All Episodes

December 29, 2020 90 mins

As The Breakfast Club is on break and gearting up for the next year, we flashed back to our classic interview with Dave Chappelle who spoke about being non apologetic, the late Charlie Murphy and more. Also we flashed back to the last time the late great Nipsey Hussle stopped in and spoke about owenership, west side protocools and more. Also remember when Charlamagne gave his hee haw to Ellen Degeneress? well we are running that back as well.

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FM

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You want anywhere else, so you're friend fronds. The world's
most stagers want to sell the cameras. I don't agree.
What is this list? The city South with DJ Henvy
the captain of this the only one who can keep

(00:21):
these guys in chat charge. God is the breakfast club
pictation is your time to get it off your chests,
whether you're man or blessed, so so you better have
the same industry. We want to hear from you on
the breakfast club? Hello, who's this good chest brow? I

(00:43):
wanted to just spread some good news, and I wanted
to tell y'all thinks. I don't think y'all know how
I'm pointing. Y'all are out here, Charlomagne Henry, and yet
y'all sometimes feel like you just think of how y'all
what y'all do for people on a regularation? Thank you
someone all, but everybody got time to be thinking about
that bottom of like you do? Ask she when she
humbly talk to people and getting good as good advice.

(01:04):
Then she traveled to cities and countries, controvel to state
this country, doing seminars and powering our sisters, you know,
the short sisters what they can do how they can
become and they can grow up and blow up. Charlotte Magne,
you constantly big ingen up a pc us, right, Oh,
y'all do pretty much fund raisers, they help presidents to
go to college. Then you channel a mental awareness and
you donate the brothers and sisters are helping sisters and

(01:26):
brothers wood mental illnesses because you know how to fake
the you right, Yeah, definitely, we appreciate now, we appreciate
you for recognizing. We appreciate you for recognizing the work.
That's nice it is, and even envy you travel this
country polar seminars, you don't be probably be Boston, and
then you people ain't your family and friends? Y allay
do this to people? Y'all don't even know. I don't

(01:48):
want let y'all know. We appreciate y'all man, and we
have because we wouldn't even be in the position that
we're in without you. So that's right. We got your
Universal Basic income check coming in the mail for you know,
bigging us up this morning. Thank you for that. Thank you. Brother. Hello,
who's this? Hey, good morning man. This Jermaine out Atlanta
with Bombay Voda. We're going on guys, what's up, Jamaine?

(02:10):
Hey man, just want to send some positive vibes, positive
energy out there. Man, scar every time they prayed up,
we're gonna get through this. And man, just it was
trying time y'all, so like, let's just stick together on
the hey say nothing but pray for America. This is
exactly why Donald Trump is saying in America first we
should have led with pray for America. I pray for
us first, pray for us. Say America, y'all all of y'all, Man,

(02:34):
pray for America. Man, Like, how y'all doing though? How
y'all doing, because y'all we're doing good? Man, We blessed
with we love. We're talking to the good people. Man,
we are right. Man. Hello, who's this? He this Chandler
from CLEMSONIO. How y'all doing? Hey man, we're good morning,
high schood morning. Just wanting to let y'all know, you

(02:54):
know this, this coronavirus ain't scaring me. I still uber
all weekend, still my money. You know what I'm saying.
I'm still outside with its inside. I'm saying, chairless, stay
your ass inside, bro, there's no reason to be outside.
All you're doing is you probably you could be infecting people,
or you can get infected. Just stay your ass home, bro,

(03:15):
I'm gonna do my best. I'm gonna definitely do my best,
all right, brother. Hello, Who's this is Chris from Bloomfield,
New Jersey. I just want to give a shout out
to everybody who out here is still grinding. I want
to give a shout out to you guys at the
radio stations was keeping us, you know, calm and entertained,
and I want to give a shout out, Like I
said again to Bloomfield Police Department, Fire department. They holding

(03:36):
it down for us. Hello. Who's this? Warren from Norfolk, Virginia,
Warren from the seven five seven. Get it off your chest, bro,
how are you doing? Good morning to DJ Envy Sharpote
and God Angela even more. It's one to say, having
a tough week, got this coronavirus going around the world,
got a lot going on at work, got legal problems,

(03:56):
but everything's gonna be all right by the end of
the day. You got to keep your head up, keep
moving forward. There you go. It could be worse. You
could have the coronavirus, sir, Yes, yes, thank you. Charlotte Mane.
Men that's right, but we all got to get through it.
We gotta be come together. It don't matter about We
don't got no choice, no anything. Everybody got to come
together and be one. Get this out of the way

(04:17):
and get this stuff out of the way. And yeah,
that is very true. This is something that impacts us all.
Keep your head up, bro, Hello, who's this? All right?
This is Courtney Renette? How I is? Hey? Courtney Renette?
Get it off your chest, mama, Well, I don't have
anything on my chest. I just wanted to really wish
my sister, Brittany marshake I happy twenty nice birthdays. Happy birthday,

(04:39):
all right, well, happy birthday to her. She can't go
on the way to celebrate what y'all doing. No, we
already heard of. All weekend we had a couple of
house parties with all our family and friends. You know,
everybody was coornthizers and lifefall. Social distancing. No, no social distancing.
You're supposed to be six feet away from each other.
To shame on y'all. I know, but you know in

(05:01):
South Carolina, solive as you already know, get it off
your chests. Eight hundred five eight five one on five
one if you need to vent hit this up now.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning. It is your time
to get it off your chests, whether you're Man or blast,
so people to have the same. Anything we want to
hear from you on the Breakfast Club, he'll know who's this. Hey,
this was a lot of us as up. Bro. How

(05:24):
you feeling the day, man, I'm feeling fine. One love
to you all, One love to y'all in these get
it off your chests. Brother, man, I'm upset about that
black authors of sci Fire have no outlets really, like
we're kind of rejecting and thrown and loose from the
film industry to the book literaries, to the publishing companies.
You know, like we really need some some better outlets

(05:47):
with black Sci Fire authors. Now, I agree Smooth, my
dude's investor, he got this line call planet dead, But
I agree with you. It's only because they don't take
us serious in that space right now. They look at
black people and they think we're only supposed to be
writing about one thing, which is usually the screet life,
right and that's that's like like they want us just
to walk write an identity of corruption and nothing that

(06:07):
develops us or gives us some science about life. You know.
So like in my book The Black Rose, a coush,
we got everything in there from post traumatic slave syndrome.
Like with doctor J. M. Joy Degury puts in her book,
y'all definitely need to put her on your show. Have
y'all had doctor post traumatic slave syndrome. She is, She

(06:29):
is the I call her the female Malcolm mix of
this time. You got to really check her out, like
she is the truth for for post traumatic slave syndrome.
If I've heard that, yeah, I mean I've heard that term. Yeah,
I've definitely used that term. I don't maybe, man, maybe
I do know her. I don't know. I've definitely used
that term. Though. You like to go see the slave

(06:51):
play on Broadway, then well when it's whenever it's back
open again, it's kind of all about that too. But
I shout out to touch. We had him on the show.
He's a black sid think he wrote the book of
war Girls. Hello, who's this? This is Douglas Pond from
the top notch Mobile Salon and Detroit, Michigan. What's up, brother?
Get it off at chess bro I agree with Charlotte

(07:12):
mine man, man, my wife and now we worked together
all the time. Now we're home with the kids, and
I see it's a blessed man that you know all
the time, and the work I put it on my
kids as children, it's paying off because I can see
exactly what's going on with him. You know. Yeah, my
wife and I we were we uh, we really truly
appreciate each other's company. Now, man, you know now that

(07:34):
we out with sanitizing, with disrespecting the salon, getting ready
to go back to work. You know, it's just that,
like I agree with Charlotte mine, they never did liked
each other in the first place. For us, never liked
each other. You can't take this a couple of weeks.
You never liked the person you would. I'm witching, man,
I'm enjoying this so much. Thank you for calling brother. Hello,
who's this this? Missus? Sparkt Up. I go by the

(07:55):
name of kay mane it okay whatever, get it off
at chess bro Oh yeah, I just like, uh, let's
know that at the fifteen long months your boys finally
got his license clear your third number, dirty driving okay regulations, King, Yes, sir,
Thank y'all, Thank y'all very much. All right, we'll be
safe out there. Don't lose it again. Brother. Hey, one

(08:17):
more thing though, Hey, y'all gotta call our D. Go
ahead and say my number. So when I called this time,
y'all already we don't know damn call our D. But
we're not we're not storing this number. St number because
I can win. You gotta ask, ye, I got something
on to ask your numbers? The nine O four number
right your third? Yeah, we're not storing that though, but

(08:38):
have a good one. No, brother, who who've all got? Duvall? He? Oh? Hello?
Who's this? Just shapers man? What's up? Broke? Get it
off your chest? And man, I'm just black, you know,
woke up this morning, got a little work out man
at work? No blessing of a dog? Regulations, bro bro
that's it appreciated man, that's how you feel good? Yeah? Yeah,

(09:01):
I'm even gonna follow me on Instagram that case the
man or not? Okay? Brother? Hello, who's this Romeo? Romeo?
What's up? Make it off your chest? What's up? How
you doing? First? First? Because stay on blessed this morning
I'm having my first child, Thank you, thank you? But
um your suller man a guard man I love you.

(09:22):
Ain't enough wrong with a black buzzer? You love you
say I'm mad at you. I'm mad at you because
I can't believe you're surprised that on EMV lightskin ucy
so can't change some tires. Man. Well, I don't want
to stereotype people. But it's easy to take. To take
some tire, It's like, how do you care to say
some tire? You gotta be taught like my father had

(09:43):
to teach me. I mean I know how to. I mean,
I know the concept, but changing the time, never change.
It's a very easy thing to dizy concept. But I
just don't. I'm not sing and say it's easy now,
you know, I rather to do it. Were you from, brother,
I'm from Brooklyn. How many how many uh fixing fa
places by you? It's a whole lot. There you go.
That's why I gotta change the tie. That's what I

(10:04):
paid them to do. Thank you, though, brother, you might
not have the money. Hey, people are struggling, you know,
don't even does it. Some people don't even have actually
tire in their time. Now that's expensive around with extra tire.
Get it off your chest. Eight undred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, you
can hit us up at any time. Morning. Everybody is

(10:27):
J M. D Angela, Charlomagne, the guy, We all the
breakfast club. We got a special guest in the buildings. Indeed,
this is the first time man finally get the energy
right here. God damn Sugar. A K eighteen of Snow
in the Building album is out right now, let's let's
start it. For people that don't know, how did it
Meg the Stallion start out as a rapper? How did

(10:49):
you get into this rap game? So my mom was
a rapper, and like every day after school and when
she would get off work, I will see her in
her room writing and stuff. And then she would be
like going to the studio and I'll be in the
little waiting room and I'm pretty sure she thought I
was in there doing like little kids stuff. But I'll
be like listening at the door, like okay, yeah, And
I really thought it was normal. I kind of low
key thought everybody mama was doing that. Yeah I didn't know,

(11:13):
so like, I don't know, it was just normal. So
I would eventually like start stealing her CDs with like
all her instrumentals on there, and like start sneaking and writing,
and then she'll be like asking, like have you seen
my CDs? And I'll be like no, like and then
like eventually, when I graduated from high school, I was like,
I can wrap and she was like, no, you can't.
And I was like, yeah, I can't. She was like,
let me hear you. So I started rapping and she

(11:33):
was like, oh my god, like rapa. I really don't
remember what I was saying, but I remember wrapped over
like that, I'm different beat by two chains and she
was like, oh like so then ever since then, like
I don't think she still even took me seriously then,
so I started going to the studio on my own,
and so when she knew I was at the studio
by myself and stuff, she was like, oh, hell no,

(11:53):
I'm a manage you and we too. I was exactly
how I rapped now, like I was talking probably a
more crazy life. I was like, Mama, don't be mad,
I'm a curse okay, and she was she was like okay.
I don't think she knew exactly how hard I was
about to go. And she was like, I don't know
where your mouth came from. And the only thing my
mama ever played for me, was like PEMC U g

(12:15):
k oh. Yes, my daddy only played three six mo fia.
So understand why y'all not figuring out why I'm talking
like this. So I read somewhere that Pimc's wife wanted
to she had vocals for you that she wanted. Ye,
I mean I got the vocals. I got vocals from
her and Juicy J. So I mean I was working.
I'm still working on my album. Like I had to

(12:37):
hurry up and put together EP like of songs that
I just really liked that I recorded so far, but
like stuff like that, I really liked to take my
time because I really look up to PEMC. So I
really wanted to. I want to do the song right.
How long did it take for you to to I
don't want to say pop, but to actually pop because
it seems like on the outside world it seems like
it was fast. So it seems like it was a
little rumbling and then it was going. I feel like

(12:59):
I'm I'm still getting there, Like I don't feel like
I'm just like I don't feel like I've like popped.
How many platinum singles you got already? Three? I mean, no,
you got the right attitude that they don't only count
until you put out a debut out right, Yeah, I
feel like I just got a lot more work to do,
Like I like to work. I like to hustle. I
don't feel like nothing should just be given to me,

(13:21):
like I really do want to work for you think
that sometimes people are misjudged, like looking from the outside
with you know, hot girl and all of that, because
I looked at it and we were trying to have
this discussion on just being like somebody about your business
as a woman that is independent, taking care of yourself.
You go to school, TSU shout out to TSU shot
because they show proud of you. But sometimes people think

(13:41):
that means you just out here holing and that, and
then they think that that's what it is, um being
a hot girl. You know, it really started off as
me really just letting everybody know what type of summer
I was about to have, Like me just being unapolo, unapologetic,
me just doing what I want to do, not really
caring about anybody else's opinion, Like me just being me,
you know, just doing what we want to do as women,
Like we shouldn't be trying to fit into like a

(14:03):
certain standard that people try to put us in a
certain box. People try to put us and you should
just do what makes you happy. Now, when the boys
got involved, it was like, oh yeah, y'all on that
high girl, y'all think y'all this, and then it turned
into like a whole like ballo. Yeah. I was like,
whoa y'all making this? Something started that Yeah, well they
drunk it. I was like, damn like high girls like

(14:24):
I was saying, that was like, yeah, real high girl,
And I was like, what did you do for the fall?
I went it's high girl semester. Oh yeah, when we
went back school, we got more with Megan the Stallion.
When we come back, don't move. It's the Breakfast Club.
Come on, the Breakfast Club is back backs should thing

(14:46):
everybody in DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy, we
are the Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Meg
the Stallion. Charlomagne. Do you think this is a situation
where major company is poaching off the work that A
fifteen on one day to help you get to this point? No,
like Rock Nation don't have nothing to do with the problems.
We was already going through. I don't like it. I

(15:08):
don't like that, you know, people bring up jay Z
like jay Z and I worried about them, like you're
saying names that I feel like, it's just you're just
trying to draw like attention to the situation, like facts
or public. I don't have to lie. Why would I lie?
Like I just I feel like people want to bully me,
like you don't have to gang up on me, like
I didn't do nothing in the y'ase. So I really

(15:29):
don't understand where it's coming from. I think I think
a lot of that came from I think you said
that that Rock Nation looked at the contract and told
you something. So when when I finally got real lawyers
and like you know, people around me that knew what
they were talking about, it was like, some things in
my contract are just uncomfortable in the state of Texas.
So it's like, well, let's just fix the things that
are wrong. So I just wanted to renegotiate my contract.

(15:54):
It look like things are going to move to our
dad direction. Are you feeling like, do you feel like
if you had a conversation. I tried to have a
conversation because he said he had cars that he hasn't
heard from you since August. He's like, I haven't had
heard from me before that. Like we just don't have
a relationship. So it's not nothing that's brand new. Is
not because of rock Nation. We just already didn't have
a relationship. Maybe call was the money guy, but he

(16:15):
wasn't the day to day guy. That's what it seems like.
I mean, like I said, like I couldn't well, I
know what's being said, it's not true, like all that
hundreds of thousands of dollars, like people not even you know,
putting it out there, Like we asked for the proof
and you're not even giving us the proof of that.
Like I gotta go back and look at some of
your old Instagram pictures. Thank god, we got an album

(16:36):
out today, So it's not even my album, Like it's
an EPP. So who is Sugar now? So Sugar? It's
basically just like a girl who is going through it,
but she getting through it. It's like me basically letting
people know that I'm not perfect. I'm a human. I
know I'll be fucking up, but I'll be trying. I'll
be getting through it. You know what, I'm saying, and
I just I don't like the I don't like the

(16:57):
fact that everybody be trying to seem so perfect. Why perfect,
But obviously people are online they just are all so
amazing and nothing's wrong with them and they've never been
through in their life. So I mean, that's more so
what I'm talking about. And then it whack. Know that
you gotta you gotta learn that in real time, like
you gotta that have to play out in front of

(17:18):
the world, you know what I'm saying, Those growing pains,
I mean, it's just all a part of being in
the light. So I can't complain. I knew knew what
I was getting into, so it's not nothing I'm upset about.
It's just I'm just learning as I go. So when
I put my head, I'll just be like, Okay, you
and the Baby make great records with each other. Yeah,
y'all doing an album together? Is that a plan to

(17:38):
do it a full project? I don't know if we're
gonna do a full project, but I know we definitely
got some music that's gonna come up and some other
things I don't want to say yet. Yeah, the Baby
always says if he could do a collab album with
somebody would be you I love him, Like, I really
think that will be fired if we actually did it.
What type of deal is making the Stallion looking for?
Not necessarily in that situation, but just in general at

(18:00):
this point in your career, what would be fair to
making a study? I just wanted to be fair and
I wanted to be you know, good for everybody, Like
nothing is gonna be perfect, but if we can both
come to agreement, like you gotta you gotta give a
little to get a little. You know what I'm saying.
And I understand that. So I just want everything to
be fair. Can you have a relationship with Jay Prince
at all? No? So have you ever met him in person? Though? Okay,

(18:22):
growing up, did you look up to rap a lot
in Jay Prince had to write in Houston? Oh? Really?
Like I didn't. I was young, so I didn't really
know anything about it. You see all of them though,
I only knew the music, Like, I didn't know the backstory.
I didn't know the background. I mean, you know, you're
from I'm from Houston. You know you hear things, But
it wasn't I didn't think it was gonna be anything.

(18:44):
I would ever have to deal with rights. I wanted
to talk about the song. Oh lord, what with Jay
accused you of lying this morning on this Instagram said
you're lying on him and court documents? What is that about? Like,
that's something that I definitely can't talk about. But I
don't lie though. Who helped you negotiate your original deal?

(19:04):
I'm just saying, I'm just yeah, I mean all of this,
I really would like to answer. It got you. So
hopefully you know, next time I come, I will be
able to talk about it. But right now, you know,
it's just in court. Like, so I can't say a
lot of stuff. All right, It's Meg the Stye, It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, It's time to shoot your shot.

(19:30):
To shoot your shot with the Breakfast Club. You just
want chance. Don't mess it up? Mess it up? Mess
what's up? What's up? Guys? Who are you trying to
shoot your shot with? Davante? This girl Lot she works
at the pharmacy. I go too, all right, now you
gotta go there to pick up your Vale trecks every
now and then. Maybe you know tricks an STD problem
because I'm letting you know if you got to pick

(19:51):
up your Vale treks. I don't think this is a
good idea to shoot your shot if she knows that
she's given you. Nah, she's just this dope man. I
don't even have a prescription there. I just go there
once a week to get like a packer or something,
and then you go with that pharmacy register just to
go see her. Yeah, she definitely did you have an
STD and too scared to get the prescription? Bro, I
don't know. I don't know. I'm scared to shoot my shot.
I was hoping y'all to help me. Why have you

(20:12):
ever had an Have you ever had a conversation? Dude?
You know, I get the gum, ask her how her
day is doing, what's going on? And she's going at
this for that concert? Not question. Do you put the
gum in your mouth before you talk to her? Oh?
You know, I usually get a piece of the offer
her one, because if you're talking to her before you
put the gum in your mouth, that's probably why she's

(20:33):
not interested, because your breath is clearly funcky. Now it's
like half a half half with gum, half without. Okay, okay,
all right, well let's get right into it. I mean
they've only had some brief conversations, though he doesn't see
her when he buys some gums, So I'll be interested
to see if she's noticed you. Does she say hi
when you walk in? Oh? Yeah, yeah, she's very friendly. Okay,
it's got to be a reason that you haven't shot

(20:54):
your shot yet other than just nerves. Maybe he's scared.
Maybe he got a small wee week. I don't know
damn about Okay, all right, well let's maybe maybe you
need some some zannies then for anxiety. I don't have
a prescription for it. You know where I could get something? Yeah,
the girl? Once you shoot your shot. We're in the
middle of shoot your shot. We have DeVante on the line.

(21:16):
Shoot your shot, man, make that phone call? Hello, Hey,
what's up with Tylier? Who's DeVante from the pharmacy? DeVante

(21:38):
from the pharmacy? How did you get my number? You
gave it to me? Remember No, I don't remember. I
never gave you one. Wait, please don't see what do
you want? Well, you didn't actually give me a number.
You actually gave me your name, and then our search
Facebook and your number came off. Jesus Christ, Okay, got stop.
You did not tell us this part. I'm sorry. Let's

(22:00):
have you ever from the Yes wait Djeli Charagne from
the Breakfast Club. Mama, yeah, we're doing because he is going.
We thought that you gave him your number, and so
he was calling to shoot his shot because he has
a crush on you. He said, he comes in there
all the time to buy gum. Oh my god, oh
my god, to du that bars gum. I don't even
put his change in his hand like I put it

(22:22):
on the Oh my god, he's the creepiest. Why is
he calling me? I don't understand why he still he's
still on the phone. He can hear he can hear you,
he's here. I got this point. I don't even care
because you're talking about too looked up my number on Facebook.
That's it's kind of weird. That's really because Facebook does

(22:43):
provide this kind of information. But I do think I
wish we would have asked him, you know, did he
get your number before? And but yeah, but wait, why
is he calling me? I'm not understanding. He wants to
have sex with no, No, he wants to take you
out on a date. He wants to take you out
on a date. Why would go out billion people on
the planet, and you think I would go out with
this dude? Speak no, no, no, no, no, no, Sea.

(23:07):
You have the name of America. I just want to
take such keep no, well, let me keep it one hundred.
DeVante has adult acne. I can't even get past that
because we're not even doing it like that. No, are
you kidding me? Trying to figure out? Figure me out? No? Please,

(23:33):
and let me tell you. I'm giving out medicine for diabetes,
for HIV, for cancer, and this is coming every day
buying gum. Do you know how creepy that she is? Listen,
why don't you prescribe him something for his adult acne?
Should he go see a dermatan? I have a great man.
I can't believe. I really don't know why she's being

(23:56):
like that. I always offer a piece of dumb when
I come, and that's creepy. I don't think. I don't
think you should tell a guy like this any last words.
They're creepy and you chew it it really okay to
it all nice and slow. Flirt with me. You know
you love the girl. Yeah, Why are you taking the
gun from him? Why are you leading him on by

(24:18):
taking the gun from gun from him. If you're never
taking a gun from him, I'm never taking fire. I
have a video I snapshotted Lata. Yeah, next time he
comes in there, I would call the policeman. He's creepy
as hell. Yeah, and the table, you might you might
need to get a rest. No, we didn't know. I'm sorry,

(24:38):
you know we didn't know. Hey, DeVante, your mother or
father was clearly a Jodasy fan. Okay, because they named Devant.
Are you familiar with DeVante swing from Jodas? Yeah, okay,
he did a juicy fru commercial back in the day.
Oh my god, La, I'm sorry, all right, we gotta go.
We got things to do. I'm sorry, good time, Bante,

(25:01):
have a blessed day. Stop stalking women. Okay, all right,
I'll see you. To see you next week, girl, Sorry, sorry,
all right. We got more coming up next with a
breakfast club for the best of the best of the best.
We'll be right back with our best of interviews morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomine the guy. We

(25:24):
are the breakfast club. We got some special guests in
the building with now we have one special guy. Yeah,
we always say we got special guests. Right in the building.
We don't always apply to everybody. This this one definitely applied, dude.
When the start on show, like, yo, see we can
get Donelle to come in, buddy, I'm cool. We have
Ashley Larry, Donnelle Rawlins, and we have a special guest

(25:47):
that has in twelve man the legendary that's right, iconic
Dave Chappelle. Oh my god, good morning, Hey, good morning.
You feel you feel pressure to do a great radio
interview that you haven't done it in twelve years? Not really,
I mean yeah, I just you know, I want everybody
like me. I don't come out and try to do bad.

(26:09):
I saw you with the fight Charlotamagne. Yes, I was
at the Triple G Danny Jacob's fight, and I gotta
tell you, I got excited to see that. I realized
I've never met this person. That's how I felt. I
saw you a few rolls up, I'm like, that's Dave Chappelle,
and then you turned around and you saluted. But I'm like,
I don't think he's doing that to me. I didn't
want us to look back at first. I wanted to

(26:30):
look back out from like, oh he's talking to me.
I told my wife, say you see Dave Chappelle, just
say what's up to me? So I'm saying all that
to say, you know, I got really good flat show
that night because you said what's upthing, I didn't know
where that was gone. Marital Fla. Do you wake in

(26:51):
bake in the morning? Day? We do? You wait till
after breakfast? Yeah, I'm a waiter. I usually late at night.
Oh at night? Okay, okay, you said something interesting. You
said you don't ever want to just present something bad.
You still feel like you got something to prove because
you're like critically acclaimed, you're respected by your peers. You
feel still like you got something to proof. No, it's
not it's not necessary. You feel like you has something

(27:12):
to prove. I'm sure you guys feel the same way.
It's like quality control, right, yea. You want to make
sure that whatever you offer you put your best foot for.
You know, that's doesn't mean you want to prove anything.
It just means you respect the people that respect you,
and you want to reciprocate their respect with a good product.
You still get nervous when you do shows or this
is a piece of cake too. Well, one time it

(27:32):
didn't work out and sometimes don't worry. You know what
it's like and done. You can attested this. People ask me, like,
do you get nervous when you're going stage? It's like
asking a pilot if he gets nervous before a flight.
I might hit some weather, but I feel like you
normally are laying the plane. I don't think we've ever
not landed. Maybe Detroit, but other than that, By the way,

(27:55):
I would never want I would never want to know
if my pilot was nervous, by the way, you want
on nervous pilots. I'm just a little confused because everybody's
throwing so much respect and Dave, I've been on this
show four or five times. When I come in here,
they don't even look me at my face every time
I come here, y'all on social media, y'all everything. What
about that time you came in I told everybody that said,

(28:17):
no matter what Donelle says, do not laugh. It was
like it was like, I was like, oh, this looked
like the set up? What made you even like down
there was? It was? What was it down there that saying,
you know what? I could work with this guy up?

(28:38):
The first time I heard about you. I was. I
went home to DC and I went to the comedy
club when I asked some old comers like what's popping
around here? And everybody was like, yo, you gotta see
this new kid downe now rawlings. And then I met
you and we had we had a swell time that yeah,
I do all right, swell time. We're gonna leave me everywhere.

(29:09):
I watched the like, okay, like I watched your show
one line all the time, Like I watched all you
guys I've seen. I just watched an interview that you
did with Neil yeah faced, yeah, it's my guy. I
watched you on a real estate show. Yeah. And then
I and I saw you with the DJ Awards I
presented awards. Yeah, and you promise you said I'm gonna

(29:30):
come on the show. You said, you know, I need
a little time, but I'm gonna come. Yeah. That's right,
that's right. You definitely kept your work. Yeah. Man, s
to my guy, Neil, Why why do you think white
people have gravitated towards you your comedy because it's been
like that your whole career. Well, you know, I don't know,
I don't look at it that way. Like the whites
are really gravitating to it. I don't use those I
don't use those kinds of metrics. I think all of us,

(29:52):
at some point we have ventured into some kind of
cultural cross road with black people, with corporate people. And
we all smoke weed, We all smoke weed, we all,
you know, we traverse the American landscape. So I don't
think there's anyone in America that I'm incapable of communicating
to on some level. Now, if you think so sensitive,
Now do you think you could do the Dave Chappelle's

(30:13):
show and not have backlash? Because it seems like everything
is sensitive. You say a word and people are already
crying and pick it in outside of things. Hey man, president, grads, girls,
a boy. That's all you need to know, right, That's
what That's what I'm saying, you know, you know, and
comedians wipe out, you know everybody that sometimes you're gonna

(30:34):
say something that you might be wrong, but that's that's
the nature of the genre. You know, to not take
a chance for fear of that would be would not
be being true to the music. Would you ever apologize
if if you said something too far? If if if
I can see if I actually can see this too far.
But it's a it's a touchy line, you know what

(30:54):
I mean? I like, I like it harder I think
I think that. Yeah, no, I'm gonna say you have
you have quite possib be the greatest rape joke of
all time, Billy. What he says was that was that
an observation you was pondering? Or I mean, you know,
the thing is, this is a thing. It's tough to
talk about jokes because I don't want to open to

(31:16):
do it all these weird like analytics and like what
does he actually mean by that? That's a slippery slope. Well,
you know, I don't want to antagonize anybody or intentionally
offend somebody. Have you come up with an answer for
as far as like what should we do with Bill Cobby?
Should be still watch his work? Should we still appreciate
his art? To have an answer for that? Yeah, no,

(31:39):
the question, it's a kind of question that makes more questions.
Got you know what I mean, Like, it's a it's
a tough one, man, because you know Way's accused of
it is very serious. I don't I don't. I don't
like take that lightly. However, you know, I don't know.
It was seventies times. It's crazy. She's going on. I
don't know what. I don't know what to say. America's
dad is now America's rapists. Yeah, but what According to

(32:00):
The New York Post, Yeah, so it's a tough one.
We got more with Dave Chappelle and Donnelle Rawlins when
we come back. Don't move. It's the breakfast clo Good
morning morning. Everybody is DJ n Vy, Angela, Yee, Charlemagne
and Guy. We all the breakfast club. We have Dave
Chappelle and Donnelle Rawlins in the building. Yee. I did
appreciate on those specials that you didn't shy away from

(32:21):
any topics, because I do feel like everybody's so politically correct,
you know. And I also find it ironic that everybody's like,
he walked away from fifty millions, but then you came
back and got sixty million doing Netflix specials. Yeah, well
you know what. Yeah, thank god that there was a
happy ending to thee because I could have just never
worked again, you know, but I never stopped. Even when

(32:43):
I was like not in the public guy, I was
still playing comedy clubs, and I found the altitude that
I was comfortable with and you know, a good time.
How many times have theyd Donnelle call you and beg
you to come back? He didn't call. Were you guys
always in communication because Danielle did it for a while
he was in a state of depression. After Dannielle was Jesus,

(33:06):
I had a tough time myself, like what if the
he mean? I think, you know when I was gone,
I think I stayed. Daniell stay in touch with me
and Neil were cool the whole time. You know, it wasn't.
It wasn't as a bad blood of monkst like people
would assume that I left in a hub. It wasn't

(33:26):
like I mean, I didn't leave in a hub. I
wasn't mad at the guy. A lot of people like after,
you know, after he left a lot of people would
ask me, you know how I feel about it or whatever,
all you're upset? And I never was upset because I
was doing calmly for a while before I was introduced
to Dave Chappelle. Like with anything, you can be, You
could be as talented as you want, but until you
get the right platform, nobody never know about it got you,

(33:46):
so you know, just I don't know if I can't
being at Dave Chapelle's eating here, but go ahead what
you speak, so I know what happened. But you know everybody,

(34:07):
you know the one that I've been asked that question
a million times that I always felt that I was talented.
But again, you need the right opportunity, like even in sports,
you know you could be a talented person, but until
the coach put you in the game, nobody will never
see what you um so you do. So he gave
me a platform to do what I've been doing for years.
And I think there was an even exchange after all that. Okay, So, Dave,
do you have a favorite mumble rapper? Because you're hip hop? Hey,

(34:33):
do you appreciate anything from the generation? Uh? Yeah, I
appreciate it. I'm at party too. If I go out,
they playing me goos. I listened to that. Yeah, but
a favorite mumble rapper, I don't know about all that.
I like to build to say the lyrics too, well,
I can tell who you really like based on who
you have on tour. When you well, when you do
this residency that you're doing in New York City at
Radio City, I can see that you hand picked the

(34:55):
artist that you wanted to be there. Yeah, you know,
it's it's funny, man. So this year will be like
my thirtieth anniversary standard. I figured, like why I should
mark that occasion right, Like you know, it's you know,
this business is hard. You you existed in a long time,
and it's good to stop for a minute and just
appreciate the fact that you I'm still able to do

(35:16):
this and I'm very lucky to be successful. So it's
it's it's a it's a celebration. Like even now, you'll
see my next special the act I'm doing now. I
like it because he's joying, Like I'm really enjoying what
I'm doing right now. I really you know what I mean.
It's like I want skydiving once. Have you ever done? Okay,

(35:37):
I hated it, you know, Like what did you hate
about it? Because I hated going up? I hate people.
I enjoyed that part, but the whole going up part
I didn't like it was because it was terrifying the
time time. Like Okay, yeah, in the beginning, it's a
plane right then the door opens and you realize you

(35:59):
expected to jump about and I'm strapped to a guy
that I've never met before, and I didn't see the
shoot pack and oh my god, I have kids and
all this stuff. You're thinking as you edge up to
the door. Next you know, you're just in the sky.
There's no logical reason to be there. There's no you know,
my life didn't depend on any yet. I jumped out
of this plane and just falling. And then one says

(36:21):
it feels like flying, but to me, it felt like
falling about one hundred and twenty miles and I was terrified.
So what did you get out the situation other than
being terrified? Well, the point is when you when the
shoot lands and you survive it, you go home at night,
you eat then a food taste, but house is quiet
and still, and you feel comfortable in saving your house.

(36:42):
You're like, man, I'm glad to be home. Everything's good.
So that's what it felt like. It felt like coming
back and doing this Netflix special. All that felt like
my shoot open and everything's just good. Right. Yeah. I
don't got to do all that to get that feeling.
I'm black in America. All I gotta do is to
drive through the neighborhood that I live in and making
home without being I feel that I live in a
much nice and Neige. I I mean, we're all black,

(37:11):
you know what I mean? Like, I know what you mean.
But it's not like I'm gonna try to survive and
traffic stop just to get that feeling. I mean, it's
like it's the black experience. But I did it. I
don't know why I did it, but the point is
that now this is just I'm happy to be doing it.
Would you do it again? What quit my show? No?

(37:31):
Oh no, I don't think I would. Man, I mean,
like I get it. I know what it's about, you
know what I mean. I just think that you know
something's It's just one of those things that I didn't
even mean to do it the first time. It's a
long story, Dave. I hate to do this, but I
have to put you on the spot. But could you
explain to the breakfast club interviewing what you did to

(37:52):
my apple pie a year ago? Something? No, he's taught Okay.
So we're playing at the perhaps Blue Ribbon Theater and
the pastry chef and Donelle hit it off the first
night of engagement. She was white, no, no, no, but

(38:13):
but she just know she was an older woman, real
sweet woman. And she really liked. So I came to
work and she had baked him a pie and the
pipe had his name stencil and the crest. Wow. And
I was excited about it because every day she would
come of where she says that anything that you could
do for is there anything specially want? I was like,
make me a post. She was like, that's pretty simple.

(38:34):
I said, well, if that's so simple, make me a pie,
then put my name on the top of the pot.
Of the story that is correct. And I was excited
about the pie. No, no, I was sure. Everybody pipe,

(38:56):
I didn't actually put money in it. Well, you have
still leading the pipe day with put he kept going.
He was like, because somebody put that pie in a
mic way for three seconds. So it's a bunch of
people love Dave Chappelle. He's an evil friend. Man. That
was funny. Man, We got more with Dave Chappelle. When
we come back, don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good
morning morning. Everybody's DJ n v Angela Ye, Charlemagne the guy.

(39:20):
We all the breakfast Club. We have Dave Chappelle and
Donnelle Rawlings in the building. Charlemagne. When when the last
time you've been humbled, Dave humbled. Yeah, you mean like
what professionally or personally both? Yo, yo, man, life is humiliating, yeah,
for you, for everybody. Yo. You think if I'm walking
down the street and a lady says you gonna take

(39:42):
a picture and she don't know how to work her
camera and we all staying in there, but you do
that because you gotta you know, you gotta have empathy.
But life is humilly. Being a parents, humiliating, being a
husband's humiliating. All of it's humiliate. Hindsight is twenty twenty.
Was it was everything worth it? Like everything you went through,
like even the Chapelle Shaw experience, and even walking away

(40:05):
from it was at all worth it? Hey man, Yeah,
I was. I was happy to have that show. You know.
I'm sorry it end of the way it ended. But
I enjoyed making that show. It was a it was
an experience that very few people get. The head you
miss it, especially with everything going on and so much material. Yeah,

(40:25):
because I see something and I say, damn I misspell Yeah,
I miss it too, you know, but I think I
don't know if I could do it again though, because
I missed it. But then I remember what it was
like to do it and it just wasn't. It might
be easier now to make just because of technology, and yeah,
but the internet ruined because it won't be the same. Yeah,
stuff that you want to do, somebody will do on

(40:45):
YouTube ten times faster than ten times worse. Right, Yeah,
it's true, but you didn't play a lot of people.
It was great. Yeah, I worked with a lot of
great people that I was doing the showing at Lanta
the other night and bumped into like similar guys from
the crew. I hadn't seen those guys as I walked
up to set. It was good to see him. You know,
you remember people finally, like after it's all said and done.

(41:06):
So you know, I do have bad feelings about how
it ended, but I don't have bad feelings about what
it was. It was a great experience. How did Charlie
Murphy's pass and affect you? Because I know you guys
were pretty close. It was tough, man, it was. It
was a reality check. I feel very lucky that I
got to know him. I feel like he was a
very large part of the reason that I got to

(41:27):
be successful, Like literally changed my life just by saying
I fought Rick James. Many times we were like, what
fought James? Jesus who I didn't know? You can stay

(41:50):
on the radio, but no, he said he fought Rick James.
Many times we tell us his story of lunch and
it literally from then on to just change. It changed
your lives. You immortalized him. Yeah, man, But you know
I got to like meet and work with rig And
and the I mean, you know Charlie, and he was
an og Like Charlie's been around the block. You know,

(42:12):
his brother is Eddie Murphy. He's seen the epicenter of
like the fame that we all wanted to acquire. He
had great stories and he was also a real nurturend dude,
I think he gave me great advice. Uh, you know,
I got missage presents. Man, I'm really I was real
sad that year that doing a great job on Power
a great job job busted you in New York. Yeah,

(42:38):
but I will say, you know, like you when other
people get stuff away from yourself, it's hard to celebrate that.
But you know, when I found out that Charlie was
doing that role, I realized that he was probably perfect
person for him. And then the hindsight as far as
with him passing away or whatever. I just think this
is a nice thing for people to see him being
a part of a great body of work like that

(42:58):
he said. And he did a good job, did Charlie. Definitely,
y'all think about your own mortality because I know Donellill
called me one day random, He's like, y'all just want
to tell you, man, you know what I'm saying. You know,
people dying and you might die, So I just wanna
tell y'all love you. You're doing a good job. I'm like,
you know, I will say. I don't know, Daven have
different answers, like when someone passed away some specially with
somebody that you care about, it makes you think about

(43:19):
people important in your life, for the people that you respect.
And I don't know, I was probably you know, in
my feelings that day, but it was at a time
when you just dropped your book and I'm seeing like
your transition from not just doing urban stuff, but like
the media running you get oh, I'll keep it real.
All the white folks that you partnered up. I was like,

(43:44):
I was like, he's taking it to the next level.
And another thing in our community is not too often
to people read books. So the fact that you know,
a brother put a book out and he got people
that wouldn't normally pay attention to that. Like, I know,
it's hard to say. And I didn't say no homo
before I said that I loved and I know that's right.

(44:05):
And I didn't say pauls at the end, right, I
thought you were sick. No, no, when you called, I
thought he was sick. I thought he was like guys.
And that's the one time that we really appreciate people
in death, and when someone passed away, it makes you
think about so many times in our life. We get
to a point where you say to yourself, I wanted
to call that person just to say hi or just

(44:27):
say what's up. And you don't act on on those
films and didn't something tragically happened and then you're like, oh, man,
I was just supposed to call him. So that was
me and my mom. You know, sometimes on the tour bus,
Danielle gets drunk and looks at pictures of his son
and cry, oh, you just tell you that. I couldn't
believe that. That's cute. I called him doing it. You

(44:49):
haven't met Danielle, baby mama. Yeah, of course, Yeah, of course,
she's wonderful. Were vacation together. Yeah, I've seen that you
guys were on the yacht. Well, yeah, because I thought
it wasn't yacht until I saw puffy shit times that
we had a boat, that we had a boat. You

(45:11):
don't feel the need to compete with stuff like that though,
not at all. Yeah, I'm yeah, I'm really, like, really
really happy right now. And I you know, I appreciate it.
Like my kids are safe right now. I don't know
where they everyone's happy, everyone's fat and clean and skill. Look, man,
I'm just Yeah. We've seen you pop out with Chris

(45:33):
Rock a couple of times. Another legend, another icon. Yeah,
he's that's the homie man. There's only two of y'all
in that space though. Yeah, Chris is, he's definitely a
big brother. Though he's like he's killing it. I wasn't
so exact as soon as act a few times one
he's doing he's killing it right now. He's seen. Maybe
you guys would do a tour together, Well, we are.
We are gonna do two nights together at Radio City.

(45:55):
Would be the first time we've ever officially headlined to
show a co headline show. Together, and I'm very excited
about it because it's the first time any comic has
ever done a residency of a month at Radio City
Music Hall. Dave is a real humble dude. I'm not
gonna say, really a spectacle of what's about to go down,
but nobody's ever done a joint where like the entire

(46:17):
month of August, we're locking everything down. We got some
of the best show I don't don't let me get people,
don't let me. Don't let me. I do think y'all

(46:39):
need other comedians on those, and be quite honest, I'd
be quite honest you don't. But you know what I'm saying.
We got a team. I'm not. I'm not I'm gonna
do some of the shows, but do you know that
your show, y'all, well, in the event that I have

(47:00):
the opportunity, He's totally gonna be on it. We all
the Breakfast Club now coming up next. Usually we do rumors,
but I mean, damn it, man, Dave Chappelle's here. We're
gonna kick it with Dave Chappelle's some more soon. Don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning Now. Usually we do
rumors right here, but I mean Donnell Rawlins and Dave
Chappelle's here. Dave Chappelle hasn't done radio in twelve years,

(47:23):
so we're kicking it with Dave Chappelle. Charlemagne ask you today,
where do you draw the line when it comes to
like a cultural appropriation. What do you mean white people
appropriating like black culture? Okay, this is a controversial question.
I'm not sure if the premise. I'm not sure if
the premise of the question is correct. Kylie and Kendall

(47:45):
today superimposed their images on Biggie and Tupac and they
got t shirt right, Okay, And as a black person
or person from that culture, you feel like they misrespectful disrespect. Yeah, yeah,
that's that's a tough one. Did you go see the
Tupac movie? No? Did you like it? I don't think

(48:08):
it was as terrible as everybody was saying. But it wasn't.
I haven't heard good things and it wasn't like it
starts before Tupac is born and it ends when he dies.
That's a long period of time to cover, and so
many things that happened in Tupac's life, and he was
such a complex person and so many different incident you
ever had a club when Tupac was there. No, never.

(48:31):
It wasn't that much fun really, Yeah, I just remember
being in part it just felt like a lot of
dark shoes around a guy. I liked them. I didn't
know well, but I felt like culturally that those were
darker time. Yeah, yeah, absolutely right, you know. And I'm
not saying this should be controversial. I don't even it's
just nothing to do with the question that you asked me.

(48:53):
I just thought you got out the question like a
UFC fighter. I didn't know what's good you have been
watching Charlotte Man was ready for you, was like, just
ignore him. I just didn't think, Yeah, you know, do
you plan to see it to just get an idea.

(49:15):
I'm gonna watch that at home probably, you know what
I mean. Like, I don't know, man, something the question
asking I think it is a very important question, but
I'm not sure how to answer that, you know what
I mean, Because at a certain point, I feel like
no one's gonna feel that way more than African American

(49:36):
because we create so much culture and oftentimes just sighting
from us, and it's almost all that we've ever had.
I'm we've never had, We've done many great things, but
you know what I mean. But but it is American
culture too. Kylie and Kenna, like they don't understand what
they had happened then too, they don't understand. I don't
think they were doing that maliciously. I just think that

(49:58):
they don't. They're never gonna black dude, I'm gonna see
the world. They if you have some glasses that someone
could put on this to see the world, how you
saw the world be terrified? Yeah, you know, I heard
the interview with you. I get it. I know what
you gotta get it. But that's a hard question to answer.

(50:18):
Do your kids think you're funny? Yeah? Yeah, I mean, look,
I'm gonna dance, so there's something about me that's corenty
to them. But but they but they yeah, they get it.
They know. Like my kids are teenagers. Then my youngest
son is as old as I was when I started
doing he's fourteen. He started at fourteen. Yeah, I started

(50:38):
really young. Wow, thirty years I'll be I'll be forty
four this this summer. Veteran seasoned. Yeah, and it'll be
my thirtieth anniversion. I'm like really proud of that. We
means you're get on stage at the age of fourteen.
The fear of death, Well you do? You do? You
have been thinking about your own mortality? Well, Yo, we're
black dudes in America. So right when I was in

(51:00):
high school. My freshman year of high school, I talked
about on an active studio, Oh, six hundred kids my
age got murdered in Washington, DC. You can't be in
an environment like that and they're not affected. Like, Yo,
you made me want to just do whatever it was
I wanted to do. I feel very lucky to get
to be forty four, right, which which you know. Now

(51:21):
I'm more ambitious and I'm looking forward to paying half
price at the movies. But before that I didn't. I
didn't know I was going to live this long, you know.
And I think the fear of not doing what I
want to do in life made me do what I
want to be. Even in Kevin Harts book, he talks
about doing comedy because he was just trying to survive too,
Like just being funny is what actually helped him. Not. Yeah,

(51:42):
I wonder what makes it? What makes you believe the
stage can save you, though it absolutely did. Look at
guy like Kevin Harts from Philly he is the number
one selling artist on tour on Earth from any jump.
You know, I'm very proud that somebody from my genre
is at the top of the food chains, right and

(52:02):
somebody I remember him starting out. It's amazing to see it.
And it's absolutely can save your life. What made you
think that you're fast talking? And and your liking of
controversial questions would take as far as that that's true?
And yeah, and then yeah, and I've never met you,

(52:23):
but you one of the few celebrities I've met a
long time. Like literally, I feel like I know you
and I've I've only seen you once. It means you're
very effective at what you do. In my opinion, I
would say it means you're very effective. But I still
feel like I can get shot because of my fast
talking you up. Yeah, but god forbid, no, man, you've
transcended that. I mean, look, anything terrible can happen to anybody.

(52:45):
But there's some people that get shot, that never get
a platform, they never get to write a book, that
never get there. I mean, everybody knows your name. You
meet famous people, they already know who you are. It's amazing,
you know, what's about that? I was so aware. Somebody
came up to me, want to take a picture. They
thought I was here. No, they didn't swear to God.

(53:07):
Not happen. I swear to God. He was like, are
you Charloman the god come? How are you feel mad
about that? You wasn't mad with Morris Chestnuts. That's Morris chestnuts. Mean,
it's a difference. You caught a Mars chester Nut. Mars
chestnut chestn give me take with you. That's the big day.

(53:28):
Then Chiel gotta go. So let's tell him about radio
get one more. I was driving Dave in twenty seventeen.
I was driving you right now, right now. It's a
gentleman named Nester. Let's get radio president. We look forward

(53:49):
to seeing the show. And when does gotta come? Man?
I'm uh, it's August. It's August first and fourth is
first for this me in the roots. All right, you
sound like Floyd Mayweather or not. I saw you. I
know this This starts August first first? Now? And who

(54:16):
do we here for tickets? Oh? You guys, you're good.
You're good money. Until we get to the door. I
was like, oh, never knock, I beg your I would
love to get that call. Yo. This is a breast.
We all saw Hi, what what what? What? What's that about?

(54:37):
What dare you have? Is Dave Chappelle? Come on, damn Donna?
All right, don row Is, it's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
It's don't be a dusty because right now you are
some real It's time for Donkey of the Day. So
if we ever feel I need to be a dog man,
give me with the heat. Did she get? Please tell

(54:58):
me I had become Donkey of the Day. Past club bitches, you'dy?
Dunkya Today goes to the icon known is Ellen degenerous.
Safe to say, Ellen is one of the most successful
daytime talk show host of all time. Right, I have
to put her jersey in the rafters with the Oprah,
Winfreys and Donnie Hughes of the world, for sure. But
Donkey Today is all about giving people the credit they

(55:20):
deserve for being stupid. Doesn't mean they are stupid, but
we all have blind spots that make us sound stupid
at times. And that's why I love donkeya Today because
I get to correct people for saying something stupid. Okay,
just like I would hope someone would do for me. Well,
in this case of rich privileged white people say the
darnedest things. Ellen on Monday taped a new episode of
her Daytime Talk showing her mansion where she and her

(55:42):
wife have been self quarantining for weeks now. A very
important note, Ellen lives in a mansion that's over eight
thousand square feet, sits on eight point two four acres
of land. It has five bedrooms, a companner that doubles
as a gym, a two bedroom gastouse, and up a
salt pebble infinity pool that overlooks the ocean, and it
cost her twenty seven million dollars to buy. Dropping the

(56:03):
clue box for Ellen DeGeneres, listen, I'm not mad at her.
She has a skill set, a talent, and she has
made the most of death talent in order to be
able to secure the bag and live like that. So
I'm not mad at her for that. I'm not one
of those people who not people for what they have accomplished. Okay.
I see certain people get mad at rich folks for
acting their wage. If the celebrity takes a picture from
a yacht and says this is how I'm quarantining, well

(56:24):
that's just what it is. Okay. They put themselves in
that position. That's their life. Salute to them. We all
do what we can, and if you're able to afford
that lifestyle, God bless you. So I'm not giving her
donkey to day because she is quarantining from her mansion. No,
I'm giving her donkey of the day because Ellen Degenerous
insisted at her mansion feels like a prison. Don't believe me.
Listen to yourself. One thing that I've learned from being

(56:45):
in quarantine is that people this is like being in jail.
Is what it is. It's mostly because I've been wearing
the same clothes for ten days and everyone in here
is gay. Now I understand she's a comedian. She was joking,
terrible joke though, I even understand what she was trying
to go with it, because because if what you want
is to go outside but you're stuck in the house,

(57:05):
no matter what type of residence you're in, it's gonna
feel like you have a lack of freedom. Doesn't matter
if you're an a mansion or a one bedroom apartment.
If what you really want is to go outside, you're
gonna feel deprived of that during this time. But in
light of what's going on in prisons and jails all
around the country during this global pandemic called COVID nineteen.
Ellen degenerous sounds tone deaf as hell. I am so

(57:26):
glad that she said what she said because it provides
me an opportunity shine light on something that folks may
not know what is going on. Okay, Please, I'm sure
someone will send this to Ellen later, because Ellen, your
platform is way bigger than mine and you can help
shed some light on this problem. Okay, So let's start
with Aaron Campbell. He's a prisoner at FCI Elkton, a
low security federal prison in Ohio where three people have

(57:48):
already died from coronavirus. He posted this online from the jail. Listen, Ellen, literally,
Now they got this law. The care the car is
for people who not in game member, not a sexual offender,
and not on duff from If you at risk of

(58:09):
catching it and die like three people I know already
celt it and die, they can send you home on
home confirming. Right. So I went to talk to these
mornings to get on home confirming. They're not gonna let
us on home confirming why because they got to make
money off of us. So the nurse came in this
bitch today. I talked to this morning. This tell me
be prepared half the unit about to dine in this

(58:29):
bitch like. He literally told me that they put the
ten up everything. That's what they're stuck in. Dead bodies.
One dude, his moment was on his way out of here.
You feel me? He did serious? Bro, Look at that.
So y'all want to think of playing a mine? Let
me see bro, Bro? You all right? Oh, by the way,
Aaron has not been heard from since he posted that

(58:50):
Facebook live video. Twenty three residents and staff members at
that prison have tested positive for coronavirus, and I told
you already three have died. Now, Ellen, would you like
to hear what it sounds like with a family men
his home, worried, begging for their loved one to get
help in a prison. This is Teresa Massey and her
husband is Angelo Massey. Listen to what she had to say. Ellen,
My name is Teresa Massey. My husband, Angelo Massey, is

(59:12):
locked up and FCI helped him. Someone called me and
said my husband was real sick. No one has called
me from the jail. I tried to reach the jail.
No one has called on returned my calls. My husband
called me yesterday and said he wasn't feeling good. Now
today he did not call me. Someone's calling from inside
the jail on a cell phone, telling me he's sick,

(59:33):
that I need to call the warden, that I need
to contact somebody. He finally went over to the nurse.
He hasn't returned. They came and they packed up his
belongings and didn't tell no word where they was sending him.
I'm just reaching out to someone who can tell me
where my husband is, if he's okay, Just anything that
somebody could tell me, if somebody can help me, please,
like these minutes up there dying. My husband is locked

(59:56):
up on a drug charge. Ellen, I'm sure you get
the picture as to why you're statement was completely culturally clueless,
because you are simply not in this world. These things
aren't at your front doorsteps, so you're not thinking about them. Okay,
You've probably being watched all seven seasons of Oranges the
New Black and thought to yourself, well, prisonism so bad.
But Ellen, no, I want to play for you these
brothers who made this video from a prison in Alabama

(01:00:19):
and what they are currently experiencing California is releasing people
for the coronavirus. New York has started to release people
for the coronavirus. But Alabama is the most open, crowded
prison system in the nation, and they refuse to turn
people into it's gonna be a mass grave site. I'm

(01:00:41):
seventy one years old. I am a number of part
of illnesses that make me accessible even more so, they
are not giving us hand sanitizers. They're not giving us
proper so, they're not giving us mass my thing to
the outside. How world, it's killed. The moral of the

(01:01:02):
story is this is happening all over the country, Ellen,
de generous. Okay, in California where you live, damn there
thirty five hundred inmates have been released. And they aren't
just releasing random people, Okay, prisoners whose crimes were violent,
those registered sex offenders and domestic abuse abusers. They're not
eligible to see for this, Okay, all right. See, people
think when you're in jail, it's fu Okay, you do
the crime, you should do the time. True. In a

(01:01:24):
lot of cases, and a lot more cases, people are
in there for non violent drug offenses because they were
just simply trying to make kings meet. Okay, some folks
are in there innocent of the crime they committed and
might be awaiting trial because they can't afford to bail out.
It's all types of nuance to prison and why prisoners
are locked up, and those folks don't deserve to die
just because people don't know, don't show, or don't give

(01:01:45):
a damn about what's going on in America's jail. Since
did I even mention Rikers Island in New York City,
I saw a letter that tax don't wrote from jail,
wrote from Rikers where he spoke about the conditions and
Rikers and he started the letter by saying, I'm currently
in my grave with my eyes wide open. He said
that DA's in the head of the Board of Corrections
are playing judge, jury and executioner with people's lives because

(01:02:08):
this virus is spreading all through right because and nobody
seems to care. He said, the CEOs have no protective yet,
and they aren't giving them anything to protect themselves. Since then,
you know, Reform has stepped in and provided mask and
some other ppe. But Ellen, I think you understand now
why you saying your mansion feels like a prison. Didn't
sit well with people. So now, Ellen, since you know

(01:02:30):
the problems, what are the solutions? How can you fix this? Easy?
Use your platform to sign the alarm. Okay, I'll put
you onto some of the things that are happening. But
I'm a black male with a criminal record and a
list that can't pronounce words correctly. You are a white, privileged,
white woman, Ellen, I need you to use your privilege
to come back to this prejudice that is going on. Ellen,

(01:02:51):
I need you to act like your name is Karen. Okay,
reach out to someone who was on the front lines
fighting for these inmates, like Van Jones. All Right, have
Van Jones or CNN on your show, on your platform,
and let's see if we can get these brothers and
sisters some help. We should be calling for people to
be released from prisons in jails at a time like this,
because we don't need any more stories like Patrick Jones.
You know who Patrick Jones is, Ellen, Oh? Well, he

(01:03:12):
was the first federal prisoner to die from coronavirus. He
was locked up in Louisiana on a drug conviction, and
if I read right, I think he had a year
left on his sinis. Not to mention for other people
have died in that Louisiana jail from coronavirus since he died,
Simple and Plaine. There's a lot going on, Ellen that
clearly you don't know about, because if you did, you
would have never compared your mansion to a jail. Please

(01:03:34):
give Ellen Degenerous the sweet signs of the hamiltones. Oh
no you are dogee the day, do gee, oh the day.

(01:03:54):
And like I said, you know, there's a lot of
different ways to help. You know, if I was hurt,
I would reach out to Van Jones or CNN. Van
Jones it's part of the reform alliance, you know, him
and Meek Mill and jay Z. They all made sure
that right because Island got ppe and got you know,
the things that they needed to properly protect themselves. And
I think she needs to have somebody like that on

(01:04:14):
the show to highlight everything that's going on in the
prison in jail systems right now due to COVID nineteen.
Because if we don't ring the alarm for our brothers
and sisters behind those walls, nobody will. And Ellen, you
can be an ally and help us do that. Have
a blessed day, all right, Well, thank you for that.
Dawnke here to day, don't move. It's the Breakfast Club.

(01:04:35):
Good morning. The Breakfast Club is back with our best stuff, interviews, spoting,
everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne the Guy. We
are the Breakfast Club again. Rest in peace to Nipsey Hustle.
It's like, it's a lot of things, you know, you
don't expect to say that definitely is one of them.

(01:04:56):
Right now. He was shot and murdered over the weekend,
and he stopped by here last February February. Yes, Victory
Lap came out of last year February. You know, Victory
Lap is my favorite rap album of twenty and eighteen.
I think that. I think he came here on like
the twenty if if I'm not mistaken, Yeah, February we
added on the twenty first. Yeah, so we're gonna get

(01:05:16):
that back on. We talk about so much of that interview.
So that was a great interview. Man, it's like an
hour long and we covered a lot of ground in
that interview, you know, but let's get into it. Now.
What up? What up? What up? What's up? My brother
del bro? Now, I don't know nothing about la politics,
but are you allowed to wear that much read I
could do it, I won't. Man, it's my brand. I'm saying. Absolutely,

(01:05:37):
I like I read look with gold. I mean people
tripped like that with the colors you wear or depend
like again, everybody knows who I am far as where
I belong, so you know I'll be seeing like internet
uh comments some time when I'll be flamed up. But
in La, you know what I mean, we grew up.
If you was a real one, you can wear what
you don't really apply, you know what I'm saying. Yeah,

(01:06:01):
it's still heavy like that though. I mean it's like
if I'm in somebody elsehood with a gang of red
on and I'm not a known face and I'm in
a crip hood, Yeah it'll probably I probably get addressed.
But I don't think I had that problem. They'd be like,
that's n it, you know what I'm saying. Congratulations on
the album, man, Yeah, Victory Lapping stores, don't grab that
stream that all that I've had to It took too long, right,

(01:06:25):
you had a lot to prove on that head. I did.
Let's talk about it now. The album's dope first and foremost.
You love the album. I hear a lot that you
don't like weirdo rappers. Well, I think you talk about
the line when I was like the saint this weird
rapping it's used to. Yeah, I just feel like, you know, um,
I felt pressure a little bit from where the game
is at, and there ain't no this to nobody specific,

(01:06:46):
just like it ain't in a direction of what we
grew up on in terms of like you gotta say something,
you know what I mean. You gotta be a man
of respect or a woman of respect, you know what
I mean, even from like just the drug stuff. Like
you know, I was never glorified in rap culture. We
could almost like led by Scarface, a jay Z or

(01:07:06):
Tupac lyrics. If we ain't had no principles, like a
man around, we could led by the lyrics and come
out as a solid individual. That's what I meant. Just
as far as, like, you know, just returning to that direction,
I don't know, like telling people what to do, but
just you know, try to represent the principles that I
grew up on in rap music. That's one thing I

(01:07:28):
like a bunch of music. It always has socially redeeming
value to it. On dedication, you know, Kendricks said that
this man, El said, do a song with nip here
better cryp. M. Kendricks said, here a man first, or
do you hear what these peaks about from black businesses?
The false imprisonments? And he said listen closest bigger than
deduces and four. So is that a challenge for you
to get people to see you for more than the
stereotypical West Coast gangster rapper? I mean people people received

(01:07:50):
me based on what I said, so I wouldn't I
wouldn't blame people for that. I came in and said,
it's where I'm from and it's when I represent. But
it was for a reason I wanted. I wanted to establish,
you know, what I belong to, and I looked at
it like jail. That's what I used to tell my
homies because even some of my homeboys would be like, well,
you can't come out talking about the hood and specifically
you know what I mean. When you walk into a dorm,

(01:08:12):
the first thing you establish is where are you from?
And then from there you get into the person behind this.
Just in case whoever got a problem with this, wherever
your enemies is, you go to the back. You hunt
of your business and then you get into like, Okay,
I could actually with you you you know what I mean,
We get to know each other, but you get that
out the way first. And so also I wanted to

(01:08:32):
I wanted my message to impact gang culture, you know
what I'm saying. I wanted what I had to say
to impact individuals like myself, young people. I was in
these areas that I was controlled by gang banging. I
didn't want appreciate the choir, but I wanted to be
able to say, you know, I'm one of you, and
where I'm gonna go, wherever I end up, you're gonna
You're gonna know that you can end up there too,

(01:08:54):
whether it's at the top of the game or in
a successful situation as a business owner. I came from
this and it's authentic, and I'm not on the outside
of this culture. That's why I came in like I
came in. I wasn't trying to like be on no
super tough guys, you know what I'm saying. I just
wanted to be clear that you know, wherever I take it,
I'm not I'm not different. I'm exactly the same. I've

(01:09:15):
been through everything you've been through, or you're gonna go
through as a somebody in that culture. What is it?
What is a better crip? What does that mean? I
don't know because I ain't saying, But what I would
assume Kendrick meant was that, um, somebody that is not
one hundred bias or outside of communicating with a blood

(01:09:36):
or somebody from the other side of the tracks. Maybe
that's what he meant. That's what I took it, as
you know, But we had to ask Kendrick his his
take on what he meant by that. You talk about
West Coach's infrastructure, it was a period when you needed adopted.
Drake co signed to get out of the West Why
why do you think that changed? Drake Man he built Uh.
I call it an island. If you look at music,

(01:09:57):
it's like three or four islands in rap Mus, you
know what I mean. And a lot of a lot
of the things that you might not know, well y'all know,
but that the people might not know are connected to
these islands. They connected. You got to like Jimmy Iveen
doctor dre Island, which you gotta let's stall the artist
Tupac came under that Drake snoop game. Um, Kendrick, well, Yeah,

(01:10:18):
Kendrick is a part of the top Dog thing as well.
But it connects, you know what I'm saying. And so
then you got like the Leoor def Jam Island and
that not the island records. I'm just saying, you know
what I'm saying. Yeah, and a rough frauder's murder ain't Rockefeller. Yeah,
you know, um Kanye, then all the artists that came
out to ya fall under that, and then you got

(01:10:41):
um whatever happened on Sony, you know what I mean.
And so it was one of them three options right
for artists, and unless you you wanted to go what
I call just taking the stairs and figuring out how
to how to get into one of those situations as
your own thing. Top Dog did it. You know what
I'm saying. Top Dog created his own thing. And so
that was my goal to build the island myself. You

(01:11:03):
know what I mean. I saw what even like Jay
they got rock Nation, I saw island right, Absolutely, that's
the own thing. Even though it came from then being
an artist connected to another situation, they have turned that
into its own operation. What kind of conversation did you
and did he have? Because you and did he? Yeah,
formed a relationship I assumed through Lauren London and Cassie
and yeah yeah yeah book through me too, you know Lauren. No,

(01:11:26):
I'm saying Lauren. Lauren introduced me to Puff. I mean
I knew Puff, but it was it was more of
a personal relationship out to you know. Uh we was
at Cassie something like that. You know who made you
want to get a old? Like? Did he and put
him on Young? That's crazy? Did he did? He chose Young?
I'll try to get you more rapper because I was.
I was referencing to Hate Me Now video and what

(01:11:48):
what what his his presence on that record with nas
brought to it. I'm like, look this this the record,
this rapp. I want you to get on this. Put
the mink one in the video. We're gonna make a movie.
He was like, um, he told the whole story behind that.
He like, Robbuster forty million out of check a week
before I did that movie, So I wouldn't. I mean
that video wow? So like that's that's the energy you
saw in that video, Like I wouldn't spend all this

(01:12:10):
dough on the chain and we got tigers. He's like,
I got the biggest check in my life. Yeah, so
he like, we probably gonna be able to recreate that,
but you know, um, when I played the rest of
the songs for him, he heard young and he chose
that record. Yeah, so you know he just went in
the booth and then start you know, yeah, start gassing,
you know, but even still like rappers. He gave me

(01:12:33):
some real production advice on that record. When I played
it for him, it was different than what y'all heard.
Loud enough, yeah, and he was like, listen, bro, he
pulled up Natural warn Killers, Boy ice Cube and Doctor
Dre like, this is what you're going for. This is
what y'all trying to do on this record, maximizing make
it sound like this. And we went back in the
studio and I played it for my producers and then
we turned it up and added a sin flead all

(01:12:55):
the way through so it sound more like West Coast violent,
you know what I mean. And I felt what he said.
After the fun I was a little set, like what
you mean, banging, but at reapproached it. It was room
to make the record better, all right. Well that was
part one of our interview with Nipsey Hustle Again, Rest
in peace, Nipsey Hustle. If you're just joining us, we're
reairing when Nipsey Hustle stopped. Though. When we come back,

(01:13:16):
we'll get into part two about interview keeping locked us
to Breakfast Club. Go Morning Money, Colin Morning, Everybody's DJ,
Envy Angela, Yee, Charlemagne the guy, we are the Breakfast Club.
If you just joined us, We're gonna reair our interview

(01:13:38):
with Nipsey Hustle. This is part two. Charlemagne, you said
with Hard Knocked Life on the album, Yeah, yeah, did
you have to clear? What do you have to clear? That?
With jay Z? Ok? Okay? Yeah? You know what's crazy
about that record? I thought you played the keys over
just the stuff where you have to clear. Let us
a hard motivation record. Hustling and motivation. Yeah. So when
jay Z got Annie to clear the record, I guess

(01:13:59):
when he ate him. He said, y'all gotta let every
other rap artists after me used it. Wow. Yeah, So
that was his that was his deal with with with whoever,
the producers and riding you know what I'm saying. Yeah,
so we benefited off his negotiation in nineteen ninety eight.
We just had to get jay Z to clear because
when he cleared it with the owners of the copyright.

(01:14:21):
He made it to where any hip hop artist after
him could use the rector. Jay did that, so hopefully
you don't have to go through that. I'm saying yeah
for everybody. Every hip hop artist gotta clear with Jay first,
where they just need skilled me, they just need the
jay Z clearance to any clearance as good long as
they are hip hop artist. Jays always showed you love it.
Didn't you buy like a thousand copies of your Crenshaw?
What album? With the he bought it? He bought a

(01:14:41):
hundred copies of Crenshaw That was one hundred dollars. Ok? Yeah, yeah,
And now you didn't even know him back then. Now.
I mean, you know, I met j in La years
ago at a concert. I was just backstage and I
you know, I ran up to I ain't run up
to him just like what's upthing, I'm nipp you know
what I mean? From at like bro Rolling sixties. He
actually bought a low rider. The story is I ain't
never I seem but he bought a low Rider from
one of my homeboys, Money Mike. That's into maya video

(01:15:04):
that's to me. Yeah, you know what I mean. He
bought that from one of my homeboys, one of my
j homies from La I was an old school hustling
that was really his hunt Yeah, that was here. He
bought that being so real. Yeah yeah, yeah, that's confirmed,
you know what I mean. Wow. So I just was like, yeah,
I'm I'm nim rolling sixties. He's like, nah, I know.
And you know, this was years before the Crenshaw thing.

(01:15:24):
He like, you know, y'all doing your thing. He keep going.
So that was the only count boy we ever had
until the Crenshaw thing. But um, yeah, Jake been a
hunted man. So you know what I know, a lot
of love and now Blue Laces too, one of my
favorite records on the album You make a spook who
Sat by the Door reference you know about that man? Yeah? Absolutely,
but I don't. I don't think you are spookle sat

(01:15:45):
by the door. I think your intention to pretty clip
Well now, I would say so, but even to the
to the point made earlier. That's one of the reasons
I was so vocal about where I was coming from
and what I represented, because I knew I knew who
I wanted to mobilize, you know what I mean? And
if anybody ain't seen that book, I mean, see that movie.
You read the book. It's about a gang member from
Chicago who uh, you know, presented himself in a way

(01:16:08):
he never kind of cases he was. He was. He
had a clean cut look, and he infiltrated the CIA,
and he became educated and became and basically he used
their agenda, which was to have a token in the
CIA for political reasons. You know, we're gonna speak blunt um.
He used it against him. And I think that in
terms of hip hop, you think of the message that

(01:16:29):
they embrace, I feel parallel with like, you know what
I mean the power structure. I don't mean the culture
of hip hop, but the power structure of music they
got prescribed personas they expect from us, you know what
I'm saying. So I feel like the way he used
their intention against him was was one of my underlying strategies.
You know, you gotta put the medicine in the candy.

(01:16:51):
And was interesting by that book. All his people used
to call him my uncle Tom and the coon, you
know what I'm saying. Yeah, but he was there working
for them the whole time. Yeah, and he and he
I don't want to up blow nothing up like he
did in the movie, you know what I mean. But
just in terms of being able to mobilize his homies
towards to a hard cause. You know, there's a lot
of little jewels that you're saying. And then that's what
I like, Like I said, the medicine really isn't the candy,

(01:17:12):
because Eve, when you drop a ball, like about doctor Seby. Yeah,
like just that one thing they killed doctor Seby will
make somebody go research undt doctor cebb Takettle doctor. I
never met him, I met his wife and I take
his products for sure. Why why do they kill all

(01:17:32):
holistic doctors messing up to the medicals? You short stopping
the ground? Why don't you get killed for hustling in
front of a spot? You're short stopping the grind? And
these they check his billions, You got that get flipped
for a couple hundred thousand, So you're playing with some
pharmaceutical money, you know. And what's crazy. I'm working on
doing a documentary on the trial. In nineteen eighty five,

(01:17:56):
doctor Seby went to trial against New York because he
put the newspaper cure age. Did he did? He beat
the case and he went to federal court the next
day and beat that case on record, and nobody talk
about it. We're still talking to Nipsey Hustle. He's in
the building right now now. What happened with reboking and
were you signed the reboking the rebok do the release
that you were there? Nah? I didn't. I didn't endorse

(01:18:18):
me with Puma right recently. Um, I don't want to
go too deep into that because man, I ain't. I
ain't uh faking nah, But I don't want to go
too far into details with the with the other thing
because it's something that we're gonna pursue. But um, you know,
it wasn't authorize, It wasn't authorized and they put all

(01:18:39):
money in on the shoe. They put rich Rolling on
the shoe. I don't even that's that's some gang. You
don't put rich Rolling on the shoe. You know, you
gotta pay thousands of people. It's doing life in jail
that you know what I mean, fall under that structure.
So you gotta be careful with that, you know. I don't.
I'm not even taking a check for nothing to say
rich Rolling. I would have told him out of total designers, no, bro,

(01:19:02):
stay clear of that. You can't copy right. It's like
putting crip on a shoe or something. Who are you
gonna pay? And that caused the problems for you. It's like, oh,
you got paid off. And even outside of that, because
if if I was right, I would I would stand
on being right. That's not right. I'm not I'm not
the beneficiary of that. You can't just pay me and
think that. And by the way, they didn't pay me.

(01:19:23):
But you can't just pay me and think that we
paid nip Man he speaked for the nah Ross got
they got a hundred years. You know what I'm saying,
what I looked like taking a check. I can't do that,
grinding all my life. You tell a story where somebody
got stomped out and you say, fifty and Midweather bounced
from y'all in Vegas? What was that? That was a
long time ago. Man at a club, Me and YG

(01:19:43):
was performing that in Vegas called strip Hot, and uh,
you know somebody Melee broke out and U you know
it ain't going nice favor that didn't that started it?
And uh just so happened. Fifty and Mayweather was in
the club. You know they had all the cars and
that was really just coming to show love and uh,
you know, it made the news. It was a big

(01:20:05):
old thing. But tried to robbers, you know what I mean.
Like somebody was waiting outside in my section. It was
all girls coming into section and take pictures. And you know,
you be in the section, your chain hang, you stand
on the couch, and you know, somebody was like, where
are you from? One of the things you're a fan.
I'm like, huh, you got my concert? You don't know
what I'm from? From La Bro. He's like, no, where
are you from? And I frowned. I guess my homeboys

(01:20:27):
seeing me frowning, dopfending and then it just a big
old melee broke out, you know what I'm saying. But yeah,
that's what that was about. It's on YouTube. The news
footage is on YouTube. But fifty and maywe a bound
for y'all, like they need they needed to get out
the club. Well, you that was probably taking out of context.
They left the same time, twenty thirty security and fifty

(01:20:49):
was it with fifty thirty people? So yeah, yeah, yeah,
that was good money on I wasn't saying like they
needed our help. It's just like you know a little
fact they was in the building and you know that
got footage and flooried on the end of arguing with
the police in the front of the club. You know,
I just I'll be trying to revolve around really that
took place, you know what I mean? Just to go
back to the doctor semi thing real quick? What makes

(01:21:11):
you want to do a documentary? Okay, get it right, man,
it makes you want to do a documentary about doctor Cebe.
I think the story is important. I think it's a
powerful narrative. It is, you know what I mean. And
I think if imagine this anybody in this room, if
I could say somebody cured a's, Ya'll be like, yeah, right,
And then I can show you an example of him
going a trial, improving in the court to a jury

(01:21:35):
that he cured a's. I'll be interested in that absolutely,
and y'all will look into the way he did it. Right,
So I feel like, more so than like champion his
products or explaining his methodology, put some light on that case.
Imagine being able to cure cancer, or being able to
cure any type of herpies and all kinds, and that's
what he do. Bout what he did yeah, yeah, yeah.

(01:21:57):
He used to send all types of vitamins up to
the state. Yeah herbes No, I said vitamin station. Hear me?
I said crazy? All right? That was part two of
our interview with Nipsey Hustle. With re airing our interview
he stopped through last year, and let's get on a
Nipsey Hustle mini mix. Let's play a couple of this joint.
So I said, don't move, it's to breakfast Club, good morning.

(01:22:19):
That wasn't Nipsey Hustle mini mix. If he just joined
us again, Rest in peace to Nipsey Hustle. He was
killed over the weekend, and we're replaying an interview that
we did with him a year ago. All right, so
let's get back into that now. Nipsey, you were talking
about Cardi and how wearing different colors and I wasn't. No,
that's not what I said. And you know what I mean,
he's a woman. Yeah, I like Cardi b Cardi B

(01:22:40):
DI diverse for me. I like, yeah, that's that's that's
a fact. Like anybody don't like Cardi that a hater.
I used to watch her ig clips and be laughing
like this girl crazy. But our personality is golden. You
know what I mean. But wrong is wrong? Right is right? Bro,
that's what I grew up on. That loved me brog
gonna tell me about you it's wrong, right, all right,

(01:23:01):
don't tell me that in public. Wait till we get
back to the hood. I might set off a melee
and we're gonna fight with me. But when we get
back to the hood, bro, that was but don't do that.
You're gonna have us. You're gonna get us in the wreck. Wrong,
it's wrong, right, it's right. That terminology she used is
like real. Look, let me just for the record, that's
how blood's talk. Blood says crab, bloods say flute, crips

(01:23:22):
say slod, crips say dead like the files. With all
my homeboys, I'd be like, bro, give me a dead bull.
That's how we talk. But I'll be intentionally respectful on
the record because we're talking about a public environment, which
is the music industry. You feel what I'm saying. We

(01:23:42):
saw what happened with death Row, so we're gonna set
trip in public. You're gonna get caught on camera squabbling.
You're gonna violate while you worth three hundred million sugar night.
You're gonna go to the pen. Pockey gonna die right.
A wrong that happened. That was game banging, that was
set trip publicly, so we would be bad leaders to

(01:24:03):
read create that. What about somebody like Takashi sixth nine.
I don't want to talk about other people for real,
you know what I'm saying. I feel I feel my
own way about it, but God bless everybody. Man, get
your money. You feel me what I said about Cardi
big ask me and so I spoke on it. But
I don't want to hate on Cardi. B get your money. Cardi.
I respect what you're doing. You know what I'm saying.

(01:24:24):
She done a verse for me. I see to me goes,
I shake their hand. You know what I'm saying. I
respect her. Come up, she came from the gutter about
saying disrespectful things on I G I'm gonna always be
like that. Ain't to move, that's not That's not what
you're supposed to do. Now. Do I tell you what
to do? Nah? You get it how you live. If
you like it, I love it. I just know me

(01:24:46):
and mine we're gonna move this way because I'm always
stand on what I do so that if I walk
into a room full of bloods and I ain't gonna
be like, oh, they go to slops. I'm not gonna
talk like that, because that's that's called being a sales
soldier on some jails. You know what I'm saying, Get
that's in the cell, popping it because you can't get touched.

(01:25:07):
You're hiding behind the cell. You know what I'm saying,
pop the gates. Talk like that. If you ain't gonna
talk like that, then keep it one way. I've been
in a tank with a hundred bloods before. I'm from
six old crib. I ain't even to call slaves to
kill me. But I ain't even that's where I'm from, homie.
You feel what I'm saying, And so same the other

(01:25:28):
way around. I've been in a dorm with a hundred
cribs in two or three bloods and it ain't using
that terminology. They not. That's just against the laws of nature.
This is just self preservation gonna prevent you from talking
like that. That's what I was speaking on. But for
the record, and just for the New York bangers, I
respect real everywhere in every city and state. You can't

(01:25:52):
take that from nobody. Gang culture came from out of LA.
I don't mean it ain't really in New York that
pushing on as bloods and crips. But we gotta be honest,
We gotta speak honestly. We can't be political about the
dead and doing life for you fee what I'm saying.
So that's that's that's my stance on it. But like

(01:26:12):
I said, everybody get money. Man. I respect CARDI, you
know what I mean. She linked up with Whacko. One
of my respect he had Paro and you know, I
ain't ad out of deal thing. I just my personal opinion.
It's in your interest not to be public dising gangs,
you know what I'm saying, unless you want to put
your security at risk, because it ain't gonna be you

(01:26:33):
shooting or getting shot at. You're gonna be pushed into
the car. You know, we were talking about checking in
and how do you feel about checking in? Because I mean,
it's it's a big thing, especially in LA, you know
what I mean, because it's so open and you mean,
you could drive in a block in LA one block,
it'd be a sunny, clean block, mixed block. You're in
the middle of the hood. Yeah, checking in is it
suggests friendly extortion when you say checking in. Our relationship

(01:26:58):
is different because we all need relationships. You know what
I'm saying. I'm sure when you travel you from New York,
but you got relationships all over the country, Charlotte, man,
you got relationships all over it and I'm sure you
do too, and a relationship I don't. I don't believe
in fake relationships. So it just established genuine relationships. Everywhere
you go, you'll be in a better position. And you

(01:27:19):
do that off being respectful and being you know you're reciprocated.
Some mighty come to your city. Bro, you need something,
whether it's a car, some weed, you know what I mean.
You want to go somewhere to eat what you need?
You out of town. I got you, not just some
protection you feel me? So I wouldn't say to check in.
I don't know know about that, but just I got
relationships in New York. That it's respect. When I pull up,

(01:27:42):
you know what I mean, to make sure I got
whatever I need. Same in La I can get you
from the airport. Bro. You could take my car. You
could come to my store. You could you meet my homeboys.
You could get numbers if you any problems or whatever,
just call in or you want to know where to
go eat at. That ain't because you had to. That's
because especially Yeah, we can strength numbers and we only
from one place. You know. My last question for Nip Man,

(01:28:04):
because I'm riding in the car and I'm like, boy,
Nip gonna get into for this. You said that your
mistress is creole? How do you get away with that? Man?
This music man, I said, I said, my wife is
a CEO. I said, this life is a free through
my life, my wife has a ce No, but my
mistress is creole. You know that was that was number one.
I recorded that before me, before I had a girl.

(01:28:25):
For real. That's that's a claim. That's a fact though.
I just but then again, this music man like my
girls an actress? If she kissing on camera, what I'm
gonna be mad? No, do your thing? I love. I
love the fact you said your girl. So you're back together,
y'all go? Yeah, yeah, yeah, we solid players up too. Man.
That's all I'm gonna saying about that. Never Eaven, I asked,

(01:28:46):
because she don't play. Yeah, no, run down on it. Yes,
she ran down on you know. Charlot Knight went hard,
you know what I'm saying. But yeah, boogie boogie, boogie man.
You know, she knows how to defend herself and stand up,
you know what I mean. And you know she La
she grew up. Um. A lot of people might think
she got a privileged background. She ain't got no privilege background.
I think she's new, new in real life. That's yeah, yeah, yeah, no,

(01:29:08):
but she comes from La Man, and you know what
I mean, She's seen Charlotte Magne zero then, but she
I told her, I told her from jump though. I'm like,
you're gonna meet Charlotte Magne and like Charlotte magn respect
Charlotte man, you know what I mean. Charlotte Magne known
for being honest and you know what I mean, ruffling feathers.
But I know his stance and I'm like, y'all got
the similar mentality in terms of like what's right? You

(01:29:30):
know what I'm saying. So, yeah, she she got a
lot of love and respect for you. We appreciate you
joining us, Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. And it's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, yeah, mourning everybody a DJ Envy and Jela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy we are the Breakfast Club. Now, I'm Charlomagne.

(01:29:50):
You got a positive note now the positive note is
simply this. You can't be committed to your BS and
your growth. I repeat, you can't be committed to your
BS and your growth. It's one of the other. Choose
wisely the Breakfast Club.

The Breakfast Club News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Charlamagne Tha God

Charlamagne Tha God

DJ Envy

DJ Envy

Jess Hilarious

Jess Hilarious

Popular Podcasts

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Welcome to Bookmarked by Reese’s Book Club — the podcast where great stories, bold women, and irresistible conversations collide! Hosted by award-winning journalist Danielle Robay, each week new episodes balance thoughtful literary insight with the fervor of buzzy book trends, pop culture and more. Bookmarked brings together celebrities, tastemakers, influencers and authors from Reese's Book Club and beyond to share stories that transcend the page. Pull up a chair. You’re not just listening — you’re part of the conversation.

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.