pull back. that was a downward reversal. the other term you may have heard in sberchs to what happened 24 hours ago was the do you dropping about 1,000 points, some people prefer to that as a flash crash. it is a rapid and teep fall. we saw that happen on may 6th, 2010. yesterday s record, was that the drop was 4.6%. i never want to think about the point numbers because it changes depending on how high the do you is. it doesn t even crack the top 20. 1987, we remember that. 1929, 1899. you don t want to see a 4.6% loss in a given day, but it is important to have this
but if you take away the dramatic score. take away the dizzying 360-degree camera move. [ tires screech ] .and take away the over-the-top stunt, you re still left with a pretty remarkable tale. but, okay, maybe keep the indulgent supermodel cameo. thank you. [ male announcer ] innovative medical solutions. fedex. solutions that matter. bill: thanks for staying with us. i m bill o reilly in the kelly file segment tonight, you may remember back in 2010 at the live oak high school in morgan hill, california, five students wore shirts emblazened with the american flag in school s cinco de mayo celebration. they feared violence as 40% of the students are hispanic americans. the students asked to leave sued. on may 6th, 2010. megyn kelly and i debated the
the odds of you standing there with the big check are just north of zero. so, why do we buy a ticket? are you ready. scott hotel is part of duke university s neuroeconomics team, exploring among other things why smart people make foolish decisions with their money. people don t buy a lottery ticket just because they have a chance of winning. they will buy a ticket because over the next couple days it allows them to fantasize what they would do if they won the lottery. in a sense they re paying for that experience rather than a chance for the lottery itself. it s not just the lottery. nathan zweig know is firsthand and put his brain to the test with scott s team at duke. it s a combination of neuroscience and economics basically using the tools of scanning and other measurement technology that neuroscientists have used for years to study how the human brain evaluates risk and reward over time, which is what investing is all about. reporter: from investing to buyi
we re supposed to be rational and objective but often our behavior is anything but that. as we saw last may. panic selling. the flash crash of may 6th, 2010. the dow plunges nearly 10% in less than 30 minutes. the panic leading to a suspension of logic. rationally, it was clear that something was amiss, something was going on. the human brain really does not like surprise. the reason the flash crash was so devastating, is because it was so inexplicable. it caught people completely by surprise. if you choose to gamble you have a 50/50 shot of keeping all 40 or losing all to receive z o zero. reporter: this type of risk and reward scenario that neuroscientists and the team at duke university hope to better understand conducting experiments with real money. this is called a functional mri. what does it have to do with how we save our money, spend our
they re gorgeous. greatest ties in the world. i have been wearing them, and i have been flooded across america, where did you get the ties? trump. what about us? i ll get you one. thank you, mike. he touches it, it turns to gold. like his apartment. everything is gold. will yay, if it s way too early, what time is it? morning joe. right now time for the daily rundown with savannah guthrie. revenge. the times square bomb suspect is still talking, telling interrogators he was angry at the u.s. for drone strikes in pakistan. and to the rescue in the gulf. a daring, never tried before attempt to seal off the leaks, a four-story, 100-ton dome arriving on the scene. good morning. it s may 6th, 2010. i m savannah guthrie. let s get to the rundown. first up, the times square bombing suspect. he says he does not need an attorney, can wait for a court