Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The Waldmo Stan Trous Morning Show, the Breakfast Clubs Club,
y'all together, y'all are like a manga for us. Y'all
just took over him with its Chris Brown. I've officially
joined the Breakfast Club. Say something, mother, I'm with it.
Waldo Stan Trous Morning Show, Breakfast Club, Good morning us
(00:27):
a yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo Good money is Yola mean?
Good morning Angela? Ye. Pick to the planet is Tuesday. Oh,
it is Tuesday. It is. To think about it for
a second, almost forgot. I thought it was Monday. To
(00:49):
correct you, like today's Monday. It's definitely Tuesday. How was
your long Maorial weekend? Yeah, I'm all right now. You know,
I'm in Oklahoma and it's been a one hundred years
since the Tulsa massacre, so I know we'll talk about
that this morning. Oh. Yes, it's been a lot of
events around um the Tulsa masket this weekend. You participated
in anything, I'm sure that's why you out there right. Yeah.
(01:11):
It started yesterday with the candlelight vigil, because the Tulsa
massacre actually started at ten pm May thirty first and
went on for about twenty four hours. They said, it's
one of the worst cases white supremacy, a massacre that
happened in America. Yeah, and it happened. It happened twice
and Tulsa from that mistaken Yeah, it happened twice. There's
(01:33):
two different times, two different times they built up their
infrastructure only to have it destroyed. But white supremacy. They
said up to three hundred lives were lost, even though
officially it was thirty seven people according to records that
were killed. But they said a lot of the missing
bodies were dumped in the nearby river and Arkansas River.
But there are three survivors from that night who are
still alive. By the way, Yes, they all over one hundred,
(01:55):
right then they all testified recently. Yeah, because obviously it
was one hundred years ago, so they would have to
be over a hundred. Duh. Yeah. One thing, it's a
little bit of matter, Okay, all right, Jesus. But I
mean that is ran though, that you have three people
all over one hundred, who all lived through something like that.
(02:17):
You know. What I mean is imagine just what that
stays with you forever, just having witnessed that one woman,
Viola Fletcher, SE's one hundred and seven years old now
and never been compensated for it. That's the other. It's
never been compensated. They said, imagine if you were starving
and they gave you a picture of some food. Lord,
have mercy, Lord have mercy instead of actual food. All
(02:39):
these promises. So we'll talk about that this morning, of course.
How was your weekend? Weekend was cool? I went to
South Carolina. I was in South Carolina for like twenty
four thirty six hours something like that. So that's always refreshing.
And then you know, just later on it did nothing.
Caught up on all my talk shows. I caught up
on Zweed this weekend. I watched a little bit of
Sam Jay And what else did I do? I was
(03:00):
just reading mind of my business, that's all. Yeah. I
saw a little Sam j. Also, I want you to
go see Donna La Carolines, Dona Arlings. I saw you.
I saw you. I saw you in the paper too.
I'm sure we'll talk about that in Rumor Report. Sure,
I think all you in page six they made it
a way bigger deal than it was, but it was
funny with a couple of yes but radio icons. Yes,
(03:20):
Miss Jones and Wendy Williams showed up towards the end
of the show and surprised everyone. Eddie, we got any
guest today? No guests today? Okay, no guests, So we
got front page news next. What we got you, Well,
let's talk about this TUSA massacre and what happened one
hundred years ago today. All right, it's the world most
dangerous want to show to breakfast club Yep, it's the
world knows dangerous wanting to show to breakfast clubs. Charlomagne
(03:42):
and God Angela y dj Envy is off today It's
time for front Praige news. What we got you, Well,
employers are allowed to require that employees to take a
COVID nineteen vaccine, and they can also legally provide incentives
like cash to workers who do take it. Yeah, they're
starting to walk a lot with just a whole vaccination
marketing promotion thing, though, I mean everything is vaccine. Something.
(04:04):
I was driving in I saw a sign that said
vaccum scratch. People say vaccine wax, Like everything I gotta
be vaccine something vaccine scratch. Yeah, I don't want to shame.
I don't want to shame people who don't get vaccinated either.
It's a personal decision. I don't think anybody should force
you to do it. Yeah, which everything don't have to
be a vaccum something, is all I'm saying. They do
(04:25):
make it harder though, if you don't get it. They
make it really hard to move around and do certain things,
you know, go places if you're not vaccinated. So I
think that alone is incentive. It's also kind of not
fear to people who got it early on, and now
there's all these incentives, like I didn't get a lottery ticket, Well,
you got it because you did what you thought was right.
All right. Now, let's talk about the Tulsa massacre that
(04:46):
happened in one hundred years ago today. It started last
night May thirty first, and then went on for about
twenty four hours. Now, there are still three people who
are alive that remember the Tulsa massacre. That's when angry
white male I set out undercover nightfall and Tulsa, Oklahoma
to kill black people and to destroy black America's economic mecca.
It was over thirty streets in Greenwood and Tulsa. That
(05:09):
was a thriving black community. They called it the Black
Wall Street. And it's been one hundred years since that
massacre happened. Over three hundred people were killed, even though
on record it's only thirty seven people and one hundred
and seven year old Viola Fletcher is actually speaking out
about what that night was like. The night of the massacre,
I was awakened by my family. I was sold. We
had to leave, and that was it. I will never
(05:32):
forget the violence of the white mom when we live
for our home. I still see black men sin being shocked,
Black bodis line in the street. I still smell smoke
and see far I still see black businesses being burned.
Here the screams I have lived through the massacre every day.
(05:53):
Country may forget this history, but I cannot. I'll tell
you what if they can't get reparations for what happened
in Toulta, no hope for the rest of us, because
that was so egregious and obvious, and it was just
a hundred years ago and folks are still alive from
that massacre. They can't use their typical excuses, Oh you
can't pay goals, so, oh you weren't a slave. Those
folks are still alive and still have not gotten compensation. Right,
(06:16):
there were about nine thousand black people who lived in
and around Green With Avenue before the massacre. They said
at least twelve hundred and fifty black homes were destroyed,
in addition to other commercial businesses. So it was a
bunch of different factors like racism. Of course, it was
a landlust by the railroads and industrialists for which the
community sat, jealousy over the success of black people, expansion
(06:37):
of the Ku Klux Klan, and the form of Tulsa Tribune.
So there you haven't. Yeah, I just read an article
that Germany paid Nambia one point three billion for crimes
committed by Germany and what is now Nambia. So it's
really no excuse not to compensate, you know, the people
who lived through the Massaca and Tulsa. And I was
(06:58):
watching the local news here because I'm in Tulsa right now.
They said Joe Biden is supposed to be coming here
today around one pm. For what I mean, there's a
lot of events. Yeah, I'm saying, but it's like you're
the president. That's what I'm saying to your president of
the United States of America. If you show up to
places like that, it should be because you're actually going
to do something, not for photo ops and just to
(07:19):
say you were there and tell us how bad the
crime was. We know how bad the crime was, but
what are you going to do about it? Yeah, I mean,
there's all these services happening today, So I'm just praying
and hoping that as they're bringing more attention. I was
watching the news yesterday and they were saying how there
was a lot of shame and even discussing it, and
that's why a lot of people don't learn about it
in school, because no one wanted to really discuss it. It
It was like a shameful part of history. You know,
(07:41):
America's got a lot of those America's got a lot
of you know, trauma that they called the people that
I'm sure that they don't want to discuss the same
reason they don't want the sixteen nineteen project in schools.
All right, Well that is your front page news. And
you know the Washington will just beat the seventy sixers yesterday,
so they lead the series three to one, and the
Jazz beat the Memphis Grizzlies. Utah leads that series three
(08:03):
to one, and of course our Brooklyn Nuts are going
to be playing tonight. They're actually leading that series against
the Celtics three to one, and the Trail Blazers versus
the Denver Nuggets that's tied at two and two. Yeah,
I don't think the Wizard is not leading the series
in Philly Arty. Oh no, Phillies. I'm sorry, Phillies leading
Phillies leading through to one. Okay, now they're leading through
to one. Got you got you? Got you all right?
Get it off your chests one, one hundred and five
(08:23):
and five one oh five one. If you got something
you want to get off your chests all if you
want to simply tell us why you're blessed, reach out
and touch us right now. It's the world most dangerous.
Want to show to breakfast club, the breakfast club. This
is your time to get it off your chest. Whether
you're man. Hear from you on the breakfast club. You
got something on your mom Yeah, it's the world most dangerous.
(08:47):
Want to show the breakfast club. Who's this yo? Charlotte Man,
tid Peace King, how are you doing? Brother? I'm in
a perpetual state of struggle. That's not what I called
the violet Listen. I like that answer because it was
an honestanding. Yes, an understands it. Don't take it as
a statement of sorrow. Man, you gotta struggle to move forward.
I mean just answering the question. You gotta feel your fields. Brother,
(09:09):
I'm not mad. Just don't stay there. But what's happening
that black? Okay? Hey if Angeline, so listen. I'm of
the belief, based on truth, that if we would, if
we would teach accurate history and accurate civics in this country,
we would have no need or not even be compelled
(09:30):
to teach critical race theory. And it's that reason that
I questioned the value of critical race theories, because a
critical study of the accurate assessment of the facts in
this country, or what how this country has behaved in
a negative and positive way for its citizens would give
you what you need to an honest study and delivery
(09:50):
of history and civics. So I hope that at some
point this becomes more of a topic of conversation on
your broadcast, because while I don't I'm not knocking its
existence right now, I am saying that it's being put
in place that has much more value, and that's a
that's a critical study of the accurate assessment of facts
of history and civics in this country so that we
(10:11):
can move forward. But but I mean, no, I agree
with you. But that's why you need critical race theory.
You need critical race theory because you know that the
accurate history isn't being told. Well, I'm saying what we
need is correct teaching of history and civics and push
harder for that so that you don't put another label
on top of it. Is then being compelled to put
another label on top of that. I see what you're saying.
(10:32):
And let me say this as I exit out. I've
known about them, the Master and Tulsa since I was
the summer before I turned six, and that goes back
to the seventies. And I knew some of those older
people because I had family down there. They were in
their seventies, they were in their twenties when when it
happened to them, But they were in their seventies when
I met them. Do you know they still haven't had
their insurance claims paid out. That's discreet. Yeah, I mean
(10:56):
that's what they that's what they're fighting for now. I
agree with you, brother, manum, that's the minimum word. Thank you, brother.
I get it off your chest. If you want to
call us right now and tell us why you're upset
off you want to tell us why you're blessed, just
reach out in touch one one hundred and five A
five one oh five one. It's the world most dangerous.
Want to show the breakfast club Happy Tuesday, the breakfast
club wake up, wake up if you're time to get
(11:20):
it off your chest because your man or blessed, we
want to hear from you on a breakfast club. Yeah,
it's the world most dangerous. Want to show the breakfast club.
Good morning. Who's this all right? Okay? London? Peace? K
from London, London Town. I'm blessed, Black and Holly Favorite.
How are you? I'm good man, I'm good. I just
wanted to, you know, just say that you've got some
international listens. You could be aware of that. He got
(11:43):
an international listens, you know, but you know it's there's
you know, it's a show. He's at a pon you
know this before you you know. Oh Now, I love London,
at London, I've had morning and Andy. I love you man,
you are inspiration. I swear you are an insperation. I
(12:03):
love you, man, love you even even if I if
you even had your accent, I'll be I'll be so
happy if I even had to. Don't discredit your beautiful
UK accent. We love that. And let me tell you
something when you do their access. But you know, I
used to live in New Jersey and they used to
love you every there. But I don't like it. You
(12:26):
guys now, I love London. I've done book signings in London.
I've hosted parties in London. My homegirl Ashley from London.
She actually got me a billboard a couple of weeks
ago in Times Square. Um when when I got my
honorary doctor from South Carolina State that that that blew
my mind. So I'm demanding a lot from my American
(12:46):
friends from my birthday lady this month. I know they're
a lot more generous in London. They definitely are. Your
money's worth more, your money's worth more than ours, thank you? Kay.
So well, sometimes I'll be listening to like old podcasts,
like it's really interesting. I'm listening to What's Happen like
a year previously listening back. You should you guys should
(13:10):
listen back, and just like with the whole coronavirus and
everybody thinking, oh, you'll be out of this in a
couple of months, and you know that what other countries
are doing. England has still Britain they's been just as
bad as America like in dealing with this, and you
guys are not. But then you guys have got states
that are old con stuff. We're still in lockdown and
they're even saying that on the twenty first of June,
(13:31):
when they're supposed to be eating lockdown. They're not going
to ease it now because we've got the Indian variants.
Believe the rights in London, in England, in Britain. If
they don't open it up, this would be a right.
What's England, Florida, England further where all the crazy people are, Yes,
that would have to see, Oh I don't got one London,
(14:01):
I say, Clay London. There's only one floor. No tell
you what the cornwall con Okay, okay, but it will
speak of it funny, yeah, okay, I have to do
all right, then I have a book that all right,
thank you, King, appreciate you. Damn good morning, yo. What's
(14:24):
up this cliff? What's going on, Cliff, what's happening? King?
Get it off your chest? Man, Man, I just wanted
to say, um, I love my wife, my beautiful black Queen, Sheena.
We just celebrated our for your anniversary. Thank you, and um,
I just want to shut out our finished page. Man,
it's administered strong E D M U N D s
(14:46):
O N underscore st r O N G. Man. We
both lost Me and my wife both lost thirty pounds
over the last year and we're just trying to get
everybody there. Um, just stay positive, man, they just continue
to look forward to your figgus goals and everything else. Man,
y'all have a blessed day. I respect you. He called
(15:07):
in focused. Shout out the wife, shout out. That's right.
All right, let's get it off your chests. We do
that every morning. Um. If ever you want to get
something off your chests off, you just want to tell
us why you blessed. Start off your morning the right way.
Just reach out and touches. We got rumor report coming
up you. Yeah, since we're talking about weight loss, let's
talk about Raven Simone. She's lost twenty eight pounds and
for some reason, people are upset about her post. We'll
(15:30):
tell you what it is, all right, we'll discuss It's
the world most dangerous want to show to breakfast club.
This is the rumor report with Angela. Years now, Naomi
Yosaka has withdrawn from playing in the French Open, and
she said it's because of her mental health. She said,
(15:51):
the truth is I have suffered long bouts of depression
since the US Open in twenty eighteen, and I have
had a really hard time coping with that. Anyone that
knows me knows I am introverted in Anyone that has
seen me at tournaments will notice that I'm often wearing
headphones as that helps dumb my social anxiety. Though the
tennis press has always been kind to me, and I
want to apologize to all the cool journalists who I
may have hurt. I am not a natural public speaker
(16:12):
and get huge waves of anxiety before I speak to
the world's media. I get really nervous and find it
stressful to always try to engage and give you the
best answers I can. So here in Paris, I was
already feeling vulnerable and anxious, so I thought it was
better to exercise self care and skip the press conferences.
I announced it preemptively because I do feel like the
rules are quite outdated in parts, and I wanted to
(16:32):
highlight that man drop on a cool box from Naomi Osaka.
I feel a million percent. I don't give a damn.
Staying healthy is the most important thing that we all
can do, and I'm glad that people are taking their
mental health. That's serious. There's nothing more exhausting than being
in your own head being overwhelmed by everything around you.
I respect her for unplugging and dealing with the consequences
of that unplugging. Well. She had to pay fifteen thousand
(16:53):
dollars fine for refusing to attend mandatory post match press
conferences at the French Open, and she withdrew from the
tournament on Monday because of that depression. In that post
that I read to you now, so a Peers Morgan
was going in on her and he was calling her
a brat for refusing to speak to media in order
to protect her mental health, and he also says she
(17:14):
took a page out of the playbook of Meg and Harry. Yeah,
somebody tells you they they're dealing with mental health issues
and you respond by calling them a brat way to
go up here, that's the way to do it. And
she's like, she just gave this whole thing about what
she's been dealing with, about her anxiety and her mental health,
and then he bullies her for that. She's what twenty
(17:35):
three years old, and it's not like she was losing one. Hey.
I respected for unplugging and dealing with the consequences of
that unplugging that fine is just an investment in her
mental health. That's the way I look at it. I
respect it, all right. Blair Underwood and his wife, desire DaCosta,
have put out a joint statement about their divorce. They
are calling it quits. They've been married for twenty seventy years.
(17:58):
They said it would be they would continue to put
their kids the best interests first. According to People magazine,
they said, after a tremendous amount of thought, prayer, and
work on ourselves individually and collectively, we have come to
the conclusion to end our marriage that began twenty seven
years ago. It has truly been a beautiful journey. Okay,
I know that sucks. I saw them together one time
when I was in New Orleans eating at Naows. They're
(18:20):
both very nice. You know, I wonder we get you
to that point after twenty seven years, because you would
think that like, after twenty seven years, there's nothing you
can't work through. So I wonder to get you to
that point. Well you just got I'm out all right now.
Raven Simone and her weight loss, let's discuss this. She's
thirty five years old and she shared a video celebrating
the fact that she lost twenty eight pounds pounds down.
(18:44):
Check out the chin, babe. I got a whole different
face going off. Just so you guys know, I am
twenty eight pounds down. We started a little exercise journey
together and we're still filming it. We're gonna share it
with you guys as soon as it's all done. But
I think it's to say it's kind of like transformative.
I mean, you see that jawline. Know right now it
(19:04):
looks like I have a neck. You congratulation to her.
I could stand there lose about fifteen my damn self.
It was her and her wife, Miranda Pramian Maday. And
you know people some people were not happy about her,
you know, being excited about her journey to weight loss.
What I saw people where yes, they said that her
remarks were triggering and a fitting example of diet culture's
(19:25):
effect on society. Eat it here. We're not the UFOs coming,
man terrestrials coming to bring some ballots. Why are you
mad at somebody because they're celebrating their weight loss journey?
How could that trigger someone losing weight? She also had
said that she's going to be doing a forty eight
hour fast and there's nothing wrong with that. It's okay,
(19:46):
it's your body, And a lot of times when people
do fast it is also because they're trying to give
their organs a break from having to break down food.
So it's a good thing to do at times if
you choose to do that, How could somebody looking trigger
you in the next I guess if you have issues
with food and weight loss and things like that. Oh,
if you can't lose weight, like yeah, I guess if
(20:06):
you have like some sort of trauma with your own
weight loss or lack of weight loss, weight problems, what
are the case they hearing other people talk about. I
guess it could be triggering for some And it was
interesting nobody got mad at Will Smith for that, and
he's been showing off his whole fitness progress and new clips.
After he discussed how he gained weight. I didn't see
anybody mad at him. Well, I haven't seen anything since
Will Smith posted that he had a dad bought so
(20:26):
I guess more people can relate to that. Right, you
didn't see the video of him and his briefs on
a rotating platform. Yeah, but that's the one way he
was saying that he needs to lose weight. But it's
different from men and women though, right Like, you never
ask a woman, you never talk about a woman's weight,
right Like things like that. It's like a rule, it's
like her asient thing. It's different from men and women.
The rules are kind of different. That don't mean she
can't talk about her own weight. I agree. I'm just
saying that's the other perspectives that I've heard before. Why
(20:47):
are we even debating with silly people think? I don't know,
it's just silly. Come on. I mean, she's excited about
the fact that she's lost weight, and there's nothing wrong
with that. It's been a journey for her exactly all
right now. Michael Jordan recently donated one million dollars to
more House, and that is to advance and support journalism
and sports at more House. The school's journalism program originally
(21:08):
launched following a donation from Spike Lee, and now they
have released a statement thanking Michael Jordan for that donation,
stating more House is grateful to Michael Jordan and Jordan
Brand for an investment in the education of talented men
of color who will ensure this equity, balance and truth
and the way sports stories are framed and the way
the black experience is contextualized within American history. Dropping a
(21:30):
clue mass from Michael Jordan. I like hearing stuff like that,
stuff like that, That's what inspires me. Howard University has
rolled out of Chadwick inspired master class. Chadwick Boseman. He
wanted to get Howard University students up to speed on
the entertainment business early, so he had this idea to
do this master class. But the university is now going
to roll out a master class template for the Chadwick A.
(21:52):
Boseman College of Fine Arts that's inspired by Chadwick Boseman himself.
He presented that idea and concept to head Hancho's before
he passed Wow, dropping a clue buzz of Chatwick Boseman
topcareliner's own rest in peace, good brother. All right, and
just tell y'all know Felicia Rashad, who was just named
the new dean of the Fine Arts College, will also
(22:13):
help shape that. So everything is in good hands, all right,
and that is your rumor reports. All right, we got
front page news coming up next year. What we're talking about, Oh,
teaching masturbation in the first grade. What do you think about?
Oh Lord, come on aliens UFOs. We need you, baby,
we need you now. It's the Breakfast Club. So Breakfast Club,
your morning's will never be the same. Do you want
(22:35):
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the world most dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club. Charlemagne
and God Angelie dj Envia is off today. It's Tuesday,
(22:56):
but it feels like a Monday. It's time for front
page news. What we got you, Well, let's talk about
the shooting that just happened and this was in Florida.
Authorities have released new surveillance footage of the suspects in
the Sunday morning shooting that left two people dead and
twenty one people injured. On Sunday morning, there's a video
clip with three suspects who police say open fire on
(23:17):
a crowd outside Elmula banquet Hall. They did find the
vehicle that the suspects used in the shooting. That vehicle
was submerged in a canal and, according to reports that
have been reported stolen two weeks ago. So they are
saying it was a release party for a local rap artist.
That's what the banquet hall was hosting when gunfire erupted
(23:37):
around twelve thirty am. How many people it was twenty
one people injured and two people killed. I heard nothing
about that until just now. Yeah, two twenty six year
old men were killed at the scene. Please have not
released their identities, but one man said his son, Clayton
Dillitt the third was killed in the shooting. So our
condolences go out to the family of Clayton Dillett the third.
(23:59):
So what is it matter? Shootings don't move or headlines
no more? Because I swear I did not see that
anywhere the bogs had dance. Yeah, I mean I've seen
it on the news all weekend. All right. Now, pairs
are very upset. And this is at Dalton. It's a
very ritzy's private school in New York City. Their first
grade is we're learning about masturbation in class now. A
(24:22):
teacher at the Dalton school reportedly showed students a video
from the cartoon series Amaze. A little boy in the
video is asking about erections. Howcome my penis gets big
sometimes and points up in the air. That's called an erection.
Sometimes I touch my penis because it feels good. Sometimes
when I'm in my bath or when Mom puts me
to bed, I like to touch my volva two. You
(24:44):
have a clitterist there, Kayla. That probably feels good to touch,
the same way Keith's penis feels good when he touches it.
But have you ever noticed that older kids and grown
ups don't touch their private parts in public. It's okay
to touch yourself and see how different body parts feel,
but it's best to only do it in private. What
do you think as a parent, what do you think?
(25:06):
This is first grade? I feel like you know they're
they're planting seeds and kids heads when they do stuff
like that. Because first grade, I was not thinking about
sex or masturbation. But after that video, A damn sure
don't want to play with no toys no more? You
know what I mean? Is there is there a reason
for them even playing that video? Like did the kids
asked for that? The parents kept their kids masturbating? Like,
(25:28):
what was the point of that in first grade? I
don't know when do kids start wondering about their bodies
and noticing, Like when do kids start, boys start getting
erections and girls start touching themselves. That's a great question.
Did you know my mother told them post I'm paying
a mother told the Post, I'm paying fifty thousand dollars
to these a holes to tell my kid not to
(25:50):
let her grandfather hug her when he sees her. Because
a lot of this is also about consent, right, and
the students are reportedly taught not to let their parents
or grandparents touch them without asking for a mission first. Well,
hug right, it too far. UFOs, aliens extraterrestrials. You know
(26:10):
Barrock said that UFOs exist, right, you know they're presenting
it in front of the Senate this month. Okay, we
need them now because everybody's lost their mind. I'm serious,
everybody's lost their mind. Man. Is it the age thing though,
or is it the actual teaching of masturbation? I just
think first grade. In first grade, I meant it don't
bother me. I just think that you're playing seeds in
(26:31):
kid's head when they're probably not even thinking about that
kind of stuff in first grade. You know, if kids
have questions, then you answer the questions for them. But
why are you just volunteering this information to them in
first grade? Yes? I wonder when then they got the
little boy humble bragging little boys like why did he
get big? That's where you got triggered. Shut up, just
say it's like, why don't you just say hard? Why
(26:53):
do you say you got big? Because you probably they're
trying to be politically correct against as their kids. I
don't know. Man. Look, I'm reading this article all about
when do kids start masturbating and how to respond when
that does happen, And they said the majority of kids
discover their genitals and the pleasure they can bring by
age six. Right, I think kids are a lot more
advanced we give them credit for it, because I didn't
(27:13):
start math to being until in my teens. Now, I
was definitely mass man before that. But I'm sure that
you wondered what an erection was younger and right. I mean,
I don't remember either. But according to reports they're saying
around by the age of six, a lot of kids
have already discovered things. I would just hope that if
schools are doing stuff like that, they're asking the parents
(27:34):
permission before they just you know, put that in my
kid's brains, like I would want to slip to go
out there says, hey, this is what we want to
teach on such and such day. You know, do you
give your permis your kids permission to you know, indulge?
That is early for sex. I didn't get textils in
high school, so it does seem a little crazy. I
think high schools a little late. That's a little late.
(27:59):
So many things value, especially when you got the teen
you know, rates of pregnancy, ye, high school might be
a Lloyd the middle ground. All right, well that is
your front page news now. I know. We had another discussion.
We wanted to have the discussion. Um, we wanted to
talk about wearing bonnets in public. I saw that this
(28:19):
turned into a huge thing over the weekend. I saw
a lot of people are weighing in on this. I
still applies did a post about women wearing bonnets. Then
I saw Monique actually did a post about it, and um,
I think we had that audio. But I saw so
many of our young sisters and head bonnets, scarves, slippers, pajamas,
(28:40):
blankets wrapped around them. And this is how they have
shown up to the airport. Not just at the airport.
I've been seeing in a store at the mall. And
the questions that I'm having to you, my sweet babies,
when did we lose pride and representing ourselves? When did
we step away of let me make sure unpresentable when
(29:00):
I leave my home. What do you think about that?
Wearing a bonnet to the airport? And niggas be tired?
What you mean people be tired? Man? People be needing rest,
Like people just want to get on the plane and
take their pillow and go to sleep. I don't know.
And it depends what time of day it is. It
(29:21):
does if it's early in the morning. Early in the morning,
I see somebody with a bonnet. I'm not tripping, I'm
not tripping period. But I don't know, what do you think.
I don't need dramas you wear bonnets. It's interesting though, that,
like I guess, even the concept of like our culture,
what we wear out and what's considered being dressed up
and back in the day they wear suits everywhere, and
(29:41):
now we kind of wear sweatpants and everything everywhere. I'm
definitely wearing a suit to go to the airport. But
let's see what you guys thinking. I'll tell you what
I think when we come back. Eight hundred and five
eight five one five one, Call us up. Call in
right now at your opinion to the Breakfast Club top
breaking down. Eight hundred five five one five one to
Breakfast Club. Yeah, mister world, dads want to show the
(30:06):
Breakfast Club. Charlemagne and God Angelie dj Envy is off
today and we're discussing head bonnets and pajamas. Talk to
him me. Yes. And Monique had some comments about wearing
those bonnets into the airport. Here's what she said. But
I saw so many of our young sisters and head bonnets, scarves, slippers, pajamas,
(30:27):
blankets wrapped around them, and this is how they are
showing up to the airport. Not just at the airport.
I've been sending in a store at the mall. And
the questions that I'm having to you, my sweet babies,
when did we lose pride and representing ourselves? When did
we step away of let me make sure unpresentable when
(30:47):
I leave my home? What do we think about this? ANGELI? Um,
you know what. I wouldn't do it personally, but not
to the airport. Maybe if I was like going outside
or going to the supermarket. Maybe not even this. I
probably lee would wrap my hair and put a scarf.
I would wear a scarfe before I would wear a bonnet.
I'll say that much like I would put a scarf on,
(31:08):
but not necessarily a bonnet. But I really don't judge
people who do it. I personally wouldn't. But I never
looked at somebody and been like, I can't believe she
left the house like that. Yeah, I thought about it
during the break. I don't care. I can understand what
Monique is coming from. She's an old gee. She wants
to see the young ands carrying themselves the way she would.
But you can't expect you from other people. But I
don't care bonnets to find pajamas. You know, I might
(31:30):
say that's a bit much. You know, personally, I've never
seen nobody with pajamas on at the airport. Have you
you have, yes, I definitely have. I wear sweats all
the time, and basically I think that's the most comfortable things.
I would throw on some leggings, some sweatpants. I definitely
always want to travel comfortably. I wouldn't wear pajamas. Yeah,
I wouldn't wear pajamas. I'll do sweats. But bonnets, I
don't see the problem. You sleep with bonnets on, right,
(31:51):
And if you want a flight for a couple hours,
a few hours, it would make perfect sense to wrap
your hair because you're gonna be sleeping. Yeah, I personally
I wouldn't do it, but I wouldn't care if someone
else did it. If I was with a friend or
saw somebody in the airport, I wouldn't even think nothing
of it. All Right, let's go to the phones. Good morning,
it's the breakfast club. Who's this is? Technically I'm calling
(32:12):
from Miami. So I just feel like this whole conction
is ridiculous. About Bonne. Where is the same conversation And
when males are leaving their home with the drag. A
due rag gets on and there's no conversation about it.
It just goes. It's improved point that women are just
helpful different singles. Women should start wearing du rags. I'd
(32:33):
be seeing Asia Wilson, she'd be wearing du rags all
the time. Now I think she got her own dug.
I'm just I'm just gonna wear a due rag spot
stores anytime I wear one? Does du rag do the
same thing as a bonnet? Can it keep your hair intact?
I guess yeah, that's what I do. Ring Charlemagne, ain't
ha hair in a minute. I have no idea that
none of this. I don't know what you're talking about.
(32:55):
Let's going the next calling. Thank you for calling. Good
morning the way same way guys when they take up
to do ragging, that line be in the middle of
their forehead. You have to do it and you start
rubbing your head like you got a headache. Good morning,
good morning, good morning. Who's this? My name is Anna,
I'm Chicago and I live to you guys almost every
day in the morning. Thank you. Your phone is a
going a little bit. Now do you wear banners to
(33:17):
the airport? Republic no adult. Okay, so you agree with
more Nique, Yeah, I do. I'm gonna be very honest
with you. I'm one of these girls that like, you
look look too good wherever I go, Like, why should
I leave my house within like a hot mess? I
feel so banning equals hot mess to you? Whoa to me? Yeah?
(33:38):
Because there's a whole to me, you know, because Okay,
I feel like, why would you want to look look like?
Have you seen somebody with a banning or do you
judge them? No? But I feel like, okay, why wish
you were that? You know, I'll fight however, I would
help you say this. Hey, hey, hey, that's judging people. Man, Okay,
(34:00):
all right, all right, have a good day. Mean. I
guess it's a matter of preference. I don't know if
there's a wrong answer here. Good morning, Good morning, breakfast,
claud This is mister Dingo or Dido fish. Mister Dingo.
Do you wear your bonnet and your pajamas there? But no,
I don't wear about it. To be honest, guys, really
one of these we lost our appreciation for flying, and
(34:23):
it's really sat. At one point, it used to be
an honor the fly plane you had to get dressed,
represent your family to the piece. So i'mwhere a lot
of the lives we just walt I don't really happen.
I don't believe that. I don't think people lost the
what you call it appreciation. No, I don't think it's that.
I just think that the airplanes aren't that comfortable, bro Like, like,
airplanes are not comfortable at all, even if even if
(34:45):
you're in first class, first class is cool, but all
first classes are not equal. Plane judge. I judge when
I see people wearing hills in the airport, I'm not
why are you wearing? Word now that that's what I'm saying.
I'm with you. When I see people overdressed. No, when
I see people overdressed at the airport and they got
on hills and they got on like full suits with
(35:06):
hard bottoms, I'm like, I hope they got a short flight.
But you're right, I shouldn't judge because they might have
to tap up the plane and go to a meeting
or be coming from something to exactly going to a
beat or whatever. But yeah, obviously what it is. But
I'll make sure y'all catch many showing that letter. All right,
we'll be looking for you. You say it like he's performing.
I don't know. All right, it's the Breakfast Club. We're
(35:28):
talking about bonnets and pajamas. Do you feel that they're
appropriate attire? Just to be out and about it. Let's
talk about it. It's the world most Dangerous morning to
show the Breakfast Club. Call me and your opinions to
the Breakfast Club top. Come on eight hundred five five
(35:50):
five one. Yeah, it's the world most Dangerous Morning show
to Breakfast Club. Charlomagne and God Angel l Ye. It
is a Tuesday and we're discussing bonnets and put jamas
this morning. Where did this come from you? This came
from Monique and a post that she did about women
wearing bonnets to the airport. Here's what she said. But
(36:10):
I saw so many of our young sisters and head bonnets, scarves, slippers, pajamas,
blankets wrapped around them. And this is how they're showing
up to the airport. Not just at the airport, I've
been seeing a store at the mall. And the questions
that I'm having to you, my sweet babies, when did
(36:31):
we lose pride and representing ourselves? When did we step
away of Let me make sure, unpresentable when I leave
my home. I mean, I'm not mad at her opinion.
I mean, that's her opinion, you know. And what I
would say to anybody is you can't expect you from
other people. You know. So about a bathroom? Can you
wear bathrows? No, that's ridiculous. You don't think so it's
(36:54):
next level. Yeah, that's ridiculous. I mean I think I
wouldn't do with jamas. I can understand the bonnets in
the hand scarfs and stuff like that, because the flights
be long. People be sleeping on flights, you know what
I mean. You want to maintain your hair. Yeah, you
might be maintaining your hair for our purpose. You might
be landing. When you land, you might need to go somewhere,
so you gotta have your hair wrap. So when you
get there, you unwrap the scarff, comb it out, and
(37:15):
you get the way you're going. Who knows? Who knows?
Let's go to the phones. Good morning, good morning, who
it is? Good morning, Lynch Spencer? How are you? I'm amazing?
Good morning? How are you? Guys? Blessed Black and Holly
favor about what you think? Would you do it? I
don't personally wear a bonnet. But as a medical and
(37:36):
a mental health professional, if you are unapologetically black, who
created a standard of preventables, you aren't supposed to do
whatever makes you feel comfortable. Okay, whatever means you comfortable.
So no judgment, correct, we can't. We don't have room
for judgment. Now it is a double edged four because
your parents does um can open up of an individual
(38:00):
to your mental health, how you feel about yourself and
from reference to depression and things of that nature. But
as an unapologetically black individual, you're not supposed to impress anybody.
You're supposed to do exactly what you want to do,
how you want to be able to take those consequence
before it. Well, yeah, I understand what. I understand what
you're saying. But then people can go too far with that,
(38:20):
right because I mean, what if somebody shows them to
the airport with just a trench code on and nothing
under consequence? True? Yeah, that they definitely will when you
got to take off that code to go through TSA. No,
I get what you're saying, Right to do exactly what
they want to do. Who created the standard of preventable? Yeah, us,
(38:40):
I get it. So, but what if that what if
the standard is coming from one of us, like more
in more Nique's case, if Monique is saying this is
what she would like to see, don't we got to
take that into consideration. Who said Monique was one of us?
Okay Na, see, I ain't going that far now. What
I'm just saying us it's different categories of things. US
is a comfort of representable. But everybody can't relate to money.
(39:02):
I can relate to Angela Yee, I can't relate to
a Monique. I get it. So I'm Angela ye had
a standard and she says, you know what, ladies, this
right here is appropriate. This right here is not appropriate
because we can personally see how she carried herself and
now her word is her bond, and that she's not
going to tell people to do things that she's not
(39:23):
going to do. Then that might be something you might
look at and say, you know what, let's kind of
look at this standard a little bit differently. But coming
from a rich individual that have stylists and all of
these other things that thrusting to prepare them to those places,
she's not an US. We're regular, everyday, hard working mental
health professionals and this is what we do, and our
(39:43):
focus is to make sure that people understand how to
be unapologetically black and hold onto those consequences. Well, I
appreciate your opinion, and I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry that you don't think that about them. At
work every single morning and sometimes I'm tired and I'm
(40:06):
not gonna have time to get dressed up and do
my hair, and you know, do all of those things.
Might throw my hair in a bun, put on a hat,
do what I gotta do. Absolutely, good morning. Hey, what's happening?
Who does It's a wastler? Is this Leonard? This is Leonard? Yes,
it is Hey, sir Lennon, how you doing it? It's Leonard.
Before we get on the but first we get on
(40:27):
the topic of the bonness our queens are wearing. I
want to say, don't let Angela Yea and that other
guy in the studio, don't let them talk about anything
dealing with children, because it's obviously they don't have kids.
Who in the hell won't there first? And Kenney Gardner's
learn about homosexuality and masturbation at at age? Where did
(40:48):
you come up with all of this? Who said anything
about homosexuality kind of training. I guarantee they don't have children. Yeah,
I don't think we say not. Let's get on the
subject we didn't say. I guarantee you I was a
child's right and envy got a million kids, he said
about dramas. I guarantee you I was a child, and
I can't to you. I know my own experience is
(41:10):
as a child, a six year old grandkid to learn
about that kind of stuff. I don't even know what
you're talking about, sir. But she's too angry. He's upset.
He's upset about the teachers at the Schoolkay, let's get
on the bonnets. Yes, sir, you hate them absolutely. Well,
you're not a woman, so you can't talk about bending.
I know he hates some of you. Embarrassed, Charla Man
and I've been wanting to talk about this and you
and NBA ain't said a word about it. I'm talking
(41:33):
about it at the malls at nice trendy rest. It's
embarrassing and I'm gonna hold the black queens available, but
not police agress come on coming outside with the house
shoes on and the pajamas bond. It's embarrassing. Anything else
for you're a woman, sir. I like women, women decide
(41:57):
to do with their bodies or what they decide to
wear on their heads. The hypocrisy and your statements the time,
staying on something that you're not you and your girl.
When we need you to calm down, we need tom down,
you're gonna say, oh yeah, wear your bonnets, sir. Gonna
(42:18):
be you and tell people what they can and can't
wearing the airport. Can I ask you a question, sorry,
black women, a white women. What's your preference or your
queens or queens? Okay, just making sure any white women
wearing bonnets here we go. You said what white women?
Definitely any white I don't see any white women wearing bonnets. Okay.
So when you call, when you say queens, when you
(42:38):
refer to sir, I can't tell. I bet you use
the phrase good hair too, don't you. No, I don't
use that phrase, but you chuse it. You just used it.
Thank you for calling, sir. If you tell people you
got good hair, have a good I don't have terrible heart.
Thank you. All right, listen to everybody. Everybody's the title
to their opinion. What's what's the moral of the story
(43:01):
is there a moral to the story. But the moral
to the story is, you know, I agree with the
woman that called up earlier where she said, you can
wear what you want, but you just have to know
that there's whatever the repercussions are from that, that's on you.
I don't judge what anybody has on in public. I'm
o my business. I'm also a New Yorker, so I've
seen everything, so it takes a lot for me to
be like, damn what they're doing. Honestly, I think that's
(43:22):
what Monique is trying to say. Mornique is just trying
to say, like, Yo, you know you're gonna you leave
the house looking a certain way. You know, people may
judge you or treat you accordingly, So there is repercussions
and consequences for you know, how you present yourself, I think,
and a lot of times they'll be dead wrong, because
it'll be the people with the most power, the most
whatever that you judge the wrong and you be the
(43:43):
one that suffers those repercussions and consequences. Very true. Treat
people based on their appearance, That's very true. Haafy Tuesday
shout out who celebrated Memorial Day yesterday and you know
I went to go see Danielle Rowlings perform at our lines.
I hit you, I told you, Miss Jones and Wendy
Williams showed up. I did. I saw that in page
(44:06):
six yesterday I was reading about yes, so that actually
made it into pace six. And I'm gonna tell you
what really really happened. She said, for rumor report or
do you want report? Why would you give it to
us now unless you got something better for a room
a report? I mean I have a lot because you
know it was over the weekend. It was a hot,
bloody weekend. Why is that jay Z for young bucks
(44:27):
like myself? The two of them in ask a question, Christ,
why is it to them in a room A big deal? Well,
Charlottagne worked with Wendy Williams and we worked with Miss Jones,
so you know there's slight We had a slight rivalry
(44:47):
back of the day. Mm hmmm. And so the two
of them actually came in together. And so what happened
was at the end of the show. Well, first of all,
Dona of course kept shouting all of us out, and
when they came in, it was like pretty much the
end of the show. There was literally, I think Danielle
was about to wrap it up, and I think he
extended it just a little bit because they walked in,
(45:09):
you know, kind of late, and so Danielle kept saying, no,
we got all these queens of radio in the room,
and when he was like, what, like she didn't know,
you know, who else was there, but Miss Jones had
already waved he low to me and everything, and so
then she was like, oh, hey, Angela. Then somebody in
the audience yell like, oh no, not hey, Angela, and
it was getting like a little feisty. I don't know,
(45:33):
that's what I'm saying. I don't know what was going
on there. It was such a big deal. So then
at the end of the show, Danielle was like, hey,
let's all take a picture, and Miss Jones you know,
gets up there and they're trying to get Wendy to
get up. I'm still in my seat, and then you know,
Daniell's like, come on, let's take a picture. So I
got up to go take a picture with Danielle's I
would have done anyway, and people in the audience like,
(45:53):
Wendy go, Wendy go, and she didn't want to, which
is no big deal, no problem, Like, I didn't really
have an issue with it at all. I didn't go
up there thinking that we were all taking a picture.
I went up because Danielle was like, come on stage,
let's take a picture. I don't know, I guess because
they felt like Miss Jones got up and took a picture.
I got up and did it, and they felt like
(46:15):
Wendy should have. But nobody had to take a picture
if they don't want to. How y'all know didn't hurt
in that moment. You just saw her post about her
feet last week. I'm just I'm just playing, you know,
White Devil's advocated. You just saw your I mean, whatever
the reason is, even if you just don't feel like it,
it's not a big deal. It was really the audience
that was like, get up there and go Wendy, come on, Wendy,
take the picture. And so it turned into like a
(46:36):
way bigger deal than it ended up on page six.
You know, people whatever. But Miss Jones and Wendy did
come together and they did post a selfie together. They
were seated together, and then they left pretty much like
right before the show ended. They got up and left.
So I guess they wouldn't have to deal with all
the everything. So people making something out of nothing per usual. Yeah, okay,
(46:58):
and so I just want to put that out there.
I wasn't the one saying come take a picture. It
was nothing like that. I was minding my business. Danielle
is my boy, you know, he's like family to me.
So if Danelle says come get up here and take
a picture with him, of course I'm gonna do it.
And I would have did it regardless, no matter what. Okay,
that was a rumor report advertising what we got for
the main course, I don't know how that may pay,
(47:19):
all right, and we're gonna talk about a con. He's
not planning to press charges. Remember his car got stolen.
You met it than I don't know. Yeah, it's about
report with Angela Yee on The Breakfast Club. Well, jay
(47:42):
Z was on the season premiere of Lebron James's HBO
series The Shop Uninterrupted, and he was talking about DMX
a lot. On this episode, he talked about boycotting the
Grammys and it all has to do with DMX. By
the way, the first time I boycotted the Grammys was
for him. We both came out that year. He didn't
get nominee two albums, had two number one albums, say
(48:03):
they didn't even nominate him. I won that year for
rap album, so my first Grammy win. I wasn't in
So there was a There was a competitive thing, but
it was big love. He was so competitive with me.
I never met a human being more competitive bringing here
like ever, not even my big brother. We met battling.
We was in the boss in the pool hall. After
(48:24):
that battle, he went to like a show. He got
on stage jay Z where you And then in addition,
he talked about having to go on stage after DMX,
and you know, DMX's energy was crazy. Me DMX, mappe
man red man job, the locks this towards pack. So
X is about to go on and I'm like, you know,
(48:46):
I want to see. I got like this. This is
going before the lights off. He's in the hallway. It
goes and now the arena is shaking and I'm like
this is cool. And then he goes and the ghost
(49:08):
deafening and I'm like, oh, they're like, hey, how you go.
The best part about that is a hole didn't let
that situation make him bitter. He let it make him better.
He became a better performer after witnessing that because he
could have just hated. Yeah, because and imagine met the
man and read man and energy they had too they
used to be on tour. That was the second concert,
(49:29):
not the first concert I've ever been to in my life,
Hard Knock Life Tour. It came to the North Charlton College.
Your mouth, I'm trying to my fish oil pills on.
Why would you talk right now? Relaxed? Yes, that was
the first concert I've ever been to in my life,
North Chalton Coliseum, a Hard Knock Life tour. I think
that was huge. Nine two thousand, I don't remember, all right.
(49:52):
Bullston's pay six has all the reports. Jay Z and Beyonce,
according to pay six, are a rumored to be the
buyers of a new twenty eight million dollar Rolls Royce.
It's the till convertible car, so they said, it's the
most expensive car in the world, and an industry insider
told the UK's Telegraph that they believe that the Carters
are the ones who purchased that car. All right, let
me see how I can make this situation make me
(50:13):
better and not better? Twenty eight million dollars for a
Rolls Royce for a car twenty eight mint? What does
this card? Does it fly? Can it go in the
water like a submarine? What does it do? I'm looking
at it. Don't look that nice? Does it drive itself?
What year is it? Where is envy when you eat it? Man?
Don't forget the car show is coming up if you
(50:33):
don't have anything to do for twenty eight million dollars car?
All right, And I want to talk about Coil Ray
for a second. I thought this was really nice, you know.
Nicki Minaj, Pology and others have showed support for her
after there was a crowd reaction clip that went viral.
It was her performance in Houston and it shows that
a section of the crowd is just kind of standing
there while she's performing as part of htown Memorial Day Mayhem,
(50:57):
and she went on Twitter and said the love used
to outweigh the hate, but now that hate outweighs the
love and it's slowly destroying me. Feel like y'all trying
to kill me. That's why I stay out of the way.
Gotta make sure I keep my distance. Your haters are
in my life for a reason. We're gonna have to
deal with each other and with whatever smoke and you
know she goes on and you can tell she was
just disappointed with that viral clip. But Nicki Minage Waiting
(51:20):
and said, don't do that. Chin up. Always remember this.
When black people not f with you, they will boo.
Those people were on their feet. That means they may
not have known the song, but they were interested in
getting to know more. So they were observing. You charge
it to the game and move on. Yeah, I mean,
by the way to hate never outweighs the love. Social
media just makes you feel that way. And I'm sure
that there was a point in that show, in her show,
(51:42):
that there were songs that they were more familiar with
than I'm sure the crowd was going crazy over what's
that song? She got enough popular? No more parties or
something like that, now parties, I'm sure out when that
song was playing. Paulo G. Waiting also said, that's always
how it be when you first come in, compared to
when you really blow. You gotta black that it shout
and keep going crazy. You got it And that was
still but actually turned into the best weekend for her
(52:03):
after that, you know, having everybody give her their advice.
You know here here in New York City. Our headquarters
is Power one O five one. And you know, Nihla
Simone is the DJ here on Pole one five one.
She's also a coiler's role DJ. And that was a
moment where they were playing a new song that the
crowd didn't even know. So she was debuting new music,
so that makes sense that the crowd wasn't responding to it.
(52:24):
All right, Well that is your roomor report now, Charlottegne.
You got Donkey of the Day coming up? Yes, I do,
and it's going to a young man named Cole Buckley.
He needs to come to the front of the congregation.
We would like to have a word with him. Place
all right, the breakfast Club. The breakfast Club, Your mornings
will never be the same. Angela year here, And did
(52:45):
you know that the General Insurance has been saving people
money for nearly sixty years. That's a long time. So
if you want the quality coverage you deserve at prices
you can afford, check out the General eight hundred General
or visit the General dot com. Some restrictions apply. Don't
be out here acting like a donkey. Heeha, It's time
(53:06):
for Donkey of the Day. I'm a big boy. I
could take it if you feel I deserve it. Ain't
no big deal, I know, CHARLOTTAGNI gut go out, funny Sea.
You gotta say something you may not agree with doesn't
mean I need. Who's getting that donkey that donkeys that
don't don't don't don't don't. Dunkey other day right there
the breakfast club. Bitches, you can call me the donkey
of the day, but like I mean no harm. Yeah,
(53:27):
it's dunkey of to day. For Tuesday, June first goes
to a twenty one year old Massachusetts man named Cole Buckley. Now,
we all know how passionate people are about their sports team.
Sports is probably the shared experience in this country that
brings us together the most. It's amazing that you can
be in an arena which someone who's a fan of
the same team that you are, and for the duration
of that game, regardless of what your raised, sex, gender, religion,
(53:51):
or classes, you and that person are on the same page.
Doesn't matter what any of your differences are, It doesn't
even matter what your biases are. If you're rooting for
the same team, Okay, during that game, you're on the
same team, and that's a beautiful thing. But some of
you fans take things too far because y'all act like
the team you're rooting for his dying for you. Okay,
I am a diehard Dallas Cowboy fan because my daddy
(54:13):
is a diehard Dallas Cowboy fan. I drop on a
clue bonds for liar mc kelvey. Okay, cowboy all day
and mons corn in South Carolina. But I'm not about
to fight you over that Sylvian Blue. Okay, I'm not
even gonna curse you out over that Sylvia and Blue
because I get nothing from the Dallas Cowboys except joy
when they win and sadness when they lose. So I
can't understand for the life of me why fans do
(54:33):
criminal things in support of their favorite teams. This is
what brings us to the curious case of Cole Buckley.
He's twenty one years old. Then he's a fan of
the Boston Celtics, and after Kyrie Irving and the Brooklyn
Nets washed the Celtics on Saturday Night and Kyrie Kyrie
Irving wiped his feet on the face of Lucky the
lepre con, Cole Buckley decided to take it upon himself
(54:54):
and do this. Let's go to w FXT Boston twenty
five dudes for report. Police. We can now put a
name to the face of the fan who's accused of
throwing a water bottle like Kyrie Irving's Cole Buckley. He's
twenty one years old and he's from Braintree. He also
now faces a lifetime band from the TD Garden after
this incident. This is what happened thanks basically the game. Indeed,
(55:15):
the Sea's blown out rather by the Nets, Kyrie Irving
going to center court, wiping his foot on the Sea's logo.
He went to the locker room, but before he got there,
a water bottle came down from the stands. He raised
his hand to be able to point out that fan.
Police swarm that fan. Seconds later that person was arrested.
His name is Cole Buckley. This is not the only answer.
Didn't liked this In terms of bad behavior by fans.
(55:37):
Last week, in Philadelphia, a seventy six Ers fan through
popcorn on Russell Westbrook of the Wizards, and a New
York A fan spit on Hawks guard Trey Young. Also
in Utah, the Jazz were playing the Grizzlies. There were
fans that reportedly heckled the family of Grizzly star John Morant.
Look whether you just six this fan who threw popcorn
on Russell Westbrook, the clown who's been on Trey Young
(56:00):
at the garden all the idiot who ran on the
court last night during the sixties, verses was the game.
If you love sports the way you say you love sports,
if you love your team the way you say you
love your team, then why or why would you aid
do something to make your team look bad and b
do something that will get you banned for life from
the arena of the team you love. Not to mention
the golden rulers do unto others as you would have
(56:22):
them do unto you. Shouldn't you do unto other players
as you would have people do unto the players you
root for. Now Kyrie had something to say about the situation.
Let's listen. Unfortunate that sports has come to a lot
of this, uh you know, kind of crossroads where you're
seeing a lot of old ways come up. There's been
that way in history in terms of entertainment performers in
(56:43):
sports for a long period of time and just underlying
racism and just treat them people like during a human zoo.
I agree, and I just think it's just common courtesy
and decency. Okay, the players you root for don't appreciate
you doing that to other players. Now you call Buckley
Band for Life from TD Garden and you have an
assault in battery by means of a dangerous weapon charge
(57:07):
for what. Throwing that body like Kyrie isn't gonna change
the outcome of the game. The final score is what
it is. I don't care if you upset that Kyrie
you know, didn't leave the Celtics on good terms. Hell,
if I'm Kyrie and you did that to me, you're
just proven why I made the right decision leaving this city,
because that love is clearly not real. Now, for all
you fools who say Kyrie shouldn't have disrespected the logo,
sure you may be right, but you know whose job
(57:31):
it is to protect the logo? The Celtics, Okay, the team.
They have to go on that court and bust the
nets ass. That's how you defend the logo. Okay. But Cole,
even if Kyrie disrespected the logo, who died and made
you the guardian of the Garden? Okay? How come you're
the only fan reacting in that way. Okay, then what
happens when a player gets something thrown at them and
they react the way the og ron artest Metal World
(57:54):
Peace did back in the day dropping a clues bomb
from Metal World Peace. Okay, if one of the players
reacting that, are they wrong? No, they wouldn't be. But
they will be the ones who get treated like they're
dead wrong. They're the ones who're gonna get fine, crazy,
suspended and have to deal with all the high stakes
consequences that the punk ass fan who started it won't
have to deal with at all. Okay, listen, if you
love sports the way you say you love sports, if
(58:16):
you love your team the way you love your team,
then why would you ever do anything that would get
you banned for life from watching the team you love?
Please give Cole Buckley the biggest he hall. It's just
totally unnecessary. M all right, Well, thank you Charlotte Mane
for that donkey of the day. That's right, they're coming
(58:38):
up next. Who we got ye? Oh man Now she
is an icon for real. It is Caribbean Heritage Month
in June, by the way, so Happy Caribbean Heritage Month
to everybody out there who wants to celebrate with us,
but Miss Pat is going to be joining us now.
If you don't know who Miss Pat is, she is
one of the founders of VP Records, and VP Records
is one of the biggest independent labels for dancehall Soca
(59:03):
Reggae Music was founded back in nineteen seventy nine by
Miss Pat and her husband, and her kids and grandchildren
now run the label. But when I tell you the
biggest artists in Caribbean music have been signed to VP Records,
either now or at some point in their career, I
mean Spice is there, Beanie Man, Shaba Rings, Boujeou, Bounty Killer, Bungee, Garland, Capeleton.
(59:29):
I don't know if. I don't know if Bob Marley
was signed there, but they did used to own a
record store, so there's pictures of him. And she has
a book out too, by the way, about her reggae
music journey, and she has pictures of a young Bob
Marley there because their record store in Kingston, Jamaica was
like the spot where everybody used to go. So a
young Bob Marley did used to come there and they
did used to sell his records. But I don't believe
(59:51):
that he was signed to VP, but they had pretty
much all of the huge artist mister Vegas, Wayne Wonder,
t Okay, anybody you name it. Yeah, Sean Paul is
probably their biggest success to and they did they did
a whole collab with Atlantic Records with Sean Paul to
really make him the huge star that he is today.
(01:00:13):
And so Miss Pat is the founder of VP Records
and she's going to be joining us now as we
kick off Caribbean Heritage. Man. All right, it's the world
most Dangerous morning show. The Breakfast Club, The Breakfast Club Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We have a special guest in
the building. We have Miss Pat. Good morning, good morning,
(01:00:37):
good morning, good Morning's happy to be here. That's an
honor to have you, Miss Pat. And you have such
an interesting journey. But you founded VP Records, right, and
people don't that don't know about VP Records. We want
to talk about the history of that and how you
got to where you are. But just tell us how
important VP Records is for the reggae and for the
(01:00:58):
whole world in general. VP Record for me, I started
it very very young, and it's a journey. It's over
sixty years, and I love every minute of it. And
I'm very happy that I'm still here high up in age.
But I enjoy my journey for the last sixty years,
(01:01:20):
and I'm happy to see my reggae music has spread
all over the world, and I am being blessed with
all who helped me to reach this stage. And miss
Patti is from you from Kingston, Jamaica, and you came
over here when you were young, correct, and you create
a VP record. The only reason I know is my
mother in law is Chinese Jamaican and she came here
(01:01:40):
from Kingston, and she tells us the stories all the time.
So breakdown how difficult that was, because she always used
to tell me that they would send one relative over first,
and that one relative would bring everybody you know to
send for everybody, as she would say, yeah, yes, As
I said, I came here in the nineteen seventy seven,
but my brother in law was living here before I did,
(01:02:02):
so he was a help to bring us over. And
then my husband came first with my two sons, and
three years after I got my papers, then myself my
second son and my daughter came And what made you
think of creating VP Records? At the time, reggae music
was hard to get. It was very hard to get.
(01:02:23):
Even the time when VP Records was around, that was
the only place to do it. So what made you say,
you know what, I want to create VP Records and
have a brick and mortar store in Queens and be
the outlet for all Jamaican artists at that time for decades,
Caribbean artists, Caribbean artists. Yes, well, long before that time,
(01:02:43):
I was also doing music in Jamaica twenty years before. Yes,
so I spent twenty years on the counter at Randy's
Record twenty years after that's when we came here. Now, Pad,
this is all I heard. Book too, by the way,
because I want to make sure we know. Miss Pat
has a book, My Reggae Music Journey, beautiful book, the
(01:03:04):
most amazing pictures in here. You have like all of
the iconic artists from dance hall, from reggae, all of
that that are in this book. And they all had
to pass through Randy's and VP Records at some point
in their career. Yes, it has been. It has been
a journey. As I said, I started very early when
(01:03:24):
Jamaican music was just about to start, and like maybe
twenty years ago nineteen fifty eight. When we got our
independence in nineteen sixty two, that was a big, big
year for us, and we was invited to the World
Sphere here in New York and that was a great
thing for us. Bicoe were able to spread SKA. At
(01:03:47):
that time Scow was in and we brought Scow with
us and from SKO we have come right up sixty
years after. How difficult was it to create VP records?
Very difficult when I came here the new Bob Marley,
but they didn't know all the other artists that we
had in our genre. So we had to start twenty
(01:04:09):
years backward, small space and start all over again. I
would go to Brooklyn three four times a week trying
to sell a couple of forty five records. So it's
been a journey, but we love what we do and
we stayed here over forty years now doing the same thing,
(01:04:30):
embracing Jamaica and regga music and also Soca. We did
dipped into Soolo maybe twenty years now we started to
do Soco. Did the regular labels try to shut you
out because here you are independent Chinese Jamaican, you know,
and at the time, all the labels ran by white
corporations and you were kind of the only independent out
(01:04:53):
and you were making money, you were bringing artists in.
You were the only place for Caribbean artists. Did they
try to box you out and push you out all
even try to buy it back? Then? Well, you know,
I should say we hadn't core audience which we should
try to service and it'll buy a little. Everybody knew
about us, and at one time we you know, we
do telemarketing. We didn't know a customer. There was a
(01:05:16):
few white big labels here, but they didn't stop us
because we had a variety of music. We brought in
all the small labels as well as the popular labels,
so we're really a big one stop. At one time,
I had over six hundred customers selling all over the country.
And I'm blessed because we didn't have any money to advertise,
(01:05:41):
but we use a lot of flyers, pamphlet all the
information we can and I was on the phone. We
started telemarketing, so we had to have all the music
in our head. We didn't have computer to write on
so if a customer would come and access for music,
we have to know which record they want, what lpezs
(01:06:02):
on because twenty years before that, I stayed on the counter,
so I know all the singers, all the producers, all
the label, how much version is in a song. Sometimes
the customer doesn't know the name of the records, so
they'll hulme it for me and I'll find it for them.
That was definitely mean where I used to go to
VP Record because I knew the name of no song.
I'll be humming all of them now, miss Pat. Before
(01:06:24):
we even start with VP Records, Let's go back to
Randy's in Jamaica, right, and how you guys started out,
how you started even that business, because that was something
that just wasn't being done back then. It was you
and your husband who started Randy's. And just tell us
the idea behind that, because you've always been a hustler. Yes,
at eighteen, my husband was working in a jukebox company,
(01:06:46):
so we bought them out from the company that you
worked with, and that's where we started selling all jukebox
records and that's what our anchor, and later on we're
developing selling one one LP Slept, Jim Reeve, Sam Cook,
all those were the latest because of R and B
(01:07:07):
and jazz, and I don't even think you know about
hip hop at that time eighty sixty years ago. We
didn't hear her about hip hop. So that's how we
started selling News record and we developed two day afterwards,
Study seventeen and my store was at seventeen, not Parade
where it does the heart of Kingston and everybody gather around.
(01:07:29):
We have Chris Blackweld passing through. We have great producers
like Lee Perry, Scratch, Lee Perry, Bonny Whalers, Scatter Lights, Jammies,
even Bab Marley came through. Bob Marley came through when
he first started with a Lee Perry. All right again,
you know it's Caribbean Heritage Month all of June and
we'll be talking somewhere with Miss Pat about her book
(01:07:51):
and her reggae music journey. Coming up next on the
Breakfast Club. What's up? It's the Breakfast Club and we
are joined by Miss Pat. Now, if you don't know
who Miss Pat, she is the founder a VP Records,
one of the largest reggae music labels ever that that's
ever existed, and it's Caribbean heritage man. So let's get
into it, miss pat No VP records. VP is Vincent
(01:08:12):
and pat that's the name. Yes, figured it out. Okay,
that's that's our first name. Vincent, just be and Patricia
which is P So we just call it VP. When
we went to registered, we didn't even know her name,
so we just say, okay, just put it her name,
and it so happened that unique after And you also
helped artists. I heard this. I don't know if this
(01:08:32):
is true, but a lot of the Caribbean artists said
you would help them get the proper paperwork to come
over here, to be able to perform and to be
able to come over here and work. A bunch of
artists that I've dealt with said, no, VP helps me
with that. Is that true as well? Yes, you know
we have to do the proper papers, so we had
to help them. Who do you think has been the
biggest crossover artists? Because I would say when I was
(01:08:54):
talking the Spice, she was telling me Sean paul was
probably you know, signed a VP. And then you guys
did it? Do you do a deal with Atlantic with
Sean Pauler? Do they that he signed directly to Atlantic
had a that word. No, Sean Paul was signed to us,
but when he started to make the hits, we couple
do it collaborate with Atlantic. And so if you had
(01:09:15):
to say for yourself, who has been the biggest success
as far as sales, as far as cross over, what
do you think is Sean Paul? I think so because
at that time when Sean Paul came on the scene,
hip hop was very big then, and I think they
associated Sean Paul with hip hop. So I think I
think you know, when I came it was just all
Bob Morley than you, and I thought there would associate
(01:09:39):
Bob Morley with Sizzlers and the other roots music. But
it didn't take off as much. It was the dance
all Yellow Man, so one that that the dance all
that really b Banton being a man? Did you ask
the verses? Yes, yes, with the very sound Yes, I
(01:10:00):
did watch it. I really liked I like everything in
it because I think because of the pandemic, everybody was
at home and this was like a fresh new excitement
for everyone. So we got a lot of response and
I was very happy that everybody liked it and enjoyed it.
(01:10:21):
How did you transition from a record store to a label. Well,
in Jamaica, we started out as a record company selling
records and afterwards when we built a studio. It was naturally.
My husband did independent Jamaica in nineteen sixty two, I think,
and that became a big hit for us because the
(01:10:43):
raider didn't want to play it, but the streets were
singing it, so they were forced to play it. And
that's how we started to make our own records. And
as we go along, we just do. Every day we
tried to do something better. They didn't plan it, didn't
go to business school, but we just follow instinct and
(01:11:04):
there was a lot of people that helped us along
the way because we were in the heart of kingstowhere
everybody sung in Jamaica. We are gifted for singing. Colle
singing when we're happy, were singing when we were sad,
with singing, when we are working with singing church, we
sing on the street. So we are blessed that Jamaica
(01:11:25):
is gifted for singing. What about being a woman in
this business right? Because look at you. We had to
tell you for eleven, yes, for for eleven, how she
staying on our money, though I don't know the money
came first. I think we're helping others on the money
will follow. Yeah, well, back home, I didn't know I
(01:11:47):
was invaded into a man's man's job. I was just working.
But when I came here and we were doing telemarketing
and they would said, can you put on a and
for me? I said why? He said, well, I don't
think you know what I need because you know, I
don't know the name of the song, but I can
(01:12:10):
hem it or I know who sings it, so you
test me. I know it. I spent twenty years on
the counter and all the songs. So after that they
realize being a woman doesn't mean you can learn your trade,
you know. So I learned fast, and I had to
learn hard because I don't go to the dances. So
I had to just learn and listen and ask questions
(01:12:32):
and who sing that, who produced it, who was the
backup singer? Do they have ten versions behind it? Who
did them? So I learned a lot of lessons by
on the counter every day for twenty years. Actually I
used to spin the disc on the counter too. Wow.
What about the women artists? Well, at first it was
(01:12:54):
we didn't have much. You know we had We had
the Eye Trees, which is Richa Marley, Mass Griffiths and
Judie Moot. Those are three I knew. And gradually as
we go along, you know, we signed quite a few
women artists and I'm blessed now that there They were
only backup singers. They weren't really individual singers. But they
(01:13:18):
are coming up. But we need more women on stage.
How was Bob Marley? I was like working with him
or just knowing him on a personal level. Bob Marley
is very shine, not who you see on stage. When
he was about sixteen seventeen, he used to pass by
the store. He was always going to play football with
his friend's skill call. He just came look around for
(01:13:42):
his friends and they would leave. But Lee Perry, Lee
Scratch Perry was the first one that brought him in
the studio upstairs and then made his first new LPs.
Did did you know he was special? When? When did
you realize he was special? No? Nobody know. Everybody. Everybody
sang in Jamaica even when Bob Marley. Bob Harley made
(01:14:03):
a hits in America first and in England before we
realized he was his manager. Chris Blackwell really trained him,
teach him and showed him the way, and he was
accessible too, and he followed instructions. But when you first
knew him, nobody knew Bob Marley would get hit because
(01:14:24):
everybody sound. So when he became a hat, we had
a brush up all the Bob Marley records because they
were hot at that time. But I would say, nobody
knew a hit, Hayte is not born in the studio
or on the boardwalk. It's born in the streets. They
always asked me, how do you spot a hit? I
(01:14:45):
would say, not in the boardwalk and not in the studio.
The people in the street makes the hit. Well, thank
you for joining us this morning and taking time out
of your day and coming in even a summer history
that's right. Make sure get their book. Yes, amazing book,
a lot of information. Miss Patty. Truly is an honor.
You are an icon send me into so many people,
(01:15:06):
so I'm so glad you were able to join us,
and i want to thank you all on the Breakfast
Club to have me and to share my journey. It's
been a pleasure and I'm so happy to be here.
Thank you all, and thank you to all of the
reggae fans out there and the hip hop fans, thank
you for supporting my music for over sixty years. Big up,
(01:15:30):
Oh god? That all right. Well it's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, thank you, thank you very much. Okay, the
Breakfast Club. This is the Rumor Report with Angela Gui
(01:15:51):
on the Breakfast Club. Well, Timberland and Swiss Beats did
their versus rematch battle and it went down one day
night live at Live in Miami. And it was a
good battle because the two of them definitely has some hits.
I mean, you talk about Eliah, DMX, Missy Elliott, jay Z, Beyonce,
(01:16:12):
Nicki Minaj, Justin timber Lake, j Cole, Drake, Little Wayne,
and so on and so on for twenty rounds altogether.
I saw a lot of people are saying the audience
wasn't that hype though, you needed like a better literation
than that. And it was really nice at the end
with the Eliah and Missy birthday jacket that Swizz gave
to Timberland. If you guys had a chance to see
(01:16:34):
how dope that jacket was. But a lot of things
happened during this battle. Now to kick it off, Missy
Elliott did this preview. Hebo to Kay. First of all,
I want to say congratulations, and I want to say
I'm proud of you and swizzon. Thank y'all for creating
verses for us to relive some of the best moments
in music. But till you know, supposed to be coming
(01:16:54):
with them snaps, he be coming with them banks, So
you got to come straight out the gate. I love
love y'all. Y'all deserve all the flowers coming to y'all. Now.
One moment that was surprised was was Beats actually playing
an unreleased verse from j Cole's song Bath Salts Who
the first one and one? To jump up? Who the
(01:17:15):
first one and one? And it's got you really believing
if you like, say that went up to it for
Breggan Rights. I don't know if that's cool with y'all's
so the cool I move along. I feel like the
m I grew up with juice and dopes and that
type blue day life. Like you might lose your phone
relatively offten, I might put seven fifties off the never
(01:17:36):
living me off my chair in this jam of musical chairs.
Ain't declared that my maneuvers whip my fluids and night
here you're talking about your money. Was you are aware
just to catch up to my bregga would take your
two hundred kids. I don't know why you saved that verse.
Bath Salts is on the new DMX album with Nas
and Jay. Maybe maybe too long, I don't know. All right, Well,
(01:17:57):
the whole night was dedicated to DMK. Yeah, I forgot
about I forgot about that versus last night. I'm not
gonna lie. I have to catch the replay it out.
When I was watching basketball and TV Jakes all day yesterday, yeah,
this was Sunday night. Was last night on Monday? Tuesday? Yeah, Sunday.
Forgetting what day it is? Right? I was watching t
D Jakes and basketball all day Sunday. Yeah all right.
(01:18:20):
Also over the weekend, DC Young Fly apparently he was
performing in Oakland, California, and uh, something happened. I guess
an incident happened where somebody came on stage during his
set and they said that he knocked the person out.
I saw people posting DC Young Fly and knocked him
out and then kept the show going. Now he posted
his own explanation. He said, I'm from the West side
(01:18:41):
of Atlanta. I'm really from the streets. I've been stabbed.
I'm traumatized, but God turned my life around. But I
always stay on point just in case I have to
protect myself. Pleasant in Oakland. I love y'all forever and
we always have a good time. But I'm mad you'll
have to see that side of me. But if you
don't ff for me, please don't come to my shows
if your intentions ain't to come and have a good time.
First of all, DC Young Fly, don't bother the body
dropped on the clues balls with Dc'm okay business, that's right,
(01:19:04):
and sometimes swinging on folks as a form of self care.
If you on that stage, you gotta protect your piece,
and security not fast enough. Sometimes you gotta protect your
piece and you gotta protect yourself. I'm not mad at
DC on Fly for that all right now. I meant
to do this earlier with jay Z when he was
on the Shop Uninterrupted. He spoke on being a father
and one thing that he had to learn because of
(01:19:24):
Blue Ivy as fathers with daughters, Like, what is it
like in this world? Now? I didn't learn how to swim?
Itto Blue was boy that this is a metaphor for
how our relationship or she ever fell in the water
and I couldn't get her. I can't even like fathom
that thought. Right, and now that that was the beginning
of our relationship. I thought about, you know, the Hall
(01:19:45):
of Fame, and I got to announced. I was like,
I was taking Blue to school. I was like, this
ain't no celebration. She walked away. I was like, yo,
I'm in the whole of right. I mean, the evolution
of hip hop is such a beautiful thing. Right, but
(01:20:06):
that's such a perfect metaphor not just for your kids,
but in life period, Like you always got to be
willing to learn new things so you can better serve
and help others. I was thinking, it's at Brooklyn thing.
You see Chris Rock learn how to swim. Now, jay
Z knows how to swim. I'm next, I'm gonna have
to learn how to swim. You swim? No, I say
that like that this is all That's why this is
(01:20:28):
all fascinating to me to see people learning how to
swim now, and I'm a I love being in the water,
but I can't swim. You don't know how to swim. No,
I can't swim, not at all. Shot how ya. Neither
one who knows swim, I ain't know what you said.
You bid was in your mouth. You're both judging neither
one who knows that swim. I ain't judge. You got
the judgment in your voice. Both. All right, you almost
(01:20:49):
get out of here. Saw something. Now let's talk about
Since we're talking about Lebron's show the shot, let's talk
about his agent or Rich Paul. Now, he recently did
an interview with The New Yorker, and he talks about
being a black man in a field of agents that
is overwhelmingly white, and he said that many black athletes
are reluctant to sign with a black agent, but he
said it was much more the case with the white counterparts.
(01:21:11):
He said, it's very difficult for me to represent a
white player. And he said, look around, there's very few.
I represent a player from Bosnia, but again he's international.
He looks at a difference. And so he was asked,
the white players who are American don't want a black agent,
and Rich Paul said, they'll never say that, but they don't.
I think there's always going to be that cloud over America.
Interested I would think that, you know, you would want
(01:21:33):
the best agent. I would think that you would want
the person that's, you know, getting the most deals done,
getting you the best deals, getting you the best endorsement deals.
I would just think you want the best agent. And
he also talks about the decision right and that whole
situation that happened with Lebron and he said it helped
other athletes take control of their careers. And Rich Paul
did say that's why I don't speak to Bill Simmons.
(01:21:54):
A lot of that has to do with race. He
wouldn't have said that about Larry Bird. He wouldn't have
said that about JJ Reddick. You get what I'm saying.
The decision ten years ago is the norm today. It's
what everyone wants to do. Kids won't even decide where
they go to college without it being a big production.
And Bill sim Simmons says some ish like that, I
wonder who are the top agents though, I mean Rich
Paul is definitely, you know, one of the highest top agents.
I I don't wonder who else is on that list. Yeah,
(01:22:15):
because he has Anthony Davis, Been Simmons, Draymond Green, Anthony Edwards,
John Wall So he has a pretty nice roster, all right. Well,
that is your rumor reports word. So I guess I
gotta lie right now and tell y'all the People's Choice
mixes up next. Oh man, listen here, stop lying to people.
(01:22:36):
What do I want to here this morning? You think
he's going to play be a whole lot of money?
I have no idea. What do you think going to play?
I have no idea. This is the People's choice mix,
not the people Take your requests right now, y'all can
tweet at DJ and be telling what you want to hear.
He's gonna get that off for you in the middle. Okay,
it's the Breakfast Club. So Breakfast Club, your morning's will
(01:22:58):
never be the same. Into four chance to win two
hot end cell phones with twelve months of service in
twenty five hundred dollars thanks to Simple Mobile. Simple Mobile.
Out with the old, in with the simple to enter
and get rules. Visit breakfast Club online dot com. Yeah,
it's the Worldmore's dangerous morning to show to Breakfast Club
Charlomagne and God Angelie. Ye dj Enva is off today.
(01:23:19):
It is a Tuesday. We had a long Memorial weekend.
It still feels like one day now, and listen, I'm
out here in Tosa, Oklahoma, and it does feel I mean,
I'm glad I'm here. It's historic, but there's just so
much pain that people are in Tolsa, Oklahoma had to endure,
and the fact that there's three people who are still
alive from the Tusa massacre that happened one hundred years ago. Today,
(01:23:44):
you know, I'm going to be doing some pianos today
with Hennessy. They're sponsoring a lot of the activities that
are happening out here this weekend, Moe at Hennessy. So
I just want to thank them for just participating. And
I'm hoping that some of the relatives of the people
from the Tusa massacre, and even the three people who
are still alive today will get some type of justice
(01:24:04):
from this horrible incident that happened a hundred years ago. Yeah,
I mean, if people are in Tulsa, if those people
in Tulsa who are still alive, you know, can't get
any formal reparations for what happened to them one hundred
years ago, there's no hope for the rest of us,
you know what I mean, Because that literally was just
one hundred years ago and they're still alive to talk
about it. They can't use the typical excuses like well,
(01:24:24):
you can't pay ghosts or you know, y'all weren't slaves, Like, no,
those people lived it, so them and their descendants should
definitely be compensated. Yeah. And I've seen stories about different
people who actually have relatives who there descendants of people
who actually were really rich during this time period in
Tulsa one hundred years ago, and you know everything was
(01:24:47):
taken from them. Wow. So imagine your linears put you
as one of America's wealthiest families, and then your life
was impacted by something that happened one hundred years ago,
a massacre from white supremacist and you still haven't gotten
a justice. That's right. That's right. Well, and also too,
I want to tell people, man, make sure that they
grabbed to Mika Mallory state of emergency, how to win
(01:25:08):
in the country we build. Nothing makes my heart smile
more nowadays than seeing people posting about the book how
the book has impacted them thus far. So thank you.
It's available everywhere you buy books now. All right, we
got the positive note when we come back. It's the
world most dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club. Yep. It's
the world most dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club Charlomagne,
the God Angelie, Ye dj Envy is off. I think
(01:25:31):
it's time for the positive note. Ye all right, well Charlomagne,
what is the positive note today? The positive note is
simply this man. First of all, I want y'all to
watch Bishop td Jake's left for Dad's shermon that he
gave on Sunday. If you haven't seen it, chet Man,
go on YouTube and watch that. It is a word
that will bless your life. But he said something in
there that made me think. He actually said that what
(01:25:52):
you call luck is actually God's grace. So that's the
positive note. Nothing you have is because of luck, a chance,
it's all due to God's grace and favor. Breakfast Club Pies,
y'all finish it, y'all. Dunb