tv On the Money ABC December 6, 2015 7:30am-8:01am EST
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welcome to on the money. i'm sharyn epperson in for becky quick. read all about it. how best selling author james patterson is putting his money where his reading glasses are. his mission to get more americans to pick up books, and not just the ones he wrote. the drug company under investigations after accusations of kickback schemes to boost sales. >> there was just an insatiable agreeded. ou> get a degree in this and you can just about write your own ticket. the booming field where demand for workers is a whole lot higher than supply. and picture this. the best way to save those precious photos you are taking during the holiday season. on the money starts right now. >> announcer: this is on the money, your money, your life, your future.
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james patterson is among the most prolific authors of all time. he has written 147 books that have sold more than 305 million copies. but beyond all the suspense thrillers and novels he has penned he has also been on a crusade. and that's our cover story this week. one of the country's most popular writers is on a mission. james patterson is dedicated to getting more people reading. 30 million americans can't read. that's about 14% of the adult population. across the u.s., the literacy rate has remained about the same for the past ten years. patterson says the country must make reading a national priority, especially for children. but he's encouraging kids to read not just the young adult series he writes like middle school, house of robots or treasure hunters. >> the illustrations are humor use. >> he has been a one man foundation working to fight illiteracy and funding the
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evidence himself. he is pledging $2 mil mon to get new books to school libraries. last year he gave grants to 178 million bookstores. has given more than $5 million ton scholarships to students and reading teachers. beyond that, he has donate more than a million books directly to soldiers and school children. the national book foundation presented james patterson for, quote expanding the audience for books and reading. when becky quick spoke to him recently he explained when he started his writing career he experienced a lot of rejection. >> interesting thing about that book,, it was turned down by 31 publishers. it then won an award for best misstree. >> it was turned down by 31 -- keep the names of all the editors that turned me down, so that when they send me blurbs. >> that in itself is a show of entrepreneurial spirit that you
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wouldn't take no for an answer. >> it's necessary. you have to be able to get knocked down and get back up again. >> what do you think about the state of publishing industry today versus where it was when you started. >> i think it's like everything in life. it's more complicated. i think we are getting a bounce between e books and paper books again. it's evening out. and the publishing industry needs to innovate more. >> you started with suspense thrillers and moving into children's books. why? >> the interesting thing for me about children's book. i started an imprint a little one called jimmy. the smart one is when a kid finish as jimmy book, they will say please give me another book. because a lot of kids when they finish a book, they say i don't like books. >> how do you catch kids. >> you hook them. get a story they are interested
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in in. >> where do you start? with the plot w the page. >> this is weird. >> i can write a story about pretty much anything. >> about baby shoes. >> yeah, i could give something about baby shoes. >> give meshoes. >> not off the top of my head. give me an hour -- right off the bat, it sounds like a horror story. that's probably where i'd go with it of the. it's going to be a horror story or a teary love story. one of the two. see i'm already starting it. >> did it get easier the more books you wrote or was this just your personality? >> i grew up in upstate new york and spent a lot of time wandering in the woods or whatever. and i would tell myself stories. and i went to graduate school at vanderbilt. and i remember while driving i would write plays in my head. >> i play the license plate game. you are a different person. >> i would be writing play,
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musicals, singing the songs, buy czar. >> were you driving by yoself? was there somebody with you. >> yeah, by myself. >> you have got a creative imagination. >> it is a fun thing. and that ability to imagine stuff and then to be able to turn it into a story -- that's a tricky thing. there aren't -- some writers have a lot of ideas but they don't -- they can't put it together very well. and some are really good writers but they don't have a lot of ideas. i'm just very lucky in that i have a lot of ideas and i can write them reasonably well. >> you have been on the forefront trying to make sure that we stamp out illiteracy. >> yeah. i don't know about staff it out but draw attention to it. the essence about getting kids reading is almost everyone watching can do it. you can do it in your house. you can actually get your kid -- you can. you can get your kid reading. you have to be firm about it.
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you don't let them track mud on the floor and you say we read in our house. that's it. we read in our house. and no is not an acceptable answer. >> why is it so important to you? >> if the kids are going to become decent readers you want them to read more broadly because there is nowhere you can get so much information and understand how complicated things are. whether you read war and peace or become a life long reader isn't as important as kids becoming c competent readers. if they are competent readers they can get flew school a and there are more possibilities for them. >> in life. >> yeah, yeah. >> mr. patterson thank you. now here's a look at what's making news as we head into a new week on the money. a strong job report for the morcht of november. the department of economy created jobs ahead of expectations last month. this jobs report makes it more
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likely the federal reserve will raise interest rates at its meeting later this month. that sent the dow higher in early trading on friday after two triple digit losses during the week. with the nasdaq and the s&p 500 following suit stocks finished higher on friday. auto sales are a in high gear wh november's numbers clocking out to an annual rate of 18 million vehicles. that's on pace for a 14-year high. chrysler, ford, gm, toyota a of their sales were up. you can rest easy. mattress firm holding company is buying second place sleep ease for $780 million. the companies will have a combined 3500 stores and more than $3.5 billion in sales annually. up next, we're on the money. the drug company under investigation in at least six states, accused of putting profits before patients for its pain killing drugs. and later, if you want job securityty, this is the field t pick. and as we go to break, a
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the number of painkillers dispensed in the u.s.. nearly quadrupled from 1999 to 20106789 even though the amount of pain americans have reported hasn't changed. that's according to the centers for disease control and prevention. the cdc also told us about 45 people per day die from prescription painkiller overdose. we have a story on how one pharmaceutical company is accused of contributing to the epidemic and what you can do to protect urself. >> the goal was profits
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regardless of the effect on patients. >> the oregon attorney general is talking about ensis therapeutics, who market a opiate the fda should only be used for persistent cancer pain. the company is now being investigated in at least six states, california, massachusetts, connecticut, arizona, illinois, and in oregon, where the state accused ensis of engaging in kickback schemes and illegal marketing all in an effort to boost sales. >> have been investigating drug cases for about is a years now, and the conduct that we saw in this case is among the most unconscionable i've seen. >> reporter: the former sales representative says she resigned in october after realizing -- >> there was just an insatiable agreed as far as trying to just get as many prescriptions as possible. >> reporter: theo be prescriber nationally according to a health and human services
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office of inspector general complaint was a newerologist, dr. hour book. he is accused of engaging in health care fraud and distribution of controlled substances. among other things, it says he was prescribing the drug for patients who didn't have cancer and some didn't report severe pain. hour book billed medicare almost $7 billion for the drug, mostly in 2014. in that same year he received $54,000 from the company for thing like speaker fees, travel, and meals. this database is how we found that two physicians in alabama, partners at a practice received over $210,000 from ensis in 2013 and 2014 n. may they were arrested on drug and fraud charges. both pleaded not guilty. a fast track expedites approval
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for a spray to use substance. shannon walsh had originally been looking forward to selling a product like this because she thought it could have really helped late stage cancer patients like her father. but when shannon told management she wanted to approach palliative care offices. >> i was basically told just don't bother calling on those offices because the patients would die too quickly. >> after our investigation first aired the company's ceo would step down. ensis did tell us it takes patient safety serious she and quote we are committed to work with health care providers to help ensure the proper prescribing of our products. our compliance process is designed with this in mind. now the company also settled with the state of oregon for over $1 million, ensis did not
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admit to wrongdoing in that settle men. >> we still need to check out our doctors. this is what i'm learning from your package. tell me more about this websi and what information you can gain. >> it's just a great tool that empowers the patient because you can check on your doctor. all you have to do is type in the doctor's name and you have a breakdown of which company paid the doctor, what the payment was for, how much it was for, and the date it was made. i want to underscore this is a common practice in the fa pharmaceutical company. but if you log on and see a lot of payments made by the same company frequently for a lot of money you might want to ask your doctor about that. >> great information. great reason to go to that website and check out your doctor. thank you. looking for a new career? try this new field where me
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cyber security. by 2020, there are expected to be 1.5 million unfilled jobs in cyber security. that means that runt graduates in the field can write their own ticket. joining me now are ibm security president caleb barlow and kevin chung. caleb, how big an issue is the shortage of workers in the cyber security area? >> it is a huge issue. 175 million unfilled jobs. odds are there are several hundred jobs today that aren't filled. the challenge we have is not only do we need the technical talent but we need the pipeline of students coming out of universities. >> kevin right now just graduating from school of engineering at nyu. how has that provided the skills for you and many students. >> we have classes where we encourage an attacker mind-set in younger students and we have thing like hack night where we work with students on attacking
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real life systems. they are not actual systems, but we deploy them and pretend that they a actual problems. >> a competition. itit became the world's largest competition, and many companies actually providing you information on types of challenges to set up for people to try to solve. >> yes. >> how important is it for you to have students able to do this? and how closely do you look at these competitions and the students who succeed in them like kevin. >> it's not an accident that we look to sponsor competitions like this. and it's also not an accident we are working with over 300 universities we need people who can think like the bad guys. most of the attacks out there -- this is this alarming thing that most people don't realize are completely avoidable. people exploiting known vulnerabilities and it's only when you train like this to go in and fine the vuler in its you get two benefits, one, a cyber security work force that knows
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how to secure systems but when these individuals go to build new innovations applications they are thinking about security by design. >> when we hear about the data preaches it is alarming and concern about what this means to you. but what this means to a rene graduate o someone who is looking into figure out what to major in, kevin is you could see one of the most recruited students on the campus. your eyes lit up because you were one of those people at nyu. how attractive do you think you are as a candidate? and considering the 2015 graduates how my job offers did you get comparepa to some o your colleaeagues. >> i don't want to get into the exact number -- >> that means it was high. >> but i would assume that it's -- my fellow students -- i assume it's larger. and. >> and the salaries are larger. >> yeah. >> caleb in terms of the salary, you can graduate and get a six figure salary?
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>> absolutely. >> as an undergraduate, with a degree. >> absolutely because people aren't any good. fur a top cyber suit absolute coming out of school, not only demand, it's also about money. students want to go to work to someplace where they are going to see these types of attacks and use their skills. one of the other types of challenges is not every type of company is attractive to these types of students. a pass gnatting example, at one of the most rene cyber security conferences, the top kind of evening event wasn't some venture funded sidebarer security company. it was a shoe company. >> because they care about it also. >> absolutely. they have got to recruit the talent. >> every sass suspect of our economy. thank you, gentlemen. >> up next on the money, a look at the news for the week ahead. and 'tis the season to say cheese. but how can you make sure all those photos sta safely
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labor turnover report will be released. and it's been 35 years since john lennon was shot and killed in front of his apartment building in new york city. the end of the week brings the producer price index, the price of inflation. also friday, the big number of the week we'll get a read on the consumer with the retail sales for november. and seven years ago, bernie nay dove was arrested for one of the biggest security frauds in history. eggs serving a 150-year sentence. an estimated 1.8 billion photos are uploaded and shared every single day. that's according to the kpcb internet trends report. with this kind of shear volume, everyone is bound to run out of space. so how do you keep track of it all? joining us now is tecology journalist natali morris with more on organizing and storing your photos, because it is your money, your future, and your memories.. and natali, this is the type of year that pictures are on my phone. i have so many from the thanksgiving holiday and i just don't know what to do with them all. >> right. >> where do you start? >> you have to have a strategy.
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your phone is not your hard drive or your sturge solution. think of your phone as a temporary hard drive. you've taken the pictures. now you have got to put them somewhere. i like redundancy. i put my photos both in the clouded and on a hard drive i have in my own house. i feel safer about that. >> you have the phone, the hard drive, the cloud. >> yeah. >> and now how does the cloud work? do i have to pay for that? what do i look for in terms of putting my photos on the included? >> there are so many companies that want to store your photos on their services. you have a lot of options. the key is choose one. i like to choose one that has printable options as well because i like to make the cute books and all that stuff. you have aem, you have google. you have drop box. you also have microsoft. they all have a cloud solution. amazon is doing it as well with their prime. >> you can do it up to a point for free, right? >> you can. most of them will offer you --
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it's called premium, it's free up to a point but if you are using it as your main storage solution i feel okay paying for that. >> there are security concerns for people. the cloud. do i want to put my photos out there? that's why you never sake naked photos of yourself. first of all. yes, there is always going to be a security concern there, especially because for some of these services they are being stored at servers owned by companies,an encrypteded or not. you have to think about that. and you use solid password strategies and that's why you have your hard drive back up. my big concern is what if one of these servers pops out or gets hacked. then i've lost all the baby photos of my kids? you know, that's why i like redundancy. save them in triplicate. >> the phone, the hard drive, and fine a cloud service. >> and make it a part of your -- like you are watching tv, drag stuff over.
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it's mindless work. sometimes when i'm on a conference call i'll be dragging over photos while i'm listening to someone else. make it a regular habit because if your kid turns 8 and you have got eight years of photos. >> you are making m me feel bad. i'm going to start doing that, never paying attention in a meeting again. >> that's what you took away from this. >> thanks for being here. that's our show for today i'm sharon ep herbson becky will be back next week. next week, surprise your pet with the perfect present. we will have holiday gift ideas for your dog or your cat. keep it here on the money. keep it here on the money. we will a see you next weekend.
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so go online or call now. get out of the past. get fios. good morning, america. new overnight, investigation intensifies. the fbi tracking those guns used in the san bernardino massacre, descending on this home. >> i heard the windows crashing. you know, the garage door being pulled. doors being broken down. >> what did they find? reconstructing the crime scene, the high-tech way of how every bullet fired is being retraced inside that kill room, as more survivors describe the horror this morning. good evening. >> message to the nation. >> we're also learning more about the kills. >> president obama's rare oval office address tonight, what we learned about his plans to keep america safe. and america in arms. >> we have sold out about every 9 millimeter pistol we sale. >> guns sales surging. as the government goes to the
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