Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning, Usa yo yo yo.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
Jess Laris is on maternity leave and lorda Roses a
little late this morning, Charlemagne to God, peace to the
planet this Monday.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Back to the work. Were good morning, Yes, just maternity
to leave should be over.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
So the return of jess Alari's officials sooner than you.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Think, I hope.
Speaker 5 (00:27):
So?
Speaker 4 (00:27):
Okay, yes, miss my sister. What a what an exciting
time to be alive?
Speaker 5 (00:31):
Man?
Speaker 4 (00:31):
We are a wake up, a simple wake up a
day and a wake up till election day.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
That is right, That's right. Did you early vote yet? No?
Speaker 4 (00:39):
I'm actually going to early vote today because what you mean,
CANNAHI why can't early vote?
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Was just until November third?
Speaker 6 (00:46):
No?
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Yes it is, yes, it is in Jersey's just sure, yes,
because I tried to go yesterday but I missed the time.
But I thought it was until six o'clock and I
got there I think at like four five, and they
stopped at four.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
So I was like, I'll come back to morning. No,
you gotta come back tuesday.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
Oh oh, I guess I'll be voting on Tuesday. I
had planning to go today.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
After I was trying to go yesterday, but no, I
know early voters O. The timeframe was up. The time
frame was up. Ye, she can't go into Tuesday. I'll
go to tomorrow morning. Then that's right.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
Damn, I gotta go early because I'm going to DC tomorrow.
I'm definitely going to DC tomorrow. Yeah, so you gott
figure out.
Speaker 2 (01:19):
You gotta go.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
What's to vote? They open to six or four some six.
We gotta figure that out early in the morning. I
gotta I gotta vote too. But what is exciting time?
It is Kamala Harris h Donald Trump. Tomorrow's election day.
I don't know why this feels. This feels different. Just
don't feel like other elections. It really doesn't like.
Speaker 4 (01:37):
This feels like you know how they always say the
most consequential election of your lifetime?
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Yes, this what? It feels that way?
Speaker 7 (01:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:44):
In real way? Yeah, it does. No, it absolutely positively does.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
And I think I feel more into it now, especially
because we were in the commercials and every time I
go somewhere and somebody but like I seen you in
a commercial.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
I don't give it. To be honest with you, I
don't give a damn about that.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
I see it all the time, and people, you know,
people come up to me and talk to me more
about this election and the other elections.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
So I think that's the reason why I just.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
Give a damn about where I feel like the future
of our country is going.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
So that's why I should go. Yeah, I should go.
Speaker 4 (02:07):
No, where it's going. By the way, it's going that
way regardless. Okay, you just have to know that. That's
the other thing, like, you know, the regardless of who
wins tomorrow, America really has to do some real soul
searching because I can't believe we're here in this position
that we're in where you have somebody like Donald Trump
who can be so bigoted, right and who can literally
(02:29):
literally we have women in this country right now that
have less rights right now than they did when I
was born in nineteen hundred and seventy eight. Think about that. Yeah,
so think about that. So, yes, we have some real
soul searching to do as a country. But tomorrow the
soul searching, because right tomorrow is election. Tomorrow you get
to decide what kind of country you want to be.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
So make she get true. It's the truth to the
better and vote now. I want to salute law Enlow.
So who's on the way. I hope I'm sure she's listening.
Over the weekend, I got a chance to take my
son to his first professional Major League soccer game the
New York City Football Club out in Queens. When I
say it was, my son had the most amazing time
watching soccer.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
Now, I've been to everything.
Speaker 3 (03:11):
I've been the Major League Baseball games, I've been the
World Series, I've been the Super Bowls, I've been.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
To playoffs in the NBA.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
But when I say soccer, when I say they take
it serious, my son was right along with them, charing
and he had such an amazing time.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
So salute to the New.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
York City Football Club for inviting us. Thank you Long
and the Roast for setting that up. We had such
an amazing time. If you ever get into soccer, or
if you want to check out your local professional team,
you definitely should take your kids.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
It was such a my son had a great time.
It was crazy. It's crazy with the Giants and Jets.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
Sucks so bad that you got New York becers that
have to go to football now and I love football.
I love football. I love football. Okay, it's a great
sports lou to the MLS. But the fact that the
Giants and Jets sucks so bad in the middle of
the season that you're in here with a soccer New
York City Soccer club, football whatever, jersey on. You take
your son to the game. You tired of taking them.
(04:01):
You're tired of the tears. Hey, time you take him
to go see the Giants, you just didn't leaving tears.
You're tired of that.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Your Cowboys do this weekend? We suck. Okay, okay, all right,
but it's okay, all right, you still go on to
the super Bowl? Yes, ah up, my goodness.
Speaker 4 (04:13):
All right, what you mean now, the cowboy fan, I
am obligated to say, we're going to the Super Bowl
till we are no longer in Super Bowl contention.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
Now, the US Representative for South Carolina, Nancy May, she'll
be joining us this morning, and also row Conna and
Joe Moore. Now Rocanna is the US representative from California.
That's right, jay A moris from South Carolina. Yes, and
we're gonna be talking to them in a little bit.
But when we come back we got front page news.
Morgan will be joining us. It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Good morning, Good morning everybody.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
It's DJ Envy Jesse, larrys Charlamagne the guy.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
We are the Breakfast Club. Law on the Rosa is here.
Speaker 8 (04:44):
Yes, good morning, and let's.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Get in some front page news.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Now sports over the weekend, the Commanders beat the Giants,
the Bills beat the Dolphins, Titans beat the Patriots, the Chargers,
I'm sorry. Chargers beat the Browns. Cowboys got squashed by
the Falcons. Bengal beat the Raiders, Cardinals beat the Bears,
Ravens beat the Broncos, Rams beat the Seahawks, Eagles beat
the Jaguars, and Lions beat the Pactas, Vikings beat the Colts,
(05:09):
and and Monday Night Football the Buccaneers take on the
Kansas City Chiefs at eight fifteen.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
What's up, mulligan, what's up?
Speaker 8 (05:16):
What's up?
Speaker 9 (05:17):
Hey?
Speaker 8 (05:17):
Happy Monday?
Speaker 2 (05:18):
See you are y'all feeling all right?
Speaker 10 (05:19):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (05:19):
Indeed all right.
Speaker 11 (05:21):
So an unfortunate breaking news legendary record producer Quincy Jones.
He has passed away at the age of ninety one.
It's reported that the Grammy Award winning entertainer died peacefully
at his home in bel Air, California, on Sunday, surrounded
by family. But I'm sure you guys are going to
get more into that. Let's switch gears and get into
this election news. So tomorrow is Tuesday, It's the big day,
(05:41):
November fifth, front page News. Make sure you exercise your
right to vote, and of course shout out to all
the first time voters. You know you got a big
responsibility tomorrow. So Vice President Harris She says she's cast
her ballot in this year's election. The Democratic presidential nominee
revealed on Sunday that she completed and nailed in her
California ballot. Her running mate, Governor Tim Wall Minnesota Governor
Tim Wallas voted early in person last month in his
(06:04):
home state alongside his son. Former President Trump has yet
to cast his vote, or at least let us know,
speaking of which this comes as VP Hair has had
a busy weekend with stops in Georgia, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.
She also made a surprise appearance on Saturday Night Live
with comedian Maya Rudolph, who plays me.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
On the show Yes Credible.
Speaker 11 (06:24):
The VP and her lookalike joked about her laugh, her
name and Donald Trump while she gave herself a pep
talk in what's supposed to appear as a mirror.
Speaker 12 (06:32):
Let's hear.
Speaker 11 (06:33):
Let's take a listen to Harris' skit on SNL.
Speaker 8 (06:37):
And I'm Kamala, Take my Pamela.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
The American people want to stop the.
Speaker 8 (06:45):
Chaos and end the dramaa.
Speaker 11 (06:49):
With a cool new step Mamalaka backing up Pajamala's and
watch a rom Kamala like legally Blondola and.
Speaker 8 (07:00):
Start decorating for Christmas.
Speaker 12 (07:03):
Follow la la la, because.
Speaker 11 (07:06):
What do we always say, Keep Kamala and carry on
the lah.
Speaker 6 (07:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (07:13):
So that skit that was partial of the skit appeared
to be a copy of that of Jimmy Fallon he
did with a former President Trump back in twenty fifteen,
but the skit nonetheless was still amazing, still cool. Meanwhile,
a commissioner from the Federal Commission's Communications Commission, or the FCC,
he took the X to air his grievance with Kamala
Harris's appearance on FSNL. Commissioner Brandon Carr posted on X
(07:37):
that Harris's appearance violates equal time rules that regulate political programming. Now,
he called the appearance biased and partisan conduct. The FCC
guidelines read equal opportunities generally mean providing comparable time and
placement to opposite candidates. Now, on Sunday that was rectified
and former President Donald Trump was given ad time during
NBC's NASCAR broadcast and also afforded an addition sixty seconds
(08:01):
of campaign time during Sunday night football coverage. Yeah, so well,
I see.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
You know the only reason I like the FCC commission
to doing that is because as a radio personality here,
folks don't understand that. Like if you bring on bring
on one side, the other side request to come, you
have to bring them on, right, Like people don't understand that,
Like they be so upset.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Oh, I can't believe.
Speaker 4 (08:26):
Y'all haveboy, that's the way it works, your city rules
and regulation.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
If you gets the way it.
Speaker 13 (08:33):
Used to be in media, where you would know that
that would happen, you would, Yeah, that's so strange. But
back like years ago, that was normal and the expected.
Speaker 4 (08:43):
You have to do it, like it's FCC rules and regulations.
If you bring on one side, whatever time you give them,
you gotta uh give the other side the opportunity to
just send the amount of time you just do.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
That's the way it goes, equal time.
Speaker 11 (08:57):
And of course, you guys, you know what's going on
in d C. Of course the election is tomorrow and
they are already taking UH security steps and measures. We'll
talk about more about we'll talk more about that at
seven am, So stick around for more front page news.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
That all right, everybody else, get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. Let
us know how your week it was, what you did,
all that good stuff. Eight hundred five five one oh
five one, Get it off your chest.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
It's the breakfast club. Good morning, the breakfast club. This
is your time to get it off your chests, whether
you're mad or blessed. So we better have the same
anag we want to hear from you on the breakfast clubs.
Speaker 10 (09:34):
Oh what this is Margaret from Queen.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
Hey, Margaret, good morning, Get it off your chest, Margaret.
Speaker 10 (09:40):
Good morning. I'm just just happy news today. I just
want to thank you so much for talking about a
pc US colleges. And now my granddaughter goes there, Saria Johnson,
she's in margant state.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
Ohka, oh, congratulation.
Speaker 10 (09:55):
Just wants to wish her as the delayed birthday.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
Hey, what part of Queens are you from?
Speaker 10 (10:00):
October twenty eighth, I'm from. I live in Springfield Garden.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
Oh, Springfield Gardens. Okay, well, congratulations, what made you? What
made you pick go ahead?
Speaker 10 (10:08):
Because you talked told much about these colleges and how
good they are and what they're doing for the community
and everything. So I make sure tell her make sure
you at HBCU College because it seems to be doing
good for the black community.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
Absolutely well, thank you, Margaret.
Speaker 10 (10:28):
So happy birthday in Jaria. October twenty eight was her birthday,
and I didn't get to speak to her, So I
hope somebody is listening and to tell her that her
grandma is wishing her happy birthday.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Okay, Margaret, your radio Grandma.
Speaker 13 (10:42):
You didn't get er Graandma didn't get to talk to
her because she was partying at school.
Speaker 10 (10:46):
Probably that.
Speaker 3 (10:48):
Now, Margaret, you got to throw a little couple of
dollars in her, Throw a little couple of dollars on
her phone, like twenty forty dollars that help them put
you know, wash, he laundry and all of that stuff.
Speaker 10 (10:55):
I do that, Okay, you know it comes to grandma
and because that's the franchi, so she.
Speaker 8 (11:03):
I'm the first grandchild too. I love that life for her.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Thank you, Grandma. Okay, I have a good one. It's
boil you too, Lauren.
Speaker 8 (11:09):
What my grandmother?
Speaker 6 (11:10):
What?
Speaker 8 (11:10):
You can't tell her nothing about me?
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Really? You need to give her a which backs this?
Speaker 8 (11:18):
He started early hum.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
I said, Hey, what's your name?
Speaker 14 (11:23):
Oh my name is Marcella.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Nay Marcella morning, Marcella. Get it off your chest.
Speaker 14 (11:27):
Okay, so have three things. I'm quick. I wanted to
get off my chest dj MV. I wanted to shout
you out for all the mental stuff that you just
spent their mouth to a sorry. My brother committed suicide
years ago, and I've had a few students supper that
they want to take people out and I get my
brother's story and one of the years I wanted to
share with you the next time you're pasching. I don't
(11:48):
know if you do it, but you may see. Have
to those who concentrated, see those who survived it, who
survived because when I spoke to my students who said,
I don't want to be anymore and after how my
brother's suicide still affects my family and my parents the
difference in the state. They don't realize that taking the
(12:08):
other type is going to have a big impact on
the loved one.
Speaker 4 (12:12):
Oh oh oh, we have you ever been to the
mental Wealth flex vote that I do every year we do.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
We have a whole breakout room panel about that.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
But my guy, my guy, Jay Barnett, he's a person
who actually survives to suicides himself. But then you have people,
you know, who actually come to the mental Wealth flex
boat who have had family members, close relatives commit suicide.
And you're right, you know, they talk about the grief
that they feel, you know, having to deal with losing
a loved one the suicide.
Speaker 14 (12:40):
Yeah, I think that's beautiful. Charlemagne, I'd like to shout
you out because from the very beginning you said, I
pay attention the things that Trump say and pay attention
to what's going on. I kind of scene. And he
is a magician. He'll have you looked into the left. Really,
it's the fright. You should be paying attention to it.
I just want to read it actually tomorrow being a
(13:01):
lection day, and the last thing is the blast the
three Village Central School District and hate the Tucket my nephew,
Balen Ams States quarterback the senior count But the last
week you have to deal with racism and racist comments
not only from his teammates and his classmates, but even
(13:22):
from his coach to the point where the mom had
shopped and involved, and the lowsuit against the district because
he's been exposed to the N word times. He's sent
some newses to point where she even had the pre
get involved persevered. And I'm just hoping that this loss
goes through and three Village gets the rude to what
(13:42):
so it don't happen to another black, our child of
color peans just when they expose them to a better education.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
You so much as their mental health, Well, thank you
again and salute to everybody. And I just want to
tell everybody out there there's there's always another way and
there's always help out there. In my book, Real Life,
Real Love, I talk about about what ten twelve years
ago when I wanted to commit suicide and almost did,
and we discussed it in Longevity well at length, about
(14:11):
the process and everything that I had.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
To go through. And I do go to a bunch
of different schools and a bunch of different places talking
to students and kids that have that on their mind,
and it's easy to say, well, they shouldn't be thinking
about that, but being in that position and having that
thought process at one time, I understand what you guys
are going through, and I understand I've been there. I've
been at my lowest at times, so and we will
(14:34):
continue to do that. And maybe I need to talk
about that more because you know, we go to a
bunch of different schools a lot. But yeah, I'm glad.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
That I've got to tell people not to make a
permanent decision based off temporary feelings.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Yeah, no, absolutely, But you know, the main thing is
people feel like in life life would be better without
them there, that their family would be better without them there,
and they put that in their mind, and I even
put that in my mind, and it's something that I
had to really, you know, to really find within myself
and do work on myself to figure out a better.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
Solution in a better way, of course.
Speaker 3 (15:05):
But I'm glad that you know, your your students, and
your relative was able to take the other route. All right,
get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up now. It's the Breakfast Club, the Morning, the
Breakfast Club.
Speaker 15 (15:20):
I'm telling, I'm telling what you're doing, mall of you.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
This is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five eight five one.
We want to hear from you on the breakfast clubs. Hello.
Who's this?
Speaker 10 (15:35):
Yo?
Speaker 2 (15:36):
This Chris Chris? What's up? Brother? Get it off your chest?
What's up?
Speaker 16 (15:39):
Man?
Speaker 2 (15:39):
Good morning?
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Man's up?
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Morning.
Speaker 14 (15:41):
I didn't want to say, man, Wayne did this thing
at Louisanafesse Man. That was that was plastic. That was
for the culture.
Speaker 17 (15:47):
And I love that.
Speaker 16 (15:48):
Man.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Lauren was there. Yeah, I've seen some of the clips.
Speaker 14 (15:51):
Yeah, yeah, I've seen Lauren. Now, Man, I know Charlomagne
goes crazy over Kendrick Man. But they supposed to have
Wayne at that super Bowl. But I feel like this
was a little better than the super Bowl.
Speaker 8 (16:02):
They've been arguing online about that since the show.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Yes, but that's silly. And I'll tell you why.
Speaker 4 (16:06):
It's silly that Hot Boys Reunion was perfect for Louisiannfest.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
You know why because when you think about the.
Speaker 4 (16:11):
Super Bowl, I know it's in New Orleans, but it's
literally a national event like the reason that the Louisiannifest
and that Hot Boys Reunion hit so hard was because
it was in New Orleans. That wouldn't have happened, that
wouldn't hit so hard anywhere else. And be hung up
on the guy per.
Speaker 8 (16:27):
Usual, Why do you hang up?
Speaker 2 (16:29):
I didn't hang up, he go on. Actually I didn't
touch it. Hello? Who's this?
Speaker 9 (16:35):
Hey?
Speaker 2 (16:35):
You want to get it off your chest?
Speaker 9 (16:37):
I'm waking up this morning with a heavy heart. We
walked Jones American regen Uh, one of the sist composers
of the twenty three from to.
Speaker 14 (16:51):
Alive, including Uh, Off the Wall and we Are We
Are in the War World.
Speaker 4 (17:02):
I love I love Quincy Jones. But that brother was
ninety one years old. That brother lived. You mean that brother,
he lived a life, life, full life.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
He produced a hit show Bell Press, Kretzbelle, the Color Purple.
I mean he wrote the theme song from The Cosby Show.
I mean we could talk about Michael Jackson Rachall.
Speaker 4 (17:23):
That man lived natural, whole life. Yes he did, Okay,
him and Jimmy Clarence. Him and Clarence Avon with two
of my favorite people to watch. So you know the
only thing I can when I hear stuff like that,
I don't even I'd be like, damn, God, blessed. I
don't even feel any sense of sadness because he lived
a full life.
Speaker 13 (17:38):
Yeah, we're gonna we're gonna take some time to, you know,
pay tribute to him this morning too.
Speaker 8 (17:42):
So keep listening.
Speaker 17 (17:43):
Yeah, I hope you we will, because he is he
TRANSNDD culture movies, just like MB said, composing.
Speaker 9 (17:55):
It seems to I think it was impossible, you know,
missing impossible. You you know, it's what the Jones song
when you hear it, it is. He is the twenty
century when it comes to pop culture.
Speaker 10 (18:15):
It's it's it's heavy.
Speaker 9 (18:17):
Yes, he lets the long life, and it was an
extraordinary life. And I just I just hope everybody takes
time to recognize how much you cut every part of
the world.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
I mean, it's so it's so much out there bottom.
Speaker 4 (18:34):
You got his books, you got his documentary like Quinthy
Jones produced for Frank Sinatra, like you have to like
fly Me to the like it's like racial.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Yeah, full life, a full life. Well, thank you Mama
for calling in this morning.
Speaker 9 (18:51):
He a I want to also tell everybody to go
out both tomorrow as well.
Speaker 14 (18:59):
It's impoorant and don't forget.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
It, alrighty, get it off your chest.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
Eight hundred five eight five, one oh five one. We
got just with the Mess with la Laoso coming.
Speaker 8 (19:08):
Up, we do.
Speaker 13 (19:08):
We are going to actually pay tribute to Quincy Jones.
I'll talk about his life and his legacy.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
All right, we'll get into that. NeXT's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Good morning everybody.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
It's DJ n V, Jess Larry's Charlamage the guy we
are the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
Let's get to Jest with the Mess with Lauren Lo Rossoe.
Speaker 16 (19:26):
News is real, whether it's Laria's Jessica, Robin Moore, just
don't do no lines, don't do.
Speaker 8 (19:32):
Talk them nobody, talk them low?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Why jess worldwide?
Speaker 6 (19:37):
Mess on the Breakfast Club, the Coaches with Lauren Lauren
Lo Rosa.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
I'm back and I got the mess talk Tommy.
Speaker 8 (19:48):
Now we lost another legend.
Speaker 13 (19:49):
Quincy Jones has passed away at the age of ninety one.
Speaker 8 (19:54):
His publicist told.
Speaker 13 (19:56):
A few outlets, according a court and the AP, According
to his rep that last night, filled with broken hearts,
his family decided to share the news that their father
and brother, Quincy Jones has passed away. Although this is
an incredible laws for their family, they said they want
to celebrate their great life that he lived and know
(20:16):
that there will never be another like him, And man,
when you say that there will be another like him,
an incredible, full, great life, it's almost like an understatement.
He lived so many different creative lifestyles. He was a musician,
a songwriter, producer, conductor, arranger, artist, record label owner, executive,
TV and film producer, magazine Parbluscher, humanitarian author like There's
(20:39):
just so much that he did, and he spanned across
so many different genres rb a cop, classical music, like,
just so many different things. He was a twenty eight
time Grammy winner. He won an Academy Award, two of them. Actually,
he won an Emmy for Roots. There's a lot that
(21:00):
he did. I'm not even gonna be able to get
it in this full segment. But also worth mentioning he
was one of the first black executives to really thrive
in Hollywood, and because of that, he helped so many
artists be able to put He put their careers like
on their back. He arranged music for Saint Frank Sinatra,
Ella Fitzgerald. He composed soundtracks for Roots in the Heat
of the Night. He produced on the color Purple. He
(21:23):
was an EP of The Fresh Prince of bel Air.
He produced I didn't know this one. I saw this
this morning when I was reading just about some his stuff.
He produced and organized Bill Clinton's first inaugural celebration. He
oversaw the all star recording of We Are the World
in nineteen eighty five, that charity record that they did
for relief in Africa.
Speaker 8 (21:46):
Yes, a thriller beat it.
Speaker 13 (21:48):
There is so much, yes, And we grabbed some of
the like you know, just some of the music and
the things that he composed that a lot of people
probably wouldn't even know that he had his hand. And
I know a lot of it I learned this morning.
Speaker 4 (22:00):
Includes bombs, right. That's why you should watch the documentary
on Netflix, Quincy. It came out I think about five
six years ago. Learned, Yeah, you learned so.
Speaker 13 (22:08):
Much about You've always heard about like I've always heard anyway,
and just knowing how many different people, across genres and
across a career path that he's worked with, just how
much of a great composer and he just was able
to He's kind of like a chameleon.
Speaker 8 (22:20):
He was able to do so much.
Speaker 13 (22:20):
And I was saying, I don't think anybody today could
do that because he really just took everything out of it,
no bias though anything.
Speaker 8 (22:28):
He just did what'd like to do.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
Well.
Speaker 4 (22:29):
That man lived a full life ninety one years old.
We should be so blessed to live that long. But
what he did with those ninety one years, Like we
throw the word icon around very loosely nowadays, we throw
the word legend around very loosely nowadays. Quincy Jones was
the pure definition of all those things.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Absolutely.
Speaker 13 (22:44):
I want to also to sit for the Sun theme
song and Doc Charlotte. You watched the doc, right did
he talk about like when a lot of these different
earlier in his career, when a lot of these different
opportunities were come asway, how he knew which ones to
say yes to? Because everything he did was like super legendary,
But like was he strategic about that?
Speaker 4 (23:03):
It seemed to me like Quincy Jones did what he
wanted to do, like you know, and that's what I respect.
I respect longevity. People who aren't defined by an era.
They just always find ways to reinvent themselves.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
That was Quincy like he was the algorithm. He wasn't
a surfer.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
He was the way people put themselves in unnecessary boxes
nowadays because they give people what they feel they they want,
not what they need.
Speaker 3 (23:26):
Quincey gave you what you need. Yeah, he was a musician.
He created the sound like that's what we don't have now.
He's creating the sound for the next generation. When he
did Michael and when he did all the things that
he did, which is amazing. He was so ahead of
his sound.
Speaker 13 (23:38):
Well, one last you know music listen that I want
us to listen to Austin Powers, the theme song for
Austin Powers. I didn't know he did this one either.
That tripped me out that I watched that movie so much.
Speaker 4 (23:50):
What happened with that one? He did that in the sixties.
He did the original and they recreated it, and I
don't know if they recreated they just used it. I
think they recreated and they I think so, I don't
know they recreated. He did it in the sixties, sixties
soul bossing Nova, and they used it for the Austin.
Speaker 13 (24:04):
Power correct, gotcha, gotcha man to live a life like that.
Speaker 2 (24:08):
Said, It took him twenty minutes to do that.
Speaker 13 (24:11):
Twenty minutes to do that, and do you know, well,
y'all know that awesome Powers franchise is so big, huge,
and like everything that that was probably used for is amazing.
Yeah wow. But I mean when this morning, like you said,
he lived a full life. Ninety one years old is
a long time here, you got to see a lot.
Speaker 8 (24:27):
I know.
Speaker 13 (24:27):
I went to his Instagram just to see kind of
what like some of his last posts were. And the
last post I saw it was something posted with his
daughter talking about how he, you know, was just so
happy to be her dad. So he lived a life,
he had his family, you know, saying RP to the legend.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Ratzy jokes that Austin Power song.
Speaker 4 (24:41):
It was used by Judy Garland in the second episode
of The Judy Garland Show in nineteen sixty three. So
you just think about how that one piece of music,
you know, have been used for so many different things.
He first did it in nineteen sixty two, then it
was used for Judy Garland, then it was used for
a couple other movies, The Palwm broke it, Take Money
and Run, then it became Dauntin Power song, and he
(25:02):
it's just he's just an incredible human man.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Amazing.
Speaker 13 (25:04):
So beat the blessed like that because he from Chicago.
I was reading about his upbringing. It literally came from
like nothing. That's right to beat and to be blessed
like that.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
Watch the Do on Netflix, y'all, ye good day.
Speaker 8 (25:16):
I'm gonna go watch it tonight.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
To learn more about Quenche Jones.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
Okay, all right, legend, all right. That was Jess with
the mess with Lon Laos. So now when we come back,
we got front page news of Morgan Woods.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
They don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, good morning.
Speaker 3 (25:28):
Everybody's DJ env just hilarious. Charlamagne the guy. We are
the breakfast Club. Lon Laosa filling in for Jess, and
let's get in some front page news.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Now, nfls with quick sports.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
The Commanders beat the Giants, Bills beat the Dolphins, Titans
beat the Patriots. Chargers beat the Browns, the Falcons beat
the Cowboys, the Raiders beat the Bengals, the Cardinals beat
the Bears, the Ravens beat the Broncos, the Rams.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
Beat the Seahawks.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
I can beat the Colts, The Lions beat the Packers,
the Eagles beat the Jaguars, and did I say that
the Falcons beat the Cowboys, and.
Speaker 4 (25:59):
Then Monday night you hear about how your Giants got
beat to the Commander. See you, you lack self awareness
so much that you be trying to clown when your
team is at the bottom of the NF East.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
I know that your team got worst record than us,
but I'm not delirious. I didn't say my teams make
it to the Super Bowl.
Speaker 4 (26:12):
Neither, So what point is shut up? No, your team
is at the bottom of the nf so accept it
and don't and don't clown. Nobody know what they team doing.
Accept it, don't clown. Nobody on the bottle awareness thinks about.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
Where you are, not the Giants fan. Accept it.
Speaker 4 (26:31):
You got a soccer jersey on right now because your
team is so bad, and.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
I don't have it because my team because I went
to a soccer game this weekend. That's why. Because the
New York football teams is so terrible.
Speaker 4 (26:39):
Because my love soccer, y'all looking at another football My
son loves soccer.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
Yep. Good morning, Morgan dang, y'all.
Speaker 8 (26:46):
Good morning. Okay, so tomorrow you.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
Better stop it. Both of your teams won. You don't
even know what what fear you are.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Yeah, no, I'm good today.
Speaker 11 (26:54):
Yeah, tomorrow is election day, y'all, Tuesday, November fifth, on
top of news. Make sure you exercise your right vote.
Shout out all the first time voters. You guys got
a big job to do tomorrow. So yeah, Trump claimed, y'all,
the only way he'll lose Tuesday's election is if there's cheating.
So he's been busy, and his campaign has been busy
attempting to clarify recent comments made by the former president
(27:15):
over the weekend. The campaign says the GOP presidential nominee
was looking out for the media when he was talking
about assassination attempts targeting him during a rally in Pennsylvania
on Sunday. Let's take a listen to Trump at this
rally on Sunday in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 5 (27:30):
I have a piece of glass over here, and I
don't have a piece of last there. And I have
this piece of glass here, But all we have really
over here is the fake news man, And to get me,
somebody would have to shoot through the fake news. And
(27:56):
I don't mind that so much.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
I don't mind that now that's.
Speaker 8 (28:03):
The same type of stuff he do. And then be
like he I don't know where it came from.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
Yeah, so it's like he'll say that, you know, they'll
tell everybody else to tamper down on their rhetoric because
that's what causes people to try to assassinate him. But
then he'll do things like that and then act like
it never happened. He'll act like everybody else is the
one that's saying the type of rhetoric that could cause violence.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
But what was that just now?
Speaker 11 (28:26):
Well, in a statement, Trump's campaign spokesman said that he
stated the media was in danger and that should have
a glass and that they should also a glass protected
shield as well.
Speaker 4 (28:37):
Yeah, you know, you should stop doing, Morgan and all
media should stop doing.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
Stop trying to explain his BS.
Speaker 11 (28:43):
I'm not I'm not trying.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
I know you, I know you not.
Speaker 4 (28:46):
You're just saying you try, You're giving their inplanation for it.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
It sounds ridiculous, So.
Speaker 11 (28:51):
The spokesman added, there can be no other interpretation of
what was said.
Speaker 6 (28:56):
Uh.
Speaker 11 (28:56):
The statement ended with he was actually looking out for
their welfare are more than his own.
Speaker 4 (29:01):
So explain, explain, Explain why he said I wouldn't mind.
Speaker 13 (29:04):
That I about to say that that sounded a green
light to me.
Speaker 4 (29:07):
And that's what I don't understand when they when they
released these statements, like, well, explain why he said.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
I wouldn't mind that. Listen, y'all.
Speaker 12 (29:14):
I'm just reporting it.
Speaker 11 (29:15):
So Meanwhile, Florida Senator Macro Rubio, he's defending former President
Trump's comments made by a speaker at one of his rallies.
In an interview on CBS's Faced the Nation, the Miami
Republican downplayed the joke by comedian Tony Hinchcliffe that Puerto
Rico was garbage. Let's hear from Florida Senator marcro Rubio
in regards to those comments that Trump.
Speaker 18 (29:35):
Made and a comedian made a joke and it was tasteless,
but it wasn't Trump that said it.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
It wasn't.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
This guy's not going to be in his cabinet.
Speaker 18 (29:41):
I mean, this comedian is not going to be a
member of his government.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
He's certainly not running for anything.
Speaker 18 (29:45):
If it had to be done in hindsight, the guy
probably doesn't get invited, Okay, especially with a joke like that.
The sitting president of the United States said out loud
what most people in the Democratic Party and hierarchy belief,
and that is that anyone who votes for Donald Trump
is garbage, is a racist, as a hate he is
a Nazi.
Speaker 4 (30:01):
Not what he said though, and I don't even like
defending Joe Budden. What he said was anybody who supported
that comedian's jokes is garbage.
Speaker 11 (30:10):
Yeah, so Rubio, excuse me, went on to defend Trump's comments. Again,
These are a lot of comments that Trump said about
former US Representative Liz Cheney after she endorsed Harris, adding
that she wouldn't be a quote warhawk if she was
standing there with nine barrels shooting at her. Now, a
warhawk is a person who advocates for aggression, excuse me,
aggressive foreign policies or armed conflicts.
Speaker 15 (30:32):
Now.
Speaker 11 (30:32):
Rubio also went on to say that Cheney shouldn't face
a firing squad, but was instead trying to make the
point that so called warhawks wouldn't be so pro war
if they were placed.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
On the front lines.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
She sh this is.
Speaker 8 (30:45):
Gonna have your stuff, y'all.
Speaker 12 (30:46):
Please go out the vote anyways.
Speaker 8 (30:49):
Switching gears and bringing things home to New York.
Speaker 11 (30:51):
A judge is setting a trial date for New York
City Mayor Eric Adams or federal corruption charges. Judge dale
Hoe set April twenty first, twenty twenty five, for Adam's
trial date to start, which is a month later than
the speedier March trial date Adams acts. For now, Adam's
face is a possible Democratic primary in June not long
after that if he stays in the race for re election.
(31:12):
In addition, Adam's attorneys are trying to get the bribery
char charges against him tossed. Judge Ho said he would
consider the arguments made in court an attempt to rule shortly. Meantime,
prosecutors also said they're still unable to access the mayor's
personal phone one year after they seized it. They say
Adams changed the password the day before he knew they
were coming, and he said he can't remember what that
(31:34):
password is.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
Yeah, I wonder who Eric got him voting for.
Speaker 11 (31:39):
I know, right, because lately he's been very vocal about
like not calling Trump a fascist and things like that.
But he's also you know, along Democratic party lines. BOTHO
has been very clear about who she supports.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
He's been on the fence.
Speaker 8 (31:50):
Yeah, I feel like he got to say new to
right now, right just in case, you know, he might
need to call on whoever wins, they need that pardon
and not he forgot the password. Yes, all right, ch'all.
So that's your front page news. I'm Morgan. We'll following
you on social ad more.
Speaker 11 (32:04):
And media, and for more news coverage, follow APT Black
Information Network, download the free iHeartRadio app and visit us
at bi nnews dot com.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
Happy Monday, Thank you Morgan. Now when we come back,
roll Conanna and job Moore will be joining us.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Of course.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
Rocana is the US representative from California, Job More from
South Carolina. We're gonna talk to him next. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
Good morning.
Speaker 3 (32:27):
Everybody is DJ MV Jess hilarious, Charlamagne the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club, low on the roster, filling in
for jests. We got some special guests joining us this morning.
We got US representative of Rocanna from California, and we
got Ja Moore from South Carolina.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
Vote Carolina state representatives.
Speaker 3 (32:43):
J Welcome, how y'all feeling to say great to be
on to be here. What do you guys think about
the rally in New York and Madison Square Guard? What
were your thoughts?
Speaker 7 (32:51):
Here's the thing you know, Maya Angela once said that
words are things, and you've got to be careful about
how you use words.
Speaker 19 (32:59):
Now, I'm a free speech person, but that doesn't mean
old speech.
Speaker 2 (33:02):
Is good speech.
Speaker 7 (33:03):
We teach our kids to be thoughtful about how they
use words because of respect. We have had this situation
in this country that if you think something is funny,
that somehow that's a license to insult people. Just because
something is funny doesn't mean that you can denigrate people
based on their race and gender and just say, oh, okay,
(33:24):
I was just making a joke.
Speaker 19 (33:26):
I thought the vile.
Speaker 7 (33:28):
Attacks on racial groups in the context of a political
rally was horrendous and someone needs to say, yeah, okay,
you can have humor, but not everything in this country
can be justified just because it's funny.
Speaker 2 (33:42):
I thought those bad politics.
Speaker 4 (33:43):
It's like, you know, a week before the election, you know,
and you know you're gonna need Latino people, you're gonna
need Black people, you're gonna need you as people. You
just put somebody up there to insult them.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Kind of great.
Speaker 20 (33:53):
Yeah, I mean, I think it's just another misstep by
the Trump campaign and Trump himself. It was a a
I don't know, I don't even know if it was
desperate and I was just nuts. It didn't make sense.
I don't know why you would, you know, would all
due respect I'm a Knicks fan, with all due respect
to New York, why you would do a rally in
New York anyway when it's not a battleground state that
(34:15):
makes sense.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
It was a terrible move on this part.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
What's the stop Wall Street? Landlord lke Bro.
Speaker 7 (34:20):
You know what's going on right now is private equity.
These big companies they're buying up single family homes, and
they're buying up largely in working class neighborhood. By doing that,
they're making the prices of these homes go up, and
they're making the prices of rents go up. And you're
in my tax dollars or subsidizing them. So this says,
stop giving them a subsidy. You shouldn't have Wall Street
(34:41):
firms getting tax dollars that go buy up single family homes.
And by the way, they're doing them largely in black
and brown communities across this country, and it's outrageous.
Speaker 4 (34:50):
If you stop Wall Street from doing it, how do
you make it the way people from the community can
actually not just purchase those homes, but have the equity
to reinvest into those homes and you know renovative.
Speaker 7 (34:59):
Well, that's a a big, big question why home ownership
has gone down the biggest source of wealth. You know,
homeownership is about sixty two percent in the white community,
forty five percent in the black community. One, you need
to build more homes so that you can bring the
price down. But you know the bottom line is you
got to have higher paying jobs. I mean, you've had
(35:21):
jobs in this country with the working in middle class
stagnate in wages. And one of the reasons I wanted
to come on and JA and I've been working on
is you know, I represent Silicon Valley twelve trillion dollars
of value, Apple, Google, Intel, and Vidia. We've got to
create those high paying jobs in many other parts of America.
(35:42):
For you look at the bulk of wealth generation in
this country over the last forty years, a lot of
it has come out of technology, and whether it's high
paying manufacturing or high paying technology jobs. We've got to
actually do that in community so people could go have
a salary to buy a house. We built We did
a sum DA and I and others in Clafflin with
(36:03):
forty historically black colleges and universities. We got Apple there,
we got Google there, we got Nvidia, we got Microsoft.
They've created a program seventy one percent placement rate, eighteen
month course, ten hours a week. You end up with
a sixty five to one hundred thousand dollars job in
different technology skills. It doesn't even require coding. We've got
(36:23):
to create more opportunities for people that actually build wealth
in a modern economy.
Speaker 19 (36:27):
That's how they're going to be able to afford housing.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
Let me ask you a question, though, right, So, I
believe in you, and I feel like, especially our community,
most of our generational wealth starts from home ownership, right,
passed down from generations to generations. One question I do
have is sometimes when you put these laws into effect,
it just doesn't affect.
Speaker 2 (36:44):
The people they are trying to get. It effects other people.
Speaker 3 (36:46):
Let me break it down, right, So, for instance, my
dad was a police officer, police officer, he retired. My
mother worked at a life insurance company. Didn't make a
lot of money. They saved all their life. They bought
their first house with twenty eight thousand dollars, right, lived
in that house for forty six years, it's worth let's
say five hundred thousand dollars, six hundred thousand dollars. When
they pass, they pay taxes on that house. They paid
(37:07):
everything that they needed to pay for the rest of
their life. When they passed that house down to their child,
they have to pay taxes on that. That child who
gets that house has to pay taxes on that. Again,
that's behind the buck for somebody that's trying to make it. Now,
if this was somebody else, like let's say Donald Trump,
that received a million dollar loan and this family has wealth,
I understand it. But how can somebody in these communities
create wealth when they're getting taxed twice like somebody else
(37:30):
and they don't have the same tax breaks, they don't
know the same accountants. That's my only problem when I
hear some of these things, because I get it, Yes,
people have to pay their fair share. When you have
people that come from those communities that are trying to
create generational well for the first time first time millionaires,
first time people making five hundred thousand dollars, it affects
and hurt them as well.
Speaker 13 (37:49):
Especially too, because a lot of times in those situations,
by the time it's passed down to that second or
third generation, the mom, dad, grandmother make owe money that
now you inherit and it's a lumpsum.
Speaker 8 (38:00):
It's not just like oh I got to pay the
text for this year.
Speaker 13 (38:02):
It might be like a lot of money that they've
just been figuring it out and now you know, and
now it's in your lab and you got to figure
that out or you don't own the house anymore.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
So what do you say to those people that are
saying like, yeah, I agree, but you know, my mom
just sold she paid twenty eight thousand. I sold it
for five hundred thousand. Now they're taking forty percent taxes
on property that she already paid tax. How can they
create generational wealth when that's starting behind the eight bawl already?
Speaker 19 (38:24):
I hear you.
Speaker 7 (38:24):
I think we should have an exemption for passing down
your actual house to family. Maybe exempt the first two
million or up to three five million, and we can
figure it out and that's not going to cost the
federal government a lot of revenue. You know what's going
on right now because while you're taxing the guy you're
(38:44):
talking about or the daughter you're talking about, who is
getting a half a million dollar house passed to them,
and they're having.
Speaker 19 (38:50):
To pay tax.
Speaker 7 (38:51):
At the same time, you got these multi billionaires in
my district in Silicon Valley. They buy Facebook stock for
one thousand bucks, that stock go up to one hundred thousand.
They pass that stock, they don't pay capital gains tax
on it. Then they pass that stock down to their kids,
and their kids don't pay any of the appreciation. So
you've got a rigged system that is hurting the working
(39:14):
and middle class from building wealth and allowing the top
one percent to continue to build without paying tax. And
the Republicans are very clever. Every time we say we
want to tax that top one or ten percent, they
talk about all the other eighty percent. They said, your
taxes are going to go up. But the Democrats have
to say is no, you're working class, you're middle class,
you want to build wealth.
Speaker 19 (39:34):
We're going to give you an exemption. We're going to
shift the tax burden to the multi millionaires who have
benefited from this system. But one more point to you,
and look, I'm all for home ownership. I think home
ownership is we've.
Speaker 7 (39:47):
Got to figure out more ways to get the disparity
not to be sixty two percent in the white community
and forties low forty percent of the black communities. But technology,
here's what I fundamentally believe. It's a generational opportunity to
overcome the racial wealth generation gap. One generation, the Black
community was excluded in the agricultural revolution with the loans
(40:08):
from the USDA that we're targeting, excluded in the manufacturing revolution.
Shame on US as a country in twenty twenty four.
If we exclude communities from the digital revolution, there is
an opportunity in one generation to build extraordinary wealth with AI,
with new technology, with new industry. And that's what I
want to try to say, is why don't we get
(40:30):
these opportunities to more of the community so they actually
can build wealth that you never will overcome the racial
wealth generation gap just with taxation and redistribution.
Speaker 19 (40:41):
Unless you overcome the racial wealth generation gap.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
We got more with Rocanna in job more when we
come back, don't move his the Breakfast Club good morning,
wanting everybody as j NV Jess, Hilarius Charlamagna, God we
ought to Breakfast Club long and the Rosa fill and
info Jess. We're still kicking it at Rocana, US representative
from California job more from South Carolina.
Speaker 2 (40:59):
Now one day away from elections, how do y'all feel?
Speaker 7 (41:03):
I'm hopeful, I'm optimistic. I think that I believe the
young people are going to come out and vote for Harris.
I think this thing is overblown in terms of that.
You would know more of about the black vote Latino vote.
I mean, I don't A lot of the men I meet,
they're voting for her. Black men and a lot of
Latino men are voting for her. So I think that
she's going to win the Michigan Pennsylvania. It's going to
(41:28):
be close, but I think the polls actually are underestimating
her support. And you know, you made a great point
about this image of why is it that we think
traditionally of the Republicans as the business party, because that's
that's all that Donald was running on. You know, Frankly,
if he had never had Apprentice, he never would have
been president. Hates not enough to become president. I mean,
(41:48):
the Madison Square Garden stuff wasn't enough. It's because you
had fourteen years in people's living rooms as being this
business guy. And the Trump signed and I think we've
got to be look all New Wealth, the technology, the innovation,
all of that's not being created by the old class.
It's a whole new generation. It's a whole new group
(42:09):
of entrepreneurs. I consider you guys entrepreneurs. If that's the
new wealth, that's the new innovation. And I fundamentally believe
that's when when Kamala Harris say issues for the future,
that's what she represents. And I think that's the image
that's going to prevail.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
And I think it's gonna come down.
Speaker 20 (42:23):
And maybe I'm biased with something from South Carolina, but
I think if we win North Carolina and we win Georgia,
we win. And I've had the pleasure of traveling. I
just got back from Nevada. I mean, I feel cautiously optimistic.
And everywhere I'm going, I mean, I'm in the uber
and people as much. The more Donald Trump talks and
(42:46):
that's crazy stuff like he did here in New York,
the better kama has has. I mean, I think I
feel good about it. I'm cautiously optimistic about it.
Speaker 4 (42:54):
It's it interesting to me that, you know, with all
of the things Trump is that I don't even need
to run down his whole resume, but when I just
look at two impeachments eighty eight criminal charges, thirty four
he was convicted of. To me, that alone should be disqualified, Like,
why isn't there anything that legally that prevents him from
even being on the ballot. I know they got section
(43:16):
three of the fourteenth Yeah, yeah, but Supreme Court shot
that down.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
Well, you know the pip the Congress.
Speaker 7 (43:23):
The people who let him off the hook were Mitch
McConnell and Kevin McCarthy. I remember talking to Kevin McCarthy
after we impeached Donald Trump in the House and I said,
and Kevin McCarthy and Mitch McConnell are telling you about
how terrible it was what he did on January sixth,
And I said, well, this is the reason we've got
to convict him in the Senate. And I said, oh,
(43:44):
Donald Trump's done. He's not coming back. His numbers were
thirty percent in the polls.
Speaker 6 (43:49):
Wow.
Speaker 19 (43:49):
They didn't think he would ever come back.
Speaker 10 (43:51):
Wow.
Speaker 7 (43:51):
And they let the guy off the hook. In terms
of if they had convicted him back then, he wouldn't
have been able to run.
Speaker 19 (43:57):
And it was the biggest error.
Speaker 7 (43:59):
And I blame the Senate for not having the guts
back then to convict him. But this point in the media,
which I've heard you make a number of times, is
absolutely right. I mean, no one they're asking Kamala Harris
every detail of every plan. I'm fine, but no one
is pointing out the fundamental point of the convictions and
(44:24):
the illegality and the total shocking nature of Trump's candidacy.
Speaker 4 (44:31):
Oh, I want to ask you about the Section three
or fourteenth Amendment, because the Supreme Court, you know, they
say it's not up to the state when the states
are trying to take them off to the ballot. It's
not up the states, is up to Congress. Congress would
have never done that because it was a Republican led
Congress at the time, right, there.
Speaker 7 (44:44):
Was a Republican led Congress at the time, and the
Senate would never have done it. And the Senate was
not even willing to convict them of the actual charges.
And they all thought, by the way, McConnell, you asked them,
I'm sure it'll come out when they're they're biographies. They
all thought that what Trump it was an impeachable offense
and convictim. But they said, why why should we upset
(45:04):
thirty percent of base? Because his numbers were down at
thirty percent. You know, why should we upset thirty percent
of our base when the guy's gonna go away anyway
and we're gonna have a new generation Nikki Haley. Ron
You remember Ron DeSantis was their big thing. They all
thought Ron DeSantis was gonna win. Yeah, they had written
dot Trump off. They thought Trump would go away quietly,
(45:25):
and that's why they didn't want to put their next
out to upset thirty percent of that base.
Speaker 4 (45:29):
I think the biggest problem is that nobody treats Trump
like the actual threat that he is. The DJ didn't
treat him like that, the media doesn't treat him like that,
voters don't treat him like that, and so it's just like, yeah,
if there's no consequences to your actions, what are we
supposed to do?
Speaker 20 (45:46):
And I think we also take for granted the segment
of the population that he inspires, and I'm, you know,
the good people and all that, but it's it's something
about that sect that that that third percent that you're
talking about, they're not going anywhere. And if you have
that kind of base, especially going into a primary, you're
(46:06):
I mean, you're a well positioned and then so many
other people of my colleagues, even at the State House
in South Carolina, just all keep falling in line because
they're so worried about their own political futures and not
about the country. And I think all of us over
these next what it's seven eight days left, we need
to be aware of that.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
And no one can sit home.
Speaker 20 (46:28):
I'm telling all the brothers out there now that can
hear me, don't have a non vote, protest vote against
the Democratic Party.
Speaker 1 (46:35):
That we can't afford to do that this time. And
we just cannot afford to do it.
Speaker 20 (46:39):
And after this election, whatever grievance you had, if you voted,
just you know, you know, and feel whatever, just take
it up with the elected officials and hold us accountable
once we get elected. Elect Kamala Harris on November fifth,
and then hold all of us accountable as elected Democrats.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
I mean, that's really my call for the brothers out there.
I can hear me.
Speaker 19 (47:01):
And the media is scary.
Speaker 7 (47:02):
I mean, look at all these people, these billionaires were
owning the newspapers. Suddenly they're saying that, well, we may
not want to endorse because Trump may win. Now, what
is that vote in terms of the media actually standing
up to him if he wins.
Speaker 16 (47:19):
This is the.
Speaker 7 (47:20):
Classic tactic of authoritarian leaders that they intimidate any dissent.
And it's not that people often wonder, well, how do
they get to power. It's not that people suddenly all
start rallying around them. It's that they get enough of
a base rallying around them, and they put enough fear
in everyone else to say, Okay, we're gonna as long
(47:41):
as they don't come after us.
Speaker 19 (47:43):
We don't want to get in the way.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
Well, go out and vote, and we appreciate you guys
for joining us this morning. Really do thank you. You
got an election coming up to right.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Oh yeah, I'm on the ballots you guys. Jaymore stay Representative.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
Carolina South Carolina, and of course Representative I do.
Speaker 19 (47:59):
Too, California.
Speaker 7 (48:00):
And we gotta win, not just mine set, we gotta
win for four Democratic House seats out of California to
take back the majority. So uh we can have a
king Jeffries, Speaker of the House.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
Well, it's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 6 (48:12):
Good morning, warning everybody, it's DJ.
Speaker 2 (48:14):
En Vy, Jess, Larry Charlamagne, the guy. We are the
Breakfast Club. Good morning yo. Now we got Jess with
the mess coming up a little bit we do.
Speaker 8 (48:22):
We're gonna get into the hot boys. Were you and y'all?
I was in New Orleans. I was there. I seen
it in real time. Man, I ain't never witnessed nothing
like that.
Speaker 2 (48:29):
It was New Orleans. I love New Orleans.
Speaker 8 (48:31):
Well, it just felt it was home for the weekend.
Like it felt like that too.
Speaker 13 (48:36):
All my ober drivers wanted to talk about the fact that,
like they just knew you was in town for that,
so they wanted to talk about like, oh, I got
a cousin that grew up with baby and a small Yeah,
like they you know, going through all the miss of
you know, cash money and the baby GE's and all
that stuff.
Speaker 2 (48:51):
To go out. What did you do the show?
Speaker 16 (48:53):
I ate?
Speaker 2 (48:54):
I want to.
Speaker 13 (48:55):
I went to the brunch spot I want to Monday
Mondays spot. Shoan Clarry too. He made sure I was
good all that. I had a bartender named Jin and
a waiter name Bri the combination of those too.
Speaker 8 (49:09):
And I was there. But I had a great time.
The best limit drop I had it was I was like,
was this pre made? This mix is so crazy yourself?
Speaker 2 (49:15):
Yeah, I just went real quick to sign a confidence.
Speaker 8 (49:18):
Oh you don't you don't know me by now sign
a confidence? I oozed it? Are you crazy?
Speaker 2 (49:23):
Okay, okay, you went to the ball by yourself?
Speaker 13 (49:25):
Well I was only there for like thirty minutes because
I was headed to uh We had the Amazon had
the Little Louisy NFS con and they did a panel,
so I moderated the panel with everyone from the Amazon
Music team about what they were doing in New Orleans
and being a black creative. And then after that we
went straight to the festival. So I had to go change.
So I didn't have a lot of times, but I
just wanted to get in one of like Larry's spots.
Speaker 2 (49:46):
So did you go out at night?
Speaker 8 (49:47):
And now I didn't make it either night? No, No,
that's not true.
Speaker 13 (49:51):
Friday night we went to Burbon Street after we did
the Culture Creators dinner.
Speaker 8 (49:55):
We had a time.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
Did nobody trying to hollered you was eating by yourself?
I'm sorry, I didn't mean this to go back there
asking nobody try theology.
Speaker 8 (50:01):
Why are you in my business?
Speaker 4 (50:02):
I'm just asking that is that is a very like
that's a sign of self confidence and it's a way
to assert independence when you see people like eating alone
or going to movies and stuff alone.
Speaker 2 (50:11):
It's dope.
Speaker 8 (50:12):
Had a great time.
Speaker 4 (50:14):
Oh you got some new numbers. Well you ain't got
no type of poker face. You are the easiest person
to terror gate.
Speaker 8 (50:23):
I really don't, my friends, your poker face is horrible.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
We could never have a bag was his name? Don't
do it.
Speaker 13 (50:29):
I literally met my waitress her name was brit and
the bar tender her name was Jim. The lemon drop
was amazing. I had the grits with the catfish and the.
Speaker 2 (50:38):
Yep, the crab. Yeah, yeah, I didn't make it. Got
oh my, I love that?
Speaker 11 (50:49):
All right?
Speaker 8 (50:50):
All right, the music, I will.
Speaker 2 (50:53):
Never leave there, don't move.
Speaker 3 (50:54):
It's the breakfast like good morning to look to everybody
in Delaware. I just want to salute to all my
family laying friends out in Delaware.
Speaker 8 (51:01):
Got family in Delaware.
Speaker 2 (51:03):
Oh I'm just I'm here with you.
Speaker 13 (51:05):
I'm saying to my family, be getting the dose of
me being my my uh caretaker life as the oldest
child in the family.
Speaker 8 (51:12):
He's never.
Speaker 19 (51:14):
Life.
Speaker 13 (51:15):
My grandma's having a small procedure today and I'm here
coordinating live from New York.
Speaker 8 (51:18):
My family as they just wanted to give you a
you know the.
Speaker 2 (51:21):
Way You're dealing with all your family members on one.
Speaker 8 (51:23):
Call and be this is like Jesus, this is light work.
I can do it in my sleep.
Speaker 2 (51:27):
I'm glad I'm the only child. All right, Well, let's
get to Jest with the mess with Lola Rosa.
Speaker 9 (51:30):
Louise is real us just carrobbing Moore.
Speaker 2 (51:33):
Just don't do no lines, don't do.
Speaker 15 (51:36):
Talk nobody talk Station World Why world Wise Master talk
on the breakfast Clubs the Coaches with Lauren Lauren ros
I'm back and I got the mess talk to me.
Speaker 13 (51:53):
So Little Weisy Infest went down over the weekend in
New Orleans. During Little Weisy n Fest, the Hot Boys
reunited for the first time in over fifteen years.
Speaker 8 (52:02):
On stage. Rob for nine opened up for them, and
I was there.
Speaker 13 (52:08):
And when I tell y'all, the energy like Charlotte keeps
making it a point to be like you were in
New Orleans. And I get it because I like it
was you felt like you just felt it like you
really just.
Speaker 2 (52:19):
Just hit different. Oh, I got it.
Speaker 4 (52:21):
Show hit different because it's in LA Yes, this hit
different because it was in news.
Speaker 8 (52:26):
It hits so different.
Speaker 13 (52:27):
And I know that there have been so many conversations
you remember back at Essence Festival, it was supposed to
be the reunion and Wanne did his own thing like,
so I was curious. I'm like, yo, how did this
all come about? Because not only were they there, but
y'all they were in great spirits, like they were so happy.
So we talked to I did the live stream the
pre show live stream with Amazon on Amazon Prime in Twitch,
and we got to talk to Turk, Juvenile and many fresh.
(52:50):
Let's have a listen to Turk because what I learned
was that little Wayne was one who made the phone
calls to put it all together.
Speaker 2 (52:54):
Let's take a listen. I'm more happy than the fans,
I believe.
Speaker 8 (52:58):
Yeah, it was that emotional for you when it finally
came together.
Speaker 13 (53:00):
What was the moment because Juvenile said that Wayne was
like the connecting piece, like everybody listens to him, right,
So was it a call from Wayne?
Speaker 8 (53:08):
Like what brought it all back?
Speaker 2 (53:10):
Call from Wayne?
Speaker 6 (53:11):
What was that like?
Speaker 1 (53:12):
From Wayne?
Speaker 2 (53:13):
It was like me you calling me?
Speaker 21 (53:14):
You feel man?
Speaker 2 (53:15):
It was like a God answer prayer.
Speaker 1 (53:17):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (53:18):
You know, sometimes you have a lot of adversity, you
have a lot of people.
Speaker 21 (53:22):
Trying to stop things from going forward, you know, just
to get that right energy to finally come. You know
what I'm saying, Man, weesey, you know it's God. God
worked through Weasy and what y'all gonna see the night
is nothing but God.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
I'm glad at.
Speaker 4 (53:37):
Wayne the only one who could have brought it together
because he's the one in the position of power.
Speaker 2 (53:40):
Like that's Wayne, Like you know, yeah.
Speaker 4 (53:43):
They said by the year two thousand, Wayne was gonna
tear this game.
Speaker 2 (53:45):
Up, and he did that. So now you know what,
let me come back and bring it all back together.
Speaker 13 (53:49):
And we also too, for times sake, I didn't throw
this in there, but I wanted to mention it too.
When I was talking to BG and I was asking him, like, man,
when you were locked up, did you think that this
would be like happening? Like I know that you watching
them and they're doing well. Wayne's doing well, baby, still
doing well. But did you think that you'll be here
right now and this would be happening? And he said
to me, he was like, honestly, I felt buried alive
when I was there, like because everything just kind of
(54:11):
stops and people are moving, so you don't really know
what what happened. When Beg came out on that stage, y'all,
I literally just stopped and started recording the crowd. He
didn't even have to sing the way that they received him.
I was like, wow, like these this they mean so
much to get.
Speaker 6 (54:28):
Yes.
Speaker 19 (54:29):
Yes.
Speaker 13 (54:30):
We also talked to many Fresh because remember Manny Fresh
was up here at Breakfast Club with Juvenile and I
asked them what we get the reunion.
Speaker 8 (54:36):
They were like, oh, we got to have the conversations.
Come to find out. They knew the whole time it
was going to go down, and said, listen.
Speaker 13 (54:41):
Last time I saw you Breakfast Club, we were trying
to figure out if this would happen.
Speaker 8 (54:46):
Now we are here.
Speaker 4 (54:47):
Yeah, I told y'all speaking into existence, it's gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (54:51):
You already knew what's happening there.
Speaker 8 (54:52):
Okay, did you know then months ago that this was
going to happen.
Speaker 2 (54:56):
Yeah, the first half of the deposit Gut.
Speaker 8 (55:01):
He came through.
Speaker 6 (55:02):
Yeah, I got the first half of it without before
I talked, So I.
Speaker 2 (55:07):
Was like, it's going down.
Speaker 8 (55:10):
I thought that that was little too, because it was like, Okay,
it's been months in a making. Rob for not mention
that too.
Speaker 13 (55:14):
He was like, no, Wayne's been working on this, like
he been wanted this to happen now when they also
to you guys heard mouse Jones in that audio, shout
out the mounth Jones and Waite know they hosted the
appreciation now when it came out on stage, because Wayne
did like a metal melody of songs and then he
brought them out many fresh acts. He came out and
brought them out. Let's take a listen to that. They
(55:35):
did Hot Boys. That was the first song they came
on stage.
Speaker 2 (55:37):
Two.
Speaker 8 (55:56):
Yeah, so it was like y'all had everybody separate because
Wayne did it.
Speaker 13 (55:59):
Wayne did his songs, BG did his songs, Turk did
some songs, Juvenile did some songs, and then they brought
everybody out.
Speaker 8 (56:05):
They did Hot Girl. Baby came. Baby was there as
well too. On stage with them.
Speaker 13 (56:10):
They did back that Can I back that up? I
didn't not can say that word. They end up a
bunch of different songs and then when they ended it,
Wayne was like, man, you know, I'm so happy to
be here.
Speaker 8 (56:19):
Get shout out to my brothers.
Speaker 13 (56:20):
But watching them on stage together, I have videos that
I posted to Bronkar grinding. It was literally like little kids,
like little brothers just reuniting and they were so happy.
Speaker 4 (56:29):
It was a perfect song for them to come out
to because they all go back and forth, you know
what they do, back and forth, like the perfect song.
Speaker 13 (56:37):
One video I had, They're literally on the front of
the stage and like Wayne's hopping in front of BG,
then BG hops, then Turk Like it was just I
was like, man, you felt the love from the stage
and even then talking to them, I felt the love.
Speaker 6 (56:48):
Now.
Speaker 13 (56:48):
There was one point untward the end of the show
because Wayne was honored, he was giving a key to
the city, and master P came out on stage, which
I also thought was dope, knowing the history between No
Limited Cash Money and the Hot Boys and all that,
and master P was telling people like Wayne is going
to be the first person in New Orleans to receive
a star on the New Orleans Walk of Fame on
Canal Street, and they give them the key to the city.
(57:08):
But then Wayne had you know something to say about
the whole Super Bowl conversation. Let's say a listen to that.
Speaker 22 (57:13):
During my lifetime, the first Super Bowl was here, I
made sure I bought tickets at the beginning of the season.
I did the same when I moved to Miami, and
I was wishing my team making and guess who made
it that year? The mother Saints. I was able to
give my mama that sweep. She was able to bring
my family and other people from New Orleans and they
(57:34):
had a ball. That moment, I said to myself, I
want to be on stage for the Super Bowl one
day in front of my mom and I worked.
Speaker 2 (57:44):
My off to get that position and it was ripped
away from me. But this moment right here, they can't
take that, man, they can't take that from me.
Speaker 13 (58:01):
So everybody, of course, you know the word ripped away
from me, and then you play mister Carter after they're like, oh,
it is a shot at jay Z again, igniting that
whole conversation, and.
Speaker 2 (58:10):
I will say, I do wonder I was Wayne promised something.
Speaker 4 (58:13):
That's what I want to know, because he's taught, he's
just very entitled, or he was promised something.
Speaker 2 (58:18):
I would like to know which one it is.
Speaker 3 (58:20):
But he had a conversation I thought, after I seen
an interview he did after I thought, and he was
in the dressing room and he was talking about that.
Speaker 2 (58:25):
He I guess felt like it was his already. But
that's what I mean. Was it a sense of entitlement
or was he promised something?
Speaker 13 (58:32):
I don't know, But when I heard that, I had
actually went backstage because this was after, like he did
more songs after the reunion appen and I was like,
y'all need to take a break, went back sage. We
watching it on the monitors. When I heard ripped away
from me, I said, Oh, Wayne, it's starting to fire again.
Speaker 8 (58:47):
He's starting to fire again.
Speaker 1 (58:48):
But it was.
Speaker 13 (58:48):
It was a really really great night. And I know
you said that you saw some people asking about why
Drake wasn't there.
Speaker 3 (58:52):
I didn't feel like Dupree said, you know, he's a
hip hop lover and he felt like Drake missed the moment.
Speaker 2 (58:59):
But I disagree with you. Make make said it was
it was a reunion. It would have been had nothing
to do with it.
Speaker 13 (59:04):
Yeah, it would have been really weird, not weird, like
awkward if Drake was there. No, no, like, no shade
because he just didn't fit like that's.
Speaker 2 (59:10):
What he said. He said it was last but.
Speaker 4 (59:12):
He was, y'all don't realize how long Little Wayne has
been around. Little Wayne's been around since like ninety seven,
ninety eight, when him and Beg was doing the baby
gangster projects together, So that hot Boys thing has nothing
to do with Drake do your Money.
Speaker 13 (59:25):
Even Many Fresh right, who you know has produced a
lot of those songs, a lot of the show Many
Fresh events, took a step back and let them have.
Speaker 8 (59:33):
Like when they was doing that bar for bar going
back and for Many Fresh step back.
Speaker 2 (59:36):
He just let them go.
Speaker 8 (59:37):
So Drake Ben there would have been really like how
to play.
Speaker 2 (59:39):
It didn't make sense. It would have made sense.
Speaker 13 (59:41):
I was like, I know my audience is different than Wayne's.
I'm just here to support you, know what I mean.
It was really their moment. And y'all when I tell
you that sold out crowd.
Speaker 3 (59:47):
That was a real was having his own moment in Toronto.
That was the first time that the Toronto Raptors retired
a jersey. Ever it was Vince caught her. So he
wanted to be there for his people.
Speaker 13 (59:56):
And be there to throw some salt at Derozen. I
guess we're gonna get into it all right.
Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
Well that was Jess with the mess. Now, Charloamann, who
are giving your dounkle?
Speaker 14 (01:00:06):
Two?
Speaker 4 (01:00:06):
We need Donald Trump to come to the front of congregation.
We'd like to have a word with him. All right,
we'll get into that. NeXT's the breakfast Cloak in the morning,
the breakfast club. Your mornings will never be the same.
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
Hanod J.
Speaker 5 (01:00:17):
Trump is calling for a total and complete chuckdown of
Muslims entering the United States. Would you love to see
one of these NFL owners when somebody disrespects our flag.
Speaker 19 (01:00:26):
To say, get that son of a bitch off the
field right now out.
Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
He's tired, he's tired. Please step up to the congregation.
Yes you are again.
Speaker 7 (01:00:41):
When Mexico they're not sending their best, they're bringing drugs,
They're bringing.
Speaker 4 (01:00:51):
Hey, man, I'm just hearing pist mag off donkey today
for Monday, November fourth goes to the forty fifth President
of the United States of America, Donald J.
Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
Trump. Tomorrow is election day.
Speaker 4 (01:01:00):
And you know I will never lie to you and
tell you that who you vote for will solve all
your problems. That is just not true, That is just
not accurate. But who you vote for, it can make
your life a little bit better or can make it
a lot worse. And I don't know about y'all, but
I'm tired of the country flirting with fascism. Okay, we
at some point have to realize the nuclear weapons that
we are playing with. If I started to say fire,
but we're not playing with fire. We playing with something
(01:01:21):
a lot worse. And I don't understand why so many
of us can't see how this man, Donald Trump, just
continues to play in our face. I will never understand
why Republicans chose this man to represent them again, It's
mind boggling to me. I mean, damn there any conservative
could have represented the GOP better than this, but instead
they continue to prop up the most divisive president in
American history. I really have asked myself what is God
(01:01:43):
trying to show America through Donald J.
Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
Trump?
Speaker 4 (01:01:46):
And I really believe, in my heart of hearts that
he is just a reflection of so many people in
systems in this country, just a whole outdated way of thinking. Altogether.
It is my sole belief that Donald J. Trump is
the Frankenstein Monster of white supremacy. White people don't even
know what to do with Trump. This is what happens
when that privilege in power goes unchecked. It eventually cannibalizes,
cannibalizes the very system that created it. Okay, that's another
(01:02:09):
story let's get back to why Trump is getting donkey
here to day to day. Okay, Over the weekend, he
made a couple of statements that would be disqualifying for
anyone else but not Trump. By the way, I don't
even know what disqualifying means anymore, because there is no
real qualifications to be president, and Trump has shown me
there is nothing you can do to not be able
to run for president either. But this weekend Trump said
two things. First, one, when folks like myself would say
(01:02:33):
if people when folks like myself would say what he said,
people would say I was overreacting and I was talking crazy.
But I always said, Trump isn't leaving the White House
if he loses in twenty twenty. He damn sure tried
not to leave by leading an attempt to cool his country.
But this weekend he said the choiet part out loud.
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Let's listen.
Speaker 23 (01:02:52):
On the last Sunday rally before election.
Speaker 5 (01:02:55):
Day, we had the safest border in the history of
our country.
Speaker 2 (01:02:58):
The day that I left. Shouldn't have left.
Speaker 23 (01:03:00):
Former President Donald Trump told a crowd of supporters that
he shouldn't have left the White House after the twenty
twenty election and took an aggressive job at the media,
while describing the protective glass around his podium on stage.
Speaker 5 (01:03:15):
And I have this piece of glass here, but all
we have really over here is the fake news man.
And to get me, somebody would have to shoot through
the fake news.
Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
And I don't mind that so much.
Speaker 23 (01:03:35):
Trump's campaign quickly put out a statement after the Lancaster rally, saying,
in part, the president's comments weren't about the press, but
instead about his own personal safety in light of two
assassination attempts against him earlier this year.
Speaker 4 (01:03:49):
A lot to unpact there, Eddie isolate the second part
for me about the media. I want to come back
to that. I want to talk about the first part
of what he said. Now, maybe he meant he shouldn't
have left, as in voters shouldn't have voted him out,
But when you look at the fact he tried to
stage and attempted coup on January sixth, twenty twenty one,
and you look at the fact now that he's projecting,
and by projecting, saying how Democrats are going to steal
(01:04:12):
the election, even though the only people currently doing everything
they can to suppress the vote is the Republicans, all right,
They are already are purging voters and trying to restrict
the twenty twenty four US election vote. And Georgia they
are suing to block hand returned mail ballots. They just
lost two back to back lawsuits in North Carolina and Pennsylvania.
Republicans were challenging voter registration prestigures. They are the ones
(01:04:35):
trying to manipulate the election. But we will get to
that after Tuesday, because it's going to be a lot
of that after Tuesday, trust me, because Donald Trump is
not going to accept the results of this year's election,
just like he didn't accept.
Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
Him in twenty twenty. It's just this time it'll be
a lot worse.
Speaker 4 (01:04:50):
But I will say, nobody will ever deprive the American
people of the right to vote except the American people themselves.
Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
And the only way they could do this is by
not voting. You know who said that, FDR. Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:05:03):
Now, the other reason Trump is getting donkey here today
is simply because he said he doesn't mind reporters getting
shot at.
Speaker 2 (01:05:09):
You just heard it.
Speaker 4 (01:05:10):
The man has already said he wants the jail journalist.
He's suing CBS right now for ten billion dollars. The
man wants sued Bill Maher. In twenty twenty two, at
a rally, he said that if reporters don't reveal their sources,
he will put them in prison until they do.
Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
And now he said he don't mind if reporters get
shot at Listen.
Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
I have a piece of glass over here, and I
don't have a piece of glass there, and I have
this piece of glass here. But all we have really
over here is the fake news man. And to get me,
(01:05:55):
somebody would have to shoot through the fake news. And
I don't mind that so much.
Speaker 8 (01:06:04):
I don't mind.
Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
I don't mind that.
Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
In the Trump's campaign spokesperson said the president's comments weren't
about the press, but instead about his own personal safety
and light of his two assassination attempts, the president's statement
about protective glass placement has nothing to do with the
media being harmed or anything else. It was about threats
against him that was spurred on by a dangerous rhetoric
from Democrats. President Trump was stating that the media was
(01:06:30):
in danger and that they were protecting him and therefore
were in great danger themselves and should have had a
glass protective shield.
Speaker 2 (01:06:37):
Also, the man said, to get to me, they would
have to shoot through the press. But I don't mind that.
Speaker 4 (01:06:45):
But yet his campaign said he was stating that the
media was in danger. Yeah, they in danger because you
putting him in danger by encouraging people to shoot through
them if they want to shoot at you.
Speaker 2 (01:06:56):
This is the type of plan in our faith that
I'm over.
Speaker 4 (01:06:58):
Okay, nothing to see it if, folks, I'm tired of
flirting with fascism, doing this dance with authoritarian rule, y'all
not tired. We keep talking about all this violent, devisive
rhetoric coming from politicians, but it's only coming from one person,
and then you have everybody telling the truth about that
one person. Now, my favorite thing about these comments is
how Trump supporters right now, right now, is they listening
to me. They are playing games of twist by themselves,
(01:07:21):
trying to justify why he said what he said. That's
why I'm not talking to them. Okay, I want to
talk to us. What we're doing tomorrow. Abraham Lincoln once said,
elections belong to the people. It's their decision. Sadly, it's
up to us to stop all of this. Okay, Personally,
I don't think you stop dictatorship through votes. But since
Merrick Garland and the DJ didn't do what they were
(01:07:41):
supposed to do.
Speaker 2 (01:07:42):
A long time ago. Here we are, okay. Naomi Klein
once said democracy is not just the right to vote,
it is.
Speaker 4 (01:07:49):
The right to live in dignity. Tomorrow we get to
show the world if we are indeed a dignified country.
Are not, please give Donald Trump the biggest he are.
Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
We shall see.
Speaker 13 (01:08:07):
That's the same thing he did with January sixth. He
said all that stuff, and it was like, I don't
know why that happened. I didn't say it like that.
Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
It's unbelievable.
Speaker 8 (01:08:13):
And then people died.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
And then the man.
Speaker 4 (01:08:15):
Literally said he wouldn't mind if people shot through the
reporters to get to him. And then his campaign people say, well,
that's not what he said. Like I said, we didn't
hear what he actually saying.
Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Right, all right, well, thank you for that donkey to day, Yes, ma'am.
Speaker 3 (01:08:31):
Now when we come back, Nancy Mace will be joining us,
you guys, representative for South Carolina, and we'll talk to
NeXT's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (01:08:38):
Go morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 6 (01:08:42):
Good morning.
Speaker 2 (01:08:43):
Everybody is DJ MV Jess Hilary charlamagnea guy. We are
the breakfast club.
Speaker 3 (01:08:48):
Jess is on maternity leave, so long La Rosa is
filling in. And we have a special guest in the building.
We have Nancy Mace.
Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
Welcome and thank you for having it.
Speaker 8 (01:08:55):
Great to be here.
Speaker 2 (01:08:56):
Finally, what's happening in Nancy? You let me be Nancy
with the high school together. I think that she looked
so much younger than you. Yeah, I mean in high
school that you remember. Was he a bullet?
Speaker 6 (01:09:05):
No, I don't.
Speaker 12 (01:09:06):
I don't know if we knew each other. He was
only there for a few months, but but we dropped
out of the same high school the same year, and
our mom's taught school together, and she out you got
kicked out right. I had been raped by a classmate
of mine at sixteen, and I just now your fault.
(01:09:27):
It happens a lot, and I just decided I couldn't
go back to school at that point. I'd kind of
given up on myself. And my parents mom was a
school teacher and my dad is retired army, and they're like,
if you're going to stop going to school, you have
to start going to work. I don't know what your
parents said to you, but mine were like, go get
a job. I got a job at the waffle house
and College Park Road and Lats in Exit two three,
(01:09:48):
and I was a waffle house waitress for a couple
months when I decided maybe I wanted to get my
high school diploma and not be a waffle house waitress
the rest of my life.
Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
How did you go from waffle house to being a
US Congress representative for l Well.
Speaker 12 (01:10:01):
I had its steps and it's also, you know, God's
hand in some ways, the fine intervention. You talk about
that a lot. But I would eventually go to college
and I went to the Citadel, the Military College of
South Carolina. It's a place where my dad went. There
had been no women there in one hundred and fifty
four years, and I was the first when I applied,
I was the first class of women to go there
(01:10:21):
and ended up graduating the first woman from the Citadel
twenty five years ago. This year, I'm feeling my age,
feeling kind of old. And then the rest is sort
of history. And I started my own company in two
thousand and eight. I did a little entrepreneurial work and
then I ran for state House in twenty seventeen, twenty eighteen,
I won. I was served for three years and then
(01:10:43):
this seat, I won it from a Democrat in twenty twenty,
I flipped the.
Speaker 4 (01:10:46):
Seat the post and Choria asked the question that a
lot of people ask, which side is an anti mace
on because you challenge Republicans a lot, but then you
vote you.
Speaker 2 (01:10:56):
Know a lot.
Speaker 12 (01:10:56):
Well, actually, and I wrote that op ed because I
want people to ask a question and then answer it.
I'm actually the of all four and thirty five members
of the House, I'm the twenty second most bipartisan, so
I'm like almost top twenty most bipartisan. Yet I get
pilloried in the press by certain media outlets that I'm
(01:11:17):
a raging partisan. Am I conservative on most issues?
Speaker 6 (01:11:21):
Yes?
Speaker 12 (01:11:21):
But there and there are a lot of issues where
I'm maybe to the left or socially moderate on I
do a lot of civil rights work. I do a
lot of work for women because I'm a survivor of rape.
I've been through domestic abuse, and I know how terrible
our laws are at the federal on the state level.
But I've worked a lot Rokana you talked to him earlier. Again,
Roe and I do a lot of tech and cybersecurity,
(01:11:42):
computing type of legislation together. But it's not sexy. It's
not clickbait. It doesn't get you likes when you're on
X or views when you're on Instagram. It's not the
sexy thing that the media likes to talk about is
when we get along. They like divisiveness. It pays ads.
I mean that sort of thing. But I'm actually been
really effective on working with both sides of the aisle.
(01:12:03):
But I also call them out. Republicans and Democrats alike
are the reason that things cost so much with inflation.
Speaker 13 (01:12:09):
How do you deal with like because with your you know,
the experience that you had with being a survivor of rape.
I know that like you do get a lot of
pushback because your pro life and you have a pro
life voting record, but you push back on other like
exceptions like for abortion. When that conversation happens on the
Republican side, that must be a lonely place to be.
(01:12:32):
It's I will tell you it's a little confusing for
some people too.
Speaker 12 (01:12:36):
Probably I have no friends in Washington. It is an
extremely lonely experience when you're calling out both sides, or
even when you call it members of your own party.
There's so much middle ground and there's so much we
can do for women together, and yet neither party wants
to do it. Like when I and you see it
on both sides of the aisle, they just use it
as a political wedge. But what have we done for women?
What have we done substantively for women in the last
(01:12:59):
couple of years, I would argue very little, And so
I've been fighting really hard. I have bills that would
address domestic violence, rape, incess floyurism, revenge, porn, a lot
of issues IVF, contraception, birth control. I have a whole
portfolio that I've focused on that I believe both sides
can agree on because we're not doing enough. We're just
(01:13:19):
further dividing ourselves by having these arguments when there's ninety
five percent of the things. Even when you talk about abortion,
I'm pro life, but I have a fifteen to twenty
week second trimester limit. At some point you got to say,
this is an infant that deserves life. Most people don't
want abortion in the third trimester, but all of us
think first or second trimesters. There's even if you're pro choice,
(01:13:40):
you're likely you likely have limitations around the second trimester too,
And so I just believe there's a lot of common
ground and we're not having those conversations.
Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
You are Trump supporter, I voted for him. Why well, I.
Speaker 12 (01:13:52):
Mean, in my party, the man who has been leaning
on women's issues on the forefront has been Trump. So
for the first time in our party's history, he added
to our party platform this summer at the Republican Convention
IVF that we want to protect IBF, that we want
to protect women who are victims of rape, victims of incests,
the exceptions that I just spoke about. No one else
(01:14:12):
has done that before. He put in the party platform.
We want to protect contraception and contraceptive access. Those are
things that had never been done before. And so for me,
as a woman like I have someone that I go to,
I bend his zier on women's issues because that's really
the thing that I've been harping on the last couple
of years, or women's rights. Balancing the pro life with
(01:14:33):
pro woman. I think you can do both.
Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
Because he listened. I heard people say, oh, I heard
you say that he listens to you.
Speaker 12 (01:14:38):
Yet I feel like he does listen to me, and
then he's taken steps to put those things in the
party platform. Despite people saying, well, maybe we don't want
to do that, he did it anyway, And I think
it's really important that we have someone that isn't beholden
to other organizations or big money, that he does what
he believes is right. Even if you disagree with him,
I think we can all agree he's not really holden
(01:15:00):
to any one person. He's doing what he thinks is
the right thing.
Speaker 2 (01:15:03):
To get why, I don't know about that.
Speaker 12 (01:15:07):
Nobody wants Russia to win, and I just I don't
want Russia to win, and I'm a Republican. I think
it's the ideas at porrent. You have this trifecta now
with Russia, Iran and China, and it's very dangerous, very dangerous.
We've got to stem that tide and break that up.
At some point it's going to become a real problem globally.
Speaker 2 (01:15:27):
Not A narrative has been is Donald Trump is racist.
They believe he's a fascists. What's your thoughts on all that?
Speaker 19 (01:15:32):
I don't believe.
Speaker 14 (01:15:33):
So.
Speaker 12 (01:15:33):
So I've done a lot of civil rights work. So
I had a bill signed into law when I was
a state lawmaker. It was a prison reform bill for
women and I modeled it after the First Step Act
that Trump signed into law prison reform bill in December
of twenty eighteen, and it was bipartisan and when you
look at the impact of that, it's it's improved the
lives of ninety percent of the individuals. That has helped
(01:15:54):
improve we're black Americans.
Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
Question, if Vice President Kamala Harris wins right and she
wants to legalize as marijuana, would Republicans in Congress vote
for it?
Speaker 2 (01:16:03):
I would they say no? Because it's a Democratic president.
Speaker 12 (01:16:05):
I don't think it matters. I mean, there are some
of us, not all Republicans are for it. I actually
have a bill that would be a federal reform. It's descheduling.
In order to do cannabis, you have reschedulings, okay for now,
but you have to deschedule it and decriminalize it and
at any rate.
Speaker 2 (01:16:21):
So I have a bill for that.
Speaker 12 (01:16:22):
It doesn't matter who's president. If I can, if that
can become law, I would support it. But not every
Republican supports cannabis. There are fewer of us that do.
I'm one of them that does. But I've worked with
both sides on cannabis. I've worked with both sides on
issues related to mass violence, for example, women's issues, there
is a lot of common ground, but you have to
have the courage to actually raise your hand and say
(01:16:43):
we're gonna do this work, no matter even if it
costs me my next race. We need to do it
because it's right for the people. There's just not a
lot of that in Washington, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:16:52):
We got more with Nancy Mace when we come back.
She's the US representative for South Carolina. It's the breakfast club,
Good morning.
Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
Hoarding everybody's dj MV. It's just hilarious.
Speaker 3 (01:17:00):
Charlamagne, the guy we aught a breakfast club, was still
kicking it with Nancy Mace, US represented for South Carolina.
Speaker 4 (01:17:06):
Chelamy talked to us about this biparties and boarder bill
that Republicans and Democrats agreed upon in the Senate, signed
in and then Trump said, no, don't do it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:16):
Why didn't that get done?
Speaker 12 (01:17:17):
Well, didn't It never passed out of the Senate, And
so I did to that bill. We never voted on
it in the House. The House actually sent over HR two,
which was a conservative border security bill, in May of
last year. That bill came through the Senate, but it
never passed the Senate, so it never even got to
the House. So in that particular bill, and I read
it with my staff, like the debt ceiling bill, there
(01:17:38):
were good ideas in the debt ceiling Bill, but on
the next page you would see, oh, there's the loophole
that totally skirts around the good idea. That bill was
the same way. So it was essentially when you read it,
there'd be a good idea on page one, but then
on page two there was a loophole that would give
Secretary of my orcists, for example, Carte Blanche to do
whatever he wanted. There were loopholes on every other page,
(01:17:58):
and so it really wasn't worth the paper was printed
on was it going to do what it was intended?
And my problem is the lack of honesty, the lack
of integrity, and the lack of truth. Just tell the
people the truth and then they can decide for themselves
if that bill really is what you say it is,
because oftentimes it's not. What Washington likes to do too
is they'll title a bill, oh, this is rainbows and
(01:18:21):
unicorns for all people, and then you read it has
nothing to do with rainbows and unicorns, right, and so
there's just a lot of I think performance and magic.
You know, it's just it's not what it is.
Speaker 13 (01:18:33):
With the performances like in politics that you're talking about, right, So,
like how does it work with you? Like, so, for instance,
if Kamala Harris is elected president and you have to
work with her, there has been times like the CNN
moment where you've like you got in trouble for saying
her name wrong and people are upset about that and
then Kamala doesn't know what a woman is those remarks.
Speaker 8 (01:18:52):
How do you then sit with her?
Speaker 13 (01:18:53):
Like, do you guys have conversations behind closed doors first
to get all that out the way so that you
can can work together or does that not even come up?
Speaker 8 (01:19:00):
Like how do you remove the performance that happened?
Speaker 12 (01:19:02):
Yeah, So I'm always willing to work with anyone who's
willing to work with me, and oftentimes if staff are
open to working together, Like I have a rule in
my office that we don't block anything. If someone wants
to do business with us, If someone wants to work
with us, regardless of party or political affiliation, we will
do it. I mean I have sponsored bills with progressives.
I've sponsored bills with people on the Freedom Caucus, so
all the folks, but I mean, in that particular instance,
(01:19:24):
I felt like I was being ganged up on air.
A lot of people haven't been able to say her
name right because her name hasn't been in the news
every day. I know how to say it now, it's Kamala.
I've got it down, I've got it right. But one
of my issues too was being ganged up on as
a woman live on air, and then the hypocrisy during
the commercial breaks of hey can I grab a selfie?
And you know, I don't mind it, will have the
(01:19:47):
colloquial on air and you do whatever you want to do,
but then behind the scenes, you know, send me a
kiss the emoji, tell me how gorgeous I am, tell
me we look good together, and all that whole thing.
Because it was just kind of an act, and so
it's like, I'm just gonna call it for what it is.
I was probably the first person in Congress that entered
into the Congressional record at text with a kissing emoji.
Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
It was the mispronunciation. It was when you said, I
say her name, I can say it however I want to.
And I was like Nancy had a drink.
Speaker 8 (01:20:12):
I did not.
Speaker 12 (01:20:13):
I did not, but you know, during the commercial breaks,
you know how it is your taping and you're doing this,
and it was just the hypocrisy was what was grading me.
Because behind the scenes on commercial break, bagging for the
selfie picture, you know, hitting on me, all that stuff,
and I was like, okay, this.
Speaker 2 (01:20:26):
Is so that happened. Then y'all came back.
Speaker 12 (01:20:28):
Yes, yes, it was all going on at the same time,
and so that's why I was just like, Okay, it's
not okay to label somebody and gang up on them
in public but then have a completely different position and private.
I don't like hypocrisy, and I don't like people who
aren't being honest.
Speaker 4 (01:20:47):
Talk about the Violence against Women reauthorization that because some
people say, you know, you say you're a champion of women.
Speaker 2 (01:20:54):
But you voted against that.
Speaker 12 (01:20:55):
Yeah, well I voted for a clean reauthorization. So the
first one that came through had some I believe, like
red flag laws that they were putting into it, and
I think we have to balance constitutional Second Amendment rights
with violence against women, and so I voted for a clean,
real authorization of that billain In fact, I've gone back
since then, because when I dove into I just got
(01:21:18):
through a domestic abusive relationship. There was domestic violence, and
I went through the system and I was like, wow,
this is how women are treated. And I learned about
the Violence Against swim and Act, what it did to
protect victims' rights, and also what our state does to
protect victims rights, and I realized there's even more we
can do. So since that time, I have created legislation.
(01:21:39):
One in particular, there's a revenge porn civil tourt with
the Violence Against Women Act, but it's only civil. Yeah,
it's civil. It's civil, not criminal. So it didn't make
it a crime at the federal level. So I have
a bill that would fix that. There's a civil tourt
that would allow you to have a civil right of
action for revenge porn at one hundred and fifty thousand,
so I have a bill that would increase it to
(01:22:00):
five hundred thousand. There is nothing in there about voyeurism,
so I have a bill. Voyeurism is when you record
someone without their knowledge or consent or permission an intimate way.
So I've gone back and I'm doing things to strengthen
to actually strengthen it. Now that I've learned so much
about how victim's rights are and are not protected, and
what it does and does not include. And I like
(01:22:21):
to do small bills that will make a big difference.
A lot of times people will do really large, comprehensive
bills and they'll put things in there that people can't
agree to. I like smaller bills that are up and down.
So these are all different pieces of legislation that will
hopefully get an up or down vote, and if you
disagree on something, you have a chance to say no,
I don't like these big Christmas tree bills. But let's
do one thing at a time and make have small parts,
(01:22:43):
small bills, make it really big different. And when you
do these massive bills, things get snuck in and you're like,
what did we just pay for?
Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
I don't know.
Speaker 12 (01:22:52):
We have these we have these giant spending bills, these
continuing resolutions or omnibuses. The DC will manufacture some sort
of crisis is going to shut down if we don't
do this, and so then they have these giant spending
bills and all of a sudden you realize your tax
dollars are going to pay for trans kid clothing, I
mean things that most people would not want to want,
would not want to agree with, or you know these
(01:23:14):
this is what happened last year. It's just what did
we just spend money on. I voted for gay marriage twice,
but I don't think you should be spending federal government
money on just gay nursing homes. I think all nursing homes, right.
Why are we just specifying, Yeah, there was a million
dollars last year. I mean, I don't know there was
a thing. There are gay nursing homes apparently, but you're.
Speaker 8 (01:23:33):
Very watch with John.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
I don't want I don't want taxes.
Speaker 12 (01:23:38):
I don't want tax dollars paying to incentivize illegal immigration.
I mean, there's just you know, there's just things that
I think, common sense wise, we don't need to be
paying for. Government doesn't even be paying for sex change surgery.
I mean just those things will get stuffed in there
if you don't read the fine print. And that's why
I vote against almost all of the fine print when
it comes to the big spending bills, because they're just
ridiculous things in there that you and I sides would say.
(01:24:01):
The average bear would be like the average person, like,
why are we doing this, Why do we vote for that?
Speaker 2 (01:24:05):
So tomorrow's election day, So what's your message of people.
Speaker 12 (01:24:08):
We're asking people to get out and have their voices
heard and to vote, and we need as many people
to come out and vote on election day. It's your
right as a citizen and we want to make sure
that your voices are heard. The polls open at seven
am and close at seven pm in South Carolina.
Speaker 2 (01:24:23):
Okay, all right, good luck, Thank you Nancy Mace. Ladies
and gentlemen, and we appreciate you for joining us.
Speaker 12 (01:24:28):
Thank you, thank you for having me.
Speaker 2 (01:24:29):
And it's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
Good morning everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:24:35):
It's DJ en Vy, Jess, Larry Charlamagne, the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. Let's get to jest with the
mess with Lona Rosa.
Speaker 16 (01:24:41):
You knave your real whether it's clients, Jessic, Robin Moore,
just don't do no lines, don't do nobody.
Speaker 6 (01:24:51):
Low why jests worldwide mess on the breakfast clubs the
coaches with Lauren Loros and I got the mess.
Speaker 13 (01:25:04):
So over the weekend, the Raptors played the Kings and
Drake and Chubbs were there for the game and there
was a ton of video that went viral from this
game because Drake and Chubbs were on the side. Chubbs,
for those who do not know, is Drake's like right
him and he's a part of OVO. They were on
the sidelines of the game. And there's a point.
Speaker 8 (01:25:21):
There's two points.
Speaker 13 (01:25:22):
So the first video that went viral was Drake just
standing on the sideline and the way that him and
Chubbs were looking at deroz And as he walked by,
people were like, oh, there's shade, there's tension. And then
there's another video that fans pointed out where you can
see Drake's lips say something and fans are saying that
he said the P word. I can't say that, right, No, yeah,
the P word were No, wasn't that. I mean, they
(01:25:44):
can be pretty, but that's not what the P word
I'm talking about. Yep, that he said that toward DeRozan. Now,
at first you're like, assuming maybe this is happening, and
then then it was very direct. So Drake began to
do some sideline comments. Let's take a listen to what
he went there.
Speaker 24 (01:26:03):
Don't get me fired up tonight shots events, Carter. I
don't think people understand that's our first retired numbers. Unfortunately
playing this goof tonight. But it is where it is,
you know what I mean speaking of national treasure. Yes,
if you ever put up a DeRozan banner about go
up there and pull it down myself.
Speaker 2 (01:26:18):
That's answer question. Is that what you're gonna ask?
Speaker 25 (01:26:21):
No, well, you know to Riot and Kyle, Yeah, shout out.
The statues are next, Well, yeah they are, Drake.
Speaker 2 (01:26:33):
Thank you for joining us. I'm getting cut. You're not.
What is Drake mad about the fact that mar De
Rozan was in the Not Like Us video and you
got to mention on them not Like Us record?
Speaker 8 (01:26:43):
That's what the streets is saying. Okay, now now listen.
Speaker 2 (01:26:47):
I think Drake was joking here. I think that's sarcasm.
I think he was joking and playing.
Speaker 13 (01:26:51):
I mean, even though Drake do be trolling legendary at
these games and all that, you know what type of
troll that's going to be and how that's going to
be picked up and received if you do it.
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
You know, so if you know.
Speaker 8 (01:27:03):
You say that, you stirring the pie.
Speaker 4 (01:27:04):
So what about all the ice grilling and calling him
the pe word when you walk by? Do you think
Drake was gonna fight him.
Speaker 2 (01:27:09):
I ain't ask you that.
Speaker 4 (01:27:10):
What about I said, what about the ice grilling and
the calling him the pew ware? You think all of
that was trolling? Well, we don't know if he called
him the pee word. You've got people that said they
read his lips and that's what looked like.
Speaker 8 (01:27:21):
When I saw it. Now, no, okay.
Speaker 13 (01:27:23):
So the Rosa was asked about this and he responded,
let's take a listen, said, if you ever.
Speaker 19 (01:27:29):
Put up the rosens that are up, I'll go up
there for it on myself.
Speaker 2 (01:27:32):
What's your Actually, Well, he gotta he gonna have a
long way to climb to take it down.
Speaker 8 (01:27:36):
So I tell him, good luck, now go ahead.
Speaker 4 (01:27:39):
I was just say, you know, if Drake was trolling,
it just shows how much of a poor decision making
he is.
Speaker 2 (01:27:45):
Because the reality is the.
Speaker 4 (01:27:46):
Reason he's really, really, really really lost his battle is
because of the way he's handled everything. After the fact,
he showed that it's bothering him. So even if you're trolling,
you're still showing that you're bothered.
Speaker 13 (01:27:58):
And when the Rosa was here, we asked him about
then he said, you know, Kendrick is hometown, but I
mean Drake is cool.
Speaker 10 (01:28:04):
Like he was.
Speaker 2 (01:28:05):
Drake is cool, but Kendrick is hometown.
Speaker 8 (01:28:07):
Let's take a listen.
Speaker 2 (01:28:08):
Now, you played in Toronto for years, but then Kendrick's
from Compton. Drake is from Toronto. That's your guy. How
do you how do you choose what you're gonna get
into and what you're not gonna get into? At that point,
I love them both.
Speaker 26 (01:28:18):
But at the end of the day, it's like, I'm
from Compton, like my city, where I'm from, where I'm born,
like when my family still live. It's like that comes
first before anything. Any real person will understand that, you know,
and that's just what it is.
Speaker 2 (01:28:31):
Have you spoke to Drake. No, I haven't talked to him.
I haven't talked to him. You sent him a text
to be like, you're good, blocked, nothing good. It's dope,
regardless of how everybody look at it. I think it's dope.
Speaker 26 (01:28:46):
Go back to the Compton thing to see somebody from
Compton headline the super Bowl.
Speaker 8 (01:28:50):
I need a source close to Beigeman and b yes,
all of this. Is it really this serious? This music?
Speaker 2 (01:28:58):
I don't know it really just I just speak to
the sources about that. But the Rose the Roses.
Speaker 3 (01:29:04):
Probably jersey is going to get retired in Toronto, Like,
let's be honest, he played their nine season. He's an
all time leading scorer for the tam so his jersey's
gonna give it tired there.
Speaker 13 (01:29:13):
Regardless of any of that, I'm just saying, is all
of this worth? Like the we heard about the unfollowing
on the Instagram. Now he's on the sidelines and they
ice grilling and he's jokingly.
Speaker 2 (01:29:22):
Whatever know these people's relationships? I have no idea.
Speaker 8 (01:29:24):
I just don't think.
Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
You want to say no handshakes, no hugs, no nothing.
They was ice grilling like he was dirdy on above
the rill. I don't know the relationships.
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:29:41):
I want to see if Chub's really crashed though. You
don't want to see that. Stop that you do not
want to see We don't.
Speaker 4 (01:29:47):
We don't want to see that. We don't want to
see that. Well, I'll tell you this man, Drake has
handled this all wrong. Okay, The fact that he just
always seems so bothered, I've never seen it disrecord getting
somebody's spirit the way that not like us and all
of this stuff has gotten in Drake spirit.
Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
But you've never seen the disrecord is big. No reason.
Speaker 4 (01:30:10):
Kendrick going to Grammy for it, Kendrick going to Grammy
for not like us and euphoria, then you're gonna turn
around the very next week and do the Super Bowl.
Speaker 13 (01:30:18):
You know what I think we would need to know.
I need to understand how deep was Drake and DeRozan's relationship.
Speaker 2 (01:30:23):
And that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 8 (01:30:23):
We don't because Kendricks because.
Speaker 3 (01:30:26):
Nasty for some reason, just I don't know why it
was how deep because you just we don't know if
Drake held him down. We don't know, you know, we
don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:30:34):
That's what I'm saying. We don't know how deep?
Speaker 8 (01:30:36):
How deep was it?
Speaker 2 (01:30:37):
Envy past my pay grade? I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:30:41):
You don't get to that level of deepness.
Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
You know, not that level, on that level of deepness
with one person.
Speaker 19 (01:30:50):
Who know.
Speaker 8 (01:30:55):
About crash.
Speaker 2 (01:30:58):
Raj.
Speaker 8 (01:30:58):
You better relax over there, like you said that an
hour ago, you were here talking.
Speaker 2 (01:31:04):
About be so funny of them three little boys come
and get.
Speaker 8 (01:31:09):
Spell Drake.
Speaker 2 (01:31:09):
Just they need to seriously, Drake need to stop acting
so bothered like let it go.
Speaker 4 (01:31:14):
He really should have took the break that he said
he was gonna take after he took that l but
that should have went away for I'm gonna climb up.
Speaker 13 (01:31:22):
You can't get on that broad on that broadcast like that,
and you know you Drake in the middle of all
this and say that.
Speaker 2 (01:31:27):
No, you cannot. You know what that's going to do.
Speaker 4 (01:31:30):
You already you already look super bothered. We know you
bothered by it. And then here you come with this.
Speaker 13 (01:31:34):
What you're doing over there, that's like that you're communicating
to the base people through that, Dad, what's wrong with you?
Speaker 8 (01:31:40):
I don't know figure out.
Speaker 4 (01:31:41):
Was making rain pe Whenever you see bags people doing
that little dance, they gonna make it rain peat and
dirty yellow colored canary color.
Speaker 8 (01:31:50):
Ye, what's the name of the people Drake said he
needed to have. He's sitting out the call for them
to come, so what ours?
Speaker 2 (01:31:56):
No, you got to ask Eli. They know to call
for them to come. There's no call for that.
Speaker 8 (01:32:02):
Sounded crazy too. We gotta wrap up.
Speaker 2 (01:32:08):
You talking about you dance?
Speaker 6 (01:32:10):
He do the oo.
Speaker 2 (01:32:11):
No, that is just with the mess. Now when we
come back, we got to keep this choice.
Speaker 3 (01:32:15):
Come on, Oh my god, I hate this. Please it's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Your mornings
will never be the same.
Speaker 2 (01:32:26):
Good morning everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:32:27):
It's j Envy, Jess Hilari, Charlamagne the Guy, we are,
the Breakfast Club lawl and Rosa filling in for Jess.
All right, now, we gotta salute Nancy Mats for joining us.
You GUS representative for South Carolina.
Speaker 4 (01:32:38):
That's right, Saluted Nancy Mays and saluted Rocanna and Ja Moore.
Rocanna is also the US Representative for California. Jay A
Moore is also an elected official in South Carolina as well.
Speaker 8 (01:32:48):
Mane oh, and I just.
Speaker 13 (01:32:49):
Want to shout out to Amazon and Amazon Music team.
Thank y'all so much for bringing me to New Orleans
to witness history the High Boys Reunion. The live stream,
the pre livet stream that we did on Amazon Prime
was led. Shout out to Miles Jones and Wayno my
co host for it. It was such a great time.
I can't wait to join the Amazon Music family again.
Speaker 3 (01:33:07):
All right, when we come back, we got the positive
notice to Breakfast Club. Good morning, morning everybody. It's DJ Envy,
Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the God, we are the Breakfast Club
Law and the Rosa feeling in for it, Jess and
I got a salute. Thank you, Lauren. My son had
an amazing time. He had his went to his first
professional soccer game. He had a game over the weekend
where they won him. Right from the game, he went
straight to the New York City Football Club's playoff game.
Speaker 8 (01:33:32):
They text me and say Envy's here and blah blah blah,
thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:33:36):
I was in New Orleans a great time.
Speaker 4 (01:33:39):
So it was.
Speaker 3 (01:33:39):
It was eighteen thousand people in arena. They're actually building
an arena right next door. So we had a great time. Man,
hopefully we get a chance to go again. I know
the next game is away, but hopefully the next time
they in town or they played messy, I get to
take my son again. But he had a great time.
He wasn't there this time. He was there last week
and I ran into I would say, what what what
(01:34:01):
would I call it a radio icon as well legend
and that radio game.
Speaker 2 (01:34:04):
I ran into miss Info mis Info, Yeah, Miss Influence
there with her family, so I ran into her. So
it was good to see.
Speaker 8 (01:34:11):
I don't know her, but I know who she is.
Speaker 2 (01:34:13):
One of my catching up with her.
Speaker 4 (01:34:16):
You know, she she paved the role for people like
you entertainment news reporters. I think that that is a
lost journalist. I wouldn't even call the journalism. I just
think entertainment.
Speaker 2 (01:34:26):
I mean it is journal She started off with the
sauce entertainment.
Speaker 4 (01:34:28):
News reporters in particular, that's a a lost start, like
people are actually doing entertainment news in a substitutive, substitutive way.
Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
Yes, yeah, yeah, what miss info?
Speaker 8 (01:34:42):
Are you crazy?
Speaker 3 (01:34:43):
That's the homie to uh misinfomenia. Oh all right, now
you've got a positive note.
Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
I do, man, my positive note. This goes back to
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Speaker 4 (01:34:50):
It's something I said earlier during Donkey of to Day.
But I really just want to scress this, since tomorrow
is election day. U nobody will ever deprive the American
people of the right to vote except the American people themselves,
And the only way they could do this is by
not voting. Have a blessed day, breakfast club bitches, do
y'all finished or y'all done?