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Sep 17, 2024
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david rubenstein, he's also the host of the david rubenstein show, co-founder of the carlisle group. er of my beloved baltimore orioles, david, i'm so grateful to have you on the program this morning. >> thank you very much for having me this book i i've i've started at really digging into it and it is just fascinating what these presidents have had to say to you as they have sat down and discussed what it's like to hold this office and your own reverence for the presidency really comes through. >> one thing that i think stuck, stuck out to me as you were talking to these men, was about what brought them there as people and their parents in particular, and what they might feel tell us a little bit more about what you learned well, each of these people become president. i'd states because they have some ambitious, they worked their way to get there. when you think about it, since woodrow wilson, this has been the most important job in the world you've got about six or 7 billion people in the face of the earth. but the most important person on the face of the earth, many people would sa
david rubenstein, he's also the host of the david rubenstein show, co-founder of the carlisle group. er of my beloved baltimore orioles, david, i'm so grateful to have you on the program this morning. >> thank you very much for having me this book i i've i've started at really digging into it and it is just fascinating what these presidents have had to say to you as they have sat down and discussed what it's like to hold this office and your own reverence for the presidency really comes...
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Sep 24, 2024
09/24
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we will bring the latest on that in a moment which i will speak to david rubenstein this hour and get his take on it. the giveaway is on. you will level or you are worried about it. alexandria half following changes to the tax code in savanna. to you, my friend. >> great to be with you. today, donald trump is speaking to corporations overseas, and he wants to see more business than in the us, it is a lot of that action, it is buzzing get, the sierra paul puts donald trump four points ahead of vice president harris in georgia. the focus was abortion. president biden won the state by the smallest of margins, 12,000 votes. he arrives in savanna from another biden won state, pennsylvania where he spoke of his plan, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime or social security benefits. he says he's doing what harris is not. >> one of two reasons, she's not very smart. the other reason is she doesn't know how to talk about inflation. inflation at a number nobody can believe. >> reporter: donald trump says his tax plan will be put in place on foreign goods imported into the us. in pennsylvania he t
we will bring the latest on that in a moment which i will speak to david rubenstein this hour and get his take on it. the giveaway is on. you will level or you are worried about it. alexandria half following changes to the tax code in savanna. to you, my friend. >> great to be with you. today, donald trump is speaking to corporations overseas, and he wants to see more business than in the us, it is a lot of that action, it is buzzing get, the sierra paul puts donald trump four points...
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Sep 25, 2024
09/24
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scarlet: to watch more of david rubenstein's interview, tune into the david rubenstein show: peer tot at 9:00 on bloomberg television. america might be past the peak of college. some institutions are opening a playbook opening to win among this downtrend. we will have more on that, particularly when it comes to northeastern. this is bloomberg. ♪ scarlet: this is "bloomberg markets." i am scarlet fu. america higher education is in crisis. 20-25 colleges will close annually over the next few years. that is roughly double the average over the last decade. some schools like northeastern and boston are following a playbook to grow amid this collapse. we are joined by the co-author of the story. clearly when it comes to higher education, the strong are getting stronger and the weak are getting weaker. ivy league schools are in a category of their own but smaller schools are struggling to stay afloat. talk about how northeastern is capitalizing on this. >> northeastern is paving a third way within the higher education landscape. since 2019 they have been merging with smaller colleges strugg
scarlet: to watch more of david rubenstein's interview, tune into the david rubenstein show: peer tot at 9:00 on bloomberg television. america might be past the peak of college. some institutions are opening a playbook opening to win among this downtrend. we will have more on that, particularly when it comes to northeastern. this is bloomberg. ♪ scarlet: this is "bloomberg markets." i am scarlet fu. america higher education is in crisis. 20-25 colleges will close annually over the...
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Sep 25, 2024
09/24
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plus, in two weeks tuning for david rubenstein's full interview with the google ceo.on bloomberg television. we played a little bit of that earlier on. coming up, micron set to report results after the bell. there is a big ai story within that name. this is bloomberg technology. ♪ if your business needs a new application, then developers will have to write code. a lot of code. if an application needs to be modernized, then you'll need time, resources... and caffeine. if this sounds daunting, then use watsonx code assistant. built with ibm's granite code model, it's ai designed to multiply developer productivity, so you can generate code quickly. ibm. let's create. >> this is the ps5 pro and sidenote ps5 pro 30th anniversary edition retro badge. we got hands-on with the consul which is playstation's most expensive ever. 600 $99 in the u.s.. a supercharged gpu with juiced up ram and faster rendering. it boosts the experience in 4k and offers more gameplay at 60 frames per second. for the tech aficionado those are great selling points. see how it compares to a standards
plus, in two weeks tuning for david rubenstein's full interview with the google ceo.on bloomberg television. we played a little bit of that earlier on. coming up, micron set to report results after the bell. there is a big ai story within that name. this is bloomberg technology. ♪ if your business needs a new application, then developers will have to write code. a lot of code. if an application needs to be modernized, then you'll need time, resources... and caffeine. if this sounds daunting,...
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Sep 26, 2024
09/24
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. ♪ >> "the david rubenstein show: peer to peer conversations" is sponsored by wells fargo. are helping our clients reaching the next horizon. ♪ david: when i had my company and i was the co-ceo, i had a co-ceo i started the company with. we got along well. we had different responsibilities and it worked out reasonably well. you have co-ceo. initially, the company was started by reed hastings, and he ask you to be the co-ceo. were you surprised that a founder of a company took somebody who had been employed and may you the co-ceo? ted: it would have been a shock if i did not know him that well at the time. the first time i met him, he talked about this desire to build a company that will be around for decades and centuries after him. he foresaw some kind of succession already. i believe he saw this succession we went through recently 15 years ago and started acting on it 12 years ago, which is very unusual, as you point out, for a founder, but for somebody really thinking about the company first and the longevity of the company first, he has been amazing about that. david: h
. ♪ >> "the david rubenstein show: peer to peer conversations" is sponsored by wells fargo. are helping our clients reaching the next horizon. ♪ david: when i had my company and i was the co-ceo, i had a co-ceo i started the company with. we got along well. we had different responsibilities and it worked out reasonably well. you have co-ceo. initially, the company was started by reed hastings, and he ask you to be the co-ceo. were you surprised that a founder of a company...
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Sep 13, 2024
09/24
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david rubenstein, thank you so much we are coming right back dow is up 293 points.randmother's artistry and establishes a charitable trust to keep the craft alive for generations to come. from preserving a cultural tradition to leaving a legacy, a raymond james financial advisor gets to know you, your passions, and the way you enrich your community. that's life well planned. (aaron) i own a lot of businesses... so my tech and my network need to keep up. thank you, verizon business. (kevin) now our businesses get fast and reliable internet from the same network that powers our phones. (aaron) so whatever's next... we're cooking with fire. (vo) switch to the partner businesses rely on. as the world is growing, it needs copper, scandium, cobalt and gold. these metals power our technology and sustain our everyday lives. doubleview is transitioning from exploration to development. ready to meet the challenge. doubleview. what does a good investment opportunity look like? at t. rowe price we let curiosity light the way. asking smart questions about opportunities like clea
david rubenstein, thank you so much we are coming right back dow is up 293 points.randmother's artistry and establishes a charitable trust to keep the craft alive for generations to come. from preserving a cultural tradition to leaving a legacy, a raymond james financial advisor gets to know you, your passions, and the way you enrich your community. that's life well planned. (aaron) i own a lot of businesses... so my tech and my network need to keep up. thank you, verizon business. (kevin) now...
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Sep 25, 2024
09/24
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tom: google ceo, you can see the full interview on the david rubenstein show, peer to peer conversationsesday, october the ninth on bloomberg television at 9:00 p.m. new york time, 6:00 p.m. london time on thursday, october the 10th. caroline ellison has been sentenced to two years in prison by a federal judge for her role in the ft apps -- ftx collapse. the judge says her cooperation with the case was remarkable, but cannot be a get out of jail free card. she was ordered to forfeit $11 billion as proceeds of the crime. coming up, beijing plans spark a stock rally, but will it make a difference to china's economy? we break that down for you with the analysis. that is next. this is bloomberg. ♪ tom: chinese stocks have extended their gains on beijing sweeping stimulus package. the big question is whether that optimism will last and whether it will support the economy of china. bloomberg television guess have been weighing in. >> chinese markets had a long time of underperformance. almost a stage where people don't want to be there. i think what these moves are saying is that probably we r
tom: google ceo, you can see the full interview on the david rubenstein show, peer to peer conversationsesday, october the ninth on bloomberg television at 9:00 p.m. new york time, 6:00 p.m. london time on thursday, october the 10th. caroline ellison has been sentenced to two years in prison by a federal judge for her role in the ft apps -- ftx collapse. the judge says her cooperation with the case was remarkable, but cannot be a get out of jail free card. she was ordered to forfeit $11 billion...
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Sep 18, 2024
09/24
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david rubenstein of the carlyle group. emiere of the 10th season of david's show tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern time on bloomberg television. for you trying to find out if he was 25 or 50? >> this is what we are doing today, connecting everything the 25 or 50. jonathan: it's a ridiculous conversation, isn't it? because way beyond just 25 or 50. lisa: and yet this is what the debate is. but beyond this. case, like export affiliation. it's like the super bowl. >> we have david rubenstein doing the warm-up act, definitely doesn't want to talk about sports today. but david rubenstein said it does matter to markets around the world. very different than jamie dimon is an initiative budget people on tv and it is not going to be earth shattering. but what happens this afternoon it is important for the markets and the election cycle. this is going to be politicized on both sides. >> this is the easy decision, the harder one to be november 7. >> yelled latest point that you highlight was really interesting. a month and some of the data
david rubenstein of the carlyle group. emiere of the 10th season of david's show tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern time on bloomberg television. for you trying to find out if he was 25 or 50? >> this is what we are doing today, connecting everything the 25 or 50. jonathan: it's a ridiculous conversation, isn't it? because way beyond just 25 or 50. lisa: and yet this is what the debate is. but beyond this. case, like export affiliation. it's like the super bowl. >> we have david...
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Sep 19, 2024
09/24
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he spoke about that on the david rubenstein show.s. >> some tech companies, maybe a lot of tech companies go public a bit too early. in stripe's case, we still see tons of opportunity to change and grow the business quite a lot. we are still constantly inventing new product and developing new business lines and you can do that in the public markets but i think culturally we have ended up with analysts following public companies. culturally we've ended up a bit more of a world where public companies are usually the extract stage of the curve, rather than the expand stage. caroline: you can catch the full interview from the david rubenstein show at bloomberg.com. let's talk elsewhere in venture because a virtual care clinic, midi health finished a. funding round back in. april $60 million -- finished a funding round back in april. $60 million. midi health ceo joanna strober joins us now. it is a who's who, set up for what reason? why did you want these women in particular to be signing up to back your company? joanna: over 70 million w
he spoke about that on the david rubenstein show.s. >> some tech companies, maybe a lot of tech companies go public a bit too early. in stripe's case, we still see tons of opportunity to change and grow the business quite a lot. we are still constantly inventing new product and developing new business lines and you can do that in the public markets but i think culturally we have ended up with analysts following public companies. culturally we've ended up a bit more of a world where public...
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Sep 30, 2024
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announcer: this is pbs news weekend from the david rubenstein studio at wep a studio in washington, homews hour. john: the remnants of hurricane helene have been wreaking havoc hundreds of miles from where it made landfall in florida three days ago. western north carolina is one of the hardest hit areas. this reporter is from nashville. give us a sense of what it has been like in asheville the last few days. reporter: it has been almost total loss. asheville has been struck hard. there is no water in the city and cell service has been gone as well as internet and power. we are just starting to get back online. it has been really challenging. water is the most dire thing right now. we don't have water in the city. folks are trying to bring it into asheville but because hurricane helene wiped away large swathes of the highway, it is stopping tractor-trailers from getting into the region. john: you said that cell service is out and that the roads are closed. are there people that cannot call for help or people where the help cannot get to? reporter: that has been one of the most challenging
announcer: this is pbs news weekend from the david rubenstein studio at wep a studio in washington, homews hour. john: the remnants of hurricane helene have been wreaking havoc hundreds of miles from where it made landfall in florida three days ago. western north carolina is one of the hardest hit areas. this reporter is from nashville. give us a sense of what it has been like in asheville the last few days. reporter: it has been almost total loss. asheville has been struck hard. there is no...
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Sep 2, 2024
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well, david rubenstein spoke at this year's gala in 2001. at the kickoff gala. the late historian david mccullough made remarks. mr. president, mrs. bush, dr. billington, ladies and gentlemen, i am hugely honored to take part in this event, this historic event. there has never been a national festival of the book launched by the library of congress, and with the backing and enthusiastic leadership of our first lady. i would like to read something from my book. john adams, and to set the scene. let me just say that in 1812, after more than ten years during which they refused to even speak to each other, the rift between thomas jefferson and john adams was broken. when john adams wrote a letter to his old friend jefferson at monticello and thereby began one of the great exchanges of letters in american history, which went on until their deaths in 1826. not just one of the great exchanges of letters in american history, but one of the great exchanges of letters in the english language. jefferson, in his continuing correspondence with adams, had observed that old and
well, david rubenstein spoke at this year's gala in 2001. at the kickoff gala. the late historian david mccullough made remarks. mr. president, mrs. bush, dr. billington, ladies and gentlemen, i am hugely honored to take part in this event, this historic event. there has never been a national festival of the book launched by the library of congress, and with the backing and enthusiastic leadership of our first lady. i would like to read something from my book. john adams, and to set the scene....
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Sep 18, 2024
09/24
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. ♪ >> this is the pbs newshour, from the david and rubenstein studio at weta in washington and arizonaversity. geoff: federal authorities are charging music mogul sean "diddy" combs with racketeering, violent abuse, sex trafficking, and transportation to engage in prostitution in a sweeping federal indictment. the details of that indictment were revealed this morning after combs -- who was the subject of a sex trafficking investigation and a pair of federal raids -- was arrested in new york city last night. damian williams, the u.s. attorney for the southern district of new york, in a press conference today said combs used his extensive music and business empire as a criminal outfit. mr. williams: and the indictment alleges that he maintained control over the victims in several ways, including by giving them drugs, by giving and threatening to take away financial support or housing, by promising them career opportunities by monitoring their whereabouts, and even by dictating their physical appearance. because of all of this, the indictment alleges that the victims did not believe they
. ♪ >> this is the pbs newshour, from the david and rubenstein studio at weta in washington and arizonaversity. geoff: federal authorities are charging music mogul sean "diddy" combs with racketeering, violent abuse, sex trafficking, and transportation to engage in prostitution in a sweeping federal indictment. the details of that indictment were revealed this morning after combs -- who was the subject of a sex trafficking investigation and a pair of federal raids -- was...
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Sep 3, 2024
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i want to give a shout to david rubenstein because one thing he did while we were there, i do not know if they still go on but there were quarterly dinners at the library of congress that were incredible infants where he would out -- events where he would always invite a speaker to talk about their book, but it would be a presidential historian and the library of congress would bring out all these documents for us to look at related to the book. and the meal was even related to a book about kennedy, it would be a meal featuring things from that time. so you were really immersed and felt a reverence for the institution. it was bipartisan and you were sitting at a table with your colleagues for an evening where you were immersed in the institution, talking, and everyone would comment -- everyone would come and spend the evening there and it was really something where you were learning, listening, and engaging with your colleagues so all of these things where you are building those relationships i think are the most importance. >> i'm going to throw out a really radical idea and i know it
i want to give a shout to david rubenstein because one thing he did while we were there, i do not know if they still go on but there were quarterly dinners at the library of congress that were incredible infants where he would out -- events where he would always invite a speaker to talk about their book, but it would be a presidential historian and the library of congress would bring out all these documents for us to look at related to the book. and the meal was even related to a book about...
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Sep 18, 2024
09/24
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tonight, bloomberg is proud to celebrate the premier of the 10th season of the david rubenstein show.tonight with the president and cofounder of stripe. the opening trade is up next. we are going to be setting you up again with the details, that analysis about what to expect from the fed. the dot plots will be in focus, the forecasts. we will bring you smart analysis on how to position. as we are thinking about this federal reserve, we also break inflation data out of the u.k. that drops in about three minutes and could tie interviews around the boe. no opening trade is up next. this is bloomberg. ♪ the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess ar
tonight, bloomberg is proud to celebrate the premier of the 10th season of the david rubenstein show.tonight with the president and cofounder of stripe. the opening trade is up next. we are going to be setting you up again with the details, that analysis about what to expect from the fed. the dot plots will be in focus, the forecasts. we will bring you smart analysis on how to position. as we are thinking about this federal reserve, we also break inflation data out of the u.k. that drops in...
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Sep 25, 2024
09/24
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there's the issue of paying for these tax impacts, and issue i raised with david rubenstein of the carlyle group who worried about something we rarely talk about, the debt. how would you react to this? it's not resonating with voters. it's not resonating, not even on a top 10 issue and should be tier point but it is not and that, like you are taking the capital. >> it it is not until that is. in other words at some point people on wall street and congress will say we've got to deal with the debt and when they recognize it is a big problem and the calamity comes about people will be more interested. people are more interested in other things. inflation or jobs but not the debt. neil: he said and as he pointed out it doesn't pop up on issues of concern, they love to hear about tax cuts and all the rest but i am wondering will we see this going? they are both going to improve the dollars to already 35, $36 million bill. >> it is supercool. i think congress, both parties are difficult, bearing their head in the sand on question of the debt. there are lawmakers who out how do we pay for these t
there's the issue of paying for these tax impacts, and issue i raised with david rubenstein of the carlyle group who worried about something we rarely talk about, the debt. how would you react to this? it's not resonating with voters. it's not resonating, not even on a top 10 issue and should be tier point but it is not and that, like you are taking the capital. >> it it is not until that is. in other words at some point people on wall street and congress will say we've got to deal with...
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Sep 12, 2024
09/24
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after the break, we're going to talk politics, the economy and so much more with david rubenstein of and then on energy markets, president biden's top energy adviser is going to be here. and then jd vance, all of them joining us in just a little bit. do not go anywhere "squawk box" rolls on after this i can't believe you corporate types are still at it. just stop calling each other rock stars. and using workday to put finance and h.r. on one platform. tim, you are a rock star. using responsible ai doesn't make you a rock star. it kinda does. you are not rock stars. (clears throat) okay. most of you are not rock stars. oooh. data driven insights, and large language models. oh, that's so rock roll. it is, right. he gets it. yeah. let's say you're deep in a show or a game or the game. it is, right. on a train, at home, at work. okay, maybe not at work. point is at xfinity. we're constantly engineering new ways to get the entertainment you love to you faster and easier than ever. that's what i do. is that love island? >>> all right, let's talk about the state of the economy, the federal
after the break, we're going to talk politics, the economy and so much more with david rubenstein of and then on energy markets, president biden's top energy adviser is going to be here. and then jd vance, all of them joining us in just a little bit. do not go anywhere "squawk box" rolls on after this i can't believe you corporate types are still at it. just stop calling each other rock stars. and using workday to put finance and h.r. on one platform. tim, you are a rock star. using...
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Sep 18, 2024
09/24
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ed: bloomberg is proud to celebrate 10 seasons of the david rubenstein show.miere of the latest season airs tonight at 9:00 p.m. new york time. this is bloomberg. caroline: watching shares of 23 and me rebounding after seven independent board members resigned yesterday protesting the ceos plan to take the company private. and the director said there hasn't been any notable progress on a proposal. it's only up 2% and it has been under pressure. this is extraordinary. it was a special committee to analyze whether or not a deal would look good and clearly they are voting with their feet. >> it's an interesting situation and they actually control the company, she controls the vote so it's up to her what happens to special committee did form and they've been waiting for a fully finance offer to come in and that hasn't happened yet so it seems like they are frustrated on some of these big silicon valley names with sequoia's role has resigned and others pretty we will see what happens. but and still wants to, p private and really the ball is in her court because she
ed: bloomberg is proud to celebrate 10 seasons of the david rubenstein show.miere of the latest season airs tonight at 9:00 p.m. new york time. this is bloomberg. caroline: watching shares of 23 and me rebounding after seven independent board members resigned yesterday protesting the ceos plan to take the company private. and the director said there hasn't been any notable progress on a proposal. it's only up 2% and it has been under pressure. this is extraordinary. it was a special committee...
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Sep 30, 2024
09/24
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people like david rubenstein, a democrat, you've had him on the air. that's what he's hitting up.don't think this is the reason or, but one way is that they're getting uber-confident that she's going to be president, so they're throwing all the money they can at her to influence her economic policy once she becomes president, kamala harris. the other thing, and i think this is more likely, is that the race is so close that -- and it looks like trump is starting to make some headway in some of these battleground states, particularly pennsylvania if you look at the polls lately, that the democratic party elite is panicking a little bit. if trump does get in there, let's be real clear here, he's not going to be a friend of, of silicon valley. as a matter of fact, you know, he's not -- you know, who knows? he may push to get rid of section 230 toof the communications act which is their safe hard bar -- or harbor from libel in social media. he might break up google, even more is than the biden-harris administration's looking to do that. private equity, he might look to get rid of their
people like david rubenstein, a democrat, you've had him on the air. that's what he's hitting up.don't think this is the reason or, but one way is that they're getting uber-confident that she's going to be president, so they're throwing all the money they can at her to influence her economic policy once she becomes president, kamala harris. the other thing, and i think this is more likely, is that the race is so close that -- and it looks like trump is starting to make some headway in some of...
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Sep 25, 2024
09/24
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. ♪ >> this is the pbs newshour from the david and rubenstein studio in weta studio and from the school arizona state university. >> ozempic and wagovy are some of the most popular drugs in the company treating diabetes and obesity. but the drugs are extremely expensive. and the drug maker faced questions about why those prices are so high. william bringham reports. >> what we are dealing with today is not just an issue of economics -- >> at a senate health committee hearing, chairman bernie sanders pressed the cry of about why prd the c.e.o. about why americans pay so much more. >> ozempic is $900 as much as it costs in germany. the estimated net price of wagovy is $800. nearly four and a half times as it costs overseas. >> he pointed the cost prince apply. >> we don't see decide the cost for patients. that's issued by insurance companies. >> he blamed are known as pharmacy benefit managers or pbm's. he said that it's between them often determining which drugs get covered and at what price. >> insurance companies and the big conglomerate have close to tripled their pro fits. those pric
. ♪ >> this is the pbs newshour from the david and rubenstein studio in weta studio and from the school arizona state university. >> ozempic and wagovy are some of the most popular drugs in the company treating diabetes and obesity. but the drugs are extremely expensive. and the drug maker faced questions about why those prices are so high. william bringham reports. >> what we are dealing with today is not just an issue of economics -- >> at a senate health committee...
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Sep 14, 2024
09/24
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joining me is david rubenstein, he served as the deputy assistant to president carter for domestic policyavid, welcome. it is wonderful to speak with you, i have told you i am a fan of your podcast, as well. trust in american institutions are declining and have record low approval ratings. did you write this book to address that and show where we have been and should be when considering the american presidency? >> well my wrote it in part so i could inspire people to learn more about the president and vote. we have about 160 million people who will vote in this presidential election. 80 million people, 80 million people who are eligible to vote will not vote. i think our democracy would be much stronger if we have everyone eligible actually voting. >> absolutely. write about the vast experts and presidents, are their character inconsistencies and what about motivations to seek the presidency? are they typically good for the country or in pursuit of personal power? i am curious about ego, how much of that is involved and if there is a difference between the ego and confidence. >> you have
joining me is david rubenstein, he served as the deputy assistant to president carter for domestic policyavid, welcome. it is wonderful to speak with you, i have told you i am a fan of your podcast, as well. trust in american institutions are declining and have record low approval ratings. did you write this book to address that and show where we have been and should be when considering the american presidency? >> well my wrote it in part so i could inspire people to learn more about the...
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Sep 5, 2024
09/24
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let's dive in with david rubenstein, owner of the baltimore orioles, speaking to cal ripken junior, part of the ownership group. -- >> if your games get moved around, your body wants to get into a routine and it's hard. >> when you are a former professional baseball player as famous as you are, people come up and they want autographed selfies, hate to bother you, but can i bother you. what do you say? too busy? how do you deal with it? when you are at a hotel, when these little kids are trying to get autographs, how do you deal with all of that? >> when you get older, they don't do it so much anymore. [laughter] i'm grateful that i get recognized as readily as i do. i always keep in mind, and sometime someone approaching you, they are nervous, they lose their mind, they say you are my biggest fan and i say -- i am? they lose it. you have to keep in mind that it's meaningful to them. at that moment, by signing your name for a little kid, their eyeballs get big and they run back to their mom or whoever else and say look what i got, you helped that happen. if you remember what happens after
let's dive in with david rubenstein, owner of the baltimore orioles, speaking to cal ripken junior, part of the ownership group. -- >> if your games get moved around, your body wants to get into a routine and it's hard. >> when you are a former professional baseball player as famous as you are, people come up and they want autographed selfies, hate to bother you, but can i bother you. what do you say? too busy? how do you deal with it? when you are at a hotel, when these little kids...
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Sep 14, 2024
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. >> david rubenstein, you are ind your element with this book, the highest calling. let me plug again i love your podcasts for the ages. thank you so much for your time. >>> a lot happened with donald trump and his media stock on friday, the ups and downs and why they have trump angry. that is ahead in the next hour. >> ♪ ♪ circle good day to you from world headquarters in new york. welcome tos alex witt reports. we begin with the race for the white house. 52 days ceto election day. kamala harris is attending events in washington, d.c. today while former president donald trump is in las vegas in person early voting begins monday in pennsylvania. n one party official says democrats may be on course to win north carolina this november. >> when you have 40,000 new volunteers setting up in florida and 40,000 new volunteers signing up in a pennsylvania. we have tens of thousands of volunteers in north carolina and i want to be on the record, we are going to win north carolina. in the last six months, four trips to eastern north carolina, not to charlotte, not to raleigh,
. >> david rubenstein, you are ind your element with this book, the highest calling. let me plug again i love your podcasts for the ages. thank you so much for your time. >>> a lot happened with donald trump and his media stock on friday, the ups and downs and why they have trump angry. that is ahead in the next hour. >> ♪ ♪ circle good day to you from world headquarters in new york. welcome tos alex witt reports. we begin with the race for the white house. 52 days ceto...
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Sep 27, 2024
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. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david rubenstein studio in washington and in the west from theter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. >> you carry and president -- the ukrainian president is heading back to his home country after a week of meetings in the u.s.. his final sit-down was with donald trump, whose current bid for president holds high stakes for u.s. support for ukraine. >> former president trump and ukraine's leader, volodymyr zelenskyy, met at trump tower in new york. >> the war in ukraine. ukrainians have to prevail and i want to discuss the details. >> ahead of their meeting, trump said he had a great relationship with zelenskyy, crediting him with helping him during the first of his impeachment trials. that scandal exploded five years ago when zelenskyy sat with then-president trump at the united nations. >> the president of ukraine has made me more famous. >> trump was impeached in late 2019 after he demanded ukraine provide information on then candidate joe biden in return for releasing military aid to ukraine. the republican-controlled s
. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david rubenstein studio in washington and in the west from theter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. >> you carry and president -- the ukrainian president is heading back to his home country after a week of meetings in the u.s.. his final sit-down was with donald trump, whose current bid for president holds high stakes for u.s. support for ukraine. >> former president trump and ukraine's leader, volodymyr...
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Sep 20, 2024
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. >> this is the “pbs news hour” from the david m rubenstein studio at weta in washington and in thete school of journalism at arizona state university. amna: with the race for the white house as close as ever, the election could come down to a small number of undecided voters. but in a hyper partisan political climate, who are those people that are still unsure? npr's domenico montanaro spoke to a handful of undecided voters who have responded to our regular pbs news-npr-marist poll. he's here to walk us through what they're thinking. good to see you. when we talk about undecideds, how big is this block and how are they still undecided? domenico: it is a tiny slice of people. we are talking in recent years anywhere from 6% to are generally persuadable to maybe the low teens. in this election given how people know so much about donald trump in, particular, and when president biden was running it was a really small number of people. it was like 3% of people who were undecided. when harris got in, more people moved to be undecided but it was still only about 9% of people. immediately a
. >> this is the “pbs news hour” from the david m rubenstein studio at weta in washington and in thete school of journalism at arizona state university. amna: with the race for the white house as close as ever, the election could come down to a small number of undecided voters. but in a hyper partisan political climate, who are those people that are still unsure? npr's domenico montanaro spoke to a handful of undecided voters who have responded to our regular pbs news-npr-marist poll....
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Sep 28, 2024
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. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david m. rubensteinfrom weta in washington and from the west at walter cronkite school of university at arizona state university. geoff: ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is heading back to his home country after a busy week of meetings with leaders in the u.s. his final sit-down was with former president donald trump whose current bid for president holds high stakes for u.s. support for ukraine. stephanie sy has more. stephanie: former president trump and ukraine's leader volodymyr zelenskyy met at trump tower in new york. >> we have a common view that the war in ukraine has to be stopped and putin can't win, and ukraine has to prevail, and i want to discuss with you the details of that victory. stephanie: ahead of their closed-door meeting, trump said he had a "great" relationship with zelenskyy, crediting him for helping him during the first of his impeachment trials. that scandal exploded five years ago when zelenskyy, fresh-faced before years of war, sat with then-president trump at the united
. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david m. rubensteinfrom weta in washington and from the west at walter cronkite school of university at arizona state university. geoff: ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is heading back to his home country after a busy week of meetings with leaders in the u.s. his final sit-down was with former president donald trump whose current bid for president holds high stakes for u.s. support for ukraine. stephanie sy has more. stephanie: former...
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Sep 29, 2024
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. ♪ >> this is pbs news weekend from the david m rubenstein studio at weta in washington, home of thehour, weeknights on pbs. john: as september comes to a close, public schools across the country are finding themselves at the edge of a federal funding cliff. ali rogin explains. ali: in the throes of the pandemic, congress passed three acts totaling $190 billion in aid for the elementary and secondary school emergency relief fund. the money was meant to tackle education problems brought on by the pandemic, including learning loss and crown sent -- and chronic absenteeism. the last of the funds will run out in just a few days, and some district will need to slash jobs and cut programs. we spoke with principles in georgia and ohio. >> i hate to see the funds go because one of the things that we used the funds for that i think nobody pushes anymore is enrichment. we are able to get back to our community in a sense -- give back to our community in a sense. we had camps, photography, robotics. >> we were able to hire tutors to be here during the school day, so we would pull kids to meet wi
. ♪ >> this is pbs news weekend from the david m rubenstein studio at weta in washington, home of thehour, weeknights on pbs. john: as september comes to a close, public schools across the country are finding themselves at the edge of a federal funding cliff. ali rogin explains. ali: in the throes of the pandemic, congress passed three acts totaling $190 billion in aid for the elementary and secondary school emergency relief fund. the money was meant to tackle education problems brought...
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Sep 8, 2024
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co-chair of the national book festival, david rubenstein. hey, we're we're very honored today to have one of the bestselling authors in the country. with us today, a person who wrote his first book and already on the new york times bestseller list. how many people here have read the book? wow. okay. how many people are going to read the book? okay. how many people are going to buy the book today? okay. our special guest is j.d. vance. and why don't you ask him to come up now? j.d.. so thank you very much for coming. let me give people who may not know your background a little introduction. j.d. is a native of middletown, ohio. okay. and a graduate of the middletown high school. he then went into the marines for four years, served in iraq. and came back, went to ohio state and finished it in two years, then went to yale law school, graduated there as a member of the yale law journal, clerked for a federal judge for a year. he is now in the investment world and based in part in washington, d.c. he is married to a former classmate from yale law
co-chair of the national book festival, david rubenstein. hey, we're we're very honored today to have one of the bestselling authors in the country. with us today, a person who wrote his first book and already on the new york times bestseller list. how many people here have read the book? wow. okay. how many people are going to read the book? okay. how many people are going to buy the book today? okay. our special guest is j.d. vance. and why don't you ask him to come up now? j.d.. so thank you...
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Sep 10, 2024
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"new york times" best selling author david rubenstein, thank you. is great to see you in person. >> my pleasure. >> take care. thank you. congratulations on the book, too. >> thank you. >>> ahead, democratic national committee chair jaime harrison will join the conversation ahead of tonight's high-stakes presidential debate. >>> plus, donald trump's niece, mary trump, will join us with more stories about what she describes as her family's dysfunction. what her new book is now revealing ahead of the election. >>> also, we're taking a look at one of the greatest comebacks in rock history. 50 years after the release of paul mccartney's hit solo album "band on the run," we'll dig into joe's new piece for "the atlantic." that's straight ahead on "morning joe." ♪ i thought the only lonely place was on the moon ♪ customizes car insurance, so they only pay for what they need. got it? [squawks] did you get that? only pay for what you need. ♪liberty, liberty,♪ ♪liberty, liberty.♪ donald trump's back, and he's out for control. ♪liberty, liberty,♪ i would have
"new york times" best selling author david rubenstein, thank you. is great to see you in person. >> my pleasure. >> take care. thank you. congratulations on the book, too. >> thank you. >>> ahead, democratic national committee chair jaime harrison will join the conversation ahead of tonight's high-stakes presidential debate. >>> plus, donald trump's niece, mary trump, will join us with more stories about what she describes as her family's...
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Sep 14, 2024
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book entitled, the highest calling, conversations on the american presidency and its author, david rubensteina very famous line at the debate. the truth was the state >> talk about the highest calling, the timing seems quite good. >> i worked in the white house as a young man. i was a little thinner, i worked with your father, as well. i have spent some time in washington in the last 30 plus years since i left the white house and i got to know some people, including the president. i have written about presidents, i thought it would be interesting to interview some presidents, including president biden and former president trump. i wanted to, from my view, talk about the importance of voting. i wanted people to get to know the president and the candidates and vote. we have 80 million people in this country eligible to vote. the last time we had about 160 million people vote but we have 80 million people who didn't vote. i think our democracy would be stronger if more people voted. >> david, we like that you ring in oreos with your -- orioles with your black and orange tie. everyone is well rep
book entitled, the highest calling, conversations on the american presidency and its author, david rubensteina very famous line at the debate. the truth was the state >> talk about the highest calling, the timing seems quite good. >> i worked in the white house as a young man. i was a little thinner, i worked with your father, as well. i have spent some time in washington in the last 30 plus years since i left the white house and i got to know some people, including the president. i...
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Sep 20, 2024
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. >> this is pbs newshour west from the david m. rubensteino at weta studio in washington and in the west from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. geoff: ukraine's president zelensky is drawing up a plan for how they believe the war with russia should end. poland has been a staunch supporter and has taken in hundreds of thousands of ukrainian refugees. for some perspective on all of this we turn to radoslaw sikorski, poland's foreign minister. thank you for coming in. president zelenskyy will soon make public his plan for ending the war in ukraine. what are your expectations for the eventual outcome of this conflict and how is poland preparing for best case and worst-case scenarios? p.m. sikorski: it is 1.6 million ukrainian refugees in poland, without a single refugee camp because we have taken them into our homes. poland has offered $4 billion of military assistance to ukraine. war is never won by a single factor, it is a combination of things. i was in kyiv last weekend what i learned has an i
. >> this is pbs newshour west from the david m. rubensteino at weta studio in washington and in the west from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. geoff: ukraine's president zelensky is drawing up a plan for how they believe the war with russia should end. poland has been a staunch supporter and has taken in hundreds of thousands of ukrainian refugees. for some perspective on all of this we turn to radoslaw sikorski, poland's foreign...
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Sep 26, 2024
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. >> this is "pbs newshour west" from the david and rubenstein studio at weta in washington and our bureau school of journalism at arizona state university. ♪ [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy.] wow, you get to watch all your favorite stuff. it's to die for. now you won't miss a thing. this is the way. xfinity internet. made for streaming. (bright music) - for me, family comes first, but food comes a very close second. i love it! (chef laughs) it's the joy of growing... it looks like ringlets, doesn't it? cooking... it's a bit of all right. and eating it. well, it can't be bad if i'm having a second go. - come here, my mary! - i'm getting a bit sort of happy. and i love meeting the people who share this passion.
. >> this is "pbs newshour west" from the david and rubenstein studio at weta in washington and our bureau school of journalism at arizona state university. ♪ [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy.] wow, you get to watch all your favorite stuff. it's to die for. now you won't miss a thing. this is the way. xfinity internet. made for streaming. (bright music) - for me, family comes first, but food...
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Sep 23, 2024
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. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david m. rubensteindio at weta in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite pool of journalism at arizona -- school of journalism at arizona state university. amna: congress is returning to town with the election hovering, and funding for most of the government set to run out a week from today. geoff: congressional leaders announced another short-term deal to punt more partisan fights over spending until after the election. lisa desjardins is tracking the movements on capitol hill and joins me now. here we go again. what is in this deal exactly? lisa: this came together over the weekend from the republican and democratic leaders of congress. this would extend government funding -- before a new president would be sworn in. this includes $231 million for secret service and it especially says it can be spent now. concern for both parties protection including former president trump. there will not be any increased funding for veterans affairs. that is something democrats say they tried to get in th
. >> this is the pbs news hour from the david m. rubensteindio at weta in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite pool of journalism at arizona -- school of journalism at arizona state university. amna: congress is returning to town with the election hovering, and funding for most of the government set to run out a week from today. geoff: congressional leaders announced another short-term deal to punt more partisan fights over spending until after the election. lisa desjardins...
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Sep 1, 2024
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he will be in conversation with david rubenstein, who is the of the national book festival and an original signer, the giving pledge. is also a recipient of carnegie medal of philanthropy and the museum of modern david rockefeller award. his latest book, the highest calling conversate on the american presidency, is featured at this year's festival. i hope you enjoyed the festival and let us welcome them to. our stage. so i enjoyed reading your book. how long did it take you to write the book? ten years. the reagan administration? eight years. so it took you two years longer to write the book than the reagan administration? alas, as i write, it was not a fly by night project. i think you can say that for sure. so it was it was family cooperating with you in any way. yeah. i mean, primarily patty and ron, two of the kids were very cooperative and very helpful. and actually read the book already and and gave it a thumbs up. i was very happy to see. really. okay. so ronald reagan is somebody that was very worried, his own legacy in some respects, or maybe his family was. and so had a biographe
he will be in conversation with david rubenstein, who is the of the national book festival and an original signer, the giving pledge. is also a recipient of carnegie medal of philanthropy and the museum of modern david rockefeller award. his latest book, the highest calling conversate on the american presidency, is featured at this year's festival. i hope you enjoyed the festival and let us welcome them to. our stage. so i enjoyed reading your book. how long did it take you to write the book?...
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Sep 19, 2024
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david rubenstein will inn tervi him at the washington club. >>> republicans voted down speaker mike johnson'sm funding bill to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month. the vote was 202-220. two voting members present. >> three voting present. >> some of them would never vote for any cr. other ones, the same thing, no spending cuts, so they won't do it. three democrats voted for it. here's what the speaker said yesterday about the prospects of the bill on "squawk box." >> i'm the quarterback on the field. we have a big playbook. we have to do the right thing. this is on principle and on the constitutional the exact right thing. >> we talked about that in makeup. he told us the truth. he said there was no plan b. as far as we can tell, there is really no plan b. he didn't really pretend it was going to pass, either. >> he said he thought it was going to pass. >> well, he knew massey and others. last night, speaker johnson told fox news, not familiar with that entity. fox news. he would go back to his playbook and he didn't think the government would shutdown. focus now shifts to the
david rubenstein will inn tervi him at the washington club. >>> republicans voted down speaker mike johnson'sm funding bill to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month. the vote was 202-220. two voting members present. >> three voting present. >> some of them would never vote for any cr. other ones, the same thing, no spending cuts, so they won't do it. three democrats voted for it. here's what the speaker said yesterday about the prospects of the bill on...
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Sep 2, 2024
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the session is moderated by david and rubenstein, author and co-founder of carlyle group. enjoyed the festival and let us welcome them to the stage. so. how many people here have read a book by eric larson? oh, wow. how many people have not read a book by erik larson? oh, okay. well, you have to leave. would you stand up, please? oh, okay. so i interviewed you last on your book, on winston churchill's first year in office. it was spectacular book, bestseller. and at that time, i asked you, what was your next book? and i think you were you weren't sure or she wouldn't tell me, but why did you think that the world needed another book on the civil war? i mean, there have been 100,000 books. why did you think you could add to the civil war literature already? and didn't you once say you would never write a book on the civil war? okay. thank you so, sir. i am on record. can google this? i am on record as having said numerous times that i will never write a book about the civil war and i will never write a book about abraham lincoln or anything where he's a is a significant char
the session is moderated by david and rubenstein, author and co-founder of carlyle group. enjoyed the festival and let us welcome them to the stage. so. how many people here have read a book by eric larson? oh, wow. how many people have not read a book by erik larson? oh, okay. well, you have to leave. would you stand up, please? oh, okay. so i interviewed you last on your book, on winston churchill's first year in office. it was spectacular book, bestseller. and at that time, i asked you, what...
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Sep 25, 2024
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annmarie: they won last night, so congratulations, david rubenstein.56, last night.incredible . >> do you think the fed is going to pay attention to inflation? probably what they are looking at more than anything, i think you have many promises, and it is really what is happening with real estate because that is the last piece of inflation. jonathan: danielle hale of realtor.com, next on the program. from new york, this is bloomberg. ♪ ere 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 jonathan: we are down .10% on the s&p 500, up three basis points, 10 year yields, 3.76. >> you think the fed is going to pay attention to inflation, but probably what they are looking at more than anything making campaign promises is what is happening with the last piece of taming inflation. the problem in real estate is that you have not had enoug
annmarie: they won last night, so congratulations, david rubenstein.56, last night.incredible . >> do you think the fed is going to pay attention to inflation? probably what they are looking at more than anything, i think you have many promises, and it is really what is happening with real estate because that is the last piece of inflation. jonathan: danielle hale of realtor.com, next on the program. from new york, this is bloomberg. ♪ ere ya headed? susan: where am i headed? am i just...