called vow chipewwowow. i don t know what it involves but it doesn t sound like you will get a job. freddi greg: you have a son, eric, three years away from college. eric: given your monologue, no comment. paying attention. i think what they were doing is after they realized the funding would be cut they went after the private donation. they got planned parenthood to put money in. honestly, it seems like we re making hay out of not much. there are things that the people do in college, a lot of things they talk about in college that everyone isn t necessarily going to agree on. this is one. greg: this is frivolous and stupid. dana: imagine being a mom and dad and saved your life the put your kids through college and what is what they come back with. they graduate and live in your
subsidiaries to nbc. we ask, was nbc, fallon and the crew of rich fat cats need that money? bob: are you asking me that question? eric: yes. bob: sorry. let me eric: here is the crux of the question. bob: i got it. i got it. eric: give them free money. eric: i don t understand that the states that entice people to production like michigan, is it that they lose money? or don t make money? this is what happens. we give you $24 million but the economic activity that you bring when you come to the city, make up for it that way. dana: i think this screams need for tax reform. this is so warped that for cuomo can t get his arms around the fracking issue. issuing the time regulations or whatever law they need.
freddibasement greg: i have 42. eric: they are in the basement until 4:00 in the morning, playing x-box. find a girlfriend. please. dana: i didn t think anyone went on actual dates anymore. hang out, hook up. i watch that girls show. i know what goes on now. andrea: how old were you when you were allowed to date? dana: probably 15 or 16, i imagine. we lived in a rural area in colorado. so everybody had cars. so that s how you got dana: do you remember your first date? no. not really. bob: how old were you? greg: the age of my first girlfriend was 16. five years ago. we don t talk much anymore. the worst influence for girls are boys. that s why parents and siblings are extremely important because they re the guardian angel angels that makee
our conversation. this guy was a vietnam vetera veteran. he felt this against the core of his being. eric: i hate boycotts. the better thing is man up and apologize. if you i have been there first hand doing this. i misspoke. they should apologize. they can run something at the end of one of the shows. hey, sorry for the insensitivity to the vietnam vet or all americans for that matter. karl rove had something to say. he has a message that will appear later on greta. this is a message. god bless bob beckel for standing up on this issue. this was tone death, insensitive, callus and stupid for cbs to do this. they allow themselves to insult every vietnam era and the family and those who
dana: it evens out. eric: here is what they estimate the tonight show expense , production expenses. $80 million. they get 30% cut off that number. in the form of credit, right, $24 million is going go to them, whether they owe taxes or not. the revenue last year was $150 million or so. if you take the number as $8 or $9 million in tax liability, $24 million in tax credit, we pay them $19 million in refund. dana: why do they think it s a good idea? why would new york want it? eric: we called cuomo s office this afternoon. andrea: they favor the hollywood film industry. if you look at the money that new york spends to sponsor film credit and the films in the city it s the same amount, eric, you said $24 million. that could hire 5,000 public school teachers.