Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Morning us say yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Yo Jess, hilarious.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
What's going on, chelam the God. I don't even know
why we did that just now right. I understand why
because nobody is here. Okay, but that was pointless. Thank
you Brandon for giving me the run the show. I
appreciate you, Young Ghana. I go by the name of
Charlamagne Tha God.
Speaker 4 (00:24):
Good morning.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
How y'all feel out there? I feel blessed, black and
Holly favorite. Happy to be here another day to starve
off beautiful listeners fresh off the iHeartRadio Music Festival twenty
twenty five. Okay, I landed last night around ten o'clock,
eleven o'clock back from Vegas, and we're here and nobody
else is okay nv. I think we'll be back tomorrow.
(00:48):
I don't know where it Jess is. I don't know
where Lauren Lerosa is, but me me Brown will be
up next with Front Page News and I think we
have a special guest. This is what we're doing today.
I was told something else yes yesterday afternoons just told you. Okay, Well,
Bobby Brown will be joining us. Not Bobby Brown, the
R and b Icon. Bobby Brown the founder of two
major cosmetic companies. You know, she founded Bobby Brown Cosmetics
(01:11):
back in the day. Now she has Jones Road, but
she has a new book still, Bobby, a masterclass in
leading and authentic life, and she'll be here this morning
to talk to us all about it. Okay, so we
are Front Page News. Coming up next, it's the world's
most Dangerous morning show, The Breakfast Club. Drop on the
clues bomds for Gloririlla. Man Watch Glorilla. I think that
was my first time ever seeing Glorilla perform this weekend
at the iHeart Radio Music Festival.
Speaker 5 (01:32):
She actually closed the festival.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
She was the last act to go on on Saturday night,
so that was fun to watch. Man salute the Big Glow.
It's time for Front Page News with me Me Brown.
Good morning, Mary, good.
Speaker 6 (01:43):
Morning, good morning, good morning.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
How y'all doing this or how you doing?
Speaker 7 (01:46):
Charlamagne?
Speaker 3 (01:47):
I am blessed Black and Holly Faeld, but I would
do NFL scores, but I don't care because the Cowboys
got their ass catch yesterday, so I don't care about
nothing else that happened in the league, not even a
little bit, not even a little bit.
Speaker 8 (01:57):
We'll go birds.
Speaker 9 (01:57):
I know you don't want to hear that.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Nod go birds.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
So we got news.
Speaker 9 (02:03):
Yep, We're going to start off this morning in Arizona,
where tens of thousands packed State Farm Stadium for the
funeral and public memorial. Conservative activist Charlie Kirk, a thirty
one year old activist Turning Point co founder, was shot
and killed less than two weeks ago at a campus
event in Utah. Now President Trump, he highlighted headline the service,
(02:23):
calling Kirk a martyr for American freedom and vowing to
award him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. At times, Trump
slipped into campaign style lines, but making it clear he
treats his opponents differently than kirked it. Let's listen to
that message.
Speaker 3 (02:39):
He was a missionary with a noble spirit and a great,
great purpose. He did not hate his opponents.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
He wanted.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
The best for them.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
That's where I disagreed with Charlie.
Speaker 10 (02:53):
I hate my opponent and I don't want the best
for them.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I am sorry Erica. But now Erica.
Speaker 11 (03:01):
Can talk to me and the whole group, and maybe
they can convince me that that's not drag.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
But I can't stand my opponent. You know, it's so
interesting about that. He said that at uh, you know,
Charlie Kirk's memorial. But that's how some people feel about
Charlie Kirk. Like that's the same rhetoric that the right
was pushing back against last week when they were saying
things like, you know, how could y'all celebrate you know, uh,
you know, his his passing, which I don't condone, by
(03:26):
the way, but that is exactly the same energy that
he brought to the memorial by saying he don't care
about his opponents. You know what you say, I hate
I hate my opponents. I don't want to see my
opponents succeed.
Speaker 9 (03:37):
I don't want to see all of the all of
the things, and so on. The opposite spectrum of that.
Kirk's widow, Erica, she delivered maybe the most emotional moment
of the day, telling the crowd she forgives her husband's
accused killer. Let's listen to that moment.
Speaker 12 (03:54):
I forgive him. I forgive him because it was what
christ did and is what Charlie would do. The answer
to hate is not hate. The answer we know from
the Gospel is love and always love, love for our enemies,
(04:18):
and love for those who persecute us.
Speaker 9 (04:23):
And so she got a standing ovation after saying that
she forgave her or forgives her husband's killer.
Speaker 13 (04:30):
Vice President JD.
Speaker 9 (04:31):
Vans He also spoke, telling the stadium the day was
not a funeral but a revival, saying Kirk's death will
spark a Christian awakening. A Donald Trump junior he was
also there. He urged supporters to carry the movement forward,
saying when they took his life, a million more Charlie
stepped up to fill the void. Other speakers included Kirk's
(04:51):
pastor Rob McCoy, senior Trump advisors Stephen Miller, cabinet officials
like Defense Secretary Pete Hesseth, the Health sect for Terry
Robert F. Kennedy, and tech billionaire Elon Musk was also
spotted alongside Donald Trump. They were sitting together. That's getting
a lot of press this morning. And outside the police
(05:11):
say the line stretched for more than a mile, with
some people turned away after the stadium hit capacity. Now
inside Erica Kirk now named CEO of Turning Point USA,
promised her husband's work will continue to will continue and
grow stronger. And also, I think notable Charlottmagne. President Trump,
he made a statement saying that there would be an
(05:33):
announcement coming sometime today related to autism, something that Charlie
Kirk reportedly.
Speaker 10 (05:38):
Was involved in.
Speaker 9 (05:39):
Some are saying he's going to talk about a cure
to autism, So we'll have to stay tuned and hear what.
Speaker 10 (05:44):
That's going to be.
Speaker 3 (05:45):
You know, I always respect and wonder about people who
have that type of script that you know, Erica Kirk
showed on up there, you know, to forgive the killer
of somebody that they love.
Speaker 5 (05:55):
But I don't know if I'm wanted them, you know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
I feel like forgiveness. Our not having forgiveness is probably
like grief. It probably comes in waves. Like some moments
you probably feel like, you know, you forgive the person
who killed somebody you love because you're supposed to.
Speaker 5 (06:07):
But then I'm sure some days where you like f
that person.
Speaker 14 (06:09):
Yeah, especially good morning me, me, especially because she got
to look at their kids, you know what I mean,
and have those conversations with their kids as they continue
to ask questions for the rest of their lives now.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
And I wonder do you even give yourself an opportunity
to really like feel what it is you feeling, or
do you just default to forgiveness because that's what your
Bible says you should do, that's what the Christian in
you says you should do.
Speaker 5 (06:30):
It says you're supposed to forgive.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
But do you really feel that way? I don't know.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
I don't know if that's possible.
Speaker 13 (06:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (06:37):
She says she felt every emotion that you know a
human person could feel. I believe that, yeah, seeing what
happened to her husband, So you know, I'm sure it
goes in waves.
Speaker 13 (06:46):
Some days she's in, some days she's out, up and down,
you know.
Speaker 6 (06:49):
So well, what we got next time with Mimi, I'm
coming up.
Speaker 9 (06:53):
At seven will tell you know, inflation is hitting everybody
in every state, but one state has a plan to
fight back.
Speaker 10 (07:00):
And we'll tell you what say that is?
Speaker 5 (07:01):
All right?
Speaker 3 (07:02):
We got more front page news next hole, But right
now it's time for get it off your chest. If
you want to call up and tell us why you're blessed,
if you want to call up and tell us why
you're upset, you could do that too, okay one one
hundred and five eight five one oh five to one.
It's the world's most dangerous morning to show the breakfast club,
the breakfast club.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
Wake up, wake up, way, you're.
Speaker 15 (07:23):
Time to get it off your chest, your man or blessed.
We want to hear from you on a breakfast gloss.
Speaker 5 (07:29):
Good morning. Who's this page?
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Well, how are you sir?
Speaker 16 (07:35):
Bro Yes?
Speaker 3 (07:36):
King Street?
Speaker 5 (07:37):
What's happening?
Speaker 10 (07:38):
You know?
Speaker 3 (07:38):
King Street right by most Corn used to be I
used to host it the night Life, night Life nightclub
in King Street back in the day.
Speaker 17 (07:44):
I remember when you was at the ninety three correct.
Speaker 5 (07:47):
No, I was at Hot ninety eight nine then, yep.
Speaker 18 (07:50):
Okay, yeah, well but anyway, did you see the manisters
from Charleston have sent just hunters.
Speaker 17 (07:56):
And hundreds of brothers tail and now he's.
Speaker 18 (07:58):
Got himself confederate today with children phornography and did you
say that?
Speaker 3 (08:03):
I think I think that briefly did come across my
my my feed. Yes, I think I saw something.
Speaker 18 (08:09):
And this guy was one of the strictest manuscripts being
her down here in Charleston.
Speaker 5 (08:15):
What's his name? What was the judge's name?
Speaker 17 (08:17):
I saw it this morning on caune of two dudes.
Speaker 18 (08:20):
I forgot to think, but I was following at that was.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
One thing I wanted to.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
James Gosnell, James Gosnell Jr.
Speaker 18 (08:28):
Okay, yeah, that's it. Yeah, and one more thing quickly shotowed.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
Man, I know to hit it been of Minicent because
everyone's speaking of my damn up there.
Speaker 18 (08:37):
But you know, it's amazing how people it's cooking on
Dami Dash about his downfall, and I just want to say,
you know that that circle goes around. You know, we
never know where we're gonna end up. So it's amazing
how people just on him instead of being my brother Keithley.
Because you know, I was seeing Wendy Williams cook Peter
blind Stegn. People never figured the day that she would.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
Have her down.
Speaker 18 (09:00):
So we got to be mindful how we throw bricks.
Speaker 3 (09:02):
I think people also got to be mindful of how
they throw bricks when they're down. Just because the person
is down, don't mean that they can't still kick you.
Like people like to say, don't kick People like to say,
don't kick somebody when they're down, But what about when
the person down still kicking me?
Speaker 5 (09:16):
Yes, you know what I mean?
Speaker 18 (09:19):
I agree with you. But like I said, fifty mindful,
not to you, but just people and the whole damn
it comes back the way. He needs to be full
social and just remember the things sometime because with or
going to reach the seats that we saw.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
You know that is very true, my brother. Thank you
for calling. Good morning, Get it off your chest. Who's this?
Speaker 19 (09:38):
Good morning? This is cash some calling from DC.
Speaker 5 (09:42):
He's Cash from DC. What's happening?
Speaker 17 (09:44):
First of all, I just want to say that I
have listened to you all every day.
Speaker 20 (09:48):
I love you so much.
Speaker 5 (09:49):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
I appreciate that doing what you're doing.
Speaker 19 (09:54):
So I wanted to say how blessed I am because
I just turned fifty two. I have fought and wanted
to express answer and life is good.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
Congratulations man, look at God, Look at God.
Speaker 19 (10:08):
Yes, thank you.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
And I have one I'm sorry.
Speaker 19 (10:13):
I'm going to say I have one favor to ask
of your listeners.
Speaker 17 (10:16):
Okay, my son is in the car with me right now.
We're going to work together, and he is a.
Speaker 19 (10:22):
Super producer and artist in the DMV area. So you
have people follow him.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
What's his name and what's his Instagram or whatever? You
want him to follow? Our Tech.
Speaker 20 (10:32):
Thank you.
Speaker 19 (10:33):
It's his instagram is eazy sg M e e z
y s G.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
That is incredible to hear a mom supporting their child's music.
Speaker 17 (10:46):
I love I love my babies.
Speaker 21 (10:48):
They take such good care of me.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
That's right. Are you also encouraging him to learn a trade?
Speaker 17 (10:53):
Just he just finished school for software development, That's.
Speaker 5 (10:57):
What I'm talking about? Okay, oh yeah, we got question.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
Is the National Guard still in DC?
Speaker 18 (11:03):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (11:03):
They are.
Speaker 5 (11:04):
Okay.
Speaker 19 (11:04):
I work downtown right up the streets from the White House,
and it's pretty terrible. Charlotte Mane.
Speaker 5 (11:11):
What is terrible that the National Guard is still out there?
Speaker 2 (11:13):
Now?
Speaker 19 (11:14):
I'm a Settle employee and just the things that.
Speaker 21 (11:17):
Are going on are pretty terrible.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
Absolutely.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Well, I'm glad that you still have a job because
those could have probably clipped you earlier this year. So
the fact that you're a federal employee who still has
a job.
Speaker 5 (11:25):
Congratulations, absolutely, thank you. All right, thank you for calling.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (11:31):
Get it off your chest.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
Call us right now, one one hundred and five eight five,
one oh five one. You can tell us why you're blessed.
All you could tell us, you know, what's what's bothering
you this morning? It's the world's most dangerous morning show.
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (11:41):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
I'm telling, I'm telling what's doing on.
Speaker 12 (11:50):
You.
Speaker 15 (11:50):
If this is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five eight five one,
we want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
Get it off l this by This is Michelle from
my corner. Michelle calling from the crib. What's happening in
eight four three all day?
Speaker 19 (12:08):
Yes, this is your neighbor, Cha Michelle.
Speaker 5 (12:11):
What's happening to Michelle? Oh, Michelle, how are you?
Speaker 3 (12:13):
Michelle?
Speaker 13 (12:14):
This I get rid of Eric.
Speaker 3 (12:18):
He's doing this.
Speaker 16 (12:19):
I'm just fine for like a year to get through
to talk to you.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
But you I don't probably passed your house like four
or five times going.
Speaker 5 (12:26):
To see my moment.
Speaker 19 (12:27):
Yeah, I just wanted to shout out my business if
I could.
Speaker 5 (12:30):
Yes, go ahead.
Speaker 7 (12:32):
I'm an artist, a local.
Speaker 21 (12:34):
Artist in Charlton.
Speaker 20 (12:35):
Findal you know, go to other places.
Speaker 16 (12:38):
My instagram is the Rwanda's Creations. I'm at the Miller
Gallery downtown Charleston and I'm going.
Speaker 22 (12:45):
Ready to participate in the Global Arts there in North
Chauston next month.
Speaker 10 (12:50):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Congratulations, I'm excited. Absolutely. I want to see so many
your pieces, Michelle.
Speaker 16 (12:56):
Yes, all of my Instagram Page's all my Instagram page
that they anybody wants to follow me, you can follow
me on Instagram and Facebook creations.
Speaker 5 (13:04):
The Wanda's creation. I'm following you right now.
Speaker 17 (13:07):
Yeah, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 20 (13:08):
We all problem you, Charlae.
Speaker 3 (13:10):
Thank you, Michelle. I appreciate you all right. You take
care absolutely, Pete, get it off your chest.
Speaker 17 (13:15):
Who this good morning, Birst Club.
Speaker 7 (13:18):
This is Nicole Wallace calling from the Saint Louis metro area.
The day is a very special day. It is my
sister's birthday. Her name is Katie Odie. I want to
give her a huge shout out for her birthday. Yes,
Katie Odie.
Speaker 17 (13:37):
Okay, And I'm hoping, hoping that.
Speaker 7 (13:41):
The bestest Club family can take a moment to bless
my sister on her special day by going to her website,
Phoenix Media and Books and grabbing a copy of her book,
Izzy's Almost Epic Day.
Speaker 5 (13:57):
Is He's Almost Epic Day?
Speaker 17 (14:00):
Yes, Charlamagne, Yes, sent you a copy of her book.
Can you please please read it.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
I will let us know what you's thought. Absolutely when
I get it out, I will definitely read it is
his most epic day.
Speaker 17 (14:12):
Yes, is this almost et the day we sent it
to you last November, So it's coming up on a year.
Speaker 7 (14:20):
So I'm hoping that it's somewhere.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
If I ain't seeing the chest, you might have to
send that again.
Speaker 7 (14:27):
You know what?
Speaker 3 (14:27):
I order it on Amazon? Is it on Amazon? Yes?
Speaker 7 (14:30):
Play you can go to her website. Please.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
What's the website?
Speaker 17 (14:33):
It's Phoenix Media and Books.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
Phoenix Media and Books. All right, I'm gonna order a
COMPROMI please, I will. Okay, thank you for calling, Thank you,
thank you. Guys. All right, we do it. Oh, I'm
on it right now. Phoenix Media and Books. Yes, okay,
we do that every morning. Get it off your chest.
Five one. You can call up and tell us why
you're blessed. You can call up and tell us why
you're stressed. But Laura Lauoss, you got the ladies coming up?
Speaker 14 (14:58):
Yes, I do, Cardi b Am I the drama. You
know she just left from up here in a day
already Platinum.
Speaker 5 (15:04):
Dropping the clues box a big body.
Speaker 14 (15:05):
Then the industry is in it's hissy right now. Over
that and we're gonna talk all about why.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
Okay, we'll talk about when we come back to the
world most Dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
It's the World's most Dangerous Morning show, The Breakfast Club.
Charlamagne and God DJ Nvy just hilarious.
Speaker 2 (15:21):
Oh it's Monday.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
We just got back from Vegas. Uh last night, I
landed at like ten something something that you.
Speaker 14 (15:28):
Landed like early, like ninety tink you about two hours
to get home.
Speaker 5 (15:33):
Yeah, but at least we're here exactly.
Speaker 13 (15:35):
We're alive and wake, woke, awake this morning. What am
I here?
Speaker 3 (15:39):
Tho slew the NBA and just they on vacation, but
you know, talking about the rest of the production team.
Why y'all not here? Okay, we were in Vegas too,
and we landed late. Why y'all not here? Why y'all
get to stay home?
Speaker 13 (15:48):
But we got to be a working remotely?
Speaker 3 (15:50):
Oh please, I can't tell. It's the latest time for
the latest law.
Speaker 4 (15:54):
Lam becoming a straight fast.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
She gets the from somebody that knows, somebody details.
Speaker 13 (16:00):
I'm a long girl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 5 (16:03):
She'd be having the latest songs, the largest, the latest
with Lauren La Rosa.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
Sometimes you have sometimes you have details. Sometimes you have
a little bit of everything.
Speaker 5 (16:12):
It's the latest on the breakfast Club song.
Speaker 13 (16:16):
So shout out to Cardi B so am I.
Speaker 14 (16:18):
The Drama dropped on Friday, September nineteenth, and in that
same day, the RIAA, which is the Recording Industry Association
of America, certified the album as platinum within that day.
Speaker 13 (16:30):
So within the first twenty four hours that the album
came out.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
We dropping a clue bond for body.
Speaker 14 (16:35):
I'm sure, oh yes, people are pissed off because so
the album's twenty three songs. But on that album, remember
she added up and Wow, yes, the song would make
the sallion to the album because those songs themselves are
so big people you know, of course that takes her
to the platinum status. So people were having the conversation about, okay,
(16:57):
if those two songs were not added, she'd be platinum
within the first day, and she broke records for that.
I saw one record say that like she was like
one of the fastest, you know, albums to do so,
or female albums to do so. But the reason why
people are putting out those two songs is because why
by itself was five times platinum and then I'm sorry
it was nine times platinum, and then Up itself was
(17:18):
five times platinum.
Speaker 13 (17:19):
So people just feel like it's unfair for her to
be able to do so. But let me tell y'all
something right here, Well, it.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
Can't be unfair if it's the rules of engagement. If
you can, if you can do that, then it's not unfair.
Speaker 14 (17:29):
This is the thing I think when it comes to artists,
it really is crazy to watch because at the same
time that all this is happening and Cardi B Is
doing so well with this album and the rollout, and
people are upset about certain things, she's also feeling so
much love too. I watched in real time how when
you just where you are, people just you have to
be the conversation, so you people need something to talk about.
(17:50):
So people are going to be upset, But it's because
she's doing so well.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
Because even the territory. Yeah, like I was always talking
about the rule of ten, right, the rule of three
people gonna like it, three people are not gonna like it,
four people don't even know what the hell's going on.
Speaker 14 (18:04):
Well, I mean, I will say there were more people
I saw liking it than not, and surprisingly enough, there
was like music on the album because when she.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
Was here, you know, she was so surprisingly enough, there
was music on.
Speaker 14 (18:15):
That No, surprisingly enough, there was music on the album
that like this is that we didn't catch, Like I
didn't catch the line that was going to j T.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
You got to finish your sentence, Lene, you didn't let me,
you said. Surprisingly his music on the album. It's an album.
Speaker 13 (18:25):
Listen, we got home, ladies earlier, you didn't let me know.
Speaker 14 (18:28):
So I'm saying that there was things in the album
that once I went back and listened again once it
was released, I didn't catch. But yeah, there's been a
lot of conversation about that. But Carti got really emotional.
She's been live and you know how she does the
spaces and you know, different things on her own. She
got really emotional about some of the success that she seen.
Let's take a listen to Cardi getting emotional.
Speaker 8 (18:46):
What I'm most grateful about is how good people are
receiving my music. Like I have seen so many beautiful
compliments and that means so much to me.
Speaker 12 (18:58):
Come from you.
Speaker 8 (18:58):
Guys, because a lot of work in this in this album,
and I had like a lot of feelings during this album.
So for you guys to be saying all these beautiful
things about my album, Like it's getting to the point
that I don't even know which which song I should
do a music video to next, because you guys.
Speaker 13 (19:15):
Have been receiving it so well and that means so
much to me.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
And I want to say thank you so much.
Speaker 8 (19:21):
The numbers are doing amazing, but it's expected for the
numbers to do good because it's such an anticipated album.
But for people to say so many beautiful things about
my art like that means a lot. And I'm super
grateful so many beautiful people saying so many beautiful things
about my music. I just want to say thank you
guys so much, like it really.
Speaker 21 (19:41):
Really means a lot.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Drop the clue bomb, body, That's what I was saying.
I was seeing people giving it a lot of great feedback.
Speaker 13 (19:47):
Yes, one hundred percent.
Speaker 14 (19:48):
Now another one of the things that happened with the album,
because remember we talked about how she had the Cardi
b Bo Dagga on door Dash, but she also used
Walmart and she used a drone delivery service so that
people could get her album as they were ordering it. Right,
So she's doing this drone thing with Walmart, and then
she breaks another record a Guinness's Book of World Records record,
(20:09):
and she becomes she becomes the most delivered. Her album
became the most delivered album with strategic marketing.
Speaker 3 (20:19):
So the any other albums that did that. I've never
seen an album on door Dash before the album.
Speaker 13 (20:23):
It wasn't no, so they're talking through Walmart.
Speaker 14 (20:26):
So I think it's just a product in general, because
the title is most Deliveries with strategic Marketing, So a
product in general. I don't think it's just an album.
But there's a woman named Kylie Galloway who is a
senior executive at Genesis World Records, and she talked to
TMZ and she said that the tandem of Cardi, Walmart
and then the Wing drone delivery that Atlantic Records did
(20:46):
earn the new title for the most deliveries by ua
V drones in one hour, with one hundred and sixty
one hundred and seventy six deliveries by drones.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
Now, I'm just happy that Carti's album seems like in
a yea. These people just y'all. I'm telling you, man,
these artists and these labels, they just be putting out
albums like it's nothing.
Speaker 5 (21:06):
Just drop it online and tell your followers to go
pick it up.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
I like the fact that she had an actual rollout
that she was, you know, doing doing doing marketing periods,
like marketing is a lost art.
Speaker 5 (21:17):
Nobody does it no more.
Speaker 14 (21:18):
Well, I will say, with all the good must come
some of the bad because Stephan Dicks, first of all,
was adorable. Cardi b had like a huge event here
in New York where she was celebrating the album Stefan
Diggs had these huge am I the drama roses delivered
to her.
Speaker 13 (21:32):
He like surprised her. He comes from like behind the truck.
Speaker 14 (21:34):
But within the same weekend, there was a story that
came out over the weekend that there is a model
who is a legend in court documents, that Stepan Diggs
is the father of her month's old baby and that
you know, she wants paternity to be done. So when
this story came out, because there's been rumors about does
Stephon Diggs have you know, other children that are very
young or children on the way or whatever. When this
(21:55):
story came out, of course, Cardi, who just newly announced
her pregnancy, got a lot of pushback online about why
are you having a baby with someone who potentially has
younger children and just all the different things. So Cardi
uh decided to speak on that as well too. Let's
let's take a listen to Cardi be on having more kids.
Speaker 8 (22:13):
I love every kick, even if it hurt me. Every kick,
every punch, every elbow, I love. And you all here
just saying the most weirdest like come on, would you
say like hope you don't die?
Speaker 13 (22:26):
It's kind of weird.
Speaker 8 (22:28):
Again, I could flame and volley, but is that I'm
not even.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
On that type of time.
Speaker 8 (22:32):
I feel very, very very blessed right now to my
fans online and offline and everything, y'all, my kids, aunts
and uncles, so y'all already know what's someone to.
Speaker 9 (22:42):
Come to these brother friends, Yeah, have another one too.
Speaker 13 (22:46):
If I have ten kids, we do.
Speaker 5 (22:50):
That's her business.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Yes, she's absolutely right now.
Speaker 13 (22:53):
And then response is to find digs filed.
Speaker 14 (22:55):
In response to the following, which happened in mid July,
he stated that he wasn't sure if he's a parent
of the little girl. The little girl was born in April,
but they were both requested him and the woman to
take genetic tests and to officially make the determination, even
though it's not clear yet if they've taken these tests.
But of course, you know, Cardi was getting some of
the backlash from that. But she is so happy right now.
(23:15):
She is okay with her decisions and where she is
in her life. So that's all she can do. And
in true Cardi fashion, what.
Speaker 5 (23:21):
Is she supposed to do at this point?
Speaker 13 (23:22):
Though, That's what I was thinking.
Speaker 3 (23:24):
She's pregnant, she's accepted she's pregnant, she wants to have
more kids.
Speaker 5 (23:27):
What is she supposed to do?
Speaker 13 (23:28):
I also think too.
Speaker 14 (23:30):
I mean, I get it, she had a baby last year.
Now she's moved on and she's having another baby. So
you know, you knew that was going to come, and
we talked a bit about that with her when she.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Was up here.
Speaker 13 (23:38):
But I'm not gonna hold y'all.
Speaker 14 (23:39):
At this point, there is nothing she can do but
have the baby and be in love and be happy
and hope it works out for the best.
Speaker 13 (23:45):
That's all you can do.
Speaker 14 (23:46):
Even if even if they were married and having a kid,
you just never know what can happen.
Speaker 3 (23:50):
And I would say, why do y'all care? But the
reality is, y'all care because she's Cardi B She's scared
when somebody's life is public, then you know, people feel
like they have the right to speak on that person
very much so.
Speaker 14 (24:01):
But you know, Cardi gonna do what Cardi you gonna do.
She was cooking on her her Instagram Live. You saw
the video her cooking. No, that's take a listen to
Cardi B on steppont Digg's News the number one.
Speaker 13 (24:11):
But she's cooking, girl, Well what now, we'll figure it out.
Speaker 14 (24:19):
Yeah, So she cooking, she making food, she listening to
one of her songs, and she's like, look at this point,
baby hello, Shirley, Like, what is she supposed to do?
Speaker 3 (24:29):
That's your baby daddy. That's my baby daddy too. We're
gonna figure it out. Why come on, man, it's Monday. Man,
I just got here, wake up. That's her business.
Speaker 13 (24:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 14 (24:38):
That's what I'm coming about, My man, honey, were all
in here together. I'm sorry, go ahead, gotta get out.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
What'd you say? Nothing?
Speaker 14 (24:44):
If I was Cardi, I'm coming that same You got
multiple women. That's not what I'm saying. What I'm saying
is I'm saying, if I was Cardi, come in that
same way. If it's my man, it's my man.
Speaker 13 (24:53):
Like what I'm gonna do.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
She ain't say that's her man now. She said, that's
our baby daddy.
Speaker 13 (24:57):
That is her We know that's her man.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
She said, that's your baby. That that's my baby.
Speaker 13 (25:02):
Girl is in love. Okay, she ain't letting up.
Speaker 5 (25:05):
You don't know that.
Speaker 13 (25:07):
Okay, let's get out of here. What are you talking about? Yes,
we do know. Is that her man now?
Speaker 3 (25:12):
She said that's her baby daddy. I'm just going off words.
That's her baby, that's my baby daddy. That's your baby dad.
Speaker 5 (25:19):
But we're married. That's not actual wife.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Yes, but I'm saying you're trying to deflect from the
fact that you said that your man got multiple women
all together. What you just said, you got multiple dudes.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
So it's cool.
Speaker 5 (25:32):
Listen, We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
The world Most Dangerous Morning to Show the Breakfast Club. Yes,
it's the World's morn to Show to Breakfast Club. Charlamagne
to God dj NV just hilarious. Envy and jests are
off today. Ll Cool Bears here Lauren l Rossa and
it's time for Front Page News with Me and Me Brown.
First off, I want to salute nothing in the NFL
because the Cowboys got washed yesterday. So I could care less,
but I do want to salute uh South Carolina's own
(25:56):
Agia Wilson. She was named w n B a m
v P yesterday for our record fourth time you've seen
me in here with my Asian Wilson hoodie on this morning. Okay,
salute the big Asia. Nobody has won MVP four times
in the WNBA ever, so she's the first. So dropping
the clues bombs for Asia Wilson. Now, mee, mee, what
we got fro Front page News this morning?
Speaker 9 (26:17):
All right, well, good morning, Charlamagne and Lauren. We're still
talking about Jimmy Kimball and Disney is facing a wave
of back last this morning, after ABC pulled Jimmy Kimmel
Live indefinitely over comments he made about conservative activists Charlie
Kirk now subscribers they began canceling Disney Plus and Hulu
in large numbers, so much so that the website it
(26:40):
crashed repeatedly over the weekend that ABC pulled Kimble's show
after pressure from affiliates like Sinclair and Next Star and
a warning from SEC chair Brendan Carr, who said the
late night hosts cross a path with insensitive comments about
Kirk's death Now, Saint Clair went even further, demanding that
Kimble apologized to Kirk's family and donate to Turning Point
(27:02):
USA before the show could return.
Speaker 7 (27:05):
Now.
Speaker 9 (27:05):
ABC also said that Sinclair's fifty five minute tribute to
Kirk would run in Kimball's place, but on Friday night.
When it came time to air, it seems that the
network made a different decision. Instead, viewers saw a rerun
of Celebrity Family Feud while the Kirk special aired on YouTube.
But now Carr may be setting his sites beyond late
(27:26):
night TV. In an interview on conservative commentator Scott Jennings podcast,
the FCC chair questioned whether ABC's daytime talk show The
View still qualifies as quote a bona fide news program.
Speaker 13 (27:40):
Let's listen to that.
Speaker 21 (27:42):
I'd assume you could make the argument that The View
is a bonified news show, but I'm not so sure
about that, and I think it's worthwhile to have the
SCC look into whether The View and some of the
programs that you have still qualify as bonified news programs
and they're exempt from the equal opportunity regime that Congress
(28:03):
is put in place.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
You know, it's so interesting, right because I know, folks
keep talking about the FCC and this is an attack
on free speech. At some point we have to acknowledge
this is simply Donald Trump's hitless.
Speaker 5 (28:16):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
Like months ago, Donald Trump was saying he wanted to
Stephen Cobetz and the Jimmy Kimmel's off the air. Months ago,
he was saying he wanted the View off the air.
I think over the summer, he you know, the White House,
you know, warn the View about being pulled off the
air after Joy Bahard made some comments about Trump. I
think she called Trump a loser or something like that.
So we got to acknowledge at some point. I understand
the whole free speech conversation, but this is actually just
(28:39):
Donald Trump's hitless.
Speaker 13 (28:40):
And you're absolutely right.
Speaker 9 (28:41):
He tweeted over or he posted on true Social that
of course, applauding ABC suspension and now calling for NBC
to now drop Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers. So you're
absolutely right. Whoever he doesn't like, he's literally going after.
So But with that said, all of this rhetick is
rhetoric is growing increased dangerous over the weekend, and ABC
(29:02):
station in Sacramento California, was shot at Video shows three
bullets fired through the lobby glass. Investigators have arrested a
sixty four year old man in connection with that shooting,
though they say the motive is still unclear. But the
incident came just one day after protesters gathered outside that
same ABC station to oppose the network suspension over the
(29:24):
Jimmy Kimball Show.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
You shooting that protesters and shooting at the station they were.
Speaker 9 (29:28):
They were shooting at the station a day after the protests.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
So Jimmy kim that much.
Speaker 14 (29:34):
I think people just feel like their constitutional rights is
being like, do you know how some people are about
the constitutional But do you you ever thought that you
would get to this point and like seeing, really this
is scary as heck to me.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
Yes, I'm so scared. And one thing that but I'm
gonna tell you why. It's always it's going to always
be a backlash. Americans are entitled to freedom. Americans don't
know anything else. Okay, this ain't a black thing, this
ain't a white thing, this ain't a gaged great thing.
If you are an American person, you are entitled to freedom.
And if Americans feel like their freedoms are being taken away.
(30:06):
They're going to revote in some way, shape or form.
Speaker 5 (30:08):
And by the way, it's gonna be to white Americans.
Let's be clear on that.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Same Americans that's throw on Capitol Hill are going to
be the same ones that flip when they feel like
their freedoms are really being script away.
Speaker 9 (30:18):
Well, I like to see how Americans feel after this story.
Because after months of back and forth over whether TikTok
would be banned in the US, the White House says
the app will stay, but there's going to be a
major change. So while TikTok may remain, the algorithm that
drives the for you page will now be controlled by
the United States instead of China, which could mean what
you see on the app will look very very different.
(30:40):
So over the weekend, White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt
she explained more about what this deal will look like.
Speaker 10 (30:46):
Let's listen to them, But.
Speaker 23 (30:48):
This deal does put Americas first, And let me just
be very clear. This deal means that TikTok will be
majority owned by Americans in the United States. There will
be seven seats on the board that can controls the
app in the United States, and six of those seats
will be Americans, and the data and privacy will be
led by one of America's greatest tech companies, Oracle, and
(31:10):
the algorithm will also be controlled by America as well.
Speaker 13 (31:14):
So all of those details have already been agreed upon.
Speaker 23 (31:16):
Now we just need this deal to be signed and
that will be happening, I anticipate in the coming days.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
Damn, So Oracle got uh what Scott got Paramount? Now
they got TikTok. I heard they're about to get Warner Brothers.
Speaker 14 (31:28):
You know what, you know what you knew that was
happening though, Like you knew that this whole conglomerate of
like you control the media, you control everything.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
I did, but I didn't know that they were going
to have TikTok and be trying to get Warner Brothers.
Speaker 13 (31:39):
They need social media, you need social media.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
Well no, this is Larry Ellison, this is Oracle. This
is the people that is the people that just bought Paramount.
Speaker 14 (31:46):
Yeah, but I thought that that I thought that people
were connecting that with the Trump administration at some point too.
Speaker 5 (31:51):
I have no idea.
Speaker 9 (31:53):
Yeah, well, we're also learning that the Fox Corps, led
by the Murdoch family, you know, they own Fox News,
Wall Street Journal they will also have a role in
this deal. Supporters say this addresses, of course, the national
security concerns, but critics warn it will open the door
to something else, political and corporate interest shaping now what
Americans see. And while the deal does keep TikTok online,
(32:15):
just like what you guys are saying, there are just
more questions and answers like who will be those six
Americans who sit on the board and how much power
will Oracle have? But you were just saying, he Larry
Elson is the co founder, but he's also a Trump ally,
and he's going to have control over your feed, your.
Speaker 13 (32:32):
Data, your privacy.
Speaker 9 (32:33):
You know what will that look like now as TikTok
now kind of goes, government control goes goes, you know,
privately backed by the United States, So we'll see. And
then one other note is that reports say that once
this deal is complete, you'll need to delete the old
version and download the new version.
Speaker 7 (32:53):
So I'm.
Speaker 13 (32:55):
Even start the first one.
Speaker 5 (32:56):
Start.
Speaker 13 (32:56):
The first one I was trying to do on TikTok
was get ready with me a dance little bit.
Speaker 9 (33:00):
Now it's all of the yeah, yeah, I wonder what
this will mean for creators though, and what they're what
they're going to do because some of their their content
may be suppressed. But we'll see, we'll see what happens.
Speaker 13 (33:09):
That is your front page news.
Speaker 10 (33:11):
I'm Memi Brown.
Speaker 9 (33:12):
Follow me on social at Mimi Brown TV. And for
a more news coverage, follow Black Information Network and download
the free iHeartRadio app and visit binnews dot com.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Thank you, me and me. We see you tomorrow now, Lauren, Oh,
know what we got coming up?
Speaker 4 (33:25):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (33:25):
Coming up?
Speaker 5 (33:25):
Bobby Brown?
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Okay, founder of two major cosmetic companies. I guarantee you
that you you got some Bobby Brown cosmetics somewhere. But
you know, she doesn't do Bobby Brown anymore. Now she
has Jones role, but she's not here to talk about
any of that. She's here to talk about her new book.
Still Bobby a masterclass in leading and authentic life. So
we'll be talking to Bobby Brown when we come back.
It's the world's most thing. You just want to show
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (33:47):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 11 (33:51):
Everybody is DJ NV, jes So, Marius Charlamage, the gud
We are the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
Lauren L.
Speaker 11 (33:57):
Rosa is here as well, and we got a special
guest in the.
Speaker 5 (33:59):
Bound, the legend Bobby Brown.
Speaker 3 (34:02):
Let's which one?
Speaker 5 (34:05):
Which one?
Speaker 11 (34:05):
This is not new audition Bosston, my prerogative, Bobby Brown.
This is Bobby Brown, makeup artists, entrepreneur, owner, Bobby Brown Cosmetics,
and more.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
She has a new book out right now called Still
Bobby Well.
Speaker 5 (34:16):
Hold on now. Bobby Brown Cosmetics was old Brown?
Speaker 10 (34:19):
Oh yeah, that was That was the first one. Jones
Road is the new one.
Speaker 6 (34:22):
I love that you have Jones Road. I'm gonna just
let you know right now. I hope this is not
a thing you I thought you were black.
Speaker 4 (34:27):
I ain't gonna lie to.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
You because you're Bobby Brown.
Speaker 6 (34:31):
It's so good for my skin, our skin, you know
what I'm saying. Yeah, and usually you know, you know,
we only we're the only ones who know our skin.
Speaker 10 (34:41):
But it's like, baby, miss Bobby, I'm you know, my
background is, I'm a makeup artist. I spent my life
doing makeup, and I had this crazy idea that you
should put a foundation on that's the exact color of
your skin.
Speaker 6 (34:54):
The skin stick, the correct man everything that the foundation
with the sunscreen.
Speaker 13 (35:00):
Yeah, thank you.
Speaker 10 (35:01):
Yeah, Jones Road is even better. Jones is even better.
But you know I've I've done so many, so many
different makeups, so many celebrities, so many women, and you know,
it took a while to kind of teach women that
you just want to look good, you want to look
like yourself. I mean I used to do with In
Houston's makeup. She did not like the makeup to look natural.
(35:23):
She wanted a lighter foundation, and I used to fight,
I'm like, you can't. It's got to match your skin,
especially under them lights. So thank you, welcome, I'm great,
I'm great.
Speaker 3 (35:35):
I want people to buy the book still, Bobby, but
I do want you to give them a little bit
of your history. Like you started as a makeup artist.
How does a makeup artist go from that to creating
her first billion dollar brand?
Speaker 10 (35:47):
Bobby brant Well, I was a makeup artist that when
I started in the eighties, it was all really artificial
makeup and just really not attractive. And I started doing
makeup a different way. But the makeup on the market sucks.
It was not good. I used to have to fix everything.
And one day I met a chemist and I said, hey,
I always wanted to make this lipstick, and he's like,
(36:07):
I can make it for you. So we made it,
and I said, I bet I could sell this, you know,
and I then I thought about ten colors, and I
made it, and I started selling out of my house,
you know, when my had my first baby and my
hometown of Montclair, New Jersey, and I would be going
into the city to do fashion and Vogue and all
that stuff. And then it just kind of grew from there.
(36:31):
And one day I met someone and I talked to
everybody because I think most people are nice and interesting,
and I said, what do you do? She said, I'm
a cosmetics buyer Burgdorf Goodman. I'm like, oh, I have
this line of makeup I'm working on. And I got
into Burgdorf Goodman. Didn't shop there at the time, but
I sold the makeup there and the rest is history.
(36:53):
And then we sold the company to Esti Lauder after
four and a half years.
Speaker 3 (36:56):
Now, I don't want to give too much away, but
just break on the details of that situation. I didn't
even know that.
Speaker 10 (37:02):
Yeah, after four and a half years, we sold to
stie Laughter. I stayed as an corporate employee twenty two years.
You could read the book, you could text me afterwards
and ask me other questions, but you know, so that
was the first brand and then I you know, while
I was I think the only reason I was able
(37:23):
to stay in corporate America because I am the least
corporate person you have ever met. I don't break the rules.
I just make up my own is. I used to
do all these cool things. On the side, I was
an an entrepreneur, you know, so I did a lot
of different projects and you know, became a on Elvis Duran.
I became the beauty editor of Elvis Duran and els.
Speaker 4 (37:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (37:46):
And you know, by the way, that's how I met Charlemagne.
I was lucky enough to sit next to him at
a wedding, Elvis's wedding, yeah, which I guess is like
six years. I think he just celebrated. I think so
something something like that, and you know, and I just
liked this guy and I'm like, let's have dinner, and
He's like, all right, great, and we made dinner plans
and the rest is history.
Speaker 11 (38:06):
Yeah, what foundation to show the menus?
Speaker 10 (38:09):
Well, he's got such beautiful skin. He doesn't wear any that's.
Speaker 6 (38:12):
His secrets of his which you would would would be
the shade back then.
Speaker 3 (38:16):
Did you know him before then?
Speaker 9 (38:17):
I did not.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
I did not. I did not, but I love that
you had a non compete for twenty.
Speaker 10 (38:24):
Five twenty five years. And so when we sold the company,
I was thirty four. And when my husband said, we
got this non compete, I mean I always got ds
in math that I'm very proud of. To be successful,
you know, and not be good in school, I think
is something to consider. But I counted on my fingers.
I said, well, I'll be in my sixties. I'm not
going to want to work when I'm in my sixties.
(38:46):
Fast forward, I'm sixty eight right now. So I started
this company.
Speaker 3 (38:50):
And really good. I'm sorry.
Speaker 10 (38:52):
I mean that, you know why, because I don't shoot
anything in my face? Okay, I'm shocked, you really really honestly,
it's the truth, I think. But I'm also into health
and wellness and fitness, and you know, so.
Speaker 11 (39:05):
Let me ask you about that, because this seems like
that's the new trend now. If you watch any show
on television, it's all about lip fillers and fillers and
botox and disktox and net talks and detox and red talks.
Speaker 5 (39:16):
What do you think about someone that I.
Speaker 24 (39:18):
Don't like it.
Speaker 10 (39:19):
I don't like it. I don't like any of it.
I don't I don't feel it looks natural. I don't
think it looks good. And I think, you know, the
important thing is how you feel and your lifestyle choices.
I mean, I like to have fun like everyone, but
I know how to balance and I know what to
do to make me feel better. And when I look bad,
I don't run to the doctor to say fix me up.
(39:39):
I look at myself in the mirror and say, what
have you been doing that's not working? And change it?
Speaker 13 (39:44):
Wow, So how do you implement?
Speaker 3 (39:47):
She cut her off, she was a grown woman, and
you launched another brand?
Speaker 10 (39:50):
Oh yeah, I launched another brand when the day my
non compete was out, and which was literally a week
before the presidential election. You remember that time in the
middle of the pandemic. I just flicked the light up
and did three things and we launched the brand. Didn't
know what was going to happen. And this we're celebrating
five years.
Speaker 3 (40:10):
Amazing.
Speaker 10 (40:11):
It's yeah, it's been amazing.
Speaker 3 (40:14):
Noticed, like I got to buy this one now too, right?
Speaker 10 (40:17):
No, something we're not for sale?
Speaker 13 (40:22):
Like business wise, like what are your go to?
Speaker 9 (40:25):
Like?
Speaker 14 (40:25):
Here's what I always rule A thumbs and business because
you make it just seems so effortless, like oh, I
met a woman at Bird of Goodman and boom, we're
in the store. I know it's not but in not
giving away too much from the book, but like, what
are those things that you kept very near and dear
to your chest.
Speaker 13 (40:40):
At honestly do you do every time?
Speaker 10 (40:42):
Honestly? Like it's common sense. It's just doing things the
way you do things. And it's doing things the way
you know, my parents taught me, you know, my grandparents,
Like I grew up with this loving family, complicated but loving,
and but they were you know, everyone worked really hard.
Everyone worked really hard. Everyone had to be nice. You
had to be nice. You just there was no excuse
(41:04):
not to be nice. And you had to, you know,
be a little creative with your thinking. And when things
didn't work, you're like, all right, that didn't work, let
me do something else. That's how I lead business is
like the same way I would lead my life. And
I'm like, right to the point, like I don't I
don't mess around. I don't like when people are like
talking about what they should do and how and strategizing.
(41:27):
I've already done it. Yeah, I've already done it.
Speaker 11 (41:29):
How do you work with I know your son is
the CEO of the company. A lot of people say,
you know what, I don't want my family part of
the companies because family usually mess things up. You can't
talk to family.
Speaker 5 (41:39):
But you took a different route. So break that down
a little bit.
Speaker 10 (41:42):
I did not choose to work with my family and
my I. You know, my husband and I have always
done everything with my husband. But our kids weren't not interested.
Three boys, none of them were interested in beauty or
business really, and it just kind of happened our second son, Cody,
who I named to Coda, which I thought was the
coolest name. But he's Cody. He came to work with
(42:06):
us on some growth things. He knows a lot about
digital marketing. He's now people meet us and they're like,
oh my god, your son is the you know, is
the guy. I'm like, yeah, I'm so proud of that.
But so he started helping and we had to see
a COEO, we had a president. One by one, Cody
started doing their jobs and so it's like it's it
(42:26):
seems like the more we get rid of people, the
better our team is. It's about having like your community
your posse and putting your heads together and figuring out
what to do. And he's been incredible. I mean, he's
just been incredible. And it's not the easiest thing working
with the family.
Speaker 5 (42:42):
Sure.
Speaker 10 (42:43):
On top of that, my head of brand is his wife,
which is amazing, and she's a very beautiful, tough, smart woman.
And they have my two grandkids, so I've learned, you know,
the most important thing in my life is not to
piss them off, because I want to see those grand
kids every single day.
Speaker 3 (43:01):
How has motherhood influenced your philosophy and business or our beauty?
Speaker 10 (43:05):
You know, the greatest thing about being a woman and
being a mother is we know how to multitask. If
I ask my husband or my chiropractor, any guy a question,
they stop what they're doing and answer. You women, you
ask a question, you know, we're on the phone, we're
getting her nails done, we're chopping vegetables. So it's you know,
(43:25):
I just think being a mom, I have figured things out.
You know, how to get the kids ready for all
the things. I mean, you tell me, how's it like,
you know, having four daughters and watching your success man,
and how do you fit it all in?
Speaker 25 (43:38):
Well?
Speaker 10 (43:38):
I know how you fit it, and you have the
best wife in America.
Speaker 3 (43:43):
Give her all the credit. I'm just here like she
handles she's the CEO of the household. Yeah, and she
makes all lives that much easier.
Speaker 10 (43:51):
And she just loves you.
Speaker 3 (43:53):
She does.
Speaker 7 (43:53):
You know.
Speaker 3 (43:54):
So if I told my daughter that last name, my
ten year old, I was like, this is the most
important woman in all life?
Speaker 5 (43:59):
Did my wife go, I stop gassing it up? And
I'm like, who else would it be?
Speaker 21 (44:03):
It's not you?
Speaker 5 (44:04):
And I really feel that way.
Speaker 10 (44:05):
Yeah. Yeah, it's evident. You dedicated your book to your husband.
He is the light of my life. He's amazing. And
by the way, we've been married thirty seven years. It's
not easy, guys. Nothing's easy, right Is there anything easy
in this world? Nothing's easy. I work really hard.
Speaker 6 (44:23):
You know the hows he impacted that, that journey, you know,
but between you know, the woman you are, your professionalism,
business owner, all of that house.
Speaker 10 (44:32):
He impacted that.
Speaker 22 (44:34):
You know.
Speaker 10 (44:34):
He's look, I can't do anything without them, because I'm
the one that's like, oh my god, how am.
Speaker 3 (44:38):
I going to do this.
Speaker 10 (44:39):
I'm only four hours sleep. I just got back and
He's like, I'm down I'm down.
Speaker 4 (44:43):
Breathe.
Speaker 10 (44:44):
That was what he said to me on my way
out of the door this morning. He said, breathe, I don't.
I didn't.
Speaker 3 (44:50):
That was my first Was there anything you discovered about yourself,
you know, maybe something that even surprised you in the
process of writing this book reflecting on your journey?
Speaker 10 (44:59):
Actually yes, And I suggest everyone writes a memoir at
sometime in their life, even if it's not to be published,
because it's very cathartic. You know. It's not like being
in therapy where you discuss things. But when people ask
you questions and you're talking about your journey, you start
to tie things together. And I realized how watching Papa
Sam and his car business, who came from another country,
(45:21):
you know, watching my dad kind of go through different
He was a lawyer, but then he kept hating it
and doing other things and then coming back to it
because that's what paid the bills. I realized some of
my entrepreneurial spirit is from watching all my family members.
Speaker 14 (45:36):
The girls who are like starting today where they're not
doing like magazines because everything's digital and they're trying to
grow their brains like physical products. What do you advise
them to do because everybody's online with a product now right.
Speaker 10 (45:48):
Well, you just you know, I have a lot of
you know, female founder friends and male founder friends, and
I help them all and I tell them the same
thing my husband tells me is breathe first of all,
and just keep doing it. You just gotta like, how
do you start? You just start, and you just keep
doing it. Put a post up if it didn't work,
figure out what are you going to do next? And
(46:09):
you know, and and meet people, you know, get out
there and meet people.
Speaker 11 (46:14):
I was going to ask, you know, why is it
so important for you to document a lot of this,
this is your tenth book, like to share a lot
of knowledge.
Speaker 3 (46:20):
Why is that important to you?
Speaker 7 (46:22):
Well?
Speaker 10 (46:22):
I think somehow. You know, all I wanted to do
when I was a kid was be a teacher and
a mother. So I'm kind of both, right. I mean,
I'm a mother. I'm definitely a teacher. I like I
like to learn. I'm like I'm like notorious for like
wanting to try new things and learn new things. I'd
like to surround myself with really smart people to teach
me things. But I also like to surround myself with
(46:44):
young people that I would like to teach certain things
you know, how you can have and I'm hoping this
book is going to serve as you know, many different
things for people, but for young for a young person
to read and say, wow, you can do these things
and you know you don't have to do everything so well,
(47:04):
don't have to be perfect.
Speaker 11 (47:05):
I want to ask you know this, We see it
here a lot of people all the time, women and
men that's trying to create their own company, right, their
own lipstick line, their own hair lined, and it's very difficult. Right,
what would you tell that young entrepreneur that's trying to
break through the doors and they're having a problems. Target
won't take their calls, Bloomingdale's won't take their calls, Macy's
tells them no, or they don't have enough stock. What
do you tell that young entrepreneur?
Speaker 10 (47:25):
Well, first of all, I tell everyone, try to work
for someone first. Try to spend a year and you know,
just think of it as being in school. Go work
for a company that you admire. I don't care if
you have to be the receptionist or social media manager.
Just see how things are and when you're ready to
launch your own business, don't take and don't overinvest because
(47:47):
then you're going to be stuck. People think it takes
a lot of money. And do it really slow and
make sure what you're doing is different than what's on
the market. And if you don't know if it's going
to work, just make a couple of things.
Speaker 4 (47:59):
Figure out.
Speaker 10 (48:00):
You know, people come to me with these big decks
and they're the most beautiful decks. I'm like, oh, this
sounds amazing. Can I try the product? Well I don't
have the product. Well, how do you know it's gonna work?
I mean, you know, I had this one girl with
a Harvard degree come to me with this beautiful deck.
He said, right, let me try it. She was a
woman of color. She wanted to make this special suns
screen that looked She didn't even know where.
Speaker 4 (48:23):
The lab was.
Speaker 10 (48:24):
I'm like, how could you do all this until you
actually know the product works?
Speaker 4 (48:28):
And you know.
Speaker 10 (48:29):
When you do have one that you think is great,
put it in little containers and start giving it to
all your friends. If they like it, then give it
to other people. Like, just start slow. You don't need
like people think you need it all figured out.
Speaker 3 (48:41):
You want to think this is a woman who'd two
billion dollar brands telling y'all it is okay to have
a job.
Speaker 2 (48:46):
Okay, she said, work for years.
Speaker 3 (48:50):
But most people will be like we have we know
a lot of entrepreneurs the black No, I I don't
want to have a job.
Speaker 5 (48:54):
You shouldn't have a boss.
Speaker 10 (48:56):
Yeah, but first of all, you got to learn things
like arriving on time, saying hello, or if you're late,
calling and saying I'm so sorry, I'm late. How do
you learn those things? And you also have to figure
out how you can work with other people, and so
you know, it's okay to work with people that you
don't like because you have to learn how to do it.
Like all these things in life, we're learning things.
Speaker 11 (49:17):
I was going to ask with makeup, it seems like
it's a difficult industry, right. And the reason I say
that is like the red lipstick, Right, Charlemagne puts it
on his lips and he might have a reaction to it,
or you know something like that. You even know what
product works with somebody's skin. How do you go around
that to make sure something can work for I guess everybody?
(49:39):
Or do you say I'm looking for a particular market
and I'm going to focus.
Speaker 10 (49:42):
For that you know, either one of those work, it
doesn't really matter. I mean, Jones Road is a clean
makeup brand, so I know people are not going to
have problems with it.
Speaker 21 (49:52):
You know.
Speaker 10 (49:52):
I also know the only people that aren't going to
like Jones Road are people that like artificial makeup. If
you like artificial makes and want to look like that,
there's other brands for you. So I don't have to
be everything for everybody. But what I know, what I want.
It's you know why, Jones wrote, I think one of
the reasons why it's successful is because it's what I
(50:14):
believe in, which is makeup that when you put it on,
you just look better and you don't know why, because
it's almost like magic. You're like, oh my god, what happened?
Because it looks like you. You look less tired, your
skin looks more even, it looks fresh. But that's my aesthetic.
It's not every makeup bounder's aesthetic. And my biggest warning
(50:37):
to people that want to start their own brand is
don't just go out there and do what other people
are doing. It's you got to have a point of
difference or you're just gonna sit there and you're gonna
invest too much money you're gonna borrow from everyone you know,
and then you're gonna be like, well, this is don't work.
Speaker 3 (50:51):
How important is people knowing Bobby Brown the person to
Bobby Brown the brand.
Speaker 10 (50:57):
Well, I think people get confused. They think I am
still with the brand and I am not. The book
tells the whole story, and yeah, it was hard. You know,
I don't own my name, so I can't just you know,
slap my name on things or use it the way
I want. But it's okay. You know, I've been able
to my husband and I have probably sent twenty twenty
five kids to college, so it's okay. I'm glad, you know,
(51:21):
I'm at peace with it. And Jones Road, you know,
just came. I found it on Ways when I was
given my husband direction, and I'm like, oh, that sounds
like a cool name.
Speaker 3 (51:30):
But I feel like Bobby Brant, the person is the brand.
Speaker 10 (51:35):
Bobby Brown, the person is the Jones Road brand. Yeah
it's not. I know it's complicated, right, it's complicated. But
you know, there's Calvin Klein, there's HARMANI, there's all you know,
Donna Karen, So it's you know, it is the way
of the world. But you know, yeah, I Bobby Brown.
I mean, who knew people were brands?
Speaker 6 (51:57):
Yeah, but we are apparently, so I was alway, Jones wrote.
The significance behind that is just you just saw it
on Wait.
Speaker 4 (52:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (52:04):
My husband said, if I didn't have a name by Monday.
Speaker 3 (52:07):
It was a Friday.
Speaker 10 (52:07):
We were driving to the Hampton's and my husband always
has me look at ways and Google maps because god forbid,
we're five minutes late, even though we have nowhere to go.
So my head was down and I saw Jones Road
and I said Jones Road. Makeup Instantly, I thought it
sounded like a British bespoke, you know brand, and I thought, oh,
that's a cool name. And I can't use Brown, I
(52:28):
might as well use Jones. So he said I like it,
and it was available, and that's how it became Jones Road.
Speaker 5 (52:36):
What was the most difficult memory A chapter for you
to revisit?
Speaker 10 (52:39):
While he was writing, Nah, you know, it's really funny
because I had a you know, it's an audible book
too right now, So I had to read it and
I cried once. And it was talking about my mother
in law that I just adored her, and I just
you know, The hard part, the hard weird thing is
all the people that were my family are not alive anymore, right,
like my original chic family. I mean, my dad is
(53:01):
ninety right now and he's still there, but he's only one.
Speaker 24 (53:06):
You know.
Speaker 10 (53:06):
I lost a brother, I lost a mom, I lost
my grandparents, you know. And it's like, and my ninety
four year old aunt Dallas is still there, sharp as attack.
She has a boyfriend who's ninety five. Wow, and she's
interviewing me on stage in Chicago when I've come there
at her retirement community.
Speaker 7 (53:23):
Wow.
Speaker 10 (53:23):
That's what I'm excited about this book tour. When are
you going to Chicago October tenth or something?
Speaker 3 (53:30):
How did that make you look at your own mortality?
Speaker 24 (53:35):
You know?
Speaker 10 (53:35):
I look, it's weird because I know, you know, my
parents were twenty and twenty one when I was born,
So I'm like, I'm just twenty years to go, right,
I Mean it's like, you know, I hope to live
over ninety, but it's like, you know, sixty eight guys,
Like it's.
Speaker 4 (53:53):
Totally keep learning hip past. Yeah, it takes me years off.
Speaker 10 (53:58):
Yeah, i think I'm gonna text Flower to come DJ
my birthday. One of my best memories of my life
is hop it on stage with flow Rider may he
put his chains on me and I also I also
hopped on stage with Salt and Pepper.
Speaker 11 (54:11):
Oh so you did the apple bottom Jean, you did
all that?
Speaker 2 (54:15):
You push it?
Speaker 10 (54:16):
No, we didn't do push it. We did get low.
Speaker 3 (54:19):
I I got flow.
Speaker 10 (54:25):
Well, you know, my dad's name is James Brown, so
when you meet my dad, you'd be like James Brown.
He's like, yeah, I feel good. How are you saying
that for ninety years?
Speaker 4 (54:36):
James too?
Speaker 5 (54:38):
Great?
Speaker 14 (54:39):
Part one of your book is nowhere You're from talking
about your family, and then you go into your nana
and your papa. Right, Why why is knowing where you're from?
Or how has that been so important in every brain
you've created?
Speaker 10 (54:51):
Because it's who I am, right, it's you know, being
from Chicago has made me like a much I think,
a much more like stable person with my feet in
in the ground.
Speaker 23 (55:01):
You know.
Speaker 10 (55:01):
I know Charlemagne talks about where he comes from. I
just think it's important. And by the way, some people
say my childhood was complicated, and I don't look at
it that way. I mean things happened and I moved
around it, and I you know, I take the good
stuff and I don't blame anyone for anything, right. I
(55:23):
mean my mother there's a story in the book where
she told me I was really pretty and I said,
thank you. She said, but you'd be gorgeous to you
had your nose fixed. And I didn't clearly, and I
just didn't define me. But it did push me to
help people appreciate who they are.
Speaker 13 (55:40):
Oh so that that that's what steers you away from
the contour, I.
Speaker 10 (55:43):
Think yeah, I think so. And you know, every time
I'd go to Asia and I would tell the women
they're beautiful, they would just say, oh no, my eyes
are this and my fan.
Speaker 24 (55:51):
And I'm like no.
Speaker 10 (55:52):
And you know, in women of color, it's like, guys,
you have this beauty that we don't have, like, appreciate it,
your skin color, your features, everything. And you know, to
my fellow friends with lips small, you know that match
their faces, leave those things alone.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
Right, Like people look so stupid with them.
Speaker 10 (56:13):
It's just it doesn't work even when you just I'm
just gonna do a teeny bit. No, you look like
a duck.
Speaker 5 (56:19):
How do you define authenticity?
Speaker 10 (56:22):
Just be yourself, be real, Just be yourself, be real,
and all of a sudden, now it's a trend. Being
authentic as a trend. Okay, great.
Speaker 3 (56:32):
Your definition of authenticity I've shifted over time?
Speaker 10 (56:34):
No, I think I think I've gotten much more comfortable
with who I am. And that's that's a good part
about getting older. You're like, you realize I tried on
everyone else and it didn't work.
Speaker 5 (56:45):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (56:46):
What do you what do you hope for youer, just
take away from still body?
Speaker 24 (56:49):
You know.
Speaker 10 (56:49):
I hope it gives them encouragement to you know, to
live their life their way and you know, and and
it's not as difficult as you make it. Yeah, and
just be be naive, be positive, and you know, just
work hard and keep at it and just be nice.
Speaker 3 (57:09):
And I noticed just the first week of the book.
But now that you shared this memoir, what's next? Like,
what are you excited to accomplish or create moving forward?
Not even just in the beauty world, just life.
Speaker 24 (57:20):
You know.
Speaker 13 (57:20):
I try.
Speaker 10 (57:21):
I try things like I did a you know, a
series on YouTube that I can't seem to get enough
eyeballs on called I Am Me, which I interview all
these really cool women. You know, I don't know how
to get more eyeballs on it. But that's fun.
Speaker 12 (57:33):
You know.
Speaker 10 (57:33):
It was sponsored by JP Morgan, which is cool, and
I'm like, all right, I'll just keep trying stuff.
Speaker 3 (57:39):
You know.
Speaker 10 (57:39):
I had a podcast with iHeart.
Speaker 13 (57:41):
It was cool.
Speaker 10 (57:41):
It was fun.
Speaker 7 (57:43):
You know.
Speaker 10 (57:43):
I'm like, I don't know, maybe I'll do something else.
I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (57:46):
You get eyeballs on it by going on Mail show.
You go on Mail Robin Show and you tell everybody
you have YouTube.
Speaker 10 (57:53):
Yeah, yes, all right, well that's on my list. I
have her and I have one other one and then
I'm good, Okay, yeah, I wanted this was on my list.
So thank you for this. And by the way, when
I became Times one hundred this year, and thank you.
And they said, we're going to reach out to someone,
you know, who would you like to write this thing?
And they said we need five people and I ranked
(58:15):
them and number one said, yes it was Charlemagne. But
so I so there I was walk in the red carpet.
You know, Bobby, look here, Bobby, look here. People didn't
say how do you feel about this award? You know
what they said to me, how do you know Charlemagne?
Speaker 13 (58:29):
How did you get them to do this.
Speaker 23 (58:32):
Really.
Speaker 5 (58:33):
I love Bobby and I love her husband, Steven.
Speaker 3 (58:35):
And the thing I like that you bring people together,
like you know that that dinner you had with all
of these different people.
Speaker 10 (58:41):
Walk their life to matha class and just making everybody
like Salmon Rushty was at that dinner. I'm like, I'm
sitting there with like Charlemagne and Salmon Rushty, you know,
and Don Garber, the Major League Soccer czar, because.
Speaker 3 (58:53):
It's amazing conversation. Everybody, you know, put their phones down
and just talk. And I just think that does so
much and bringing people together, man, And I think we
need these kind of safe spaces in this world that
we're in right now.
Speaker 14 (59:03):
That's what you're sit down conversations are like too. All
those people, I'm like, I never would have even known
who these people were.
Speaker 13 (59:09):
And people are.
Speaker 10 (59:10):
Interesting, by the way. I love people's stories. And Jones
Road just launched something called Beauty Stories because I want
to share people's beauty stories. You know, think about your grandma,
your mom, your aunt, Where did you learn and what
things kind of stay with you.
Speaker 25 (59:24):
I love that.
Speaker 4 (59:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (59:26):
Still, Bobby, A masterclass and leading and authentic life is
available everywhere you buy books right now that's right, so.
Speaker 4 (59:32):
Make sure you pick it up.
Speaker 11 (59:33):
And we appreciate you for joining us absolutely and thank
you so much, my pleasure, thank you for having me,
Bobby Brown the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (59:39):
Come morning and it's time for the Latest to Lauren.
Speaker 4 (59:42):
Lauren becoming a street face.
Speaker 2 (59:45):
She gets them from somebody that knows something problem detail.
Speaker 13 (59:48):
I'm a home girl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 5 (59:51):
She'd be having the latest on you. The latest with
Lauren la Rosa.
Speaker 3 (59:56):
Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details. Sometimes you
have a little bit of everyth tolist the leading on
the Breakfast clouds. I just want y'all to know too.
Lauren Lorossa has broke her fast. Her thirty day fast
was drinking. So if you hear slearning the words and
silly stuff, it's because she back on that boost.
Speaker 13 (01:00:12):
First all, I haven't had even drink.
Speaker 5 (01:00:14):
You just almost fell just now for no damn reason.
Speaker 13 (01:00:16):
That chair wrong?
Speaker 3 (01:00:18):
Who steps on the chair? You' supposed to just sit
in it? Who steps on it? Because what continue?
Speaker 13 (01:00:23):
That's okay.
Speaker 14 (01:00:26):
I am really excited because we just came back from
the iHeart Music Festival and I was rewatching some of
the stream as we were getting ready for this segment,
and man, I had such a good time.
Speaker 13 (01:00:36):
It was my first I Heart Music festival. Charlotte, you
were there.
Speaker 5 (01:00:39):
I was there.
Speaker 3 (01:00:39):
I enjoyed myself. Tell them how you embraced something front
of Mariah Carey that was amazing.
Speaker 14 (01:00:44):
We will get to it. I actually didn't get a
chance to embarrass myself. I couldn't wait to do it.
Speaker 13 (01:00:47):
I love Mariah Carey. I am a lamb. So the
I Heart Music Festivals down at the Tea Womble Arena
in Las Vegas.
Speaker 14 (01:00:54):
Llll COOLJ performed a big exa plug, Billy Zimmerman, Brian
Adams at Sharon dip Low Glow Rilla closed out the
second night, Jelly Roll took the people to church, John
Foggerty Justice, Mariah Carey.
Speaker 13 (01:01:07):
As we've been talking about Maroon five, that don only
mean this.
Speaker 14 (01:01:10):
Oh fine, uh send me Hayguard, Tate McCray, who I
am now a huge fan of the Offspring, and Tim McGraw.
Speaker 13 (01:01:16):
So those were both of the nights. So those were
you know, all the big acts, major music that went
down in person. Now, Charlotmae, you have dropping.
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
From Mariah Carey. By the way, Yes, let me tell
you something.
Speaker 12 (01:01:27):
I know.
Speaker 3 (01:01:27):
Mariah Carey name never came up in no verses that
I can remember. A boy to be tough to take
Mariah out the verses?
Speaker 13 (01:01:32):
What you couldn't even who would she go get?
Speaker 3 (01:01:35):
I have?
Speaker 5 (01:01:36):
I don't know, RII got some joints.
Speaker 14 (01:01:39):
She would sit there so soft and just so like yeah,
I don't know. But so when a lot of a
lot of the performances at the Ihart Music Festival, that
was my reaction. When llocool J came on stage, I
was like, man, he has songs for days and days
and decades and decades and decades. Same thing with Mariah Carey.
Now you were talking about me embarrassing myself with Mariah Carey,
(01:02:00):
what actually happened was we were live on stream.
Speaker 13 (01:02:03):
So the Breakfast Club does have a Twitch account.
Speaker 14 (01:02:05):
Please make sure you guys are subbed, subscribed following us
all the things, because we took you into the festival
both nights, so you were backstage with us, you were
in the pit getting to wash the performances. And the
second night I dressed up because I wanted Mariah Carey
to see that, like, you know, she inspired my outfit.
Speaker 13 (01:02:22):
It was very like honey. You know, but let's take
a listen to me. Listen to Mariah care Honey, Yo,
Mariah Carrey's got to go on stage, Eli, we gotta
go see her.
Speaker 26 (01:02:34):
A few moments later, mariming of my outfit, it was
very Mariah Carey.
Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
Is all I needed was a fan?
Speaker 14 (01:02:50):
Oh my god, she didn't see me. My whole, my
whole thing. The second night was I need to get
right Mariah Carey. We were trying to get her on
stream and Glorella.
Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
She didn't see For those of us who can't see
your outfit, who didn't see your outfit?
Speaker 26 (01:03:02):
Yes, what about your outfield with Mariah carry is it
just gave like litter gold fan.
Speaker 13 (01:03:07):
Don't talk to me. I'm a lamb.
Speaker 3 (01:03:09):
No it didn't. Yes it did, Mariah scary maybe.
Speaker 14 (01:03:15):
Well you but speaking of backstage, you got a chance
to talk to a couple of people. So you got
a chance to talk to Ed Sheeran before he performed,
and y'all had an interesting conversation about him going to space.
Speaker 13 (01:03:26):
Let's take a listen to that.
Speaker 5 (01:03:27):
You know what I heard about.
Speaker 3 (01:03:28):
I heard that you you got to offer the performing space?
I did you turned it down?
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 27 (01:03:33):
Yeah, because they said it was like a thirty percent
chance I might die. So I was like, I'm good.
You've got you've got kids, like if they're not going
to space, and that's what I mean. Yeah, No, I
wouldn't mind going when it's like getting an uber, you know,
it's like.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
No, I don't want to do it, Danny, No, No,
you really want to visit space?
Speaker 27 (01:03:51):
No, when it's like you know, like some like going
to Antarctica now, like it's a mission, but you can
still do it and people do it. Yeah, I just
don't want to be like the fiftieth person.
Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
I'm cool on space.
Speaker 13 (01:04:02):
You know what's crazy?
Speaker 14 (01:04:03):
As Kay Sinnett was talking to Jennifer Hudson about him
trying to stream in space, he said the same thing.
They kept giving him all these statistics about how he
could die, and I'm like.
Speaker 5 (01:04:10):
I'm cool on that.
Speaker 3 (01:04:11):
Really, Yes, I'm cool. Got to go, Yeah, but I
don't want to rush it. There's so many places on
Earth I haven't been. Let me explore, let me shut
through this earth thing for us before I start going
to space.
Speaker 14 (01:04:24):
Well, you talked a big to on our stream about Glorilla,
and you know how Glorilla was the biggest, and you
know it was big because Glorilla got to close out
the second night after Mariah Carey. Let's take a listen
to some of Glorilla's performance from the second night.
Speaker 5 (01:04:38):
Gloria was scaring the white people, wasn't you?
Speaker 13 (01:04:40):
Oh my god, Yes, I.
Speaker 14 (01:04:42):
Just got done Mariah carry I was in bless big
Gloat comes on We're on stream and this white lady
turns to me and says, this is the most horrible
way to end the festival.
Speaker 13 (01:04:51):
I was like, what's wrong? Are you tired? Has it
been like a long night?
Speaker 3 (01:04:54):
And she was like, no, what is this?
Speaker 13 (01:04:56):
What is this song? What is this person? I was like,
Glorrilla is she? It was like, yes, this is horrible,
And I'm like.
Speaker 3 (01:05:03):
See the beauty of the iHeart Radio Music Festival, and
this is why you should go. It really is a
family a fair because it covers generations, right, So there's
gonna be something for the father, there's gonna be something
for the mother, there's gonna be something for the kids,
there's gonna be something for the grandkids.
Speaker 5 (01:05:16):
So you really can take, you know, the whole.
Speaker 3 (01:05:18):
Family to this show very much, right, because it does
go from you know, the offspring to a Mariah Carey,
to an ll cool J, to an ed Sharing to
a Gloilla to a big extra plug.
Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
So it's something for everybody.
Speaker 14 (01:05:31):
Yeah, and we were talking about some of the performances
so far, so you can also discover too.
Speaker 13 (01:05:35):
I mean, these artists are huge.
Speaker 14 (01:05:36):
It's not like you're finding them for the first time,
but some people you may be seeing them for the
first time. Tate mccraye, that was my first time seeing
her performed live. I am I'm locked in. I'm a
tatter top now I'm a fan.
Speaker 3 (01:05:45):
What what do you want to You can't be everything.
You can't be a Tata Todd, a Lamb or Swifty
Like no.
Speaker 14 (01:05:50):
God gave me the power to be all things through
him and I will be just that. I do want
to take a listen though, before we get out of here,
to ll cool J performing because you again his performance
went through the span of his career and I just
sat in silence, like, this.
Speaker 13 (01:06:02):
Man is amazing.
Speaker 3 (01:06:03):
Always think about the young lady on this record. Who
was the young lady on this record?
Speaker 13 (01:06:05):
I can look at him, not for sure, but I
will tell you one.
Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
Thing he opened by the way he opened up Friday night.
Speaker 14 (01:06:11):
Yes, yeah, that's Friday night. I was in the like
the VIP like riser thing in the back where you
have like you know, all the people that are invited.
Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
They did.
Speaker 14 (01:06:20):
They were doing it doing a wild Okay. They were
into those lyrics. Shout out tolkuj legend man Icon, Yes, Icon.
You got on Sage a couple of times. Did you
enjoy your experience like you got the intro Glorialow, which
was a major because you've been such a big, you know,
push for Glorilla.
Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
Who else I introduced me and Ryan Seacrest, and Ryan
Seacrest introduced big extra plug. I forgot what else I did.
I did a bunch of stuff backstage for Hulu. Jelly
wrote Me and Jelly roll talk backstage. I had him
on the Blue Scream.
Speaker 5 (01:06:46):
It was a great event, Maent. I'm telling you.
Speaker 13 (01:06:47):
They talked to Diplo.
Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
Diplo, Yes, iHeartRadio Music Festival is an event that you
should absolutely take your family to. And I'm not saying
that because I work for the company. I'm saying that
because it actually is an incredible weekend.
Speaker 13 (01:06:59):
I agree. I agree.
Speaker 14 (01:07:00):
Make sure you guys, if you missed, you know that
because I know that they were also streaming on Hulu
as well, but if you guys miss that, please go
over to the Breakfast Club's Twitch account. At the Breakfast Club,
am and we have both nights, and I take you
guys in and out of both nights, and it's such
a great time from behind the scenes to on the stage.
Speaker 3 (01:07:16):
I don't even know why we're here right now. Nobody
else here. I landed at ten o'clock last night.
Speaker 13 (01:07:21):
I am happy to be here.
Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
I am happy to be here, all right, So stop complaining.
Speaker 5 (01:07:25):
No I feel like complaining.
Speaker 14 (01:07:28):
Tell me Donkey's next said, don't get a dazz up
next Charlotte, what you got?
Speaker 3 (01:07:31):
Yes? For after the hour, I'm gonna tell you why
you need to mind your business right No, for real,
there's a man named Ishmael Tina. He should have minded
his business, and uh, you know what, we'll talk about
it for after the hours.
Speaker 5 (01:07:42):
Don't get a day. It's time for Donkey of the Day.
So if you ever feel I need to be a
dog man with the heat.
Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
Did please do I become of the day The Breakfast
Club bitch donk here today for Monday, September twenty secon
it goes to a New Mexico man named Ishmael Tina.
He's twenty seven years old. Why in as far as
I'm concerned, okay, and he's accused of two counts of
open murder in the first degree. It is some cold
(01:08:13):
bloody killers out here, man.
Speaker 5 (01:08:14):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:08:14):
I was talking to my wife last night, and I
was telling her how to we live in a world that,
for the most part is.
Speaker 5 (01:08:20):
It's just built on trust.
Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
Like we all have to trust each other in order
for us to have a civilized society. Okay, what do
I mean by that? I mean everything from waking up
to take public transportation. I don't care if it's a
bus ride, shat service, trained airplane. You have to trust
whoever is driving that vehicle to get you to your
destination safely. You have to trust all the passengers on
those rides not going bug out.
Speaker 5 (01:08:42):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:08:42):
We drop our kids off at school, we have to
trust the principles and trust the teachers and trust the
staff to take care of our kids. Humans have to
have this trust system, Okay. Humans have to trust other
humans to not be crazy in order for us to
have a civilized society. That's the only thing that keeps
this world civilized insane for the most part, and we
do a good job, you know, give a take, hey,
(01:09:04):
because it's way more humans doing the.
Speaker 5 (01:09:05):
Right thing than it is people like Ishmael Tina.
Speaker 3 (01:09:08):
Okay, there's a lot of decent men in this country
of demons, but Ishmael Tina is not one of them.
Speaker 5 (01:09:13):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
See, two people are dead because of Ishmael. And I
know some of y'all might be saying people get shot
every day, be but no, they're not supposed to.
Speaker 5 (01:09:22):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:09:23):
I know Charlie kirk One said, I think it's worth
it to have a cost of unfortunately some gun deaths
every single year so we can have the Second Amendment
to protect our other God given rights. I don't all
the way agree with that, okay, because majority of these
gun deaths are just senseless and this is just the
latest example. Let's go to KRQE News thirteen for the report.
Speaker 24 (01:09:41):
Police calling nine to one one only to end up
in handcuffs himself. That's the pattern for twenty seven year
old Ismael Tanna, who is most recently behind bars for
the deadly shooting of two O'Reilly Auto Parts employees following
a dispute over an oil filter court record, so Tanna
called nine to one one shortly after that Sunday shooting
(01:10:02):
outside the store near Coors and Blake that killed forty
seven year old Richard Newman and eighteen year old has
Sus Waldez. Tennant told the dispatcher the two employees came
after him and he was scared for his life. But
when berte Leo County deputies arrived, they determined that Tenant
should be charged with two counts of murder.
Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
This Monday man oil filters, oil filters. Two people shot
dead because of oil filters, Ripeter Richard Newman, forty seven
and Jesus Valdez, eighteen. I feel sorry for those individuals.
That poor eighteen year old young man, man life just
getting started. This might have been his first job, not
a dead or we oil filters. Let me also take
(01:10:44):
the time to say I don't care where you work, Okay,
I don't care what the place of employment is. I
can assure you that business isn't dying for you, and
you shouldn't.
Speaker 5 (01:10:53):
Die for set business. Okay. If that man and his.
Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
Father walked out of there with oil filters without paying
the police, okay, call law enforcement. There's no need to
play vigilanity. There's no need to go after those individuals.
Let them have whatever they took. Because people are crazy.
I don't think y'all understand how unhealed trauma is leading
people to project that pain and hurt they are feeling
onto other individuals.
Speaker 5 (01:11:16):
Yes, two people.
Speaker 3 (01:11:17):
Killed in New Mexico over oil filters, but trust and
believe there's somebody somewhere today who will get killed for
less why because of other people's underlying trauma. Okay, Ishmael
should have realized a long time ago that his feelings
are temporary, but prison is permanent, especially when you charged
with two counts of murder. And that is the lesson
I want us all to take from this story. That's
(01:11:38):
what I want you to understand from Donkey of to
day to day. Don't make permanent decisions based on temporary emotions,
or you will find yourself by yourself in a prison
cell or even worse, a casket.
Speaker 5 (01:11:52):
Please give Ishmael Tina the biggest.
Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
He huh.
Speaker 5 (01:11:58):
Oil filters.
Speaker 12 (01:12:01):
You can.
Speaker 5 (01:12:02):
It's beyond that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:03):
Okay, Now, let's woo sup. Because Lauren l Rosso was
in here crying about something earlier, you weren't crying, but you,
but you be remediscent though you hear certain things and
you get triggered. And we had to cast the Reasonable
Doubt here last week, and this conversation sparked from that.
From that conversation, if you really love the person, you
(01:12:24):
probably would have been more careful, wouldn't shed to begin
with about a.
Speaker 13 (01:12:27):
Lot of things?
Speaker 5 (01:12:29):
Go a little bit further on that she really cheated?
Speaker 3 (01:12:31):
What happened.
Speaker 14 (01:12:34):
The women cheat? I got you said women do their
thing is different. Just because I love Jackson.
Speaker 13 (01:12:44):
Cheating cheap they were separated, you forgot.
Speaker 3 (01:12:53):
What I'm talking about, Like, we can't do that though?
What's wrong.
Speaker 21 (01:13:05):
Now?
Speaker 3 (01:13:05):
For everybody who watches Reasonable Doubt? You know that Jax
and her husband Lewis are dealing with the aftermath of
a break baby that Lewis and Tony had. And even
though it's a TV show, that happened to you in
real life, Laura, take a deep breath.
Speaker 5 (01:13:23):
And telling the story.
Speaker 3 (01:13:24):
Don't curse and stuff like you did when the MIC's
raw off. Just just tell the story calmly, my story
or jack your story. We know what happened with Jackson.
That's the story. Your opinion is way more hilarious.
Speaker 13 (01:13:35):
To me, but go ahead, you are a horrible person. Okay.
Speaker 14 (01:13:39):
So somebody that I was seeing a while ago, who
doesn't matter anymore. We I moved to a different No,
they don't. I moved to a different state, and I
was like, you know what, let's just take a break.
This ain't working out, saying to eye blah blah blah.
I even said, you can go ahead and see other people,
because let's just be honest. We're in two different states.
I'm in La or across the country. Baby that less
(01:14:04):
the other people led to a baby, which is okay,
and then you got back with the man.
Speaker 13 (01:14:08):
I decided to get back with him.
Speaker 3 (01:14:09):
I'm no longer with him, though.
Speaker 5 (01:14:10):
Let's talk about accountability. Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
Yes, Now, if you and a person decide to take
a break, and y'all say we're taking a break and
you see other people, if that person goes out there
and gets another individual pregnant, and then you choose choice,
remember that choice, choose choice, choose you choose to get
back with that individual, there should be nothing to complain about.
Speaker 14 (01:14:31):
So my only complaint was there shouldn't be anything. My
only complaint was that there was a lot of lying
that happened like I. And also I shouldn't have had
to hear from from anybody else but the person that
I was in a relationship with for all that time.
Speaker 5 (01:14:44):
And so they chose to take the person back.
Speaker 13 (01:14:46):
Yeah, but still things.
Speaker 14 (01:14:48):
Can still upset you and you know, hurt a little
bit at the time. And also too, I feel like
even though there was a break, we had had conversations
about what the rules of the break.
Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
Were, knew we were getting the baby.
Speaker 13 (01:15:00):
Yes, we had a conversation.
Speaker 14 (01:15:01):
Nobody ends up pregnant and no full relationships during this
break either.
Speaker 13 (01:15:06):
The plan was to get back together.
Speaker 3 (01:15:08):
Okay, But even with all of that, he went out there,
he violated the rules, he had a baby. You still
took him back, Lauren. You made a choice. You chose
to take that individual back. How can you be mad
at that man if you chose to take them back,
If it was that serious, you would have took them back.
Speaker 14 (01:15:24):
That's not true. Women take men back for things that
are very serious all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
But you still made the choices. What I'm saying, you
made a choice to get back with this person. So
what is the issue? Nothing, I'm just throwing things.
Speaker 13 (01:15:44):
What is the question? Because I'm confused.
Speaker 3 (01:15:46):
Why what is the question? I guess we're just having
a discussion about break babies. Should that be a deal
breaker in a relationship? Because my thing is if people,
if the women are choosing to take these men back
after they have babies, are vice versas. I'm sure there's
situations where a man chose to take a woman back
if she had a baby, if they're to have these
If y'all are choosing to take these individuals back, why is.
Speaker 5 (01:16:09):
It a problem?
Speaker 14 (01:16:10):
Because you still have emotions involved, and that's a it's
a whole. So don't take the preson's raising.
Speaker 13 (01:16:15):
It's not that easy.
Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
Well, let's talk about it. Five and five one oh
five to one.
Speaker 5 (01:16:19):
What is our opinion of break babies?
Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
It is our opinion they are break babies, little break baby. Okay,
it's the Breakfast Club, Breakfast Club.
Speaker 15 (01:16:37):
It's topic time called eight hundred five five one five
one to join into the discussion with the breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
Yes, it's the world's most dangerous morning to show the
Breakfast Club charlamagnea god dj NV just hilarious.
Speaker 5 (01:16:49):
Envy and jests are off the day.
Speaker 3 (01:16:51):
But llll cool bays Heir Lauren Lorossa and a reasonable
doubt got us talking break babies. You know, Jackson and
Lewis are dealing with the aftermath of a break baby
that Lewis and Tony had. On reasonable doubt, Tony is
actually suing Jackson Lewis for the baby's death. Yeah, and
that is, you know, a big event in season two.
It carries into the new season of the show because
(01:17:12):
the baby died, if I'm not mistaken, but we bought
that up because that triggered law and the roster, because
that actually happened to you, not the baby dying and everything, but.
Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Used to data.
Speaker 3 (01:17:23):
Man and the man 'all went on a break, Yes,
and then the man got another girl pregnant. Yes, and
then you took the man back.
Speaker 13 (01:17:30):
Yeah, But so what, I could still be mad. I
have the right to still feel away about it.
Speaker 3 (01:17:33):
I'm not saying that you shouldn't feel away, but I
feel like it felt away, felt away. But I feel
like if you, in an individual, chose to go on
a break and you say you went off and had
a baby, or that guy went off and had a baby, if.
Speaker 14 (01:17:46):
You choose to get back with that person, then you
have to accept that if I had went off and
had a baby, that man would have never even looked
my way spoke to me again. Men, Well, let me
not just say man, because women can be wrong with
situations too. But in this situation, I dealt with what
I felt like was because I was the woman. It
was just automatically assumed that because I said, Okay, let's
continue to try to do this, that I didn't have
(01:18:08):
feelings about the situation.
Speaker 3 (01:18:09):
That's not fair, But you shouldn't take the person back
if you're gonna be still upset about it.
Speaker 5 (01:18:13):
I really truly feel that.
Speaker 14 (01:18:14):
But that's like if somebody cheats, right and you know
you've been through this, you get back with your wife
and y'all figure it out and y'all work things out.
There were still feelings that y'all had to go through
and talk through just because she took you back, though,
mean it erases the slate.
Speaker 3 (01:18:26):
It don't happen like that, absolutely, but you can't keep
bringing it back up if you chose to be back
with that person. See.
Speaker 13 (01:18:32):
But Jackson's situation reason that is a bit different too,
because not only is there you.
Speaker 5 (01:18:35):
Know they been there. Lauren is way more entertaining than Jackson.
Speaker 13 (01:18:38):
Okay, don't say that about my girl and mayatzi Oka.
Speaker 5 (01:18:41):
Cool, I'm talking about your situation.
Speaker 14 (01:18:43):
No, you just like me being in trauma. But if
it's fine though, because I'm in such a better place now.
One thing I learned, I'm not doing no breaks.
Speaker 5 (01:18:49):
The why it still trigger you?
Speaker 14 (01:18:50):
Then it triggered me because I just remember how I felt.
I remember having a find out from somebody that was
other than him, my whole family finding out, and how
embarrassing that was having a deal with the Now you're
watching him raise a kid with another person, and you right.
Speaker 5 (01:19:04):
There with him because you chose to take him back.
Speaker 14 (01:19:05):
So you step mama, Yeah, but it's staying, man, shut up,
color my baby grim I mean, my mom, grandma, everything.
Speaker 13 (01:19:13):
But it still was. It was hurt, like you feel
hurt still, Like.
Speaker 3 (01:19:16):
It's just like, ugh, well, let's go through the phone
and see how these break babies have impacted.
Speaker 5 (01:19:21):
Good morning.
Speaker 3 (01:19:21):
Who's this hey, neque Monique?
Speaker 5 (01:19:23):
How are you?
Speaker 20 (01:19:24):
Hey?
Speaker 13 (01:19:24):
Onique?
Speaker 17 (01:19:25):
I'm hearing, how are you?
Speaker 3 (01:19:26):
I'm blessed black and Holly Favor. Are you a break
baby or do you know? Did your man have a
break baby on you?
Speaker 17 (01:19:31):
So it wasn't technically a break so we literally were
like dating. There wasn't like a title or anything. We
were dating for like six months and now Mindie, we're
just dating, so I don't know this shid that there's
a baby, and.
Speaker 7 (01:19:44):
Then the bomb was dropped.
Speaker 17 (01:19:46):
I didn't find out about the baby until two weeks
before she had the baby, So like the whole time
we were dating, I didn't know there was a baby
about to see being born. So, like Lauren said, it's
really like the lying part of it, because technically we
weren't in a official relationship, but we were dating, like
(01:20:07):
as if staff that we were moving towards. But it's
like you let you lie the whole time, and then
I had to find out when somebody else.
Speaker 25 (01:20:14):
You didn't even tell me.
Speaker 17 (01:20:16):
Then That's really the part that's hard to get over
is the line, yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:20:20):
I'm with you, I don't think your situation is the same.
On the reason I don't think your situation is the
same cause we're talking about people who are in relationships
broke up, you know, for whatever, They went on a
break from each other, and then during the break the
person got somebody PREGNANTY.
Speaker 25 (01:20:33):
Yeah, but I still feel.
Speaker 22 (01:20:35):
Like it's a it's a betrayal of trust.
Speaker 20 (01:20:37):
Though, are in.
Speaker 13 (01:20:40):
Intense that.
Speaker 17 (01:20:47):
I feel like you're dating with the intent of being
in a relationship. So it's like, if you're gonna lie.
Speaker 7 (01:20:53):
About that and we technically aren't even official, then what else.
Speaker 3 (01:20:58):
Are you gonna lie about with you? But six months
is such a temporary period that is like, come on, man,
like that's the probationary period. Good morning. Who's this?
Speaker 21 (01:21:07):
Taylor?
Speaker 3 (01:21:08):
Peace? Taylor? How are you all right?
Speaker 20 (01:21:10):
How you doing?
Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
Tarler, Bless Black and Holly Favorite so talk. We're talking
break babies, break baby.
Speaker 20 (01:21:15):
If I had one child and my kids father cheated
on me and it had another child, a daughter outside
of our son. We decided to get back together and
we had a third Chile together and we weren't married,
but I took me and his break baby and we
ended up having another child. So we had four kids
with this break baby, and it was hard because people
does having kids after our third one. But I wanted
(01:21:37):
a girl. The only girl we had was the break baby.
So Lauren, I think you get the right things. I'm
moving on because now this break baby takes me all
the time. She said me, send your heads off.
Speaker 13 (01:21:48):
Well, you got kids, though, so you got siblings.
Speaker 14 (01:21:50):
So y'all have to like that's that's hard too, because
no matter emotionally how you feel, you got to put
the kids first. But the fact out of you saying
you wanted a baby girl and his own only baby
girl is the baby that he had outside.
Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
I know that hurt you.
Speaker 20 (01:22:03):
I know that hurt yeah. Yeah, But I came back around, Lauren.
So by the time our fourth child got about pin no,
he said for in kindergarten, I took another break and
I had a baby. So now he raises my daughter.
Speaker 13 (01:22:15):
I know that's right.
Speaker 4 (01:22:16):
Yuh.
Speaker 5 (01:22:19):
So you got a break baby and he got a
break baby.
Speaker 20 (01:22:22):
Yes, my break baby sick for his break baby seventeen.
I got your heads yesterday and this morning he sent
in mind to kindergarten.
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
But this is what I respect about both of y'all.
Y'all made a choice. Y'all took a break, y'all ended
up having other babies, and then y'all made a choice
to be back together. And now y'all are co parenting
the way you should because both of y'all made choices
to be with each other again.
Speaker 20 (01:22:44):
We did, and then accountability was hard because when she
got about six seven eight, I was like, look, I
want my own daughter.
Speaker 3 (01:22:50):
She was never there.
Speaker 20 (01:22:51):
The mom didn't like me. I couldn't buy her certain clothes.
So yeah, I kind of wish I would have bought
out earlier. But at the same time, it kind of
worked out. But I still have never married me.
Speaker 5 (01:23:01):
I'm still single, so yeah damn wait so you oh, okay.
Speaker 22 (01:23:07):
He never married me.
Speaker 20 (01:23:07):
We've been together to two thousand and four. I was
born in two thousand and six. Yes, I oldest, just
turning nineteen in November. You might feel but I'm like,
we didn't raise big break babies and we still ain't married.
Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
He might feel like he can't trust you, but I
don't know why he feels like exactly right. Thank you
for calling.
Speaker 13 (01:23:27):
It's crazy.
Speaker 5 (01:23:27):
Did you heard what she said?
Speaker 22 (01:23:28):
Though?
Speaker 5 (01:23:28):
Accountability? Okay, and that's my only thing.
Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
If you choose to still be with the person after
the break baby, then then that's on you.
Speaker 5 (01:23:36):
You gotta eat that.
Speaker 3 (01:23:37):
Reasonable doubt the show on Hulu. I guess y'all not
watching it because a bunch of y'all deleted y'all Disney
accounts allegedly. Okay, after you know they got rid of
Jimmy Kimmel.
Speaker 13 (01:23:48):
That's what that's one there either, So please go watch
the Breakfast Club twitch.
Speaker 5 (01:23:52):
Oh that is true. Reasonable doubt.
Speaker 3 (01:23:54):
God is talking about break babies because you know, Jackson
Lewis are dealing with the the aftermath of a break
baby that Lewis and Tony had and Lauren l Rossa
had a situation where you know, she was with a
guy and they went on a break in.
Speaker 13 (01:24:06):
We'll never break again. I will never like the relationship
I'm in right now.
Speaker 25 (01:24:11):
We in it.
Speaker 13 (01:24:11):
We either gonna do.
Speaker 14 (01:24:12):
It or not.
Speaker 13 (01:24:13):
I'm not breaking nothing because it's just uh.
Speaker 3 (01:24:15):
Nope, the man went on the break had a baby,
but Lauren, you still took him back.
Speaker 5 (01:24:18):
I did, Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:24:20):
My only thing is if you are a woman and
y'all going to break and the man ends up having
a baby and you take him back, then you.
Speaker 14 (01:24:26):
Have to eat that you made a choice to get
back with that and even after you because even after
I got over the anger of it, the hurt, like
it was so bad for us for probably like that
first year, like every days where I didn't even speak
to him and I know that he wasn't happy in
that situation. That's another thing too, It's like you can't
but you can't you Sometimes you literally can't stop. It'd
be small things like I remember my first time seeing
(01:24:47):
a picture of the baby. I cried for like three days.
Speaker 3 (01:24:49):
Damn it hurts. Why I take the man back? Because
made you think you should take him back.
Speaker 14 (01:24:54):
In the back of your mind, you're thinking, like, Okay,
I've invested this time in this person. I'm here and
I wanted like this was the person that I thought
I wanted.
Speaker 13 (01:25:03):
To do all that with. Let me just not throw
it away. Let me try. But that was the hardest
thing I ever tried to get through. I would not
suggest it for anybody.
Speaker 3 (01:25:10):
My thing is, if you're gonna take the man back,
you better be the best step mommy you can be.
Speaker 5 (01:25:13):
I don't want to hear all.
Speaker 13 (01:25:14):
That step mom until we broke up.
Speaker 5 (01:25:17):
Good morning, who's this?
Speaker 25 (01:25:18):
Good morning? Good morning. This is Randa Conor from its Town.
Speaker 5 (01:25:21):
He's Roonda.
Speaker 3 (01:25:22):
How are you.
Speaker 25 (01:25:22):
I'm blessing Holly Favor.
Speaker 9 (01:25:23):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (01:25:24):
I'm blessed Black and Holly Favorite. Now we're talking break babies.
Speaker 5 (01:25:27):
Talk to me. What's your story?
Speaker 21 (01:25:29):
So I feel a break?
Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
Baby?
Speaker 25 (01:25:31):
If you take the person back, you have to take
it all back. You knew what they did you accepted it.
But now Lauren said that they had turns and he
broke the terms. Okay, so you broke the terms and
you brought a baby, So you have to be able
to accept that knowing that you might find out more
so that was a choice you made and you have
to live with that and you can't continue to bring
(01:25:53):
it back in the situation. I know it's the baby,
There's gonna be triggers you. You have to live with that,
and you have to figure that out yourself, the same
way as infidelity. If you say, okay, I forgive you,
there's gonna be triggers, and you have to go and
figure that out yourself, because you cannot continue.
Speaker 17 (01:26:07):
To hold that over a person's head for years or
so long, because it's not right.
Speaker 25 (01:26:11):
If you say you forgive it, you for you don't forget.
Speaker 21 (01:26:14):
But if you forgive, you have to move on.
Speaker 22 (01:26:15):
And if you can't, then let.
Speaker 5 (01:26:17):
That person be I agree wholeheartedly.
Speaker 3 (01:26:20):
If you don't like something, let it go and leave
it alone.
Speaker 5 (01:26:23):
Don't take that something and say.
Speaker 3 (01:26:25):
Hey, we're back together, and then make life miserable for
you and that person for the rest of you all lives.
That's ridiculous. Together, I know, But when y'all were together,
you was being miserable. Why you chose to get back
with that person? Good morning?
Speaker 16 (01:26:37):
Who's this?
Speaker 7 (01:26:38):
This is Kelly?
Speaker 3 (01:26:39):
How are you, Pece Kelly? How are you? We're talking
to break Oh? Go ahead, I'm sorry. How are you?
Speaker 20 (01:26:44):
I'm doing good.
Speaker 3 (01:26:45):
I'm glad to hear that we're talking break babies this morning.
Tell me your story. You might be entired of the conversation.
Speaker 22 (01:26:53):
Okay, I don't have a break baby story. The story
I got is not is not safe radio. But with
Lauren and first, I want to say, Lauren and jes
you ladies have bossed up so well and I'm so
proud of both of you and started off a little rocky,
but y'all boss lady through it and y'all got through it.
(01:27:16):
But with that being said, when you build up that
type of persona characteristics within yourself, you think that that's
supposed to guide every part of your life. And even
in the face of all the boundaries you set when
you guys decided to take your break, you still win
against the boundaries that you set because you made the
(01:27:37):
decision with your heart. And it's okay to have made
a decision with your heart. We all do that as
women every now and then. It doesn't make you any
less of a boss lady because you made a decision
with your heart. The key is, as you get older,
you learn that it's two sides to accord with women.
We the boss ladies and we're vulnerable. The key is
(01:27:59):
not to let either side dictate more than the other
and create that balance. But that comes with time, life
lessons and wisdom. I'm fifty two and I learned that
because when I was your age, I was doing the
same thing. But as I got older and I got
more wisdom, I learned that either side can't dominate the other.
I have to create that balance that.
Speaker 14 (01:28:20):
Talkin that's crazy because me and so in the relationship
I'm in now, That's one of the conversations we have
a lot this weekend because I do struggle with that often,
like trying to, you know, be in control, and because
in my everyday life I'm in charge, I have to be.
In my relationship. I got to learn to, like you know,
to let a man be a man. So that that's
been a very challenging and I don't have like you.
Speaker 3 (01:28:40):
But you got two guys, though so maybe you can
be a boss with one and then be vulnerable with us.
Speaker 14 (01:28:44):
Maybe you can go to you know what, maybe you
maybe you can go there. Okay, I think they have
a seat reserved. Well okay, and the heat and the fire.
Speaker 5 (01:28:53):
I'm gonna tell you what I fire.
Speaker 3 (01:28:54):
Funny the fact that the women that call up here
that got break babies actually call them break babies, like
do you have them?
Speaker 5 (01:29:00):
Same under your phone is break?
Speaker 23 (01:29:01):
No, you don't do that.
Speaker 5 (01:29:04):
Imagine being called a break baby in a heated argument.
Speaker 13 (01:29:07):
At least listen, I might not have a dad, but
at least it was no break baby.
Speaker 3 (01:29:11):
I was on purpose.
Speaker 13 (01:29:13):
They told her mom my mom. Yes, my mom has
always told me he sought him out because she was
ready to have me. Okay, what.
Speaker 3 (01:29:23):
You weren't conceived out of love?
Speaker 5 (01:29:25):
She just went to seek somebody out.
Speaker 13 (01:29:27):
It was a passion.
Speaker 5 (01:29:30):
You like a test tube baby, not a break.
Speaker 13 (01:29:36):
Oh my god, she was her clock. She had to
get me here.
Speaker 18 (01:29:39):
Damn.
Speaker 3 (01:29:39):
Do we have the ladies with Lauren coming up? Yes?
Speaker 7 (01:29:42):
We do.
Speaker 2 (01:29:44):
Why my fault?
Speaker 5 (01:29:45):
You just told us that your mommy just had you
because the time was running out.
Speaker 3 (01:29:50):
It was the bottom of the not God, you are
feel goal.
Speaker 5 (01:29:55):
She made it though, what you a feel goal at
the end of the game.
Speaker 14 (01:29:59):
Lord coming up next to the latest, we have Lebron James.
He is finally speaking on where him and Drake, saying, today.
Speaker 5 (01:30:07):
All right, we'll talk about a week come back at
the Breakfast Club. The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (01:30:13):
Yes, it's one of the most dangerous morning to show
the Brakfast Club. Charlamagnea God, DJ, Envy Jets Hilarious. Envy
and Jess are not here today, but l Cool Bay
is Laura La Rosa and it's time for the latest.
Speaker 4 (01:30:24):
Lauren be coming a straight fast.
Speaker 2 (01:30:27):
She gets them to somebody that knows somebody detail.
Speaker 13 (01:30:30):
I'm the lone girl that knows a little bit about everything,
and she'd be.
Speaker 5 (01:30:33):
Having the latest on you. The Latest with Lauren la Rossa.
Speaker 4 (01:30:38):
Sometimes you have.
Speaker 3 (01:30:39):
Facts, sometimes you have details, sometimes you have a little
bit of everything.
Speaker 5 (01:30:42):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (01:30:44):
Talk to me.
Speaker 14 (01:30:46):
Lebron sat down with Speedy for three sixty with Speedy
on Complex and they talk about a ton of things,
but they did get into Drake and Lebron's relationship.
Speaker 13 (01:30:55):
At this point. Let's take a listen.
Speaker 11 (01:30:57):
Someone you have been friends with seemingly forever, Drake are
y'all cool, what's the status?
Speaker 3 (01:31:02):
There is this someone you always have love for, always,
always always wish him the best obviously different places right
now currently he's doing this thing.
Speaker 5 (01:31:10):
I'm doing mine, but it's always love for sure, and
dropping the clues bonds with Speedy though be getting them.
Speaker 3 (01:31:16):
Goney, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, I could care
that's about Lebron and Drake, but I'm glad that Speedy
got that sit down Lebron.
Speaker 13 (01:31:23):
Yes, question off, Yes, it was a great I did.
Speaker 14 (01:31:26):
I was expecting Speedy to follow up a little bit
more get into the things, but it wasn't up there
because we've never heard Lebron speak about it.
Speaker 13 (01:31:32):
He's always just moved on as if there was nothing
actually happening.
Speaker 5 (01:31:36):
So, yeah, shout out my speedy style.
Speaker 14 (01:31:38):
Sometimes he will, he'll jokingly do it, and by this
point in the interview him and Lebron had already joked.
He didn't been through the Lebron be lying like, you know,
he's really good at making all of the talent that
he sits with it feel like they the homie.
Speaker 13 (01:31:51):
So I think he could have in his own speedy,
funny way.
Speaker 14 (01:31:54):
I think it would have worked. But only he could
have done it in that like it would have had
to be like funny. But he was very funny throughout
whole interview, as he always is, So I think he
could have done it. But I did want to know
specifically what that Lebron if he even cared about the
whole tattoo removal, like that whole thing with Drake.
Speaker 3 (01:32:08):
Drake Bron probably like you should have never got the
tattoo to begin with. First of all, let's be clear
about choices. I keep telling you all about choices. Why
y'all don't want to respect choices. Drake made the choice
to go get Lebron's name or the jersey tattooed on him. Okay,
that was a personal choice. Thing, got none to do it, Bron.
Speaker 13 (01:32:23):
Well, we will never know. Maybe we just don't know
right now.
Speaker 3 (01:32:27):
But shout out to Speedy.
Speaker 13 (01:32:28):
But that was an update that wentn't crazy because people
just wanted to hear it.
Speaker 14 (01:32:31):
Now, in other news, speaking of things that people going
crazy this weekend, there's an AI music artist.
Speaker 13 (01:32:37):
Her name is Zania Monet.
Speaker 14 (01:32:39):
Now, the news came out over the weekend as Zania
Monette signed a multi million dollar record deal. Now, this
had a lot of artists upset, like actual music artists,
human artists, Uh, Kaylani, Sizza, Chloe Bailey, they all came
out and had some things to say.
Speaker 13 (01:32:56):
Let's take a listen to Kaylani.
Speaker 1 (01:32:58):
There is an AI R and B artists who just
signed a multi million dollar deal and has a top
five R and B album and is the person is
doing none of the work. I think you guys think
that AI can just be the cover for something which
some people can use. They can make an AI cover.
AI can also make the entire song. You can have
(01:33:18):
a song that's one type of song and say AI
make this into a country song and it'll literally rewrite,
re sing in a country voice and redo the entire thing.
And they don't have to credit anyone, nothing, and no
one on earth will ever be able to justify AI
to me, especially not in the creative arts in which
(01:33:39):
people have worked hard for, trained for, slept on the
floor for, and got injuries for, worked for their entire lives.
Speaker 13 (01:33:47):
I'm sorry, I don't respect it. She's got a void now,
nimn A. This a little known fact.
Speaker 14 (01:33:54):
So she's an R and B artist and she has
a crazy amount of streams online, but here's the thing.
Money is actually an AI powered creation of a Mississippi
woman named Talisia Jones.
Speaker 3 (01:34:05):
And that's what I was about to ask, who created her?
Speaker 14 (01:34:07):
Yeah, so Talisia Jones, who writes her own lyrics, uses
the AI platform Sono to make them into music. And
this has sparked the conversation because you know, there were
a lot of when the news broke up the meeting,
even before the deal was signed, there was a lot
of conversation about, you know, how do you even do
that deal? Because you know, the human is going to
own certain things, and then the label has to come
(01:34:28):
in a certain way, and there's just a lot of
different ways to shift to think about you.
Speaker 3 (01:34:30):
Should get Telisia is like the artist, so I'm sure
she's got the deal.
Speaker 13 (01:34:34):
Yeah, she is the one who inked the deal.
Speaker 14 (01:34:36):
And it says creators like Jones can secure intellectual property
protection on the lyrics and music they write themselves, but
the protection depends on the extent to which AI is
using the process and to what extent they disclose that,
like how much do you tell what it's been used?
But yeah, so people came out swinging about this. They
were very upset, but I will say the music is good.
Speaker 3 (01:34:55):
I mean, if Talisia Jones is an actual artist herself
and she actually writes herself and she decides, did you
know what I want to have me an AI artist
that I'm going to you know, write music for and
help coach AI to create music for. I don't know
if that's a problem. If I was these artists like
Kilani and everybody else, I'd be creating me an artist too.
Speaker 14 (01:35:15):
Listens, let's take a listen to them on a music
Let's listen.
Speaker 28 (01:35:20):
Love don't sound like sounds. Love don't feel like that.
I swear my forget what freeom feels like. Feel Shoot, lady,
(01:35:47):
you got to keep what you're send me free and
I'm losing myself trying to love you more than me.
Speaker 5 (01:35:54):
I can't freeze, I can't move.
Speaker 3 (01:36:04):
If this is where the music industry is going, right,
I just wonder, like, if you create an artist who
gets production and writing credits, will the creators of these
AI platforms be able to say, Hey, you made this
on our platform, so we get a piece of it, Like,
do we get a piece of the production, we get
a piece of the publishing. I just I don't know
(01:36:24):
where does it end so.
Speaker 14 (01:36:26):
Based on I'm reading a Billboard report and they're kind
of having that conversation. They say that it's a case
by case basis because the US Copyright Offices issued a
major report that said that the use of AI is
an assistive tool for human expression, which would be fair.
So it makes you know, fair game when you're trying
to claim different things. But it's case by case because
(01:36:47):
I guess it depends on who lends.
Speaker 3 (01:36:48):
What to what if the AI is writing the lyrics,
if the AI did the beat, Like I'm just saying,
I wonder who gets credit, Like, will the creators of
these AI platforms be able to, you know, claim credit
because it's their platform. I don't know.
Speaker 14 (01:37:02):
I don't know, because even in this situation, there are
some legal experts that were saying that the AI her
using the AI assistant tool made it a little tricky
because the lyrics were pinned by Jones, who was the
actual woman who writes the stuff and they're obviously hers,
but her managers say that she used a combination of
you know, different AI models and other live elements that
create the music. So that raises key questions how much
(01:37:24):
human contribution contribution does it take the established copyright on
an entire song.
Speaker 13 (01:37:28):
I don't know, man, But the music sounded good. That's
what got me. I was like, this actually sounds like great,
sounds like there's feeling like as a person.
Speaker 5 (01:37:35):
It's limited.
Speaker 3 (01:37:35):
It's a limited amount of money you can make off
that music too, though, right, because I mean, you'll get
paid off screams, you'll get paid off radio play.
Speaker 5 (01:37:41):
But you know you'll never be able to tour.
Speaker 16 (01:37:43):
Why not?
Speaker 13 (01:37:43):
Why you can't take a hologram somewhere.
Speaker 5 (01:37:47):
For real, it's not happening.
Speaker 3 (01:37:48):
First of all, they think about how much money it
costs to make holograms and to actually have the holograms
in these venues, because it's not like you're going to
start off in arena. It's not like you're going to
start off in stadiums.
Speaker 14 (01:37:59):
No, but if it because more popular and easier to
do the same way, because at one point, just doing
this would have been like imagine that one of these
one of.
Speaker 3 (01:38:06):
Those AI artists would have to really really really blow
up and be able to pack a stadium, which is
not easy to do, by the way, AI or otherwise, Yeah, okay,
in order for that to make sense for them, to
be doing holograms to perform for crowds. We just came
from Vegas. Chris Brown did Allegiance Stadium two nights in
a row. Think about how long Chris Brown been grinding
in order to do something like that. Literally it's been
(01:38:28):
twenty years. Yeah, I don't know who knows.
Speaker 13 (01:38:31):
Yeah, well, artists are upset. I know Chloe Belly.
Speaker 14 (01:38:33):
I saw her say AI should be being when it
comes to creative spaces and that this made her sad,
you know, because she's a singer.
Speaker 13 (01:38:38):
Singer I it. Yeah, that's it for the latest this morning.
Speaker 3 (01:38:41):
All right, we got the People's Choice mix coming up next.
Speaker 5 (01:38:44):
I'm not even gonna lie to y'all.
Speaker 3 (01:38:45):
I was about to give you all a phone number
and like NBB line, you know, MBB line, be like
one hundred and five and five one five one, call
up and request the song. The mixes already per Records.
It's The Breakfast Club Chester, one of the most dangerous
morning show, The Breakfast Club Charlamagne God DJ AV just
hilarious and being just off. But Lauren LaRosa is here.
We were at the iHeart Radio Music Festival all weekend.
Me and Lauren just got back last night.
Speaker 13 (01:39:06):
What time did you land, Lauren, I got back at
like nine thirty ten.
Speaker 5 (01:39:09):
I think I landed at the same time. What flights
you was on?
Speaker 13 (01:39:11):
Maybe it's I was on a US flight.
Speaker 5 (01:39:13):
Maybe I was Jet Blue.
Speaker 20 (01:39:15):
What it may be earlier than that.
Speaker 3 (01:39:17):
I don't know.
Speaker 13 (01:39:17):
I'm so delusional from the time changes.
Speaker 3 (01:39:19):
That's how I feel, too, man. But salute to the
iHeart Radio Music Festival. If you've never I'm not saying
this because I work for the company. If you've never
been to the iHeart Rated Music Festival, you should go
at least once in your life.
Speaker 5 (01:39:29):
It is a family affair.
Speaker 3 (01:39:30):
It really is a generational thing because you'll have artists
like you know, the Offspring.
Speaker 5 (01:39:36):
You'll have artists like Mariah Carey.
Speaker 3 (01:39:38):
But then you'll have Glorilla, then you'll have Ed Sharon
ll cool J, you know what I mean. Whats the
Tate McCray who everybody was raving about, you know, So
it really is something for everybody. Man. I don't think
that there's a more diverse festival that's from race to
generation everything more than iHeart Rated Music Festival.
Speaker 5 (01:39:57):
So salute to everybody. We saw out in Vegas this week, and.
Speaker 13 (01:40:01):
I had a great time in Vegas. Shout out to
our I'm going every year. That was fun.
Speaker 5 (01:40:06):
Maybe what you never know are on here.
Speaker 13 (01:40:10):
Don't say that I just got here. All this stuff
gotta be happening.
Speaker 5 (01:40:13):
That's why you gotta enjoy the moment.
Speaker 13 (01:40:15):
I enjoy every moment to the full list, and I
enjoyed this weekend.
Speaker 14 (01:40:19):
And it's on our stream or we work on stream
on Twitch Breakfast Clubs Twitch. Please go check out day
one to day two. We were in there acting up
a little bit. We had a good time.
Speaker 3 (01:40:26):
I will say this though, if you do what you're
supposed to do, when you work the way you're supposed
to work, you'll be at the heart rate of music festival.
Speaker 5 (01:40:33):
Yes, exactly like that. That's that's exactly how you should
look at it.
Speaker 22 (01:40:37):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (01:40:37):
Yes, It's like when you, you know, want to treat
on the weekend, so you eat clean all week and
you work out all week.
Speaker 13 (01:40:45):
This got me out that you said, well, you want
to cheat on the weekend. I'm like, Chuler may I
just got in.
Speaker 3 (01:40:49):
You're the only person with two guys.
Speaker 12 (01:40:51):
What is you?
Speaker 7 (01:40:52):
You know?
Speaker 13 (01:40:54):
Loo imber tired that I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 5 (01:40:56):
I want to salute to Bobby Brown Man.
Speaker 3 (01:40:58):
Bobby Brown joined us this small She has a new
book out, Still Bobby, A master Class and Leading and
Authentic Life. So if you love Bobby Brown, you know Cosmetics,
or you love Jones Road Cosmetics, you want to know
more about the story of Bobby Brown, go pick that
book up. Still Bobby A Masterclass in Leading and Authentic Life.
And I also want to say I want to sleute
(01:41:20):
to everybody who will be joining us on October eleventh.
Speaker 5 (01:41:23):
You know it is my fifth annual Mental Wealth Expo.
Speaker 3 (01:41:27):
Okay, my fifth annual Mental Wealth Expo is happening Saturday,
October eleventh from eleven am to four pm at the
Joel and Diane Bloom Wellness and Evince Center. It is
an honor of World Mental Health Day. It is a
day of mental health education and healing. It is a
day of panels and breakout rooms. Some of the best
mental health professionals in the country like doctor Rita Walker,
(01:41:47):
Debbie Brown, doctor Alfre Breeland, Noble, doctor j Bardinett, Elliott,
Connie Corey, Minor Smith, Jason Wilson is going to be there.
And later this week I'll be telling you some more
individuals that will be joining us, and it is a
free event, free, free, free, free, free. I wouldn't even
want to do this event if it wasn't for free.
So Saturday, October eleventh, eleven am to four pm the
(01:42:09):
Joel and Diane Bloom Wellness and Event Center at the
New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, New Jersey, my
fifth annual Mental Wealth Export join us. You can go
to mentalwealthexpot dot com to register to be there.
Speaker 14 (01:42:21):
What you got, Lauren, I mean, I'm trying to take
the people to Delaware. You know, homecoming season is upon us.
It is the best HBCU time. Homecoming season is here.
So Friday, October tenth, HBCU a Delaware State alumni, join
me in Wilmington, Delaware at the Queen Theater for Delaware
State University's Alumni Homecoming kickoff party. I do do it
(01:42:41):
every year and it is a great turnout. Tickets available
at IFL events dot com. That is IFL events dot com.
You don't got to be Delaware State alumni to come
at party with the best HBCU on the plane.
Speaker 3 (01:42:53):
That's the only way people going to Delaware State if
they alumni ain't nobody making the trip.
Speaker 5 (01:42:57):
To Delaware pulling up.
Speaker 13 (01:43:00):
They be fascinating.
Speaker 5 (01:43:01):
They're playing who they're playing.
Speaker 13 (01:43:02):
I'll tell you the second.
Speaker 3 (01:43:03):
You don't even know that's what I'm talking about. You
see what I'm saying. That's that.
Speaker 14 (01:43:06):
But that's the day. That's not even the game day.
The game day is Saturday, Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:43:10):
Soluther Delaware State and Shawn Jackson y'all coach?
Speaker 13 (01:43:13):
Yes, he is. And we've been on the winning street.
What we've been on the winning street?
Speaker 3 (01:43:18):
You don't even know what the hell's going on.
Speaker 13 (01:43:20):
My uncle just posted it on Facebook. I saw yesterday.
Speaker 5 (01:43:22):
It's only been like two games. Let me see you
they first, y'all first.
Speaker 14 (01:43:27):
Been to me at yes because when I want to
true delawars the university winning under DeShawn Jackson. It's now
three straight wins, a first in the program since twenty twelve.
It's time to get excited about the Hornets, y'all.
Speaker 5 (01:43:38):
That's dope, Salutor Deshaun Jackson man, Yes, Louke. Now, I
hope y'all can pay him. Now what I just hope
y'all can pay him?
Speaker 13 (01:43:47):
We play this go ahead.
Speaker 3 (01:43:49):
You have no idea what the hell's going on the positive,
noticed simply this. It comes from Bobby Brown, who joined
us early this morning. Always remember that how you feel
about yourself is more important than how you look. I repeat,
how you feel about yourself is more important than how
you look. Feeling confident, being comfortable in your skin, That's
what really makes you beautiful. Have a great day, breakfast club,
bitchess you I'm finished or y'all done.