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October 17, 2025 109 mins

Today on The Breakfast Club, Governor Josh Shapiro joins us to talk about public service, pushing back on lobbyists, and his relationship with Vice President Kamala Harris. Ty Dolla $ign also stops by to discuss his new album TYCOON, signing Leon Thomas, fatherhood, working with Kanye, and launching EZMNY Records. Plus, Danny Garcia opens up about his final boxing match, career highlights, growing up in Philly, and the Crawford vs. Canelo fight. And on today’s People’s Donkey, a caller gives Laila Ali Donkey of the Day after her response to a potential boxing match with Claressa Shields. Listen for more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Yo yo yo.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
Yes, should be hearing the second. Shall I meet the guy?
Peace to the plan. It is Friday. Good morning. How
y'all feel out there? I feel blessed, black and holly favored.
Happy to be here another day to serve our beautiful listeners.
Good morning. Yes, he said, just gonna be here in
a second, not you know, no, not even she's gonna
be zoom oh zoom oh. Yes, yes, remotely this morning. Yes,

(00:28):
what's happening man? Happy Friday? What's up? Man? How you feel?
I feel good. I was watching the NYC Meryl debate
last night. I was watching that also trying to read
at the same time a Gucci Man's book, Bro Episodes,
The Diary of a recovering mad Man Man Man Man
Man Man Man Man Man. I got so many questions
and so many stories it is, But I mean, I

(00:48):
just like the fact that he's being so open about
his mental health issues, you know, his drug addiction, you know.
Because and one thing I get from reading Gucci's book,
there's a lot of artists going through exactly what he
went through, and we've watched a lot of it, but
we just don't see the behind the scenes of it all,
and we don't know if they were out there getting
the help and trying to do the work on himself

(01:09):
like Gucci was. But there's a lot of your favorite
artists thatad of going through psychosis and manic episodes and
probably battling drug use and probably been diagnosed with things.
Cause Gucci's been diagnosed with bipolar and it's frinnier. But
you know, we don't know. We just sit back and
watch all the headlines, and even though we know something wrong,
everybody just thinks everything is cool.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
In COPA static and I think we get to a
point where a lot of times, a lot of artists
use these drugs as a coping method, and we need
to make sure that does happen. Let me ask you
a question, yes, ma'am, Yes, man, this scout's crazy. You know,
with all the stress and things that you ever did,
you never use drugs as a way to.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Cope on things or anything like that. No, not prescription drugs.
Plant I've done plant based medicines before, though, Yeah, I
mean I do therapy and meditation and grounding and breathing exercises.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
Now before you got to that, right, because you got
to that recently, you know, because a lot of people
use drugs to coach.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
You know what I'm lying? Maybe I was. I mean,
all when we was outside and all that heavy i'll
caohol you and everything else, Maybe I probably was right. Yeah,
I mean I didn't look at it like that back then,
but yeah, I'm sure I was doing that as a
way to escape. But we used to be in hit drunk.
I thank god we used to be here we're talking about.
I'm just asking. I just I thank God all the time.

(02:19):
I'm like, damn, we used to We used to be
out all night then coming here and do rady and
I don't even know how we did it, you know
what I'm saying. And the bad part about it, a
lot of it is recorded. Y'all just didn't know he
was on drills.

Speaker 4 (02:27):
Yeah, Jesus Christ, all right, let's continue on man, All right,
right now, I just say it's Ai.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
That was not That was Ai.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
You see all the videos out of posting I'm fighting sharks, gorillas,
all types of you wright that new thing they got sorrow,
sorrow sore, or so, yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
That's exactly what that was me.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
All right, Well, let's get the show crack, and we
got a pack show for you this morning. Governor Josh
Shapiro will be joining US governor of Pennsylvania.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Yes, he will be. He's been there before, you be
a couple of times. Yeah, that's right. I like Governor
just Brow. Yeah, we'll be kicking it with him. Also
also from Philly, Danny Garcia.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
He has a boxing match this Saturday, So you're gonna
kicking it with Danny Garson just.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
Any boxing match, he said, his last boxing match ever.
He said he's been tiring after so he says, do
y'all believe him? For no, I don't know. No, I
don't believe him.

Speaker 4 (03:10):
But we'll talk to Danny Garcia and R and B
singer Tied Dallas side he has a new album Tycoon
out now.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
We're gonna kick it with Tid Dallas. I think Tycoon
came out today. Came on to that.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
Yeah, okay, all right, so we'll kick with them. Like
I said, PAC show this morning, So let's get the
show cracking. We got Front page News a lot to discuss.
Mimi Brown's up next, that's right, so don't move.

Speaker 5 (03:29):
It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
Morning morning.

Speaker 4 (03:30):
Everybody is dj n V Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the guy.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
We are the breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (03:35):
Let's get in some front page news all right now?
If you following Major League Baseball, the Blue Jays beat
the Baroners eight two. The series is tied to two,
and the Dodgers beat the Brewers three to one. That tonight,
the Blue Jays played the Barons in Game five at
six p Yeah. I also tonight the Bruise take on
the Dodgers at eight thirty eight.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
What's up to me?

Speaker 6 (03:57):
Good morning, Envy, jeffs. Charlamagne, how y'all doing coming?

Speaker 7 (04:01):
Good morning?

Speaker 8 (04:02):
All right?

Speaker 9 (04:02):
Well, we start this morning with John Bolton, President Trump's
former national security advisor, now facing federal charges. A grand
jury in Maryland has indicted Bolton on eighteen counts, eight
for sharing national defense information and ten for keeping it
at home.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
Now.

Speaker 9 (04:17):
Prosecutors say he passed along more than a thousand pages
of sensitive materials to his wife and daughter, who didn't.

Speaker 6 (04:24):
Have clearance to see it. Now.

Speaker 9 (04:26):
A news report news of the indictment broke. Reporters press
President Trump for a reaction, asking if he was aware
of the charges against his former advisor.

Speaker 6 (04:35):
Let's listen to what he had to say.

Speaker 10 (04:37):
Prelia Donelon was.

Speaker 6 (04:38):
Just indicted by a Granduri and Maryland. Do you have
a reaction to that.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 11 (04:41):
You told me for the first time. But I think he's,
you know, a bad person.

Speaker 8 (04:46):
I think he's a bad guy.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Yeah, he's a big guys too bad. That's the way
it goes. That's the way it goes, right, That's the
way it goes.

Speaker 6 (04:55):
Will I what have you reviewed the case against him?

Speaker 11 (04:58):
No, I haven't.

Speaker 12 (04:58):
I haven't.

Speaker 11 (04:59):
But I just think it's that's a bad person.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
What does he mean He doesn't know that he's the
reason Bolton got him dieted. He's the one who called
for it. Okay, Bolton wouldn't be getting indicted if Trump
didn't tell him to do it.

Speaker 9 (05:10):
Well, you know, yes, you're right, so Bolton. He is
expected to turn himself in today at the federal courthouse
in green Belt, Maryland.

Speaker 6 (05:18):
His case has been assigned to a.

Speaker 9 (05:20):
Judge who was appointed by President Obama. Investigator say Bolton
also kept a printed diary pages a printed diary of
pages at home and use his personal email to send
classified details, something the FBI calls a clear violation of
federal law. Now, Bolton, of course, is saying this is political.
In a statement, he said that he is the latest
target and what he calls Trump's effort to punish his critics.

(05:43):
He also pointed out that his book in twenty twenty,
The Room Where It Happened, was reviewed and cleared by
officials years ago, and that no charges were filed up
until now.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
Now.

Speaker 9 (05:53):
If convicted, Bolton could face up to ten years in
prison for each count. He is now the third Trump
critic and died in recent weeks, following former FBI director
James Comy and New York Attorney General Letitia James Man.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
Trump needs to write a book on how to make
people been to his will. Okay, you can't tell me
it's just because he's president, because plenty of people have
been president, But I've never seen them will power like him.
Folks just do whatever he tells them to do. There
are no checks and balances, none. They scared though of
what though, that's my point of getting locked up like
these other three people getting charged. I've never seen anything

(06:29):
like this in my life.

Speaker 13 (06:30):
And then even even the free speech like you getting
people shows that canceled and taken off networks and stuff.

Speaker 7 (06:35):
I mean, people definitely scared.

Speaker 3 (06:37):
Of Jimmy Kimmel that that kind of backfight on Trump.
But I'm just saying, I've never seen anybody been to
the will of a president the way that these folks do.
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 6 (06:47):
Yeah, there's definitely a lot of that going on.

Speaker 9 (06:50):
And now we are in day seventeen of a government
shut down and there's still no deal in sight. And
the Senate they tried for the tenth time yesterday to
pass a funding bill, but it failed before lawmakers left
for town left out of town for the weekend. That
means the shutdown will roll into next week. Now, Republicans
they are shifting their strategy. GOP leaders are now considering

(07:10):
a plan to pay federal workers who've missed checked since
the shutdown began, something they refuse to do unless Democrats
agree to reopen the government. The bill is sponsored by
Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, but it needs sixty votes
to advance. They're also looking at another bill from Alaska
Senator Dan Sullivan that would guarantee pay for military members,

(07:31):
but Democrats say they won't back any standalone bills unless
there's funding for healthcare, housing, and other programs that Americans
depend on. And now, as I mentioned, the shutdown is
in its seventeenth day. It is now tied for the
third longest shutdown.

Speaker 6 (07:44):
In US history.

Speaker 9 (07:45):
And as the standoff drags on, pressure is shifting from
Capitol Hill to the kitchen table. I mean, most federal workers,
they're still furloughed or working without pay. Military families they
got paid this time around, but their next pay day
on October thirty first, that is still uncertain. And meanwhile,
the Department of Agriculture, they are warning that snap benefits

(08:06):
food stamps could run out by November. If this drags on,
affecting more than forty two a million Americans that depend
on those benefits for groceries.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
That's when things gonna get real. When that's snapping that
week run up. And just let the record show the
first longest government shutdown was also Donald Trump's first term.
It was thirty five days back in twenty eighteen.

Speaker 6 (08:25):
That's right, absolutely, all right, y'all.

Speaker 9 (08:28):
So coming up at seven, how much are you willing
to pay for comfort? When airline is putting passengers to
the test, will tell you what's changing and why it
could really catch on.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
You're about to make y'all sleep on the flow and back.
All right, everybody else, get it off your chest. Eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one.

Speaker 4 (08:45):
If you need the phone lines to wide open again,
eight hundred five eight five one oh five one, get it.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Off your chest. It's the Breakfast Local Morning, the Breakfast Club,
wake up as secure, time to get it off your
check your mad or bless We want to hear from
you on the breakfast bloss.

Speaker 14 (09:06):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 2 (09:07):
Oh my god?

Speaker 3 (09:08):
Dj is what's up? Who's this?

Speaker 10 (09:12):
Oh Lord? Good morning? This is Jeannie out of Syracuse,
New York.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
What's up? Jenne's what's going on?

Speaker 7 (09:17):
He Syracuse?

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Good morning, Jess, Good morning, Lauren.

Speaker 10 (09:21):
How y'all doing?

Speaker 15 (09:22):
God?

Speaker 3 (09:22):
Blessing Black and Holly favorite? How you feel?

Speaker 14 (09:24):
Absolutely ray?

Speaker 10 (09:26):
So listen real quick. I just wanted to give a
shout out to my daughter and my niece's cheerleading team
out of Syracuse, New York. It's Pop Owners, Kurt Park Coach.

Speaker 12 (09:36):
Y'all be going to Jersey. We all took first place
at our locals. It's two weeks ago.

Speaker 13 (09:42):
Congratulations leader, right, yes, I'm so nervous.

Speaker 16 (09:47):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 10 (09:48):
Yes, my daughter's eleven and my niece is ten. They
both cheered for the same team, so I just wanted
to give them a shout out and tell them, ma
how proud I am of all of them. And get
ready for Jersey, ladies, because we're coming up.

Speaker 3 (09:59):
Read knows what's what part of Jersey? You know, Charlotte,
daughter's dead to Trenton, Okay, well, good luck. Yeah, salute
to your daughter, Sleuth. All the cheered moms and cheered
dads out there. My daughter does competitive cheer leading too.

Speaker 10 (10:11):
Yeah, happy to get through.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Well, good luck, mama, thank you, Thank you.

Speaker 17 (10:16):
Guys.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
Me not in ulterant. I don't know what level she is, bro,
she's a high level. I think it's I don't freaking know,
you know what. The funny thing, I was walking walking
from the park lot this morning.

Speaker 17 (10:24):
Construction worker stops me, goes, what's up? And I've seen
you at at the at the dance spot. Now seeing
you here, I guess he's a dance dad like me.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
It's just so much.

Speaker 4 (10:32):
It's so crazy, how many dads and everything they'd be
so excited to see their daughter's dead.

Speaker 3 (10:36):
So salute to all the construction breakers.

Speaker 7 (10:37):
Out there doing the dance moves and everything that's right.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 14 (10:41):
What's up? You have?

Speaker 3 (10:48):
How you doing? How you surgery went?

Speaker 8 (10:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (10:50):
It went well, actually really well. I mean I've never
been athes before and I didn't realize it definitely knocks
you out. Was talking to a lady like I don't
feel anything, and you know I was waking up in
a whole nother room with a cast on.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
I love it. They give you that stuff they gave
Michael Jackson.

Speaker 14 (11:06):
I don't know that I'm still alive though, I don't
think so.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Play the game. How old are you?

Speaker 12 (11:12):
Thirty seven?

Speaker 3 (11:13):
Okay, yeah, it's the stuff. Think it's just I forgot
what this call. But it's when they when you get
a colonoscopy or end of knoscopy, they give you this
medicine and they say, hey, this is what Michael Jackson
was taking, and you'd be out in second.

Speaker 13 (11:25):
They don't supposed to say that. They don't say that
doctors can't see that.

Speaker 14 (11:28):
Doctor told doctor I would have been a little I'm
glad it didan tell me that.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
I would have been scared.

Speaker 7 (11:33):
Well, I mean his nigga said I'm still alive.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
They ain't give me, But how deep did they go?

Speaker 10 (11:39):
Trap?

Speaker 3 (11:40):
WHOA?

Speaker 14 (11:42):
Here you go, Charlae Mane. Listen, y'all doing this repast
LUFB documentary, right, and I just feel like y'all need
to include some of the you know, fans that helped
build the Breakfast Club, like maybe you know, I'm just
thing you know.

Speaker 12 (11:56):
That there are some fans you know, you know, just.

Speaker 14 (11:59):
You know, the very first guest co host was on
The Brothers Club.

Speaker 3 (12:02):
No me, I don't know if that's yeah, I don't
know if that's true.

Speaker 12 (12:06):
Sorry, that is true.

Speaker 14 (12:08):
Stop saying that.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
But my memory is getting worse and worse as I
get older, So I have no idea. But I don't
remember that being true.

Speaker 14 (12:14):
But you know I got received.

Speaker 18 (12:15):
I was the very first.

Speaker 14 (12:16):
I paved the way for lowering the jets, so I know.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
So he said he was the very first guest call.

Speaker 14 (12:23):
I was the very first guest go host on the
brother Club me Angela and DJ Vy. You wasn't there,
charlaw Man.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
I don't know what you're talking about. Maybe that's why
I don't remember, because I wasn't here. I have no
idea what you were twenty eighteen. He wasn't looking for
no guest go host though I was the.

Speaker 14 (12:40):
Very first guest.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
Y'all wasn't looking for I was just I just did
it okay.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
Obviously Still he's still high from the show getting poked poked.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
Yes, man, I love you, brother, thank you for appreciate you.
That is a good idea though you might have you
might have listeners on the Doctor.

Speaker 19 (12:56):
Definitely, yeah, definitely Black Rob.

Speaker 17 (13:00):
His name is not black Robin's oh g Rob, Oh yeah,
o g Road for sure.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Get it off.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
Yes, God blessed it that he's passed away. You didn't
know who look at us, she had no idea. Rest
in peace, Black Rob. Get it off your chest. Eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you
need to vent, hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
I'm telling what you're doing. Call of you if this
is your time to get it off your chest, whether
you're mad or blessed.

Speaker 5 (13:35):
Eight hundred five eight five one o five one.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello,
who's this? And they what's a word?

Speaker 2 (13:43):
It's mellow?

Speaker 3 (13:43):
Mellow? What's up? Is your birthday? Right? Mellow.

Speaker 14 (13:46):
Oh yeah, you already know the viobs appreciate.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
You can Mello, cool bab. She's not in the room
right now.

Speaker 7 (13:53):
Oh damn.

Speaker 14 (13:54):
All right, well listen, man, I want to know. I'm
gonna say positive vibes on my birthday. You were you know,
I will y'all in a minute. And I just dropped
a new single.

Speaker 3 (14:02):
You heard it's me.

Speaker 14 (14:03):
I'm single.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
That's what it's called. Yes, Oh you said you single?

Speaker 14 (14:08):
Yeah, I just dropped a new single with me.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
Okay, congratulations Mellow. He didn't even think. Okay, Lauren just
walked in and shoot your shot, Mellow.

Speaker 7 (14:18):
On your birthday.

Speaker 14 (14:19):
Hello, fool bay, I just want to let you know
the first I want to give you that name. And
I just dropped a new single. Give me a few
months of hell, and I'm I'm gonna spend your block.

Speaker 19 (14:25):
Spin my block for what? You look for a house?

Speaker 11 (14:29):
Look?

Speaker 3 (14:29):
What be calling you about?

Speaker 7 (14:30):
House?

Speaker 3 (14:31):
Looking for the house? Oh?

Speaker 14 (14:34):
Oh you said you want to You said I want
a house.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
I'm looking for a home, man, Mellow. Lauren just walked in,
looked like looking like Brandy and Monica merged in the
one artist.

Speaker 7 (14:43):
Now you see it?

Speaker 20 (14:44):
No, I know, Okay, because you've been like that. It's
not they're beautiful, Charlottagnet just be He don't know how
to give a compy beautiful.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
It is ain't beautiful.

Speaker 20 (14:53):
If you put them together, they merged in the one.
Then I cut my hair and he wants to say,
you cut your hair. Yes, yeah, it's your real hair.

Speaker 15 (15:01):
You're I'm gonna be out.

Speaker 14 (15:03):
Here wild for no reason.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
The Bob wasn't in real hair like.

Speaker 14 (15:05):
The dam.

Speaker 19 (15:09):
So bad, so we started fresh. What you say, mylo
I like it.

Speaker 14 (15:13):
I say you missed with black and excellent.

Speaker 12 (15:14):
Don't let him play with you like that.

Speaker 19 (15:16):
It's okay. It happens, you know, little people be angry.

Speaker 3 (15:19):
Your hands ash you.

Speaker 19 (15:20):
I just washed my hand.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
I like the low cut. I like the low walking
killing them. Make sure you'll get you wear hands ashy,
happy boy, mellow? Hello, who's this?

Speaker 14 (15:35):
What shot man?

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Super trucker, super trucker, what's up?

Speaker 21 (15:38):
Brother?

Speaker 3 (15:38):
Good morning, super trucker.

Speaker 7 (15:40):
Good morning?

Speaker 14 (15:40):
What's short?

Speaker 10 (15:41):
Charlotte man?

Speaker 12 (15:42):
My Carolana pressure and how you throwing?

Speaker 3 (15:44):
I'm blessed black and Holly favorite? Are you? What part
of Carolina is you from?

Speaker 12 (15:47):
I'm from Jacksonville Man, carolown on the coach.

Speaker 3 (15:49):
Okay, okay with everybody in Jacksonville, North Carolina. Get it
off your chest, brother, Yeah, man, No, I just.

Speaker 12 (15:55):
Got song out truck and off.

Speaker 14 (15:58):
He's trying to check it out.

Speaker 12 (15:59):
Also got one out with my Bene Tayler for the weekend.

Speaker 3 (16:02):
We just dropped the video for last week now. It's
called Truck of Love. You got some flying lot lizards
in the video.

Speaker 12 (16:09):
No, I said I had a lot of in the
video for that one.

Speaker 17 (16:12):
Man.

Speaker 14 (16:13):
It's just he's singing about the trucking thing.

Speaker 12 (16:15):
Man what I'm saying.

Speaker 18 (16:16):
And my man your tailor.

Speaker 12 (16:18):
We dropped the weekend, so you we just cattle.

Speaker 14 (16:21):
Bit of music man singing about what we love grobos music.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
Let's hear a little bit, brother.

Speaker 12 (16:27):
Turn the stick well around, trying to burn some metal carnline.
His first tign got it out at the Devil cut off.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
In a Tersey need some attention, d oct on the
parking lot. Cast me sifting know the suicide called he
be there.

Speaker 12 (16:42):
To mornting twelve hours the way in the Mardy yarn it.

Speaker 22 (16:46):
I'm already in no.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Role with that black mot rolling. It'll be there, my son, right,
That's what I told him. If you love it, let's
believe it came on eighteen deals.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
If you got it, put somebody eye is doing that deal.

Speaker 12 (17:00):
If we won't get it, no matter how fuck yeah, specialist.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
Dropping the super truck. I did get a little souvereign,
a little southern soul right right. Tell them how they
can find you.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
Super Man makes sure y'all check us out. Man, I
got the joy with sor the week kids, So check
it out.

Speaker 14 (17:19):
We're trying to run them numbers out, man.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
Man, salute all the truckers out there. Man, the truckers
are the backbone of the economy. Than all right, They
out here right now, working them long hours, delivering them
goods the people to make sure our country is running
for food, the medicine, building materials, all types of stuff. Man,
So salute all the truckers out there. That's right, get
it off your chest. Eight hundred and five eight five,
one oh five. We got to leave this. Laura coming up.
What we're talking about we do.

Speaker 20 (17:42):
We're gonna be talking about Layla Ali and Clarissa Shields,
because again there's been a conversation starting at the Breakfast club.

Speaker 19 (17:49):
Lay Is finally responded to Clarissa's hills like.

Speaker 3 (17:52):
The boy is yours this morning?

Speaker 19 (17:53):
Oh he is mine?

Speaker 7 (17:54):
He is now I see the Monica, let me see you.

Speaker 20 (18:00):
The other day I said, when I have a certain hairstyles,
people say I look like Monica.

Speaker 19 (18:03):
The rest of the time people say I look like Brandy.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
Don't look like Monica. You still look like Ja Binks.
But when you got I can see what you got.
I can see where you. I can see the Brandy
and Monica where it's trying to go. You don't look
like Brandy Monica fight. You don't get out first. You
don't look like that. I do know they're beautiful. You
got some symbol of just say you like the symbol
of remind you of them.

Speaker 8 (18:24):
Like the.

Speaker 19 (18:27):
One back and forth this morning. It's not us.

Speaker 3 (18:30):
Okay, we'll get to that next. Don't move. It's to
breakfast club. Good morning, the breakfast club. Wanting everybody's d
j Envy, Jesse, Hilaris Charlamage the God. We are a
breakfast club on this Friday. Yeah, and let's get to
the ladies with Laura Lauren be coming straight fast. She
gets them. Somebody that knows somebody detail.

Speaker 19 (18:52):
I'm a long girl that knows a little bit about everything.

Speaker 3 (18:55):
She'd be having the latest on you, the Latest with
Lauren la Rowe. Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you have details,
sometimes you have a little bit every time on the
Breakfast club talk to me.

Speaker 19 (19:08):
Coome Onnie, y'all, good morning.

Speaker 12 (19:11):
Hey.

Speaker 20 (19:12):
So Laila Ali has finally decided to step in the ring,
but it's on YouTube, so she is responding to Clarissa
Shields and all of the whole you know, Laila Ali
is scared to fight me, a conversation that has been
happening because of a lot of conversation that started here
on the Breakfast Clubs. So Laila Ali created a YouTube
channel and an Instagram because she says she doesn't even

(19:33):
want Clarissa on her Instagram, and she's doing multiple parts.
She released part one on YouTube where she explains how
their relationship started, how it ended, and addresses will she
fight he or not. Let's take it a listen to Layla.
Let's take a listen to Laila calling No, I'm trying
to look at my list, but the listen is because

(19:55):
this is.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
Why it's good to work with older people, because I
need somebody can recognize the signs of a stroke. Shut up.

Speaker 20 (20:02):
Let's take a listen to Leedle talking about promoters calling
her and reaching out to actually get in a ring
or to fight come back.

Speaker 21 (20:09):
In twenty twenty, I did get to a point where
I was ready to get back in the ring and
show her.

Speaker 15 (20:13):
Why even though she is talented.

Speaker 21 (20:16):
I said it back then and I'm saying it now,
but she could never outbox me. High level promoters did
reach out to me directly and we had some serious
conversations about me making a comeback. Now, of course, she
was never even involved in any of those discussions. Then
COVID happened, you know how that was, and it all
went away and I left it alone.

Speaker 19 (20:35):
Yes, So she also talks about the fact.

Speaker 3 (20:38):
That said if they're gonna fight it not that she
ain't get it that yet.

Speaker 20 (20:41):
So in part one she she says that she's going
to answer the question that if she's going to take
on the the offer.

Speaker 19 (20:47):
For that what was it fifteen million, fifty million.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
Yeah, it's three parts, so she didn't say it any
two two parts. She didn't say it any first.

Speaker 19 (20:52):
She didn't say it in the first part.

Speaker 20 (20:53):
Basically, this first part is her laying out where the
issue started, and she says that she actually tried to
help Claris a lot in the beginning, and she talks
about the fact that they started hearing the Breakfast Club.
Let's take a listen to Layla on the Breakfast Club
in the corment she had here.

Speaker 21 (21:08):
Fast forward to twenty eighteen. I was promoting my cookbook
Food for Life and went on The Breakfast Club, a
national show with millions of listeners. I had a thirty
six minute interview, and when the topic of boxing came up,
I actually mentioned her and made positive comments. Then, much
later into the interview, I was asked about the possibility
of a comeback.

Speaker 8 (21:29):
Just just just for fun.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
They didn't hear it because we hit the dumb button.
You had to hit dumb one because there was a
curse wording in it, because you know, nobody listens to
the audio. Here, I tell you, we got the worst
production team in the world. But poor your voice sounded
different before you had that nose job.

Speaker 19 (21:42):
Yeah, faces a little bit more stuffier.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
I did not have a nose. I have had polymps
in my nose and they had the I ain't judging.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
But for people that didn't hear it, I asked her
would she get back in the ring for issues in
gig because she said she retired, and she said.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
But they didn't edit the issues up because we got
the worst production team in the history of Morning Rat Up.

Speaker 23 (22:07):
No.

Speaker 20 (22:08):
Yeah, well, she also too says and this kind of
broke my heart to hear. And I did reach out
to Clarissa to see if she wanted to call in
today to respond to it, but she went to X
and all she said was, look, we fighters, let's fight.

Speaker 17 (22:21):
Uh.

Speaker 20 (22:22):
But it broke my heart because Laila Ali did a
lot of like laying out the platform of she actually
was trying to help Clarissa. She said when Clarissa first
started there, she was calling her like big cys, so
like they had a relationship. She said that she was
helping Clarissa understand how to like build your brand, you know,
how to go between different weight classes, your heart because

(22:42):
it's like, you know, at some point Clarissa feels like
she didn't have support no more.

Speaker 3 (22:51):
You know what, fight And I'm glad all I'm seeing
is a lead up to a fight, That's what I'm say.

Speaker 4 (23:00):
It could be Bob, it could be the fact that
you know, people have been issued on Layla saying Leily
hasn't been supportive La, that she's a me and girl,
and she broke down and had receipts to no.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
I broke down with her. I told her this. I'm
the one that that you know, encouraged her to do this.

Speaker 4 (23:15):
I've always supported her, and she showed the receipts. I
was the first one to interview her.

Speaker 11 (23:19):
I did all that.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
So she broke down everything she did for a fight.
That's what I say.

Speaker 13 (23:25):
And even when she said I saw something that she
said yesterday when Clarissa met her, she told her that
when you hear about the face of female boxing, it's
Layla and she wanted that to be her.

Speaker 20 (23:35):
Yeah, basically that she Layla's basically saying that Clarissa's doing
all of this because it's it's cloud and she's jealous
of her.

Speaker 19 (23:43):
Now, there was she did put together a lot of
different receipts that she gathered.

Speaker 20 (23:46):
There was one part where Clarissa was recently on Jamel
Hills podcast talking about what she teaches younger boxers and
and uh uh Aliah's like, this is a perfect example
of I helped her. Now she's using what I taught
her and trying to make it seem like I never
had a relationship with her. Let's say to listen to
her on Jamal Hill.

Speaker 21 (24:06):
Here she is on a recent podcast explaining how she's
passing the torch and that she has created a blueprint
for success, which she is now sharing with other female fighters.
She says that the number one thing they need to
know is how to build their brand.

Speaker 13 (24:18):
It's a blueprint now, and how you make a million
dollars even if you don't have the gold medals.

Speaker 19 (24:23):
The biggest blueprint is build your brand.

Speaker 21 (24:25):
Oh, she must have forgot years ago. She recorded this
and said that I gave her the piece of advice
that she is now referring to as the most valuable
piece of information that you need to be successful. But
supposedly I didn't support her and I didn't want to
pass the torch.

Speaker 20 (24:40):
Eylili told me to build my brand, a good brand
and a brand that I want.

Speaker 19 (24:45):
To represent, a stand for that have good people behind me.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
Watchras.

Speaker 21 (24:49):
So I guess if I'm supposedly jealous of her, I
must be hating on them too, right, Nope, I actually
celebrate other women's success. She's the only one who decided
to make herself my opposite.

Speaker 4 (25:01):
I'm with Charlamagne. Man, it's none of this matters for anything.
And at the the end of part two they don't
say and the fight is going to happen this day,
this time, and that's what.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
It has been building uppe for a fight, because I
know Leila don't need to build up no goddamn YouTube page.

Speaker 20 (25:14):
Okay, this is all for the hype of a fight
and it has to be YouTube and Instagram.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
I'm like, I'm here for it.

Speaker 4 (25:24):
I just hope leyle if they do fight, that she's
back in the gym and she's sparring and she's she's
where she needs.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
To be physically. Because Clarissa Shields is gonna try to
lock ahead on here with Jester said that's yes, she
probably been doing I.

Speaker 19 (25:36):
Don't know she's posting it and all exactly.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
Said, I hope she is. She can't just pop out
with these YouTube videos for no reason. Layla know what
she's doing. And I'm probably Clarissa probably in on it too.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
When I.

Speaker 20 (25:49):
When when I had Clarissia yesterday, she said she was
in she was at training. I mean, she's probably always
just training, but when she said that she training for
what's happened, it's coming up next. Yeah, he'll said Pat
poos on it too.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
One record.

Speaker 7 (26:06):
No, because you know, Clarissa just did Gilly.

Speaker 13 (26:09):
She just sat down with Gilly and they was talking
back and forth while it was talking and everything, and
then we heard another laugh.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
Oh here right there.

Speaker 7 (26:19):
I thought that were cute in that interview.

Speaker 3 (26:21):
They always cute.

Speaker 13 (26:22):
It's just that they wasn't showing him at all the
thing and then you see him like, oh damn, he
right there the whole time.

Speaker 20 (26:30):
Well, listen, whatever these ladies are building up to. Conversations
started here. I think we should come here and have
the conversation again. Yes, I think that'll be Yeah, that
would be a fight to see for sure. So that
is it for the first hour.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
All right, Well that was the latest with Lauren. Now
when week also today's Friday? Shawlo what you're doing?

Speaker 3 (26:48):
Oh yes, on Fridays we do the people's donkey. So
you can call in one hundred five one O five
one and give somebody the credit they deserve for being stupid.
You can give out the biggest he hall on Friday morning.
So call us right now eight hundred five five five one.
Front page News is next morning, everybody, It's DJ.

Speaker 4 (27:04):
NV Jess Hilarius Charlamagne, the guy we are the breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Let's get in some front page news.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
National Click Baseball, the blue Jays beat the Marinus eight
to The Dodgers beat the Brewers three to one. Tonight
the Blue Jays played at six eight and the Brewers
played the Dodgers at eight thirty eight.

Speaker 3 (27:20):
What's up, MEMI?

Speaker 9 (27:21):
Good morning, Envy, Josh Charlamage, how y'all doing me? Me?

Speaker 10 (27:25):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (27:25):
And I forgot to say I'm so sorry the Stealer's loss.

Speaker 4 (27:27):
Last night, the Bengals beat the Steelers thirty three thirty
one in NFL Thursday Night Football.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
What's up, Mimi?

Speaker 9 (27:33):
All right, well, we start this hour in New York City,
where the first mayorial debate is still in the books,
and all three candidates they came ready to make their
case to voters. Democrats Zoran mon Donnie, Independent Andrew Cuomo,
and Republican Curtis Sleewaff based off for two hours.

Speaker 6 (27:48):
This was the first general election debate. It didn't take
long for things to heat up.

Speaker 9 (27:53):
Now Man Donnie, the thirty three year old Democratic Socialists,
is leading in the polls. He took most of the
heat with his rivals question his experience and how he
plans to pay for his big ideas on housing and affordability.
Let's listen to that exchange.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
Has never had a job. On his resume, it says
he interned for his mother. This is not a job
for a first timer. Any day. You've got to have
a hurricane. You god forbid a nine to eleven health pandemic.
If you don't know what we.

Speaker 23 (28:22):
Can do people, sir, mom, donad I want to respond.
And if we have a health pandemic, then why would
New Yorkers turn back to the governor who sent seniors
to their death and nursing homes. That's the kind of
experience that's on offer here today. When I don't have
an experience, I make up for an integrity, And when
you don't have an integrity, you could never make up
for an experience.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
That was a bull he was shooting. That was a buck.

Speaker 9 (28:44):
Absolutely And you know also the debate it turned national
with all three candidates asking how they would work with
President Trump if they were elected mayor.

Speaker 6 (28:54):
Let's listen to some of that exchange.

Speaker 12 (28:55):
I'd like to work with you.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
I think we can do good things together. But number one,
I will fight you every step of the way if
you try to hurt New.

Speaker 23 (29:04):
York, unless he weaponizes the justice system to go after
the attorney general of the state, in which case you'll
issue a statement that doesn't even name the president. I
would make it clear to the President that I am
willing to not only speak to him, but to work
with him if it means delivering on lowering the cost
of living for New Yorkers.

Speaker 3 (29:20):
You can be tough, but you can't be tough if
it's going to coush people desperately needed federal funds. John
MONDOMMI the president, and it's already said it's going to
take seven billion dollars out of the budget right from
the start. If you're elected mayor, what I would do
is set and negotiate well.

Speaker 9 (29:37):
And let's say Cuomo showed command of the issues but
spent much of his time on the defense. Mondomie he
stood out with his stage president and those sharp soundbites
we just heard critics, though he side stepped questions about
his past progressive positions, and he even apologized again for
past tweets and sleewaw. He came out like a street

(29:58):
level fighter. He kept swinging at both the them as
he stood right in the middle. Now, the latest polls
show that Mandamie is still in the lead and Cuomo
is closing in and a slee while he is still
trailing behind. Now, the next and final debate will be
set for next Wednesday, October twenty second. That's just three
days before early voting begins on October twenty fifth, and
that's less than two weeks before election day on November fourth.

Speaker 3 (30:20):
Yeah, I do believe mom, Donnie should explain how he
plans to do a lot of the things that he
says he's going to do, because his messaging of affordability
is a great one. But oftentimes I don't hear the how.
And I also agree with the fact I don't want
to hear him keep apologizing for old tweets and old
social media posts. That'd be the problem when you were
a little bit younger, right, because you know they can
bringing it up. That's the reason why. Yeah, But it's

(30:42):
just like yo, either stand on some of it instead
of trying to you know, avoid it, or just heaped
he did like either didn't stand on it or apologize
for it. It's just like, you know, so you don't
believe none of this and maybe he don't. Yeah, you know,
you pulled something. When you twenty ten years later you're like,
why did I post that? Right? You know, it just
it just sounds like I don't want to say childes

(31:04):
because it's the world were in, but it does sound
childers to have to keep apologize of old, old, old
tweet because Cormo ad apologize, but none of the charges
he got they bringing up Homo criminal potential investigations and
charges and killing old people. He kept the movie. He
ain't apologies, but none of it. He kept the movie.
He was like, that's not true. That's not true. Boy,
the mom Doddie, I had have said the same thing.

(31:25):
That's not true. That's ay. I didn't post that. That
was a fake tweet.

Speaker 6 (31:27):
Yeah right, yeah, all right.

Speaker 9 (31:29):
Well, let's talk about something we can all agree on,
which is saving money, or at least we thought we
were saving money until Amazon dropped this lawsuit until his
Amazon lawsuit dropped.

Speaker 6 (31:38):
Well now, two shoppers.

Speaker 9 (31:39):
They are suing Amazon, claiming the company misled customers during
its Big Prime dal Prime Day sale that featured fake
prices that made discounts look better than they really were.
Now in this new class action lawsuit filed in Washington State.
The plaintiffs say Amazon listed higher original prices to make
deals seem deeper than they really were.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
So for an example, a pair.

Speaker 9 (32:00):
Of headphones was advertised as forty four percent off one
hundred and eighty dollars, but the suit claims that that
same pair had actually been selling between one hundred and
thirty dollars to one hundred and sixty dollars before the sale.

Speaker 6 (32:12):
Another deal, a.

Speaker 9 (32:13):
Kid's tablet, was listed at forty percent off one hundred
and twenty, but according to the lawsuit, that same tablet
had been going for as little.

Speaker 6 (32:19):
As fifty dollars a month before.

Speaker 9 (32:21):
So chappers say that Amazon is creating a false sense
of urgency and it's pushing people to quick purchases, calling
the discounts false and misleading. Now Amazon has not commented
on the sale, but they said that their July Prime
sale was its biggest sale ever, saying customer saved billions
of dollars. We know it just wrapped another Prime sale
last week. Now what this means for you that if

(32:43):
this lawsuit goes through, it would mean that retailers have
to be more transparent about how they advertise their deals,
which will mean fewer fake discounts and more honest pricing.

Speaker 7 (32:52):
So that's crude.

Speaker 6 (32:54):
I know, I know that those deals always get me.

Speaker 9 (32:57):
So also in switching gears just a little bit. Let's
talk about flying, right, So, first it was bag fees,
then it was leg room fees, maybe even paying for
your seat assignment. But what if reclining your seat came
with the price tag too? Are y'all still flying?

Speaker 22 (33:11):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (33:12):
That's crazy. Airplane tickets already expensive enough. Mebing, we know,
can't pay for no recline in seat. That's crazy.

Speaker 9 (33:17):
Yeah, Well, one airline is testing out that very idea.
So west Jet, the Canadian carrier that flies to nineteen
US states, including Puerto Rico and Washington, d C. They
are rolling out planes where standard economy seats no longer recline.

Speaker 6 (33:32):
Now, if you want to lean back, you'll have to
pay extra.

Speaker 9 (33:35):
The airline says it's reconfiguring forty three of its planes
with what it calls a fixed recline in regular economy Now.
West Jet says the goal is to preserve personal space,
so no more battles over the seat in front of
you leaning back too far. But and if you do
want to recline, you just have to upgrade to a
premium or extended comfort seat, which of course is going
to come with the higher price tag. But west Jet

(33:56):
says this is all about keeping faars low, but critics
say this is just another exact sample of charging for
what used to be standard.

Speaker 3 (34:03):
Yeah. I never been on west Jet in my life,
and I'm pretty sure that I will never be on
there ever. Now.

Speaker 4 (34:08):
Yeah, I've been on west Jet before because sometimes when
you go to certain areas they only have a west Jet,
especially in Canada. But that's ridiculous, like the fact that
what happens if I go to buy a ticket and
all the reclining seats are booked up, so I can't recline.

Speaker 3 (34:20):
I got to sit straight up the whole flight. That
Luthor delgis Luthor Jet Blue. Those my go tos, And
a United American is cool too. Overseas, Emirates, Okay, you
catch a Virgin Atlantic, that's great. West Jet, y'all kiss
my ass. Okay, charging for reclining sell ridiculous.

Speaker 8 (34:38):
That is that's stupid.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
That's like charging for water. You might not get water
on that flight. You probably won't.

Speaker 7 (34:43):
Yeah, when they get less and less business So.

Speaker 3 (34:46):
What if a guy fly you out and he don't
pay for your seat recline, you still give him someone
you got that? Damn that's a charge. Now you can't
even do that no more?

Speaker 9 (34:54):
No, yeah, oh yeah, y'all. Okay, well that is your
front page news. I me Me Brown and follow me
at Mimi Brown TV. For more stories, follow the Black
Information Network, download the free iHeartRadio app, or visit v
I nnews dot com.

Speaker 3 (35:08):
It says a lot about you, though, if you want
to fly a girl out on west Jet and don't
pay for their reclient to seat. If that man don't
play for your reclined seat, man, he don't really value
your vagina. Ladies.

Speaker 13 (35:17):
I just want to put that on be flying you
out anyway because that's traffic, not even that.

Speaker 3 (35:24):
Not I be a vaginny your neck because you stiff
neck the whole time, you know what I'm saying. God dang,
imagine the man after borrow and he done made your
next stuff because he didn't wouldn't pay for your reclient seat.
This is crazy world we in right now? Is crazy? Alright,
all right, thank you and me have a good weekend.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
Thank you y'all too.

Speaker 3 (35:41):
When we come back.

Speaker 4 (35:42):
The Governor of Pennsylvania, Governor Josh Shapiro will be joining us.
We'll talk to him next. It don't move, It's to
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (35:52):
Want everybody is dj.

Speaker 4 (35:54):
NV just hilarious, Charlamagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We got a special guest in the building.

Speaker 3 (35:59):
That's right, I call Barack Obama. Barack Obama. God, we
have the Governor of Pennsylvania, Governor Josh. Is that Sequon's
old helmet because damn he's over on the birds. Now
you know what is is signed by s Let me
put it the fact that you recognize you. That's crazy.

Speaker 8 (36:23):
Good morning.

Speaker 3 (36:24):
How you feeling Hey, I'm feeling great. Thanks for having
me back.

Speaker 5 (36:26):
It's good to be with you guys again.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
You asked me how my family was before the interview.
I want to ask you how your family is now.
Because I saw this week that Koley Balmer who was
accused of an arson attack on your house. He played
guilty and will send us to twenty five to fifty years.
How does that make you?

Speaker 11 (36:42):
Know?

Speaker 3 (36:42):
You in the family field.

Speaker 5 (36:43):
I'll be honest, it's been hard dealing with this as
a governor, right knowing that you're a target, knowing that
in this world of politics we're in today, you got
people who want to do your harm. And I'm sure
we'll talk about political violence. We're seeing way too much
of that across the country. But the hardest part of
this whole thing for me has been knowing that the

(37:06):
job I love right being governor of Pennsylvania, serving the
good people of Pennsylvania, put my family's lives at risk.
I mean, this guy, Charlman, he came in with miletov cocktails,
he fire bombed our home.

Speaker 11 (37:19):
How do he get so?

Speaker 5 (37:20):
How did he get in? But I just want to
be clear. He was wielding a metal hammer that he
said he was going to use to try to kill me.
And he not only pled guilty to arson, he pled
guilty to attempted murder.

Speaker 3 (37:35):
Damn.

Speaker 5 (37:36):
And So I think the the thing for me that
I'm I'm just being really honest, that I'm working through
is how to keep my family safe doing the job
I love that by the way, I feel real purpose
in right serving people, and the notion that people now
need to choose between their families safety and well being

(37:56):
and doing public service, that's a hard thing for me.
To work through just as a dad, you know, beyond
beyond being a governor. But look, and I mean to
your point or to your question. Sorry, you know, there
were tremendous failures from a security standpoint, pennsylvani State Police,
who I do have confidence and have changed a whole

(38:17):
bunch of procedures. The home, which really hadn't been this
was the governor's residence, really hadn't had any kind of
overhaul from a security perspective for decades, has gone through that.
I do feel safe there now. I do feel safe
when I'm going around. I worry about my family obviously
all the time. But it was a failure and they
learned from it, and I've got confidence that they're going

(38:39):
to do better if, if God forbid, something like that,
you know, happens another time.

Speaker 3 (38:42):
Well, tell me how you have that kind of com
How do you feel safe? Because how do you know
it wasn't an inside job? How do you know?

Speaker 16 (38:48):
You know?

Speaker 3 (38:49):
You don't. You don't know whause they got pretty close.
It wasn't like it they threw it from the street
like they got he down.

Speaker 20 (38:55):
Doors in your house, which wasn't successful to get through
those doors, and you it was fifteen people in your house, h.

Speaker 5 (39:00):
There were about twenty. We had me and my family.
There's six of us, our two dogs, and then we
also had my brother, sister and their kids, so my
nieces and nephews. Yeah, it was scary. I mean, you know,
knowing that there's a fire and you've got these brave
firefighters rushing in to put out the firefight and put
out the fire. Pardon me as they're ushering you out.
I mean it's scary. Look, there are some things that

(39:23):
they have done. They are going to make what happened
there impossible. Again. They built a wall around the residents.
We really didn't have something like that. There's now a
dedicated crew of state troopers to patrolling the grounds. We
didn't have that before. There's all kinds of new technology.
I'm not going to get into it here. That is,
you know, going to make us safe, and they're taking
steps at our home as well. Look, I think you

(39:44):
gotta in this job. You gotta have faith in the
people around you to keep you safe. Otherwise you become
paralyzed by fear. And I'm unwilling to be a victim
the rest of my life. I'm unwilling to be paralyzed
by fear. And I'm not going to be deterred in
doing this work. I'm not going to be deterred in
practicing my faith. I'm not going to be deterred and
being who I am. I'm not gonna be deterred and
just being able to go outside and catch with my kids.

(40:05):
You can't live in fear, and that is kind of
how I've I've worked through this, and my family and
I have worked through this so that we can we
can go forward and do this job we love and
try and do it in a safe way.

Speaker 3 (40:15):
Well, you don't believe that building a wall is a
proper way.

Speaker 5 (40:19):
What you say, man, I've always been for securing our border.
If that's where you're going. Yeah, I was, as you know.

Speaker 3 (40:24):
So what startled him?

Speaker 5 (40:25):
That was my question.

Speaker 3 (40:26):
Because he was in the house, he had a hammer.
What made him flee? What made him run?

Speaker 5 (40:31):
I don't know if you saw the video, but he
used this metal hammer to to break a window to
throw them all tough cocktail, which ignited the explosion. Then
he went to another window, used the metal hammer to
break a window so he could climb in. What's really scary,
which I don't think folks understood when they looked at
the video. Is he then tried to kick down a

(40:51):
set of doors that literally lead to our private living courters.
That's where we all were. So he was a door
away while that was going on. You know, we've later
learned this. The state police opted not to go after him,
but to get us out and get us to safety,
which was the right thing to do, and so we
were able to be safe and secure while you know,

(41:12):
he was able to get away.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
And I saw you say that you had an enormous
guilt about that based off what you just said, you
know earlier about being a public servant, being governor, but
just still being a father. Is it worth it?

Speaker 5 (41:27):
I think it is, Charlemagne, And I mean that's a
tough question. You're asking me, right, Is it worth putting
your kids' lives at risk?

Speaker 3 (41:34):
Right?

Speaker 5 (41:34):
I mean, that's a hard thing to ask to answer.

Speaker 3 (41:37):
I think what.

Speaker 5 (41:39):
I love public service, and I'm not trying to sound corny,
but like, i really feel like I get to make
a difference every day, and I'm sure we'll talk about
some issues. I think we are making a difference, and
so I want to help other people, and obviously the
most important thing is keep my family safe. I think
if you can have confidence in the people who are
keeping you safe, I can't walk away now with everything

(42:02):
that's on the line, with all the challenges we face
as a country, with my responsibility to frankly push back
on what we're seeing in Washington protect our freedoms in
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. And now it's not the time
to walk away. So I think we're in a good
place from a safety perspective. I am mentally strong and
prepared to continue on with this work knowing that my
family is being cared for and protected, and this is

(42:25):
not a time to quit. So yeah, it's worth it.
It's worth it to put yourself out there and try
and do good for others.

Speaker 20 (42:31):
How will you say that the conversations with your kids
have been hard right because of all of this? Have
your kids asked you to not do this job anymore?
After everything?

Speaker 5 (42:42):
I want to be respectful to my kids' privacy, But
you know, I'll tell you what it was like in
the days after and kind of where we are today.
We're blessed with four kids. Twenty three, twenty sixteen fourteen.
What was really interesting that Laurie and I and twenty
three is a daughter and then boys. They each asked

(43:02):
different kinds of questions, and they asked them in a
different way, and you know, sometimes they were concerned about
my well being. Sometimes they were understandably concerned about their
own well being. My fourteen year old asked a lot
of questions that were super factual. How did he get here,
how did he do that?

Speaker 3 (43:19):
What was he doing? What does the video look like?
You know, stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (43:22):
And I remember early on in this I just answered
everything I knew. I told him everything I knew with
as much granularity as I had. I remember my wife
said to me, are we doing this?

Speaker 9 (43:34):
Like?

Speaker 5 (43:34):
Is this what we're supposed to do? Are we supposed
to like tell our kids this? And I was like,
I think so. I mean, there's no playbook for this.
And so we were just brutally honest with our kids
about both the facts of what happened and then the
emotional questions that they asked. And I think that helped
them get through it too. My kids haven't asked me
to quit. My kids haven't asked me, you know, the

(43:57):
real question you asked me before. I think they want
me to keep doing this work. I mean, I think
like any job that a parent has, it pulls you
away from a game, or it pulls you away from
something they want like that annoys kids, rightfully so, But overall,
the idea that I would quit this job because I'm afraid,

(44:19):
I think that would set the wrong example for my kids.
I want my kids to grow up strong and confident.
I want my kids to grow up in a world
where they feel like they could do whatever they want
to do, and they can make a difference in the world.
And I can be deterred by bullies, and I can
be deterred by people who want to come after them. Instead,
they're going to stand up to that. I want to
show that example.

Speaker 3 (44:38):
That would be a tough conversation if your wife and
kids came to you and was like, we love you,
but we want you to step down. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (44:47):
Look, you know, when we talk about politics, every decision
I made ever run for an office or whore deciding
not to run for an office or do something, it's
always been kind of like, you know, one percent political
and ninety nine percent personal and family. Because when you
do these jobs, you got to be all in. You
gotta be willing to you know, miss the games and
the routine stuff, which which you guys all I'm sure

(45:08):
go through every para coase for that, but you also
have to be you got to have your family all
in to deal with the public pressures that come along
with this. And my kids have been amazing. My wife
has been unbelievable. I mean, we've we've been together since
the ninth grade. She's not that we knew this was
gonna be our lives back then, but she's just been

(45:28):
with me through everything, and she's like the most amazing
support system and just you know, my best friend in
the whole world.

Speaker 3 (45:35):
I would tell them it's gonna be way less security
if I'm not governing, to know more So now, I
read Kamala Harris's book One hundred and seven Days, and
I saw your comments on her book. And for those
who don't know the form of VP, wrote that governors
Shapiro seemed overly ambitious because you were, you know, up
with a VP role. She said, you seemed overly ambitious,
and you pushed for two large a role for a

(45:56):
vice president and seemed unwilling to accept a number two position.
How did you feel when you heard that?

Speaker 5 (46:01):
I mean, like, I haven't read her book. I'm busy
every day, frankly, dealing with the effects of the fact
that we lost the twenty twenty four election, dealing with
Donald Trump wanting to send troops into our street, dealing
with Donald Trump, by the way, just a week or
two ago, demanding that I turn over the entire voter roles,
including Pennsylvani's Social Security number, driver's lilacens.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
Some of all this stuff.

Speaker 5 (46:25):
I don't know what the hell he wants that for,
but I know it's not for any good purpose, and
he sued me when I wouldn't turn it over. I'm
dealing with the real effects of governing in the world,
you know, after Donald Trump won the election. So haven't
read the book, having really focused on it.

Speaker 3 (46:39):
But even what's wrong with the vice president being overly ambitious?
If you're the number two to the number one, Yeah,
shouldn't you be ready to be number one?

Speaker 5 (46:46):
I guess that's a question for her.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
She clearly thought it, and you also criticized her, which
I thought was fair for not speaking out publicly earlier
about concerns over President Biden's fitness to run in twenty
twenty four. To me, just the criticism for the VP
is the criticism for a whole democratic point. You and
I have talked about that issue.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
Yeah, Look, I don't want to get into it with
the former vice president, but I mean, if you're in
the room, you're seeing things nobody else is seeing. You
had a responsibility to speak up, and she didn't. Do
you think, Hold on, I think about it and we
can move on.

Speaker 3 (47:17):
But the book, the book also mentioned because you didn't
read it, but it mentioned that some of your comments
on pro Palestinian protests were flagged by her campaign. But
that wasn't a deciding factor, do you think.

Speaker 5 (47:29):
Look, I wasn't in her head. I don't know what
she was thinking. I'll just say to you, I think
I said this to you before, just to keep it real, man,
when I was going through that process. First off, it's
an honor to go through that process. I said throughout
it that she had a deeply personal decision to make.
In the end, Charlemagne, so did I and I love

(47:49):
being governor of Pennsylvania and calling the shots.

Speaker 4 (47:52):
Now, it seems like you two don't rock with each
other too much, right And from the comments that Charlemagne
said in the book and things that you said.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
About who a couple of hours. No, I don't get that.

Speaker 10 (48:02):
No.

Speaker 5 (48:02):
And by the way, she and I have known each
other twenty years. I mean, we've worked together for a
long time.

Speaker 4 (48:07):
It doesn't seem like it's a united front, right, But
sometimes you look at Republicans per se, it seems like
it's more of a front.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
It just seemed like that front wasn't I.

Speaker 5 (48:15):
Don't think so envy. I worked my butt off to
help her get elected. I mean I did every I
traveled with Gretchen Whitmer and Tony Evers to all three
swing states Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan. I did dozens of events. Hell,
I even cut an add for I don't think her
campaign ever ran it, but cutting add for her in Pennsylvania,
where you know I'm doing okay there. So yeah, I

(48:39):
got no ill will And I don't think she does
toward me.

Speaker 20 (48:43):
What about because I know you had a conversation with
Biden one on one where you told him that you
didn't think that he was like fit to run, right,
you had conversations with the VP leading up to her
announcing and all the things. Did you ever say to her?
You should say something now like people are relying on you.

Speaker 8 (48:59):
Well.

Speaker 5 (48:59):
I never had a conversation with her. I went directly
to the president and spoke to him about what I
saw were, you know, his challenges in Pennsylvania. I was
really honest with him. We got together at a coffee
shop in Harrisburg. I think there's been reported. I mean,
I'll just share with you. He said, how's it going.
I was very clear, it's not going well. The polls

(49:22):
are showing it's not going well. I don't think you're
handling the cost question. Back to what we talked about before,
with rising costs. It was a big theme in the campaign,
big issue in Pennsylvania. I didn't think they were handling
that well. I expressed that I thought people thought he
wasn't up to the job, not so much the job
doing it at that moment, but the job doing it

(49:43):
for another four years, which I think there's a real
difference there. And I was very honest with him about that.

Speaker 3 (49:48):
Look.

Speaker 5 (49:48):
I'm maybe it's old school, but I believe that if
you had something to say, you say it directly that
person's face, and he's President of United States. I respected him,
still respect him, and I respect him enough to say
it's directly to his face as it received. I think
he heard it. He told me that their poll numbers
were different, and he seemed committed to continuing forward and listen,

(50:12):
that's his call. Of course, I mean, it's the president
of the United States. And so to me, I thought
I had a responsibility, as the governor from arguably the
most important swing state in the entire country, to be
very honest about what I was seeing on the ground,
and to be very honest about the fact that I
saw real challenges for him to get or for him

(50:34):
to win Pennsylvania. And I was also really honest with
him that I had shared a lot of this with
his team, and I didn't think that they were being
direct with him. And so I felt the need to
take what is, you know, a fairly extraordinary step and
go directly to the president and say this.

Speaker 3 (50:50):
You can't you should have that stuff should be amplified.
Like I knew that story, right. But the reason I
say that stuff should be amplified it because that's what's
going to help you in the future if you do
decide to run. Because I keep telling folks like, look, man,
anybody that wants to lead this party in the future
have to throw that old regime under the bus, and
it has to be people that told that old regime
the truth about where they were at. It wasn't a

(51:11):
lot of y'all that did that.

Speaker 5 (51:12):
Can I disagree with you slightly on this. I don't
believe that you get ahead in life by throwing people
under the bus. I don't believe that I got to
kick somebody in order to get ahead. I think you
got to show your work. I think you got to
show a vision. I think you got to tell people
what you're all about, and that's how you know you
can be successful as a governor, is senator, whatever it

(51:33):
is that you do. I made my point clear to
the president and pret the former president, and you know,
I'm glad I did that.

Speaker 3 (51:42):
Okay, how about being known as a truth teller in
a party that lied to the whole country?

Speaker 5 (51:46):
I think speaking truth is really important. Yeah, and I
did that. I think people believing that even if they
disagree with you on an issue, or they disagree with
your viewpoint on something, at least they walk away knowing, hey,
you know what, that guy was straight may hell, I
think we started the conversation. I was at a farm
in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, yesterday. This is not an area
that Democrats go to. And I was there talking for

(52:09):
real about tariffs and other things, and I kind of
made a joke. I said, look, I know where I am.
I know I'm in Lebanon County. I know this isn't exactly,
you know, an area where I'm getting a majority of
the vote, or however I said it.

Speaker 3 (52:21):
But I wanted to be here.

Speaker 5 (52:22):
Today and I wanted to be clear with you about
what I think, how I feel, and how I see things.
I think what the American people really want. Certainly people
in Pennsylvania want again swingy estate. In the whole country,
I think it's a pretty good indicator of where others are.
They just want to be real, they want to be authentic,
and they don't need to agree with you on everything.
Like this isn't about everybody agreeing on a purity test.

(52:44):
They want to know what's in your heart. They want
to know what motivates you to serve, and they want
to know what you really think.

Speaker 3 (52:49):
Were you surprised when Trump won Pennsylvania?

Speaker 5 (52:52):
No, I mean I saw when Biden dropped out, he
had been consistently down and by the way I shared
this with the former president, he'd been consistently down five
six seven points. When the vice president jumped in, you
saw the numbers close, but they never She never overtook

(53:14):
him in any of the data that we saw. And look,
I think beyond the data, I got a pretty good
feel for my state and in my state, you know,
you get a sense of sort of where different areas
are going and how they're moving. And she just never
was able to close that gap. Now, look, if she
would have one Pennsylvania by fifty thousand votes, would I

(53:36):
have been shocked?

Speaker 11 (53:37):
No?

Speaker 5 (53:37):
But you asked me, was I surprised or shocked that
he won?

Speaker 21 (53:41):
No?

Speaker 5 (53:42):
Because basically by the end, when we were in that
final couple weeks, you know, she's kind of minus one,
even minus two, something like that. I mean, it wasn't
that she had overcome where he was.

Speaker 20 (53:55):
If she had separated herself more from biding, do you
think she could of one state? What do you think
was the reason why she didn't?

Speaker 3 (54:02):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (54:03):
I mean, look, what's the title of the book, one
hundred and yeah, I mean, she didn't have a lot
of time, right and fairness to her, but it kind
of goes back to whatever she's saying in a moment ago.
People want to know who you are. They want genuineness,
they want authenticity, they want to feel like they know
who you are. And you know clearly that that was
not accomplished.

Speaker 20 (54:24):
Oh yeah, I just saw that they had made an
arrest yesterday and the Kada Scott, the missing girl in Philadelphia.

Speaker 19 (54:29):
If you familiar with the story, I.

Speaker 20 (54:31):
Just wanted to know because it seems like they're the
police that are having issues with located. I mean, she's
still missing, but they don't have anything that they're tracing,
like no cell phone, no anything.

Speaker 19 (54:40):
Do you guys bring in additional resources?

Speaker 3 (54:43):
I'm not so so.

Speaker 20 (54:44):
Kaida Scott as a young woman, she's twenty three. She
went young black women went missing in Philadelphia from work.
She was being a harassed v phone by someone. Prior
to that, she told her parents. Now she's missing. She's
been missing for some time. They just made an arrest
in the case, a young man, but they haven't told
us what the tie to him is in the case.
But it seems like though they're having issues with finding

(55:07):
like her footsteps leading up to that, like cell phone anything,
or just whereabouts whatsoever.

Speaker 5 (55:12):
I don't want to get ahead of the police on this.
It is an awful, awful case and just my prayers
go out to her family. I can tell you that
the Pennsylvania State Police, which you know, which I ever
see through through our State Police Commissioner, we work very
closely with local authorities, including the Philadelphia Police and the

(55:34):
philid off Your police are outstanding in these cases, and
I have confidence that they'll get to the bottom of it.
Our technology, our unique know how, the tools we have
to solve these kinds of cases are always brought to
bear to work with our municipal partners to make sure
that we address crime in our communities. I mean, this
is an awful case and hopefully they'll get to the

(55:55):
bottom of it. I would also just caution you, you know,
I mean disrespectful to you and anyone in the media.
There are lots of cases where we can't share all
the information with the media as we're working them, because
sometimes you don't want something to come out at first. Ultimately,
you know, you provide that transparency when the case is

(56:18):
sort of closed. But we're kind of still in the
midst of this one right now, and so I think
you know not everything is being shared, but I got
a lot of faith in the Philadelphia Police, and I
can tell you that the Pennsylvania State Police is always
at They're ready to support them in every other municipal department.

Speaker 3 (56:33):
I got one last question. You got a sixty two
percent approval rate, right? How do you measure success by
polling numbers? Are lives change? Oh, lives change?

Speaker 5 (56:43):
And look for as wonderful ass to have a sixty
two percent approval rating in the toughest state in the
country to run in. I still rely not on the
data that you cite, but the feel I get from people,
whether on their farms and you know, downtown in you know, Pittsburgh,
Center City, Philly, walking down the street, having someone stop
me and go yogav and talk to me about something.

(57:04):
That's where I get my feel from. And you know,
I measure it in terms of what people tell me
they want done and and going out and doing it
and the people's lives I touch along the way. I
gotta tell you, I mean, for me, the motivation is
not seeing a poll like that. It's when someone says, hey, Gov,
five years ago, I reached out to you, and you
know you were returning general back then. But you took

(57:26):
on my case and you helped me get you know,
get back my money after someone tried to scam me.
That's the stuff that fills up my cup. And you know,
it kind of goes back to the first question, or
one of the first questions you asked. You know, why
do you do this? And what happens if your kids
told you not to do it. I'm one of these
people that is motivated by helping others, and I do.
I do get fulfillment from people telling me I made
their lives better, and there's there's just an extraordinary feeling

(57:52):
that you get from that. It's it's how I was raised,
It's what my faith has taught me, and that is
what motivates me. Not you know, numbers and pol I'm
grateful for that support, but knowing I changed someone's life,
knowing I made it better, and pursuing the next thing
and the next thing and the next thing that's gonna
help my communities out.

Speaker 3 (58:10):
You know, a life that that governor shaperial change that
he doesn't talk about is Wallow. He's the one who
pardoned Wallow. What made you want to pardon Wallow?

Speaker 5 (58:20):
I think there are people out there who had one
bad day, or in Wallow's case, had a few bad days,
let's be real, and there are those that don't learn
from that, and they end up living sad and tragic lives,
oftentimes in jail or you know, in places that are
dangerous for them. And then there are other people. And

(58:43):
while it's a great example that he happens to be famous,
so you know about him, but there's a whole lot
of people who aren't famous who do this, who learn
from that bad day, who learned from those bad decisions,
and they not only turn their lives around for themselves,
but they then make a difference for others. And those
of the people that I try to find, those are

(59:03):
the people whose cases I want to come across my
desk so I can fix my signature to a pardon
for them. That is an enormous power that a governor
has to be able to sign your name and wipe
away someone's bad deeds and give them an opportunity in

(59:24):
life again. And I will tell you I take that
power really really seriously. Wallow earn that he earned the
right to have his case come across my desk, and
he earned my signature because of the way in which
he's lived his life and help make other lives better.
The way he's helped other people get back on the
right track, the way he's helped other people achieve prosperity

(59:46):
for them and their families. The way he's I think,
in many ways changed an industry, whether it's music or
the kind of influencer industry or what have you. I mean,
he's done extraordinary things, and I'm proud of him. And
I'll tell you what else I told him. I don't
think he'd mind me sharing. And I've said this to
others who we've given second chances to, including those who
have granted clemency to which means letting them out of

(01:00:07):
jail even though they're facing a life sentence. I tell them,
don't screw up, because you are now an example to others.
I said that to Meek, I've said that to a
number of folks. You now have an enormous power to
do good in the world. You're also an example, and
you've got an awesome amount of pressure and responsibility on you,
and so live your life in a way where you

(01:00:28):
acknowledge that pressure, you acknowledge that responsibility, and man while
I has done that, and I'm really really proud of him,
and I try and check in on him every so often,
and checking on others who I've issued pardons to or
clemencies too, just to see how they're doing.

Speaker 3 (01:00:42):
And me, yeah, yeah, but he didn't want to be
on alicoptery. You didn't want to do no photo ops
or anything. He's like, Nope, no, because that's not what
it's about. This isn't about me being able to stand
next to Meek or Wallow and some press thing. This
is about knowing that they did the hard work to
get their lives back together. And I've got this unique
power for this moment in time as governor where I

(01:01:04):
can give them some extra help, but with that comes
a responsibility and and they've got to own up to
their end of the bargain.

Speaker 20 (01:01:11):
And they are The way you are is how the
spirit of so many other people in government should be.
Like just the spirit I get from you in this conversation,
Like you absolutely there's a genuine care for people to
end up well.

Speaker 19 (01:01:22):
I agree, and that you don't feel that all the time.

Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
Hopefully, thank you. I hope we've got free and fair
elections in twenty twenty eight. You can be in the mix.

Speaker 19 (01:01:30):
They hope they get it right.

Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
We're gonna work to make sure we got free and
fair elections. As Governor Josh Shapiro, thank you so much.
Thanks guys always, and we'll see we'll see in another
whipTo too. I look forward to thank you to Philly.
Is that we're just gonna leave it there. Listen, you
want to do this, we can do this. Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:01:52):
I think you guys are exciting. Jackson Dart is seemingly
pretty good.

Speaker 3 (01:01:57):
He's excited.

Speaker 5 (01:01:58):
Scataboo is pretty pretty good. Lost you lost neighbor Milik neighbors, unfortunately.
But you cannot over a long season hang with the Eagles.
You just can't.

Speaker 3 (01:02:10):
You just can't.

Speaker 8 (01:02:10):
You know that.

Speaker 5 (01:02:11):
I can pray, you can pray all you want, but
you ain't gonna be able to do it over a
long season. But they are a team now seemingly on
the upswing, which I think is uh is a good thing.
And and look the Birds have stumbled a little bit
over the last couple of weeks, but we'll get it
back together.

Speaker 3 (01:02:25):
That's all right. Championship team right there, Governor Josh apperrol
is the breakfast Club good morning. Let's get to the
latest with Lauren. Lauren becoming a straight things, she gets them.
Somebody that knows, somebody detail.

Speaker 19 (01:02:38):
I'm the long girl that knows a little bit about everything.

Speaker 3 (01:02:41):
She'd be having the latest on you. The latest with
Lauren la Rosa. Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you have details.
Sometimes you have a little bit of everything on the
Breakfast Club.

Speaker 20 (01:02:54):
So Gucci Man is, uh, you know, starting to have
some conversation about a lot of the things that we've
seen play out on Gucci Man's life over the last
few years and where he is today because he has
a book coming called Episodes.

Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
Now this book The Diary of a Recovery mad Man. Yes,
it's what today, it's today today?

Speaker 20 (01:03:14):
Oh yes, okay out now, so now in this book,
and when I say these couple of things, there's been
so many big moments. Even before the verses, there was
like the wiffle House moment, like all these things, and
he's saying he discovered that, you know, his mental health
played a major part in that.

Speaker 19 (01:03:29):
Let's say, could listen to Gucci on mental episodes when he.

Speaker 24 (01:03:32):
Was when I was having an episode like Man's like
it's so bad, but it's so embarrassing. It's like just
why I can see other artists when they're going through
someone know they' spiring because when I'm walking like I
say that the most cruel stuff, Like I might talk
about your kids, like I say stuff that when when
it's over with, I'm so embarrassed that I said.

Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
It ain't a good thing. You feel me.

Speaker 24 (01:03:50):
I might say I put your baby in the microwave,
but in that moment, it's scary, and then you'd be like, damn,
I can't believe I said that out of my mouth.
You just tell about you sorry.

Speaker 3 (01:03:59):
Because world were living in you kind of got to
stand on it.

Speaker 24 (01:04:02):
But this thing is, I don't be on a stand
on it because I really I'm going through something. I'm
not well when I did that, So that be.

Speaker 3 (01:04:08):
Eating you up.

Speaker 22 (01:04:08):
Like when you when you when you when you snap
out of your episodes whatever, and you see it and
you go to Centiland, that's a whole nother that's there's
a whole nother trouble.

Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
So look at the Big Facts podcast too Many.

Speaker 7 (01:04:20):
That's a little crazy to see. You kind of got
to stand on it, you know what I mean.

Speaker 13 (01:04:24):
That's that's no, that's that's not that's what this is about,
Like you don't have to stand on it. I think
when people say, you know, you kind of got to
stand on it, that's just your pride in a way, Like, no,
you don't you realize.

Speaker 19 (01:04:35):
I think people aren't learning that now, know, Justin I
think he's banks that.

Speaker 4 (01:04:40):
Yeah, but I think I think, like you said, just
it's like you standing on it because you say it
and you be like, damn, I ain't mean to say it,
but almost like your pride makes you do it.

Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
But I want to ask, but also we got to
remember if you read his book, he was diagnosed with
bipolar schleisophrenia and he was on drugs y.

Speaker 4 (01:04:55):
But I want to ask you. You know you read
the book, Charlamane, You've seen the interview Lauren. I think
you at the book to just I'm reading it reading
it now. So after hearing all that, this that make
you look at Kanye any different because it made.

Speaker 19 (01:05:08):
Kanye had the moment I always in Charlemagne.

Speaker 20 (01:05:11):
I know yesterday we had a conversation about this, but
I feel like if you were there, you saw that
in person. I saw the switch like I saw him
come in. He was charming, he was so sweet, and
then it just switched and it was like crazy to see.
But you have to know that there's something going on there.

Speaker 3 (01:05:25):
But here's the thing. When you say look at him different,
what do you mean? Because I can look at Kanye
and tell that he be dealing with psychosis and man excepisode.
There's a lot of artists. I could look at it
and think that. But the thing the difference between him
and the Gucci mans. Gucci Man exactly got the Gucci
man understands that you know, his trauma was and his fault,
but his healing was his responsibility. He went and got help.
He actually says that verbat and one of the chapters,

(01:05:48):
Gucci also has somebody in his corner.

Speaker 7 (01:05:51):
That somebody never gave up on.

Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
Let me let me, let me, let me let me
quote something out of one of his chapters in the book.
This is actually at the end of chapter four. He said,
it's a reflection of the greatest lesson that I had
to learn. Sometimes when you need help, that's the only
person you can rely on is yourself. Right, So I
don't matter God bless you know. Everybody that you know
assists you, but it starts with you, right.

Speaker 13 (01:06:14):
Well, he also, But because I ain't answered the question, nah,
it didn't, it didn't make me look at him differently.
I look at him the same because you can just
figgybacking off of what shar says, you can definitely all
like you could always tell something wasn't right with Kanye.
It wasn't okay because he would be okay one one
moment and then he would not be okay. And then

(01:06:35):
after hearing like Kim's testimony to certain things, it's like, no,
I've been I've been looking at him like okay, yeah,
it's mental issues, you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 20 (01:06:44):
And Gucci, so they start talking about some of the moments.
So they talk about the verses with Gucci and Jeezi
and Gucci has you know, he talks about some things
he's never said before and reflecting back on that verses,
let's take a listen.

Speaker 22 (01:06:58):
You know, Master, you did that and then he did
Jesus did I mean did his part. You felt like, damn,
it got over there.

Speaker 24 (01:07:05):
Now I'm gonna tell you something ain't never said this
though after I did the truth truth. I'm glad that
he stopped and did what he did because if he
would have played stage scrapped.

Speaker 3 (01:07:14):
I don't think I could have taken.

Speaker 24 (01:07:17):
I'm telling you, that's what like he I guess he said,
let's calm it down, because it would have just it
would been like a volcano.

Speaker 3 (01:07:26):
Was already ready to go there. I seen you moving.
I seen I was ready.

Speaker 24 (01:07:28):
I was ready to go down. I really, I really
was in the heat of the moment. I didn't intend
for it to be like that. I ain't intend to
go there like that. But then it's like once you
get that, like it's just man, it's just clubs.

Speaker 14 (01:07:40):
All.

Speaker 3 (01:07:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 20 (01:07:41):
He's talking about the moment where Jeez and him kind
of were starting to go back and forth, and Jesus
stood up and said, this is not what I invited
you here to do. We got to think about the
artists that we've lost, and like we need to move
forward for people and other artists to see that we
are able to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:07:54):
And then he said one thing for certain, two things
for sure.

Speaker 2 (01:07:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 20 (01:07:58):
Yes, So he's talking about that moment and one last
clip I want to play from this versus because I
thought this was important too, with him talking about Young Thug,
and he says that he instantly forgave Young Thug because
he was there.

Speaker 24 (01:08:09):
Let's say a listen the sense for stuff about me
and whatever, right, and they came on the internet.

Speaker 3 (01:08:14):
But then he made a song and say I missed
my dolls about me.

Speaker 24 (01:08:17):
I immediately accept the policy because I'd have been there
and I wanted somebody to forgive me. I know how
that it's like it's like a wait on its people
who I won't forgive, that won't don't get no comeback.

Speaker 5 (01:08:27):
They can't come around me no more.

Speaker 24 (01:08:28):
But somebody forgave me though, So that makes you be like, damn,
I really take that to heart because I know.

Speaker 3 (01:08:34):
How I am.

Speaker 19 (01:08:35):
Yeah, and I thought that that was Yeah.

Speaker 20 (01:08:37):
I thought that it was interesting because I think, you know,
saying sorry after you've been through all the things that
Gucci talks about, he did didn't even realize he was
doing and being able to forget thug and all the
things publicly.

Speaker 19 (01:08:47):
I thought that that was important to hear.

Speaker 13 (01:08:49):
Also giving another man grace. You know, men don't do that,
they feel like they can't. It's also pride and ego
with that as well, So that's great to hear.

Speaker 4 (01:08:56):
That shows evolution and growth because what he said was,
you know, he's like he's like, IM eight right now
where I can't dive into the petty beefs and all that.
He says, if I don't mess with you, we don't
mess with each other.

Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
But there is no beef. I'm not going at you.
You go your way, I go my way. He said,
I got two babies to raise. I ain't on it
like that. Man, go get Gucci Man's book Episodes Diary
of a Recovering mad Man. I know we say people,
you know, when we were younger, we would say people
are real for how menacing they can be, really for
how criminal they can be, how gangster they can be.
You know, as we've all got know to what we

(01:09:27):
see is real as being vulnerable. You know, real is
knowing that you need healing and going to get it.
And the way he's expressing all his issues in this book, Man,
and drop on a clues box for Gucci Man. Incredible
and he's incredible.

Speaker 19 (01:09:40):
Yes, yes, that's the thing. We gotta wrap it up.

Speaker 3 (01:09:43):
That's the latest with Lauren. Now when we come back, Charlamagne,
what you're doing. We got the people's donkey. Every Friday,
we let you call in and give somebody the biggest
he Okay, you can call in and give somebody the
credit they deserve for being stupid. So call us right now,
one hundred five five one on five to one. It's
the world's most dangerous morning show, the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (01:10:01):
It's your time to nominate a donkey of your own.

Speaker 3 (01:10:04):
Remember now, that's that's how they choose. I call in
now eight hundred five eighty five one oh five one
donkey today for Friday, October seventeenth is the People's donkey.
You know we do that every Friday. We have you
call in and you get to give somebody the credit
they deserve for being stupid. So good morning, who's this?
What's some night? Peez? What's happening? Who is this man?

Speaker 12 (01:10:26):
That's a man in full three?

Speaker 3 (01:10:28):
What's upping? What's happening? Calling from the Chuck this morning?
Who you wanna get the biggest he Hall too?

Speaker 12 (01:10:33):
Man? I sorry, just like I gotta give him to
just larious.

Speaker 9 (01:10:36):
Man, we just do.

Speaker 10 (01:10:38):
I don't so I get I get the tickets to
her November first show right in Charlotte. I don't know
how to do a dangle? Meet street man Jack.

Speaker 3 (01:10:45):
How you doing the dog on? Like you on Instagram?

Speaker 16 (01:10:49):
Run asks you how to do the meat and dry.

Speaker 10 (01:10:50):
I gotta meet you.

Speaker 3 (01:10:51):
Then are you mad at Jess because you don't know
how the body meet and greek? Right?

Speaker 5 (01:10:55):
But right?

Speaker 3 (01:11:00):
Man? So how you mad at just because you couldn't
find the button? Even call I even call Comedy Zone,
I still couldn't find that.

Speaker 7 (01:11:12):
Look, So that's what you do?

Speaker 13 (01:11:13):
Ry damn, you already gave me. Don't you wait till
after the show you pay me for the meet and greet?
You don't pay them, you know what I'm saying. So, yeah,
you stay, and then you gotta come to the second
show because I don't do meet and Greek after the
first show because they got.

Speaker 7 (01:11:26):
To flip the room.

Speaker 19 (01:11:27):
So oh yeah, I got the last yep, go to
the last show.

Speaker 7 (01:11:31):
And you're gonna get your meet and greet.

Speaker 13 (01:11:32):
Baby, It's all good, okay, okay, I sorry, it's all
good til you realize that meet and greet dollars.

Speaker 7 (01:11:44):
It's not it's not No, it's not bad, it's not.

Speaker 3 (01:11:46):
What is the show with Charlotte?

Speaker 9 (01:11:48):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:11:48):
When is it?

Speaker 13 (01:11:49):
October thirty first and November first at the Comedy Zone
in Charlotte, North Carolina. Get your tickets at jes Lari's
official dot com. The meet and greet tickets are not
on the website because all of that money goes straight
to meat, not club, not the agent, not nobody.

Speaker 3 (01:12:01):
But I don't I don't think need to know that.
Good morning? Who's it?

Speaker 8 (01:12:08):
Hey?

Speaker 16 (01:12:08):
Good morning? How are y'all doing that?

Speaker 10 (01:12:10):
What up?

Speaker 8 (01:12:11):
Though?

Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
This is Detroit?

Speaker 3 (01:12:13):
What's up? Kindred from Detroit? The biggest hall to.

Speaker 16 (01:12:18):
Ezra in the Bible, but with the tea on the.

Speaker 13 (01:12:20):
Front, giving the biggest seat hall to in our Republic
school my employer.

Speaker 3 (01:12:25):
Damn what they do?

Speaker 8 (01:12:28):
First of all, I.

Speaker 16 (01:12:29):
Spoke to y'all earlier in the summer. I'm the one
who's colon ruptured. Oh yes, So the situation is this,
Mariosha has taken the lead, however, and our Republic Schools
has yet to inform anyone that asbestos was disturbed during
the recent during the renovations. And also they did they

(01:12:52):
found cancer in my body?

Speaker 3 (01:12:55):
Oh man, sorry to hear that.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
But the thing about it.

Speaker 16 (01:12:59):
Is this, My faith is all slow. I trust God
and I know he's got me.

Speaker 3 (01:13:05):
Yes, he does, period, simple as that. And I want
you to hold on to that belief. I want you
to hold onto that I want you to have faith
and know that faith and fear can't coexist. But you
still got to do you know, the things that the
doctor tell you to do, but know that everything that
is happening to you right now is part of a
bigger plan that God has for you. That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:13:25):
Absolutely. I want to let y'all know I love you
the life.

Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
We love you.

Speaker 16 (01:13:29):
One day I'm going to meet you in person, and
God bless have a peaceful day.

Speaker 3 (01:13:35):
Bless you on purpose. That's what I'm talking about. Good period,
Good morning. Who's this er dre? Who want to get
the biggest herd too?

Speaker 12 (01:13:44):
Man?

Speaker 18 (01:13:44):
I want to give that man?

Speaker 3 (01:13:46):
Okay, why you want to give the biggest hull?

Speaker 12 (01:13:48):
Man?

Speaker 18 (01:13:49):
All crest you want to do is fight Chla Man.
That's ship least saying all this stuff. Whatever they check
them out, back and forth, whatever they speaking on personal
stuff is Adam and she just want to box. Whether
we friends or not we used to be friends, that
don't matter. I want to box. She did all that.

Speaker 3 (01:14:07):
I was just by, But you got to build up
to hype for the fight. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 10 (01:14:11):
That's what I think.

Speaker 18 (01:14:11):
She can't try to fight, man, I ain't what you're saying.

Speaker 14 (01:14:13):
But she ain't gonna fight.

Speaker 3 (01:14:14):
I promise you we're gonna see. I mean, you're doing
three points on YouTube. I don't think lay Lee doing
this for no reason, no.

Speaker 12 (01:14:20):
Reason, just trying to expose her.

Speaker 18 (01:14:22):
That's what she's trying to do. Personally.

Speaker 3 (01:14:23):
I think Layla coop growing for that.

Speaker 11 (01:14:25):
Man.

Speaker 3 (01:14:25):
I think she building up hype for a fight. I
could be wrong, but we're about to see.

Speaker 7 (01:14:28):
You think they're gonna fight. You think they're gonna fight now,
That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 8 (01:14:31):
I don't.

Speaker 18 (01:14:32):
I don't think that she's gonna fight. I think at
the end of whatever the series she's doing on YouTube
and with Nah, I'm I choose to blah blah blah.
I guarantee you she's not gonna fight.

Speaker 3 (01:14:42):
Well, if she do that, I want everybody who subscribed
to her YouTube page and unsubscribed I will go I
will go on to unsubscribe from Leila Lee YouTube page
campaign myself if she do that. Okay, good morning.

Speaker 14 (01:14:53):
Who's this morning?

Speaker 3 (01:14:55):
My name is Paine. Who you want to get the
biggest he hart to want to give the.

Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
Biggest he are to the breakfast club this morning? The
lady who will broadcast the news. She needs to After
she repeats what Trump says, she needs to follow up
with facts, like facts behind it, because when you only
repeat what he says, the listeners believe what he says
is the truth, and we know that's not the case.

(01:15:24):
Believe you are on a platform and you said something
very valuable the other day that the Democrats need to
do be on repeat with their message. I think that
you yourself needs to do the same. You don't need
to be diplomatic right now. We ain't a fight for
our democracy, so you need to pick a side and
stick with it. You have to come at them the

(01:15:45):
way they come at us. Democrats no message to be
on repeat, repeat, repeat, because that's what common people that
don't have really like analytical skills listen to. Once you
do something over and over and over, it sticks. So
I do agree with you. You made that point the

(01:16:07):
other day, so we need to do that.

Speaker 14 (01:16:09):
But but.

Speaker 3 (01:16:12):
No, no, my side is the truth, and the truth
is Democrats ain't all good. Republicans, ain't all good Democrats,
ain't all bad. Republicans ain't all bad and and and
and we're in this We're in this situation because of
the cowardice the Democrats, and I'm gonna keep saying that
over and over.

Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Well, I don't agree with that, because we're in a fight.
It's just like we're part of a family right now,
Charlamagne and wait, we discussed that behind closed doors, sides.
We stick together, what the Republicans.

Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
No, Listen, we the we the people have to stick together,
not we the party. We the people gotta stick together
because at the end of the day, the resistance is
gonna come from the people. There's one branch of government,
and I call it a branch of government, even though
we're not a branch of government, but we technically are.
There's one body that is not controlled by the Republicans
right now, and that's the people. I'm gonna always be

(01:17:06):
here speaking for the people. I ain't speaking for no party.
I am not speaking for no party.

Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
Well, okay, I can't change your mind obviously, or my
seniors still remains. I'm giving you the docu of the
day because right now we're first because the Republicans their guns.
They stick to it, what a lie, whatever, whatever, they

(01:17:30):
stick to it. So we not even need to send
a message and repeat your message that this man is
such horrible. He's honorable, but you got to say exactly
what he's thought me every day. That's damaging the pe.

Speaker 3 (01:17:44):
Okay, yes man, thank you very much. Humans driving me crazy.
I literally just told this lady I'm on the side
of the people, not decided the party. And she's gonna
repeat back to me what I told her after her
calling up here telling me I need to be caping
for Democrats. I'm not doing that. I'm not caping for Democrats.

(01:18:05):
I'm not caping for Republicans. I am on the side
of the people. That's it like this, she said it.
You know what I'm saying. God, damn boy. Humans driving
me crazy. No, I don't. Actually, my mom exhausted. I'm exhausted.

Speaker 22 (01:18:19):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:18:19):
We do that every Friday. It's the People's donkey. Who
got coming up next?

Speaker 4 (01:18:23):
That's right, Tie Dollars sign is up next. This new album,
Tycoon is out now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning,
the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:18:32):
Owning Everybody.

Speaker 4 (01:18:33):
It's DJ n V Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne, the gud We
are the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:18:38):
Long LaRosa is here as well. We got a special guest.

Speaker 10 (01:18:40):
In the building.

Speaker 3 (01:18:41):
Tie Dollars signs that's going on, plus black and highly
favorite new album Tycoon coming.

Speaker 8 (01:18:49):
That's how you're feeling, Yes, sir tycot on the way
ten seventeen.

Speaker 3 (01:18:54):
What do you think defines the Tie dollar sign sound
right now? Because a lot of people say you've helped
shape like the modern R and B sound. So what
what defines the Tie dollars song sound right now?

Speaker 8 (01:19:05):
Taking your time in finding the right you know what
I mean? Like, damn, that's a question right there.

Speaker 3 (01:19:12):
That's what the interviews are four times.

Speaker 8 (01:19:15):
That's a good question. What is the sound? The greatness?
There we go?

Speaker 20 (01:19:24):
Okay, at what point did you realize that you had
more to offer the world? I saw something where you
talked about like, you know, this album being for people
who you know, you dream, but you know it's more
to you.

Speaker 19 (01:19:35):
When did you realize that about till.

Speaker 8 (01:19:37):
I realized that, like early, early, but especially when I
got my first job. My first job was when I
was like sixteen, and it was at a subway sandwiches
and I was in there going through the you know
when they teach you everything, and I didn't come back.

(01:19:58):
I went one day and that was it.

Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
That's the orientation was I can't do this it's not
for me. It's not about to go make music and
figure it out.

Speaker 23 (01:20:06):
Is that?

Speaker 3 (01:20:06):
What am I getting this? Ready? That where you met
like y G and everybody back then?

Speaker 10 (01:20:10):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:20:10):
No, no, you met him some way.

Speaker 8 (01:20:15):
No, that was much later though.

Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
Okay, why Taycoon?

Speaker 8 (01:20:18):
Why is that the name of album, Tycoon? Because that's
what I'm stepping into, my greatness. It's a japan It
came from Japanese word great lord. You know over here
in English it's like top of your game, top of
your business. I did the artist thing, started the record
label Easy Money. We signed our first artist, Leon Thomas.

(01:20:39):
He's now Leon Thomas.

Speaker 3 (01:20:41):
I don't think you get enough credit for that, like
people like people mention it, but it's like, no, that's time.
That was not artists, which says a lot like I
always say, you know, you become a true legend when
you're tree bads fruit exactly.

Speaker 8 (01:20:52):
Yeah, man, So shout out to Leon. I'm a champagne
owner now it's the champagne John. What else we got?
I'm about to drop a documentary. Ye, my daughter, let's
talk about my daughter. My daughter's twenty years old. Now
she's at Pepperdine getting her Master's Wow. Shout out to her.

Speaker 3 (01:21:14):
That's what life is.

Speaker 8 (01:21:18):
And real fruits.

Speaker 3 (01:21:19):
When it comes to Leon, right, like, well, how did
they meet? First of all, how do y'all how did
you sign Leon? What do y'all meet?

Speaker 8 (01:21:24):
We met at this studio session, like during the pandemic.
My homie, uh A Lee was like, Yo, you got
to check this out, and he played me this song,
that California Cation song that we It's called love Jones now,
but at first it was Californication and then it's Love
Jones on his first album, and really, uh, I was
supposed to put that out, but I didn't put it out,

(01:21:45):
and then he was like, I'm about to use it
on my man. We ended up signing on me and
Sean Baron because we always talked about making a label together.
Sean Baron is the guy who signed me to Atlantic
in twenty twelve, and now we got a label together.
So it's a blessing.

Speaker 3 (01:21:59):
Man's a lot of artists. They'll see another artist with
that type of talent and they'll basically like just take
the whole or take the energy for themselves. What made
you say, nah Man? I want you to go fly
on your own.

Speaker 8 (01:22:11):
Because It just reminded me of myself like at that time,
just being great for people, not knowing what to do
or you know what I mean. So I'm like, yo,
we got the label, would you be down? He's like, what,
let's go and we figured it out.

Speaker 20 (01:22:27):
What instincts do you use in business that you gather
from music or vice versa that help you be good
at what you do.

Speaker 8 (01:22:36):
It's a total different thing. But in business it's all
about getting the right team, you know what I'm saying.
I got a great team, So I just want to
shout out to them because I couldn't do it all
alone for sure.

Speaker 3 (01:22:49):
How do you balance being a collaborator behind a sound
but then being an artist in front of it, because
you know, you work and produce for people everybody, right,
so how do you know when to just be a
collaborator behind the sound but then switching out to do
the album and being an artist in front of the
south When.

Speaker 8 (01:23:03):
It comes to music, I just like give it what
it needs, you know what I mean. I don't try
to overdo it. It's like, if I feel like it
just needs my feature, cool, if it's my song, it's
a whole different thing, you know. What I mean, it's
the intention and you're.

Speaker 7 (01:23:17):
Talking about that, you're also dropping a documentary. Yeah, still,
free TC. What is that about?

Speaker 19 (01:23:22):
Give us a little bit about I know you don't
want to spoil it.

Speaker 8 (01:23:24):
Free TC is basically going to show you my whole
There's some parts that are not in there, but it's
basically my whole thing from a kid all the way
up until now. The whole trajectory like deeper than any
other interview has went or any other any other way.
You gotta see me out there for sure. That's on
the way. It's basically done. I scored the whole thing

(01:23:48):
and shout out to the whole team that put that
together as well.

Speaker 3 (01:23:51):
Who pushes you the most as far as creative? Is
it your artist?

Speaker 4 (01:23:55):
Is it another artist that you're in, whether it's YG
or whoever it may be, who pushes you to most?

Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
To say? Now, I could do better than that.

Speaker 8 (01:24:03):
I think I pushed myself the hardest just from just
for Karen and wanted to go to the next level.
And it's just like, all right, that's cool, but what
can we do different?

Speaker 3 (01:24:12):
All right?

Speaker 8 (01:24:13):
That sounds like you know I've heard this before.

Speaker 5 (01:24:17):
What can we do?

Speaker 8 (01:24:18):
You know? What I mean to take it to the
next level. I get real bored with music, you know
what I mean. It's like how many songs come out
of day? You know what I'm saying. So it's like,
what can we do to make it like interesting? You
know what I'm saying? What's the wild factor?

Speaker 7 (01:24:30):
What's your inspiration?

Speaker 9 (01:24:31):
Right?

Speaker 13 (01:24:31):
Because your voice is like timeless on anything. Anything you
put your voice on, it makes it a hit, right.
I love your bocals, love your voice.

Speaker 8 (01:24:39):
Appreciate that.

Speaker 7 (01:24:40):
Who is the inspiration?

Speaker 8 (01:24:42):
Inspiration? Tons? It could be we can name back in
the day artist all the way up until now. But
I like Prince, I like DeAngelo, I like Joe to See,
I like Himrell. I like all the greatest singers. Stevie Wonder,
Stevie Want is my favorite male singer ever. I could
just then there's rap, then there's like house music, then

(01:25:04):
there's rock music. Then there's tons of things that can
inspire me.

Speaker 7 (01:25:07):
We just love music.

Speaker 3 (01:25:09):
You remember the first that you want the record you
ever heard.

Speaker 8 (01:25:11):
Or Stevie Wonder record. Maybe isn't She Lovely? I don't know.
I don't know if that's the first, but that's the
one that you felt like you did. That's just what
I thought of right now when you.

Speaker 12 (01:25:22):
Say you can hear it.

Speaker 7 (01:25:24):
Did you grow up singing in church?

Speaker 11 (01:25:26):
No?

Speaker 8 (01:25:27):
I didn't. I didn't. I didn't really want people to
know I could sing back then. I didn't really like
all the way know how to sing back then, but
it was in me. But I was playing bas in.

Speaker 3 (01:25:35):
Church though, for sure. Yeah, when did you first start singing?

Speaker 8 (01:25:39):
I first started singing when I was a kid, but
like publicly what was her name?

Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
What was her name?

Speaker 8 (01:25:48):
That was really my pops that got me into singing,
because y'all know my pops. He did music as well.
He still does music to this day. He just sent
me this video of him playing somewhere playing trumpet. But uh,
it's just it's just something that I've always loved and
I get to make money off of it, you know
what I mean?

Speaker 19 (01:26:04):
You, I mean your R and B. But it's like
a different type of R and B.

Speaker 20 (01:26:07):
Are you like an emotional person in a relationship and
that gives you for your music too?

Speaker 8 (01:26:13):
Or yeah, I can be sure. I could definitely be emotional.

Speaker 3 (01:26:20):
How much of that comes? How much of that comes
from your own personal highs and lows?

Speaker 8 (01:26:24):
Yeah? Some of it's personal. Some of it's like if
I do a song with a writer, you know what
I mean, whatever, But I still put my my passion
into it. You know, I still put my my whole
thing into it. For sure.

Speaker 3 (01:26:37):
What's the last thing you looked at online about yourself
and laugh?

Speaker 8 (01:26:40):
The last thing I looked at online about myself then
laughed is calling me jar Jar Binks.

Speaker 19 (01:26:49):
He calls me that.

Speaker 8 (01:26:50):
Wow, I didn't know who jar Jar Binks was before this.

Speaker 19 (01:26:53):
And then how did you feel like when you saw him?

Speaker 8 (01:26:56):
Well, when you see the one picture from the ORF video,
the way my hair was, man and then you put
it next to Jarjia Binks is actually hilarious, Like it
is funny.

Speaker 3 (01:27:08):
You didn't laugh when they said you was on the
on screen kissing the man.

Speaker 8 (01:27:11):
Okay, see this romani man. That's the homie. He from Brazil.
This is how he does all the homies, like, oh
what's up one? And we told him like, yo, he
didn't actually kiss me, bro if you really look close,
but yeah, it just mad. So what I had a
fish in that shirt on. It was sexiest. Your bitch

(01:27:32):
was loving it?

Speaker 3 (01:27:33):
How about that? Yeah? Yeah that used to be regular fish.

Speaker 8 (01:27:41):
That back in then, Like, I forgot what type of
shirt that was, but that was expensive too, and I
like it.

Speaker 3 (01:27:47):
So you hear that was the Jamaic shirt back in
the day, it was did you have Did you have
to explain that to anybody? Though?

Speaker 8 (01:27:54):
I don't ever have to explain it. Yeah, you have
to laugh though it was funny. I definitely called it like, bruh, see,
I told your stupid ass, we don't even That's not
how it is out here. We don't do that.

Speaker 14 (01:28:09):
What do you say?

Speaker 8 (01:28:11):
He was like, man, I'm gonna be me every time,
like you know, I ain't get this. Well he's married.

Speaker 20 (01:28:18):
Yeah, yeah, I saw you say. That is this album right?
You said it's perfect for shrooms?

Speaker 8 (01:28:23):
Nah, I hate shrooms like this back back in the day. Okay,
shrooms it can be fun people laugh, but if a
bad thing happens on shrooms, it's that same energy of
the greatness reverse. So I forgot what song it was.

(01:28:44):
I think it was motion, like this song right before
Vultures that I put out. I was going to do
radio interviews up and down California. Start off in the Bay,
drive down. It's just me the Bred from Atlantic and
the driver and uh, I'm like, you know what, I'm
about to take one of these little corners of this
chocolate bar. Go do these interviews be a funny ass,

(01:29:07):
like have all the energy you feel me early more than.

Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
All the shit.

Speaker 8 (01:29:10):
It worked well. I went and started and did my interviews.
It was going crazy, just having fun. Then we get
back in the car and I'm looking at the phone
and the homies just like well. I actually talked to
my homie the day before and he was in the
hospital and I was supposed to go see him the
next day. I had to go do these interviews, and
my plan was as soon as I got back to

(01:29:30):
LA I was going to go to the hospital. But
on the drive down, they said he passed away. And
while I'm on mushrooms in the back seat by myself
and nobody to talk to, and it's like ah, and
it made me just like never want.

Speaker 7 (01:29:45):
To put that again dry.

Speaker 8 (01:29:47):
Yeah, long lived my brother big why yeah mm hmm.

Speaker 7 (01:29:56):
I got some reducing as I went home.

Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
You never did the actual plant.

Speaker 7 (01:30:02):
That was just the chocolate.

Speaker 8 (01:30:04):
I thought about that part too, that was the chocolate one.
And back in the day when it was the actual plant, Yeah,
it was. I had way better times. So I don't
know that candy.

Speaker 3 (01:30:16):
Maybe it was that y'all didn't know the story was
gonna be dark. If I know it's gonna be you
know what I mean, maybe there's like that.

Speaker 8 (01:30:27):
Maybe there's maybe we just kept somebody off of doing drugs,
you feel me?

Speaker 7 (01:30:31):
Yeah, for sure, definitely, especially the chocolate.

Speaker 20 (01:30:34):
Absolutely, Leon Thomas in his career was like such a successtory.
I saw you call him king of R and B
right when you're looking for other artists, now, is it
R and B that you're trying to stand or like
what type of artists are you looking for now?

Speaker 19 (01:30:47):
For your label that you have?

Speaker 8 (01:30:48):
Yeah, just like the greatest artists possible, like people that
are actually good, people that aren't just like you could tell, man,
it's like certain people that just want to get famous
or just get lucky, you know what I'm saying, or
just have popularity, and it's like that should be cool,
But when it comes to easy money, we want the
real deal, you know.

Speaker 13 (01:31:10):
O, right, easy money, Do y'all invest in artist development
because that's not something that's around anymore. Like you said,
most people want to get famous just to be famous,
or you know who's the likes and all.

Speaker 8 (01:31:22):
That there is something that I love that much that
I believed in, I would invest in that. But I'm
more so like working with easy lifters, meaning like that
you got your together. I used to have my old label,
the Movement. I've started many labels and signed many people,
but now it's like Leon has been the easiest person

(01:31:43):
to work with. So now that's like my blueprint. It's like,
if you ain't got it like that, then I don't
even want to waste my time because it's the same
as I am. You know, I'm like gonna come with
the fully done. I'm gonna do my part. So now
when I get my team, it's like, all right, you
do your part, You do your part, and we can
all went together, you know what I mean. So I
want a person that has this together. The last meeting
that we went I said this in another interview, but

(01:32:04):
I'm gonna tell it to y'all. The last meeting we
went to at a Capital motown for Leon. This pulls
out his laptop. O. You guys got a CMI cable.
They hook it up he PowerPoint display. This is how
the album's finna go. These are the directors I want
to work with. These are the colors I want to use.
This is my stage DA. I'm like, oh, this is

(01:32:26):
all I need from Utah. Can you make this happen?
I want to get Chris Brown on the song you
feel me like like that, like got your together easy
money and then it makes it easy.

Speaker 20 (01:32:37):
You know, were there ever any artists that in all
of your label journeys that you didn't sign and now
you're like, oh, maybe they weren't all the way to
having it together, but I should have because now I
see them and they get it now.

Speaker 19 (01:32:51):
Yeah, like artists you feel like you missed out on.

Speaker 8 (01:32:54):
That I missed out on. Uh not for real. I
like that I didn't have my together when it was
like when I first met YG So we did it
more team right, you know what I mean? But we
still you know, we're still rocking. He know my new
song I just put out small Body, Pretty Faces in
the Kodak.

Speaker 3 (01:33:13):
And y G I need.

Speaker 6 (01:33:15):
I love making banger with you and Leon Thomas.

Speaker 3 (01:33:19):
I got you okay a new question.

Speaker 8 (01:33:22):
That's what I want, That's what I need.

Speaker 7 (01:33:24):
Joe I ain't no more All right.

Speaker 3 (01:33:28):
Side is a perfect person to do a crime with
because he ain't gonna tell the port. I mean, you
can interrogate him all day. He's gonna be sitting there
with that hoodie.

Speaker 16 (01:33:35):
On, and you know.

Speaker 4 (01:33:40):
You, ladies and gentlemen. Todd Coon comes out on the seventeenth.
It's Todd Dollard sign is the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:33:49):
Good morning, Yes, sir, the Breakfast Club Morning.

Speaker 4 (01:33:55):
Everybody's the d J n V Jesse Larry said, Guy,
we all to breakfast this club.

Speaker 3 (01:34:00):
It's time for past the auks. Yeah, DJ, what's up? Big?
What's happening? Oh? Nothing?

Speaker 25 (01:34:21):
Just another day, Happy Friday?

Speaker 3 (01:34:23):
Every Friday Friday.

Speaker 19 (01:34:25):
And I'm going to get into some music first.

Speaker 25 (01:34:27):
I'm gonna start with this Big all Odds, you know,
is doing a bunch of legendary projects with his Master
Pill label, and him and Big L drop the records
called you Ain't Got a Chance?

Speaker 3 (01:34:37):
Yeah what BIGL still sounds amazing, man. Master Appeal is
the best hip hop label out right now, it's not
even close, correct, Like if they're the best hip hop
label out they put out Golden Face Project, Ray Crome,
Ray Quon Project, My Deep Project. Like when it comes
to just hip hop, they're the best hip hop label. Yeah,
Purest Purreus absolutely.

Speaker 25 (01:34:59):
Yeah, and this is cool because it's gonna introduce a
whole new generation to big Lass.

Speaker 7 (01:35:04):
But he said Nas is on it too.

Speaker 25 (01:35:06):
Yeah, yes, And then next I'm gonna go with this
Molly and Tyler record. I know the Internet is not
in love with Tyler, but I still really really liked
Tyler her music.

Speaker 13 (01:35:16):
I don't know why they do that, and they just
yo so grudge it so long over stuffed that ain't
got nothing to do with them.

Speaker 25 (01:35:23):
Yeah, but I love her and she just did a
record with Molly who Molly has been I feel like
an underdog in the afrobeat world and I'm so happy
that they collapsed because this is just a great record.

Speaker 6 (01:35:33):
And the record is called bodyg Like.

Speaker 7 (01:35:35):
It's a little vibe.

Speaker 3 (01:35:37):
Y'all watch peace Maker. On the last episode of piece Maker,
they went into a multiverse and it was all these
little imps, like these little, small, little tiny creatures that
was eating people. It's not like a bunch of them singing.
That's not like a bunch of drimblings. But I mean
that respectfully. That that was that was not dope, and
y'all alive. Tyler be making some good records, but that
wasn't one of them Molly's record? Who's Molly?

Speaker 19 (01:36:00):
Just Molly is on shake It to the Max?

Speaker 3 (01:36:05):
To the Max? Well, whoever that was saying, it just
now sound like the Gremlins when they was in the
movie theater right right? Why we gotta be we like it?

Speaker 10 (01:36:13):
We like it.

Speaker 7 (01:36:14):
You like stuff that we don't.

Speaker 3 (01:36:16):
Y'all say it's cool, y'all don't like it. I just
said it's cool. I will tell you. I don't like.

Speaker 25 (01:36:20):
Maybe there's a bad introduction. She has a really another
you like Shaking to the Max?

Speaker 19 (01:36:24):
Everybody like you don't like the song of the Summer.

Speaker 3 (01:36:28):
That's like the first single of gmlins three sounds.

Speaker 8 (01:36:33):
That's what that was.

Speaker 20 (01:36:34):
You know.

Speaker 19 (01:36:34):
It's okay, we'll see another record by her.

Speaker 3 (01:36:36):
I'm sorry. She has a unique voice, she does, but
she does actually really fire. Just don't feed her after midnight.
That's sorry. I'm sorry, Molly, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.

Speaker 25 (01:36:49):
The last record is but Jordan Ward and Sailor.

Speaker 19 (01:36:52):
You definitely know Sailor, No, I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:36:55):
But the Asian girl with.

Speaker 25 (01:36:57):
The okay she and Jordan Ward you had like this record,
But I haven't played a record for him in like
two years. But anyway, Jordan Ward and Sailor put out
a single and this is leading up for Jordan Ward's
new project which is dropping next month.

Speaker 19 (01:37:09):
And the song is called Smoking Patna.

Speaker 13 (01:37:12):
She sounded like a gremlin edie, but I like it.

Speaker 3 (01:37:17):
Though you shouldn't smoke when you're a singer. It message
up your vocals. That was I don't know, man, that
like the music.

Speaker 7 (01:37:26):
I like the music.

Speaker 3 (01:37:27):
I like the.

Speaker 19 (01:37:30):
It's viby.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
It's fine.

Speaker 3 (01:37:31):
I couldn't get jiggy with that one.

Speaker 7 (01:37:32):
But I just don't understand what she was saying. But
I definitely did like the music.

Speaker 6 (01:37:36):
It was what that was Jordan. The part that you
guys heard was Jordan's.

Speaker 19 (01:37:40):
But he's vibes.

Speaker 6 (01:37:41):
He makes like viby music.

Speaker 3 (01:37:43):
It sounds like it was COVID And she was singing
behind the mask. That was a man and woman to
do that was a man. It sounds like he was
singing behind the mask in the booth like he was.
He had a little surgical mask on in the booth.
It sounded very muffled, like the mix is something that
wasn't it?

Speaker 19 (01:37:57):
All right? Well, if you guys like the.

Speaker 3 (01:37:59):
Songs subjective, don't take my word just word that the
music is subjective, y'all. If y'all like it cool, I'm
not knocking it. Okay, you did ask me my opinion?

Speaker 9 (01:38:07):
I did.

Speaker 25 (01:38:08):
I did you know people really be coming up to
me playing records and like you think, Charlaminea like.

Speaker 11 (01:38:13):
This, I'm I don't know, I do not know.

Speaker 3 (01:38:16):
Well, you're the one way to find out. Now, listen
to bath Dogs. They might find out that way. You
heard some feelings this morning.

Speaker 11 (01:38:22):
I know.

Speaker 25 (01:38:24):
Well, for those who do enjoy it or definitely want
to check out that big el Na's record, definitely.

Speaker 3 (01:38:29):
Follow me at Yeah, hells was fight.

Speaker 19 (01:38:32):
Maybe I should have ended with that one, but okay.

Speaker 25 (01:38:35):
Nylo Simone n y l A s y m O
n e e E. You can follow me on Instagram
click the linkoln bio. I have a few playlists on
my website, but Certified is a one where you'll find
all the records from Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:38:45):
All right, thank you, Nyla.

Speaker 4 (01:38:46):
Now when we come back, we got the People's Choice mix.
We throw it back on a Friday, it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (01:38:50):
Good morning, you're checking out the Breakfast Club. J MV,
Jess Hilary and Charlamage.

Speaker 14 (01:38:55):
The guy.

Speaker 4 (01:38:56):
We are the breakfast Club I brought with us this
morning and we got a special guest in the building
from Philly, Philly, Philly.

Speaker 3 (01:39:03):
Hey, the brother Danny Garcia. Welcome up. Now you're feeling.

Speaker 15 (01:39:07):
Feel good, feel good?

Speaker 3 (01:39:08):
Are you really having a final fight, Danel Gonzalez? Yeah,
like retired, like done done?

Speaker 15 (01:39:14):
Yeah, I feel like yeah really yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:39:16):
Why do you think that?

Speaker 15 (01:39:18):
Just that's my forty second fight. I've been pro since
two thousand and eight. I mean, I won world titles,
I had my ups, to have my downs, but just
to be I just feel like I can still fight.
But I just feel like I'm not passionate as I
used to be about it.

Speaker 3 (01:39:32):
Interesting.

Speaker 15 (01:39:33):
I don't want to let my fans down. But at
the end of the day, I feel this fight.

Speaker 3 (01:39:37):
I feel good.

Speaker 15 (01:39:38):
I know what I got myself into. So it's my show,
my promotion, that's what really promoted. That's what really motivated
me to do this last fight. But other than that,
I think that's pretty much it. I just feel like
I want to give my fans everything that I got
in that ring, and I don't know if I could
keep up that momentum and that that type of I love.

Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
They don't want to be a couple of YouTubers though
after that, like, oh y'all do that.

Speaker 15 (01:40:07):
I'm talking about fights to really count.

Speaker 3 (01:40:09):
Because the YouTube fights money money, fighting influences.

Speaker 15 (01:40:14):
Yeah, that's for sure. Now I'll do that for sure.
I still being entertainer. I still go out there.

Speaker 11 (01:40:19):
But the decision you made happened must have been it
must have been doing training camp because when you first
announced it, like you said, this is your farewell to Brooklyn,
but you're still gonna fight again. But then like that changed.

Speaker 15 (01:40:30):
I said eighty five per chance out you were no.

Speaker 3 (01:40:34):
That hang it up? Yeah, okay, what was the last
thing because you said that was the eighty five, So
what was the fifteen? Is just because I'm a fighter?
What was the thing that said now this is it?
Was it? The training was like nah my back hurt
like it wasn't. It wasn't the training.

Speaker 15 (01:40:46):
It was like before I started, before I even started training,
I knew that this could be my last fight.

Speaker 7 (01:40:54):
That's in it.

Speaker 3 (01:40:55):
Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 15 (01:40:57):
I got three kids, three beautiful kids, and I got
my son Danny he's one. I got Palaced she's three,
and I got Philly she's ten. So definitely just being here,
I'm missing time with them. And my daughter's already ten
years old, and I felt like I missed her grow up.
To be honest, that's how fast them ten years went.
It's like I missed so much, you know, because when

(01:41:17):
you're in the prime of your career, everything's going so fast.
It's like everything's like you miss everything. And I just
felt like I missed her grow up. And I don't
want to feel that with my other two kids.

Speaker 11 (01:41:28):
You gained a lot, though, I mean, oh yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:41:31):
But sure it's a sacrifice. You know in life, you know,
you can't have it all. You can't have the beautiful family.
Then you can't have the time, you can't have the money,
like you just can't have it all. Every time you
got to sacrifice something. You know how it goes to
be successful.

Speaker 3 (01:41:45):
You said, you just realizing that you don't have the passion.
Is this something you're just realizing or you know, even
I think your last fight was against what Yeah, yeah,
and you got stopped in the NIF round. Did you
have the passion? Then you think it was Wayne?

Speaker 15 (01:41:58):
I thought I thought I was up for it, and
then remember I was out for twenty eight months before
that fight. I was out, and you know, boxing inactivity
for a fighter, that's the worst thing for a boxer
because you gotta stay active, you gotta stay sharp. So
I thought I could do it, and I went up
away class from one forty seven to one sixty.

Speaker 3 (01:42:17):
Damn.

Speaker 15 (01:42:18):
Yeah, I was trying to do something legendary, but it didn't.

Speaker 8 (01:42:21):
Work my way, you know, But it's all good.

Speaker 3 (01:42:23):
So let's talk about it.

Speaker 4 (01:42:24):
You took two years off the super because of anxiety
and impression. So what happened during the two years that says,
you know what, I need to take a step aside,
Like what was what was concerning.

Speaker 15 (01:42:33):
The Bendavida's fight to the Laura fight. I was actually
already I recovered from everything that was from like from
twenty twenty to twenty twenty two. That's when I was
going through like anxiety and depression. Then I came back,
I beat Benavida's. I put it all behind me. I
just started looking at life different, started being I appreciate things,
being grateful. I felt good, and then I just sat
around for two and a half years, not because I

(01:42:54):
wanted to, because of you know, boxing, just sometimes.

Speaker 3 (01:42:57):
This is just the way it is.

Speaker 4 (01:42:59):
When you see these because get some of these huge
paydays by fighting whoever they want, right some we talked
earlier about YouTube stars and influencers. Does that make you say,
you know what, forget quote unquote real box and I'm
gonna go this lane because there's more money in this lane.

Speaker 12 (01:43:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:43:13):
I mean I wish I would always thought like that.
Like growing up in Philly, it's like if you did,
like if you promoted yourself or then anything weird, it's
like you like you get clown for it. It's like
Philly they teach try to be like real, but I
feel like that's what we're missing, is like the marketing part.

Speaker 3 (01:43:28):
You said real but real what it's just.

Speaker 15 (01:43:30):
Like, don't do not goofy for things like That's how
I was always brought up. But it's like, really, you
gotta kind of have like a character. You know, you
gotta you gotta be a fighter, and you gotta be
an entertainer.

Speaker 3 (01:43:43):
You know, you fought some killers too, that man, you
think about them and that I mean, I swear I
kind of forgot about some of those. I came in
we were just talking about. But you fought Therman, you
fought Porter, you faught Spent But you never got stopped.
You feel like your toughness, your toughness was taking for granted.
Oh yeah, for sure.

Speaker 15 (01:44:00):
Two out of those three fights I felt like I won.
You know, those are controversial fights, especially the Therman and
Quarter fight.

Speaker 3 (01:44:06):
Many people thought I won those fights, but no, I
always knew. Everybody know I was gritty. I was tough.
That's what got me here, is my heart.

Speaker 15 (01:44:13):
So I never Yeah, I never even knocked down to
my last fight because I took a knee. Really, I
got here with a good shot, took a knee, and
that that's pretty much it.

Speaker 3 (01:44:21):
I was gonna ask you, what's the fight that keeps
you up at night? Like, what's the one you wish
you could run back?

Speaker 15 (01:44:25):
Man Keith Therman, that fight was like, that was my
first loss, and I was thirty three and oh before that,
So I never dreamed about like losing. So when I lost,
I felt like somebody died in my family.

Speaker 3 (01:44:36):
That's how bad it was. Damn Yeah. Did Floyd do
that to a generation? I feel like Floyd did that
to a generation. Floyd being undefeated made boxes feel like
you gotta be undefeated to be great.

Speaker 15 (01:44:46):
I never really cared about being undefeated. But it was
just like my first loss. It was tough, like you
know what I mean, Like the first time losing. Knew
it was a possibility I could lose because I was
fighting another great champion like myself, but I just felt unstoppable.
When when I lost, it was like, dang, I learned
something about myself.

Speaker 7 (01:45:03):
So how did you recover and reset from that?

Speaker 15 (01:45:06):
I just took a year off and came back and
knocked somebody out. And then about it was that Brandon Reals.

Speaker 11 (01:45:13):
Oh yeah, Brandon was tough. I never you never seen
Brandon get knocked out like that. That was mbitious. Who
was somebody that you wish you would have fought out
from your era that you didn't?

Speaker 15 (01:45:23):
Just for that's about it. I feel like I thought
everybody else besides Crawford, but I fought him in the amateurs, right,
But I really thought every single body in my generation.

Speaker 11 (01:45:32):
Did you Did you ever try to make a fight
with Pat Yo back when.

Speaker 15 (01:45:35):
You were when he fought Thurman? They offered it, They
offered him me or Thurman. Oh yeah, they said you
want to fight Dani R. Thurman and he picked you
picked Thurman? Oh yeah, Well, when I thought Matisse and
he thought, uh Canelo. Remember with the Core main event,

(01:45:56):
I was told if I beat Matisa, Remember, I was
like U was an underdog again. Nobody thought I was
gonna win. But they said if I won that fight,
that they were setting it out for me to fight Fluid.
But it just never happened.

Speaker 3 (01:46:06):
Damn. You know you talked earlier about taking time off
of mental health reasons. What did you learn about yourself
during that break that fight and could never teach me?

Speaker 15 (01:46:15):
That's a good question. I was always a warrior, Like
I was worried about stuff like I just I learned
that I can't. I can't save everything, you know what
I mean. I can't change the world as much as
you want. Like you try to help, you know, you
try to do this, You try to do that. I
just try to Yeah, I can't save the world. And basically,

(01:46:35):
like I just try to be living the moment. That's it,
because most of the stuff you're worrying about is like
stuff that never happens.

Speaker 3 (01:46:42):
And I don't know. I was always like that.

Speaker 15 (01:46:43):
I just be worried thinking about things that anxiety is. Yeah,
I just be if I gotta fight, I'll just be
thinking about it every day. I can't get my mind
off the damn fight, and I'm thinking that I'm focused,
but I'm really just psyching myself out. As soon as
I go in the ring, it just go away. But
I just that feeling, like you know, it's like you
can't get that thought off your head.

Speaker 11 (01:47:03):
You feeling like that?

Speaker 10 (01:47:04):
Now?

Speaker 15 (01:47:04):
No, I feel good now.

Speaker 3 (01:47:05):
The funny thing you said about marketing too, I was
thinking about it. I'm like, that's mad people in shurely
that know how to market themselves and don't look boofy though,
like Gilly the Willows, Kevin Hart. Yeah, but before they
was all serious. Member not Kevin Hart.

Speaker 7 (01:47:19):
Serious and he gilded the Chicken Man though, but he
was serious about that.

Speaker 3 (01:47:23):
We was Gil.

Speaker 15 (01:47:27):
Now he's being himself. He was always like that, you know,
funny laughing around.

Speaker 3 (01:47:31):
But you know, Philly is just like gotta be tough. Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:47:34):
It's just how people. It's how they talk, they teach people,
or how you raised.

Speaker 11 (01:47:38):
Let's say you you win big on Saturday at the
Blay Center and you retire in the ring, who would
bring you back out of retirement?

Speaker 5 (01:47:47):
Like what fight or what fight?

Speaker 11 (01:47:49):
You would say? You know what, pops, We're gonna do
it one more time.

Speaker 15 (01:47:52):
I mean, like ten millions.

Speaker 3 (01:47:53):
So who so it's a number, it's not a number.
The risk gotta be worth it.

Speaker 11 (01:48:00):
O doubt it is a good number.

Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
But we wish you the best, brother. And what's the
platform again?

Speaker 15 (01:48:05):
It's called millions dot Co million and it's on Direct TV. Okay,
so if you got Direct TV you can watch it
on there. So millions dot Co the platform.

Speaker 3 (01:48:13):
Millions in New York.

Speaker 4 (01:48:14):
Pull up to the bark, Yeah, the eighteenth, get there,
get your tickets and like we said, we wish you
the best of love.

Speaker 8 (01:48:20):
Brother.

Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
Absolutely, congratulations or whatever it is you decide to do. Man,
thank you, thank you, appreciate it.

Speaker 4 (01:48:25):
Danny Garcia, I we appreciate you. Now, Charlomon, you've got
a positive note.

Speaker 23 (01:48:29):
I do.

Speaker 3 (01:48:29):
But I want to salute Governor Joshapiro for pulling up man.
You know what I mean. Always a great conversation with
Governor Joshapio. Make sure you go watch that full conversation
on a Breakfast Club YouTube page. Now, salute the tie
dollar sign for pulling up. His new album, Tycoon is
out right now in Birmingham, Alabama. I'll see y'all this
afternoon because I'll be in Birmingham, Alabama, at the Alabama
Theater with former Vice President Kamala Harris having a conversation

(01:48:52):
about her book that is out right now one hundred
and seven days. So I'll see y'all this afternoon in Birmingham, Outabama.

Speaker 13 (01:49:00):
October thirty first and November first. You guys need to
come see me in Charlotte, North Carolina at the Comedy Zone.
We got four shows that we can. We got two
on Friday, two on Saturdays. We'll get your tickets if
you have not yet. Jess larriosoficial dot com. I will
be doing meet and greet. However, Meet and Greek is
not on the website, so you see me after the
second show if you want to partake in the meet
and greet. Also wear your Halloween costumes because I will

(01:49:22):
be giving away a cash prize for the best Halloween
costs too.

Speaker 7 (01:49:27):
That's right now, don't have to don't don't say nothing
else to move so dry.

Speaker 3 (01:49:32):
That's right, Go see big yes, Jessica, Robin Moore Okay, okay, okay,
all right, listen in the positive note, simply there, be
kind to yourself, be proud of yourself, be patient with yourself,
take care of the most important person in your life yourself,
have a great day, breakfast club you don't.

Speaker 7 (01:49:50):
Finish for y'all.

Speaker 3 (01:49:50):
Dump

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