of narratives. the prologue written by the government in january spoke of bold pledges putting a dramatic end to austerity. greece is also face a herculean task. under the terms of the original bailout, it has to repay almost $30 billion in debts by the end of the year. at the end of this month, it reportedly faces a bill of $1.8 billion for public sector wages and pensions. its creditors have frozen the next portion of the international bailout, $7.8 billion, until they re pleased with greece s package of reforms. translator: greece is part of the eurozone. despite an intensive discussion, we do not agree on what we must do next. since i have an experienced diplomat as a spokesman, i m supposed to say we agreed to disagree. reporter: this caused a scene change in act two. brussels was the backdrop this past february. after three euro group meetings,
you know, today and today. yesterday i did some things i m accountable for. reporter: when that testimony is spoofed on saturday night live. i am looking into knowing when i first knew about it, but i won t know the results of that knowing until i know for sure. reporter: it s a bona fide brand crisis. general motors barely shaking off its bailout baby government motors image, thrust into a product safety crisis of its own making. the pattern of incompetence and neglect. reporter: those words attract plaintiffs lawyers like bears to honey. gm now finds itself among the greatest hits of deadly corporate mistakes that resulted in massive settlements. toyota dolled out $1.1 billion for its runaway accelerator problem. merck paid $4.85 billion for its deadly drug vioxx. the dangerous diet pill phen/fen costs 3ds.75 billion. bp paid $7.8 billion for
but bp, they can t find it. the coast guard can t find it. every time we have a storm. every time we have bad weather oil is going to pop up because bp never picked it up. out of sight out of mind and leave us with the mess. bp is working on this thing called public opinion. they have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on an ad campaign trying to clean up the nightmare. they aren t helping the case by fighting claims from those who have suffered damage from the spill. bp is trying to weasel their way out of paying some claims to businesses in the gulf. they say some claims are not related to the spill. they originally expected to pay out $7.8 billion in claims and now it could be well over $9.2 billion. on monday the 5th circuit court in louisiana ruled against bp. bp said they will take it to the
we re in sensitive negotiations to somehow get them to level off on their enriching of uranium. we freed up $1 billion on monday to interject into their economy. how can we be outraged? samantha powers is the one messing us up. $1 billion is small. take a look at the amount of money the united nations spends out of our hearts, out of our treasury to fund the united nations. there it is. $7.8 billion. and so it s laughable, the fact that, okay, iran says we re not building nuclear bombs or any of that stuff. right. iran says we d be perfect to be on this commission for women and then you look at theç stats. we could have stopped this. but because our ambassador, our american team across town apparently was too busy to go put the kabash on this, iran is on two of
shares jumping to a high following quarterly earnings report. mark zuckerberg making his goal to write a thank you note every single day. i love that goal. profits jumping eight fold to $2.5 billion steadily climbing all year after the botched ipo in 2012. gene marks is a small business onowner and my guest today. a lot of people thought facebook sold too high. a lot lost money. $2 billion bucks, i d be writing thank you notes every day, too. good boy. the biggest reason, $7.8 billion in revenue compared to $5 billion last year. mobile has been their big driver. i m a big facebook fan. i use it on my mobile phone. they are growing it. watch for video, they are making it there. speaking of news and