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October 23, 2025 103 mins

Today on The Breakfast Club, Andrew Young and John Hope Bryant join us to talk about The Dirty Work documentary, their lifelong friendship with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and the ongoing fight for economic justice. Plus, Charlamagne Tha God gives Donkey of the Day to a Florida Uber Eats driver who kept delivering orders after realizing his son was missing from the car. Listen for more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning, usc 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 Yohio.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Instead of playing this Thursday. How y'all feel out there?
I feel blessed, Black and Holly Favorite, happy to be
here another day to serve our beautiful listeners. Good morning,
good morning, my bad. I was really preparing for the verses.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Yes, but tomorrow I'm gonna do a mix. It's gonna
be no limit versus cash money. I just want to
make sure I have everything there.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
So you know what you're doing on nobody and no
limiting cash money were enough tims for you to know
what the hell you're doing. Okay, I'm pretty sure. I
went to school at Hampton, Virginia. I was DJing you got,
tell me what you got, tell me, tell me what
you got.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
I just started. I just started downloading master making sure
I got down for mygs. Make him say about it better.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
That was an easy ones. Go get chopping and master
p chopping style.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Yeah, I'm starting to get him, but I was just downloaded,
getting ready because I got to go in and out.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
So I was getting my fault. Okay, go get five
for boys, Wobble wobble. I'm okay getting it. It's a
lot of some joints and then a lot of them.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
I got to make sure they clean because it's for radio,
like make it like about it sounds stupid clean.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Yes, it sounds horrible. Get mac feature and mysticol the murder, murder,
kill kill.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
Kill right, it ain't mind fault.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Definitely go get Fiend like I bring it. Okay, don't
get Woodie who by true? Come on now, okay, you
can go deep down that rabbit hole.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
I ain't going to have that that far down the
rabbit hole now.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Which no limits. Soldier, you're gonna get the remix of
the Red One. You gotta get mister the Man right,
the man right, come on now, come on now.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Yeah, okay, joy, I got some joints, all right, So
I'm getting.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
My ice stream man, Matthew, I forgot man Man. I'm
just saying, yes, you got bout about it. That's the
easy one. Yeah, I got you got some joints. They
can listen. It's gonna be a great versus. Okay, no
limit love cash money, It's gonna be a fantastic verse. Now,
I forgot to ask, can we watch it online? Because

(02:03):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
That's what I wanted to because you know, it seems
like they might do a pay per view on us
or something like that. So I'm just curious. I'll pay
for that if we could watch it online? Or do
we have to go to.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
There? We gotta find is gonna be there though? Is
it gonna be like bird Man versus P I don't know.

Speaker 4 (02:19):
Nobody said any Wayne.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
I can't see Wayne coming out to a versus.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
But he's cash money.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
I agree, but I just can't see. I mean maybe
I don't know. We'll see.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
All right, Well, let's get the show, Cracker. Who's you on?

Speaker 5 (02:34):
In US?

Speaker 1 (02:34):
This morning?

Speaker 2 (02:34):
We have an icon living civil.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Rights activists and politician, diplomat past.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
The former mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, Andrew Young. He has
a new documentary on MSNBC called Andrew Young The Dirty
Work Now. Andrew Young is a person who was used
to work closely with Martin Uther King Junior. He was
one of Martin Luther King junior strategists. And it is
so interesting when you sit down with these legends, these giants,
these pillars in our community, because they actually lived the

(03:00):
history we talked about. That's the history we read about.
And when you talk to him, it ain't nothing like
you talk it was. That's right, okay, But we'll talk
to Andrew Young this morning.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
All right.

Speaker 3 (03:11):
And also we got front page news me be breaking
down everything that's going on now Brown, Yes, so don't
go anywhere.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
It's the breakfast club.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
Good morning, we are the breakfast Club. Let's get in
some front page news. I'll been here at the university,
by the way.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
But what's something And we're gonna start off for some
quick sports tonight. It's Thursday night football. The Vikings will
play the Chargers at eight fifteen. But quickly, did any
of y'all see the NBA games last night? Did Yoah?

Speaker 2 (03:34):
John?

Speaker 4 (03:35):
Yeah, but you watch Clay Thompson's team.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
Clay Thompson Dallas, Dallas.

Speaker 5 (03:44):
There.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
My husband's watching the game, and I started watching.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
I was like, okay, is watching Cooper Flag and Anthony Davis? Yea?
They lost.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Yeah, when we got crazy last night, I can't wait
to hear you messed up Cooper Flag name. I know
it's I know you're going to drop the l I
know what I can feel happen.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
The Knicks one last night. It was the season over,
and they played pretty damn well to this. They beat
the capitalist They look good. I am a Knicks fan.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Night all right? What's that me?

Speaker 6 (04:10):
Me?

Speaker 7 (04:11):
Good morning? MV Jeff char Ala Magne. How y'all doing
this morning? Good morning?

Speaker 8 (04:16):
All right?

Speaker 9 (04:16):
So we start this morning in Washington, where the government
shut down is now stretching into his twenty third day,
marking the second longest shutdown in modern US history. Now, yesterday,
the Senate voted once again to pass forward a bill
to reopen the government, marking the twelve time that the
bill failed, and the measure it failed fifty four to
forty six, short of the sixty votes needed to move forward.

(04:39):
Three Democrats cross party lines to vote with Republicans, but
it still wasn't enough to break the stalemate. So that
vote came after a twenty two hour marathon speech from
Oregon Senator Jeff Berkley, who spoke throughout the night accusing
President Trump of authoritarianism and urging Congress to act now.
With no dyll inside, Republican leaders are floating two ideas.

(05:01):
Either change the Senate rules that make it hard to
pass anything without sixty votes, or come up with a
plan B to break that stalemate.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
Now.

Speaker 9 (05:08):
Democrats, meanwhile, they say they will not budge on any
plan that doesn't include healthcare subsidies.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
And at the White.

Speaker 9 (05:14):
House, attention is turning from policy to construction. Who's have
started tearing down parts of the East Wing to make
room for that new three hundred million dollar presidential ballroom,
a major expansion from what President Trump once called a
small renovation. During a Senate luncheon, the President bragged about
the project. Let's listen to that.

Speaker 6 (05:35):
You probably hear the beautiful sound of construction to the back.
You hear that sound, Oh that's music to my ears.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
I love that sound. Other people don't like it. I
love it, Josh. I think when I.

Speaker 6 (05:46):
Hear that sound, it reminds me of money. In this case,
it reminds me of lack of money, because I'm paying
for it. So it's the officer.

Speaker 9 (05:56):
Well, the administration says the project is right being funded,
But for nearly half of the American Charlamagne, who haven't
received a paycheck and may soon be leaving losing access
to food assistants, they say the optics are striking again.

Speaker 7 (06:11):
We've been talking about this all week.

Speaker 9 (06:12):
Federal officials are warning that if the shutdown stretches into November,
there may not be enough money to fund those food
assistants programs.

Speaker 7 (06:20):
Several states are already sounding the alarm.

Speaker 9 (06:22):
In Georgia, the Atlanta Community Food Bank says nearly one
point five million people could be affected. In California, another
five million people could see delays as early as next week.
In Detroit, of food banks, they say that if they
lose SNAP, it would devastate the community because that's where
nearly one in five people they rely on those SNAP

(06:42):
benefits to afford groceries. And in New Jersey, families are
being urged to use whatever benefits remain on their EBT
cards right now because those funds may not be available
after November first.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Yeah, you know, I'm an ambassador for the Food Bank
in New York City in Harlem, and they are flooded,
like you know, the Hallow food pantry. They faced a
record demand because of this shutdown. I think they said
they've given out more than seven thousand food packages since
October twenty first, well up until October twenty first, and
they've logged one three hundred and seventy six new clients

(07:16):
just this month. That's the largest single month increase of
the year because people are just say, anticipating losing the
snap benefits. Wow.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (07:23):
And while lawmakers in Washington can't seem to agree on
the basics, another debate is now taking shape at the
Supreme Court. It centers on a question that's raising out
eyebrows across the country. Can you smoke weed and still
own a gun? That's the question before the court right now.
The law currently says that if you use marijuana, even
in the state where it's legal, you can't legally own

(07:44):
a firearm, but that rule is now being challenged in
a new case that the Court just agreed to hear.
It involves a Texas man who admitted to using marijuana
regularly but said he wasn't high when federal agents found
the gun inside of his home a lower case. A
lower court they signed up with him, saying that occasional
drug use doesn't take away shouldn't take away someone's Second

(08:05):
Amendment rights, and the Justice Apartment, though they disagree, saying
the law is meant to keep guns out of the
hands of people who could be impaired or dangerous. They
argue that similar restrictions have existed for centuries, even dating
back to laws that kept habitual drinkers from carrying weapons,
and the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the months ahead,
and the decision could have major implications for millions of Americans,

(08:27):
especially in states where marijuana is legal.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
Well, I don't smoke weed, I eat it, Okay, not
to mention, shouldn't that apply to people who drink alcohol?

Speaker 3 (08:36):
Yeah, it doesn't make sense because if you drink alcohol,
it's the same. You know, it can deter what you're
doing as well. Yeah it shouldn't. Yeah it sounds so stupid.
But wow, that's.

Speaker 9 (08:47):
Where we are, all right, And so coming up at seven,
the company that redefined shopping may now be redefining for
work itself.

Speaker 7 (08:56):
I'm sorry, y'all may be redefining work.

Speaker 9 (08:58):
But we'll explain what's behind the biggest change in why
it's sparking so much concern.

Speaker 3 (09:02):
All right, everybody else, get it off your chest. Eight
hundred five eight five one five one. If you need
the vent phone lines to wind open again, eight hundred
five eight five one oh five one, get it off
your chest.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
It's the breakfast Club. Go morning, the Breakfast Club. This
is your time to get it off your chest, whether
you're mad or blessed.

Speaker 8 (09:21):
I hate the way that.

Speaker 4 (09:21):
You walk, the way that you talk, I hate the
way that you dress.

Speaker 8 (09:24):
Everything when me is best?

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Call up new eight hundred five eight five five one.

Speaker 8 (09:30):
I'm with the coach of Philling.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
Hello.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Who's this?

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (09:35):
Who's this?

Speaker 2 (09:38):
Frosty's my guy? We heard from you in a minute. Man,
where you've been?

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Frosty? Be on a chat? You be on the twitch
chat over real?

Speaker 10 (09:46):
Yeah? How can you remember me? DJMD?

Speaker 1 (09:50):
Because it says Frosty it's only to be outside, needs
to be outside. Sounds like him, right, that's Oh? What's up? Man?

Speaker 4 (09:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (09:59):
I'm in Vegas and i'll oh.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Man, congratulations, what you're doing out there?

Speaker 11 (10:02):
I live out here?

Speaker 2 (10:04):
Okay, all right, anything else I met y'all though, miss
you too, man, do you?

Speaker 8 (10:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (10:09):
Frosty used to scare the hell out of us. And
you're sitting outside the radio station. You're laughing, doing this
crazy ass laugh like I had security keep your gun
off safety nothing.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
Hey, Yeah, okay, what's up?

Speaker 4 (10:23):
Hey? What's up? Frosty? How you doing?

Speaker 12 (10:25):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (10:25):
Good?

Speaker 11 (10:26):
Y'all?

Speaker 10 (10:26):
Shall follow me on Instagram?

Speaker 2 (10:28):
What's your Instagram?

Speaker 10 (10:29):
Why are you in g e?

Speaker 11 (10:31):
R E c E thirty seven?

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Why are you in g what R E thirty seven?
Why you ask?

Speaker 1 (10:37):
You're not gonna follow him?

Speaker 2 (10:38):
Man?

Speaker 4 (10:38):
Shut up?

Speaker 1 (10:39):
Man, man, Frosty, what's up?

Speaker 2 (10:41):
You don't never know how to get out of a situation.
You just talk to God? Damn much? Shut up? Yeah,
man about to follow you right now?

Speaker 1 (10:46):
What's up, though, Frosty? Sure you see the next one
last time?

Speaker 10 (10:50):
Yeah? Yeah, I seen the powers watching them play.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
That's what I'm talking about, Frosty. How the food and
season foulers?

Speaker 10 (10:59):
I haven't had it?

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Oh, okay, we'll go. Yeah, we get you something need
man on me?

Speaker 11 (11:04):
Sure hopefully they got find though the next.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Yes, sir, they're gonna go far.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
The only team in the East I think it's gonna
be a problem is Cleveland. Everybody else I think it's
beat up. I think we are.

Speaker 2 (11:11):
Orlando gonna be good too though a little bit. Yeah,
but but ed New York next club nice?

Speaker 11 (11:17):
They look pretty unstoppable.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
They look good.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
They look good.

Speaker 2 (11:21):
This is their year.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
Well, frost you have a good one, man. You get
back to doing what you do, all right, man, I
have a go one brother.

Speaker 4 (11:28):
Bang.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
You don't know how to get out of situations. Man,
you tell somebody like that everything they want to hear
you just moon walk out the situation.

Speaker 4 (11:36):
Artistic. I'm asking you can draw.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Okay, you can draw your pain, very autistic.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
Nice, okay, cool.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
I hate this place.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
Get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up now. It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Good morning, the Breakfast Club, wake up, wake up, A
secure time to get it off your chest? Really, your
mat or bless.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast bloss. Hello,
who's this? What's uping, Melissa? Get it off your chest?

Speaker 2 (12:10):
It's Alyssa.

Speaker 10 (12:11):
Hey, I just Charlomagne. I just want to tell you
that I appreciate you so much for that. Oh you
guys are for the interview with Putumaine and his wife
about the diagnosis. This thing hit my family so hard.
My son, who went to he has two degrees, he
is oh my gosh. He went to school to be

(12:34):
a software engineer and he has a degree.

Speaker 11 (12:37):
In biology, and he was well.

Speaker 10 (12:39):
On his way to doing living out his dream. And
then all of a sudden, one day his behavior started changing,
and I had no idea what was going on, and
it's still happening now, but it's not happening with the
intensity that it once was before. But I'm still so
very lost on what to do and how to continue

(12:59):
to have him. He's on a Kedo diet which helps
so much. He's on all these vitamins that he takes
every day and that is really what's helping him. But
he hasn't really got over that hump yet. And so
and I'm still working a full time job. I mean,
it was so bad. My son literally was at the
airport for twenty four hours because his mind was telling

(13:20):
him someone was coming taking him to another country.

Speaker 11 (13:23):
Wow.

Speaker 10 (13:23):
So this thing is terrible. It is awful. It is
the worst thing I've ever spent in my life. And
I'm sorry, I'm trying not to be emotional, but I
just want to encourage families and anyone that is going
through this to definitely deband for your children or whoever
it is that is going through this, because it is
so hard. You take nobody understand why it's happened.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
You're right, Did you take them to a doctor, mental
health provider? You know? Yeah? Okay?

Speaker 11 (13:50):
Good?

Speaker 10 (13:51):
And he went to one one company, one health care facility.
All they want to do is just prescribe medicine. They
don't really want to get to what the root of
the issue is. And so I've been working with this
lady calling Nicole lorent I don't know if you guys
want to look her up. She has a program and
it's this entire keto program that it's it's like medically

(14:13):
induced keto. So once your body gets in that high
levels of keto, then it actually can reverse some of
the issues going on in the brain. So Keisha didn't
speak on that. I'm not sure that's something that you
know Gucci was doing. But exercise definitely. And vitamins are
so important, like the omega threes and the oh god,

(14:36):
she's taken so many the vitamin D three with K
two when it's just so many different vitamins that they
need to be on. Serotonin Lyon's name, I mean stuff
for inflammation, like cinnamon for inflammation. Is so many different
like natural things that you can do. But it's like,
this thing really needs to get out there now. And

(14:58):
I'm with you, Charlotte Magine with it's not enough information
out there with people that are actually their caretakers, that
are helping them because I was the victim of so
much rage and anger and I kept going white, why
is my son talking to me like this? We never
had this relationship, But like Keisha.

Speaker 11 (15:16):
Said, it's not them, it's not.

Speaker 10 (15:19):
The person that you know in love that it's something different,
and it's just so hard. So I just wish there
was more information out there, something someone I don't know
who can do what. But we really need that support
because some days we just wake up just defeated and drained.
Because especially if you raise your kids right, they're like, what.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Did I do wrong?

Speaker 10 (15:39):
Where did I go wrong? I tend to turn it
on ourselves.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
Yeah, I think it's a lot of information out there.
What I think it is, it's not a lot of
people like yourself and Keisha telling their story.

Speaker 5 (15:48):
You know.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
That's something we started doing at the Mental Wealth Fax
Ball a couple of years ago because I think it
was Corey minus Smith. Corey Minusmith was the person who
bought it our attention about you know, you know, talking
to the people who actually have to deal with the
individuals who have mental health issues.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
And thank you for sharing your story, mam. I appreciate it. Hello,
who's this Good morning?

Speaker 13 (16:08):
This is Winston aka DJ Cliff. I'm doing all right.
Good morning, Jess, Good morning, Uh, DJ and B good morning,
and Charlamagne the Guy, good morning. When I want to
get out of my chest, first thing is first I
want to talk for Charlemagne because I don't like how
you be having DJ answer because when he says it's

(16:29):
the Dominika and he's not from the Republic, and that
always get on my nerve when you say that, because
as a pro Dominica.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
Myself, that's right, that's right, that's.

Speaker 13 (16:38):
A proud Dominica myself. I'm proud to call djn via Dominican.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
Listen.

Speaker 13 (16:44):
I am just excited because you know that, you know
you're going to Dominico for especially for the first time.
I want you to have the time of your life.

Speaker 14 (16:52):
I want you to go, like like Jess said, go
down to the Indian River that's in Portsmouth area, That's
where I'm from. Hello up, amazing, Yeah, yeah, go to
the coverage and of course I goes to screws as well.

Speaker 13 (17:07):
Get someone with that salt for hot water, naturally hot
water in your system, clericy pours and stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
He definitely want to get screwed. I guarantee you that's
gonna be his first stop.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Man.

Speaker 13 (17:18):
That's the other thing.

Speaker 12 (17:19):
That's the other thing.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
Oh wow, But I'm excited.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Man, I'm going there this Saturday. Where should I get?
Where should I go eat? What's what's a good place
to get some food?

Speaker 5 (17:29):
Uh?

Speaker 13 (17:29):
Pa to get some like you just go down the Portsmouth.
There's a place for and you can get some great
fish over there.

Speaker 15 (17:38):
All right, that's good, But he do gotta be careful
because y'all got the highest density of volcanoes.

Speaker 5 (17:43):
Right.

Speaker 13 (17:43):
Oh listen, that thing happened erupting a long time man.
Who cares about that?

Speaker 4 (17:48):
We just now cares about it. Nobody from New York
who want to be Dominican.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
I'm Dominica.

Speaker 13 (17:55):
Dom Yes, exactly, get it. Streat not Dominique.

Speaker 3 (18:00):
I'm excited to go to Saturday. I got a lot
of people that's been hitting me. I want to see
where my family's from. So I'm gonna go see where
my family's from. And because they say they got some
family land out there, I just want to go see.
I just want to go touch the soil and see.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
Thank you, sir for calling and inviting him.

Speaker 13 (18:15):
Welcome jet Jet Yeah, and you guys should take a trip.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
To one day.

Speaker 4 (18:20):
Absolutely.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
I let him know how it is first. Please get
it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five, one
oh five. What you wanna say? What you're gonna say?

Speaker 4 (18:29):
Okay, Lambskin, Yes, okay, lambskin.

Speaker 15 (18:36):
I want today, man. Look, I told her, don't come
in with our stomach, go out so she won't get.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
M We got the Latest with sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. All right, yeah we do.

Speaker 4 (18:59):
We got the ladies and Lauren coming up.

Speaker 16 (19:00):
I heard the caller earlier talking about, you know, the
struggles of someone who is like the caretaker or family
member of people with mental health issues. Well, Nicki Minaj
was on Spaces last night and she was sounding off
about Keisha Kor and she felt like the interview was
too much about her.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
It was not about her at all.

Speaker 4 (19:19):
About it.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
I don't even know why we entertained itination was not
about her.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
But we could talk about I mean, I think you
should have teased about did he getting poked in jail?

Speaker 16 (19:31):
I was told that he didn't get poked like that,
not that his throat.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
Talking about all of this in the first hour of
the Latest.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
Explain, We'll get to it nexus the Breakfast slogan Morning
the Breakfast Club, Lauren becoming straight fast.

Speaker 8 (19:53):
She gets somebody that knows, somebody gets to detail.

Speaker 16 (19:56):
I'm the home girl that knows a little bit about
everything that you'd.

Speaker 2 (20:00):
Be having the latest on the Latest with Lauren la Rosa.
Sometimes sometimes you have.

Speaker 8 (20:07):
A little bit everything on the Breakfast Clubs.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
Yes, you did a pre recorded for a live segment.

Speaker 4 (20:14):
Oh my gosh, shut up, tell them.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
They did time to make sure we was t the
time it was right.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
Yes.

Speaker 16 (20:22):
So last night Nicki Minaj spoke out about the Gucci
min and kishak Or interview that we did up here,
and I know that we've covered her tweets on it,
but last night was a little bit more in depth.
She went live on Twitter Spaces and she talked about
how she felt like Kisha thrusted herself to the front
of that interview. So she says that it was a

(20:43):
basically a setup for us to just talk to kish
not Gucci.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
Mai.

Speaker 4 (20:46):
Let's take a listen to Nicki Minaj. Number one.

Speaker 17 (20:49):
Goodness, why would you have had to decide if you
were still gonna do a show because you got bit
by a beat. Did you who you think we was
born yesterday? Don't you see how you just revealed that
the show was to talk to you? You see how
you just revealed that it was not about Gucci man,
your silly Emma's deb said she wanted to get in

(21:11):
on a mother's action too, But I said, were trying
to be nice? Since when if somebody's spouse I use
that term loosely depending on certain things. Gotta do the show?
If you had an allergic reaction, why you didn't do
your mother of a mother favor and us and sit
the outside. You are that insecure about your aging face

(21:33):
that you have lied to millions of people and.

Speaker 4 (21:35):
Said she got bit by b or some that she
got allergic reaction.

Speaker 17 (21:40):
Notice she ain't say that prior to that footage coming out,
Like she didn't wake up that morning and say, oh
my god, y'all I got this thing by Bee? Why
got allergic reaction? Ee blood tea. It was when the
footage came out that she's seen her filter didn't come
with her outside that day.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
I have no idea why we're entertaining this, Like what
is what about Nikki would be amazing on Broadway?

Speaker 3 (22:07):
But first of all, we didn't even know.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Yeah, what amazing. We didn't even know was coming until
she actually explaining this. Bro bless Nikki's heart. We send
the Nikki healing energy. Don't you want to put up
the facts out there because people believe things if they
don't hear the fact facts we did not know was here.
She pulled up with Gucci and her husband.

Speaker 4 (22:29):
When is she not with her husband? Ain't that like him? Everywhere?

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Did y'all read the book episodes?

Speaker 4 (22:35):
I'm reading the book now.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
The book is absolutely about Gucci and his manic episodes,
and it's about the person who is the closest to him,
who also had to live through those episodes with her
care of them. What are we talking about?

Speaker 4 (22:49):
Yeah, well yes, and uh.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
I don't understand how she's making this about her, but
God bless her heart. We send the Nicki Minaj healing energy.

Speaker 15 (22:56):
But even outside of her being a big part of
the because she's her husband's saving grace, she always with them. Yeah,
it's hard to not see Kisha when you see Gucci.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
Man like and I'm glad that she was in the
interview because nobody ever talks to the individuals who have
to deal with the people who have mental illness. Yeah,
and not only that, she was able to break it
down what she happened, what she saw. She was able
to help people who are dealing with family members who
have mental illness and the signs to see.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
I thought that was dope and amazing.

Speaker 15 (23:27):
And we always see Kenneth with Nikki all the time.
He'll be saying nothing always, you know, sitting off the side,
but we always we always see them together. It's like,
what's the problem.

Speaker 4 (23:38):
Well, Nikki talked about for a second of the problem
that she was with her husband.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
I'll get it.

Speaker 16 (23:43):
Well, yeah, so Nicki did mention her husband on the Spaces.
She also talked a bit about She says that the
reason why Keisha ky Or was interviewed in the interview
and made it a priority being in the interview is
not because they an't the reasons you guys just said,
but because Kor is a narcissist and the X Spaces Act.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
She got interrupted by her son. Let's take a listen
at number two.

Speaker 17 (24:03):
The is so insecure at her face simply being her face.
You see, not everyone ages like the generous queen. Because
my light inside, my grace, my peace, my love, my paradox,

(24:23):
my conundrum, my truth, my generosity, my humility, my restraint
when I have the power to do so much damage and.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
Choose not to.

Speaker 17 (24:35):
No, I'm no psychology major. I don't know much about much,
but boy, boy, do narcissists sure have a way of
pushing themselves to the front by any means necess They
will step on you.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
They will.

Speaker 17 (24:50):
It ends today you do not honor Google?

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Is it that the pot calling the blueprint pink?

Speaker 9 (24:59):
Like?

Speaker 2 (24:59):
What you mean? She's making this about her? Okay, listen
if someone needs to read that Gucci Man book episodes
and learn something from it, Okay, and intervene in this
life that Nicki Minaj is living, yo, because this is ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Side note, Nicki would kill voiceovers?

Speaker 3 (25:16):
What now, I'm not even joking, Like could you like
when she was just I closed my eyes and I
was listening to the scary movie and just what she
was saying that, I was like, she would kill voices,
not like on the side, No, Nicki's she could spitch
rap butt.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
Jesus, we can move on.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
Now I have one more. We can move on because
you know.

Speaker 16 (25:33):
In other news, other New York news, Diddy almost lost
his life behind bars. This was revealed by in court
by Brian Still, his attorney. Yeah, somebody tried to attempt
to stab him in his throat, so damn in court
we found this out when they were trying to basically
make the plead that you know, Diddy is going to.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
Be in danger behind bars.

Speaker 16 (25:53):
But his friend Charlucci, who I know one time we
had talked about like who comes with the family. There's
always a guy named Charlucci Finney with his family, making
sure his kids are good, and you know, all the
thing got Yeah, so he spoke to Daily Mail once
that became news and kind of not being kind of
he detailed more of what happened. So he said the
inmates snuck into Diddy's jail cell and could have murdered him.

(26:15):
He said, did he woke up with a knife to
his throat? And he says that this was unreported even
though it was a close call. Uh, and it was
super violent because did he kind of he didn't want
it to be like a big thing. Now, Charlucci says
he doesn't know if did he fought him all or
the guards came in.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
He just knows that it happens.

Speaker 16 (26:32):
And they also say, if this guy wanted to harm him,
Diddy would have been harmed. It would only have took
a second to cut his throat with the weapon and
killed him. So it was probably a way to say,
next time, you're not going to be so lucky. Everything
is intimidation. But but Diddy, it didn't work because Diddy's from Harlem.
Now again, Diddy's.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
University from all of them got to do with anything. Yeah,
I just I said, actually said that.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
Yeah, it's a quote from his friends.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
I was fit.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
I was feeling the quote Tom said from he has.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
These special power like.

Speaker 11 (27:09):
Me.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
You know, he's been through some things.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
What you just said is a great point. What they
talk about Harlem like it's hard all wakandact like it's
some mystical place.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
From Hall.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
What does he have to do person, It don't matter
where the hell are you from.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Yeah, until he had the.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
Hall, they almost got him, but he from Halem Man,
what are we talking about?

Speaker 1 (27:36):
It's sad.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
I mean, we could joke all day long about Diddy
because some of these things are funny. But you know,
it's to the point now there's no way that that
they should be sneaking into his jail cell and get
that close to him, right, That.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
Is horrible, That is crazy, but it is prison, and
those are the horrors of prison. You can wake up
with all types of stuff in your throat. I'm just
shocked that Diddy doesn't wake up with all types of
your throat. Shocked that Didd he doesn't have more supervision.
I would think, because he's such a high I would
think such a short sentence, you would have a lot
more supervision around.

Speaker 16 (28:04):
Well, I did act, you know, since I've been asking
since this came up in court, like what happens next now,
like how what do you guys request supervision wise?

Speaker 4 (28:12):
And wherever he's going to end up?

Speaker 16 (28:14):
And I mean, of course they they don't want to
answer that because they don't want that to be a
broadcasted thing. But you know, after hearing something like this,
if you're a BOP, you have to take a lot
of things into consideration that the Bureau of Prisons, like
the people that make the decisions of like where you're
going with the security, is going to look like they
work with the you.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Just said, Bob, like I want to help them, Like
Bob got that.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
What's going on with that pill? Did we get any update?
On their pill.

Speaker 16 (28:37):
No, nothing yet, nothing on the appeal yet. The last
thing I heard was forty six weeks that was it. Yeah,
because what do you mean that with the Trump stuff? No, no, no, no,
because they said they were going to follow a pill
on the sentences. I was just scarious if di'sney updates.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
But yeah, after the first incident where they say, did
he almost got into a fight, he yet, like Charlamae said,
he should be on the supervision like crazy, they should
make sure he's safe because it would be crazy to see, uh,
somebody like Diddy or anybody in jail get hurt or
killed especial. Yeah, after this is the second time now,
and like you said, this is yeah, he doesn't have
a long bid.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
This is a smaller bid, but still it seems crazy.

Speaker 16 (29:09):
Yeah, I mean, so we'll I mean I was gonna say,
we'll find out kind of what that looks like security wise,
but I don't think they don't even disclose it, you
know what I mean, because of high profile, how high
profile the cases. We'll just figure out where he's going
and kind of what the security measures will be as
far as like generally what the court has. But that
White House did respond to me. I asked him about
that report that said that Trump is backing away from

(29:31):
this now, like he don't want nothing to do with
it because of Mega. And they just pointed me to
that original statement that no White House official can give
any updates. This is a decision up to Trump and
as of right now, that's not even a conversation.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
Okay, all right, well that is the latest with Lauren.
Could you imagine Diddy's mental right now? There's no way
Diddy can sleep in jail, bro, There's no way. The
second time, there's no way he's sleeping.

Speaker 11 (29:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (29:54):
And I was reading this report by this guy who's
like a legal analyst, and they were talking about how
like celebrities are higher state. I mean, you don't depends
on your crime too, but celebrities and people of like
financial influencers are always of higher stake in bars, behind bars.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
I'm sorry, all right, when we come back, we got
front page news and we'll talk to me me next.
It don't go anywhere. It's the Breakfast cluc.

Speaker 8 (30:14):
The Morning owing everybody.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
It's DJ Envy, just hilarious, Charlamagne and the guy.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get back in some
front page News. So for NFL Thursday Night Football, the
Minnesota Vikings take on the charges to that at eight
fifteen pm.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
Also last night, did any of you watched the NBA games?

Speaker 2 (30:33):
I watched one be drop forty.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
When we got busy last night. He beat the Mavericks.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
I ain't watching it.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
I heard about he was going crazy.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
Cooper Flag scored ten point rebounds. Ad was getting busy
last night. It was great getting the next look of
Bazy last night.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
Lotry come back healthy. The math is gonna be good. Yeah,
Nick's gonna be real good too.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (30:50):
Nixt look really really really good. So salute to the
next last night. But what's up to me?

Speaker 7 (30:54):
Good morning, NBA? Josh Charlamage, how y'all doing this?

Speaker 2 (30:56):
We you and me?

Speaker 4 (30:59):
I'm good?

Speaker 7 (31:00):
Thank you?

Speaker 9 (31:00):
All right, we'll we start this hour in New York
City where the gloves came off. In the second and
final mayorial debate last night a Democrat Zoran Mandani, former
Governor Andrew.

Speaker 7 (31:10):
Pomo, and Republican Curtis Leewall.

Speaker 9 (31:12):
They went head to head less than two weeks before
election day, debating everything from prime to housing to immigration, and.

Speaker 7 (31:19):
From the start things got heated.

Speaker 9 (31:21):
Now the three sparred over experience, leadership, and who's best
to run the city.

Speaker 7 (31:26):
Take a listen.

Speaker 18 (31:26):
You have never had a job, You've never accomplished anything.
There's no reason to believe you have any merit or
qualification for eight and a half million liars.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
You don't know how to run a government. You don't
know how to handle an emergency, and.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
You've literally never proposed the bill.

Speaker 18 (31:45):
And you never showed up for work, and you missed
eighty percent of the vote.

Speaker 19 (31:49):
Now, we just had a former governor saying his own
words that the city has been getting screwed by the state.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
Who was leading the state?

Speaker 8 (31:58):
It was you.

Speaker 2 (31:59):
Driving a.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
Screwing. Heard the both of them again, fighting like kids
in the schoolyard.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Jorn your resume could fit.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
On a cocktail napkin.

Speaker 12 (32:11):
And Andrew, your failures could fill a public school library
in New York City.

Speaker 4 (32:18):
Damn, your resume could fit on a cocktail.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
That was good.

Speaker 7 (32:23):
That yeah, that was good. He came with the zingers
all night.

Speaker 9 (32:27):
The debate then shifted the policy with sharp divisions on
prime housing and transit. On policing, all three candidates said
they would keep Police Commissioner Jessica Tish if if elected.
They also found rare common ground condemning the ice raids
in New York City, saying federal immigration agents should stay
out of local policing. But the most intense exchange came

(32:47):
when Mandani former confronted Cuomo over the sexual abuse allegations
that led to his resignation as governor.

Speaker 7 (32:54):
Let's take a listen to that.

Speaker 19 (32:56):
In twenty twenty one, thirteen different women who worked in
your administration incredibly accused you of sexual harassment. Since then,
you have spent more than twenty million dollars in taxpayer
funds to defend yourself. You have even gone so far
as to legally go after these women. One of those women,
Charlotte Bennett, is here in the audience this evening. You

(33:18):
sought to access her private gynecological records. She cannot speak
up for herself because you lodged a defamation case against her. I, however,
can speak. What do you say to the thirteen women
that you sexually harassed?

Speaker 4 (33:33):
There were allegations of sexual harassment.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
They were then with the five.

Speaker 18 (33:38):
District attorneys, fully litigated for four years.

Speaker 8 (33:42):
The cases were dropped.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
You know that as a fact. So everything you just stated,
you just said was a misstatement.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
I'm gonna tell you all something. Man. I said this
before on Laard Trump's show. But when it comes to
campaign style, Mom, Donnie has a lot of trumpet him. Okay.
Number one, running onto methad of affordability. Okay, the economy,
he never moves off that message. Number two, keeping it
America first, in specifically New York City. And yesterday bringing

(34:09):
one of Clomo's accused us to the debate that was
right out of Trump's playbook. Trump did that Hillary Clinton,
you know, when he bought up Bill Clinton's accuses like that.
He has taken the things that Trump has done in
his campaign that actually are effective and applied to himself.
I think it's He's ran a great campaign, bro.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
That's probably why Cuomo the answer questions after, because it
was only Mandani and Sleepway answer questions after. Cuomo got
a buy the Dodge as she went to the Knicks
game after.

Speaker 7 (34:35):
But yeah, he was sitting with Eric Adams.

Speaker 2 (34:38):
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 9 (34:39):
So early voting in New York It begins on Saturday,
October twenty fifth. It runs through November second, but election
day is November fourth. The polls will be open from
six am to nine PM, so you make sure you
want to exercise your right to vote. And this morning,
we have an update on a case, the case of
twenty three year old nursing student Kita Scott. We talked

(34:59):
about this earlier this week. She's a young woman whose
disappearance gripped Philadelphia earlier this month. Now, the man previously
charged with kidnapping her, twenty one year old Keon King,
is now charged with murder. Police confirmed that the remains
found in that shallow grave this past weekend belonged to Scott.
The medical examiner has ruled her death a homicide, and

(35:20):
prosecutors have added a long list of new charges to King,
including theft, tampering with evidence, abuse of a corpse, and
obstruction of justice. Now police say Scott was last seen
October fourth, leaving her overnight shift at a local nursing home,
and investigators believe she met up with King shortly after
leaving work. Days later, officers found her remains behind an

(35:42):
abandoned middle school in Germantown after receiving what they say
was a very specific, anonymous tip. Now authorities say surveillance
video shows two people leaving a vehicle and moving what
appears to be a heavy object evidence that more than
one person may have been involved. Let's listen to the
police talk about that.

Speaker 20 (36:01):
The covering case's body was not the outcome we hoped for,
but we are grateful that we are able to bring
her home.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
We continue to.

Speaker 20 (36:08):
Pursue anyone who helped, who concealed, who participated in this
app We will not stop.

Speaker 2 (36:16):
I wish nothing but the worst for that young man. Yeah,
I mean I wish nothing but pain and a lifetime
of heartache for that, for that, for that, for that
man man. I just don't even know what triggers a
person even want to do something like that to another individual.

Speaker 9 (36:30):
Well, prosecutors say that he has a history of violence
against women, including a separate kidnapping case earlier this year. Now,
that case was dismissed when a witness didn't show up,
but those charges have now been refiled and Scott's family
is thanking everyone for their in the community, for their
for their prayers and their support. Meanwhile, King he remains
behind bars on a two point five million dollar bill.

(36:52):
A preliminary hearing has been set for November third.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
I don't understand why people like that don't have to
register like some type offenda. You try to kidnap somebody
before and you're just out here walking around.

Speaker 15 (37:01):
Yeah, and just because they didn't, just because the witness
didn't show up the court like you just free, you
scot free.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
It don't make sense.

Speaker 9 (37:07):
Yeah, so we will. We will continue to watch that
and follow this story. All right, Well, that is your
front page news I Mimi Brown. Follow me at Mimi
Brown TV for more stories. Follow the Black Information Network,
download the free iHeartRadio app, or visit binnews dot com.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Thank you, me me me.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
Now when we come back, we have American civil rights activist, politician,
diplomat and pastor Andrew E.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
Young mo a man. This is ninety three years of wisdom. Okay,
this man worked alongside Martin Luther King Jr. All the
stuff we read about in history books, he actually lived.

Speaker 1 (37:38):
Right, and we're gonna talk to him next. So don't
move us to Breakfast Cloud. Come on it the.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
Breakfast Club owning everybody.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
It's DJ env Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the gud. We are
the Breakfast Club. Laonla Roast is here as well, and
we got a special guest in the building, civil rights activist, politician,
diplomat and past the ladies and gentlemen. Og Andrew Young.

Speaker 12 (38:00):
Good morning, sir, Good morning. I'm really glad to be
here with you. Yes, sir, I'm long overdue, man. What
are you telling I'm gonna need I mean, I need
to know where you are, yes, sir. And I'm a
look at the book and be honest or dilaying, and
I probably you know, need to read that quickly.

Speaker 8 (38:19):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
John O'Brien is here as well. John O'Brien, Good morning, sir.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
Good morning.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
Mister Andrew Young had a new documentary i'll called The
Dirty Work. Why was it important for you to tell
this part of your story? Now?

Speaker 12 (38:36):
Well, I'm telling my story and we see the glamor
of the civil rights movement, and it was very glamorous.
For every one or two you see on television, there
were five hundred to one thousand of us in the
background doing the dirty work. And it's the way I
got into it. I was actually up here in New

(38:57):
York in nineteen fifty seven fifty eight and doctor King
needed somebody to move with him to Atlanta. My wife
was from Marrying, Alabama, which is a little country town
near Selma, and we saw the NBC documentary on John

(39:20):
Lewis in the Nashville citing story, We just bought a
house out in Queen's and I was working up at
the National Council of Churches. And when the documentary came home,
my wife said it's time for us to go home.
I said, we are home. She said, no, this is
New York, k it. We'll be my home. And I said, well,

(39:42):
we just bought this house. We got a good job.
She said, I'm going back to my mama in Alabama
and I'm taking my children. And I said, well, what
do you want me to do? She said, I want
you to sell this house and find a job down south.
It was the attraction of going back south that got
me back in the movement. And it was in that

(40:04):
transition Martin Luther King had just been stabbed and he
took New York. In New York, he took a month
off to go to India and was just coming back
and planning to move from Montgomery to Atlanta. So I
ended up getting pulled in to try to help him move.

(40:24):
And that was that was the dirty work. He needed
to be in a bigger city than Montgomery, and but
he couldn't afford to live in Atlanta except with his parents,
and so he was trying to raise funds. He never
had a million dollars a year to work with the
entire time we had the movement going, and so I

(40:45):
was trying to help him raise some funds and went
to my church up here, the United Church of Christ,
and asked them. They founded a number of colleges, Howard
and Fisk, Talladega to Galoo, all across the south, and
so I said, you know, if you would let us

(41:05):
use some of these properties or some of them, we
could have a movement southwide in a little and no time.
And so I was sort of being a bridge between
him making the transition to Montgomery and comeing to Atlanta.
I was then moved from Atlanta back to I mean

(41:29):
from New York back to Atlanta. And the first job
I got, he was not there. His secretary said, well once,
she said, my wife's in Alabama. She said, you can't
be hanging around here loose. He said, idle miner the
devil's workshop, and we got the school a whole lot
of devils. And she said you need something to do.

(41:52):
I said, well, anything I can do to help, and
she gave me a great big egg crate. Pat would
let us. And so she said, if you can help
doctor King with his mail, that'sh Really, if you want
to get to know a company, If somebody's coming and
Ian wants to get to know it, answer the mail,
or at least read it the mail, know what's happening around.

Speaker 2 (42:15):
And so it gave me.

Speaker 12 (42:16):
I mean, I ended up with the bucket of mail.
And that was sort of dirty work.

Speaker 5 (42:22):
So Charlotmagne when he also when he went to go
get the job, when he went to do it South,
the stabb didn't want them. Doctor King was out giving
speeches and on the road. The stabb didn't want him.
He was smart, he was articulate. He was like, all
the seats are taken, we all get every good. They
sent him packing. So he came back with a grant.

(42:43):
The grant was self funded and it was for non
violent education or something like that. But he's funded a salary.
So Doctor King said, you consider you paid for it.
You can sit right over here.

Speaker 12 (42:53):
Well, we paid for it, huh. We not only paid
for it, I brought access to all of those schools, yes,
in North Carolina and King's Mountain, Georgia. It was Atlanta University,
Alabama's two Galu Talladega Talladiga and Alabama and two Glue
and Mississippi.

Speaker 5 (43:14):
But the key point of that in bass Young was,
again you won't take credit for this. He became the
one person nobody could fire, so he could speak truth
to power. We didn't anybody exactly because doctor King didn't
like conflict. If you let me finish my point, yes, sir,
Doctor Dean didn't like conflict, so he was a conflict manager.
So he was the one inside the staff. You had

(43:37):
crazy people on the left and crazy folks sort of
over here trying to do revolutions. Doctor King didn't want conflict,
so he would expecting Bashil Young to knock his inside.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (43:49):
And when he came in, he wanted it to be resolved.
And so he was a resolution manager inside the movement
and outside the movement. Again, he doesn't take credit for it,
but that that really became one of his magic pieces
was that he was an independent thinker, just like you are,
just like all you gots independent thinkers.

Speaker 2 (44:06):
Did they get that right?

Speaker 12 (44:08):
I guess you know the thing is that I left
Howard and I really well, I really d up three
and a half years. See, but I somehow got a degree.
And because I was playing around, wasn't studying. I was
trying to make the swimming team, and so I was

(44:30):
trying to get on the girls, and I wasn't making
any progress at all, you know, from New Orleans, and
I got along with people, but I was I was
trying to grow up. And when I got came left
Howard and we stopped that you couldn't had no hotels

(44:51):
at Leicester. We stopped at a King's Mountain, North Carolina,
where we had a church conference going on, and I
decided to run up the mountain. Somewhere along there, I
kind of blacked out. I looked around and everything seemed perfect.
You know, it was a perfect sky, perfect corn field

(45:13):
or green trees were sparkling, and I said, damn everything.
He has got a purpose but me and I said,
I cannot be put here on this earth with no
purpose at all. And how do I find a purpose? Well,
what I came to was if there's something that I

(45:34):
think needs doing and nobody wants to do it, that
becomes my purpose. So I was looking for stuff that
needed to be done that nobody wanted to do.

Speaker 2 (45:43):
It's such an interesting perspective when you talk about you know,
purpose too, John, because in my mind, you know, I
always thought the purpose was the liberation of black people.
But you're always just looking for something, a purpose within yourself.

Speaker 5 (45:57):
So let's let's let's get some into real talk. He's
got survivor's guilt. He doesn't sleep. He's always working because
he was on that balcony when doctor King was assassinated.
The FBI told him the instructions for the shooter. If
you miss the dreamer, kill the strategist. He's been this
all this time. You an ambassador, first black UNI ambassador

(46:19):
to the history of the United States under Carter, first congressman
since reconstruction in the South. Brought the at the Olympics
to the Atlanta, made Atlanta International City Mayor, Presidential Medal
of fream of Wardee Frich Foreign Legion of Bardie, one
hundred and fifty Honorary doctor degrees, brought a venture capital
of Africa, liberated Zimbabwe, helped get Mandela out of prison.

(46:40):
But underneath all this, I'm here because my friend was
a shot, so he couldn't enjoy any of it. He'd
give all his money away. He's been a servant his
whole life, and he is He's the closest thing we
have to Nelson Mandela.

Speaker 16 (46:55):
Everybody plays a role in the movement, is what I've
always heard and learned. I feel like today when we
talk about the boycotts, that that we're trying to do actively,
there's no real roles. We don't take one thing serious,
we might take the other one serious because there's no structure,
there's no how did you get people to fall along,
even though not everybody growth with.

Speaker 12 (47:13):
Everybody used to go to church back then, and the
radio black radio was owned by white folks, and they
would play the music, but we'd have to slip in
an announcement there's going to be a certain meeting that
you know, SESSI and such a Baptist church or such
and such a Methodist church. And they finally even stopped

(47:36):
them from from doing announcements. So it went by word
of mouth. We knew that every night we'd have a
mass meeting at some church in some neighborhood and people
would get together about five o'clock and they sing these
old songs that the young folk then came in and
modified the freedom songs. Then the preachers would come in

(47:59):
and preach it a little bit and tell what's going on.
But it was all around the church, and in the
daytime when the churches were not operating, the kids went
to the schools, and the guys who were hanging out
at the pool hall, we'd stopped by the back. Doctor

(48:19):
King was very good pool played. Grew up in the YMCA,
and he could get everybody's attention because he would go
into a pool hall and challenge the guys that can
I take the winner? And after they saw he was
he could run the table. They listened to him, and

(48:39):
it was finding a way to get to people where
they are and they would really say, I'm ready to
die for my people. It was the threat of death
to almost every black man in the South until just recently,
and it's coming back now. It's more organized now. The

(49:00):
only person who would talk about it openly was Martin
Luther King, and he said, now, you know, if we
go messing with Birmingham, some of us ain't gonna come back.
See now he knew he was the one most likely targeted,
but I mean he'd make a joke out of it,
and he had a real good sense of humor. He said,

(49:20):
John it might be your turn, but it's gonna be
one of the hardest things I ever do. But I'll
try my best to preach your ass into heaven. And
then he'd start preaching all the things that I pick
on him about, see and he would say things you

(49:42):
didn't know he knew about you, and he'd ask God
to forgive you and please let him into heaven. You know,
I mean, really, he really turned your death into a comedy.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
It was a sadistic Now, if you're just joining us,
were still talking with Andrew Young, civil rights activist politician
work very closely to Martin Luther King Junior Charlamage. The
fact that people knew that they could potentially die is
still were willing to make that sacrifice is what I
think is missing.

Speaker 12 (50:11):
Yes, now you shouldn't be willing to make the sacrifice.
You should be willing to take your time and assume
that you can make the world rights and you don't
have to die. And we maybe have made it too difficult.
Most of the people who died, we can remember their names,

(50:34):
but they're literally millions. Like Martin Luther King got stabbed
by black women up here in Harlem and the with
a letter opener and a let opener was pressing on
the a order of his heart, and they said, if

(50:55):
he had sneezed, he probably would have died. And he
talked about that all the time. But what he talked about,
he said, but he got a letter this girl said,
I am eleven years old and it shouldn't matter, but
I happened to be white, and I just want to
thank you and thank God that you did not sneeze.

(51:19):
And he would talk he talked about that all the
time because it represented the fact that there's still many,
many good people. And you shouldn't believe that the whole
world is going to hell at a hand basket. See
that right now. So even right now, in right now,

(51:41):
the whole world is not going to hell in a
hand basket.

Speaker 2 (51:44):
And the doc you said, after Martin Luther King Junior
got shot, you knew there was no hope.

Speaker 12 (51:50):
I knew that it was going to be hard, but
I really my mama used to make me go to
Sunday school and and they time they were talking about
Elijah going to heaven and a flaming chariot, and I
was about nine years old, and I said, I don't
believe that they put me out of center school. But

(52:12):
I never forgot that. And that's what I thought when
I saw Martin laying there one I said, he probably
didn't even hear that shot. The bullet Pollers travels faster
than the speed of sound, so it hit him right
in and severed his spinal cord, so he probably never

(52:32):
heard it. He probably never felt any pain, and he
was dead instantly. And the thing that occurred to me
then was, damn, my brother done gone to heaven and
flaming chariot and all the all of the spirituals talk about,
you know, steal away, steal away to Jesus, and I

(52:54):
just felt that he'd gone home to the Lord and
left me here. But I knew, and I still know
that there's hardly a day that I don't talk about
him and learn or remember something that he said in

(53:17):
a similar situation. And I passed that on to my children,
but to all children, And it's one of the reasons why.

Speaker 2 (53:26):
I'm really grateful to those folk.

Speaker 12 (53:29):
And John is one of them that put together money
to tell this story, because all the books that were
written by the movement are big, big books, and we
don't read, we don't keep stilling that long. So the
mass media, radio and television is still our means of communication.
And it's why you play such an important part in

(53:53):
our community and why I had to. I mean, I
was in a meeting last night till ten o'clock, went home,
got me a few hours sleep, got up at four
o'clock in the morning, got on a plane, and came
up back here because I wasn't coming to talk to
you all. You talk to more people than anybody I know.

(54:14):
And when John said he's going to let you talk
to his people, I said, thank you Jesus.

Speaker 2 (54:20):
No, it's a privilege man. Well, but it's a privilege
for me. Do you think we've honored doctor King's legacy?
Are just branded it?

Speaker 21 (54:27):
No?

Speaker 12 (54:28):
I don't think there's anybody anybody around that doesn't respect
what he did and what he gave.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
His life for.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
I think that.

Speaker 12 (54:38):
I think he is a sacred personality in our history.
But everyone is like that. I mean, Christmas Attics. I
knew about him. He's the first black man, first man
to die for this country in Massachusetts, and he's black.
This country would not be what it is without us.

(55:01):
And I think Martin Luther King represents the best of us,
But he ain't the only one of us that there
were people around him, and only a half a dozen
of us have been to college. I mean, most of
us learned learned from the streets, and they learned from

(55:22):
our experiences. But the I mean Louis Armstrong grew up
in my neighborhood in New Orleans. He didn't I don't
think anybody ever gave him trumpet lessons. He just picked
up the thing and made it blow. And and the
thing that I'd like to remind people is that he's
a man who grew up in one of the poorest

(55:44):
neighborhoods in New Orleans, and he sings It's a wonderful world.
And there's Ray Charles who's blind, and there's a big
piano out in all ben and Georgia where he grew up,
and he sings America the Beautiful. But he doesn't start

(56:04):
with though, but the spacious guys. He starts with a
little beautiful for heroes proved in liberating strife, who more
than self their country loved and mercy modern life. And
we take the history of this country and the history
of this planet, and we turn it into a piece

(56:26):
of music or a symbol of grace. If we do something,
we do it with style, you know, and it's and
no matter what it is, we do it better.

Speaker 4 (56:40):
What was the issue, the real issue between Martin Luther
King Jr. And Malcolm X.

Speaker 12 (56:49):
You know, there was no issue. The difference was that
Martin Luther King learned in college, Malcolm X learned in jail.
But Malcolm X read the dictionary and the Bible. Say,
and when Martin came back with the Nobel Prize, we

(57:10):
worked in Harlem and the Armory. And when we came
in the back door, who was standing act in the
back door with Malcolm X? Two people, Malcolm X and
Nelson Rockefeller. And Malcolm X said, I just wanted to
thank you for all that you've done, and I want
you to know that I am with you in anything

(57:32):
you want me to do. But I think that it's
probably better strategy if you and I don't seem to
be so close, and said, that's why I'm not going
to come in there with you in public.

Speaker 5 (57:47):
He wasn't trying to profile.

Speaker 2 (57:52):
Disparage Malcolm. You see disparage Martin publicly sometimes though we'll
call him Uncle Tom Brand.

Speaker 12 (57:58):
It wasn't it wasn't Malcolm so much as it was
that whole whole crowd around Elijah Muhammad. Now, but Martin
was close to Elijah too. It seemed like, I know,
well because we're because when we came to if we
went into town, like when we went to Chicago, we

(58:20):
got all the big preachers together and got them to
agree that we would be there with them and that
they could tell us what they wanted us to do. Now,
some didn't like it, and some just didn't want anybody
to have a profile but them, and we just went

(58:41):
on around them.

Speaker 5 (58:42):
By the way, when he became mayor, just the point
about playing people playing their roles. When he became mayor
of Atlanta, the civil rights leaders his friends. The second
day he was mayor, they picketed him, so he went outside.
He said, what are you guys doing? They said, well,
you're mayor now, so we you know, you got jr. Job,
we got ours and he and he accepted that. So
Malcolm was playing his lane, is playing his role publicly,

(59:03):
but privately he respected doctor King.

Speaker 2 (59:07):
Now, if you're just joining us, were still talking with
Andrew Young, civil rights activist, politician work very closely.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
To Martin Luther King Junior Charlamage.

Speaker 2 (59:14):
If the Dirty Work documentary could teach one lesson to
this generation and the next generation or organizes, what would
you want it to be.

Speaker 12 (59:22):
There is some dirty work in any struggle for freedom.
But dirty work could be hard work. Dirty work could
be thoughtful work, you know, whatever nobody else wants to do.
Like we didn't want to mess with money, and John
decided that he was going to teach folk how to
that you can't be free without voting, but neither can

(59:43):
you be free of you broke. And so teaching people
how to manage money, how to save money, how to
invest money, how to know the meaning of money, to
your salvation and survival, that's another issue all together. But
communications is an issue.

Speaker 5 (01:00:05):
And so don't be afraid of doing the dirty work.
Embrace it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
It is. It's noble work. It's not dirty work, yeah,
is that right?

Speaker 12 (01:00:14):
That's not only is it noble work, is is the
kind of work that has to be done.

Speaker 5 (01:00:21):
So when when Charlemagne was doing that internship way back when,
and that in that first radio program, and when people
noticed you, that was the dirty work. Absolutely, I'm sure
you've done dirty work in your career. You've always not
been both of you and I had always been sitting
here prime time. You've had to hustle, you had to
do things and jobs nobody else wanted.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
I still do the dirty work now, m maybe.

Speaker 1 (01:00:45):
Maybe.

Speaker 5 (01:00:46):
And the work you're doing with with mental health, the foundation,
you're doing the stuff that nobody sees. The conversation that
we have that at two in the morning about about
life in general, all that's the dirty work. And raising
your children is the most honorable version, raising your pain,
paying school fees, like we've got to be about the basics.

(01:01:09):
We got to get back to the basics and be
about we and not just about me. That's really who
he is. And I spent most of his interview trying
to draw him out.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
This good. You can see him. This is good. John O'Brien,
thank you for bringing this, this, this walking memorial, this iconic,
this icon living. Mister Andrew Young, thank you for coming, brother,
Thank you for having men. That's right, and check out
the dirty work on What's It's a Peak irectb Globally
on MSNBC globally, Thank you, brother, thank you, and thank

(01:01:42):
all of your audience.

Speaker 12 (01:01:44):
Yes, sir, this is college on the radio.

Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
I like that that's.

Speaker 12 (01:01:50):
A word if you didn't have money to go to
college listening, that's.

Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
Right, Yeah, thank you, it's the breakfast club.

Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
You know what's so crazy about that interview?

Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
We had a rest stuba two hours.

Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
No, not only that, So my wife's best friend, her
name Massasha, and she was she loved Andrew Young. She
actually went to the School of Policy Studies at Georgia State.
And I wasn't here for that interview. It wasn't here.

Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
I was in Atlanta for her funeral because she passed.
So it's so crazy that her husband just hit me,
was like, you know, she would have had a thousand
questions for you. But I wasn't actually here for that
interview because I was about her and he was here
for almost two hours.

Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
Yeah, I wasn't here for that interview. So rest in peace,
Sasha mcwilliam's.

Speaker 3 (01:02:35):
Rest in peace. That another angel and have been looking
over me. All right, But let's get to the latest
with Laura Laurna.

Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
Be coming straight fast.

Speaker 8 (01:02:43):
She gets them from somebody that knows somebody detail.

Speaker 4 (01:02:46):
I'm long was a little bit about everything.

Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
She'd be having the latest on the latest with Lauren
la Rosa. Sometimes you have fact sometimes you have details.
Sometimes you have a little bit of everything. On the
breakfast Club, Brandon.

Speaker 4 (01:03:02):
Cupiks, yeah, we're here, good morning. That you gotta tell
them why you're bad? Yeah, yes, yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:03:11):
Backstory may say that you you put Lamb on today.
That's not what I would ass.

Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
Okay, Well it's Peter, nothing real.

Speaker 16 (01:03:23):
Yes, Well, and other news outside of the Lambs, Stephen A.
Smith has decided to come out and apologize to Jasmine Crockett.
You guys, remember we had a conversation up here about,
you know, people being upset about some of the things
that he had said about her and how Jasmin Crockett
has been fighting for us out there in the political streets.

Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
Well, now he's apologizing. Let's listen.

Speaker 20 (01:03:43):
I wanted to take this opportunity to attack this issue
as it pertained to me and Jasmine Crockett because I
personally have had an issue with how things have been
misconstrued and misinterpreted.

Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
But at the end of the day, I have to
own it.

Speaker 20 (01:03:56):
And so when somebody says to me, Stephen, rather than
point to her and her verbiage and her language and
how she talked about the president, what about how he talks?
I have no problem with that, And if that is
the reason that everybody is in an uproar, that is fine,
And I have no problem apologizing to that to my sister, because,
damn it, I want her to know I don't feel
that way about her. I have no problem apologizing if

(01:04:17):
I'm wrong, But I'm gonna challenge the legitimacy of what
people come at me with. If you came to me
and you said to me, it came acrosd as a
bit dismissive, Steven, you should have been more protective of
her than that, because look at how he speaks, look
at how they act on Capitol Hill towards her. I
understand that, But when somebody tries to take that to
accuse me of being disrespectful or in any way misogynistic,

(01:04:40):
I'm going to push back on that because that's emphatically false.

Speaker 4 (01:04:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (01:04:45):
So he's apologizing. Nice, good, Yeah, I think it's a
good thing to hear to see.

Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
That's why I will always have respect to stephen A
because he has the ability to change his mind and
when he's wrong, okay, and that says a lot about
it person. That says a lot about a person, Okay,
when they are presented new inxacmation and can admit they
were wrong. I respect it, I.

Speaker 16 (01:05:03):
Agree, she responded, No, I haven't seen a response to her.
She actually that I was watching, didn't said anything to
him at all.

Speaker 4 (01:05:10):
She's working in Congress exactly.

Speaker 16 (01:05:13):
And I think people try to make this out to
be like steven A. Smith has this like uh, like
he knows that this story is going to get traction.

Speaker 4 (01:05:20):
He's just doing what he does.

Speaker 16 (01:05:21):
But I think that this also shows too that he
does actually care about the things that he's talking about personally,
because he cares about her well being.

Speaker 4 (01:05:27):
You can hear that through his apology.

Speaker 2 (01:05:29):
So because that you can agree or disagree with steven A. Smith,
but I've never heard steven A. Smith just talk for
the sake of talking, okay. And I really wish more people,
especially black people, in the political space or the social
justice space or the activism space, you know, build some
bridges with steven A and tapping his audience going to
his show, because the white politicians are taking full advantage

(01:05:52):
of going on steven as show and taking advantage of
his audience. So why aren't the black elective, black activists
and black politicians.

Speaker 3 (01:06:01):
I hate it sometimes when I feel like, you know,
we will go at somebody and not have a conversation
with him, right, even if you think they're right or wrong,
have a conversation.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Maybe what you said they but like, oh, I wasn't
thinking that.

Speaker 3 (01:06:10):
And I just hate when we attack each other when
we don't necessarily agree with.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
What we say. I hate that.

Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
And if you think you think he's misinforming his audience,
then go have a conversation with him on his show.
And as you're educating him, you'll also be doing what
educating his audience well.

Speaker 16 (01:06:27):
In other news, shifting gears. Yesterday news broke of a filing.
So Drika Gates or formerly Drika Gates, who is this
strange wife of Kevin Gates music artists Kevin Gates. She's
put paper in paperwork into the court stating that Kevin
Gates has abandoned her and her children and they are
now in financial ruin. So the docs read, you know,

(01:06:49):
they tell a story about how Drika was managing Kevin
Gates for some time. She left LSU to manage him
even before he was like this big famed celebrity, and
they built so much together. They share two children, and
she says that she says several things. She's asking the
court for a ton of spousal support and child support.
She believes that she should be receiving over seventy K

(01:07:14):
between those two things. And here's why. She says that
Number one the debt that they've been left in. She
says her Mississippi farm is now in foreclosure. She lists
that the IRS has a levey out on Drika for
seven million dollars and unpaid taxes. And she's also saying
that you know Kevin's actions in twenty twenty three, she
alleges went from neglect to weaponization. She says that at

(01:07:37):
one point in time, there were I guess like royalties
and different things that she was receiving, and she alleges
that now she does not receive those things. She and
the doc says that you know she stood by him
through it all, through incarceration, absences, and fidelity and financial manipulation.
And then in twenty twenty one is actually when everything changed,
and she claims that Kevin Gates dismantled the financial foundation

(01:07:58):
of their family. She says that he also stopped paying
allegenc he stopped paying for basic family obligations like household
staff property tax, private school tuition, and that it was
actually eighty percent of the couple's royalty income stopped coming
to her and when and now she alleges only goes
into his personal accounts. And she says she tried to
figure it out on her own. She tried to downsize,

(01:08:20):
She tried to do everything that she could. She borrowed money,
she took loan, She even sold her car to keep
up with the children's expenses. She poured herself into her
growing wellness business, Rudrika LLC. But no amount of determination
could offset the calculated financial sabotage that she's alleging. So she's,
you know, asking for money. She says that she needs

(01:08:40):
help right now that she's not receiving it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
She has seventy thousand a month.

Speaker 16 (01:08:43):
Yeah, so she wants over seventy k and monthly support
to catch up and just be able to maintain a
lifestyle that she says that you know, her children and
her need to.

Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Maintain seven million dollars a lot of bread.

Speaker 16 (01:08:55):
He taxes gesh right to me, Like, in reading the
docs and it's almost four hundred pages, I didn't even
get halfway through. But in reading it, it sounds like
a lot of this is her wanting to be able
to just catch up, like she says at one point,
you know, like she's talking about her farms in foreclosure,
like they're losing their stability living.

Speaker 4 (01:09:12):
Wise, is what she's claiming.

Speaker 8 (01:09:14):
Now.

Speaker 16 (01:09:14):
I did reach out to reps for Kevin Gates. I
have not heard back at didn't see that he posts
anything or anything like that on social media. And in
the docks, her attorneys say that Kevin Gates, they let
she's defending himself by saying that, you know, the two
were never legally married, but you know that we knew
of they had been married back in twenty fifteen, back

(01:09:36):
in October twenty fifteen.

Speaker 15 (01:09:39):
Yeah, well, prayers to Drinka in the family.

Speaker 16 (01:09:44):
Yeah, wishing them the best or to figure it out.
I guess for the two babies absolutely.

Speaker 2 (01:09:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:09:49):
And their kids are eleven and twelve, so they're older kids.

Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
Able to work it out.

Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
Yeah, me too.

Speaker 2 (01:09:55):
That's it.

Speaker 4 (01:09:58):
Already. Silence little lamps.

Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
You lost me a little bit. What it don't even
matter her seven million.

Speaker 16 (01:10:07):
It's just basically she's saying she's she's fighting for her
life right now financially, and she alleges that it's because
Kevin Gates took away their income.

Speaker 4 (01:10:16):
But she's she was his manager, so she didn't have
and she was his wife, right, that's what she's saying.

Speaker 16 (01:10:22):
She's saying that the royalties were they stopped coming her way,
they started going to a personal account that he has.

Speaker 4 (01:10:28):
That's what she alleged.

Speaker 1 (01:10:28):
Court Court Court, Yep, that is the latest for Lauren, Yes,
leaving that man.

Speaker 2 (01:10:34):
Niggas don't care about their kids. We're gonna talk about
it for after that.

Speaker 16 (01:10:39):
We know you're not talking about what we just came
out of. But that was a crazy sec I know
I do crazy seguys.

Speaker 1 (01:10:44):
But right, Lauren, you know what.

Speaker 2 (01:10:49):
Forget it? Why you look at why when you said
that you couldn't look here.

Speaker 1 (01:10:53):
You can look here. You could look at.

Speaker 2 (01:10:55):
Why every single one of my co hosts in this.

Speaker 4 (01:11:01):
My land.

Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
I don't have nothing to do with this projection, Okay,
don't got kids. I don't know what's going on right
now here to do a job, guys. I don't know
what y'all are doing. This weird all right, it's the
Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
Good morning. Make sure you're telling them watch out of Florida, Milorada.

Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx in
all of four. Yes, you are a donkey.

Speaker 15 (01:11:30):
The Florida man attacked an ATM for a very strange reason.

Speaker 4 (01:11:34):
It gave him too much money.

Speaker 9 (01:11:35):
Florida man is arrested after that, say he rigs the
door to his home in an attempt to electro hit
his pregnant wife.

Speaker 7 (01:11:40):
Police arrested in Orlando.

Speaker 4 (01:11:41):
Man, we're talking of Faminda. It's the breakfast club, bitch
you Donkey of the day with Charlam Hayne a guy.

Speaker 2 (01:11:47):
I don't know why y'all keeping letting here and get
y'all like, yes, it's not me do ball. It's Florida
Donkey of to Day for Thursday, October twenty third goes
to a thirty five year old Florida man named Jeremy
Jarren Rousse. Okay, what does your uncle Shalla always say
about the great state of Florida. The craziest people in
America come from the Bronx and all of Florida, and
today is no exception. Now, Jeremy is an uber each driver,

(01:12:07):
and we the people need our uber each drivers to
do two things for us. One make sure we get
our food in a timely manner, and two, which is
probably the most important. Don't f with our food, bro Okay,
we trust you not to put your penis on our pastry.
So I respect people who take their job as an
Uber each driver seriously. Drop on the clues bombs for

(01:12:28):
all the Uber each drivers there. Jeremy definitely takes his
Uber Each job seriously. Okay. Anybody who cares about their
delivery rating is my kind of Uber Each driver. How
do you get a great rating being an Uber each driver, Well,
it's a few things. Okay. You must focus on efficiency
and customer service. You must be prompt, Okay, you must

(01:12:48):
be polite, you must be professional. You must communicate effectively
with the customer and restaurant. You have to follow delivery instructions. Okay,
you should verify the order and you should keep the
customer informed throughout the process. Okay. That's how you get
a good rating on Uber Each and Jeremy takes that
very seriously. Okay, he is determined to get a good
rating by any means necessary. But I would like to

(01:13:10):
also tell all the Uber each drivers out there that
there is some things that should come before your Uber
Each delivery rating. See, we know how you know hard
times is out here right now. Okay, Folks can't afford rent,
they can't afford food, and they can't afford child care. Okay,
it's damn, damn possible for some people to be able

(01:13:31):
to take care of all three of those things. So
some people have to bring their kids to work. Okay,
Jeremy is one of those people. Jeremy had to bring
his child to work. And Jeremy bringing his child to
work led to a headline that I read this morning,
and the headline said, uber each dad realizes his son
is missing from car and keeps doing deliveries to prevent

(01:13:54):
rating from going down. I can't make this type of
stuff up. Let's go to Fox News for the report.

Speaker 21 (01:13:59):
Police Altamont Springs police arrested Jeremy Ruse. Police say they
found his nonverbal juvenile son, who has autism, running naked
on the westbound on ramp of I four at State
Road four thirty six. Happened around eleven o'clock Thursday night.
Police say Ruse admitted to them he realized his son
wasn't in the backseat of his car, but kept driving

(01:14:21):
to make his deliveries. Officers say Ruse even drove by
them as they cared for his own son.

Speaker 2 (01:14:28):
They say a woman picked the boy.

Speaker 8 (01:14:30):
Up after nearly an hour.

Speaker 21 (01:14:31):
Police say hours later, Ruse called them to share his
side of the story. The report says he told them
he kept driving to Ward Winter Park miles away because
he did not want to negatively affect his uber eats rating.

Speaker 2 (01:14:46):
Police say he.

Speaker 21 (01:14:46):
Told them he didn't go pick up his son because
he feared being arrested, and said if he were to
be arrested, he preferred to do it later.

Speaker 2 (01:14:57):
Every now and then, a Facebook post pops up in says,
the more I get to know people, the more I
understand why Noah only let animals on the arc. I
agree wholeheartedly. Drop on the clues bombs for Noah. Okay,
and I would like to give that more of an
updated field. The more I get to know people, the
more I understand why the tech roles want to replace

(01:15:17):
y'all with robots AI everything. I am sick of humans
in their decision making. Okay, virtual reality it all. Y'all
don't deserve real oxygen, okay. Keep people in the house.
We can't be trusted around each other, all right. The
fact that his uber rating means more than him than
his special needs child. Okay, little boy autistic running around

(01:15:38):
neckad Okay, and you don't even realize it. All right, Hey, Jeremy,
how about sscribing to be a five star father? Okay?
You don't want to get a thumbs up on being
a dad? All right? I think it's a damn crime
to label this little boy special needs and not check
to see if the needs of the father are special too. Okay,
Like something is not right. Dispatch of humans, I really

(01:15:58):
believe aren't created by God. There's just a certain batch
of humans that God had nothing to do with it.
I think at some point God left the ingredients for humans,
but whoever was in charge of making them they changed
the recipe. Okay, because common sense is just the thing
of the past, all right. I know life be lifeing,
But how you just forget your child? And then when
you remember you forgot your child, you say, let me

(01:16:20):
finish these Uber Eat drop offs first? Okay? Now, selfishly,
if I ordered food, thank you, But damn man, I
want you to love yourself. Jeremy, There is no way
you really love yourself, because taking care of yourself is
part of taking care of your kids. And the reason
that you don't know your child was missing is because

(01:16:41):
you're missing so much within yourself. Please give Jeremy Jaron
Rouse the sweet sounds of Hamiltons.

Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
Oh no, you are the dog gee.

Speaker 11 (01:16:52):
Of the damn.

Speaker 4 (01:16:56):
The dog gee.

Speaker 1 (01:16:59):
Oh this is a shame. It definitely sounds like the
dad ass autism too.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Yeah. Yeah, Like how you didn't know the little boy
wasn't in the vaccine nomore because I know the little
boy was making noise. Yeah, I know he was making noise.
He didn't realize how quiet it was once the little
boy wasn't in the car no more. This is this
is crazy. This is crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:17:25):
He definitely had to know. And the and the sad
part is it probably happened before.

Speaker 3 (01:17:29):
It's not the first time because you you lose your
autism son, and you're just like, all, well, I gotta
do these deliveries.

Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
That means that must have happened before.

Speaker 4 (01:17:35):
You like, yeah, yeah, lord, how old was the kid?

Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
I don't think okay he was thirty five though, yeah
yeah him.

Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
Poor little boy? All right, thank you for that. Don't
care today?

Speaker 4 (01:17:55):
Yeah? No, please?

Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
Why man? You always want to play games?

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
No, because a game? Don't play that's my game?

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
Why what does it matter?

Speaker 1 (01:18:03):
I want to play?

Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
What you mean, wise, he was responsible? Okay.

Speaker 4 (01:18:07):
The only reason why you don't want to play because
you already know the race.

Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
God did the story. He always knows, and I know
the race to you know what the race is? No,
let's play game. Play text y'all with the races. I'm
gonna text y'all text to play game. Come on, man,
I'm gonna text y'all with the races.

Speaker 8 (01:18:25):
I want to playing.

Speaker 2 (01:18:26):
I'm gonna text yalla. Hold on, yes, So Patty, like,
don't you say it out loud? You just shut up?

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
Oh my god?

Speaker 8 (01:18:41):
You know what chat?

Speaker 2 (01:18:44):
We live on the breakfast club am twitch chat? Tell
me what the race is? The chat said, I'm not
even saying when the chat said, I just want to
know what you think the races?

Speaker 4 (01:18:54):
His father is training him for that though.

Speaker 5 (01:18:56):
You know what, you know what?

Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
Just fixed my best eight five eight five one o
five one.

Speaker 3 (01:19:03):
If you have a relationship issues for any type of problem,
because it would mix, just fix your mess.

Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. Just
fix my mess.

Speaker 2 (01:19:13):
I hate this.

Speaker 1 (01:19:13):
Please is the breakfast club?

Speaker 8 (01:19:15):
Breakfast Club?

Speaker 10 (01:19:19):
We'll kill.

Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
Oh my god, I'm all up in your mess.

Speaker 15 (01:19:24):
I'm gonna fix it, mix it, fix it, fix it,
just gonna fix your mess because my advice is real.

Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
Morning everybody, It's d J n V. Just hilarious. Charlamagne
the God. We are the Breakfast Club. We got Lisa
on the Lisa good morning. Hello. Hey, what's your name? Mama?

Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
Fatima?

Speaker 1 (01:19:42):
Oh, Fatima? I'm sorry, Fatima?

Speaker 4 (01:19:44):
What's that baby?

Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
What's your question for? Jess uh?

Speaker 11 (01:19:48):
Hi?

Speaker 10 (01:19:48):
My bad?

Speaker 22 (01:19:49):
I'm sorry. So I was with somebody for about four
years and it was good, but we was on the
nof stuff and my main problem with was he wouldn't
find God. But I felt like, in my opinion, he
needed and he knew he needed. He was swagging. So
when he finally found it, every time there was a problem,

(01:20:10):
he would use it against me or anybody in his family.

Speaker 15 (01:20:14):
And I'm sorry, you said, find God.

Speaker 22 (01:20:20):
Yeah, find God like he's in my opinion, I knew
he did it, and I feel like a lot of
people these says. So he finally founded okay, but then
whenever there was a problem, he would use it against
me in any conversation, like he decided to be absent
and I was gonna play with that I didn't mind,
but he kept that boundary every time he wanted to

(01:20:42):
do something, and then when he was finished, he would
blame me. So I finally decided to leave. But my
thing is just I'm trying not to break no context.
Even though this was somebody who I wanted to marriage,
somebody who I wanted to have kids here, how do
I accept the fact that it might be over?

Speaker 4 (01:21:00):
You just have to accept it.

Speaker 15 (01:21:01):
I'm having a hard time following it though. You know
what I'm saying you you you said God right? Because
you keep saying it. You mean, so you're so christ
you know faith?

Speaker 8 (01:21:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (01:21:12):
You introduced him to faith, okay, and he found his faith.
But somehow when y'all get into arguments, he turns it
back on you. I don't know what that has to
do with, yeah, leading him to faith, like.

Speaker 22 (01:21:24):
He wants to trying to have SA sometimes he would
sometimes he would it, and yet afterwards, with finished, he
would just turn around in his corner and act like
nothing happened. And I hated that because then sometimes I
would feel like it was my fault.

Speaker 15 (01:21:42):
Okay, So you practice abstinence, yeah okay, And he did
not want to do that, but he is doing it
because he's doing it for the betterment of you guys relationship,
and he also found Christ through you. So it's like, okay, yeah,
he's doing this, but but he's also a man and
and he's very tempted, and so he beats off sometimes

(01:22:03):
in the corner and you didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:22:07):
Okay, I'm sorry.

Speaker 22 (01:22:11):
It's complicated. Yes, after he finished sex, he would turn
around in the corner and act like nothing happened. And
then we had a conversation that when you come around,
just sit on the other side of the couch because
I don't want to be tempered because at the time
you're around me.

Speaker 2 (01:22:28):
I just want to pay.

Speaker 22 (01:22:30):
And I told him you left, Oh that's the problem
you don't have.

Speaker 10 (01:22:36):
I got you.

Speaker 4 (01:22:37):
I got you. So it seems it seems are you
guys married or you just go together? Are you marry
by yourself?

Speaker 9 (01:22:43):
No?

Speaker 22 (01:22:44):
Absolutely at all.

Speaker 15 (01:22:45):
Okay, So that's why you're practice and you're trying your
best to stay of course until you guys are married,
and you guys can willingly do whatever you want to
do sexually whatever.

Speaker 22 (01:22:55):
Because we had a we had an issue a while back.
I had a miscarriage by him.

Speaker 4 (01:23:00):
Hmmm, So sorry, and I yeah, and I just could not.

Speaker 22 (01:23:04):
I'm like, I don't want to because I really want
to have a child in marriage, but I just have
to let go because I'm like, if you can't be
the man that I need, I cannot have you around them.

Speaker 2 (01:23:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:23:17):
Well, obviously it's to y'all on two different pages, right,
and it honestly, it seems like he did try your way,
and he tried, and he's trying and he's still trying.

Speaker 4 (01:23:27):
However, that doesn't seem like the life that he wants
to live.

Speaker 15 (01:23:32):
He's doing it because he loves you. It seems like right,
but and sometimes that works out, but it's very hard
for him.

Speaker 4 (01:23:38):
Girl.

Speaker 15 (01:23:39):
You you are finance individual because he can't even look
at you, honey.

Speaker 4 (01:23:42):
He wants you to turn around.

Speaker 15 (01:23:44):
You want to hide behind a curtain when you walk
in the door. So that is not the guy for you,
you know what I'm saying. And that's not to say
he's not a bad person. I mean, and that's not
to say he's a bad person. You you're gonna have
to It is a very few individuals that can deal
with what you are down, you know what I mean.
But that's your way, and there is somebody out there

(01:24:04):
for you. Unfortunately it is not him, and I know
the history between you two. You lost the child. I'm
so sorry about that, but I feel like this is
not the relationship for you. You need somebody who is
aligned with you.

Speaker 4 (01:24:17):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 15 (01:24:18):
You You need somebody that you are equally yoked with,
and that is not that gentleman. I do appreciate him,
and you should appreciate him too for even trying. But
you can't get upset with the person for not living
in abstinence to the degree that you do.

Speaker 5 (01:24:33):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 15 (01:24:34):
You just have to do your best and find your
person to entertainment and hung up. She said, Look, you
ain't trying to hear what I'm putting down.

Speaker 4 (01:24:41):
So it is what it is. Good morning, who's this?

Speaker 11 (01:24:43):
Good morning?

Speaker 4 (01:24:45):
What's up? Joey from Orlando? What's wrong?

Speaker 11 (01:24:48):
You're the lost store for you? But BA try to
break it down and showing it up.

Speaker 2 (01:24:51):
So I got on.

Speaker 11 (01:24:53):
I got like a bipolo this sword. I've been diagnosed
through the VA. I've gotten married for a couple of months.
I basically kicked out my current wife and her kids
at my house. It's been two months, she found her
own apartment. So what do I do? Do I continue
to fight for the marriage or I just a lot
of paperwork and just be done with it.

Speaker 2 (01:25:12):
Wait?

Speaker 15 (01:25:12):
Wait a minute, Wait a minute, Wait a minute, what
do you mean continue to fight?

Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
Do you kicked her and her kids out?

Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
What do you mean?

Speaker 4 (01:25:20):
How are you fighting? What do you mean? What's happening?

Speaker 8 (01:25:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (01:25:23):
Just I mean so basically with them that two months
and she's been going like we've been we'll talk here
and dead well be linked up a few times, you
know what I'm saying. So that's what I don't know
if she's just giving me false hope.

Speaker 15 (01:25:35):
You kicked her out. There's no hope when you kick
me and my kids out of your house. And this
was your wife, you know, So that's kind of right,
you know. And I know that you are struggling with
you know, your your mental disorder, and I do understand that.
Are you getting the proper help for that?

Speaker 1 (01:25:49):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (01:25:49):
Yeah, Actually I go to thea you know, every two weeks,
every two weeks.

Speaker 15 (01:25:53):
Okay, okay, why did you kick them out? What made
you kick them out? And don't tell me you was
a whole nother person. And you hear voices when you
did it, it had to be a reason for that.

Speaker 11 (01:26:03):
I got a kid from a pre relationship and she
got kids from pre relationship. So my daughter told me
some stuff that she said to her and I wasn't
too happy about. So I immediately turned into dad mode
and protected my daughter and you at my house because
I didn't like what they were doing to.

Speaker 8 (01:26:19):
Or seeing to her.

Speaker 15 (01:26:20):
Okay, now, before you just went ahead and kicked her out,
I understand dad mode absolutely, but you're also a husband
as well, you know, And we're wearing both of those
hats under the same roof as your wife and the
Brady Bunch because you have kids from previous relationships since
she has kids from previous relationships. What you do is
you call a family meeting, You go speak with your

(01:26:41):
wife about what your daughter just told you, and you
can still be that that dad and protector mode without
kicking them out. First thing, it don't even sound like
you allowed a conversation before you did that, you know, right, Yeah,
So that's that's just all that is, you know, and
it's it sounds like you really do It sounds like

(01:27:01):
you feel like you made a mistake, but you don't
want to you don't want to disappoint your daughter and
you will not be doing that. But it sounds like
you know that you went too far too quickly. Right,
you made a decision a little too quick?

Speaker 4 (01:27:18):
Yes you didn't.

Speaker 15 (01:27:19):
So I can tell you want your marriage and I
want you to fight for it, you know, but think
about where your wife mindset is right, because if you
kicked her out without even hearing her out, it's like, damn,
how can I trust you? How can I trust this?
You won't do this again? So you have to also
put yourself in her shoes too, And then you also
have to have a conversation with your baby girl, you

(01:27:39):
know what I mean. But I think it should have
been a family meeting. Take that took place, and y'all,
and in family with family, when you're married and everything
like that, they're always going to be uncomfortable conversations that
you have to be willing to have. You know, you
just can't make decisions like that. That was That was
very That was you know, Yes it was selfish. I

(01:28:02):
wasn't word I was looking for, but yes, it was selfish.

Speaker 4 (01:28:03):
But that was that was made. That was a very
I don't know what's the word Charlemagne. Come on, O
Jesus Christ.

Speaker 15 (01:28:12):
I'm sorry, Orlando man, but look, I want you to
continue to fight for your marriage. I think you should
call your wife and you and her should go somewhere
and talk about it, and then bring the kids together
and have a family meeting. You should apologize in front
of your kids to your wife, so that also sets
a tone in the home, you know what I mean,

(01:28:32):
Because I don't even want your daughter to think that
that was okay, that you just took her word and
just kicked her step mom and her you know, step
siblings out.

Speaker 4 (01:28:43):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 15 (01:28:44):
You have to set an example for your child and
your wife's children as well, and also be the head
of the household and run it the right way.

Speaker 4 (01:28:51):
That's a marriage that you're in.

Speaker 15 (01:28:52):
It's not just your girlfriend, you know, And so everybody
needs an apology from you, your wife and there and
her kids and well y'all kids, because y'all are married,
so y'all are parents to all of these children and
your daughter, you know. Yeah, I'm sorry that that happened,
but I do I do have faith that you will

(01:29:15):
get your wife back.

Speaker 10 (01:29:16):
You just have to.

Speaker 4 (01:29:17):
You just have to reassure her and you. You got
to get better with communication, babe. Okay, thank you, no problem.

Speaker 2 (01:29:23):
That was just fix my mess. Okay. We do that
every Thursday around this time. Why are you looking at me.

Speaker 15 (01:29:30):
Like because you wasn't even listening. You had it, and dude,
I listened to You don't get a day every day.
I do this once a week on Thursday. You couldn't
even listen.

Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
I just wasn't listening to that part. I listened to
the first one. Okay, what are you talking about?

Speaker 15 (01:29:43):
First one ain't make no damn sense, and you're gonna listen.
You missed out on a really good one.

Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
What happened?

Speaker 4 (01:29:48):
He kicked his wife out because it's something that his
daughter told him.

Speaker 15 (01:29:51):
I can't even say, hey, wife, you need to sit
down and have a conversation because I don't like when
I'm here.

Speaker 4 (01:29:55):
My daughter came back and told me that y'all was
talking about something something.

Speaker 2 (01:29:57):
But he also said he deals with bipolar disorder, so
all he was having a manic episode when he did that,
So he probably don't even mean that when he did it. Okay, yeah,
he's so, I'm just staying listen. We do that every
Thursday around eight eight eight fifteen am. But yeah, we
got the latest with Lauren coming up next? Right, what
the hell did n't go? I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:30:17):
We wouldn't get an ass burger.

Speaker 10 (01:30:18):
I don't know what.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Morning to show the breakfast club.

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
The breakfast club, she gets them.

Speaker 8 (01:30:27):
Somebody that knows somebody detail.

Speaker 4 (01:30:30):
I'm a long girl that knows a little bit about everything.

Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
She'd be having the latest on it. It's the latest
with Lauren l Rossa. Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you
have details. Sometimes you have a little bit everything on
the breakfast club to me, Lauren like Lrosa.

Speaker 4 (01:30:47):
So this is a culture.

Speaker 16 (01:30:50):
So this is breaking right now. I don't have much details.
I've not been able to reach out or anything to
speak to anybody. But according to reports from ABC News,
Portland trail Blazers Chauncey Billups has been charged in an
illegal gambling operation tied to the mafia. Now, Billups was
arrested allegedly or according to the support and organ and

(01:31:11):
he's supposed to make a court appearance today at some point.

Speaker 4 (01:31:14):
Now Miami Heat guard Terry Roser did I say his
last thing?

Speaker 9 (01:31:17):
Right?

Speaker 16 (01:31:19):
Rosier is also charged in a separate but they say
related alleged illegal gambling case as well. An FBI director,
Cash Motel is supposed to be making you know, announcement
of the charges along with some other law enforcement officials
today in New York City, So there'll be more developing there.

Speaker 4 (01:31:34):
You reach out to Cash I have I don't have anything.

Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
You reach out to the mafia. He ain't reach out
to nothing and supposed to be Yeah.

Speaker 16 (01:31:44):
So yeah, he's locked upright now. He's supposed to be
heading the court. It's a poke operation, that's they're pointing too.

Speaker 1 (01:31:49):
So he got arrested after his game because they had
a game last night.

Speaker 4 (01:31:52):
He's arrested right now.

Speaker 16 (01:31:53):
Supposed to be seeing a judge at some point today,
according to this ABC News report. But I'll get more
answers to that and we'll be back with that tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:32:00):
Now.

Speaker 16 (01:32:00):
In other news, switching gears completely Monica. So there is
a single dad that posted a video online and has
started a conversation about whether or not sleepovers are okay
for your children.

Speaker 4 (01:32:13):
Let's take a listen to that audio.

Speaker 23 (01:32:15):
Last year, I was trying to throw my daughter a
slumber party. No woman lives in the household. It's just
me and my daughter. I communicated with one of the mothers,
like just to see if she can get the ball
rolling because she know a bunch of more mothers and whatnot.

Speaker 1 (01:32:30):
And then I asked, do she.

Speaker 23 (01:32:32):
Feel comfortable, And as I was talking, because she straight
up interrupted me, No, I don't feel.

Speaker 1 (01:32:37):
Comfortable with that at all.

Speaker 23 (01:32:39):
And like I said, because I'm a man, and she
was honest to like, yes, and I'm like, that really
did make me feel some type of way. And I
do understand like where women coming from. It just hurt
to know that me, just as a man, I get
labeled as that. I would never do nothing like that
to kids, because like when I was growing up, long

(01:33:00):
story short, it happened to me, but by a woman,
I would never do that to a child.

Speaker 1 (01:33:06):
That just made me really feel some type of way.

Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
I don't think that's anything to take personal because most
parents don't like I mean, I don't like my kids
spend spend the night at nobody.

Speaker 16 (01:33:14):
I wasn't allowed to do that for a long time
when I was a kid either, and I didn't understand
until I got older why my mom was like so
strict about that. But Monica, I mentioned her in the
beginning because she commented on this video she said, we
don't do sleepovers. My mother didn't do it. I don't either,
and that applies to my sons and my daughters. In
his case, inviting some moms to be there overnight. The
chaperone may work, but that would be a no for
me as well.

Speaker 1 (01:33:35):
The crazy thing would you would you allow your daughter
to go to somebody's house with a single father? Would you?

Speaker 6 (01:33:40):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:33:40):
I don't even if she does know him. No, it doesn't.

Speaker 15 (01:33:43):
I mean because obviously in this case the kids do
know him, right, But no, And I am absolutely sorry
about what happened to him. But honestly, I just feel
like we didn't even need to know that part of that.
What I'm saying just frum a lesson, you know, as
a child. But like Charlamage said, he he shouldn't have
taken it personal.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
That's just what it is.

Speaker 3 (01:34:06):
Well, I would I wouldn't allow my daughter to go
to his house as well, just because he is. I
just it would make me feel uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (01:34:12):
Don't let my daughters go to two parent households.

Speaker 1 (01:34:14):
I don't know, but I will say this. The relationship
I have with all the parents that go to my
kids school, and the relationship I have with the dance
moms and the dance dads. If I was having a sleepover,
my wife wasn't dead, they would allow their daughter to
because when I'm a lot of times I'm the only
man at those those dance competitions, and I'm watching over
all those girls, and I treat all those girls like

(01:34:36):
they're my kids. I watch them.

Speaker 3 (01:34:37):
I make sure that they're safe when they go get
their uber food and all that. I watched them. So
if it was me, I don't I really can't see
the mother saying no because they know me. They've been
around me, they've been to my house.

Speaker 11 (01:34:47):
But they do.

Speaker 15 (01:34:49):
Are you going to be upset if somebody say I
don't feel comfortable with my daughter.

Speaker 1 (01:34:53):
I wouldn't be upset because wouldn't understand because I was
feeling the same way.

Speaker 4 (01:34:55):
Just understanding the climent that we're in.

Speaker 15 (01:34:57):
We talk about stories, we hear stories, is that these
people are doing things to children every day, and then
it's just like, nah, no, I'm sorry.

Speaker 4 (01:35:06):
And then how do their fathers feel? You know, we're
talking about the moms.

Speaker 15 (01:35:09):
How do the fathers of the kids that he's inviting,
how do they feel about it too?

Speaker 2 (01:35:14):
I'm just a father who deals with print paranoid, and
I don't give it one parent household, two parent household.
My kids ain't staying at nobody house. But y'all want
to come stay over here. Cool, but they're not going.

Speaker 3 (01:35:23):
But if it's a boy, I'm sure it would be
they would feel differently. Right if he had a son
and they said other kids, I'm.

Speaker 15 (01:35:29):
May now because now that's different for me. Okay, that's
all boys. But it's like you're a man hosting a
all girls sleepover. I understanding that it's your daughter, but
it's just no, even if.

Speaker 2 (01:35:41):
It's a boy, I just don't want my kids staying
over nobody else house. We got a nice over house
over here. What we need to be saying somebody else
house for I get it now.

Speaker 4 (01:35:47):
My son used to stay. Now, my son when he
was playing football, his coach, they had a coach. They
would he.

Speaker 15 (01:35:53):
Would get all the teammates and they would have to sleepover.
That's fine, we knew the coach and everything. But if
it was like my daughter, no, it's just my kids.

Speaker 1 (01:36:01):
My kids go to certain people's houses. But I'm like Charlamage.

Speaker 2 (01:36:04):
My house is the house with everybody. I'd rather everybody
here and like there's enough stuff to do. I order
you food, but you know, like this type before you're vegan.
We can get your vegan alternatives. We can get you
like come and here. Way, my anxiety is set up.
I need to have eyes on my kids at all times.

Speaker 24 (01:36:19):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:36:19):
My oldest daughter is seventeen, so she has a different
level of autonomy now, which I'm just learning to let go.
I am just learning to let go.

Speaker 15 (01:36:28):
Okay, Well, my house think the house for everybody kids
to come to either mm hmmm.

Speaker 4 (01:36:33):
It's to each his own. I think it really is.

Speaker 16 (01:36:35):
It depends on how your parents are, the relationship they
have with the parents that's inviting, and just how they were.

Speaker 1 (01:36:40):
Imagine Mama, I seen miss Jess on the porch smoking
something that wasn't exactly why my house.

Speaker 4 (01:36:48):
It's just I see her, that's right. I seem's just
put the scurf on.

Speaker 1 (01:36:56):
You know, everybody run out. We're running down, y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:37:02):
Do look like missus, y'all do like Miss Lauren and
miss Jess.

Speaker 4 (01:37:06):
Absolutely better look like miss Jess. The hell. Somebody called
me ma'am the other day and it hurt my heart.

Speaker 8 (01:37:13):
Man, And she said, man, I said.

Speaker 4 (01:37:16):
Ma'am, stop seriously, stop playing with me. Stop playing with.

Speaker 16 (01:37:29):
I did have a little bit more, but Summer Walker.
So Summer Walker is talking about the fact that she
might die alone. Let's take a listen.

Speaker 24 (01:37:36):
Once you really like decenter men from your life and
you really find your peace with just yourself, then you
just start to get like.

Speaker 4 (01:37:45):
Do you really want to?

Speaker 7 (01:37:47):
So then it be like dying alone don't sound too bad?

Speaker 4 (01:37:50):
Do you think that that will be what happens?

Speaker 2 (01:37:53):
It could be.

Speaker 24 (01:37:54):
But as long as I'm at peace, then it's cool
because it's like everybody I know that got it. It's like,
apciate it, girl, he would my ass, girl.

Speaker 4 (01:38:06):
He gave me a STD.

Speaker 24 (01:38:08):
So it just gets to a point where it's like
I'm bored, but I don't have nothing to complain about
to none of my friends.

Speaker 25 (01:38:13):
Then it seems like what you're saying, it's the solution
here is stop fitting man.

Speaker 7 (01:38:18):
Yeah, you don't really got to bust it open.

Speaker 4 (01:38:20):
You really don't have to. They got all types.

Speaker 2 (01:38:22):
They got rollses.

Speaker 24 (01:38:24):
Yeah, like my smell good, like everything like, you don't
even got to you really.

Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
Got all soluted. Speedy that was walking talking to Speedy.

Speaker 4 (01:38:32):
She was speeding on over at complex.

Speaker 2 (01:38:34):
Number two regardless of what you use, and you're busting
it open. Okay, I don't care if it's another Yes,
he's still busting.

Speaker 4 (01:38:42):
But she's saying that it doesn't come with all those problems.

Speaker 16 (01:38:44):
I know she's been through her things, meeting the glottle
meat and the groceries, and she talked about that as
well too.

Speaker 1 (01:38:49):
I thought she had the white guy.

Speaker 4 (01:38:50):
I thought the white guy was Remember I told you
that was just a friend.

Speaker 16 (01:38:52):
She's gay, enjoying her money or she's enjoying people's money
right now, just companionship. What she wants to is what
she's saying, because she has and she has this new
album Finally over It coming out, and she says that
we're gonna get that air from her her music, Like
she don't need to be super attached to a man
right now, because we've seen her be attached and didn't
work out well with a lot.

Speaker 4 (01:39:10):
Of the pot O summer is.

Speaker 2 (01:39:14):
Yeah, I understand that why she needs to be attached
to a man at this aage.

Speaker 4 (01:39:16):
Let's second listen to her about the groceries.

Speaker 25 (01:39:19):
Lastly, on the on the dating tip, before you move on,
I want to talk about an unfortunate situation for you
that led to an incredible line and mean for us
as fans and viewers, and that was I can't help
my cousin bring the bags in the house.

Speaker 4 (01:39:34):
Yes, what do you remember about that incredible line?

Speaker 8 (01:39:37):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:39:37):
What do you remember about a moment like that?

Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
Was it infuriating for you?

Speaker 24 (01:39:41):
It was?

Speaker 7 (01:39:42):
That was really ignorant.

Speaker 4 (01:39:43):
But hey, did you laugh at it or were you
like into teep?

Speaker 24 (01:39:46):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:39:47):
I was like, that's trifling.

Speaker 24 (01:39:48):
I literally don't even have to say anything on that
because his life is terrible now.

Speaker 2 (01:39:54):
So yeah, damn.

Speaker 4 (01:39:56):
Being good Amy. He did, laughing and joking the whole time,
but get so much out of and under an hour
too interview.

Speaker 1 (01:40:04):
All right, well that's the latest with Lauren.

Speaker 3 (01:40:06):
Let's get to the mixed chat. We'll see you guys tomorrow.
Chat Man Conversationthday.

Speaker 15 (01:40:14):
Birthday, Ryan Reynolds and Jackie Long. Jackiel Long is my brother.
Every birthday, Jackie.

Speaker 1 (01:40:19):
Okay, all right, well let's start to mix with some miguel.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, warning everybody, it's DJ MV.
Just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:40:27):
I want to salute to everybody that's incarcerated and locked up.
This is the second person I spoke to yesterday that
said that they watched us on YouTube all all the time.
They was like, you know, don't forget, you know, brothers
locked up, that they still watch us and they get
a lot of the information from watching us on YouTube
and everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:40:45):
That a couple of weeks ago, me and Shot and
sing Kor and a lot of the brothers, And they
were saying how they listen to us. Remember when that
guy used to draw pictures. You remember that God drew
a picture of you naked and send it to you
from prison. You remember that, I do. That was wild
And then he did the front end in the back.
That's what made us so crazy. So he drew a
picture and be neggar from the front. But then when
you turn the paper over, it was him nigger from

(01:41:06):
the back.

Speaker 4 (01:41:07):
Come on, what did you do with the picture?

Speaker 2 (01:41:08):
Even colored it in?

Speaker 8 (01:41:09):
It was yellow?

Speaker 4 (01:41:11):
No, what did you do with the pictures?

Speaker 3 (01:41:13):
I don't know what happened, but yes, we ustab somebody
that used to invite us all the time, and he
did draw a picture of me.

Speaker 1 (01:41:19):
Slue to that brother, I don't know where he's at.

Speaker 2 (01:41:20):
But sluc and now be talking about the first he
drawing naked men in jail. He at home, he did
not want to be, He right to want to be.

Speaker 1 (01:41:32):
He ain't go home. Yeah, yeah, but salut to everybody
that's locked up and slew to Andrew Young for joining
us this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:41:38):
Man and John O'Brien man. So many people texting me
about that Andrew Young interview. This is a man who
literally worked hand in hand with Martin Luther King Jr.
We don't be understanding that people like that still exist.
For the folks you read about in history books, the
folks you hear about, they would have still been alive
today if they weren't assassinated. Okay, and people, there's people
out here who actually knew them and were friends with them.

(01:41:58):
And I'm just glad that Andrew Young is ninety three
years old and still has the wherewithal and the cognitive
ability to be able to tell those stories.

Speaker 1 (01:42:04):
That's right. I'm glad we're able to document it so
people can you know, see it more and listen to it.
It was a blessing.

Speaker 2 (01:42:11):
I'm mad I missed that one, so make sure you
go watch the documentary on MSNBC Andrew Young The Dirty
Work Our Go watch the interview on Breakfast Club YouTube page,
which is actually longer than the documentary.

Speaker 1 (01:42:21):
Yes, all right, well, got a positive note.

Speaker 15 (01:42:25):
Actually, before we do, guys, drum roll, drum roll, I
have a big announcement on Monday. I will be making it.
It's something very near and dear to me. It's great
and it will be one of my biggest accomplishments yet.
But October thirty, first, make sure you get your tickets
in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Speaker 4 (01:42:42):
I will be at Comedy Zone.

Speaker 15 (01:42:43):
We got four shows, two shows on Halloween and then
two shows that Saturday, November first, at Comedy Zone.

Speaker 4 (01:42:48):
Like I said, Jacelari's official dot com.

Speaker 15 (01:42:50):
For the tickets, I will be giving away a cash
prize to the person who wears the best Halloween costume. Okay,
I love you guys, can't wait to see you seven
h four.

Speaker 1 (01:43:01):
All right, you got a positive no shout of mind
I do.

Speaker 2 (01:43:03):
I want to tell people tomorrow four thirty pm Colonial
Life Arena, myself, Don Staley, Asia Wilson. Go get your
tickets right now. We will be in conversation and then
right after the conversation. USC women's basketball is playing Anderson
in an exhibition game, so we'll see you tomorrow in Columbia,
South Carolina. Not a positive notice, simply this. We cannot

(01:43:24):
give what we do not have, Okay. We cannot bring
peace to the world if we ourselves are not peaceful.
We cannot bring love to the world if we ourselves
are not loving. So be the change you want to
see on this planet. People, have a great day.

Speaker 1 (01:43:38):
Breakfast club bitches, you don't finish for y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:43:41):
Dumb

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