i don't know, energy industries, oil, coal, gas, when their jobs are ripped out from underneath them and told, why don't you learn how to code or something. find something else to do. stuart: this is a slightly different situation between the writers and actors are faced with ai, artificial intelligence which really could take away their future income. they've got a point on that. >> they do but it's easy to talk about this because it's hollywood and glitz and glamour and everyone is worried about their jobs getting taken over but what about the average blue collar worker and worried about the extreme and environmental lobby and told to find somethings else. i think it would be great if some of the highly pills liberals that are gone and finally step up in their own game and give a little and that's not going to happen and trying to live in california by the way and not an easy place to live. there you go, gavin newsom.
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step in maybe. stuart: the federal reserve paying attention to and $4.6 billion with a lot of money and maybe the white house is considering taylor for the campaign. >> she would be better qualified than a lot of people currently working in the white house and that would be a great thing and not only are people going to the concerts but getting hotel rooms, buying plane tickets, spending money in these communities when they go and see the concerts. this is a big generator, and we should maybe take a page out of taylor swifts book here and she's got something people want to buy and it's doing great things for the economy and everybody wins in this situation. stuart: is she has big now as the beetles were in the early 1960s? you don't remember that but i do. >> i wasn't around then admittedly, stuart, i will say in her ability to transform
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herself in this industry is remarkable whether you like her politics or not, she does a great job and generating money for the economy and post-covid. stuart: what are women politics. >> she's on the left side of politics but all of that aside, she's generating money for the economy and doing it in a way that a lot of people are excited to go see and again, if there's a spot open, i think in the white house she could maybe solve a lot of problems there and she'd do a lot better than some of the other picks if i'm honest with you. stuart: all right, tomi, thank you very much indeed. see you soon. real shift in the subject matter here and 10,000 people are dying from overdoses every month in this country. now there's a new push to punish china flooding our street withs fentanyl and we've got that story for you. organized groups from south america to ransack homes in america. they're coming here on tourist visas.
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stuart: the centers for disease control says 10,000 people die from drug overdoses every month in this country and eight of every ten cases are caused by fentanyl. majority leader in the senate chuck schumer wants to sanction china over this and he's pushing for amendment to the defense bill. it would declare fentanyl trafficking as a national emergency. now this, former governor of new york david patterson is speaking out about crime in new york city.
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watch this. >> what mayor adams tried to say from time to time is media is hyping up a lot of profile indications and scares the public and it is a rampant fear of crime by most residents of the city and of course there's a lot of people that moved out of the city. stuart: retired police lieutenant joins me now. lieutenant, do you have a fix for this because we've been hearing about people moving out of the city because of crime forever. you've got a fix? >> i wish i did when residents there see the difference between pre-pandemic and post-pandemic the way the city looks and the way the physical and social decay that's gone on there. you've always got the homeless out in the streets and the number of businesses that are still empty and things like that and i was walking down broadway
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the other day and same day i see people storming out of the store with bags full of stolen items being chased by security and another guy sitting on the street shooting up heroin and walking to the gym in broad daylight and they're in the city seeing these type of things every day and documented photo from a guy holding a knife there in time square and everybody is going to be very fearful even though violent crime is down. stuart: crime tourism. am i correct in saying that people are coming from overseas, they get a tourist visa overseas and fly into america and rob homes and then take the loot back with them. i'm told this is all by asian americans 6789 is this all accurate. >> it is and it's not just asian americans and they're targeting
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nice neighborhoods and the price of your homes and these guys are smart just as you mentioned and coming in with the visas and getting fake ids once they're here and law enforcement may have contact and it's very difficult to know who the guys actually are. they are using nicer rental cars and blend into the communities and uses does guyses and utility workers to get up to the houses and knock on the door and found out if anybody is home. just as you mentioned, once you get inside, they're in and out very quickly and getting jewelry, cash, and things like that and they're even boxing it up and sending it back home. stuart: are they targeting any particular state? >> they've been everywhere from the east coast, the recent reports in delaware and they've struck in indiana before. all the way out to southern california. so that's the big thing and it's typically originally was coastal and now they've worked their ways through middle america as well. stuart: amazing. lieutenant, a new fox nation
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show called crime cam 24/7. watch this briefly, please. roll it: >> after moving to the star bard side of the sub, the team pulls up on top of it. bounding through ocean waves and two coast guardsman jump from the boat on top of the steam submarine and a guardsman leap onto the subjust in time to throw open the hatch. inside one of the subs occupants can be seen raising his hands before the video comes to an abrupt end. this was the only footage of the incident released by u.s. coast guard. stuart: wow, lieutenant, that was remarkable video. coast guard jumping on top of mini sub. how did that work out? >> >> yeah, you know, actually inside they found several hundred million dollars worth of cocaine and end up arresting all the individuals inside and don't get to hear too much about the coast guard out there protecting
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what's coming into the country but crime cam 24/7 on fax nation every friday, there's incidents like this and talking about the home inva invasions and home burglaries were citizens themselves and fighting back and stopping these guys. stuart: that show will do well. sean sticks larson, thank you for joining us. always appreciate and hope to see you again soon. thank you. >> thank you, simplet stuart: this is the time when we show you the dow 30 as we always say. give you a sense of the market so put it on the screen. it's a pretty even split. winners and losers, half up and half down. the dow is up now 66 points. steady progress to the upside for most of the day. there's this. thousands of soccer fans welcome lionel messi to the new team. that's inter-miami. roll tape. >> best no. 10 in the world. lionel messi. stuart: he could start playing as early as this week.
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stuart: a spectator at tour de-trance caused a big crash over a selfie and replay footage shows the spectator holding phone with their arms scout clip a cyclist and cause the massive chain reaction pile up. the tour de france tweeted every rider that fell was able to get back on their bike. it was a bad crash. spain's 20-year-old carlos alcarez defeated 36-year-old novak djokovic in an epic show down. winning second grand slam in less than a year and beat joe vac djokovic in five setses and tvs a grueling match and second set was 85 minutes and age gap, the widest in any man's slam final since 1974. djokovic very unhappy at one point in the match and smashed his racket on the side and greigely eventually praised the new champion.
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then there's lionel messi and he has finalized his deal to join major league soccer's inter-miami. jonathan is there. it took -- looks like messi's arrival is getting miami very excited. >> yeah, he's getting the royal treatment here and his face is not yet amounted to mount roar moray and adorns the side of many buildings driving through neighborhoods in miami and the wait is over and miami can claim lionel messi as its own and they unveil as they call it was delayed by a torrential downpour but that did not deter more than 20,000 fans that packed inter-miami's stadium in fort lauderdale and cheered arguably the greatest player in soccer and 36-year-old world cup champion emerged from behind the curtains and walked across the rain slicked field to hug inner miami co-owner david beckham. perhaps you've heard of them as well. same a day after finalizing the
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signing with inter-through the 2025 season and contract that pays him between 50 and 60 million a year and give him equity in the team. messi is a huge celebrity among residents and tourists here in south florida when he appears in public adoring fans flock to him for awed graphs and selfies and his decision to sign brings great hope not just for the mime team but u.s. soccer in general. >> i didn't want him to go to saudi arabia, and i like that he's here so he's way closer and i can come and see the games when he comes to play in miami or over there back home. reporter: coming back to live shot of the mural in the win wood art district here in miami and tomorrow mess, attending first official training session with the team and his first game with miami is expected to be on
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friday when the temporal integration takes on mexico's cruz azule. back to you. stuart: thank you. monday trivia question, the only woman ever to be award you have had the medal of honor received it for her service in which war, the civil war, world war i, world war ii, iraq. the answer after this. with your hearing, if you start having a little trouble, you're concerned that it's going to cost you money. to this day i only paid what i had to pay for the device... when i go back everything is covered. there's so much you're missing by not having hearing aids. we'll find you a hearing aid that fits your lifestyle and budget at one of our over fifteen hundred locations. call miracle ear at 1-800-miracle
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be back in excellent monday trivia question. the only woman to be worded the medal of honor in which were, the civil war, world war i, world war ii or iraq war. i have no clue at all. i am guessing world war ii. >> the civil war doctor mary walker was the first female surgeon in the u.s. army she was awarded the medal in 1865, then resend it which she refused to give it back into work every day until she died. president jimmy carter reinstated 1977. time is up for me but "coast to coast" is about to start, it starts now. >> right now on "coast to coast" the -- for cash is on and so far president trump leading the pack. ron desantis is expected to
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