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December 18, 2025 94 mins

Today on The Breakfast Club, Jarrett Adams joins us to talk about being wrongfully convicted, his work with Redeeming Justice, mental well-being, and prison reform. Plus, Charlamagne Tha God gives Donkey of the Day to a woman arrested for hiding razor blades in loaves of bread at Walmart stores. Listen for more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Wake, wake, wait that ass up on the program you
alarm the power one oh five point one on iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Good Morning Usa.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Yo just hilarious.

Speaker 4 (00:17):
Good morning.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
Charlamagne the guy, he'll be here in the second in
his Thursday.

Speaker 5 (00:25):
What the hell is wrong with CHARLAMAGNEA.

Speaker 4 (00:26):
Goud? I know, I don't know why. He don't know
what the hell is going on in New York everybody
that chumping block. He better get it together.

Speaker 6 (00:34):
Make sure you subscribe to his YouTube channel and that's
uh YouTube dot com.

Speaker 5 (00:39):
See the guide.

Speaker 6 (00:40):
And also while you're doing that, make sure you subscribe
to my Only Fans my only Fans feet page, which
is gonna be.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Dj NV's feet just in case.

Speaker 7 (00:48):
What's up?

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Just how you feeling?

Speaker 4 (00:50):
What's up? I'm good, I'm good. I know you has
ready come for me, like, uh what what? What? What's
going on? Where you at?

Speaker 8 (00:55):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (00:55):
I was telling when I ain't see you in the
I said, just better stop playing.

Speaker 4 (00:58):
I know, yo, I know, I know.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Get on holidays with what's going on.

Speaker 8 (01:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:01):
Yeah, I actually was trying to get my stamps back. Man,
food is high as hell what so, yeah, I was
trying to get my stamps back.

Speaker 5 (01:07):
You better stop, you better stop.

Speaker 6 (01:10):
Yeah, I'm I'm almost done a holiday shop and I
have one more gift to get, which is my son,
Jackson's gift. And he went to one of them electric
bikes that you know you see people riding through the city.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
So are you finally gonna get him one? Because I
know you was hating on an idea for no.

Speaker 6 (01:24):
I don't, I don't. I think the electric bikes are dangerous, right,
And it's funny. As a kid, I used to ride
all types of bikes. I used to ride to the street.
It didn't matter. I don't care. You fall, you get up.
But now it's like I don't want to see my
parents didn't care, But I think I care a little more.
Like I googled, I did the homework, and I see
the kids that fall off the bike us they have
brain damage. And I'm like, I don't think but all
his friends got it. But I'm like, you know, it
was like, you know, little boy, be a boy. But

(01:46):
the electric bikes are dangerous, man, I know they are.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
But you can.

Speaker 9 (01:49):
It's all types of like safety gear that you can
get him, like you know, helmets, knee pads, elbow pads, yes,
all that, And I thought about that, but you still
ain't no, because he'll leave the house with that stuff
and then when he go hanging out with his friends,
he'll take it right there for because you don't look cool, correct, correct,
And he'll be the only one with the full uh
elbow pass, just the whole suit on and his friends

(02:11):
riding a little stunt man, and then he gonna take
it off, and I'm gonna feel a way.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
So I don't know.

Speaker 6 (02:16):
That's that's the last gift I have to give everybody.
I got everybody moms that everybody's done, So he's the
last one. And I've been going back and forth, so
I'll figure, like I.

Speaker 9 (02:23):
Tell people, if you're looking forward for me to get
you a gift, look backwards, nigga, because I can't now,
I can't.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Oh nah, I only got the kids in my mom
and my pops.

Speaker 7 (02:31):
That's it.

Speaker 6 (02:31):
Everybody else, that's all. It's tough out here. It's hard
out here.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
It is Well.

Speaker 6 (02:36):
Today on the show, Jared Adams will be joining us
he's a civil rights attorney and justice reform advocate. He
was wrongly convicted and spent ten years in prison for
a crime he didn't commit. He'll break down the story
and we'll chop it up with him in a little bit.
A lot to talk about, and of course, just fix
my mess. If you're having relationship issues, relationship problems, if
this thing's going on, the holidays are here and you
need some advice, some a friend that is not connected

(02:58):
to the situation anyway anyhow, or Jessell be here to
fix your mess.

Speaker 5 (03:02):
So she'll help me out.

Speaker 9 (03:03):
So I'm charging, I'm charging them, So I'm gonna drop
my cash ap and be going. But the caship out there,
huh because I'm charging ten dollars for advice?

Speaker 8 (03:11):
What ah? You not?

Speaker 5 (03:12):
But she's not charging you.

Speaker 6 (03:13):
Calling up there a little bit, She'll help you out
with all your stuff, and then let's start the show
with DMX. Today is DMX's birthday. We got what we
got A nigga is only right? Hey, he's Charlamagne. I
think it's only right to start with the dog. Today
is his birthday. Today is the Dog's born day.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
One day to the dog.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
He created the greatest second greatest Christmas song of all
time after the release nov Dot.

Speaker 5 (03:37):
I don't know about that, but let's play what's my Name?

Speaker 10 (03:39):
DMX?

Speaker 5 (03:39):
Wake your glass? So it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 10 (03:41):
Good Morning.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
That is a one on one.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
God created one of DMX and then shut the pattern
down after that. You never he's never met a person
like DMX ever in your life. Oh my god, Saluta,
just rest in peace, DMX.

Speaker 5 (03:57):
You know I got mad.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
I didn't get to meet him.

Speaker 6 (03:59):
I used to to make beats and DMX purchased three
of my beats. He overpaid me, and then he put
it in his movie, and every time the movie got
released to every country, I got paid, and he told
me to put it in my kids name so the
kids get all the royalties.

Speaker 7 (04:15):
Was just a good doom.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
He was a spirit. Oh my gosh, he was a spirit.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
Not gosh. All right, all right, morning, everybody, be all
the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (04:23):
Let's get in some front page news to start off
quickly with some sports. Thursday Night football, the Rams take
on the Seahawks at eight point fifteen.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
What's that meme?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Good morning?

Speaker 11 (04:33):
MVA Josh all the man, how y'all doing this morning?
Good morning?

Speaker 12 (04:37):
All right, So we start this morning at the White House,
where President Trump addressed the nation with a clear objective
to set the narrative for his second term.

Speaker 8 (04:45):
Now.

Speaker 12 (04:46):
In the eighteen minute address the President, he touched on
a wide range of issues, including the economy, immigration, crime,
conflict overseas, and early in his speech he made it
clear where he places the blame, opening with criticism of
the Biden administry and the country that he says he inherited.

Speaker 11 (05:02):
Let's listen to what he had to say.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
Eleven months ago. I inherited a mess, and I'm fixing it.

Speaker 13 (05:08):
When I took office, inflation was the worst in forty
eight years, making life unaffordable for millions and millions of Americans.
This happened during a Democrat administration, and it's when we
first began hearing the word affordability. Our border was open,
and because of this, our country was being invaded by
an army of twenty five million people, many who came

(05:31):
from prisons and jails, mental institutions, and insane asylums. They
were drug dealers, gang members, and even eleven thousand, eight
hundred and eighty eight murders. This is what the Biden
administration allowed to happen to our country.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
I cannot accept that.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
The reason I cannot accept that is because Donald Trump
said on day one he was going to fix the economy. Okay,
he volunteered that lie. And since that hasn't happened, we
got to hold.

Speaker 11 (05:56):
Them today exactly.

Speaker 12 (05:58):
And speaking of that, speaking of Maschel, and made much
of his speech and focus on the economy, the president
he argued that his administration they've already made progress bringing
prices down, even though millions of Americans, they say, they
still continue to fill the squeeze by the cost of
everyday of groceries, housing, utilities, and other basic expenses. Let's

(06:19):
listen to what he had to say about the economy.

Speaker 14 (06:22):
I am bringing those high prices down and bringing them
down very fast. Under the Biden administration, car prices rose
twenty two percent and in many states thirty percent or more.
Gasoline rose thirty to fifty percent, hotel rates rose thirty
seven percent, airfares rose thirty one percent. Now under our leadership,

(06:43):
they are all coming down and coming down fast. Democrat
politicians also sent the cost of grocery starry, but we
are solving that too. The price of a Thanksgiving turkey
was down thirty three percent compared to the Biden last year.
Rice of eggs is down eighty two percent since March,
and everything else is falling rapidly.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
He's making the same mistake that Biden administration did. Like
Biden tried to tell if the economy was good when
it was that, you can't tell people they don't feel
what they feel like what exactly.

Speaker 12 (07:16):
A recent polling shows the majority of Americans say the
economy is not working well for them personally. Seven and
ten say the cost of living in their community is
no longer affordable, and with the twenty twenty six midterm
elections approaching, the economy is expected.

Speaker 11 (07:30):
To be the central issue.

Speaker 12 (07:32):
One of the biggest moments of the night came when
the President announced what he calls a Warrior dividend. It's
a seventeen hundred seventy six bonus check that he is
sending to one point four million service members. It's tied
to the nation's two hundred and fiftieth anniversary. He said
those checks are already on the way, and he said
they have been funded by tariff revenue.

Speaker 6 (07:51):
Crazy thing is you can play with semantics, right, That's
what he did, Right, You talk about the car industry
right when Biden was in Yes, the car industry was high,
but it wasn't because of Biden. It was because of
what happened with and everything was shut down, so they
couldn't build any cars. So because they couldn't build any cause,
the demand was high, so people were paying overpriced to
get the casts that they need. As soon as the
world opened back up and these car manufacturers were able
to build again and people were able to fly, everything

(08:13):
went right back down. As you know, the country would
had nothing to do with Trump.

Speaker 7 (08:18):
This was all with supply and demand.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
That don't mean people could afford the causes.

Speaker 6 (08:21):
Now they couldnt afford the caruse But that was the
reason why the call prices had nothing to do with government.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Had to do it because COVID shut the world down.

Speaker 12 (08:27):
Yeah, and to your point, V, now that they went down,
their back up because of tariffs, correct.

Speaker 6 (08:33):
And now they back up because of tariffs and people
still can't afford it. He still can't afford.

Speaker 11 (08:36):
It, still can't afford them.

Speaker 12 (08:38):
So it's turning now really quickly to Capitol Hill. House
Speaker Mike Johnson. He is sending lawmakers home early for
the holidays. Without a deal to stop health insurance premiums
from rising. Now, House Republicans they passed a healthcare bill yesterday,
but it does not include those extended Obama care subsidies
that are set to expire in just fourteen days. A
GOP leader say, the bill lowers healthcare costs in other

(08:59):
ways by expanding cheaper insurance options, lowering some premiums, and
targeting drug prices. But those missing subsidies they sparked sort
of a revolt on the House floor yesterday. Four House
Republicans they broke with their own party. They sided with Democrats,
using a procedural vote to force a vote.

Speaker 11 (09:16):
On extending those subsidies for three years.

Speaker 12 (09:18):
And Democrats say Speaker Mike Johnson he sent lawmakers home
to avoid dealing with the issue. Let's hear what Jasmine
Crockett had to say on that issue.

Speaker 15 (09:27):
You know, we are supposed to be in session until Friday.
The Speaker he loves to run when things get tough.
That's not leadership, that's cowardice, and so that is what
he's decided to do. We saw this happen when it
came down to the Epstein files. He decided to send
Congress out right now, we are supposed to be until Friday.
He has decided that our last day is going to

(09:48):
be tomorrow because he does not want to deal with
the fact that we have a ripe discharge position that
is sitting in front of him that could not only
help our constituents, but help he is.

Speaker 6 (10:00):
Let me just tell you, like when you talk about revote,
you're going to see that crazy. Like I've been dealing
with the healthcare system in the last couple of weeks.
They're saying that the volume of people that go to
the hospital has risen forty percent. They said people are
scared to go to the hospital now because they don't
know if they can afford it. Right they're talking about
the price of ambulance bills, the price of emergency room bills,
the price of I have to decide if I'm going

(10:21):
to take my child, my mother, my father, my brother,
my sister, my niece, my aunt to the doctor because
I can't afford it because the premium is going to
be too high, or I can't afford to take them
to the hospital.

Speaker 5 (10:31):
And they're talking about but we'll figure it out later.

Speaker 6 (10:33):
It's going to be crazy, and especially with the flu,
the flu has been hitting the kids and old people
like crazy. If they don't figure this out, it is
going to be a nasty mess because if I go
to the hospital and I got to figure out if
I can afford it, or take my kid or figure
something out.

Speaker 5 (10:47):
It's going to be discussed.

Speaker 2 (10:48):
You're ready for a nasty mess up.

Speaker 5 (10:49):
It is gonna be a nasty mess.

Speaker 11 (10:50):
Yeah, because with the.

Speaker 12 (10:51):
House being sent home, that forced vote won't happen until January,
which all but guarantees that premiums will rise on January first.

Speaker 11 (10:58):
So you know it's gonna be a big backlash, yeah
for sure.

Speaker 12 (11:03):
All Right, Well, y'all coming up at seven Christmas. Stress
might be doing more than draining your wallet. It could
be draining the mood too, So we'll explain what I mean.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
You know what, don't I don't need more bad news.

Speaker 11 (11:16):
It's not bad news. It's not bad news, draining the mood, intimacy, mood?

Speaker 2 (11:20):
All right, okay, beat.

Speaker 6 (11:24):
All right, okay, everybody else, get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If
you need to vent phone lines to wide open, call us.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Up right now.

Speaker 5 (11:33):
It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 10 (11:33):
Good morning, this is your time. To get it off
your chest.

Speaker 7 (11:38):
Eight hundred five eight five one five one.

Speaker 10 (11:40):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast club.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 16 (11:45):
Yeah, this is trouble White Maga calling in from Richmond, Virginia.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
You said, aka what mega aka baga? Oh lord y'all
a few weeks ago, tell to us.

Speaker 17 (11:57):
Yeah, but I just want to say this.

Speaker 16 (12:00):
You know, it's no doing it gloom out here down
here in Richmond, Virginia.

Speaker 17 (12:05):
Plenty of money, plenty of money being spent.

Speaker 16 (12:07):
Grosser prices are down, gas prices we damn super far
what a dollar almost ninety nine two dollars.

Speaker 17 (12:15):
You know, it's no struggle out here.

Speaker 8 (12:19):
It's no struggle.

Speaker 17 (12:20):
And as far as like that.

Speaker 16 (12:21):
Obamacare, Obamacare wasn't good from the get go. I'm a
healthy individual, and that because I didn't want to sign
up for Obamacare.

Speaker 17 (12:30):
Way back then, they used to charge.

Speaker 16 (12:32):
Me six hundred dollars just because I didn't want to
sign up for it. I think the healthcare and things
like that, you know, the mamas and his daddy is
used to put their heads together and you know, develop
their healthcare.

Speaker 17 (12:44):
Our programs for the kids and things like that. You know,
we need to strip that Obamacare away. You can't keep
subsidizing that and keep pumping money into it. But now
at the top of the year, you're gonna really see
how Obamacare really was, you know, and what the prices was,
because they're gonna striple way the government funded towards it.
But it's no doom it groom out here.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
The economy is boom, Trevor.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
I don't I don't know what what what with small
block you live on or what.

Speaker 8 (13:10):
Bubble you looking?

Speaker 6 (13:12):
But the gas, gas prices all down a little bit, yes,
they all down about a fifty. Gas prices all down,
got a dollar. But grocery prices are down. Grocery prices
are still higher as draft putting on.

Speaker 17 (13:24):
It like not not down here, And I'm living.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
In Listen this don't want you to do. Open up
that bubble some more people can come living.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
And you got room in that bubble. Because you got
room in that bubble. The project is booming.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
Ain't nobody struggling in the project?

Speaker 4 (13:43):
You now, I know what he said, he said, his
name Magan.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
What he said going crazy?

Speaker 6 (13:51):
Then he said, you know, yeah, I paid six hundred
dollars every time I went to the to the to
the doctor.

Speaker 5 (13:56):
You think people can afford when people are living check.

Speaker 1 (13:59):
Have for half of you as an adults say it's
difficult to avoid healthcare afford healthcare cost My brother okay,
and three and ten say they have a they have
a family member in the household that has that has
had problems fan for healthcare in the last year.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
I don't know what he talking about.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
By the way, I don't even go yeah, I don't
even need you the statistics I see it, so I
don't know what he talking about.

Speaker 5 (14:20):
Get it off your chest.

Speaker 6 (14:21):
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If
you need to vent, hit us up now. It's the
breakfast Club.

Speaker 9 (14:26):
Good morning, Ray right, Ray yo, charlote Magneamy, what up
are we lying?

Speaker 10 (14:32):
This is your time to get it off your chest?

Speaker 17 (14:33):
I got an indoor pool pool.

Speaker 10 (14:36):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast Club.

Speaker 8 (14:38):
Get on the phone right now.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
He'll tell you what it is.

Speaker 10 (14:40):
We lie, it's ya.

Speaker 8 (14:42):
So what's up? Teacher? Ms you?

Speaker 17 (14:43):
Good morning everybody.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
You said the other day that you've never seen a
female truck driver.

Speaker 6 (14:49):
When I was a kid, I didn't see too many
female tricks. I see him now all the time, But
when I was a kid driving, I don't see none.

Speaker 8 (14:54):
Want to let you.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
Know, I want to bum and I wanting to hank
my horn for you for me go, let's go day.

Speaker 18 (15:05):
No money.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
I wanted to shout out my company real quick if
you don't mind.

Speaker 19 (15:10):
Yeah, listen, I worked for a company called call a
Redisposal Inks that CDI is located in.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
Avenuel, New Jersey. We are a roll off company. We
have all sides, containers, thirties, twenties, fifties, tens, compactors, anything
you need. We got competitive licens to have one.

Speaker 17 (15:28):
Hell of the teams, I'm one of them. Check us out.

Speaker 5 (15:31):
Yeah, I'm gonna tell you your needs. You know, I
went through.

Speaker 6 (15:35):
I went through a deep rabbit holy of a day
of female truck drivers and what y'all have to deal
with on the road where it goes to changing tires
and how the men try to pick on y'all and
all that other stuff. Oh yeah, heead man, you're doing
an amazing job. I don see how y'all shower at
rest stops. Y'all really be doing your things.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Salute to you, thank you, I appreciate.

Speaker 8 (15:53):
I'm definitely one of those females that actually.

Speaker 3 (15:56):
Messed with the guys back, I call it not that
long ago, complaining up obsensitive man? You remember that?

Speaker 4 (16:01):
Yes, that was me.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
You ever had a little lot of lizard action? I
don't what, don't let what? You ever had a little
lot lizard action?

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Pulled up to a truck stop seeing a little handsome something,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 8 (16:13):
Decided in that called that got a wife and a kid,
buddy back of oh you.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
Got a white okay, never month? All right, what are
the men called are they? They're not a lot of lizards?

Speaker 8 (16:24):
Right?

Speaker 4 (16:24):
What are the men called?

Speaker 20 (16:25):
Lot?

Speaker 4 (16:25):
Leon's?

Speaker 12 (16:26):
Like?

Speaker 8 (16:26):
What are they?

Speaker 14 (16:29):
No?

Speaker 2 (16:32):
You'd be safe out there in the roads.

Speaker 8 (16:33):
All right, all right, I think it is. You got
a poppy holiday you too?

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Yes, truck driving study. Hello, who's this?

Speaker 3 (16:41):
And then you know who it is? Sharida again from
New Jersey.

Speaker 6 (16:44):
Return in the mall, sharda, what's something? The one that
called the other day? You was mad that trap kept
getting through, right.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
And I'm calling again for the same reason. Listen, I'm
calling a tail traps this time we played the same feel.
I'm definitely never.

Speaker 21 (16:59):
In and by and by people all wait, wait, wait,
all I'm asking is trap? Just give it a break.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Let other people get through.

Speaker 10 (17:09):
Hold on.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
When you say y'all played the same field, that means
you like penis too.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
Is what you say.

Speaker 21 (17:14):
Basically, I don't want here, you.

Speaker 6 (17:17):
Don't want his Okay, got you gotten?

Speaker 3 (17:20):
Let me let me tell y'all I get it. I
get to work at six thirty, just said. My husband
text me. He's like, I think that call was for you.
When I got on, he was just finishing. So you know,
just know I'm definitely coming back. She No, women, we
don't play. We don't go back every other day if
I have to.

Speaker 4 (17:38):
But what about the people that's gonna.

Speaker 9 (17:41):
What about the people that's getting getting tired of you
calling talking about trash, calling to.

Speaker 4 (17:48):
Know, but you're gonna get back through it and complain
about trash again?

Speaker 2 (17:51):
I feel it.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
No, I'm done, I'll die. I just had to.

Speaker 9 (17:56):
I had just had to come back one more time.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
There, what's up?

Speaker 21 (18:02):
Wait for all the people that all year please don't
called on holidays?

Speaker 1 (18:13):
The holidays, the holidays is the time where they're gonna
really get it in.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
But I got a solution for that.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
Anybody who asks you for anything around this time of year,
just tell them you'll get back to them after next year.
And if they and if they trip on that, because
you know, people will coming to you with all types
of stuff like oh, you know, my my roof need
to get fixed. Uh, you know, all types of stuff
like Okay, I'll get back to you after.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
The new year.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
If they trip on that, they're just trying to get
Christmas gifts for somebody. They need a little extra money
for Christmas gifts.

Speaker 19 (18:42):
Y'all have a good day, yes, ma'am, all right, because
they the New Years in a couple of weeks, right,
So it's just like if I tell you I'll get
back to you, you know, top of the new year,
and you get mad about that, that means that you
really just want some extra money for Christmas gifts.

Speaker 6 (18:57):
That's right, all right, we'll get it off your yes.
Eight hundred and five eight five one oh five. On
we got the latest Laura coming up.

Speaker 22 (19:03):
And we talked about cool bad Good morning y'all, yes morning.

Speaker 23 (19:05):
So twenty one Savage is on the quest to get
Atlanta back together. He's calling out everybody, y'all, lug future.

Speaker 10 (19:11):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (19:12):
Not only did twenty one Savage drop a great album,
I'm telling you that young man is probably one of
the few few young rappers with real, live.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
Common sense and emotional intelligence.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
And they respect him and we'll talk, we'll talk about it. Yes,
it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 9 (19:23):
Good morning, Lama, be coming straight fast.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
She gets somebody that knows, somebody gets to detail.

Speaker 22 (19:30):
I'm a homegirl that knows a little bit about everything.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
She'd be having the latest on Savage things, the la
the latest with Lauren la Rossa.

Speaker 20 (19:38):
Sometimes you have fac sometimes you have details, sometimes you.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
Have a little bit everything.

Speaker 10 (19:42):
So it's the latest on the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 22 (19:44):
Talk to me, all right, guys.

Speaker 23 (19:47):
So last night there were a series of tweets that
were posted to twenty one Savage's x account. So he
is attempting to get Atlanta back together with all the
different beefs that's happening. So he tags Gunna and young
Thug and he says, y'all niggas fit figured this out.
Y'all figured this ish out. Y'all love each other. Y'all
knew Gunna wasn't no gangster when he told the first time,
and we swept it under the rug for you. You know,

(20:08):
he wasn't trying to leave you to hang in word
the streets.

Speaker 22 (20:14):
This is blocked out.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Okay, you don't read word like you used to.

Speaker 22 (20:17):
No, the words are blocked out on the block.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
Y'all in words, fixed.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
That y'all love each other, and word you knew Gunner
wasn't no gangster when he told the first time, and
we swept it under the rug for you. You know, he
wasn't trying to leave you to hang f the streets.
We ain't get s but trauma from that s.

Speaker 22 (20:32):
Thank you.

Speaker 23 (20:33):
So then he continues and he's uh and he this
is now tagging the baby or not the baby?

Speaker 22 (20:37):
Baby h He says, you want of the baby, little baby?

Speaker 23 (20:40):
You one of the realist young in words out this
ish at mixed line was moving the goalpost and we
were standing behind him because we love him, my brother.
He then tagged quevo and offset y'all in words, tell
the word, I put tell the world. I put y'all
on group text and told y'all a squash it before
it even got far. In words, if y'all was still together,
y'all would be unstoppable.

Speaker 22 (21:00):
I totally agree. Then he tagged que from.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Control.

Speaker 23 (21:05):
Yeah, he from Quality Control, who you know was the
manager over the migos and a bunch of other artists
as well. He said, I told you to your face
you did wrong at the party, but I never bashed
you on the internet because it would have made me.

Speaker 22 (21:18):
It would have made the city look bad because you.

Speaker 23 (21:19):
Was putting all the young in words on and that
would have afft the money up. So then after that,
you know, the tweets are circulating and people are starting
to respond to them and comment on them. There are
some tweets that happened from Future's account that he responded to.
He says bigger than the Net. Then he put us,
and then he tags twenty one Savage.

Speaker 22 (21:40):
Future.

Speaker 23 (21:40):
He says, you my little brother for Infinity US, and
then twenty one Savage responds back and said, I apologized
my brother. I should have called you first US. And
then twenty one Savage continued to tweet. I guess he
was getting some pushback.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Did anybody else responded? Any of the artists respond beside
his Future, I saw a Thug.

Speaker 22 (21:58):
Respond I didn't see.

Speaker 23 (22:01):
Oh yes I did, yes, so Thug responding that I
love you, my brother, You've always been with me. Thuck
also was talking on a stream, just you know, randomly
and it's kind of like coincidental for the timing, but
he was talking about how the rap game is messed
up right now because of all of the beefs.

Speaker 22 (22:16):
Let's say, could listen to that.

Speaker 24 (22:17):
I feel like I always wanted to do this type music,
and then I feel like raps are like weird.

Speaker 25 (22:21):
Weird, like space out them because it's just saying like
everybody bet on them.

Speaker 11 (22:25):
It's just like the big artists in the world.

Speaker 7 (22:28):
Like like last where it's like a lot of.

Speaker 10 (22:31):
Weird.

Speaker 24 (22:32):
I feel like it's time we gotta like take it
to the next level.

Speaker 10 (22:36):
We gotta level up, like AI.

Speaker 7 (22:37):
It's just so much everything in the.

Speaker 11 (22:39):
World leveling about this stuff about like it's I think.

Speaker 7 (22:42):
We're like brief something.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
It's just like comfortable cumfortability.

Speaker 24 (22:45):
Even though we even when we feel like he's like
wrestling artists, we don step still like it's still.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Captain listen man salute to twenty one Savage. Oh go ahead,
Yah yeah.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
I was saying, I respect what twenty one it's trying
to do.

Speaker 9 (22:57):
I don't know if I'm like I'm not said that
he did it online. I just feel like all these
grown men and he seems like he's cool with all
of them. He could have typed like he could have
tried to arrange some type of meetup for everybody.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
I don't have no problem with him doing it online
because the drama be online. You know what I'm saying,
And I drop on the clues bonds with twenty one Savage.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
That brother is a real leader.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
And I don't know anything about the screet politics of Atlanta,
but when you got a brother trying to bring people
together like twenty one is, your got.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
To say that he's right.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
And twenty one speaks with a whole lot of common sense,
and if you young men would listen to him, your
lives would probably be a whole lot better because we
already know when it comes to the streets, you end
up in jail are dead. So it makes no sense
to get the opportunity to be making so much legal
money and still be in the screech.

Speaker 2 (23:39):
And twenty one is telling you that.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
And that's why I love his new album What Happened
to the Screech, because he has those messages all throughout
the album.

Speaker 6 (23:44):
But we said what he said was he did say
he reached out to a lot of these people behind
the scenes, so he probably tried scenes. Yeah, so he
probably like, enough's enough. Let me do it in the
public eye so people can see why not. And I
hope and I hope, like they said, I hope they
are able to get it together because.

Speaker 5 (23:58):
Music did sell so much much better when.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
They were all working with each other.

Speaker 6 (24:02):
We would hear little Baby and Thug and Thug and
Gunna and Offset with this one and Gunna with this
one and this one. That's what made music sound amazing.
And that's what I loved about Atlanta because it showed
that they stuck together until they did.

Speaker 22 (24:13):
So twenty one.

Speaker 23 (24:13):
Savage continued to tweet because I think some people were
commenting on the on the like his attempts to get
people back together. He says, for the ones that don't
get it right now, it'll sink in later. I was
lost to He says, the realist in it the biggest
change all the time. Last year I was the realist
for trying to stop Thug from exposing Gunna, and now
I'm fake laugh out loud.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
Listen, man, we see all the drama in the public.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Guy, y'all can't wait to run out there and talk
about folks when they beefing So when you see a
brother like twenty one who's being a real leader trying
to bring people together, run out there and talk about
that too.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Absolutely tell you. I love what he's attempting to do.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
I love how Gunna is.

Speaker 8 (24:49):
Now.

Speaker 9 (24:50):
You know, he's been consistent with music, he's been in
the gym. He seemed like he he seemed like he
should have never been around streets anyway.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
I like where he at. He probably like, no, I'm good, y'all.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
Can y'all can go ahead and get together?

Speaker 22 (25:03):
But his five k that's.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Right, you sound like his aunt, his grandma or something.
Y'all told you shouldn't have been riding the boys anyway.
I told you that from the beginning.

Speaker 2 (25:12):
But he's selling out concerts.

Speaker 5 (25:14):
He's selling out.

Speaker 8 (25:17):
He just.

Speaker 4 (25:19):
Hanging with different people. You know, we got a new friend.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
Why he running around here calling himself gunner? Sergio Serge.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
You got a nice name, Sergio Giovanni, and you want
to be a gunner and be here with these thumbs
out and told you you.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Wouldn't, you would cut it off? Okay, yo, say y'all
know he went the street.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
When he's told the first time, I'm like, dang, that's
that's a good point though, And why you want people
to become rappers and then follow street rules? That makes
no sense to me. Of the man wasn't in the
street to begin with. Now he got the opportunity to
make legal money. Why do you want him to resort
back to the streets. Why did any of y'all want
to go but revert back to the streets. I don't
understand it.

Speaker 23 (26:08):
I hope we see it. I hope we can get
to see especially thugs gonna wanna.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
Clues momb for twenty one man for being a real leader.
Pull up some twenty one savage, got what you want
to I want to hear U Step Brothers.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
I want to hear Step Brothers treature and young Nudy
he samples DMX stopped being Greedy? Today is DMX born day? Yes,
pull up that Step Brother's record.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
Mand we got it right now.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Go check out twenty one's album What Happened to the streets?
The same things, those same tweets that he's putting out.
He got those messages all throughout the album.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Man, all right, let's get.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
Into the birthday was yesterday? That's for Nudy had a
birthday yesterday.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Yeah wow, okay, all right.

Speaker 6 (26:40):
Let's get to the joint. We got front page news next,
it's the breakfast Club. Good morning everybody. You see ej
NV just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are the breakfast Club.
Let's get back to some front page news. Down on
Thursday night football, the Rams play the Seahawks at eight
fifteen on Prime Video. Also, the next decide against hanging

(27:00):
NBA Cup ben at Madison Square Gardens. So they're not
gonna hang up that cup. They want a real chip.
They said, we'll take it. We want a real chip
to hang up a band.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
I ain't speaking to the nick they say that video
or Josh Hall putting his thumb and Jailen Brunton, but
was a I was?

Speaker 2 (27:13):
It wasn't.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
I don't. I don't, man, I'm telling you, I cannot
live the rest of my life asking if something is
real or not.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
I have no idea if it was. It was on
the NBA page. I was thinking, I mean, I don't
know that that was real.

Speaker 9 (27:25):
Man.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
Don't they do stuff like that all the time.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
No, they don't do stuff like that all the time.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Yeah, that was crazy. They might slap you on the butt.
Good play, but that was wild. I don't know if
it was.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
I don't know. I just saw somebody say it was
a I don't know if.

Speaker 5 (27:36):
It was all right, But anyway.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
What's up me?

Speaker 11 (27:40):
Good morning, MB Josh Charlamage, how y'all doing this morning?

Speaker 4 (27:43):
Good morning, Good morning.

Speaker 12 (27:45):
So we start this hour at the White House drawing
attention this morning not for new policy, but for new plaques.
So they're part of a recently added presidential Walk of
Fame mounted beneath portraits of past presidents, and several are
taking sharp aim at President Trump's predecessors, including President Joe.

Speaker 11 (28:02):
Biden and Barack Obama.

Speaker 12 (28:04):
Now one plaque calls President Biden the worst president in
American history. It repeats false claims about the twenty twenty
election and blames him for inflation, immigration, the Afghanistan withdrawal,
and global conflicts. Another target's former President Obama, using his
full name, calling him decisive, attacking the Affordable Care Act,

(28:25):
and repeating debunked conspiracy theories.

Speaker 11 (28:27):
About spying and Russia.

Speaker 12 (28:29):
Now White House officials they confirmed that President Trump he
personally wrote many of those plaques, calling them his version
of history, and last night for Vice President Kambala Harris.
She weighed in on the frustration during an appearance on
Jimmy Kimmel Live.

Speaker 11 (28:43):
Let's listen to what she had to say.

Speaker 26 (28:45):
The idea that those plaques would have been placed by
a president of the United States to talk about former
presidents of the United States, The American people deserve better.

Speaker 10 (28:55):
And a lot of times you can't help but laugh
at it.

Speaker 2 (28:58):
But is this co ordination or is this just random chaos?

Speaker 4 (29:02):
It is not random chaos.

Speaker 26 (29:03):
First of all, I know that it has felt chaotic,
but what we are in fact witnessing is something that
is a high velocity event. It is moving quickly, which
is the swift implementation of a plan that has been
in a large part decades in the making. And yes,
part of the crazy is meant to distract from the

(29:25):
fact the guy said. And I believe there were a
fair number of people who voted for him, who believed
him when he said on day one he was going
to bring down prices.

Speaker 4 (29:33):
And look where we are.

Speaker 26 (29:34):
The price of food is up, unemployment is up, inflation
is up. And so what does he do?

Speaker 11 (29:39):
He keeps dropping bombs.

Speaker 26 (29:41):
That is because he wants to distract from the fact
and have us talk full time about the crazy instead
of the fact that people are being challenged right now
by being able to pay their rent, buy food, get
Christmas gifts for their kids. And he doesn't want us
talking about the fact that he has destroyed the economy
and so many ways.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
She is absolutely correct, like every single word.

Speaker 11 (30:07):
Yeah, that was last night's episode of Jimmy Kimmel.

Speaker 12 (30:09):
They it's really an interesting watch, so if you get
a chance to watch the whole thing.

Speaker 11 (30:14):
But yeah, she definitely.

Speaker 12 (30:16):
Went in and explained a lot of things. You know,
she talked about a project twenty twenty five and how
it's literally been in the making for decades and what
we're seeing now and this plan of you know how
we talk about it never stops, it just keeps going.

Speaker 11 (30:30):
That is by design. And so it was a really
good listener.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
And now I will say this, Me and me, you know,
me and me and the Vice president had this conversation
whenever they talk about Project twenty twenty five being decades
and the making.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
The question I have to ask is, then, what was
y'all defense.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
If y'all knew that this was decades in the making,
why weren't y'all creating a defense for it for decades
as well, Like I don't, I don't I understand her rhetoric,
but I just like, well, what were y'all doing while
they was making Project two thousand and twenty.

Speaker 11 (30:57):
Five is a very good question.

Speaker 12 (31:01):
But getting back to those plaques, the White House has
not said how they were funded or where.

Speaker 11 (31:05):
The government resources were used to make them.

Speaker 12 (31:07):
Did you guys see the photos of those new plaques
that are along the presidential wall?

Speaker 2 (31:12):
I said, I saw Obama and Trump?

Speaker 12 (31:14):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's it's very interesting.

Speaker 11 (31:18):
You haven't seen it. Take a look, all.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Right, y'all.

Speaker 12 (31:21):
And lastly, here's something that might surprise a lot of couples.
So Christmas might be actually killing the mood. So researchers say,
interest in sex goes up around the holidays, but for
many couples, the stress of Christmas is getting in the
way of intimacy. Psychologists say it's not about desire, it's
about pressure. So Christmas for couples it means travel, family obligations, hosting, shopping,

(31:45):
financial stress, and long days. So by the end of
the night, most couples are just exhausted. And then they
here comes New Years though, and then it flips.

Speaker 11 (31:52):
The pattern flips. Researchers say intimacy.

Speaker 12 (31:55):
It often rebounds for couples around New Years because the
energy is different.

Speaker 11 (32:00):
Clebration, it's not an obligation.

Speaker 12 (32:02):
There's a countdown, there's champagne music, staying up late in
a sense of starting fresh together.

Speaker 11 (32:08):
So that makes sense, right, what do you guys say?

Speaker 2 (32:11):
It does? It does?

Speaker 4 (32:12):
It makes sense? The pressure of it all is a
mood drainer, But is it?

Speaker 9 (32:18):
Yeah, especially if you shut you a whole Christmas list
or yeah new stressful.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
Yeah, you just.

Speaker 9 (32:27):
Got with somebody in lockdown in October and Christmas is
like the first official.

Speaker 4 (32:34):
Gonna spend together.

Speaker 9 (32:34):
That's a lot of pressure because it's like, damn, it's
our first Christmas. I gonna be able to get you nothing.

Speaker 1 (32:38):
Yeah, y'all should have had that conversation in October because
the reality is, I don't think you deserve nothing of y'all.
Job just got together in October. It's like a ninety
day probation their prayer. I'm not buying you nothing, and
I just met you in October.

Speaker 4 (32:48):
No, no, no, you didn't just meet this person, but.

Speaker 9 (32:50):
You locked in like you made it official in October.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
Now, I'm gonna be honest with you'all. Been married too long.
I don't even know what making it official means. Ah
Lauren Muhammad the girl got ring worm now listening to her.

Speaker 11 (33:06):
But think about we just got through finished talking about affordability.

Speaker 12 (33:09):
Right, So if families are going through a lot and
Christmas stress, they couples may not.

Speaker 11 (33:13):
You know, they don't feel like getting it in. But
when the New.

Speaker 12 (33:15):
Year's comes around, they made it through Christmas and so
you know they feel better.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
But honestly, man, that's why you have to have more
than material things in a relationship. In a relationship, man, like,
it should be mental, it should be spiritual, you know
what I mean. It should be emotional, like those three
things were always keeping you wanting to be physical with
your significant other.

Speaker 6 (33:36):
I think so, yeah, it has nothing to do with
what you can buy somebody, right, because times go up,
you go things go up, things go down.

Speaker 5 (33:43):
Your paycheck goes up, paycheck goes down.

Speaker 6 (33:44):
You have a lot of money, you have a little
bit of money, but that love you have forget all
that stuff. If your relationship is based off of finances,
it's not going to last long.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
I want all youall single people out there to remember that.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
You know, I'm telling you the spiritual connection, spiritual, mental, emotional.
That's how you should be trying to connect with a person.
Talk to that top first of all.

Speaker 2 (34:01):
Hush up, he came back, all right, he want to
be my soulmate.

Speaker 12 (34:07):
So bad, well silly? All right, Well, that is your
front page news. I mem Me Brown, follow me I
Memi Brown TV. For more stories, call the Black Information Network,
download the free iHeartRadio apps, and visit bi nnews dot com.

Speaker 6 (34:21):
Thank you, all right, When we come back, we have
Jared Adams, civil rights attorney and justice reform advocate. He
was wrongly convicted and spent ten years in prison for
a crime he didn't commit.

Speaker 5 (34:32):
He's gonna break that all down when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 2 (34:35):
Good Morning, Good morning.

Speaker 6 (34:36):
Everybody's dj NV Just so Larius Charlamage the guy.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
We are the Breakfast Club Lawn the Roses here as well,
and we got a special guest in the building.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
His name is Jared Adams.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
Okay, you've got a book out called Redeeming Justice for
he is a civil rights attorney and justice reform advocate
with an amazing story.

Speaker 24 (34:53):
Good morning, my brother, Good morning, good morning. Thank you
both for having me on here.

Speaker 2 (34:57):
Thank you for being absolutely you know you were you
were wrong.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
I'm fully convicted and spent ten years in prison for
a crime you didn't commit. Yeah, and then you got seventeen,
I believe right, seventeen years old. Seventeen but you went
on to become an attorney yourself.

Speaker 24 (35:12):
Yeah, not the first to do it, but seventeen years old,
wrongfully convicted. My conviction being over reversed, reversed after almost
ten years with the help of the Wisconsin Innocence Project.
And then it was what I saw inside the prison
that really led me on the journey that I'm on
right now. So when I get to this maximum security prison,

(35:33):
you know, I'm one of the youngest, you know, inmates
who's walking around this prison. By the time I'm on
my way out, you know, of this prison, I'm looking
at mainly eighty ninety percent of the prison, it's seventeen
eighteen year old men of color. So literally the prison
boom that we talk about right now, that was when

(35:53):
I was doing my time, and it was just it
was a sight to see. So when I left for
out of those doors, I told myself, not only was
I not gonna go back, but I'm gonna try to
do something to keep people from going there and pull
out as many brothers and sisters now increasingly that I'm
doing as I can.

Speaker 2 (36:08):
No.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
I was thinking, man, when you walk into a courtroom
now as a lawyer, what part of that teenage version
of you is still present in your mind?

Speaker 7 (36:17):
I would say it's two spirits when I go in there.

Speaker 24 (36:20):
Number one, I thank God that I'm able to walk
in there now, you know, a champion of justice, you know,
being able to pull people out. But then also when
I go in there, there's a bit of you know,
y'all try to try to murk me. You tried to
take me out, you know.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
What I mean.

Speaker 24 (36:34):
So I'm walking through swinging arms like George Jefferson and
this boy, you know what I mean, like like legitly.
So there's a moment of being proud, there's definitely being humble,
but it's a reminder that, man, look, this is all
I fight.

Speaker 7 (36:48):
You understand what I'm saying.

Speaker 24 (36:49):
There are more families affected now by our system, and
we gotta find a way to link arms and create
a human chain.

Speaker 22 (36:56):
How do you identify like what clients you choose to take.

Speaker 24 (37:01):
Well, it's an interesting question because for a long time, Lauren,
I was a sucker for all my son and you
know my myself.

Speaker 22 (37:10):
Yeah, because see anybody behind bars and stuff.

Speaker 7 (37:12):
It is.

Speaker 24 (37:12):
But then also like my going through my journey, I
went through it with my mama, my mam, a single
black mother. I go through it with her and we
became tighter. And so once I got my law degree,
and this to help answer the question too. You know
how you gotta wait in the mail for the law
degree to actually get to the house. So when you
get to the house, my mama tell me I come
over there, and I told I want her to keep it.

(37:32):
And so she started crying and I say, well, we
ain't crying no more, man were doing good. She said, no, no,
I'm not crying because I'm sad. I'm crying because I
know you just ain't gonna go try to make money.
You're gonna you're gonna realize that there are other black
males with single parents and they gonna need your help,
and you're gonna help them.

Speaker 8 (37:49):
Right.

Speaker 7 (37:49):
So for a long time I was a sucker for
that story.

Speaker 24 (37:52):
And then I get down deep in these cases and
realize that it wasn't exactly what it was, but it
never disturbed me from from from like perfecting the process
of the intake unit that we have right now, right,
I have an organization called Life After Justice where we
review these cases and we try to select these cases
on the cases that can do a couple different things.

Speaker 8 (38:12):
Right.

Speaker 24 (38:12):
We always want to see people get out, but also
if we can get out and make a change legislatively
or some rule that would prevent those are the cases
that we highlight and we want to put at the
top of the list.

Speaker 23 (38:22):
I saw you working on the Bence brother's case, yes, right,
so I know that there's no decision at this point.

Speaker 24 (38:28):
Where it is one okay, they granted the decision if
the Ben's case that she saw them if you know it,
don't know. Two white brothers from Wisconsin were wrongfully convicted
and spent twenty seven years in prison for the rape
and the murder and the kidnapping of a bar you
know bartender.

Speaker 10 (38:49):
Right.

Speaker 24 (38:50):
They ended up doing DNA testing exhuming the body of
the person who actually did it and was a serial rapist,
and they cleared these men. But when they came home
they came home past the age of retirement. And literally
there's a statute in Wisconsin that no matter how many
years you've spent in prison, the maximum you will get
is twenty five thousand dollars. Right, so you have to

(39:12):
petition the legislators and make an argument and say, look,
this is why they deserve more money. They did not
make a decision up until like a month ago or
about three weeks ago, and they agreed to pay these
men a million dollars plus the twenty five thousand, and
it's something that they desperately needed.

Speaker 22 (39:28):
Yeah, that's that's like, that's amazing.

Speaker 23 (39:31):
But when you get involved in these cases like this, right,
even though you know that there's a wrong because of
the way the system is set up, Yeah, how do
you kind of save yourself from like if there is
disappointment at the end, because you know, yeah it's fifty.

Speaker 24 (39:42):
It's continued therapy. Like I still go to therapy right
now to this day, you know, because I have to
balance my emotions no matter what. The tentacles of when
you come in contact with this system that we have
in the United States, the tentacles of that contact will
always reach you through life and the only way you
can maintain that balance is with constantly they therapy. And
so I encourage therapy. I do it myself because there

(40:04):
are there are we we take it on the chin
a lot, Lauren, and so we have to find a
way to continue to get up off the mat. And
we who are off the mat, we need to find
a way to keep extending our palm and pulling people
up with us.

Speaker 22 (40:17):
And that was a historic amount that they were awarding
in Wisconsin.

Speaker 7 (40:20):
Yeah, yeah, it was.

Speaker 24 (40:22):
It was It was a it was an amount where
it's been it's been met before, but like only twice. Okay, right,
so they don't they don't necessarily give it out. And
right now there's a there's a bill on the floor
right now to make it, you know, a law that
you will get fifty thousand dollars a year not having
to go through what they went through and hold on
and wait and hope.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:41):
I agree with you on therapy.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
You know, I'm a big proponent of therapy myself, man,
And I always say, you know, heal people. Healed people
will help heal people, no doubt. Hurt people will continue
to hurt. It hurt people absolutely. And my journey from listen.
My journey through mental health wasn't easy.

Speaker 8 (40:55):
Man.

Speaker 24 (40:56):
I thought I was going to a damn fish fry.
My mom and Auntie was like, man, baby, look, we
need you to like you're going to see the lady. Yeah,
we need you let it out.

Speaker 8 (41:03):
You know.

Speaker 16 (41:03):
We not.

Speaker 7 (41:04):
And I think that in our community we are we
are we rejected because.

Speaker 24 (41:08):
We think it's a sign of weakness because you're like,
oh man, it's crazy you going to see this and
going to see that. But for me, I was on
auto pilot when I got out because all of my guys, man,
they wasn't turning up no more. They had kids, they
had careers, So I thought I could work twenty four
hours a day to catch up for almost a decade
that was taken and it wasn't.

Speaker 7 (41:28):
Mentally healthy for him.

Speaker 24 (41:30):
So going through that, I'm understanding now that that that
the real how I look at this when it comes
to my mental health is these are moments of decompression,
and sometimes, man, you have to go and decompress so
that way you can have the right state of mind
to respond to all the stresses that the world has
to offer each and every day.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
I gotta get you on my you know, you know,
I do the Mental Wealth Explorer.

Speaker 8 (41:52):
I do, I do.

Speaker 24 (41:52):
Shaka was telling me about that. He was like, man,
make sure you talk about that so you can get
on with that.

Speaker 20 (41:56):
Brother.

Speaker 1 (41:58):
We're going next year. We're gonna do I want to
do your four Cities next year. So okay, that definitely
needs you that. You got a memoir Redeeming Justice and
the subtitle.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
Is from Defendant to defend It.

Speaker 1 (42:07):
Yes, what was the hardest chapter to write emotionally? And
what did you learn about yourself when you was putting
your story on pig So.

Speaker 7 (42:14):
It took me three years to write the book.

Speaker 24 (42:17):
And part of the reason why it took me those
three years is because I wanted to read all of
the books of people with stories of wrongful conviction. Because
I wanted it to be honestly. I wanted it to
be man. I wanted to be a salute to my
mom and my aunts. Man, they didn't have to hold
me down like that, but they did. So when I
write it, and when you look at the book, you
think it's a wrongful conviction book, But if you look

(42:38):
at the first opening, it's a dedication to my aunts
who sugar, Honey and pizzas looking from Chicago dough. You
know what I'm saying, that's the right. And so I
sent the shout out to them, because man, they did
stuff like keep me alive when I wanted to die
in that boy, I would get a letter with a
verse every day from one of them because they told me, baby, look,

(43:01):
we're gonna acknowledge that they've incarcerated Joe body, but we
will never let them imprison your mind. And so I
wrote this story from a perspective of not just what
the person goes through while they're in prison, what does
the family go through Because my mama went from Literis.
My mother was a big hat wearing peppermint passing front
road church. But when I went through this, she got
tired of answering the question in Charlamagne, what happened to Jared?

Speaker 7 (43:25):
Where he at?

Speaker 2 (43:25):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 7 (43:26):
It became hard for her, and so.

Speaker 24 (43:28):
I wanted to send a shout out to her and
then also continue to page this about what I'm doing
in life right now.

Speaker 23 (43:33):
When you talk about like your mom and your aunt,
right and you said that, they was like, you gotta
go see the lady when you're helping, because I mean
you get people the justice that they deserve, right, but
a lot of times they don't identify that they have
issues that they need to deal with. So now you're
that person in their life when you're doing that, Like,
how easy or how hard is it to tell somebody, hey,

(43:54):
you need to go get some help, Like we're going
to figure out the job and to stay, but you
need to go get some help because he's trying to
live your life.

Speaker 24 (44:01):
It's a difficult conversation, but I can I can use
a story that I just had. So I got a
client in Chicago, guy by the name of Shaquille Williams.
He was wrongfully arrested for a murder that they knew
he didn't commit. So we are going through the suit
and one of the toughest things about a civil suit
is a deposition because you get Pepper with questions and
so he's being asked these questions that are emotionally triggering

(44:24):
to him, where you know, he lost his mom while
he was locked up. He now has a wife, and
I have to explain to him and encourage him that
you have to keep going to therapy because there are
situations where when someone gets out of a place like
a system like we have. You have to learn how
to not treat your wife like your selling and that's

(44:45):
a difficult thing to do and you should never want
to do it alone. So what I try to do
is live my life and say look what I've done,
what I've done to make it more easier for guys
to be receptive. These are some hard dudes who think
that you know, they can't show a sign of weakness.
So if I'm telling them that I don't went through
and did this time and I don't walk the same
part tiers you have, but I still revert back to
therapy because it is it has helped me tie my

(45:08):
shoes in a race that is life.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
I've heard you say the criminal justice system is rigged, yeah,
and that justice is for sale. So when you look
at the current system, what are the top two or
three pressure points that most clearly show you how like
money and race still determine these outcomes.

Speaker 24 (45:23):
Well, look at what we got going on right now, man, Like,
just look at what we what we got but we
have we have a system that it depends on who
you know and what you have, right and it will
determine your result. We are seeing right now our justice department,
you know, being used in such a way that is scary,
but also being used in the way that we must

(45:44):
ask ourselves, like why they.

Speaker 7 (45:46):
Weren't doing this for us, you know what I mean.

Speaker 24 (45:48):
Like while we wasn't getting this right. So I think
that the low hanging fruit is this, we must find
a way to step in where there are clear gaps
in our system, and there are wealth gaps that determine
a whole lot of the sentences and stuff like that.
We need to get as loud as we can for

(46:09):
Lakeisha as we do for Bryant.

Speaker 7 (46:13):
You get what I'm saying.

Speaker 24 (46:14):
And I think that I really do believe that our
way of fixing fixing the system itself. In Angela Royt
and a lot of other of my colleagues say the
same thing. We have to focus in the individual states, right,
That's where we have to focus at. But once we
start to work together in these individual states, I think
that we must then be able to link arms and

(46:35):
start to petition the change that can make it up
to the Supreme Court to make that governmental change that
will affect the United States. And it's all in its entirety.
So in short, what we need to do is The
people who are closest to the fire usually know how
to put it out, but that the fers is from
the water holes. We need to find a way to

(46:56):
feed the water holes to the people who are on
the ground, the activists, the people who are going to
the courtrooms, the people who can tell you, look, don't
vote for this judge, vote for that judge, because this
judge will make the change. However, we can go back
and make sure that our vote counts. We have to
be educated in order to do it. But that is
what we have to do in order to start to
tinker away at this mighty, mighty system.

Speaker 2 (47:18):
I wanted to ask you about this.

Speaker 1 (47:19):
That's why I got up because the track you're on
is I want to stay on this track. What did
you think, man, because this really really disappointed me when
I saw our good brother, my son, and that's my
daughter front page of the New York Post labeled as
a crime boss. Because doraen Madani is essentially doing what
you're saying people should do, He's going to get somebody
who's been through the system, who's reformed, put them in

(47:41):
place on the Public Safety Committee. I don't think there's
a better representative to have than somebody like a myceon
and for him to be demonized like this, how did
that make you feel?

Speaker 24 (47:49):
I mean, look at it. I felt attack. I felt
attacked with that brother and I know him, like you
know what I'm saying, and me and we just talked
about the case. I have a new jersey a few,
you know, weeks ago. The case is ra Hee and Brian.
You could look at it. The kid was shot in
the back of the neck. We got an a sessive,
assessive you know, force you going. But I was just
rotating with that brother. So when I looked at that

(48:09):
and I saw it, it came up on my timeline
and I immediately felt attacked. You know what I'm saying
as if it was me. And I think we all
should have that type of response. And I'll just say
this for anyone who's questioning, you know this move right
when we we just came through the pandemic, right, and
we got through the pandemic through vaccines, right. So the
vaccines are actually what the virus that has turned into

(48:33):
an antibody, right, and we injected in ourselves as a
defense mechanism. If this brother, which I know he will
do with it his experience. Being in his position, he
is a voice that is the closest thing to the
problems that we have to be able to provide us
a solution.

Speaker 7 (48:50):
Why would we not want that.

Speaker 24 (48:52):
We if we have a president right now who is
the president, and he's been convicted of something, why can't
we have a brother like this and more like this
in positions where they can say, look, I know what
it's like right to be at home, not have childcare,
and have to not be able to work, so that
way they can provise the solutions you want us to
all come off dedicating all these dumb ass arguments that

(49:13):
you hear about with black people on snap they don't
to stay on that. Well, why don't you put the
people who have had the experience and why they had
to be on snap in position to be able to
provide solutions so that we could snap snap out of
here if that's what you all want to do.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
Man, you said something earlier when you were talking about
like the prosecutors. Man, it made me think, like you
stent on both sides, right at an defendant and a
defense attorney. What's one thing you wish every prosecutor, judge
and cop had to experience or learn before they're allowed
to hold that kind of power.

Speaker 24 (49:44):
Over somebody like Man, I really wish taking experience a
day in prison, in a day with the family members
at home who have their loved ones in prison, right
because you're talking about astronomical phone calls. Prisons ain't placed
in the sit they Appalachia somewhere, right.

Speaker 7 (50:02):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 24 (50:03):
You got to drive the clean correctional you ever went
to Clinton, I got a couple of clients up there. Man,
you might as well block out your calendar for that day,
right and hope everything work out. So it's like that
that part of it, in my opinion, is again they
need to experience it, just to have that sympathy and empathy.

Speaker 8 (50:22):
Man.

Speaker 24 (50:23):
Everything doesn't require a hammer, you understand what I'm saying.
And that's that just seems like what happens when you
get us in front of one of these systems, Man,
we all look like nails to them.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
For people who listening, man, who will never see the
inside of a courtroom beyond jury duty, what's one specific
action that can take, you know, right now, to actually
move the needle long Wrongful convictions and criminal justice reform
and in their own city.

Speaker 24 (50:47):
Pay attention man like legitly man, if you're gonna be
there and you're gonna show it. And also listen in general,
black folks show up the jury duty. Come on, y'all
like legitly man, like we we have to show up
the jury duty. Like you just don't know how many
jury pools in the Northern District of Illinois where I'm
doing a wrongful conviction case and I ain't got nothing
but one or two of us in there, and then

(51:07):
we're trying to get about that like we need y'all man,
we listen, look, our turn up cannot outweigh our turnout
like legitly.

Speaker 7 (51:17):
So so for me and my perspective, I like to
have a good time too, man.

Speaker 24 (51:20):
But man, when it's time, when it's time to turn out,
we got to turn out.

Speaker 7 (51:24):
Please show up the jury due to y'all.

Speaker 24 (51:25):
Y'all, y'all if you just don't know, man, if we
get a jury pool that is that is diverse, right,
we now control a lot of the outcomes.

Speaker 7 (51:35):
Man, show up, show up. If you can be there,
be there, right.

Speaker 24 (51:38):
I be like, man, Charlamagne, I'll be trying to get
people our eye contact when they be on the jury
pool like please please don't no, it's go stand up
and say you got a baby like that come home.
But that's that's what we need because we present the case,
but the jury makes a decision.

Speaker 7 (51:51):
We need black and brown folk.

Speaker 24 (51:53):
And let me make sure that I'm clarifying that not
just black for black and brown folk, because we ain't
the minority if we link up, you know what I'm saying.
So that's what we need. Show up the jury duty,
that's it, and even pay attention to that, take notes
and stuff like that. Be active in your participation because
what your vote counts for right there in that moment,
it's critical to the lives of a lot of my

(52:14):
clients and a lot of lawyers clients.

Speaker 1 (52:16):
Will gives you hope that meaningful justice reform is actually possible.

Speaker 24 (52:21):
Man, the cases, man, I just look at the cases
and I and I and I also am just a
person who wants to be hopeful. I have to be
right going through what I went through. Man, I'm a
prayerful person. I'm I'm a I'm a hopeful person. And
I also get an opportunity to look at the babies
that we have that are coming up right now, man,
And I'm I'm afraid y'all ain't gonna even lie, you know,

(52:41):
when I'm looking to talk to these mothers and fathers
in these courtrooms. I believe that it's desensitizing our babies
to believe that the criminal system is just a part
of our lives. And some kids never experience that only
in the movie and I and I, you know, I
give you another example of of people ask me, man,
what's what's the toughest thing you've ever seen in prison?
They expect me to say a knife fight or something

(53:01):
like that. Man, I tell you the toughest thing that
I've seen in this prison. So I'm playing ball on
the first couple of years that I get to Green
Bay Correctional. Green Bay Correctional in Wisconsin was was. It's
a tough place, okay. And right now they are they
are stabbing each other up in there, and it doesn't
make any sense what's going on with the violence. So

(53:23):
I'm passing time. I playing basketball, and you know, everybody
picking a squad, everybody got a nickname.

Speaker 7 (53:28):
And I'm hearing, you.

Speaker 24 (53:29):
Know, these guys on the other team and they're like
g Pops old man and G's son.

Speaker 7 (53:36):
Right, I'm just thinking that they all from the same block.

Speaker 24 (53:39):
You know what I'm saying. I ain't, No, I ain't
know at all. It wasn't until I got in the
visiting room and I was visiting. My mama came up
to see me from Chicago and I'm in a visiting
room and I didn't realize, Man, this was three generations.

Speaker 7 (53:51):
Man, this was a grandfather, a father and his son.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
God.

Speaker 24 (53:56):
But what really messed me up was three two women
came to see him with three kids, and it was
a little girl with him. And man, the little girl
came through the medical detective and raised the armor to
be wanded because she was looking at her mama and
grandmama be wanded coming to the prison. And you don't
wand the kids anything like that, man, Like you know,

(54:18):
you this is a baby. What's she doing at three
four years old? Knowing that she's supposed to stick her
arms up in the air. And I said, man, look,
we gotta address this. We need to implement inside our
schools of psychology sections that address specifically people who encountered

(54:39):
the system, whether it be family members or whether it
be people who are there. In order to make some real, real,
real change. That is the thing that I will never forget,
and that happened almost twenty seven years ago, but I'll
never forget it.

Speaker 1 (54:51):
Listen, man, Jared Adams, his book Redeeming Justice From Defending
to Defender My Fight for Equity on both Sides of
a Broken System is available where you buy books now.

Speaker 2 (55:01):
Man, thank you man. How can we continue to support
your work?

Speaker 24 (55:03):
I know, Life after Justice, but also the website is
is Jared Adams all dot com. Life after Justice dot
org is the website and y'all can support by sharing
the story man, like honestly, Charlamagne, listen, if we're gonna
have a donkey of today, let's do a King.

Speaker 7 (55:18):
Of Queen of the day. You know what I'm saying
straight up?

Speaker 24 (55:21):
Man, I love y'all. Thank you'll crowing you right now.
I appreciate you, brother, I really do, man, Yes, I
really do. It's Jared Adams. It's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (55:28):
Ye, thank y'all morning everybody.

Speaker 8 (55:30):
It's E. J. N. G.

Speaker 6 (55:32):
Jesse, Larry and Charlamagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
And I was just thinking I haven't heard the artist
to dream in a minute.

Speaker 2 (55:38):
You know what I was just thinking, I rich the
weekend is right now?

Speaker 1 (55:42):
Oh you see that he just did a billion dollars
dollar deal. Yeah, some of his catalog but yes, salute
to the Dream. Last time I saw the Dream. The
last time I saw the Dream was at the Book
of Whole event. I can to see him and Brook
whenever that was, That's when that's I saw. I haven't
heard no music music for the Dream in a minute.
But anyway, let's get to the latest with Laura.

Speaker 2 (56:01):
Laura be coming the street fast man. She gets them
somebody that knows, somebody to detail.

Speaker 22 (56:08):
I'm a homegirl that knows a little bit about everything.

Speaker 2 (56:11):
She'd be having the latest on you Bla.

Speaker 10 (56:14):
The latest with Laurence La Rosa.

Speaker 20 (56:16):
Sometimes you have sac, sometimes you have details, Sometimes you
have a little bit of everything.

Speaker 10 (56:19):
It's the latest on the breakfast Club.

Speaker 23 (56:22):
Talk to me all right, guys, so real quick before
we get into our next story. I did want to
add something on to the last hour. When we were
talking about twenty one Savage, I saw that a big
bank had posted that future twenty one Savage and him
were on FaceTime like a few hours ago. So twenty
one and Big Bank from the perspectives with Big Bank
the interviews that we play out of Atlanta. Yeah, so

(56:43):
just want today Big Bank man update. There they got
on the phone and listen.

Speaker 1 (56:46):
If you a big if you love Big Bank like
we love Big Bank, make sure you subscribe to the
Big Facts podcast as well as the Big Banks Uh
Perspective podcast, both on the Black Fact Podcast Network.

Speaker 22 (56:55):
Nope period.

Speaker 23 (56:56):
Now moving on in other news, So Marla Wayne's revealing
what his family group chat looked like during his back
and forth with fifty cent. He was speaking to Melvin
Robert and his team over at KTLA. Let's take a listen.

Speaker 7 (57:09):
You found time for a social media beef with fifty cent.

Speaker 27 (57:12):
What was it like in the family chat where your
brother's like egging you on or telling you quit it?
I just said his name they gave asked me about
the documentary.

Speaker 7 (57:21):
I was like, I didn't see it.

Speaker 27 (57:22):
I was just like, I don't think brothers need to
be quarreling in public like that. And then what I
get into a public call with a brother and I
just think it was bad for the culture.

Speaker 7 (57:33):
So I kind of backed out. So I wasn't gonna
say that name anymore.

Speaker 27 (57:37):
If you asked me, hey, you got changing a dollar,
so you need you need a half DOLLARNI about five
dimes two quarters follow you.

Speaker 7 (57:47):
I'm forty forty plus a dime. I will no longer say.

Speaker 27 (57:51):
And my brothers they were funny. Dame was like, why
you picked the biggest brother. He's on Gamma Rays, stick
to beef them with soul your boy people that we
can beat.

Speaker 6 (58:04):
Good advice, yea, that can turn everything into a joke.
He's one of his comedians, those comedians.

Speaker 2 (58:10):
That a joke in the comedian.

Speaker 23 (58:13):
Yes, Well, moving on, uh so wile switching gears a
bit while sat down with Shannon Sharp on Club and
they talked a bit about uh it was it was
all over the place.

Speaker 22 (58:26):
But they talked a bit.

Speaker 23 (58:27):
About the rumors that have been long standing that he
dated Solange. Yeah, he dated Solange and that Lotus flower
bomb was about Solange. Let's take a listen to him
denying those rumors Lotus flower Bomb.

Speaker 10 (58:40):
The rumors are it's about you know, No, we was.

Speaker 25 (58:43):
Real good friends and how good we like.

Speaker 7 (58:47):
She's got great issues.

Speaker 25 (58:48):
One of the first like super like celebrity people that
are like really put my music and I remember we
performed together at the v M as you know, my
band was the house band for that joint before on
together and we.

Speaker 2 (59:01):
Just got cool.

Speaker 25 (59:02):
I was still very very very like underground, right, and
she put me onto a lot of stuff like back then,
like we was just cool. Like she put me on
there like givon SHEI and she put me on the
victim Roth's flower bomb.

Speaker 4 (59:13):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 25 (59:14):
And that's that's how that that's why the opening lines go.

Speaker 7 (59:17):
But it ain't.

Speaker 10 (59:17):
About nobody like it ain't so y'all.

Speaker 7 (59:20):
Ain't it was she.

Speaker 25 (59:21):
That's just that's my people. If anybody knows Solo, they
know that she's always ahead.

Speaker 7 (59:26):
She thinks ahead, like she.

Speaker 25 (59:28):
Saw what a lot of people she saw with a
lot of people seeing me now back then, right.

Speaker 9 (59:34):
I always those kind of stories about Solange though. She
always putting somebody on with something. She did the same
thing with JT, couple of other artists.

Speaker 4 (59:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (59:41):
I know though for some time leading up to this,
like the reason why people stood ten toes down, the
fact that there had to be something going on is
because back in twenty eighteen, there was a fan that
tweeted while he does like where you can like talk
to him on X and they the fan said, I
want to know who loadus, who inspired Lotus Flower Bomb,
and he responded, she's married now the time, Solange was

(01:00:01):
marrying the direct or I believe his name is Alan,
So that kind of sparked it even more so. This
is his like putting his foot down on like, no,
we were just friends. And she said that before too,
like we were really good friends.

Speaker 9 (01:00:11):
He could have just she could have just gave him,
like some inspiration for an idea to do the song.

Speaker 23 (01:00:16):
Yeah, you know what I mean, Yes, you have to
be a bower now. He also got into the Kai Sanat.

Speaker 2 (01:00:22):
There's no way we're still talking about this just nowhere.

Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
Yeah we are.

Speaker 23 (01:00:26):
Shannish and Shannon Sharp asked him about you know that
whole running with Kai Sanat at the EBT Awards.

Speaker 2 (01:00:32):
Let's take a listen that was.

Speaker 25 (01:00:34):
Upset for like five days in a row. So when
he's talking about mental health at the Stream Awards, I'm like, yes, yes, yes,
mental health.

Speaker 10 (01:00:40):
You get it.

Speaker 8 (01:00:41):
Now.

Speaker 25 (01:00:41):
Imagine giving your life to this game and then you
go to the awards to just support the culture that
you've been a part of for thirteen years, and then
so somebody who asked you to play a video like
ask you, yeah, yeah, let's play one day because you
saw him last year. And then you go online and
everybody's like, yo, guy's not you didn't know who you was.

Speaker 7 (01:00:59):
I was and you in the room full of.

Speaker 10 (01:01:01):
Your piers right, and I was like, wait, let me.

Speaker 25 (01:01:04):
Go hollering real quick through my vantage point. I'm just like, yo,
that made me look crazy, bro. But I think the
way that people saw it is like yo, I'm just
saying you made me look crazy. I don't I feel
like uncomfortable in this room. And then when they said
I pressed him, I was like, oh, oh see that
means I gotta leave.

Speaker 7 (01:01:23):
I don't expect nobody.

Speaker 25 (01:01:24):
I introduced myself to my meet and Greek sometimes like
that's how I move, Like I don't be like you
got to know one. It's just something that seemed like
it was a little bit like down playing a little bit.

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
Ky did not biglet crazy while at feels crazy because
that's just how he feels.

Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
While's my guy. But you got to let that go.

Speaker 13 (01:01:40):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
Ky didn't know who he was, so what everybody not
gonna know who you are, my brother.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
But the way that it happened was so natural. He
didn't know who he was and the.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
Chat why I can't believe were still talking about this.
It makes talking about this with that is a wounded ego. Okay,
while they feels hurt and inadequate because KAYI gave him
a blow to his self esteem just because he didn't know.

Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
Who he was.

Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
While and we know, while while they sense itself is
not that fragile that brother knows he is enough. Most
people react like that when they feel they are not
enough while they knows he's more than enough.

Speaker 6 (01:02:11):
Come on, while let go, I don't know if whyle
they knows that though I think while it's in the place,
I feel like he feels he's undappreciated, underappreciated. Yeah, I
feel like he feels like people don't respect him the
way that he should be.

Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Well, that was just a blow in the face that respect.

Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
People feel that way.

Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
But we do, we value him, know we appreciate it.

Speaker 23 (01:02:27):
But that being true, Charlotte, is there anything wrong with
him being vulnerable about how he felt in that moment?

Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
No, there's nothing wrong with being vulnerable.

Speaker 1 (01:02:33):
You can feel it, you can feel any way you
want to feel and say you can express a reason
for it.

Speaker 9 (01:02:38):
I'm just saying, now what I didn't like about you
know how he bought that conversation in with with Shannon
when he was saying that Kai just he saw him
at UH at the Streamers Award opening up about you know,
mental health, and then he's like, oh, now you get
it because I was going through the same thing, and
I imagine showing up like the way he bought it in.

Speaker 4 (01:02:59):
It is still it's like why we why we take
that approach to it.

Speaker 1 (01:03:04):
I might always say nobody is responsible for how you
feel about yourself when we say things like oh he
made me feel creative, Like, no, can't nobody make you
feel anything that's not just about yourself.

Speaker 6 (01:03:14):
You just didn't know who Walley was at that time.
I meanes, you've been there before.

Speaker 8 (01:03:17):
Right.

Speaker 22 (01:03:19):
Everybody?

Speaker 4 (01:03:21):
Yeah, yeah, hello, people don't know me.

Speaker 9 (01:03:26):
Knowing people oh oh hell yeah yeah hell yeah all
the time, Like y'all be getting on me every day
because I didn't know all the sports and Nigga was
the governor of California.

Speaker 1 (01:03:36):
No, that's not the one we're talking about. Don't worry about.
I don't know why be bringing up whole stuff. It's okay.
So if you want to bring up old stuffbout envy.
That's fine, let's move on. That's the latest, Lauren told us.
So he told us Everything is a Lot, and clearly
in the world of Everything Is a Lot and Out,
which is also one of the best best albums of
the year, by the way, I had to put together
top five albums of the year right now, Everything Is

(01:03:56):
a Lot.

Speaker 22 (01:03:57):
Would probably be in you know, I know we're rapping.

Speaker 23 (01:03:58):
But one of the things he said about that project
in this interview that I thought was so brilliant. I
love to hear him say, is he realized with this
album that he cannot It doesn't matter what the numbers are,
first week, whatever, he can't make people feel how he
felt about what he put out. Basically, it doesn't Yeah,
he can't make people He can't And this is not verbatim,
but the conversation was he can't make people feel what

(01:04:21):
he felt when he put out this album, Like people
are gonna feel however they want. This is most critically
closed album and people still got something to say.

Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
I love to hear right now, Kyle is like, look,
I cannot make you feel like, Okay, I wasn't slighting you.

Speaker 2 (01:04:33):
If that's how you feel I was not slighting you.
But if you.

Speaker 1 (01:04:36):
Feel that way, while, there's nothing I can do about it,
no matter how much I apologize.

Speaker 22 (01:04:45):
Everything out now.

Speaker 1 (01:04:50):
Man, for after the hour, I need this woman name,
what's her name, Camille Benson to come to the front
of the congregation.

Speaker 6 (01:04:58):
Man, I don't hate people, well boy, I hate what
this person did. All right, we'll get to that next.
We got a while they joint. Can we play a
while they joint?

Speaker 2 (01:05:06):
Play something off the new album?

Speaker 6 (01:05:07):
We ain't got everything about disrespect radio station not having
none of your new music.

Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
That's more disrespectful line than KI not knowing who you are. Okay,
you done been up here plenty of times. Doing you
better have something off the new album. Play some old today.

Speaker 1 (01:05:24):
I'm saying that, no play that until you find something
new off the new album.

Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
That's all we got right now today. That's more disrespectful.
Gonna blame it on me. I'm not the music director.

Speaker 4 (01:05:35):
Look at DJ, you know what, damn heg.

Speaker 10 (01:05:44):
It's time for Donkey, I mean trying to be Donkey today.

Speaker 8 (01:05:48):
No more.

Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
They should be embarrassed by what they already did. I'm
not making these people do these days.

Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
Called Donkey of the day, and it really caught me
off guard.

Speaker 9 (01:05:55):
Damn Charlamagne, who got the donkey out of the day
to day?

Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
Well, Jess Hilario, it's donkey today for Thursday, December eighteenth,
the second to last donkey of twenty twenty five, because
after tomorrow we are taking a well deserved vacation until
the new year. Hopefully we'll be back. Okay, But it
goes to a woman named Camille Benson. Okay, she is
thirty three in Hells from Texas. But she has been
charged with attempted mayhem. I have never even heard of that. Okay,

(01:06:21):
you heard of attempted mayhem?

Speaker 2 (01:06:23):
No, never heard of it. Now, now, what is attempted mayhem?

Speaker 8 (01:06:25):
Will?

Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
According to AI overview, it refers to the crime of
trying to maliciously disfigure, disabled, or destroy a part of
someone's body, like an eye or tongue or limb, but
failing to complete the act all right, Like such as
trying to blind someone but only causing serious injury. Okay,
mayhem itself involves successfully causing disfigurement like blinding or cutting

(01:06:48):
off her figure. I want, I guess slashing of the face.
I guess stuff like that, right, I swear man. The
more you learn about life, the more you wonder why
certain people are living.

Speaker 2 (01:06:56):
All right, your brain shouldn't even be allowed to work
like this.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
God, I really needed to install a self destruct button
into some humits, Okay. I mean, as soon as a
person is about to do something as heinus is mayhem
to an individual, they should just cut off, all right,
just fade the black, go dark right there on the spot,
wake up, reincardinated. If the tuna fish is something, okay,
it don't make no sense. And this woman, Camille absolutely

(01:07:21):
needed to wake up as.

Speaker 2 (01:07:21):
A tuna fish.

Speaker 1 (01:07:23):
Matter of fact, not even a tuni fish, because my
mouth started watering thinking about tuna.

Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
Tunas are great, very tasty.

Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
Maybe she should come back in the worm or something,
all right, anything that can be put on a hook.

Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
Coming back into the tuna fish just seems too good
for her, even though she looks like she probably smells
like one.

Speaker 2 (01:07:37):
But let's go to WXXB twenty five news for the report. Police.

Speaker 28 (01:07:40):
We begin with new details this evening on the case
of razor blades being found inside loaves of bread at
to Biloxi walmart locations. Biloxi Police announcing just minutes ago
that they have made an arrest in this case. Thirty
three year old Camille Benson from Texas is charged with
attempted mayhem and is being held in the Harrison County

(01:08:00):
on a one hundred thousand dollars bond. Police had released
surveillance videos earlier today of Benson, identifying her as a
person of interests in the case. Take a look at this.
This is a TikTok sent to us by Mariah Watson
showing some of the impacted bread sheep purchased at one
of the stores. IF investigation all began Monday when officers

(01:08:22):
responded to the walmarts on CT. Switzer Road and Pass
Road for calls about tampered products. In both cases, customers
reported discovering those razor blades inside loaves of bread.

Speaker 1 (01:08:34):
Jesus, this chick wanted people to eat raizor blades on
ride with says peanutbody and raisor blades sandwiches.

Speaker 2 (01:08:42):
I don't like to use the word hate, but I
hate people like her. Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:08:44):
We love to say hurt people, hurt people, and that
is true in a lot of cases. Unhealed pain and
folks does cause harm and it does cause unhealed people
to cause harm. But some of y'all just evil, and
you need an exorcism just as much as you need therapy.

Speaker 2 (01:08:58):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:08:59):
I love home food over anything, but I also love
eating out all right, everything from.

Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
Fast food restaurants to find dining.

Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
That's why I don't like when fat people try to
say I hate them, because I.

Speaker 2 (01:09:08):
Identify as a big bag.

Speaker 1 (01:09:10):
But one of my greatest fears when eating from these
places is stuff like this.

Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
This is what I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:09:14):
When I say every single day of our lives, all
we are trying to do is avoid other people's crazy.
All it takes is one person committing one act of
crazy to disrupt the multiverse. Okay, what's the point of
putting razor blades in banana nut muffins? That's why I
love banana nut muffins. Okay, banana nut muffins is my
go to. Blueberry muffins is my number two. But I'm
only doing either all But why put raizor blades in

(01:09:36):
banana nut muffins? Why put razor blades and loaves of bread?
By the grace of God, I'm glad no kids were injured.
By the grace of God. I'm glad no elders were injured.
By the grace of God, I'm glad nobody was injured.
But just the mindset of a human to put multiple
razor blades and loaves of bread and banana nut muffins
and a couple of retail locations in the Biloxi area.

Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
Now here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
Her bond was set at one hundred thousand dollars. Okay,
that's it. A hundred thousand dollars for attempted mayhem. Probably
gotta pay ten percent, like ten grand, right. I don't
see the reason for her to be out.

Speaker 2 (01:10:13):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
People like this should not be allowed to come home
until they spend a lengthy amount of time in a
psychiatric institution. This woman put raisor blades and banana nut
muffins and loaves of bread. This is an intentional, premeditated,
batman level villain attempted crime.

Speaker 2 (01:10:30):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:10:30):
You don't just let people like that back into society
because they can afford a bond. Nah, broh, you gotta
spend some extensive time trying to figure out what's wrong
with this human that she would be willing to harm
other humans on this level. The Gritch wasn't this diabolical.
He just wanted folks to have a terrible Christmas. Okay,
he wasn't trying to disfigure them forever. Listen, all you

(01:10:54):
hurt people, do yourself a favor and get some healing. Okay,
that's what I want you to get for Christmas, some healing,
because not all hurt people hurt people. Some spend their
lives making sure no one else feels what they did.
Some break cycles, some build safe spaces, some turn pain
in the purpose. Hurt people don't just hurt people. Hurt
people can heal people. To Camille, if you get out

(01:11:16):
on a bond, try that. Please, let Rey Ma give
Camille Benson the biggest he hull.

Speaker 2 (01:11:22):
He ha, he ha, You stupid mother, Are you dumb?
You can't just let somebody like her back into the street.

Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
She needs to be set sat down in somebody's psychiatric
institution and we need to figure out what's wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:11:36):
It's crazy.

Speaker 7 (01:11:40):
I want to play.

Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
I'm not playing a game. Why crazy? It is crazy.

Speaker 9 (01:11:46):
It don't matter what color exactly, crazy belong that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
Then you over there, chalk the choking dying over there.
But you want to play the game, want to pay.

Speaker 4 (01:11:59):
That could have been to raisonably play game.

Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
No, I don't want to play a game. Crazy is
as crazy does? This woman is just the chap wants
to play a game?

Speaker 7 (01:12:07):
Just chat.

Speaker 2 (01:12:07):
I always want to play a game. I don't care
what your kids want to do. Let's play a game.

Speaker 4 (01:12:10):
God know what is crazy is? It's crazy?

Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
She's crazy?

Speaker 7 (01:12:14):
What is she?

Speaker 2 (01:12:15):
I'm just killing? Needs help, that's what she is?

Speaker 8 (01:12:17):
What is she?

Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
Okay?

Speaker 8 (01:12:18):
Is she?

Speaker 2 (01:12:18):
Black?

Speaker 8 (01:12:19):
Meat? Up?

Speaker 5 (01:12:19):
White meat?

Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
Help you Dominican?

Speaker 7 (01:12:22):
You need to drink a water?

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
What is she? Le me alone? Move on?

Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
What is she?

Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
What is she she? What are you? I'm glad everybody
want to know? Black child looks play a game with
DJ nvy. Yes, what racy is? Don't nobody know?

Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
Because they show up to the Puerto Rican they parade
with the Porto Rican flag, show up to the Dominicans,
they parade with the Dominican flag. Show up the black
stuff like he black and when he want to be
a crack, I ain't gonna be a crack.

Speaker 6 (01:12:46):
I Hi, I'm black. All the chat says I'm black,
all the I'm black.

Speaker 2 (01:12:53):
That's a lot. Y'all know better than that. What is
she scared. It don't matter.

Speaker 7 (01:12:59):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
You know what, I'm gonna tell you what my theme
is so I can just see what.

Speaker 2 (01:13:07):
Is honest with you, be honest with you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:09):
I'm really just looking at her picture for the first time, right,
and she's what I have no idea because she got
nigga features, right, she's twenty one savage tattoos all over
her face.

Speaker 2 (01:13:19):
She like, I don't know what this is.

Speaker 1 (01:13:21):
I'm gonna be honest. Her name is Camille Benson. I
have no idea what this is.

Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
I don't even know.

Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
Actually, this might be something that they created in the
last character.

Speaker 4 (01:13:31):
Wow, she looked, she looked.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Wow, she looked like one of them.

Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
She looked like one of them.

Speaker 2 (01:13:36):
Though, What was the white lady that remember you were
just saying.

Speaker 4 (01:13:39):
What is she? What is she? What is she?

Speaker 8 (01:13:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:13:42):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:13:42):
What is it? I don't know what made it?

Speaker 4 (01:13:46):
That's what.

Speaker 1 (01:13:46):
Yeah, she looked created if I see it, like I'm
running this is the creative village.

Speaker 4 (01:13:51):
Yeah, that's the creative player right there.

Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
I don't know what I really don't know what this is.

Speaker 5 (01:13:55):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
All right, Well, thank you for that dog today, seriously,
And she got like blonde, curly hell, what is it?

Speaker 10 (01:14:00):
What is like?

Speaker 2 (01:14:01):
They took the worst of all races and just put
them all together.

Speaker 4 (01:14:06):
He got a little bit of everything.

Speaker 6 (01:14:08):
All right, Well, thank you for that, Donkey. Today when
we come back, just fix my mess. Eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one. Relationship advice, any type
of advice you can call just right now. She'll help
you out with all your problems. Eight undred five eight
five one oh five one. It's the breakfast logan Morning.

Speaker 10 (01:14:25):
By.

Speaker 2 (01:14:26):
It's the real peal help me help. Oh my god,
I'm all up in your mess.

Speaker 9 (01:14:31):
I'm gonna fix it, mix it, fixed it, fix it,
just gonna fix your mess because my advice is real.

Speaker 5 (01:14:37):
Morning Everybody is DJ Envy just hilarious.

Speaker 6 (01:14:40):
Charlamagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. It's time
for just fix my mess. Chris, can you what's your question?

Speaker 4 (01:14:47):
Morning By Miller?

Speaker 18 (01:14:49):
Everybody that ball is yes, Oh clomen good State of Florida.
And my wife is basically how when a psychological break
down and her job last week called me scared of her,
So Friday I went and got a corn order to
have her put in a psych ward. The hospital wasn't

(01:15:12):
communicating with me. So I went over their head and
got them in trouble to psych you in it. And
now they hate my guts and they're telling my wife
sayings that only I told them, making her hate me more.
And then they wanted to call yesterday for an extension.
And instead of them telling them what they did or

(01:15:34):
what they know, everything.

Speaker 17 (01:15:36):
Was her husband said there.

Speaker 18 (01:15:38):
Her husband said back, so neless to say, this woman
will probably never speak to me again. This is my
wife for thirty four years, and I don't know what
to do.

Speaker 9 (01:15:49):
I'm not going to speak to you again because the
psych ward is telling her things that you did or
that you said that you didn't say that.

Speaker 18 (01:15:57):
I said a confidentiality with them. When they wanted the
court yesterday for an extension, they did.

Speaker 8 (01:16:03):
Not say they have.

Speaker 18 (01:16:05):
They put everything on me, every band damn. Yeah, they're
upset with me when I went over their head.

Speaker 4 (01:16:14):
Okay, all right, all right? What which you what you
should have done?

Speaker 9 (01:16:18):
It sounds like because you only want the best for
your wife, right correct?

Speaker 18 (01:16:21):
And like I told them, I don't know them to
make an opinion, nor do I care about them. My
objective is my wife. And maybe I shouldn't have told
them that I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:16:31):
Okay, so you want me to do what.

Speaker 8 (01:16:35):
I don't know what to do. That's why I'm calling you.

Speaker 9 (01:16:37):
Oh no, uh, you probably got to call another one,
like call another I mean, because I really don't understand
what the problem is.

Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
It's like, so they won't let you come back in there,
you like if they just.

Speaker 18 (01:16:51):
No, no, that's not the problem. My wife said, Yeah,
they're telling her things that I'm telling them a confidentiality
and they're claiming they're not telling her.

Speaker 17 (01:17:01):
But how does she know if if they are.

Speaker 18 (01:17:03):
The only people I told I saw in court yesterday,
they blamed everything on me of why she was there
and why they needed an extension.

Speaker 9 (01:17:13):
Oh yeah, well you need a lawyer, that's what it is. Okay,
you need a lawyer, not me. You need a lawyer
to figure that out because that's actually that's actually bad.
But I mean, your wife is mad at you, but
she's in a psych ward.

Speaker 4 (01:17:26):
Though you tell me so anyway, no disrespect.

Speaker 9 (01:17:30):
Yeah you put it there, but you kind of had
to right because she got to get right, you know
what I'm saying. So let her be mad at you
should be all right, you know what I mean, she'd
be all right, if she's in there.

Speaker 18 (01:17:41):
If that's my question is do you think just to
blow over?

Speaker 8 (01:17:44):
Should I just sit back and relize what I don't?

Speaker 9 (01:17:47):
Yeah, it's the back of relax Shes gonna be mad
at you anyway because she in a cycle woll A
lot of people in the cycle world don't want to
be in a cycle world.

Speaker 4 (01:17:52):
So she's gonna be mad at you anyway. You know,
just sit back, pray, pray for you know what I mean.
That's to go see it on Christmas? You know what
I'm saying. Yeah, she'll get over it.

Speaker 8 (01:18:01):
You think when she get out everything.

Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
Yes, that's the whole reason why she did adds.

Speaker 9 (01:18:06):
She's getting her rehabilitation together for her mind and all that.

Speaker 4 (01:18:10):
You know what I mean. Don't mess them mental health up.
You know what I mean?

Speaker 9 (01:18:13):
Over her being mad at you, she going to She's
gonna be mad at you, but she gonna be she
won't forget all about it when she get home.

Speaker 8 (01:18:19):
Boom.

Speaker 17 (01:18:19):
Okay, thank you, yeah you good you good.

Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
Good luck brother.

Speaker 6 (01:18:24):
Okay, with the middle of just fix my mess, we
got Michael on the line. Michael, what's your question for Jess?

Speaker 8 (01:18:28):
All right? First of all, good morning to everybody, you
know what I mean. My question is is that I
raised my son by myself, and I don't like when
it comes to discipline. I don't hit or anything like that.
And he's been showing out more in school than on
the bus and bad temper, raising his works at me
and ed grandma and all that. So I was just

(01:18:49):
wondering how the how I could go about that because
whipper's never worked worked for me. I got my ask
with all the time and it did nothing. So I
don't really think I don't really know what to do
with him right now.

Speaker 4 (01:19:01):
Okay, how old is that?

Speaker 8 (01:19:02):
He said eight?

Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
He's eight?

Speaker 4 (01:19:04):
Yeah, And what you say you're doing y'a.

Speaker 8 (01:19:07):
No, he just like when it comes to me, he
he just liked the raise his voice and stuff like
that when I'm trying to correct tough on something he's doing.
But at school is like he's hitting people on the
bus and constantly getting into fights and all of that.

Speaker 4 (01:19:23):
So you and you.

Speaker 9 (01:19:24):
Said you don't physically discipline like that's that's never been
your way.

Speaker 8 (01:19:28):
And because it never worked with me, I was like,
at all among kids, that was the most of you
in my ass.

Speaker 4 (01:19:33):
Whoop, It did nothing, and it did nothing.

Speaker 9 (01:19:35):
H What kind of kid would you say you were?
Why were you getting your ass? Were you worse than
your I.

Speaker 8 (01:19:42):
Did all the I did, all the things that was
that that was worth getting my ass work?

Speaker 4 (01:19:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:19:48):
Yeah, and it didn't work for you. So that's why
you don't want to whoop?

Speaker 24 (01:19:51):
Is it?

Speaker 4 (01:19:51):
You can't like.

Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
I didn't hear that, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:19:56):
What I'm saying.

Speaker 9 (01:19:57):
So you you ain't never just pop his ass one
good time, just you know, bow right in the chest
real quick, like just once.

Speaker 8 (01:20:04):
No, no, hell up?

Speaker 2 (01:20:06):
Damn?

Speaker 4 (01:20:07):
Okay, Well you're getting back what you did.

Speaker 9 (01:20:11):
I mean usually they say that about girls with their moms,
but you know, it just seems like your son is
walking in your footsteps, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:20:18):
I mean, he's eight.

Speaker 4 (01:20:20):
I thought you was telling me about a teenager, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:20:23):
But he's.

Speaker 8 (01:20:26):
Now. If it'd be different if he was a teenager, like.

Speaker 9 (01:20:29):
Right, no, he hedn't get his little ass whip right now.

Speaker 4 (01:20:32):
But you know, I respect your household. I respect your
parents too.

Speaker 9 (01:20:36):
You know your views, like you don't want to hit
your child, that's that's cool, you know what I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:20:40):
But you're going to continue to have this.

Speaker 9 (01:20:42):
Problem if you haven't tried to sit them down, and
you know, you gentle parent, that's what you did.

Speaker 8 (01:20:48):
I mean, I guess you can call it that, but
I like, I like, I think communication and teaching them
all from right helps more because I got my ass
whip and it's like, just stop doing that, don't do that.
But you ain't telling me how to correct the problem,
So it's gonna take me a little while alonger to
learning on my own. So I just communicate and try
to explain and help them correct it.

Speaker 9 (01:21:09):
Right, But it don't seem to be working. So now
sometimes you gotta try that, because listen, gentle parenting sir,
that's cool. But when you got no limit soldiers that
you're raising, you know what I mean, sometimes they need
they need that that that yok his ass up. Just
yoke him up, y'all, Like you don't got to hit him,
your yok's little ass up.

Speaker 4 (01:21:28):
He's eight, you don't.

Speaker 9 (01:21:29):
Want him to, you know, get ten, twelve, fourteen, sixteen,
and never experienced a yoking, a proper yoking before, you.

Speaker 4 (01:21:39):
Know what I mean, Because that's the problem with a lot.

Speaker 9 (01:21:41):
Of these adults and a lot of these kids now,
they never had the ass whip or even just you
know what I mean, just chastise just.

Speaker 2 (01:21:49):
A little bit.

Speaker 9 (01:21:50):
They never had their father put them in a corner,
shake them, yank their ass up, and you know what
I'm saying, now, get your ish together.

Speaker 4 (01:21:56):
They haven't had that. I don't think that's abuse, you know,
I'm saying.

Speaker 8 (01:22:00):
Do you think it could be like with like a
stability problem too, because like he was in Michigan with
his mom, then she moved to Tennessee. Then they moved
back from Michigan. Now he's down here with me.

Speaker 9 (01:22:10):
Hm, it absolutely could be that. How long you had him?

Speaker 8 (01:22:15):
He's been down here with me for about five months?
Six months?

Speaker 4 (01:22:19):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, so he's adjusting. That's what it is.

Speaker 8 (01:22:22):
I mean.

Speaker 9 (01:22:22):
All right, so you can still yoke him up, but
you know what I mean, you do have to teach
him like look, things that you I don't know, you know,
like whatever the household you were in before, you you
can't do that here.

Speaker 8 (01:22:33):
You know.

Speaker 9 (01:22:33):
Really, really, if you don't want to yoke him up,
you know what I'm saying, just really really put that
in perspective on him.

Speaker 4 (01:22:37):
He ate, but these little he's mature.

Speaker 9 (01:22:40):
Enough to know what he's doing is wrong, you know,
and he can distinguish the difference between right and wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:22:45):
And then also a part of this is still just
him growing up as well.

Speaker 7 (01:22:48):
He is eight.

Speaker 9 (01:22:49):
But implement those rules right now, implement that structure because
he can't do the same things he was doing with
his mom at dad's house.

Speaker 4 (01:22:57):
And it's still all out of love, you know what
I mean.

Speaker 9 (01:22:59):
It's a good way to it's ways to discipline him
and still show him that.

Speaker 2 (01:23:03):
You love him.

Speaker 4 (01:23:04):
You get what I'm saying.

Speaker 9 (01:23:05):
Yes, but five months and that gave me the context
that I needed. He's just trying to adjust and you
can help him with that.

Speaker 4 (01:23:13):
That's that's not bad.

Speaker 2 (01:23:14):
That's not bad, thank you.

Speaker 6 (01:23:16):
And on the other spectrum, brother, I you know, just
remember all sometimes physical doesn't have to fit the all
discipline doesn't have to be physical, right. And the reason
I say that is some kids don't react to a
beating or anything like that. They feel like that's the
way that if something goes wrong, they're gonna use that
on other kids. I would say, have those conversations first.
You don't have to be physical. You having a strong

(01:23:37):
talking to your son. He should be able to fear
and hear in your tone what's right and what's wrong.
My pops has never touched me in my life. He
has never put a hand on me at all.

Speaker 2 (01:23:46):
Yeah, but then you grew up the lights, bankings from
other men.

Speaker 5 (01:23:48):
No, but on the rail, you don't necessarily have to.

Speaker 8 (01:23:51):
Now.

Speaker 6 (01:23:51):
I did put hands on Logan, but my other son
I did not put hands on and they were raised
totally different.

Speaker 2 (01:23:57):
It's still respect.

Speaker 6 (01:23:58):
But you don't have to put a point where your
kids are scared of you, because you don't want your
kids to be scared of You want them to be
able to feel comfortable to tell you everything and be
able to, you know, tell Dad whatever if there's a problem,
if there's a situation, and you know there's some trauma,
there's some stress because of what's going on with your family.
So I would just say keep them close to you,
keep having them conversations, and really try to guide him
that way, because sometimes you put hands on him, it

(01:24:19):
could go left, and you don't want it to go left.

Speaker 5 (01:24:20):
You don't want to lose your son's trust.

Speaker 8 (01:24:22):
Yeah, that's the Really, that's why I don't whoop my
kids like I used to. The only child I ever
whooped is my oldest daughter and she was about eight
at the time. I whooped it so and it's just
think the tears in her eyes and the way she
looked at me like she was scared. So it was like, no,
I'm never hitting my kids again.

Speaker 4 (01:24:38):
How was her behavior acted that if I just may ask?

Speaker 8 (01:24:41):
I mean, she she's very respectful and you know she's
not like the bad kid. No butt you. I just
it hurt me. I can't do it.

Speaker 4 (01:24:50):
I feel you, I feel you. Appreciate that.

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
Good love, brother, thank you.

Speaker 6 (01:24:55):
Just fix my mess. Eight hundred and five eighty five,
one oh five one. We got the Latest with Lauren
coming up. It's the breakfast Club, Good Morning, Lauren becoming
a straight faces.

Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
She gets them, somebody that knows somebody detail.

Speaker 22 (01:25:08):
I'm the homegirl that knows a little bit about everything, and.

Speaker 24 (01:25:11):
She'd be having the latest on the Latest with Lauren
la Rosa.

Speaker 20 (01:25:16):
Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you have details.

Speaker 2 (01:25:18):
Sometimes you have a little bit off.

Speaker 22 (01:25:23):
So a real quick mention.

Speaker 23 (01:25:25):
There was a filing that happened recently Diddy, Drew Ski
and Odell Beckham Junior. There was a sexual assault lawsuit
that was filed against them a while back. This was
the lady that alleged that did he tried to sexually
saw her with the TV remote and Drew skin O'Dell
Beckham Junior were there.

Speaker 22 (01:25:40):
That case was officially dismissed.

Speaker 23 (01:25:43):
It was dismissed because the judge is basically saying that
the plaintiffs were told several times that the lawsu would
be dismissed if they kept missing deadlines because people weren't
served the way they were supposed to be. So it
was dismissed without prejudice, which means that the plaintiffs could
refile in the near future if they.

Speaker 2 (01:25:57):
Choose to dismissed. Agains Drew skiing months ago.

Speaker 23 (01:26:00):
Yes, yes, yes, it was months ago, Yes, months ago.
What happened was drewski provided evidence to show that he
was nowhere near any of the things and all of whatever.
But now it has officially been thrown out of the court.

Speaker 5 (01:26:13):
Is what we were you said a couple of weeks ago,
was throwing down.

Speaker 23 (01:26:17):
Y'all can look it up. I'm moving on to the
next story. I just wanted to make sure that we
mentioned it because I reported on the claims when they came.
Okay now, and Drewskie did give a statement on this
as well. He says the evidence I submitted overwhelmingly showed
that I was innocent and proved I never knew this
individual and was never in the same state at the
time of the alleged incident. Through it all, I'm truly
grateful for the support of my family, friends, and fans

(01:26:37):
and business partners who stood by my side even as
these individuals attempted to destroy my reputation for greed.

Speaker 22 (01:26:43):
I pray for the real victims of assault.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Now, let's lock her ass up. Let's lock the woman
who filed that crazy no right, you're absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (01:26:53):
You make those false claims, and he has to spend
all that month your attorneys and all that other stuff,
and he probably lost deals a lot of That's right,
Lauren Juicy.

Speaker 23 (01:27:00):
Sue her if he if he chooses to, he can
definitely come for her if he wants to. Yeah, and
he says He ends the statement by saying, we can't
allow these cloud chasing antics to deter true survivors from
coming forward and speaking out against their abuses in the future.

Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
Drew should be allowed to sit on her for real.
That's the start of a punishment.

Speaker 4 (01:27:18):
Well, he lost a lot of weight.

Speaker 9 (01:27:19):
It ain't gonna do nothing now right, No, I'm not
even gonna bring it up.

Speaker 4 (01:27:23):
Homicide is the modern.

Speaker 8 (01:27:30):
Day heavy yo. No.

Speaker 23 (01:27:32):
But in the beginning is remember when the lawsuit first broke,
people was like, ain't no way this really happened because
she said that drew Ski was oiled up and acted
like it was was.

Speaker 22 (01:27:43):
Like, what, ain't no way that that happened.

Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
But she needs to have some type of consequences. Yes, yeah,
that's ridiculous.

Speaker 4 (01:27:51):
Yes.

Speaker 23 (01:27:52):
Now in other news, uh, bringing the move back up
the Different World cast, it was announced that they will
be reprising their roles and the Different World News series
that is that will be coming. So I know we've
had you know, Jasmine Guy here, we've had Miss Debbie
Allen here as well too in Kadem Hardison, who've talked
about this coming and trying to get it going. So

(01:28:13):
it's you know, over time, we've known that this is happening,
but they are coming back to reprise their roles. So
in a joint statement, they said, a Different World is back.

Speaker 4 (01:28:21):
Yay.

Speaker 23 (01:28:21):
We are over the moon to bring this much anticipated
sequel with our returning legacy stars, Kadem Hardison, Jasmine Guy, Chrise, Sumner,
Daryl and Bell. These we Love characters are returning in
a major way with that respects to their histories while
engaging and exciting new storylines that are relevant to the
issues of today. So the log line for this is
Dwayne Wayne and Dwayne Wayne and Whitney's daughter goes to

(01:28:46):
college and she's like navigating things. So all of the
OG characters will reprise their roles and it'll be reincurrent, reoccurring,
So there'll be in.

Speaker 2 (01:28:52):
A few episodes love It.

Speaker 4 (01:28:54):
That's right.

Speaker 23 (01:28:55):
Yes, Now as we end the hour, I know we
were talking a lot of today about back and forth,
and I thought that this would be a good clip
to play because Mari Polvich was on Sherry Shepherd a
few days ago and he talked about if he came
out of retirement what he would want to do.

Speaker 2 (01:29:10):
Let's take a listen, come out of retirement. If I
could get Nicky Okay, Nicki Minaj and Cardi B.

Speaker 28 (01:29:17):
Cardi B settle their differences with lot detector tests.

Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
How about how about if Drake and Kendrick, if.

Speaker 22 (01:29:29):
So you would come, you'd.

Speaker 2 (01:29:30):
Want to come out of retirement?

Speaker 29 (01:29:32):
Come out of retirement to settle the beach, y'all, Maury
Povinch would come.

Speaker 2 (01:29:37):
Would y'all like.

Speaker 29 (01:29:37):
To see Maury Polovitch settle those bees? You would get
such great ratings if.

Speaker 22 (01:29:43):
You could get Drake.

Speaker 5 (01:29:44):
And Kendrick put it out there.

Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
I put it out there. Well, we're putting it out there.

Speaker 29 (01:29:48):
Would you Cardi B come on over with Maury Povich.

Speaker 2 (01:29:51):
We could do a primetime special. You could be the host.

Speaker 4 (01:29:55):
I would love it. We'll hand your retirement because.

Speaker 1 (01:30:00):
He has no idea that it's twenty twenty five about
to be twenty twenty six.

Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Not ned one of them need that in no way,
shape or form. Yeah, that's not even something they're considering.

Speaker 6 (01:30:13):
Yeah, okay, the last the Latest with Lauren now up
next to the mix, Salute to DMX, Happy birthday, DMX.
It's all about DMX this morning. We're gonna be playing
DMX records all through the mix and also also to
DJ S and S today is DJ sn S Sir
to my guy legend I he sent me he called
me last night late last night. He sent me he
got a new record that he did and he said

(01:30:34):
tell Charlemagne that he said leave in Villons.

Speaker 1 (01:30:37):
And that is a great brother man. First time I
Eving met that's and that's idn't even really knows.

Speaker 2 (01:30:41):
And that's like that.

Speaker 1 (01:30:41):
And we was in Puerto Rico and got into a
little squabble and I have dropped my wallet in the
midst of the squabble, and he took my wallet and.

Speaker 2 (01:30:50):
Put it to the front desk.

Speaker 4 (01:30:51):
What year was this?

Speaker 1 (01:30:54):
I figured out, I've been stuck in Puerto Rico and
I had no idea, know nothing about the money.

Speaker 2 (01:31:04):
Look you are.

Speaker 9 (01:31:12):
Ye also birthday today as well, that's heavy birthday.

Speaker 2 (01:31:18):
And that's right, it's the Breakfast Club more. Let's get
to the mix morning. Everybody is d j en Vy
just hilarious.

Speaker 6 (01:31:24):
Charlamagne and the guy we are the Breakfast Club shot
everybody in Atlanta. I'm actually headed to Atlanta right now
for Atlanta's jingle Ball that's tonight.

Speaker 5 (01:31:32):
That's tonight, So I'm.

Speaker 6 (01:31:33):
Gonna be hosting that salute to friends John and friends Knie.

Speaker 2 (01:31:40):
I'm gonna be working and I'm gonna questions going out
there coming right back.

Speaker 5 (01:31:44):
Seriously, we want me to talk to we'd be asking
to what it's not wild some wild questions.

Speaker 23 (01:31:50):
No, I would love to talk to Nelly about you know,
the metro booming, and you know that whole collaboration. And
Jermaine Duprie, he just said that people are gonna ride
the good singers going rides to the top of my note.
Which singers he thinks is gonna come out of the
AI are the best. Like I got some positive stuff,
you don't won't have to fight.

Speaker 2 (01:32:06):
Well, some tickets are still available.

Speaker 6 (01:32:08):
It will sell out tonight, So if you haven't got
your tickets, get your tickets check. It's gonna be an
amazing show. So I can't wait to see you guys tonight.
That's our jingle ball in Atlanta. Salute to Jill, Salute
to Louis v. Salute to everybody out there Ferrari bt
Joe Joe scream everybody on that station, man, mono, what's up?
We gonna have a lot of fun tonight, all right.
And also we got a salute to Jared Adams for

(01:32:31):
joining us today.

Speaker 2 (01:32:32):
Salute to the good brother Jared Adams.

Speaker 8 (01:32:34):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:32:34):
He's got a new book out. It's called Redeeming Justice,
all right, And I just like Jared.

Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
His story is crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:32:41):
He was wrongfully convicted and spent ten years in prison
for a crime he didn't convient learn the law while
he was in prison, and now he's a civil rights attorney.
Man so and justice reform advocates. So salute to Jared Adams. Now, Jess,
were you at this weekend?

Speaker 9 (01:32:54):
I'm gonna be in DC. My first show was tonight.
We in DC for four days, me and my brother
does the Lexander. Get your tickets if you have not yet.
Most of them are sold out. I'm looking to add more, y'all. So,
like I said, we got five shows so far, I'm
looking to do like six, seven eight. I can stay
in DC for as long as I please. I love
DC and prov so meet me there tonight. The show

(01:33:14):
starts at seven thirty. Get your tickets if you haven't yet.
Like I said, Jess Hilarious official dot com. Also pre
order my book Till Death du We Parent, the co
parenting memoir me raising my son with his father.

Speaker 4 (01:33:27):
And it's great if you pre order now through Barnes and.

Speaker 9 (01:33:30):
Nobles because they having a twenty five percent off pre
order sale, So do that, and they only doing it
up until the new year.

Speaker 2 (01:33:36):
So get the book.

Speaker 1 (01:33:37):
Yes, indeed, all right, well you got a positive note.
I do have a positive note. Man, thirteen days left
in the year. I've been telling y'all that it's the
year of the Snake, and it's a nine year.

Speaker 2 (01:33:48):
The year of the Snake.

Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
When it meets the universal year nine, it is a
perfect alignment for growth. You got thirteen more days to
release the baggage you've carried for too long. Move with intention,
and let your everlution be the ultimate flex. Have a
great day, breakfast club bitches, you don't finish or y'all done.

Speaker 8 (01:34:06):
Woke up?

Speaker 10 (01:34:07):
Wake you up, Wake you up, Wake that up.

Speaker 1 (01:34:09):
Program your alarm to power one oh five point one
on iHeartRadio.

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Charlamagne Tha God

Charlamagne Tha God

DJ Envy

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Jess Hilarious

Jess Hilarious

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