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May 7, 2024 97 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's important Main Street.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Will I wanted the big things in American culture.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
Like us. Thank everybody going on the breakfast club.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
You don't want to shake it up.

Speaker 5 (00:13):
Ain't not like.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
You people.

Speaker 5 (00:17):
Choice the family guy just hilarious.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
And Charlemagne got some donkeys days. This southern so yo.
I'm just loving that. And it's up there right now.
Sometimes you've got to pop out this shows. Now let's begin.
Good morning Usa yo yo yo.

Speaker 6 (00:33):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Just hilarious. Good morning, Charlamagne the cat.

Speaker 7 (00:41):
Peace to the planet is Tuesday, Yes it's Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Yes it is.

Speaker 6 (00:48):
How y'all feeling blessed black and Holly favor. But I'm
gonna tell you something. I'm about to give up this
thrown man, this throng be hurting my back. Yeah, yeah,
that's how you get about your baby.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Shout. Absolutely, I'm getting rid of this.

Speaker 5 (00:58):
As soon as I have your baby, I gotta get
one like well, not like yo, because that's her.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Does it hurt your back?

Speaker 3 (01:04):
Because I got this cushion on it, so I got.

Speaker 5 (01:06):
The cushion it.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
Yeah, you don't have a yeah, a cushion.

Speaker 6 (01:09):
I need something that makes my hips move around and
my back move my shoulder.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
This makes me stay too straight. I don't like.

Speaker 8 (01:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
You remember the girl called up here like when I
first started working up here, and she was telling us
about ergonomics, and she was like, those thrones are gonna
hurt y'all back.

Speaker 6 (01:21):
Ex Definitely she said that and she was not lying. Okay,
I feel every bit of it in my forty five
year old bone. Yeah, that's all good though.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Yeah, the sun is out already. I could not believe,
you know, the sun was up and everything at five thirty.

Speaker 7 (01:34):
Really, yes, we mean really, I was hitting and I
was here early. I didn't see something.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Oh yeah, driving in because I usually mouths like like
five fifteen, five twenty the sun was the sun came
up it like five twenty one, and really I was like, wow, yep.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Did you watch the games last night? Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Absolutely you were.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Don't you just lie like that for no reason, I
mean just for no.

Speaker 9 (01:54):
One.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Next they played what did the next one?

Speaker 6 (01:58):
Looking at the faith that two times I did watch
the Nick Pays's game Minnesota.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Timberwo was the Nuggas game too late for me. Yeah,
I watched. I watched both games last night and and
I'm I'm feeling it this morning.

Speaker 6 (02:09):
I can't get my six to seven hours of sleep
per night. If I if I, if I stayed up
to watch the timber was the Nuggets game.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Yeah, that's not happened.

Speaker 7 (02:18):
Great games. Will tell you about it in front page news.
And we have Angela Ride joining us this morning. She's
knocking out the front page.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
Are we starting right now?

Speaker 3 (02:27):
No show? And when we talk about when we come
back and got that ready? We need a second.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Oh no, I'm ready.

Speaker 10 (02:33):
We're gonna talk about Donald Trump because why not. And
we're also talking about Britney Grenner.

Speaker 7 (02:38):
Okay, all right, we're and also Tiffany Hattish will be
joining us this morning.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
She's got a new book, I Curse You with Joy,
that's right, which.

Speaker 6 (02:45):
Is out right now. So she'll be joining us. And
John Carr will be joining us. He's got a book
I'll called Donald Trump in the End of the Grand
Old Party.

Speaker 7 (02:53):
Okay, all right, well, let's get to the let's get
the show crack in front page it was this next one.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
We got news. Oh my god.

Speaker 6 (03:00):
We started with something other than snooze changed it. Okay,
I know physics. Snooze was on day, been on for
the last two years.

Speaker 3 (03:06):
I changed it.

Speaker 7 (03:07):
This is the breakfast like good morning everybody. It's DJ NNG, Jesse,
Larry and Charlamagne. The gut Lee at the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (03:13):
Knew this one little song which changed the course of
hip hop work, this one little reference.

Speaker 7 (03:18):
Well, let's get in some front page news. ANGELAAI is
here and come on to miss Rye.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Good morning.

Speaker 10 (03:24):
It is always a pleasure to be with my dear
breakfast Club family.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
Angela.

Speaker 10 (03:28):
We are starting with the positive of something that was
really negative at first. Britney Griner w NBA All Star
is of course back. We did not have Britney for
ten plus months. He was being held in a Russian
prison over a wee pin that she forgot was in
her suitcase. You all may have been noticing, but she's interviewing.
Her book is out and so she's interviewing. She did

(03:50):
an interview last night with joy Anne Reid where she
talked about being Putin's Pawn.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Let's take a listen.

Speaker 9 (03:57):
He wrote a chapter called Putin's Pawn. Did you get
the immediate sens is once you had Russian lawyers wonderful
me who came very close to.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Did it become clear to you and to them that
Putin was going to use you?

Speaker 6 (04:11):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (04:11):
Yes, one hundred percent.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
I mean the few times that I would get the
guards to say something to me when I'm like, where
am I going?

Speaker 3 (04:17):
Am I the only one in the cell?

Speaker 4 (04:21):
I knew that the American basketball player had to be
by themselves. I'm like, well, this is this is weird
because normally, you know, you go, you go into the
holding tank with everyone else.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
You're in a cell.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
You don't have a room to yourself. In the beginning,
You're with a lot of people. So I already knew
that there was little things going on. And then the
check ins. The top guard was always there, the warden,
the deputy warden was always there, so I knew that
there was some special treatment. Let's keep her good for

(04:53):
right now.

Speaker 9 (04:55):
You know.

Speaker 3 (04:55):
It's interesting about that.

Speaker 6 (04:56):
I remember when people started to make noise about it,
and folks were saying, no, don't make noise because they
don't want people to know how I guess popular.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
She is or quote unquote, how valuable she is. Yes,
I wonder if they really knew from the beginning.

Speaker 10 (05:10):
I think they did know from the beginning, because she
talked about also in this interview, how there were two
different lines for people to go through, and she realized
she was the one that was going to be ginning screened.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
She thought nothing of it.

Speaker 5 (05:21):
I don't know if y'all remember this at the time,
she forgot the weedpan was in there. I have a
friend who I worked on Capitol Hill with her mom
forgot she had a gun in her suitcase going through TSA,
because some folks use their luggage is storage when they're
not moving around like that. So I think that this
is one of those instances where she talked about forgetting.
But she also talked about this experience she had being

(05:42):
looked upon as a zoo animal.

Speaker 9 (05:45):
It can take a leak, and so it strikes me
as doubly tragic to feel, as you said, like the
zoo animal. When for you, other than playing basketball and
sports getting you out of that feeling, just growing up,
talk a little bit about that.

Speaker 4 (05:59):
Definitely always felt like I was the outsider, you know,
I vividly remember it's like sixth seventh grade, you know,
someone another girl literally came up to me touched my
whole chest and was like, see she's not She's not
a girl like the boys, being a little bit deeper
the height. I was always the spectacle. I was always

(06:20):
the ooh, look how different you are. And I've always
felt that. I mean, I am different. When I walk
in the room, people notice how different I am. It
took me a little bit, but I embraced it. But
that moment, being in that prison and how they were
treating me, it took me back to that spectacle of
my childhood, which.

Speaker 3 (06:39):
Is six ' nine. She probably was six three and
seventh grade.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
And you think that makes it okay.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
No, it don't make it okay. But I can understand
why she would be considered the spectacle to other kids,
especially kids.

Speaker 7 (06:49):
You don't don't see women at a six three in
high elementary school. I don't know the fact that their
voices DP. You usually don't see that. Not to say
that it is right is right?

Speaker 3 (06:59):
I can understand.

Speaker 10 (07:00):
I appreciate you all both understanding the trauma that sixth
grader's probably caused, you all, probably those who caused it.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Yeah, think about how think about how we got it.
In sixth grade. I talked about so imagine if I
was six foot four.

Speaker 10 (07:13):
That has nothing to do with the fact that even
from the standpoint of like you're trying to go to sleep,
you know, they deprive you of sleep and torture. That's
what they were doing to her in Russia. So she
was saying it literally took her back to the trauma
of her childhood. We all know what that's like. We
all have a traumatic experience and we can harken right
back to it. That's what she talked about. This is
part one of the interview. Part two airs tonight, and

(07:33):
we applied Brittany for telling her story. She's also expecting
a baby stout Cherrelle, I do not know it at
the top of my day.

Speaker 5 (07:40):
Look it up on the internet.

Speaker 3 (07:41):
That's the whole point.

Speaker 10 (07:42):
That is the whole point, that is the whole point
of the interview. But I don't know it right now.
I was focused more on how compelling this interview was
and the fact that we did get her back. Shout
out to Don Staley, by the way, who we all love,
who worked really hard to get Riddy.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Back coming home called coming home.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Yes, thank you, brother, teamwork. High five Okay, two races.
Also speaking of Putin's pond.

Speaker 10 (08:02):
This is day thirteen of the Trump trial, where he is,
of course, facing thirty four counts for falsifying business records,
for paying Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal to stay quiet
about his alleged affairs, and for paying the National Inquiry
to catch and kill stories.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
I don't know if y'all have anything compelling to talk
about that.

Speaker 10 (08:20):
But he also is being threatened with prison time for
violating a gag order because again he got well, he's
been threatened that if he continues to violate the gag order,
the thousand dollars clearly is no deterrent, so he will
be facing jail time if he continues, just not having
One of.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
The judges even said, I don't want to put you
in jail.

Speaker 6 (08:38):
You're you're you're a former president and possibly the future
president of the United States of America.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
Imagine what his supporters will do with that.

Speaker 6 (08:45):
Yes, they don't want to put him in jail. No
do he knows that, Well, you'll wipe his ass with them.

Speaker 10 (08:49):
Okay, Well he's that's what he's doing. So now he's
going to be weapons ass in jail if he keeps
it up.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Anyway.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
This is y'all all right, and just want to remind
you last night the Nicks.

Speaker 7 (09:00):
And they beat the Paces and the Timberwolves beat the
Nuggets one o six eighty If you missed the games
last night, all right, everybody else, get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If
you need the vent, call us up right now again.
Eight hundred five eight five five one is the Breakfast Club,
Good morning, The Breakfast.

Speaker 11 (09:17):
Club New days is if your time to get it
off your chest, whether you're man or black, time to
get up and get something.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Call up now.

Speaker 12 (09:29):
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. We
want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 13 (09:35):
What on?

Speaker 9 (09:35):
Man? This?

Speaker 14 (09:35):
Knowledge?

Speaker 9 (09:36):
Man?

Speaker 3 (09:36):
Y'all knowledge born, what's happening?

Speaker 5 (09:39):
Knowledge?

Speaker 3 (09:39):
What's up? Get off your chest?

Speaker 13 (09:41):
Nah?

Speaker 3 (09:41):
Hey, waiting on?

Speaker 14 (09:42):
Way on. Charlemagne drop him two days with Dallas for
the book timing, but he ain't doing it yet. He
got to go to his main spots first.

Speaker 6 (09:48):
Oh No, I love Dallas, man. Dallas is considered one
of my main spots. I'm gonna be in Texas though.
Let me look and see where. Let me look it up.

Speaker 14 (09:54):
I'm being a shop for the summer, so come there.

Speaker 6 (09:57):
Chicago was one of my next dates. When I'm gonna
be in Texas. I'm gonna be in Texas.

Speaker 3 (10:03):
Damn, I'm not.

Speaker 14 (10:04):
Man, I want this off my chairs. I normally can
be happy, but man, over the years, the Brickney ground
of stuff to get on because she's got in trouble
for something illegal. It happened to me in America. You
know what happened five years probation. Couldn't get a corporate job,
and we're celebrating it, like what's the jump of my kids? Oh,
you can get hurt or you can do something that'll
be all right. And we wasted our taxpayers' money. And

(10:26):
it ain't nothing to do with it. It is we
spend so much money on this show. I think we
just they could have been realized for some knowledge.

Speaker 7 (10:32):
You do know, people make mistakes, and you see how
you got follow years probation. She got like twelve years
in prison.

Speaker 14 (10:37):
Hey, I'm going out of town this summer. You think
I'm gonna take anything that I can do legally in America?

Speaker 3 (10:45):
No, he has a point. I can see both sides.

Speaker 7 (10:48):
But she made a mistake and we all make mistakes,
and it's not all what we think is the time,
it's the excessive time. If she would have got probation,
five years, probation probably a year and probably would have
sat better with people.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
But twelve years, I think to give.

Speaker 13 (11:01):
You can't.

Speaker 6 (11:03):
More than one thing can be true. Yes, you gotta
respect the laws of other countries. Yes, we can be
happy that Britney Grinder is home. Yes, people can say
they feel like, you know, we gave up too much
to get Brittney Grinder. Yes, people can say, hey, they
wish that the military veteran that's still locked up over
there should be home as well. Right, like, all of
those things can be true at once correct. I don't
know why we act like it can. It can only

(11:24):
be either or that's right.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 2 (11:26):
This is Prince Man?

Speaker 3 (11:28):
Prince where are you calling from?

Speaker 2 (11:29):
I'm calling from Orlando, Florida.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
What's up?

Speaker 12 (11:32):
Prince?

Speaker 3 (11:32):
Get off your chest.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
I just want to say that if Indiana gonna beat
the Nicks, they're gonna have to beat the referees too,
because the last a couple of calls of very very suspect.

Speaker 6 (11:42):
They were but jailing brunch and showed out last night.
He been showing out the last five games Stop Jail.

Speaker 7 (11:47):
And the reps have been messing up damn near every
game during this series, so you can't just brame Oh
they got to beat the reps too. No, they made
some bad calls, but my next one and Jailing Button
played hard. Josh Hart played art.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
So yeah, you were at the rest. The rest have
been suspect and a lot of these serious But that
pig last night, that call on the legal pink or
whatever they called legal screen, that was Yeah, that was crazy.

Speaker 7 (12:14):
I just want to crazy because they even replayed and
they said it was not a kickball.

Speaker 3 (12:18):
That was that was different. But they even replayed the
illegal screen.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
I mean in that in that part of the and
that heeded the game. It wasn't that egregious. I don't
think they should have called it. I just want to
say we as black people, we needed movement to come
together because all this foolishness is going on in the world,
and with this political landscape and the coming election and
all this, all these rappers beefing, we need to be

(12:44):
focused on how we can come together, stop the violence
and just do something. And you know, the chance the
direction of our culture all right, brother, thank you.

Speaker 3 (12:54):
Yep.

Speaker 6 (12:54):
We got to make up my mind about this rap
beef too though, which you mean it's either it's either
we want the rap because it's fun and good for
hip hop. That's why I say more than one thing
could be true all the time. It's people out there
that think it's fun and good for hip hop. Then
if people out there that feel like it could lead
the violence, and you know, we got to stop this
and focus on other things, like you know, to each
his own.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
I guess do I think that this will leave the violence?

Speaker 9 (13:17):
No?

Speaker 3 (13:18):
I don't want.

Speaker 6 (13:18):
I think that they have the kind of rhetoric that
could lead the violence. Yes, but I don't think it will.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
I don't think so. Yeah, but 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 in the morning.

Speaker 12 (13:30):
The Breakfast Club. This is your time to get it
off your chest. Eight hundred five five one. We want
to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Hello. Who's this?

Speaker 14 (13:46):
This is Henry from Errodi team.

Speaker 6 (13:48):
Man.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
I just want to say I love y'allast morning, just
so beautiful.

Speaker 6 (13:53):
Last and wait for that baby.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
To drop your name, Henry or her Henry.

Speaker 6 (13:59):
I just want to give birthday shout out to my
brother Jeremiah and my man Pete k the universal twins.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
They share the same birthday.

Speaker 5 (14:09):
But I love y'all boys.

Speaker 14 (14:10):
Man and Yo, Charlie man, I need a hat.

Speaker 9 (14:14):
Yo.

Speaker 6 (14:15):
I don't know if we got any, but I can
send you a copy of my new book, Getting Out.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
That's a die line. If you hey Less find it, please,
I got you. Add On putting old. Email him a
book today. He's online.

Speaker 15 (14:26):
Three.

Speaker 3 (14:27):
Hello, who's this? It's get it off your chest? Your name.

Speaker 8 (14:33):
I really feel like this Kendrick and Drake beef was
about to be the most historic moment in Tiptop that
we've witnessed, and the sam social media really ruined this beef.

Speaker 3 (14:44):
Real fast, talk to me, talk to me more, let
me hear expound on that.

Speaker 8 (14:48):
It really made these artists get out of pocket and
start asking like they normally don't. Add Kendrick getting real emotional,
kind of spirally. Drake was not moving like he should.
Like really, it really made the beef really nasty because
their quarter public opinion cannot look at these hands objectively.

Speaker 6 (15:07):
Well, I'm gonna tell you something, I don't give a
damn about the court of public opinion.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
I enjoyed it.

Speaker 6 (15:11):
I think it was the greatest rap feud of all time.
I think that Drake and Kendrick both delivered with the music.
I don't see the problem.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
I agree.

Speaker 7 (15:19):
I love the fact that they gave us the music.
I love the fact that they came back so fast.
I love the fact that it just gave people something
to talk about for the last couple of days.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
Now.

Speaker 7 (15:27):
I mean, you could decide who you thought it was
a winner. Some people throw it was Kendrick, some people
thought it was Drake. But I think hip hop really won.
I mean that the amount of music we got. I
just hope those brothers didn't take it too far away
they want to. They did, or they would have hurt
each other they did.

Speaker 6 (15:39):
You call me a pedophile, You say I'm a woman
beating You say my wife is pregnant had a baby
by my man.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Yeah, you took it too far.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
You ain't gonna never see them on stage in the
future holding each other's hands up. Like I remember how
Nods and Jay came out and they did the whole
I declared peace thing.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
They that's not happening. No, no, hell no. I never
thought Jay and Think would do it though either.

Speaker 7 (15:58):
Nah, I never thought and was totally I never thought
I would see g Z and Gucci on the stage together.

Speaker 6 (16:05):
I never thought I would see GZ and you might.
I mean, yeah, you're right with the GZ and Gucci thing.
You're right, are cool, that's no.

Speaker 7 (16:11):
I wouldn't say what they're cool, But I think they
can get the money and do the verses. Yeah, they
could be on the same table still throwing crazy shots.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
But at one time they could even be on the
same stage with each other. By the way, it took
twenty that was twenty plus years later too, So at
least I think it was at.

Speaker 6 (16:26):
Least twenty so we got about ninety more years. You
got about nineteen more years before you see us something
like that. But I thoroughly enjoyed this battle. And but
stands are gonna be stands too. I think the problem
with hip hop is that it's not like sports, so
you can't you can't say who won. Everybody just wants
to go with their who their preferences, whether it's Drake
or Kendrick.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
When it's a sport, it's a score.

Speaker 7 (16:45):
Yeah, you know, but these fans are crazy because at
one time, when I said I thought Kendrick was winning,
then I was a Kendrick guzzler.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
Then when I said I think Drake got it, then
that was a Drinke guzl. I don't even know.

Speaker 6 (16:54):
I'm just how Drake guzzler though, But it's you, Maige,
because Beige people stick together, Beaige lives matter.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
I got get it.

Speaker 8 (17:00):
We don't.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
Just I'll tell you who I thought it one. I
know who do you think one? Even? Who do you
think one?

Speaker 7 (17:05):
I told you I thought it was up. I thought
it was Kendrick until I heard Drake say he fed
him the lines.

Speaker 6 (17:11):
I thought that was believe that he fed that. The
fact that you even still believing that it's crazy, Maybe
that makes no sense.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Maybe like if I was if I fed Kendrick those lines.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
If you watch that Family Matters video, Drake documented everything,
Why wouldn't you record yourself showing that you're feeding Kendrick
the lines.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
It's not more, it's more. Maybe it's maybe who you
think one.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
I don't think anybody went.

Speaker 7 (17:39):
Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five
one o five one. We got just with the mess
coming up what we're talking about.

Speaker 5 (17:44):
The protesters was headed for the met galler last night.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
Did they make it?

Speaker 9 (17:48):
Well?

Speaker 3 (17:48):
I guess we'll find out when we come back.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
We'll find out, all right.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
It's the Breakfast Club in the morning, The Breakfast Club.

Speaker 7 (17:55):
Morning, everybody in Steve j n v Jess Celariy Chelamage
the god we are the Breast Club.

Speaker 3 (18:00):
Good morning, Where the hell is? Jests that? Good morning? Listen.
I want to tell y'all to.

Speaker 6 (18:03):
My new book, Getting Honest to Die line Why Small
Talk Sucks, comes out May twenty. First man to go
to watch Small Talksucks dot com to see where I'm
gonna be at in the next couple of weeks. As
far as pulling up the bookstores in your city, that's right,
all right, Well, let's get to just with the.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
Mess is real lines.

Speaker 3 (18:20):
Just Robber Moore, just don't do no lines. Don't do
that talk world why, jests worldwid on the Breakfast Club.
She's a coach of ship.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody could get you to see this
time to set it off.

Speaker 5 (18:41):
Okay, So two months ago I reported on the death
of John Barrett who was a former Boeing quality control
man at a manager, he became one of the many
whistleblowers who warned us about all the dangers of the
Boeing production standard. He was found with the gunshot on
that determined to be self inflicted. But now another whistle
blow died after a short illness. We got the music play.

Speaker 16 (19:02):
A second Boeing whistleblower now dead after experiencing a brief illness.
This comes after Joshua Dean expressed concerns over manufacturing issues
with the company's seven thirty seven Max planes.

Speaker 17 (19:15):
The forty five year old died Tuesday after an agonizing
two weeks in critical condition. Rather his antilesa Seattle Times,
Dean started having trouble breathing. He was intubated god pneumonia
and then MRSA before he died. Doctors were considering amputating
his hands and feet, but he was too weak for surgery.
Dean used to work as a quality inspector for Spirit

(19:35):
Aero Systems, a Boeing supplier. He was fired in April
twenty twenty three. He said it was in retaliation for
flagging safety concerns regarding the seven thirty seven Max plane.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Okay, two whistleblowers randomly ended up dead.

Speaker 6 (19:48):
Don't make it so obvious, guys, all right, we got
to remember bolow down, space them out of something.

Speaker 3 (19:53):
He's one hundred and ten billion dollar company, so I'm sure.

Speaker 7 (19:57):
Yeah, whatever it takes to make sure that that company
and that stot the stock shot down I think a
couple of months ago, So whatever it takes to get
that stock back to where it.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Needs to be.

Speaker 6 (20:04):
Because we're not accused of nobody, not at all all.
Were saying, it don't make things so obvious.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
Yeah, right, There are conversations about that, whether their deaths
are suspicious or just a coincidence.

Speaker 6 (20:17):
I mean, if somebody randomly just gets sick and the
two weeks ago, all of a sudden can't just stops
being able to breathe the way they used to, can't
even can't speak on the stand, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Even two week So hell of coincidence, guys. I want
to throw that yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (20:31):
And the attorneys for both Joshua and John hope that
their deaths don't scare away they at least ten more
whistleblowers who wanted the company to be swallowed them whistles.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Yeah, yeah, swallow gone.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
Sallow, but prays up to their families. Moving on to
mc galla recap. Last night was the twenty twenty four
Mtgala in New York City. It was one of the
biggest nights in fashion. As usual, the stars were in attendance,
but some of my favorite looks personally were damps injuries.
He was so clean from head to toell. Lord Damnson Indries,

(21:03):
do you know what it is? Go ahead, Damson Indress.

Speaker 3 (21:07):
There you go. You got to stand like you're from
over there with.

Speaker 9 (21:13):
Injury.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
But you were talking about that, Lord nos Ex.

Speaker 3 (21:18):
I loved it. I loved it.

Speaker 5 (21:19):
He he killed his little outfit.

Speaker 11 (21:22):
No, he was not.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
He was fully clothed and he had the little Cisco
head cut going on the platinum. It was nice to me.
He looked nice, nicky. No, she understood the assignment. Willow
and Jaden Smith killed this side by side. Kim Kardashian,
I liked her outfit. Mandy Khaling, I liked her outfits.
To her presentation was was nice.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
Before they said Kim Kardashi's waist was too small? Did
you see that? They said?

Speaker 4 (21:45):
It was?

Speaker 9 (21:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (21:46):
I mean, hasn't it always been?

Speaker 6 (21:48):
You know?

Speaker 5 (21:48):
But the outfit was very form fitting.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
I liked it.

Speaker 5 (21:51):
She killed it.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
She was look a little boneless in the waist, that's all.

Speaker 10 (21:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
She I feel like she always looked like that, like
you know, when she wear old, that girl will not
breathe on purpose to look like that, you know.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
So it is what it is.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
I'm telling you.

Speaker 5 (22:07):
Katy Perry was one of my favorite looks also, but
she actually really wasn't there. People reported that pictures of
Katy Perry at the met gala was ai so hilarious.
I know, but she would have killed it if she
was there. So AI, kat Parry killed it definitely. And
Rihanna also reportedly missed the met gala because she's fighting
the flu. So healing energy over there.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
I saw body. Body looked good clad b damn.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
Yep, I Sawry too.

Speaker 13 (22:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (22:33):
Protesters crashed the event the PVPS, which is the pro
palest time protesters. I just said PVPS because that's very long.
They attempted to storm the met gala. The protests started
around four pm at Columbia University and New York University,
with a planned meet up at Hunter College at five pm,
before marching towards the met police had barricade set up
about a block away. Some protesters were able to get

(22:55):
past the police, but were eventually stopped and arrested. The
met Gala itself had more security than usual and the
event remained safe.

Speaker 6 (23:03):
Yeah, the meg Galla security was waiting on Kanye Diddy
to try to crash the party. That's what that was.

Speaker 7 (23:08):
Stupid, stupid. But how the met Gallus security better than
these universities? Kell and them students didn't get nowhere near
to megalo none, not even close.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
Well, they're already on the campus of the college.

Speaker 7 (23:19):
Yeah, but they college campus and college. Then the police
caldn't even get them off campus Meggalla. They wasn't nowhere
near the mec Galla.

Speaker 6 (23:26):
Well, I mean it's different when you start inside something
like if you start there already, it's different than trying
to get inside.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (23:33):
Magdae Stallion dropped the new freestyle. She flipped Gucci's twenty
ten song I Think I Love Her seem as though
the kids doing on the cold tell him you played
it go because I'm frozen.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
That's from what I got over. You don't know where
the can slay't hang on the take before COVID. I
can tell about how wed that she chrosing.

Speaker 5 (23:48):
When I look at my DMN, Naomi can't walking out
to be like Naomi to well I playing. If I
need me, a Tony could bring graduated talking my percentage,
I take it out of chet.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
I ain't trying to be a pimpal met.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
While yeah, she always eats, we noticed she is phenomenal
her freestyles. Although our reported yesterday to some of her
tickets are going as low as twenty four dollars, which
was a fact. She also has two hundred ticket dollars,
two hundred dollars tickets, three hundred dollars tickets, and even
more in some other cities.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
And she also did sell out some venues.

Speaker 5 (24:20):
United Center in Chicago, Little Caesar's Arena in Detroit, MSG
in New York, has already sold out Wells Fargo Center
and Philly CFG Arena in my city Baltimore, and State
Farm Arena in Atlanta, and a lot of others. So
what you don't know the day before, you find out
the next day.

Speaker 6 (24:35):
That's right, Because I asked the question yesterday, I said,
is making the Stallion an arena artists?

Speaker 3 (24:41):
Yep?

Speaker 6 (24:41):
Clearly we got our answer, because, like Jessa said, she
sold out thirteen arena stops and I think I read
over two hundred and forty thousand.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
Tickets, Yes, across forty thousands North America and Europe.

Speaker 6 (24:52):
So yeah, if you're selling, if you're selling out arenas,
you're an arena artists.

Speaker 11 (24:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
Absolutelyeah.

Speaker 5 (24:57):
I don't think should be hating on them. Twenty four
dollar tickets, Please take them, because I'm about to buy
Chris Brown tickets for four hundred dollars, four hundred, four hundred.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Because he's not hitting me back, like boy. But when
you want time, you hit me.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
Up whatever you want. Has he ever hit you?

Speaker 17 (25:11):
What?

Speaker 3 (25:12):
Has he?

Speaker 12 (25:12):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (25:13):
He has hit me?

Speaker 3 (25:13):
What he said.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
My job business? You put it out there when wessing
with Ja, But now we.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Not each other. What is you talking about?

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Davey Hey and like crazy?

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Listen, we got your questions?

Speaker 5 (25:28):
You love you A christ got front page news coming up, y'all. Way,
it's Angela.

Speaker 7 (25:33):
Angela ra will be joining his next front page US
and then Tify be in the building.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
What nothing, it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 7 (25:40):
Good morning, we got you're checking out the Breakfast Club
morning everybody, as tej NV Jess HILARI is Charlamagne, the guy.
We are the breakfast Club. Let's get in some front
page news.

Speaker 3 (25:51):
Angela, Angela is here, all.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
Right, y'all, here we go.

Speaker 10 (25:56):
So Columbia University has canceled there university wide commencement ceremony
on May fifteenth and instead is having a smaller, well
several smaller scale, school based graduation. And this is after
weeks of anti war protests and counter protests on campus.
While a lot of private universities have codes of conduct

(26:17):
that align with the constitutional rights to protest, the threats
and consequences for students who have engaged in these protests
include suspension at.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
Some institutions of higher learning. So there is some nuance here.

Speaker 10 (26:30):
But there are some parents, I think, especially black parents,
who see this issue as very black and white.

Speaker 18 (26:35):
Let's roll the clip now, parents, how do you feel
about these protests on campus? Sarah, We'll start with you.

Speaker 9 (26:41):
Rowan.

Speaker 15 (26:41):
Now, I'm all for free speech, but I don't understand
what they think they're accomplishing, and that's really putting a
strain on me and my daughter's relationship.

Speaker 19 (26:49):
Well, I think it's just great, you know, it's wonderful.
Nothing makes me prouder than young people using their voices
to fight for what they believe.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
In Alfons, your daughter must feel so supported when she's
out there.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
What's that now?

Speaker 5 (27:03):
When when who's daughter is out.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
There at the protest? You bugging.

Speaker 19 (27:09):
Alexis Vanessa Roberts better half her button class? Let me
find out she in one of them damn tents instead
of the dorm room that I pay for.

Speaker 3 (27:17):
I thought you were in favor of the student protest.

Speaker 19 (27:19):
Brother man, I am supportive of y'all's kids protesting.

Speaker 6 (27:24):
Godic kids, godfic, you better get your gother in that
back damn class while godthera you'll ask.

Speaker 10 (27:29):
Exactly so, even though that's an SNL skit, I know
we're all laughing because either we have that parent or
we know a parent just like that.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
It's speaking of that parent. You are that parent. Let
me tell your story, your truth.

Speaker 7 (27:42):
I mean, yesterday was my daughter's last class, so she's
supposed to graduate in another week or so, and we
don't know if she's gonna actually have a graduation because
they're saying that they might cancel a graduation.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
And the sad thing about it is she didn't have
a full graduation.

Speaker 7 (27:55):
For high school because of COVID, So she didn't get
to experience what she should have experienced because of COVID,
and now she might not be able to experience her
graduating college because of what's going on with all these protests,
which is sad and similar to what you know, the
S and l skit is. Yeah, I'm support yeah free speech,
absolutely positively. But there's a lot of students that work
hard that want to graduate. There's a lot of students
that put themselves through college. There's a lot of parents

(28:16):
that work very hard to make sure that they can
pay for school, and they want to see their child
walk across that stage. And I might not have that opportunity.
So I might have to create a stage in the
back yard just to see my daughter walk across. But
I want to see my daughter walk across. I want
I want to hear him yell her name, and the
grandparents and my parents and myself and my wife, you know,
scream Madison, whatever it may be.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
But we might not get that opportunity to do a
little stance to some pomp and circumstance. There you go.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
That's right.

Speaker 10 (28:41):
I love that, and it's so important to again hold
the space for that nuance, because there are a lot
of people who may listen to this show every morning
who are like, yeah, there are kids and gaza who
aren't going to experience graduation because they won't live to
see that graduation. So I know it's hard to hold both.
I totally understand what you're saying, but one.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
Thing will don't even got a compere them.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Well, I'm not.

Speaker 10 (29:00):
That's why I said nuanced. It's not comparison at all.
What I'm actually saying is we have to hold space
for the humanity of both.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
Right, I'm empathizing with what MB is saying. But one
thing I know about you.

Speaker 10 (29:11):
If anybody's likely to build a stage in the backyard,
and that's an amazing opportunity for you. So shout out
to your daughter and we certainly hope to see her
walk across the stage.

Speaker 3 (29:22):
I hope so.

Speaker 10 (29:23):
And speaking of our ability to fulfill the American Dream,
there's a recent report by Investipedia that estimates to fulfill
the American dream it would cost three point four million
dollars over a lifetime. There are a lot of folks
who can't afford that right now. Based on what they
say is the average two point three million lifetime.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
Well, I know, and isn't it changing every single day?

Speaker 10 (29:47):
Like one of the things that I thought was fascinating
in this report is it says the lifetime costs. The
highest cost on here is health insurance at nine hundred
and thirty four thousand plus dollars.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
We were supposed to have a pass hole ledge to make.

Speaker 10 (30:00):
This hell of a lot easier, so I'm actually shocked
that that is the number one cost on this report.
The next is mortgage. It talks about the cost of
raising two kids, lifetime, car costs, pet costs. They even
put the funeral cost you're still paying when you die.
So you know, this is we need we have a
hell of a bridge to close a gap to bridge,

(30:22):
and I think this report is shedding some light on that.
So we hope the kids can cross the stage and
they can pay for the lifetime that lies ahead. We
know that this life is not easy or cheap, and
this American Dream Report tells us that a lot of
folks will be living a nightmare because there's a big gap.

Speaker 6 (30:37):
And that's why I keep telling people most folks in
America can't see past their bills. You'll be getting mad
at people for not caring about what's going on.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
All over the world.

Speaker 6 (30:47):
Very hard to do that when I can't even you know,
focus on putting food on my table or keeping the
roof over my head right here.

Speaker 7 (30:53):
But not only that was she said, you know, one
of the most important things, and I know we're seeing
it a lot more because we getting a little older.
A lot of our friends and the people that we
know a little older than us are dying dying because
they can't.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
They can't go to the doctor.

Speaker 7 (31:05):
They they don't have health coverage, they can't pay for ambulance,
they can't pay for emergency room. So what a lot
of people do is they just take a little aspir
and say out it'll be okay, and by the time
they figure out what's wrong, it could have been prevented.

Speaker 6 (31:16):
They don't even have health insurance to go cover of physical. Yeah,
it's going to get a regular, yearly, annual physical.

Speaker 9 (31:21):
You know.

Speaker 10 (31:21):
The other thing that's coming up for me. I'm forty
four now, so one of the things that's coming out
for me is our shut up. Our parents are getting
older and one of the things that we're not really
set up to do. I think, especially in black and
Brown communities is being able to caretake for our elder parents.
You end up in a position where you can't continue
to earn for the American towards the American Dream because
you have to take time off to support your parents,

(31:43):
saying God, that's not my lot. But a lot of
my friends are taking their parents to doctor's appointments and
occupational therapy and physical therapy so that they're good.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
That's another big part of this.

Speaker 7 (31:53):
And I will say this if you can, and I
know it's something that people don't like to think about,
but you should also think about. And this it is
going to say I'm crazy, is to make sure you
take care of your funeral so you don't leave that
court with your kids or your family when you do pass.
When my wife's mother passed away, you know, we had
to pay for the funeral. But what it made me
think was I paid for It's gonna sound crazy, I
paid for my own funeral, yeah, and my wife's funeral,

(32:16):
so that when we passed, that's something my kids don't
have to worry about.

Speaker 3 (32:18):
I paid for my cast and I.

Speaker 7 (32:21):
Paid for that already, so if something ever happens, it's
just pull it out the safe and look where it is.
So my kids, that's one thing my kids don't have
to worry about, you know. And I don't want to
go fund me for that, Like please, I don't want.

Speaker 9 (32:32):
To go for me.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
Please please please please? Yeah, put a go from here
for me. You better not.

Speaker 6 (32:36):
I'm definitely stupid. Hopefully I don't have to do that,
you know, because you know, we get to live long,
healthy lives.

Speaker 14 (32:42):
Boy.

Speaker 3 (32:43):
But if not, I'm putting one out just to do it.
The name was lying the whole time. He was hell talked.

Speaker 10 (32:50):
See everything they don't cover in some of these breakdowns,
Well they do, they say, cost of to baby deliveries.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
We know that you are with child, glowing and beautiful,
thank you, But.

Speaker 10 (33:01):
There are also so many challenges that exist around childcare
and all of that, like even getting on lists and
access to childcare services is costly and difficult.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
It is, so I'm not looking forward. Yes, that's it, yes,
full stop.

Speaker 10 (33:17):
Okay, Well, we are hopeful that everything will be fine
and there will be no complications, no challenges, and no
extra costs.

Speaker 5 (33:25):
Yeah, that's the main thing.

Speaker 10 (33:25):
But college, speaking of costs, costs forty two thousand dollars
as well.

Speaker 3 (33:29):
On the low end.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
We know for some colleges that could be a year.

Speaker 5 (33:34):
A manifesting the daughter shingle.

Speaker 1 (33:36):
She's not gonna go radio, okay, she was like, there's
another way to.

Speaker 5 (33:43):
A college.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Okay, well listen. Well that's what it is. So shout
out to Jess's.

Speaker 10 (33:47):
Baby, fulfilling American dream by going through radio just like
you and whatever else we want to do.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
So that's it. That's it for Front Page.

Speaker 3 (33:54):
News and listen.

Speaker 6 (33:55):
Make sure you subscribe and download to the Native Land
podcast hosted by Angela, Tiffany Cross, and Andrew Gillham on
the reason Choice Media Radio podcasting network.

Speaker 7 (34:05):
Dropped, playing episodes every Thursday, right, yes, every Thursday.

Speaker 6 (34:10):
And you'll be joining us later this week to sit
with miss Marilyn Mosey. Yes, yes, nay, she'll be miss
Marylynd Moses.

Speaker 3 (34:17):
You'll be joining us later this week, okay.

Speaker 7 (34:19):
All right, Now when we come back, comedian Tiffany Hattis
will be joining us an actress, so we're gonna talk
to Tiffany.

Speaker 3 (34:24):
We got a new book, I Curse You with Joy
out today. That's right. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
The Breakfast Club wanting everybody.

Speaker 7 (34:33):
It's steenj Envy, Jess Hilarious, Charlamage, the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. We got a special guest in the building.
Good sister, Tiffany Haddis is back.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
Welcome.

Speaker 13 (34:41):
Hey, Yeah, I'm feeling fantastic.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
How are you feeling less? Black?

Speaker 5 (34:46):
And I feel good?

Speaker 3 (34:49):
There you go. Yeah, new book. I curse you with joy.
Talk to me about it.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
But you know it's funny.

Speaker 13 (34:54):
Everybody's calling it, I curse you with joy, but I
call it. It's at the top of the page. If
you look at the front page and say, Tiffany Hattish,
I cut you with joy?

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Got you?

Speaker 5 (35:03):
Yeah, I need to say that, But you can say
I cut you with joy.

Speaker 6 (35:06):
You've been saying that since I've known you. You always
do that, like curse people with joy.

Speaker 5 (35:11):
Yeah, because it's a lot of unhappy people. And I mean,
if you look at the internet, you can see it's
a lot of like it's a lot of hate and
anger and sadness out there. And I could, like, you know,
come back that with the same thing, or I could say,
you know what, I'll cut you with some joy because
you obviously are not happy. So I'm sharing some stories
in this book. It's a series of essays if you will,

(35:33):
and then I'm sharing some dark things about my existence
and how I find the bright side of it.

Speaker 7 (35:40):
You know what got you to the point to write
the book? Was it a particular comment, Was it something
that somebody said, or you just was all of the above?

Speaker 13 (35:46):
No, I had always wanted to do that because the
first book, Tiffany Hatish The Last Black Unicorn, that first
one I had edited down when I had took a
lot of stuff out because it was too long. I
don't like super long, but I don't like them too
long personally. If I'm not gonna read it, why would
I expect somebody else to read it?

Speaker 3 (36:03):
Right?

Speaker 13 (36:04):
So I took a lot out. So on this next book,
I curse you with joy. All the stuff that I
had took out the first book I put in this book,
plus more of the journey of being this you know,
shot out of a cannon star, I guess you would say.
And it's been it's been an interesting journey. You guys
have known me since the beginning of the journey. You

(36:25):
guys have seen the whole ups and downs and all
of that.

Speaker 5 (36:27):
I'm like, this is the craziest roller coaster, and nobody
gives you a manual on how to be famous. Nobody
gives you a manual on how to handle certain things.
And you have to figure that. You got to figure
it out, and it's it is hard. It is very hard,
but I'm having fun doing it.

Speaker 3 (36:43):
What was the most difficult part, you said, you figured
it out.

Speaker 13 (36:45):
The most difficult part was not rolling up on somebody
and whipping the ass, right, because I'm from the nineteen
hundred and we'll show up to your mama house and
beat your ass.

Speaker 5 (36:54):
That's what it is like the good old days. You know,
Oh you're talking, Okay, I'm gonna come over there and
beat you up. You know, when my period come on
and I got some time, I will call people. I
will make a phone call that.

Speaker 7 (37:06):
You actually, I guess you found an app that you
could actually find out where these people live or find
a number.

Speaker 5 (37:11):
Yeah, yeah, you can find you can find people.

Speaker 6 (37:13):
You know.

Speaker 13 (37:13):
I used to be married to a private investigator, so
I know how to get in your business if I
want to. And so when the lady in the red
dress show up, I become a little evil and I'll
be having time.

Speaker 5 (37:24):
Sometimes sometimes I have time.

Speaker 13 (37:26):
So then I decided to take that time to invest
in people that like to talk, and I'll just put
your business out there, not like docs you or nothing
like that, but you know i'll call you or I'll
make comments on your page and you won't know it's me,
but i'll make comments about you know, police recordsition.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
So when you call these tros, you call saying this
is Tiffany Haddish.

Speaker 12 (37:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (37:47):
Yeah, I'll be like is this blah blah blah, and
they'd be like, yep, I'll be like this Tiffany Hatish.
They'd be like what nah what, no, No, this is
Tiffany Haddish I saw. First of all, I want to say,
I know you love me because you spent three hours
making a video. The video was three hours, so I
know you spent at least six editing it and all

(38:08):
of that, like searching for pictures and finally like thank you,
I appreciate you, or you know, I see your whole
YouTube pages about me. So I just wanted to say
thank you. And I wanted to let you know that
I'm about to monetize your videos because you know, you
use something my content there, so I'm gonna need to
get paid too. And they'd be like you crazy. Ain't

(38:28):
no way this is you. No no, no, no, no no,
I'm not crazy. I'm not crazy. I have endometriosis. And
so I'm telling you I'm using it. I'm using it.

Speaker 13 (38:38):
I'm using the energy towards something positive. So I just
wanted to let you know how I know you let.

Speaker 5 (38:44):
Me lady therapeutic for you don't like in any way.

Speaker 14 (38:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 13 (38:49):
I've been therapy so long, I don't know. I don't
know if it was therapeutic. I felt like it was
more so informative for others, like it was my way
of sharing. For others, some parts are a little artic
or whatever, but for me, it was more so I
want people to know they're not the only person going
through what they going through, like and just because somebody's
famous doesn't mean they're not a regular human being, and

(39:11):
that there's not like bad days. There's sometimes it's more
bad days than good, especially like I'm know, dealing with
the Greek. Losing my grandma really kind of just threw
me for a loop. I feel like my soul was like, look,
we're gonna have we don't have too many losses at
this point, so we're gonna have to sit down and
deal with it. And if you don't sit down and
deal with it, i'ma I'm gonna make you do things
that's gonna have to make you sit down and deal
with it.

Speaker 3 (39:32):
So was the daddy issues chapter hard.

Speaker 13 (39:35):
That was the hardest one. That was the hard That
was the hardest one because I realized, like, man, is
it's hard not having a dad.

Speaker 5 (39:46):
And then like when I met my dad, it was
like I was a little girl all over again, and
like I remember everything about him, you know, even though
I was three years old the last time I saw him.
I remember how he smelled, I remember what he sounded
like just here in his voice. My whole soul lit up,
like nobody sound like my daddy. Nobody could be my daddy.

Speaker 9 (40:06):
And so.

Speaker 5 (40:08):
But there was years I was trying to find my dad, like,
you know, through other men and through whatever I was
doing stupid shit.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
I was done.

Speaker 5 (40:15):
And it's a lot of us out here like that.
But you can you can pull past all that and
grow and be successful.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
You about to make me cry, is it true? And
women really look for that, and men like do they
look like look for somebody that's like their daddy.

Speaker 5 (40:27):
I don't know, I don't know what other women looking for.
I know what I was looking for.

Speaker 3 (40:30):
I was looking for.

Speaker 5 (40:31):
I was looking for like safety. I wanted to feel safe.
I wanted to feel like no fear. For so many
years growing up, it was like every day was scary,
you know, just be scared every day. So then to
decide like, I'm not gonna be scared no more, and
I'm gonna find somebody that's gonna do this with me

(40:52):
and protect me and love on me and hold me,
like take care of me and kiss on me and
tell me I'm doing good.

Speaker 13 (40:59):
But it's hard to fine. Also, I'm a little difficult.
I'm sweet, though a little difficult.

Speaker 5 (41:07):
I'm gonna do what I want to do because I
never that's part of I think, not growing up with
the fathers, Like I know how to take orders and
I know how to get things done. If you ask
me to do something, I'm gonna get it done for you,
but I'm gonna do it on my time when I
feel like it. And if a man is like I
need you to call me when you leave out of it,
I want you to be here at this time whatever
if you not. If I'm not getting a paycheck, I'm

(41:28):
gonna show up when I feel like it. I'm gonna
be at your house when I feel like coming to
your house. You know That's I think that's been the
biggest issue, is like I don't want to feel like
I got an answer to this man. So you've never
had that type of relationship yet where you would be like, Okay,
I'm gonna let this man lead, Like no one has
ever shown you that they that I let men lead
all the time. I let them lead, But that don't

(41:50):
mean I'm gonna follow all the way. I'm gonna let
you lead and start saying like this is not going
don't feel sad, this don't feel safe. I'm not gonna
be like you know what I'm saying, Like I need
to feel safe.

Speaker 13 (42:04):
I need to feel like this is where I'm gonna
be Like spiritually, I need to feel safe, emotionally, I
need to feel safe, physically, I need to feel safe financially.

Speaker 5 (42:13):
I need to feel safe. And I don't need to
be feeling like I'm being used. If I feel any
type of way I'm being used or manipulated in some
kind of way, U what like no, and if you
using me, tell me you using me? So I could
use you to like, Oh, I can help you use
me better. I'm here to be used.

Speaker 13 (42:28):
We all are here to be used for some purpose
something right. But tell me what you're using me for
and I might help you get it done better. Don't
don't sneak it. Don't do it sneakily like think I'm
stupid because I'm not.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
I might be.

Speaker 5 (42:41):
I might be sating you up to give it.

Speaker 3 (42:43):
Use me, don't misuse me.

Speaker 5 (42:44):
Yeah, use me, don't abuse me.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
We got more with Tiffany Hattish. When we come back,
don't move.

Speaker 7 (42:49):
It's the Breakfast Club, the Morning Wanning everybody. It's DJ
n V JESSEILARI is Charlamagne the God. We are the
Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Tiffany Hattish. Now
it says you haven't been drinking in said months?

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Has it been seven months?

Speaker 17 (43:01):
No?

Speaker 5 (43:02):
No, no, no, I haven't had sex since October. That's
seven months.

Speaker 3 (43:05):
Oh drinks.

Speaker 13 (43:08):
It's November twenty When was the twenty third Thanksgiving?

Speaker 1 (43:12):
Twenty third?

Speaker 14 (43:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (43:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (43:14):
How was it affecting your comedy?

Speaker 7 (43:15):
You know, sometimes when you look at comedians or even
rappers actors, sometimes that's that's what they use because they
used to it. They drink and they do a show.
So the fact that you haven't drink it doesn't make
your show.

Speaker 3 (43:25):
Is it easier? Is it more difficult? Are you seeing
clear room?

Speaker 13 (43:28):
I see everything more clear for sure. And but I
didn't really drink before shows. I will probably drink during,
like while I'm on stage. I'm gonna have a drink
while I'm on stage. But like before, no, I don't spoke,
no we before, none of that, not before the show.
But maybe by the second or third show at the night,
I'm probably I'm probably because I started drinking on the

(43:48):
first show, but I notice now like by the but
if there's more than two shows in the night, by
the end of that second show, I'm sleepy. I'm so tired.
I'm so sleepy. I just want to go to be
like I want to go to bed at ten o'clock,
nine thirty. And you know, but comedy happens at night.
And then I've been getting up super early in the
morning working out, so I make sure I get my
afternoon nap. If I'm getting on nap in the afternoon,

(44:11):
I'm pretty much the rest of the evening. But I
feel like my comedy is I've been listening to it
because I record every set. I've been recording every set
for the last like five years through my phones and
my recruiting devices. And I was listening to like before
my grandma died, how much joy was in my voice,
and then like after my grandma died, like I don't know,
I'm about to.

Speaker 5 (44:31):
Like maybe when Jesus died. It was before Jesus death, see, yeah,
before Grandma. I don't know, but yeah, bgg yeah. Anyways,
I just noticed there's a big difference in like people like, oh,
you're saying you look good, you feel good, like your
energy's good. And I do feel good and I am

(44:53):
happy for the most part, but I feel like this
is huge grief hanging over me.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
Like I just feel like grief that's morbile.

Speaker 1 (45:00):
Do you write on that?

Speaker 5 (45:01):
Yeah, write on that? Yeah, I talk I talk about
it on stage hall like deal with my grief. Like
some days it'd be so heavy.

Speaker 13 (45:07):
I'm like, oh, I gotta do something for Granny today.
And I put a picture of her up in the backyard.

Speaker 5 (45:11):
I put on some music and I do rhythmic dance
from gymnastics and with ribbons and stuff, and I dance
around in my backyard. I hope nobody ever sees. It's
just for my grandmother.

Speaker 3 (45:23):
And God, what do you think you more focused alcohol?

Speaker 5 (45:27):
No, because I wasn't.

Speaker 1 (45:29):
I was drinking. It wasn't getting.

Speaker 3 (45:31):
Okay, you thinking about something now.

Speaker 1 (45:38):
I just had a clash to my head.

Speaker 5 (45:42):
And I'm just like MS, mediums my face.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Stop smoking.

Speaker 5 (45:49):
Now, I'm back smoking weed. I started back smoking weed
after my court date.

Speaker 11 (45:54):
Me.

Speaker 13 (45:56):
I'm not I'm not gonna drink no more. I probably
will never drink alcohol again. It's like I'm engaged to
get married just so he could see like my full
crazy un Yeah, like there's no with like no restriction.

Speaker 5 (46:08):
I feel like though I have more restrictions. I was
like I was way too nice. I feel like when
I would be drinking, I'd be way too nice.

Speaker 13 (46:16):
Way too accommodating, probably way too loud because alcohol make
you death.

Speaker 5 (46:21):
So I think I'm a little meaner now I'm quick
to tell people no.

Speaker 9 (46:25):
Now.

Speaker 5 (46:27):
Yeah, boundaries, I feel like boundaries is mean. Though it
can't be. I know I'm protecting it. I'm protecting it.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
Had a conversation since she was on a club station.

Speaker 13 (46:37):
No, we have not had no conversation. We barely ever
had a conversation ever. I've you know, tried to talk
to her here and there or whatever, but no, we
haven't had no conversation. I slid in her DM since.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
She got my number, if she checked, Oh, you just
sent her your number.

Speaker 5 (46:50):
I said to a statement, Yeah, and here's my number two,
here's my number. If you want to talk about it, what.

Speaker 3 (46:57):
Do you think? What do you think of that?

Speaker 6 (46:58):
The whole state of black comedy since the top of
the year, it's like, since kat Wims did that interview,
it feel like everybody just been kind of at each other.
Like it's almost like you go to club just to
get that other comedians.

Speaker 5 (47:08):
Yeah, I don't know about that. Godfrey didn't go Brell
didn't go at other comedians just a little bit, a
little bit, just a little bit. I don't know.

Speaker 13 (47:18):
I feel like that's something we do in the club,
Like if you got some beef with somebody, you like
tell them to they face.

Speaker 5 (47:24):
I mean, I know I have.

Speaker 13 (47:25):
I've definitely gone up to people in their face and
said I don't like you, you know, or what you
did with that. I ain't feeling that, like I haven't
had to do it too often because there's not too
many people that like really get on my nerves like that.

Speaker 5 (47:38):
Just a few people. I mean, that's comedy like you're
supposed to. It's a little challenge, But I don't know
about doing it in front of the world like that.
I don't know about all that.

Speaker 3 (47:47):
Seemed like it was a brunch this weekend, ie, I
think a Netflix brunch. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (47:51):
I was like everybody that was beefing with each other
were all in the same room. Yeah, but you know
what was crazy. You know what was crazy was outside.

Speaker 5 (48:00):
So we wasn't in the same room.

Speaker 13 (48:01):
We was outside and everybody was there, and Kat was
there and he was looking very interesting. He's looking very interested,
very shiny, and it was super cool, and he's talking
to everybody.

Speaker 5 (48:13):
Moving around, moving around the room and stuff, talking to everybody.
And then as soon as Kevin got there, nobody could
find Kat. I don't know where Kat went. But then
he did perform live, but it was like one.

Speaker 3 (48:25):
In the afternoon.

Speaker 5 (48:26):
Yeah, the brush started at twelve, and then I think
Kevin got there like one one point thirty, and then
cav was gone.

Speaker 3 (48:34):
Did you speak the cat?

Speaker 9 (48:35):
No?

Speaker 5 (48:36):
No, I smiled and waved you cursed him with joy.

Speaker 1 (48:40):
He looked at me.

Speaker 5 (48:41):
I don't think he recognized me because I had a
wig on, so I don't think he realized it was me.
That's what I'm telling myself. Or he just was like,
I ain't right now talk crazy too.

Speaker 6 (48:50):
But that's fine though. Yeah, everybody put their boundaries up.
I rather y'all not speak than see each other in
public and be crascinating.

Speaker 1 (48:57):
I wouldn't.

Speaker 13 (48:58):
First of all, I love me some cat me and
cat ain't got no beef. I mean, he do like
saying my name, and I think it's because my name
garnishes clicks for some reason, especially if you say like
one negative thing around my name.

Speaker 5 (49:08):
Everybody's clicking on like oh what she do now?

Speaker 3 (49:10):
What she do now?

Speaker 6 (49:11):
What she do now?

Speaker 13 (49:12):
So like, and I think he knows that he's a genius,
so he's like, Okay, what's gonna get me the clicks?
What's gonna get the you know, she's just randomly a
say my name and don't saything else, just timedy, haddish.

Speaker 5 (49:23):
And live factory and then let me tell you about
this kenviny.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
I'm make no sense.

Speaker 13 (49:31):
It's like he's like, I'm the one that put her
on she was in school dance with me, And I'm like,
I never said that you that you didn't put me
on it that you did. But Nick Cannon did put
me in school dance for that road, not Cat Williams.

Speaker 5 (49:43):
But we did kill that together, Like we did that
together and that was awesome and it's like a viral
moment online and I love Kat. I sent him a
script and he's like, we gotta work on that, writing
on that script. Okay, let's work ont Like who do
you want to write? Like whatever, Like, let's make it happen,
Let's make a movie.

Speaker 9 (49:59):
Like.

Speaker 12 (49:59):
I love him.

Speaker 5 (50:00):
I think he's super talented.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
It is strange when people trying you do get on
my money nerves sometimes.

Speaker 6 (50:04):
It is strange when people act like you didn't you
didn't come come up, come up like everybody else. Like
you was in the comedy clubs, you busted your ass,
you did all that.

Speaker 13 (50:13):
Yeah, I mean, can't put me out, can't put me
out the club to with Parkerssino. I was underage and
he was doing the Hollywood Parkasino every week and I
was too young to.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
Be in there.

Speaker 5 (50:23):
He put me out there, like you ain't got nobody
you can't be in here, and like, you put me
out there. Finally I got a you know, I was
old enough and uh, he let me perform and then
he commenced to roast me for like probably twenty minutes
after I got off stage, and I felt so proud.
I was like, Cad William is this talking about?

Speaker 13 (50:40):
He was roasting me back then he roasted out of me,
and I'm like, do you remember this? He's like, not
too many hours.

Speaker 5 (50:48):
I remember this.

Speaker 13 (50:49):
I was struggling a picture. He was like, oh, that
was your skinny ass. So I felt honored. You know,
It's funny because some people don't even like I remember them,
but they don't remember me.

Speaker 5 (51:00):
They like, no, we just met that.

Speaker 13 (51:01):
I'm like, no, we met back in two thousand and
one at this place and they're like no. And then
I show him a picture and they're like, oh, you
were kind of mean, but now you're nice.

Speaker 7 (51:11):
So we got more with Tiffany Hattish. When we come back,
it's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning wanted everybody met.

Speaker 3 (51:16):
All the Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Tiffany Hattish.

Speaker 5 (51:20):
Uh huh.

Speaker 3 (51:21):
A lot going on, Drake Kendrick, what's got to ask
you to the court, what doing you Jewish too?

Speaker 13 (51:35):
I'm a Jewish business woman and I'm about what's entertaining
and if I'm going with the entertainment factor of it all,
Kendrick is killing that ass like I am, very entertained.

Speaker 5 (51:45):
He got all the good punchlines. Drake got good punchlines
and all that too, And I just want to give Drake,
You're doing a good job. I'm proud of you, because
you know he sensitive. He went off on me before. No,
not in my dams, in my face.

Speaker 1 (51:59):
He's he.

Speaker 5 (52:02):
He told me, he told me I didn't like that.
That hurt my feelings that I'm sorry, I will I
will not talk about that no more.

Speaker 13 (52:11):
Although I did tell you I was gonna talk about that,
and he said it hurt his feelings, and I said, okay,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
What did you talk about him?

Speaker 5 (52:18):
I talked about how his daddy.

Speaker 13 (52:19):
I told him I wasn't gonna talk about it no more,
but I'm gonna talk about him his daddy, his dad
be trying to Yeah, his daddy be trying to holler.

Speaker 5 (52:26):
He don't like that. I said, I much rather be
your baby mama than your step mama. Ain't like that,
Like I like his dad, but not.

Speaker 9 (52:35):
Like that.

Speaker 3 (52:38):
Hurt his feelings that.

Speaker 5 (52:40):
Because I talked about it on stage, I talked about it.
There was a lot of commodate to you that then
since you talked about it on stage and then got
back to him, his daddy's interesting.

Speaker 6 (52:53):
But no, the.

Speaker 3 (52:55):
No interesting.

Speaker 9 (52:58):
No.

Speaker 13 (52:58):
I see him at different events, stuff in different like
he'd be a Jewish stuff and all that. His daddy
be around, like I don't know if you're looking for
his next Jewish backround my mother what but he outside,
he'd be outside. So but as far as the beef goes, uh,
the rat battle, I'm loving it. I'm here for it.
I think I'm so proud of Kendrick. I'm so proud

(53:20):
of him, like, uh, he's killing it and he's like
in the lap just bringing it in. The punchlines is there,
Like he's killing it. I'm proud of him. And I'm
proud of Drake too. He has an airplane. Airplane. Now,
I think it's a little they're getting a little they
going a little blow the belt, but they're going yeah

(53:43):
it's deep.

Speaker 5 (53:45):
Yeah, but it's it's like a real rat battle attle,
you know what. I'm saying like, we get it at
a safer one of these in a long time. Yeah,
a real good one.

Speaker 1 (53:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (53:56):
I feel like I'm back on the school bus.

Speaker 3 (53:58):
What happened on? Where were you at an outside joke appearance?

Speaker 13 (54:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (54:02):
So I was at the Netflix is not a joke?
Netflix not a joke. I was at a showkay, outside Netflix.

Speaker 3 (54:12):
Protest.

Speaker 6 (54:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (54:13):
I went off because people.

Speaker 13 (54:14):
Were saying, you know, they were saying what they were saying,
and they was like, you got to support the colleges,
and I'm like, I don't want to. I don't want
to support people tearing up a school. I don't think
that's the way to go about it.

Speaker 5 (54:26):
If you really want the if you want stuff like
this to stop happening, if you're protesting the genocide that's
going on and you want that to stop happening, I
think there's some better ways to go about making it
stop happening.

Speaker 13 (54:38):
Blocking people from going to class is not going to
be the thing. I don't think that's gonna be the thing,
because that's what the I mean, that's what the Nazis did.
They blocked the Jews, they blocked the Jehovah witnesses, They
killed a lot of people. They didn't just kill Jews,
they was killing everybody that was not like them. So
like uh, and they were blocking them from getting their education,

(54:58):
blocking them for being able to have a if they were,
they were hurting them. And so like to me, if
you really want to be changed, you want to make change,
you really want to be effective, you really want this
to stop, then start learning, get get yourself educated, and
get in there and change the laws, change how we
how get become, get in NATO or whatever, the international
or whatever you gotta be on Senate all that, Like,

(55:21):
change the laws, change how we move.

Speaker 5 (55:24):
That's what I would do.

Speaker 13 (55:25):
That's what if you really wanted to change, like be
effective in get involved in government to protest.

Speaker 3 (55:31):
You disagree with how they protest.

Speaker 13 (55:33):
How they protesting is not I don't. I don't agree
with how they're protesting. Yeah, protests, yes, Protests yes. If
you think that's gonna make it change, yeah, if you
think it's gonna make a difference, you're gonna it's gonna
make people pay attention. Yeah, But the way y'all going
about it, I don't think this is right. I don't
think you're spray paying the library is gonna really make
anything change. I know it's been spray paying the library
for years and they just shut the library down.

Speaker 5 (55:56):
That's all they did. Like so no, I don't think
that's the way to go about it.

Speaker 13 (56:01):
I think the way to go about it is to
get into legislation, To show up to your congressmen's office,
show up to your senator's office, show up, sit outside
they office, and protest. Put the pressure on them. Doing
it at the schools ain't putting no pressure on them.
They're just like, oh, they're up there at the school
cutting up whatever, like and we like, as a twenty
something year old, like do you invigorate it teenager?

Speaker 1 (56:23):
Yet?

Speaker 13 (56:24):
Like that's protests. It's been happening every decade. It's always happened.
Women was out there burning they bras. But y'all out
here angry about you know what's going on over there
in Gayza, and this's genocide. When they're about to make
pass laws over our bodies, women's bodies, we ain't gonna
be able to have no choice in what we doing,
like overturn, Yeah, like hello, we need to be paying

(56:48):
attention to distraction is real, Like you're not gonna it's
gonna be Handmad's tail out here. When you start really
reading all the legislative read everything, like it's about to
be Handmaid's tail out here, You're about to be like
it's gonna be crazy, Like you voluntarily want to be pregnant. Yeah,
that's a voluntary thing, Like, but there's gonna be situations
where it's gonna be involuntary. Like I mean, if you

(57:10):
read the legislations and I'm not I might not be
articulating it's the best, but I'm concerned.

Speaker 5 (57:15):
I'm concerned for our future.

Speaker 13 (57:17):
And I'm concerned when our youth are all their knowledges
coming from TikTok and Instagram and they.

Speaker 5 (57:24):
Not really like doing the real research and really reading.
They just taking some some bloggers word for it. It's like, no,
go look this up. Go to the go look up
these legislations.

Speaker 13 (57:36):
Like there's no doubt there's there is a genocide happening,
there's no doubt about that, but like that's not the
only one that's happening right now. So if we're gonna
be protesting genocide, if we against genocide, we need to
be against all the genocides, not just the.

Speaker 5 (57:48):
Lighter genocide, all the like the black the the br everybody, everybody,
We're not it. Don't need to just be from the
river to this.

Speaker 13 (57:57):
You need to be like, uh, recycle yourself on the
stop killing the Congolesese like, but.

Speaker 5 (58:03):
Don't get me started. I'm sorry. Okay, anyways, I curse
you with joy. It's out today.

Speaker 13 (58:09):
Get it audio or a physical book hard copy at
any local bookstore. The audio version is off the chain
because I'm definitely bringing it and some of my music is.

Speaker 5 (58:20):
On there, and I'm really excited about the music that's
coming for you.

Speaker 7 (58:24):
So yeah, all right, well, there you have it. The
book is out right now, make sure you pick it up.
It's the Breakfast Club's Tiffany had more than everybody. It's
j n V Jess, Larry Cholamine, the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 3 (58:35):
What's happening. Let's get to Jes with the message as.

Speaker 20 (58:37):
Real, just a robber Moore, just don't do the lines,
don't do talk.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
Talk the world why Jes worldwide mess on the Breakfast Club,
the coaching ship.

Speaker 1 (58:53):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody could get you to see this
time to set it off.

Speaker 5 (59:00):
Okay, So twenty six year old declared braindead after drowning.
We can go straight to the report the Louisiana attack.

Speaker 15 (59:08):
University graduate was hanging out with friends at a lakefront
restaurant back on April fourteenth when one of his friends
allegedly pushed him into the water of Canselely exclusively obtained
new information today from the Union Parish Sheriff's office. Law
Enforcement released the call sheet report from the near drowning incident,
and tonight Chris is still in the hospital, but according

(59:29):
to family, he's doing much better and is officially off
life support.

Speaker 3 (59:33):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (59:34):
Okay, so a little bit more detailed. So he is
a young black man and he was the only black one.
All of his friends are white. He spent more than
ten minutes submerged underwater. He was hanging out with some
of his white friends at a lake front in Louisiana
when one of them pushed him into the water, knowing
that he couldn't swim. In the video of the incident,
you can see a woman trying to save him, but

(59:55):
she was unsuccessful. Shortly a man shortly after, a man
who was eating and nearby restaurant. He saw and heard
the commotion and he went to rescue him. His friends
originally lied and said that he fell into the water,
but one of his white female friends admit to pushing
him and considered it horse play. His friends looked on
as he struggled for ten minutes, and it took two
strangers to help him, like I just said, And when

(01:00:17):
he arrived at the hospital, he was the clear brain
dead and the rest of his organs were starting to fail.
Earlier this week he was on life support and his
lungs were operating at twenty percent capacity. But in the
last day or so he was taking off life support.
And even though he liked the like the report said,
is making major improvements, he still can't speak.

Speaker 3 (01:00:35):
That's horrible.

Speaker 7 (01:00:36):
That don't even make sense. It don't even make sense.
They pushed him in the water, they said they were
horse playing. Obviously, Well he couldn't swim because he was
under there for ten minutes, So nobody jumped in to
go get him.

Speaker 9 (01:00:46):
No.

Speaker 7 (01:00:46):
One girl said she tried with all the other males
on neck that could have helped him out, and they
had to wait for somebody else.

Speaker 5 (01:00:51):
That was another woman. That was another stranger. Another stranger
tried and was unsuccessful. He was pribe too heavy, so.

Speaker 7 (01:00:55):
They heard the commotion, and then from hearing the commotion,
they saved him. So them other kids on both didn't
try to say no, none of his friends and lied
about it.

Speaker 6 (01:01:03):
At first, I wonder what the percentage of you know,
black people who can't swim is now, Because I'm back
in the day, it used to be high. It used
to be like almost sixty percent. I wonder what it
is now in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 7 (01:01:13):
Now, you're right, Yeah, And I tell everybody with kids,
I mean, it has nothing to do with this, but
when you have kids and babies, teach them how to
swim early if you can. Whether it's the YMCA they
have cheap classes, or you take them to wherever. You
can teach your kids how to swim early. So if
they're ever in a situation, they can at least hold
themselves up until they can get some help.

Speaker 6 (01:01:31):
But it shouldn't those kids be shouldn't they be charged
with something absolute?

Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
Yeah, you know, whether it was a horse player or not,
you know, something bad still happen. Yep.

Speaker 5 (01:01:41):
And then yeah, and she admitted it after a while, like, yeah,
I did push him in, but I was just playing.
But so I'm gonna keep up with that story to
see if they are arrested or but any type of consequence. Javonte,
Davis and Devin Haney get into a heated argument in Miami.
So Tank and Devin Haney was outside the out in
Blue in Miami when they got into a heated argument.

(01:02:04):
And a few days ago, Javonte was interviewed by a
journalist and talked about backing up Ryan Garcia in his
last fight and just not believing that Ryan was on
performance enhancing drugs. And this is what he said to journalists.

Speaker 20 (01:02:16):
You know, while I'm backing around because a lot of
boxers going down him, which when we thought we made
it cool to go at Brian like that, Brian is
not somebody that he's compensation. And why didn't it take
thirty seventy two hours for the test to come back?

Speaker 18 (01:02:32):
Right?

Speaker 9 (01:02:34):
Right?

Speaker 20 (01:02:34):
So why ain't come out that Tuesday or that week
that they waited to Caneto fight to uh to push that.

Speaker 5 (01:02:42):
Then once they pushed that, Kevin and.

Speaker 3 (01:02:45):
Was on ESPN that night promoting that he was.

Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
It's all it's odd And I'm telling you thoughts.

Speaker 6 (01:02:54):
I been watching Javonte lately, and you know, I saw
him on a million dollars worth a game. He got
a speech coach or something. Because what happened to Javonte's
ts what you mean you don't says No, it's just
it's not like y'all it used to.

Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
Be heavy Baltimore.

Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Well maybe he did get a speech.

Speaker 3 (01:03:11):
I don't like that.

Speaker 5 (01:03:12):
You don't like that.

Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
I don't like a Davis. I want I want the clone.
I want the real thing going to.

Speaker 5 (01:03:18):
They almost needed Ai for what he said the journalist.
I was over there, like Jesus, what are you saying?
But you know, don't play with my b That's that's
the Baltimore brother right there. And if he needed the
speech therapy, obviously, because he did, then he did.

Speaker 3 (01:03:35):
To me, I like the Baltimore accident though, all right.

Speaker 5 (01:03:39):
Well sometimes I guess I guess the speech therapists had
to work on certains, yeah, you know, to help him out. Okay,
all right, so yeah, but the video really wasn't necessarious.
They wasn't letting Javonte get to Devin. Devin was hanging
out the car and he was, you know, both of
their teams were like around each other, and they had

(01:04:00):
on Scully hats in Miami in May. So that was
just an observation that I saw.

Speaker 6 (01:04:05):
I was like, Jesus, they're not hot pointless to get
a speech therapist. If you're gonna wear a Scully hat
in Miami, first of.

Speaker 5 (01:04:09):
All, don't do that.

Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
Don't do that.

Speaker 5 (01:04:12):
But either way, he's expected to fight coming up.

Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
Yes, you're fighting, Frank Martin.

Speaker 1 (01:04:18):
What y'all got?

Speaker 20 (01:04:19):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:04:19):
Tankan?

Speaker 5 (01:04:20):
Absolutely that that's my guy. I had another story, but
it's not it's not gonna not gonna make it. And
so he swear your little finger. Yeah, I'm sorry we
have to end that.

Speaker 3 (01:04:32):
But that is just with the message that Charlamage we
give that.

Speaker 6 (01:04:35):
You know, there's a Catholic priest named Lawrence Kozak who
needs to come to the front of the congregation because
he stole some booty.

Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
We'll talk about it for after the hour. We'll get
to it next. It's the breakfast club. Good morning, wake up.
You're like into the breakfast club.

Speaker 5 (01:04:52):
An execution on the donkey of the day is something
you can hold the.

Speaker 1 (01:04:55):
Reason he gave me donkey other day and I deserve that.
People need to know what you you need to tell them.

Speaker 5 (01:05:01):
I am tell them.

Speaker 3 (01:05:05):
It's time for don't give the day.

Speaker 5 (01:05:06):
It's a reed, but you're so good at charlamage.

Speaker 14 (01:05:10):
He wants Charlomade.

Speaker 1 (01:05:14):
Solomon, Who do you given?

Speaker 9 (01:05:15):
Dusk?

Speaker 1 (01:05:15):
You other day?

Speaker 8 (01:05:16):
Sooner?

Speaker 6 (01:05:16):
Well, Sexy red Donkey Today for Tuesday, May seventh goes
to a Catholic priest named Lawrence Kozak. Lawrence is accused
of stealing booty from a church in Pennsylvania. And I
let the record show when I say this Catholic priest
stole booty, I'm not talking about little kids.

Speaker 3 (01:05:30):
I'm talking money.

Speaker 6 (01:05:31):
Yes, this man stole more than forty grand and expenses
over three years, and some of the money was used
to buy cell phone games, cell phone video games. You know,
I'm a stern believer that it's not a stereotype if
it's true, and this story is not going to do
anything to defy the stereotype that Catholic priests are pedophiles
and child abusers, especially when we die more into why

(01:05:52):
this particular Catholic priest was stealing money.

Speaker 3 (01:05:55):
Let's go to w R A L for the report. Police.

Speaker 21 (01:05:57):
A Pennsylvania Catholic priest is accused of stealing parish funds
to play games like candy Crush, Wort's. Kozak is charged
with theft and related crimes. Authority say he rocked up
tens of thousands of dollars and expenses over three years
and used some of that cash to play cell phone
games like Pokemon Go. The archdiocese has placed Kozak on

(01:06:17):
administrative leave.

Speaker 6 (01:06:19):
These poor people, man, they come to the Catholic Church,
you know, given tithes and offers, given tithes and offerings,
typic tithes and offerings. Okay, giving they ten percent to
the Lord, and here go to pastor stealing money because
he wants to play Wizard of our Slacks and candy
Crush soging cash Frenzy and Mario Kart or in Pokemon Go.
I hate to be, you know, the one to break

(01:06:42):
the news to you, but this man, this man might
have been buying apps fast man. Okay, There's just no
way that the Catholic priest steals forty thousands from the church,
and a large part of it is going to these
apps that are largely.

Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
Aimed at kids.

Speaker 6 (01:06:53):
Now, I'm not one of these people who buys into
every stereotype. I know that there has a lot of
prejudice against the Catholic church because there are some people
who believe that Catholic priests everywhere are pedophiles and child abusers.

Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
We know that this is not the case. Every Catholic
priest is not the same.

Speaker 6 (01:07:07):
So if I say, what's the difference between Woody from
toy Story and a priest? When someone replies, only one
of them goes limp when a child walks in walks
in the room. That does not apply to all priests. Okay,
do you understand, but it could apply to Lawrence Kozak.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
I don't want to.

Speaker 6 (01:07:22):
Get distracted though this man used the church's money that
he stole over forty thousand dollars on apps.

Speaker 5 (01:07:29):
The thing that.

Speaker 6 (01:07:29):
Bothers me the most about this is that you are
taking advantage of people's need to believe. Taking advantage of
a person's you need to believe, that's also a form
of abuse. All right. These people are sowing a seed.
They are showing gratitude for all that God has given.
They want to return to God a portion of what
they have received. And a lot of people do this
hoping that they will also come back to them because

(01:07:50):
they need it.

Speaker 3 (01:07:51):
People say, when you tie, it brings you closer to God.

Speaker 6 (01:07:54):
So you taking advantage of people's need to believe they're
hard earn money that they could be spending on ood,
medical bills, housing, childcare. But you taking these folks, you know,
money so you can buy candy crushing Pokemon Go, Pokemon Go.

Speaker 3 (01:08:13):
I think you got all these apps because you want
the poker kids.

Speaker 6 (01:08:15):
But I don't want to reinforce stereotypes, because all Catholic
priest should not be judged by the bad actions of
a few. Like if I ask what's the difference between
acne and a Catholic priest, if someone responds to all
Catholic priests, that just wouldn't be right. Now, let's just
say Lawrence wasn't reinforcing negative stereotypes of Catholic priests, and
he was one of the many people who are addicted
to these self on apps. I truly believe game purchases

(01:08:39):
is an epidemic as big as crack or opioids. They
get you hooked by giving you something free, but the
catch is they make you wait like every hour to refresh.
But then they'll offer you a quicker way to get
whatever you know, whatever you need replenished, you just gotta pay.

Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
Monopoly Go gives you ten.

Speaker 6 (01:08:56):
Dice every hour, or you can get one hundred dice
for nine ninety nine. Which one are you gonna ultimately choose?
If you want to play Monopoly?

Speaker 11 (01:09:03):
Go.

Speaker 6 (01:09:03):
It's kind of like, man, remember back in the day,
and it still might happen now, Like when the new
iPhone comes out and then they ask you if you
want an update on your old phone, and then when
you update it, it don't quite work.

Speaker 3 (01:09:14):
The same that just happened to me. You see what
I'm saying. My long clock will not work. Now you
see what I'm saying. So now you forced to go
buy a new phone. Yeah, that's how they get you.

Speaker 6 (01:09:22):
Speaking of getting you, I just really want people to
understand that I am not on this radio saying all
Catholic priests abuse kids. I'm just saying it's suspicious that
this guy was using the church's money to have all
these apps for kids on his phone. If I ask
Kendrick Lamar, why do Catholic priests like playing the violin?
And Kendrick replies, because they get the finger a minor.

(01:09:43):
That a minor that has nothing to do with all
Catholic priests. Okay, Now, Father Kozoles was arrested on April
twenty fifth and faces felony theft charges.

Speaker 3 (01:09:52):
And he earned that, father Kozak.

Speaker 6 (01:09:55):
Have you ever wondered why Catholic priests called themselves father
because it's too suspicious for kids to.

Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
Call him daddy.

Speaker 6 (01:10:02):
But that has nothing to do with all of them,
just some Please let remy ma give Lawrence Kozak the
biggest he.

Speaker 1 (01:10:10):
Haw he haw he ha, you stupid mother?

Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
Are you dumb? Mm mmm mmmm.

Speaker 1 (01:10:18):
Well mm hmm, that's.

Speaker 3 (01:10:25):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
I don't know what his words like Charlemagne or the priest.

Speaker 3 (01:10:29):
I didn't do anything. I was just telling the story.

Speaker 5 (01:10:31):
No, I'm not talking about reference to the kids. I'm
talking about the way that you just slaughtered a lot
of other precesses.

Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
No, pres I said, I said some preciss is the
word I didn't say. I didn't say all. I said something.

Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
I know the last little bit. I'm not listening to this.

Speaker 5 (01:10:48):
It's gonna be like, oh uh uh, well.

Speaker 6 (01:10:50):
If it don't apply, let it fly. Okay, yes, listen,
I said, don't fit.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
You must have quit. Huh. All right, thank you for that.

Speaker 7 (01:11:01):
Donkey today, and now we come back, John Carl will
be joining us.

Speaker 3 (01:11:05):
What John called from John carr Is from ABC.

Speaker 6 (01:11:08):
He's on This Week ABC, but he also had a
new book out called Tired of Winning Donald Trump in
the End of the Grand Old Party.

Speaker 7 (01:11:14):
Yep, we're gonna get with John Call when we come
back as the Breakfast Cloud, Go Morning, the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (01:11:21):
Boy.

Speaker 7 (01:11:21):
Everybody is DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the Guy.

Speaker 3 (01:11:25):
We are to Breakfast Club. We got a special guest
in the building. Yes, indeed Gotathan called. Welcome, Thank you,
thank you. How's it going. How you feeling.

Speaker 18 (01:11:31):
I'm feeling great, feeling great script to be.

Speaker 3 (01:11:33):
Here of people who Jonathan call it if they don't know, I'm.

Speaker 18 (01:11:37):
The chief Washington correspondent for ABC News. I covered the
White House for more than a decade as the Chief
White House Correspondent, including all of Obama's second term, all
of Donald Trump's term. I've written three books on that guy,
on Trump, and I'm the co host of This Week
And how did you get into politics? So people that
don't know, I mean, you know, I gotta tell you.

(01:11:59):
I mean, ever since I was like a little kid,
I was in fifth grade, I was like grabbing for
the New York Times sports section. First you know, which
was pretty lame at the times, and then the op
ed page to read the op eds. My mom and
my stepfather went out to South Dakota at about that
time and we went to Mount Rushmore and they ended

(01:12:20):
up doing a project. And by the way, neither one
of them went to college. My stepfather had been a
cab driver. He was working running a factory in Stanford, Connecticut.
We went out there, we ended up moving to South
Dakota and then went on this project to interview all
the people that worked on Mount Rushmore. There were three
hundred and some people, most of the miners who built
that freaking you know, you know, sculpture, that mountain, and

(01:12:43):
that was like journalism. I went, I missed a lot
of school, ended up going to school to town with
three hundred and fifty people out there for a couple
of years, and so I think that was the beginning.
I never really looked back.

Speaker 6 (01:12:55):
Who was better for business? Obama a Trump. We're just
talking about the business. Nothing now, it's just a business.

Speaker 3 (01:13:00):
Of what you do.

Speaker 18 (01:13:01):
Who was better for Okay, So being at that White
House for the transition, and by the way, I was
in the Oval Office the one and only time that
Barack Obama and Donald Trump met, and that was on
November tenth of twenty sixteen, two days after Trump won.
Obama invited him in, you know, seeing the two of them.

(01:13:21):
I mean, we've never had two more different presidents, of course,
in American history together. The one time I saw Donald
Trump in a room where he was not in charge,
you know, Obama was the president and it was Obama's meeting.
Obama invited you know, me and the other press in
the for the little photo op. At the end, Obama
made the first comment, invited Trump to speak, and Trump

(01:13:43):
almost seemed humble for a moment. He even said some
nice things about Obama. Lasted for about thirty six hours,
still kept on saying some nice things about how well
he was welcomed by missus, Oh and you know, the president.
But sort of who's better for business? Let me answer
it this way. With the advance of that from that
moment on, the interest in what was going on at

(01:14:04):
the White House was completely off the charts. So is
that good? I mean, I guess it's good because the
ratings are high. Is it good for the country, you know,
that's a whole, entirely different question.

Speaker 6 (01:14:13):
It was unprecedented, right, because I mean it was the
executive producer celebrity. It's a notorious eighties nineties celebrity that
becomes president of the United States of America.

Speaker 18 (01:14:23):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, and he and it was a show.
I mean, that's why my first book I wrote was
front wrote at the Trump Show and this is what
it was. And he cared, He tracked the ratings, he
beat up on the critics. You know, he programmed. He
was the executive producer. That's why he went through so
many communications directors and press secretaries and all that, because
he was. He was the chief of staff, he was

(01:14:45):
the spokesperson, he was the executive producer. He was the director.
And every day he was thinking how can I get
more attention?

Speaker 9 (01:14:52):
You know?

Speaker 18 (01:14:53):
One thing, you know, the Twitter thing was obviously something
that defined the Trump years, but he would this little
parlor trick. Sometimes we had people coming to the dining
room off the Oval office where he spent most of
his time, had a big TV is to watch this
and he would tweet and then count the minutes until
the tweet was on the cables.

Speaker 8 (01:15:12):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
Really, But that's the other thing too.

Speaker 6 (01:15:14):
He's also probably yeah, probably the first president that had
the full benefit of social media.

Speaker 3 (01:15:19):
Like social media and it's full of form as we
see it now. He had full advantage of that since
twenty sixteen.

Speaker 18 (01:15:25):
Do you know how many times the Obama campaign tweeted
in two thousand and eight that once it wasn't it,
it was a new thing. They tried it out, it
was like and and Obama made a lot of use
of social media, to be sure. But Trump would do
another thing, which is he had this guy, Dan Scavino,
who was actually he had been his caddie, you know,

(01:15:45):
and he him met him at one of his golf
courses and been with him, the guy that's been with
him the longest outside of his family in that White House.
And you know another thing Trump would do. We'd have somebody.
I witnessed this myself, you know, you come into the
Oval office and you can see how we're doing. He's good, Dan,
what's the number? And then Dan would come out from
this little officer outside and tell him the number of Twitter, Facebook,

(01:16:09):
Instagram followers he had, the combined number he was tracking
that by in the minute.

Speaker 3 (01:16:13):
Do you think Biden could beat Trump?

Speaker 7 (01:16:15):
And if you do feel that way, what does he
have to do to make sure he has the support
of the people out there.

Speaker 18 (01:16:20):
I actually think that Biden is probably the front runner,
even though it doesn't look like that in the polls
right now.

Speaker 3 (01:16:26):
Why do you feel that way?

Speaker 18 (01:16:27):
Trump has u And I document this in my I
had a book out a few months ago, I'm tired
of winning, and I kind of go through. Trump does
a great job of convincing everybody that he is the
biggest and most powerful, the greatest winner of all time.
He's actually been a tremendous loser in politics. He's won
one election and that was twenty sixteen, and he led

(01:16:49):
the Republicans on a series of losses. And primarily you
can track the losses. Almost all the major defeats can
be tracked to something Trump did. Either. He was the
one that basically chose the candidate. He meddled, you know,
inserted himself in a way that was not active. So
he doesn't have a good electoral track record at all. Now,
he did just run through the Republican nomination in what

(01:17:11):
turned out to be a very weak field. Most of
the candidates he was runn against didn't even want to
like criticize it until it was way too late. Yeah,
Chris Christy, who had one fundamental flaw Christie had as
he was the guy that basically helped Trump win in
twenty sixteen. But so I think that Trump comes into
this election with far more negatives than he had in

(01:17:32):
twenty sixteen when he won, and certainly then in twenty
twenty when he lost. The whole experience of what happened
through January sixth, and then what he did after he
left the White House, and this is what I spent
and I spent a lot of time documenting. I mean,
this does not look like a former president of the
United States, let alone somebody has a chance of coming back.
You know, he wallowed in these conspiracy theories for more

(01:17:56):
than two years that he had won the election, and
he actually believed that he could be put back into
the White House before the next election.

Speaker 3 (01:18:04):
He believed that the world would see what had.

Speaker 18 (01:18:06):
Really happened in twenty twenty and Biden would be basically
evicted and they would put him back in dinner with
Kanye and Nick Fuentes, you know, white supremacist. A week
after he announces his campaign selling NFTs, you know, these
digital trading he looked like a guy just trying to
make some money off the whole thing. So now he's
leading in the polls, and he is consistently leading in

(01:18:28):
the polls, and most importantly in the polls of the
battleground states. But I truly think that most Americans have
kind of checked out. And you know, for all that
intense focus on what I was doing when I was
the White House correspondent that I felt at the Trump
White House, who's paying attention to what's going on in
the Biden White House? You know, in the public at large.

Speaker 7 (01:18:47):
We got more with John Call when we come back
his book Tired of Winning Donald Trump in the End
of the Grand Old Party. He's here and we'll talk
to someone when we come back. As the Breakfast clubical
Morning Morning, everybody is DJ Envy, Jess, Larry Chalam, We
are to Breakfast Club. Was still kicking it with John Call,
of course from ABC and his book Tied of Winning
Donald Trump and the End of the Grand Old Party.

Speaker 3 (01:19:08):
He's here now.

Speaker 7 (01:19:08):
I got a question, what do you think about the
effects of some of the celebrities like Steven A. Smith
saying that he's relatable because of his arrest or him
sitting down with people like Kanye West and all these
other artists that are going for him.

Speaker 22 (01:19:20):
Do you think that is a big influence to help
him out or do you think it had hurt him?
You know, I don't think I don't think Kanye particularly
helped him. I thought it was that whole episode was
so bizarre. I mean, Will sells millions of records.

Speaker 7 (01:19:34):
He shows he just had a number one record, So
I know people hate him, say to him, but somebody
supporting him.

Speaker 18 (01:19:40):
Yeah, And it's interesting because he you know that that dinner,
which and what did Kanye say afterwards that he was
offering Trump to be his vice president? But he brings
Nick Flentes. This is a guy who is like, you know,
most people didn't know him until they saw the stories
about this, but this guy is like an actual white supremacist.
I mean, that's his that's his brand. And Kanye has

(01:20:02):
a thing for Adolf Hitler, which is really strange. So
Trump gets you know, everybody condemns this meeting. Trump to
this day has not criticized either of them and hasn't
said like, maybe I shouldn't have done that, or if
I you know right, or I did it. I'll meet
with anybody. But I don't believe in what they believe in.
He hasn't done he hasn't not on a hint of criticism,
So he clearly senses that this is good. I think

(01:20:22):
the other thing that he's done is he is afraid
of alienating anybody who is he sees as his supporter,
even if they're totally off the deep end. He didn't
get around to condemning David Duke until, by the way,
after the Louisiana primary in twenty sixteen. I mean only
after it really became I there's a crazy story that
I talked about in front run the Trump Show about

(01:20:43):
how you know, Wright's previous and Chris Christi and all
these people that were around him were basically like just
pleading with him and begging him to just disavow the
endorsement of David Duke because David Duke could endorsed him,
and Trump didn't want to do it, didn't want to
do it. Finally he got browbeaten into doing it. By
the way, that's the stuff that not going to get
brout beaten into doing anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:21:02):
No, that's Normaliza. Yeah, why did the Grand Old Party
come to an end?

Speaker 18 (01:21:06):
Well, I think you alluded to it when we started
this conversation. I think that the Republican Party is the
Trump Party now. I mean there are elements and there
are you know, little bits and pieces of the old
party out there. I mean, look at look at this
debate over Ukraine. So this big debate of whether or
not we're gonna you know, support Ukraine, continue to support
Ukraine in the war against Russia. And it passed overwhelmingly. Eventually,

(01:21:28):
you know, when when when the Republicans finally agreed to
have the vote overwhelming in the House, overwhelming in the Senate,
but in the House a majority of Republicans voted against it.
I mean, this is the party of Reagan, not anymore.
It's the Party of Trump. The future of the Republican body, well,
I think the Republican Party has a real challenge once,
you know, I mean, when when Trump is gone. I

(01:21:48):
think that he's done such a good job of basically
decimating what was there before. I think that they've got
they've got some, you know, some real definitional problems. What
do they stand for? What what does make America great again?

Speaker 9 (01:22:02):
Mean?

Speaker 18 (01:22:02):
Because if you look, do you remember what the what
the Republican platform was in twenty twenty.

Speaker 3 (01:22:06):
Make America Great Again.

Speaker 18 (01:22:08):
Yeah, there was no platform except for that's for that,
for that statement. There was no platform usually, like I mean,
I've been covering conventions, right, you know, you have all
the detailed what we stand for in domestic policy, foreign policy,
you know, the cultural issues. Nothing. It was just like
Trump's make America Great Again plan? So you know what
do they stand for?

Speaker 5 (01:22:25):
You know?

Speaker 18 (01:22:25):
When he's gone? Now, look, there are the Democrats have
huge problems. And you see, I mean the fact that
we see more Hispanic voters we than we've seen voting
Republican and in the reflection in the polls supporting more
black voters. It's still you know, Democrats dominate both groups.
But the fact that they're losing the fact that Democrats

(01:22:47):
are losing supports among Blacks and Latinos to Donald Trump
is a sign that Democrats have some problems too.

Speaker 6 (01:22:54):
When you when you talk about what a Trump white
House will look like if he gets back in the
White House, can you can you talk to that?

Speaker 3 (01:22:59):
Can you speak the Project twenty five?

Speaker 18 (01:23:01):
Yeah, So this is really important and I don't think
people understand and this is something that I think people
have to understand before they go and vote when Trump
comes back in If he comes back in, the first
test for anybody in a position of authority and power
is going to be loyalty to Donald Trump. I spent
a lot of time reporting and documenting the work of

(01:23:22):
a guy named Johnny McEntee, who was the guy that
carried Trump's bags. He was actually one of the first
guys I met on the Trump campaign in twenty fifteen.
He'd been like a very junior. He was a kid
just out of Yukon. He'd been a college quarterback. He
came to volunteer for the Trump campaign right after Trump
announced the first time around, and ended up carrying his
bags for much of his presidency. He came back in
twenty twenty. He'd been briefly thrown out of the White

(01:23:44):
House by the way because he had issues related to
his gambling that were flagged by the FBI, so John Kelly,
Trump's chief of staff, fired him. After Kelly was gone,
McAtee came back and was putting in charge of Presidential Personnel,
basically the HR department for the whole executive branch of
the US government, and he went about in the beginning
of twenty twenty to try to do a series of

(01:24:05):
loyalty tests interviews. He sent his people out, most of
his buddies, like these are kids in their twenties. He
was thirty years old at the time, to interview from
cabinet secretaries on down testing their support of Donald Trump.
And he engineered The biggest thing he engineered was the
firing of the Secretary of Defense right after the election. Esper.

(01:24:25):
Remember Esper was the one that opposed the use of
the use of the Insurrection Act to bring active duty
troops into American cities during the George Floyd protests. Fired
top four people the Pentagon fired replaced by people devoted
to Donald Trump. So now mcintee is part of this
thing called Project twenty twenty five, which is to create

(01:24:48):
a list of who can serve in the next Trump
White House. And you're not going to have people. Trump
brought in some people of real stature, General Baddis, General Kelly,
his White House counsel Don mcg and later White House
counseled Pat Sibaloni, you know later Bill Barr. People that
had served in previous administrations or were top military figures
who ended up standing up to Trump and refusing his

(01:25:10):
demands to break the law. Essentially, those people and people
like them will not be back. It'll be people that
Johnny mcintee and his and this group have decided are
truly loyal to the king.

Speaker 3 (01:25:21):
And what type of threat to democracy do you think
that polls?

Speaker 6 (01:25:25):
Well, look, do you think it's overstated when people say
that that he's a threat to democracy.

Speaker 18 (01:25:29):
I don't think it's overstated because he actually tried to
bring down a presidential election, so he has done that.
But I think that underappreciated. Is you heard the Supreme
Court arguments on this idea of immunity unity. And by
the way, when Trump talks about immunity, and he talks
about it a lot in his campaign rallies, he's not

(01:25:50):
talking about acts tied to his official duties. He's talking
about immunity. He's talking about shooting on Fifth Avenue community.
So you have somebody who is making the case that
the president is above the law, who is running to
be president again. I think that raises real questions about
what does the rule of law mean. You know, there
is a theory, the unitary theory of the executive branch.

(01:26:10):
This is put forward by some serious legal, you know,
constitutional scholars that basically says that that the president is
the law. The way Nixon put it, you remember in
his interview with David Frost, you know, after he had resigned,
it's not illegal if the president does it. I mean,
there's a whole theory that goes along with that, and
that's what essentially Trump is putting out there. So I worry.
You know, there was a big question that I explored

(01:26:32):
after January sixth about what would have happened if Mike
Pence had done what Trump wanted and what Trump really wanted.
By the way, it was Pence to just throw out
those electoral votes and declare him president. He didn't have
the power to do that, absolutely not. But who had
the power to stop him? This is a mind blowing thing.
And by the way, the law has been changed now

(01:26:53):
to be clarified. But who had the power to stop him?
Some people say, well, the Supreme Court would have stopped him. Well,
first of all, it's not clear at all that the
Supreme Court has any jurisdiction over the rules of Congress
in counting electoral books. But so let's say the Supreme Court,
the Supreme Court in what army? I mean, there was
I talked to you know, you know Judge Luttig who
testified in the January sixth Committee. I talked to him

(01:27:14):
about it, and he he said, look, this would have
plunged us into the greatest constitutional crisis that we have
ever seen, because it is Pence did not have the
power to do that, but basically it's unclear if anybody
had the power to stop him.

Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
Yeah. Wow, well this.

Speaker 7 (01:27:28):
Book is out right now, tired. You could definitely pick
Donald Trump and the end of the Grand Party. Hey,
thank you, Jonathan. Call ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 3 (01:27:35):
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club, Good morning.

Speaker 7 (01:27:41):
Everybody is DJ Envy Jess hilarious, charlamage the guy.

Speaker 3 (01:27:45):
We are to Breakfast Club. Let's get to jest with
the mess for years is real?

Speaker 5 (01:27:48):
Blessings, lines, just go, Robin Moore just don't do no lines,
don't do.

Speaker 3 (01:27:52):
No, why jests on the Breakfast Club. She's the coaching ship.

Speaker 6 (01:28:03):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody.

Speaker 3 (01:28:08):
Could get you to see.

Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
It's time to set it off.

Speaker 5 (01:28:11):
What the Goldberg recalls cocaine addiction with The Goldbird's new
memoir Bits and Pieces, My mother My Brother and Me
comes out today. But one part of the book that
is really circulating already, it's her addiction to cocaine. She
spoke on how Hollywood and New York read defined the
meaning of recreational drug use in the eighties. She wrote,
I was invited to parties where I was greeted at

(01:28:32):
the door with the bowl of coelus from which I
could pick what I wanted. Lines of cocaine were laid
across tables and bathroom counters for the taking. Damn, the
parties was lit back in the time.

Speaker 6 (01:28:42):
There's no different than what these kids doing now with
the molly and the ecstasy and all of them drugs
they're doing that.

Speaker 3 (01:28:48):
That was the drug at the time.

Speaker 5 (01:28:49):
But you're not greeted with no ball now. I've been
Ain't nobody ever opened the door for me with no bowl,
like what do you want?

Speaker 10 (01:28:55):
Or weed.

Speaker 3 (01:29:00):
On a chain?

Speaker 1 (01:29:02):
Three rolls?

Speaker 5 (01:29:03):
I got about three four more months, all right. She
felt like she could handle cocaine because she didn't feel
like it was dangerous because of how accessible it was.
She was good for about a year until she felt
like cocaine started kicking her ass. It started to impact
how she showed up for work and caused her to hallucinate.
She said the moment that made her get help was
when she was doing cocaine in a closet at an

(01:29:25):
upscale hotel. A housekeeper came and opened the closet. She
saw Whoopy and started screaming. Whoopy jumped up and started
explaining to her that it was her room. She saw
her reflection in the mirror and she had cocaine smeared
all over her face. From that moment, she decided to
quit cold turkey. She said, I knew I'd have to
change out my friends and turned down invitations, but I

(01:29:45):
could do that. I didn't want to die.

Speaker 3 (01:29:47):
Cocaine it was plant based, you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (01:29:49):
This is back in the day, you know, before they
used to put all the Rihanna makeup in it, you
know what I'm saying. So when they started adding a
fifity to it, that's when it became really really dangerous.
When they started cutting the cocaine with all types of
other stuff, that's when it became really really names.

Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
But there was a time when cocaine was really really pure.

Speaker 7 (01:30:04):
While she was in the closet, though, if there was
her hotel, yeah, but you know when you want that coke,
when you want that plant based coke exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:30:11):
You don't know Whoopy said she was coming up here
for a book man.

Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
Yeah, this will definitely make people read it though. This
is this is actually great and it just and it
comes out today, so get it if yeah, well so.

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
Get it all right? Moving on.

Speaker 5 (01:30:25):
Dj uh dj vladd criticized for argument with college professor.
Uh So, we got into it with the Princeton professor
after she asked him not to speak on the Drake
and Kendrick beef. His tweet was simply, Kendrick Kendrick's not
like us needed a better mix. It takes away from
the song. Now, I was told that DJ lad was
a producer, So I don't see why you couldn't make

(01:30:46):
this opinion. I couldn't have this opinion about the song.
She responded to him and said, you are white. This
is a black folk affair. So he responded to her
and said, wait, so a professor at Princeton is telling
me that a white person shouldn't be allowed to voice
their opinion about hip hop?

Speaker 1 (01:31:04):
Is that how you interact with your students.

Speaker 5 (01:31:05):
She came back and said, what I'm saying is that
you put your opinion in a discussion that's not needed.
This conversation is and should sensor black people, not you,
she said. Vlad said, don't try to change your words now.
I'll be reaching out to Princeton about this on Monday.
So she said, semester's over and my contract has been completed.
But thanks for trying to bully me out of a
job for censoring black people, because you got your feelings hurt.

(01:31:29):
Very retaliatory, hant nice tactic. The professor says she found
it funny that Vlad shows her to respond to, out
of all people. Well, I mean you, kind of asked Ford.
Vlad said, I responded to you because all the other
responses are from trolls and fake accounts. You may want
to think about getting a burner account like all the
other bigots do. That's how they keep from getting fired.

Speaker 3 (01:31:51):
Lol.

Speaker 5 (01:31:51):
Eight her up.

Speaker 3 (01:31:52):
Jesus.

Speaker 5 (01:31:53):
He definitely did, and later on he shared another tweet
clarifying that he never actually planned to file a complaint
against her. He said, she trolled me, and I trolled back,
but he feels like their argument led to a bigger
conversation about race relations, and he plans to bring it
up in his future interviews.

Speaker 6 (01:32:10):
Social media is the place where people can express their opinions.
Vlad said what he said, and that comment had nothing
to do with race. All Blad said was the song
needed a better mix, you know what I mean. There's
nothing wrong with that comment. And then the sister said
what she said. But now that sister has to deal
with the consequences of whatever Blad chooses to do, if
he chooses to, you.

Speaker 3 (01:32:30):
Know, file a formal complaint or whatever.

Speaker 6 (01:32:32):
And Blad has to deal with the consequences of filing
the complaint on the system, cause social media is gonna.

Speaker 3 (01:32:36):
Be mad at So everybody got the right to their opinion.

Speaker 5 (01:32:39):
Yeah, he said, he wasn't actually gonna do it though,
He's probably just trying to, like, like you said, troll
her back. But I, like I said, I just feel
like some things just shouldn't be turned into race. I
think it was just you know, And then some people
would argue that Drake is half white and Jewish by
the way, so why can't have an opinion about the
competit there beat, that's all he said.

Speaker 3 (01:33:01):
He's like when he was talking about a mix. But
the thing when you gonna be a DJ.

Speaker 6 (01:33:06):
Not only is DJ, Lad was a producer, So Vlad
knows a bad mix when he hears one.

Speaker 3 (01:33:11):
But he was a real DJ, like doing parties and
clubs and mixes.

Speaker 6 (01:33:14):
And he's from the West Coast, so he heard probably
like And by the way, when you walk into a
recording studio, you know who the people mixing your music
most of the time are white, white engineers, you know
what I mean.

Speaker 5 (01:33:24):
He was just an honest critique of his own. It
was his own opinion.

Speaker 6 (01:33:28):
I just I thought that whole exchange was very, very
screen because I don't know why a professor from Princeton
would react in the way a regular Twitter nigga would.

Speaker 3 (01:33:37):
Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (01:33:39):
He just said he didn't like the mix, like that
wasn't the thing to bring like this record because it
is like the miss I didn't like to mix that
had that that was not something to bring race into.
And and and by the way, Vlad, like I said,
you got to deal with the consequences of whatever however
Blad chooses to react. And Blad has to deal with
the consequences of reacting in that way because he he'll

(01:34:00):
complain to Columbia University and she complained to Twitter.

Speaker 3 (01:34:03):
Twitter gonna get on Black. It's like Columbia University or
some university. You might get on her. That's all.

Speaker 7 (01:34:07):
The only difference is is Vlad owns is his own stuff.
So he he's not gonna get fired. Very she could
get suspended.

Speaker 3 (01:34:13):
That is very true.

Speaker 5 (01:34:14):
Yeah, a lot of people attacking him, like Mark Lamont
Hill and all that he back in Lamont Like how
many jobs he was fired from?

Speaker 3 (01:34:20):
Again, No.

Speaker 8 (01:34:23):
He did.

Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Yeah, so Mark didn't say anything else.

Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
Salute Mark.

Speaker 7 (01:34:29):
All right, Well that is just with the mess, all right.
When we coming back, we got the People's choice Mixed
Dot moves to Breakfast Club in morning.

Speaker 3 (01:34:35):
You're checking out the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 7 (01:34:38):
Morning, everybody, it's tj NV. Just hilarious, Charlamagne the guy.
We are the breakfast Club. Salute to Tiffany had Us.

Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
For joining us this morning.

Speaker 14 (01:34:45):
That's right.

Speaker 6 (01:34:45):
Make sure you go pick up her new book, I
Curse You with Joy, available everywhere you buy books.

Speaker 3 (01:34:50):
Now, you're sitting over there looking sick, doesn't.

Speaker 6 (01:34:54):
Trying not to get sick, won't go ahead, and we
all know you pregnant sickness comes with it.

Speaker 5 (01:34:59):
Well, I gotta do, got to throw up after I
finished my job.

Speaker 3 (01:35:03):
That's a trooper, Yes, hanging in there. And John Call
for joining us this morning. That's right, John Carr.

Speaker 6 (01:35:08):
You got a new book out too, called Tired of Winning,
Donald Trump and the End of the Grand Old Party. Yes,
that John Call that you watch on this week ABC
every weekend. And that's who joined us this morning as well.

Speaker 18 (01:35:18):
All right.

Speaker 6 (01:35:18):
I like this type of show, the type of shows.
The type of shows are like the perfect balance of
ratchetiness and righteousness. We had Angela Rye here doing Front
page News.

Speaker 5 (01:35:27):
Yes, she's a breath of fresh air to miss Rye. Nice.

Speaker 3 (01:35:31):
And when we come back, we got the positive notice
the Breakfast Club, Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy
just hilarious.

Speaker 7 (01:35:37):
Charlamagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. It's time
to get up out of here. I want to sloop
to the New York Knicks again. A great game. I
mean that the NBA series has been amazing. I mean
it's getting It goes down to the wire each and
every night, and the Knicks are scrappy. So sloop to
the New York Knicks.

Speaker 6 (01:35:52):
I was thinking last night, I said, man if the Knicks,
the Knicks are like one scorer and one healthy Julius
Randall away from like winning maybe winning a championship.

Speaker 3 (01:36:02):
I agree, I mean I don't.

Speaker 6 (01:36:04):
Yeah, I don't know if they can contend with too
many teams in the West, but maybe, like literally, I'm
talking about a scorer though, like they need. I'm talking
about When I say score, I mean a Kevin Durant
level score and then a healthy Julius Randall. But you
got a jail in Brunson, a healthy Julius Randall, and
like a scorer that can get them buckets anytime. Nicks
will be a problem.

Speaker 3 (01:36:22):
They're saying Paul George that he's been in the room
of mil. Somebody else in the room of mil. I've
seen too that as long as you don't got to
give up too much to give. But I think Paul
Joean might be a free agent. They might be a
free agent. I'm not sure. I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:36:32):
I don't think Spider Mitchell. Don't think Mitchell ain't leaven
in Cleveland. All right, Well, it's time to get a
bout of it. We got a positive note.

Speaker 6 (01:36:38):
Yes, I want to make sure to tell people to
pre order my new book, Getting Honest to Dieline watch
small Talk Sucks available May twenty, first Man. You can
go to watch small talk sucks dot com to see
what cities I'm gonna be in starting on May twenty,
first man. So I'll see you out on the road
and the positive notice simply this. I don't know who
needs to hear this, okay, but it is time.

Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Listen to me.

Speaker 6 (01:37:00):
Man, God really wants me to tell you this. It
is time to delete uber each from your phone because
that's the reason your stomach big.

Speaker 3 (01:37:07):
Now have a blessed day breakfast club bitches, y'all finished
for y'all done,

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