tv Varney Company FOX Business June 28, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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so, what are you thinking? i'm thinking... (speaking to self) about our honeymoon. what about africa? safari? hot air balloon ride? swim with elephants? wait, can we afford a safari? great question. like everything, it takes a little planning. or, put the money towards a down-payment... ...on a ranch ...in montana ...with horses let's take a look at those scenarios. j.p. morgan wealth management has advisors in chase branches and tools, like wealth plan to keep you on track. when you're planning for it all... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management. >> actually going forward in terms of this election with the support of democrats given everything we've heard over the last several hours. we're going to actually have him remove himself and replace him with kamala harris. they'd need to move rapidly. >> as for joe biden, even in the new york times they're saying it was a catastrophic night.
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he was incomprehensible and mumbling and bumbling and hard to understand. >> everyone that you ask today the best question would be are you better off today than what you were four years ago? and every american telling you they were better off four years ago. >> this condition and dynamic puts the country at stake and puts us in joe bind. >> look at joe biden and the people at camp david and can't put joe biden back together again. meaux ♪ stuart: i'm losing you. is that a reference to the debate last night and outcome? i think it is. it's a lovely, sunny, bright day. 11:00 eastern time. friday, june 28th. the day after a consequential
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debate. on the markets, there's a rally. modest. dow's up 150, nasdaq up 68 points. i'm not sure that's linked to the debate. we'll find out later. show me big tech however. most are on the upside. telling a lie. microsoft at 453, apple 214, they're up but meta, alphabet and amazon are down just a little. 0-year treasury yield, where's that this morning? it's going up to 4.33%. now they've also received important supreme court rulings and the first one is the ruling on the fisherman's case. the supreme court ruled in favor of a group of fishermen who challenged a decade's old legal doctrine that they gave the administration. minister of state too much power over business. the supreme court went with the fishermen. we'll get more on this later and made it harder to charge januart defendants. in a 6-3 decision, a key criminal obstruction charge against a capitol riot defendant
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was scaled back bay the supreme court. that could have implications for trump's election interference case. more details on that later on in the show. now this, the people in the president's inner circle have explaining to do and telling us joe was just fine and sharp as a tack and videos of him wandering off were cheap fakes and no cognitive decline. last night it was obvious the president is not sharp as a tack and that begs the question, who is really in charge? who writes his note cards and tells him what to say? who is the real president? this is serious stuff. america's involved in two wars and we're deep in debt, and we don't know who's running the show. if he ever took questions, we might have found out that the president doesn't know what he's doing, but he doesn't take questions. his handlers keep him under wraps and the basement strategy is another way that we are being
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misled. there's going to be a lot of finger pointing. how could his handlers let him go out in public like that? your staff is supposed to protect you. how could the first lady let him go out in public like that. she must have known his true condition. after the debate jill biden said how well he'd done. you answered all the questions, she said. arguably not telling him the truth and not telling the country the truth ended his presidency because it is over. he's not going to be president for another four years and joe biden's inner circle has to come clean about the president's i did cline. up till now, they'd been lying. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: steve hilton, come on in, please. is this the end of the biden campaign? >> california, last night joe
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biden looked like death and the presidency in the next few days or weeks and party persuades him to face the truth he's incapable of doing his job for another four years and whether he goes on with the fingertips and defeated in november. it's over for him. but the truth is we should all be outraged at what happened because exactly as you said, stuart, this has been very apparent to most of us who have been honest about it for years now. and so when people say oh, joe biden had a bad night last night. no, that's not true. he didn't have a bad night. he had a perfectly ordinary night. a perfectly normal night for joe biden. this is what he's like every single day. we see it in public and the real question is if this is what he's like in public when he knows he's on display and in such a high stakes moment, imagine what he's like in private when he's supposed to be taking the big
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decisions that come with the presidency. this is absolutely outrageous. the fact that his condition has been covered up for so long, it reminds us of what used to go on in the soviet union with their ailing leaders. stuart: after the debate, gavin newsom said he still supports biden. watch this. >> replacing president biden, do you support that idea? >> i would never turn my back on the president. we're all in and doubling down over the next few months [inaudible]. stuart: i don't think newsom wants to run this time and wants to wait till 2028. what do you say? >> look, he's operating on the principle of he who wheels the dagger never wears the crown.
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so he's professing his loyalty. that's probably a good strategy in terms of his own future. i think again, we should point out this is not a game. this is not about who's up and who's down in the democratic party. you have someone there, the governor of california saying we have his back. we're going to double down on someone clearly incapable of being president. that is actually anti-american. it is not the patriotic thing to do. the patriotic thing to do when you have someone like joe biden who now the world world has seen is incapable of being president is to remove him, gently, politely, however you want to do it, but it is anti-american to insist that this man stays in office. let alone is there for another second term.
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>> i got the point you're making about a one and a half hour debate. i'm talking three and a half year performance in work that's historic. >> the man we saw on the stage tonight, is that the person you see every day? i mean, you can't honestly say -- can you say that you are not concerned at all having watched the president's performance tonight? >> it was a slow start. that's obvious to everyone. i'm not going to debate that point. stuart: all right, steve. that was a strong push there from anderson cooper at cnn. has the media finally seen the biden we've been talking about? >> they've been seeing it, stu, it's obvious because of the videos and every time biden is out in public it's been a disaster and it's so disgraceful that the media have been lying about it and covering it up. they've seen it just as we have.
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so they know but they think they could get away with it because they're so air i can't they think with their lies and spin and manipulation and covering for this appalling man, biden, who insists on staying in this job even though he knows he can't do it. the media think they can get away with it and now they can't and suddenly they're pretending to be surprised >> that will live in history, that debate forever. stuart: i'm glad i got up to watch it all the way through because history was being made right there. steve hilton, you're all right. thanks for joining us. quick check of the markets, please. friday morning. a bit of green, not bad. dow up 80, nasdaq up 34. jonathan hoenig with us this morning. do investors care about the debate? >> they do long term, stuart. especially when it comes to spending the deficit and debt. none was discuss asked it was dis-stressing to watch president biden is distressing to hear president trump talk about the tariffs in particular. these are paid by americans and
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not china, regardless, the debt to gdp ratio doubled in the last 20 years. that was not discussed in seriousness at all and that's by the pce number this morning, inflation number is a head fake. you've got people making $150,000 or more saying they're having trouble making ends meet. i don't think innation is dead. that's why i'm looking at investments that can benefit from higher inflation to come. stuart: it's friday morning and you're john thing hoenig. better -- jonathan hoenig. better be exotic for us. >> nothing exotic about fossil fuels but president biden spent a trillion on green energy program but people wake up and want to put gas in their cars and need oil, natural gas and this is etf that tracks these ml ps, master limited partnerships and they're dividend oriented energy stocks and they'll benefit from a period of higher energy prices and we'll see but even if the market flat lines, 7% dividend will keep you in the green even if the rest of the market, in
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particular big tech stalls. stuart: best till last. 7% dividend? >> i think in a bull market, make money on the dividend and price of depreciation and inflation isn't dead. no os terrificty to put it to bed and -- os tearty to butt it to bed. stuart: thanks, jonathan. always good stuff. >> be well. stuart: looking at synchrony financial. lauren: what a gain. stock up 6.5% and rating call and it's a buy and called number one private label credit card platform with a large data base of retail partnerships. system of articulation stuart: all right. qualcomm. lauren: bernstein said stock going to $240 and it's at 197 and smart phone demand bottomed and only way up is up and find ai encouraging and stock's up 1%. stuart: google. >> moving to the sidelines. they cut to neutral. stock's down almost 1%. they see multiple areas of what they call transitional risk
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including ai. ai could actually hurt google search business if it requires them to not show or not get paid as much for the advertisements that the search does show when it has ai. stuart: not supposed to work like that, is it? thanks, lauren. coming up, president biden claims he's the only president in the last decade to not have u.s. troops die on his watch. we know that's false and we have a full report. democrats are in full panic mode after biden's painful performance. watch this. >> everything we have to do witt medicare -- >> thank you, president biden. stuart: we're really trying to figure out where we go from here. that's what we'll spend part of the show doing. the supreme court made it hard to charge january 6 capitol riot defendants and could have big implications for trump's election interference. jim jordan deals with it next.
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her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name!
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it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. stuart: jillian, we know it's not true that president biden was the only president no to have troops die on his watch. how do we respond? >> foreign policy was going to feature prominently in the debate and the two got into it over everything from the wars in ukraine and gaza and nato and anti-semitism and started off the night talking about the 2021 afghanistan withdrawal. take a listen. >> the idea that he did something significant in the military, you know, when he was
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president, they were still killing people in afghanistan and he didn't do anything about that. when he was president, we were still finding ourselves in a position where you had a notion that we were this safe country. truth is, i'm the only president this century that doesn't have any -- this decade, that doesn't have any troops dying anywhere in the world like he did. >> as far as afghanistan is concerned, i was getting out of afghanistan but we were getting out with dignity, with strength, with power. he got out, it was the most embarrassing day in the history of our -- reporter: all right, well he said the most embarrassing day in the history of our country. the sound was cut off and d-day and comments on european and american war debt. listen to this. >> the general and he told me, i don't want to go in there because they're a bunch of losers and suckers. my son was not a loser, he was not a sucker. you're the loser, you're the sucker. >> that was a made up quote. losers and suckers.
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they made it up. it was in a third rate magazine that was failing. reporter: trump got flak on social media as using palestinian as a slur in this sound byte, listen. >> the only one that wants to keep going is hamas. he's become like a palestinian but they don't like him because he's a very bad palestinian. >> number one, everyone from united nations security council straight through to the g7 to the israelis and netanyahu himself have endorsed the plan i put forward. reporter: stuart, not just you and i and all our viewers watching this debate, hundreds of millions of them last night. it was also america's adversaries and allies overseas. we are on the phones this morning trying to get some reaction first from the europeans starting to come in now. there's a lot of surprise you might even say shock about what transpired on the debate stage last night. stuart. stuart: i think shock would be a better word. jillian, thank you very much
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indeed. listen to this again. president gave gaffe-filled answers mumbling through the debate. watch it, roll it. >> that $2 trillion tax cut benefited the very wealthy. now i'm going to fix the tax system. for example, we have a thousand trillion natural rights approaches in america -- i mean billionaires in america. if they just paid 24% or 25%, either one of those numbers, they'd raise $500 million, billion i should say. making sure we're able to make every single solitary personnel jill for what i've been -- eligible for what i've been able to do with the covid -- excuse me dealing with everything we have to do with -- look, if -- we finally beat medicare -- >> thank you, president biden. stuart: congressman jim jordan joining me and we learned biden cannot be the president for the next four years. you've settled that.
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take us through what happens next. any idea? >> i think the big take away is the past 24 hours have been amazing for president trump and frankly for the country. two great supreme court decisions just a few minutes ago from the court. last night the president was focused and funny and he was engaging and dominated the debate. i thought it was -- i thought the president was a real leader and he talked about his record. i mean, this is the guy that we had a secure border and now we don't. where we had $2 gas and now we have $4 gas. where we had safe streets and now under biden we have record crime and maybe most importantly to families out there, stable prices versus this record inflation. then of course what you were just talking about, foreign policy with a commander in chief and president trump projecting strength versus joe biden so this has been an amazing 24 hours for president trump but for the country in these good decisions and the leadership he
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displayed on the debate stage last night, i think the choice is clear. president trump should be our next president. stuart: there's a lot of coverage this morning about his handlers. those who said he's fine and he's sharp as a tack and it was deep fake or cheap fake videos. i think those people were lying. we don't know who is really running the country. i think it's that serious, jim. >> one thing, when president trump wins on november 5, he'll be running the country, he'll be the type of commander in chief we need. he'll be the guy focused on restoring those tax cuts and making sure they stay in place, lowering regulations, building the wall, securing the border and projecting the kind of strength we need in porn policy and all the things we need in the first term, that's coming and what we need to be focused on is how strong of a leader he is and how we saw that last night. stuart: congressman, hold on for a second. the supreme court ruling on
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january 6 and i'll get back to you in a second. kelly o'grady is with us and explain what this means, januart means for the trump interference case. >> this is really important because in that case, former president trump is also facing an obstruction changer and that was at the heart of this ruling. so it was a 6-3 decision by the supreme court and they scaled back an obstruction charge for the defendant in this case. says it's far too broad and areas of peaceful disruptful conduct and going back to the dc court and deciding if this defendant in this case was charged under this obstruction charge and is now the narrower person charged. the issue is the bigger so what is president trump is facing an obstruction charge. this could have huge huge implications they find this doesn't apply to him. i want to give you the biden
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campaign's response. they said this, violent insurrectionists and those that encourage them must be held accountable and donald trump thinks otherwise and last night trump again defended january 6 and insurrectionists that violently assaulted law enforcement officers and tried to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to these ruling doesn't change the fundamental truth that donald trump will always put himself over our democracy. something to watch there. quickly to the other piece. the fishermen's case and hugely impactful in the business world. stuart, i was speaking to a legal analyst before i got on with you and folks are wrapping their heads around this and this is breaking right now. but it is going to dramatically change federal agency powers, 6-3 decision and claws back the precedent and set by what's known as chevron difference. it allows the agencies to interpret confusing ambiguous laws and decide how they'd enforce and versus leaving to a court and case in question, concerned fishermen and federal agency have to allow a government representative to ride on the boats, monitor
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overfishing and have to pay for it themselves to the tune of $700 a day. this is being called, this case was the war on the administrative state. today the court said no more. we're signing with the little guy. listen to this. >> i'm ecstatic. we finally have a level playing field. american citizens finally have the same rights in court as the united states government. that'll make a huge difference in our virgin islands >> the little guy and everything you can imagine, cell phones, clothing, ai. this is huge. stuart: it is huge as you describe it. kelly, thank you very much indeed. congressman jim jordan, come back in again. what's your reaction to the supreme court ruling on january 6? >> i think both of the cases you just talked alabama, the take away is real simple, congress writes the laws. on the chevron case, it's not administrative state or bureaucrats that write the law. it's congress.
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when it comes to enhancing the penalties going after folks, congress writes the laws and not some out of control prosecutor and want to take the january 6 case and say oh, we're going to use that as basis for inhansing the penalties and charges against the individuals. congress writes the laws and not out of control prosecutors and bureaucrats and it's good for the country. it's a good day for president trump, good 24 hours for the country as well. stuart: good 24 hours for republicans and jim jordan if i'm not mistaken. congressman jordan, that's why you got a smile on your face. see you again reel soon, jim. thank you for being here. >> yes, sir. stuart: coming up, some democrats want biden to step aside from the election. who would take his place? kamala harris, gavin newsom, michelle obama? we're breaking down all biden's big mistakes of the night. that's next. ♪
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day and the morning after and the hour after the debate was single best hour of fundraising since they launch the campaign last year. no word yet on trump's fund fundraising. we've been discussing all morning how president biden failed to meet even the low expectations set for him for the debate. aishah hasnie in atlanta joining us. give us the breakdown of biden's biggest mistake. reporter: hey, stuart 90 minutes of district questioning and not a lot of district answers and we're all here talking about that one moment seen all across the world where even democrats were wondering what is going on, watch. >> we have to do with -- look -- if -- we finally beat medicare -- reporter: so there was actually an audible gasp in the press room when that happened and seemed as though the president had frozen. that was just the beginning,
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stuart, of what some democrats themselves are saying was a disappointing and very poor performance. even kate bettingfield that used to be at the white house said biden didn't deliver. a couple of cringe moment where is he said something false or spoke to an audience that wasn't there. >> truth is, i'm the only president this century that doesn't have any -- this decade that doesn't have any troops dying anywhere in the world like he did. i ask anyone out there in the audience -- anyone watching this debate, do you think the tax system is fair? >> i don't know what he said at the end of that sentence, i don't think he knows what he said either. >> joe, you did such a great job. you answered every question -- reporter: so what's interesting is right after the debate everybody goes down to the spin room and democrats took a little while to get down there and don't know if they were having conversation with the biden campaign before they went into the spin room, but they all stuck together and answered a
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couple of questions about his performance and gets the win out of there and one was california governor gavin newsom and asked him over and over again, stuart, if he'd be willing, capable to take over for joe biden at the top of that ticket? he kept dodging my question saying that joe biden is going to be the nominee. he supports him. stuart. stuart: okay. we'll see. aishah, thanks very much indeed. former biden white house communications director kate benningfield said biden was really disappointing last night. roll it. >> yeah, look, it was a really disappointing debate performance from joe biden. there's no other way to slice it. his biggest issue to prove to the american people he had the energy, the stamina, and he didn't do that. so i think that is of concern, and i think for a lot of democrats it's very disappointing. stuart: sure is. lisa boothe joins me now. biden's debate performance is setting off real loud alarm bells for democrats. i want to know where you think
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they go from here. where do the democrats and their campaign, where do they go? >> well, let's just say if i were joe biden, i wouldn't accept any dinner invitations to the clinton household at this point. look, you've got democrats sharpening the myself. you've probably got kamala harris and gavin newsom trying to make their case to democrat donors as well to democrat leaders. i'm sure jill biden and joe biden are fielding a lot of calls trying to enjoe biden to drop out of the race. i want joe biden to stay in this race. anyone who wants donald trump to win this election should want joe biden to stay in the race. you want donald trump to face the weakest candidate he could possibly face. that debate last night would have looked a lot different with kamala harris or gavin newsom on the stage. it's time for the republican party to expand their line of attack beyond joe biden to start attacking the democrat party at large because, look, joe biden is not a terrible president because he's 81. he's a terrible president
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because he's a democrat. look at california for example. gavin newsom's 56 years old. they have the highest taxes, highest unemployment, homelessness, crime, the list goes on and they're taxed into oblivion and the country state queens failing not because joe biden is 81 but because he's a democrat. stuart: who do you think is the real president? who do you think state queens calling the -- is calling the shots? it's hard for us to find out and president's cognitive decline is significant. who is it? who's the person behind the curtain? who's writing his note cards and putting the stuff into his tell prompt terrific and whispering in his ear? who is this person? >> i don't know but, you know, does it matter? what's more dangerous to me is how much we've been lied to about this. if you remember that wall street journal article trying to take us behind the scenes into joe biden's cognitive decline. how many democrat leaders and cabinet secretaries were on the record telling us and assuring us everything is fine and nothing to see here. we had the media and democrats accuse republicans of these
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cheap fakes, of doctoring these videos showing joe biden in cognitive decline he's in and the fact he's falling apart and he's not ready for the job, lying to us, accusing republicans of these cheap fakes when the truth was on the stage last night. now it's so in americans face, they cannot deny it, but they're willing to go to that length to lie to the american people, that extent to look us in the face and tell us the same thing we saw the 51 intelligence officers. former cia directors lying to the american people saying hunter biden's laptop was russian disinformation when it was the truth. that's dangerous. the point where we are now to the lengths that democrats and the media are willing to cover up for the democrat party. we're in dangerous territory with that. that scares me worse. stuart: with you all the way. lisa boothe, thank you very much indeed. good stuff. >> stuart, take care. stuart: jd vance is considered one of the top contenders for trump's vice president position. what did he have to say about last night's i did bait, ashley?
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ashley: yeah, the republican senator from ohio, stu, says that trump dominated the debate and democrats have only themselves to blame for keeping joe biden as their leader. this is what he told sean hannity last night, listen. >> it's too late. they have let their voters -- basically gave them one choice, gave them the joe biden choice, and that's what they're stuck with in presenting this case to the american people. it's so funny, sean, you hear democratic operatives now and there's a spin room behind us and talking about how they don't want joe biden on the ticket anymore. what's a bigger threat to democracy than running this entire primary process in an effectively throwing a guy off because he had a disastrous debate performance? this is the choice that democrats have offered the american people. ashley: saying it straight. vance went onto say trump has so much more energy and clarity then biden adding the contrast in his mind is insane.
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stu. stuart: okay. thanks, ash. coming up, actor kelsey grammar has publicly supported donald trump and that's rare for a hollywood star. has he been ostracized? i'll ask him, he's next. ♪ [thunder rumbles] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently.
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stuart: the union that represents most film and tv crew members has reached a tentative contract deal with major hollywood studios. this follows months of bargaining. ashley, any details? ashley: i do indeed. national alliance ophtheti reigns leading cal stage employees -- of theatrical stage employees and it's a three year agreement including pay hikes and artificial intelligence protections.
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they have demanded and agreed upon union members and the art directors, set painters, editors, camera techs, costume designer, hair stylist and makeup artists and all of those. good news for stu studios that endured production stopping strike and we know the labor turmoil in hollywood and the union must still vote to approve the new contract all though it's expected and meantime a separate agreement that affects about 20,000 crew members across the country still under negotiations. stu. stuart: got t thanks, ash. got to check stocks for you. first off the big board and dow up 126 points and day after the debate of course and i'm looking at dow winners, united health, goldman sachs, ame american exp, solid green. they're winners and synchrony financial, discover, steel
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dynamics and nasdaq winners headed by sirius xm and marvel technology and qualcomm and nxp semiconductor. more markets for you, the 10-year treasury yield has been going up and what is it today? it's going up some more. and price of gold, $2,330 per ounce and bit country-specific dropped down to -- bitcoin dropped to $60,000. price of oil above $81 per barrel and nat gas above $3 and average price of gallon of regular, $3.50, no change. california, $4.4.80 for a gallon of regular. biden calling hollywood elites to support his election campaigns and having support from stars like george clooney and julia roberts and kelsey grammar is with me and he's a supporter of trump. kelsey, welcome to the show. great to have you with us, this morning. >> thank you, stuart.
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how you doing? stuart: no complaints this morning. have you been ostracized in hollywood because you're a trump guy? >> i don't speak to that kind of stuff very often. i've been a well known conservative in california for 40 years and i come from a reasoned and rational point of view politically and don't take short views for too long a time. stuart: why do you like trump? >> well, because donald trump is pointed in the direction i think the country needs to go. stuart: okay, get to your special on fox nation. it's all about our first president, george washington. i've got a clip, roll it, please. >> it was dry for battlefield glory and just triggers international catastrophe and french diplomat killed and the war between england and france around the corner and head the way for father of the country
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launching his military career, yes, and we can all learn from our mistakes at this exact moment, georgia washington has a more pressing problem: whether to retreat or stay and fight. stuart: george, rise of the revolutionary is out on monday on fox nation just in time for jejuly the fourth. what will viewers get to learn about washington in this special, kelsey? >> well, they're going to get a look at his younger, more mad impetuous days and i did a version with one of my first acting jobs and it's a great story, but my admiration for george washington is unmatched for element anyone else because of his sheer force of will that came to bare in terms of realizing our country and bringing it about. he learned some of those things with his stubborn quality and his perseverance and his unbelievable give and these
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things shaped and molded the whole american consciousness and he's the father of that. stuart: starts monday, fox nation streaming there and kelsey grammar has the story and terrific stuff. we wish you the best of luck and thank you for being on the show. always a pleasure. see you later. >> good to see you, like wise. stuart: guess what, folks. friday feedback is next. ♪ (♪) car, this isn't the way home. that's right james, it isn't. car, where are we going? we're here. (♪) surprise!!! the future isn't scary. not investing in it is. car, were you in on this? nothing gets by you james.
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♪ stuart: i like toby keith and i really like that song. that's navajo damn and new mexico. that looks like a real nice day. here we go, friday feedback and ashley, lauren, let's get started. first one from jan and, and ashley, this is specifically for you. where in montana did you live and how long were you there? ashley: oh i lived in helena, montana, have a helena day.
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it's the capitol so a lot of politics, but i love it had. i was there as a reporter for nbc station became anchor and news director and love it had about five years. stuart: five years in montana. only state i've never been to. need to get there. ashley: have to go. lauren: you've been to 49 states? stuart: yes, ma'am. from russell, mr. varney, what was your view on the dave clark five versus the beatles? >> came up from london in late 1950s, herreraly '60s and -- early '60s. their song was glad all over and they faded because they didn't have a supply of new music and the beatles went everywhere and all kinds of new stuff and they settled through one thing and faded badly. viewers i'm sure are not terribly interested.
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stuart: all four of the most disliked foods in america. all eat asking cultural. what's the most unusual food you've ever tried and did you like it? you want to start with that one, lauren? lauren: i'm not an adventurous eater so i can't name anything i've tried. i've seen people in my travels eat things i can't even watch them eat like bugs. stuart: yeah. ash? ashley: yeah, no, i'm with lauren on that. my biggest fear funny enough is pickles. i have nightmares about them and cannot stand them. stuart: well i tried and i kind of like a fruit called durian. it's in southeast asia and smells absolutely awful and make it into ice cream and it's very, very attractive. lauren: what color? stuart: like a brownie orange. ashley: smells bad and it's brown. yum. lauren: so advertising. stuart: not enticing. this comes to us from miranda.
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i absolutely think phone use should be banned during school. i understand needing to have them close by in case of emergency, but not during lessons. do you feel technology is driving us further apart? yes, i co. think it's atomizing us and we're all individuals and going for the individual screen. lauren: a lot of people make the argument that because of social media you're brought closer together and people going from way back when. stuart: not a touchy feely kind of thing. i like it in relationships. this is from rem seizure disorders. did i hear lauren say she wouldn't get her kids a dog? say it ain't so. i've had dogs my entire life.
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stuart: the dog is a farm dog. and that's a different dog from one that lives in your apartment. ashley: we dropped an older dog from the local shelter and her name is irish. i'll get a picture to you and she's wonderful and it's great to have that kind of love in your life i got to be honest. stuart: i didn't have a dog in my house till i was 55 years old and i fell in love with her. what a great dog. now i couldn't live without one. there you go. thanks, everybody, for your friday feedback. wait for it, now it's time for the friday trivia question. in 1803, the u.s. bought 530 million acres in north america from france. it was called a louisiana purchase. okay, how much did it cost? in dollars in those days, $15,
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$30, $45, or $60 million? answer when we come back. we've always been competitive. yeah... one of us always had to be first. first! first! [continue bickering in background] hold on, guys! [car honk] first. today, we're first together. .. put yourselves first. vanguard investments and advice. for college, retirement, and all of life's firsts. that's the value of ownership. what will you do when the power goes out? power outages can be unpredictable and inconvenient, but with a generac home standby generator, your life goes on uninterrupted. because when your generac detects a power outage,
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million acres from france. it was called the louisiana purchase and it cost 15, 30, 45, $60 million our resident historian ashley webster has the privilege of going first. ashley: i'm no historian but 1803, 50 million is a lot of money. i go with number one, 15. lauren: i second that is 15 million. we one upping the stakes, $30 million and you are right, it was 15 million, the deal was completed by thomas jefferson, the land of stretches from mississippi to the rocky mountains, 50 million, today that 15 million then is worth 417 million now. great show, day after the big d debate. lauren, ashley, good to see you, see you again soon. coast-to-coast starts now. neil:
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