Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Wake you up. Wake up, Wait that ass up?
Speaker 2 (00:03):
The program your alarm to power one oh five point
one on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 3 (00:07):
Good Morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Speaker 4 (00:10):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Yo.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
Charlotte said, we just having some technical difficulties.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
What's up? Just wake that ass up.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
It's Friday, Yes, the weekend is here.
Speaker 5 (00:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
How you feeling? Just I'm excited.
Speaker 6 (00:28):
I'm ready to get to uh Greenville, South Carolina to day.
I got four shows down there at the Comedy Zone.
We got two to night and to tomorrow. So I
can't wait to get down there. I ain't been in
Greenville in like four years. Really, I don't know why
I stay, you know, I less so much time passed
before I go back to visit the Carolinas before South
Carolina because I'm always in North Carolina. Shout out to Charlotte.
But yeah, man, I can't wait to get down there.
(00:48):
I can't wait to eat yo.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Yes, the Carolinas have some of the most amazing food.
When I got down South so swood everybody out. I'm
heading out to I think North Carolina in a couple
of weeks for the Battle of the Bands. Remember it's
supposed to be a couple weeks snow but it got
cancel acause of the snowstorm.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Yeah, so we'll be back out there in the least.
Speaker 6 (01:01):
Couple of weeks because it's gonna be hot that well,
it's gonna be a little warmer down there.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
It'll be a lot warmer there. So yes, salute everybody
in the Carolina. We got Charlamagneyett. He's working now, Charlotte, Charlotte,
can you hear us?
Speaker 7 (01:12):
What?
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Yeah? We can? Good?
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Now you good? Now you can?
Speaker 5 (01:15):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:15):
No echoes you oh no, echo positive? Yep, said I'm good.
Speaker 8 (01:19):
Don't lie to me now, Why.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
Would I thank you, Mike Salutor, Mike, thank you, Mike Man,
appreciate you. Yes, I'm broadcasting from uh I heard y'all
talking about the Carolinas.
Speaker 8 (01:27):
I'm home in South Carolina right now.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
I'm broadcasting from Hot one O three point nine in
Columbia as I speak right now.
Speaker 9 (01:33):
Yeah, tell them get the tickets, y'all. I'll be down there.
Speaker 8 (01:36):
That's two different places.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
I know, I know, but it's right down there.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
It was right up the street. It's about an hour
and a half. Yeah, you're gonna be in Greenville. People
got cars, tell them come down the street, y'o. Yes, yeah,
go go see Jesse Larius in Greenville. I was, uh,
I was there for business yesterday, but I went to
go watch the University of South Carolina Lady game Cocks
win their fifth straight SEC championship last night.
Speaker 8 (01:58):
Gradual for the Lady Fox. Absolutely and it was senior night,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (02:03):
So a lot of great seniors will be leaving South Carolina.
Saluthor Raven Johnson. Raven Johnson, Okay, been on floor general
for the last five years here in South Carolina. Two
n C Double A championship. She's one with us, So
salute to her, essolute to her. Absolutely well.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Benjamin Crump will be joining us this morning. Ben Crumb, Attorney,
Benjamin Crump. There's a new book Worse than a Lie, and.
Speaker 8 (02:24):
Y'all be needing Ben Crump.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Y'all be calling up here all the time, and we'd
be like, Yo, we're gonna send y'all Ben Crump.
Speaker 8 (02:29):
Y'all think we'd be lying. We really do.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Yeah, I really do be.
Speaker 8 (02:37):
Sending y'all to Ben crump y'all all with issues.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
We'll be passing y'all issues along, so I don't you
know some of y'all be handing from them him.
Speaker 8 (02:44):
Some of y'all don't get to you.
Speaker 6 (02:47):
It's Bobby Bobby b birthday. We got some Bobby ving
a q No Big Bobby visil No.
Speaker 8 (02:52):
I know we gotta slow down.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
We're starting to show that way we started.
Speaker 3 (02:56):
Today is Dominican Independence Day.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Okay, big Dominican Independence Day.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
Tall the Dominicans out there, that's what's.
Speaker 8 (03:05):
That I want. I want the records, the show. I
want the records, the show.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Just a Larrus shouted out a black man's birthday, sir
during Black History mon Black the classic album, his first
album is a classic and and we cut that off
the rep for the Dominicans.
Speaker 8 (03:18):
But then he not, he don't want to be Dominicans.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
I'm not Dominican. I'm just shouting out to that's crazy,
nobody black crazy.
Speaker 8 (03:25):
That was crazy.
Speaker 3 (03:26):
Well again to the Dominicans out there, Dominicans Independence Day,
let's get on some.
Speaker 8 (03:32):
Want to the black man.
Speaker 6 (03:34):
I'm sorry about the Jesus you are crazy operations.
Speaker 10 (03:41):
You got to you.
Speaker 8 (03:43):
Gotta pick a side. All the Dominicans, you gotta pick
a side. Know you're not what you not?
Speaker 1 (03:48):
What the course mean? I don't know. Not to just
keep it.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
I'm black. The same to the Dominicans out there. All right,
this is cult will.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
The reason is cultural appropriation is because you are a
Dominican pretending to man.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Let's get some front page news. What's up?
Speaker 11 (04:08):
Maybe, good morning, jesss Charla Maaye, Happy Independence.
Speaker 12 (04:12):
Day and being.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Independendness.
Speaker 11 (04:19):
All right, Well, we started this morning with a major
development that could impact how Americans vote in this year's
midterm elections. So sources say President Trump is reviewing a
draft executive order backed by pro Trump attorneys that could
dramatically change how elections are run nationwide. So the draft
calls for declaring a national emergency based on claims that
China interfered with the twenty twenty election. It's very important
(04:43):
to note that US Intelligence they reviewed it and they
found that there's no evidence that China changed vote totals.
And supporters argue that declaring an emergency would allow the
president though to set national voting rules ahead of mid terms,
including requiring voter ID across the country, replace seeing voter
machines with hand counted paper ballots, and banning most mail
(05:04):
in voting.
Speaker 12 (05:05):
Now it's not clear whether the.
Speaker 11 (05:07):
President will move forward, but he has publicly said that
he wants stricter voting rules in place before November.
Speaker 12 (05:13):
And here's the main issue.
Speaker 11 (05:14):
Under the constitution, states, not the president, have the authority
to oversee and manage elections.
Speaker 12 (05:20):
A mains secretary of state.
Speaker 11 (05:22):
She says state election officials are already working together to
protect the voting process.
Speaker 12 (05:27):
Let's listen to what she said.
Speaker 13 (05:28):
The secretaries of state are going to stand up and
fight back. President doesn't get to do this just because
he wants to.
Speaker 9 (05:34):
They're absolutely terrified.
Speaker 13 (05:36):
They know what they're doing is deeply unpopular and they're
going to get crushed in November. And that's why he's
so desperate to try to exert control over the elections.
And it's not going to work because here's the thing.
Election officials are the world's best contingency planners. We're making plans.
The states are going to share threat information, they're going
to do scenario planning tabletop. The votes coordinate amongst ourselves
(05:59):
without the federal government, because the federal government is showing
itself to be an adversary in all of this.
Speaker 8 (06:04):
I don't like her tone.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
She's talking too calm for me, Like she's talking like
this is just politics as usual, Like this is just
a political dispute. At this point, everyone has to stop
acting like the Trump administration isn't an authoritarian regime. They
do not care about democracy. They constantly wipe their ass
with the Constitution. I don't like throwing words like fascism
around loosely, but what else do you call this? This
isn't about democratic Republicans anymore. This is about democracy or
(06:27):
no democracy. I don't know about y'all, but I don't
want to live on the dictatorship.
Speaker 9 (06:30):
Hell no, hell no, no, of course not.
Speaker 11 (06:35):
But if this executive order is issued, it would almost
certainly face immediate legal challenges. And speaking of legal challenges,
Hillary Clinton. She spent nearly six hours behind closed doors
yesterday testifying before a Republican led over House House Oversight
Committee about the Jeffrey Epstein files, and she told lawmakers
she has no new information on Epstein or Gelayne Maxwell.
Speaker 12 (06:57):
She said she never.
Speaker 11 (06:58):
Met Epstein, flew on his plane, and never visited his island.
At Clinton she called the investigation a partisan distraction. Instead
of lawmakers want real answers, they should question President Trump
under oath.
Speaker 14 (07:11):
Now.
Speaker 11 (07:11):
She was also pressed about her husband, former President Bill Clinton,
and his past association with Jeffrey Epstein.
Speaker 12 (07:17):
Let's listen to how she responded.
Speaker 15 (07:19):
The chronology of the connection that he had with Epstein
ended years, several years before anything about Epstein's criminal activities
came to light. I think it is fair to say
that the vast majority of people who had contact with
him before his criminal please in eight were like most people,
(07:44):
they did not know what he was doing. And I
think that that is exactly what my husband will testify to.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
So why would he question in her if her husband
is the one that had the relationship allegedly with Epstein.
Speaker 16 (07:59):
While we she on the stand, question.
Speaker 12 (08:03):
Good question.
Speaker 11 (08:03):
It's a Republican led committee on this side, and so
you know, a lot of this, as they're saying, is performative.
So you know, Democrats are, you know, conducting their investigation.
Republicans are conducting their investigation, and they wanted to speak
to Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton, who is expected to
testify today.
Speaker 8 (08:21):
So yeah, I don't know if.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
I don't know if Hillary Clinton ever met Jeffrey Epstein
or not, But those AI pictures with Epstein and the
Clinton's been killing me because I know Hillary Clinton, Jeffrey Epstein,
Michael Jackson, Jackson and websteron never been together all at once.
But people be posting the pictures on it like that
they are so real.
Speaker 11 (08:39):
Yeah, we're a seen those And if you are in Texas,
today is the last day to vote.
Speaker 12 (08:44):
Early turnout is surging.
Speaker 11 (08:46):
More than eight hundred and fifty thousand Democrats have already
cast ballots in the Senate primary, outpacing recent cycles and
making up the majority of early voters so far. So
on the Democratic side, you've got Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett and
State Reference James Tellerco who are top contenders, and recent
polling shows Crockett leading by double digits, but the race
remains very competitive and Republicans, they are also in a
(09:10):
very deeply divided primary that has turned a little bitter
a Senator John Corwin. He is facing challenges from Attorney
General Kim Paxson and Congressman Wesley Hunt. And now that
race it's been marked by personal attacks, including corruption and infidelity.
But President Trump, he is headed to Texas today, as
this GOP fight intensifies, all three candidates they've been highlighting
(09:34):
their ties to him. He has yet to endorse anyone,
but Republicans they're watching very closely. Texas has not elected
a Democrat to the Senate in nineteen hundred.
Speaker 9 (09:45):
And eighty eight.
Speaker 11 (09:46):
I believe so with the higher Democratic turnout, with Republicans
losing key races, the stakes are really high. So if
you haven't voted it yet, today's your last chance to
vote early. Tuesday is election day, March third. You can
always vote on March third, but today, this is the
last day of early voting in Texas.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
All right, well, thank you, yes, I.
Speaker 11 (10:07):
Mean well, coming up at seven what started as a
winter fun day may have crossed the line. Well, we've
got an update on that snowball gate story we covered
earlier this week.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
All right, and everybody else, get it off your chest.
Eight hundrenk five eight five one oh five one. If
you need to vent phone lines to wide open, it's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, wake up, wake up.
Speaker 16 (10:26):
As if you're time to.
Speaker 5 (10:28):
Get it off your chest.
Speaker 16 (10:31):
You're mad or blessed, you want to hear from you
on the breakfast Cloud Hello.
Speaker 5 (10:35):
Who's this Good morning?
Speaker 17 (10:36):
I'm anonymous.
Speaker 4 (10:37):
Hey, why wine you on the radio. We can't see you.
You can even you can call the people a fake name.
Speaker 18 (10:42):
Okay, well my name is Tracy.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
Then all right, Tracy, get it off your chest, Tracy.
Speaker 18 (10:48):
Okay. I worked for the Post Office and I want
to get off my chest the fact that then I
delivering people's mail and packages and they're still blaming the
snowstorm from the twenty.
Speaker 4 (10:58):
Seven Oh why they're not delivering.
Speaker 17 (11:02):
I mean, it's the it's they're blaming the weather.
Speaker 19 (11:05):
And I understand the.
Speaker 18 (11:06):
Weather was bad, but there's people who have medication, you know,
court documents, all types of stuff, and they're just not
they're not doing it. They're not given over time.
Speaker 10 (11:17):
It's just it's a mess.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
We can I ask you a question. I'm just playing
white Devil's advocate here. The weather was bad, No, it was.
Speaker 14 (11:26):
Agreable.
Speaker 18 (11:26):
But now but now the I mean for the most part,
most of it has cleared up.
Speaker 20 (11:33):
You can deliver mail.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
So what you're trying to say they don't want to
pay overtime, so they don't want to catch up on
all the packages.
Speaker 18 (11:38):
That exactly, yes, they're not they're not giving out over
time so people could process the packages, so people can
get their their mail and their packages and medication.
Speaker 17 (11:48):
Whatever else they have to get.
Speaker 10 (11:50):
And I think, you know, it's ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
With that over time. Yeah exactly, I'm sorry.
Speaker 10 (11:58):
You know, I just had to get that off my
chest because I'm not still go to work now and
deal with it.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
What city is Tracy?
Speaker 5 (12:03):
What state?
Speaker 1 (12:03):
I'm just curious.
Speaker 5 (12:04):
Whats state New York Queens?
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Oh, queen, you ever got changed by dog? I'm just curious,
I asked.
Speaker 8 (12:09):
Man.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
I don't know why I spray dogs.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
That's all right, thank you, Mama.
Speaker 17 (12:17):
I don't play around. Thank you. Have a good day, guys.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
Thank you. T get bit n as today wa at
the universe on test today?
Speaker 5 (12:29):
Hello?
Speaker 1 (12:30):
Who is this?
Speaker 7 (12:31):
Yo?
Speaker 17 (12:31):
Yo?
Speaker 5 (12:32):
Yo?
Speaker 21 (12:32):
What up?
Speaker 5 (12:33):
Whatever? It's love Low?
Speaker 1 (12:34):
What's up? Why you got that deep voice on?
Speaker 5 (12:36):
Man?
Speaker 22 (12:37):
Nah?
Speaker 23 (12:37):
That's just how I talk.
Speaker 14 (12:38):
You know.
Speaker 23 (12:38):
I'm just in a good mood, you know, I mean,
I'm everything good, Okay. I just had a pee Jill
Charlot man Yards had had a quick question man a
couple of weeks ago. So I called it, called up
and tell.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
Them why you're mad?
Speaker 23 (12:51):
And they was talking about your slippers. And I'm like, damn,
I was the first one to bring that up on
the show.
Speaker 8 (12:58):
Like I don't that's right, I'm talking about it.
Speaker 23 (13:02):
Credit man, I need a drop of something, man, because
like I said, you you always taking pictures with the
with the slippers, young man, I don't understand. And and
and what's her name? Where Monroe came up there? You
had the fresh chimnys On when she came up there.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
I'm like, yo, this guy, Oh no no, because I
was running out of the building. I had to literally
leave right after we took that picture. That's why I
have my shoes on. I like to be comfortable. Slutor
my girl, busy Baby, I'm actually in Columbia, South Carolina
right now. My homegirl, Busy Baby, she lives in Columbia.
She actually got me my new past slippers that I
wear right now.
Speaker 8 (13:34):
So salute the besy baby.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up now with the Breakfast Club. Good morning.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
I'm telling what's you doing? Call yo?
Speaker 16 (13:47):
This is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're man or blessed.
Speaker 5 (13:51):
Eight hundred five eight five one, five one.
Speaker 16 (13:53):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast club.
Speaker 7 (13:56):
Hello, who's this from Detroit?
Speaker 5 (13:59):
Man? What's up?
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Get it off your chest?
Speaker 5 (14:01):
Alright?
Speaker 10 (14:01):
Look, I think it's kind of crazy that they didn't
lord the flag for Jesse Jackson, but they lorded for
Charlie Kirk.
Speaker 8 (14:08):
Why do you think that's crazy in America?
Speaker 10 (14:10):
Well, you know what, I don't think it's crazy to
be since you praiser like that, but.
Speaker 7 (14:14):
I just think it's wrong.
Speaker 14 (14:15):
It's found, but it's expected.
Speaker 23 (14:18):
Look at who we got in office.
Speaker 7 (14:20):
It's expected.
Speaker 10 (14:21):
You right, you're right?
Speaker 4 (14:22):
Well, they got the flag lord that half master Jesse
Jackson here in South Carolina. He'll be lying in state
on Monday's right here in Columbia.
Speaker 10 (14:31):
But that's good. At least somebody's recognizing it.
Speaker 7 (14:34):
But they should be across the whole United States.
Speaker 8 (14:37):
I agree.
Speaker 5 (14:38):
I agree with your brother.
Speaker 10 (14:39):
All right, man, thanks for letting me call in y'all to.
Speaker 5 (14:44):
Hello.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Who's this Hi?
Speaker 19 (14:45):
My name is Yanni.
Speaker 7 (14:46):
I'm calling from Ocallam, Florida.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
What's off your chest? Morning?
Speaker 17 (14:51):
Listen?
Speaker 19 (14:52):
And I have to tell you I'm disappointed today's Dominican
independence thaying you put on mine.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Not told I told you Dominican.
Speaker 6 (15:03):
No, he's not Dominican. And this man skipped over Bobby
V to play some wrong and they on the course something.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Oh that's not what they do, my bad.
Speaker 20 (15:17):
No, no, d J and me come on now.
Speaker 6 (15:20):
Told you damn you got that really rock and Red
is sitting right there in Red Puerto Rican read anything nothing.
Speaker 8 (15:29):
He lets you play right right.
Speaker 3 (15:31):
I was gonna play out for two, but I was like,
when I google it says, well, why you should.
Speaker 17 (15:37):
Have put dag Daddy Cardigan crazy?
Speaker 1 (15:43):
That would have been a way.
Speaker 6 (15:45):
That's crazy. Damn close with the Dominican and he ain't
even playing her.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
Damn, I'm sorry. See I told you I'm really not Dominican.
Speaker 5 (15:56):
Love you, I'm wow.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
I let you down out his way to get it
wrong to all the Dominicans out there, I'm solem the problem.
Speaker 8 (16:07):
Damn.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
He is a Dominican who's been cause playing is black
so long that he don't even know what's Dominican anything.
Speaker 5 (16:14):
I'm black.
Speaker 8 (16:15):
The problem. It's a crazy problem, yo is the problem.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
The crazy part is I texted Puerto Rican in the
room and he says, yeah, Donald mar is Dominican.
Speaker 4 (16:24):
Yeah, but you know, Puerto Ricans and got a little beef,
so he wanted to play yourself this morning.
Speaker 8 (16:29):
He tried a good job, right, good job one score.
Speaker 5 (16:34):
One for p R.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Next time hit v O v is Dominican, Right.
Speaker 6 (16:39):
Vicky Victoria Victoria to go get your breakfast day.
Speaker 8 (16:46):
It didn't sound right. I'm not in the room, so
I don't know who the.
Speaker 1 (16:49):
Hell salt all the Dominicans out there.
Speaker 5 (16:50):
My bad.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
I didn't mean to do that to you. He should
have been played. Damn all right, this is his birthday.
We got the latest, Laura coming up.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
We do.
Speaker 9 (16:58):
We got to celebrate an other friend of the room.
Speaker 19 (17:01):
NB.
Speaker 24 (17:01):
I know you were celebrating you this morning, but somebody
we know made time one hundreds Woman of the Year
and we're gonna celebrate it this Charla get today.
Speaker 5 (17:11):
Shut up.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
And also, uh, it's time to open up the phone lines.
Speaker 7 (17:14):
You know.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Sharloa opened up the phone lines for donkey of.
Speaker 3 (17:16):
The Day each and every Friday. He let you give
whoever you want donkey to day.
Speaker 8 (17:20):
That's right, it's for people's donkey. So call us one.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
If you want to give somebody donkey, doesn't matter who
it is, you got to say their name. Eight hundred
and five eighty five one five one is the breakfast club,
good morning talk.
Speaker 5 (17:30):
Yell cool back.
Speaker 9 (17:31):
Yeah, I mean not dumbing myself down. I'm being myself.
Speaker 24 (17:37):
I'm the home gout that knows a little bit about
everything and everything the little.
Speaker 9 (17:42):
Brown girls look at you and go, I want to
be like you.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
Take me to that, Take me through the latest, Take
me breakfast club, ll cool back, talk to me.
Speaker 24 (17:54):
So it was announced yesterday Times Woman of the Year
and Tianna Taylor discovering Time magazine as their Woman of
the Year. Yes, oh my god, this has been a
year for her. So she talked to them about various things,
but she did talk about her Oscar nomination and how
this feels like waking up in a dream.
Speaker 9 (18:14):
Let's take a listen.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
You don't say it, okay.
Speaker 9 (18:20):
Well yeah, So she says.
Speaker 24 (18:21):
That when she she said it took her some time
to realize that this was like we haven't okay, let's
play to give some time.
Speaker 22 (18:28):
With my nomination. I had been like still pinching myself
weeks later. What really really did it for me was
the class photo. Being in that class photo all my
fellow amazing nominees is when it really hit me and
I was like, oh, this is I'm really an Oscar nominee.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
Am I gonna wake up?
Speaker 22 (18:46):
And they say we hadn't even called the names yet.
It just still felt like a dream. And I had
been like this the whole time, and you know, get
into the luncheon, I loosened up a little bit. But
then taking that class photo is when I was able
to really really let loose it. It felt so good
to like allow myself to wake up.
Speaker 4 (19:06):
Hey man dropping, Yeah, I'm rooting for Tianna Taylor. I'm
sending her nothing but positive energy. I hope she wins
that Oscar man. Tiana one of us for real, real,
we saw that from the ground up. I'm really hoping
she win that.
Speaker 24 (19:23):
Yes, And for those who don't know what the list is,
So when you are celebrating Women of the Year, you're
celebrating a list that highlights influencial women worldwide who are
driving progress, fighting for more, fighting for more equitable world,
and creating positive change in various fields. And we know
Tianna Taylor dominates across so many fields. So congratulations to her. Now,
really quick mentions here, Rihanna, yesterday she dropped this vlog.
(19:45):
It was like a short day in the life that
she posted to her Instagram and you get to see
her mommy literally from like and just being Rihanna from
like nine am to like three am.
Speaker 7 (19:54):
Right.
Speaker 24 (19:55):
But in the vlog, there's a bit of her in
the studio, which we've been hearing her say she's working
on music. The music is coming, but of course everybody
went crazy to just actually see her in the studio
working on the music. So making sure we mentioned that
here because Rihanna is actually coming with some we don't know.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
That because she's going from the Black Panther the soundtrack
again like she did a couple of years ago, she
said movie song.
Speaker 9 (20:22):
Rihanna's been saying for some time though, that the music
is coming.
Speaker 24 (20:25):
She's just like reworking it. She wants to be happy
with it when she comes back. She wants to make
sure she saying what she wants to say. I think
that this is it because in the blog she doesn't
say much, but she says, yesterday's price is not today's price,
and that's what the.
Speaker 9 (20:37):
New music is going to give. And I believe that
what va.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Soundtrack.
Speaker 9 (20:43):
She gave a little statement line, yeah.
Speaker 6 (20:46):
Please don't ruin our day, right, So you said that's
what I believe the new music new music is going
to be.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
That's what she said.
Speaker 9 (20:52):
She didn't say that's what it was going to be.
Speaker 24 (20:54):
But she's in the studio when she says, yesterday's price
is not the day's price.
Speaker 9 (20:57):
So she's feeling good about whatever she's making.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
Oh that's all she said.
Speaker 24 (21:00):
Yesterday's it was not very I'm just excited to see
Rihan in the studio, y'all with it was just it
made me happy.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
I'm sorry, not today's price. Can't nobody afford Rianna right now?
She a goddamn billionaires.
Speaker 9 (21:12):
Talk to her nicely period.
Speaker 22 (21:14):
Now.
Speaker 24 (21:14):
In other news, yesterday, it was announced that Meg thee
Stallion will debut on Broadway. Yeah, so she's going to
be a part of Mulin Rouge. It'll be her first
time there aka debut. That's perfect for her me too,
because of all of her theatrics and everything that Meg
the Stallion gets into. Yeah, so to be Mulin Rouge
the musical, she'll step into the traditionally male role of Zidler,
(21:37):
who was formerly played by Harold Tayler.
Speaker 22 (21:39):
Uh.
Speaker 24 (21:40):
And this will happen between March twenty fourth and May
seventeenth at the Al Hirschfeld Theater. So congratulations, No, it's
usually played by man, just a character.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Yeah, now it's played by woman.
Speaker 24 (21:54):
She's making history as the first female identifying performer to
play the role, not only in the Broadway.
Speaker 8 (22:00):
Is the role of man?
Speaker 1 (22:02):
See a man usually play the role? But now why.
Speaker 8 (22:07):
I'm asking that? What is the role? Is a woman? Now?
Speaker 9 (22:10):
Yes, they changed, I think they ain't no more man, but.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
I want there's no characters. It's not like somebody dresses up.
Speaker 5 (22:18):
As a line.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
So is it a man that dances? And now that
now she is she playing that?
Speaker 6 (22:23):
Yes, she's playing the role the man who is dancing,
But it's a woman.
Speaker 8 (22:29):
Now what's the character name?
Speaker 24 (22:31):
The character's name that she will take the stage and play.
Speaker 9 (22:37):
I know, but I lost it because.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Zidler Zitler. Yeah, so Harold Zitler. Harold Jesus.
Speaker 24 (22:45):
Harold's stepping into the role of nightclub and pressro. I
don't know if you say that word, Harold Zitler. It's
a part originated by the Tony winner Danny Burstein.
Speaker 8 (22:54):
Okay, I'm really confused now because it's that boy George
used to.
Speaker 6 (22:56):
Play yeah, but it is new, it's new, and it's fresh.
They're gonna let a woman do it now, and just
think it's going to be a woman that actually takes over.
They're not going to do the man no more. It's
gonna be a woman.
Speaker 8 (23:11):
I don't know what is talking about right now. I
just want to know if the role is what is
the role of man.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
What they're saying is these is based off of a nightclub,
and he's the owner of the club in the play.
So she's going to be playing the owner and usually
paid played by man.
Speaker 24 (23:26):
And there have been formerly people who've played it that
were also a part of pause drag race. So I
think this is a non gender identifying role and she's
stepping into.
Speaker 8 (23:35):
It has just been changed and it's just a woman.
Speaker 9 (23:40):
It's been changed and now she's gonna play it.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
And because it's.
Speaker 6 (23:44):
Showing that a woman can be also an owner of
the club, not a man, not like Uncle Clivit.
Speaker 4 (23:50):
I don't know what you were talking about, just because
when you start talking about women and men, I get scared.
Speaker 25 (23:54):
I will try to move on.
Speaker 24 (23:56):
Well, look all right, let's speaking of music. I mean
because Magdick drops on the music today with juvenile. But
speaking of music, we're gonna move on because Little Yachty
has sparked a music conversation online because he's saying that
the music from back in the day is the originating
music of hip hop is trash.
Speaker 26 (24:11):
Let's take a listen where I did my research. If
it was twenty sixteen, I knew it was so much bored.
In the nineties, I'd be like, yo, y'all tripping. It
was a lot of week ass going on out there.
I always think about the first song hip hop, hip hop,
hip rapper, like particular, you know what I'm saying, and
I'll be.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
Thinking, like, damn, bro, y'all be really.
Speaker 26 (24:32):
Acting like like we were the only sayings didn't make
no sense, And I'm like, come on, I agree with you.
I do think that there was more intention probably right.
You had a DMX and you had a bus drums,
and you had a tupac and you had all these
you know, I will say I think that hip hop lost.
It's like, if you was from the West, you sounded
(24:53):
like it. If it's from the Northeast, sounded like, yeah.
Speaker 8 (24:55):
I think the region I feel like your internet. I
guess distinctiveness.
Speaker 5 (24:59):
I think it was.
Speaker 6 (25:00):
But dmx I already said that. Remember, he was like,
what the f is a Hito Like he said that already.
I mean, I agree with it.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
Was the origin of rap.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
Everything evolves, right, So if you look at the evolution
of your television, evolution of your cell phone, when you
look back at it, you're like, yeah, that cell phone
was trashed. The new one has all these different things.
The first television was only black and white. You could
go back and say it was trash, but it was
the origin to what you have now.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
Now I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 3 (25:20):
The sugar Hill Gang hip hop and hit me to
the hit to the hip hip hop, you don't stop
blocking to the bank bab booky to up, jump to
be to the book of the book Boogey to beat.
That is kind of crazy if you listen to it.
That as what the hell? They said?
Speaker 8 (25:31):
Fire? That's right, it was fire.
Speaker 6 (25:34):
Yeah, but I'm sure it wasn't fire to everybody because
everybody was like everything.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
It was fired.
Speaker 3 (25:39):
Everybody was something new. It was justice, right, I mean,
listen back then listen. All music is subjective, correct, I'm
sure that there was. By the way, I know our parents.
I was born in seventy eight. But our parents didn't
like early hip hop.
Speaker 4 (25:51):
They thought I had a bunch of noise, right, So like,
what do we talk about, like if you grew up
on the James Brown and the Motown era and all
of that. When they was hearing, my dad was like,
what the hell is that? Turn that off?
Speaker 8 (26:00):
Correct to say turn off.
Speaker 1 (26:05):
Hip hip hop?
Speaker 5 (26:05):
Ye?
Speaker 4 (26:06):
So, but I mean rappers the light is dope. I
don't even what he said about nineties rappers. Yeah, every
nineties rapper wasn't dope. But I would tell little yachty
that if you are, if you got to compare yourself
to what was going on in the seventies and saying
you know that wasn't hot.
Speaker 8 (26:21):
Your style hasn't evolved in your shape or form? Yes,
did he freestyle?
Speaker 9 (26:27):
No we haven't. Yeah, we don't have it. I'm sorry, y'all,
damn sire.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
No.
Speaker 4 (26:37):
The thing I would say to the little yachty, after
you make a statement like that and then you go
to l A Leakers to do a freestyle, you got
to make sure them bars. Yes, you got to make
sure them bars right, because you're just opening yourself up.
The more scrutiny, that's right, because don't know, don't know,
error think that freestyle you did on Leakers.
Speaker 24 (26:53):
Was good that day because of his statement, I gotta
listen now we gotta.
Speaker 5 (26:57):
Get it, y'all.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
All right, well, anyway, thank you.
Speaker 3 (27:03):
That's the latest with Lauren, and you can go from
the eighties and nineties and two thousands and talk about
MC's that get busy for fair Rest One to Cool
g Wrap to Big Daddy.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
Kane, to jay Z to Biggie to be busy.
Speaker 8 (27:14):
But you as your wack rappers too though there you don't.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
But there were some rappers that got busy, the lyricists
that got busy.
Speaker 8 (27:19):
Oh no, that was the golden era for us. Yes, yes,
all right.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
When we come back, we got front page News and
then Attorney Benjamin Crumble be joining us.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
It's the breakfast Club. Good morning morning.
Speaker 3 (27:29):
Everybody is piej MV Jess hilarious, Charlamagne the guy.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
We are the breakfast Club. Let's get back in some
front page news.
Speaker 8 (27:36):
What's up to me?
Speaker 11 (27:37):
Good morning, MVA Jos, Charlamagne, how y'all doing this morning?
Speaker 12 (27:40):
Good morning, good morning.
Speaker 11 (27:41):
So we started this hour with one of the biggest
media shakeups in decades, a merger fight that could change
who controls some of the country's most powerful news and
entertainment brands. So Netflix has officially walked away from its
bid for Warner Brothers Discovery same Paramounts a higher offer
no longer made financial sense, so that clear the way
for Paramount. It's roughly one hundred and ten billion dollar bid.
(28:04):
That's about a thirty one dollars per share now. If approved,
the deal would combine CBS, Paramount Pictures, Nickelodeon, MTV, Paaramount
Plus with all of Warner Brothers Discovery, including HBO, Max,
Warner Brothers Studios, TNT, Discovery Channel, and CNN.
Speaker 12 (28:21):
A CNN is part of the package.
Speaker 11 (28:23):
Under Netflix's earlier deal, it would have been spun off,
but under Paramount it will sit now alongside CBS if
that merger does.
Speaker 12 (28:31):
Go through, so to put that so that would.
Speaker 11 (28:34):
Put major broadcast networks, cable news operations, film studios, streaming
platforms under one roof, raising immediate regulatory and political questions.
And this morning there's already some political backlash beyond what's
just happening with that merger. This week, President Trump demanded
that Netflix remove board member Susan Rice after comments she
(28:55):
made on a podcast suggesting companies that bent the knee
to Trump could face concept instance, once Democrats were gained power.
Speaker 12 (29:02):
Let's listen to some of her comments.
Speaker 25 (29:04):
When it comes to the elites, you know, the corporate interests,
the law firms, the universities, the media. I agree with
you preed, it is not it's not going to end
well for them. For those that decided, you know that
they would act in their perceived very narrow self interest,
which I would underscore is very short term self interest
and taken me to Trump. I think they're now starting
(29:25):
to realize, Wait a minute, you know this is not popular.
Trump is not popular. If these corporations think that the
Democrats when they come back in power, are going to
play by the old rules and say, oh never mind,
we'll forgive you for all the people you've fired, all
the policies and principles you've violated, all you know, the
(29:45):
laws you've skirted. I think they've got another thing coming,
and we're not going to play by the old set
of rules. When these guys are playing by a very
different set of rules. We're going to play by the law.
We're not going to violate the law the way they do.
But we're not going to be suckers.
Speaker 5 (29:59):
I know him.
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Yeah, she's right, but she's acting like their long game
isn't forever. Like their long game is, you know, to
not relinquish this power. Their long game is to get
rid of democracy, you know, all together and replace it
with authoritarian rule.
Speaker 11 (30:14):
Yeah, she says that the democracy to you know, play
the long game instead of you know, kind of like
the short game or whatever they're playing. She did say
that in that podcast interview as well. Trump responded by
saying Netflix should fire her or pay the consequences. Netflix
co CEO Tess Randall's He pushed back, calling this a
business deal, not a political one, and saying regulators, not politicians,
(30:38):
will decide the outcome. Meanwhile, the involvement too, which is
also raising questions of the Ellison family, who backed Paramount.
They have long standing ties to Trump and several of
his allies. That's adding another layer of scrutiny, with critics
warning that this deal could reshape the media landscape as
we know it.
Speaker 6 (30:56):
So way, Netflix ceo said that they wasn't going to
take action again.
Speaker 9 (31:00):
Susan Rice, right, He.
Speaker 11 (31:01):
Called it a uh, this is a business deal, not.
Speaker 12 (31:05):
A political deal.
Speaker 11 (31:06):
So he said that regulators will decide the outcome, not politicians.
Speaker 3 (31:10):
So and FCC is supposed to be against this type
of media consolid monopoly, they're.
Speaker 12 (31:16):
Saying it is exactly like monopoly.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
So if you think CBS is a Fox News like, boy,
they about to get rid of every every liberal on CNN.
Speaker 11 (31:27):
Yeah, very very at different times. We're living in right now.
And lastly, we've been talking about this earlier this week.
So what was supposed to be one of the best
parts of winter, it took a serious turn this week
and ended with someone in handcuffs. So police arrested a
twenty seven year old content creator, goose Main Coolie Bali,
known online as the diaper Man, at his home in
(31:47):
the Bronx early yesterday morning.
Speaker 8 (31:49):
Welck him up, shut locked.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Up over the name for the name or already I don't.
Speaker 8 (31:56):
Even know who it is, but he sounded like he
did something.
Speaker 11 (31:58):
The diaper Man, that diaper Man, that's what he is
called online. So he was initially charged with felony assault
after officers were hit with snowballs during Monday's blizzard in
Washington Square Park. For the district Attorney, they dropped the
most serious charge, So no felony charge.
Speaker 12 (32:13):
That's gone.
Speaker 11 (32:13):
But prosecutors because they said after reviewing the social media video,
reviewing body camera footage, they could not prove that an
officer suffered a physical injury directed directly hit that was
directly hit by that was caused by the twenty seven
year old man. So now he faces a misdemeanor of
obstructing government administration and a violation for harassment. He was
(32:34):
released on the same day under supervised release and he
is no longer in custody. But police say that he
was recently arrested on a robbery charge.
Speaker 12 (32:43):
But his family says that that was a prank.
Speaker 11 (32:45):
Apparently he's a big prankster online, so they say that
is not real. But police say they are still looking
for three other suspects tied to that snowball fight.
Speaker 8 (32:53):
Why did they call him the diaperment.
Speaker 12 (32:55):
I do not know.
Speaker 8 (32:56):
I don't think I want to know.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
You know me, neither is Yeah, they said the police
did it.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
Of the press conference yesterday said they believed that they
were putting snow around rocks.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
That's what they were saying.
Speaker 8 (33:06):
But I mean, if they were doing that, that's disrespect.
Speaker 4 (33:09):
What I mean, based off the story that we're hearing
and what we saw in the video, it just looked
like they were just throwing snowballs, just threw snowballs back.
Speaker 6 (33:18):
I heard some of the police officers. They got cut
and they was bruised like it was.
Speaker 12 (33:24):
You know what they said. Two went to the hospital
for minor cuts and bruises.
Speaker 8 (33:28):
Just damn.
Speaker 11 (33:30):
It turned a fun day turned into something else. So
we'll see what happens with the other two. It escalated
really quickly. But that is your front page news that
Mimi Brown. Follow me at Mimi Brown TV. For more stories,
follow the Black Information Network or visit bi nnews dot com.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
All right, when we come back, Attorney Benjamin Crump will
be joining us. He has a new book called Worse
Than a Lie, and we'll get to that next.
Speaker 5 (33:51):
It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 16 (33:52):
Good morning, morning everybody.
Speaker 9 (33:53):
It's dj n V.
Speaker 3 (33:55):
Just hilarious charlamage the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We got a special guest in the Bounty. Yes, indeed,
Attorney Benjamin Crumb.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
Welcome, brother, how you feeling.
Speaker 5 (34:03):
The morning and birthday King Queen? How you can man
happy to catch you out doing black history monch.
Speaker 4 (34:11):
Yes sir, Yes, sir, I feel like you've been keeping
more of a low profile lady.
Speaker 8 (34:14):
Brother Crump.
Speaker 21 (34:15):
You know, I've worked on this novel and I was
really trying to inspire the next generation of civil rights lawyers,
social justice warriors, because it has always be building for
the future. We're gonna pass this torch, and we got
to make sure the next generation go even further than us.
And so Betty Man, I've been working by But if
(34:37):
I just ain't been in the public so.
Speaker 8 (34:39):
Much, is there a reason for that.
Speaker 21 (34:41):
No, it's just that we put we got the enemy
for how to suit the klan that was in the media.
We've been fighting on these environmental racism cases. I'm battling
in Alta Dina the wildfires. While everybody moved on, those
black people are still this place, still homeless, and we're
still fighting the whole the company accountable and the county
(35:04):
because they gave it the evacuation notices to the people
on the east side, the more affluent white people, and
then the black people got their evacuation notices late, and
nineteen black people died.
Speaker 5 (35:19):
And nobody's talking about it.
Speaker 21 (35:21):
And if we're not careful, charlocks Man Man Alta Dina,
which was the predominantly black historic distraction of Los Angeles.
Speaker 5 (35:31):
Would become California's Katrina.
Speaker 21 (35:34):
And that's what we cannot afford, for black people to
lose their land, their generational wealth. And we sometimes with
this administration, we forget their trouble. I mean just the
craziness they're doing. They didn't even allow FEMA to come
in and build the infrastructure because this president was opposed
(35:57):
to California and it'smocratic leadership, so they said.
Speaker 5 (36:01):
We're not going to help them.
Speaker 21 (36:03):
So now we're having to hold the state and the
county and the City of Los Angeles accountable to do infrastructure.
So the black people, if it would have took a
year a year and a half to get back in
your home, now it's going to take two years, two
years and a half.
Speaker 5 (36:18):
Can you imagine?
Speaker 8 (36:19):
Wow?
Speaker 5 (36:21):
You know, can you imagine Charlotte Maine.
Speaker 21 (36:23):
Yeah, just one day, you minding your business and then
a fire comes from the transform and just in a
matter of minutes burn everything everything you had. Is God,
your children are not being able to go to school.
Your cars were burnt, so you can't go to work.
And then the theme of the emergency management system that
(36:47):
was built for this exact moment.
Speaker 5 (36:50):
Then says, for political reasons, we're not going to do anything.
Speaker 8 (36:53):
Please please, I'm glad to know that you on that case.
Speaker 5 (36:56):
Man.
Speaker 8 (36:56):
Mimi Browna does off Front page News.
Speaker 4 (36:58):
She did a whole special on the Dina Call from
Alta Dina with love and she and she talks about
that a lot, and the people she talked to talk
about that a lot. And people call up here all
the time just looking for help in assistance and feel
like they can't get it.
Speaker 8 (37:10):
And people aren't remember what happened.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
What about this show.
Speaker 5 (37:12):
We're suing the hell out on Charlamagne.
Speaker 21 (37:14):
So I know that we if they ain't got nobody
at least advocating, call us and we'll keep fighting the
insurance companies. You know, Governor knew some of the Attorney general,
and damn they did a mortgage moratorium for a year,
and then we got to extended another year because think
about it, envy and just yeah, you're paying a mortgage
(37:35):
on a house that you can't even live in, I mean,
and a lot of people just ain't doing it.
Speaker 5 (37:42):
And so you got the.
Speaker 21 (37:46):
Whether the disaster capitalists the opportunitist because you know, the op.
Speaker 5 (37:51):
It's coming to la They got world up coming. Man.
Speaker 21 (37:53):
They've been trying to bop these black people laying forever anyway,
and now with this tragedy, they're taking the opportunity to
throw pennies on the dollar and steal our lands still
our generational wealth. And so the insurance companies, you know,
have been doing what they do. I believe all of them,
State farm, all state, everybody. They try to get your
(38:18):
premiums no matter how many times you pay. The first
time you make a claim, they come over with every
single reason to say, well, we're not gonna deny that,
We're gonna deny this claim, or we don't think this
land is that valuable Lauren and Charlamagne because it's in
a black neighborhood.
Speaker 4 (38:35):
Yeah, but once they get all black people out, then
they didn't bring the white people in out of land increased.
Speaker 5 (38:39):
Ripper ten times with the Olympics.
Speaker 21 (38:42):
Man, they gonna be building condos, high rises, and this
is prime land Los Angeles already is what they said,
five times more than any of the property in America
price wise, and so this is gonna go up even more.
It's so many things that don't make the media Charlemagne
that we work on and fight on, you know, banking
(39:06):
while black. And right now, all the black women who
are being fired and terminated, they caused this attack on
DEI and diversity, equit inclusion. We're seeing all these corporations
for these black people who are losing their jobs with
no rhyme or reason, just that you know, this administration
gave us an excuse now that we don't have to
(39:28):
tolerate you all.
Speaker 5 (39:30):
I mean.
Speaker 21 (39:31):
And it's funny as funny as our test figuring. I
always laughed when we were representing lower people at the
corporation and they bought discrimination claims. You will have these
black people sitting at the table helping to defend the
corporation's actions justifications.
Speaker 5 (39:50):
To fire them. But now you got a lot of
those people calling in. I'm like, wow, ain't this interesting?
The tables have turned.
Speaker 21 (39:59):
Now it's you on this side while you will helping
protect them. So it just says to us, especially during
Black History Monk, the future of black people won't be
determined by how white people treat us. The future of
black people won't be determined how white people support us.
The future of black people won't be determined how white
(40:22):
people invest in us, but the future of Black people
will be determined how we treat each other. The future
of black people will be how we support each other.
The future of black people, Charlamagne, will be how we
invest in each other. And that's the God's honest truth
when you really think about it, Man, we need to
be supporting black businesses, black lawyers, black doctors, black resta Rob's,
(40:47):
black dry cleaners, black mechanics.
Speaker 5 (40:49):
Black and short age. I mean, we got that.
Speaker 21 (40:51):
Every week he dinner or at least every month have dinner.
Speaker 5 (40:56):
Lunch with our colleagues and so forth.
Speaker 21 (40:58):
And we got to hold each other accountable, like, yes,
you know the fifty percent of your money at least
forty percent go to black businesses. Okay, well, who let's
talk about it. And I try to be honest with myself.
God bless me immensely, and I'm like, I don't want
to be a hypocrite.
Speaker 5 (41:16):
I want to be true.
Speaker 21 (41:17):
And I got to look in the mirror first and
foremost and hold myself accountable. And so I say to myself,
when I really think about it, our Asian sisters and
brother brothers, their dollar in.
Speaker 5 (41:29):
Their community stays in their community. Twenty one days.
Speaker 21 (41:33):
Before it leaves our Jewish sisters and brothers, their dollar
stays in their community seventeen days before it leaves their community.
Black Americans, our dollars stay in our community seventeen minutes
before it leaves our community.
Speaker 5 (41:49):
And it's sadhyall.
Speaker 21 (41:51):
I mean because I love how Lee by Armstrong out
of Minneapolis and Jamal Bryant when we boycotted Target and
those things. Because it's such a philosophical decision. It's a mindset.
They say, I'm going to be intentional about supporting black businesses,
and you gotta be intentional. And with the Internet we
(42:13):
can find black businesses. This ain't no no, I'm going
to find a black Dennis. I'm going to find a
black you know, insurance SA agent. And it's intentional because
now we're building a strong black economic base and we
can then tell this administration that, hey, like how new
(42:34):
Jack City Cash Money Brothers are self contained unit. We
will be okay with or without you. We don't need
you to say.
Speaker 4 (42:41):
But you talk about that title worse than a lie, right, like,
like what in your view is actually.
Speaker 8 (42:45):
Worse than lying?
Speaker 4 (42:48):
And do you think America understands how often that shows
up in the courtroom.
Speaker 21 (42:52):
I certainly think they don't my grandmother who helped raise me.
My mom worked two jobs to raise me and my
two little brothers, so oftentimes to stay with my grandmother.
And you know, black grandmothers are brilliant. My grandmother, I
think was the wisest person I ever met in the world.
And I remember her saying, Charlomagne on occasion, what's worse
(43:14):
than a lie? To tell the truth and have nobody
believe you? And that's and then in this book it
really goes so much deeper when you are seeing where
Hollis who's been shot ten times, survived and now he's
charged with four counts of attempted murder. It's really life
(43:36):
I maintaining art when you think about what's going on
in Minneapolis with ice and stuff.
Speaker 5 (43:41):
But to answer your question directly.
Speaker 21 (43:43):
Charlemagne, man, I don't think many people understand how many
sisters and brothers have to go in courtrooms all across
America every day and lie on themselves and except trumped
up felony convictions and trumped up felony play agreements. Because
(44:08):
they understand that the alternative of going to trial with
for jury of peers that have nothing in common with them,
the likelihood that they would be convicted and sentenced for
decades and have to be wrongfully convicted for a crime
(44:28):
they didn't even commit. That's worse than a lie. And
it happens every day, man, every day.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
How do you deal with stepping from the beside from
the book for a second, but how do you deal
with that?
Speaker 5 (44:40):
Right?
Speaker 3 (44:40):
Because I feel like even on social media now people
are lying more and more and more. But the problem
with the line is I feel like journalists, newscasters, papers,
they're taking what these people are saying and making it factual,
you know what I mean. So now when people hear it,
they thinking they're hearing it from Channel four, but it's
really a lot that they heard online.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
How do you deal with that when you go into
those court rooms?
Speaker 21 (45:02):
Oh, it's getting so much worse already. You have two
battles when you're representing people of color, especially in America,
because there's a credibility factor. Every time we're fighting the
police off, we're fighting these large banks over banking while
black discrimination cases, or we're fighting these corporations like Elon
(45:23):
mussing them about poisoning in our community.
Speaker 5 (45:26):
With these data centers.
Speaker 21 (45:27):
There's this credibility gap where they want to believe what
white people say over black people. And the worst part
about it, envy, is our people want to believe it too.
Speaker 5 (45:39):
Our people are so quick to attack one another.
Speaker 21 (45:42):
I mean, every day I pray to God and say, God,
help me love our people more than they hate themselves.
You know, I really believe, because when you've been blessed,
you gotta try to do better to help other people.
And you got to even make allowances for their criticisms too,
because I mean, they have such a psychological effect on
(46:03):
our people, and we got so many haters out there
on us when we got so much. We're fighting against
white people. I don't care what black people do. Try
to get them some grace, you know. And so the
line is so real now with social media, I mean,
it's being proliferated a hundred times than what we were
(46:24):
used to before social media. But that's why in the novel,
you know, early on, Boli Cooper realizes why he's fighting
the Chicago machine and stuff. To beat the broken system,
He's gonna need more than just the truth. What were
gonna need is our whole community being gavanized with our resources,
(46:44):
with our brilliance, with our connections that come together just
to get justice.
Speaker 5 (46:49):
And it's never about one person.
Speaker 21 (46:50):
That's the other thing I tried to emphasize in the book,
It's always a team effort. The fact that we I
was intentional about having returning citizens brothers who were convicted
of drug dealing and you know, being street wise and
so forth. It was like Malcolm X said, some of
our most brilliant minds in America are locked up in
(47:15):
five by seven cells, never given the opportunity to expose
their intelligence and so forth. So in this new series,
I wanted to give those brothers opportunity to say, what
would it be like if they got to expose themselves
using their street smarts and their intellect and brilliance to
help solve cases. And so that's how you try to
(47:38):
overcome the truth. But it's hard, man. They was those
saying a lot of goals around.
Speaker 8 (47:44):
The world, around the world, the truth putting on the
shoes exactly.
Speaker 24 (47:46):
I saw the press conference you did about you, but
YouTube and the targeting of like people like falsely on
the YouTube and far.
Speaker 5 (47:55):
People lauring who's doing it.
Speaker 21 (47:57):
I mean, you got these foreign actors in country like
India and uh career and so forth coming up with accounsel.
That's why we're looking at Google and YouTube and the
I'm saying, well, you all are peel them even though
it's being shown to be false with Judge Faith and
Judge Mathis and I mean all these livees uh st
(48:21):
Stevie Wonder, I mean just putting out lines and our
people believe it so quickly. Just I don't know why
it is we are so prone to be leave negative
versus positives, want.
Speaker 8 (48:32):
To he wanted to take the worst of people.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
I feel like, mister Crump, that's why I think you
got a little profile.
Speaker 8 (48:38):
I think you got.
Speaker 4 (48:38):
Overwhelmed by all the negativity because you all wanted the
people that's really out here on the front lines helping
our people. But for whatever reason, people wanted to villainize you,
especially a lot of our own.
Speaker 5 (48:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 21 (48:49):
And you know it's so interesting, Charlemagne, because Man, the
more good you try to do, God just keep blessing you.
So I I don't even think about any negativity criticism.
Speaker 5 (49:04):
Ts Lawrence, the British soldier known as Launch of Arabia.
He said something so profound.
Speaker 21 (49:10):
He said, The most dangerous person in the world is
the person who dreams with their eyes open. They're so
focused on their objective that they have very little time
to focus on any other distractions. That's how I run
my life. We're now twenty one cities, you know, we
have sixty over sixty our member staff, two hundred lawyers
(49:31):
working with us. And I'm just focused on my mission
in life that God put on my calling. I can't
worry about what he's saying. Man, we too busy trying
to help liberate black people. I'm too busy now trying
to do stuff globally with Africa and so forth, because
we if we learned anything from this administration is not
enough to think nationally. We really got to think globally
(49:53):
and the African diaspora, like Marcus Garbin said, that's what's
gonna save our people.
Speaker 4 (49:58):
Does it ever get overwhelming for you that you are
to go to you know, civil rights attorney like when
people think, and especially the generation like somebody called Ben Crump,
they'll get old woman for you.
Speaker 21 (50:07):
You know, I try to always thank God and be humble,
never get the big heir, you know, Black American's Attorney general.
I say, well, I'm proud that people would think that
of me. But what I also know, Charlemagne, it can
never be about one person. We can't have one leader
(50:30):
because they'll take them out, and then where will we be.
So I'm all about community and building the bench.
Speaker 5 (50:37):
We got to keep.
Speaker 21 (50:38):
I'm so happy that Tez is in law school. I'm
so happy that other people are going to law school
because we need, like very good March she said, we
need an army of civil rights lawyers to be able
to deal with all the injustices we have. And so
I try never ever to say, oh woe is me,
because you know, Charllemagne, if I did not choose to
(50:59):
go take on these big fights, then I wouldn't have
to worry about people calling me. But I choose because
I said, God bless me, and shame on me if
I don't use the influence that God gave me to go.
Speaker 5 (51:14):
Try to help others. And that's what it was, Jamie
Fox and I.
Speaker 21 (51:21):
Oh at Harry Belafonte. Harry Belafonte said, what good is
having influence if you don't use it when it matters most?
And I worry so much about other sisters and brothers
who got the influence who just stay silent?
Speaker 22 (51:34):
Man?
Speaker 21 (51:35):
I'm like, you got all this money, all of this power,
you see what's happening to our people, and you ain't
gonna say nothing.
Speaker 5 (51:41):
I mean it's and again I shot you out the
breakfast charl man.
Speaker 21 (51:45):
I look, while you need your platform to speak truth
to power. And we all got to do it, y'all
because God is watching and one day he gonna say,
but what did you do with the blessings Eye bestowed
upon you? What did you do with the influence? Did
you just use it for yourself or did you try
to help others?
Speaker 5 (52:04):
Did Boosye reach out to you?
Speaker 1 (52:05):
Boosey said he was gonna reach out here.
Speaker 5 (52:06):
He did, he did.
Speaker 1 (52:08):
Well, what happened with Booty Case? I know that Boozy said,
Louisiana is kicking his ass, kicking his butt.
Speaker 21 (52:12):
Well, you know, I do think there are times when
people try to use their authority to come after people
who are in our community, who have high profiles, and
they do it intentionally, and so I know they did
it with NBA young boy. We were able to get
him a bell and that was Louisiana. I think they're
(52:34):
doing it with boots I think they do it to
a lot of us envy. So in short order, we've
broke down Bootsy's case.
Speaker 5 (52:42):
We think he's gonna be fine.
Speaker 21 (52:45):
I worked with great lawyers and Louisana like attorney James
Williams Tez and Sue Anne Robinson helped me on that case.
And it was really one of those things, just doing
the legal research and so forth, saying this is where
I believe their bark is worse than their bike. And
so I said, if they come for you, we'll have
(53:06):
the community ready. And that's why it's good to work
for what the lawyers around the country. So it ain't
just being Crump, but when you call Ben Crump, he's
calling his network of attorneys saying, hey, how do we
help Bootsy? How do we have you know, I'm gonna
look at Tie Dollar signed brother. He believes in a
lot they are wrongfully convicted in California. So we're gonna
(53:28):
look at those cases because that's what we have to do, envy.
We have to be the answer to bell fire people.
And I smile when you say, Boots, just call the office.
When you put it on soucial media, I got one
hundred dollars Bootsy trying to get you, crump.
Speaker 8 (53:48):
Has the Trump administration targeted you anyway?
Speaker 21 (53:50):
I'm sure I'm on some enemy lists, but I try
not to think about it, because you know, I have
the honor of representing the family of Malcolm X. You know,
and this was sixty one years ago. They were targeting
our people, and I don't think nothing has changed with
the CIA or the FBI. Tell them, I think you
and me both on this enemy's list. Brother, you know,
(54:14):
come with me. We know who we are, whose we are.
And I refuse to be afraid. I tell my security
in everybody all. I refuse to let them make us
live in fear, standing up, fighting for our children's future.
And you know, God has ordered our steps, and whatever happens, I.
Speaker 5 (54:38):
Want my daughter.
Speaker 21 (54:39):
I want our children to know we believed in them
so much, we were willing to fight for them, sacrifice
for them, and if need be, not for our children. Man,
I really got to see that black people believe in
black liberation, and just like and I mean this from
the heart, just like they are unapologetic and their white
(55:01):
supremacist beliefs, we have to be unapologetic defenders of black life,
black liberty, and black culture.
Speaker 5 (55:10):
I mean now more than ever. Y'all. They they saying
it with they chest, how they think we're inferior.
Speaker 21 (55:15):
We got to say with our chest, now we think
black is the greatest thing and we don't care. And
we got to say it a hundred times over, like
Jesse Jackson saying, you know, we got to talk about
I am somebody, because everybody in society try to tell
little black boys and girls you ain't nobody.
Speaker 1 (55:32):
Now, what did Jesse you mention? Jesse Jackson? Rest in peace,
Jesse Jackson? What did Jesse Jackson mean to you?
Speaker 5 (55:37):
Man?
Speaker 21 (55:37):
You know, for the greater part of my life, I'm
in the fifties. You know, Jesse was the standard bear
for civil rights that we knew. And the thing I
remember the be specific I remember. You know, you fight
the campaigns, you get people who show up for the cameras,
(55:57):
and then when the cameras go, you see people showing
up on the consistent Bacey Jesse, even the old age,
was still trying to show up and after salute that
I'll never forget we were and I won't call the corporation,
but we were representing agents of a certain insurance company
where they were ran lining in the black agents where
(56:18):
they could never make as much as the young white
boys and girls who was twenty years their junior. And
we were in federal court in Chicago, and you know,
I believe like their good. We got to fight in
the court of public opinion, in the court of law,
and one of the states. One of the agents was
Jesse Jackson's insurance agent, who was one of the class
(56:39):
action representatives.
Speaker 5 (56:40):
So I asked Reverend Jackson to come to court.
Speaker 21 (56:42):
And we were in court Envy and we were there
for about four or five hours at this federal here,
and the judge was really giving it to me, man
and my team. I mean, he was coming at us
left and right, and you know, you're like, man, this
ain't going go well for us, and so forth, and
(57:02):
you know, you had a defeat. This mentality stunting to
set in a little bit, and we went on break man.
Reverend Jackson got me in the corner and he said,
he said, Attorning Crump, Man, you gotta remember you don't
drown because the water is deep.
Speaker 5 (57:18):
He said, you drown because you stopped kicking.
Speaker 21 (57:21):
He said, Crump, our people can never see our leaders
or people they believe in stopped kicking. He said, you
just always gotta keep kicking. Man, He said, you keep kicking,
you will make it to the shore. You keep kicking,
you'll overcome. But you just gotta keep kicking. I don't
care what the hours, I don't care how the cars.
Speaker 5 (57:41):
Are stacked against you. You just keep kicking. And I
was like, wow, you know, all right, just let's go.
Speaker 21 (57:48):
And as fate would have it, man, we went back
and caught for another hour or so, and the judge,
even though he berated us and talked down to us,
like third Good March, she got talked down to. And
that's part of you know, you gotta understand that the
system really doesn't think black.
Speaker 5 (58:07):
People supposed to get equal justice.
Speaker 21 (58:09):
Every bit of justice we get, every ounce we get,
we gotta fight for it. We been making that court
room and the judge now they motion to dismiss, and
I said, man, what a legacy to Jessy. We just
right now, more than ever in this era, black people,
we just gotta keep kicking.
Speaker 5 (58:25):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
Absolutely always into the phone.
Speaker 9 (58:29):
I'm just seeing her thinking, like you've been doing a
lot of things, but you always into.
Speaker 5 (58:32):
The phone for us, right, Lauren?
Speaker 21 (58:34):
And I appreciate the cause when we're trying to use
our platforms to help our people tell our stories.
Speaker 5 (58:41):
So you keep doing what your deal.
Speaker 1 (58:43):
Queen Attorney Benjamin Krupp.
Speaker 3 (58:45):
It's the Breakfast Club, Good morning, thank you. Let's get
to the latest with Lauren.
Speaker 16 (58:49):
Why you kind of.
Speaker 3 (58:52):
Gets somebody that knows somebody.
Speaker 9 (58:55):
I'm long that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 8 (58:58):
She'd be having the latest Sad.
Speaker 14 (59:02):
The Ladiest with Laura la Rosa.
Speaker 4 (59:04):
Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have detail, sometimes you
have a little bit every time.
Speaker 1 (59:07):
Well, it's the Leaders.
Speaker 3 (59:08):
Well to you by top Dog Law on the Breakfast Cloud,
talk talk to me.
Speaker 24 (59:15):
So there have been reports that Pink is separating from
her husband, Carrie Heart of like over twenty years, and
the reports were going everywhere. Yesterday Pink got online and
she addressed it like nobody else could.
Speaker 9 (59:27):
Let's take a listen, Hi, everybody.
Speaker 27 (59:28):
So I was just alerted to the fact that I'm
separated from my husband.
Speaker 5 (59:34):
I didn't know.
Speaker 27 (59:34):
Thank you people Magazine, Thank yous Weekly, Thank you for
letting me know. I was wondering, would you also like
to tell our children my fourteen year old and nine
year old.
Speaker 9 (59:42):
Are also unaware? Or do you want to talk about
some real news. Do you want to talk about the
Epstein files. Do you want to talk about.
Speaker 27 (59:48):
Systemic racism or misogyny in sports? Or how classy the
women's hockey team is, or how eight of the twelve
medals won in the Olympics this year for the US.
Speaker 5 (59:57):
We're one by women.
Speaker 27 (59:59):
Or do you maybe want to talk about the fact
that I got nominated the first year I was eligible
for the Rock and Roll mother Hall of Fame.
Speaker 28 (01:00:06):
Do you want to talk about my accomplishments or do.
Speaker 27 (01:00:08):
You only want to talk about my supposed demise? So
fake news not true?
Speaker 9 (01:00:12):
I hate that term trash news.
Speaker 14 (01:00:15):
You can do better.
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
He love me some paint.
Speaker 8 (01:00:19):
Where does People Magazine even get something like that?
Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
Crazy?
Speaker 24 (01:00:22):
That's a source information? So I don't know that to
be director. But no, you know what's crazy is like
it's it's okay. So yes, they have these sources, they
run the story. But the fact that, like you trust
People Magazine, so so many outlets picked it up. I've
seen it on shows yesterday because it's pink right right,
And then she comes to imagine she never said any
(01:00:43):
of this because some people don't address this.
Speaker 3 (01:00:46):
Kids in school like sorry about your mom and dad,
you know, I mean that's found because she's.
Speaker 8 (01:00:51):
So wild people and people are supposed to be reputable.
Speaker 9 (01:00:55):
I mean, I'm a mate.
Speaker 24 (01:00:56):
Yes, if she feels like this is just her brain
and her reputation and stuff, yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:01:00):
Like right, traumatized, cure deformation, all that.
Speaker 24 (01:01:04):
Yeah, so yeah, that's but I mean they've updated it
with you know, her statement, but the story's still there,
so I don't I don't even know how you.
Speaker 8 (01:01:11):
I'm looking at it right now.
Speaker 4 (01:01:12):
That thing separates from Carrie Hart for the second time
after twenty years. Then it says the Grammy win and
then posted a video on Instagram. And this is what
I hate, because whoever wrote this story, they just care
about the clicks that.
Speaker 9 (01:01:21):
This clearly didn't even Yeah, but.
Speaker 8 (01:01:24):
I would have took the story down.
Speaker 24 (01:01:25):
That's the scariest thing for breaking the story is like
for it to be like completely like but she got
with them, she said, she needs to say.
Speaker 9 (01:01:35):
Now speaking man, it's a bit different right now.
Speaker 24 (01:01:39):
Speaking of people and dating in the relationships. So Young
Miami was talking to up Rock yesterday and she's, you know,
pushing all the new music that she has out, and
she's talking about what her dating wants are.
Speaker 9 (01:01:50):
Right now, let's take a listen.
Speaker 8 (01:01:51):
It's six. What is your status of love?
Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
Right now?
Speaker 9 (01:01:54):
I was just you know, I'm just living living life.
Speaker 26 (01:01:57):
Yeah, just have fun.
Speaker 8 (01:01:59):
Do you have a a list of things you look for?
Speaker 28 (01:02:02):
First of all, you gotta have a coin making a provider.
I need someone that's, you know, God fearing that this religion,
they believe that I someone at least what is the
minimum networth that he has to have.
Speaker 9 (01:02:18):
I won't like a man at least got like one
hundred million dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:02:21):
Man, you come on, man, you know I love you,
but you got to sit you ass.
Speaker 6 (01:02:24):
That if she's used to he come home, he's not
going to have a hundred million dollars then worth.
Speaker 9 (01:02:32):
Yeah, and if she went, it's aspirational, right, No.
Speaker 4 (01:02:35):
It's not aspirational a million. You're making your pickings really
slim with that number. Also, a person does not need
a hundred million dollars to be able to provide for you.
Speaker 8 (01:02:45):
You're not much one hundred million dollars is.
Speaker 1 (01:02:46):
I don't think people understand how much I like to
be talking like.
Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
We show how how how little we know about money
when we just say things like that you know they
are only they're only like ten, They're only ten thousand
people in America who are considered one hundred millionaires.
Speaker 8 (01:03:03):
Are you're now small of a number?
Speaker 9 (01:03:04):
That is well, he said, it's only gonna be about
ten people in the DM.
Speaker 3 (01:03:08):
So crazy thing about it is she's basic love of
for finances, off of money, off of providing a spetter,
basic love off of somebody who really cares about her.
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
That Moody could come and go, yeah, that's right.
Speaker 6 (01:03:17):
You know what I mean, which is, look, man, I
tell you what Bill Gates surprise holler.
Speaker 8 (01:03:22):
That's right, hundred thousand dollars a month to provide for you.
Speaker 4 (01:03:26):
Like I saw the other girl talking about, uh, she
needs she was on earnerligiosa and she needs fifty thousand dollars. Yeah,
is like what is a woman spending fifty grand a
month on? That's six hundred thousand dollars a year? Like
what is your upkeep that you're spending fifty grand a month?
Speaker 1 (01:03:42):
That's wow.
Speaker 6 (01:03:42):
I used to did said that and that didn't buy
our comment, yeah comment and said it was your last
year was free for him on the homies. But this
is what I'm saying, Like Shaw and said that just
people just be talking. And I don't know how is
but when you say stuff like that, when you say
stuff like that and somebody come out and they didn't
pay fifty thousand dollars to you, but you gotta be
(01:04:06):
ready for that.
Speaker 9 (01:04:07):
But what is it?
Speaker 24 (01:04:07):
But okay, so we talk about manifestation, right, so maybe
one hundred million dollars isn't Like that's not gonna happen, right,
just saying that she wants someone who can take care
of her and who comes financially, right, that's her, that's her,
that's Miami.
Speaker 5 (01:04:22):
Somebody there's a.
Speaker 3 (01:04:23):
Lot of bread, Like what do you need for fifty
thousand dollars a month?
Speaker 9 (01:04:26):
That's insane?
Speaker 3 (01:04:27):
Like other context, it's just her or they say in
the household bills of kids and this, that and and thousand,
what do you do?
Speaker 1 (01:04:34):
Like what do you do?
Speaker 6 (01:04:35):
You know what I'm saying, because because a nigga could
leave any day and then what you want a pride?
What filling all the applications for fifty thousand dollars niggas?
Like that's what you're doing, right, Like.
Speaker 9 (01:04:45):
What are you doing?
Speaker 8 (01:04:46):
You know what it is to envy?
Speaker 5 (01:04:47):
Man?
Speaker 4 (01:04:48):
If you've never had to spend that kind of money.
You don't even know what that means when you say it,
fifty thousand dollars a month on what I would love
for you. I need to see the line items, yes,
like what is the line? What are you spending fifty
grand a month on? You have to you have to
show me. And you know as far as people having
one hundred million dollars, like come on, like I said,
(01:05:10):
it's like ten thousand people in America who are considered
one hundred millionaires, Like, cut it out well, And I
love Miami by the way, absolutely.
Speaker 24 (01:05:19):
Yes, she knows what she's doing. She's getting it going
because the music is out now. She knows exactly what
she's doing. But speaking of music, I know last latest
we we didn't have that YACHTI freestyle, but we went
and grabbed it. So him and all the Concrete Boys
crew where they pulled up the prober one those six
studios with just incredible and did the freestyle thing. And yeah,
little YACHTI, he did something.
Speaker 5 (01:05:41):
Let's do it.
Speaker 29 (01:05:42):
Something moving like a Southern cracker walked on our mind
and like, I don't know one's going against that pasty
you tell on some.
Speaker 5 (01:05:48):
Clips but what's that deal?
Speaker 1 (01:05:49):
What is you have to call to?
Speaker 29 (01:05:51):
But are just like my last name casta. I ain't
have a lot of spoke your absent.
Speaker 8 (01:05:56):
I can't tell your faking.
Speaker 29 (01:05:57):
At all the way down from your accents kill the kids.
I'm too convinced there wasn't an accident because what a liquor.
Speaker 5 (01:06:06):
Hip?
Speaker 20 (01:06:14):
No way?
Speaker 1 (01:06:15):
Basically, he ain't no way.
Speaker 8 (01:06:17):
Yeah, that's not no concrete.
Speaker 4 (01:06:18):
That's quick sying because I feel like I'm sinking lower
and listening to him, like God, Yeah, you can't make
the statements you make about hip hop and then come with.
Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
That that is wild to me.
Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
What are you trying to prove that you like if
you make the statement that there was a bunch of
garbage rappers in the nineties and rappers the light was garbage,
are you just rapping like that to prove.
Speaker 8 (01:06:38):
See I'm garbage too?
Speaker 30 (01:06:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 22 (01:06:41):
What do you?
Speaker 8 (01:06:41):
I don't get what you're doing.
Speaker 9 (01:06:42):
But there's a conversation about the generations, and it's like
this generation here does this?
Speaker 5 (01:06:47):
Is that right?
Speaker 8 (01:06:48):
There was garbage in any generation?
Speaker 9 (01:06:50):
Why this morning? Okay?
Speaker 7 (01:06:53):
I love it.
Speaker 4 (01:06:54):
There's generations out there, there's mad generations listening, all agreeing
that that was garbage. There's a father and he's not
in the car right now. A mother and daughter in
the car right now. She's seventeen forty seven. They're like, God, damn,
is it something wrong.
Speaker 5 (01:07:08):
With the radio?
Speaker 9 (01:07:10):
That's Wilder medo.
Speaker 24 (01:07:11):
All right, well, I just wanted to mention we don't
have time to play it, I guess. But a Scary
Movie six trailer dropp yesterday. Marlon Wads was up here
talking about what might happen, what might not happen. Kay,
Sanat does make a little intro cameo in the trailer,
but it dropped yesterday, leaked, and then Marlon Walls went
to the movies to see it because it's a commercial
for another scary movie. So everybody's excited to see that.
(01:07:33):
But we don't have time to play. Yeah, yeah, it's
gonna be fire. It literally crosses every line.
Speaker 8 (01:07:38):
That guy have dreads in the trailer.
Speaker 24 (01:07:40):
No, his hair was cut in the trailer, but they
aren't on like a stream thing, so you could tell
it was a while back, like it's like a stream setup.
Speaker 1 (01:07:47):
Okay, all right, well that is the latest with Lauren.
Thank you, Lauren.
Speaker 9 (01:07:50):
No problem in that.
Speaker 24 (01:07:51):
Listen, remember every accident or any accident bigger small called
top dog law.
Speaker 3 (01:07:55):
All right, when we come back, we got donkey of
when we come back, we got donkey today.
Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
What were doing slowne?
Speaker 4 (01:08:00):
Well, you know on Fridays we do the people's donkeys,
So you can call in and give somebody the credit
they deserve for being stupid.
Speaker 8 (01:08:05):
One one hundred five A five one oh five one.
Reach out to touch us right now.
Speaker 16 (01:08:11):
It's your time to nominate a donkey of your own.
Speaker 5 (01:08:14):
Remember now, that's that's how they choose.
Speaker 16 (01:08:18):
Call in now eight hundred five eighty five one oh
five one.
Speaker 4 (01:08:22):
Don't here today for Friday in February twenty seventh. Man,
you know how we do on Fridays. It's the people's donkey.
So you can call up and give somebody the credit
they deserve for being stupid. You can give somebody the
biggest he hall. So one one hundred five A five
one oh five to one.
Speaker 8 (01:08:36):
Good morning. Who's this this big ruger man.
Speaker 10 (01:08:39):
Calling in from the four one Providence for what island?
Speaker 5 (01:08:41):
Big Ruger?
Speaker 4 (01:08:42):
Hey, let me tell you something. I love Providence, Rhode Island.
Y'all got some of the most slept on food places
in Providence.
Speaker 10 (01:08:49):
Man and lions.
Speaker 8 (01:08:50):
Shall who you want to get the biggest he hall
to my good.
Speaker 10 (01:08:53):
Bro, these people really got us. They're trying to charge
us our PTO for the stowst off that kind of
you know what.
Speaker 5 (01:09:01):
I mean to give us.
Speaker 10 (01:09:01):
They gave us an option of uh what, no charge,
no pay, we can use our PTO. So I don't
want to put my PTO on something I can't control what.
Speaker 8 (01:09:10):
People who you're talking about, my job, my boss, the.
Speaker 10 (01:09:13):
Big dogs you know what I'm saying, the tough dogs all.
I'll say their name because you know what I mean,
they take.
Speaker 4 (01:09:17):
Money, got you, got you, but you know you got
to say names. Okay, how about we bleep your name
and then you say their name.
Speaker 5 (01:09:22):
I'm gonna say this.
Speaker 10 (01:09:23):
It's one of the biggest golf companies in the in
the in the world, in the country.
Speaker 4 (01:09:27):
I don't understand how y'all expect to put pressure on
these people to pay y'all if y'all don't really really
put them on blast by saying their name.
Speaker 8 (01:09:33):
But I don't want you to lose your job either.
But you can always, you know, just give a fake.
Speaker 10 (01:09:38):
I'm a brother man. We don't know what I'm saying.
Speaker 8 (01:09:40):
I get it.
Speaker 10 (01:09:42):
I'm hanging on a thin string, brother, I get it.
Speaker 4 (01:09:44):
Them irregardless Biscuits and in Providence rhode out of a sheep,
So you gotta have it.
Speaker 10 (01:09:48):
Listen, no, no, no, listen to the Johnson Massachusetts.
Speaker 5 (01:09:52):
I can't.
Speaker 10 (01:09:52):
I'm not putting that all my city.
Speaker 8 (01:09:54):
Oh oh it ain't roode Outland. Okay, got you.
Speaker 10 (01:09:57):
Yeah, But at the end of the day, let me
give us some k might work it here.
Speaker 4 (01:10:01):
Jena right saluted, he said, Dana right. No, Jana ray
im a hey a I n An saluted.
Speaker 5 (01:10:08):
Jana Man.
Speaker 8 (01:10:09):
We appreciate you. Brother. Good morning. Who's in Good Morning?
Speaker 17 (01:10:12):
Many a breakfast club?
Speaker 8 (01:10:14):
It's Lord Yeah, Hey Laurie, Yeah. Who you want to
get the biggest he.
Speaker 28 (01:10:17):
Hall too, I want to get the biggest eat high
to that dude that's called a couple of days ago.
Speaker 17 (01:10:21):
Forget it off your chest talking about he don't think
women should run this country. Men has been running this country.
Speaker 14 (01:10:27):
For years, for decades, and look at.
Speaker 20 (01:10:30):
The state that this country is in.
Speaker 17 (01:10:31):
Did he really think a woman.
Speaker 20 (01:10:33):
Is gonna do anywhere?
Speaker 8 (01:10:34):
I agree with you wholeheartedly.
Speaker 4 (01:10:35):
I don't see like I know, there's plenty of women
that can run this country better than these old white
men have because you see the situation that they got gotten.
Speaker 20 (01:10:43):
Right now exactly, So give him the biggest h We
just need.
Speaker 8 (01:10:48):
The right women candidate to run.
Speaker 5 (01:10:49):
That's all.
Speaker 8 (01:10:50):
Good morning.
Speaker 20 (01:10:50):
Who's in?
Speaker 7 (01:10:51):
What's up? I want to gift Dunky. I know twenty
twenty six just started, but I want to give dunk
At a year to Nicki minaj.
Speaker 8 (01:10:59):
Okay, go ahead, continue to.
Speaker 7 (01:11:02):
Reason then for the for the footlet that you've been doing.
Then when the posts made about the Obama she said
absolutely nothing. But when she started. Kevin Newsom was talking
to a predominantly black audience. When he made the calming
about his stores, she jump out the window like she's all.
Speaker 8 (01:11:21):
For the people. Yeah, picking and choosing selective politics.
Speaker 7 (01:11:25):
You're right, correct. I want to give our junk out
a year.
Speaker 8 (01:11:28):
Hey, I appreciate you, brother, thank you for calling. Good morning.
Speaker 5 (01:11:31):
Who's this?
Speaker 7 (01:11:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (01:11:32):
Yeah, what's up?
Speaker 22 (01:11:32):
Man? My name?
Speaker 10 (01:11:33):
Her name? I'm calling from Fairville, North Carolino.
Speaker 8 (01:11:36):
Man, what's up?
Speaker 5 (01:11:37):
Her nan?
Speaker 8 (01:11:37):
Who you wanna get the biggest hee haw to man?
Speaker 7 (01:11:39):
I want to get the biggest he to all the
people that go to work and don't work at work,
So leave.
Speaker 17 (01:11:44):
All the other people that do work to leave all
the work.
Speaker 5 (01:11:47):
Why they ask you at home there?
Speaker 8 (01:11:49):
Why are you shaming us?
Speaker 10 (01:11:50):
Because people like he that do all the work, we
got to come in expect it to all the work.
Speaker 20 (01:11:55):
And the people that they already know they lazy toy'll
be like.
Speaker 10 (01:11:57):
Oh y'all, y'all just go over here and do all
the easy stuff. But the hall work is like like me,
we always got to be responsible for to get.
Speaker 8 (01:12:04):
Done for where you work at.
Speaker 10 (01:12:05):
My brother, Oh, I work for a moving company.
Speaker 20 (01:12:07):
Man, It got an easy job.
Speaker 8 (01:12:09):
No, hell no, So I see why you so pissed off. Yeah,
we can't be moving everything by your damn self. We
move people all over the world, man, I said, yes, sir.
Speaker 5 (01:12:23):
Every man.
Speaker 20 (01:12:23):
I want to give you thanks.
Speaker 17 (01:12:24):
Man.
Speaker 10 (01:12:25):
You guys got me through my prison bed. I was
looking for every day to working fact early in the morning,
five thirty, just to wake up and listen to you.
Speaker 8 (01:12:32):
Guys your show man. We appreciate that. My brother, how
long you did?
Speaker 10 (01:12:36):
I did three years?
Speaker 8 (01:12:37):
Three years?
Speaker 5 (01:12:38):
What you do?
Speaker 7 (01:12:39):
Uh?
Speaker 10 (01:12:39):
I got a traffic in charge man?
Speaker 7 (01:12:41):
Oh yeah yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:12:43):
Wait a minute, hold on what kind of trafficking drugs? Okay,
just making sure you got kids. Don't just don't just
be saying trafficking now now, oh.
Speaker 10 (01:12:50):
My bad, my bad?
Speaker 17 (01:12:51):
Yeah, yeah, where I come from.
Speaker 10 (01:12:53):
When you stay trafficking everybody already know this drugs.
Speaker 4 (01:12:56):
I'm with you, with you because of Epstein and DDDY
and everything else. You gotta make you gotta be clear
about this type of stuff.
Speaker 22 (01:13:02):
Now.
Speaker 4 (01:13:03):
Yeah, I fear you all, I'm saying, but I'm glad
that you're home, and I'm glad that you, uh, you know,
on the straight and narrow man, So salute to you.
Speaker 8 (01:13:11):
My brother.
Speaker 10 (01:13:11):
Yeah, let me give a shout out.
Speaker 20 (01:13:13):
Just hilarious.
Speaker 23 (01:13:14):
Man, I'm Mexican, My wife is flag.
Speaker 10 (01:13:16):
We've been together for thirteen years.
Speaker 20 (01:13:17):
Y'all doing y'all going?
Speaker 5 (01:13:19):
You know what you just now?
Speaker 8 (01:13:21):
Now we know why they put all the work on you.
This is exactly what now we know, man.
Speaker 5 (01:13:27):
But you ain't lead with that now.
Speaker 4 (01:13:29):
I see why do you put all the work on you? Okay,
they like we got a Mexican there, why we need
to do anything?
Speaker 5 (01:13:35):
I get it.
Speaker 10 (01:13:36):
I know that.
Speaker 8 (01:13:36):
I know that's right, right, Yes, sir. We appreciate y'all though, man.
Speaker 14 (01:13:40):
Yeah, man, we love y'all.
Speaker 10 (01:13:41):
I love y'all man, for real, man.
Speaker 5 (01:13:43):
Good for the people, man.
Speaker 4 (01:13:44):
Thank you, King, appreciate you brother, Yeah man, yes, sir,
all right, listen, we do the people's donkey every Friday.
You can call in and give somebody the biggest he hall.
Y'all got to stop being afraid, okay to actually say names.
Just don't say your name, all right, and then put
whoever you want to put, uh, you know, on blast
because they probably deserve the credit for being stupid.
Speaker 8 (01:14:04):
But yes, we do that every Friday.
Speaker 3 (01:14:05):
Thanks Charlemagne. Now let's open up the phone lines eight
hundred five eight five, one oh five one. Now, this
conversation comes from Young Miami and I Shads and both
of them saying.
Speaker 1 (01:14:16):
You know, Young Miami says she wants somebody with a
network of one hundred million dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:14:19):
I usually says that somebody should make at least forty
five to fifty thousand dollars a month to make sure
she's okay.
Speaker 14 (01:14:25):
What do you expect on a monthly basis from financially
come home?
Speaker 9 (01:14:29):
Yeah, honestly, I spoiled.
Speaker 14 (01:14:32):
What is your say? You're spoiled? What does that mean?
Speaker 9 (01:14:34):
Spell means I need you to be able to keep
up with my lifestyle. If you want to be with me?
Speaker 14 (01:14:39):
What does that mean financially? What does that mean? Though?
What does that mean? What's that mean on a monthly?
What's that mean? Numbers?
Speaker 9 (01:14:46):
Yes, yeah, forty five fifty.
Speaker 14 (01:14:50):
Fifty thousand dollars, so you need fifty thousand dollars a month?
Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
So the question eight hundred five eight five one oh
five to one? What was the question? What you say?
Speaker 9 (01:14:57):
I basically was saying, I'll piggyback.
Speaker 6 (01:15:00):
But what you said, Yo, they're basically dating off of
financial status.
Speaker 9 (01:15:03):
You know what I'm saying? That ain't even a way,
that's not one. That's not a way to find love too.
Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
What do you bring the table? What do you bring
to the table?
Speaker 6 (01:15:10):
And I know that's cliche too because that's like the
topic of all podcasts when it comes to relationships and
love and stuff, But like, what do you do?
Speaker 1 (01:15:17):
What can you buy?
Speaker 22 (01:15:18):
What?
Speaker 9 (01:15:18):
What are you gonna buy?
Speaker 8 (01:15:19):
What are your.
Speaker 9 (01:15:19):
Expenses that I have to be able to make?
Speaker 6 (01:15:22):
If she's the thousand dollars a month to take care
of you, I'm not even talking about your Miami because
she is even in a different status than it's Ayisha.
Speaker 9 (01:15:28):
Girl because she's in her own rappers.
Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
So that just was dating Diddy, so I understand her.
But do you expect to find love when what you're
looking for is finances? No, that's the question.
Speaker 3 (01:15:38):
Do you expect to find love when somebody has to
have a hundred million dollars, when they have to make
up to fifty years?
Speaker 9 (01:15:44):
You don't even love me for me? I could be ugly,
I could be, I could be.
Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
It don't matter. As long as I got this bread.
Speaker 9 (01:15:51):
We good. Some people live like that though. Some people
would rather have a lifestyle than love. But they don't
last though that and that's.
Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
They They don't last. Eight hundred five eight five one.
What are your thoughts? Let's discuss this's the Breakfast Club
Go morning.
Speaker 16 (01:16:07):
It's topic time called eight hundred five eighty five five
one to join it to the discussion with the Breakfast.
Speaker 3 (01:16:13):
Club Morning, everybody. It's dj NV just hilarious, Charlamagne de God.
We are the Breakfast Club Law on the roses here
as well if you're just joining us. We're talking about
women wanting men because of their finances, right. Eight hundred
and five five five one. This conversation comes from Young Miami,
who was doing an interview and told the interviewer that
(01:16:33):
she needed somebody that has a networth of at least
one hundred million dollars.
Speaker 9 (01:16:37):
Let's listen A six, what is your status of love
right now?
Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
I'm just you know, I'm just living okay, just living life.
Speaker 9 (01:16:44):
Yes, it's kind of fun.
Speaker 28 (01:16:46):
Do you have a list of things you look for?
First of all, you gotta have a coin thanking, a provider.
I need someone that's, you know, God, fearing that this
religion and believing God. Soone at least.
Speaker 9 (01:17:01):
As what is the minimum net worth that he has
to have. I don't like a man at least got
like one hundred millions.
Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
Saluta up rocks and also I usually Diaz was doing
an interview with eyl and Ian Dunlap and she was
talking about she needs a gentleman to make at least
forty five to fifty thousand dollars to supply her lifestyle.
Speaker 14 (01:17:19):
Let's listen, what do you expect on a monthly basis
from financially come home? Yeah, honestly, I spoiled. What is
your say? You're spoiled? What does that mean?
Speaker 5 (01:17:29):
Spoil means I.
Speaker 9 (01:17:31):
Need you to be able to keep up with my lifestyle.
Speaker 14 (01:17:33):
If you want to be with me, what does that
mean financially? What does that mean? Though? What does that mean?
What's that mean on a monthly? What does that mean?
Speaker 9 (01:17:40):
Numbers?
Speaker 14 (01:17:41):
Yes, yeah, forty five fifty fifty thousand dollars, so you
need fifty thousand dollars a month.
Speaker 1 (01:17:48):
Now, Lauren, you said she cleared it up a little bit.
Speaker 24 (01:17:50):
Yes, so I ds she went on her social media
and cleared it up because she was talking about lifestyles
that she lives because she's one of the bartender girls
in the club.
Speaker 9 (01:17:58):
They see twenty to do sometimes a night, she said,
and that's regular.
Speaker 5 (01:18:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 24 (01:18:02):
And she also was saying right, and she also, I mean,
we have the audio, so we can play the audio.
But what she was saying is that it's not just
about the bills. It's like, if you want her to
be able to set herself up so she's investing, she's
able to like save some money, you gotta double it up.
Speaker 9 (01:18:15):
That's the point.
Speaker 31 (01:18:16):
She was.
Speaker 6 (01:18:16):
Now, Yeah, that's why I said I should have liked Well,
actually I didn't know who I didn't know who she
was until you showed me.
Speaker 9 (01:18:22):
I was like, oh, yeah, I know, I'm from love
and hip hop.
Speaker 22 (01:18:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:18:24):
So she also said too, which makes a big point.
If your man don't want you to work, Now, I'm
all for that. If you don't want you to work, yeah,
I totally agree with her. It just wasn't enough context provided.
It's just like, yeah, I thought I didn't know that
she was saying, if your man didn't want you to work.
I thought that's just period, Like, yeah, that's what I
need if we didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:18:44):
Now, I know, I used to work the clubs with
when I was DJing in New York City clubs and
Jersey Strip clubs, and now you should definitely used to
have million dollar dudes, basketball players, football players, rappers in
the club waiting on her.
Speaker 1 (01:18:56):
And I'm not just talking about the nice, lush clubs.
Speaker 3 (01:18:58):
It'd be a hole in the wall club up that
she's working and she's bartending and I'm DJ and whatever,
and they'd be ballplayers at the end of the ball
waiting for bow.
Speaker 5 (01:19:07):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
One time I walked into a club, I'm like, what
are you doing here?
Speaker 9 (01:19:10):
Time he commented, yeah, he hit it for free or something.
Speaker 3 (01:19:15):
Well, I don't know, I don't know what what what
the financial was, but Balo was definitely at the whole
at the end of the bar.
Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
Maybe they was dating and you're putting out.
Speaker 9 (01:19:25):
Maybe she had a little soft spot.
Speaker 7 (01:19:26):
For the.
Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
New Jersey Club hole in the wall and was at
the end of the ball talking to her all night
and I was like, boy, what are you doing.
Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
No security was by himself. So she definitely has some
dudes waiting on her.
Speaker 3 (01:19:42):
So the question is, so let's now, let's get to
the question she could even look at finances. Will they
possibly find love? Will they be able to find an
individual that's into them and not into the dollar?
Speaker 6 (01:19:51):
No?
Speaker 9 (01:19:52):
Not if it's all about the bread. No, I just
still don't see it long last.
Speaker 6 (01:19:55):
I mean lasting that long if it's just about the bread,
you know what I mean, because honestly bread, right, and
even if it don't like time and patience run out
too when there's no real substance behind just having brands.
Speaker 24 (01:20:07):
But this is such a touchy topic because I think
it's a thing of like maintaining lifestyle, right, Like she's saying,
this is what I do on my own and if
you want me to stop doing what I'm doing or
even just be with me, this is what I expect.
Why is there always an issue when women have those expectations.
Speaker 3 (01:20:20):
I'll tell you why, Because you're looking for lifestyle. You're
looking for finances and not love. Because finances come and go,
like somebody could be a hundred millionaire one day and
lose it all.
Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
Somebody can have a million one day and lose it all.
And you don't want that person with it.
Speaker 3 (01:20:32):
You don't want the person that's just here for the
money to finance the bags, the coach, the shoes and
all that other stuff. You want somebody that loves you.
That's like, you know what, we ain't got it right now.
Let's go to McDonald's lunch.
Speaker 1 (01:20:42):
You ain't got it right now.
Speaker 3 (01:20:43):
I'm aware of this, this coach shoes or this Mary
Kay whatever or Tory Burger or whatever.
Speaker 6 (01:20:48):
Figure out how to get back, how to get back up,
you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 9 (01:20:52):
That's what it is.
Speaker 6 (01:20:52):
You know, you shouldn't be compelled to leave just because
you are only with somebody for the money. But and
I use this defense if that that's her lifestyle already
and you don't want her to work. This is what
this is the text.
Speaker 9 (01:21:04):
But I mean, this is what I'm texting you, mothly, Hello,
who's this?
Speaker 18 (01:21:08):
Hey?
Speaker 17 (01:21:08):
This taboo? How you doing get traded.
Speaker 1 (01:21:10):
Taboo what I don't talk to us? What's your thoughts?
Speaker 19 (01:21:13):
Hey, y'all want my thoughts?
Speaker 17 (01:21:15):
I think that a woman need to have her own bag,
even though she had those expectations, because love is more
meaningfuls than just getting with a man for his money
and what he could do for you.
Speaker 23 (01:21:24):
Come on, you got to be independent, got you?
Speaker 5 (01:21:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
I'm with you too, And that's what I would tell
my daughters. Make sure you have your own It's cool
to have everything together. I'm not mad at that, but
just in case you can start acting up, make sure
you're good, that you ain't got right.
Speaker 17 (01:21:37):
Well his money, something can happen at any time. And
when something happened with him.
Speaker 23 (01:21:40):
Did you ain't even gonna be able to have his
back and both of y'all gonna be out here looking supid.
Speaker 1 (01:21:44):
Right, Thank you so much?
Speaker 5 (01:21:45):
Mama? Hello? Who's this? Hello? Hey?
Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
What's your name?
Speaker 19 (01:21:49):
San?
Speaker 5 (01:21:49):
Hey?
Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
Shane to talk to us? What's your thoughts?
Speaker 19 (01:21:52):
That is that said something about it's that meant to last?
It's just I know the love isn't gonna last, or
love is and it's gonna be there, but trust me,
it's not meant It's not meant to last, for you
to get the money and.
Speaker 17 (01:22:05):
Get the hell on.
Speaker 1 (01:22:06):
I get you.
Speaker 6 (01:22:07):
Now that's the agenda. I mean, if that's the objective,
then that's what's up.
Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
You're not looking You're just looking for a bag. That's
what you're looking for.
Speaker 8 (01:22:13):
My depends on what you want.
Speaker 19 (01:22:14):
Yeah, you've ever been in savible mode. Don't nobody want
to be in the bble mode. If if a guy
is willing to send some money or making a certain
amount of money.
Speaker 17 (01:22:23):
We I want that.
Speaker 3 (01:22:25):
But but the thing with you is you're gonna look,
You're gonna look ugly one day, your looks, you're gonna drop.
Speaker 17 (01:22:32):
I'm gonna get his money.
Speaker 14 (01:22:33):
I'm opening up.
Speaker 17 (01:22:35):
You can't just see messing with a dude and.
Speaker 1 (01:22:38):
Just what are you calling from?
Speaker 11 (01:22:40):
There?
Speaker 24 (01:22:40):
So you you seeing in this stage right, it's about
the money. But you're using that money to set yourself up.
So when all that phase you got.
Speaker 19 (01:22:46):
You correct, But now you can't just be in it
to get bags and shaneil bags and and all of
this and that. No, you get that, but you set
yourself up to get the hell away from him. Because
you're right, it's not gonna last. And I'm not I'm
not doing this for love. I'm doing this to sex
to make sure what my future is set.
Speaker 6 (01:23:05):
So you're looking at them like a job. You're not
even looking at it like a relationship. You're going in
that way, and look.
Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
That's what that's different. That's that's what you want.
Speaker 9 (01:23:12):
Is that the definition of a good most definitely professional
professional relationships are what it is. There a transition wrong
with it.
Speaker 1 (01:23:21):
That's just your title professional.
Speaker 8 (01:23:24):
But you got it.
Speaker 19 (01:23:25):
But you also you well in my case, I work,
I work, I do, I have my own business. I'm
I'm working towards something. I'm just not not doing something.
Speaker 3 (01:23:37):
But why would I date you if you're telling me
you're only there for the bag and that if something
does happen.
Speaker 19 (01:23:41):
Oh no, but we ain't gonna tell you a minute
for the bag?
Speaker 17 (01:23:45):
Like act like I like you?
Speaker 9 (01:23:47):
Okay, okay, I was gonna say, at least act like
it does?
Speaker 29 (01:23:49):
Right?
Speaker 7 (01:23:50):
Good?
Speaker 9 (01:23:50):
What makes her qualified to who's this?
Speaker 21 (01:23:54):
Hey?
Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
Good morning, I'm gonna.
Speaker 5 (01:23:55):
Talk to us.
Speaker 17 (01:23:56):
I don't agree with the fifty a month because what
comes with that abuse, disrespect, hurt, like you attracting the
wrong person for that, Because a real smart man ain't
gonna just give you fifty a month, you know. And
I think the real happiness, the real Richards is your peace,
your joy, your happiness.
Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
Yeah, and I will say this, there's a lot of
dudes spending out there. And not just rappers, I mean hustlers,
I mean ball players. There's a lot of dudes spending
that money on these women. Uh And like you said,
what happens with that?
Speaker 1 (01:24:28):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 17 (01:24:30):
Yeah? Yeah, absolutely. David Mann was on the Willie Moore
Junior podcasts and he said, women be like, you know,
I want this, I want that and the man And
he said, become that list if you want a man
that you know works.
Speaker 19 (01:24:43):
Out and you know, have money.
Speaker 17 (01:24:47):
Instead of instead of you know, you want him to
work out.
Speaker 9 (01:24:52):
But you're a big bag like that because you are
with you at track, you know what I mean? What
you are too, So yeah, you gotta do that. You
want a man in a gym? You want to? Yeah,
no mind, you can't have them. You want a man
with the curve penis? You know what I'm saying?
Speaker 6 (01:25:05):
Would you well your uterusk be tilted sometimes that that's actually.
Speaker 5 (01:25:13):
Hello?
Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
Is this red?
Speaker 5 (01:25:15):
What's up? Brother? What your thoughts? What's up?
Speaker 11 (01:25:18):
Man?
Speaker 20 (01:25:18):
I believe the call for man. It all depends on
how you raised and stuff like. I feel like these
women now they teach their girls and kids to go
loose for somebody that's gonna take kids. Then they don't
have that mindset. But it's mainly white people don't get
it today.
Speaker 24 (01:25:38):
Yeah, you know what I have, I have I've worked
with and I've had friends that white girls that they
are taught to look for husbands very early, that it's
a whole thing and they need to work, they need
to make a certain amount of money.
Speaker 9 (01:25:55):
You go to certain places to find them. You're in
certain What is the programs that they're in you just sororities?
Is it Jack and jail?
Speaker 1 (01:26:05):
Jack and jails? For that's Black families know there's.
Speaker 24 (01:26:08):
A it's a program like Jack and Jail, But white
families do it and they put their girls in it.
Speaker 9 (01:26:13):
You get to meet the boys.
Speaker 6 (01:26:18):
They groom the same way. Something of the black mom's groom.
Don't make that a black thing. And then I don't
want people to act like this is now yo. Back
in the day, like probably not like sleeve or whatever,
but like I'm talking about like beause my great grandfather. Yeah,
like my My great grandmother's mom was telling her daughters
and all them, yeah, make sure you get a man
to take care of you.
Speaker 24 (01:26:38):
My grandmother, we're talking to me like that until I
went to college because they didn't don't know better.
Speaker 9 (01:26:43):
And that's what they changed the social media.
Speaker 1 (01:26:45):
That's and the crazy thing is with me and with
my daughters, I do it different. I say, I will
take care of you. I got you.
Speaker 3 (01:26:51):
You don't need nobody for nothing. If you need it,
you call me. If you got to change your light bulb,
but flick fix a tire and it's a problem called dad.
I will get out my bed at five in the morning.
Speaker 5 (01:27:00):
Come.
Speaker 24 (01:27:00):
But Dad is in the household and dad is the provider.
It's different when you're growing up with two black women
who've done it all themselves, that like, get you somebody
that's gonna if Ksean have some babies, they can take
care of them kids. That was my mom's things, like
go get you somebody that's gonna provide my grandma. Make
sure he brings his check on. I don't care what
you doing, make sure he brings check on. I completely
wanted the opposite, like bring it home. But I want
(01:27:20):
to be happy like I don't want to be miserable.
Speaker 3 (01:27:22):
And and that's if my son to my son's know,
you ain't gotta do nothing fault. You ain't gotta go
check you some change for whatever, some ask for some change.
You ain't got to do no hustling nothing they gotta
they gotta hustle. They ain't got to do no stupid
stuff for no money. You think I'm just saying it's
a term.
Speaker 1 (01:27:36):
It's just a term.
Speaker 9 (01:27:37):
Did you go through.
Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
You ain't got to shake nothing for no change? But no,
but whatever they need, Daddy's there for them. If they
come up with and I did that, they want to invest,
I will help them because I wanted to fall back
on Dad. If we don't win, we don't win together.
But Dad's gonna be in your corner to the end.
Speaker 9 (01:27:56):
It's time period is different.
Speaker 24 (01:27:59):
Lifestyles are you're scared to be damn right, Yeah, gotta
be scared now?
Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
All right, what's the old The story is that mar
if you.
Speaker 6 (01:28:05):
Work fifty thousand, charge fifty thousand. If you worth five hundred,
charge that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:12):
Okay, all right, thanks words from just last All right,
when we come back we got past the US, will
be joining us as the Breakfast Club the work.
Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
Yeah, DJ, what's something.
Speaker 32 (01:28:41):
I'm chilling?
Speaker 14 (01:28:42):
You know.
Speaker 31 (01:28:42):
I had a really long, extensive studio session this past
weekend and I lost my voice, So bear with me, Okay,
But I'm gonna start with some R and B, and
then I'm gonna get into some lyrical rap, and then
I'm gona get into some up be rapping.
Speaker 32 (01:28:54):
I want to start with this new Nlly coiler ray record.
It's called Maybe.
Speaker 31 (01:28:58):
I've been a big fan of Dolly for a while,
so to see the two girls collab, I think it's
really dope.
Speaker 1 (01:29:03):
I like Colna Rae, I like Corner Rae.
Speaker 8 (01:29:05):
I rock with it.
Speaker 32 (01:29:06):
Okay, cool, Yeah, but it's not these record courches the future.
Speaker 31 (01:29:09):
But now he's really dope. I'm actually gonna be highlighting
her with Certified for the month of March. Women's his
three months.
Speaker 32 (01:29:16):
But next time we get into this new Marlin Kraft song,
Marlon Kraft is about.
Speaker 9 (01:29:20):
To drop a record.
Speaker 31 (01:29:21):
He's been going viral off of that last on the
Radar site for Gabe Put Together. And yesterday was actually
his birthday, and he has this residency in Manhattan with
a live band, and people have been telling me about
it for a long time, but this is my first
time actually pulling up to it and seeing it, and
it is really a really dope experience. So happy birthday, Marlin.
(01:29:41):
But this record is called Analog man I like that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
Yeah, that's what we said, Marlon Kraft, He's dope.
Speaker 9 (01:29:46):
I like that, super dope.
Speaker 8 (01:29:47):
You said.
Speaker 31 (01:29:48):
This is happening with a live band, Yes, yes, and Manhattan.
I'll let you know the next time he does it,
because he does it at least once a month.
Speaker 24 (01:29:55):
I feel like the live band wave because I mean,
I know old artists, but like GZ then you had
Gucci did, I think live band as well too, But
like I feel like us over my bands is like
it's like art.
Speaker 3 (01:30:06):
Sometimes it works better when you know the records, though
it's a little hard, and sometimes when you don't, you're
trying to fight to hear what the artist is actually saying.
Speaker 24 (01:30:13):
I think if you somewhere down you you know ever
somewhere you experience in live music, you don't know who's
singing because it's person, but it's just the energy of.
Speaker 9 (01:30:19):
It and just the feeling of it. I guess what
I dove.
Speaker 31 (01:30:22):
Yeah, I think that's why I love my favorite Toddy
Desk is still juvenile and manny because them.
Speaker 9 (01:30:27):
Ratchet Ass Records.
Speaker 31 (01:30:30):
Yeah, all right, I'm gonna get into this new Baby King.
You know, he dropped his album last week and I've
been seeing a lot.
Speaker 9 (01:30:38):
Of reviews on him, but also also the Spotify.
Speaker 31 (01:30:42):
Whole we need new rap leaders, and then they picked
a bunch of people who've already been doing this.
Speaker 32 (01:30:46):
It's like I thought, y'all said new.
Speaker 31 (01:30:48):
Anyway, let's get into good Flirts featureing Kendrick and Momo Bird.
Speaker 9 (01:30:52):
I love it. I love his new project, love it.
I saw this, I was looking it up.
Speaker 24 (01:30:57):
I saw this thing on Pitchfork whatever talking it was
a review and they were saying that it was a
bust because like his voice doesn't sound the same and
he's fighting the like I guess, like break out on
some of the records I love.
Speaker 9 (01:31:07):
I like the project. I thought, I mean, it does
sound very Kendrick, but like I know why, Like I
get it.
Speaker 1 (01:31:13):
Yeah, I'm not.
Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
I didn't listen to the project, but I'm not mad
at that record, and I'm not mad at some of
the stuff I've been hearing from Baby King. But I
think people just always want to I guess compare him
to Kendrick. But that's that's family right there. But there's
only one Kendrick. Yeah, you're not gonna get that again,
There's only one.
Speaker 26 (01:31:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 24 (01:31:27):
I just think it's, uh, it's unfair because he's so
talented and I thought it was a great project.
Speaker 31 (01:31:32):
Yeah, I didn't listen to the project yet, but I
do think that Pitchford just doesn't really allow space for
artists to evolve, Like I'd be feeling like.
Speaker 32 (01:31:41):
Based off the project, they'd be like, this sounds different.
Speaker 9 (01:31:43):
This sounds different. It's supposed to sound different.
Speaker 31 (01:31:45):
I'm gonna definitely get into that Keen project though, but
I just haven't had the time to really sit and
give a full assessment.
Speaker 32 (01:31:50):
But this last record, to me is a straight up Peter.
Speaker 31 (01:31:53):
It's called six w A Big X the Plug flipped
nw A with his crew, his Texas crew, and it
just knocks.
Speaker 9 (01:32:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:32:02):
I really like Big x Plug and I know a
lot of people love him out there, but I still
don't feel like he gets the credit he deserves.
Speaker 9 (01:32:08):
They don't make enough noise Ya is just not enough
and people who.
Speaker 3 (01:32:10):
Know him, you play him in the club. It works
in the South, it works, But I feel like he
should be. I don't want to say a lot bigger,
but I feel like he should be a lot bigger
tho because Big X gets busy. Like he he gets busy,
he makes great meals.
Speaker 9 (01:32:20):
And it's across genres too. Yeah, yeah, easily across genre.
Speaker 22 (01:32:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 31 (01:32:23):
The country album last year, all his rap albums slapped
like this. I love all the flips over the neo
so beats and the funk beats from the seventies.
Speaker 11 (01:32:32):
So I don't know.
Speaker 31 (01:32:32):
I'm a big big X of Flug fan too, but
I don't know what the disconnect is or if it
even is a disconnect.
Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:32:39):
Maybe because he doesn't do that much press, like you
really don't see him doue to many interviews true.
Speaker 9 (01:32:43):
And artists from Texas really don't got to leave Texas.
Speaker 32 (01:32:45):
Te makes so much money at Texas.
Speaker 1 (01:32:47):
Is like for what, that's true, But I rock with
Big X same Well.
Speaker 31 (01:32:52):
If you guys like those joints, to make sure you
guys follow me on Instagram at nailis Simon with a
y N y la s y m O n ee,
and make sure you guys follow. It's a certified vibe.
You can find the certified playlists that has all these
records and all the new joints from today available. And
just be on the lookout because I have some more
events on the way.
Speaker 3 (01:33:12):
All right now, when we come back, of course, we
throw it back on a Friday. Today is Bobby Valentino's birthday,
so we're gonna start to mix up with some Bobby
valet Chatino and also today's Chili.
Speaker 1 (01:33:21):
From TLC, so we're gonna get some TLC in the
mix too.
Speaker 9 (01:33:24):
Go about to play pink because it's Chili birthday.
Speaker 5 (01:33:26):
You know how you get.
Speaker 1 (01:33:27):
It's the Breakfast Edy Morning Joining Everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:33:29):
It's dj MV just hilarious, Charlamage the gud We are
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 1 (01:33:33):
It's Black History Month. What are we doing today?
Speaker 8 (01:33:35):
Charlamage Man Sluthor my guy Betot.
Speaker 4 (01:33:37):
Every day during Black History Month, Beatot does a podcast
on the Black Effect Podcast Network called I Didn't Know
Maybe you didn't either, And today he's gonna tell you
about the African soldiers who helped win World War Two.
Speaker 30 (01:33:49):
The African soldiers who helped win World War Two? Freak
Welcome Back, No It All to Another Elplisute. So the
the most anticipated podcast on the Black Effect podcast Network,
especially in February entitled I didn't know. Maybe you didn't either.
(01:34:11):
I'm your charismatic, very attractive, six foot two, one and
eighty pound cut up like a bag of dope host
Bee dies and yes I look like a Greek god
in the nude. But that's neither here nor there. We've
got two more destinations this week, So grab that digital passport,
because today we headed to the mother land Africa.
Speaker 5 (01:34:35):
Ah. Yeah, you getting stamps this week because if.
Speaker 30 (01:34:37):
Your World War two history only includes Europe and America,
well that's not history, that's editing. But before we get
into that, I have to give you three of the
most useless facts you'll never need, never, ever.
Speaker 8 (01:34:51):
Not a day in life.
Speaker 30 (01:34:52):
Up first, over one million African soldiers fought in World
War Two, Your second useless fact. They served in Europe,
the Middle East, and Asia, not just Africa. And your
third useless fact, most of them came home to colonial
rule anyways. So yeah, let's talk about that.
Speaker 17 (01:35:13):
I didn't know.
Speaker 7 (01:35:15):
I didn't know.
Speaker 17 (01:35:16):
I didn't know.
Speaker 20 (01:35:18):
I didn't know.
Speaker 22 (01:35:18):
I didn't know.
Speaker 7 (01:35:19):
Maybe you didn't I didn't know.
Speaker 3 (01:35:20):
I didn't know.
Speaker 14 (01:35:22):
I didn't know.
Speaker 9 (01:35:22):
I didn't know.
Speaker 5 (01:35:24):
Look, when World War two broke out.
Speaker 8 (01:35:26):
Europe needed help bad.
Speaker 30 (01:35:28):
They were looking like Jake Paul in the ring with
Anthony Joshua last year. You remember that, and they'd got
they white ass has knocked out, just like Jake Paul.
If they didn't do what colonial powers always do when
they're in trouble, they turned to Africa. Need bodies, Call Africa,
need labor, Call Africa, need us to fight your war.
Speaker 8 (01:35:49):
Same number man.
Speaker 30 (01:35:51):
Britain, France and others recruited millions of African men to
fight fascism, Nazism and imperial aggression. These African rifles the
Royal West African Frontier Force, and these weren't just units,
they were entire military traditions with decorated service histories. African
soldiers fought in North Africa. They helped liberate Italy. They
(01:36:14):
battled in Burma. They guarded supply lines, they carried equipment
through the terrain the Europeans couldn't survive man.
Speaker 1 (01:36:20):
They wasn't assistance.
Speaker 5 (01:36:22):
They were soldiers man.
Speaker 30 (01:36:23):
The Burma campaign alone had ninety thousand African soldiers fighting
Japanese forces in jungle warfare. The eighty first and eighty
second West African Divisions were critical to the Allied victory there.
But here's the contradiction that broke everything wide open.
Speaker 22 (01:36:40):
Man.
Speaker 30 (01:36:40):
African troops were fighting for freedom abroad while they was
living under colonial rule at home. They saw Europeans panic,
white soldiers, bleed, empires weakened, and that's when they.
Speaker 1 (01:36:51):
Realized something that was powerful.
Speaker 5 (01:36:53):
These people ain't invincible.
Speaker 17 (01:36:55):
Man.
Speaker 30 (01:36:56):
When that war ended them, African soldiers returned home with
military training, global awareness, and zero patients for colonial nonsense.
Speaker 5 (01:37:05):
That ain't a coincidence.
Speaker 30 (01:37:06):
Many of those posts World War two independence movements across
Africa were led by veterans who had already fought and
won wars for other people. Kwamin the Krumer, Jomo Kenyata,
Leopold singor all independence leaders across Africa who drew directly
from veteran networks and the political awakening that came from
World War Two. They just decided it was time to
(01:37:28):
fight for themselves. And here's the part that gets erased.
World War two is often framed as the war that
saved democracy, but democracy leaned heavily on African bodies to
survive without them.
Speaker 1 (01:37:44):
That war looks pretty damn different.
Speaker 30 (01:37:47):
A century after Cartigie Woodson warned that black history would
be minimized or erased. African soldiers became proof they helped
save the world that were written out of the story.
Speaker 5 (01:37:58):
CG.
Speaker 30 (01:37:59):
Dubbew If we don't document global black sacrifice, freedom starts
looking like it was one by only a few, and
it was not. If you learned something on today's episode,
please share it, because I promise you I didn't know.
Speaker 5 (01:38:14):
Maybe you didn't either.
Speaker 1 (01:38:15):
I congratulations, your passport has been stabbed.
Speaker 9 (01:38:20):
Next stop Spain.
Speaker 5 (01:38:22):
For real.
Speaker 1 (01:38:23):
That's that's it, yo, for real.
Speaker 9 (01:38:25):
It's an African chant and it means look y'all, it's
a lion.
Speaker 1 (01:38:30):
Oh my god.
Speaker 4 (01:38:30):
Can I want to ask you a serious question? Why
did you think that we didn't know? That's what the
circle of life meant? You think that all of these
years we watched The Lion King on TV, and we
watched it on Broadway, and not once did we think
to ourselves, hmm, I wonder what that means.
Speaker 6 (01:38:46):
I mean, I never heard nobody even asks what admit?
I never even heard nobody talk about it.
Speaker 8 (01:38:51):
But I don't know what to tell you. Yes, it's
a Zulu chat, it's alu chat.
Speaker 4 (01:38:59):
I just I just don't understand why you think you
would be the first person that would hear that and
think to himself, I know nobody knows what you know.
Speaker 6 (01:39:09):
I'm not, but sometimes you just gotta love rock Man
rock Man. Yeah, because we're talking to a lot of people.
It's not just me, you, you and you, it's it's
it's other people.
Speaker 5 (01:39:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:39:19):
But the Lion King been around for a long time.
Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
And you know she's wrong. I don't remember ever seen
Oh my god, it is it is. My father is
a lion. It's a lion.
Speaker 4 (01:39:30):
I mean it's different translations translate to here comes the
lion father lion.
Speaker 9 (01:39:35):
Yeah, and Layman's Zulu terms is y'all look, it's a lion.
Speaker 5 (01:39:39):
Oh my gun. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:39:40):
I mean there's different ways to say it, but that's
essentially what it means. Here comes the lion for here
comes the lion fall.
Speaker 1 (01:39:45):
It's a lion.
Speaker 8 (01:39:46):
But but yes, we did know what have you?
Speaker 1 (01:39:48):
Have you gone to the play? No, Yeah, that's prob.
Why you know what you gotta get out there.
Speaker 8 (01:39:52):
That I've seen the play, I seen the movie. You
see the Live Man movie, like it's the goddamn Lion King.
Speaker 4 (01:39:58):
I wrote about the Lion King in my first book,
Black Privilege, Opportunity comes to those who created Okay, I
have a whole Lion King theory about black people, all right,
and how the Lion King symbolizes black people in Western
civilization and then returning, remembering who they are and returning
back home and becoming who we're supposed to be.
Speaker 9 (01:40:17):
Okay, that's nice and whatever, we'll we come back.
Speaker 1 (01:40:22):
We got a little bit about it in the book.
Speaker 8 (01:40:26):
So much confidence.
Speaker 3 (01:40:27):
I don't know what my kids was in the play,
you know what I mean. I mean the local play
in Jersey, but my kids, you know what.
Speaker 5 (01:40:35):
Forget it.
Speaker 4 (01:40:35):
I thought she was about to tell us something like
we ain't never heard that. She start singing Lion King
all off beat.
Speaker 19 (01:40:41):
Yeah, it wasn't even beat.
Speaker 1 (01:40:44):
Shut up now, Lauren, You remember your first call?
Speaker 9 (01:40:47):
Yes, I do.
Speaker 1 (01:40:47):
Oh my god, what type of call was it?
Speaker 15 (01:40:49):
It was a.
Speaker 1 (01:40:52):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 3 (01:40:53):
Mine was a nineteen eighty six Honda Accord with the
flip of lights, baby blue. And I look for that
car all the time on eBay because as soon as
I find it, I'm a grab it. I actually see
you one like seven years ago, the guy wanted four
thousand and when I went to buy if somebody took it, So.
Speaker 1 (01:41:07):
That's what I'm looking for. If I ever find that
call on eBay, I'm gonna buy it.
Speaker 9 (01:41:11):
Iby dope if you signed it in time for one
of the car shows.
Speaker 1 (01:41:13):
I've been looking.
Speaker 3 (01:41:14):
But if you see it on eBay, please let me
know because eBay is the place to shop for your
favorite fine, so don't forget. You can also make extra
cash by selling on eBay. Find what you love, sell
what you don't. eBay things people love.
Speaker 1 (01:41:26):
I'm not Yes, you're gonna be in the Carolina this week.
Speaker 9 (01:41:28):
It's South Yes i am.
Speaker 6 (01:41:29):
I'm gonna be in Greenville, South Carolina, today and tomorrow,
so get your tickets if you have not yet. I
believe tomorrow is sold out, but you still got a
chance to get some last minute tickets tonight on my
website justselariasofficial dot com me and Dessi Alexander will be
at the Comedy Zone, so get your tickets.
Speaker 3 (01:41:44):
All right when we come up. Oh no, it's time
for the positive. No show them, man, you got some
positivity for the people.
Speaker 4 (01:41:48):
Yes, tomorrow is the last day of Black History Month, man,
So I just want y'all to know that we are
the ones we've been waiting for.
Speaker 8 (01:41:55):
We are the change that we seek. That's from President
Barack Obama.
Speaker 4 (01:41:59):
And I just wanted to tell y'all that with our
future ahead of us and the ancestors beside us, there's nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:42:05):
We can't do.
Speaker 4 (01:42:06):
I want all of y'all to go listen to Jill
Scotch song off the back of my ancestors.
Speaker 8 (01:42:11):
Matter of fact, let's play that. Can we play that?
Let's play that? Six tomorrow is the.
Speaker 4 (01:42:14):
Last day of Black History Month, because with our future
ahead of us and the ancestors beside us, there's nothing
we can't do.
Speaker 8 (01:42:20):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:42:20):
We're doing this off the back of our ancestors. Man,
So salute y'all. Have a great weekend.
Speaker 5 (01:42:25):
Breakfast club bitches.
Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
We don't finish for y'all.
Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
Done up, Wake up, program your alarm to power one
oh five point one on iHeartRadio.