Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Just hilarious.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Charlotte may.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
Listening to the bast Thank y'all for bed like coach
Ole got family.
Speaker 4 (00:09):
The Rector Club is where people get the information on
the topics, on the artist, everything like that.
Speaker 5 (00:13):
I'm gonning you guys were nice. Everybody got me all
nervous like you guys.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Let's not go You locked into the world's most dangerous
morning show.
Speaker 5 (00:24):
If you want to Breakfast Club, we're gonna bring it.
One hundred and twenty miners will not come up here, Jean,
this is what y'all do.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
That's right, Get up about the beds and listen to
the greatest show on earth.
Speaker 6 (00:34):
It's a new day.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Is it your time to get it off your chest? Wait?
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Wait up, whether you're mad or blessed, time to get
up and get something.
Speaker 7 (00:42):
Call up man eight hundred five eighty five one O
five one.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello.
Speaker 8 (00:48):
Who is this listend?
Speaker 7 (00:50):
Hey, d good morning, good morning.
Speaker 9 (00:52):
I need to talk to my fellow lesbian.
Speaker 10 (00:55):
Ma.
Speaker 7 (00:55):
How you doing d yes?
Speaker 11 (00:57):
Hi, how are you doing now? Charlotte, big brother almighty?
What did the luxury size community do to you?
Speaker 5 (01:04):
The whole community?
Speaker 11 (01:05):
The luxury size community, the big.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Back luxury size that I love that. We was talking
about what word should we use to describe people.
Speaker 11 (01:19):
Our our sides are the luxury because we chuldo instead
of drugs and brilliant.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
But what we do to you nothing.
Speaker 5 (01:28):
I didn't listen. Here's the thing.
Speaker 12 (01:29):
I didn't even know when Jesse Larryce was telling that story.
I didn't even know the woman was a part of
the big back community. I just said, it sounds like
she she is a.
Speaker 11 (01:37):
Luxury size system. But here's the thing, I'm no more
swim ships than it got played than us. They don't disciminate.
And then on top of that, he was paying her bill.
Speaker 5 (01:47):
He was paying her Usually the other way around.
Speaker 12 (01:49):
Usually it's the big back paying the bills, paying the bills.
Speaker 5 (01:53):
Big really offensive.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
But I don't like luxury.
Speaker 11 (01:55):
I love the luxury size.
Speaker 5 (01:57):
I like luxury.
Speaker 7 (01:59):
Luxury means expensive, don't don't mean big.
Speaker 11 (02:04):
It's a pleasure right now. It's expensive, but it's a
luxury right now.
Speaker 12 (02:07):
Yeah, luxury means bigger usually Oh yeah, in a sense, yeah,
luxury is big.
Speaker 13 (02:12):
I like.
Speaker 11 (02:14):
Your mental health. You can't put that in the narrative.
Out said, like we just all that that's not the case.
Speaker 12 (02:20):
Well, you're right, But I just said in that case,
it did sound like big back behavior, and I was right.
Speaker 5 (02:25):
So is it a stereotype If it's true, I didn't
know she was big.
Speaker 7 (02:28):
They just don't like to turn big back. But see,
but luxury means extravagant living.
Speaker 12 (02:32):
It means opulents like extravagant, too, extravagant size. Extravagant just
means all that sounds big, though, lux extravagant, premium, premium size,
all that sounds good ninety three.
Speaker 5 (02:47):
I'm just premium back, premium back.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
Hello. Who's this Yeah?
Speaker 14 (02:51):
With your boy?
Speaker 7 (02:51):
J from p A, J from p A. Good morning,
p A.
Speaker 15 (02:55):
Hello, what's up? J?
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Yeah, I hear you.
Speaker 7 (02:58):
What's going on? Getting off your chest?
Speaker 5 (03:00):
All right?
Speaker 14 (03:00):
Man? I just want to let everybody know, especially the
brothers out there, especially just black man. Man, go home, man,
go home. That over time. It ain't worth it. That money,
It's not worth it.
Speaker 7 (03:12):
You got home, like.
Speaker 5 (03:16):
To if you needed to keep the lights on at home.
Speaker 14 (03:19):
Listen, Listen, listen, sol Man. You know, listening family more
important than anything.
Speaker 4 (03:23):
Bro.
Speaker 14 (03:24):
I was listening for a year straight. I was working
doubles almost every day. I almost lost my family behind this, bro.
And she simply told me, she was like, Yo, you
just simply weren't there, damn. But that's that's more important
than anything right now. Like I'm fighting right now to
get my family back, kid's wife, all that, bro. And
I realized, like, yo, that money ain't important, Like you
(03:45):
know what the kids missed. They missed me being there.
Speaker 7 (03:47):
That's right.
Speaker 8 (03:48):
You feel what I'm saying.
Speaker 14 (03:49):
They ain't worried about that dollar billing. Kids don't care
about how much money I'm making. They gonna remember that
time I spent with them and the light get cut off.
They ain't gonna think about, oh, dadd ain't ha the
money for that. They gonna think, yo, dad was playing
with us with the flashlight.
Speaker 7 (04:00):
Well you don't want to like to go home, but
you're right. You got to make time for your family
absolutely positively now. Doing double's important.
Speaker 14 (04:10):
Yeah, Like I'm fighting for it right now. You know
what I'm saying. And I can't blame it like it's
my fault. I wasn't there, But you know you.
Speaker 7 (04:17):
Can't and I don't want to. You know, you're putting
a lot on yourself, you know, as a as a father,
you know, the first thing that that we thinking is
we got to protect and provide, and provide means a lot,
and especially in this crazy world where people have been
losing their jobs, things have been messed up. So you
just want to make sure that you can pay for school,
you can pay for activities, you can pay for your house,
your car and all those things.
Speaker 12 (04:35):
So don't beat yourself up too much. But they're talking
about activities. This brother right here, you just want to
keep some food on the table. And sadly sometimes it
is that seems like the bad minimum, but.
Speaker 5 (04:47):
It's really not.
Speaker 12 (04:48):
It's actually a whole lot, especially what you're saying where
you're saying that you want to spend more time with
your family.
Speaker 8 (04:52):
Man.
Speaker 12 (04:52):
So I think we got to shift our mindset. A
lot of times we think just being able to provide
food and keep a roof over the head is the
bad minimum.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
It's not.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
That is a lot, a whole lot.
Speaker 13 (05:00):
It not.
Speaker 5 (05:01):
That's right.
Speaker 14 (05:01):
Time is more important than anything. Like I just switched
up jobs. I took a lower paying job. I'm working
third ship so I could be home with them all day.
Like I don't care about no money.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
No more respect.
Speaker 14 (05:11):
You don't need them. I need them.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
I respected my brother. Salute to you man, and salute
being a stand up man for your family.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Brother.
Speaker 7 (05:18):
Absolutely, have a good one.
Speaker 16 (05:19):
Brother.
Speaker 14 (05:19):
Hey, hey, saw, may I get a book?
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Bro?
Speaker 12 (05:21):
Yes, send my guy a book because you don't got
no money, you know, ask your money another one.
Speaker 5 (05:26):
Send him a book right now.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Jesus Eddie, get it.
Speaker 12 (05:28):
Put them all hold and get my guy's address and
send him a copy of Get on if the Die
Line right now.
Speaker 5 (05:33):
That's the least I can do for you, brother.
Speaker 14 (05:35):
I appreciate it.
Speaker 10 (05:36):
Bro.
Speaker 7 (05:36):
Yes, sir, I have a good one.
Speaker 8 (05:37):
Man.
Speaker 7 (05:38):
Get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up now. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, the
breakfast Club. This is your time to get it off
your chest. Eight hundred and five eight five five one.
We want to hear from you on the breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
Hello.
Speaker 7 (05:57):
Who's this?
Speaker 2 (05:58):
He yo?
Speaker 14 (06:00):
Seven five seven.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Seven five seven?
Speaker 7 (06:02):
What's up the Lando? Get it up your chest, man.
Speaker 14 (06:03):
I just want to give a big shout to all
the truck is. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 8 (06:07):
We make We're making it happen this morning.
Speaker 12 (06:09):
Salut to all the truck drivers out there man and
all you all the truck driver wives, like just hilarious.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
No doubt, everybody.
Speaker 14 (06:15):
I just want to know when we're gonna bring that
car show down to the seven five seven.
Speaker 12 (06:18):
You know what?
Speaker 8 (06:19):
I got a food truck?
Speaker 14 (06:20):
I said, Well, when you bring your car show down
to the seven five seven the.
Speaker 7 (06:24):
Seven five seventh been caught on a lot, and I
think I think I'm gonna try to do it next year.
I'm not sure when. Maybe I could get the Hampton
coliseeeum to do it. But yeah, everybody from the seven
five seven, you don't went to ham University, so I
got that's my second home down there, so I'm gonna
I'm gonna try to put a play together to get
it down.
Speaker 8 (06:39):
There, though, no doubt, because we got food trucks, you
know what I'm saying.
Speaker 14 (06:41):
I think we got the best food truck down there.
Speaker 7 (06:43):
All right, Well, pull up in New York, New Jersey.
You a truck driver, you nonter, It's August seventeen, pull
up down here, and I'm not there truck driver.
Speaker 14 (06:50):
I'm an order hauler.
Speaker 8 (06:51):
So you know you need a car boo.
Speaker 15 (06:53):
That's what I do.
Speaker 7 (06:54):
Say noan, say no more. Hit me in the DM
and you in the truck. Now blow the home for us. Hey,
Dad out there on the.
Speaker 8 (07:02):
Road, all right, man, he say hello, who's this?
Speaker 12 (07:06):
Hey?
Speaker 8 (07:06):
Good morning. It's James called from North Carolina.
Speaker 7 (07:09):
James from North Carolina. What's up? Get it off your chest?
Speaker 1 (07:11):
Brother?
Speaker 8 (07:12):
Yo. I just wanted to say, Man, the Marley family
is so musically gifted. Man, that that why g Marley.
That gives y'all to think. Oh man, it doesn't matter
if I'm in a bad mood. Whenever I hear that joint,
my spirit is immediately uplifted.
Speaker 16 (07:28):
Man.
Speaker 8 (07:28):
I mean, man, you know Damien, brother Damien. I used
to listen to him all the time.
Speaker 7 (07:34):
But man, you know they're all talented Rohan Damien, of course,
Pops Bob, like, they are all talented. You can just
just listen to their music all day long. So yeah,
they are a talented family.
Speaker 5 (07:46):
Fertile too. Oh yeah, yeah, So I didn't give God
the thanks's called.
Speaker 8 (07:51):
Oh yeah, give y'all to think give thanks.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
I gotta go check that up. I like it.
Speaker 5 (07:57):
I love that. I love a song giving glory to God.
Speaker 6 (08:00):
It's called praise John the Morney.
Speaker 7 (08:02):
Get it off your Chest? Eight five eight five one
oh five one. If you need to vent, hit usuping now,
it's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 7 (08:12):
Warning everybody, it's d J M V Jess hilarious, Charlamagne
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got a
special guest in the building.
Speaker 5 (08:19):
Yes, indeed, lazy gentlemen, Drew Ski doing welcome back, look
Black and Holly.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Are you brother?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
I'm good, man, I feel good.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
Remember on MSNBC.
Speaker 17 (08:28):
I don't know why I was on that, brother, I'm
confused on why they put me on the news. But
you know, man, I got a pr man. I don't
know what he got me doing.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
I just agree with what they tell me to do.
I showed up. I'm showing up. I didn't even where
the right a tie.
Speaker 5 (08:43):
So I just was I like, how you didn't act
like you knew what was going on?
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Let them straight up. I don't know what I was
talking about it. I loved it.
Speaker 17 (08:54):
Yeah, negotiation. When you talk about remort, I know, yeah,
I know they talking about something. So I'm like, hey,
I'm gonna just try to blend in. I ain't even
I'm not gonna trying to blend in on here, man,
with the video, I'm already tapped into coaches. I'm sure
I already knew who Drewski was. Yeah, yeah, yeah, somewhat somewhat.
That dude, he's very hip and he he knows what's
going on. He was reciting lyrics and stuff. But yeah,
(09:17):
I don't know what that guy.
Speaker 12 (09:18):
And it worked for you because I mean, you know,
you still ended up getting a viral moment. Yeah, you know,
and it was funny. Yeah yeah, yeah.
Speaker 17 (09:26):
So the p I ended up working. It was like
reverse of what it was supposed to do. I think
we were supposed to be on there talking about me
going to the White House or yeah, dogs in the
White Man.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
Yeah, I went like, a year ago.
Speaker 5 (09:37):
You had a dog.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
No, I don't know why they had me talking you
don't really know much.
Speaker 12 (09:42):
Yeah, I guess the secret service dog had been somebody
multiple dog beat a bunch of secret service.
Speaker 17 (09:48):
Yeah, but they're not putting it down. So it's like
and then when I said that, he looked at me
like why would you?
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 17 (09:54):
So I was like, let's just move on to I
want them to talk about what they had to talk about,
because I was like, hey, the subject you'll have me
talk about I don't want to talk about that.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
I'll just keep doing that.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
But you think the dog should be killed?
Speaker 1 (10:04):
Bro, put you down.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
I like how he tried to make it sound dog.
Speaker 7 (10:15):
How many how many people the dog white?
Speaker 1 (10:17):
It was a lot.
Speaker 7 (10:18):
Yeah, yeah, I think you want anybody else's dog there
to put your dog down? But it was like secure
secret service the first day to put a muzle on
a minute to put that dog down if it was
a black dog and pit bull. Yeah, it was the
first bike, damn not twenty twenty four is come on now?
Speaker 5 (10:33):
So you got a new show could have been out.
Speaker 17 (10:35):
Uh, it's an amazing show. It's based on I was
influenced by P Diddy and when he had the Making
the Band show, I.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
Swipe like, yeah, no, that's bro. See that's why I
can't look this way.
Speaker 5 (10:48):
That's what I said.
Speaker 15 (10:50):
A lot.
Speaker 12 (10:52):
Said because he didn't making the band. You know we
were watching that, you know, y yeah they Yeah, I
wasn't watching making the band. We was watching making the band.
So yeah, it played a big part, and I really
wanted to do something based There was too much space
(11:15):
between I said.
Speaker 16 (11:16):
What he did?
Speaker 10 (11:17):
It was?
Speaker 5 (11:17):
It was that question, Yeah, you gotta get to that quick.
Speaker 17 (11:24):
I need to say making the band first, by making
the band the show, and yeah, nah, it's it's a
mazing show. It's pretty much like a comedic version of that,
kind of like how Chappelle did when he did like
a skit on making the band back in the day.
But yeah, they we had we had contestants standing there
for seven days. They competed for fifty thousand dollars. You
(11:46):
come out of pocket to do that stuff, right, hey yeah,
yeah man, But you know, now we had companies help us.
We had raising Canes put up the fifty thousands for
the contestants to win there.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Yeah, yeah, yeah sure, and we had like Nike.
Speaker 17 (12:02):
Nike participated in putting in some money, prize picts, Icebox,
Jewelry putting some money too as well.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (12:08):
Nice. So why so, I mean, I see you putting
it out on YouTube and some people would ask why
But if you're getting your own sponsors and you're making
your own money, like why Chase behind these networks and
the screaming service?
Speaker 17 (12:20):
Yeah kind of because it's like, uh, they we tried
to pitch it to all these big networks anyway, and
nobody believed in it.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
They were like, yo, what.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
Could have been records?
Speaker 17 (12:28):
Yeah, there's a lot of you know them older executives
that don't really know, they're not really hit and they
just like, we heard this guy is funny, but we
don't know what the hell could have been records is?
Speaker 6 (12:36):
You know?
Speaker 17 (12:37):
So every time I try to explain it, nobody understood
what I was talking about. So I'm like, damn, we
probably gonna have to do this ourselves. We went to
every meeting. I'm talking, I'm taking zooms. It's taking an hour.
I'm explaining it for like an hour, breaking it down.
We got a power point. I'm pointing that stuff. I'm
making them laugh. So I'm like, oh, we got this.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
Nobody believe. They all like, nah, we'll pass, We'll pass.
Speaker 5 (12:55):
That's one of your most popular sketches.
Speaker 12 (12:57):
Yeah, I know, that's how we got proof of concept.
I'm like, they're doing views. Yeah, we get millions of views.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
But you know they, you know they you know what
happened with the show with you and Kevin Hark. Oh man,
they took that off.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Man.
Speaker 17 (13:10):
We uh, we were supposed to do that right a strike,
right a strike. So during writer strike, they took that down.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
Man.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
They just they just got rid of it.
Speaker 17 (13:19):
I don't know, I don't know what the real real
reason was, but uh yeah it was a show based
on like like past high school, being like a high
school senior, and uh yeah I came on and talked
about it. But yeah they I really don't know the
full the full reason, but they took that off. Man,
I don't know. Yeah, low key pissed me off a
little bit. But yeah, this just cause you know, I
(13:39):
don't I really don't know the full writer shrike reason,
you know what I'm saying. So and I feel like
nobody fully knew exactly what was going on with writer
strike and all that, So I think, uh yeah, they
might have used that as an excuse. I really don't know,
but yeah, we we had anything rolling.
Speaker 12 (13:54):
But you know, I think about you with sketch, right,
and I think about you know, I was born in
nineteen hundred and seventy, so I've seen a lot of
great sketch shows and Living Color show.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
Get gassed when we start talking about times.
Speaker 12 (14:11):
When I think about it, because you are very good
at it, right, Yeah, do you think you need a
TV show to validate you to where people start talking
about you in that way like they talked about the
key and the pills, the Chapelle's and living colors. Not
not really, I think because social media is so powerful now, bro,
like without social media, and I'm sure she know this
(14:33):
too as well, like social media might be bigger than
TV now, like it used to be the goal, like, oh, we're.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Gonna get the TV, We're gonna do this big thing.
Speaker 17 (14:41):
But it's like, when you really think about it, majority
of the stars right now are like the social media people.
We even got Twitch streamers who are making bigger bags
than rappers, That's what I'm saying, Like and Aiden Ross,
these dudes are really making a lot of money. They're
paying the rappers like real show fees to come onto
their stream. So it's like, I don't know, it's different days,
(15:03):
but I think that that's what made me think I
don't really need anything to justify anything, because it's like, damn,
we're doing it now. Like I will pull up to
a city and say we're doing could have been records
tomorrow and thousands of people are out there just lining
up trying to audition.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
So it's like that's really the goal.
Speaker 7 (15:19):
For how we got more With Drewski when we come back,
don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast
Club Morning everybody. It's the j M V. Jess Hilarius,
Charlamage to God. We are to Breakfast Club. It's still
kicking it with Drew Ski Charlamagne.
Speaker 12 (15:34):
You know, ask you about could have been records, like
you talk a lot about the three sixty deals in
the bad Contract.
Speaker 5 (15:38):
Do you actually talk to artists about that?
Speaker 2 (15:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (15:40):
Hell yeah.
Speaker 17 (15:40):
I like to tell people straight up, we're gonna key over.
That's why I said I was inspired by p Diddy.
That's what I was talking about.
Speaker 12 (15:47):
Why do y'all keep looking at me like that when
I say that I'm saying that I'm inspired by the way.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
He was talking to his people. Well, I ain't say that.
I say that I like the way that he was
talking to.
Speaker 17 (16:03):
The people at his label on the show. You know, like, yeah,
so that's the same way we do our business. Yeah,
we tell you, yeah, you know you're getting over from jump.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
What the problem is? You knew the contract when you
got in him.
Speaker 5 (16:15):
That's true. You knew what it was by the way.
That's true. Even if you don't tell him that, because
Curate don't get you a lawyer.
Speaker 17 (16:22):
They can't already, don't he can't alread somebody that was
dyslexic that was recently on the show.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
You know, okay, his brother can't read either.
Speaker 17 (16:37):
He liked to get you to just keep talking and
just run down that rap hole saying, stupid talking. I
gotta I gotta come back and correct myself. I feel
like we need to put a disclaimer at the beginning
of this. Wait for Drew to finish his whole answer.
Speaker 12 (16:56):
I thought you came here just beef with everybody, y'all
bringing up the beef manlexic Dazzy.
Speaker 17 (17:03):
Wait, whoa whoa, whoa whoa? No, ya, hey, come on, man,
I don't got no beef with problem with nobody.
Speaker 10 (17:10):
Man.
Speaker 18 (17:10):
Is it tough for people to take you serious?
Speaker 12 (17:12):
And because obviously I'm trying to be serious, man, I
trying to get my point across.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Nah.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Yeah, since I was a kid, man, I always yeah.
Speaker 5 (17:22):
But I think, uh, even when a kid, when you
was a kid, they didn't take you serious.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Yeah yeah, yeah. I think like teachers, uh, students all that.
Speaker 17 (17:30):
Man, Like we always used to I used to around
so much that everybody everything I said it was a joke,
you know, so it's normal.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
But the people close to me, they know we laugh. No,
my brother's trying to tell us truth right now.
Speaker 5 (17:46):
Yeah, you remember a time like you was like dead serious,
like man, like you were sick or something and you
believe you and they didn't believe you.
Speaker 15 (17:53):
Yeah. No.
Speaker 17 (17:53):
I had to go to the hospital when I crashed
on a on a four wheeler like four or five
years ago, and we're really like three four years ago.
And I went to the hospital and everybody was in
there try and take selfies, take videos and joke around it.
But I really was like hurt for real, But it
was like a whole joke that I was in there,
Like what what the hell you doing in here?
Speaker 2 (18:14):
I'm like, yeah, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (18:20):
It's like, yo, I need help right now.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (18:23):
But that's the problem.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
What your ass doing?
Speaker 4 (18:26):
Your ash up?
Speaker 5 (18:28):
My back, my back, you know what I'm saying. But
that that's the thing about man.
Speaker 12 (18:33):
You can never be serious or like really be going
through some reals that's because of you, because you not
not even even even d C d C. Recently, I
think somebody stole his bag or something and it was
in the comments Rosa. They said, lame man lost your
bag at the club, and I'm like, damn, bro, he
had some valuable things in there.
Speaker 19 (18:53):
Man.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Can y'all really.
Speaker 5 (18:55):
Show some remorse for the dude?
Speaker 1 (18:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (18:58):
People do when you when you people don't give us,
you do be having like yeah, I'll be having a real,
real circumstances.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think he would be thinking that
after he comes into the.
Speaker 18 (19:08):
Stadium's arenas, courthouses, no.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Matter what ts A.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
So like, yeah, why would I be Yeah, you're right, you're.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
Right, You're right.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
I did it, tell you?
Speaker 5 (19:17):
I had. I had a guy text me was NBA
All Star weekend last weekend?
Speaker 12 (19:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (19:22):
Shut up? Text me last weekening?
Speaker 17 (19:25):
Text you.
Speaker 5 (19:25):
He was like it was like it was in a
group chat and he was like, man, was.
Speaker 12 (19:29):
Popular person that some NBA All Star party Drew Ski
hands down. I'm like, are you doing this thing?
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Man, I'm just I'm blessed. I'm thankful.
Speaker 15 (19:38):
Man.
Speaker 5 (19:38):
Did you feel that in the party that he was
talking about a little.
Speaker 17 (19:41):
Bit a little bit, Yeah, because was standing on the
couch and nobody else was. No, no, no, no, that
wasn't my groo. Yeah, it was he talking about the
All Star. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I remember that.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 17 (19:51):
I think it was Jada Jada Kitsch. Yeah, it was
a couple. It was a couple of different that was
out there party. Yeah, I think Jada kiss the party
it was. It was one of the old heads. Man,
they had a party.
Speaker 5 (20:03):
Jesus.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
No, no, no, no, no, I'm just saying like it was.
It was one of those I don't know.
Speaker 7 (20:07):
Let's let's get into your record. Let's introduce your record.
Speaker 5 (20:10):
A lot of movie right, are you still working on that?
Speaker 2 (20:12):
No, we're not working on them.
Speaker 12 (20:17):
Another another writer, Shrike, We had we had a whole
bunch of a lot of misopportunities.
Speaker 17 (20:23):
But see, it'll be about the miss opportunities. Man, it's
about continuing to try. You got to keep doing this
over and over, figuring it out. You don't matter about
the news. They onnlyt gonna know about the yeses unless
you y'all bring it up.
Speaker 5 (20:37):
Nobody really you Jack got a good relationship though.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Yeah yeah, hell yeah, man, that's my boy.
Speaker 5 (20:41):
How you feel about his record talking about.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
Man bro, he's going crazy.
Speaker 5 (20:45):
I mean there's a white guy talking about woos and
chains in America. People love that.
Speaker 17 (20:48):
Yeah, but I think he's talking about like locking them down,
like yeah, no, man, you know what I'm saying, like
locking them down like nobody with slavery.
Speaker 5 (20:58):
No man, as long as it's Jesson, No, it's a good.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
Song, I think.
Speaker 12 (21:05):
I think he uh yeah, moving on because I don't
want how to correct myself on now.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's about my music.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
To number one, we.
Speaker 12 (21:17):
Appreciate you for joining us following if you're not already,
but who is it? Yeah, definitely, it's always a pleasure
to see you.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
B thank you.
Speaker 7 (21:26):
Breakfast Club is Drew ski Coome on. It's topic time
eight hundred and five eight five one oh five one
to join into the discussion with.
Speaker 5 (21:38):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 16 (21:41):
Morning.
Speaker 7 (21:42):
Everybody is the j n V, Jess, Hilarry Charlamagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. Now if you're just joining us,
we were talking about something ben Zeno said in an interview.
Let's here.
Speaker 20 (21:52):
I don't I can't follow her Instagram because she could
be in a bikini, you know, twerking or something. So
but I love her to death, you know what I'm saying.
So I want to be able to, you know what
I'm saying, visualize her the way I want to visualize
has my daughter necessarily as an artist or as coy
or you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
I don't want to visualize my daughter like that.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
My mother has followed and unfollowed me on Instagram quite
a few times year.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
For similar reasons. Sure.
Speaker 7 (22:22):
Yeah, so we're asking eight hundred and five five one
oh five one. As a parent, how do you handle
following your kids on social media? For myself, only my
two oldest kids have social media, and they really don't
post too much. And anything my daughter does post, she
usually runs by me before she posts anyway. But if
I did have a child that was twerking and posting
(22:45):
you know, kinie picks all the time, that would be uncomfortable.
It would be uncomfortable. I think it would be. I
think I would have to unfollow them, and not necessarily
because of that, well because of that as well, but
also because of the comments too.
Speaker 12 (22:55):
Yeah, my daughter don't have social media, you know, but
your daughters young, oh fifteen? I mean I have a
four daughter's fifteen, eight, five and two. But you know, yeah,
social media is just something that I don't even ever
want them to get it to get into, you know,
I just see where it's going.
Speaker 5 (23:10):
I see where it's headed. I see where it's at.
Speaker 12 (23:11):
Now I'm gonna need to even ever, you know, give
your brain your time and attention and way to that thing.
But yeah, I can totally understand where Benzino is coming from.
That that would be super uncomfortable, you know, to open
up Instagram and you know, see your daughter doing that.
But that's also just the I don't want to see
the price. That's not the right word, but that's just
also life, right, It's kind of the price.
Speaker 7 (23:31):
You pay for fame.
Speaker 5 (23:32):
Yes, that's the price that you have. That's the price
you pay for having a daughter.
Speaker 12 (23:35):
But your daughter's going to grow up, and your daughter
is going to grow up and be an object of
desire because guess.
Speaker 5 (23:41):
What, the person you had that daughter with with somebody
else's daughter.
Speaker 7 (23:46):
It's a lot worse that she's a celebrity and she's
famous and she's an artist. Even if she wasn't, I
get what you're saying, but it was more eyes on
her now. Sure, but I don't even think that's what
he's concerned about. He's he's concerned with what He's just
concerned about opening up Instagram and seeing his daughter's working
in a bikini.
Speaker 12 (23:59):
Yeah, like that make anybody uncomfortable. Don't care if you're
a male man or a famous rapper, you know what
I mean. Like that's just yeah, it's embarrassing. But it
works both ways because you know, as an adult, there's
things that I'm sure that you could do that embarrass
your daughter, you know. So I mean we all, we
all have to be cognitant of that. We all represent
each other. Like it's very embarrassing, Like you know what
(24:20):
I mean. I know that, you know, Logan and Madison
are very embarrassed by their father at certain points, but
they love you.
Speaker 7 (24:25):
Yeah, you know, but I don't. Haven't posted myself with
a bikini torking yet. Oh you've done way worse, Alexandria,
way worse. I've seen it. Hello, Hey, what's your name, Alexandria?
You just said that, well, Alexandria, that we're talking about.
Do you follow your kids on social media? On social media?
Speaker 13 (24:44):
I do not.
Speaker 9 (24:45):
So I have two kids, a little girl and little boy.
The boy isn't biologically mind, so he's going through, like
you know, trying to find himself and all day.
Speaker 5 (24:57):
Oh lord, so he thugging.
Speaker 9 (25:02):
I can't do in front of him.
Speaker 13 (25:05):
I don't.
Speaker 15 (25:05):
I do not.
Speaker 9 (25:07):
Oh so you don't follow me one Instagram?
Speaker 7 (25:11):
Oh so you don't follow him because you'll be wilding out, say,
oh so you'll be hold on now, hold on now,
you be showing your ass on social media.
Speaker 9 (25:21):
But I mean, like, you know, I'm bikinis or whatever
because I am married. I'm a merid woman on.
Speaker 21 (25:26):
Faithful of Hell.
Speaker 9 (25:28):
So it's like it's nothing too crazy.
Speaker 5 (25:31):
I don't you don't want to, you don't want to
turn him on. I'm trying to. I'm confused, like what's
going on?
Speaker 2 (25:35):
He did?
Speaker 9 (25:35):
I don't want to, Like, okay, So we had a
little situation where if I'm in the bathroom, he'll bust
it up and he'll put his hands over his eyes
and he'll open two fingers so.
Speaker 5 (25:48):
He's trying to see something. So he's trying to see something.
Speaker 7 (25:51):
This is step mommy. So this ain't my mommy, this
is step mommy.
Speaker 12 (25:55):
No, yes, oh here on point her watching them videos
that got them. I was like, that got left alone
with step mom That's what that's that's what the hell
going on, step mama. Let me just ask him not
being rude? Are you is your body? You have big
boobs in the big red So I'm.
Speaker 14 (26:16):
Like, I have a big blood.
Speaker 10 (26:19):
I'm not.
Speaker 9 (26:20):
I don't have liked, but still I have a body.
Speaker 5 (26:25):
Man, Why why did you think he was talking to
a white man?
Speaker 2 (26:29):
Den, you have a big rear.
Speaker 7 (26:31):
I'm trying to say, a big respectable I didn't.
Speaker 5 (26:33):
Want to say, trying to language understands. You know you're
not disrespecting. I don't know what to tell you. Man,
you got that horny little boy running around your house.
Speaker 9 (26:47):
I just I just want people to understand, like it's
nothing wrong with that, you know, because at the end
of the day, you want to see your children as children,
but you also want your children to see you as
their parents.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
You need to get a lock on your door though, too, Mama,
you need not.
Speaker 9 (27:03):
Going to hal see now, I got a lock on
my door, like a real lock, because you know, like you.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
Be in your panting drop.
Speaker 7 (27:11):
So like you know, hey, be in your pants.
Speaker 5 (27:14):
Better count your talking about man because if he's.
Speaker 7 (27:17):
Into mom like that, I'm sure he grabbing.
Speaker 12 (27:20):
When you are projected, and you need to shut up
because you're telling a lot about yourself when you're getting
it for this, you don't know how you got you
She just says she went into the bathroom because it is.
Speaker 5 (27:29):
Totally different than what you're talking about. How old is he?
Man here? A little boy, Yeah, a little hony, little boy. Yeah,
I understand.
Speaker 7 (27:41):
I need this christ all right, all right, Alexander.
Speaker 9 (27:45):
All right, y'all have a good way.
Speaker 7 (27:48):
We have the coal on the line, the cold.
Speaker 14 (27:50):
Good morning, good morning.
Speaker 7 (27:52):
How you feeling the Nicole?
Speaker 9 (27:54):
I'm feeling well.
Speaker 10 (27:55):
How about you, gentlemen?
Speaker 5 (27:56):
Good good good.
Speaker 7 (27:57):
So we're asking how do you handle following your kids
on social media?
Speaker 10 (28:00):
Well, my daughter is fifteen and she has like probably
four or five accounts. One account that her father and
I get to see, one that she shows people that
she really quote unquote doesn't deal with like that, ones
that her friends can see, ones that she actually uses
for certain postings. So we really don't know where to go.
(28:22):
We just only have one.
Speaker 7 (28:25):
Really, how did you figure out she has five different accounts?
Speaker 10 (28:29):
Because when I asked her, I sent you something, did
you see it? And she said no, where did you
send it? And I said, but what do you mean
where did you send it?
Speaker 15 (28:37):
I have this?
Speaker 10 (28:38):
She said, oh yeah, those people, I don't deal with them,
no more like that. So I created another page and
send it to this or if you send it to
these two, I'll get that. And so she has multiple
accounts and I just can't keep up.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
Are you calling from Baltimore?
Speaker 8 (28:53):
Yes, I am.
Speaker 15 (28:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (28:54):
I heard the two and it was something else you said.
Speaker 19 (28:57):
I heard.
Speaker 5 (28:58):
I heard the E at the end of a few words. Yes, Hello,
who's this?
Speaker 15 (29:03):
Uh? This is boy Sterning Stacks.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
Man, it's good Stacks.
Speaker 7 (29:07):
How you feeling.
Speaker 15 (29:08):
What's up?
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Brother? How you doing?
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Chela Mane?
Speaker 5 (29:10):
What's up?
Speaker 18 (29:11):
My guy?
Speaker 5 (29:11):
I A'm talking to you in a minute?
Speaker 15 (29:13):
Yeah, man, good minute, man. Graduation on everything?
Speaker 19 (29:15):
Man?
Speaker 15 (29:15):
That the black effect joint. Man, you're the publishing thing
all that. Man to look to you, brother, you read,
you read to stay well.
Speaker 5 (29:21):
Thank you, brother, you see you all day.
Speaker 7 (29:22):
So we asking how do you hear them following your
kids on social media?
Speaker 8 (29:25):
Bro?
Speaker 15 (29:26):
Man, I'm lucky, man. Luckily, my daughter ain't that raunchy.
You know, she ain't ghetto. You know, I was worried
about it at first, but you know, after following for
a little bit, I've seen that. You know, she don't
do nothing crazy, you know what I mean. Like, so
it's a little bit easier. And I mean she's twenty nine,
so you know she don't you know, she out, she drinking,
you know, she partying with her girls. But her clothes
ain't never too revealing, you know. But if I do
(29:48):
see her with like, you know, too many cups, you know,
I will shoot at tech.
Speaker 12 (29:51):
I wonder if she knows she know to behave because
daddy watching. I wonder if that if that helps parents?
Speaker 5 (29:57):
Parents following everybody watching?
Speaker 16 (29:59):
Yeah, you know what I mean, they think. I think
my mom follows them, you know what I mean, her auntie,
you know, but we ain't raised it like that, you know.
So now some of the younger girls I see, I
don't know how their parents do it. Now, if she
was a little bit, you know, doing like you know,
thongs and bikinis, I'd have to untravelow.
Speaker 5 (30:13):
Up totally get it all right?
Speaker 7 (30:14):
Thank you brother? What's the morell of the story.
Speaker 5 (30:17):
I don't know. I don't have kids on social media.
I don't know, but I do.
Speaker 12 (30:23):
I think sterling Status brought up a good point. I
think that if kids know their parents are following them,
but and vice versa, parents know your kids are following them,
I think we're all more aware of what we're putting.
Putting on social media, So I think that is good.
We should probably police should all police each other like that. Absolutely,
all right, It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 6 (30:46):
Morning.
Speaker 7 (30:47):
Everybody is DJ n v J. Just Hilarry Charlamage the God.
We are the Breakfast Club. We got some special guests
in the building from Owning Manhattan. We have Ryan Sirhan
for Shali and Jeffrey Saint armand welcome. That's a last name, right,
did you said it right? Just make it sure?
Speaker 5 (31:02):
Welcome.
Speaker 7 (31:03):
How's it going, everybody?
Speaker 2 (31:04):
We're good, We're good, great man. Thanks.
Speaker 7 (31:05):
I saw with you Ryan. So if you don't know
Ryan Sirhan, of course a million dot listing. You are
a huge real estate agent across the country. What made
you lead?
Speaker 22 (31:13):
You look like I used to lead a boy band.
I tried, man, it didn't work. I did a soap
opera when I first moved to New York City. That's
why I first moved to New York in two thousand
and six. They killed me off if my grandmother killed
me actually, and then I ran out of money, and
that's why I got into real estate back in two
thousand and eight.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
Smart man.
Speaker 7 (31:28):
You know so you left million Dollar Listing. Why what
happened with Million Dollar Listing?
Speaker 22 (31:32):
We did it for ten years. We were nominated for
two Emmys.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
I mean it.
Speaker 22 (31:35):
I built my whole career off the back of the
TV show and it was a total accent. I went
to an open casting call with three thousand real estate
agents in twenty ten. That's how that show happened.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
Rarely but yeah.
Speaker 22 (31:44):
Then in twenty twenty, I started my own company and
Bravo said, listen, million Dollar Listing is a is a format,
right It follows three agents as you do deals. That's
what people expect. It doesn't follow two agents doing deals
and then one guy running his own company. So what
do you want to do? And I said, I maybe
this is time, you know, to move on to the
night chapter. So then I immediately called Netflix and I said, hey, listen,
I have an idea start my own company. I just
(32:06):
took down this building in Soho. I'm going to wrap
my name in it. I've got a lot of crazy,
crazy agents that are going to start working for me,
like the people crazy. And they said, listen, make a presentation,
send it over to us. We did, and we started
shooting that show in twenty twenty two, and here we
are two years later.
Speaker 7 (32:25):
Now, you guys make being a real estate agent look easy,
but it's not that easy. It's not easy. It's not easy.
So how did you guys get your start? Not Ryan,
you get your stought in Tricia and Jeffrey in real estate.
Speaker 13 (32:36):
Well, we're both from different careers. Jeff is a producer,
Emmy Award winning multiple Emmy Award Yes.
Speaker 22 (32:41):
Clear, okay, carried them around with them everywhere.
Speaker 23 (32:45):
Everywhere.
Speaker 13 (32:46):
Trust and I ran businesses in Brooklyn, So we were
both transitioning at the same time.
Speaker 18 (32:50):
When we met.
Speaker 13 (32:51):
We were we both thought that real estate was the
next thing we're you know, coming out of a recession.
It just made natural sense to us. And we met
in real estate and Ryan reached out like maybe five
years into my career and was like, like, we should meet.
You know, this is this is something we should do.
I didn't even realize he had started a new firm.
And then I started studying that and we met and
next thing I know, I'm in front of the cast
(33:12):
and crew and they're following us around and I do
think you're gonna see real real estate here because I
don't know how to like sugarcoat anything for you. Our
job is hard and we work our asses off, so
you will see that there's just no way to make
that look different.
Speaker 4 (33:25):
No, I was just saying, and Tricia's being super modest,
Like she had multiple polish bars, the name of the brand.
It was a big brand in Brooklyn. She had a
huge following. So it was just the perfect synergy of
like the entrepreneur spirit that she has and me with
the television and the marketing background. So it was a
good mix. And then going through everything to get to
Sir Hand. We ultimately came to Sir Hand. It was
just like a good fit with having studios there that
(33:47):
what Ryan provides there, it really makes our stuff different,
you know. And Tatricia's point about like the show, the
show is as real as it gets, and we could
speak to it not being easy because it wasn't easy
for us. It's like I want to be like seven
eight years in. It took a while to get to
this chool. It wasn't like overnight all of a sudden
it was selling you know, multiple million, five ten million dollars.
Speaker 13 (34:05):
Now you start like my first house was one hundred
thousand dollars sale. It took six months for it to happen.
How long it was eight years ago? Wow, I worked
on that longer and harder than any other deal.
Speaker 23 (34:15):
Exactly, you made no money.
Speaker 7 (34:17):
People don't People don't understand. So my daughter recently graduated
from NYU and she's she jumped into the real estate game.
It's it's like having another wife that doesn't leave, right.
She just just because she doesn't get paid unless she
sells something. Exactly, And if it takes two months, it's
two months of not getting paid, of paid for cars,
paid for gas, showing people properties. It's a lot take
(34:37):
two years sometime. Yeah, it takes a lot of work,
but I feel bad for it. But the good thing
about it is she loves it, so she wants to
do it right. So, how long did it take for
you to you said, to sell your first property.
Speaker 13 (34:49):
I didn't do any business for six months, and I
worked every single day while running my beauty businesses at
the same time, So at a seven am to eleven
o'clock schedule for six months and I didn't make a dollar.
Speaker 4 (34:58):
Jeff, I would say somewhere around the same. The big
difference is that I'm like a year ahead and a
half two years. So as she was going through that.
I was like, listen, it'll come together. Just keep doing
what you're doing.
Speaker 23 (35:08):
Hit it here, I'm not getting you.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Something's happening.
Speaker 4 (35:10):
He's like, listen, you're gonna do a lot better than
people who are in the business right now. Just keep
head down, keep going. And that's the same thing I
tell your daughter. You know, just it's gonna be difficult,
it's gonna be challenges, but just if you in it
and you really learn the business. And that's what's really key,
learning the business and know it because this isn't like
and again, this isn't fake, like we know the business.
Speaker 13 (35:28):
Yeah, way try to make it look like what he
does on TV is the job, and it's like that's
that's just a portion of what's actually happening. If you
sit down with him and have a business conversation, he's
gonna blow you away far more than anything he does
on television.
Speaker 5 (35:39):
Can you lose yourself in the reality TV of it all?
Like you can you forget what you got you here?
I think so.
Speaker 4 (35:47):
I mean I can only speak to Mike s Creer,
are you Jeffrey, Yes, But I think you know the
thing about it is weird and you'll see this in
the show. There's like less experienced agents and more experience agents,
so we're a little bit more experiences agents, but just
life experiences, so it's not like we're brand new going
into something. And we have like the TV background, so.
Speaker 7 (36:06):
You kind of know what it is.
Speaker 4 (36:07):
So I can say for us, it's a little different,
but I can see how someone else, you know, just
get caught up in the modern day. I want to
be an influencer. I don't even want to do real
estate anymore and try to have all the whole different career.
But for us, I think we're yeah.
Speaker 13 (36:20):
And I think we chose to do this at a
time in our life where we know who we are,
so we an audience is not able to tell us
who we are. For me, I just wanted to be
myself as if I can show us myself every day
that I'm good doing it. But I didn't want to
fit into what they thought.
Speaker 22 (36:32):
I should be.
Speaker 7 (36:32):
Now, COVID was was lovely for a lot of real
estate agents.
Speaker 15 (36:35):
Right.
Speaker 7 (36:35):
Interest rates were low, everybody was buying banks were given everything,
every money to get it. But now it's changed. Interest
rates are high as I don't know what, so how
is the business now for a lot of people. And
what do you tell real estate agents now? That out
there and it's difficult, right banks taking a lot to
give people money. You got to give your damn and
your right arm to get a loan. You know, interest
rates are super duper high. So what do you tell
agents now?
Speaker 13 (36:56):
I say stick it out because I feel like I
came in when it was going up, and I came
when I came in, it was like you showed something
once and you had an offer. But at the entire time,
I said, it will not always be like this. It's
a cyclical So I was mentally prepared for where we
are now. I don't take it that bad because I
knew it couldn't always take good And in.
Speaker 4 (37:11):
Bad times is when really the cream rises to the top.
So this is opportunity right now. If you really again
really know the business, learn the business, you can take
advantage of it now. I mean there's a lot of
things you could like really guide your clients with, like
forty your mortgages. That's an option to try to deal
with the higher interest rates, you know, putting more down
conceivably if you can refinance down the road. You know,
(37:32):
there's different options you can do and give good direction,
But for the real estate agent, it's just like head
down and keep going, ycause everyone's right now. I would
imagine a lot of people. I don't know the exact numbers,
certainly you do, right, A lot of people have left
real estate with the rates being as high as it is.
Speaker 22 (37:46):
Yeah, hundreds of thousands.
Speaker 5 (37:47):
Yeah, it's so is a global pandemic worth the low
interest rates.
Speaker 19 (37:55):
And a half.
Speaker 22 (37:55):
I take a week purge every year like a COVID.
Remember we you know, zero percent interest rates for five days,
you're not allowed to leave your house.
Speaker 18 (38:04):
Just see what happens the first day sounds.
Speaker 23 (38:08):
To go back to work.
Speaker 13 (38:08):
I had eleven showings. Like when we were allowed to
go after that seven month break or like that seventh hold,
we had eleven.
Speaker 22 (38:14):
Yeah, there were real estate agents in the city who
had like emergency here on just in case the police pointed,
because you know real estate in New York, you were
not an essential worker, right, and they were trying to
get you. They were trying to like make you stay inside.
Speaker 2 (38:26):
It was.
Speaker 22 (38:27):
It was a complete insanity. But yeah, listen, we like
if you were to say, hey, I want to find
a really really resilient person who can kind of stick
through the tough times and the good times. Let's go
make that person in a box. You wouldn't put them
in a happy box, right, That doesn't make resilient people.
You'd put them in like a really tough box. And
that's exactly what we're in right now. We're in a
tough market. So if you can forward yourself through this,
(38:49):
you know, the good times do come. What goes up
must come down. What goes down wants go back up again.
It's just back and forth and back and forth.
Speaker 7 (38:55):
Yeah, we got more with Ryan Sirhan, Tricia Lee and
Jeffrey saying, oh when we come back. The new show
Owning Manhattan is out right now. We got more as
the breakfast Club good morning knowing everybody is DJ Envy,
Jess Hilaris Shall I mean to god, we are the
breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Ryan Sir Hanan
Trici Lee, and Jeffrey saint Aman. Owning Manhattan is out
right now on Netflix. Now, Now, what about your families?
Speaker 14 (39:16):
Right?
Speaker 7 (39:17):
So we see in your family a million dollar listing
and how your family grew and your families. It takes
a lot because you leave your family a lot, right,
because when somebody wants to show in or they want
to see a property, you can't say, hey, babe, I
know we had dinner date, but you know, because this
might be you know, a million dollar profit, this might
be a couple hundred thousand dollars. So how how was
raising kids and having a family doing real estate?
Speaker 5 (39:35):
Us?
Speaker 13 (39:35):
We work together, Jeff and I and I'm the only
like balance in the relationships. You'll be working if his
eyes are open, and I'm kind of a workaholic, so
there's not much help.
Speaker 23 (39:45):
But we have boundaries.
Speaker 13 (39:47):
There's certain times of the day where we have to
shut down, but we're on vacation and hiding out. We
go to the bathroom and we're gone for forty minutes.
Everybody knows you're doing a deal and you're not supposed
to be on your phone.
Speaker 7 (39:55):
Oh going to the bathroom. I was like, your bathrooms.
Speaker 13 (40:00):
No, we hide well, I usually hide out, like I'll
say I'm going to the spa, but it's like I'm talking,
I'm doing calls because the rule is you're not supposed
to be working.
Speaker 23 (40:07):
But we both cheat all the time.
Speaker 4 (40:09):
I remember we were on a cruise in the Mediterranean
last year. Yeah, right, I need acts when we started
shooting the show, which is a whole other reason we
should talk about it. That's why I missed out on
the on the Central Park Tower on yours.
Speaker 22 (40:23):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, keep going on those cruis, man, A.
Speaker 4 (40:26):
Cruise always caused this to fifty billion dollars. But really,
you know, even in that moment, there was times we
stepped away and I try to try to text some
of text or something.
Speaker 13 (40:35):
Yeah, and then we don't want each other. We don't
want to catch each other, right, So I'm lying to you,
you're lying to me. Everybody knows, everybody's working, and I don't.
I don't think this one has any of that.
Speaker 7 (40:43):
What about you lying? You know, you got a wife
and kids, and how do you balance that because I've
seen a couple of times where your wife was upset
like no, this is our time, and you're like.
Speaker 5 (40:51):
But this is deal.
Speaker 22 (40:51):
Yeah it's hard, man. I mean, when you're in sales,
it's you get addicted to it, you know, because you
don't get a salary, there are no benefits, and you're
only as good as your last deal. And you can
always say, well, when is enough enough? And sure, you
can set a goal for yourself for the year, but
then that next phone call, like you want to pick
it up. You want to see because your life can change.
Like I, you know, we started sur hint at the
(41:12):
end of twenty twenty. It's like I just want to
I went on rental appointments. It's like I gotta to
pay bills now. COVID shut down all of our markets.
It was awful, especially in New York right there were bodies,
you know that we had the Red Cross, there were
tents in the park. It was nuts. I went on
a rental appointment on the Upper east Side and my
wife's like wear gloves. Where has Matt sue? This is
(41:33):
pre vaccines. Met a guy that wanted to rent an
apartment on the Upper east Side, did a big budget,
you know, thirty to forty to fifty thousand dollars a month.
Started talking to him, decided not to rent something, decided
you know what, maybe I will go buy something in Florida.
And that was a Monday. By Friday, we were in
contract on a house that was asking one hundred and
forty million dollars. So had I not picked up that
(41:53):
rental call, I never would have done a nine figure
sale that at that time in twenty twenty going to
twenty one was the largest transaction in the history of
the state of Florida, and like the top five deal
in the United States.
Speaker 23 (42:06):
So like that, that can tell her that can remember this,
I remember this moment.
Speaker 22 (42:10):
I remember, but that can you know those things can happen.
But you do have to set boundaries, and you especially
have to set boundaries with people that are not your family.
It's not about telling your wife and your kids that, hey,
daddy's at home now, so let's pay attention to each other.
It's about telling your clients, like, hey, just so you know, Monday,
Wednesdays and Fridays from six to eight, I'm with my daughter.
I put her down Saturdays like Saturday's for me, your
datur Days unless it's life threatening. I'm really focused on
(42:32):
on Zena that's her name, she's five, and being there
for her. And then she knows Dad goes to work
the next day. I don't think she knows what I do.
You asked her, she'd be like, daddy sells and dances.
I'm like, tapes it exactly, he films it. She'll she'll
take my phone and she'll put you. She'll pick it
up and look at my phone and be like, Hi,
I'm Xena Surhan, thank you for watching. Please I can subscribe,
(42:53):
And I'm like, no, oh, it's happened terrible.
Speaker 7 (42:56):
So how do you guys deal with because of course
you're on the show, so people know who you are,
how do you deal with people that just want to
don't necessarily want to buy something, but just want to
hang out.
Speaker 22 (43:05):
Yeah, that happened to happen a lot. I mean it's
happened to me now for twelve years. These guys are
going to have to go through it now for the
first time ever. And you gotta be super careful, right,
Like wasting your time is terrible. What's worse is when
people have like malicious intent and they do like especially
has that happened with you before? Oh yeah absolutely, We've
had FBI involved, We've had stalkers.
Speaker 14 (43:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 22 (43:24):
Man, we had to move offices once, like our home
addresses or scrubbed.
Speaker 7 (43:28):
Me hurt anybody, Like yeah, but people get obsessed.
Speaker 23 (43:31):
You impersonate him every day.
Speaker 22 (43:32):
People get sassy. They watched you know, TV shows and
you know, Bravo is American for the most part, and
then the show aired around the world. But you know
reality TV, you do, you do get very vulnerable and authentic,
and you let these cameras into your life for a
year and they see your ups and downs. And then
with social now everyone feels like they know you. And Netflix,
I mean, the show dropped today to two hundred and
(43:54):
seventy million people in one hundred and ninety countries. Our
voices are dubbed in over twenty different languages. That's a lot, right,
all in all in one day. So one, you gotta
be careful. But two, if you're not googleable, you got
to show me something, right, you know, you gotta. I
had a guy from a different country, I won't say
what country, but you know, reached out to me kind
of right at the beginning of million dollar listing and
totally seemed like he was going to try to kill
(44:15):
me or sell my body into oil drums or something,
you know, and I'm like, this is not real, this
is not real. He sent me a he sent me
a photo of his accountant as his proof of funds,
Like this is not good, this is not great.
Speaker 2 (44:27):
Not great.
Speaker 22 (44:28):
Turns out we ended up doing a deal together for
you know, eight point three million dollars almost a year
later after like it was the most traumatizing experience of
my life. He just liked to drink and was on
Zillow one night and hit me up and then I
was just I follow up relentlessly. The guy makes hundreds
of millions of dollars a year in another country in
a really weird way, and it is what it is.
(44:48):
So like sometimes you just never know, and that's that's
part of that addiction, right of like sales, you just
never know who's gonna call.
Speaker 7 (44:54):
What's the one deal for each one of you that
you lost that it burns you to this day that
you knew you should have sold.
Speaker 22 (45:00):
I'm gonna tattoo it on my butt.
Speaker 10 (45:01):
Bro.
Speaker 13 (45:03):
One of my first closings, I got to the closing
so excited and the seller on the side of the
table I'd never met and she was a former beauty
client and I wasn't at the time marketing myself. And
as we got up to leave, she was like, this
should have been your deal, and I was like, okay,
And that's when I kind of like lit a fine
her myself to start marketing myself and putting myself out
because she's like, I don't even know this guy that's
selling my house.
Speaker 23 (45:22):
This should have been your deal.
Speaker 13 (45:23):
I was with the buyer, but I wasn't sharing to
the world what I was doing. And luckily it was
my first deal, so that changed everything for me. Now
you can't see enough of me, gotcha?
Speaker 3 (45:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (45:33):
Yeah, I mean for me, it was a deal. It
was an interesting deal. It was a Brownstone. It was
like a five million dollar Brownstone, and the guy was
acquiring a different company, but he put money down for it.
He had to sell the rest of the company in
effort to get the deal, so down payments down I
think put what one undred thousand dollars down. Down payment
you know, went hard, which means if it doesn't close,
(45:54):
you lose the money. The money up and haven't. He
just couldn't sell the company, and so we're here and
we're spending This is something I never do. But I had,
like the buyers and the seller come together and they
were like great friends. Everyone loved each other. They were,
you know, borroing services to extend the period. And then
at the eleventh hour he just couldn't sell the company.
And I felt bad till and he knew it and beautiful.
Speaker 22 (46:18):
Yeah, I was uh. We were selling a building at
the end of twenty nineteen going into twenty twenty. Before
we started the company, we had contracts out everything. It
was eight hundred and eighty million dollars. I'd never done
a deal like that before. The commission was one percent,
so it was eight point eight million dollars. And then
COVID hits and the money was coming out of the
Middle East. The price of oil starts to tank. The
(46:39):
buyers say, hey, we just need a little bit of time.
You need a little bit of time. They need a
little bit of time. Deal slowly falls apart. I worked
on it for a year. I still I think about
that deal every day.
Speaker 23 (46:47):
Eight easy.
Speaker 22 (46:49):
I feel that I like that was, you know, it's
like a life changing sale, you know what I mean.
Like that was especially when I was starting my own company.
I'm all right, so that's gonna be my seed Money'm
bootstrapped like we we you know, we're not backed by
anybody else. We build, you know, four agents by agents
with agents, Like I am a real estate agent, so
I think the agents that work with us, I understand
their world because I'm in it with them all day long.
(47:11):
That was a brutal one that sucked.
Speaker 5 (47:13):
One day, though one day I keep a lock.
Speaker 7 (47:16):
We got more with Ryan Sirhan Tricialy and Jeffrey State Almond.
Is the Breakfast Club go more? Body is dj Envy
Jess HILARI shall I mean the guy we aret to
Breakfast Club? Were still kicking it with Ryan Sir Haan,
Tricia Ly and Jeffrey State Almond. Owning Manhattan is out
right now on Netflix. I gotta ask you, guys, being
being black, is it more difficult to get people to
come in and say trusting you guys than anybody else?
Speaker 23 (47:38):
Far more?
Speaker 1 (47:39):
Far more?
Speaker 7 (47:39):
Why would you say that?
Speaker 23 (47:40):
Because you work with who you identify with. That's just
what people do.
Speaker 13 (47:43):
Like if every agent sat down and thought about their
last five clients, they probably look something like them. And
so people that we work with typically look like us.
And you know, the economic wealth gap is as well
as anyone else in this room. So the likelihood of
us working with clients that own two and three and
four and eight million dollar homes has shrinks down to
us less than five percent, probably less than two percent.
So it's just harder for us to build volume, drastically
(48:05):
harder for us to build volume.
Speaker 4 (48:06):
And I think for us that's part of like we lean,
we lean into you know, our sphere, and we really
worked out, worked out as hard as we can to
really get the business right. And then in the show itself,
it's part of our transition from leaning into our core,
which is our Brooklyn audience, and then going into Manhattan. Yeah,
that's the show owning Manhattan. So it's like transitioning from
still servicing that base, but knowing that we want to
(48:28):
go to a different tier and then starting to do that.
And then at that point we have all the experience,
you know, and we can speak to whatever the market is,
to whoever we're speaking to, and then they kind of understand.
Speaker 23 (48:38):
Like you can be at Brooklyn rock Star.
Speaker 13 (48:40):
That's great, but it's like, you know, at a certain
point you have a conversation, you're like, Ryan, I want
to do these other things.
Speaker 23 (48:46):
Help me, you know.
Speaker 13 (48:47):
And I think that's how this came together because we
were both working at another firm and then we came
over and we were like, Okay, this is how we
want our business to shift, and we sat down and
did a planning session with him about how we could
grow that business.
Speaker 22 (49:00):
I still have to come to your cookout.
Speaker 23 (49:01):
You really do you have one?
Speaker 22 (49:04):
Ally?
Speaker 13 (49:05):
You're an ally and you have an admission to one cookout,
one cookout, one cookout.
Speaker 23 (49:09):
It's a little ticket. He has it on his wall.
Speaker 4 (49:12):
We might do it for Labor Day.
Speaker 22 (49:13):
You're not labor but only one.
Speaker 23 (49:15):
If it's this year, make sure you use it this year.
He's invited to one.
Speaker 7 (49:20):
You better not bring him to Brooklyn and Labor Day
you have him in the parkway.
Speaker 23 (49:26):
But my first day on the parkway was last year.
Speaker 7 (49:31):
Brian's like, I don't know what the parkway is, but
stay away from it.
Speaker 23 (49:34):
Stay away from advice.
Speaker 7 (49:36):
I also got to ask when it when it comes
to everything that you do, do you start off small
because you know, thinking about real estate, right, there's always
that one person, right, I remember buying my first house
is probably three four hundred thousand dollars, right, But then
you stay with that agent to a million dollar house,
to the next one. So do you still stay smaller?
It's like one of the things like na that I'm
not doing that is.
Speaker 22 (49:55):
It completely depends, right, It's all this business is all
about relationships. We're not actually in the real estate busines.
We're not developers, we're not contractors. We're in the people business.
We help people, and we connect those people to buyers.
We connect those people to sellers. I think, especially when
you're early on in your career, you take everything because
you never know that two thousand dollars rental client that's
going to drag you around and you don't get paid
by the hour, you don't get paid a salary. Right
(50:17):
that person maybe her uncle, her brother, who she knows,
her future girlfriend or boyfriend like, could be an amazing client.
And it's all about those relationships, and there's a thousand
stories to tell that way. I run the brokerage now,
and that's really what owning Manhattan is about, you know.
It's it's running the company, the stresses of running the company,
and then the agents that work with me, and so
depending on deal price and all that. I mean, almost
(50:38):
every deal I do now, except for maybe one or
two a year, I do with our agents. I'm doing
with Jeff and Trisha, you know, I'm doing with the
other agents that you'll see on the show, and other
agents that are at our company who are highly specialized
and have domain expertise and kind of what they sell.
You know, that way we can expand our business as
much as we possibly can.
Speaker 7 (50:57):
Well, Owning Manhattan is out right now on Netflix. Go
check it out. Political commentary and everything that's going on
in politics now, does political help a hurt? What's going
on right now with everything?
Speaker 22 (51:07):
Honestly, we're going through a rerun right now, so you
know what's going to happen either way, right, And that's
all you really got to focus on. And it's probably
not going to change your personal life a whole lot.
You know, it might change what you see on your
news feed, it might change what people talk about around you,
But is it going to change the fact that you
still need a house. Is it going to change the
(51:28):
fact that you still got to have a job and
provide for your family. Probably not. And so just focus
on yourself, do what you do best, right, have a
get up and go mindset every single day, and you know,
be an agent of change in your own way, you know,
if you want to be, you know, as salespeople, it's
always hard though, because you can't you know, we want
to work with people on every side of the spectrum,
so it's tricky for us to really pick a you know,
(51:49):
to pick a side. But you got to say authentic
and and true to yourself as much as you can.
Speaker 7 (51:52):
Now the real estate agents out there that's looking for
a job and thinking about jumping into this crazy industry,
what advice would you give the younger.
Speaker 23 (51:59):
You learn the business, Learn the business.
Speaker 4 (52:02):
Everything else is just icy. It's like a cake essentially.
It's like, you know, you got to learn the foundation
of the business. You talked about before about mailers and
you know, cold calling. All that stuff is still key
and still essential. You do that coupled with the new stuff.
So learn the business inside out, and I think.
Speaker 13 (52:18):
Learned the product. You know, a lot of people are
so focused on promoting themselves they're not trying to learn
the product. You're not you know, you're not talking to
people that don't know their way around a rooftop, you know,
mechanical room, like if it's in my house, I know
what it is and I know how to fix it
like that. That's a huge part of it. I think,
because you're dealing with a client that you're supposed to
help and guide. How can you guide somebody to do
something you're not familiar with? So I think studying and
(52:40):
understanding the product is really important. And honestly, follow me
for a day because there are parties and people are
jumping in pool and that's great, but we also need
to walk this careful.
Speaker 24 (52:49):
How I see you tris shot in like a week
from that, Like why literally physically following. Actually we behround
that I can't take it back forever.
Speaker 25 (53:00):
But like we work.
Speaker 13 (53:01):
We work, like you know, we're driving all over from
Brooklyn and Manhattan. We're walking and retoring things and it's
one hundred degrees and you're in the basement and you're
trying to figure out, like what's the best price, and
is everything that's being presented to you really what it is?
And so the product itself, these one hundred and thirty
year old old homes that we sell, study that focus
on that, you know, understanding how finance plays a part
of that. It's really more textbook. I think the work
(53:24):
and then the celebration is what people typically see on team.
Speaker 23 (53:28):
This is a different opportunity. You're going to see the
work here.
Speaker 7 (53:31):
Now, Ryan, what do you say to a young agent,
a young yourself get into this industry?
Speaker 22 (53:35):
I say kind of what Jeff and Tricia just said,
which is you should first, you should intern, you should follow,
you should follow somebody you should be on a team
and you should follow and see what they really do
and see if you really want to do that work,
because it's never what you think it is like you
watch you can't watch suits and be like, you know what,
I'm going to go be a lawyer. You want to
know what it's really like to be a lawyer. You're
gonna sit and you're gonna read, and you're going to
(53:55):
type for eighteen hours a day with a bottle of advil.
That's that's what it really means to be a lawyer,
and that's not what they show on TV. So go
follow someone and make sure you understand the first three
years in the business, you're not going to make any money.
If you're okay with that, if you're okay with working holidays,
working birthdays, working seven days a week, working in the rain, snow, sleet,
(54:17):
the middle of the heat, to build something massive for
you that no one will ever be able to take
away from you where there literally is no ceiling, because
no one's ever going to tell you, hey, you sold
too much, right, But they're also not going to pat
you on the back when you sold nothing and you
got to go get another job. If you're Okay, with that,
give yourself those three years and you can be incredibly
successful in this business. This business rewards hard work, all.
Speaker 7 (54:38):
Right, well own in Manhattan. Check it out right now
on Netflix. And I appreciate you guys.
Speaker 22 (54:41):
Any thank you so much, absolutely all right.
Speaker 7 (54:43):
Why is SNR. Shale Jeffrey saying, Amen, We appreciate you guys.
Speaker 5 (54:47):
Thanks thanks to Breakfast Level morning. Your an execute show
on the Donkey of the Day is something to go.
Speaker 23 (54:52):
Give you the reason he gave me Donkey other Day
and I deserve that.
Speaker 26 (54:55):
You need to know what you need to tell them.
Speaker 4 (54:58):
I am you have the boy.
Speaker 27 (55:00):
Tell them.
Speaker 1 (55:02):
It's time for Donkey of the Day.
Speaker 6 (55:03):
It's a read.
Speaker 2 (55:04):
But you're so good at Charlomagne. You only wants Charlomage to.
Speaker 7 (55:11):
Damn Solomame.
Speaker 26 (55:11):
Who do you give it Dusky other Day to?
Speaker 1 (55:13):
Now?
Speaker 12 (55:14):
Well sexy red Donkey to Dave goes to a twenty
six year old Evansville woman named Lindsay Pearson. Now, I
get on this radio quite often and warn you all
about the dangers of drunk driving. There's absolutely zero reason
to drive drunk, okay, especially in twenty twenty four, because
there's way too many rides share options out here, all right,
not too many tax not too many taxi cabs, but
they still exist, all right. If you can't find a
(55:34):
ride wherever you had drunk as for somebody who works
at the establishment to assist you, they would be more
than happy to if you know, and if all that fails,
and at least you should have a designated driver. Well,
what if I told you that Lindsay said she had
one drink at Rick Sports Bar and she must be
a lightweight or that must have been a very strong drink,
some Bacardi one fifty one or a long Island iced
(55:55):
tea type concoction with by krump to kill a gin.
Something had her leaning, okay apparently, and it was just
one drink, and it had her leaning so.
Speaker 2 (56:03):
Much that.
Speaker 5 (56:05):
She could drive.
Speaker 12 (56:06):
But she couldn't drive, so she decided to get a
designated driver. Now, I never thought about who shouldn't be
a designated driver outside of someone else who is also drunk,
Like you can't have a person who's also been drinking
be the designated driver. Okay, even if you don't have
a license, like it's suspended to something. I understand if
that person drives, they may be breaking the law, but
I would still rather them drive with a suspended license
(56:28):
than drive drunk. Well, Lindsey has broadened my perspective on
this issue. There are other designated drivers you shouldn't have.
I would never think that I would have to tell
you about them. But let's go to WFIE News fourteen
for there report.
Speaker 28 (56:40):
Policeman is facing child neglect charges. Police say she let
a twelve year old drive a car with herself and
two other kids inside. Officers say Lindsey Pearson's brother in
law told them she did it because she was intoxicated.
Officers say when they interviewed Pearson, she told them she
had one drink out of She also told them she
(57:02):
didn't know twelve year olds could legally drive or could not,
excuse me, legally drive on public roads. Police also charged
Pearson with resisting law enforcement, saying she continued to scream
as they tried to arrest her.
Speaker 12 (57:17):
You left the bar to go pick up the kids
and let one of them drive? How many lies were
told in this story? First of all, the lie that
she had one drink. Okay, let's just say she had
one drink cool, she was on something else, Okay, if
it's after one in the morning, and you get the
bright idea that you need to teach a twelve year
old to drive you on something harder.
Speaker 5 (57:36):
Than one drink, I know, on cocaine or something stronger.
When I hear it.
Speaker 12 (57:40):
Another lie when Lindsay told police that she did not
know that twelve year olds could not drive.
Speaker 5 (57:45):
Vehicles on public roads.
Speaker 12 (57:47):
Really, really, Lindsey, now that in the history of American
life have twelve year olds.
Speaker 5 (57:52):
Been old enough to do anything fun?
Speaker 12 (57:54):
All Right, you can't drink at twelve legally, you can't
buy alcohol at twelve legally, you can't have sex at
twelve legally, you can't buy anything with tobacco at twelve legally,
you can't rent a car at twelve legally, and you
certainly can't drive at twelve legally. So you're lying, and
you know you're lying. Okay, you lie, you lie, You're lying.
Speaker 5 (58:11):
You know what Royns will lie?
Speaker 2 (58:13):
Hi, that's what you are.
Speaker 5 (58:15):
I believe you when you said you only have one drink.
Speaker 12 (58:17):
But I also know alcohol and cocaine are popular among
drug users, so I'm sensing some sort of combination.
Speaker 5 (58:24):
Shine. Now, I believe Lindsay should be investigated further because
who the hell are these kids?
Speaker 1 (58:29):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (58:30):
Where's their parents?
Speaker 2 (58:31):
All right?
Speaker 12 (58:32):
It's after one am in the morning, you have a
drink and you decide to just go pick up some
kids to go joy riding. These news reports don't say
they were her children, her family. It just says she
went to go pick up three kids. Nobody wants to
know how this twenty six year old woman just knew
random twelve year olds? And why was it okay for
random twelve year olds to leave the house after one
in the morning? And how come nobody is any is
(58:54):
asking any questions about that. I'll tell you why, but
I can't tell you why until we play a game
of what. Lindsay Pearson, twenty six years old, had one
drink allegedly at a sports bar in Indiana, decided after
one am to go pick up three kids and let
a twelve year old drive. Claim she didn't know twelve
year olds couldn't drive vehicles on public roads, and she
(59:15):
resisted the rest by kicking and screaming, dj Envy, yes,
what races white?
Speaker 5 (59:24):
Okay? Okay, what makes you say that?
Speaker 7 (59:27):
Everything that you said? Okaydiana, Okay, okay? One drink having
a twelve year old drive that we don't know where
this twelve year old came from.
Speaker 5 (59:35):
Nobody asked me, no questions.
Speaker 7 (59:36):
Sounds white to me.
Speaker 5 (59:37):
Okay, okay.
Speaker 12 (59:38):
Jess Hilarius Lindsay Pearson, twenty six years old, had one
drink allegedly at a sports bar in Indiana, decided after
one of them to go pick up three kids and
let a twelve year old drive. Claim she didn't know
twel year olds couldn't drive vehicles on public roads, resisted
the rest by kicking and screaming, yes, what race she is?
Speaker 2 (59:55):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (59:58):
What makes you say that? Yess?
Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
Anything that she said, just like DJAV said, but the kicking,
the screaming like she wasn't wrong when the police came
out of nowhere yet.
Speaker 12 (01:00:07):
Yes, yes, well dj MV just Hilarius, I'd like to
tell both of you that you are correct.
Speaker 5 (01:00:15):
Would you like to see her picture?
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 27 (01:00:17):
Absolutely?
Speaker 12 (01:00:18):
What the hell did I do with it? Hold on, nope,
that's ryan go I see you. I don't know what
I did with the picture, but yes, she is.
Speaker 18 (01:00:25):
Well how does she look? Describe her?
Speaker 7 (01:00:27):
Don't say nothing?
Speaker 4 (01:00:30):
How does she slightly?
Speaker 12 (01:00:31):
Big backish? Okay, okay, I can see her face? What
I can tell by the round around this yet you
know there's no bone structure. It's just like like a
twitter egg.
Speaker 6 (01:00:44):
Twit used to look.
Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
Yeah, she got the little nikky, That's.
Speaker 5 (01:00:47):
What I'm saying.
Speaker 12 (01:00:49):
She's twenty six, so she's probably slightly big backish, but
her her trajectory says by thirty four thirty five, big,
big big, yes, but she's she's caucasey and she is
cry at a Tailor Swift concert.
Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
White.
Speaker 12 (01:01:02):
Okay, she is mad that Beyonce doing country music white
look yes, yes, absolutely, well, thank you for that don
to today. So please give Lindsay Pearson. Lets let Kathy
Griffin give Linday Pearson the biggest huh.
Speaker 22 (01:01:15):
Please give this giant jar male thet big as he
haw Charlamagne.
Speaker 7 (01:01:20):
I just want to inform you states are like Alaska, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas,
North and South Dakota. You can get your learners permit
at fourteen, Yill. I know it's not but I'm just
telling you at fourteen.
Speaker 5 (01:01:33):
I have nothing to do with this.
Speaker 7 (01:01:34):
I know, just letting you know because I thought it
was kind of weird that that a fourteen year old
could even drive. But I just wanted to let you
know that and.
Speaker 5 (01:01:40):
You can get your permanent fourteen.
Speaker 7 (01:01:42):
Sixteen, get your permit in sixteen if you take drivers
at Josh, my daughter got a perman now she's fifteen.
Speaker 3 (01:01:52):
Yeah, Giant jar mayonnaise is crazy. Hey, yo, Okay, it's crazousy.
Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
That was like, so you get a.
Speaker 5 (01:02:01):
Permit in Jersey cause my daughter fifteen, she got it.
She got a ferm it.
Speaker 7 (01:02:08):
No, it's a sixteen.
Speaker 5 (01:02:10):
You know you paid fifteen season drivers that she got
a permit. Now you paid for her to get it,
and Shane got it to pay for her to get Okay,
all right?
Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
The Breakfast Club, everybody's the j n V.
Speaker 7 (01:02:28):
Jesse Larious, Charlamage the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We got some special guests joining us today. We have
s w V and Escape. What how y'all feeling?
Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
This is a lot to move around?
Speaker 5 (01:02:44):
Expensive for?
Speaker 7 (01:02:47):
How was we're working with everybody?
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Now?
Speaker 7 (01:02:49):
Is it difficult getting everybody on the road together, getting
nobody on time? Because at first they said y'all gonna
be a certain time, They like, somebody gonna be just
a little late. But then y'all all came together.
Speaker 15 (01:02:57):
How is that.
Speaker 3 (01:03:02):
Ready?
Speaker 7 (01:03:04):
Who's the latest?
Speaker 8 (01:03:05):
I was ready?
Speaker 29 (01:03:07):
I heard it, But I don't know.
Speaker 30 (01:03:12):
I'm going to bit. I do have a problem, but
I'm never late when I get there. Ready, ain't nobody done?
Speaker 7 (01:03:27):
We me the one y'all got to tell an hour
early just to get on time.
Speaker 27 (01:03:31):
That is that still doesn't work.
Speaker 5 (01:03:35):
Today. Did the talk come together? MoMA Mic.
Speaker 18 (01:03:45):
Get them together? Obviously?
Speaker 25 (01:03:46):
A lot of people know after we did the reality
show together kind of like put things on ice for
a while. And then Mona, you know, she just kept
coming back with ideas and she got us all on
the same page. And and I'm glad she did because
you know, we always friends for a while, so it
was crazy that we allowed to show they're like mess
things up whatever, you know what I mean? And and
(01:04:09):
this is I feel like it's a perfect time to
come back. We also got our girls seven o two,
so it's gonna be a really fun tour, Like we're
gonna have a good time.
Speaker 5 (01:04:21):
What about the reality broke up? Exactly?
Speaker 25 (01:04:23):
We were just you know, just having our own were
we had our own inner turmoil, you know what I mean.
Speaker 18 (01:04:29):
And then you know, we had bumped heads about stupid stuff.
Speaker 12 (01:04:32):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 29 (01:04:34):
And it don't help when you get the people involved.
Speaker 7 (01:04:37):
You know, the media, media, and how was how was
it with your families and your life so into the
press because anything that you do, family does, kids do,
it's in the press all the time. Does that get annoying?
Speaker 19 (01:04:53):
Yes?
Speaker 30 (01:04:54):
Yeah, of course, everybody's accountable, Like we have to be
accountable for every little thing that we do because we're
not the only ones that feel it. Yeah, so you
almost have to live your life for other people. You know,
it's it's the most uncomfortable feeling ever, but you got
to do the best you can and just sign an NDA.
Speaker 7 (01:05:20):
Does it make it difficult to be a parent? You gotta.
You got a daughter that's graduating this week. Does it
make it difficult that because everything that she does is
on I remember I took them all out one night
right with my daughter, and I was so nervous because
I felt like a chaperone. Right now you're looking but like, oh,
they're drinking. I hope nobody sees them drinking.
Speaker 18 (01:05:37):
And it's like people that don't know both of our
daughters go.
Speaker 8 (01:05:40):
To n YU.
Speaker 7 (01:05:41):
Yeah on the side, but they all went out for
birthday and I was the chaperon, so I had to
get security. I had to make sure and I didn't
like it, Like it was like it was too much
stress on me because at the end of the day,
I'm like, rabbit, if Candy calls me next morning, was like,
and why did my daughter get back at this time?
Like it's a lot, but it's always in the public,
So how you deal with that?
Speaker 18 (01:06:01):
I mean, we're used to it at this point.
Speaker 20 (01:06:03):
We was.
Speaker 25 (01:06:04):
I mean I was on Housewife for fourteen seasons, so
Riley grew up in it, and she's about to do
something else, you know, So it's just kind of like
I just told her, you know, whatever you do, just know,
you just say, hey, I had fun doing it, and
if I messed up, I messed up.
Speaker 18 (01:06:17):
I'm about to get it right the next time.
Speaker 12 (01:06:20):
Yes, after the reality show, you know, y'all had y'all
little issues. What was that first conversation like, because nowadays
it seems like nobody knows good conflict resolution skills, So yeah,
what did y'all?
Speaker 5 (01:06:29):
What conversations did y'all have that got y'all back on
the same page.
Speaker 30 (01:06:32):
I thought it was it was really cool because when
Mona got us all back together, we hadn't spoken to
each other. But what I thought was really cool was
that we put the managers out. We put everybody out,
and it was just a six yeah, And it's easier
that way.
Speaker 7 (01:06:49):
We worked it out.
Speaker 27 (01:06:50):
We talked, We let each other know how we felt
about certain things.
Speaker 7 (01:06:53):
And who's the most difficult, Who's the I call it
the virgo or the group that's like me.
Speaker 5 (01:06:58):
I want Coco to answer this.
Speaker 26 (01:07:06):
The most difficult. I could be mean difficult.
Speaker 31 (01:07:13):
I just you know, I know what I want, what
I believe in, and I'm gonna go for it. I
don't want nobody to tell.
Speaker 1 (01:07:18):
Of what to do.
Speaker 27 (01:07:19):
She's gonna say no twenty times in four years, and
it's just a yes.
Speaker 5 (01:07:23):
It ain't even a hard yes.
Speaker 2 (01:07:29):
You don't know.
Speaker 27 (01:07:30):
I'm just going with the flow.
Speaker 7 (01:07:31):
I don't know that.
Speaker 27 (01:07:32):
She tells me, all is the one thing you catch
more beads wide.
Speaker 26 (01:07:36):
I just like I don't tell her assimilate.
Speaker 27 (01:07:38):
I'm trying to.
Speaker 12 (01:07:40):
You know, I'm not there yet, but it's business. All
of y'all gotta be stirn because you're black, you're women.
You try to get over on you, so you gotta
have those boundaries.
Speaker 6 (01:07:48):
Sure, for sure?
Speaker 27 (01:07:49):
Yes, and we which one of us. We think our
group is the best.
Speaker 31 (01:07:52):
So you're gonna bumpas something, you're gonna bump pass, but
you know, we come to a resolution make work.
Speaker 7 (01:07:59):
We did have a common station one day on about
who closes the show? Remember I remember that was part
of the drama where we had during the season, and
I was like, how do you figure out? Because I
guess it's certain markets, a certain group of clothes or
maybe not. So how did y'all figure that out?
Speaker 26 (01:08:16):
We have a thirty shows.
Speaker 21 (01:08:17):
Yeah, we just just decided to split it down in
the middle. You know what I'm saying, thirty shows, you
closed fifteen, we closed fifteen.
Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
We just do it like that.
Speaker 25 (01:08:25):
But to be clear, our show is intertwined, so for people,
it's not gonna be one of those concerts where you know,
one act goes do their whole show and then the
next act goes.
Speaker 18 (01:08:34):
It's like we're doing kind of like Versus.
Speaker 25 (01:08:36):
But a live fun or a better version where we
going back and forth doing our you know, our hits.
Speaker 18 (01:08:42):
So yeah, it's gonna work out.
Speaker 25 (01:08:44):
Yeah, the last song is gonna change, you know for fifteen,
you know versus fifteen or whatever, but it's still the
whole show is going to be like you're gonna feel
like you're going back down memory lane and being able
to sing every hit of ours that you've ever felt,
you know what I mean. And it's not gonna ever
like make you to a point where you want to
sit down because you go like, oh, this is my joining.
Then they gonna go and it was, Oh, that's my joint.
(01:09:06):
It's gonna keep going back and forth.
Speaker 5 (01:09:08):
Is this why you took a break for Real Housewives
of Atlanta Game?
Speaker 25 (01:09:10):
No, I wasn't an older reason. I have a whole
bunch of different things that I'm doing. I'm producing The
Wiz on Broadway. I got another show that I'm about
to announce that I'm producing. I'm filming on a TV show.
I can't even announce shit. So it's a lot of
other things that I really wanted to do that unfortunately,
you know, I don't know if y'all watched last season.
I was always they was always mad because I was
(01:09:31):
working on something else, and that wasn't gonna change because
I got a lot of dreams I'm trying to make happen.
It's extra busy, but I still got love for them.
I'm still gonna be supporting them, you know.
Speaker 7 (01:09:41):
We got more with SWUV and Escape when we come back.
Matter of fact, let's get into an Escape mini mix.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning everybody. It's DJ Envy,
Jess Hilarious, Charlamage, the guy we are The Breakfast Club
was still kicking it with Escape in s w V. Charlamayne.
Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
So why is this so important to do this?
Speaker 18 (01:09:57):
It was very important for my group and you know,
us together to do this.
Speaker 25 (01:10:02):
I mean, I personally want to keep the legacy of
our groups going, you know what I mean. I feel
like it's crazy to be able to say that back
in the nineties we had hits and now in twenty
twenty four, we're still able to headline tours and go
across the country.
Speaker 18 (01:10:16):
Like as women, you know what I mean, I think
that's very important.
Speaker 25 (01:10:20):
I don't know about y'all, but as women, you know,
I'm all about you know, we got to make moves
and big moves and show people like, yeah, like this
is where it's at.
Speaker 18 (01:10:28):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 5 (01:10:29):
What about you? Important for you?
Speaker 21 (01:10:31):
I mean because it's something that I really love doing,
and I mean it just it's just a different feeling
from everything else that we do. And you know our
music is still living and doing his things. So it's
just it's just a great thing to be able to
be able to go out there and sell arenas and
do these shows. So I mean, I feel like, I mean,
(01:10:55):
I feel like, why not you know what I'm saying.
The money and you know, for a long time we
wasn't doing shows and so many ecs in our era
was you know, getting that money. And I was just
like going to my gut, like why ain't we getting
the money?
Speaker 16 (01:11:07):
Like what do we do?
Speaker 21 (01:11:08):
We can't even we can't get along, like we're missing out.
So we finally, you know, thankful to Jermaine and Autumn.
They were trying to do like a movie, a movie
on us that we didn't have nothing to do with.
So that's really what brought us back together.
Speaker 29 (01:11:22):
I was trying to figure that out, like, oh, hey,
doing a movie on us and we ain't got nothing
to do with it. Yeah, So that's how we got
back to where we are.
Speaker 5 (01:11:29):
Well, was it important for y'all? S WV?
Speaker 26 (01:11:31):
This is something that I've been wanting to do since
how long? That's the long I think.
Speaker 32 (01:11:36):
We got back together in twenty two thousand and five,
and I just always wanted to put a girl group
tour back together. The nineties was just beautiful with so
many varieties of girl groups doing their things successfully. I
missed that vibe and I wanted to do it again,
and it's just been so hard trying to get everybody together.
But finally this situation came along, and I'm.
Speaker 15 (01:11:57):
Like, all for it.
Speaker 30 (01:11:58):
I thought it was dope because I think we left
a lot of things open, you know, since the show.
And another thing, I don't think men really give us
the support I think we deserve. Yeah, so for us,
for the world to see us come together as women
that support each other like this, I think it's a
big deal for me because y'all support each other, y'all
don't support us.
Speaker 7 (01:12:18):
But I've also seen the shift in R and B
music because I would say maybe about four or five
years ago, it started shifting where R and B music
it was army music parties, army music concerts, army music things.
And I'm sure you guys seen that shiit because at
one time it felt like, I don't want to say
it was dead, but people didn't respect the nineties groups
like they should have. Redallis groups. But I've seen that
(01:12:39):
shift where it's like you're seeing concerts, you're seeing shows.
I mean, think about it, a vague show lovers and
friends when they had thirty forty thousand people. You would
never see that before. So that was always a good thing. Yeah,
and I got to ask. I got to give you
a lot of props. You took dogs getting shut up.
Speaker 5 (01:12:55):
Don't even break that shot up.
Speaker 7 (01:13:00):
To where I'm going down that roll?
Speaker 13 (01:13:06):
You know?
Speaker 5 (01:13:12):
Wait, change the collection.
Speaker 12 (01:13:21):
Yes, vaginas getting discoloration, he said, I have vintage, but
I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
Know what you're talking about.
Speaker 23 (01:13:33):
A vaginant.
Speaker 5 (01:13:34):
I got nail things.
Speaker 18 (01:13:42):
Wait, that's kind of a good thing.
Speaker 19 (01:13:51):
Did you give him the vining?
Speaker 5 (01:14:06):
You think this generation even knows what nineties are.
Speaker 26 (01:14:16):
They're gonna learn about?
Speaker 5 (01:14:24):
Do you think do you'll think this generation even knows
what real rm B is?
Speaker 14 (01:14:28):
Oh?
Speaker 26 (01:14:28):
Absolutely.
Speaker 32 (01:14:29):
There are a ton of of youngster's millennials gen z's
that know about StEB B and escaped because their parents
are teaching them about that.
Speaker 26 (01:14:39):
We did a show last year with Glowrilla and a
couple of other young rappers. We were like, why are
we here?
Speaker 32 (01:14:46):
But those kids were out there singing those songs like
they were there when we recorded them and they're holding
their moms up on FaceTime.
Speaker 7 (01:14:56):
Hey, for music is not the same. R and B
doesn't seem like it's the same. Even with my daughter now.
Of course she listens to the scissors and she listens
to someone Walker, But when these records come on in
the house, she knows every word, word for word, like
these are her artists. She looks at you, you guys,
at her artists like we do, which is different.
Speaker 32 (01:15:12):
It's not the same behavior when you when you immerse
these kids in this kind of music, they love it
that you have TikTok, you have all these YouTube My
son used to sit there and uh, look up different
artists on YouTube, and.
Speaker 26 (01:15:26):
He would like, I think it was so cool. And
I'm like, that's old school music.
Speaker 18 (01:15:30):
No it isn't it is.
Speaker 27 (01:15:32):
I have to tell my grand baby, no, they didn't
make that song.
Speaker 5 (01:15:36):
The song came from this, So you know, you got to.
Speaker 21 (01:15:39):
Hate you old even though she's my child. She goes
she knows all of escape songs, all the songs that
we don't sing. Work slowly, she sang. I'm like, girl,
you cannot sing these songs.
Speaker 29 (01:15:50):
She's singing every She's like, and I know this song,
and I know she can't sing.
Speaker 7 (01:15:55):
Oh, that's crazy that you said eight years old. I
feel like we just seen athing.
Speaker 5 (01:16:05):
She knows what she wants to do.
Speaker 25 (01:16:08):
But you got to realize, like a lot of our
songs and other R and B songs, they end up
trending and everything on social media and people be making
their own video clips, not knowing where they got the
song from. They just started singing it and blow it
up all over again.
Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
So is there any songs you'all tired of performing? But
you got to because it.
Speaker 29 (01:16:27):
Tonight for every last.
Speaker 5 (01:16:32):
You don't like Tonight's honey, I.
Speaker 21 (01:16:33):
Mean I do, but you know, like sometimes we have
to show you, like we need to cut the songs down.
I'll be ready to cut tonight. They never want to
cut tonight.
Speaker 18 (01:16:42):
She don't want to have the pressure of hitting the hog.
I know at the end, you know.
Speaker 32 (01:16:49):
What about y'all anything that you're to performing every last song?
Every time we sing those songs, I feel blessed. I'm
gonna sing them everything the bottom of my heart.
Speaker 27 (01:16:58):
We don't we get tired to write?
Speaker 9 (01:17:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (01:17:00):
Right?
Speaker 6 (01:17:02):
What why.
Speaker 29 (01:17:04):
Choreography?
Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
Still got the choreography?
Speaker 5 (01:17:07):
That's why.
Speaker 27 (01:17:08):
No, it's not the choreography.
Speaker 30 (01:17:10):
It's more of a radio song.
Speaker 27 (01:17:13):
It's not a performance song.
Speaker 8 (01:17:14):
Not me.
Speaker 29 (01:17:16):
I feel like I feel like that, like it's so good.
It's more like one of.
Speaker 5 (01:17:23):
Right here, one of them one.
Speaker 6 (01:17:28):
I have to do it, but you don't want to
do just Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:17:32):
We got more with s w V and Escape when
we come back. Now, let's get into an s w
V Mini mix. It's the Breakfast Club, Good Morning.
Speaker 1 (01:17:39):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 14 (01:17:42):
Morning.
Speaker 7 (01:17:43):
Everybody is d J n V, Jess, Larry, Charlomagne, the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. That was an s w
V Mini mixed Escaping s w V our Head. They're
on tour, the Queens of R and B Tour, Charlamagne
and you was on Survivor, right, Yes, sir?
Speaker 12 (01:17:56):
Did you want to say you compare Survivor to working
with ant know?
Speaker 26 (01:18:03):
No, I said I compare Survivor to you taking le out.
That's what I said.
Speaker 30 (01:18:12):
It was hard.
Speaker 6 (01:18:13):
It was hard, Jesus christ Man, it was crazy.
Speaker 32 (01:18:37):
Look, Survivor is the only reality television show and that's
the only one.
Speaker 26 (01:18:42):
There are no storylines, there's nothing.
Speaker 32 (01:18:44):
You're out there with absolutely nothing and you have to
literally survive.
Speaker 26 (01:18:48):
So will I do it? Again, absolutely not. They've been
trying to get me to come back.
Speaker 5 (01:18:52):
So we ordered just something like surviving. We need to
do a show.
Speaker 13 (01:18:57):
We have.
Speaker 26 (01:19:06):
Prepared her scale the fish.
Speaker 18 (01:19:12):
It can do either one. It depends on what you
do with it.
Speaker 5 (01:19:15):
Really.
Speaker 25 (01:19:16):
I mean, I definitely feel like, you know, I've had
moments where I hated it, obviously, but I feel like
I really built a big fan base through it, you know.
Speaker 30 (01:19:26):
Down, I think that's what everything though, like, even when
y'all come to work every day, is you gotta deal
with the political book.
Speaker 5 (01:19:35):
And you're you're gonna do with something.
Speaker 27 (01:19:38):
No matter what you do, you're gonna deal with something.
It's just how you resolve.
Speaker 7 (01:19:42):
What's the crazies?
Speaker 5 (01:19:43):
You heard about yourself? If I heard I used to be.
Speaker 26 (01:19:49):
Somebody got a background check on that, I said.
Speaker 32 (01:19:51):
When I saw it, it was like people saying, yeah,
she's doing much better now because she used to be
on the street.
Speaker 5 (01:19:58):
I'm like, I never that that.
Speaker 26 (01:20:02):
Little background check thinking, But no, I've never been a prostitute,
thank you very much.
Speaker 29 (01:20:07):
Y'all know what mine is.
Speaker 21 (01:20:08):
I got women locked up in the basement. I'm feeding
them up because you know what I'm saying down, how
you able.
Speaker 12 (01:20:18):
To navigate through that though timey, like like when you
hear those stories about yourself, you know, they.
Speaker 29 (01:20:22):
Pissed me off more so than anything.
Speaker 21 (01:20:24):
But you know, just because I want to say so
much and I have to you know, everybody always tell
me no, I can't say anything my lawyers and tip
and not be on my head. So I just had
to be quiet. That's the That's the part that really
bothers me the most. It's just not being able to nobody.
Speaker 5 (01:20:39):
Nobody cares about.
Speaker 29 (01:20:42):
Yeah, so you know, and I have to my husband
telling me all the time, like it don't matter.
Speaker 21 (01:20:46):
You know, nobody you know, either they gonna believe you
or the night and most of the people the split,
so you can't.
Speaker 29 (01:20:52):
You can't get everybody. So just forget about it and.
Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
Ever been like where it affected your kids in school
like anything like that, because on that level too, like
they got kids, successful kids and like they still have
their life, like.
Speaker 21 (01:21:08):
You know what I mean, they got to yeah, I
felt like maybe so, but they don't really talk about it.
They don't really say, oh, I've had a bad day
because of this and that, like major it's one of
the main kids just in school right now and he's
so he's.
Speaker 29 (01:21:22):
So chill, like he don't never just be like, you know,
I just had the worst day to day.
Speaker 21 (01:21:27):
If he does have a bad day, he probably he
don't really have bad days because he don't care about nothing,
you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 29 (01:21:33):
He don't really care about anything.
Speaker 22 (01:21:36):
Young King, he's got tough.
Speaker 21 (01:21:43):
Skin like he and I'm glad he got tough skin
because you know, he get he get the most flat
out of everybody. But he's got really tough skin, so
he don't. He could care less with this. He'd be like, yeah,
tell him keep talking about it.
Speaker 23 (01:21:54):
I don't care.
Speaker 21 (01:21:54):
You know what I'm saying, He don't mind, So I'm
okay with that, you know what I'm saying. So all
our kids pretty much they know us, and they pretty
much you know, they they don't.
Speaker 29 (01:22:04):
Really care what nobody said.
Speaker 21 (01:22:05):
They kind of like, I know who my mom and
my dad is, so you know, it don't really bother
them like I would think it would.
Speaker 29 (01:22:12):
And the air she's just too young, so she just
kind of she just living life.
Speaker 7 (01:22:17):
Right my career.
Speaker 12 (01:22:22):
How does I don't know if this is true, but
they say Latasha Fire a lawsuit against the group, is
that true.
Speaker 18 (01:22:29):
Uh, she follow lawsuit against us.
Speaker 8 (01:22:32):
She sent a letter to.
Speaker 18 (01:22:36):
Yeah, she said that letter.
Speaker 29 (01:22:38):
Yeah, I think it was more of a scare tactic.
But it didn't it didn't work. You know, we kind
of knew, I write, How.
Speaker 5 (01:22:46):
Does that impact the personal relationship.
Speaker 21 (01:22:47):
Though, as of right now, we don't really have a
personal relationship, you know what I'm saying, nobody.
Speaker 29 (01:22:52):
We don't really speak.
Speaker 15 (01:22:53):
We don't.
Speaker 29 (01:22:54):
I don't even think we have her number for real,
for real, they changed their numbers. So you know, we
just going on moving. You know, it comes to us.
It comes to us. But you know we're just doing
that regular daily thing, moving around.
Speaker 23 (01:23:07):
Like you know it is.
Speaker 29 (01:23:09):
It is more so, you know, you know, this is
what life is bringing us.
Speaker 18 (01:23:16):
Obvious to talk about.
Speaker 23 (01:23:19):
It is wonderful.
Speaker 33 (01:23:21):
I have a wonderful family, my children, I'm a grandma,
wonderful husband from the New York. He's from New York or.
Speaker 26 (01:23:29):
Yeah, life is good.
Speaker 33 (01:23:31):
You know, sometimes you have to separate in order for
certain people to know your worth, and until they know it,
you just be separated.
Speaker 30 (01:23:39):
But life goes on, and sometimes you got to separate
from people closest to you, yea, whether it be family
or whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:23:46):
Definitely. Does it make you feel any guilt though, when
you're all out.
Speaker 33 (01:23:49):
On the road, No guilt when you're when you're not
in the room, you don't feel guilt, right, Just congratulations
you look.
Speaker 3 (01:23:58):
So big.
Speaker 27 (01:24:02):
The first day I noticed it's sex impregnant.
Speaker 15 (01:24:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 29 (01:24:06):
I'm tired.
Speaker 7 (01:24:11):
Queens of R and B too, especially guest May total
And now this.
Speaker 2 (01:24:14):
Is the hell of a talk.
Speaker 27 (01:24:18):
We want you all to come. We want you try
to come and support us an experience.
Speaker 33 (01:24:22):
Hold up, we want to we want before that, we
want to give. We want to give a shout out
to our queen's birthday.
Speaker 29 (01:24:28):
We have queen and queen.
Speaker 23 (01:24:33):
We got to show them, you know what I'm saying
and make.
Speaker 4 (01:24:36):
It look easy.
Speaker 18 (01:24:37):
Yeah, thank you birthday all right.
Speaker 7 (01:24:39):
We're got you guys for joining us.
Speaker 32 (01:24:41):
Ticket bath for tickets, yeesa dot com and ticketmaster dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:24:48):
On the road rod like talk bus Wednesday, working on
my birthday.
Speaker 29 (01:24:54):
You know it's basic.
Speaker 26 (01:24:57):
We don't turn up a birthday long time. It's all
right to work on your.
Speaker 7 (01:25:05):
WV escape. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning, Everybody's
dj n V. Just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are
the Breakfast club. How you feeling, Jess pregnant?
Speaker 5 (01:25:15):
I'm so tired, y'all.
Speaker 7 (01:25:17):
You don't look tired.
Speaker 12 (01:25:18):
Thanks.
Speaker 5 (01:25:22):
I just said that, so y'all can say.
Speaker 27 (01:25:24):
That, but no, I know I am really tired.
Speaker 7 (01:25:26):
So let's get to the positive note.
Speaker 2 (01:25:27):
That's right.
Speaker 12 (01:25:28):
The positive note is simply this man For everybody out
there wondering if they're in the wrong situation. Just know
you won't find peace in an environment that you aren't
supposed to be in.
Speaker 5 (01:25:39):
That's how you know Breakfast club, bitch is you don't
finish for y'all.
Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
Done,