Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Wake up, Wake wake up.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
The program your alarm to power one oh five point
one on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Good Eddie, Good morning in Usa.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo.
Speaker 4 (00:17):
Yo yo yo Yo.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Jess hilarious, got morning charlamage to be here in the
second And it's Thursday, shorty. Are you feeling Jess Eve?
I took him good.
Speaker 5 (00:27):
I feel good.
Speaker 6 (00:27):
It's going into the weekend. I got shows this weekend.
I'm happy about it. They's selling out.
Speaker 5 (00:31):
So I'm amazed. I'm amazed by that.
Speaker 6 (00:33):
Man, because Connecticut sometimes they struggle a little bit.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Really yeah, they lagged.
Speaker 6 (00:38):
They like to get tickets the same day they come
in the same day, you know, and then I'm at
the meet and Grease, I'd be like, yo, I took
y'all sol on and get your tickets and be like
we do you know, if he was going to have money.
It's the trouble with people be telling me like stuff
like that.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
It's the truth.
Speaker 5 (00:52):
Keep it a hunted with me.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
So especially the holiday season. Hell yeah, boss, may think
things are so damn expensive.
Speaker 6 (00:58):
That's the problem. Like, and then everybody is on toyo.
We got so many people onto it. I've never seen
so many people on to a my life. Like we
got all these comedians to them, we got artists, and
then we got the plays. It it's people doing plays
toward you know. It's so much going on. And and
then you're right, it is the holidays, and then the
finances ain't ain't really financing for everybody. So people got
(01:18):
to pick and shoes where they want to go, what
they're gonna spend their money.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
On, right, you know what I mean? And I ain't
gonna front the Black Friday deals and the Cyber Monday
deals weren't as good as they use Yeah, yeah, they
were fifty sixty percent off and you can say, oh
now it's like, yeah, I'm like, I know whom we
to work at the story. I can use the discount
for third, right, but it wasn't what it usually was,
something so expensive. So yeah, anyway, what up Charlomangay. At
(01:46):
least he's not an aid it this morning morning, Well,
Jordan Klepper will be joining us this morning comedian and
he has a new special quote.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
Fingers the posts, fingers in the post. Is it on
the post in the post?
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Fingers the post, fingers the post, Yes, he thinkers the post. Yah,
my god, Jordan Club.
Speaker 7 (02:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
He has as on Comedy Central this weekend Monday, actually
the eighth Monday. Oh you had a good night, Yeah,
had a good day. Yeah? Why what's up?
Speaker 8 (02:11):
Did you?
Speaker 1 (02:11):
I can't after No, don't don't do that. They don't
usually be that nice. How was your dad? You gots
some sleep?
Speaker 2 (02:16):
I did get some sleep last and I had a
long day yesterday. I did the New York Times deal
Books summer yesterday was it was dope. We had a
panel with it was myself and.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
I don't want to talk to you right now. You
you you do a routine. Do your routine. Man, You
come in here, you usually pray and then you're like,
come on, you're messing up routine. You slap on his
SPF right, like, do your routine? Thank you? Yes, because
he does it for fifteen nurs He's been doing the
same thing today. He wants to change change things up.
Family doing yeaday night. What are you talking about? We
(02:47):
got front page news coming up. To get it off
your chest eight hundred five eighty five one oh five,
it's the breakfast Lub. Good morning morning everybody. We are
the breakfast Club. Let's get in some front page news
now tonight Thursday night for Wow, I'm cowboys take on
the Detroit lines at eight fifteen. Okay, standing up for that.
You said a little bit of it, you shaid, watch
(03:08):
a little bit of nine fifteen, nine to fifteen. I'm
snoozing morning.
Speaker 9 (03:12):
Me me, good morning, Envy, josh Arlamage, how y'all doing
this morning?
Speaker 10 (03:16):
Me me, good morning?
Speaker 9 (03:18):
All right, So we start this morning with a new
fight over SNAP benefits, a new warning from the Trump
administration that could impact millions of families. So the administration
says it will withhold certain SNAP funds for more than
twenty Democratic led states starting next week unless those states
hand over detailed personal information about everyone receiving benefits, things
(03:39):
like social Security numbers and immigration status.
Speaker 10 (03:42):
Agriculture Secretary Brooke.
Speaker 9 (03:44):
Rawlins says this data is necessary because she says there's
fraud happening, even though the USDA has not offered any
proof and federal research shows that SNAP fraud is very rare.
Speaker 10 (03:55):
Let's listen to her explanation.
Speaker 11 (03:57):
When we found one hundred and eighty six thousand days,
people who dead, people's social Security numbers being used, five
hundred thousand people receiving benefits more than twice.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
We had a couple of people.
Speaker 11 (04:09):
Receiving benefits in six states. In February of this year,
we ask for all the states for the first time
to turn over their data to the federal government to
let the USDA partner with them to root out this fraud,
to make sure that those who really need food stamps
are getting them, but also to ensure that the American
taxpayer is protected. Twenty nine states said yes, not surprisingly
(04:30):
the Red states, and that's where all of that data
that fraud comes from. But twenty one states, including California,
New York, and Minnesota the Blue States, continued to say no.
So as of next week, we have begun and will
begin to stop moving federal funds into those states until
they comply and they tell us and allow us to
(04:52):
partner with them to root out this fraud and to
protect the American taxpayer.
Speaker 9 (04:59):
Well, a federal judg yeah has already blocked the USDA
from collecting this information and punishing states that don't comply.
The administration has until December fifteenth to appeal, but for
now that order stays in place. And just another important
thing to note that the way the administration is framing
this has given the impression that SNAP benefits themselves will
be cut off, but that's not exactly what the order does.
(05:22):
The only money that could legally be withheld is the
administrative funding fee, so not the food money that families
actually receive, but states say that still matters because losing
administrative money affects how the program runs day to day.
It means fewer staff to process application, longer wait times,
delays fixing problems, and slower service for families who depend
(05:43):
on SNAP.
Speaker 10 (05:44):
So we will.
Speaker 9 (05:45):
Continue to watch that and one more thing, And as
all of this sets into place for next week, people
may have started feeling the other big change. That's because
the brand new or the Snap's rules, the brand new,
big beautiful bill that quietly kicked in this week.
Speaker 10 (06:00):
They are much stricter now. So here's the difference.
Speaker 9 (06:02):
Most adults ages eighteen to sixty four who don't have
disabilities and who don't have young children, they now have
to complete eighty hours a month of work, job training,
or volunteering to keep those benefits. And if you don't
meet that, you will be kicked off in three months.
And exemptions for veterans and house people and young adults
who have aged out the foster.
Speaker 10 (06:22):
Care system those ended this week as well.
Speaker 9 (06:24):
So Trump's big beautiful bill definitely kicked in this week
and SNAP recipients will start filling that.
Speaker 6 (06:31):
I do think it's crazy used in deceased people's security numbers,
social Security numbers that get benefits.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
That is crazy.
Speaker 9 (06:40):
Yeah, I mean, you know, there's they're looking into it.
We don't know sometimes with this administration what's real and
what's fake. But you know, I'm sure you know there
are some things, yeah happening.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Yeah, you see that in the news. A lot of
times when people pass away, people still use their Social
Security numbers, or if people live in housing complexes where
they get cheap rent, they don't say that the individual
dies so they can keep the same rent. So you
do see that a lot.
Speaker 6 (07:03):
Dang, I ain't thinking that in the day's crime. I
don't even I wouldn't even do that.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
Now.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Fraud, it's okay, I'm supposed to do that.
Speaker 9 (07:15):
Sorry, But the administration is arguing that that's what's happening
in the Red States, who only knows what's happening in
the Blue States, so they want that information and really quickly.
While we're talking about the cost of living, President Trump
is also taking the conversation in a very different direction.
In a marathon cabinet meeting, he's blasting Democrats for using
the word affordability. Just a couple of weeks ago, that
(07:37):
was his favorite word, and now he's calling it a
scam and insisting that his administration isn't getting the credit
that they deserve as things like gas and groceries have
come down. He used that meeting to defend his record,
touting tariff drug prices and even suggesting that the twenty
twenty eight Republican nominee was probably sitting at that cabinet meeting.
(07:57):
And as a pressure increases over the economy and those
military strikes, Trump is maintaining that his policies are working
and that Republicans need to stay the course and avoid
more democratic gains. So we will continue to watch that
as far as it's funny.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Though, because you know, I was born in nineteen hundred
and seventy eight, so I'm old enough to remember when
Democrat James Carville with Bill Clinton's political advise, and he said,
it's the economy stupid. So that means the primary concern
of American voters is the state of the American economy.
So you know, in the modern era, the economy historically
has done better under Democratic presidents. So technically that's Democrat messaging.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
You know.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Then Madonnie took it here in New York City and
it's worked for him. But Trump kind of stole that
message in from Democrats if you.
Speaker 5 (08:39):
Ask me, he did, he did.
Speaker 9 (08:41):
But he's now calling it a scam. He's saying that,
you know, democrats are calling he's saying it's a con job.
There's no such thing as affordability and things like that,
and so I don't it doesn't matter what party you're in, red, blue, whatever.
If you can't afford your groceries, if you can't afford
to live, affordability is the main issue.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
That is a great point me.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
It is a scam from politicians because it's not how
people It's not about what you say, it's about how
people actually feel. You can talk about affordability all you want,
but if people aren't feeling that in their pockets, it
don't matter.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
That's right, Thank you and me all.
Speaker 9 (09:10):
Right, well coming up at seven. It's holiday season, but
it's also breakup season. We'll explain that friend and the
triggers yes, in the next hour, and.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Everybody else, get it off your chest eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one. If you need the
vent phone lines of Wide open, call us up right now.
It's the breakfast Club. Good morning.
Speaker 7 (09:25):
Wait, this is your time to get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eighty five one five one. We want
to hear from you on the breakfast club.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
Hello. Who's this?
Speaker 8 (09:36):
Good morning?
Speaker 4 (09:37):
My breakfast club family? Shit boy, love you from.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
Love's happening yo.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
First of all, I want to take you spectfully shout
out to chest. She's going to be in my second home, Hapercy.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
You got to you got to.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
You told me I'm a kickstand dude, so you won't
give me a hug. I will pull up on you.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Okay, Lovey, thank you so much.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
But I do want to.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
Talk about the docum theories because fifty is my guy
or what's crazy is fifty? First off, NB, I'm sorry
you had to go through that to get in the
industry too.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
I didn't have to go through anything, sir. I don't
know what you what you point.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
You don't understand what we're talking about. Yesterday, Envy told
us that you know he had to suck big get.
I did not say resources and the characters. I did
not say any of that. Go ahead and love to
continue on.
Speaker 3 (10:26):
But but you know it's crazy. I worked radio for
ten years and I worked with fifty actually party at
his mansion with him. I didn't see nothing like Diddy's house.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
But what's crazy.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
About the Diddy doc is what got overlooked and how
he is leading his son down that path. You know, us,
being parents, we're supposed to lead our guns to put
our kids in the best position to win. What he's
doing with his kids, you coached, ain't not Envy.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
No, I don't go sign none of that and none
of nothing I've seen on that doc I co signed.
Nothing was cool about that doc. That that doc showed
a a nasty individual that needs some prayers. He needs
some healing, he needs, he needs a whole lot, he
needs some hugs, he needs, he needs a new team,
he need, he needs a whole lot. I don't I
don't go sign anything I've seen in that doc.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
It was was crazy as the arrogance that he shown,
just that she would film themselves going through this, like.
Speaker 4 (11:19):
Who does that?
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Thank you, love, I appreciate you, brother, King Peace King.
I ain't seen the dock yet.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Watch I didn't watch it. Yeah, I watched the last
I watched the three episodes. I watched the fourth episode
last night, and the fourth episode is where they use
a clip from the Breakfast Club audio and the video.
But you talk about talking about no, no, no no.
They were talking about, uh did he still calling people
after he was being investigated. We were just saying, like,
(11:48):
who do that? That's what they took from that clip. Yeah,
but get it off your chest? Eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. If you need to vient,
hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
ain't right?
Speaker 4 (12:00):
Ray yo, Charlotte, mae yamvy?
Speaker 12 (12:02):
What up?
Speaker 13 (12:03):
Are we lying?
Speaker 7 (12:04):
This is your time to get it off your chest?
Speaker 1 (12:05):
I got an indoor pool pool.
Speaker 7 (12:08):
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 14 (12:10):
Get on the phone right now.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
He'll tell you what it is. We keep that mouthfooping. Hello,
who's this problem? Oh my goodness? What's up?
Speaker 8 (12:20):
Like staying at heavy tried?
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Let's up drive. Hey, Charlam may pus, what's happening.
Speaker 8 (12:28):
Make sure you let army and just know the tune
in tonight. So we about to run the table, baby,
and we're going to the bowl. Were about to go
to the bowl.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Tune in tonight, Envy, Let's keep let's keep it calm. No,
you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
The more we say that our cowboys s up, the
better they play.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
So let's let's just keep cowboys big cowboys fans.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
Come on, man, broke back cowboys fan, Baby, Okay, I
get him by my daddy, he said, back driving gay cowboys.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
Yo.
Speaker 5 (12:57):
Oh.
Speaker 8 (12:58):
Also a jay, you need to drop some music. If
you're listening cold, drop some music. Me and sarlom ain't
missed you.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
No, that's right, jaj Cole. But no, I'm cool.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
I mean when you drop on Death, I'm gonna definitely
listen when you drop I like by trave.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
Hello. Who's this?
Speaker 4 (13:22):
Good morning? This is James calling from North Carolina.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
James from North Carolina.
Speaker 8 (13:26):
Get off your chest, James, Yeah, good morning everyone.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
I got a lot of horns. Itally with you and Charlemagne.
Bro y'all were mentioning all these classic Christmas songs and stuff,
And y'all didn't even mention the Temptation Solid Night or
this Christmas the original, not Chris Brown version.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
We did, man, we did mention Temptation Solid Night. But
I'm gonna tell you the thing about Temptation Slid Night.
That song too long, man, By the time that song
over is Valentine's Day.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Yeah, that's back, but it's long.
Speaker 7 (13:58):
But it's good Man made the same.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
They don't have like solos.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
Everybody also with that song, that song is like a
Christmas Eve, Christmas Day song. You ain't listening to Temptations
Silent Night leading up to Christmas, You're not.
Speaker 4 (14:13):
It doesn't like Christmas. And I hear that, man, hear that.
Speaker 6 (14:18):
Yeah, I wonder had a banging Christmas album too, Wonder Steve,
you wonder.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
I saw Mommy Kisse's Aanta claud I was Jackson five,
but Jesus Christ, you know what he was lying. Get
it off your chest eight hundred and five eight five
one o five one. If you need the vent hit
us up. Now. We got the latest with Lauren. I'm
sure she's gonna be breaking down more of the Diddy doc.
She got some some I would say, some first hand
(14:43):
information about that doctor. Yesterday should be breaking all that down.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, wan be coming a
straight fast. She gets the from somebody that knows somebody,
get the detail.
Speaker 5 (14:54):
I'm not gonna that nose A little bit about everything.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
She'd be having the latest song.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
The law is the Latest with Lauren la Rosa.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details, sometimes you
have a little bit.
Speaker 7 (15:06):
Every time, it's the latest on the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (15:10):
All righty y'all.
Speaker 15 (15:10):
So yesterday I was able to speak to Wayne Burrow,
who who worked with Miss Violetta Wallace, who is the
mother of Biggie Smalls and managing her son's estate. Now,
he reached out to me, or I reached out to him,
and then he was like, Okay, I'm willing to get
on the phone with you, because he says that a
lot of people have been blowing them up following his
documentary and he wanted to speak out and he made
(15:31):
it clear that this is on behalf of Miss Violetta Wallace.
He says there are a few allegations that he wanted
to address from the doc So, number one, there's this
allegation from the documentary that Diddy used a Biggie's record
label deal or his own money, Biggie's own money to
pay for Biggie's funeral. So Wayne tells me that that's
completely not true, that he himself officiated the funeral and
(15:55):
planned it along with Kirk Burroughs, who is in the
documentary Bad Boy Staff, and that bad Boy pay for everything.
At no point was there any indication that on any
royalty statement that this would be coming from Biggie's account,
So the family never paid for anything in regards to
the funeral. He said, bad Boy and Diddy covered everything
from the from the cars to the police to the
(16:15):
funeral itself, and they wanted to make that clear. And
he also says that it's disrespectful that anybody would even
imply that, you know, miss Wallace, Biggie's mom or any
of his close friends would even be that naive to
allow something like that to happen and not catch it
as they're watching the royalty statements and just different things
that are coming in. He also talked to me a
bit about the contract conversation. So there is a claim
(16:38):
in the dock, and this has been a claim that's
been circulating for some time that right before Biggie's passing,
there was an issue with contract negotiations between Diddy and
Biggie Smalls. He says that is completely not true as well.
He says that life after death was already done, so
there was no contract negotiations happening. He says, based on
the sales of the records and how everything was moving,
(16:59):
they had already he had already recouped, so at that
point there was nothing to be talked about. But they
did go back into a negotiation because they put out
more music following the death of Biggie Smalls, and the
conversation they had then was just about how that would
happen and you know how spits would be. But that
whole conversation around the contract and there being an issue
with that as well's there's nothing to talk about.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
He says.
Speaker 5 (17:22):
The contract was the contract and people just need to
leave it at that.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
And Barrel is Biggie's friend. He also managed Biggie at
one point he owned a remember that the what was
it called Oh Jesus christ by Storm Entertainment. That that's
what they ran, which was a manager becoming I think
they managed Shine at one point they managed now is
at one point they not managed of course b ig
so he would know, right, you mean.
Speaker 5 (17:44):
Yeah, yes, yes, yes, yeah, so he would know.
Speaker 15 (17:47):
And he also wanted to mention too that you know,
there was this rolling Stone covered conversation in the documentary
they alleged that did he so Biggie was supposed to
have this like rolling Stone cover?
Speaker 5 (17:58):
And did he stepped in away?
Speaker 15 (17:59):
And that it said no, I got an album coming out,
I want to you know, get on this cover. That
was like a big point in the documentary. He says
they had never that never been brought to them. They
had never had a conversation with anybody about a cover whatsoever.
So he doesn't know that there's any truth to that
as what either because they had never had a conversation
about it, and they would have you know.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
So, So who do you all believe?
Speaker 2 (18:19):
Because I didn't watch the doctor, wasn't it Kirk Burrows
who was the co found the Bad Boy and former
president of the Bad Boy who said that they that they
charged me for his funeral?
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Yes, So who do you believe?
Speaker 5 (18:30):
If I had to.
Speaker 15 (18:32):
So, it's it's it's uh so I believe Wayne. And
the only reason why I believe Wayne is journalist, Well,
you didn't. I didn't report from I didn't report from
what I believe. I report from what was actually said
to me in fact. But you asked me a question,
So I'm answering to answer, why did you ask it?
They don't have to answer it, whatever, whatever. And I
(18:55):
was going to say, the only reason why if I
am removing my journalists had and just having an opinion
after someone who watched the doc has been able to
see both sides of it. I'm believing Wayne because he actively,
up until the point that Miss Wallace passed away, was
still involved in the estate, and he was saying that
they had a process that they would do where and
(19:15):
it was Miss Wallace's wishes that they would do it
this way where they're not checking accounts and royalty statements
just one time.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
She checked everything twice.
Speaker 15 (19:21):
It was very important for her to make sure that
the money and everything was like paid attention to, very heavily,
because she wanted to make sure they didn't know anybody anything,
that they weren't up under anybody, and that they weren't
being taken advantage of. Because she wanted to make it
where Biggie's kids and her grandkids could live a good
life after he passed away and after she left.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
This, well, she'd be paying attention to something that happened
so long ago though, Like in nineteen ninety seven funeral.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
They said they was big pass they said they were
on top of every last dime. Yeah, because they wanted
to make sure that the kids would be straight for life. Yeah.
Speaker 15 (19:48):
She said that was really important to her, even down
to the fact that when they decided not to go
back into a deal after they knew that Biggie recouped,
that was.
Speaker 5 (19:56):
Her decision to do that. So she has been on
it since.
Speaker 15 (19:58):
And he did say to me that the only reason
why he's addressing this, he's not going to speak to
anybody else, but he wanted to speak to us and
only want to address it because it's not fair for
the people who you know, are an extension of Biggie's
legacy to have to be dealing with a lot of
these rumors and these different allegations resurfacing when they're just
trying to live their life. And this is actually family
to someone someone lost the father and you know, so
it's why.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Wouldn't need to tell the documentary makers though, because I'm
sure the documentary makers reached out to the estate, like
when you're doing a documentary on the level of this documentary,
I am almost positive that they reached out to Biggie's
the state to ask questions.
Speaker 15 (20:30):
He said he didn't want to be bothered until he
didn't have a choice but to be boutable.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Oh that's ridiculous because now that whatever he's saying, I
don't know if that's the truth or not. I don't
know if those are facts, but I know it's the
narrative because of the documentary is way bigger than anything
that he could put out now.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
I think they also told Lauren that they hate the
fact that Biggie's name is mentioned in all this BS
that they didn't want Biggie's name in this bull crap,
and that was that was a part of it. But
like what Charlamage also said, like, you know, salute the Wayne,
he's actually been on the show. But if what's the
other guys name, Kirk? If Kirk was doing the financing
and he was the one that was paying the people
(21:06):
he was, it was like it's kind of like both sides,
you know what I mean, Because you can hide money, right,
you can say that you know that we really paid
for this producer when it went to this. I mean,
but there's no ways.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
But you can't just credit Kirk because Kirk was the
co founder bad Boy in the President.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
At the time.
Speaker 5 (21:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (21:21):
Well, I mean there's always two three sides to a story.
So I'm just here to present them all as much
as I can. You believe, No, I presented it first,
and then you asked me a question. I can believe
what I can believe.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
So Kirk and Wayne Cousins.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
They're about differently.
Speaker 15 (21:33):
Wayne and Kirk's about borrow. Yeah, B A R O
B A R R O W and n B you
are R O W E. S Burroughs and then borrow.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
He These did he leftovers have lasted longer than Thanksgiving.
That's right.
Speaker 12 (21:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I guess there's gonna be more and more and more
because people are coming out that people have been talked about.
Speaker 15 (21:54):
They're still trending on ex this morning. I believe it
was like number five or six of yesterday. It's it's
long and it just I believe it just hit top
ten on Netflix.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
Let me look at what number number one on Netflix?
I did.
Speaker 15 (22:06):
I just said, let me look at the number me
this morning, I say, I said it hit top ten.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Let me look at it. It's number one. I know that.
I mean I saw fifty post.
Speaker 5 (22:14):
I was headed the fifties Instagram.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Post is number one. All right, well that is the
latest with Lauren. Thank you, Lauren. You're now when we
come back, we got front page news. Also, Jess will
be fixing your mess. So if you have a relationship
issues of problems, you can call up eight hundred and
five eight five one on five one. Now today is
December fourth. Oh, now you're going.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Now you want to acknowledge that it's December four, I
hear do the mix. Its the anniversary death and it
is jay Z one day.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
You got big pimpin Oh, this is like like I
got jay z birthday. You got you know, like how
you got from them? Like you got it. Let's let's
get that happy birthday. You know what to do? If
he's a real everybody j m V just hilarious. Charlamagne
(22:58):
the guy, we are the breakfast club. I'll just get
back in some front page news football. The Cowboys take
on the Detroit Lines at eight fifteen.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
Let's go my Cowboys, Cowboy Nation. That mean I'll be
sleep by nine fifteen. So all the way up and
fight out.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
Won Let's go Detroit?
Speaker 3 (23:12):
What up?
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Don't root against us? Okay? Even though I know you
always root for the d right.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
I know you, I know, I know, yes, we don't do.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
What's up?
Speaker 11 (23:24):
Well?
Speaker 9 (23:25):
Let me interrupt, really great? No, I gotta interrupt. We
gotta interrupt, all right, y'all. So good morning. We're gonna
start this hour with the latest on the immigration raids
the Trump administration. He has now officially launched enforcement operations
in both New Orleans and in Minnesota. In Minneapolis, DHS
(23:45):
officials there in New Orleans say they are targeting criminal aliens,
and they argue that the local sanctuary policies they let
people get away with serious charges, including home invasion, armed robberies,
and rape.
Speaker 10 (23:57):
Now the Louisiana the governor there.
Speaker 9 (23:59):
He says that he supports this move even as crime
in New Orleans has been falling and it's on track
to be.
Speaker 10 (24:05):
At its lowest in more than fifty years.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Now.
Speaker 9 (24:07):
The raids they are already spreading fast in different communities.
Families there say that they are staying inside, they're skipping work,
and they're keeping their children home because they are afraid
to go out in public. And in Minneapolis, immigration operations
are also underway in a region that's homes who's the
largest Somali communities in the country. And this all comes
a day after President Trump he ended in his cabinet
(24:28):
meeting with a tirade against Somali immigrants and attacking Congresswoman
ill Hand Omar. When he was asked about this yesterday
in the Oval Office, he doubled down his criticism of
Omar and the Somali people.
Speaker 10 (24:41):
Let's listen to some of that.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
They have a representative, il and Omar. She should be
allowed to be a congresswoman. And I'm sure people are
looking at that, and she should be thrown the hell
out of our country. And most of those people then
they have destroyed Minnesota.
Speaker 16 (24:56):
Okay, Minnesota, you have an incompetent governor, you have a
crooked govern finish Alvit Walsh's should.
Speaker 4 (25:02):
Be a shamed and the Somalian should be out of here.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
They've destroyed our country and all they do is complain, complain, complain.
You have her, she's always talking about the constitution. Provides
me with.
Speaker 14 (25:17):
Uh, go back to your own country and figure out
your constitution now.
Speaker 10 (25:22):
It's yeah, Omar.
Speaker 9 (25:24):
She fled civil war and Somalia before becoming a US citizen.
She responded on x quote saying his obsession with me
is creepy. I hope he gets the help he desperately needs. Meanwhile,
that rhetoric, combined with the raids, is sending fear throughout
that Somali community in Minnesota. Residents say they are carrying passports,
extra documents everywhere they go. Here's how one community member
(25:45):
described it to a local news station in Minneapolis.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
Let's listen.
Speaker 17 (25:48):
It is hurtful to be called garbage. It's that act
of looking over my shoulder, which pains me because I
am the United States and this is my home. I
don't want to feel unsafe in my home disguised as
law enforcements. There's a lot of fear right now and
a lot of confusion because it has been said multiple
times that a lot of us are United States citizens.
(26:09):
So the elders in our community are just are confused,
and they're scared for their children, and they just want
some type of hope and understanding of the situation.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Yeah, that's a damn shame. People who aren't criminal aliens
have to live in fear like that, you know, because
it seems like ICE just profiles people, right and based
off the videos we've seen, it's not like they got
a sophisticated.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Process at home when they're approaching people to.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
Try to find out if their you know, criminal aliens
in that Yeah.
Speaker 9 (26:36):
Well, federal officials say they are not specifically targeting Somali families,
but arrests may include anyone they believe violated immigration laws
and community advocates in Minnesota, they say the vast majority
of Somalis in the state they are citizens or have
legal status. They estimate the actual number of undocumented Somalis
just to be in the hundreds.
Speaker 10 (26:56):
So we'll continue to watch that.
Speaker 9 (26:57):
The administration has also paused immigration atlicans from nineteen countries
that include Somalia. I believe the only country that they're
still taking applications from in South Africa.
Speaker 10 (27:07):
So and switching gears.
Speaker 9 (27:10):
It is officially the holiday season. Just the stories for you.
The Rockefeller Center tree, it was lit in New York
last night. The lights were on, the crowds were out,
and it's that time of year where the excitement is
in the air. Right, family gatherings, holiday parties, tradition, all
the little moments that make the season feel special. But
there's another trend that people don't always talk about. So
December it's one of the biggest breakup months of the
(27:32):
entire year. Relationship analysts say, the timing isn't random. This
is when all the expectations.
Speaker 10 (27:39):
Hit at once.
Speaker 9 (27:40):
I'm talking about talking about the future, meeting families, buying
gifts in a tough economy, even when you're not sure
where things stand. So experts say a lot of couples
they're choosing not to take that uncertainty or have that
financial pressure into the holiday or into the new year.
So there are two dates that you might want to
circle because this is when a lot of couples are
calling it quit. So they're saying December eleventh, which is
(28:03):
next week, and the Sunday right before Christmas.
Speaker 10 (28:06):
Those are the days when break up spike.
Speaker 9 (28:09):
So if something fills off, just know that those are
the weeks that people tend to get that we need
to talk text and that is crazy.
Speaker 6 (28:17):
Relationship analysts really really like did their research showing that
and realize that that's so wild.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Well, you figured this Sunday before Christmas. People realize they
ain't got no money and they can't buy no gifts,
So you got to end it right then and dead,
though you don't you feel specially you think you and
your boot boot up and then all of a sudden
can't get you nothing for.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
Christmas, that's right, I mean, And now that people can't
afford presents, You know, me and women want to know
what the relationship is. But I do want my brothers
to know something. You can't go back until after Valentine.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
You know what I'm saying. If you break up with
them down Valentine is a whole other holidays.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
If you go back, you can't go back to Valentine,
go back during March madness. Okay, if you really want
to create some razz, I'll have to pack March madness
to continue to ruin your life.
Speaker 10 (29:00):
Okay, that is crazy. Well, they say dating platforms, they
see it too.
Speaker 9 (29:04):
They say activity jumps right after those dates as newly
single people, they reset. He headed into January. They don't
wait till after Valentine's Day, but you're probably right. They
probably like break up with you again right around that time.
Speaker 2 (29:16):
Like you said, you gotta wait to after valid will
after Valentine's and I honestly break up now, Like you know,
it's early December, don't wait so close to Christmas.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Yeah, that is a little petty that that's the lot Patty.
You should have did it.
Speaker 5 (29:27):
Actually you should have did it on Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
You should have it. Yeah, because that's that's too much.
You're leading people on.
Speaker 6 (29:32):
But I never thought about that, that this is the
highest like breakup rate, like dressful.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
Yeah, I just never thought about it. You got kids
and a girlfriend or whatever. Maybe you got to buy
all that in your mind.
Speaker 6 (29:42):
People all year and then December comes and it's like, uh, sorry.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
Why I'll be back fifteenth. Damn, that's so sad.
Speaker 6 (29:52):
And when you come back and it's another guy over
here doing the dude and what.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
It's crazy and be talking like you know anything about it. Yeah,
you've been married, you're talking about it, right man.
Speaker 10 (30:03):
But there's a lot of there's a lot of other
stress with this, right.
Speaker 9 (30:06):
I mean, you mentioned the gifts, but there's also meeting
the family. People don't know they want to, you know,
take you home yet they said. There was just a
lot of different reasons for why people are calling it
quits in December. So December eleventh is the first date
and the Sunday after Christmas, so I mean the Sunday
before Christmas. So it can get a little crazy right
around those states, guys, with all.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
The love bombers out there, man sleuths, all the love
bombas that came hard over this summer, you know what
I mean, even maybe a little bit of September started
acting a little funny around the holidays.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Not about to break up with Bay.
Speaker 9 (30:40):
All right, y'all, Well that is your front page news.
I Me Me Brown, follow me at Me Me Brown TV.
For more stories, call the Black Information Network, download the
free iHeartRadio app, or visit bi N news dot com.
Speaker 5 (30:52):
Thank you now.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Also coming up next hour, just fix my mess. So
if you haven't relationship issues or relationship problems, you can
call us right now at eight hundred and five eight
five one oh five to one. Right. But when we
come back, comedian Jordan Klepper will be joining us. He
has a new special, Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse. We'll
get into it when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, good morning. Everybody is DJ M V Jess Hilarious,
(31:15):
Charlamage the guy. We are the Breakfast Club long rouses
here as well. We got a special guest in the villain. Yes,
indeed we have a comedian, Jordan's clepper. Welcome.
Speaker 16 (31:23):
I'm feeling good. How you guys doing You're doing well,
going well?
Speaker 1 (31:26):
You always keep a project. The last time you was
here from your last field piece. Right this time it's
that field piece. You got a whole documentary documentary.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
Now you're here for your special Jordan clipper fingers the
polse give demand a prize.
Speaker 16 (31:38):
Let me tell you it's nothing about projects. Your hard
It is to keep health insurance in this country. You
have to keep working constantly and contractually. I'm obligated to
go out in the field and do special after special
after special.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
So that could make you sick. So you gonna need
all that healthcare. I need that healthcare. Trust me.
Speaker 16 (31:52):
I'm getting old too. I got bad feats, I got
weird shoulders. I wake up now my hip doesn't work.
So yeah, I need to keep I need to keep
out there talking to people about Paul.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Are you really a people person, Jordan? Do you like
the people?
Speaker 16 (32:03):
Do I like the people?
Speaker 1 (32:04):
I know? Not not like the people? Do you like
to people? I call it people? In like you're using
that as a verb. Yes, do I like to people.
I do.
Speaker 16 (32:12):
I feel comfortable peopling. I think it's my Midwest nice
that that makes me like jump into spaces, try to
find commonality. I've met a lot of people, though I
definitely have I have a love hate relationship with people
as a general idea. I've seen they're good, I've seen
they're bad. There's a lot of them live somewhere in
the middle. But I like getting getting to know them
(32:33):
a little bit. I'll tell you people off camera are
so interesting to me, and those are the people that
I like the most. You know, I go into these
Mogel worlds. I go into these these strange spaces, and
the camera shifts the way in which everybody talks about stuff,
makes them more certain, makes them more argumentative, makes them
versions of themselves that they see online. And then that
camera goes off and they got they got music interests,
(32:56):
they got wives, they have had issues with, they have
food intro they have peccadillos that you just sort of
gravitate towards. So people without a camera on their face,
those people, those are the best people.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
What about when you walk in a room and the
camera's not on and somebody says, make me laugh.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
Yes, well you're just a gesture, you know what. Sometimes
that happens.
Speaker 16 (33:13):
Sometimes you want to come on the breakfast club, you
want to have a nice conversation, and then you walk.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
Into a room and I say, you make me laugh.
Speaker 16 (33:20):
The bar is set. Yeah, you get nervous.
Speaker 5 (33:23):
Because he said, do I look good? And I was like,
you look great.
Speaker 15 (33:25):
Just make us laughing because I thought, as a comedian,
when you're making people laugh, it makes you feel good.
I wanted you to feel comfortable and welcome.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
You did.
Speaker 5 (33:32):
Yes, I'm happy.
Speaker 16 (33:33):
Well, here's the problem. As a comedian, you complimenting the
way I look made me feel uncomfortable because my expectation.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
My expectation is.
Speaker 16 (33:40):
I look, I look strange, I'm ill fitting clothes. I
think that's how I see myself. So you set me
off my game by making me feel good about myself.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
That's on you.
Speaker 5 (33:50):
I'm sorry if you look if you want me to
walk it.
Speaker 16 (33:52):
What's wrong? Talk about the fit? Where did I go wrong?
Speaker 5 (33:55):
You really do that?
Speaker 1 (33:56):
No, you don't have to know this is it's a
new jacket? Is it okay?
Speaker 5 (34:00):
The jacket? I just wouldn't have put it with that shirt.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
There it is, she's wearing a full leather onesie and
you're going to take.
Speaker 15 (34:08):
I just don't know what jacket though, and I thought
the hair was a good compliment to the jacket. But
but if you want me to talk bad, I just
I felt.
Speaker 5 (34:14):
You could want with a lighter shirt, lighter shirt. Thermal.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
It is a thermal because it's cold. It is cold,
but it's texture. There's texture on texture. You don't like that.
The texture is just very different to wear a white T shirt.
Speaker 5 (34:26):
I mean, do you do a unique well, I see,
I know your friends.
Speaker 15 (34:31):
Yeah, they have really great T shirts that you could
have put the thermal under, put the white T shirt
and then it would have with the sneakers. I looked
at your shoes when you talked about your feet, and
I just thought, why are you doing it?
Speaker 1 (34:41):
Me to do it? I respect it, I respect it,
I need it. It's just the part of people that
you like. We're right on the line right now. I
gotta tell you this.
Speaker 16 (34:48):
But you know I do specials. I do specials because
I get health insurance. I do publicity so I get
fashion tips. I can't pay for a publicist. You're helping
me here, you feel comfortable.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
You told me to do it.
Speaker 16 (34:57):
You know, I like it. I respect it. Now you
don't want to grab fifty you're saying a plain tea
is the way to go with something like this.
Speaker 15 (35:02):
Yeah, I think a plant would have been wrote too,
like you seem like effortless.
Speaker 16 (35:06):
Oh that's what you're getting out of this good thing.
I'll take effortless.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
She said, you see efforless, But you actually tried this morning.
I'm trying.
Speaker 16 (35:13):
There was so much effort put into this moment. Here
you can see it. It's bled into the interview last night.
Speaker 1 (35:18):
I can tell you did it last night. I'm kill
with this, like first day of school?
Speaker 16 (35:21):
Do you know I iron into this corduroy jackets? Damn,
I don't even know if you were supposed to iron
a corduroy jacket.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Jesus, interesting jacket. This is good. This is good intel.
I didn't know.
Speaker 16 (35:34):
Yeah, you steam corduroy instead of ironing corduroys.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
This is helpful. I had a towel over in the steaming.
Speaker 7 (35:40):
Through the tower.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
You can do that too.
Speaker 5 (35:41):
Did you put the tower?
Speaker 1 (35:41):
I did not put the towel down, But you know,
Jordan's a real comedian. Because soon as Lauren said, make
me laugh, and Joe was like type five airline food,
I got, I got thoughts on that. Let's go no special,
fingers the pulse, give the man a prize. Fingers the
Polese sounds racy, but that's about his name. Have you
(36:04):
met Figures of the Balls? I guy?
Speaker 16 (36:05):
Oh boy, it's a bit handsy.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Okay, stay away, all right, he's got a raption. She
don't look into him. Don't google the guy. Are you
messed with Macca? People? To get man? What's wrong with
you? You just like, just you know what. I like getting
out there. I like getting out there.
Speaker 16 (36:19):
This one was wild because we're trying to figure out
what to do a special on and two things were
happening simultaneously.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
Like Trump was sending troops.
Speaker 16 (36:28):
Into cities because he said it was World War two
and Portland and Chicago, and at the same time, he
wanted the Nobel Peace Prize because he said it was
the most peaceful guy on the planet.
Speaker 1 (36:37):
Crazy.
Speaker 16 (36:37):
So we're like, all right, that's that's a hypocrisy. That
makes for comedy and a special. So it's like, let's
go after this Nobel Peace Prize desire and let's talk
to people about like what's actually happening in these cities,
which is chaotic.
Speaker 2 (36:49):
Absolutely, and it's in the special blend. Stand up with
what you do in the field. What did you want
audiences to understand about America that you couldn't capture just
through field pieces.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
It just wouldn't stand it well.
Speaker 16 (37:02):
I mean, I think when you look at something like this,
what piece looks like in America, what it feels like?
What is so night We went to Portland, which was
supposedly World War two, and if you're watching Fox News,
if you're watching the right wing political sphere, all you're
seeing is this is a war zone. This is chaos.
You never want to visit. We went there on the
(37:23):
Naked Bike Ride, which was a comical experience full of
people dressed as some people who were naked, some people
who were dressed as cartoon characters, all of them going
outside in ice facility to protest what they saw is
inhumane treatment. It was comical, it was absurd, and then
we saw ice agents shoot pepper balls at these people
(37:44):
dressed as cartoon characters. And for me, that's what America
feels like right now. It's this absurdity, it's this violence
it's two different worlds clashing into one another. And so
that's why we go out and do these field pieces.
That's why we go out and do these specials. Is
it's one thing this behind a desk and talk about
what you see on camera. That's another thing to get
out there and and and see it up close.
Speaker 5 (38:06):
How do you measure the success of your pieces that
you do?
Speaker 15 (38:09):
Because it's it's comedy, but there's also like a deeper
conversation that you want to start, Like I know you
want to in me for your last one.
Speaker 5 (38:15):
So is it okay?
Speaker 1 (38:17):
Thank you?
Speaker 16 (38:17):
Thank you? Emmy wise I I had a couple at home.
Speaker 1 (38:22):
That's pretty nice. Pretty nice.
Speaker 16 (38:24):
Yeah, And even with all of that, I'm still so
nervous about what I wear. You know exactly that you
can't you can't get you let me, you think so,
but you still care. I measure success with clicks. That's
all that matters. Just clicks. Who is watching? How many clicks?
Speaker 14 (38:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 16 (38:42):
I was healthy, I was a supportive snort.
Speaker 1 (38:44):
I'm taking.
Speaker 16 (38:47):
I wish I didn't look at it, and I can't say,
I mean, you know what, there's truth in that comedy.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
I'd like to know. I I what I tried.
Speaker 16 (38:55):
Our intention in this is to find we're comedians in
this crazy, strange role. I came up an improv comedy guy,
a comedy dude who suddenly thrust on the Daily Show
and I love it, and then the world sort of explodes,
and our job is to find comedy in these chaotic times.
And I think using comedy as a way to add
(39:15):
context to a moment, and for people who aren't necessarily
paying attention and watching Comedy Central at eleven o'clock, who
might not be interested in politics suddenly to be paying
attention to the Nobel Peace Prize race and what's happening
in Portland, Like that's that's our intention.
Speaker 1 (39:28):
It's like engage in that conversation.
Speaker 16 (39:30):
And then late at night, when I feel good about
my intentions and what I've done, I go on YouTube
and I see how many people have watched it and
if it's not enough, and I compare to what else
is out there that I feel bad about myself. And
then I talk to my agent and they're like, well,
your contract's gonna be dependent on how successful the show is.
And then you watch CNN and it talks about what's
happening in the late night sphere, and then you worry
about eyeballs and the attention economy, and suddenly you have
(39:51):
a breakdown when you come on a show like this
and you're wearing something that's not exactly I'm just I
can't get out of it, you know, I can't get
my head outside of it.
Speaker 5 (39:57):
I'm so sorry.
Speaker 1 (39:59):
Just the only way to make special special? Is this
the only way to make special special?
Speaker 7 (40:05):
For me?
Speaker 16 (40:06):
Yes, there's something improvisational about it. We knew we were
gonna do a special three months ago, and the stuff
that we do is current. You know, we were we
were editing it up until yesterday. We were filming up
until like a week ago. And for me, I've done
specials that take a year. I've worked in the stand
up world, and you craft something over the course of
(40:28):
years to put that special out. But for the Daily Show,
for Fingers the Pulse, what we do is like, what's
the conversation right now? How do we make a larger
argument about that conversation, and how do we keep it
evolving up until the moment it goes out? So for
me that that retains the improv spirit of keeping it,
keeping it in the moment.
Speaker 1 (40:47):
I always wanted when you go out and you're talking
to these people, how does your wife feel like? Like,
I know it's a lot to be nervous, but how
is it on her?
Speaker 16 (40:56):
She she gets a little stressed when we go in,
has some hairy situations, like you know, she knows me,
trust me. When I bring that argumentative stance back home,
she is not as excited. Like it's one thing to
see the guy who goes out there and argues about
politics on the road, trying to find hypocrisy, but to
bring that guy home and in the house is a
(41:17):
tough thing for a wife and a loved one.
Speaker 1 (41:19):
So I feel for her in that position.
Speaker 16 (41:22):
As of the last few years, though, she is earnestly
worried about what happens out there.
Speaker 1 (41:28):
You know, it's crazy. People are crazy.
Speaker 16 (41:30):
And I started going out there with no security and
now I go out there with four security guards, and
there are threats that take place on the show, on
the family, and again when the camera's off, when you're
talking to people face to face, people are lovely. People
are not as bold and emboldened as they are online.
But when you step back from that, there's hate, there's
(41:53):
anger out there, and she fears for that you know,
we think about that, and I think this last six months,
with some of the violent activities that we've all seen,
like Late Night, chose people who are public, forward facing
and have to sort of reevaluate what.
Speaker 1 (42:06):
That looks like.
Speaker 16 (42:06):
And it's it's real and it's scary and you're trying
not to think too much about it.
Speaker 1 (42:11):
What was the incident that made you get for security
guards because you just don't go from having nobody to
all of a sudden four something had to happen. It
was I was.
Speaker 16 (42:19):
I think the big moment for us was right before
Trump's when Trump lost his re election campaign in twenty twenty,
and to stop the steal campaign, he had a giant
event in the Capitol and there were fifty thousand people
there and I was interacting with people, and the Trump
(42:41):
crew had gone from being in power and successful to
having lost an election, something they couldn't accept at the time,
and so they were angry. And I think there was
a shift from like, oh, this is playful. We don't
like the media, but we will be playful with them.
Suddenly I was pushing somebody in an interview and it
was getting a little bit intentious, and the people around
(43:01):
it who had nothing to do eyed on that started
to create two to three to ten to fifteen to
thirty people, and it became a mob of angry people,
and security had to extricate me from the situation and
run out, throw me in a van kind of a situation.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
And they chase me. They chase me.
Speaker 16 (43:19):
And it's that mob mentality that you saw a month
and a half later at January sixth, where it is
a bunch of people with nothing to do, emboldened by
a president who told him that you're a patriot and
that the media is the enemy of all people, and
they see that and literally, I don't think a lot
of the people who chased me had that intention. But
a minute and a half earlier, bored people walking around
(43:39):
emboldened by a president see something that they can do
and their brain turns off and they just they just chase.
And so when we encountered with that, it was like,
all right, we have to be prepared for this, and
quite frankly, when we go to rallies and events now,
we have to be tactical about where we are because
for a space where we can't get out of and
that mob again, you do it close to the car.
(43:59):
Now now I do it close to the cars, and
you know what, I'm gonna amend my comment about people.
I think person person is easy. People is tough, and
that's that was the case on the road. I can
talk one I want to that person. When they become people,
they start to lose accountability and that's what you can't
rationalize with group think all the way.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
You haven't think about keeping like a Maga hat in
your back pocket just.
Speaker 16 (44:23):
Going yes, I will say our producers have uh specific
colored hats and apparel to wear so that we blend
in really yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
For sure, like red hat. You mean the red hat.
Speaker 16 (44:37):
Our producer Ian Berger wears a red hockey hat from
some some minor league hockey team in Canada. It's got
like a red hat with like a mustang on it
that looks like looks like it's part of the team.
Because that's what it's tribalism out there, right you walk
out there, if you're wearing the red, you're wearing that
you're on the team and.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
There are not.
Speaker 15 (45:00):
I feel like it's worth it, like what you do
when putting yourself kind of like in the mix of
these people who could have that mentality and having a
beef up security.
Speaker 1 (45:07):
And I do.
Speaker 16 (45:08):
I love engaging with people and I do. For me,
what is most effective or interesting about what I do
is when like I feel like I'm stressed testing propaganda,
the stuff that you hear being fed to people on
all these on all these news shows, like where does it?
Where does it actually land with the American public? And
(45:30):
if I can go out there and I can find
that hypocrisy, if I can, like and it's it's most
revealing moments I'm having a conversation with somebody on the
road who has not had a conversation and thought through
their point of view until this very moment, right like
we all just accept these these points of view, these opinions,
these certainties that are fed us without like friends and
(45:52):
cohorts who push you on it. Like we're in these bubbles.
A lot of the people I talk to are in
media bubbles, They're in friend bubbles, They're in Facebook bubbles.
And when I come out here and I ask you,
why do you think that thing? They haven't thought through it,
And in that moment they have to articulate that my
job is to find comedy in it, some context in it,
but hopefully there's a little moment of revelation where you
(46:13):
see that person be that person again and you see
the BS and so yeah, for me, with that and
a little bit of health insurance, it feels like it's
worth it.
Speaker 2 (46:21):
So for you, at what point does comedy stop being
funny and start becoming like a public service.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
And start being a public service? That's a great question.
Speaker 16 (46:31):
I mean, you know, with The Daily Show, like John
always talks, we are a comedy show.
Speaker 1 (46:34):
That is our bias.
Speaker 16 (46:36):
And I think that's what is compelling about people when
they watch a show like that, they know are biased.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
All these shows have biased.
Speaker 16 (46:42):
The Daily Show has a bias towards comedy, calling out
the BS where they see it. So we're always approaching
it from that. And also, I am not a journalist.
I rely on the work of good journalists to tell
these stories to get good information and that we want
to keep that clear, and I don't want to get
over my skis in doing that.
Speaker 1 (47:00):
And in some of these.
Speaker 16 (47:01):
Situations, comedy has very little space to be and maybe
shouldn't be there. So for us again with this special,
we wanted to go to Portland, we wanted to go
to Chicago because I've seen images of what's happening with
ice raids, and they're heartbreaking and they're terrifying, And when
you have a microphone and a camera, you're like, how
do I point it at these things I think are
really important to talk about? But also what me going
(47:24):
in there making jokes? When is that helping a situation?
When is that becoming more activist and more comedian? And
how do I like take what I want to say
but still add the thing that I can do, which
is comedy. Quite literally, for this special, there was a
naked bike ride and so for us, we're like, all right,
here's a comedic take on what is happening in this
chaotic space. So let's use that so we can tell
(47:46):
a story. Because at that point, if I'm just getting
out there and just becoming an activist on television trying
to tell you what I think like, I don't serve
a purpose. I'm not speaking the language that I'm most
fluent in, and I'm not being effective to an audience
space who who understands I'm going after comedy and BS.
So I try to keep that as my north star.
So the naked bike ride was like naked, it was
naked naked. They were all there, My friend, they were
(48:09):
all there. We thought nobody would show up ten minutes beforehand.
There's like one or two naked dudes there all out.
By the end there were hundreds getting on bikes on cold,
cold Portland day, hoping on.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
The lot of shrinkage. There's a lot of shrinkage. I
gotta tell you, I you stop riding bikes too soon.
Speaker 16 (48:29):
Used you did, would would you have gone naked for
the cost.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
But for the cause? You would have gone? And I
don't want to be behind anybody that rides bike. That's
just a little weird. And see it, asshole, it's not
my thing.
Speaker 16 (48:41):
It's it's what's interesting is it's shocking for the first
twenty minutes, but when you're around two hundred naked people for.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
An hour or so, you get comfy too.
Speaker 16 (48:49):
I stripped down to an uncomfortable degree, got on a bike,
rode that bike.
Speaker 1 (48:54):
Don't does my assert Yes?
Speaker 16 (48:57):
But I mostly thinking, I mean, the ass doesn't feel good,
The ego feels poor.
Speaker 1 (49:03):
No, no, because the seat is hard. The seat's very hard, right,
but usually if you have clothes there's more padding. So
if there's no padding, that is right up.
Speaker 16 (49:10):
But you're thinking more about what's happening up front, though
you're worried about that how it's being perceived.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
Because you got you gotta put it on the left
for the right side of the seat.
Speaker 16 (49:19):
You choose, You choose, although if it's I'm talking about
the they're talking about a little bit of everything. Although
here's that is a benefit of the cold is you
don't necessarily have to choose. If it's cold enough, you
there's a recession that takes place with everything, which makes
choice irrelevant. You have a small penis, is what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (49:37):
At that point, we don't Okay, you got it. I
just want to be clear. I'm trying to paint a picture.
All stereotypes aren't true. Okay, this is good to know.
Let's do you feel like Donald Trump overlooks the Daily Show?
Speaker 7 (49:50):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (49:51):
Yeah, I wonder why, Thank god, thank god.
Speaker 16 (49:53):
I don't think he has cable. I think that man.
Speaker 1 (49:57):
I think that man, that man he's got.
Speaker 16 (50:00):
He still watches the channels he watched thirty years ago.
He watches Fox. He definitely watches Fox. But I don't
think he's like the grandparent who's got those few channels,
knows how to get to those few channels and doesn't
know how to get to the other channels. And so,
thank the Lord, he's not paying attention to the Daily Show.
He's got his own fish to fry.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
I wonder, though, with his influence that he clearly had
that paramount, will he, you know, maybe flex his muscle
behind us.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
I just don't want him to pay any attention to us.
Speaker 16 (50:32):
Well, there's different rules with the FCC and cable TV,
and so I think that may play into it as well.
But that man fixes his eyes on the stuff that's
right in front of him at all times, and it's
pretty clear the things that he watches and gets angry about.
So so as I promote this, I pray to God
he's not listening to the Breakfast Club because again, oh,
(50:54):
I know, he's not been super happy with.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
Charlotte was on Laura Trump Show.
Speaker 16 (50:58):
That's what it was, right, Yes, yes, did you did
you get blowback from the MAGA circle?
Speaker 1 (51:03):
Did you have any interaction with people?
Speaker 9 (51:04):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (51:05):
You know what's so interesting when I did that conversation
with Laurid Trump and my business partner said this to me.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
He was like, there's a lot of people that are
agreeing with the thing that you're saying, because.
Speaker 2 (51:13):
I'm not on there talking right or left, or even
black or white. I'm just talking about affordability and keeping
people safe in this country, and I don't feel like
he's doing a good job of that right now. It's
a simple conversation. We all can connect over the economy.
Speaker 16 (51:28):
Yeah, I mean, I think that's it was amazing to
see like Zorin in the Oval office and how like, yeah,
the economy and affordability that that speaks to the right.
If people get on those spaces and talk about that,
I think there's an effective lane for a lot of
those Fox viewers or what have you who are in
that bubble to be like, oh no, this is a
conversation that's happening in across party lines.
Speaker 4 (51:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
I love people like you joined because you actually be
out in the field talking to people. When you're out
in the field from your vantage point, Does America feel
more divided?
Speaker 1 (51:56):
Are just more recorded?
Speaker 16 (52:02):
Can I say both? We are more divided. We are
one hundred percent more divided. We are pushed to that space.
But like I said, it's the recording of the divisiveness
that that takes away our autonomy of thought. I think
you can break through, but people are angry, and there
are less people who are excited about the MAGA machine
(52:22):
than there ever were beforehand. There were less people excited
about the democratic machine than there ever were beforehand. I
think that's what happened in this last election. And so
you go out there now and yeah, people are people
are pissed off. They're angry, and they're more certain than
they've ever been because there's recording devices on them. But
there's still a glimmer of hope of like they want
to talk about affordability. I went to Mississippi and I
(52:44):
talked to a bunch of MAGA supporters. What was curious
is they're all afraid of places like Portland and Chicago
because of what the margosphere has told them about these
big cities.
Speaker 1 (52:54):
Afraid of all big cities.
Speaker 16 (52:56):
And the older people were afraid of Antifa because that's
the narrative that Trump pushes. The younger people every time
I ask them about things like Antifa, no interest, didn't
care and realize in that moment, you're like, oh, some
of these narratives that are being ginned up to be
divisive and push people apart. The boogeyman, the Antifa boogeyman.
The old people buy in hook line and Sneaker, and
(53:16):
they love it, and they're afraid and they're changing the
way they think because of that. The young people are
too smart for that, and they don't they they're not
as deep in as some of these other folks who
are in it to win it. And so I see
those moments I have I have optimism. We're like, oh,
these kids, these kids are easily swaying, but are not
but are not. I haven't been watching the show for
(53:37):
twenty years. Like the old folks were making some of
these decisions, this younger generation is just tuning in. They're
not buying some of these these boogeymen that the Trump
administration is putting out, and there's there is a space
to have conversation with those folks about things that they
care about. Maybe we see that in the midterms, maybe
we see that in the next year. But not everybody's
completely all in on that Trump train.
Speaker 1 (53:57):
So that's a that's a great point.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
What's scarier do you people who believe these wild conspiracy
theories that are people who knowingly weaponize well, the people.
Speaker 16 (54:05):
Who knowingly weaponize that. I think it's the people who
wield it. I think that's where there's like no moral
core where you know you it's one thing to be
afraid of stuff and then out of self preservation, which, hey,
that's that's how most of us move through life. What
is the next thing I need to do to pay
my rent, to have health insurance for my kids, to
to keep food on the table. What do I need
(54:27):
to do? Is there a way I can believe the
things I need to believe to sustain that. I get that,
I empathize with that. That makes you human. It's the
people who know better. Those are the folks that are
real scary here. And I wish our elected officials would
stand up and be the people who know better. But
you know, I've been around long enough not to have
that faith in those institutions anymore.
Speaker 1 (54:50):
Yeah, hope, you hope a little.
Speaker 16 (54:53):
Bit some of that that morality we always talked about
in schools and the Declaration of Independence talks about. You
hope that sort of makes its way back into political
discourse again. Yeah, that's a pretty good one, Yeah, I
gotta tell you. And hearing all this religious talk on
the right too, it's like, yeah, there's a lot of
good ideals there that you wish we believed in, and
I think a lot of people do. There's just more
(55:14):
focus on putting food on the table to actually engage
in that larger conversation.
Speaker 1 (55:18):
So what gives you hope about America right now? You
want me to find hope and all of this.
Speaker 16 (55:24):
You know what what gives me hope about America is
a naked guy protesting out front of an ice facility,
Like you're wondering if people have tuned out apathy. That's
what That's what the right, that's what the far right was.
They want apathy. They don't want you to care if
you show up with your balls out it's out in
a rainy Portland day to like go outside of an
(55:44):
ice facility and be like, I don't want them to
use my image to be painted as a bad guy,
so much so that I'm willing to be naked in
front of all these folks to look like a fool
because I think what's happening inside is inhumane.
Speaker 1 (55:55):
Like that that is helpful to me. That's saying literally,
the ladies and gentlemen, definitely check out the special and
next Monday on Comedy Central, and thank you for joining us. Thanks.
Did you make you laugh, Lauren?
Speaker 4 (56:06):
He did?
Speaker 1 (56:07):
Okay, breakfast It. Let's get to the latest with Lauren.
Lauren becoming a straight fast she gets them somebody that
knows somebody.
Speaker 5 (56:19):
I'm a home girl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 1 (56:22):
She'd be having the Latest on.
Speaker 7 (56:24):
The lawn, The Latest with Lauren la Rosa.
Speaker 2 (56:27):
Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details, sometimes you
have a little bit of everything.
Speaker 1 (56:30):
It's the latest on.
Speaker 7 (56:31):
The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (56:34):
All right, y'all.
Speaker 15 (56:35):
So y'all remember yesterday we did the conversation about ray
J and he was saying, bring Beyonce, jay Z, come
take some pictures with Brandy. I got so many phone
calls yesterday.
Speaker 5 (56:46):
Like, I didn't even go looking for this. I got
so many phone calls yesterday.
Speaker 15 (56:49):
It was not no, no, no, it's not ray J.
Let's be very clear. I did not talk to RAJ
about this story. That is not the sources that I
spoke to. But yesterday I got calls from people that
are close to the tour and people that would know
who called me and said, hey, you know, I saw
the report and now there's video circulating online of you know,
Brandy walking right past Beyonce backstage and just different things.
(57:10):
And they're like they don't fool with each other, like
they don't like Brandy.
Speaker 5 (57:15):
Yes, so from what I'm.
Speaker 15 (57:16):
Told, uh, hold on, from what I'm told, they do,
they do not fool with each other. I mean, Jess,
you made a comment yesterday, you said you can't miss
Brandy at that tour.
Speaker 5 (57:27):
Yeah, Jess, And no, I don't know. I will say.
I will say though that comment.
Speaker 15 (57:33):
When the person called me, they said, I just want to,
you know, think think Jess for you know, making a
point that makes sense because you can't misbrand get the tour.
But from what I was told is that, uh, you know,
at one point there was a cordial relationship. I was
told that Kelly Rowland and uh Brandy actually used to
be pretty close, but even that has subsided in years.
But yeah, there's been this whole thing, and from what
(57:54):
I was told from the sources is that, you know,
this kind of linger from you know, Beyonce came up
and became girl like Brandy is the girl and they
both are still phenomenal, iconic women and what they do.
But at some point during Beyonce's climb, things kind of
got a little bit rocky. And they haven't established anything
better friendship wise from that point.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
So you're saying that long Alsa is saying that Brandy
and Beyonce.
Speaker 15 (58:17):
Do with each other from what I'm being told, Yes,
Sourcess Recording, Yeah, we don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
The reason why.
Speaker 15 (58:29):
I mean I was I was pointing to a bunch
of different things. So, like I said that, there was
a conversation around, like you know, Beyonce's come up, and
you know Brandy's take on that, uh, and then some
other things that I'll get into, I'm sure because I'll
get some more calls after this conversation.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
Right now about twenty you like better'n.
Speaker 1 (58:49):
That's a good question.
Speaker 5 (58:52):
I'a always trying to kill me.
Speaker 15 (58:54):
I love both of those women. They are both iconic.
I said that about fifty seconds ago. But yeah, so
that's what I've been told. So, I mean, all this
stuff is circulating now, and I'm sure I'll be providing
more and maybe some people may be screaming at us
after this, but we'll be back to have the conversation.
Speaker 5 (59:09):
I don't know.
Speaker 14 (59:13):
Here.
Speaker 5 (59:14):
I will say though, from what I.
Speaker 15 (59:16):
Was told, it's not like, oh my god, I hate her,
It's super malicious it's just they just don't.
Speaker 5 (59:21):
They're just her. She won't be down, but not with her.
Speaker 15 (59:26):
Exactly exactly now in other news, speaking of not being
down with somebody, Holly Berry, it's not here for Gavin
Newsom whatsoever.
Speaker 5 (59:38):
Okay.
Speaker 15 (59:39):
Uh So yesterday Charlottagne, I know you were at this
event yesterday, Halle Berry, she spoke and she said that
Gavin Newsom has overlooked women and should not be president.
Speaker 5 (59:49):
Let's take a listen.
Speaker 12 (59:51):
Back in my great state of California, my very own governor,
Gavin Newsom has vetoled our menopause bill, not one but
two years in a row. But that's okay because he's
not going to be governor forever. And with the way
he's overlooked women half the population by devaluing us in midlife,
he probably should not be our next president either. Just
(01:00:12):
saying I need every woman in this country.
Speaker 5 (01:00:15):
To fight with me. But the truth is the fight.
Speaker 12 (01:00:17):
Isn't just for us women.
Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
We need men too.
Speaker 12 (01:00:20):
We need you to have the conversation anyway, because when
women are struggling silently through perimenopause and menopause, trying to
hold their families, careers, relationships, and communities together, it doesn't
just affect women. It affects every household, It affects the workplace,
it affects the economy. One in six women leave the
workplace due to their menopausal symptoms.
Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Yeah, that was at the York Times deal Book summing
deal books. Okay, I spoke on a panel there yesterday
as well. But you know what was so interesting about
that conversation. Gavin came on shortly after that. Really, yes,
like I want to say, he was the next panel after.
Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
Did he respond? I don't know.
Speaker 15 (01:00:58):
We're trying to find we're trying to find the audio
from so this is just beginning to circulate, but we're
trying to find the audio now from Gavin's conversation to
check to see if he mentioned anything whatsoever. It would, honestly,
I feel like it would be very in you know,
on brand for him to have at least acknowledged that.
Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
It would only make sense for the interviewer to ask him,
especially when it just happened, you know, at their event.
But you know, Hollywood was like, I'm fifty six, and
she literally said I have zero f to give anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:01:25):
Right, A lot of people got criticism of Gavin News
him in that way though.
Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
I mean people criticize him about, you know, the way
he handled homelessness in California, the housing crisis at home
in California. So I mean it's fair. She's a resident
of California. It's fair criticism.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Yeah, well, I mean you don't like ability. He didn't
approve I I don't see nothing wrong with what she said.
Speaker 15 (01:01:42):
Yeah, and people I don't the gas and all, and
people are like, oh, shoot, Holly Barry. But wow, but
she'd been straight at him on I don't know if
you'll follow her on x oh, you can't play with
Halle Berry on no social platform. She's gonna respond, She's
gonna tell you how she feels what it is, but
it's not She is not to be played with.
Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
At the point in her life, she don't care.
Speaker 2 (01:01:58):
Gavin knew someome governor knew some was there like, yeah,
I'm telling you, I think he was the next panel
right after.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
She had a point where she don't care. She's gonna
say how she feel fit what she said.
Speaker 15 (01:02:08):
Well, speaking of you know, people getting some ouh's eyes
and pushback. Tabitha Brown, y'all remember when Tabitha Brown was
going through it because the target and DEI influencer and
now she's an author and she has all these things with.
Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
Yeah, she was here recently.
Speaker 15 (01:02:25):
She actually was speaking to Kevi on stage on his
podcast and said that she had to be for prsecurity
during that time.
Speaker 5 (01:02:31):
Let's say listen, it was just hurtful that people would
go to that extreme.
Speaker 18 (01:02:35):
I mean, you know, I had to heighten my security
because like people were like approaching me and trying to
like it was. It got bad for a minute, you know,
the messages, the threats. I was like, y'all, I'm not
the enemy. I'm for the people I just happened to
be in business with at this time the enemy. That's
the part I think that hurt me the most, because
even even through it all, I still love my people,
(01:02:57):
and my hope is that we all can like learn.
Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
Did you ever wish you would have just left your
first video and not made the second one?
Speaker 1 (01:03:06):
I think about that all the time.
Speaker 18 (01:03:07):
But I would be a hypocrite if I had never
said anything. Knowing that all the people in the small
businesses who were asking for help and calling, I just
felt responsible to speak up for the other businesses.
Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
You know what I'm saying, Like I don't regret it.
Speaker 18 (01:03:22):
But I mean there are days I'd be like, I
should have just let people with their imagination.
Speaker 15 (01:03:27):
Yeah, that's kind of crazy to have to, you know,
beef up security and look over your shoulder. And she
got kids and all of that over your decision to
you know, stay with the retailer, like I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:03:37):
Tabitha Brown did nothing wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
Yeah, And the fact that people even can fix their
brains to think Tabitha Brown is not for the people
is insanity to me. And the fact that she has
to be for persecurity because of threats from.
Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
Her own people is in sanity to me.
Speaker 15 (01:03:51):
Yeah, especially when she's so for the people and for
the entrepreneur and for the you know, you don't have
to love everything everybody does.
Speaker 5 (01:03:58):
But she said like getting threats.
Speaker 6 (01:04:00):
And then did you even even hear her saying or
her gracious ass she said, it's okay, I love my
people through it all.
Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
What mister.
Speaker 2 (01:04:12):
Said, you gotta love these niggas even though they hate themselves. Yeah,
that's crazy.
Speaker 15 (01:04:16):
Yeah, Well that was from not my best moment with
Kevin said she You can go take a listen to
that full uh interview series.
Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
I Love Kevi on Stage podcast. I love this show. Yes,
actually I miss called mister fra Conn. That was a
little bit more of me.
Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
But mister fra Con says you have to love black
people more than they hate themselves.
Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
We knew you do the Negro. Don't. Don't think the
minister won't drop a word. Okay, sometimes the ain't nothing
else to call you. What's wrong? You were you giving
your donkey too?
Speaker 2 (01:04:43):
Speaking of it, there's a Florida man named John Fuller
who needs to come to the front of the congregation.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
We like to have a word with this man. I
wonder if they did the percentage of how many people
you give donkeys to and Florida. It's not my fault.
Speaker 5 (01:04:56):
When I be out they be seeing that. Like tell
Charlotte Lee, Florida alone.
Speaker 1 (01:04:59):
People control for Florida. That's crazy. By the way, Florida is.
Everybody know Florida is a crazy ass state. Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
The whole g T A six is about to be
based off how crazy Florida is. They got a show
on HBO called Florida Man with nothing but crazy people
from I.
Speaker 15 (01:05:15):
Used to fly for Dulcia. People used to want extra
money for having to work to Florida.
Speaker 2 (01:05:19):
You know, what I.
Speaker 6 (01:05:21):
Promo because I got shows in Connecticut, YO. And the
guy had asked me, He's like, so, what is what
is one of the most rowdiest, craziest cities you have?
Speaker 5 (01:05:28):
I said, Jacksonville, Florida crazy, but.
Speaker 15 (01:05:30):
Florida, I love you. When I come to Miami for
our Bosa this weekend, show me love our bozzle or
art Basil.
Speaker 5 (01:05:35):
Fazzil Basil Bozzle. I'll be there December six.
Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
Florida, your reputation precedes the days up next.
Speaker 8 (01:05:43):
Make sure you're telling them watch out for Florida, Milorida.
Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx in
all of Florida. Yes, you are adult.
Speaker 19 (01:05:55):
The Florida man attacked an ATM for a very strange reason.
Speaker 1 (01:05:59):
It gave him too much huch money.
Speaker 5 (01:06:00):
Florida man is arrested after that.
Speaker 12 (01:06:01):
He said he riggs the door to his home in
an attempt to electric hit his pregnant lights.
Speaker 5 (01:06:05):
Police arrested in Orlando man for taking.
Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
Up Amida to breakfast club. Bitch you Donkey of the
Day with Shalam Hayne, a guy. I don't know why
y'all keep letting him get y'all elected. It is not
me little duvall is Florida.
Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
Okay, donkey Today for Thursday, December fourth goes to a
thirty one year old Florida man named John Fuller. Okay,
what does your uncle Shalla always say about the great
state of Florida.
Speaker 1 (01:06:24):
The craziest people.
Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
In America come from the Bronx and all of Florida,
and today is no different. Now John has been charged
with first degree murder and he's pleaded not guilty. I'm
sure every murderer in Florida pleads not guilty, but John
is being accused of killing twenty eight year old Cameron Hoilette.
Why did John kill Cameron? Well, let's go to NBC
(01:06:46):
two for thirty fourth Police.
Speaker 13 (01:06:47):
Thirty one year old John Christopher Fuller has been charged
with murder after the Thanksgiving Day shooting of his girlfriend's
co worker at her Maitland apartment. Maitland police arrived at
Summit Center Way around twelve fifteen pm and found twenty
eight year old Cameron toilet shot and lying on the
bedroom floor. Police say fullest girlfriend Nila Lindsay, told detectives
(01:07:08):
she was redoing her coworker's hair when the suspect arrived
at her door. An argument broke out, and the police
report says the victim stated if there was a problem,
he would just leave, and that he only came to
get his hair braided. Without warning, the defendant pulled out
a firearm and shot the victim in the face. The
arrest report goes on to say that Fuller and his
girlfriend had been in a relationship for nearly a year
(01:07:31):
and a half. She moved here from West Palm Beach
about two months ago, and it also says that he
found a job nearby and would move soon.
Speaker 1 (01:07:41):
She told detectives.
Speaker 13 (01:07:42):
Due to the long distance relationship, they began having issues
and the defendant started accusing her of cheating. She told
police she'd been upset with him for not being truthful
about the potential job he mentioned because he lied about
the stark date.
Speaker 2 (01:07:58):
First things first, Rest in peace, Cameron hoilet. Okay, what
a senseless murder. John. There is no way on God's
green earth that you did your jail math. And this
made sense to you. I tell y'all all the time.
You know what jail math is. Okay, Before you commit
whatever crime your mind tells you to commit in the moment,
simply ask yourself. Can you afford to do this? Can
you afford the time you will spend in jail of prison?
(01:08:20):
Can you afford the lawyer? Can you afford the bell?
When it comes to murder, the answer is usually no, no, no,
in hell no okay, which they was usually just mean,
sit your stupid ass down somewhere, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:08:32):
I would never understand throwing your life away because of
a woman.
Speaker 2 (01:08:37):
A woman don't want to be with you like you
and your lady was having some problems. It was a
long distance relationship. You thought she was cheating. She was
nine months pregnant with your child. The day before Thanksgiving,
you called her. She said you. You said you missed her.
You wanted to come over. She told you no, she
was busy, she had plans. You ignored her and came
to the apartment anyway. You knocked on her doors. She
answered and told you I'm braiding someone's hair, and I
(01:08:59):
told you not the over. You didn't listen. You let
your emotions get the best of you. You proceed past her,
went in to her home. She didn't even stop you, John,
She didn't even stop you because in the police report,
it says she just assumed he was just gonna watch
her braid the victim's hair. Okay, then you hear what
this said in the news report. You know, John approached
(01:09:19):
the young man Cameron. Cameron wasn't leading with ego. Cameron said,
if there was a problem, he would just leave. I
only came to get my hair braided. Okay, Thanksgiving. I
just want to get my hair braided, to have a
fresh dude gone about my business. Then John, without warning,
pulls out a firearm shoots Cameron in the face.
Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
My brother's emotion can be the enemy. Okay. If you
give in to your emotion, you lose yourself.
Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
You must be at one with your emotions because the
body always follows the mind.
Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
That's Bruce Leie.
Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
The emotions of man are stirred more quickly than man's intelligence.
That's Oscar whild Now, baby girl, donundump me. She no
longer wants me. I'm no longer hired. She said that
I've been fired. On to the next one. More fishing.
Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
The sea.
Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
Girls are like buses, miss one next fifteen one comment.
That's Rodger Davis aka Gucci Man. Okay, she don't want
to be with you, so what John? All right, she's
having your child. Now that child will not have a father.
Guess what else, John, and Florida, first degree murder is
a capital felony and the only possible sentences are life
imprisonment without the possibility of parole are the death penalty.
(01:10:26):
So if you thought she was with another man, now,
my god, she is guaranteed to be with another man
because you're going to prison to do life, and this
young lady has to move on with hers brothers. Don't
do something permanently stupid because you are temporarily upset. Please
give John Fuller the biggest he huh, horrible store.
Speaker 5 (01:10:48):
So she was not muchs pregnant with his baby.
Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
Damn, that's wild, horrible store.
Speaker 6 (01:10:54):
And he probably was been toxic, you know what I mean,
probably been toxic.
Speaker 5 (01:10:59):
That's why she didn't want to be around him.
Speaker 6 (01:11:00):
Because I was trying to figure out, like, why would
she say, no, don't come to spend time right before
the holiday. But he's probably already been showing signs of
doing stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
And she was mad at him because she thought, you know,
he was lying about a job and he was supposed
to move and blah blah blah.
Speaker 1 (01:11:18):
Marland stories.
Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
It's a whole bunch of mess, and Cameron should not
be deceased because of he just got caught up in
somebody else's mess.
Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
Yes, that's right, all right, we'll take it.
Speaker 5 (01:11:29):
Sorry. Then imagine how she feels about that.
Speaker 6 (01:11:32):
She probably blames herself that she about to have a baby.
The father not about to be there obviously, Like that's
a lot, that's a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:11:41):
Yeah, all right, well up next, just fix my mess.
If you got some mess like that, called just now
before you do something, don't call the police, don't country
Just fix my messes. The breakfast Club, good morning, that's
about me. For relationship problems, that's about me.
Speaker 6 (01:11:57):
If you need to beat your coworker's ass at about me,
put worker need to be show ass, call it up,
doctor Jess and I'm here to fix your masks.
Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Fix your mess.
Speaker 5 (01:12:06):
It's getting very much mess.
Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Let me fix this morning. Everybody is dj n V,
Jess Hilaris Charlamagne the guy. We are the breakfast Club.
It's time for just fix my mess. What's your name, bro?
My name is Deman. What's your question for jess Man?
How did you.
Speaker 3 (01:12:19):
Deal with a woman who has personal hygiene issues?
Speaker 14 (01:12:23):
Damn?
Speaker 6 (01:12:24):
So, how do you deal with the woman who has
personal hygiene issues.
Speaker 5 (01:12:28):
When did you how long you been dealing with this woman?
Speaker 6 (01:12:29):
First of all, before you before you found out about
the personal hygiene issues.
Speaker 14 (01:12:35):
We've been rocking on and off.
Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
You said, six.
Speaker 5 (01:12:41):
Okay, about six months you've been dealing with her.
Speaker 6 (01:12:43):
And when was it that you realize that she had
these bad hygiene issues?
Speaker 15 (01:12:50):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:12:50):
I realized, like when you stay together for a couple
of days, take a bad one.
Speaker 6 (01:12:55):
Oh, you was over there for more than one day,
and she only took a bit in y'all were and y'all,
I guess we're having sex. So it's like, yo, when
you only freshened up one time, you only took a
shower at one time.
Speaker 1 (01:13:05):
Yeah, that went took me to the upper road.
Speaker 5 (01:13:07):
Oh my god, So you you smelled it.
Speaker 6 (01:13:09):
It's not even that you've only seen her take a
bath once.
Speaker 5 (01:13:12):
You actually have witnessed it smelling.
Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
Her smell everything.
Speaker 3 (01:13:20):
I don't know if it's a medical issue or I
don't know, but she's just too pretty too to.
Speaker 5 (01:13:25):
Be smelling like that. Jesus Christ. Okay, has it ever
been out in public?
Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
No, No, it has never been in public.
Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
But I did get it like a little whip for
like must one time when it was out and I
just checked myself, so I little one meet.
Speaker 1 (01:13:37):
Yeah, but I don't know. Okay, how do you like her?
Speaker 6 (01:13:42):
Is this somebody that you would like to be with
because this is fixable? Do you like her?
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (01:13:46):
I really really do like her.
Speaker 6 (01:13:48):
Okay, Well I think you should actually sit her down
and have a conversation with her. Now, listen, I'm ask
you this last question before I go on. When you
were at her house? How does her house look like?
Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
Is it dirty?
Speaker 6 (01:13:58):
Is it junkie like? Is it you know what I'm saying, Like,
does she keep her house clean?
Speaker 4 (01:14:03):
Fallowless? Her body?
Speaker 6 (01:14:06):
Everything is clean except her body? Okay, Well, it may
be a medical issue. I was I was asking because
I was like, it may be her environment.
Speaker 1 (01:14:13):
It may but.
Speaker 6 (01:14:13):
It's her Okay, So you have to sit her down
and just be honest with her. You said you've been
dealing with her on and off for six months or
six years?
Speaker 1 (01:14:21):
I'm sorry what you say? Six months? Okay?
Speaker 5 (01:14:23):
Six months because your phone keep going and O okay,
so six months?
Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
So you like this girl?
Speaker 6 (01:14:27):
Y'all still are in y'all. You know, preliminary stages, y'all.
Y'all are still like early on with it, so I
do feel like before y'all actually go any further, it's
it's a conversation. Oh like, you owe that to her.
You know, you really like her and obviously she likes you.
You sit her down and you tell her like over
dinner or befoot no, no, no, because what if she's thinking
(01:14:48):
at dinner now y'all want to tell out in public.
Speaker 3 (01:14:52):
Restaurant and you start thinking that dinner, I'm a to
just ask like.
Speaker 1 (01:14:55):
I got.
Speaker 6 (01:14:57):
No, you don't want to do that, just just tell her,
just be like, hey, babe, I have been pondering on
how I can bring this to you and be the
most respectful while doing it, because I like you and
I noticed that your hygiene is not up to par right,
And if you don't want to say it like that,
asks gpt how to say it nicer. But you gotta
(01:15:18):
be honest with her, because that's yeh.
Speaker 3 (01:15:22):
Honesty can lead to you know, segregation.
Speaker 4 (01:15:25):
She might be don't feel the same way.
Speaker 3 (01:15:27):
She might feel like I'm attacking her or attacking her.
Speaker 6 (01:15:31):
But you might be surprised because this can't be the
first time that she heard this. If you're if you
the way you are describing this. Somebody else had to
smell this, not not only you. You know, so she's
been told this before, or maybe she hadn't. Maybe the
previous men have just like left her alone or even friends.
I know she got friends or something, a cat or
something that don't want to be around her all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:15:53):
You look like that, so single after all these years.
Speaker 1 (01:15:59):
Now my blowing.
Speaker 5 (01:16:01):
Yeah, you gotta be honest with her. You like her.
Speaker 6 (01:16:05):
You're running the risk of segregation. But at the same time,
I mean separation. But at the same time, she.
Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
May appreciate the truth.
Speaker 6 (01:16:13):
She may appreciate all right, Look, I gotta get myself together.
I you know, it's something, and she may even come
clain like, yo, I do have a medical issue. I
just don't know who can help me with it. Then
now you gotta find you gotta help her find a
dermatologist or whoever deals with the bo because whatever's.
Speaker 2 (01:16:31):
Coming from huh, I might need to find her new obg.
Speaker 5 (01:16:36):
Right, you might always always down, nail.
Speaker 6 (01:16:39):
I thought it was just like her body armpits because
you say must and everywhere, Oh my God Jesus, and
you really Yeah, it may be medical. Then it may
be medical.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
But it may not.
Speaker 6 (01:16:54):
But I think you need to be honest whatever it is,
because if she's too beautiful and you know, she got
a lot going for us off and you really you
like her, and that's the only thing holding you back,
that's fixable. She gotta be able to fix it, you know,
she her pride can't get in the way of her
smell like.
Speaker 5 (01:17:07):
She has to fix this, not not just.
Speaker 1 (01:17:11):
For you, for her too. So be honest.
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
I would just go ahead, you know, warton milon and
pine out with her stuff and making sure she's clean,
you know, just to get whatever talk that she got
and her body flushed out.
Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
What does it smell like? I'm just curious what is like?
Speaker 8 (01:17:26):
He said, the upper room, tiny food center around for
like a couple of days, that's what it's like.
Speaker 5 (01:17:31):
Oh my god, man, I'm trying to figure out why
the Holly like her.
Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
Okay, that's fine, Yeah, just fun.
Speaker 6 (01:17:39):
Yeah, what you gotta talk to her because you laying
it on thick for me, So you need to go
and talk to her today.
Speaker 1 (01:17:45):
Matter fact. Go over there now, go.
Speaker 6 (01:17:47):
Run all right, I'm gonna all right check in with me.
I'm here next Thursday. You gotta you gotta tell me
what came of the conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:17:55):
I definitely will. I checked back in with you. I
appreciate it, no problem, damn it man, No, that sucks.
What about douche do people still do?
Speaker 6 (01:18:05):
Not really because that's not really healthy for us as
we thought it was with all them chemicals putting that
up in there.
Speaker 1 (01:18:11):
That's not really good and work right.
Speaker 6 (01:18:13):
That's for floors env That is a janitorial cleanser.
Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
Sorry, we got on the line. Chay, good morning, Hi.
Speaker 5 (01:18:20):
Good morning morning babe.
Speaker 1 (01:18:21):
How are you.
Speaker 14 (01:18:23):
I'm doing well, are you, Jazz?
Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
I'm good, honey. What's up?
Speaker 14 (01:18:26):
Me and my baby father whatever, We've been together like
off and on for like seven years. We have three children,
and so right now we're like off and he is
basically like trying to put all the responsibility on me
as far as the finances go, as far as like
pick up drop offs when it comes through everything. But
(01:18:46):
yet he want to take me to court and basically
put on paper that he's like the primary parent. And
you know, I'm just like, I don't. I hate the
court system. I hate I grew up in the system
and court like my parent is fighting back and forth
and stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:19:01):
Like that.
Speaker 14 (01:19:01):
So basically I'm like, do I really want to go
back to court and fight this man over my children?
And like go tell tell it all, because it's like yo,
like at the end of the day, I got receipts
I spend on my children. I do it whatever I
have to do for my kids. I just asked this
man to get the kids some T shirts and stuff
for the winner he thought about Christmas coming up, Like.
Speaker 5 (01:19:20):
Yeah, witness today, sir, I feel you.
Speaker 6 (01:19:24):
Is it at the point where it's irreconcilable, like y'all
can't y'all can't come to an agreement outside of court?
Or is he like, is I want to know where
the court angle is coming from? Because you said y'all
are off and y'all are it sounds like y'all are toxic, right,
y'all love each other, but y'all are on and off,
so that there's a bit of toxicity there. When y'all
(01:19:45):
are off, are things usually hostile?
Speaker 14 (01:19:48):
Yeah, So, like he's the type of person that like, okay,
we all been he stopped doing for his children even
like he'll do for them less like he'll you know,
kind of like I just out a little bit like
I mean, don't get me.
Speaker 6 (01:20:00):
Wrong, he's father, so the yeah, so the core thing
is literally just him being upset on.
Speaker 14 (01:20:07):
Paper, Yes, on paper, he wants to be a parent,
but like I said, financially and in real life, he don't.
You know, he can't. He can't keep up, you know.
Speaker 6 (01:20:16):
Okay, Well listen, let's take away the kids for a second.
Speaker 5 (01:20:19):
One second. You and him right are, well, what.
Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
Is the problem.
Speaker 6 (01:20:24):
Why do y'all keep being off when y'all are on
obviously things are good.
Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
Why do y'all keep getting off? What is the problem?
Speaker 14 (01:20:31):
The problem for me personally is bad. He doesn't know
how to communicate well, and like it's like talking to
a child, like if he has a problem with something,
and if anything, like he has an issue with anything
at all, it's like he'll get emotional and you know,
don't know how to communicate like an adult. And for
me it's like all I have to do is just
talk normally, and you know, it's like, hey, this is
(01:20:53):
the problem. How can we fixed it?
Speaker 4 (01:20:55):
And like he don't, he don't.
Speaker 14 (01:20:56):
He's never wrong. He never, you know, never did nothing wrong.
You ask him, he never did nothing wrong, but be
too good, And it's just like the fee.
Speaker 4 (01:21:03):
I can't you to put us as fast.
Speaker 14 (01:21:05):
You know, it's like it's manipulating, like the only thing
you ever did, Yeah, the only thing good to me
the whole time.
Speaker 4 (01:21:11):
That's why we offered.
Speaker 14 (01:21:12):
But I'm the only problem.
Speaker 6 (01:21:15):
So that's a deeper issue, that's deeper than this relationship
that that stems from maybe his childhood, that stems from
maybe a relationship before you.
Speaker 1 (01:21:24):
That he never healed from you.
Speaker 6 (01:21:26):
You get what I'm saying, Because the manipulation people just
don't become manipulators overnight. That this type of behavior that
you're describing that's built up like that, that's somebody being
conditioned to be that way. So that takes time. And
he's been living his life that way for a long time.
So he needs therapy. He actually needs to fix himself
as an individual, you know, if you get to the
(01:21:47):
root of why he can't communicate and why he he
gets so hostile and and just goes.
Speaker 5 (01:21:54):
Because I feel like the court play is very malicious.
Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
I feel like he's doing it because.
Speaker 6 (01:21:58):
He's upset, and when he calms down, he may regret
doing that, but that's something that he already popped the
lid on. You know, because he's trying to hit below
the belt because y'all are off. So it's about who
can win this argument and who's going to.
Speaker 1 (01:22:12):
Be like, you get what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (01:22:15):
It's like, no, you shouldn't go this way with somebody
that you have children with, that you are actually in
a relationship with most of the time you can't do right. Yeah,
So it doesn't sound like it's It doesn't sound like
it's over. It just sounds like y'all got a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:22:32):
Of work to do.
Speaker 6 (01:22:34):
And what he shouldn't do is throw the kids in
the middle of something that they have nothing to do with.
He gotta work on himself and then he gotta work
on y'all relationship. Y'all gotta work on that, but the
kids still come first.
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
So it's a lot of work.
Speaker 6 (01:22:48):
Y'all gotta do. And I got a book that is
available for pre order, so Death Do We Parent Right?
And it's a coparenting memoir. It reflects on my journey
raising my son with his dad. Me and Ron went
through a lot of this in the earlier stages of
our raising Ashton.
Speaker 5 (01:23:04):
We were very young and it wasn't until.
Speaker 6 (01:23:08):
We sat down and we had a talk right where
it's like, Yo, I don't want you, you don't want me,
or maybe you do want me, but this will never
be like it is. We gotta say it will never
be a good relationship. We have a son, though y'all
have three children. Y'all gotta get it right for right now,
you feel me so or as soon as you can,
because kids can't wait for y'all get y'all. Kids can't
(01:23:30):
wait for y'all to get y'all ished together, you feel
me like cause they still waning and evolving every day
and they're looking to y'all.
Speaker 5 (01:23:36):
Y'all are their example. Y'all had them.
Speaker 6 (01:23:39):
They didn't ast to be here, So y'all got to
figure out how to govern y'allselves individually, so.
Speaker 5 (01:23:44):
Y'all can be the best parents for these kids.
Speaker 6 (01:23:46):
You know, y'all gotta work on your relationship, like whether
y'all gotta decide right now whether we are we gonna
be together?
Speaker 1 (01:23:52):
Are we not?
Speaker 6 (01:23:53):
Our kids can't wait for us to decide, and can't
wait for us to keep going back and forth, and
can't wait for us to figure out or how we're
gonna conquer the toxicity that we got with each other
we parents first, but absolutely right though, he needs help
for sure. I know what you're describing.
Speaker 14 (01:24:09):
Yeah, yeah, you know, and I've been I'll see it
now more because I've been working on my mental health
my own, and like for him, he refuses, so it's
like I can see it clearer now. And yeah, it's
tough to get somebody to see it for himself because
it's like it's one of them things where it's like
you gotta want it. I can't want it for you.
Speaker 6 (01:24:25):
Absolutely, yep. I struggle with that with with my son's
dad for a while, you know, because I love Rome
so much. That's my family. I'm not talking about intimate
like I'm that's my guy. So it's like I loved
them so I love him so much. I was trying
to like help him, do everything for him, but he
needed other help, professional help, which he got, you know,
(01:24:46):
therapy and everything like that, because he has trauma that
stemmed from him being ten years old, you know, and
then you grow up and then it affects your relationships.
Speaker 1 (01:24:54):
That affects how you it.
Speaker 6 (01:24:56):
Uh, it affects how you look at women, how you
even parent, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:25:02):
So yeah, yeah, you're gonna be get.
Speaker 14 (01:25:06):
How did how did you get how did how did
you get Rome? Or how did Rome come to the
get to that point to where he was willing to
get the help?
Speaker 6 (01:25:13):
He had to want it, he had to wing and
he he would say things like because I would tell him, Yo,
you gotta get therapist. He'd be like, yeah, yeah, I will,
just to shut me up. But it wasn't until he
realized that he couldn't uh, he couldn't heal himself. You
don't have the tools right, And then he actually met Charlamage,
and Charlamagne actually gave him a.
Speaker 1 (01:25:34):
Therapist. I don't I got to check in to.
Speaker 6 (01:25:36):
See if Rome is because wrong Rome loved They gave
him a female therapist, and Rome probably flirted with the
the they flirted with the first lady.
Speaker 1 (01:25:45):
I gotta check to see. I gotta check. But back
to your situation.
Speaker 6 (01:25:51):
Yes, I think I think you should come totally disarmed,
go to your baby daddy and you tell him, yo,
we need to we need to figure this out.
Speaker 5 (01:26:02):
We need to we how can I help you get better?
Speaker 12 (01:26:07):
Like?
Speaker 6 (01:26:07):
How can I help you? You need to talk to somebody.
I'm not I'm totally disarmed. Forget the court stuff, forget
everything forget us our relationship right now. You need help
for yourself. I don't know how he'll receive that. You
know him better than me. But that's why I said,
disarm yourself. Don't go hostile because he fire. He's gonna
fight fire with fire.
Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 5 (01:26:27):
You gotta like almost manipulate him a little bit.
Speaker 1 (01:26:31):
You get what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:26:32):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I feel you. I feel you. I'm
gonna try it.
Speaker 8 (01:26:37):
But I love Mama, Good luck, Dad, Thank you so much.
Speaker 14 (01:26:41):
I appreciate all of y'all. Have a good day.
Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Just fix my mess. Eight hundred and five eight five
one o five one. When we come back, we got
the ladies with Lauren. Don't move. It's to Breakfast Club,
Go morning. Laura becoming a straight back. She gets somebody
that knows somebody.
Speaker 5 (01:26:58):
I'm the homegirl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
She'd be having the latest on you, the Latest with
laurl La Rosa.
Speaker 2 (01:27:06):
Sometimes you have sometimes you have details, sometimes you have
a little bit of everything on the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 15 (01:27:14):
Okay, y'all, So we've been on this Candy Burst and
Todd Tucker divorce train and and y'all remember that one
of her team members had told me that, like, it's
not as scandalous as people are making a scene. I
think what they meant now, because there have been things
that have come out just this week that you know,
Candy believes that Todd was talking to other women behind
(01:27:34):
her back before filing for divorce. I think what they
meant is they're trying to move forward in a way
that's not as scandalous as people would think, because it's
definitely become a scandalous to the point where Candy is
actually now like requesting and almost begging a judge to
seal their divorce docs because everything is kind of spilling
over into the media in the news, and they have
kids and you know all of that. So, yeah, so
(01:27:55):
that's been an update as well. But also, you know,
there was a conversation about their prenup. Had claimed that
the final agreement for signature was given to him like
right before the wedding ceremony without any notice or consultation
to his team. Candy is writing back against this, and
she's using clips from Real Housewives They did a wedding
special to fight back against it. That we went and
(01:28:17):
found a clip of our own when Todd is sitting
right before he signed the agreement.
Speaker 5 (01:28:21):
Let's say, listen to Tod.
Speaker 1 (01:28:22):
I've decided to decide to preten up against my lawyer's advice.
In the end, I know all this legal stuff is
not going to keep me from being with Candy.
Speaker 5 (01:28:28):
All right, I'm rolling.
Speaker 19 (01:28:29):
This is a video recording of the execution of the
prenuptial agreement between Candylnise Forrest and Todd Tucker. You acknowledge
that you have had a sufficient amount of time and
opportunity to fully consider the prenuptial agreement and to request
changes to the prenuptial Agreement. Yes, you understand that you're
giving up your rights to periodic alimony, lump sum alimony,
alimony and time, attorney's fees and expenses of litigation, property settlement,
(01:28:52):
equitable distribution, and community property. Yes, you understand that Whites
may dispose of any of her separate property is to
find in the pre nuptial agreement without your participation or signature. Yes,
you believe that the provisions of the prenuptial Agreement are fair, just, reasonable,
and equitable. Yes, you were signing the prenuptial agreement freely, involuntarily,
without coercion or other undo influence by wife or any
(01:29:14):
third party. Yes, there have been no threats of bodily
or other harm or other actions against you amounting to
coercion compelling you to act against your free will to
sign the prenuptial agreement.
Speaker 5 (01:29:26):
You know, to do you have any questions?
Speaker 19 (01:29:27):
No, Okay, you're just ready to get this over with.
Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
Yes?
Speaker 15 (01:29:30):
Is it that on TV they did a whole white
and special and one of the clips that so the
clip that Candy that they're referencing that Candy pulled. We
tried to go back and grab it, but it's from
like twenty fourteen, so it's the clip that we found
didn't really sound the best to play over radio, but
I did see some blogs pick up this clip. She
actually uses a clip where they're sitting in there talking
and she calls her team in it, and she's like
(01:29:51):
talking about the fact that they've spoken to attorneys, not
spoken to attorneys, like they have that whole conversation.
Speaker 5 (01:29:56):
So she's pushing back.
Speaker 15 (01:29:57):
So it's getting a bit messy, Like not even a bit,
it's really messing which divorce normally is or not normally,
but divorce can be.
Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
Although when you sign a prenup. It's what's severing that
prenup and it's kind of open shut.
Speaker 5 (01:30:07):
But he's but that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 15 (01:30:08):
Todd is saying that he signed it like almost like
almost like in a rush, and it should be revisited
and all these things, but she's pulling clips to show
that that's not the case.
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
I'm sorry they got to go through that. But with
this talking to women behind my back of me.
Speaker 1 (01:30:20):
Are you trying to say if Todd has a family
or he was just kidding.
Speaker 5 (01:30:24):
And the family thing came from her side?
Speaker 1 (01:30:27):
So what hold on?
Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
I was joking when I said I was just saying
how black people will be like because I was trying
to find like me, I'd be like black people will
be like Yo, were just talking because that was a
whole family, because that was part of rumor that Tide
had a.
Speaker 1 (01:30:39):
Woman pregnant, but that you don't listen you're speaking when
to come to that type of stuff.
Speaker 15 (01:30:46):
Technically, according to what is being reported, it's just the
fact that she had no idea, like like, what.
Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
Do you mean I say talk? I don't know when
I hear talking? What is talking to women behind right now?
Speaker 6 (01:30:57):
And that just me mad, just a question, let me woman,
ask something real quick. There's been rumors that they have
like an open situation, or they had like over situation.
Speaker 2 (01:31:08):
All this stuff be messy, man. Candy and talk, by
the way, and I ain't talking about candy and general.
I'm just saying, you don't have to have a girlfriend
that have eat right exactly. We have a pillow princess
in here right now, she's back down. Jesus, she's almost married.
Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
Mother now.
Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Okay, back in the day, Back in the day, she
was a little pillow princess.
Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
You know job.
Speaker 5 (01:31:33):
Speaking of back in the day.
Speaker 15 (01:31:36):
If y'all want details on Poor sharing her new relationship,
please go listen to the Latest to learn the roads
of the podcast. We get into some things. Okay, because
pus she has a new girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
However, she ident girl. No, you said it, you gotta
eat it. She got a girl, she knows.
Speaker 5 (01:31:53):
What she has a girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
Yes, that girl. That girl's very handsome. You know what
I mean? Your girlfriend can your girlfriend? Yes? Your eater? Yes,
but you can have an eat it and she not
be your girlfriend?
Speaker 4 (01:32:05):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:32:06):
Oh, okay, got you Taylor, come here for a second
tailor back anyway, she got a family.
Speaker 5 (01:32:13):
Don't come here.
Speaker 15 (01:32:15):
I don't want to shot twenty twenty six blessing.
Speaker 2 (01:32:20):
It's bad prople. I'm just shotting tails. Okay, Taylor is back.
Speaker 1 (01:32:25):
They're gonna Taylor gang back in the building back getting
the bill may like one years old now I know R.
Taylor's back. Yeah, that's alway. Want everybody no tailor back.
That ain't not nothing to do with nothing, you know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (01:32:40):
What an interesting time to bring it back in here?
Speaker 1 (01:32:43):
What a clown Taylor? Even there there's been a girlfriend
the eat it? I don't know.
Speaker 5 (01:32:51):
Okay, I will never ever been that way, right yest
learned to.
Speaker 1 (01:32:56):
Turn pillow printests from her?
Speaker 15 (01:32:58):
Oh my god, Taylor, first of all, is also is
with men?
Speaker 5 (01:33:04):
Great?
Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
Shut him right up more.
Speaker 15 (01:33:09):
I just wanted to know Scott Mills left BT that
that was like a thing too.
Speaker 1 (01:33:15):
Got out there geeked up looking for eat it right
now the late I'm leaving BT, but I'm out here
looking for either. I didn't say that all right. Today
is jay Z's birth that we're gonna play your favorite
let us know what you want to hear is the
breakfast Club Go Morning Morning. Everybody is t j N
(01:33:38):
v just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are the breakfast club.
The guys are doing something that I've never done before.
Anal that's a lie. That stop. Like the first I'm
getting you guys Christmas gifts this year. Oh my god,
I am not. I'm getting you guys Christmas gifts. I
thought about it or the Jaws already. Just okay. I
(01:34:00):
ordered Lawrence and I ordered yours. I am so excited.
I think they come next week. I'm just trying figure
out what I'm gona give it to y'all.
Speaker 2 (01:34:06):
I stop giving gifts in this room, because last time
I gave you a gift, you didn't appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (01:34:10):
There was a mold of ass. What you gave somebody
a mold of your butt?
Speaker 2 (01:34:16):
Yeah, of course, Stan or like a cake it was
it was like, oh no, it was a.
Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Hole and everything. Oh yeah, yeah, but no, no no,
but I got you got I got all different.
Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
That means that we have exceeded levels past gay. When
somebody just says you different, that is wild.
Speaker 1 (01:34:41):
I ordered all you guys gifts. They come in this week,
and I'm super duper excited to give you. To figure
out what I'm gona give it to you, guys. I
gotta be like next maybe next week. I'm excited.
Speaker 5 (01:34:48):
Yeah, I don't trust you though, you're very excited.
Speaker 1 (01:34:53):
Since we get given again, I'll give you.
Speaker 2 (01:34:55):
Give I whipp something for you, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:34:59):
Wh for y'all. I tell what I got, lorm but
I tell it, Okay Sloth. Jordan Klepper for joining US
comedian and he has a snow special on Comedy Central.
It's called Jordan Clepper Fingers the Posts.
Speaker 2 (01:35:12):
Yeah, man, Jordan's specials are really really good because he
actually goes out there and.
Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
Interacts with people.
Speaker 2 (01:35:17):
So you're getting like from the field on the grounds, right,
you know, experiences, uh and and ideas and stuff. So yeah,
check Jordan Clepper his new special, Fingers the Post.
Speaker 5 (01:35:29):
The Man on the Street.
Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
Yeah, Jordan is really known for his field pieces, you
know what I'm saying. So these are just like extended
field pieces.
Speaker 1 (01:35:37):
That's right, all right, And this weekend you're gonna be ware.
Speaker 6 (01:35:39):
I'm gonna be in Hartford, Connecticut at the Funnybone Comedy Club, guys,
so get your tickets if you haven't yet. Saturday is
selling out fast, so get your tickets for tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (01:35:49):
Jesselarious official dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:35:50):
We got four shows that's to tomorrow and two on Saturday.
Speaker 1 (01:35:53):
Man, DESI will be there. I did not know that.
Speaker 5 (01:35:55):
Connecticut was known for their pizza.
Speaker 1 (01:35:58):
I had no idea. That's what I swear. I swear
what I did. That they just started recently. I thought
Chicago was known Chicago.
Speaker 6 (01:36:07):
Yeah, I even heard learned for the Geeseeaks, bottom all
known for crabs. I never heard that Connecticut was known
for pizza. But it's okay, all right, Well, I'm gonna
tell him the envy said, y'all not when I get there,
So get your tickets.
Speaker 1 (01:36:21):
If you haven't got y'all, all right, Well, Charloman, you
got a possible note I do.
Speaker 2 (01:36:24):
I want to repeat a quote that I said during
Donkey of the Day because I think it's very important.
Speaker 14 (01:36:27):
Man.
Speaker 2 (01:36:27):
And you know, Bruce Lee was a very wise individual.
He just wasn't a great martial artist. Bruce Lee said,
emotion can be the enemy. If you give into your emotion,
you lose yourself. You must be at one with your
emotion because the body always follows the mind.
Speaker 1 (01:36:41):
Have a great day. I ain't gonna say.
Speaker 2 (01:36:42):
Bruce Lee wasn't a good marshal artist. I said, was
not only just a good martial arts
Speaker 1 (01:36:48):
Breakfast club you don't finish for y'all dump