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Jul 8, 2014
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bob tyler had an old secret weapon too. defensive line coach earl morningen who played college ball -- morgan who played college ball during the single-wing era. he knew exactly how to destroy it. the other surprise of the game was a touchdown from the very first day of scrimmage, when a long bomb was lobbed from bob white to george. meridian high won the game and the big eight championship, equivalent to today's 6-a championship. the 1967 season under tyler went much the same way. we had another perfect season except for a tied game with column bulls. nonetheless, we went to the state championship and defeated biloxi high. to make it two state championships in a row. with such sterling resume, bob tyler received considerable notice from colleges, as you can imagine. s.e.c. coaches pursued him and the great johnny vault, head coach of ole miss, recruited tyler to become assistant at tyler's alma mater and favorite team ever. it was rumored that vault was grooming tyler to succeed him as head coach. vault ultimately retired
bob tyler had an old secret weapon too. defensive line coach earl morningen who played college ball -- morgan who played college ball during the single-wing era. he knew exactly how to destroy it. the other surprise of the game was a touchdown from the very first day of scrimmage, when a long bomb was lobbed from bob white to george. meridian high won the game and the big eight championship, equivalent to today's 6-a championship. the 1967 season under tyler went much the same way. we had...
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Jul 21, 2014
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so tyler spins the rest of his administration successfully bringing texas into the union tyler whosewife had died while he was in office ended up marrying a 24 year-old when he was 54. not too bad. [laughter] vienna's up getting married and setting his sights his wife after the president then he knick teams it sure would forest because the way that whig outlawed him from the party. he had a sense of humor also his neighbors decided to play a joke on him and vote in bin as supervisor of roads it was a thankless job you don't want to be roadmaster did rule virginia and offered to pay a fine if you did not except the jobs that the mint -- set the minimum he would have to pay a fine but it was one job only to requisition the slaves to put them to work on the roads so he waited until the of harvest floor requisition. you see with this is going? [laughter] he requisitioned everybody slaves of a shot at his house 84 the excellent work we think it is time to let somebody else do you have worked so hard. he said i have sworn a solemn responsibility to the film i've responsibility. said he got
so tyler spins the rest of his administration successfully bringing texas into the union tyler whosewife had died while he was in office ended up marrying a 24 year-old when he was 54. not too bad. [laughter] vienna's up getting married and setting his sights his wife after the president then he knick teams it sure would forest because the way that whig outlawed him from the party. he had a sense of humor also his neighbors decided to play a joke on him and vote in bin as supervisor of roads it...
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Jul 21, 2014
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i think this is wonderful, tyler.t he made on his kids was not this financial bet but the fact that he really worked overtime, worked two jobs, everything he could to support his son in training and being able to prands get all the opportunities in the world. >> good for the mcilroys, good for the son who is now the youngest or one of the three youngest people to have three major championships under his belt. carlos slim, second richest man on the planet, calls for a three-day workweek. one catch, retirement won't kick in until 75, not 65, he says, but slim argues you will enjoy a better quality of life working three. i bet he, julia, hasn't worked three days a week in a long time. he probably works all seven days. >> yeah, look this guy is the second richest man in the world, he can work as many or few days as he would like at this point, but i -- sounds good to me, but i have to think he must have some sort of ulterior motive. we have to remember that carlos slim controls the majority of both vicks line and mobile t
i think this is wonderful, tyler.t he made on his kids was not this financial bet but the fact that he really worked overtime, worked two jobs, everything he could to support his son in training and being able to prands get all the opportunities in the world. >> good for the mcilroys, good for the son who is now the youngest or one of the three youngest people to have three major championships under his belt. carlos slim, second richest man on the planet, calls for a three-day workweek....
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Jul 6, 2014
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>> because you're a genius and you're tyler perry, that's why he is tyler perry and we're not.his is an expression that's been around since the 1900s. but what trademark does is you can use it in a title, in a movie, in a tv show. look at kellogg's. they trademarked it's great or they're great. they also have a trademark on mothers. that doesn't mean i can't say mother but if i try to sell a product by using that expression or that word, then i'm in trouble. and that's what he's doing. he's going to sell a tv show, promote something that has that title in it. >> michael, does this give him the right to go after people who are wearing the bracelets or creating the bracelets. not individuals but if he wants to start this new franchise wwjd, go after people who aren't using it the way he approves of? >> i suppose he could 2 after them. why would he. he is a brilliant marketer, he understands perfectly what he's doing right now. witness we're here today. the first kickoff move is a public relations coo. so i think the question is as we've said. what is he going to do that where wil
>> because you're a genius and you're tyler perry, that's why he is tyler perry and we're not.his is an expression that's been around since the 1900s. but what trademark does is you can use it in a title, in a movie, in a tv show. look at kellogg's. they trademarked it's great or they're great. they also have a trademark on mothers. that doesn't mean i can't say mother but if i try to sell a product by using that expression or that word, then i'm in trouble. and that's what he's doing....
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Jul 16, 2014
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>> from the cliff, tyler short can't believe his eyes. >> the p.a. tower got knocked over and you could just see big groups of people just getting swept away with this horrendous amount of water. >> the wave carries dan and betsy more than 100 feet. >> i ended up landing on a rock, then i had some big guy land right on top of me, you know, so i was pinned down. >> when the water subsides, the beach looks like a war zone. >> there was a lot of screaming, a lot of people hollering for help. i heard a lot of people screaming for medics, you know. there was just a lot of chaos. >> dan fractures his tailbone but he's able to walk. betsy's leg is broken in three places, and she's in excruciating pain. >> my foot was completely dislocated from my lower leg, and if it wasn't for skin, i would have lost my foot. the pain was pretty incredible. >> dan is ecstatic to see betsy alive, but he fears that another wave could hit at any moment. >> i'm telling the doctors get her off the beach, get her off the beach. i don't know how many times i repeated it, get her
>> from the cliff, tyler short can't believe his eyes. >> the p.a. tower got knocked over and you could just see big groups of people just getting swept away with this horrendous amount of water. >> the wave carries dan and betsy more than 100 feet. >> i ended up landing on a rock, then i had some big guy land right on top of me, you know, so i was pinned down. >> when the water subsides, the beach looks like a war zone. >> there was a lot of screaming, a lot...
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Jul 18, 2014
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tyler?ank you, jane. >>> could the crash over ukraine be a turning point in the conflict? it depends. europe very dependent on russia for its energy needs. jackie deangelis is on the case. >> good afternoon, tyler. that is the exact situation and issue right now that's making it sticky. remember, the day before the plane crash, we had the u.s. imposing fresh sanctions on russia because of its involvement in ukraine's conflict. those sanctions, of course, targeting a couple key firms include november atech, that's owned by gas-pro mvp, but not directly targeted to the big parent company. gas prom is also the number one supplier to europe. now, analysts and traders reading this to mean the u.s. wants to turn up the heat on russia, but doesn't want to throw europe into an energy crisis. now, when you consider gasp rflt om alone, it fill the demand, up from 27% in 2012, and year over year, the growth was driven in certain parts of europe, specifically places like italy, the uk and germany. accor
tyler?ank you, jane. >>> could the crash over ukraine be a turning point in the conflict? it depends. europe very dependent on russia for its energy needs. jackie deangelis is on the case. >> good afternoon, tyler. that is the exact situation and issue right now that's making it sticky. remember, the day before the plane crash, we had the u.s. imposing fresh sanctions on russia because of its involvement in ukraine's conflict. those sanctions, of course, targeting a couple key...
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Jul 11, 2014
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one right now. >> i do, tyler. you know, i would go offshore with a bigger amount of my equity exposure now away from the united states. the united states has beat everybody in the last couple years. it's solidly beat the emerging markets but also solidly beat most of the international developed markets, as well, meaning their relative values improved and i would go and take advantage of that. you can't often find value with some issues, so the reason there is good value in europe is because they are not growing as fast. same thing with japan for example. but what that gives you is you can diversify away from the economic cycle and go to something that has a different place in the recovery than the united states. they are not worried about policy officials tightening in europe and japan like here. i also like canada and australia because i think if we have more inflation fears here in the united states, we will drive commodity prices higher and the commodity based resource markets might lead the world market for aw
one right now. >> i do, tyler. you know, i would go offshore with a bigger amount of my equity exposure now away from the united states. the united states has beat everybody in the last couple years. it's solidly beat the emerging markets but also solidly beat most of the international developed markets, as well, meaning their relative values improved and i would go and take advantage of that. you can't often find value with some issues, so the reason there is good value in europe is...
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Jul 9, 2014
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(crowd chanting "tyler!") ...tyler oakley, professional fan, had quite a few fans of his own.d cheering) >> the interesting thing about traditional celebrities and then youtubers, for a fan, they run up to me in the street and they act like we are friends. part of the reason why a lot of people, like, relate to me is that i am just one of them. >> oh hey, girl, come on in! >> rushkoff: but he's not, really. beyond his massive following on youtube, he has over 800,000 followers on facebook, 1.3 million on instagram, approaching two million on twitter, and the numbers are rising every day. tyler is a millionaire in the currency of likes. >> i can upload tomorrow. >> i can upload whenever you want. >> rushkoff: but social media is all about sharing, and that includes sharing the wealth. when kids with large audiences work together, everyone benefits. >> well, hello, everyone. my name is tyler oakley, and i am here with oli white! >> my favorite thing to do on my channel is collaborations. >> christmas gives me, like, anxiety. >> all of us youtubers are realizing, "okay, there's n
(crowd chanting "tyler!") ...tyler oakley, professional fan, had quite a few fans of his own.d cheering) >> the interesting thing about traditional celebrities and then youtubers, for a fan, they run up to me in the street and they act like we are friends. part of the reason why a lot of people, like, relate to me is that i am just one of them. >> oh hey, girl, come on in! >> rushkoff: but he's not, really. beyond his massive following on youtube, he has over 800,000...
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tyler alluded to it in the intro. i personally think an investor's willingness to accept risks is the number one factor not taken into account. it's very possible that target date set in the future might actually create a prescription or a pumped of funds that is either too aggressive or too conservative based on the individual's unique characteristics. >> tim, always great to see you, you relocated from baltimore to south carolina. >> charleston, kout carolina. >>> coming up, box office bust. why fewer people are going to the movies? could it have anything to do with the movies? and what could turn a financial horror show in the right way to hype? . the world's sending largest economy keeps getting stronger. economic growth picks up in the just completed second quarter to around 7.35% according to china's premier. he also said the economy still faces downward pressure so beijing plans on increasing stimulus measures to boost growth. >>> now to drones the faa is working on new rulings to govern their commercial use. r
tyler alluded to it in the intro. i personally think an investor's willingness to accept risks is the number one factor not taken into account. it's very possible that target date set in the future might actually create a prescription or a pumped of funds that is either too aggressive or too conservative based on the individual's unique characteristics. >> tim, always great to see you, you relocated from baltimore to south carolina. >> charleston, kout carolina. >>> coming...
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>> it's the commercial side of the business, tyler. that's where the sentiment is focused for investors. a lot of questions about cash flow, the remainder of this year, particularly on the commercial side. that's why we look at shares of boeing. they've been under pressure all day long. at with you point the pressure let to about 20 points of the losses. most people are saying, look, it's likely staying in that territory for some time. on the defense side of the business, and yes, boeing gets a sizable chunk of its earnings from the defense side of the business. $7.7 billion in revenue in the second quarter operating margins of 7.5%. the military aircraft revenue of 3.5 billion, the backlog, by the way, when you hear people talk about the backlog, about pa% comes from the military side. as you look at shares of boeing over the last year, the thing to keep in mind is for investors, so much of what's happening with the stock right now is primarily driven by the investor sentiment when it comes to the commercial side of the business. so,
>> it's the commercial side of the business, tyler. that's where the sentiment is focused for investors. a lot of questions about cash flow, the remainder of this year, particularly on the commercial side. that's why we look at shares of boeing. they've been under pressure all day long. at with you point the pressure let to about 20 points of the losses. most people are saying, look, it's likely staying in that territory for some time. on the defense side of the business, and yes, boeing...
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Jul 27, 2014
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bradt is one of them. >> my name is tyler bradt., and i'm a professional kayaker. >> he's traveled the globe traveling after rapid after churning rapid. >> what i've fallen in love with is the extreme side of kayaking. big drops and waterfalls. >> tyler paddled over his first waterfall at the age of 15, and has never looked back. >> i would say as an extreme kayaker i've probably run 100, 150-plus waterfalls. i've kind of lost count over the years. >> in september 2007, tyler came across alexandra falls in canada's northwest territories, far higher than any waterfall he had done before, 107 feet tall, and he decided to go for it. >> the feeling behind running that waterfall was a moment in time that i will remember forever. i surfaced upright without even flipping over off that waterfall. it was amazing. >> the ride over alexandra falls didn't just give him an adrenaline rush, but the world record for the highest waterfall anyone had kayaked over. nobody could successfully paddle out of a bigger drop, nobody else but him, that is. i
bradt is one of them. >> my name is tyler bradt., and i'm a professional kayaker. >> he's traveled the globe traveling after rapid after churning rapid. >> what i've fallen in love with is the extreme side of kayaking. big drops and waterfalls. >> tyler paddled over his first waterfall at the age of 15, and has never looked back. >> i would say as an extreme kayaker i've probably run 100, 150-plus waterfalls. i've kind of lost count over the years. >> in...
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>> tyler, i would have to say i think it was more than a hiccup. it was a things the that had been mentioned. we add to everything when you consider the impact of just a potential speed bump with argentina. we've been through this before with argentina over the years, but it all leads to a good opportunity to take profits. it hasn't been a bad year on the back of 2013 when we were up about 30, so we would have to think that at this junction tk little selling, we've been here before in february we had a spike, a pull back, concerns about growth but we're in the process of an economic expansion coming out of an economic recovery that's been significant. >> dean, so in the past, as john just pointed out we've had these hiccups where in some cases more of a sell off and the lesson to be learned is you should have bought. do you feel the same way with today? >> i do, sue. that opportunity might not present itself tomorrow. we've had one of the worst days but as next week begins and we start to see the dust settle, you'll realize when these things happen
>> tyler, i would have to say i think it was more than a hiccup. it was a things the that had been mentioned. we add to everything when you consider the impact of just a potential speed bump with argentina. we've been through this before with argentina over the years, but it all leads to a good opportunity to take profits. it hasn't been a bad year on the back of 2013 when we were up about 30, so we would have to think that at this junction tk little selling, we've been here before in...
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Jul 25, 2014
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but there, tyler, three winners. this friday. >> simon, always great to be with you. "street signs" begins right now. >>> happy friday everybody, the sun is shining outside, but the markets are not we're just a few on the party of all the others. the drug that both saves and kills. we'll explain. and good news if you like shopping, guy or gal. 40% is the new normal, but the retailers make any money? million dollar homes plus billion dollar divorces. we have it all here on street signs. thanks for joining us as well today. >>
but there, tyler, three winners. this friday. >> simon, always great to be with you. "street signs" begins right now. >>> happy friday everybody, the sun is shining outside, but the markets are not we're just a few on the party of all the others. the drug that both saves and kills. we'll explain. and good news if you like shopping, guy or gal. 40% is the new normal, but the retailers make any money? million dollar homes plus billion dollar divorces. we have it all here...
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Jul 10, 2014
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that would be 5 million guns, tyler. expected a joint statement from the company in plaintiff's attorneys approximately we'll see if you get that. >> it could be done by october. >> october is when they're scheduled to present it to the judge. >> scott cohn, thank youer very much. >> let's go over to dominic chu. >> the dow coming off the lows. still in the red. we are seeing session highs. pressuring the blue chip, home depot and nike and exxonmobil, caterpillar and gold machine saks. the single best performing stock in the dow is verizon. telling cnbc that the company is not interested in buying a satellite company. he also said the company gained 1.4 million subscribers in the second quarter. sue, back over to you. >> dom, thank you. >>> back to chicago. 30-year bond auction. rick santelli, how are we doing? >> it wasn't bad. it was a little above average. but it isn't the driving force today. we're down 3.32 here and almost back unchanged to 3.37. what a difference. we took away a month. ten-year chart going around t
that would be 5 million guns, tyler. expected a joint statement from the company in plaintiff's attorneys approximately we'll see if you get that. >> it could be done by october. >> october is when they're scheduled to present it to the judge. >> scott cohn, thank youer very much. >> let's go over to dominic chu. >> the dow coming off the lows. still in the red. we are seeing session highs. pressuring the blue chip, home depot and nike and exxonmobil, caterpillar...
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>> tyler, what we know is the u.s. said that it was a surface to air missile that brought down mh 17 earlier today while it was flying over eastern ukraine. here is what was involved in this entire incident when you look at today. the number of passengers on board, 295 -- 280 and a crew of 15. it lost contact. the plane lost contact at 33,000 feet. there was no signals. it was clear whatever happened was catastrophic at 33,000 feet and surface to air missile is no longer a question. the u.s. government says intelligence confirms for them that this was in fact a case of the plane being shot down out of the sky, that's according to vice president joe biden. those were his words, shot down out of the sky. if you look at maps of the incident, it's clear as the plane went from amsterdam, we looked at the same maps from flight radar 24 an hour or later, all airlines flying around the air space of ukraine, not surprising given the fact shortly after this happens, almost every major airline that flies anywhere near ukraine, al
>> tyler, what we know is the u.s. said that it was a surface to air missile that brought down mh 17 earlier today while it was flying over eastern ukraine. here is what was involved in this entire incident when you look at today. the number of passengers on board, 295 -- 280 and a crew of 15. it lost contact. the plane lost contact at 33,000 feet. there was no signals. it was clear whatever happened was catastrophic at 33,000 feet and surface to air missile is no longer a question. the...
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Jul 29, 2014
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>>> thank, tyler. when we come back, two headaches, a potential big one, phil lebeau is on both of the stories. >> kayla, it has been a great five-year return in terms of sales and profitability for the auto industry. some are now asking is it possibility the auto cycle as peaked? >>> and something is crawling around in the headquarters at united. those stories when we return. >>> i know it's is the says perfect case for roscoe the bedbug dog. how does he sniff out the critters? roscoe himself will join us live in two minutes. but what if you could see more of what you wanted to know? with fidelity's new active trader pro investing platform, the information that's important to you is all in one place, so finding more insight is easier. it's your idea powered by active trader pro. another way fidelity gives you a more powerful investing experience. call our specialists today to get up and running. virtually all your important legal matters in just minutes. now it's quicker and easier for you to start yo
>>> thank, tyler. when we come back, two headaches, a potential big one, phil lebeau is on both of the stories. >> kayla, it has been a great five-year return in terms of sales and profitability for the auto industry. some are now asking is it possibility the auto cycle as peaked? >>> and something is crawling around in the headquarters at united. those stories when we return. >>> i know it's is the says perfect case for roscoe the bedbug dog. how does he sniff...
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Jul 30, 2014
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tyler? >> bertha, thank you very much. >>> new crash test ratings on electric cars, the batteries standing up very well, but would you if you were in one of these vehicles? that's still ahead. >>> and check out ucla's campus. completely flooded. some students having fun, though. a little surfing there, that's nice. that's what friends are for. the full story behind it, next. but what if you could see more of what you wanted to know? with fidelity's new active trader pro investing platform, the information that's important to you is all in one place, so finding more insight is easier. it's your idea powered by active trader pro. another way fidelity gives you a more powerful investing experience. call our specialists today to get up and running. yyyup. with xfinity internet soyour family can use all their devices at once. works anywhere in the house. even in the garage. max what's going on? we're doing a tech startup. we're streamlining an algorithm. we're going public! [cheering] the fastest
tyler? >> bertha, thank you very much. >>> new crash test ratings on electric cars, the batteries standing up very well, but would you if you were in one of these vehicles? that's still ahead. >>> and check out ucla's campus. completely flooded. some students having fun, though. a little surfing there, that's nice. that's what friends are for. the full story behind it, next. but what if you could see more of what you wanted to know? with fidelity's new active trader pro...
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Jul 15, 2014
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. >> which takes us up to tyler and ron insana, right, ty? >> we're going to talk more about that very point among other things with ron insana who wrote a sudden lid controversial piece where you state your reasoning why the traders have it basically wrong. >> you've heard a lot of complaints from people i know pretty well, that this all has to end badly, that just by virtue of this never having been tried before, there's no way -- >> this sort of new -- >> unconventional monetary policy, quantitative easing and the like, that it has to end badly, because we don't have experience with it. if you go back and read all of the fed papers on this stuff, and i've spend a fair amount of time what bernanke has written, what they have written about the current environment. in fact it goes back many, many years, talking about unconventional monetary policies. they have kind of laid the groundwork for all of this. there's been a lot of work done, and i think they're fairly confident not only have they implemented them properly, but they'll exit them pr
. >> which takes us up to tyler and ron insana, right, ty? >> we're going to talk more about that very point among other things with ron insana who wrote a sudden lid controversial piece where you state your reasoning why the traders have it basically wrong. >> you've heard a lot of complaints from people i know pretty well, that this all has to end badly, that just by virtue of this never having been tried before, there's no way -- >> this sort of new -- >>...
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. >> that's an interesting point, tyler. it's not necessarily your credit card. is the best thing i can do is a get a credit report from one agency or all three? do you do? give me advice. >> i've got to be honest, i check it, i'm a financial planner so i do it as inexpensively as i can and there are three great free resources i used in the past that i currently use or recommend and people have gotten good news from. annual credit report.com is one where you can get each of the three major credit burros to send you the credit report itself, you do have to pay money if you want to get your credit score, but if you go to credit karma.com or credit sesame, you can get an idea of what your report looks like and an estimate that tend s to be close of what your score is. that score drives a lot of leverage. >> next time you come here and teach me how to tie a bow tie, okay? >> my pleasure. >>> already disrupting the transportation and lodging industries and not done yet. what these two startups are setting their sights on now. >>>
. >> that's an interesting point, tyler. it's not necessarily your credit card. is the best thing i can do is a get a credit report from one agency or all three? do you do? give me advice. >> i've got to be honest, i check it, i'm a financial planner so i do it as inexpensively as i can and there are three great free resources i used in the past that i currently use or recommend and people have gotten good news from. annual credit report.com is one where you can get each of the...
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>> tyler, unfortunately, no. this obviously is a very divided government. the probability that the republicans pick up the senate in november has been rising. that would arguably make it even more divided. and it would likely push off any kind of comprehensive tax reform really into the next presidential election in '16. although if i was advising the president, i would say maybe let's go back to something we both could agree on. we did have a bipartisan budget blueprint with simpson bowles. that's where i would start. and maybe if you could tackle the tax inversion issue, but it seems to me the ability to get things done in washington is getting less and less. >>> it's all part of the same thing, tyler in the sense that, everybody can seem to agree that we need broad bipartisan tax reform we have some blueprint of that. the oblem is the democrats have wanted to raise revenues, the republicans haven't wanted to. it seems to me that there is room for some agreement here, but the politics just haven't allowed it to occur. >> as we look at the vote there, what
>> tyler, unfortunately, no. this obviously is a very divided government. the probability that the republicans pick up the senate in november has been rising. that would arguably make it even more divided. and it would likely push off any kind of comprehensive tax reform really into the next presidential election in '16. although if i was advising the president, i would say maybe let's go back to something we both could agree on. we did have a bipartisan budget blueprint with simpson...
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i'm tyler mathisen. susie gharib has the night off. facebook sores, amazon disappoints, stocks me aroundia. we begin from strong words from the president. so-called tax inversions were top pick a in a wide-ranging exclusive interview, the president gave today to steve liesman of cnbc that produces this program. liesman began by asking the president if it was unpatriotic or unamerican. >> companies thrive in the united states in part because they benefit from the best university system in the world, the best infrastructure, though, i would like to see it do better on infrastructure. a whole range of benefits that helped to build companies, create values, create profit. for you to continue to benefit from the entire architecture that helps you thrive but move your technical address simply to avoid paying taxes is neither fair, nor is it something that's going to be good for the country. this is basically taking advantage of tax provisions, that are technically legal but i think most people would say if you're doing business here, you're
i'm tyler mathisen. susie gharib has the night off. facebook sores, amazon disappoints, stocks me aroundia. we begin from strong words from the president. so-called tax inversions were top pick a in a wide-ranging exclusive interview, the president gave today to steve liesman of cnbc that produces this program. liesman began by asking the president if it was unpatriotic or unamerican. >> companies thrive in the united states in part because they benefit from the best university system in...
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i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm susie gharib. have a great evening. we'll see you back here tomorrow. >> this is bbc world news america. >> funding of this presentation is made possible by the freeman foundation. the newman's own foundation. kovler foundation. union bank. >> our relationship managers work hard to know your business. solutionspecialized and capital to help you meet your growth objectives.
i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm susie gharib. have a great evening. we'll see you back here tomorrow. >> this is bbc world news america. >> funding of this presentation is made possible by the freeman foundation. the newman's own foundation. kovler foundation. union bank. >> our relationship managers work hard to know your business. solutionspecialized and capital to help you meet your growth objectives.
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sue and tyler? >> thank you very much, seema. the battle over the future of the e-book business is heating up. what's at stake for consumers like you, plus stocks at all-time highs. do you still feel like you are living the american dream? robert frank always living the dream. robert? >> hey, tyler, americans are doing well right now. two thirds of americans own their own homes, educated and healthy, but most stillsh feeling that american dream, what is the dream? >> we'll talk about that after the break. >> we also want to hear from you. are you living the american dream? go take our live viewer survey, and to do that, you go to cnbc.com/vote. the dream. i make a lot of purchases for my business. and i get a lot in return with ink plus from chase. like 50,000 bonus points when i spent $5,000 in the first 3 months after i opened my account. and i earn 5 times the rewards on internet, phone services and at office supply stores. with ink plus i can choose how to redeem my points. travel, gift cards, even cash back. and my rewards p
sue and tyler? >> thank you very much, seema. the battle over the future of the e-book business is heating up. what's at stake for consumers like you, plus stocks at all-time highs. do you still feel like you are living the american dream? robert frank always living the dream. robert? >> hey, tyler, americans are doing well right now. two thirds of americans own their own homes, educated and healthy, but most stillsh feeling that american dream, what is the dream? >> we'll...
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i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm susie gharib. have a great evening. we'll see you back here tomorrow. >> the following kqed production was produced in high definition. [ ♪music ] >> in san josÉ a new gallery is dedicated to showing only local artists. >> cherri lakey: a lot of these people that work in those corporations are also artists. >> you've undoubtedly heard but did you know that its revival may have started in berkeley? >>> and experimental music pioneer pauline oliveros. >> pauline oliveros: one of my major accomplishments in life was going beyond fear through music. >> this time on spark. [ ♪music ] >> major funding for spark is provided by the william and flora hewlett foundation, supporting creativity and innovation in the arts since 1967.
i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm susie gharib. have a great evening. we'll see you back here tomorrow. >> the following kqed production was produced in high definition. [ ♪music ] >> in san josÉ a new gallery is dedicated to showing only local artists. >> cherri lakey: a lot of these people that work in those corporations are also artists. >> you've undoubtedly heard but did you know that its revival may have started in berkeley? >>> and experimental music...
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>>> this is "nightly business report" with tyler mathisen and susie gharib. >> apple tops the targets but does it have a revolutionary product in the pipeline that will wow investors and consumers? >> battle ground stock. herbalife shares have the best day ever after bill ackman failed to deliver what is being called a death blow. >> two courts issued different rulings on a central component of the president's health care law. subsidized premiums. >> all that and more tonight on "nightly business report" for tuesday, july 22nd. >>> good evening, everyone. i'm sue herrera filling in for susie gharib. >> and i'm tyler mathisen. welcome, everyone. stocks rose today and got a boost from positive earnings, strong economic data and easing worries about the global economy and how it might be affected by international conflict. add it up and it was enough for the s&p 500 to reach a fresh high before pulling back ending two points away from a historic close. after the closing bell, attention turned to the latest quarterly earnings from the tech bellwether and the most valuable public traded co
>>> this is "nightly business report" with tyler mathisen and susie gharib. >> apple tops the targets but does it have a revolutionary product in the pipeline that will wow investors and consumers? >> battle ground stock. herbalife shares have the best day ever after bill ackman failed to deliver what is being called a death blow. >> two courts issued different rulings on a central component of the president's health care law. subsidized premiums. >>...
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>>> this is "nightly business report" with tyler mathisen and susie gharib. >> mega merger, murdoch sets his sights on timewarner but his $80 billion bit is rejected. will he offer more and does this deal make sense? >> call to action, the white house urges immediate action from lawmaker s to crack down on what it calls an abuse of the tax system but will congress respond? >> blue chip record, upbeat earnings sends the dow to an all-time high and tonight focus shifts to ebay and the take away from this quarterly result. that and more coming up tonight on nig"nightly business report"r this wednesday, july the 16th. >>> good evening, everybody. i'm bill griffeth in for tyler mathisen who will join us later in the program. >> that's right. and i'm susie gharib. good evening from me, as well. media mergers were the talk as murdoch made it clear he has a new target, timewarner. murdoch made a big bid. he offered $80 billion but timewarner rejected it. it doesn't mean the story is over, far from it. many believe the price tag could go higher and if the deal gets done, it could prompt a wave of
>>> this is "nightly business report" with tyler mathisen and susie gharib. >> mega merger, murdoch sets his sights on timewarner but his $80 billion bit is rejected. will he offer more and does this deal make sense? >> call to action, the white house urges immediate action from lawmaker s to crack down on what it calls an abuse of the tax system but will congress respond? >> blue chip record, upbeat earnings sends the dow to an all-time high and tonight...
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i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm sue herrera, filling in tonight for susie gharib. the day started out with a pleasant surprise. the economy grew at a 4% annual rate last quarter bouncing back nicely from the sharp winter contraction but it put market watchers on edge. could a strengthening economy force the federal reserve to act sooner rather than later. the prospect of higher interest rates sent stocks lower and few direct hints were given. fed's fatigue set in and that sent traders to the sidelines. by the close the dow fell 32 points to 16,880, the nasdaq helped by strong twitter results, rose 20 points to 44.6 and s&p 500 had a fraction l gain. steve liesman has more on today's fed meeting and what may come next. >> the federal reserve tapered by expected $10 billion and brought bond down to 20 billion, it was 80 billion in december and there was a hawkish tilt to the statements brought about by some better economic mnumbers w got. the philadelphia fed said he thought the current statement did not reflect the improvement in the economic numbers. the fed said t
i'm tyler mathisen. >> i'm sue herrera, filling in tonight for susie gharib. the day started out with a pleasant surprise. the economy grew at a 4% annual rate last quarter bouncing back nicely from the sharp winter contraction but it put market watchers on edge. could a strengthening economy force the federal reserve to act sooner rather than later. the prospect of higher interest rates sent stocks lower and few direct hints were given. fed's fatigue set in and that sent traders to the...