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August 5, 2024 90 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
That's hilarious, and charlomagere goes looking into thank y'all for
being like coach leads out family.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
The retro club is where people get the information on
the topics, on the artists, everything like that.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
I'm running and you guys were nice. Everybody got me
all nervous like you guys. Let's not yo. You locked
into the world's most dangerous warning show.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
If you want to break this club and we're gonna
bring it one hundred and twenty, might as will not
come up here, Jesus, That's.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
What I'll do.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Other that's right, get about the bids and listen to
the greatest show onwer Good Morning USA.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Jess Hilarious is officially on Maternity Leads. He is out
Charlemagne God pas to the planet is Monday.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
She hasn't had the baby yet do but her maternity
leaves thought it because it can happen any at any moment,
that he the head is right there at the serve.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Correct.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
I think I said that correctly. The head is right there,
head is right there. It's been right there since last week, right,
any moment now?

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Now to do date?

Speaker 5 (01:07):
She said, of course, it's the seventeenth, but like you said,
any day now. So she's on maternal leave. So don't
text it, don't hit it, don't call them, just let
a chill, let her relax.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
She'll be fine. That's right. We're wishing her a healthy delivery.
That's the most important thing.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
But you do all week and anything.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Nothing, which is exactly what I like to do. Drop
on the clues momb for doing nothing. Okay, all right.
I'm not one of these mixing people that likes to
be out here in these streets. I like to be
at home on my couch with my wife and kids.
And that's what we did all weekend long and it
couldn't have been more fun.

Speaker 5 (01:39):
Well, Saturday, I was out in Akron, Ohio. Salutes everybody
out in Ohio. I was out there with Lisa Ray.
We had it was like a fashion. It was like, nah,
they call it an unblanc situation where it's an all
white unblunk. It's like an all white party in all
white situation that they do. But they've been doing all
over the country in the last couple of years. So

(02:00):
they had like a violinist play. It was really dope,
really grown and sexy and really dope. So slew to
everybody out there ran into her.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
So slew to them.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
And then I relaxed. I just sat my ass on
the couch. But the last the rest of the time,
So salute to everybody out there.

Speaker 1 (02:15):
Fake watching the Olympics. What you watch? I told you
I was fake watching it. Do you watch the watch
the track?

Speaker 6 (02:21):
Me?

Speaker 1 (02:22):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
I saw the track meet after the fact on social
media and then I went to go what was I watching?

Speaker 1 (02:28):
I was watching. So I was watching the news.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
It's like white, CNN and SNBC, and then I looked
on the guy to see what was on and it
said like volleyball or single player tennis or something like that,
and I was like.

Speaker 5 (02:41):
This, you want to watch that? Now I was watching.
I watched the Saturday. I watched Kari Richardson she picked
up a silver medal. Salute to her, Yeah, she picked
up a silver medal.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
I watched.

Speaker 5 (02:51):
No allows he saw that on gocial media. You want
to go by like I mean when I say like
the hands of his chimney chin chin. He won by
the hairds of the chicken.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
What happened?

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Because wasn't they was killed one day? One day it
was like he lost to something like that. Then it
was just a qualifying meat, maybe a qualifying meat. Then
he came back and won the gold.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
He came back in.

Speaker 2 (03:08):
I liked some kind of stories dropping the clues bombs
from Noah Lyles. Everybody just all riled up on social media,
start clowning. Yep, you know, and then now what he
when I say, he just made it?

Speaker 6 (03:18):
Though?

Speaker 3 (03:18):
He just made it, like if he didn't pocus, well,
you're right, he definitely wont I watch the mixed races,
A young lady from a bunch of vioracial people. You know,
it was men and females racing.

Speaker 7 (03:31):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (03:31):
And there was a nineteen year old from a North
Carolina I believe it was that she picked up a
silver medal, salute.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
To her, congraduations to her.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
And what else?

Speaker 1 (03:38):
Did I watch?

Speaker 3 (03:39):
A couple of swim events. I don't know anybody's name
on the swim events. But yeah, Olympics. I love the Olympics.
It's pretty fun.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
I enjoy it.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
But let's get the show cracking.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Polo G.

Speaker 5 (03:48):
Will we joined us this morning. Polo G has a
new project, Who the Poet, is going to be released
this Friday, August night. So we're gonna be kicking it
with Polo G. And when we come back, we got
front page news. There's always a lot going on in politics.
We'll break it all down for you, so don't go anywhere.
It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Good morning, Good morning everybody.

Speaker 5 (04:04):
It's Dja Envy Jess Hilarious, Charlamage the guy. We are
to Breakfast Club and let's get in some front page news.

Speaker 8 (04:12):
Good morning, Morgan, Good morning y'all. Happy Monday, y'all.

Speaker 9 (04:17):
Ha to go.

Speaker 10 (04:19):
The weekend.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
Yes, it was great on yours.

Speaker 7 (04:22):
My weekend was good, very lackluster, which is what I like.
But there was a lot of action going on with
our candidates, so let's talk about it. Vice President Kamala Harris,
she did secure enough delegate votes to become the Democratic
nominee for president. Harris called into a campaign update for
supporters after the news broke. Let's hear more from Vice

(04:42):
President Harris on her nomination.

Speaker 11 (04:45):
I am honored to be the presumptive Democratic nominee for
President of the United States, and I will tell you
the tireless work of our delegates, our state leaders and
staff has been pivotal in making this moment possible. And
later this month we will gather in Chicago, he United
as one party, where we're going to have an opportunity

(05:07):
to celebrate this historic moment together. This campaign is about
all of us coming together, people coming together from every
walk of life, every lived experience, and being fueled by
our love of country, knowing that we are prepared to
fight for the best.

Speaker 8 (05:24):
Of who we are. Yes So, VP.

Speaker 7 (05:27):
Harris noted that she will officially accept the nomination this week,
as she did run a post. The Democratic National Committee's
vote started last Thursday morning, and the delegates held a
virtual vote ahead of the party's convention in order to
finalize their nomination before a ballot access deadline that's happening
in Ohio next week now. Harris she also met with

(05:49):
three potential running mates over the weekend, Senator Mark Kelly
of Arizona, Governor Tim Waltz of Minnesota, and Governor Josh
Shapiro of Pennsylvania. She is expected to annow bounce her
VP pick as early as Tuesday, ahead of a rally.
Kentucky Governor Andy Basheer and Transportation Secretary Pete Bouagege may
still be in the running, but they were not in

(06:11):
those meetings over the weekend.

Speaker 8 (06:13):
Who do you think is going to be? You still
think you still got your money on Shapiro shar.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Yeah, that's what I like. I like Governor Jos Shapiro.

Speaker 7 (06:22):
I will say the rally. The rally is in Pennsylvania tomorrow,
so maybe there's something to that.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
Yeah, they said, they said there's nothing to that, but
I don't know. I mean, it's gotta be between the
three that came to her house of yesterday.

Speaker 8 (06:32):
Over the weekend. But yeah, absolutely, I.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
Hope it's Governor to Joshape. I like Jos Shapiro as well.

Speaker 7 (06:38):
All Right, so former President Trump and his running mate,
Senator JD. Vance, they're still on the campaign trail. They
were in Atlanta over the weekend. Trump held a rally
at Georgia State University. He wasn't so nice to them.

Speaker 8 (06:50):
He did that on Saturday.

Speaker 7 (06:51):
While we're Vice President Kamala Harris hosted her own campaign
event earlier last week. So let's hear more from Trump's
that rally at Georgia State University in Atlanta, ninety.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
Four days from now.

Speaker 12 (07:05):
We're going to win the Great State of Georgia and
an epic lands, and we're going to defeat crazy Kamala
Harris has the most ultra left wing agenda of any
presidential candidate ever in history.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
There's never been anybody like this, and.

Speaker 12 (07:22):
She happens to be really a low IQ individual.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
She has a very low IQ.

Speaker 12 (07:28):
By the way, I'd like to congratulate Vladimir Putin for
having made yet another great deal. Did you see the
deal with met We got our people back, But boy,
we make some horrible, horrible deals.

Speaker 8 (07:40):
And it's nice to say we got them back.

Speaker 12 (07:43):
But does that set a bad precedent?

Speaker 7 (07:46):
Well, he's regarding or he is referring to excuse me,
the prisoner swap with Russia that we that was conducted
last week. Now, he implored the crowd to get out
and vote, saying this election is the most important in history.
He didn't hesitate to criticize Harris, claiming America would end
up in World War three if she was elected. He
also blamed her for an increase in illegal immigration. Any

(08:10):
thoughts on that.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
On what look on people like noah, never you know.

Speaker 8 (08:20):
What, never mind, We'll just keep you.

Speaker 7 (08:21):
Let's switch gears on something that everybody can you know,
listen up and relate to.

Speaker 8 (08:26):
This isn't this isn't political, guys. Just hear me out. Boarshead.

Speaker 7 (08:30):
You know the meat company you did, Deli Meats, Well,
they're recalling seven pounds of Deli meat following two Lasteria depths,
one in New Jersey, yeah, one in New Jersey near you, guys,
and one in Illinois. And in addition to those two deaths,
the CDC says at least thirty four people have gotten
sick across thirteen states. Nearly all have been hospitalized, and
ranged from ages thirty two to ninety four. So this

(08:53):
latest recall involves liverwurst, ham balgonney, and beef salami made
at a boar's head plant in Virginia. So if you're
up and down the East Coast, you might as well
and you have boar's head in your refrigerator, you might
as well throw it away or take it right back
to the store. More than seventy products would sell by
date spanning from July twenty ninth to October seventeenth, were involved.

Speaker 8 (09:14):
Listery infection.

Speaker 7 (09:15):
Symptoms include nausea, fever, headache, and muscle ache. So if
you're experiencing any of those and you've had a deli
sandwich recar mercy.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
Oh yeah, that's difficult to recall because people usually you
get a sandwich, they go to Delhi, get a sandwich,
you eat it right there, like you know, people don't
bring that home.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
That's a tough one. That's a scary one.

Speaker 7 (09:34):
Yeah, but definitely, you know, if you're going to a deli,
ask them what type of meat they're using, ask them
where they get it from, things of that nature. But
this is a big one, so and we're going to
keep our eyes on that. So uh yeah, keep you
guys informed as to what's going on with that. But
if you do have a boar's head meat in your refrigerator,
throw it away or take it right back to the store.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
All right, Well, that is front page news. Thank you, Morgan,
thank you.

Speaker 8 (09:56):
We'll talk more about the presidential race and all that
other stuff in the next hour.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
Everybody else, get it off your chest. Eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one. If you need to vent,
phone line to wide open again. Eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. Let us know how your
weekend was. It's the breakfast Club.

Speaker 13 (10:11):
Good morning, the breakfast Club. Wait, this is your time
to get it off your chest. Eight hundred and five
eight five one five one. We want to hear from
you on the breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (10:26):
Hello.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Who's this?

Speaker 4 (10:27):
Hi?

Speaker 14 (10:28):
Good morning, My name is Sierra. Good morning, calling you
guys from.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
What's happening in Philly this morning?

Speaker 15 (10:35):
What's up?

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Mama?

Speaker 14 (10:36):
Well, I actually just got back from Greece at midnight
last night or this morning, I guess.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Oh, how was that?

Speaker 16 (10:43):
So we did a tour.

Speaker 14 (10:44):
We went to Santorini, We went to Mikonos. We also
went to Turkey. We was there for eight days total.

Speaker 5 (10:51):
All it's so beautiful. I went out there with my
wife a couple of years back. We had such an
amazing time. What was your favorite part?

Speaker 14 (10:57):
My favorite part was definitely Sanserini were great. We also
had such a great time at the pool bar where we're.

Speaker 15 (11:05):
Any to know?

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (11:06):
Did you get a chance to get on the on
the boat out there or no?

Speaker 17 (11:09):
No?

Speaker 14 (11:09):
The cruise boat wasn't enough for us.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
The cruise so you went on the cruise.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
Yeah, and now I enjoyed it. I want to bring
the kids back out there. Had a great time, and
I'm glad you had a good time out there.

Speaker 14 (11:16):
Yeah, we did, And I just wanted to give a
special shout out for me and my best friend. Her
name is you know, we listened to the bus and
stuff every day, but usually don't wake up this early,
so we do the podcast. If she's stuck in Egypt
right now because her flight got canceled, is she gonna
hear this probaly Tuesday or Wednesday? And I told her
that whenever I get through, I was gonna give her
a shot up.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
You flew to Philly. Where did she had to fly
back to?

Speaker 14 (11:39):
She had to fly to Cairo and then to JFPA.
I flew to Montreal and then back to Philly.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Dam well, so Lutha Janelle.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
Yeah, whenever she gets back Sluta, thank you, Mama, thank.

Speaker 14 (11:50):
You, and just real quick me and you know really
loves starts. I mean, if we can get a sign
book or something, we looked like.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
That, that's easy. Hold on, okay, Eddie, get her information.
That's give me the names. I know, Janelle and what's
your name, Sierra? Sierra the doctor?

Speaker 14 (12:05):
So we have to call her doctor Moody because she'll
be mad if I called her otherwise doctor Moody.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Yeah, just give Eddie your names that he's our producer.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
I got you today.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 18 (12:14):
What's up?

Speaker 6 (12:14):
Envy?

Speaker 1 (12:15):
What's up?

Speaker 3 (12:15):
What's your name?

Speaker 6 (12:16):
What's up? This is e w F Florida.

Speaker 18 (12:18):
How you doing?

Speaker 1 (12:18):
What's up? Brother? Get it off your chest?

Speaker 18 (12:20):
Yo. Just wanted to give you a shout out to
you on Man, it's up and Charlomagree is going on
teach to the jets, good luck on the baby and everything. Charlemagne.
I'm a big fan of yours man, listening on the
podcast everything, read your books everything. That just calling in
and we appreciate you too. Just calling in to big
up Saint Lucia Julian outfit that's wanting me the track

(12:44):
winner in this week weekend. That's my country, guys.

Speaker 19 (12:47):
You know the.

Speaker 18 (12:49):
President that she set man, she won our first medal
in the premiere event.

Speaker 6 (12:53):
That is big.

Speaker 18 (12:54):
That is big, that is big, one of the big
up offso coratulations.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
She put them jets on though, did she put them
jets are?

Speaker 18 (13:00):
Look here, man, Look if you don't follow the track,
you don't know about this lady and a lot of
people are learning about her now. She is a multi
national champion, sixty years champion and an international champion. And
a lot of people are like, well, you know, they
want to talk about the little controversy. I think you
heard about it. You know something about Shikari and Shelley
Anfiser Price couldn't get into a game, controversy about that, whatever,

(13:25):
But do not take that away from that young lady.
She is a champion. She ran at University of Texas
for years. She's sure the big time. Big shout out
to all the Stusians in New York. They've got a
big population there. We're in New York, We're in Canada,
We're in England, in Florida and Houston. Were all over
the world. At the one hundred and eighty five thousand
people on that island. I'm so happy this week. Plus
she's going to try to do it again in the

(13:46):
two hundred. Man, I was just hoping that she meddled,
but she came through it with the gold, our first
gold ever bro our first medal everitor.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
Congratulations.

Speaker 1 (13:53):
Man.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
When I said when she put on them jets, and
she put on the jets, wasn't the first time she
put on the jets in the preliminary.

Speaker 6 (13:59):
Soon in my finals.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
Yeah, she put them jets on.

Speaker 5 (14:01):
They said she she practices h or I should say,
trains out in Texas, and they said she's a beast.
She's fast, she's fast, and congratulations, congratulations to the whole hour.

Speaker 18 (14:10):
Yeah, bro, appreciate that. Just one of the bigger ball
evolutions worldwide. Man, thank you, and now keep going out.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
Thanks Bro, She's king all right, now get it off
your chest. Eight hundred and five eight five, one oh
five one. If you need to vent, hit us up
right now. It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
Good morning, the Breakfast Club, right right, ray, Yo, Charla, mate, Jaffy,
what up are we lost? This is your time to
get it off your chest. I got an indoor pool,
outdoor pool.

Speaker 15 (14:36):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast Club.

Speaker 20 (14:38):
Get on the phone right now.

Speaker 18 (14:39):
We're here to tell you what it is.

Speaker 15 (14:40):
We lie.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 21 (14:43):
Hey, good morning?

Speaker 3 (14:44):
This is a j Hey, good morning, aj Get it
off your chest.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
Hey, guys, So I.

Speaker 22 (14:49):
Was just calling to just shout out das Flario's sending
her many blessings, hoping that her labor and her post
delivery goes well. Just a quick drop suggestion. I think
it's important if she can she takes time to look
into post massages, take care of herself for self wellness.
You know, all of this is great in terms of

(15:10):
hormone regulation. I'm not sure if you guys know. I
know you have several babies and daughters and children, but
hormones like estrogen do increase at it seen a second
level during pregnancy and then increase after delivery. So just
making sure that she has a well balanced of foremones.
And this is coming from a mom of five.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
Okay, okay, well, thank you so much.

Speaker 10 (15:29):
You're welcome, have a blessed Hey, guys, you know hello,
who's this?

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Yes, sir, Ja from Indy Ja from Indy Ja. You
still win in that bet.

Speaker 5 (15:38):
I know your friends was betting you how many times
you could get through going to breakfast club.

Speaker 10 (15:41):
I got that on lock that I got some good
news and I got some bad. Yes, sir, I'm still
win in the bed.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Good morning, by the way, Good morning.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
What's the bad news?

Speaker 6 (15:48):
Though?

Speaker 10 (15:48):
The bad news is so my brother gets out of
prison in about a month. You've been locked up for
twenty eight years. I don't have the guts to tell
my mom we ain't that cool, like these different cans
to say. Guy was when I was fifteen. So she's
all excited, your brother coming home and it's three more
of us, and I'm like, I don't know him, but okay,
well I'll play along. So that's the bad news. The

(16:10):
good news is I'm still on Deckson Mary, my best friend,
so we locked in.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
All right, So your brother's coming home after what twenty seven?
Twenty eight years?

Speaker 15 (16:16):
So what was that?

Speaker 3 (16:17):
A man's slaughter of murder?

Speaker 6 (16:18):
Furder murder?

Speaker 10 (16:19):
Yeah, my mom ain't listening, so she she still don't
think he did it, but you know how old?

Speaker 1 (16:24):
How old was he when he did it? Though?

Speaker 10 (16:26):
Let's see I was fifteen, he was twenty one.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Damn.

Speaker 3 (16:29):
You don't think people change.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
You don't know.

Speaker 5 (16:30):
You don't speak to me. I don't think people change.
He sat down for twenty eight years, so I'm pretty
sure he had to change it.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Hopefully it was.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
Listen, man, trust your gun. Go with your discernment. If
your discernment is telling you something, hey go with it.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
Okay, that ain't up to you saying.

Speaker 10 (16:45):
I didn't mean to interrupt. I didn't say he didn't change.
I said we've changed. That's just know who he is
after twenty eight years. Mama want me to be all excited,
and I'm like, okay, Mama, I play along. But when
he get home, we ain't about to be sliding.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
That's right. You don't know that man.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
You got to get the old You got to get
to know him all over again, and he gotta get
to know you all over again.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
And y'all may not mess after all of this time.

Speaker 5 (17:05):
But give him a shot, though, Just don't just don't
throw him to the side, because he did twenty eight years.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
He's come home. Give him a shot.

Speaker 10 (17:10):
I got Ya'm gonna take him shopping, buying some food,
and then we're gonna see what.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Happens some food.

Speaker 5 (17:15):
All right, brother, have a go one to get it
off your chest. Eight hundred and five eight five one
oh five one. When we come back. We got just
with the mess Justice out on maternity leave, so we're
holding it down for her.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Do you want a piece of hip hop history?

Speaker 5 (17:29):
You could possibly put your your bidding and maybe win
something that's uh, I would say very valuable, but not
only valuable, very monumental when it comes to hip hop.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
We'll explain when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
Club today, feel like every bit of Monday. You hear me,
how y'all feel out there? Y'all feel like it's Monday.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Definitely feels like it is.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
It is morning everybody.

Speaker 5 (17:54):
It's the ej NV just hilarious, charlamage the God We
are the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Justice out on the Turnunity leave. But let's get to
Jess with the mess.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
You is real weather.

Speaker 5 (18:03):
It's the clients, Jeff car Robber Moore just don't do
no lines, don't do that talk those.

Speaker 8 (18:09):
She don't spend nobody talk those stations.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
World Why Jess World? Which mess? Talk on the Breakfast Club.
She's the coaching ship.

Speaker 17 (18:18):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody could get you to.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
See this time to set it off and just for
the record for people just joining us. Just has not
had the baby yet, No, she has it, but it
could happen any day at any date.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
That's right now.

Speaker 5 (18:33):
Now, do you want a piece of hip hop history?
You got a chance to own a piece of hip
hop history. That's because Damon Dash's one third steak in
Rockefeller Records is going up for auction later this month. Now,
United States Martiall Service will auction office thirty three point
three percent in the company to satisfy an eight hundred
and twenty three thousand dollars debt that he is old.

(18:53):
Now movie producer by the name of Josh Webber suit
him and one so he is old eight hundred and
twenty three thousand dollars and Dame Dash has to let
go of his steak in rocke Fella Records.

Speaker 6 (19:06):
Now.

Speaker 5 (19:06):
The auction is set for August twenty ninth at a
hotel in Manhattan, and the minimum bid will be one
point two million dollars, but bidders will be required to
pay two hundred and forty thousand dollars deposit just to bid. Now,
I'm sure, uh, you know, Jay z are Bigs, somebody's
gonna purchase that, right, and you're not gonna just let
that fall in into some just any old body's hands.

(19:26):
Well you could, and this is the reason why, Well,
you can't make any moves on your thirty three point
three percent steak because it has to be voted on,
and of course Jay and Biggs have probably vote the
way that they want to vote, so you really have
no voting rights. But not only that, after thirty five years,
artists are allowed to get their masters back, So that
means you will have this until about twenty thirty one,
and then twenty thirty one it goes back into the

(19:48):
hands of jay Z. So to spend one point two
million dollars, you might as well just wait till twenty
thirty one you get back anyway.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
No, but not necessarily. You still don't want it to
fall into the wrong hands because what who knows what
they could use it for over the next four or
five years. But you have to vote on it because
you only have a third of it. So whatever you
want to do, it has to be voted on it.

Speaker 5 (20:09):
Bigs and Jay owned he had the percentage of it, Okay, yeah,
but day you know, dame, he didn't have the eight
hundred and twenty three thousand dollars to pay the lawsuits,
so he has.

Speaker 15 (20:18):
To let that go.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
That's unfortunate, very unfortunate. All right, now, John B. You
know who John B is?

Speaker 5 (20:26):
Right, I'm disrespecting me. I'm just making surespect me on it.
If you don't know who John B is legendary R
and B singer in the nineties. This was his joint
in the nineties.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
People say, all.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Right, that was John B. Now, John B, it wasn't
even the joint joint. That was the joint joint.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
You're still down with the joint joint?

Speaker 3 (20:46):
No, that was the joint joint.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Are you still that was both crazy? They were still
down with Tupac with the joint joint. That was the joint.
That was the joint though.

Speaker 5 (20:54):
Yes, Well, John B was on the kN We Talk
R and B podcast and he spoke about his song
because those people are sampling it.

Speaker 15 (21:01):
And this is what he had to say.

Speaker 23 (21:03):
It does get sampled every year, you know by someone.
Last year was Gunna and Chloe Bailey. They put that
that that ratchet record out. I couldn't stand and I
wish they never did. And actually never got my rights
to do that record either. So we got a'm gonna
we gotta holler about that. That's just some business we

(21:24):
gotta handle. But yeah, I mean, you know what, it's all,
it's all a compliment to what we did.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
He said he never got the what from him, never
got the Clarence must not be your record?

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Jump.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Well, this is gonna and Chloe Bailey's version of it.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
Listen to what people say.

Speaker 19 (21:41):
I know.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
Your mind has Judy.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
Well, he didn't like that too much.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Somebody had to clear it, and whoever cleared it was
clearly on. I'm just saying, I mean to put it
out to sell.

Speaker 5 (21:58):
Yes, it has to be cleared, and it's not an independence,
it's a real label, so they would definitely have to
clear it. But he also talks about justin Timberlake and
how he feels about justin Timberlake.

Speaker 23 (22:06):
Everyone starts with an influence. Everyone starts with the influence,
whether you admit it or not. You know, yeah, I mean,
you know, look at justin Timberlake. He wouldn't be anywhere
if it wasn't for me.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
No, I'm just playing.

Speaker 23 (22:20):
I'm sorry, but that new single, though, is trash and
I'm not feeling this music at all.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
I'm dropping the clutheb john Bee what Johnny john Be?
Don't care at this point, john he is a o G. Okay,
He's earned the right to say everything that he's saying
right now. And if he thinks that the single is
trash is trash, it might be. I don't even know
what he's talking about. What's song you're talking about.

Speaker 6 (22:39):
I hear it.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
I hate it Justin Timberlake's single I hear it either.

Speaker 5 (22:42):
So it might be but in Justin Timberlake news, Justin
Timberlake he doesn't have a license anymore. That's because the
judge actually revoked his driving privileges.

Speaker 24 (22:51):
Justin Timberlake arranged for a second time, this time the
pop star appearing via video conference from Europe, where he
has been on tour. He was called but sirius and
only said yes, your honor a few times. The ten
time Grammy Wrinner pleaded not guilty to the DWI charge
he got back in June for allegedly driving drunk in
the Hamptons.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
In court Friday morning.

Speaker 24 (23:12):
The judge suspending the singer's driver's license in the state
of New York until the matter is resolved, citing he
refused to take a breathalyzer the day of his arrest.
His attorney at Burke withdrew his motion to dismiss the
case because if the case stood, Timberlake could face the
possibility of being re arrested.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
Yeah, so now Justin Timberlake does not have his license
until he goes back to court and we'll see what happens.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
Now you can afford to drive it, he'll be fine.
That's what he should have had to begin with, and
he wouldn't have had the duy.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
That's right now.

Speaker 5 (23:42):
Lastly, could you imagine buying a call and it was
once owned by cash money records. I mean, when you
purchase a call, we never know who really owned the car.

Speaker 6 (23:50):
Right.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
Well, in this case, when a guy purchased a call,
he was looking and found a notebook.

Speaker 5 (23:55):
When he opened up this notebook, it just happened to
be Little Wayne's old lyric note book. Okay, that's amazing,
So he decided to sell it. In twenty nineteen, he
tried to sell it for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,
but Little Wayne's legal team issued a cease and desistclaiming
they had no right to sell his lyrics. They went
back in court, but allegedly Little Wayne's attorneys never responded

(24:16):
in the court, so the judge actually favored for the
person that purchased the car.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
So now he's selling that notebook for five million dollars.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
I guess I just I mean, I'm just trying to
figure out what is what is the value in these things.
I mean, I know what type of value they have
when you're a hip hop head, But how does Little
Wayne's notebook appreciate with value over time if you're just
buying it for an investment.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
That's what I'm trying to figure out.

Speaker 5 (24:40):
Well, I would, I would think it should go into
some type of hip hop museum or But how much
is that worth?

Speaker 3 (24:45):
I don't know, that's my point.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Five million dollars.

Speaker 5 (24:49):
I mean, because people spend all that money on somebody's guitar,
somebody's first outfit that they weren't on a concert, So
I mean that would be in the same.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Once again, what is that worth? That's what I'm about.

Speaker 3 (24:58):
Because people buy it all the time. Time people buy
these items. All the times that.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
They buy it don't mean it's worth something in the
long run. Now, that's all I'm saying. Do these things
appreciate with value? Can you pass these things on to
your kids in the future and say, hey, this is
a this is an asset that's actually worth something.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
I think you can.

Speaker 5 (25:13):
I mean, especially Lila Wayne being one of the greatest
rappers of all times. I mean, you look at some
of the artifacts and things for Michael Jackson.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Give me an example. Tell me somebody whose notebook out
there that has lyrics in it that is worth something.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
I'm asking.

Speaker 5 (25:26):
I don't know, I don't know notebook, But I mean,
you look at Tupac's jewelry that sold for way over
but that he paid for it.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
But people that buy it are actual hip hop heads,
is what I'm saying. You know what I'm saying, And
that's different. A ring is different than you know, the
ring that Drake bought is different than a notebook full
of lyrics.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
That's the case.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
I can start writing lyrics now and tell y'all that
this was you know, jay Z from nineteen ninety six
or somebody, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Like, you can make anything up, That's all I'm saying. Well,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (25:52):
If you want to purchase that notebook, you can.

Speaker 5 (25:54):
It's going up for five million dollars in the company
that's selling this moments in time. So if you got
five and you want to spend it on little Wayne's notebook.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Go ahead. And that is just with the mess or
Jess's mess.

Speaker 15 (26:05):
All right.

Speaker 3 (26:06):
Now, when we come back, we got front page news.

Speaker 5 (26:07):
Morgan will be joining us, and then Polo G We'll
be sitting down with us and don't go anywhere.

Speaker 3 (26:11):
It's the breakfast club. Good morning, Wao, You're like's end
to the breakfast club.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
Good morning.

Speaker 5 (26:17):
Everybody's DJ env Jess hilarious, Charlamage the guy. We are
the breakfast club. Let's get back in some front page
news something.

Speaker 7 (26:26):
Yeah, I'm gonna tell you what's up this conversation about
Vice President Kamala Harris's race, ethnicity.

Speaker 8 (26:32):
It's ongoing.

Speaker 7 (26:33):
So Republicans are defending Donald Trump's comments questioning Kamala Harris's race.

Speaker 8 (26:38):
In an interview with ABC's This Week, Florida.

Speaker 7 (26:41):
Congressman Byron Donald's called it a phony controversy, but went
on to say her presidential campaign is now talking much
more about her black identity.

Speaker 8 (26:52):
Let's hear more from Byron Donalds, like.

Speaker 9 (26:54):
This is really a phony controversy. I don't really care.
Most people don't. But if we're gonna be accurate, Tamala
Harris went into the United States Senate, it was ap
that said she was the first Indian American United States senator.
It was actually played up a lot when she came
into the Senate. Now she's running nationally obviously, the campaign
has shifted. They're talking much more about about her father's

(27:15):
heritage and her black identity.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
I've never seen I've never seen the Vice president not
called Indian. I've never seen her not called black. I've
never seen her not called a woman. Every single time,
you know, they talk about her being the first something,
they named those three things.

Speaker 5 (27:30):
Yeah, I mean, but it is true, she was the
first Indian and you know whatever. But yeah, she talks, Yeah,
she's all all of those.

Speaker 8 (27:39):
Yeah, I don't know why we have to box her
in to be one or the other.

Speaker 7 (27:43):
And even those clips from years ago from the breakfast
club here, you know that they are resurfacing where she
actually says she identifies as a black woman. But this week,
host George Stephanopolis press Donald's over why Republicans continued doubting
Harris's black identity, noting that she is l It's possible
to be both. Trump during an interview at the National

(28:04):
of All this comes from, you know, Trump's interview at
the National Association of Black Journalists in abj last week,
where he claimed Harris has turned black to quote him
after identifying as Indian four years now. Meanwhile, California Democratic
Senator Lafonza. Butler said the former president's comments were despicable,
and she made those comments while speaking to CNN State

(28:27):
of the Union.

Speaker 8 (28:27):
Let's hear from her.

Speaker 19 (28:28):
It is an insult, it is despicable. This is a
woman who is born in Oakland, California, who has declared
and lived proudly all of her identities her entire life.
Donald Trump wants to divide our country. The vice president
wants to unite us and to bring everyone forward, no

(28:49):
matter their identity. When he has the courage to meet
her on the debate stage, I'm sure she will take
care of any clear of any confusion that he has
about who.

Speaker 7 (29:00):
She is fair enough so, She said that Trump's rhetoric
distracts from the real problems facing the nation, and the
contrast between the two presidential candidates couldn't be clear. She adds,
this line of attack is the only card Trump can
play's been criticizing the VP.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
You agree, that's all he got And I just truly
believe discussing you know, the vice president's race is a
complete waste of time.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
Like I don't care about someone's identity. I care about
my interests and I.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
Look to see the issues that the candidate is pushing,
what's their agenda and does it aligned with my interest?

Speaker 1 (29:31):
Period?

Speaker 2 (29:32):
What folks should be discussing, what they should be focusing on,
is do we currently have a healthy enough democracy to
have a fair and free election, Because I believe in
November we're gonna see mass refusals to certify elections all
over the country from Republicans, And in light of all
the recent rulers that the Supreme Court has made, what
makes us believe that when all these election denies in
the Republican Party and Donald Trump challenged the results of

(29:53):
the election, if they lose, the Supreme Court won't overturn
the results.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
These are the things we need to be raising hell
at they only talk it.

Speaker 3 (29:59):
They only talk about two things.

Speaker 5 (30:00):
They talk about her race, they talk about who she
dated before, and her being a prosecutor. Those are the
only three things that they've been talking about. And it's
getting exhausted because she's talked about every last one of them.
So it's like, where were going from it?

Speaker 7 (30:10):
I ain't gonna hold you, Charlotte Mane, You low key
have been calling some things out and then they've been happening.

Speaker 8 (30:15):
So I got an eye on it.

Speaker 7 (30:18):
One thing that I could honestly say we are all
interested in is team USA. That's when we get real patriotic, right.
So over the weekend, Shakarrie Richardson, she came up with
a lot of people will say it's short, but I
see a medal secured in the one hundred. In the
women's one hundred meter final at the Paris Olympics on Saturday, Now,
Richardson was a last off the blocks and she secured
a silver medal after getting knocked off by Saint Lucia's

(30:39):
Julian Alfred. Again, as mentioned, that is Saint Lucia's first
gold medal ever, so shout out to them. Richardson said
that a strong start can make or break a race.
Let's hear more from Sha Carrie.

Speaker 19 (30:53):
Definitely been hounting in.

Speaker 25 (30:54):
I'm working on that first thirty, showing that if I
said up my first thirty properly, it'll carry on down
the rest of the track start to finish.

Speaker 7 (31:00):
My only mindset was.

Speaker 25 (31:01):
To execute, knowing that as long as I execute, the
race is going to handle itself.

Speaker 7 (31:04):
Now American Melissa Jefferson, she finished right behind Shakerri to
secure bronze for the United States. On the men's side
team USA, Noah Lyles. He is the fastest man in
the world. He won gold in the one hundred meter
race with a time of nine point seven to nine seconds,
just five one thousandths of a second ahead of Jamaica's
Kashane Thompson. Now, Lyles wins the first for US in

(31:28):
the event in twenty years now. He took to social
media with a message saying, quote, I have asthma, allergies, dyslexia,
add anxiety, and depression.

Speaker 8 (31:38):
But I will tell you that what.

Speaker 7 (31:40):
You have does not define what you can become. Shout
out to him on that. Also, women's basketball, there's so
much to talk about with the Olympics. Oh my goodness,
women's basketball team will finish off group stage play in
a matchup against Germany today. The US team is two
and zero so far in the Olympics with the blowout
wins over Japan and Belgium. Team USA met Germany on

(32:02):
July twenty third in an exhibition game and they beat
them eighty four to fifty seven.

Speaker 8 (32:06):
So hopefully that is the case again today.

Speaker 7 (32:09):
Make sure you guys stay looped on everything we have
right here on the free iHeartRadio app. iHeart is the
exclusive audio home of NBC's coverage for the twenty twenty
four Paris Olympics.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
Carrie Richardson's story is amazing, you know what I mean,
the fact that she was barred, you know, from competing
in twenty twenty one, and then you know, a few
years later she comes back and wins the silver.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
I can't do nothing but salute.

Speaker 7 (32:31):
That absolutely, absolutely, And then she had, you know, that
situation where she was waiting outside the gate, so between
her and I believe Jamaica Shelley and Fraser, Shelley and
Fraser actually withdrew from the race, while.

Speaker 8 (32:44):
I believe Sha Carrie was.

Speaker 7 (32:46):
She just waited and waited until they allowed her access
and that did impact her warm up time.

Speaker 8 (32:51):
But you know, hey, you can't keep our good Madden down.
All right, y'all. So that's your front page news. I'm
Morgan Wood.

Speaker 7 (32:58):
You can follow me on socials more than media, and
be sure to catch more news coverage at the Black
Information Network and bi in news dot Com.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
Talk to y'all later, all.

Speaker 5 (33:07):
Right now, when we come back, Polog will be joining us.
His new album, Hood Poet, comes out this Friday. August night,
so we're gonna kick it with him when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club, Good morning, the Breakfast Club. More
than everybody's DJ Envy, jes Larious, Charlamagne to God. We
are the Breakfast Club. We got our niece Nola with
us today. We got a special guest in the building,

(33:29):
Polo G.

Speaker 3 (33:29):
Welcome.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
How are you feeling, brother?

Speaker 3 (33:31):
All good new.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Album hood poet for sure. Yeah, we haven't seen you
in a while.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Have been a minute, It's been a minute.

Speaker 1 (33:39):
What took so long?

Speaker 6 (33:40):
You know?

Speaker 15 (33:41):
I went through a lot of things, you know, with
my music and just personally kept on derailing me. I'm
actually like glad I went through it a thing because
I feel like I wouldn't have got the product that
I ended up with. I feel like it's the best
one that I could have had. Any yet that I
would have dropped.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
What we going through was it like a writer is
black because you didn't know what sound you wanted or
label all leave bull You know what about personally? He said,
personally you the.

Speaker 26 (34:07):
Person get into the new music.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
Some girl over here the person When he said something,
I really.

Speaker 25 (34:18):
At first they told me like, oh, Polo G flipped
Michael Jackson record, and I'm like, not, Mike, like, how
dare you?

Speaker 26 (34:23):
But then I actually really liked the record.

Speaker 25 (34:25):
Were you not comfortable because it was a more like
mainstream poppy type record. I mean, it's still a rap.
But did you feel like you're going different from like
your core music?

Speaker 15 (34:35):
You're saying like with my new album, No, I feel
like I was definitely getting back to my core because,
like my project that I dropped beforehand, I was trying
to be more a little more mainstream versatile like on
this album. That's why I tiled the hood poet, because
I connected back with my roots.

Speaker 1 (34:51):
What's a hood poet to you?

Speaker 15 (34:52):
It's like a spokesperson for the neighborhood. You know, person's
really speaking on telling the everybody's story at once, not
just his.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
And you still relate to the hood pollo? I mean
you you live in large in LA. We see walking
down Rodale Drive. You got a big stack of money.
Feel free to pass Uncle hunting if.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
You want to. But I'm I'm just watching.

Speaker 6 (35:14):
It.

Speaker 1 (35:14):
Don't you dead? Don got it? But how can you
still relate to the hood.

Speaker 15 (35:17):
I mean, as where I come from, I'm always naturally
relate to them. You know, I still got close feelings
with like my family, friends, everybody that's still come from that.
You know, I'm really you know, I really come from
it for real, So I'm always.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
Yeah, you feel a bit of a survivor's remorse.

Speaker 15 (35:34):
I feel like I do at times though, like overdoing
for people, feeling like damn, I know I was in
that situation before.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
You to get caught up in the in the feeling
that you have to go back and help.

Speaker 15 (35:44):
Yeah, I feel like that's a good thing though, having
that type of obligation or feeling obligated.

Speaker 26 (35:49):
What is the acronym for hood poet?

Speaker 15 (35:52):
Uh stand for he overcame obstacles during pain or emotional trauma.

Speaker 1 (35:57):
So have you been exploring that, Like, have you been
talking to like a therapy it's a counselor just I.

Speaker 15 (36:02):
Tried a few times, Okay, Yeah, I do want to
make it more like a regular thing, but I have, like, yeah,
a few times.

Speaker 26 (36:10):
You got to find the right person. Therapist, y'all walk
in you you'll be consistent.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
Yeah, that's what I feel like it is because I
saw a couple of months ago you posted a Drugs
and Liquor helped me cope with pain, but I need
better vices. Have you found any better devices?

Speaker 1 (36:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (36:26):
I really laid back off drinking. I ain't been drinking
for a little while. I won't say that long. It's
probably been only like a month. But no, I be
really like working out a lot. I hope from time
to time, Like I like being by myself. I feel
like that's a decent vice if it hits more. But
like being by myself helped me think clearly.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
Now Hall of Fame was a number one album.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
Did you set any expectations for yourself when you was
working on hood Port after having so much success with
Hall of Fame?

Speaker 15 (36:52):
Definitely, like creating the album and coming off of my
album being so big at first, that was my main
primary goal, Like, after all the time how I went past,
my biggest thing was just getting the music out and
just making sure it was like the best music that
I could put together and really just trying to put
my soul into it. But definitely early on that was

(37:14):
probably one of my primary focuses. And then it's shifted.

Speaker 2 (37:18):
I thought a lot of people saying they was wondering
why Little TJ isn't feature on that album?

Speaker 15 (37:22):
Man, me and TJ. We'd just be having a lock
in Brody. He be gone like probably eighty percent of
the year, Like you can never really get a hold,
but that's still my boy.

Speaker 1 (37:32):
We locked in for y'all be doing records, y'all be
in the studio together, Like.

Speaker 15 (37:35):
Yeah, most of the time. That's like the only rapper
that I be in the studio with. Like most of
the time, I just sent a track back and forth,
like a lot of feature records that I had. I
probably had two or three songs with a little baby
before I ever met him in person. Me and TJ,
we always lock in. We got that chemistry together now, you.

Speaker 2 (37:53):
Know, while Goo Aad gave you a Donkey of the
Day because you were saying that you were one of
the only rappers with no security all this June. And
the reason I was so disappointed because I'm like, yo,
Polo has always been one of the small ones. You
walk around all the jury, you got money hanging out
your pocket. Why would you testing the streets in that way?

Speaker 15 (38:11):
Polar That wasn't like sometimes I feel like because I
ain't always out there, people don't know, like when I'm
trolling or just playing around something like that. One't no
like I'm trying to entice nobody or trying to pluff
my chest out. I was just really bored. I ain't
even like you know, I probably was four hours away
about the time I posted, you know, like, I ain't

(38:34):
no goofy like that. I'll just be trolling and that's
something I've been doing since the beginning of my career.
Is just like I'll be forgetting that I'm at a
bigger point in my career where people would take down
anything and you know, so that was definitely a learning
exper like something that I had to learn to just
be my mind for.

Speaker 25 (38:54):
What Hippo being your comeback project from the break that
you took. What is like the take way you want
people to get from this.

Speaker 15 (39:01):
That I really put my all into the project, that
I took my time with it, because this the longest
said ever took me to drop a project in my career.
Like I was on the cycle of dropping an album
every nine months in the beginning of my career. So like,
with taking so much time, it had to be the
best how I could create.

Speaker 3 (39:20):
Were you nervous doing this album because you said that
you wanted to stop your vices, whether it was drinking
or drugs. So without using vices during this or doing
that where you're thinking that maybe your mind couldn't put
out an album, you couldn't rap without those vices, with
that a fear at all.

Speaker 15 (39:34):
Sometimes that's that's the thing, you know, Coming early on
into my career, like h like pills was my thing
a lot, and I made a lot of good songs
off the drugs. You would start thinking like, oh, that's
the only way I'm and then like you it's really
just a thing, a fine to yourself. No, I feel
like now at this point in my life, I make
my best music. Sob and how did you get off

(39:56):
those vices? How did you finally went off and say
I'm not doing this anymore? Was it a was it family?
Was it management? Or was it yourself? It's always myself.
It's definitely like dealing with the like mental problems that
come with it, Like you know, you know when you
drink too much and then it's like you're trying to
pour yourself out of that depression, all that darkness. Like
going through that and not wanting to be in that

(40:18):
space again is what really made me straight away from it.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
You think you're trying to escape something, because you know,
when I listen to a record like you know, barely
holding on and you like, you know, definite, definite ad
leave you with a chilled spine even though my spirit's down,
like I'm okay, I feel fine. Shots from that still
nine and from that hillside, I'm from the trenches where
they just murder just to kill time. Like it feels
like you feel like you're dealing with some real dark

(40:42):
stuff on this albums. You feel like you were doing
all that just to try to escape.

Speaker 15 (40:45):
For show, for sure, I feel like that's it go
hand in hand with the the just the rapper lifestyle too.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
While you may.

Speaker 15 (40:52):
Indulge in certain things, but I definitely feel like it's
an escape thing sometimes too.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Yeah, because on turning back you say I need therapy,
Like you literally say that, So you're clearly self.

Speaker 1 (41:04):
Aware that there's something going on.

Speaker 2 (41:05):
Yeah, for sure, And even now having am even talking
to you now, I feel like mentally you might be
somewhere else.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
You got a lot on your.

Speaker 15 (41:12):
Mind always though, that's that's that's, that's just me.

Speaker 2 (41:15):
Does it make these press runs even more difficult because
you know you got to go out here and promote
the album, but then you're dealing with real life issues
as well.

Speaker 15 (41:21):
Press runs gonna be a little difficult to me because
I ain't really like a person that like to talk,
so we know.

Speaker 25 (41:29):
Also on the turning back you talk about how you
gave your heart to the streets and got nothing in return.

Speaker 26 (41:34):
Where would you say your heart is now?

Speaker 15 (41:37):
My heart right now is with my family, my son.
I love my son a whole lot, and that's why
I want I wouldn't say shift my focus, but like
be more attentive in that area.

Speaker 2 (41:48):
Little man five, Okay, okay, high fatherhood has changed you
because you you young pul So he was a young pop.

Speaker 15 (41:54):
Yeah, it changed me for the better. For sure. It'd
be teaching me patience. I'm a very impatient person, but
dealing with my son helped me learn to be more
patient and just see the beauty and life for real.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
All Right, we got more with Polo g when we
come back, don't move.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning, everybody is cj
NV just hilarious. Charlomagne the God.

Speaker 5 (42:17):
We are the Breakfast Club now that it's hanging with
us today and we got a special guest with kicking
it with Polo g.

Speaker 1 (42:22):
Charlomagne.

Speaker 2 (42:23):
I don't want to stay on the turning back record
because you talk about your brother and you said I
missed my Broski through it all, you was dead for me,
How is his absence affecting you on a day to
day basis and just what he's going through because he's
he was charged with murder.

Speaker 6 (42:36):
Er.

Speaker 15 (42:37):
I wasn't even talk talking about my my blood brother.
I was talking about my homie b Money, who passed
away in twenty twenty one. Oh wow, okay, but definitely
my little brother. You know, we was tight, we was close,
so I speak to him. I'll be missing him a
lot though. That's like that was my dog.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
I mean, that is my dog and letter from my pops.

Speaker 25 (42:57):
You're talking about how you don't want to let your
son do like that is one of your biggest fears.

Speaker 26 (43:01):
But I feel like, you know you did have your kid.
Once you got money, you up.

Speaker 8 (43:06):
What is the fear of that?

Speaker 26 (43:07):
You can take care of yourself, You can take care
of your family.

Speaker 15 (43:10):
I just know how important it was to me, like
for my father to be up for me, and definitely
just being enough for my son important thing for me
because I know how much account to put that time
in and my pops stuff for me, but everything every
little point in my life, making sure we did our homework,
something simple at hanging your jacket up, playing catch with

(43:32):
you in the backyard, Like that's things a kid gonna
remember more than me being able to pay for anything
for my son.

Speaker 1 (43:37):
Yeah, so it's important for you to give your dad
his flowers.

Speaker 25 (43:40):
Well for sure, that's him on the record too. Yeah
that's cool.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
What else did you learn from your pops?

Speaker 2 (43:47):
Like I really want to know, like how how to
have a father figure keep you from really, you know,
succumbing to the screens of Chicago.

Speaker 15 (43:52):
My pops he a really really wise person.

Speaker 6 (43:55):
You know.

Speaker 15 (43:56):
He always gonna give you the pros or cons to
any situation. Something body that's real easy to talk to.
I feel like he kept me away from or out
of trouble a lot of times, a lot of times,
you know, or just being that voice or reason you know.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
When you're having a conversation with your son or interactions
with your son, what do you do that you're like, damn,
that was my pop.

Speaker 1 (44:16):
Pop did this for me.

Speaker 15 (44:17):
Like it's a lot of things I do. I feel
like it's similar to my pop. We almost like the
same person. I see that, and damn, I think I do.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
What's it?

Speaker 2 (44:26):
What's your relationship now with your with your mother? Station
mad because she wasn't your manager.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
She's not no more.

Speaker 15 (44:31):
No, she's not my mona no more. You know that's
my my my mom always loved my mama. You just
probably ain't in the best space right now on communicating terms,
but that's that's my old I'm always.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
And how did you find your mom? How did that
conversation that had to be a tough one?

Speaker 25 (44:46):
It was just a mutual thing, you know, it was
wasn't really Michael and Joe, Janet and Joe.

Speaker 3 (44:52):
Got to be a conversation because that's moms like hard
for you though you do, like do y'all still communicate now?

Speaker 15 (45:00):
Not often, you know, but it's still communication there. It's
just not like how it used to be. But I
feel like that's just a rough patch in our relationship
that to get back to where it was.

Speaker 2 (45:10):
When you see family public issues spill over the social media,
like you know, everybody saw the situation between your mom
and your sister, you intervene or do you let them
work that up?

Speaker 15 (45:20):
For sure. I'm always intervening. It's like I don't want
to see nothing like that. I'm always trying to get
in between it before it go too far.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Too far.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
It was fighting and shooting Chicago, Chicago. I might have
to start ad in Chicago with Florida. He said, before
it go too far, was fighting and shooting. That's normal Chicago.

Speaker 26 (45:40):
People, definitely normal.

Speaker 1 (45:48):
Is it even something that can be worked out? You think?

Speaker 15 (45:50):
Yeah, for sure? We family. I mean, I feel like,
cuss who I am? That's it's just being broadcasted more
and like everybody gonna talk about every everybody family go
through Like that's accustom too.

Speaker 5 (46:03):
I'm like, minus the shooting, that's normal to him, y'all.
And how do you intervene because you can't pick a side.
It's like you almost got to just try to put
them both in the room and be like, let's have
this conversation.

Speaker 15 (46:15):
Yeah, that's that's definitely the angle to take. Because my
sister a pretty hair strong person, she had mother child.

Speaker 1 (46:21):
You know, you definitely got to be Have you tried
that yet?

Speaker 3 (46:24):
Have you tried to have the work it out on
the phone first?

Speaker 5 (46:26):
Of course, because you don't want him in the room yet,
but to try to get their feelings out and squash
because they mom and daughters.

Speaker 15 (46:32):
It's something that I want to get around to. But
I'm definitely letting them breathe a little bit more right now.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
I just like, I just like the energy to y'all.
Bro I always liked the capitalize. I liked watching y'all
as a family unit.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
You know what I'm saying. I just thought that was dope.
Mom helped managing the rapper son. I just thought that
was dope.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Now, you mentioned you grew anti social and you said
it's all it's y'all's fault.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
Who is y'all?

Speaker 15 (46:54):
I ran through a lot of different friends or just
like people I was associated with, and it's like I
always go through a phase of having to cut off
a lot of different people. A lot of people came
and went in my life. Felt like that keep me
even more stamped office than I was before.

Speaker 25 (47:12):
To be fair, you also are evolving as an artist
and then you know in personal life and then like
public persona too. So some people are just there to
get you to your next phase. But I want to
talk about your creative process within this project. Can you
describe because you.

Speaker 26 (47:29):
Said this is the longest you know that it took
for you to put this together?

Speaker 6 (47:33):
What was it? Like?

Speaker 26 (47:34):
Did you create on beat?

Speaker 17 (47:35):
You know?

Speaker 26 (47:36):
Was it more like poems because it is a hood poet?

Speaker 6 (47:39):
Like? What was that?

Speaker 15 (47:40):
I was locked in with a producer. I was locked
in with south Side on Ato a Mafia Fire, And
we got locked in for like two months and were
we made like a large bulk of the album in
them two months, like probably like let's say eight or
nine of the eighteen songs that's on theh So we
was just building that chemistry and really went from there.

Speaker 26 (48:00):
Who else was on the project besides a way?

Speaker 15 (48:02):
He got a he got a team of producers. Smart
is one of his producers that I work real closely with.
And at l Jacob on there, I got os from
Chicago he on there. I got a lot of producers
on there.

Speaker 26 (48:15):
Check the credits. Check the credits.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
Who did we a shoot? Uh?

Speaker 9 (48:18):
That was?

Speaker 6 (48:19):
That was?

Speaker 3 (48:20):
That's how you pronounced it. I'm sure we are shoot.

Speaker 8 (48:22):
I'm sure that's but that is how it spelled.

Speaker 15 (48:25):
Shoot.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
I don't know because the shoot, I don't know what
that was. We shoot it like, I don't know what
that was.

Speaker 15 (48:36):
I put like, that's how I talked. I didn't want
to put will I think that would have sounded weird
or it would have been a weird title.

Speaker 1 (48:43):
That's in the hook we got the guns will shoot. No,
I ain't worried about what he'll do.

Speaker 5 (48:47):
You ever nervous about that scene? What's going on with
young thug put stuff like that? Rep like damn.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
I wonder if they could ever use this against me
at any time.

Speaker 15 (48:53):
I'm not word because I'm not doing nothing.

Speaker 18 (48:57):
Well.

Speaker 2 (48:57):
You did get arrested back in April, the loaded firearm
in the hotel room. I don't know if it was yours,
but all right, got you, Okay, okay, Anti.

Speaker 6 (49:10):
Guys.

Speaker 1 (49:11):
See, here's the thing for coming from the street.

Speaker 12 (49:13):
You are.

Speaker 2 (49:14):
You are a legitimate businessman. Now, so if it's not yours,
I feel like it's okay to say it's not mine.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
I do not have to say who it is, but
it ain't mine.

Speaker 15 (49:23):
Polo G.

Speaker 3 (49:24):
A counselor will say, don't say anything until the courtation.

Speaker 1 (49:28):
We got more with Polo G. When we come back.

Speaker 5 (49:30):
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning everybody in the
j n V. Jess hilarious, Charlamagne, the guy we are
the Breakfast Club. Now it's hanging with us this morning
as we kick with Polo G.

Speaker 1 (49:40):
Charlamagne.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
Did you see the discussion that Black TV was having
what he was talking about he got concerns about you
because he feels like you might have one foot in
the street still, What are your thoughts about people who
have those concerns?

Speaker 15 (49:51):
Like I said, I think they shouldn't have that concern
at all because I'm not doing I go home after
I come from the studio and I don't really ain't
none too much going on my life. I'm just, you know,
I'm just a rapper.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
I feel like the brothers who survived the streets of Chicago,
they're literally like actual soldiers just because of everything that
they've experienced, the trauma or the PTSD and stuff. So
is it hard finding happiness now because you live a
great life, But is it hard actually being happy because
of all the traumas of your past and and things
you might still be dealing with that.

Speaker 15 (50:24):
I feel like I cope with it with that stuff
pretty well because it's like how we were saying earlier,
it is something that becomes regular, Like I don't really
be too told off by like death, or nothing no
more so, I be really able to accept a lot
of that stuff now, But I do have those moments
of survivors with more so, just like my trauma's catching

(50:44):
up to me sometimes. But I feel like, all in all,
I cope with it.

Speaker 18 (50:49):
Well.

Speaker 15 (50:50):
I mean I got advice that I didn't really touch
on his music though, Like I'm always hid that in
my pocket to be able to deal with my problem.

Speaker 2 (50:57):
Are you accepting of it and just numb to it?
That's a difference, right, like learning to accept something and
just be a numb to it a little bit of both.

Speaker 25 (51:04):
You said music is one of your vices. What are
some of the things you listen to to cope? Like
artists or even decades.

Speaker 15 (51:11):
I like all types of music. I'm always on YouTube.
I like R and B music or just like I
wouldn't even consider it arm because like what what category
like sexy drill? All on? That's like rap?

Speaker 1 (51:25):
What the hell of sexy drill?

Speaker 26 (51:27):
It's R and B?

Speaker 15 (51:28):
But drill because I like that Kailani song.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
Yeah, yeah, I'm saying they call it sexy drill? Why
because you're killing literally.

Speaker 1 (51:43):
Drill beat.

Speaker 3 (51:44):
I talked to some times that woman.

Speaker 26 (51:47):
It's called sexy drill. We didn't name it. Men named it.

Speaker 1 (51:50):
You was with a man, but you're always set in
the mood.

Speaker 26 (51:54):
No, do not put that on.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
What were you set the seconty drill?

Speaker 6 (52:03):
No not.

Speaker 15 (52:04):
I really don't really like that term like that, but
I just rock with it.

Speaker 1 (52:09):
Yeah, I like Glad. Also, you face timed him. You
said you want to end up with face to face?

Speaker 12 (52:15):
Like what?

Speaker 17 (52:16):
What?

Speaker 1 (52:16):
Where did all that start from?

Speaker 6 (52:17):
Like? What is this?

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Because you call.

Speaker 15 (52:20):
Blad man? It was really a situation where I came
across him and at having to sit down, and my
name came up, and Blad had an issue with me
making a tweet responding to a tweet that somebody made
about him being the police. This before I ever seen

(52:41):
the interview about him being the police and I and
I said some long lines like I agree, you know,
and then we end up seeing each other in the bank.
He chopped it up with me. I really left it alone.
I ain't never say nothing about him since, but like
the way he was talking in an interview with actors
like he was I don't know, like he still felt
the way and he's saying that he that I didn't

(53:02):
never respond to him for an interview, and then it
was like he just fake got to going in and
I didn't really understand that from a person who had
an issue with me speaking on him publicly. So that's
really where my issue came from. And I trying, I'm
trying to talk to him like a man. It ain't
really no more to it. But then he tried to
remind me he fifty You should have known that before
he's speaking on me though.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Y'all had an actual meeting.

Speaker 15 (53:29):
No, he don't want Yeah, yeah, he I ran into
him at the bank, so.

Speaker 5 (53:34):
You pulled up on him, but he said, hey, I'm
glad or DoD. You know it was him as soon
as you see him, nobody I.

Speaker 15 (53:39):
Was in the line at the bank. He just like
during COVID time, he got his mask on. But I'm like,
you know, I looked back at him and I smiled.
That's when he was willing to engage in conversation, I guess.
And we really it wasn't really nothing. We just chopped
it up about like why he felt the way you said.

Speaker 2 (53:57):
You also said in the song you can't relapse off
these all, right, Peter Juice, you really took your last
perk with juice because you said that in the real
you said, I popped my last one with you.

Speaker 15 (54:05):
Yeah. Yeah, I haven't did that since really, how long
was it like five years ago?

Speaker 2 (54:11):
Okay, okay, you remember that last experience outside of just
the drugs.

Speaker 15 (54:15):
Yeah, I remember my last time just kicking it with juice. Period.
He used to stay fifteen minutes away from me, so
I pulled up on I used to pull up on
him a lot of time. He had hit me like, yo, bro,
just pull up on me today. We don't. We didn't
record music a lot of those times. I just we
were just kicking it together. So that was one of
those days.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
What did juice mean too? The city?

Speaker 15 (54:35):
A lot of juice man? He like, no, he a
rock star, Like he's different. He really separated itself from
the rest of the pact. Feel like he definitely won
him a kind A lot of people appreciate him AND's
and it's like a dope thing. Like people coming from
a lot of different upbringings that's able to like support
a rock with juice because like some of his music,
you would hear it and you wouldn't naturally think people

(54:57):
in the hood to play this, but like people everybody juice.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
Now you also got the you got a September eighteenth
reference on the album. Is that related to your your
your late friend who?

Speaker 15 (55:09):
Yeah, that's one of my other homies though homie. His
name was Ti Gucci. He passed away. He passed away.
I was fifteen, he was sixteen.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
He got killed her.

Speaker 15 (55:18):
Yeah, he got killed.

Speaker 1 (55:19):
Yeah, damn that much deafinite? Have you experienced you even
know what grief feels like.

Speaker 15 (55:24):
I know what grief feel like. I went, I went.
I dealt with death closely a lot, since I was
like a lookle kid, like my first encounter with death
for real or like a murder. My uncle died in
the shootout. I was like nine years old. That was
like my first real experience dealing with that and ever
since then, that's like what I've been going through.

Speaker 3 (55:45):
But you don't feel pain anymore. It's just this feels
natural now.

Speaker 15 (55:48):
I mean, I definitely feel pain still, I'm a human,
but I just don't really read too much into it
because I know no people live in certain lives.

Speaker 1 (55:56):
This will come with What do you feel your duty
is to your community?

Speaker 2 (56:01):
Is it to make records like we are shoot or
is it to say you know what I got to
say something to help the next generation be better.

Speaker 15 (56:07):
I definitely in my music, I definitely dabble between the two.
But if you know, Polo g A is an artist,
like most of the time, I'm speaking on the problems
or like telling you how this is messed up, or
that I could connect with you on the level I've
been through something too. I feel like my main priority though,
and my community specifically, is just getting a hold of
the kids. You know, like everbody who've been in the

(56:29):
streets or have their own path and they adults like
it's hard to patch them relationships up, Like you know,
people pushing peace now and trying to patch them, but
like everybody ain't gonna hide that same mindset. It's the
best thing to do is go get a hold of
the youth before they get too deep into some type
of issue.

Speaker 2 (56:48):
Once once once bodies start dropping, it's hard to just
go back and she like, yeah, okay, we're good now.

Speaker 1 (56:53):
Yeah, yeah, I totally get it.

Speaker 3 (56:55):
Let's get into a joint off the album What's one?

Speaker 1 (56:57):
What's the single?

Speaker 15 (56:58):
We a shoot.

Speaker 6 (57:05):
Lord?

Speaker 3 (57:06):
All right, Lord, let's get it on.

Speaker 1 (57:07):
We will shoot with the accent, I said, we will
shoot with the accent chart.

Speaker 3 (57:14):
We'll shoot Jamaica. They just make it Jamaica. We will shoot.
We appreciate you for joining us, brother.

Speaker 15 (57:19):
I appreciate you.

Speaker 3 (57:20):
It's the breakfast of the morning.

Speaker 5 (57:21):
Let's get to uh, let's get to Jess with the
mess you know, Justice on maternity leave. No she did
not have the baby yet.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
But no, she didn't have a baby.

Speaker 3 (57:27):
She's out and let's get to just with the.

Speaker 1 (57:30):
Mess yous as real.

Speaker 23 (57:32):
Jeff Robbing Moore just don't do no lines, don't do
that talky talk.

Speaker 1 (57:40):
Why Jess world wid talk on the Breakfast Club. She's
the coaches ship.

Speaker 17 (57:46):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody.

Speaker 1 (57:51):
Could get you to see. That's time to set it off.

Speaker 3 (57:54):
Drake is the Malcolm X of white people.

Speaker 2 (57:57):
That sounds about right to me. I don't know why,
but I like the way that sounds. No stopping let
me white people. Let me tell you where this came from.
So DJ Mustard released the album last week. DJ Mustard's
Faith of Mustard seed Well Academics posted that he sold
eighteen thousand units in the first week with a fire
real Mooji and Mustard thought he was playing with him.
So Mustard responded on Instagram or tweets, whatever, which one

(58:20):
was on social media. He said, album sales are a
form of white supremacies. You iiggas racist. Then he said,
these Drake bots are the nation of Drislom. The bots
are trying to fade me. I'm not mad. I'm at
my son's basketball game. They were souping and they just won.
I figured I fade some bots. I'm still grateful. A
bot could never make me ungrateful. Then he says Drake

(58:42):
is the Malcolm X of white people and academics. Make
sure you post Gordo season first week since Drake thought
he did a thing by making him drop on the
same day.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
He's saying that, like, uh like that. He's like he's
that he's that much of a hero the white people.

Speaker 2 (58:55):
That's what he's saying. Yes, okay, yes, I get what
you said. I guess that's what my st meant by it.
But shouldn't we stop saying like record sales like like,
isn't eighteen thousand sales.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
Like I don't know, hundreds of millions of screams?

Speaker 2 (59:09):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (59:09):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (59:10):
Like shouldn't that how it shouldn't it be worded different nowadays,
shouldn't it be like he had such and such amount
of screams?

Speaker 6 (59:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (59:17):
But the bad thing about how many units you're selling
your first week, it really doesn't matter because, like you said,
it streams. If a record continues to stream, it's considered
more and more and more and more sales. So I
don't know why they why people still care about it
so much, but people definitely do. Ice By she did
twenty thousand last week and she had major records, So

(59:37):
I mean, it really doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (59:38):
That translates to how many millions of screams? Like hundreds
of millions of screams?

Speaker 1 (59:42):
Correct, So yeah, I mean I don't know. Yeah, thank
god I'm not in the record business.

Speaker 5 (59:46):
So that was DJ Musset. Now the game he talks
about being old father and one reason I say old father.
He appeared on the Tackles and Trauma podcast and he
was talking to fact that he's currently forty four and
is expecting a child.

Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
This is what you have to say.

Speaker 26 (01:00:01):
Then I heard you're expecting kids a twins?

Speaker 27 (01:00:04):
Twins is yeah, you got to stay off the internet, right, Yeah,
I'm expecting one one child.

Speaker 26 (01:00:10):
Congratulations, thank you?

Speaker 8 (01:00:11):
How do you feel about that.

Speaker 27 (01:00:13):
I think about it in terms of like years, right,
Like I'm forty four, so when my new child is
twenty one, i'll be sixty five, right, And that seems
kind of old until you start thinking about who's sixty
five now? But I think at the end of the day,
it's new life. It's going to be a different parenting
experience for when.

Speaker 1 (01:00:32):
I was younger.

Speaker 27 (01:00:33):
So when I was younger, I was still hard headed
in the streets, and I don't know how I even
made it to this point in my life doing the
things that I was doing. It'll just be interesting to
a parent at this age.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
That's exactly how I look at it, because you know,
I had, let me see, Yeah, forty four, I got
a two year old.

Speaker 1 (01:00:50):
Yeah I'm forty six.

Speaker 3 (01:00:51):
Now I got a two year old.

Speaker 2 (01:00:52):
Mine'll be three November, and I think just like that,
I think, Okay, in twenty years, she'll be twenty two
and I'll bet six. Yeah, Steve Harobby sixty seven, I'm good. Yeah, Okay,
that's the way I look at it. But you know
I look at it.

Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
Game has three kids.

Speaker 5 (01:01:07):
He has a thirteen year old, a sixteen year old,
and a twenty year old so yeah, but that's how
it is. But I mean the way he raises the
children to be a lot different because of course, like
he said, when he was younger, he was dumb, mighte
it was a lot of things he didn't know. I'm
sure he didn't have patience. And now with this this,
this this new young one, it'll be a lot different
than he's rumored to be having a child with Evelyn
less Ada's daughter right now. He also talks about that lawsuit,

(01:01:30):
which you know Game has to pay. I think it
was like eight million dollars he lost. Well, he talks
about that lawsuit as well.

Speaker 27 (01:01:35):
And I got all kind of mother suing falsely and
doing this and doing that and all that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
But it's but it's cool. I don't even harbor no
hate towards her. Just what is the resolution? Because I
can I just can't. Why didn't you go to the
court then?

Speaker 27 (01:01:48):
Why was a good party? So I had an orthodonic surgery.
I thought that that would be, you know, that would suffice,
but it didn't. They could have just pushed it a week,
but they didn't.

Speaker 26 (01:01:58):
Why would you chance that?

Speaker 27 (01:01:59):
Because I think I was younger, this is ten years ago.
All the pills if we've exhausted all that and at
the end of the day, man like, in her heart
of heart, she knows that I didn't violate her, and
she knows how much she was like on me, and
I still wasn't giving what it was she wanted to grific.

Speaker 15 (01:02:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
The sad thing about that is that's why we have attorneys,
and his attorneys should have went to that call day
and asked to get it pushed back or whatever it
may be, especially if he was having orthodontic surgery you
know now. Also Game said in a post, he said,
any igga that smokes hookah in twenty twenty four can
jump up and land in the splits.

Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
So he said that, can you do it? Flit? Shut
up because you definitely smoke hookah. Shut up.

Speaker 2 (01:02:39):
Saucy Santana said she was gay. I'll never forget that
drop on the clue. Bota said, any man who smoke
coocka is gay. I was gay, and he's posted a
picture and you smoking a hookah? No, because you posted
and he reposted.

Speaker 1 (01:02:52):
How would I do something like that. I don't even
sound like that, and I would do everybody.

Speaker 5 (01:02:56):
Knows that's what you did, all right, now and lastly,
chapter fifty cent. You know we'll be in Treveport, Louisiana
this week. He's doing his humor in Harmony weekend and
we're bringing the car shows down here. So if you're
in the surrounding cities, make sure you pull up on
us all weekend long in Shreveport. But fifty wins, it
says a billion dollar lawsuit. So let me tell you
what happened.

Speaker 17 (01:03:14):
Now.

Speaker 5 (01:03:14):
Judge Torres ruled in favor of fifty cent and a
one billion dollar lawsuit brought against him by former drug
kingpin Corey Ghost Holland. Now, Corey believes that the whole
Power series is based off of his life and was
suing for a billion dollars and the judge rule that no,
it's not true, it wasn't based on his life. So

(01:03:34):
fifty responded on Instagram, he said, full thought he was
ghost the f rong with these ninja's man.

Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
Laugh out loud. So fifty one that lawsuit so he
won't have to be paying any money.

Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
For that, Oh God bless and that is why would
he think he was ghost for real?

Speaker 6 (01:03:50):
Though?

Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
Like I got what did he see in that show
and made him say that's my life.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
Well, I guess his nickname is ghost, so maybe throw
it was based off his life.

Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
But man, ain't nothing about power, realistic, fantastic show. Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:04:03):
Anybody that was moving like that in real life would
have got caught a long time, a long time ago.

Speaker 15 (01:04:07):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
Tommy had the same call at the scene of every crime. Okay,
cut it.

Speaker 3 (01:04:12):
Out, so he lost that and fifty won't have to
pay that billion dollars.

Speaker 15 (01:04:18):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:04:19):
Now, when we come back, we got donkey today. Who
you give you a donkey?

Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
Two man, There's a police officer named Zachary Hyde who
needs to come to the front of the congregation this morning.
We'd like to have a word with him. Today's lesson
kids is about irony. Okay, okay, all.

Speaker 28 (01:04:32):
Right, we'll get to that next. It's the breakfast Club.
Good morning, the breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be
the same some donkey days, just sa himself, Charlotte, May
I never read them donkey other day, say it again,
arla an y.

Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
A donkey today from Monday, August fifth goes to an
Arizona police officer named Zachary Hyde. Now it's a teachable
moment in this story, and the teachable moment is simply
about irony. Life is too ironic, Okay. It takes sadness
to know what happiness is. Noise to appreciate silence, absence,

(01:05:20):
to value presence, Fergie singing the national anthem, to appreciate
Whitney Houston singing the national anthems, drive Vagina, to appreciate
that gush gush. I'm just trying to paint a picture
for you to let you know that life is ironic
and you will immediately understand the irony in the story
when you hear it. Let's go to AZ Family three
TV for the report.

Speaker 29 (01:05:39):
Please Tempee officer honored with the Hero Award at the
annual Mothers Against Drunk Driving banquet a month ago, was
just arrested for Dui. State troopers pulled over Officer Zachary
Hyde early Wednesday morning. He was off duty. He's on
admin leave now pending a full internal investigation.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
Hey, Officer Zachary Hide, a police officer honored by MAD
only to get caught driving under the influence after being honored.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Y'all know what MAD is right? The Mothers against Drunks Driving?

Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
Who fights hire sly to prevent drunk driving and support
victims of the reckless behavior we call driving drunk. You, Zachary,
were Officer Jeko when you got honored, but you became
Officer High when you got that eighty prof potion and
you're okay, Zachary got honored by MAD for.

Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
Keeping our roads safe, only to become part of the problem.

Speaker 2 (01:06:28):
You would think being honored by MAD would be a
badge of honor, Okay, you'd have some pride about that,
a reminder to uphold the very values you would recognize
for right. Nope, nope, nope. No, Officer High decided to
go from hero to hypocrite. And that's why I believe
he might have been set up. Now, I don't mean
he wasn't drunk. He was drunk, Okay, he was drinking

(01:06:49):
and he was driving. Okay, he chose to get inebriated,
he chose to drive. But I do believe Zachary was
set up. Okay, he got this award, and one of
the other officers or somebody in his life that no him,
was hating.

Speaker 1 (01:07:01):
Okay. They was like, hell, no, Zachary drinks more Makers
Marked than me.

Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
All right, he was just drunk driving last night and
he's getting rewarded by MAD this afternoon.

Speaker 1 (01:07:09):
Might have to drop a dime on that, ninja. Okay,
that's what I think happened, all right.

Speaker 2 (01:07:14):
Somebody couldn't stand the hypocrisy, so they lined them up,
and rightfully so, because nobody should be drinking and driving.

Speaker 1 (01:07:20):
All right, Zachary, you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:21):
Are a police officer, the person the public looks to
to protect and serve, the person the public looks to
for law enforcement and safety. You got it recognized by MAD,
the mother's against drunk driving.

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Zachary.

Speaker 2 (01:07:34):
That should be a moment of reflection for you, all right,
a moment to double down on the message you're supposed
to stand for. Okay, You're supposed to double down on
the message that you got honored for, but instead you
decided to make the kind of mistake that lands you
in the very headlines you're supposed to prevent. Okay, Damn, Zachary,
you know you had a rough day when you're honored
by MAD in the morning and end up needing their

(01:07:56):
services by the eatning. Okay, what if he was celebrating
being honored by MAD and that's why he got drunk
in the first place. What if he thought the award
came with a few free drink tickets. I'm just trying
to make sense to something that doesn't make sense. And
the reason that doesn't make sense is because it's just
simply the irony of life, Zachary. This is the kind
of behavior that not only tarnishes your own reputation, but

(01:08:17):
also discredits the efforts of organizations like MAD. And this
is just another reason why we the public don't trust
law enforcement. Okay, you had one job, Zachary, actually too.

Speaker 6 (01:08:27):
All right.

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
First, uphold the law. That's it, nothing more because you're
a police officer.

Speaker 2 (01:08:31):
Second, set a positive example, especially after being honored by MAD.
The mother gets drunk driving for apparently setting a good example.
And guess what you managed to fail at both jobs?

Speaker 6 (01:08:43):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:08:43):
They say life is all about balance, Well, Zachary was
trying to balance a MAD award in one hand and
a drink and the other.

Speaker 1 (01:08:49):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:08:49):
Imagine being the post a child for MAD one minute
and then turning right around and being their next case study.
I hope this serves as some type of wake up call,
because it's certainly a teachable moment. But not just for you, officer, Hide,
but for anyone who thinks they're above the law, are
immune to the consequences of their actions, because nobody is
above accountability.

Speaker 3 (01:09:09):
Please give Officer Zachary Hyde the biggest he hull tell
me about it, Jesus. All right, well, thank you for
that donkey today, sir, Yes, indeed.

Speaker 5 (01:09:23):
Now when we come back, let's open up the phone
lines eight hundred five eight five one oh five to one. Now,
during just with the Mess, we were reporting about the game,
and the game was talking about being an older parent.
He's forty four years old and he's about to have
a baby, and he says when he has this baby,
when the baby's twenty one, he'll be in his sixties.
So let's open up the phone lines eight hundred five
eight five one.

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
Oh five to one.

Speaker 5 (01:09:44):
These are for anybody that has older kids and younger kids.
How has your parents in change as an older parent
versus a younger parent?

Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
That is the question.

Speaker 3 (01:09:53):
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. I'll
start with you, Charlamane. We have a second. You know
you have a young child two years old, but and
you have an older child, So how has your parenting changed.
I don't know if my parents have changed. I've changed, right,
parents have changed a little bit. I have more patience now.

Speaker 1 (01:10:09):
I have no idea.

Speaker 2 (01:10:10):
Here's the thing, I wouldn't know if I got more
patience or not, because you know what my oldest is sixteen.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
You know what my head was at sixteen years ago.

Speaker 15 (01:10:20):
Neither do I.

Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
All right what I was on sixteen years ago, but
I was not on what I'm on now. So that's
what changes you change as an individual.

Speaker 5 (01:10:30):
But yeah, I would say, you know, definitely patience, but
also I think the knowledge that you know, like you said,
you've evolved so you're able to to to definitely instill
that in the younger kids. Was because the older kids
was kind of like there's no instruction manual. You're learning
as you go along, right, And you're still.

Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
Learning as you go along because you know, as the
kids get older, like you know, the two is way
different than sixteen.

Speaker 1 (01:10:51):
That's correct, way different.

Speaker 5 (01:10:55):
So even like myself, even with the trampoline, like my
kids the other day, was like, you're getting on the
trampoline with me.

Speaker 3 (01:11:00):
And when Madison was younger, I'd be in the trampoline
with them all day long.

Speaker 5 (01:11:03):
This time, I'm like, damn if I get on that
trampoline and that something happens, I ain't gonna heal fast
like I would heal before the hell's gonna happen to you.
On the trampoline, you can fall, you can hurt your legs.
You can the goddamn trasl the goddamn trampoline. I don't
want to take that risk. The trampoline bounces, yes, and
you could bounce and hurt yourself.

Speaker 2 (01:11:20):
How I don't know, But as trying to jump so
high and jump out of the trampoline and fall on
the ground.

Speaker 3 (01:11:25):
Now, but you do tricks like you do backflips, you
do front flips.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
No, I don't do that. Yeah, but that was Loder type.

Speaker 2 (01:11:30):
You just type to get hype off some more bobs
watching your Olympics and then go outside and try to
do the same thing.

Speaker 3 (01:11:35):
So there's a lot of people out there that I'm
sure I've tried.

Speaker 2 (01:11:38):
And you know, I like, you're on the trampoline, but popcorn,
I lay down and let the kids jump all around me, Okay,
Because at the same time, you see, you don't know
how to age. You don't know how to age gracefully.
I'm forty six years old. So when I go laid
out on the Tramplin. I'm catching your little nap, getting
my little nap time and letting them do popcorn at
the same time.

Speaker 5 (01:11:55):
So you quote unquote watching the kids, but you really
taking a nap from absolutely Oh boy.

Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
Eight hundred five five one oh five one.

Speaker 5 (01:12:01):
Let's discuss how has your parenting change as an older
parent verse being a younger parent.

Speaker 3 (01:12:05):
Let's talk about it. It's the breakfast logo Morning the
Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:12:12):
Steady, it's topic time.

Speaker 28 (01:12:17):
Eight hundred five five one five one to join into
the discussion with the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Morning, everybody.

Speaker 5 (01:12:24):
It's DJ Envy, just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. Now, Jess is on maternity leave. No,
she didn't have the baby yet, but she's on maternity
to leave.

Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
Baby be here soon any moment. That head is right
there by that cervix.

Speaker 5 (01:12:37):
But we're asking eight hundred five eight five one oh
five one. We're talking about being an older parent. Now,
this conversation actually comes from the game. He's just he
was talking about he's about to have a baby and
when the baby's twenty one, he'll be in the sixties.
So we're asking, how has your parenting change as an
older parent versus a younger parent eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. Now, uh, Like I said,

(01:13:00):
for myself, I definitely have more patience. And two, I
just don't have the energy. I ain't gonna sit there, lie,
I don't have the energy I used to have. It
it ain't the same. And of course we're getting older,
so we're never gonna have that same energy.

Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
I'm like, I definitely don't have the same patience. That's
one thing kids do not give me.

Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
My kids say, ain't nothing about the kids do not
teach me patients in no way, shape or form. Yeah,
I just think that you change as a person, you know,
Like I definitely feel like, you know, my two youngest
daughters are getting the best version of me, A more
present version.

Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
I guess that's what I would say. I'm a present version.
I'm more present.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
You know, sixteen years ago, I was ripping and running.
My mind was not where it needed to be in
regards to fatherhood and regards to you know, I wasn't
even married yet at the time. So yeah, I would
say I'm more present now. That's what age does for me.
It makes me a more present parent.

Speaker 5 (01:13:50):
Yeah, I definitely and you realize what's more important. Like
you said, when I was younger, I was chasing the bag,
I was chasing the check. I was, you know, trying
to make as much as I can. But now I'm
trying to chase being home. I'm trying to be home
as much as possible. I'm trying to spend you know,
every last moment with them because I enjoy it and
they enjoy it. But let's go to the phone lines
we have. NA, you're on the line, Nia, good morning, Hi,

(01:14:11):
it's Na.

Speaker 10 (01:14:14):
It's okay.

Speaker 21 (01:14:15):
So I am a younger parent, but I have experienced
being a younger mom, just because I had experiences like
my cousins having kids young and we just you know,
it takes a village. But the only thing that I
can say is that with time, you get more experience.
And I'm felous. I don't know a wht, but basically

(01:14:36):
I forgot what I said.

Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
We listen there, we got you, We hear you.

Speaker 16 (01:14:41):
Okay. So when you're an older parent, you know how
things get with time, things get wiser, you get wiser,
and you get more experience. So I think when you're
a older parent, you just take experiences of yourself and
you have more time socially and mentally when you are younger.

Speaker 21 (01:14:57):
You're trying to live your life also taking care as
a child. That's right, yep, it's different experiences of others
put into that child.

Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
So I just when there you you're more present, you
more present, you're more president older.

Speaker 1 (01:15:12):
Thank you now now.

Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
Also, I would say that even we're dealing with life,
it's a lot different.

Speaker 5 (01:15:17):
Like I don't remember watching the debates with Madison and Logan,
who is you know twenty two and twenty now? But
now my eleven year old, my ten year old, my
seven year old, we're sitting there watching the presidential debates
and explaining.

Speaker 3 (01:15:27):
And breaking it down what things actually mean.

Speaker 2 (01:15:29):
They watching because they want to watch, just because you
got it on TV. A little bit of both, a
little bit of both.

Speaker 15 (01:15:34):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 1 (01:15:35):
Helloa?

Speaker 6 (01:15:37):
This boys all Dre day all day every day.

Speaker 1 (01:15:40):
What's up Dre, Dre? Good morning?

Speaker 6 (01:15:42):
Hey, how'd you go?

Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
On fellas Google?

Speaker 5 (01:15:44):
We're talking about how is your parents and changed being
an older parent versus being a younger parent.

Speaker 6 (01:15:48):
So, man, I'm an old guy with a baby, you know,
fifty years old. I got a seven year old. I
had my first at nineteen. Uh, he's thirty one now,
so that's a big gap between the thirty one and
and everything changes. You know when you're old and you
got a baby, you're more patient, more established. Kind of

(01:16:08):
wish I had away hit I was old to have
all the kids, you know what I mean. You have
time to ppa, have time to play. One big difference
is it hurts when you play with the kid.

Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
It does.

Speaker 6 (01:16:19):
Just can't get out there and start playing money in
the middle of kickball and all of that.

Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
No more than who you telling that I was there yesterday,
because you know, you got to jump back and forth
because I.

Speaker 1 (01:16:27):
Got the two year old, the eight year old, and
the five year old.

Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
So the two year old might want to get pushed
on the bike, the eight year old want to shoot basketball.
So you got to do all of these different things,
and you're trying to get all of them to do
one thing at once, and they don't want to.

Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
Oh Lord, have.

Speaker 5 (01:16:42):
Mercy, say I'm with you, Dracy, a game of kickball.
Everybody want to play. Madison, who's twenty two, she would
want to play. The eleven year old ten to seven,
and the two year old's happy just rolling the ball.
So I get them all to play. I try to
get them all to play games that they enjoy.

Speaker 6 (01:16:54):
Yeah, but it hurts you though they do, they do,
they do? Yeah, the defeat all of that, it's been fun.
I can't play. It's definitely been fun being older, being
more established, being able to attend meeting and games and
things like that. So you know, it's a blessing and
a curse.

Speaker 5 (01:17:11):
Okay, thank you, Dre eight hundred five A five one
oh five one. If you're just joining us, we're talking
about parenting, right. Has it changed the fact that you're
an older parent versus younger parent. This conversation comes from
the game who has a baby on the way, but
he is in his forty so he's saying when his
child is twenty, he's gonna be in his sixty. So
he was talking about those different ways he parents. So

(01:17:32):
let's discuss eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
It's the Breakfast Clocal Morning.

Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
Day. If y'all talking about it, you know we talking
about it about it.

Speaker 15 (01:17:46):
It's topic times called eight hundred five eight five one
five one. To join into the discussion with the Breakfast.

Speaker 5 (01:17:51):
Club Morning Everybody, it's DJ Envy jess Hilary Charlamagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. Now, jess Hilaris is on
maternity leave. She didn't have the baby yet, but she's out,
she's resting, she's relaxing. The baby is almost here. But
if you're just joining us, we're asking eight hundred five
eighty five one oh five one. We're asking how has
your parenting changed as an older parent versus being a

(01:18:13):
younger parent. Now, this conversation comes from the game. We're
talking about that he has a baby on the way.
He's in his forties and by the time the baby's twenty,
he'll be in his sixties. So he said his whole
parenting change. So we're asking has that happened with you
as well?

Speaker 1 (01:18:26):
Hello? Who's this?

Speaker 21 (01:18:28):
How you doing this to me?

Speaker 20 (01:18:29):
I'm from Parentson, New Jersey. It's like I'm Tynerson, New Jersey.

Speaker 21 (01:18:33):
I just wanted to give the person.

Speaker 20 (01:18:35):
I just wanted to give the perspective from the kid's
point of view. I'm twenty six. My mom had me
at twenty one, and then when I was going to college,
she had another baby. So she has a seven year
old right now, she's forty seven. I just want to say,
my mom done got off. Yes, my mom, she done
got off. When I was a kid, it was none of.

Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
That got you get up, you gool?

Speaker 20 (01:18:56):
Now Yeah, well now when my little brother said he
don't want to go to school, it's farm right. My
mother used to throw water in my face to everything.

Speaker 30 (01:19:03):
Go to school.

Speaker 20 (01:19:04):
And now now everything is cool and nobody cares about him.
And I'll be trying to tell her like, you done
got stuffed now.

Speaker 12 (01:19:11):
Like.

Speaker 3 (01:19:13):
Because that's called abuse.

Speaker 5 (01:19:14):
Now, now, if you went to school and say, my
mom threw water in my face to wake me up,
that's abuse.

Speaker 20 (01:19:19):
Now, that's abused. But back then I wasn't even too
long ago.

Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
Well it was it was abuse back then too, it
was amused.

Speaker 20 (01:19:28):
I couldn't believe she did that to me. I was
in the fifth grade and now he in kindergarten. He
don't even got to go to school.

Speaker 5 (01:19:34):
Yeah, it was abuse back then, and your mother realized
it was abuse. That's why she doesn't done anymore. You
would have test dummy, sorry to me, I guess so.

Speaker 20 (01:19:41):
But I'll be trying to I'll be trying to lay
the law down to she even be telling me, I'll
go fuck to my baby like that, and it's worse
to see a boy and you know how moms are
with itcause.

Speaker 3 (01:19:50):
And that's another reason too, he's a mama's boy.

Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
But thank you to me, I definitely is thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:19:56):
I love you.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
Guys. Hello, who's this? This is the Hey, good morning,
Good morning.

Speaker 30 (01:20:02):
How are you.

Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
I'm doing well? Doing well.

Speaker 3 (01:20:04):
We're talking about being an older parent versus being a
younger parent. What's your thoughts.

Speaker 30 (01:20:08):
I think that I'm more ten of now I'm forty four.
I have a twenty five year old and a twenty
year old, and I have a two and a five
year old, So I think I'm more I'm more aware
that you know of everything that I learned with my
older kids. So I think I'm more there now, Okay,
and understand a lot more.

Speaker 3 (01:20:28):
So you're more present, you understand more.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
Yeah, definitely, Okay, that's all it's about. I mean, I
think that's the biggest thing. That you get older, you
just become a more present parent. Absolutely, salute to everybody
who was present from the beginning. Sorry, you think you
better than us?

Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
All right, Well, what's the moral of the story. If
there's a more, the.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
More of the story is, man, you better pray to
be an old parent. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:20:51):
I want all my years. I want to be out
here eighty ninety years old. I want to see my grandkids.
So you know, I do agree with the game. I
look at it the same way, right, like my young
this is two in twenty years when she's twenty two
and I'm sixty six. You know, I look at people
like Steve Harvey, he's sixty seven now, right, So I
do look at older people.

Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
I look at that.

Speaker 2 (01:21:09):
I look at seventy year olds, eighty year old, you know,
sixty year olds, and I look at what they're doing
in their life and how they look and how they
move right, And I'm like, Okay, that's the future.

Speaker 15 (01:21:19):
That's right all right.

Speaker 6 (01:21:20):
Now.

Speaker 5 (01:21:20):
When we come back, we got Jess with the mess.
Jess is on maternity leave, so we're holding it down
for her. We got to talk about Drake. He announces
a new album. Will tell you about that. Also, Cardi
B Clear's.

Speaker 3 (01:21:30):
Up some rumors, so we get into all that. When
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:21:34):
Good Morning, The Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:21:38):
Morning everybody.

Speaker 5 (01:21:39):
It's stej Envy, Jess, Hilarious, Charlamagne, the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. Jess is out on maternity leave. She
did not have the baby yet, but she is out
and let's get to Jess with the mess Us.

Speaker 15 (01:21:50):
Is real weapons, lace, Jessica Robber Moore, just don't do
no lines, don't do that.

Speaker 3 (01:21:54):
Time talk the.

Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
Talk them old Why jes worldwi on the Breakfast Club.
She's the coach of ship.

Speaker 17 (01:22:05):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody.

Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
Could get you to see. The sun set it off now.

Speaker 5 (01:22:13):
Drake was performing in Toronto on Friday and he made
an announcement about his new project and new album, and
this is what he said, come on with do.

Speaker 18 (01:22:22):
What you need to do.

Speaker 2 (01:22:23):
I know all your girls are outside, and when it
gets a little chili, Party next door and Drake out
and would.

Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
Be right there for you.

Speaker 5 (01:22:32):
That's so he announced a new album with Party next
Door and also called Party next Door The King of
RN Not me, not this year.

Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
Drake. I already said take take take a year off,
Let nostalgia bring you back.

Speaker 18 (01:22:45):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
It's gonna be interesting to see how that project is
received though.

Speaker 5 (01:22:48):
Yeah, but you know, if it's an R and B
project and it has some some some joints on it.
People gonna let him joint. People always seem like they always,
you know, want R and B music, especially good R
and B music.

Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
Yeah, I just don't know if this is the year
for Drake to put out anything. Drake said something before
this beef happened and people forgot about it. He said
he was going to take a break. I think he
should have listened to hisself. He should have listened to
himself bafore. Yeah, before the whole situation with Kendrick, he
said he was gonna take a break. I think now
is the time for him to, uh, you know, take

(01:23:19):
that break. Nostalgiera bring you back. Nostalgia will bring him back.
People be like damn yo where Drake had.

Speaker 3 (01:23:25):
But if he got a record and you gotta smash
people to forget about it, maybe we say that maybe now.
Anne Barrowe, she.

Speaker 5 (01:23:32):
Recently appeared on a kickstream with Aid and Ross and
was talking about a bunch of things.

Speaker 2 (01:23:36):
Hold on real quick before you to finished that. You
know why It's gonna be hard. As long as not
Like Us is the song of the summer, the song
of the year. As long as that's playing, it makes
it tough for anything, Drake does anything.

Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
You can't escape that record.

Speaker 5 (01:23:51):
Because it's still a power, is still a big record
in the country. STI over again, but it has to
die at some point. Well wait till it dies direct them, Drake,
you need to sit this one.

Speaker 3 (01:24:03):
You got like snooze like snooze like like it just
keeps going and going.

Speaker 1 (01:24:06):
You know, you know when you're in the house, are
you out somewhere and it start raining real real, real, real.

Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
Hard, and you're like, you know, I'm just gonna wait
till the rains die down. A little bit, Wait till
the rain die down. Aubury Man back to Amber Rolls.
Were talking about Amber Rolls.

Speaker 5 (01:24:18):
She was on with Aiden Ross and they would have
another conversation, and of course they had a conversation about
her support for Donald Trump.

Speaker 4 (01:24:25):
Eight and my dms are full of celebrities that are like, damn, Amber,
you got yo. Like I wish I could come out
and say it, but I don't want to lose, you know,
my show on Netflix or Crazy. I had this movie
coming out and I don't want them to fire me.
And even you know, music artists, so many music artists
that I know for years and years and years they're like, yo,

(01:24:48):
we love Trump, but we're just scared to say something.

Speaker 8 (01:24:51):
And I'm just like, yo, I can't live like that anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:24:53):
I need to just be who the way I am
and say, you know, talk about my beliefs and really
try to change the mind of as many people.

Speaker 26 (01:25:01):
As I can.

Speaker 10 (01:25:03):
Well.

Speaker 3 (01:25:03):
She also talks about her feelings on Kamala and pandering
Kamala like having Meghan the Stallion work, and you know,
what are your thoughts on that.

Speaker 8 (01:25:13):
I like Megan.

Speaker 4 (01:25:14):
I think she's a good person. I think that she
is pandering to black people. I think that she thinks
that that's what black people want to see in order
to vote for her. And I think it's absolutely I mean,
I think that people in general just want to know
the policies, the extra stuff. It's like, it's cool, it's
like a you know, a concert and stuff like that,
but what about the policies. How are you gonna make

(01:25:36):
America great again?

Speaker 8 (01:25:38):
No pun intended.

Speaker 2 (01:25:40):
I don't give a damn God bless Ane Barolls. If
she wants to vote for Donald Trump, I don't care.
I don't care who wants to vote for who. I
do agree with her that, you know, when it comes
to discussing policies, that should be the issue. It shouldn't
be about somebody's identity. It shouldn't be about who they
got at their rally. It should be about policy. But
I think which is what I would ask her, like

(01:26:01):
what policies of Trump's do you support?

Speaker 9 (01:26:03):
Right?

Speaker 5 (01:26:03):
But I think that's lost on both sides. I mean,
it's neither side of talking about policies.

Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
No, that's not true.

Speaker 3 (01:26:10):
Let me rephrase that.

Speaker 5 (01:26:11):
I feel like media picks up less about the policy
more about the gossip.

Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
Absolutely, that's the problem I always have, you know, when
it comes to the media, because you'll get on these programs,
you know, whether it's the CNN's and MSNBC's, you know, Foxes, whatever,
and they'll ask you about this stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
What do you think about Amma Rose? Correct? What do
you think about Donald trump'say? And Kamala's not black?

Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
And it's like, Yo, what does that have to do
with you know, how we're gonna keep money in our pocket,
food on our table, and the roof over our head?

Speaker 1 (01:26:38):
What did that got to do with keeping America safe? Right?
Those are the things that we should be discussing now.

Speaker 10 (01:26:43):
O G.

Speaker 5 (01:26:43):
Tom Hanks. His house was burglarized in LA. That's one
thing I just I hear so much about l A.
I hear about so many breaking robberies. Right he was
out of town, they broke into his guesthouse. I broke
the window, the lawn went off. It didn't stop him.
This was broad daylight time. The police came, which was
hours later. They already had left with valuable. So that

(01:27:04):
happens a lot in LA. That's what makes me very
nervous about LA and heading to LA. It seems like
the police can never get there fast enough. And lastly,
last week just reported about Cardi b and now filing
for divorce from Offset. Well, she wanted to clear up
a lot of the rumors that were circulating. So she said, Okay,
this is getting weird because I can say he helps
me meeting. Offset helps me a lot with my businesses

(01:27:25):
and kids. You know, it was a rumor that they
said that he was unsupportive. She says, never. In my career,
no matter what I went through, I had friends or
family to go through media. So I don't know who
is the damn sauce going to People magazine. Even with
my filing, I'm not asking for child support, my claims
for him to only pay for the bills he already
pays on the kids and.

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
The new one.

Speaker 5 (01:27:44):
And by the way, I'm so happy y'all know I'm
pregnant now so I can stop wearing those damn schoolgirl skirts.

Speaker 3 (01:27:50):
Laughing my ass off. And that is just with the mess,
all right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:56):
Oh you know what I want to tell people?

Speaker 18 (01:27:58):
Man?

Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
What's that this Saturday?

Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
Right this Saturday, August to tenth Mounts Corner, South Carolina.
You know I do my knife annual back to school giveaway.

Speaker 1 (01:28:08):
And fish fry.

Speaker 3 (01:28:09):
I thought it was this weekend, but yeah, it is
this weekend. It was last week.

Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
I mean no, it's August tenth.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
August tent this Saturday, from ten am to one pm
at the Berkeley High School Student parking Lot in Monks Corner,
South Carolina. So you know, we got the book bags
and the school supplies and the food trucks, and my
pop's gonna be out there frying fish, and we got
free haircuts and you know, vendors all types of stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:28:29):
So this Saturday, ten am to one pm, Monks Corner,
South Carolina, Berkeley High School Student Parking Lot, My ninth
annual back to School.

Speaker 1 (01:28:39):
Book back Drive and fish.

Speaker 3 (01:28:41):
Fry, right, and they could just pull up right.

Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
All you gotta do is pull up. Okay, we take
care of the rest.

Speaker 15 (01:28:45):
All right.

Speaker 5 (01:28:45):
And this week of course, you know we're going to
sure you support Louisiana for Fifties Humor and Harmony Show
and we do the car show there.

Speaker 3 (01:28:52):
There's so much stuff going there.

Speaker 5 (01:28:53):
If you're heading out there, make sure you get all
your everything early because they don't have that much over
there meeting.

Speaker 3 (01:28:58):
They don't have that many hotels.

Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
Man, that's what I was thinking.

Speaker 5 (01:29:02):
Well, we're gonna find out there's a lot of people
coming to town. Of course, we got the call show
Saturday is Sunday. If you haven't got your tickets, get
your tickets. Kids fiving under a free so bring the kids,
bring the family. So many celebrities gonna be touched down
in the city. We're gonna have a lot of fun
in that city this weekend.

Speaker 1 (01:29:15):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:29:16):
But let's get to the Mixed People's Choice Mixed get
your requesting right now. It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (01:29:20):
Good morning morning everybody. It's DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne
to God. We are the Breakfast Club. Now, Jess is
on maternity leave. She didn't have the baby at but
she is out. She's just resting, relaxing and ready for
the little baby to come on out.

Speaker 2 (01:29:35):
Yes, indeed, so sending her positive energy, sending her healing energy.

Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
Absolutely, she's gonna have a baby at any day.

Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
Now any day.

Speaker 5 (01:29:45):
Baby day is August seventeenth, that's the due date, but
it looks like the baby gonna come a little sooner
than that. And I think Jess speaking to Jest yesterday,
she's ready for the baby to come on out. But
a salute to Jess and hopefully you enjoy your maternity
leave all right. And also we got a salute to
Polo G for joining us today. Is the album Hood
Poet comes out this Friday, yep, So make sure you

(01:30:05):
check out the interview on YouTube right now and when
we come back. We got the positive notice the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Good morning morning.

Speaker 5 (01:30:10):
Everybody is DJ n V, Jess hilarious, Charlamagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. It's time to get u
out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
Charlamagne.

Speaker 15 (01:30:17):
You got a.

Speaker 1 (01:30:17):
Positive note, Yes I do, man, and I want to
say this to everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
Everyone makes mistakes in life you know, I'll be watching
social media sometime, and you know, I was actually thinking
about that this weekend when I saw everybody mad at
Kelanie and Chris Brown taking a picture together, and it
just made me think that, you know, everybody makes mistakes
in life, but that doesn't mean they have to pay
for them for the rest of their life. Okay, sometimes
good people make bad choices. That doesn't mean they're bad,

(01:30:42):
It means they're human. And one day you're gonna need
that same grace that you're not giving to somebody else. Okay, Okay,
have a blessed day.

Speaker 15 (01:30:51):
Breakfast club, do you y'all finish or y'all don'

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