Skip to main content

tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  October 16, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

11:00 am
>> we use the terms misinformation and disinformation to refer to facts, news, and information that hurts their political agenda. >> the reactors on site and it'll be for the data centers and looking for bill gates and sam atman are investing and it's right there. >> look in the first term, he threatened tariffs on mexican bear and avocados and got up to them and the southern border and way back and a nationallal security risk and what have democrats railed about and run on? donald trump. that's all they got. >> we know what it's like for president. he was president for four years and things went extremely well in this country.
11:01 am
♪ stuart: this is one of my favorite songs of all times. this is wednesday, october 16th. let's check the markets and the dow industrials are up 200 points and a minor loss for the nasdaq and mostly higher today and i should tell you united health, goldman, they're two dow stocks doing very well and add them together and they add 200 points to the dow. strong performance. show me big tech, please. not much going on there and nvidia is up $1.40 and amazon, alphabet, microsoft they're all down. 10 year treasury at 4%, 4.009% to be precise. that's the markets. now this, there's no secret that
11:02 am
kamala harris is vulnerable and was the vice president for three and a half years and given the job early on of fixing the boarder and may not be named the border czar and that was the job she was given and utterly failed at it. now that she's doing a few interviews, her handlers are scrambling to come up with excuses with reasons like 8.5 million illegals columbiaing on on her watch. she's tried blaming trump and that's a nonstarter and tried blaming this year's border bill and doesn't account for the previous three and a half years and her interview with charlamagne tha god, she's come upward mobility a fine piece of misinformation. asked if she had any responsibility for the migrant mess. she said the first thing we did when we came into office was a bill to fix the broken immigration system as if the problem started right there, and it wasn't her fault. that doesn't fly. the bill to fix the immigration system was actually the u.s. citizenship act, whose main purpose was to offer a path to
11:03 am
citizenship for 11 million migrants living illegally in america. it was an n-amide amnesty bill and had little support. had lit toll do with a subsequent border chaos and in fact they were designed to create 11 million new democrat voters. this is classic misinformation. it's not a lie, it's just earl irrelevant to the real question about responsibility. struggling to get away from one of the worst failures of her time in office. third hour of varney starts now. ♪ stuart: martha maccallum joining me now. welcome back to the program. do voters see through harris' spin tactics blaming her failure on others? >> the immigration issue is a bad issue for her and bad issue for biden. it is one where she could have really separated herself at this
11:04 am
point. i mean, i wonder what the impact would be if she had said, look, you know, mistakes were made. we should have done that executive order much sooner. we hoped that congress would take up the mantle but they didn't. my goal, you know, she called say is to essentially not see people crossing illegally anymore and figure out how to get them through the ports of entry once again. she put her arms around it and say i'll tackle this in the coming year ifs i'm president. but she's always equivocating and trump is who he says he is. everybody knows him and what he stands for and might not like the way he says it but one of the biggest issues to watch in the election is what happens with the women and male voters entrenched on the sides and gender gap on who are the late deciders and that's the column i'll look at when we get exit polls. who are the late deciders and
11:05 am
are they shy, women trump voters or shy men kamala voters? stuart: that's a good question. >> this is what i think will be the thrust of where we look in 28 days from today. stuart: not many people in the groups. >> no, there isn't. but there's people holding their feelings close to the vest. people that are not answering the calls from pollsters and those will be the people when they actually go in and push a button behind the closed door or send in the mail, they're the ones that we're going to be -- that will be deciding this election. stuart: democrat congresswoman debbie dingell has a warning for the harris campaign. watch this. >> i don't think people know kamala harris yet. i do. i know how great she s. we all know who donald trump is and i'm not going to use any adjectives even though i'd like to. he is who he is. he's passionate and says what he thinks and people know him. i think kamala is trying to do that.
11:06 am
she's doing more media interviews and doing different places and i wish they'd let her go into the union hall quite frankly. stuart: she's been vice president for more than three and a half years and how can people say we don't know her yet. >> i'm listening to debbie dingell and i think she's right. when mccain lost they said, they didn't let mccain be mccain. when romney lost, this documentary came out and he was strong and this and that. oh, if that's side -- if we knew that side on the campaign trail, he might have won. she comes across as varicose veins handled and said i'm very disciplined. being discipline second-degree a very good trait but at times can prevent people from feeling like they know you and where you want to take this country and there's so much fuzziness on this and it's not clear and what direction she doesn't want it to go in but where she wants it to
11:07 am
take us, i think, it maybe still unclear for voters. stuart: she was asked what would you do differently had you been president? she said there's not a thing i can think of at this time. that's not comforting. >> she should have had a very solid answer for that. here's what i would do differently. she keeps saying i'm not joe biden but then doesn't say why. i look forward to bret baier's interview tonight because we all know bret and he's as straightforward as they come and his follow up is in what way? she hasn't been asked that yet. i'm excited. we have a big day. we have harris faulkner with president trump and lots of, you know, outspoken women in that audience in georgia and then tonight we have bret baier with kamala harris. it'll be a great day. stuart: and you at 3:30 0 this afternoon on the story, 3:00 p.m. eastern fox news and as you said, bret baier's interview with vice president harris tonight, 6:00 p.m. eastern. a big day indeed on fox. >> thank you, stuart.
11:08 am
stuart: thanks, martha. check that market. we have a nice gain for the dow and a tiny loss for the nasdaq. mark tepper is with me and he'll with be us for the hour. what is this market saying now? >> yeah and look, the reason i follow the betting odds market relating to the election, i think it's more important than the polls because number one, people are placing their hard earned money and they're betting on which candidate will win and number two, it's more in line with the electoral college as opposed to the popular vote. president trump has done very well over the last 10-20 days and 60-40 trump to harris. 10-12 days ago they were even at like 49-49. big movements towards trump and the biggest thing that's happened, stu, is in the six swing states, 10-12 days ago, trump was ahead in arizona and georgia.
11:09 am
then he pulled ahead in pennsylvania, then michigan, then wisconsin and now he's ahead in all six of the swing states. stuart: per the betting odds market. >> yes and it's reflected in the stock market and sectors and stock reflecting from the trump presidency outperformed over the last 10-12 days. stuart: which sectors and industries perform well because trump is looking good. >> the last regulation and stronger consumers and consumer discretionary on the consumer side and it's on the regulation side financials and energy and here's the interesting thing and big tech, which is over the last several years and normally correlated with a higher probability of a democratic president and he's now moving in line with trump and the reason for that is over 40% doj
11:10 am
investigation. stuart: over 40%. >> over 40% is under doj investigation for one thing or another. the thought there is that if trump comes in, he's got his issues with doj and maybe the doj doesn't have as much power to fallow through -- follow through and breaking apagoge and will may not happen as everyone is expecting right now. stuart: quick question, we keep hitting new highs and is there room to go higher still? >> absolutely. i said last week, the best is behind us and i do think that we're still trading higher. donald trump's new crypto project world liberty financial went live yesterday and fell short on the sales goals and have outages. >> yeah, they're long lasting throughout the day and it's not good for business and the cofounder of that and over
11:11 am
100,000 on the first aid business according to ether scan by yesterday afternoon and going about 4300 people in the crypto wallets and world liberty financial said it sold more than 532 million tokens yesterday and they were sold at 0.15 centss a piece. they sold less than 3% of the 20 billion tokens available. so it's used adds barometer of the performance in trump's election and we came from this and harris with her black men initiative saying she supports crypto and by in large tram subpoena a crypto candidate and that's how people view him. it's a messy start to the personal venture and we'll see how it continues to pan out and
11:12 am
from a political aspect, it shows he's committed to this space. stuart: he's the crypto guy, got it. stuart: i talked about it and i think i'm better than he would be and better than most people would be in that position. stuart: okay, that's trump and breaking down the full criticism of the fed for you a little later. house speaker johnson calling out cbs for how they edit their interviews and they purposely undermine republicans that held help democrats like kamala harris. brent bozell taking that on next. ♪ ♪ the soul searcher. and - ahoy! it's the explorer! each helping to protect their money with chase. woah, a lost card isn't keeping this thrill seeker down. lost her card, not the vibe. the soul searcher, is finding his identity,
11:13 am
and helping to protect it. hey! oh yeah, the explorer! she's looking to dive deeper... all while chase looks out for her. because these friends have chase. alerts that help check. tools that help protect. one bank that puts you in control. chase. make more of what's yours. when a tough cough finds you on the go, a syrup would be... silly! woo! hey! try new robitussin soft chews. packed with the power of robitussin... in every bite. easy to take cough relief, anywhere. chew on relief, chew on a ♪ robitussin ♪
11:14 am
welcome to ameriprise. i'm sam morrison. my brother max recommended you. so, my best friend sophie says you've been a huge help. at ameriprise financial, more than 9 out of 10 of our clients are likely to recommend us. our neighbors, the garcía's, love working with you.
11:15 am
because the advice we give is personalized, -hey, john reese, jr. -how's your father doing? to help reach your goals with confidence. my sister's told me so much about you. that's why it's more than advice worth listening to. it's advice worth talking about. ameriprise financial.
11:16 am
11:17 am
stuart: kamala harris heading back to pennsylvania today and it'll be her eleventh visit this election cycle. alexis mcadams in washington crossing, that is in pennsylvania. alexis, what is harris' big pitch today? reporter: hi, stuart. you can see behind me that's the delaware river where of course george washington crossed in 1776 and that's why kamala harris chose it because she'll focus on unity and the constitution and tram subpoena a threat to democracy saying he should not go back to the white house, watch. >> a second trump term would be dangerous for america and donald trump is unhinged and unchecked and he's out for power and
11:18 am
that's what he's looking for. reporter: the rallies that i've been going to here in pennsylvania and the one i went to the other day in north carolina. he sharpened her tax on trump and going after him and we don't have too much longer with the election psychoand will she's changed her media strategy and been on everything for the podcast the other day and charlamagne tha god calling out the vice president for sounding too scripted. what do you say to people that say you stay on the talking points? >> i would say you're welcome. the reality is that there's certain things that must be repeated to ensure that i have everyone know what i stand for and the issues that i think are at stake in this election. so it requires repetition.
11:19 am
reporter: she believes repetition is key and we only have a short time. shows harris at 50% and trump at 49 in pennsylvania. today in buck county, that's in a swing county and swing state and for the first time, listen to this. there were more registered republicans here in bucks county than democrats and here back out here live as we get ready to hear exactly what kamala harris has to say to bret baier later tonight and we'll try to get as many topics in in 30 minutes as possible and she'll go to wisconsin and it's a dead heat. stuart. stuart: bret baier interview, that's a big deal. see you again soon. thank you. house speaker mike johnson calling out cbs news for selectively editing his interview on face the nation. he posted a series of clips comparing what was aired and this is the full answers he gave. he accuses cbs of working to undermine republicans. brent bozell follows this stuff
11:20 am
and he joins me now. cbs60 minutes edited kamala harris interview and did it to make her look better and professional integrity take a hit? >> no, they have a rich history of this. go gabbing and they flat out lied about a story trying to up end george bush and kudos to speaker johnson for doing what many republicans won't do is stand up and slap them back in the face. he made two very good points and two take aways were really interesting here, stuart. one was his advice to fellow republicans and don't do any taped interviews with the networks and simply can't trust them anymore. to not manipulate a story. make the interview live. the second thing i thought was
11:21 am
really interesting was that he filmed them filming him and turned the tables on them. i would recommend any conservative doing a network interview follow his advice, do it live and if they tape it, tape them. what they did was shameless. both what they did to him and what they did for her. stuart: i've got a new poll showing it's really extraordinary and showing only 31% of us have a great deal or a fair amount of trust in the media and that's a record low. 36% have no trust at all. you're a media watch dog. why do you think this is happen something >> going back to the a gallop poll and it's straight down and drafted another point this year and they're in the toilet and they're on the # level officessed car salesmen and another poll that came out
11:22 am
recently and marketing experts saying it's far more sophisticated than the public and stove shows what they're thinking when it take as poll and in this poll they took, only 7% of the public "truly" believe the media. only 7%. that's the number to look at. look, people are seeing every single day. look at attacks on donald trump. no matter what hyoideus even after he's shot in the head, they attack him and the puck lick has seen this. this is by the way, donald trump's favorable ratings and unfavorables haven't changed after a nonstop season of attacks on him and the public is seeing what they're doing. stuart: highly skeptical. brent bozell, good stuff. thank you. now this, donald trump suggests that he would be a better >> he
11:23 am
said he thought he'd do a better job. take a listen. >> i think i have the right to say as a very good businessman and somebody that's used a lot of sense, i think i have the right to say that i think i'm better than he would be. i think i'm better than he would be. i think i have a right to say going up or down a little bit and they shouldn't be allowed to odder terrific and the right to put in comments as to interest rates go down. >> standing on fed policy intervention saying he'd believe there's a specific moves and
11:24 am
independence from the president and helping global status at the world standard and that's a important part of that and going for the global market. stuart: yeah, that's important and do you think that president trump is a good fed chair? >> i'm going to bite my tongue on that. jay powell had a very, very difficult uphill bat and will as he's raised rates for combat inflation, he's had to deal with fiscal stimulus and it's certainly making his job a heck of a lot more difficult. stuart: trump said he doesn't want to order a rate change by the federal reserve. i'm okay with that and wouldn't want the president to order a
11:25 am
rate change. >> that's healthy. >> that's important and there's so much conversation leading up to this and cutting rates to aggressively with the 50 point cut and that separation and public trust and the fed being separate is important and i'm glad he softened his tone and i don't think the president should have the ear of the fed if you will and needs to be a separate entity. stuart: got it. all right, i want to check the beauty stocks, elf. truist cut 12 month price target from 210 all the way down to 130. that's quite a cut. ulta beauty reported and the ceo sees head winds in the beauty industry as well as stiffer competition and the stock is down 4%. coming up, u.s. giving israel 30 days to get more medical help to gaza. if they don't, the white house could pull military aid and the latest from israel. new york's governor hochul
11:26 am
sending state troopers to the city to clean up a street infested with crime. residents say it was filled with more brothels than bodegas and see a crack down on migrant gangs in the city? the new york post jon levine will be with us shortly.
11:27 am
11:28 am
11:29 am
wall street forecasts over $100 billion in sales for weight loss drugs known as glp-1. even with disliked injections. dehydratech processing of a glp-1 drug demonstrated improved blood sugar reduction and reduced side effects. study results are arriving monthly and lexaria has entered a new relationship within the global pharmaceutical industry. lexaria bioscience, transforming the future of glp-1 drug delivery. (cheerful music) (phone ringing) [narrator] not all multi-millionaires built their wealth the same way, you have... the fearless investor. the type a cpa. the bootstrapper. the bootmaker. yeehaw [narrator] but many do have something in common. we all trust schwab with our wealth. [narrator] thanks to our award-winning service, low costs and transparent advice. every day, over a million multi-millionares trust schwab with more than two trillion dollars of their wealth.
11:30 am
stuart: check the markets. now it's all green. dow up 200 and tiny gains for s&p and tiny loss for nasdaq. mark tepper has stock pick with us this morning. we heard this before. >> yeah, it's a read owning distribution and warehouse and a theme we've talked about for awhile and not getting much attention and as stores with their retail footprints shrink, you're going to need more distribution centers and more warehouses and we just saw that this week with walgreens announcing they're going to be closing stores and this stock sold off about 10% in the earnings and this is a great buying opportunity to get into a great real estate investment stock. stuart: where is it going?
11:31 am
>> easily 6-10%. public disdain for larry fink and there's three catalysts and they all surround higher management fees to etfs and the first one there's like 7 trillion market funds as money market rates come down. they command higher fees and you're seeing more actively managed etfs as of late. actively managed etfs currently make up 8% of etf market and rear to date fun flows and commanding them passing and great things for blackrock whether you like larry fink or not. stuart: thanks, mark. u.s. is threatening to pull military aid from israel if they don't get more medical aid into
11:32 am
gaza within the next 30 days and separately, israel reportedly is ready to strike specific targets in iran and trey yingst is in haifa, israel, for us. latest for us please, trey. reporter: tahin, they're starting the capital of beirut for the first time this week and black smoke rising from the skyline of the naked south of the capitol and the israelis targeted another hezbollah area further south in the town. large explosions seen there with the town's mayor reportedly being killed in the strikes and those come as hezbollah continues to launch large volleys of rockets into northern israel and put ago strain on the missile defense systems and the war against hezbollah ongoing, israeli attention remains on iran and an expected counter
11:33 am
attack that could come any day by israel. reports indicate israeli leadership decided on targets to hit inside iran and washington post reports that prime minister benjamin netanyahu that israel not striking oil or nuclear facilities and conversations with fox news and israeli officials indicated no target has yet been ruled out. there's remaining pleasure and they'll continue to operate on the ground against hamas till the group can no longer control the gaza strip. stuart. stuart: trey, thank you indeed. listen to this. sticker withs swastikas on them plastered around harvard university's campus. they were placed near the hill i halleluiah center near the school. >> i remember when the protests started and they tried to say it
11:34 am
was just about israeli policy and this has always been the natural end point of the movement ending up in this place. the answer to your question is yes, obviously there's no reason why the federal government should be subsidizing schools that actively preach hate towards jewish people or any group. if this was any other group but this was kill the gays or kill the blacks and obviously the funding would be cut in a second. >> i have the lowest possible expectations in life at this point. stuart: the street was nicknamed market of sweet hearts. the activists say there's more brothels than bodegas on that street. fair enough. when will we see a crackdown on violent migrants?
11:35 am
>> it's the oldest profession for brothels and the migrant influx played a part and something that new york struggled with for a very, very long time and hundreds of thousands of new arrivals here and can't legally work or anything legally because of immigration problem we have in our country and can't come to compromise and they're stuck and a lot turn to prostitution and we have unfortunately lawmakers at city council and at state level that don't really believe prostitution should be criminalized at all. and they believe whole classes of crime should be criminalized and prosecuting them as much and really need people to vote. new york city elections are not like elections in most parts of the country and basically the democratic prior may is the election and low turnout and only registered democrats are allowed to vote in them. if you want to see change, vote for them and register for the democrat party and that's how you really bring change.
11:36 am
elect lawmakers that will enforce the law. stuart: how do we elect republican mayors like rudy giuliani in the late 1990s? >> rudy lost in 1988 to david dinkins and much crazier than now and when he won in 1992, it was a very small margin and couldn't get a cab past 125th street in those days. so rudy cleaned it up but even back then at a much more hellish time than now, it was still a very close race. when new yorkers saw the result, he was swiftly reelected. hard to get people to where they need to go in new york unfortunately. stuart: yes, jon, thank you very much. google going nuclear to power the ai data centers and fox business spoke to ceo of their partner kariss power and more on that for you. wall street journal reporting
11:37 am
that elon musk is suing regulators in california because they rejected his request to launch more spacex rockets in the state. he says their decision is politically vote visited and the full story on that, next. ♪
11:38 am
11:39 am
11:40 am
11:41 am
stuart: show me the gold mining stocks and gold plays, please. they're up up with the exception of garmin rack down 28-cents and the rest on the upside. elon musk suing regulators in california after they rejected his request for more spacex launches and max gordon joining us. on what grounds is musk suing?
11:42 am
>> well, stu, california coastal commission regulating the use of the coast violated his first amendment rights and chose to do spacex's bid and going from 36 to 50 per year and has the backing of both the space force and air force since spacex is a important contractor for the federal government and members of the california coastal commission argued they needed to cut down on sonic booms and pointed out that spacex is frequently sending up private payloads and shouldn't be given exceptions enjoyed by the federal government. in a meeting the commission honed in on comments made bay musk in and on his political stances. >> right now elon musk is hopping about the country spewing and tweeting political falsehoods and attacking fema and claiming desire to help the hurricane victims with free star link access to the internet.
11:43 am
reporter: in a post on x, musk called the comments made in a meeting incredibly inappropriate and the company is engaged in naked discrimination against spacex corp. in the violation of the first amendment and united states constitution. case x made history by catching the returning super heavy rocket booster with mechanical arms on a launch pad in texas and it's north of santa barb ya and rused for the falcon 9 meme yum lift launch vehicles and the california coastal commission have no comment on lawsuit over increasing launches. stu. stuart: max gordon, thank you indeed. mark tepper with me. what i particularly like about spacex is it's a private enterprise and highly successful. >> yeah, look at spacex with space travel and they went into space to save astronauts, nasa
11:44 am
astronauts and these private companies are taking calculated resident and can if they execute on that calculated residenting there's profits to be generated but look at what our federal government has done with regards to their spending, $7 billion for seven, eight charging stations and that's inefficient. billions of dollars to intel so they can fire people. that's inefficient. so obviously you put the money in the hands of private enterprises and that's what spurs economic growth. stuart: musk is a flat out winner in space. that's a fact. >> yep. stuart: thanks. google for working on installation of seven small nuclear power reactors. they're going to be used to power google's ai's data centers. they're partnering with the f firm. >> jeff flock said trickles a real sense of urgency to find a
11:45 am
new way to power the centers and these companies need more energy, more capacity for energy and nuclear could be the solution to that. take a listen. >> there's a sense of y urgency and not just about replacing by finding the scaleable, new technologies that can really increase the capacity for whole set of applications that will be important for decarbonization and we believe nuclear power has to be a big part of that. >> more energy needed, more capacity needed and this is a first of its kind deal that will help feed the tech companies growing need for electricity to power ai. this is part of the u.s. nuclear revival and targeting 500 megawatts of nuclear power starting at end of the decade and arrangement would be the
11:46 am
first to underpin the commercial construction in the azoth small modular nuclear reactors. so this tensionnology could be the future and enables faster, less costly construction and they're building small reactors instead of huge baa'moth plants to get approval for anyway. stuart: thanks, madison. what do you think of the big tech push into nuclear? >> we saw microsoft and amazon made an announcement and if you want reliable cost effective efficient energy, you're not going to get that from solar panels and windmills, you need nuclear and that's the best way to ensure these data center haves the reliable consist energy flow they need to all develop ai and utilize it in our businesses. it's by far the best option. stuart: it's a no brainer it
11:47 am
would seem. >> a slit of winners and losers and going on the screen. more green than red and stock is up 205 points and that amounts to half a percentage point this morning. there's a big issue and people are not buying as much wine as they used to. how to solve the problem? why are they not drinking so much wine? wine maker charles smith is here and he's in the studio. he's walking towards me and brought a couple of samples with him we may not drink on the set but we'll get into the wine market after this. ♪ where ya headed? susan: where am i headed? am i just gonna take what the markets gives me? no. i can do some research. ya know, that's backed by j.p. morgan's leading strategists like us. when you want to invest with more confidence... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management
11:48 am
11:49 am
11:50 am
11:51 am
stuart: we are seeing a downturn in the wine industry all across the world. wine sales declining 8% over the last 12 months and our favorite wine maker on the show before and joining us now. charles, get right at it. why are people buying less wine and particularly youngster s? >> i think people are drinking less wine and less people are going out to eat and restaurants where a lot of people drink wine and it's inflation and interest rates and a lot of travel to the restaurants and interest rates and trying to survive the
11:52 am
margins is lowf course.
11:53 am
11:54 am
11:55 am
>> compared to drinking wine in the u.s.. is that part of the problem. i don't want to divulge how much i drank but i felt good each morning. >> they have laws against all the chemicals we put in american wine that are allowed and the idea is to many great producers in north america and around the world including australia of the wine. it's amazing and delicious. stuart: it was. >> i was absolutely -- thank you for the bottle. that was the point. wines have -- wine gives me a headache. you get a headache, it's not the grape but the other stuff. stuart: i'm sorry, i have to go because we've got the we understand trivia question. remember, it's the state capitol
11:56 am
trivia week, you cannot play, charles. what's the state capitol of pennsylvania, harrisville, pittsburgh, scranton? we'll be back with the correct answer. ..
11:57 am
when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help. because the right information, at the right time, may make all the difference. at humana, we know that's especially true when you're looking for a medicare supplement insurance plan. that's why we're offering "seven things every medicare supplement should have". it's your free, just for calling the number on your screen. and when you call, a knowledgeable, licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free. and there's no obligation. you see, medicare covers only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. that's why so many people purchase medicare supplement insurance plans like those offered by humana. they're designed to help you save money and pay some of the costs medicare doesn't. depending on the medicare supplement plan you select, you could have no
11:58 am
deductibles or copayments for doctor visits, care and more. you can keep the doctors you have now, ones you know and trust, with no referrals needed. plus, you can get medical care anywhere in the country, even when you're traveling! with humana, you get a competitive monthly premium, and personalized service, from a healthcare partner working to make healthcare simpler and easier for you. you can choose from a wide range of standardized plans. each one is designed to work seamlessly with medicare and help save you money! so how do you find the plan that's right for you. one that fits your needs and your budget? call humana now at the number on your screen for this free guide. it's just one of the ways that humana is making healthcare simpler. and when you call, a knowledgeable, licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free. and there's no obligation. you know medicare won't cover all your medical costs. so,
11:59 am
call now and see why a medicare supplement plan from a company like humana just might be the answer.
12:00 pm
stuart: today's state capital trivia, what is the capital of pennsylvania? we start with charles smith joining us. >> i believe it is harrisburg. >> growing up in new jersey close to pa, it is harrisburg. stuart: you are not going to step out of line? >> harrisburg. stuart: you are definitely harrisburg, the guy with a british accent knows these things. john harris senior, 1719, named the state capital in 1812. hosted the first national convention for the whig party in 1839. harrisburg is the state capital of pennsylvania. that's it for "varney and company". thanks for being with us. neil: i did not know that pennsylvania had so many distinctions not the least of which is the cheesesteak. no digressing what happening the corner of wall and broad. the catalyst among other things fo

3 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on