shelves of inventory behind lock. ask you to run right with me. democratic senator joe manchin up for reelection. i lost one, won t lose another one. new york jets, jets, jets, jets, select will mcdonald. let s go. brian: felony counts of falsifying records conflicted by the lyrics because working for the weekend. steve: that is what we re doing. brian: what we re looking forward to. i know people very well that work through the weekend. if i feel too happy and elbulient, it will be at the cost steve: would you rather work the weekends or work the weekday? brian: i m not sure. he does both. rachel: it s pretty fun on the weekend, it doesn t feel like work. that is sweet. reverse outnumbered. i m the lucky gal. brian: don t firefighters work 36 straight hours rachel: isn t that what they do? brian: they get it done and can open a dunkin donuts or that is what we do, brian. brian: are you surprised we don t have a pole because o
then, tech mogul mark cuban surprises me with some news about his future on shark tank. and his ongoing feud with one guest shark. have you been in the same room with him? no, i have not. i haven t talked to him since. not a word. and later, the so-called man with a golden ear, clyde davis, reveals the biggest recording artist he never signed and the one he ll always be remembered for. is whitney the artist of your career? i worked a lot on this question. deny it? don t deny it. are you always like this? are you saying parents are wrong? will you come back? of course i will. dr. rochelle walensky leads the centers for disease control and prevention. for more than 18 months, she s been the face of the biden administration s fight against the covid pandemic. in our conversation, she talks about how she deals with the criticism she faces and her future at the agency. but we start with those new covid vaccines. how does the rate at which people are getting thi
equation? it s everything. in all honesty, with me, and again, i don t care if anybody buys into this or not, from my standpoint, one thing, i m a patriot and i love this country. the job i do, i serve. i don t want anything. i have never wanted anything. and i ll tell you the truth, every single time i speak, i will challenge you to find something that i knowingly know is not the truth. i will not do that. i believe our country is in real peril right now. look what the biden administration is doing, come on, absolutely could anybody think we re right at the border? right at immigration? right on energy independence? right on ukraine, right from standpoint of what is going on and i don t mean being in ushg yoo, i think that is where we
little-known internet pioneer to famous tech mogul in the blink of an eye. we continue our conversation with his first big purchase after striking it rich. one of the things that a new billionaire can do is they can buy a sports team. yep. and within months, you kbd and buy the dallas mavericks, nba, professional basketball team for $275 million. yep. and the last i saw, it is valued at $2.7 billion. not bad, is it? so that s like ten times. yeah, that s the way the math works. that s only if you want to sell it, though, and i don t. i m really hoping it becomes a legacy company for my kids. running a sports team in this day and age is not easy with social media. there s as much hate as there is love, if not more. but at the same time, basketball is a sport i m passionate about. i love owning the mavs. i love being part of the team and trying to win and the competitive side of it. so hopefully that carries on to
mr. wonderful, but he s a good guy. let s talk about your being an entrepreneur, and i don t mean being on somebody else s back. you are famous for getting cold e-mails and your g-mail address is pretty well known and you get cold emails, pitches, and one of them, a couple of years ago, got you going into something called cost plus drugs. what is that? so there was a doctor who was a radiologist by trade who wanted to create a compounding pharmacy that would offer drugs less expensively than they could be currently bought, particularly generics. i said, that s a great idea, but let s do it a little differently. we started costplusdrugs.com. the challenge with the pharmaceutical city is a lack of trust. it is so obfuscated, it is so dark no one really knows what anything costs or why things are done. so i made the decision, let s create some radical transparency in costplusdrugs. if you go to costplusdrugs.com and put in whatever medication