A quick rundown of the action going on in the telecom industry, with CNBC's Morgan Brennan. The big question is whether regulators will agree with a merger for T-Mobile and Sprint.
CNBC's Jon Fortt and Henry Blodget, Business Insider editor-in-chief & CEO, discuss the potential deal between Sprint and T-Mobile and what it means for the state of broadband in the U.S. Blodget says both companies are at a tremendous disadvantage and need the scale to compete.
Kevin Smithen, Macquarie Securities, shares his thoughts on the pending mega-merger between Sprint and T-Mobile and what it might mean for the telecom industry.
Walter Piecyk, TMT Analyst at BTIG, explains why a $1 billion fee, which Sprint has to pay T-Mobile if their merger falls through, is relatively insignificant.
Keith Fitz-Gerald, Chief Investment Strategist at Money Map Press, expects the merger to face regulatory hurdles since it will likely result in higher prices for consumers.
Edward Dempsey, Chief Investment Officer at Pension Partners, says U.S. telecoms and consumers may benefit from a possible merger between Sprint and T-Mobile.
Walter Piecyk, BTIG wireless research analyst, weighs in on consolidation in the media sector and whether the FCC could use deals to prompt competition in the industry.
Discussing how tablet use and its new "Framily Plan" impacts Sprint's network, with CEO Dan Hesse.
Dan Hesse, Sprint CEO, discusses his decision to pull advertising with the LA Clippers following racial remarks made by owner Donald Sterling.
"The Profit's" Marcus Lemonis discusses GM's recall investigation, Apple's new customer loyalty program, and Sprint's move to add man power.
CNBC's David Faber speaks with Sprint chairman and Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son about his rise and fall during the dot-com bubble era. Son is currently the richest man in Japan.
The "Squawk on the Street" news team discuss the potential merger between T-Mobile and Sprint.
Sprint CEO Daniel Hesse, weighs in on the growing competition for family viewers, wireless consolidation, and subsidies carriers pay to Apple.
Daniel Hesse, CEO of Sprint, discusses how his company plans to double the speed of Internet connectivity in schools and libraries without raising additional taxes.