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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  September 22, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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i've spent centuries evolving with the world. that's the nature of being the economy. observing investors choose assets to balance risk and reward. with one element securing portfolios, time after time. gold. agile and liquid. a proven protector. an ever-evolving enabler of bold decisions. an asset more relevant than ever before. gold. your strategic advantage. >> these five, six holdouts have any plan. what's the game plan? >> it's negativity on top of negativity on top of negativity. therefore i'm not surprised nor should anybody be surprise that had the market is under pressure. this isn't overstretched by any measure.
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>> these are the poll says they've been driving and standing up puffing their chests talking about how they want to be a sanctuary city. god bless them, this is what they ask for. >> i think what needs to happen on the stopgap measure and found the government for a short period of time working through the remaining appropriation bills. >> if bureaucracy feels it's running the country any way and the president doesn't mean anything, with kamala harris, they remain in place. with anyone else that feels they can actually be the president, suddenly that establishment comfort zone ends especially with people in the white house. stuart: you don't remember the four top? lauren: you know i remember them. i know that when i hear the song. i don't know much about music. stuart: get on with the show. 11:00 eastern time. friday, september 22nd. look at those markets. nice gain for the nasdaq, gain
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for the s&p yesterday selling and up 35 and alphabet 131 and microsoft at 320. 10-year treasury yield what's been the upset marker throughout the week. down today and maybe that's why the nasdaq is doing okay. 4.43%. that yield edging back away from 4.5%. now this. get ready for what might be a long auto industry strike. look at this internal union message leaked to the detroit news. "if we can keep them wounded for months, they don't know what to do. the beauty is we've laid it all out in the public and they're helpless to stop it". that's a very aggressive position and why not?
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the president supports the union. backbone of biden's green energy push is the forced conversion to electric vehicles and he's got to get the union on board with that. now that will be bad news for the big three. their costs go straight up. they're simply not competitive. from the union's point of view, so what. they know as vice president biden bailed out the auto industry, they were too big to fail. he can bail them out again or offer much bigger subsidies for evs. nothing can be allowed to derail the green new deal including the auto workers union. the president backed himself into a corner and the union knows it. uaw president shawn fain a few moments ago called on biden to join the picket lines and said workers will strike at additional 38 locations across 20 states starting now. the plants already on strike remain on strike. as uaw message says "if we can keep them wounded for months,
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bad for the economy, bad for the big three, bad politically for president biden". third hour of varney starts now. stuart: steve hilton with me this morning. looking at longer auto industry strike and it's been expanded today and does this actually hurt biden politically? >> i think it does and it shows that he's pushing two contradistrict reigns leading things at once and wants the green agenda and claims he wants jobs and higher earnings for working people and the record is dirt to that. what's going on chlorin you accelerate through the subsidies and i agree shouldn't be the way you do it if people want
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electric vehicles, that's great. that's going away and regardless of the pace, you're going to be moving towards electric vehicles and they're much simpler to make and it's labor and this is in the same category as automation field that we've seen in many sectors for decades. that's something no one can stand in the way of and more likely you'll see these car manufacturers are going to say we've had it with these states whether they're so strong and they're going to move to the places in the country or in the world where we can make the cars more cheaply without this union roadblock in the way. in the end, that damages both union and biden politically. stuart: senator dick deer hunting bin breaking away from -- durbin breaking away from the dress code saying the senate needs dress codes and we
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should act on it. steve, i've never seen you in a suit and coat and tie. whose side are you on, schumer or fetterman? >> i knew you'd bring that up. remember, i did wear one with -- out of respect around the death of queen elizabeth, that was a very important mark of respect that i wanted to show. that's the point here that you're right. i haven't worn a tie for many years and sort of in an every day sense and it was important to show respect when you're dealing with a institution that's been around for a long time. there's a certain code that goes with that and you represent the people and i'm very much with those who think that actually don't have to exactly wear the precise uniform that's prescribed and show respect. wearing a suit and exactly -- it's not exactly some massive burden for john fetterman or anyone else when they go to the united states senate. stuart: quick question on gas prices and regular now averages in california, $5.78 and up
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26-cents in a week and up 52-cents in just a month and that extraordinary and how are they dealing with it in california? >> ignoring it and that's what they're doing and they know almost like everything else in california, it's another self-inflicted wound. this is mainly the result of tax increases and regulatory changes that make the price of gas more expensive and by the way, it connects to the first story here today, stuart. all these demands for higher wages, the strikes that you're seeing, they are all fueled by a rising cost of living. the cost of living is going up almost always as a direct result of these democrat left wing policies and the answer were not to keep raising wages, it's to deal with the things that are pushing the cost of living up. stuart: good luck in california. we'll see you again soon, steve. i look forward to seeing you in a coat and tie one day. thanks, steve. bring in jonathan hoenig and i
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look forward to friday mornings at this particular time and jonathan joining us at this time every day. i always ask him on fridays, i always ask him for an exotic play. i believe he's got an exotic play in california, is that correct? >> i've got a few of them, stuart. i'm looking forward to watching the debate next wednesday and i've popped popcorn and got a recipe for a hottie totty and i'm tuning in. bad policies, higher interest rates and that's why i'm shorting an etf and cmf and this is etf that holds municipal bonds in california and financial records large and before it's over, i wouldn't be surprised if there's municipality bankrupt for the top of the list. stuart: how about blackrock? short maturity bond etf. explain that. >> short term bond and safe
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idea, stuart. pretty surprising statistic. 50% of americans don't have an emergency fund so that when they lose their job, when their company goes on strike, they've literally got nothing in the bank. how can you sleep well at night with that kind of.situation. near n-e-a-r is a bond fund that's not doing very well if interest rates go up and long term saving and that affects so many people. stuart: i don't follow your fund closely and i take it that the fund is made up of lots evansville lots of these exotic investments that i call them. >> stuart, look off the radar screen and this is like the situation for basically 2001-2010. all the big cap stocks under perform and then it was things like emerging markets, a distressed debt and they did well during that period. that's what i'm looking at now and well known names and app and will nvidias and great companies but i think for the near term, especially with higher rates and
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exactly as you said and exotic names that's where the growth is. stuart: short in california, jonathan, you're all right, thank you, sir. see you again soon. lauren is looking at movers including warner bro's discovery down. lauren: 3.34% and expanding in the uk at the same studio where barbie was filmed and that was their biggest movie of all time. the expansion will increase production capacity by more than 50% at that studio and come withs a cost hence the stock is down. stuart: dea. lauren: yeah, they're down. they cut them to hold and took the price target to 530 to 400 and that's a significant decline and channel checks and slower demand and new and used agricultural equipment. stuart: alibaba not heard much from them. lauren: alibaba is plan ago $1 billion ipo in hong kong but there are hopes of economic
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recovery in china and report that beijing is considering relaxing some foreign ownership rules in domestic publicly traded if i weres. china stocks are up today. stuart: thanks, lauren. one of taylor swift's instagram posts led to tens of thousands of people registering to vote and details on that for you. former white house press secretary jen psaki says old politicians are hurting biden's e reelection campaign. roll tape. >> does it help or hurt that there's other elderly people struggling in our political universe? >> unquestionably hurts and why are all these old people running washington? stuart: there's more where that came from. we have the full tape. seems biden and the democrats have a new migration strategy: blame republicans. edward lawrence will tackle that, next.
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stuart: fox news jazz learned that the number of migrants illegally encountered on the southern border this fiscal year surpassed the last fiscal year and we have eight days left in this one. edward lawrence is with me. what's the president's solution? reporter: yeah, the president of the administration is going to give temporary status to half a million venezuelans into this country and about 5.9 million
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people encountered at the border since president biden took office and asking for clarification on this question. >> how many people illegally coming into the united states? >> enough for what? >> 5.9 million people encountered illegally. >> i know the numbers but enough for what? >> to stop the flow? >> as i mentioned, this is a problem that's been around for some time, for decades and a broken system. the president has done everything and is going to continue to do what he can without the help of some republicans in congress to deal with this issue. reporter: president biden tried to blame republicans calling them for overhaul of immigration system completely, republicans also responded. listen to this. >> for decades, immigration reform has been a bipartisan in
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this country and the republicans and predicting cespedes torr spent four years gutting the immigration system under my predecessor. >> we need to secure the boarder and works with the wall and work with judges and stay in mexico policy and all this needs to be done again to preserve what's left in sovereignty. >> it's not a solution and they work better than they don't and the problem is that they're voiding the real issue which is border and it's like if your sink is overflowing and ask the federal government for buckets and more mops, there's a place for buckets and mop but stop the water from going in. no democrat will say that except
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for a few in border states and border towns going off the flow and every day. stuart: can you see the day when cities or states put up barricades at state line and say, no, you can't come in here. get those busses out and -- buses out and see that kind of confrontation? >> they'recosming and texas had barriers in -- they're coming and texas had those barriers in the water and what is exposed is the hypocrisy of the democrats and in northern blue states saying we're sanctuary city, we're open to immigration. remember that a key part of that being a sanctuary city, we're going to have zero cooperation
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with the federal government and now they're warning that the federal government is going to get the money and larger for the sexual assault and it's predicted. stuart: even former white house press secretary jen psaki admitted that aging could hurt biden's reelection. we're changing the subject but watch this, bill. roll tape. >> does it help or hurt that there's other elderly people struggling in our political universe? >> unquestionably hurts. so old and white. let's dbrox, you know -- be, you know, they're disconnected from what we're experiencing and living and why are all the old people running washington? they're not the same and different health and we can explain it and explaining it, it's kind of a challenge. so i think it's unquestionably bad. stuart: bill, i got to say something here, i find it difficult to report on biden's cognitive decline, but i think it's our duty to report
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accurately because he's the president and we're staring at possible president harris. what's your take into account on this? >> yeah, same view. look, it's not really he's president, he's been with the northern careen leader -- north korean leader and are they intimidated bay guy not in obvious decline and he projects weakness and confusion and all jen psaki did was report that karine jean-pierre biden with the outpacing and when you're explaining it, you're on a defensive and you're confirming the point and it's going to hurt them. stuart: do you know anyone that believes that president biden can be the president for another five and a half years? anyone? >> no, i don't. and i think when i look at tapes
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like you play, even from two years ago, biden seems more vigorous and alert then and i think the decline is so apparent to people and the democratic party was paralyzed over it and it was a bad sign. stuart: bad sign indeed and bill mcgurn, thank you for being with us. see you again soon. president biden had another gaffe speaking at campaign fundraiser the other day. walk us through this one? lauren: this is personal for me. he told the same story about the events of charlottesville in 2017 as the reason for his campaign presidency. he told that story two times minutes apart nearly word for word. i've had two grandparents go through then supra aural headphones. age is -- dementia. age is not the problem but senility that comes with age. i don't know president biden and i'm not a doctor.
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he keeps saying if you're concerned about my age, watch me. mr. president, we are watching you. social media erupted and one wrote elder abuse? that's what it is if he runs again saying he's not making it to 86. i hope that's not the case. i wicker the president of the united states well. but the polling shows eight in ten americans think he's too hold for a second term and demonstrates forgetting things and repeating himself and falling, it defeats the narrative. stuart: difficult subject and all americans want a robin lou bust and dynamic -- robust and dynamic president in charge. lauren: and respect age. stuart: it's very difficult to report on cognitive decline and big mcgurn said, it's speeding up. it's almost a gaffe a day these days. can't appear in public without something going on. lauren: got to talk about it. stuart: you have to. very important. one more for you, taylor swift and absolutely. he's called on her fans to take action.
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one action. lauren: on voting. vote.org said they've got 35,000 new voter registrations on one day: tuesday, national voter registration day and record breaking traffic to the site and something she posted on instagram and one of her stories she called on her fans tuareg versus frequency and did not get political and she has in the past and she lent one of her songs to eric and was critical of marsha blackburn and nonetheless she was not political and to me telling people to register to vote is the sign of youth enthusiasm. stuart: what did she do with eric? lauren: going to one of his adds a year ago. stuart: check the markets and we have the dow up 27 and nasdaq doing okay and up 100 points and s&p up 19. got it. coming up, new analysis shows which state has the largest diversity, equity, and inclusion
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brock seizure disorders within public universities and we're going to tell you who topped the list. that's a picture of it. all right, randi wiengarten claimed a teacher was fired for reading the diary of anne frank to students. problem is that's simply not true. we'll set the facts straight next. ♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with low fixed rates. borrow up to $100k. and no fees required.
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stuart: uaw president said they're making progress on talk withs ford. but he also says workers have an additional 38 locations across 20 states at gm and stellantis plants. they will be going on strike as of right now. strike sex tended and stock is up 3%. randi wiengarten, teacher's union chief and randi wiengarten claimed eighth grade teacher read the dire of anne frank to her students and was fired for it. nicolas giodonno is the
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political science professor and joining me now. what really happened with the teacher? >> perfect timing and my son is in eighth grade and i got him diary of anne frank two weeks to read. it's an important story to read about the horrors of the holocast and see through the eyes of anne frank. it was an adaptation of anne frank's diary and become as problem and takes away from a content and weakens and cheapens anne frank and they're eighth graders and don't need a picture book and using books that visualize what took place and helps them litically think and avoiding by common sense. why select the diary of anne frank and adaptation and diary of anne frank and most will read. >> randi wiengarten distorted the story and saying the diary
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of anne frank, read it in class and was fired. that distorts the story. >> absolutely and she's doing that on purpose to make it as if there's really book bands going on where they're trying to redefine what the word ban means. listen, all they had to do was pull this book from the students and just give them more and the problem would have been resolved and randi wiengarten trying to elevate to a bigger issue and they're fighting hard for all these books and this content that shouldn't be together to children as -- taught to children as education system is collapsing and that's the crazy part. we've been performing at our education system is in trouble. students are behind where they should be and local person wrote a story and said students can't write and critically think and 70% of americans can't name more than one freedom in the first amendment and ra randi wiengartn wants to focus on this as she destroyed the education system through the two year shut down
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with covid. stuart: i need your comment and republican senator john kennedy read from explicit books he found inside public libraries. one of the authors of the books is responding. the boo author of book gender queer. it's a comic and in full color and doesn't mean it's for children. i originally wrote it for my parents and then for older teens who were already asking these questions about themselves. i do not recommend this book for kids. even the author says it's not for kids but in public school libraries. >> parents have it so difficult today because our children are being un-undated with explicit material day in and day out that's totally inappropriate and there's a book called lone boy and fourth graders, 10 year-olds providing oral sex to each other. it is sick and disturbing and -- stuart: was that in a school library? >> absolutely. it's been in public school libraries and pans complained and gotten them taken off the shelves and parents show up to school board meetings and
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reading some of this material, the school board shuts them down saying you can't read that here. it's totally inappropriate but it's okay for children to read these books? you come branded as book ban banners. lauren: there's the option to opt your child out and many pans do. what's the point? the kids not opted out tell your kids who were opted out about it anyway. so you can't get around it. stuart: sex education is something that might be okay in the schools, i can understand that, but the modern stuff about trans -- lauren: that's what it gets into is modern stuff and so many parents are opting out and parents of children that didn't opt out saying it's not worth it because they're all talking about it anyway after school or recess. stuart: any need to teach or
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promote transgender stuff in schools? >> well, especially as they make it really explicit. i mean, you'd blush if you read some of these passages and that's the thing and our education system collapsed and we should be focused on that and outraged on that and these are the future lieders of the country and they're -- leaders of the co-un-triple-demic and they're getting shortchanged and leaders like randi wiengarten all about book bans and getting rid of books in public school libraries and it's about inappropriateness. stuart: nicolas, good stuff. thank you very much. i have another story on similar lines here and heritage foundation found that means dei bureaucracy and in virginia, george mason and virginia tech had more dei bureaucrats and deep blue states like california and new york. this one's for you, you've got -- you got this stunning findings on baltimore schools,
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tell me. 33 high schools in baltimore administered the state math exams and in 13 of those 33, not one student tested proficient in math. again, not one. if you look at five best schools in baltimore city, only 11% tested proficient, 11%. so what are they doing with the record funding that they're getting? they got $1.6 billion from taxpayers last year. stuart: baltimore city school, 1 point # billion for baltimore city schools? lauren: not including covid money. needs to be accountability on this. you can't excuse those test scores. jaire they spent $25,000 per student in baltimore. 25,000 taxpayer dollars per student per year. new york is at 25,000 on the state level, 39,000 in the city level. stuart: 39,000 in the city level? per student? >> per student, per year. stuart: in new york city? >> in new york city. stuart: that's astronomical.
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really. i think we've got another one here. mississippi's auditor is calling some college majors garbage fields. lauren: i have a gripe with this. stuart: hold on a second. hold on. let me feel it out. they indoctrinate state of the unions and should be defunded. we have the story. hold yourself for a bit later. we have it later. one of the judges of mis-universe, emily austin decided it was better for her to leave college early to pursue her career. that's interesting, emily is next. ♪
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i've spent centuries evolving with the world. that's the nature of being the economy. observing investors choose assets to balance risk and reward. with one element securing portfolios, time after time. gold. agile and liquid. a proven protector. an ever-evolving enabler of bold decisions. an asset more relevant than ever before. gold. your strategic advantage. stuart: cost of college is still
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going up. madison alworth at strayed school in new jersey. madison, i bet they're seeing an increase in all that; correct? reporter: stuart, you're absolutely correct. since the pandemic, they've seen enrollment going up by 15% and at a time when a four year degree is going up in cost and since the 1990s, tuition has gone up 79% and student debt up 700% in 30 years. look at student borrowers and talk about student loans and average of $37,000 per per borrr and $55,000 for borrowers for private loans. come on in, someone that's choose ago trade school over the traditional four year college. we've talked a lot about debt. for you, was debt a big portion of why you decided to do trade versus a four year college? >> oh, yeah, definitely one of my biggest reasons to choose a trade school over college. reporter: what do you say when you talk to your friends at college. what's the difference in terms
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of their debt versus yours? >> me, that i'm -- compared to what they're on right now is crazy. i'm only at 5k right now and that's all. that's ultimately i got. i'm over here getting all this really good education from it. reporter: education. because it's just a different type of education versus that four year. education really is a way to better your life, get a career, make money for yourself and your family. do you have confidence that this education path will provide you good money and a good lifestyle? >> absolutely. i love this job. this isn't even a job. it's a fashion for me so i do believe so. reporter: what do you think other kids node to know that are your age and thinking college isn't for me? is this a good option for them? >> i will always say it, you're always going to need trade. we're always going to need that and you should always look -- you should always be open to going to trade school. reporter: thank you so much. she make as great point, stuart. you're always going to need trade. we talk about ai.
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ai proof jobs. plumbers, electricians, welders. these are jobs that are here to stay and students like aniela making that possible. back to you. stuart: value for educational money. what's wrong with that? madison, thank you very much indeed. we have someone with us that decided to leave college. emily austin joining us. she's one of the judges of the miss universe content. you've got your own skincare company and you have a sport show, hoop chat; is that correct? >> correct, yeah. stuart: why did you leave college? >> ultimately i left college because it's supposed to prepare you and help you function in the real world and i had the exact opposite experience and told my professor, hey, i got a media credential for the superbowl. how amazing. great, if you miss this week's classes i'm failing you. keep in mind, this is a sports journalist class so i called his bluff. went to the superbowl and came back and had an f. my profestivus sore was upset
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about me inter--- my professor was upset about me entertaining and why would i stay in that environment. stuart: when did you leave? >> two years ago? stuart: you've created skincare company. is it profitable? >> yes. stuart: you've got a hoop chat sports show, you're making money out of that? >> yes. stuart: i got that one. you're a judge for the miss universe contest. >> yeah. stuart: you didn't need college for any of that? >> absolutely not. stuart: are you still stuck with the bill? >> i went to private school. i'm very thankful my parents helped me with that but, yeah, private school is no joke in terms of tuition. stuart: i understand one of the courses you had to take was on japanese sexuality. is that correct? >> that is absolutely correct. can you guess what grade i got in that class? stuart: no, i can't guess. you want to tell us. >> part of my homework assignments was to watch animated pornography, lesbian pornography, studying the 72 genders now. lauren: 72?
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>> there's a bunch. of course i didn't memorize them. point being it was a lot of work that i deny feel was necessary to take spended up failing the course because i didn't feel like watching porn for homework. stuart: i understand. you feel you made the right decision to leave college? >> yes, definitely. stuart: no regrets whatsoever? wouldn't go back to complete your degree? >> i'm finishing online at truro and studying prelaw because unless you want to be a doctor, engineer, a surgeon of some sort, something you need school for, i would tell kids don't even bother. find what you're good at and ride with it. stuart: i like your style. emily austin, thank you for joining us today. appreciate it. now this, mississippi's auditor is calling out public colleges for some of the courses they teach, which he kales garbage -- calls garbage fields. that's dramatic. what is he doing about it? lauren: this is going to be you, you, and shad white versus me. he says garbage fields are urban studies, anthropology, women's studies, german literature and
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calls them hot beds for political radicalization and says mississippi should only fund fields that fit the work force's needs like healthcare and business. if a court is deemed not vital or peripheral or radical, that state wouldn't get funding for that program. he's leaning into the culture wars to keep smart people in the state of mississippi. stuart: all right. lauren: i was a major in comparative literature and minor in women's studies. what do you say about that? he says it's a gorge field. >> i don't believe it's garbage field but from a women's studies, what can you learn from a school that you're can't talking to other women. lauren: i went to college over 20 years ago and don't think women's studies is the same as now. stuart: 50 years ago i went to college and there was no such thing as women's studies. we have an audience here. i wonder what their opinion is. we left the door. thanks very much, lauren.
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let's get back to the markets and show me the dow 30. i always say the same thing. this is a sense of the market and how it's going. it's an even split, look at that half up, half down and dow up 68 points and 34,100. okay, folks. don't go anywhere. friday feedback is next. ♪
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problem, call 1-833-521-0232 or visit homeserve.com. am i good? i know that from the very start this girl to leave me with a broken heart is old. this is really old stuff. dion and the belmonts, huh? runaround too, i suppose it was. do you want to go to a diner with the jukebox ? that. that's right. that, by the way, that is. that's atlantic beach. north carolina. 68 degrees and raining. oh, dear. all right. let's get to friday feedback. it's just you and i, lauren. i mean, ashley is off doing something more important. that's the way it is. shortly this comes from betty. i love keying in on stewart and other anchors. standard responses to reports
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by guests or co-anchors. thank you very much indeed. is stewart that is correct. all right. what's your do you think that's end of conversation phrase? i think that's a little bit of an insult. what you kind of. i do it too. you say the same thing. creature of habit. maybe she's telling you, you should wrap up your interviews in a different way. you think? yeah. hey, betty, is that what you think? i usually say this. thank you for your time. or thank you for your opinion. it's boring. and every time i say it and i'm repetitive, i say i'll think of another way to get out of that. thank you very much indeed. we appreciate you being here. see you again soon. you do? you're all right. got to fade out. somehow or other, you can't just say, that's it, time's up and move on. you can't do that. you can't do it. you've got to ease your way out gradually. your style and class, i guess. right. ease your way. listen to this one. do you own any beatles ties? they were popular in the 80s and early 90s. they were actually collector's items. nowadays you can buy on ebay. great shows. yeah, i did. i did own them and they were
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very nice ties. but, you know, like a tie with the beatles faces. some of them did. yes. and some of them had the patterns on them replicating various songs. can you wear one or is it too loud for. i don't have a minute longer. i don't know what happened to him. they don't have him. if i find one, i'll wear one. kimbrough writes this we all know that stewart invest in microsoft, uber and blackrock. and at one time, boeing, that was a disaster. what about lauren? will she will she share with us what she invests? well, william, i'm known to put small amounts of money in my last two. two stock investors were truist financial and charles schwab truist financial. why do you invest in that? someone told me to. oh, that's right. he was a guest on the show who said true is was my brother actually okay, close. dolly writes this. i was delighted with your trivia question last friday about the origin of pizza. it was naples . i lived there for seven years, compliments of the united states navy. love the
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food, love the people. have your your staff been there? i have not. have you? i haven't been to naples. i do love pizza in rome because they crack an egg and they put an egg in the middle of the pizza. and i know it sounds disgusting. oh, it's also big in milan, but it's delicious. but we don't know about naples. i'm sorry. i can tell you about naples, florida any day you like. is a wonderful place. i recommend it the other naples, not so much. the real. the real naples is the beatles. florida. okay we'll get emails on that. this is from glenna earlier this week. you mentioned you went and saw oppenheimer in the movie theater and enjoyed it. did you buy popcorn and a drink while you were there? if so, what size you could anticipate my answer. you did it, did you? no, of course not. no. did the person you were with buy popcorn? no. no, absolutely not. did you have it in your pocket or a bag? no, i don't. i want to be entirely enveloped by the movie and the wrap around sound. i want to concentrate and focus entirely on it. i'm not there to snack away or drink. that's not what i'm there for. it was a three hour movie and i lasted the
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entire through the movie without once deviating my interest from the screen. so eating distracts you? it would distract me if i'm i'm the one that's doing the eating. it's weak or weak all around. do you know they don't check your bags anymore? they used to check bags when you went into a movie theater so you wouldn't bring your own food and you had to buy their expensive food. food is still expensive, but i haven't been checked in ages. okay now, you know, this is okay. we got to do the trivia question. we did have a question about whether i would wear a hoodie and shorts. would, you know, right now, here's the trivia question. how many bones do babies have? this is a real good one, 206, 232, 270 or 300. i haven't a clue. three babies. it never came up . i've got six. the answer when we come back. when you can't watch, listen, get the latest news, business and news headlines on sirius xm anytime, anywhere, fox news audio on siriusxm america is listening.
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you know that tech stock we talked about, i picked up 500 shares. you get in at a good price. oh, yeah. schwab saved you. how much with schwab order execution advantage, you get price improvement on 96% of orders and commission free online trades. i'll take care of this. are you getting complete price transparency? we expect more from your firm. schwab the better place for traders. the new iphone 15 pro with titanium is here. get it on us. with verizon's best business unlimited plans get the new iphone 15 pro on us. it's your business. it's your verizon. seth loved family and he loved being able to go home to wyoming during the holidays . as him and i met in middle school. we grew up together. we were best friends. we did this thing when we were in middle school where we write a letter
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to ourselves. i remember reading the letter that seth wrote to himself. he's like, i'm thinking the military and. and sure enough, he stuck to it. if you were to meet seth, you would know he was a patriot, and country came first. he loved flying the ospreys. he loved being a marine. so the 8th of june, it was any other day he was off flying. he usually kept in touch with me. so it was about the time he would be coming home. i got concerned. something gone wrong and the plane went down. it took all their lives. it has been the worst nightmare from that day forward, trying to accept that it's really me. now that he's gone, my mom was like, hey, did you see this post? this organization, tunnels to tower. is there going to buy you a home? and i was like, no, that's a scam. like, what are you talking about? and that's how i found out. i didn't hear from anyone. i'm like, are you sure? like, are they actually buying us a house? mr. towers did contact us within a couple
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starting at $40 a month. sling retiring well, isn't a guarantee t it's a goal. it's easy when markets are going up , but what about when they're not? that's why you need this call for fisher investments, retirement survival kit. three indispensable guides yours for calling one (800)■a260-7788. se if your dream retirement is on track. if your retirement portfolio is $500,000 or more, give us a call. call now for your retirement survival kit. one (800)■a260-7788. now what a question to ask this. i mean, you and i have both had babies in our lives. and the question is, how many bones do babies have? i would tempted to go with the low number, but then if i do that, i'm expecting that two babies to grow bones as they get older. that seems weird. it can't be. it just can't be. okay, i'm going with 300. i'm going with a big number. i'm going to go one down to 70. all right. reveal,
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please. the answer is you're right. 300. now it's pure guesswork. some of the bones eventually fuze together to form 206 total bones in adulthood. who knew that? a see you learn something every day on this. that makes sense. i've got to do a quick market check, you know what i mean? because we're about to leave the show. the dow is up 23, nasdaq up 88, s&p up 15 points. okay. i thought that was a pretty good show and a great week. next week, of course, we have the great debate and i'll be in california on wednesday and thursday for that. can't wait. varney and company is done. coast to coast, starts now. coming up on cavuto coast to coast, the uaw strike expanding across 20 states, but not all three automakers will be affected. we're going to tell you why and how this affects you. plus red apple group chairman and ceo john catsimatidisiljo

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