This week with a story in politics. You have this map that looks at europe and the ground that is gained by the populist radical right. We tried to dissect the myth from the reality of the strength of the far right in europe. Twice 17a feeling that has gotten lost in the u. S. Because the president and some of his agenda, but there was a time when Emmanuel Macron beat back the National Front and came to an election and also what we saw in the netherlands, which beat back the challenge in a far right leader. We have seen this summit in the far right europe. That has proven not to be the case. And a disparate coalition of the agendas across far right parties. They have stitched together support that is common in the issues that draw them, whether its immigration, law and order. But they are different in how they act in their separate parts of europe. But we have sound the support is the hyatts it has been highest it has been in 30 years. Is so much optimism in europe right now and that election felt like a watershed as far as populism in europe is concerned. What you have dig down in details is that there is still a lot of support for the National Front. We saw it with the amd in germany. Theseng results for parties, even if they are not necessarily in power. The growth behind them is huge. It is hard megan for people who come from a bipartisan system in the u. S. Or the u. K. How much proportional representation really shifts the dynamic . Lets take offshore. This is a leader who wins the outright vote in austria but the challenge was with the green, not the liberal. That is a pattern we see frequently across europe. In poland, issues are on law and order cracking down on immigration. Then you go to Northern Europe where it is explication of the welfare system. Perception immigrants have come in and changed the fabrics. What these are news together with knitted together with is the what is underneath that is the changing economics of the country and how we see rage wage is still strong across europe area europe. That leads to the feeling that their society is starting to disintegrate. Julia lets move onto the cover story. Im proud we have thrown a spotlight on what rico. This time put a rico. Results andck of how it is more than meeting the challenge. Megan one of our marquee stories for the year. People to understand the challenge of putting together puerto rico. People who have had this devastation and lack of corn it government response, grass graphs coming in days after the response. Its a different way of telling the story and we are proud of it. Hopefully it will educate people of what is going on. Carol we have more going on from monte real. When you go to put a rico now, it is a situation where when you get there, it threatens to overwhelm you with what they still need. And with the desperation that you find. I think that before that sets in, you are kind of confronted with inspiration. You see all these stories of people who are rebuilding their lives and their likelihood. ,nd so its this curious mix of you see the needs they have that are still there a few months later. Still 40 of the energy grid is offline. You see people coming up with innovative ways to respond to the disaster and really pick themselves up again. Carol many acts of kindness and you play that out in your story. There is still a lack of power and running water. Placess still a lack of for people to live. They have an awful lot to do in terms of rebuilding puerto rico. Yes, they do. And it goes beyond just the immediate needs. Puerto rico is different than houston or Florida Weather other hurricanes hit hard this year because of its isolation. It was hard to get the immediate resources there. It was also financially isolated somewhat before, so you had an island that had serious economic troubles for the storm even hit. This exasperated those and underscored that. For 10 years before the storm, it had 10 straight years of economic reception. Carol larry coker took steps to attract others in puerto rico took steps to attract others in. These are folks in the Financial Sector. They have been doing a lot in the industry helping puerto rico get back on its feet. Talk about this gringo transplant. In 2012, puerto rico tried to make the island into a tax haven, especially for hedge funds and Investment Fund managers to attract capital, to encourage them to move to the island by giving them tax breaks. They would give them no taxes on interest on capital gains. A lot of people did take puerto rico up on that. Some investors came to the island and as part of that deal, you have to live on the island. You have to stay 183 days of the year in puerto rico. You have this influx of people from the Financial Sector coming to puerto rico and they were there when the storm hit. Them, i would go to the Convention Center and in addition to all of the people from fema and health and Human Services to mill around with the recovery effort, you would see these people from the private sector who were investors who had moved to a rico and puerto rico and who had joined into the relief effort to see if they could help in any way. There are creative ways they were doing that. Theres a group called the act 22 society, named after the laws that were encouraged to attack attract investors to the islands. They formed a social Services Group there with a raised money and tried to augment the efforts of the federal government in bringing aid to people. Carol later in the program, a chef spent thanksgiving feeding thousands of people in puerto rico. Julia canadas oil capital. Carol iran may be pleased with President Trump to recognize jerusalem as israels capital. Julia this is bloomberg businessweek. Carol welcome back to bloomberg businessweek, im carol massar. Julia im julia chatterley. You can find us on bloomberg. Com. Kathleen and our mobile app. President trump turned over decades of Foreign Policy by recognizing jerusalem as an as israels capital. Julia the investment might have played directly into the hands of the country donald trump is trying to contain. Carol here is editor matthew philips. We wanted to take these moves and put it in the context of a bigger power struggle between the iranians and the saudis for the dominance over the middle east. That is your polar right now. So if you look at how the alliances have shaped up the last couple years, you have the saudis on the same side as they have been on for years and they have projected the israelis to. On the other side, you have the iranians and the russians and you can read a lot of this through syria. If the message is, if you align yourself with the americans, they will give the israelis the whole game right off the back. This plays into the message in the long game the iranians have an playing as it relates to palestine. We are the true guardians of the best issues of the palestinians. Not those who are aligned with the americans. Julia the United States take this stance and the two prior president s tossed this move to shift the u. S. Embassy as far as israel is concerned. It discredits them surely as a neutral mediator in the region. Guest a lot of people are going to say, this completely stops whatever hopes we had at a piece process and it raises questions about what game Jared Kushner is playing. The prince and saudi, that has been the lens as to see a piece process. Its clear the saudis are not keen on this. What we are not understanding is what kind of messaging the Trump Administration gave the saudis because we know tillerson and mattis were not on board with this. What kind of messaging where the saudis . I cant say that. This was agest decision they were not keen on. The saudis, while the have not made official calls for violence or protest, there is a lot of outrage in their press, saying, what are you doing . This gives the whole game to iran . Donald trump has explicitly said he wants to antagonize the middle east. Carol they get aggressive with it. Guest absolutely. We should stop taking american and israeli goods into saudi. About the pushback we have seen and the violence we have seen. When you look at groups like those in the region, you look at the financial backing we know exists as far as iran is concerned, it very much ties into the suggestion of the greater leverage for iran, which is what you were alluding to at the beginning. Days, theree early was a call for days of rage. In the first 48 hours or so, the response was relatively muted. We saw a lot of protests in beirut and the west bank and around ramallah in particular. But when you look at all of the middle east, a lot of the protests have been very fairly muted. You are not seeing anything in jordan. You are seeing places where iran has the highest influence. Such as beirut and hezbollah. Thats were relieved with this. Its interesting to see the difference in how the arab world is responding to this and how iranians are responding to this through their proxies, has below and hamas. Section, the economic talk to people in calgary and they will to canadas oil capital is a shadow of its former self. Carol blame the low crude oil prices. Julia here is christina lindblad. Guest is about 30 now and they know its a problem and the have been trying to deal with this for years that it certainly has put impotence behind the governance efforts to do something about it. Of whative us a sense happened because we know the big oil players decided to retrench and prices will state lower for longer. Talked about the impact in the economy and the unappointed levels, the drop in income levels as well. It changes the economy dramatically. Guest at one point, unemployment surged as high as 9 , its down to 7. 3 now, but still one percentage point above the average. If you look at median incomes, which has been quite high, because it pays good salaries, there was a more than 40 dozen dollars drop between 2014 and 2015. And14,000 drop between 2014 2015. People get used to doing less with fewer people. Even though prices are now, at one point they touched 30, now they are at 60, we are not seeing the same jobs coming back to energy every energy. Carol is also causing a city like calgary, they are figuring out how to retool the city. They are making some success and progress. Guest i think theyve attracted some names and also what they are doing is they are looking at sectors with ara have a foothold rather than trying to create industries from scratch. They are going after businesses there. Amazon opened up a Fulfillment Center there so thats 750 jobs. Now they are competing. They are one of the many cities competing for the amazon headquarters. They have been creative about it. They plastered in seattle this building where this that are ad says, we would fight a bear for you. That is also an airline in this space called westjet and they want to start a lowcost carrier and several canadian cities bid for that project and calgary ended up getting it. Julia talk to us about the mayor because he has been in power since 2010 and hes been promoting diversification in established businesses, whether the distance or transportation, looking for the other strengths calgary has here. Guest he said when he was a student in college, he was sort of watching the duffers vacation efforts, not knowing one day he would be the guy trying to push this. He talked about, we need shock absorbers. He said, its not like we want to move the whole industry there or Energy Industry out of calgary, but we need to diversify sources come more engine firing, lets say. How muchtermining bitcoin north korea may have and what it lends to do with it. Carol plus the legal showdown over getting high in Harvard Square. Julia this is bloomberg businessweek. Julia im julia chatterley. Carol im carol massar. You can also listen to us on the radio and on aim 11th rio in new boston, 91f 6. 1 in fm in washington, d. C. And a m naik 60 in the bay area. Anda and in london on dab in asia on the Bloomberg Radio plus apps. In a finance section, north korea has been hacking its way into bitcoin. Carol researchers are trying to figure out what the country is trying to do with the cryptocurrency. Lets say you are in the bitcoin industry and you say that is a cfo opening. And its a word attachment and its for a fastgrowing londonbased bitcoin company. And it says,t up this was created in a version of word that is later than yours so you have to enable the content areas you click enable the content and you get to be the cfo and manage the accounting and work on the trading strategy and it is awesome company. Like a tech company. Cool young people with foosball and pingpong. Carol i want this job. Guest but what you have done by opening this fake Job Description is in fact your computer with malware that is being run by north korea. Carol we know that for a fact . Guest this is according to secure works. Likehave a swat team, cybersecurity researchers to look at the latest threat and they have been tracking north koreas interest in bitcoin for a while. Talk about for a while. This goes back to various viruses and someone. Tell us about what they have found out in terms of north korean hackers specifically. Guest they first saw north korean is just in bitcoin back in 2013 when they were able to track this was basically a failure insecurity on north korean hackers parts. They were able to see hackers were going into underground forums, like bitcoin forums online, to do research. To sort of understand what is bitcoin. And to understand how it might be useful. Because for a country like north korea, which has been for a very long time and trying to make money and get around those sanctions, it is an interesting tool. Carol raising my hand for those folks on radio. How north korea limits its access to the internet. Who is getting that access . Dont they . Guest yes, they do. Carol what is that going . Guest there are indications that they have hacking teams overseas. They have hacking teams this is according to other research from a different set of Security Firm called recorded feature. They got this trope of data that the who not only were able to access it from north korea, like political elite, the top echelon of society, but it also showed indicators that they have teams of people in countries overseas who would be able to also do this kind of work on bitcoin. Carol in the business section across the United States, Legal Marijuana entrepreneurs are facing pushback from neighbors. Julia jenny kaplan reports. Healthy farms is a medical Marijuana Dispensary in as a chooses. Have ay currently dispensary opened in georgetown, massachusetts and they are planning to open a second dispensary in Harvard Square in cambridge. Carol and everybodys ok with it, right . The state of massachusetts voted to legalize Recreational Marijuana last november. So by all accounts, people are all for it. This is specifically a medical one. Different municipalities can decide whether they want cannabis businesses active in the town and cambridge voted that they were ok with it. And the city Council Voted in favor of the location. Carol sounds like a lovely name for a company, but it is a living to not all that alluding to not all the neighbors are Feeling Healthy about this and have a have a lawsuit talk to us about that. Jenny correct. One neighbor in particular, he is the controlling partner of four different buildings in Harvard Square. He is suing healthy farms and 18 other plaintiffs, saying they are taking part in a racketeering operation because they are all coming together in order to create a situation in which they can sell marijuana, which is a federally illegal drug. He is suing under rico, a racketeering law. You consume three you can sue three times what it is worth. Rico, iten we think of is usually used against organized mobs and thats when we see this lot put into use. This is a very different way of implementing it. Julia and expensive. Carol and expensive. Jenny this is the fourth time rico has been used against the cannabis does this. The reason it was founded was to go after organized crime bosses. Getle who dont necessarily their hands dirty, but are part of the whole process of getting a crime done. So people are using this because they are not only going after the dispensary owner or the person running the actual operation, they are going after the ancillary businesses that make it possible. That means going after the banks if a Cannabis Companies can get a bank account. ,hey are going after the banks they are going after whoever owns the land or mortgage. They are going after any consultants on the project. And in addition, in order to make this come up to make their argument this is racketeering, they are actually even complaining against people as high as the attorney general of massachusetts, saying she is violating the constitution in that the constitution says that federal law trumps state law and they are trying to say it is ok to sell a product that is legal under federal regulation. Julia the electric truck that will probably be to the market. Carol this is bloomberg businessweek. Is this a phone . Or a little internet machine . It makes you wonder shouldnt we get our phones and internet from the same company . Thats why Xfinity Mobile comes with your internet. You get up to 5 lines of talk and text at no extra cost. So all you pay for is data. See how much you can save. Choose by the gig or unlimited. Xfinity mobile. A new kind of network designed to save you money. Call, visit, or go to xfinitymobile. Com. Julia im julia chatterley. Carol im carol massar. Insuring against movie stars acting badly. Julia elon musk gets big truck come position. Carol a guide on how to give back this holiday season. Julia all that still ahead on bloomberg businessweek. Julia we are back with megan murphy and we are in the technology section. One of my favorites this week, elon musk has a challenger. Megan he does have a challenger moving into the big rigs market. Here in the u. S. Julia he says that with such enthusiasm. Megan i always wanted to be a trucker growing up. There is a tremendous amount of attention in the market. Tesla rolls out there electric trucks and to much fanfare. Just down the road, there is a has aguy named dakota who prototype of the et one, his startup in this as well. He is so funding it. Its self funding it. They admit less, they are cleaner. They will be cheaper. Thats the interest that so many fleets are looking at. They are also coupled with limitations. Et1 only has a 30 mile radius. There are challenges, but every time we underestimated elon, he exceeded expectations with so much money and interest. It is interesting to see arrival close to home who has high hopes to compete. Carol its interesting he comes out of a Family Business and a vineyard. Megan its interesting. Hes a guy who has come up through a different track, but all those always the business route. This is the kind of space where hes arty build a prototype. It is being driven around. Particular in the trucking space, how high the job sector attracting trucking is. The Disruptive Force of electric vehicles, as well as potentially driverless vehicles, is immense. But the investment that proves you have street credit to do this is immense. Julia talk about his background. If we look at what he was doing at the vineyard, he converted the diesel trucks and they had to working on vegetable oil. This guy has an interesting knowledge of engines, as well. Hes only 25 and he spends his summers growing up, boxing up military equipment and doing wind to hers at night. Julia there is a Battery Power is the thing. Megan that is going to be the big challenge. We all know having driven crosscountry, that is what a great stew. Wants tor wants to charge and they have different demands than consumer facing vehicles we see now. That is going to be the key is building the infrastructure to keep these vehicles on the road and to meet the ruthless timetables. Carol we are snapping pictures of a new fed coming in 2018. And economics talks about the president remaking the fed. Megan this is fascinating because before President Trump came into the office, he talked about janet yellen and how it was arbitrary and the fed needs to be broken up. Since then, he has not recast it as much as expected, but he has opportunities coming up. Five governors and only two years potentially. Whether he chooses people more in line with antifed all sees and iosed to people fed policies as opposed to people who are army put up. Julia here is editor peter coy. Guest the transitions and leadership and how many residents named president s named each members of government and it was a lot of work. Trump has potential to change the fed more than a lot of his predecessors have. Carol why is he in that situation . Is it just older people retiring or why . Guest it is probably just coincidence. People are getting old and want to move on. Its partly because hes literally choosing not to reappoint people. The most notable example is janet yellen. She had one term as chair and he chose to go with somebody else. He said he admired her and like her a lot but he wanted to put his own stamp on the organization. Carol its not unusual for a democratic president to appoint a fed chair and maybe a republican chair and he keeps that fed chair. Two recent examples, ragan kept paul volcker and clinton kept paul greenspan, a republican. There is a history of bipartisanship. Carol we do know the president then candidate donald trump on the campaign trail, often talked about the fed so maybe we are not surprised he wants to make his mark. Peter exactly. He said janet yellen is more political than Hillary Clinton at one point. So far though, wall street has been quite reassured by his choices for the fed. We have seen him make crazy picks for various cabinet post, but he has taken a middleoftheroad approach with the fed. You can see that with drum powell. Hes a republican, but he was a centrist figure who works for the by policy center before he joined the fed and was an obama appointee and trump has chosen to elevate him and Randal Quarles is the wall street lawyer, who comes onto the fed as a vice chair of supervision. Now we have good friends not yet confirmed, he comes from Carnegie Mellon university. These are the kind of picks. They have a republican tinge to them, but they are nothing that will alarm people like, the fed is going crazy these days. Carol so far. Peter exactly. So far. Trump has a history of making outofthebox decisions. There is a residual fear among people that he can revert to form of the fed and treated like hes treated other parts of government, kind of blow things up. Carol how hollywood is trying to protect itself from bad actors. Julia we tell you about a good actor in puerto rico as a chef on the front lines makes civilian led relief efforts. Carol this is bloomberg businessweek. Welcome back, im julia chatterley. Carol im carol massar. You can find us online at is a sweet. Com. Julia and on our mobile app. Cape town mayor explains why she hates mondays. Carol here is our editor. Cape town has had very low rain, so they are confronting what they are calling a day zero situation, something across south africa people are referring to, which is the potential the taps might run actually dry. The dams are extremely low. Mondays is one they get those reports and as much as they are trying very hard on implement in various measures to limit the usage, the monday reports have been looking more ominous. Town isay zero in cape two months before the rain should begin. Guest exactly and as they are heading to the winter season, its summer. Carol talking about cape town as a great place for tourists. They want people to come, all these great things. Then we have this water crisis. Is it the infrastructure is not there . Is it Climate Change . Visit multiple factors . Is it multiple factors . Aret our scientist sites various. They say Climate Change could be a factor and likely is a factor, as well as increased demand on the system. The increased demand does not really explain the very low rainfall. They are quite baffled by it because it is sort of unheard of in cape town and the last time they might have confronted a situation like this was well over 100 years ago. There is greater demand, more people. It is a huge part of the local economy, the tourists, and they are there in the summertime now. Lots of locals are not there. When locals come in are away or there are other factors, things that close up in the summertime. From michael and others who reported on this is that we are not really going to feel the effects if you are traveling as a tourist. Its really the people who are living there, especially the city sport. Carol focusing on the Risk Management section, recent allegations of Sexual Misconduct and assault are forcing hollywood to rethink how it does business. Guest some of my contacts in the film industry, we wonder what our studious and filmic is doing to protect themselves or cover themselves from the fallout of the situations that are happening in the headlines recently. And what weid was have been reporting is that a lot are going through policies, their insurance policies, trying to figure out how to cover things and realizing there is an coverage for Something Like this. Of for example, in the case sonys all the money in the world, about the getty family with kevin spacey, when he was dropped from the film and they thoseto reshoot it, millions of dollars in reshoot cost, they probably would have to absorb and there was no real way of recovering that money. While we dont know the ins and outs, we havent been able to get that from them. They havent commented public week. Thati understand is financing specialists are trying ,o get a new form of insurance like a debt and disgrace insurance that is more widely used in the advertising world to apply to the film world. Kevin the allegations of spacey were 31 years ago. Guest right. And thats the problem is that there are a lot of background checks went insurers or completion bond providers for films who guarantee the film will get completed will cover for that risk for various reasons the film might go off course. It is so hard to cover for something that could have happened decades ago but could really just now put your start out of business. Carol thats the difference. Hollywood we know has always been an industry that is an industry ripe with its own issues. There are always things that come up. But this is different because it can go back in time in terms of people who have done bad things potentially. Guest yeah. And its a cultural shift. What has been sort of ignored and a blind eye turned to is not andidered unacceptable people are actively looking into its comingts and back to haunt them and put them out of their jobs. Julia this week, it is devoted to philosophy. Carol the profile of a chef and the thanksgiving he spent in puerto rico. Julia here is our editor. Guest hes a very popular chef. After the hurricane in puerto rico, he went down and started cooking meals for people, started with a few hundred meals and by now, symptom or 25th, he has served at least 3 million meals to people. At the time with the red cross were having trouble getting access to people. Was a andres figured out a way to do it. Big he just had these guest that is something he saw a early on. He saw how traumatizing these storms work. Again, people feel whole to make people feel normal, he realized a hot sit down meal was really important and he set up 20 kitchens across the country. On a certain day, he served 150,000 meals. Julia how did he do it . Guest he has a network of chefs that work with him in his organization and he basically found resources that were on the island of puerto rico, food storage, condemned the people who had food trucks that drove into rural areas and started cooking. He had thousands of volunteers. Julia the beauty is not just a Crisis Response but also rebuilding the on the Crisis Response. Wereome of the people who owning food trucks, he convinced them to hang around even after they left. Guest people didnt know what to do. It seemed impossible. He said you can help and you can stay. It was a key part of his distribution system. Didl the lesson of what he , hes done many places around the world is just start. Guest that is the first lesson of philanthropy specials. If you dont know what to do, just take the first step. Carol chrissy telling tins mission to improve the health of women across the globe. Julia no training required. Carol this is bloomberg businessweek. Carol im carol massar. Julia im julia chatterley. You can listen to us on the radio and on and 11 three ok in new york, one of 6. 1 in boston, 99. 1 fm in washington, d. C. And a m naik 60 in the bay area. Carol and in london on the dab and asia on the Bloomberg Radio plus app. In the technology section, packet tags and get ready for space tourism. Will commercial flights have less training requirements the nasa for wealthy clients. Carol good to know. Guest as soon as next year, the in errors Companies Space billionaires are going to start expanding the range of 600 aople who escape gravity by factor of scores in any given year according to their early estimates. The big change here is that were even civilians and nasa and most agencies have sent up into space for various missions in the past, have usually had to undergo a pretty rigorous months or years or extensive of extensive physical training. The federal government is living at more or less to the commercial Spaceflight Companies the astronauts needed to be. Carol are the people who have a lot of cash really ready to go into space . Talk about the prep private Space Companies are doing to get them ready. Part, thethe most chief medical officers seem to have you can pretty much an average person get by with pretty minimal training, as little as a few days. , he was towas saying keep people how to put the belt on and that kind of thing. Carol dont worry about the gees gs. Julia talk to us about virgin lactic. You did speak to the chief medical officer. What did he have to say about the physical pressures this puts on your body, but the mental . For me, thats probably more important. Guest the big caveat we heard , was that on the it isal side, while reasonable to assume people will be ok, the average person will be ok physically as long as medical issues are well understood or wellcontrolled, that the studies theyve done showed minimal correlation or unreliable correlation between peoples baseline psychological evil elections and likelihood of freaking out when things happen every julia you mean its tough to tell whos strapped to a rocket and say, i cant handle this. Attacks on had panic some rights at a music parks, but thats something to think about. From my understanding in this story, they call them the founders. They are going through extensive medical scrutiny. Said they they have heard pretty conservative as far as kinds of precautions they are taking in this first round folks. Says they are well understood and wellcontrolled, that means they have to be clear with people that you have to disclose everything so we can control for it. Julia lets get back to the special pursuits philanthropy section. Carol chris rovzar talked about a mission from others. She is one of the people who has done a lot of work in her life and she would sponsor dinners, unit to her Friends Charities and she finally realized im a person who needs to get involved. I need to go deep. She actually had a lifethreatening hemorrhage in one of her presidencies pregnancies and it opened her eyes as to what Maternal Health is around the world. She started every mother counts, which has raised over 1 million and helped 600,000 people around the world. What they do is do things as simple as adding people to Health Facilities and they provide medical training and medical supplies. Julia this is the second lesson of the giving section. She truly wanted to fight for something she believed in and understood. Guest it started as a Public Service campaign and once she wanted more about it, she went deep and her thing was, you have to care about it because once you get into it, there is no going back. Carol its interesting to note know she knew so much by going into other guest charities. She knows what would work for her. Julia also the Tax Advantages of getting. It is not just about giving necessarily. You can also offset that. There are tons of waste and everybody should look at the section for pieces of advice. You might not know that there is a huge tax advantage for you or if you want to set up a trust that gives money to good causes while you are still alive. There are different options that are still easy. Carol this game changer can teach you a lot about giving. She started at a young age. Chris zoe was 11 and when she started owing to school, she was bullied because she looked different. Nobody else looked like her. She went home after the first day of school and said i dont want this to happen to anybody else. Over time, she and her mom created zoe dolls. They make dolls with different skin colors. Any girl who reaches out to them around the world, they will send a doll too. They have sent out over 20,000 dolls so far. Julia she also attracted the attention of nickelodeon. The business is growing. Guest she was honored, which was really great. They honor kids every year and they gave her a scholarship to grow the company. Julia and her mother is managing it. It goes to show you that you dont have to be, having lived life a lot or an older person. Its just a great idea and something that happened to her personally. Chris you dont have to change the biggest game in the world. If you change it for several thousand young girls, who knows what that will mean . We have said all week how proud we are that we through the spotlight on what a rico on puerto rico. Carol they have a long way to go of recovery. Water, power, housing, and longterm, will be this sustainability of larry coker Going Forward puerto rico Going Forward . Julia some Great Stories with huge heart. The chefs that went there. 18 kitchens running at one point. And the other stories, the race to space. 2018 is the year. Will you be there . Carol i would like to be there. Julia more Bloomberg Television begins now. Cannot live without it. So if you cant live without it. Why arent you using this guy . It makes your wifi awesomely fast. No. Still nope. Now were talking it gets you wifi here, here, and here. It even lets you take a time out. No no yes yes, indeed. Amazing speed, coverage and control. All with an xfi gateway. Find your awesome, and change the way you wifi. Emily im emily chang and this is best of Bloomberg Technology , where we bring you interviews from the week in tech. The end of net neutrality. The fcc votes to kill obama era rules for equal access to the internet. A massive merger that could shake the media landscape for decades to come. Fox assets forg more than 52 billion dollars. We will hear from disney ceo bob iger