Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Yo.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Jeffs hilarious. Good morning charlamage to be here in.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
The second And it's Thursday.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
How you feeling, Jess. I'm good.
Speaker 4 (00:17):
I'm feeling good on this Friday, Eve Friday Eve. Yeah,
show listen. So you know I'm in Raleigh this weekend, right,
yep yo. And I'm like, I don't know why my
agents booked me during dreamville Fest and it's the final one,
so you know, ticket's been moving a little slow, and
I'm a little skied because I'm not no, you know,
I ain't a little slouch when it comes to you
selling out shows.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Right, That's all I had to say. There's no ending.
I'm just like yo.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
So if you're out there, go definitely get your tickets
to see Jess. She's performing with Friday and Saturday. Friday
and Saturday, Friday and Saturday and Raleigh. Now how far
is Raleigh from Charlotte? That's the show five hours? Oh wow,
you knew that exactly five hours?
Speaker 5 (00:54):
Right?
Speaker 2 (00:54):
So Dreamville Fest is in Raleigh.
Speaker 4 (00:56):
Right, It's in Raleigh, Yes, right, Damn I wish it
was in Charlotte. No, I think it's in Charlotte. No,
it's you checked it. Think you got a clarify. You
gotta clarify for me, because Yo, they gonna shut it
down because it's the last one.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
Yes, it is the last one found one.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
So everybody who didn't get to see it before, you know,
all them Raleigh neededs, they gonna come out. And even
though they they treat me good when I come to
the city because I'm gonna be at the Empro for
Friday and Saturday, I'm like, yo, so now I gotta
fly in tonight to do you press there tomorrow to
sell out the shows or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
But look, this is the crazy thing.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
When I called the radio down there to go because
you know, we broughtcast out of rally too, it's like, oh,
I said, yeah, did y'all give free tickets to there?
Was like, yeah, we're going to Dreamville, but we're gonna
see if we y'all was like.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Damn, even y'all going to dream And the crazy thing
about it, it's an all day thing to want something
near all day.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
I gotta go home and change and then come and
get ready for a damn show like yo, come on.
Speaker 6 (01:47):
But it's good they they're selling, they just ain't selling out.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
Well, definitely go support, make sure you head out. And
also I gotta salute to everybody that's been pre ordering
Real Life, Real Family. The book actually comes out on
the week we're on vacation, so just like you guys,
they put the book out on Easter week, so we're
we're not even here. All the TV networks are on vacation.
Speaker 7 (02:09):
Damn.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Yeah, So it's similar to you. So what it is,
what it is.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
But we appreciate everybody out there for picking up pre
ordering Real Life, Real Family.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
It's all about raising kids.
Speaker 8 (02:17):
You know.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
We got six kids and the oldest twenty three to three,
and we talk about everything from a D D ADHD,
the sex, talk with your kids, potty training. So it's
a it's a gamut of a whole bunch of different things.
So if you're thinking about having children, it's from two
different sides, Gia side and how she raises the kids
and then my side.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
I was just asking you that. So she co wrote
it with Yeah, we wrote it together. We wrote it together.
So did jab.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
Being like, no, I want to write it like this.
I want to you know how wives.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Get Nah, you know what it was is? You know,
I always tell people my dad has retired police officer.
He's ex military, so he's very disciplined. It's his way
or the highway. There was no questions, okay, and Geed
allows questions, gotcha? So no you can't go? Well why
can't I go? And she explains and break down it me.
I'm like, now you can't go? Why because I said so?
Speaker 2 (03:02):
I got it? Like you should explain why?
Speaker 5 (03:05):
Right? Na?
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Because I said to it got time. But it makes
a great dynamic.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
All right, Well, Eli Ellie miss Style will be joining
us this morning. He's the author of bad Law, ten
popular laws that are ruining America.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
And we'll talk to him in a little bit. And
then we got front page news.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
President Trump ak eight, mister tariffs, he's been dropping tariffs
left and right. We'll talk to him next. We'll talk
to Morgan about this next, and don't go anywhere. It's
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
Good morning morning everybody.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
It's DJ Envy, Jesse Hilarious, Charlamagne the Guy. We are
the Breakfast Club, all right now, let's get in some
front page news.
Speaker 5 (03:38):
Now.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
Congratulations to call Melo Anthony has been elected to the
Basketball Hall of Fame.
Speaker 7 (03:43):
Easy call, first ballot Hall of Fame's man.
Speaker 5 (03:47):
Now.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
The full class of twenty twenty five will be announced
on Saturday at the Men's Final Four in San Antonio.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
So salute Aget into a mellow easy call.
Speaker 7 (03:55):
There was never any doubt, not at all. That's the
first ballot Hall of Fame.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
Okay, what up, mall, what up? What up?
Speaker 5 (04:01):
What up?
Speaker 6 (04:02):
And hey bottimball shout out Carmelo Anthony. Yella.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
All right, so let's get into the front page news. So, yeah,
it's tariff Thursday, it's tariff every day.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
Right.
Speaker 4 (04:11):
So President Trump has signed new US global tariffs, keeping
in line with his campaign promise to saying that tariffs
will in decades of unfair trade policies. So he spoke
more on the order yesterday at the White House. Let's
jump right into the audio and take a listen to
President Trump today.
Speaker 9 (04:27):
We're standing up for the American worker and we are
finally putting America first.
Speaker 7 (04:34):
My answer is very simple. If they complain, if.
Speaker 9 (04:36):
You want you're tariff raid to be zero, then you
build your product right here in America, because there is
no tariff if you build your plant, your product in America.
Speaker 4 (04:47):
So Trump blamed past leaders for trade policies that he
said were imbalanced, adding that tariff's stand to benefit Americans.
As you heard in that audio companies can also avoid
paying tariffs if they make their products in the US.
Trump spoke more on this whole tariffs thing. Let's hear
more from presidential.
Speaker 9 (05:03):
April second, twenty twenty five will forever be remembered as
today American industry was reborn, the day America's destiny was reclaimed,
and the day that we began to make America wealthy again.
Our country and its taxpayers have been ripped off for
more than fifty years. But it is not going to
(05:26):
happen anymore.
Speaker 7 (05:27):
It's not going to happen.
Speaker 4 (05:30):
So tariffs cover a wide range of products that are
targeting several countries, including Canada, Mexico, China, and the European Union.
Speaker 6 (05:37):
Now Trump called the reciprocal tariffs liberal.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
The day April second, yes, yesterday, liberation day for the
US after trading partners have quote looted, pillaged, and raped
American industries for decades, leading to a loss of US
jobs and manufacturing. All countries will have an immediate ten
percent baseline tariff on imported goods, and many are getting
hit with larger tariffs on top of that. Now, critics
(06:00):
claim the reciprocal tariffs are unfair and could lead to
hyper inflation.
Speaker 6 (06:05):
You guys have any thoughts?
Speaker 1 (06:06):
Yeah, The thing about the tariffs I don't understand is
what is the end game here? Like, you know, I
hear him say it, well, in unfair trade policies, but
you know, it just feels like, you know, they put
taxes on us, so now we were gonna put taxes
on them. And I guess he's trying to get people
to bring manufacturing back.
Speaker 7 (06:19):
To the US.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
But yes, does it just cost more to build here?
Would they make it cheaper to manufacture here? Like, what's
the benefit of building, you know in America just zero tariffs?
Speaker 3 (06:29):
Well, employees are cheaper in other places too, But that's
a good question. You know, he was talking about you know,
other people charging US tariffs as well, so he wants
them to you know, knock off their tariffs, which will
knock off our tariffs. I guess that's what he's saying,
But I thought he was against free trade. And I
thought he wanted more people to build here, but like
you said, how can they build?
Speaker 7 (06:46):
Hei is more the build here.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
One of the things that is striking me is the
auto tariffs and how that stands to impact a lot
of Americans because it's not like we make all the
parts auto parts here in America, so we stand to
still even if you buy an American car, the price
of that is still going to go up because some
of the steel, some of the materials are not made
in America.
Speaker 6 (07:08):
So it's just like, yeah.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
It still affects us.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
It still affects and there saying cost prices will have
to raise between three and ten thousand dollars. What it
will do is it'll make use cause a premium, you
know what I mean, because you know you won't have
that extra ten thousand on your used vehicle, you know, absolutely.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
And I just don't understand how you know you're saying
you're going to make it easier for the American workers,
but you're doing things that are going to immediately hurt
those American workers financially.
Speaker 7 (07:32):
Yes, and this has immediate impact on your economy.
Speaker 10 (07:35):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
In fact, there is a bipartisan effort to block the
tariffs against Canada. Republicans Republican excuse me, Kentucky's Republican Senator
Ran Paul is actually working with Democrat Senator out of Virginia,
Tim Kaine, who proposed to build that would essentially end
the emergency declaration put forth by the Trump administration to
impose tariffs on Canada. Now, the Senate voted fifty one
(07:58):
to forty eight in favor of the resolution that would
block President Trump's tariffs on Canadian products yesterday. Well, actually
we don't have time to get into the audio, but
I will say that there are four other Republicans that
support this Democratic led measure, Susan Collins of Maine, Rampaul
and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. So
the resolution, authored by Virginia Democrat Tim Kaine, is expected
(08:21):
to stall in the House. However, the vote signaled bipartisan
opposition on the sweeping levees. So this is this is
bigger than just whatever party you voted for.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
This is in American so surely, but see that's the
whole thing, you know, that's why we have all of
these conversations about party and you know, everybody goes back
and forth, you know, at each other because you're a Democratic,
you're Republican. But once that person is in the White House,
at the end of the day, we're just all Americans
who are impacted by the decisions of what that president
you know, does like. So so you can scream Democrat,
Republican all you want. At the end of the day,
(08:51):
that is your president. We are Americans and we're impacted
by his decisions.
Speaker 4 (08:55):
And that's that's essentially what the senators were saying that Hey, look,
if we could agree that we don't like this, then
you know, we can go ahead and put some forth
some measures to combat it. And this is something that
you know, those senators seem to agree on.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
All we care I'm sorry, Morgan. All we care about
is American people. Is you know, keeping some money in
our pocket and being safe.
Speaker 11 (09:15):
I don't care what your race is, your religion is,
your sexuality is, your agenda is.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Those are the two things that you care about the most.
Having some money in your pocket and being safe.
Speaker 10 (09:25):
That's it.
Speaker 6 (09:26):
Hurry it, Clockett, all right, So that's you for six am.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
I'll talk to you guys at seven and we will
get into what's going.
Speaker 6 (09:32):
On with Elon Musk?
Speaker 3 (09:34):
All right, everybody else, get it off your chest. Eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one. Phone lines
wide open again one. Eight hundred five eight five one
oh five one. Get it off your chest. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I'm telling what you're doing. If this is your time
to get it off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed.
Speaker 10 (09:57):
Eight hundred five eight five one five one.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
We want to here from you on the breakfast class.
Speaker 10 (10:03):
Hello.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
Who's this?
Speaker 5 (10:04):
It is j J with up. Get it off your chest,
Bro Raim calling from the A four to three.
Speaker 7 (10:09):
A part of the A four three? What part of
the little country you're calling from?
Speaker 5 (10:13):
Myrtle Beach, Man, Myrtle Beach.
Speaker 7 (10:15):
Many already coming from them fires yet?
Speaker 5 (10:17):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, shoe sure, by the grace of God. Okay, hey,
I speaking about these terrifits. Man. I didn't vote, so
I kind of feel like I ain't really got no
face on the matter. Plus the fact that we're gonna
be getting taxed, you know, when we dad and going, man,
I came to the conclusion to realize it is what
it is. I'm gonna keep pushing man. I'm in the
(10:39):
process of getting me a car, and I know that's
gonna affect me in terms of the way these t
tarriffis Tariff's going. But I raally rived in the walk,
so I'm gonna get me a car anyway.
Speaker 7 (10:50):
Why didn't you vote Breakfast want.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
To cut Charlamagne. They're gonna do what they want to
do anyway, and I kind of feel like my vote
don't matter because they're gonna do what they want to
do anyway.
Speaker 7 (11:00):
Well, your vote does matter, Yeah, yeah, I get it.
Speaker 5 (11:03):
I guess.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
If you're looking for a car, I mean, March was
the best time to do it, but it is April now.
I would do your homework and I would pick call
companies against each other, pitt dealerships against each other. Hey,
this dealership is giving them to me for twenty five,
Can you give it to me for twenty three?
Speaker 10 (11:18):
Go back and forth.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
You got it.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
You have to use your negotiation game because them call
dealerships ain't as packed as they will.
Speaker 5 (11:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Hey on a better end of note, Charlemagne, Yes, sir, Hey,
once you think about Myrtle Beach R and B Music
Fest opening up with Mary J. Blige and closing with Usher.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Well that sounds expensive now. I mean I think R
and B fest wild work. I think anything that can
can bring out grown folks will work.
Speaker 10 (11:45):
You know.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
I remember when Tangle was up here in Tankles talking
about doing the R and B Money Awards. I think
any I think anything like that will work, honestly, Yeah.
Speaker 5 (11:52):
Yeah, the work, right. I was telling my coworkers always
gonna run it past y'all. If I was able to get.
Speaker 7 (11:58):
Through, I'm going to stuff like that all Like.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
One of my favorite festivals ever was the Sugar Water
Festival with Erica Baddu.
Speaker 7 (12:05):
Jill, Scott Loudry and Queen tief Lord have mercy that
all right?
Speaker 5 (12:15):
Hey, I appreciate y'all.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Man, Yeah, Hello, who's this this Courtney? Hey, Courtney, good morning,
get it off your chest?
Speaker 5 (12:25):
Good morning.
Speaker 12 (12:25):
I want to get off my chest.
Speaker 9 (12:27):
Man.
Speaker 12 (12:27):
We got to stop being so empathetic to these folks
that be calling on this radio and for people that
be doing stuff online. Charlamagne just gave that mad junky
the other day the other day for leaving his kids
at the McDonald's. Come to find out, he won't even
that no interview. The police found.
Speaker 13 (12:48):
Holds all of his story.
Speaker 12 (12:50):
The daughter said he left the go drop off a backpack.
Video surveillans got him walking back and forth between the
apartment complex they live there and the McDonald's. They don't
call a bank.
Speaker 5 (13:01):
Where he was supposed to have an interview at.
Speaker 7 (13:02):
This man even had no interviews.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Man to you, don I seen somebody else say something
differently that they actually spoke to the girlfriend or the
mother's baby mother and they said that he was at
an interview.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
So I've seen conflicting reports, so I don't know what.
Speaker 7 (13:18):
It was, but that's what a bake.
Speaker 12 (13:20):
It's an a baked manager. The banked manager did say
that he filled out an application on the twenty second
and that they had kind of like an informal conversation
for like fifteen to twenty minutes. But I don't know
if this was the same day at whatever, But believe
those kids for that long he was not at an interview.
And the kids said this ain't the first time he
done left them.
Speaker 7 (13:38):
Yeah, I said that yesterday.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
I was just like, what job interview takes almost two hours?
And what job interview allows you to go back and forth?
Speaker 10 (13:45):
You know?
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Because God right, like the witnesses said that they saw
him coming back and forth to right.
Speaker 12 (13:50):
Man, these folks be playing in our face every day.
Like when I listened to y'all in the morning. Every
morning somebody called him big, and it's always something going
on like man, That's why hard to have empathy for folks, cause.
Speaker 13 (14:01):
You just don't.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
You never know.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
You're absolutely right what you just said, Tuma. It's hard
to have empathy for people because you just never know.
And sometimes somebody will send you a gofund me and
read the story and be like, man, go f yourself.
Speaker 7 (14:12):
I ain't a stupid Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
Well he didn't call it no, but I don't because
she was like people calling. He didn't call in. You
get game, donkey for a story that we that you read.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
By the way, I gave him donkey just simply believing
giving your kids, but you don't just your child's safety
in the pursuit of employment, because there's no job on
this planet that would make up for something happening to
your child.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
If you need to vent, hit us up now. It's
the Breakfast clubg of one, The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 10 (14:44):
Your time to get it off.
Speaker 11 (14:45):
Your chest, whether you're mad or bleas t get.
Speaker 7 (14:49):
Up and get something.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
Call up now eight hundred five eight five one o
five one. We want to hear from you on the
Breakfast Club.
Speaker 13 (14:56):
Hello, who's this knows it?
Speaker 7 (14:59):
From A six four? What's happening in upstate state South Caroline?
Speaker 10 (15:04):
What's going on?
Speaker 14 (15:05):
Jes When're you gonna make your way down to South Carolina?
You keep tapped tip towing around, but you ain't made.
Speaker 8 (15:10):
It down here.
Speaker 4 (15:10):
Yeah, I know, right in the summer, in the late summer,
like August, September, trying to make it to Charles Center,
trying to come to Columbia.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
I'm trying to Yeah.
Speaker 7 (15:18):
People ask me that all the time. Yeah, I definitely
beat it.
Speaker 14 (15:22):
I got one more thing, Lauren.
Speaker 10 (15:25):
I know you're in the background.
Speaker 14 (15:28):
I know you're in the background.
Speaker 5 (15:29):
You can hear me.
Speaker 14 (15:29):
I've been tapped into your podcast, but I just wanted
to say, did you throw a little extra stuff in?
Because I know you talk about the stuff you already
talk about on the Breakfast Club, but I want to
hear a little bit more, not just say thank You've
been talking about Brothers Club, but.
Speaker 15 (15:43):
No, people, I've heard that, and I've also heard that
people want it longer as well too, So I hear y'all.
Speaker 16 (15:49):
But did you listen to episode three?
Speaker 2 (15:50):
You just started?
Speaker 5 (15:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (15:54):
Okay, because episode three we talked, we discussed the story
at the breakfast club, didn't touch which story was it?
Speaker 14 (15:58):
I got Charlo man, let me get a book. I
got audiobook.
Speaker 7 (16:04):
We got books up here. I get you a book, man.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
You know, the paperback from my third book, Getting on
Us to Die line, came out of yesterday. By the way, Hello.
Speaker 8 (16:15):
Good morning, dj Amy. What's going on with my brother?
Speaker 2 (16:18):
What's off your chest?
Speaker 10 (16:19):
All right?
Speaker 8 (16:20):
Listen? Listen, listen. I feel like, uh that there's a
lot going on with this whole thing of little Baby
in regards to his involvement with this video being shot down.
I feel like he's being set up and targeted because
he's making a lot of stride that most rappers don't make.
And I also noticed that a few months ago the
(16:42):
brother came out of Harvard and was in Harvard in classic.
I think it's set up. I don't like. I mean,
I want us to just be more aware and not
be so fast to judge him and what's going on
with him. But you know, vy, if you I don't know,
you won't remember what I met you, Uh the day
(17:03):
before Angela yee her last day, you had an event
Elizabeth at at Barcool and I met you that night.
I don't remember that two years ago. Kind of clown Yeah,
that kind of clowns you because you know you had
the name remember that.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
Ye?
Speaker 8 (17:21):
No, you didn't change your clothes. Charlomagne and peace my brother. Now,
did you to go check out my trailer mister show
money on Instagram?
Speaker 7 (17:29):
No, I ain't get a chance to man.
Speaker 8 (17:33):
No, I want you to take an outcome on man
for a lot of me.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm watching.
Speaker 17 (17:41):
Crazy right Hollywood, Charlo Man, That's crazy.
Speaker 7 (17:52):
I'm I'm joking man, I'm playing. I'm gonna I'm gonna
watch it.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
I do want to say something to you about the
little baby completing the Harvard Business School.
Speaker 7 (17:59):
You know that was just week long program. I'm not hating.
I'm just saying week it was a week.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Long program program. He took a bunch of time graduate.
But he's still winning. He's still you know, time the
five days just to go up and there.
Speaker 16 (18:16):
I mean, he's a little baby. He could have been doing.
Speaker 7 (18:19):
I know how people are about that people like that
are actually graduated from Harvard.
Speaker 4 (18:24):
That yeah, I thought when he said that, like he
meant like a little baby was actually going through schools.
Speaker 2 (18:28):
He was there.
Speaker 7 (18:28):
It was a five days it was a week long
program at Harvard Business School.
Speaker 16 (18:33):
But that's how that's real, HBC. You grads feel about
people get honorary.
Speaker 7 (18:36):
Degrees to y'all need to donate more money to y'all
schools like we do.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Damn should even go to a class you know.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
I didn't, but I donated a lot of money to
Sidclone and State. By the way, speaking of that, the
deadline for my scholarship is April sixteenth, So you need
to go, uh send your essays into South Carolina State
University so you can be eligible for the scholarship.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
You give away scholarship. That is what's up? I know
that's right for a couple of years.
Speaker 16 (19:03):
Scholarships.
Speaker 7 (19:04):
Yeah, well do some money through.
Speaker 14 (19:07):
That.
Speaker 7 (19:07):
My mom's all the mater I showed up for mine.
When you what's up? Lauren?
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Getting a little something?
Speaker 7 (19:12):
Now, what's up?
Speaker 15 (19:13):
The podcast only got three episodes time.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Eight five, five, one oh five one. Now we got
the latest with Lauria coming up.
Speaker 15 (19:23):
We do Kanye West just dropped the song and he
let us know Bianca, his wife, did leave him and
it's because of his social media rants.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
All right, but we'll get to that next. It's the
Breakfast Club on Morning, the Breakfast Club. Good morning, everybody.
We are the Breakfast Club. I got to cross all teas,
dot all eyes.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Let's get to the latest. Laura La becoming a straight
fast she gets them somebody that knows somebody detail.
Speaker 16 (19:50):
I'm a home girl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 10 (19:53):
She'd be having the latest song, The Latest with Laurence
La Rosa.
Speaker 18 (19:58):
Times you have fact, sometimes you have details. Sometimes she
have a little bit of every time on the breakfast Cloud.
Speaker 15 (20:05):
Okay, So Kanye West has released a song. The song
is called Bianca. This is from his new album w
W three, and the song talks about Bianca leaving him
because of his social media post.
Speaker 6 (20:19):
That was that was miss Juicy from the Ricky Smile already.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
I know I've voiced in my head.
Speaker 16 (20:24):
Well the song and the song. It is a song.
He talks about it.
Speaker 15 (20:31):
He says that Bianca lets him because of a serious
of tweets. He doesn't specify which exact tweets. But there's
been a lot of them because of a social media rant.
He says that she came to him and said, look,
I need you to get help.
Speaker 19 (20:43):
Uh.
Speaker 16 (20:44):
He says she was trying to get him committed. He
said no, so she left.
Speaker 15 (20:47):
So he's been tracking her through like his car app
and until she comes back, he's not going to sleep.
He also says that he is channeling the spirit of Donda.
He feels like this is an attack from people who
voted for Hillary Clinton, and he feels like people are
trying to kill him.
Speaker 7 (21:01):
Right now, why would that song bring her back?
Speaker 10 (21:03):
Though?
Speaker 5 (21:03):
Right?
Speaker 7 (21:03):
Like, that ain't the song that's going to bring him back.
That's a song that's gonna keep her away.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
That girl probably sing somewhere with some clothes on, so
happy and warm.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Finally, war, if you want to bed, you better go
call Keith Sweat and put him on these That ain't it?
Speaker 10 (21:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (21:18):
Well, I mean, but it confirms all of the because
you guys, remember there have been so many rumors about
them being up and down, like she's leaving him, the
marriage is over, her friend, so it was like sources
close to her friends say that like she's worried and
she's blah blah blah. I think this confirms a lot
of that and what we were seeing, like when they
would pop out in Tokyo wherever they were happy after
those reports was probably her just trying to make sure
he was good, very similar to what Kim Kardashian went through.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
I will say, I just want to speak for me,
go ahead. I didn't need confirmation because I didn't care.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
Oh my god, I know Beyonca's dad is happy though, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (21:50):
I'm sure, yeah, yeah, So I wonder who's in Kanye's
camp now, like who's who's he moving with and all
that now because it was just them too right.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Academic Oh absolutely.
Speaker 15 (22:02):
So speaking of academics, posted some text yesterday from Kanye,
and the text were in response to what we talked
about up here about jay Z not owning Kanye West Masters,
like he had put that out through that Academics interview
and we debunked it. So there's a text where someone's like, hey,
Charlemagne says jay Z didn't own your Masters?
Speaker 6 (22:24):
Is that true?
Speaker 15 (22:25):
Kanye says, you know what, I'm not sure Charlemagne won't
speak up on how those women are trafficking my black kids.
And thank you for Oh, then he thinks I'm for
posting something about Chloe. And then he says, Charllemage won't
speak up about my position on the Jews, He'll only
speak against me. What if eighty percent of what I
said in fact, in twenty percent was opinion or something
I was misinformed about, my sentiment is still the same.
(22:47):
I'm not a n word who understands publishing in master's usage,
et cetera. I always ask, what's the point of owning
master tapes if you don't own the tape deck? So
what does Charlemagne say? So who does Charlot say owns them?
I'm happy I said it out loud so I can
find out in words. Being black ball from having any
legal representation.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
What is your problem with him? You won't speak up
or speak out.
Speaker 7 (23:11):
I don't even know what he talking about the mental house,
but I will say this.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Why would he jump out there and make those claims
against jay Z and not even know if they're true
or not. He doesn't even know who owns his catalog.
He doesn't know who makes money off his catalog. Kanye
is be out here talking lying for attention and y'all
eat it up.
Speaker 2 (23:29):
But his attorneys can find out who owns the masters.
Speaker 1 (23:32):
He said he's black ball from legal representation, or you
don't listen. I don't listen, mean your Dominican is.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
But the reason I say that is because yesterday there
was a rumor that jay Z sold of masters to
get his master's back, which was a room with two
They said all of that is nonsense. That's ridiculous about
them text messages. At the top of those text messages,
what did he say about jay Z? At the very top,
what do you say, jay Z?
Speaker 16 (23:54):
White a ward is going too far? Remember that false
idol song?
Speaker 7 (23:57):
How can Kanye call jay Z white ass?
Speaker 11 (24:00):
Who you can act more white and seeks more white
validation than Kanye Freaking West. The dude is out here
with White Lives Matter T shirts on selling them on
his website, Swastika t shirts dressed up in kk K outfish,
and you got the nerve to.
Speaker 7 (24:12):
Call another black man white.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
A black man that way more blacker than you with
a beautiful black wife.
Speaker 7 (24:17):
And black family.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
But y'all just be letting any niggas get away with
anything and eating it up. It's ridiculous. I've never seen
jay Z's ass. I can't tell you the color.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
JA got to do with this?
Speaker 16 (24:27):
He said, Jason White, He said white.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
You said up, I would expect a white man. I
would expect another white man to say that he's a
Dominican white man.
Speaker 10 (24:38):
I'm black. I know I am.
Speaker 7 (24:41):
Show me your certificate right.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
Now, but certificate.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
I don't want to be gay.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
This one is so, we would swear to God.
Speaker 7 (24:52):
Gay is young and yes, it is that the birthday
they want to deal one the time right now?
Speaker 5 (24:59):
What?
Speaker 15 (25:00):
Oh my god, jes why you get so hyped when
you said that, though I love young Marie.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Okay, Jones, you.
Speaker 16 (25:06):
Already having me and girl? Relax, happy break that young man?
Speaker 2 (25:12):
What is going on? I'm short.
Speaker 7 (25:21):
Dropping a bomb for young bomb for song at least?
Speaker 2 (25:32):
What is going on here?
Speaker 10 (25:33):
All right?
Speaker 2 (25:33):
That's the ladies. Lord, I'm sorry, Lauren, I'm it all right.
Speaker 16 (25:35):
I just want her to her birthday, all right.
Speaker 2 (25:37):
When we come back, we got front No, actually I don't,
but she rips.
Speaker 7 (25:43):
She could talk me.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
Through it, all right. All right, up next we got
front page News is the breakfast club.
Speaker 7 (25:49):
Good morning.
Speaker 10 (25:51):
If you're like into the breakfast club.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
Everybody is Jean j n V Jess hilarious Charlamagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
Let's get back in some front page news again. We
got to congratulate Carmelo Anthony. He has been elected to
the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Speaker 7 (26:06):
Easy call man, First Ballad Hall of Famer Man Srom
Luther Mellow.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
Absolutely, and also the NBA is looking into John Moran.
They believe he might have been using his hands and
arms to mimic a shoot, like shooting a gun toward
the Golden State Warriors bench in Tuesday's game. So they're
wanting into that. Well, you know, they don't like you
using the gun stuff and pointing fingers that they need.
Speaker 11 (26:27):
To change the language and stop saying, shoot, he shot
the ball. He's shooting. I don't like who Caures like
and you know what bothers me about that. But Steph
Curry had fifty two points in that game, twelve three
pointers and that's what we're talking about.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
And he's doing an investigation.
Speaker 10 (26:42):
What's up?
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Mrgan so Elon Musk.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
He will likely be stepping back from his role in
the Trump administration. The reports come after the tech billionaire
super Pac spent millions in a losing effort to get
their Republican back to candidate on the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Musk has repeatedly said he'll leave his position at coach
the Department of Government Efficiency within his one hundred thirty
day mandate as a non governmental employee. So if you're
(27:05):
not an elected official or a non government employee, you're
just a special employee by the government.
Speaker 6 (27:11):
Well, you only have one hundred and thirty days to work.
Speaker 4 (27:14):
So that sentiment was backed up by the White House
spokesperson Caroline Levitt, who called the reports garbage. But you know,
Elon Musk is essentially standing to be done with all
of this at his one hundred thirty days.
Speaker 6 (27:26):
You guys have any thoughts on that.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
Yeah, I never understood why Elon wanted to be on
the front lines anyway, Like when you look at you know,
how it's impacting his business, when you look at how
it's impacting Tesla, like the sales of plumbing and the
stocks are dropping. I never understood why he just couldn't
be like every other oligarch and you know, donate to
these campaigns and be the puppet master in the shadows.
I never understood why he wanted to be all of
in the videos, all upon the records dancing.
Speaker 7 (27:48):
It was never understood it.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
When he first did it be a backsfied.
Speaker 3 (27:51):
Well, yeah, because I thought when he first did it,
I thought that the evaluation of his company shot in
the air crazy. And then I did sow all the
other issue been doing it just shot right back down.
But I thought that at first it was like a
good move for Tesla.
Speaker 7 (28:01):
But the people who buy these Teslas mostly are liberals.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Liberals are the ones who care about climate change and
your electric cars and all of that. So, like, you know,
you get so tied in with MacCAM but they always
say that if you're a businessman, you know, don't get
so entrenched in, you know, any one political side because
what Michael Jordan's say Republicans.
Speaker 7 (28:19):
Democratic Republican, the Democrats both box.
Speaker 4 (28:23):
Yeah, it's giving he was bored or something, you know,
but yeah, we will see what ends up happening with
should have.
Speaker 7 (28:28):
Did what every other rich man does when they get bored,
go gay what.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
All right?
Speaker 6 (28:38):
Goods?
Speaker 4 (28:38):
Wait, see, I'm like you you know, you know from experience,
I just heard things. All right, guys, I let's bring
things home to you In New York. New York City
Mayor Eric Adams. He's praising the dismissal of the corruption
case that was against him, Thanking his legal team. Adam
said he's happy that he can focus on the city
and the city's future and finally move on. He's also
(29:01):
apologizing to New Yorkers for having to go through this
with him. Let's take a listen to New York City
Mayor Eric Adams.
Speaker 20 (29:07):
Let me be clear, as I said all along, this
case should have never, should have never been brought, and
I did nothing wrong. I'm not happy that our city
can finally close the book on this and focus solely
on the future about great city.
Speaker 4 (29:25):
So a federal judge issued the decision on Wednesday morning
to toss the case with prejudice, meaning it can't be
brought back to court this week's uh. This is weeks
after the DOJ ordered the case to be dropped, and
just one day after Adams is required to file documents
to appear on the Democratic mayoral primary ballot, which I
believe you guys election day is in June, right, So yeah,
(29:48):
it looks like you guys are going to be gearing
up for that New York election.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
You should go listen to Eric Adams on my Guy
Andrews shows podcast Flagrant Like he talks, he says he
feels like he was targeted by the Biden administration because
he spoke out against the migrant issue. And he said
that he feels like there's a permanent government that is
in control, like a permanent government that regardless of what
happens in elections, who looks like to figure head. He said,
(30:11):
he feels like there's a permanent government that's really in control.
I just thought that was interesting for us sitting mare
to say stuff like that.
Speaker 6 (30:16):
And and but that was prior to his charges.
Speaker 7 (30:19):
Prior to the charge.
Speaker 4 (30:20):
I'd be curious to hear from Mayor Eric Adams tap In.
You know how you feel about that now? I mean,
do you still feel that's the case, being that your
charges were dropped. A lot of people are saying that,
you know, all of this is happening because he was
kind of chummy with the Trump administration or that he
you know, was working with the Trump administration.
Speaker 6 (30:37):
So you know, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (30:38):
We will continue to see watch that situation, see or
hopefully that particular situation. There is a closed book on
his particular case, but you know, I know he is
still running for mayor. So we will follow that story
and bringing things home.
Speaker 6 (30:53):
To here in the d n V or in DC.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
So, former President Obama is apologizing for his surprise appearance
in a family photo.
Speaker 5 (31:01):
Y'all.
Speaker 6 (31:01):
He photo Obama this family.
Speaker 4 (31:02):
He was taking a walk on Monday to the cherry blossoms,
which you know are the cherry trees down here that
were a gift from Japan down in the title basin,
when he strolled into a series of pictures being taken
of the Moore's families young two children. Now, the mom,
Pamela Moore, was focused on corralling the kids because there's
no railing and it's you know, near the water, so
they were like making sure that the kids weren't walking
(31:24):
towards the water anything like that.
Speaker 6 (31:26):
But dad was like, whoa is that Obama?
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Is that Obama?
Speaker 16 (31:30):
Is that Obama?
Speaker 4 (31:31):
And then when the mom finally you know, got the
shots done and all of these things, she finally surfaced
and was like, Okay, what were you saying?
Speaker 6 (31:38):
And yeah, it was Obama Clear's day.
Speaker 4 (31:40):
Let's take a listen to the mom, Pamela or excuse me,
Pamela Moore in that incident, and my.
Speaker 21 (31:47):
Husband's like that's Obama. I don't know he say it.
I'm like, yeah, whatever, I'm making sure press. I'm looking
at pressing right now after they're done with their their shoot.
I've been picked pressing up and I'm like, what did
you just say? He's like, that's Obama.
Speaker 5 (31:59):
I was like what.
Speaker 7 (32:00):
I was like, well, did we get a picture?
Speaker 16 (32:02):
And then we went to a photographer and like she
scrolled back and we were.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Like we saw, like we got it.
Speaker 4 (32:07):
Apologize I needs it wasn't a real It wasn't a
real apology. He basically, you know, caught wind of what
happened and sent a message to the Yeah it was
a black family, he said, pressing and Bell, I hope
you enjoyed peak bloom My bead was stepping into the shot.
Speaker 6 (32:23):
He wasn't like a whole issued apology from like a president.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
But it was just like, hey, President Obama, if you
got caught out there with your second family, just say.
Speaker 4 (32:32):
That it.
Speaker 7 (32:38):
Look like no photo Obama, that looked like a nice
family scroll.
Speaker 5 (32:42):
No, the.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
Only controversy that man had was a different colored suit.
Speaker 10 (32:56):
And now.
Speaker 7 (32:58):
My daddy had a second family. I know what that
looks like.
Speaker 6 (33:03):
No standard, right, no family all right, that's your brocras News.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
Follow me on socials at Morgan Media. For more news covers,
follow at Black Information Network. Download the free iHeartRadio app
and visit us at b i in news dot com.
Speaker 6 (33:15):
Thank y'all.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
If you haven't seen the picture, I'm sure the Breakfast
Club will post picture so you guys could actually see it.
Speaker 8 (33:20):
All right.
Speaker 3 (33:20):
When we come back, we have Ellie Mistyle joining us.
He's the author of Bad Law ten popular laws that
are ruining America.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
You're not gonna miss this. It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 10 (33:29):
Good Morning, the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (33:33):
Morning.
Speaker 3 (33:34):
Everybody is DJ n V, Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the guy.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
We are the Breakfast Club. We got a special guest
in the building. They call him Big Ali. The reason
I don't want to messing your last name is.
Speaker 10 (33:47):
My stylef It's miss Stall rhymes with Chris Stall, and
the kids used to say Ellie rhymes with Jelly. I
didn't like that at all, So.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
Welcome new book out, bad Law Man.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
First of all, Elie, you know you're one of my
favorite would have listened to. I love reading your work
in the nation. I started reading a lot more of
your stuff a few years ago. When I realized the
Constitution didn't mean much okay anymore? Right, So I'm glad
you're here. What got you into studying constitutional law?
Speaker 10 (34:14):
Well, I went to law school and I hated it.
I went to Harvard Law School, and part of the
legal training is like they say that they're going to
make you think like a lawyer, right, So what that
means is that they take the way you think, which
was fine to me, and they break you and then
they try to build you back up in this new
like legal way of understanding the world. And I just
never accepted the training. I like, at every point when
(34:37):
you're telling me that, like, oh, well, this is how
it's always been done, I'm always like by the slavers
and I should care about that?
Speaker 21 (34:43):
Why?
Speaker 10 (34:43):
And just so was a constant while I was in
law school, like back and forth in terms of my
professors trying to kind of push me in a certain
box and me resisting that box and not, you know,
not all of my professors. One of my professors was
current Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan. She was great, right,
but I would go to her office hours and be like,
why is this like this? And she would say, Thurgood
(35:04):
Marshall once said, it's like, I don't give a damn
what Thurgod said. He was talking for a different time,
what about our time? And so these are the conversations
I had all the time, and that led to my
first book and certainly my career in general.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
And that's why you feel like all laws before nineteen
sixty five should be deemed on constitutional.
Speaker 10 (35:21):
I said presumptively on constitutional, which is a legal dodge.
I'm trying to lawyer my way around that. But my
fundamental premise is that before the nineteen sixty five Voting
Rights Act, which I think is the most important piece
of legislation ever passed in American history, this was functionally
apartheid country. Not everybody who lived here could vote here,
Not everybody who lived here could participate in the government. Here.
(35:44):
The majority of people who lived here, if you think
about not just black people, but also Latinos and also women,
couldn't actually participate in the government. What do you call that.
We have a word for that. It's that word is apartheid.
And so if you're now going to say that we
pass some law before everybody had a say, before everybody
had a vote, and that law it should still be
(36:05):
controlling today. I say, hell no, Right, it's like Roy
Breaker from lock Stuck. Right, if the milk sour, I
ain't the type of tea to drink it. Right, So,
if you're gonna go all the way back before everybody
had a vote, I'm saying that, presumptively speaking, that law
should mean nothing.
Speaker 5 (36:22):
Now.
Speaker 10 (36:22):
I'm not saying that you get rid of every single
law passed before nineteen sixty five. Some of them I
quite like, like the nineteen sixty four Civil Rights Act.
That was a good law. I also like the Sherman
Antitrust Act. I like a lot of laws that were
passed before nineteen sixty five. But my argument is that
if we liked the law, we could pass it again.
We could pass it again, this time asking everybody. And
(36:43):
for that example, I didn't make that up myself. Right.
The example that I'm using here is what they did
in South Africa. Right when South Africa got over apartheid.
Did they just go back to their africaner racist constitution
and be like, oh, we just need a couple of amendments,
We just need a couple of changes here to make
it work. No, they threw the whole thing out and
started again, this time asking everybody, this time having a
(37:06):
completely new delegation of all of the people of South Africa,
not just the white folks, but not no white folks,
and they came up with a new constitutions. One of
the reasons why the South African Constitution is generally thought
of as one of the best constitutions in the world
and ours continues to be a piece of crap.
Speaker 1 (37:25):
We're talking to elim style a new book out now,
Bad Law ten popular laws that are ruining America, And
you talk about chapter three, who gave away the skies
to the airline?
Speaker 2 (37:34):
Now, I just want you to know, Jess and myself,
we're reading some of your chapter titles.
Speaker 3 (37:38):
Yes we love them. We gotta go through a lot
of them. There's a couple that dead me and know
we're talking to me like these would be good if
we won on edibles.
Speaker 10 (37:45):
But go the all life flying? Yes, you love flying,
you life flying? I hate flying. It is like the
worst It is always the worst day of my life. Well,
I'm fat, so I gotta I gotta squeeze myself into
a small asse that ain't built for me. I got
somebody's you know, seat back right into my lap. I
(38:06):
can't eat nothing, all right, I gotta get the most
embarrassing moment of my life every time I have to
do it. Man, I'm gonna have a seat, bulks, I'm
a fatty please and then right, and then I like
cry on the inside. Right. The food's expensive, the liquor sucks,
the service sucks. I'm always delayed, my bags get lost.
It is miserable. It didn't always used to be this way.
(38:28):
Flying used to be awesome, spacious seats, good service, kind people,
and they weren't nickel and diming you at every point.
And what the reason why it used to be great
and now it's not is this thing called deregulation, the idea.
The airline industry used to be one of the most
heavily regulated industries in the country. That makes a lot
(38:49):
of sense, because we're putting metal in the sky and
hoping it comes down at a survivable rate. That's crazy.
So it used to be one of the most heavily
regulated industries in the country with literal price fixing. Literally
they could the government set the maximum price that you
could charge for certain routes. And I know conservatives, Republicans
(39:11):
even a lot of Democrats are like, price fixing, that's terrible,
that stops innovation. No, it doesn't. It makes flying a
public service and it makes it easy for people to
get around the country. FDR thought it was a war plan.
Thought it was part of our mobilization plan for war
to have reliable, cheap and accessible commercial airflight. Right, Democrats
(39:34):
and Republicans gave this guys away literally two corporate raiders
in the nineteen seventies. Now, when I started researching this book,
I actually assumed that this was a Ronald Reagan program
because most you know, I don't know about your process.
My process is usually like, if I see something bad,
show me the Republicans, right, show me what Reagan did,
because I'm sure it's has funcked me. And there's always
(39:56):
a mustache twirling Republican, you know, behind every curtain. For
this particular issue, this Republican plan to deregulate the airlines
and let corporate let the market decide how we fly,
as opposed to the government that was spearheaded by the Democrats.
And as I did the research, Democrats that we all
know kept coming up. Joe Biden, Ted Kennedy huge in
(40:18):
this deregulation. Stephen Bryer one of the Democratic appointees to
the Supreme Court. For a long time, there were all
of these Democrats that like got sucked in Ralph Nader right,
got sucked into the gospel of deregulation. And once they
did it, once the Republicans, I would say, snowjob the
Democrats into this thing. The first thing that happened when
(40:40):
they give away the airlines is the thing that has
killed the Democratic Party. From my entire lifetime, the Airline
Deregulation Act came out in nineteen seventy eight. I was
born in nineteen seventy eight. From my entire lifeline labor
got gutting. Airline jobs used to be good jobs, baggage
handlers and flight attendants and pilots. Pilots used to be
(41:01):
one of the best jobs you could get. And with
market forces, with deregulation, those good jobs got slashed, right.
And then you go into the Reagan era where Reagan's
like social safety net. Here's a big ol' ho on
cutting in your social safety net, and people fell from
good middle class jobs straight through down to the bottom.
(41:23):
And they've never forgiven the Democrats for it. See that's
the thing that I think the Democratic Party didn't kind
of realize when you cut labor. Labor used to vote
for Democrats consistently, right, not just black labor, white labor,
this white working class laborers used to vote for Democrats.
But once the market controlled everything, Democrats weren't helping them,
(41:45):
and that's how they became I believe it's part of
the reason why they became obsessed with their cultural issues
as opposed to their economic issues, because they felt like
they weren't going to get ahead economically anyway.
Speaker 5 (41:55):
Right.
Speaker 10 (41:55):
If you tell people like you're not gonna get head economically,
you're gonna be poor, you're gonna be struggling, but you're
gonna be better off than that black person over there,
they're gonna be like, Okay, sign me up. Trump, Like,
That's that's how it happens. You get You tell white
folks that they're gonna have nothing, but they're gonna have
a little bit more than black folks, and white folks
will sign up.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
All right, we got more with Ellie mystyle. When we
come back, don't move. It's to breakfast club.
Speaker 10 (42:17):
Good morning morning.
Speaker 2 (42:18):
Everybody is DJ.
Speaker 3 (42:20):
Env Jess hilarious Charlamagne the guy we are the breakfast Club.
We're still kicking with Ellie Mystyle, the author of Bad Law.
You hat of course chapter nine.
Speaker 2 (42:29):
Why can't we say gay? What are we supposed to say?
Speaker 22 (42:31):
So?
Speaker 10 (42:34):
You know, as I'm sure most of your listeners are
aware of, I could have written the whole book just
bad Law in Florida, like it is going gone through
the Florida Like this is terrible, is there? This is
just racist? This is stupid, Right, I focused on the
Florida don't say gay law because it is so particularly
oppressive and stupid. The law says that you cannot teach
(42:55):
about gender difference, sexuality differences, transgender issues. You can't say
any of those words to school children, right. And if
you talk to certain kinds of conservatives, they are like, well,
what's fine is why does a third grader need to
learn about gay people? Why can't they just learn about
reading writing? Right? And I'm like, do y'all have third graders?
Like I got a twelve year old and a nine
(43:16):
year old?
Speaker 7 (43:16):
Right?
Speaker 10 (43:17):
They talk about all this stuff, not in a kind
of lascivious sexual way, but they're interested in who in
how these things were?
Speaker 23 (43:27):
Right?
Speaker 1 (43:28):
How did it would they be if they weren't taught
about it in school. They showing it on television.
Speaker 2 (43:32):
Yea, because they just see it in their daily lives.
Speaker 5 (43:34):
Right.
Speaker 10 (43:34):
And so I use the example if I if I'm
a school teacher and i'm you know, I've got my wife,
and I have a picture of me and my wife
on my desk at school, the kids see that it's
me and my wife, that it's a man and a woman.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Right.
Speaker 10 (43:47):
If I'm a gay school teacher and I have a
picture of me and my husband on the desk, they
see that that's different. They see that it's a man
and a man, and they might have a question about that.
And in Florida, I'm not allowed to say why. And
so you act like it. People act like it's neutral,
but it's not. It is what's the scholars call heteronormative.
It's pushing the man and the woman. That's the normal
(44:10):
way of doing it. And the man and the man
or the woman and woman. That's just crazy and weird
when you could just say like, oh, that's my husband. Anyway,
back to math, So.
Speaker 3 (44:19):
What do you think about you know, Trump's transgender of bill,
where it's just two genders to dandy evil.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
What is your thoughts on that?
Speaker 10 (44:25):
It's it's again, biologically, it's not true. There are people
who are different. That's just a biological fact. We can
pretend people are people. Think that the biological and neurological. Man,
I don't know.
Speaker 21 (44:36):
I'm not.
Speaker 11 (44:41):
Because I said neurological, because because you can think you're
in the wrong body. But I'm not going if that's
not biologically the fact man, biologically as men and women.
Speaker 10 (44:50):
I know, I don't think that's right. I think that
there are I again, is something other than the man
and horn. I see now you're you're pushing me in
the You're getting me away from the law. But I'm
just asking, as I understand it, there are people who
are born with female hormones in male bodies, right or
(45:13):
vice versa, and they want to express how they feel
inside as opposed to how they look on the outside.
But I think the larger point is not just that
I don't know. The larger point is I don't care.
It's not me. I'm the way that I am, right,
I don't care how it doesn't affect me just somebody
(45:34):
else being in trance doesn't make me think. Oh man,
maybe I should maybe I should be trans. I always
wanted to wear nice hats, like that's not like, that's
not how my whatever. I tell a story in the
book about in my kids class, one of one of
the kids in my younger kids class came out as
a boy after being a girl I want to say eight,
(45:55):
And you know, the parents were just like, I does
one really? How's that? The kids were just like, yeah, whatever,
it's Ramsey's now. It used to be clear Patrick, it's
Ramseys now, but he's cool.
Speaker 4 (46:05):
And then if I'm your mom, I'm like, no, I
named you Corey. How are you just gonna come up
and be Shakira today?
Speaker 16 (46:11):
But think about that.
Speaker 10 (46:13):
But that's between that's between Ramseys and and his mom
and the mom. That's not between me, and that's not
that's not between the school and the kids.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
I don't have a say the school call them or her,
you know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (46:26):
Because if you have Mamma named you Corey, and now
you say and I don't want to be called Corey.
Speaker 2 (46:29):
I want to be called Shamika. So now the school
is supposed to call you.
Speaker 5 (46:33):
Man.
Speaker 10 (46:34):
I go to my kids go to a progressive school
where like if my kid came in and said I
want to be called Ketchup. Today, they would call him
ketch up. They would call him what the kid wants
to be called. And I think that's just the natural
thing to do. If somebody comes and tells you their name,
you say their name, right. You don't say, actually your
cash is Clay. No, you say you want to be
Mhammad Ali. Today, guess what you get to be mohamad Al.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
That kid goes to school and say I'm Batman, then.
Speaker 10 (46:56):
They're gonna call my kid back.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
But see, I think that's a little different. We're talking
about it name. Yeah, because if I say, yes, this
is my name, you call me my name. But if
I say I am ketch Up and I just stand still.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
Dogs come around coming on my head, that's just a
little different.
Speaker 10 (47:12):
See, I disagree. I don't think Ramseys does anything different
in school now that he's Ramsey than he did when
he was Cleopatra. I don't think that there's any doesn't
learn differently, doesn't even different.
Speaker 1 (47:21):
You might go in a different bathroom, might start going
to other women, which make women uncomfortably.
Speaker 2 (47:25):
Kids uncomfortable.
Speaker 22 (47:26):
Yeah, the other eight year old girls, all right, they're
only eight do you do you know how uncomfortable kids
are in bathrooms as they hit puberty generally, So now
you're send a little boy, yeah, but nowall until you've.
Speaker 6 (47:40):
Got a word past the sink and other dudes before
you get to and it's like what you're doing.
Speaker 3 (47:47):
You have daughters and sons, sons, all right, so your
sons will not get naked in front of your wife
and other women, but he will do it in front
of you.
Speaker 2 (47:54):
Correct if you have to change or if it's something
like that. Now, imagine a girl going into a boy's
bathroom from where urinal. He's gonna feel Uncomfortable's gonna make
him felwo, don't you think?
Speaker 6 (48:03):
And even more uncomfortable than he would then you know.
Speaker 10 (48:06):
So we were at City Field and my boy going
to the urinal and my boy just drops trout, doesn't
he use the fly, doesn't like, just drops trou to
his ankles and just takes a peed. Now I was uncomfortable.
I was like, that's that? How was you raised?
Speaker 5 (48:19):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (48:20):
Wait?
Speaker 4 (48:20):
That was me?
Speaker 10 (48:22):
Like that right, and like maybe you should pull you
know when you do go? Why it's my butt? Why
I was peeing?
Speaker 2 (48:31):
And I was like he dec sounds like your son.
Speaker 10 (48:35):
That's a fair point, right, Like people will get over it. People,
people will learn. And again, we're talking about this from
the perspective of making things more comfortable for the heteronormative
kids in the school, we also should be talking about
this in terms of making things more comfortable for the
trans kids in the school. Because as much as we
might say it might be uncomfortable for the trans girl
(48:55):
in the girl's bathroom for the other girls, imagine how
uncomfortable it is for the trans girl in the boys
bathroom as they hit puberty. And then we know, and
again this is not me making up. We know statistically speaking,
that trans women are the most likely people to be brutalized,
to be murdered, to be beaten up, to be victims
of domestic violence in this country. So if you're telling
(49:17):
me that we can potentially save some trans kids from
that fate, and the cost is that some girls have
to be a little bit uncomfortable in a bathroom out
of high school, that is a trade that I'm willing
to make him. That is a trade that I think
society should be willing them.
Speaker 7 (49:35):
I respect everybody's right to live, but I don't want
to have this conversation. No more like you.
Speaker 1 (49:39):
But you said earlier it is true. I don't care
he lost the last election. People you like to listen
to them.
Speaker 5 (49:48):
All time.
Speaker 10 (49:50):
Only, can I just get back to the lodges really quickly, please,
just very closely on the law of this. The idea
that we can discriminate against trans people but nobody else
doesn't make sense legally, right. If we're gonna have a
law that treats everybody equal under the law, then we
have to treat trans people with the same kind of
respect and decency that we treat everybody else. And once
you start trying to poke holes in that, you see
(50:11):
they're not stopping at trans. They're going right togay, they're
going right to all these other things. Right the chapter
it says the chapter time, we can't say now, we
can't say trans now, we can't say say all these
other things.
Speaker 2 (50:22):
Right.
Speaker 10 (50:22):
So again, from a legal standpoint, a quality.
Speaker 7 (50:26):
Drop your trousers.
Speaker 13 (50:31):
Just be right here.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
We're not uncomfortable at all.
Speaker 10 (50:34):
That's we gotta be revolved, right. So yeah, So, just
legally speaking, the easiest thing in the law is just
to treat everybody.
Speaker 3 (50:43):
Gotcha, all right, We got more with Ellie Mistyle when
we come back. The author of bad law is the
breakfast club. Good Morning Morning, everybody is the DJ Envy
Jess hilarious, Charlamagne, the guy.
Speaker 2 (50:53):
We are the breakfast club.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
We have author of bad law, Ellie Mistyle, joining us
ten popular laws that are ruining America, Charlamagne.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
Why are people so nonchalantly discussing Trump getting a third term?
Speaker 10 (51:05):
Well, here's the thing. He can't constitutionally. But what he
can't do and what he can do are two very
different things. That's right, Right if you understand that we
live in a fascist dictatorship and we do, this is
what it feels like. I know that the New York
Times hasn't said today fascism started, but like it started, right,
this is we are now living in a fascist dictatorship.
(51:28):
And so when you tell the fascist dictator, hey, you
can't do this legally, ah, I might be right, but
he might not care. So if you're asking me about
the law, no, there is at the twenty second Amendment
is ironclad on this issue. There is no wiggle room.
You cannot serve. You cannot be elected president more than twice,
doesn't matter if your terms were consecutive or non consecutive.
(51:49):
They were very clear at what they wanted to do
when they wrote that amendment. It's one of the most
clear amendments in the entire Constitution that said Trump is
a fascist dictator. My man lost the twenty twenty election
and attack the capital and came this close to overturning
that election. So who's to say that he can't do
it again? Who's to say that he can't be successful
(52:10):
in doing it the next time?
Speaker 9 (52:11):
Right?
Speaker 10 (52:12):
So we can't blithely say that he can't do something
just because he's legally prevented from doing something. He's already
shown he doesn't actually give a damn about what he's
legally prevented from doing. So can I make a case
for how he'll do it?
Speaker 11 (52:26):
Sure?
Speaker 10 (52:27):
I can make. I like to say one of the
things that makes me a little bit of a different
legal commentator than a lot of others is that I
understand what white people are capable of. I've never forgotten
love why people are capable of in this country. And
if you want to tell me that Trump is going
to run for a third term and has a way
to win it, I can tell you how he does it.
He gets himself because remember, we don't have one federal
(52:48):
election system in this country. We have fifty. So all
he has to do is get himself on the ballot
in red states that are already capitulating to him, enough
red states to get to two hundred and seventy votes.
The ballot process is controlled by the states, not by
the federal government. You can say, well, like, he shouldn't
be kicked off the ballot, but he should have been
kicked off the ballot last time because he was in
(53:08):
violation of the fourteenth Amendment. Whether the Supreme Court do,
oh no, we shouldn't decide such things. It should be
up to the fourteenth Amendment. He should have been kicked
off last time, but the Supreme Court didn't step in.
Will they step in next time? I don't know.
Speaker 2 (53:20):
So what Al Shopton and everybody's saying is BS that
that can't happen. That's I'm true, it can.
Speaker 10 (53:25):
No, it's not BS. It can't happen legally. Go But
let's not fool ourselves to think that Trump is not
willing to act illegally. Right, he can illegally get himself
on the ballot. He can illegally get himself to some
version of two hundred and seventy votes, and he can
illegally declare that he is still the president. And who's
(53:46):
gonna check him? Boo ye. Who's going to actually stop
him from doing that?
Speaker 7 (53:50):
It won't be the Supreme Court.
Speaker 1 (53:51):
I love the article you wrote for The Nation called
It's impossible to overstate the damn is done by the
Supreme Court.
Speaker 7 (53:56):
Do you think the Supreme Court would back him in
something like that?
Speaker 10 (53:59):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (54:00):
Wow.
Speaker 10 (54:01):
Not only do I not know that they would back
him If they don't, I don't know that he would
follow their order. There's been no evidence that Trump is
going to follow a Supreme Court order that he doesn't like.
And more to the point, there's been absolutely no evidence
that he's going to unforce a Supreme Court order on
the co President Elon Musk that he doesn't like. So
(54:21):
even if the Supreme Court stands up to him, and
I'm putting that in air quotes, there's no evidence that
he'll actually listen to them. Because he control anything that
he controls the physical power of. And I think people
really have to understand this in a kind of chest
thumping way, like if he physically controls it because he
physically controls the army, he physically controls the power Military,
he physically controls the secret police. If he physically can
(54:44):
control something, he doesn't have to listen to nobody. The
legal illegal doesn't actually matter to him if he has
physical control. Now, if he only has control because he's
got to get other people to do his bidding in
the States, in the localities, that's a place where the
Supreme Court can kind of step in and maybe show
some spine.
Speaker 9 (55:02):
Right.
Speaker 10 (55:02):
So, if you think about these lawsuits that heads in
New York against like Kathy Hockel, if is a situation
where like he has to force Kathy Hockle to do
something and Kathy Hochel says no, and the Supreme Court
says no, Well, then I don't think Trump can't force
her to do it unless he's literally willing to put
you know, boots on the GW, which he might, but
you know, then we'd have some real traffic problems in
Fort Lee. But if it's something that he has complete
(55:25):
physical control over, I see no evidence of him actually
following the Supreme Court order.
Speaker 2 (55:28):
Is anything that you feel like this presidency has done
good at all?
Speaker 10 (55:32):
Was everything bad, not one thing, because there is not
one thing that fascism does well. And if I give
them that credit, I legitimize all of It's one of
the reasons why I was so angry at Schumer's capitulation
on the budget deal. If you say that you can
work with these people here there and whatever, what you're
fundamentally saying is that you just have a little bit
(55:54):
of a disagreement on this, that and the other thing.
You're not actually fighting fascism. You're just playing normal, bulk
partisan politics. Right from my perspective, Trump is a fascist
threat to the country. Nothing he do can be it
can be okay. And I wanted to say that about
other Republicans. I wanted to said that about Mett Romney
or John McCain or even w Dick Cheney different, but
(56:15):
even w Right. You could find some things that you
could work together with those people on because they were
fundamentally democratic presidents, I mean democratic with a small D.
Right presidents who believed in democracy.
Speaker 4 (56:27):
Don't get gay. Oh we can't say gag in New York.
New York don't get gay because you say a small D.
And he was just thinking of small penuses.
Speaker 10 (56:37):
I've got a couple. I said small d and I
said bush like in the same.
Speaker 21 (56:42):
But you know what.
Speaker 7 (56:45):
Was the significance of Corey book. Corey Book is philibus.
Speaker 10 (56:48):
One of the things that democrats can do since they
have no political power is start building narratives, start start
building movements, and start building momentum towards change.
Speaker 4 (56:58):
Right.
Speaker 10 (56:58):
One of the reasons why I wrote my book. Look,
I wrote this before the election, before Joe Biden's first debate.
I knew we were in trouble by the time. You know,
while I was writing it, I was under no illusions,
but I kept writing it, and I kept thinking that
this would be a good time to release it, because
from my perspective, if we lost this book then becomes
my first attempt to write Project twenty twenty nine. Ooh right,
(57:19):
it these people are out here writing Project twenty twenty five.
When did they start writing that? In twenty twenty one
when they had no power, when they had no political
power whatsoever, that's when they started their plans for this
current magat revolution. So from my perspective, this is the
time when we have no power that we need to
actually start thinking bigger and start thinking more actively. Right,
(57:40):
when Republicans come into office, they come in with a
sledgehammer and they smash things, Smash things that I hold dear,
smash things that I care about. Right when Democrats come
into office, we come in with like super glue and
tape and we're going to like put the base back
together to make We got to smash some things. My
book is about what we can smash. What Corey was
doing is that same kind of idea of building momentum
(58:03):
to something bigger, and that is the best use of
democratic power at this point, because it's the only power
that they have. Right, you can't actually stand up to
them legally because you have no authority. You can't send
smptum in Congress because you have no authority. Now, I
think they should be doing more than placards at the
State of the Union. That was pathetic doing what Corey
Booker did, breaking racist strom Thurman's record on the setup floor, Like,
(58:27):
these are the narratives and stories that we can be
building now so that by the time we get to
twenty twenty six. I'm not even talking about twenty twenty eight.
To me get to twenty twenty six primary season, that's
the fight. Whether it lasts two years or five years,
or ten years or twenty five years is entirely up
to us.
Speaker 1 (58:46):
Right well, Ellie Mistelle's new book bad Law, ten popular
laws that are ruining America.
Speaker 7 (58:50):
I learn a lot from you, Ellie. I like reading
your stuff. Man, you are very good at.
Speaker 5 (58:55):
What you do.
Speaker 2 (58:56):
I learned a lot in this interview. So I appreciate you,
Thank you.
Speaker 10 (58:59):
Thank you for tutting.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
Alrighty, ladies and gentlemen, pick up the new book bad Law.
It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (59:03):
Good morning, warning everybody.
Speaker 3 (59:04):
It's DJ n V, Jess, Hilariy Charlamagne the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. All right, let's get to the
latest with one.
Speaker 2 (59:12):
Lauren be coming a straight fast. She gets them. Somebody
that knows somebody detail.
Speaker 16 (59:18):
I'm a homegirl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 7 (59:21):
She'd be having the latest on you.
Speaker 10 (59:23):
The latest with Lauren la Rosa.
Speaker 18 (59:26):
Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you have details, sometimes you
have a little bit of everything.
Speaker 10 (59:29):
It's the latest on the Breakfast Club. Talk to me.
Speaker 15 (59:34):
So Drake just got a victory in court and the
legal back and forth that he's having right now with
Universal Music Group. So yesterday a judge, judge Jeannette Bargaz
in New York denied Universal Music Group's requests to stay Discovery.
So Universal Music Group was saying, Yo, can you pause
on this whole Discovery, letting us let Drake and team
(59:54):
get into our business until we explore the motion to
dismiss this whole thing that they have have acts. They
want it thrown out. They say, his bs, he's just
mad because he lost a rat battle. A judge said, well,
we're still gonna you know, that motion to dismiss, It's
still gonna happen, and they set a date for that.
But no, I think that the Discovery thing can happen
and should happen, So I'm not gonna say that we're
(01:00:16):
going to stop it.
Speaker 16 (01:00:18):
This's a big deal.
Speaker 15 (01:00:20):
That means that Drake and team can go in and
do what they've been saying that they wanted to do
for a very long time. They can go in, they
can look at the contracts, including things that are in
relation to Kendrick Lamar, emails, phone conversations. Basically, just come
in and get all in the business of communications and
processes and operations.
Speaker 3 (01:00:38):
And all of that stuff, so they'll be able to
get Kendrick's contract to UMG, his signing contract and his
deals and all that.
Speaker 15 (01:00:45):
That sounds crazy, but they haven't done it yet. They
just got the go ahead to be able to move forward.
And I don't know specifically which contracts they're asking for,
but I think that I don't know why would they
need a signing contract?
Speaker 7 (01:00:55):
What are they going to.
Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Discover that they don't already know though? That machine that
the machine puts, you know, a little extra umph behind
records that are already moving, just like I'm sure they're
doing with no key right now.
Speaker 7 (01:01:06):
Yeah, Well, the truth, what are they gonna find out?
Speaker 15 (01:01:10):
I think what they're trying to go in and find
out is like any wrongdoing of the machine making and
all that stuff wrong.
Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
If it's wrongdoing, then it's typical record industry practices that
have been going on since the beginning of time that
people like Drake had benefited from, that people like Kendige
benefited from that all of their artists benefit from.
Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
But what if it's not.
Speaker 4 (01:01:28):
What if it's none that's going make you look crazy? Yeah,
we talked, they ain't even know foul play, nothing going on.
Speaker 1 (01:01:35):
It's like a baseball player looking for steroids and you're
like Oh, it's the same stuff I've been using, whether
whether you know you was using it or not.
Speaker 12 (01:01:41):
No.
Speaker 15 (01:01:42):
But to Just's point, we talked about this on the
podcast yesterday, The Latest with Lauryna Rosa. I said that
if if there's nothing found, he just looks like a
cry baby.
Speaker 16 (01:01:50):
It looks like you know what I mean.
Speaker 15 (01:01:51):
But if there is things found, and it can be
something small, like it could be one employee that happened
to maybe send a uber, send it, get something that
can look I.
Speaker 16 (01:02:00):
Mean because there's certain you have certain rules. No, I
just mean like there's there's a certain room, a big one.
Speaker 15 (01:02:07):
There are certain rules around like bribery and you know,
I'm sure I don't know the rules when it comes
to radio, but.
Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
I know, like just not going to be in a contract.
And the sad thing about it.
Speaker 7 (01:02:14):
It's not going to be in a contract.
Speaker 10 (01:02:17):
Stupid, but it's not.
Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
But if you look at a judge, does the judge
know exactly about the music industry to see what he's
giving permission for, like giving giving up Kendrick's contract And
I don't know what's in kendrick contract, but giving up
how much money he's making and the money that spent.
That's nobody's business, but Kendrick and his labeled like why
would that want to go to somebody else?
Speaker 16 (01:02:35):
But that's only one part of it.
Speaker 15 (01:02:37):
And I think once we see which contracts they pull
and which information they focus on, what we can kind
of better understand you know why they did that. Another
part of it was, remember they talked about the bots
or whatever that they said.
Speaker 11 (01:02:47):
They alleged that Kendrick was a now a Drake, same
bots that have been used for all artists all Drake
is going to expose his secrets that have helped him
to and I don't even know if there's secrets, to
be honest with you. Are these secrets just records standard
record business practice that I thought it was standard record business.
Speaker 15 (01:03:04):
All this stuff, the bots, to everything we talking about
the box don't matter no more because Drake's team yesterday
in the court said that they've exchanged some you know,
letters back and forth, and they're they're withdrawing those claims.
Speaker 16 (01:03:14):
They're going to focus on other stuff.
Speaker 15 (01:03:15):
They really are trying to think figure out the bigger
picture of this is like the money that was put
into bigger things, not a few random bodies.
Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
What they're looking for it.
Speaker 3 (01:03:23):
The money that's put into Spotify, that's put in the
streaming service, just put in the radio, that's put in
the TV.
Speaker 7 (01:03:27):
That's what they're looking that's been putting put in the
Drake for the last decade. What are we talking, come on?
Speaker 16 (01:03:31):
Are streaming for farms? Is that they backed away from.
Speaker 7 (01:03:35):
All artists haven't been beneficiary of that because of these labels.
Why I can clue to hear people?
Speaker 15 (01:03:41):
Well, Drake's lawyer spoke out yesterday when this was released.
There was a short press release and at the bottom
he had a one line statement he said, now it's
time to see what UMG was so desperately trying to hide.
Speaker 5 (01:03:53):
Now.
Speaker 16 (01:03:53):
I did reach out to UMG for a comment on
this and have not heard back yet.
Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
I don't think UMG is trying to hide.
Speaker 3 (01:03:58):
I think UMG doesn't want to have to open the
books for this artist is then they have to do
it for every of the artists, So they're just trying
to protect you MG.
Speaker 2 (01:04:03):
I don't think they have anything that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
Well, maybe Drake needs to see this for his own
good because maybe he thinks Tucy Slide really went number
one because it was a good record and that record
was trash. Maybe he thinks slime you out when number one,
because it was a good record and that record was
also kowing.
Speaker 16 (01:04:16):
You out when number one. After we talked about it
in here, I remember, I.
Speaker 1 (01:04:18):
Don't remember what all I'm simply saying is maybe he
needs to see that for his own benefit, because you've
been a beneficiary the's performances enhancing drugs as well.
Speaker 16 (01:04:27):
Well you m g at.
Speaker 15 (01:04:28):
Actually they're arguing that the whole discovery evidence gathering process
would be premature. It would impose undue burdens on them,
especially given the potential that the case could be dismissed.
So they're saying, we don't mind it discovery, but just wait,
let's have the dismissal conversation first, because which makes sense
if it's going to be dismissed. Why we got to
put all these resources in time and you need to
do all this so we'll see what happens.
Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
Nobody's winning, but the lawyers period.
Speaker 16 (01:04:51):
So you got got got okay, another one? Yeah, so
Young Thug.
Speaker 15 (01:04:54):
Yesterday there was a motion filed by the State of
Georgia to revoke Young Thug's probation.
Speaker 16 (01:05:00):
Jesus yes, So the motion filed in Fulton County.
Speaker 15 (01:05:03):
A superior court yesterday claimed that Young Thug demonstrated a
blatant disregard for the law, the safety of the witnesses,
and the integrity of the judicial proceedings because he posted
a nine now deleted photo online of one of the
Fulton County investigators.
Speaker 16 (01:05:18):
Her name is Marissa Ververe.
Speaker 15 (01:05:20):
So she was testifying this week during the YSL trial
and in relation to the remember those the little boys
that were shot that we talked about the thirty year
little boys, in relation to all that stuff, and the
court basically had barred video photos all of that stuff,
and Thug posted the photo. He called her the biggest
(01:05:41):
liar in the DA's office. And she's saying that because
of that, she's received threats, her family has received threats.
There's people flooding her comments, there's a ton of basically
like she feels like she's in danger because of that.
So they're saying this presents a clear and present danger
to public safety and it's at the hands of young Thub,
which is should be a violation of his probation. Now,
(01:06:03):
Thug came out because he deleted all these tweets when
he came out and said, I don't make threats to people.
Speaker 16 (01:06:07):
I'm a good person.
Speaker 15 (01:06:08):
I would never condone anyone threatening anyone or definitely participating
in any of the above.
Speaker 16 (01:06:14):
I'm all about peace and love.
Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
The Doug gotta be careful.
Speaker 16 (01:06:17):
I don't even know why he's tweeting about stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
Yes, he tweeted about the young schools probation. Fifteen years probation.
They will do everything in their power to try to
lock him back up. He has to be very, very careful.
Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
Why do why do people care about social media so much?
What is your lower of social media? Because even if
you're thinking that in your head, why run to X
or whatever the post that Like, there's got to be
something in you that says that's just not a smart
thing to do.
Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Now, not when he has fifteen years probation and they
will try anything to lock it. Wait, yeah, yeah I don't.
Speaker 16 (01:06:46):
I would be so scared to even I wouldn't even.
Speaker 15 (01:06:47):
I don't even walk by the court if I'm the
like across the street, don't even take me in the vicinity.
Speaker 7 (01:06:52):
Don't got no reason to be mentioned in them people
publicly at all.
Speaker 15 (01:06:56):
Yeah, Well, we'll have to see what happens with this
because if they do determine this was a violation or
there was it better or whatever, there can be consequences.
Speaker 7 (01:07:03):
So Jesus, you know they are already mad that he
got away. Yes for the most part.
Speaker 1 (01:07:07):
I mean even though they got him on the probation
for the next fifteen years, but the most part he
got away.
Speaker 2 (01:07:11):
They are waiting for him to bring him back. Yes, absolutely,
And if he.
Speaker 15 (01:07:14):
Messes up the sentence that was stayed, remember they take
some of the time away. Yeah, twenty Yeah, he could
potentially have to do that as a very slippery.
Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
When line makes no sense, You stupid, that is crazy. Yeah,
all right, Well, thank you for the latest with Lauren. Yes,
give donkey, you know for after the hour. I have
an update on a donkey that I did earlier this week.
Remember Chris lewis the brother from Augusta, Georgia who was
arrested for a deprivation of a minor after he left
his kids unattended at McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
I don't remember that one.
Speaker 7 (01:07:42):
Yeah, we have, we haven't.
Speaker 1 (01:07:43):
We have an update more of a double down, actually
a double down, a double down on the he and.
Speaker 2 (01:07:49):
He was very craft of this man.
Speaker 7 (01:07:51):
I said he deserved shut.
Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
Up from the information that I got.
Speaker 7 (01:07:54):
Yeah, that's why y'all got to shut up.
Speaker 16 (01:07:56):
You give it and go fund me.
Speaker 2 (01:07:57):
Donkey, No, we'll get to it's the breakfast club. Good morning,
you're checking out the breakfast club.
Speaker 19 (01:08:06):
How you came up with them?
Speaker 7 (01:08:07):
Don't bear the name tell us because you're mean.
Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
Today.
Speaker 7 (01:08:14):
There's a bunch of donkeys street.
Speaker 1 (01:08:16):
That is why, Charlemagne, Cause we live a life where
we might our tongue based off who he may a thing.
Speaker 7 (01:08:21):
We never would say it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
On the breakfast club in the words of Charlemagne, to god,
he's a donkey.
Speaker 7 (01:08:35):
Aw Man, Charlemagne, you've given donkey the day to.
Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
Who now well buster rhymes donkey to day for Thursday,
April third is a double down to a donkey that
I did earlier this week. Chris lewis the twenty four
year old brother from Augusta, Georgia, who was arrested for
deprivation of a minor after he left his kids three
kids ages ten to six and one years old at
McDonald's unattended because he had a job interview. Can I
(01:09:00):
refresh your memory, Let's go to Fox when he said
Houston for the report police.
Speaker 23 (01:09:03):
A job interview ends badly for a man in Georgia.
Chris Lewis was arrested March twenty second. Police say he
left his kids in a McDonald's by themselves while he
went to an interview for a job. He reportedly told
police he did not have a car and lived nearby.
Lewis said instead of making his three kids, who are one,
(01:09:25):
six and ten years old, walk home alone, he decided
to make them stay in the restaurant. What we know
is he was there from fourth the kids were there
from four point thirty. He returned at six eighteen, and
then the mother was on the way as well. But
we don't know if she was called by police or
him after the fact, or if she was on the
(01:09:46):
way anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:09:47):
Now let's talk.
Speaker 1 (01:09:48):
I gave him donkey today for one simple reason, you know,
jeopardize your child safety in the pursuit of employment, because
there's no job on this planet that would make up
for something happening to your child in that McDonald's. It's
that simple salute to the good sister Tony Rivera dropping
the clues band for Tony Rivera.
Speaker 7 (01:10:01):
You know she's always out here providing.
Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
You know, human trafficking awareness and she told me it's
so much trafficking going on in Atlanta and the Georgia area.
She said, black kids are going for a high rate
right now. She said, seventy five grand and up. Okay,
and you're just gonna leave your three beautiful black babies ten,
six and one to fend for themselves in a fast
food restaurant for.
Speaker 7 (01:10:19):
An hour and a half.
Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Times may be hard, but they gonna be even harder
if God forbid something tragic had happened to those kids.
Speaker 7 (01:10:26):
Now, y'all called up to this radio station.
Speaker 1 (01:10:28):
Y'all was all in the comments, telling me, I forgot
where I came from, as if I ever came from
a place when my parents was leaving me unattended at
a fast food restaurant.
Speaker 7 (01:10:35):
I see people.
Speaker 1 (01:10:36):
Starting gofundmes for the young man Antonio Brown, as this
morning has raised almost eighty thousand grand for him.
Speaker 7 (01:10:42):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
The post on the gofund me says story called me
by surprise, a dad just trying to find a way
to make money for his family. I know he shouldn't
just leave his kids, but some people don't have the
means for babysitting, et cetera. This gofund me a certain
place to help this man. I have spoken with gofund
me and they will get the funds to Chris and
his family. Haven't spoken to Chris yet, but I hope
to do so soon. You haven't spoken to Chris, but
(01:11:05):
you're organizing to raise money for him. Why you don't
want to vet the brother and make sure the story
is what he says it is because to me, and
I said just yesterday, the story wasn't adding up. I
wasn't trying to cast doubt on the brother's story even
though his story sounded like it had bacterial vaginosius.
Speaker 7 (01:11:20):
Okay, well whatever, it just sounded fishy, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
I was just pointing out the fact that a job,
our job, and if you shouldn't come before the safety
of your kids, okay. A man's job is to protect
and provide, and protect comes before provision. For a reason,
to me, when I heard the story, it didn't make sense.
These kids were left alone for an hour and a half.
What job interview last that long? And witnesses said they
kept seeing Chris walk back and forth.
Speaker 7 (01:11:45):
What job interview?
Speaker 1 (01:11:45):
Lets you just keep walking back and forth? Oh, Charlemagne,
you don't have no empathy. Charlem Mane, You're speaking from
a place of privilege. No, I'm speaking from a place
of common sense, and common sense ain't that common in
this modern era. So today we have an update from
the same outlet that I got the story from, the
Augusta Press. The Richmond County Authorities released a full report
Wednesday with more details and based on the video evidence
(01:12:09):
and the timeline provided by all parties involved, it was
determined that Chris Lewis was not I repeat, was not
engaged and a job interview our application process during the
time the children were left unattended. He was not really
looking for a job while the children were at McDonald's.
Can I give you some details from the police report
(01:12:29):
and the noted inconsistencies Captain Danny Whitehead noted in regards
to the whereabouts of Chris while his children were left attended.
Speaker 7 (01:12:37):
Okay, let's start with the ten year old. You know
the kid's gonna tell it, Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:12:42):
She told offices that her siblings and her father walked
to McDonald's from the Hendricks apartment complex. She said her
daddy told her he had to deliver a backpack to
the apartment complex and told her he would return shortly.
The child also mentioned that her father, Chris, frequently leaves
them alone. Two witnesses said they recalled hearing Chris on
(01:13:04):
the phone with someone and he was overheard saying he
needed to drop something off. The witnesses stated that after this,
the father left McDonald's, leaving the children behind for approximately
an hour and a half. The ten year old daughter
contacted her mother on social media at approximately six pm.
Speaker 7 (01:13:21):
The mother arrived at McDonald's at six twelve pm.
Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
She advised that Chris was supposed to deliver a backpack
to her mother at the Hendrick's apartments and had been
told that he must take the children with him. The
kid's mother immediately called Chris, who answered and stated that
he was on the way back to McDonald's from the
apartment complex. Chris arrived at six eighteen pm, still in
possession of the backpack, and he told his child's mother
(01:13:46):
that he had been trying to find her to give
her the backpack, and the children's mother reminded him that
he was not supposed to leave the children unattended. Don't
go refunding your money from gofund me now to the
rest now, Chris claimed he left the kids at McDonald's
because he went to fill out a job application at
the West Bank End, which is located adjacent to the McDonald's,
(01:14:10):
and he was waiting for a callback for a possible interview.
He said he left to drop the backpack off at
the apartment complex, but during the time he lost his
ID and he lost another card and he had been
retracing his steps trying to find them.
Speaker 11 (01:14:25):
Oh, you can fill the niggotree in this story rising.
So Captain Whitehead went to the West Bank End to
verify Chris's story.
Speaker 1 (01:14:32):
He spoke to the manager and she confirmed that Chris
did come in on March twenty second, and he did
complete a job application. She also conducted an informal interview
with him on that date. When asked if Chris would
be expecting a callback for a formal interview, she said no.
The manager provided video surveillance footage of when Chris was there.
Guess what the times were?
Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
What were the times?
Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
One twelve pm to one thirty seven pm. The kids
were left on attended at McDonald's from four the six
twelve pm. So, as I said before, based on the
video evidence and the timeline provided by all parties, involved,
Chris was not engaged and the job interview when he
left the kids at McDonald's. Furthermore, by his own admission,
he was walking between McDonald's in the apartment complex, you know,
(01:15:17):
during that period, and the distance between the two locations
is zero point four miles. Now, don't let any of
that distract you from the fact that, regardless of what
Chris was doing during this time, you don't jeopardize your
child safety in the pursuit of employment.
Speaker 2 (01:15:31):
Are anything else because there is no job.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
Are anything else you could be doing that would make
up for something happening to your child when you leave
them unattended for an hour and a half in a
public place.
Speaker 7 (01:15:45):
I'm just doubling down on donkey today. You can discuss
amongst yourselves. Please let re me Ma give Chris Lewis
the biggest he.
Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
Huh hee ha he ha, You stupid mother? Are you
dumb thoughts? I knew it, I knew it and everybody's fear.
Speaker 4 (01:16:00):
I don't think the brothers should get you know, he
shouldn't lock him up, slap him on the wrist and
let him go because he was trying to do so.
He was out here serving scrambled cook and smack you.
Speaker 6 (01:16:10):
Walking back and forth and all of that into it
day care, like, what's wrong with you?
Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
See, you can't change the gold post. Charlamagnet moved the
goals war, and you can't change it either. See Charlemagne
reported exactly what happened, and that's what we made a
decision based off what he said. Now, if Charlemagne didn't
give the right information a couple of days ago, because
a couple of days ago Charlamagne said this man was
doing a job again, went to a job application or
(01:16:36):
did he not say that? Now changed it based on
what you You're not going to distract You're not going
to distract me.
Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
I get what did I just finished saying, because you
know my don't listen. I said, don't let any of
that distract you from the fact that, regardless of what
Chris was doing during this time, you don't jeopardize your
child's safety and the pursuit of employment or anything else.
I gave him donkey of the day for leaving the
kids unattended at a McDonald's for an hour and a half.
Speaker 3 (01:17:03):
I don't give a damn what he was doing, agreed,
I said, I agree, he should get donkey of the day.
But if he was actually going to a job interview,
it was not doing no fish.
Speaker 7 (01:17:15):
I didn't think he was doing.
Speaker 1 (01:17:18):
You don't leave your children unattended, And I said, after
child's mom said, the child's mom said, just you don't
leave your kids unattended an hour and a half, and.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
I said, that's why I gave him. I just didn't
feel he should have got arrested if he was really getting.
Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
Itself accountable for not reading Nigga Tree the right way.
Speaker 10 (01:17:37):
And then.
Speaker 16 (01:17:40):
I did.
Speaker 2 (01:17:40):
And also I spotted it.
Speaker 6 (01:17:42):
I smelled the nigga tree a long time aday.
Speaker 7 (01:17:44):
When you said your baby daddy would do something.
Speaker 4 (01:17:46):
Like that, I never said that in my life, never
ever ever the kids with a random girl that he
didn't know for three days. But he's not gonna leave
his kids in a public place, and let alone a McDonald's.
Speaker 7 (01:17:58):
That's crazy to leave him the long for a random
girl for three days.
Speaker 4 (01:18:01):
It's crazy, absolutely, But it beats leaving them in a
fast food restaurant.
Speaker 2 (01:18:06):
It's about to say, yeah, it is kind of.
Speaker 1 (01:18:10):
McDonald's might be Yeah, McDonald's might be worse because at
least you've got somebody watching the kid. You don't know
what the kid the person might do to the kids,
because but you at least somebody's watching them and just
leaving them on attended McDonald's a hour and a half.
Speaker 7 (01:18:21):
That's crazy.
Speaker 16 (01:18:22):
It's crazy.
Speaker 6 (01:18:22):
And the little ten year old baby girl, she said,
my dad.
Speaker 4 (01:18:25):
Do this all the time, Like I already knew what
that was. She getting tired of being a parent at McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
All right, once once again, you don't jeopardize your child's
safety and the pursuit of employment. Are anything else, There's
no reason to leave your ten year old, six year
old and one year old unattended at the damn McDonald's
for hour and a half.
Speaker 2 (01:18:44):
Up next, just fix my mess. Eight hundred and five
eight five one oh five one.
Speaker 3 (01:18:49):
If you have relationship issue, relationship problems, or anything like that,
call Jess up right now.
Speaker 2 (01:18:53):
She fixed your mess. It's to breakfast Lub, Good morning,
the breakfast Club.
Speaker 4 (01:19:00):
This about me for relationship problems, AX about me. If
you need to beat your coworker's asser, ax about me.
If your coworker needs to be your ass, call it
a doctor Jess, and I'm here to fix your mess.
Speaker 7 (01:19:11):
Fix your mess.
Speaker 6 (01:19:12):
He's getting very much messy.
Speaker 2 (01:19:13):
Let me fix that.
Speaker 3 (01:19:14):
Morely, everybody is DJ Envy just hilarious, Charlamagne to God.
Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
We are the breakfast Club. It's time for just fix
my mess Hello. Who's this?
Speaker 19 (01:19:22):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:19:22):
Hi?
Speaker 13 (01:19:23):
Yes, this is a LISTA call up?
Speaker 2 (01:19:25):
What's for Jersey? What's your question for Jess?
Speaker 19 (01:19:28):
Okay, So, my my daughter's father, me and him became
kind of like best friends. Like he became more like
an older brother than me than more like a baby father.
Like I mean, like even open. He basically has an
open invitation, so all of my family functions, like he
don't even have to be invited, like you know, he
could show up, no problems whatever. So me and we
(01:19:50):
usus sit or talking on the phone all the time,
Like I would tell him what's going on in my life.
He would tell me what's going on with his life.
I had three other kids.
Speaker 13 (01:19:58):
That's not his.
Speaker 19 (01:19:59):
I would talk you know about my kids about like
like nothing. So one day I'm going through my daughter's
phone because she's a teenager. I periodically checked my kid's phone, right,
and I see messages from he has a whole girlfriend
that I knew nothing about. And I see messages from
this girl sexting my daughter saying how much she missed her,
how much he loved my daughter. So at that point,
like I feel disrespected because I'm like, I thought we
(01:20:21):
was like ooh, you know, I thought we were friends.
Like I thought we had a good co pairing relationship,
like you know, So why is it that we just
put on the phone to talk for hours? But she's
so comfortable enough to tell me that, you know what
I'm saying, you had a female and not only that,
like you was leaving my daughter around her. Now I'm
not mad about that because my daughter is a she's
a teenager. She can open her mouth and she can
(01:20:42):
say whatever she want to say. But as her mom,
I feel like I deserve the right to know where
my kid gonna be at. Well, she's not at my presence,
especially since he lives eight hours away from me.
Speaker 2 (01:20:53):
Okay, I totally understand.
Speaker 4 (01:20:55):
All right now, you set them out full and I'm
going to just tagle this part because I can sympathize
with you. You with that because me and my son's
dad are the same way. You know, we call each
other brother and sister.
Speaker 2 (01:21:05):
We're cool.
Speaker 4 (01:21:06):
He's invited to all of my family functions, as I'm
invited to his I treat his kids with the same
respect I treat my kids with, Like we're.
Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
All, we all intermingle. Everything is cool right now now.
Speaker 4 (01:21:18):
If Rome didn't tell me that he had a girlfriend,
I would not be that upset because I understand what
you're saying. You feel more so betrayed by your friend
that he didn't come to you with this information because
y'all talk about everything else.
Speaker 2 (01:21:31):
You feel like, why the hell you couldn't tell me
that she was in a relationship with up?
Speaker 4 (01:21:34):
But but you shouldn't be that angry about it, and listen,
are there any feelings there for him? Or like any
like be honest, like, is there any chance that y'all whatever,
reconcile enough to be back together?
Speaker 6 (01:21:50):
Is that do you have that you still got a
little crush on your baby?
Speaker 4 (01:21:53):
Day? I'm gonna talking about like you like him in
the slightest way, like, is there is there anything there?
Speaker 2 (01:22:00):
So this is what I will let Yeah, we.
Speaker 19 (01:22:03):
Were we weren't together in a whole other state, and
well broke up. I just packed up and left and
I came back home. So I feel like there's a
lot of things in our relationships that didn't actually get closer.
Speaker 4 (01:22:15):
And you never Yeah, so you never you never got
that closure because you just up and left, y'all all right,
never exactly, Yeah, y'all never.
Speaker 2 (01:22:23):
Talked about anything.
Speaker 4 (01:22:24):
You never Okay, So yes, there is still some type
of feelings there and then you and now you kind
of resent him a little bit because now he has
this girlfriend and things, and and you feel like, yo,
you didn't even really we didn't really even fully.
Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
Close our chapter.
Speaker 4 (01:22:40):
And that's probably honestly why he didn't tell you about her,
because he feel the same way you feel, right, Okay, Yeah,
you gotta still like kind of understand his point of
view too, Like I don't want to tell I don't
want to ruin me and my baby mama's relationship. We
were great, although we didn't end like the greatest this week.
We didn't give any other. We didn't give each other
(01:23:03):
any clarification on like what we were doing, you know,
the end all be all of it. We never like
fully said goodbye to right well or whatever. He probably
feel the same way you feel, but he's eight hours away.
What do you expect for him to do? And I
know you got a little some something going on with
somebody else too, right.
Speaker 5 (01:23:19):
So right, so so don't.
Speaker 19 (01:23:24):
Yeah, no, no, no, I'm just saying I would have
never disrespected him and given some gen's daughter's phone number
without him even knowing that this guy existed, because you
basically gave this woman like full access to my child
even when she's not down there with y'all. You get
what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
How old is your daughter?
Speaker 19 (01:23:45):
She's she's thirteen now.
Speaker 4 (01:23:47):
Okay, And so she didn't she didn't tell you about
the lady either. You just had to go through the
phone and find out.
Speaker 19 (01:23:54):
Yeah, I have I happen to be going through her phone.
Speaker 23 (01:23:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:23:57):
Yeah, again, I feel like it's a conversation. I feel
like both of y'all still have unresolved issues and unresolved feelings,
and y'all just need to meet it. Ain't this ain't
no phone conversation. Y'all need to see each other, and
you need to tell him exactly how you feel. And
I guarantee you that's gonna open the door for him
to tell you exactly how he feels. And y'all, I
(01:24:21):
guarantee you y'all probably feel the same way. Okay, Yeah,
but let me know, call back up next Thursday.
Speaker 2 (01:24:25):
Do it before next Thursday.
Speaker 6 (01:24:26):
So I can know, Okay, I will all right girl,
thank you, all right.
Speaker 2 (01:24:29):
Mama, all right, just fix my mess. Eight hundred and
five eight five one o five one call us up
right now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, It's the
real feel help me. Oh my god, I'm all up
in your mess.
Speaker 4 (01:24:43):
I'm gonna fix it, mix it, fixed it, fixed it,
Just gonna fix your mess because my advice is real.
Speaker 2 (01:24:49):
Warning everybody, it's DJ Envy Jess Hilarious, Charlamage to god,
we are the breakfast Club in the middle of just
fix my mess. We got Bob on alarm, Bob, what's up?
Speaker 13 (01:24:58):
Hey, I'm you Bob is now that's just we know that. Hey,
but look look, I'm I'm gonna safe it really because
Charlamagne are real. Dude, is Charlamage probably gonna come down
of my so look, you know, well my child's good
friend krobably gonna hit this. But yes, I got a
question because I feel some type of when I feel
like I should have have a conversation with my friend
(01:25:19):
on this. But uh so we have a mentor, uh
of somebody who's been in our lives for like at
least ten fifteen years, like you know what I'm saying,
kind of have been helping us out with advice and
things like that.
Speaker 5 (01:25:28):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (01:25:29):
And it's four of us that all grew up you
know what I'm saying kind of under his mentorship. I'm
the youngest out of the four, the oldest person.
Speaker 5 (01:25:37):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (01:25:37):
That's who I have a question about, because I want
to talk more about this, Like I want to approach
about it because I feel like I feel like what
he did was wrong. So he basically takes our mentor's
wife and was like, Hey, your friends are some h
o es. I feel like I feel like that's kind
of out of pocket because, like the dude, you know
what I'm saying, no matter what we've all been through,
do they never looked at us different. He's always us,
(01:25:59):
I would our family's like, it's like kind of like
to me, it's like disrespecting your elth and like the
fact that you even text the dude who was like, hey,
your wife mad at you? Yet, Like, to me, it's
out of pocket because if I feel like if either
one of us would have text your wife that you
get them saying you want to fight it, and you
know him, out of all people, he's not gonna necessarily
physically do anything to you. He may not talk to
you for us. Yeah, he may praise for you, you
(01:26:20):
know what I say, heybody gonna star our prayers for
you more. But there's nothing else he's gonna do.
Speaker 5 (01:26:24):
And you know that.
Speaker 4 (01:26:24):
And I just feel like, bro, that's wow, man like
way way so way, okay, let's back it up. So
one of your friends texted y'all's mentor and told him
that his wife or text the mentor's wife.
Speaker 13 (01:26:36):
He texted the mentor's wife and said, Hey, your friends
are some.
Speaker 6 (01:26:39):
Ho e how do he get the mentor's wife's number.
Speaker 13 (01:26:42):
We all have we, like I said, we've all they've
been married for at least ten years. We've all known
them for at least fifteen. Okay, okay, so we're all
like like we're like family, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker 6 (01:26:54):
Right, And I guess y'all were hanging around her friends
and they showed.
Speaker 13 (01:26:57):
Me we've never we've never hung around my friends. It
ain't never like that we've always hung around him.
Speaker 8 (01:27:03):
We don't.
Speaker 13 (01:27:04):
This is this is why the would have texted her that,
because we don't hang around her. We don't hang around
her friends, you know, like we're all grown in adults now,
we don't hang around him like we're not kids, right, I.
Speaker 4 (01:27:15):
Don't understand why the text even went to the wife.
I'm just try understanding. Yeah, so what so your question
to me is like what you should do about this
or what?
Speaker 13 (01:27:24):
Because like I really want to come from him, Like, bro,
like why him? The hell would you do that?
Speaker 5 (01:27:29):
Man?
Speaker 13 (01:27:30):
Like, because if somebody would did that to your wife,
I'm not a lie if you would have if I'm
not married, you know what I'm saying. But if I
was married, or if you would have to text that
to the person I'm with by her friends, like yeah, bro,
we're gonna have words.
Speaker 5 (01:27:40):
Man.
Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
I'm like, yeah, but look, you ever think about this though?
Speaker 6 (01:27:45):
And it's wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:27:46):
It's definitely wrong.
Speaker 4 (01:27:47):
And and since you can't figure out exactly why he
would text her that when y'all ain't hanging around his friends,
when y'all haven't hung around his wife's friends, either he's
just lying, he's a delusional as dude, or he knows
something that y'all don't know because he had actually did
get to hang around like that.
Speaker 5 (01:28:02):
No, noah, see, look, this is the thing.
Speaker 13 (01:28:04):
We're in two different angels they're they're like, if we're
all in our thirties, so we don't hang around.
Speaker 6 (01:28:10):
You know what, your friend might be doing some hanging
without y'all, y'all.
Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
He might like the old chicks man and they might
get down with the get down and he wanted to
just like.
Speaker 13 (01:28:21):
No, it ain't look all right. So here's I get.
I hate to bring wasting to this, okay, but even
more the dynamic they're a white couple, we're all black.
Speaker 2 (01:28:30):
Oh okay, so that oh.
Speaker 13 (01:28:35):
There, people kiss your face like they go to church
every Sunday, like they are like the idea, like you
know what I'm saying, what the other side would do
as a couple successful, you know.
Speaker 8 (01:28:46):
What I'm saying.
Speaker 13 (01:28:47):
So that's why I'm like, bro, no, like it just
doesn't make sense. And like you text out, you text
our mentors like hey your wife, man, did you get
like bro?
Speaker 4 (01:28:54):
What so yeah he texted the wife and then text
the mentor. Yeah so yeah yeah, as a me talk
to your homie.
Speaker 13 (01:29:02):
I'm saying, if we should if we all holding each
other accountable, because I ain't lie. I've done some that
stuff stuff and they've all heard me accountable for it.
Speaker 17 (01:29:08):
Yeah, I like definitely, like, let's holding your account like, bro,
that's fall Like I'm not gonna lie like I said,
if you would have done that, bro, I can't say
what with everything on the radio, but yeah, we definitely
have words.
Speaker 4 (01:29:20):
Yeah, no for sure. Okay, So no, that's just if
that's what it is. I think you should hit your homie.
Y'all all grew up together. You should be able to
have that conversation with him and figure out exactly what happened.
And I bet you you better call back next Thursday,
because I bet you're gonna tell you something that you
didn't even know.
Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
I'm telling you. I'm telling you, then you letting you
told me.
Speaker 1 (01:29:37):
I know.
Speaker 13 (01:29:40):
Colleen, y'all, y'all you know.
Speaker 2 (01:29:42):
What I'm saying. Listen, call back next Thursday.
Speaker 4 (01:29:45):
I bet you you're gonna tell you some things that
he did that you did not know and that y'a
wouldn't even expect from them white church people.
Speaker 13 (01:29:51):
I bet you hey say them what I got you
ill keep you posting, all right?
Speaker 2 (01:29:55):
Thank you?
Speaker 5 (01:29:55):
All right?
Speaker 7 (01:29:56):
With the mentor's wife being wholes though.
Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
That's what I'm saying, and no mentor's wife's.
Speaker 7 (01:30:00):
Friends white friends being old.
Speaker 4 (01:30:03):
I don't know why that's so hard to believe that
he probably cracked one of them and they you know
what I mean, And he texted.
Speaker 6 (01:30:08):
The wife like, Yo, your friend's hos, you know what
I mean.
Speaker 7 (01:30:11):
With a bunch of white fifty some of your old holes.
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Man, you're all supposed to be slinging big peep and
getting paid her Karens and Becky's cut a check.
Speaker 4 (01:30:18):
Damn thing an old white woman gonna love is a
young black man. So I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's
a a young black paintings. And I don't think a
fantasy type thing, right his homeboy, Yeah, it's like a
whole fetish like what.
Speaker 7 (01:30:32):
Doctor Umbar wouldn't approve.
Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
But shoot, you know right, and.
Speaker 6 (01:30:35):
This this dude do not believe that, Like he's underestimating
his homeboy.
Speaker 7 (01:30:40):
Now, I do think it's corny for the dude to
text that.
Speaker 6 (01:30:44):
And they're gonna text the mentor like, is your wife
man that you like?
Speaker 21 (01:30:46):
Yo?
Speaker 6 (01:30:46):
You obviously ain't never had no white poem pome ever.
Speaker 7 (01:30:49):
And you ain't paid for it, probb not. Dude's always
asking where the hoes act? They what your mentor's wife.
Speaker 2 (01:30:55):
Just fixed my mess?
Speaker 3 (01:30:57):
Eight hundred and five eighty five. On five, we got
the ladies with Laura coming up as the breakfast clug.
Good morning, let's get to the latest with Laura.
Speaker 2 (01:31:03):
Lauren becoming the straight fast. She gets the from somebody
that knows somebody detail.
Speaker 16 (01:31:09):
I'm a long girl that knows a little bit about everything.
Speaker 7 (01:31:12):
She'd be having the latest on you.
Speaker 10 (01:31:14):
The latest with Lauren la Rosa.
Speaker 18 (01:31:17):
Sometimes you have fact, sometimes you have details. Sometimes you
have a little bit of everything. It's the latest on
the breakfast club.
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
Talk to me.
Speaker 15 (01:31:25):
So we want to take some time to send a
congratulation to USC sophomore guard Juju Walking. Yes, so she
was named the winner of the twenty twenty five Natesmith
Women's College Basketball.
Speaker 16 (01:31:39):
Player of the Year Awards.
Speaker 2 (01:31:40):
Well deserved yesterday.
Speaker 15 (01:31:41):
Yes, for sure, I think you know, the past couple
of months or you know what I mean, it's been
a lot with her and her injury and her season
ending last.
Speaker 7 (01:31:49):
Couple of weeks.
Speaker 1 (01:31:50):
Yeah, it really hurts something, Jude, you go down because
they would have definitely, in my humble opinion, been in
the final four. I think they would think to beat
Yukon and they'd be in the final four right now.
Speaker 16 (01:32:00):
Yeah, Well, although that happened.
Speaker 15 (01:32:02):
You know, this is historic because she is now the
first USC player to win the Women's College Player of
the Year awards since the legendary Lisa Leslie in nineteen
ninety four. So you know, it's unfortunate, you know that
her season ended the way it did. But I'm sure
she's really excited about this because she posted it and
says she is so grateful.
Speaker 16 (01:32:18):
So congratulations to her.
Speaker 10 (01:32:20):
Yeah, man.
Speaker 15 (01:32:22):
And in other news, Friday the movie, I know that
I think it was Mike Epps. He was up here
and he talked about it happening. But now Variety just
announced that ice Cube has closed a deal for this
to happen. Not just announced, but Variety announced that ice
Cube has closed a deal for Friday to happen at
Warner Brothers in New Line. So he's reached a deal
(01:32:42):
to write and start in the new Friday movie for
Warner Brothers in New Line Cinema. The new feature, which
is titled Last Friday, will mark the fourth entry in
the comedy series and then the first in over twenty years,
following up after Friday at the next in from two
thousand and two. So ice Cube has been you know,
open by his plans to make another Friday movie, though
his agreement with Warner to start and direct marks a
(01:33:04):
significant development in the project.
Speaker 16 (01:33:06):
So congratulations ice Cube, and it's happening.
Speaker 7 (01:33:10):
Yeah, that's what I said when he was here. I
think he said Cuba.
Speaker 2 (01:33:12):
Just I don't remember the third Friday though, do y'all?
I don't know remember played the club.
Speaker 5 (01:33:21):
One?
Speaker 16 (01:33:21):
Yeah, you can see a little storyline reminder.
Speaker 4 (01:33:25):
That's because the first and second one is like, well,
the first one is untouchable, the second one was cool,
and you know the third one. The third one is
always like Okay, the third one could have been the
TV show could have been Yeah, it didn't have to
be a movie.
Speaker 5 (01:33:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:33:37):
How many episodes did that TV show have been?
Speaker 1 (01:33:39):
Like?
Speaker 8 (01:33:39):
Two?
Speaker 7 (01:33:40):
Maybe four thirty minutes a piece? Three Yeah, something like that.
Speaker 4 (01:33:44):
Okay, But it didn't seem like a continuation of Friday
because if you watch the first one, yeah, and the
third one, it's like, damn, yeah, I got you.
Speaker 15 (01:33:52):
Well, I'm just happy to see what was happening because
I know for a while he was complaining that he
couldn't get the support from like the studios and stuff.
Speaker 7 (01:33:57):
That is the last one.
Speaker 1 (01:33:58):
Chris Tucker got Yes, she gotta be you gotta have
all the world's combined to Chris Talk of the Day.
But then everybody so John Wierspoon last, Bernie mac no longer.
Speaker 4 (01:34:12):
Even though Bernie Mack he was the preacher or like
his his part was real quick. They could still make
it without like some of the ex but I feel
like some of the X they need, like devo John, you.
Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
Know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Happened his family? We didn't even see his family to
last two moves. Craig Mom, what Craigs?
Speaker 7 (01:34:29):
What happened?
Speaker 2 (01:34:30):
King is the sister?
Speaker 5 (01:34:31):
Ye?
Speaker 2 (01:34:31):
As long as that, Yeah, it could still make it work.
Speaker 7 (01:34:34):
Felicia's still smoking crack.
Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
She looked good? Is Craig Mom so low?
Speaker 6 (01:34:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:34:42):
She still loves around here somewhere.
Speaker 16 (01:34:44):
Yes, they need you for this movie.
Speaker 2 (01:34:46):
He tapped in.
Speaker 16 (01:34:47):
Okay, like they need you.
Speaker 7 (01:34:49):
That woman is seventy two years old. That just last
is really seventy around here?
Speaker 2 (01:34:58):
What I so?
Speaker 5 (01:35:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
That's all we got?
Speaker 7 (01:35:01):
All right?
Speaker 2 (01:35:02):
Cool?
Speaker 4 (01:35:02):
So look scenario right, So now you know I always
give you two men to choose from, but I want
to know what you would do in this situation.
Speaker 2 (01:35:09):
You're still trying to find my man.
Speaker 16 (01:35:10):
Absolutely, I told her about to talk about it.
Speaker 2 (01:35:14):
Not passing until she lands a man. We're not going
to be past it.
Speaker 16 (01:35:18):
Okay, you don't want me to be happy first, it's like,
I kind of.
Speaker 7 (01:35:22):
Want you to be here a little bit, but just
clearly still continue, I.
Speaker 5 (01:35:26):
Want you to be here.
Speaker 2 (01:35:27):
Don't do that, stupid my god.
Speaker 4 (01:35:30):
Listen, all right, cool, I ain't gonna be the one reporting,
so you got to be here, so listen, all right.
You're dating this guy for six months, y'all, six months,
and he moved you in. Of course he would you
and everything you met, his family and all.
Speaker 2 (01:35:41):
He's successful.
Speaker 4 (01:35:42):
Now y'all are out one night, right, and on your
way out of the restaurant, a bisexual guy comes up
to your man and he says, oh, this is what
we be doing now listen and walks away. That's all
he said. And your man didn't really give a response.
He just kind of brushed it off, like oh whatever,
come on. He grabs your hand and y'all get in
(01:36:04):
the car. The first thing you do is immediately asks
what the hell was that about? And he tells you
that that guy from years ago, what's his assistant? He
was once his assistant, and he didn't like how he
was terminated once the company went under, and he's just
upset and that's the first time he's seen him in years.
Speaker 5 (01:36:21):
What do you do?
Speaker 4 (01:36:22):
Do you believe that, do you do more digging or
do you just automatically throw him in the boat with
the guy?
Speaker 15 (01:36:29):
He's in the boat and I'm definitely gonna dig. First
of all, I'm not walking out the restaurant.
Speaker 16 (01:36:33):
Where you turning?
Speaker 23 (01:36:33):
Now?
Speaker 4 (01:36:34):
He got to have a conference call. This is a
press conference. Now, I need to understand what you mean. Okay,
So what would you have said to the guy? Because
your lord La rolls and one thing you do is
reach out. So the thing is reach out until you're
gonna reach out to the guy.
Speaker 15 (01:36:46):
Let's hold hands and agree that. I need to have
a real conversation of what did you mean by that?
What do you mean this is what we're doing now?
What was y'all relationship? What was the I'm confused because
it's given me that y'all used to deal with each other,
and I didn't know that that.
Speaker 16 (01:37:00):
Was a past thing.
Speaker 4 (01:37:01):
If but the guy, his disposition, you know, your man
is like this is great, Like I don't even I
ain't even got time for this carry.
Speaker 2 (01:37:09):
The guy switches off, like, Okay, this is so sad.
Speaker 15 (01:37:12):
You know, I don't care what my man is giving
because one thing they're gonna do is downplaying one thing
I'm gonna do get to the bottom.
Speaker 1 (01:37:17):
Okay, okay, And what if you've got your man phone
later and saw that he texts the gay guy.
Speaker 7 (01:37:22):
First of all, she's trans.
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
That's about her.
Speaker 15 (01:37:28):
Now, I'm not even asking questions. I'm out like, yeah,
I can't get it. I don't want to.
Speaker 3 (01:37:33):
Anybody is sad first, you know what, because because she
can't even get a man, you're trying to just make
up a fake man for her and she can't even
get that right.
Speaker 2 (01:37:43):
Oh my god, that is so bad.
Speaker 16 (01:37:45):
I said nothing wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:37:46):
This is a scenario that I'm creating just before we
go to break. You know what happened. Gil was felt
so bad. GI was like, I think I found somebody for.
Speaker 7 (01:37:54):
Lauren.
Speaker 16 (01:37:54):
Oh no, she even getting cross all week.
Speaker 2 (01:37:56):
It was a white guy and Lauren turned him down.
You turned off somebody white? Yes, okay, we got you.
So you you want the melanated Kings, but would be proud,
but now she's again all right, Well, the people.
Speaker 16 (01:38:11):
So like how much money he makes.
Speaker 2 (01:38:13):
It's the Breakfast Club Morning Black Queens Forever, snow Bunnies,
never check out the Breakfast Club Morning Everybody. It's DJ
n V Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne the God. We are the
Breakfast Club. Now we're asking you, guys, if you call
up a lot of people say they.
Speaker 3 (01:38:29):
Call and they can't get through, Well we got an
easy way for you to just get through to the
Breakfast Club.
Speaker 2 (01:38:34):
Go to the iHeart radio app.
Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
This little mike you click. The mic is a talkback feature.
You can leave a thirty second common for any of us.
If you don't like the way Charlemagne looks, he's too short,
he's ball headed, whatever it may be you think.
Speaker 7 (01:38:46):
And you look dirty, look dirty, shut.
Speaker 2 (01:38:53):
Up, dirty, barefoot and dirty.
Speaker 3 (01:38:55):
But whatever it is, you can leave a thirty second
voice memo or voice note on that and we we
play it on the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 7 (01:39:01):
Same thing we're using when I did the Week the People,
would Vice President Kamala.
Speaker 2 (01:39:05):
Harris correct, Yes, So definitely hit that up a SAP.
Speaker 1 (01:39:08):
Because I know people if be having comments and they
be wanting to say stuff about interviews that they hear,
and you know, sometimes you don't have the phone line
with a donkey or donkey today.
Speaker 7 (01:39:14):
You know, I just said something that offended everybody.
Speaker 10 (01:39:17):
You know, when was that ever? A f.
Speaker 5 (01:39:22):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:39:22):
No, no, not up here the time. And speaking of jests,
you're gonna be in North Carolina this week. I will
be in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Speaker 3 (01:39:28):
The Samelle the same wee can I envy because.
Speaker 6 (01:39:32):
The more you talk about it, they'll be like, oh no,
I ain't going. So I'm going to our show. I'm
gonna go see Jake Coles for his last time.
Speaker 4 (01:39:37):
But yes, we're gonna be at the Mprov Tomorrow Friday,
and then Saturday we have two shows as well, and
then Sunday I'm going to be a dream of a fester.
Speaker 2 (01:39:45):
Get your tickets. So get your tickets. And also salute
to Ellie Maestelle.
Speaker 7 (01:39:50):
Did I say right? Ellie Mostelle.
Speaker 1 (01:39:51):
He's got a great new book out called Bad Law
Ten Popular Laws that are Ruining America. I mean I
enjoyed the book because you know, I've been wanting to
know more about constitutional law. I don't think there's a
better constitutional laws callar than Ellie Mustelle.
Speaker 7 (01:40:04):
I don't believe, uh, you know, his his beliefs on biology.
Speaker 2 (01:40:08):
He's one of your favorite people.
Speaker 7 (01:40:10):
Yes, no, I like, I like.
Speaker 1 (01:40:12):
I do like reading his stuff, but I don't like
his views on biology. But on constitutional law. Great, we'll
definitely pick that up. It's called bad Law.
Speaker 7 (01:40:21):
Salute the Louis V Man.
Speaker 1 (01:40:22):
Louis V is here from our assister station ninety six
point one to Beat in Atlanta, Georgia. He'll be providing
a soundtrack at the Black Effect Podcast Festival it for
twenty six. Louis had a great idea, Louis said, should
I say the idea? On the Louis said, we should
get fans right, Black Effect fans, because if you've been
to the Black Effect Podcast Festival, a line dance always
breaks out. They always end up doing the electric side.
(01:40:45):
So you know we're gonna have boots on the ground.
Louis V from the met he from the eight to
oh three, So you know you're gonna have the boots
on the ground at the Blackfec Podcast Festival. Yeah, So
go get your tickets right, your fans when you come
out there. We might have fans for you, but make
Black Effect fans. Louis got the budget, We got the budget,
got them, but ninety six point one to beat, got
them bat they got the budget. Okay, so you might
(01:41:06):
have it there, but Black Effect dot Com Slash Podcast Festival.
Go get your tickets for the third annual bla Effect
Podcast Festival, happening in Atlanta April twenty six at Poeman Yards.
Speaker 2 (01:41:14):
All right, when we come back, we got the positive
notice the breakfast club. Good morning morning everybody at Tea NV.
Just hilarious.
Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
Charlamagne the guy, We all the breakfast club. It's almost
time to get it out of here. And like you said,
Louis v is here. Also Joe Strat up from our
Atlanta station.
Speaker 2 (01:41:27):
I'm a be in Atlanta.
Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
I think in next week. I got to do a
bunch of podcasts. So set me up with Ferrari and
all of them to promote the book. Me and a
wife for be heading out there. We go on out
our book tour. All right, go to Atlanta.
Speaker 4 (01:41:39):
First of all, yeses, Atlanta is gay. Don't do all
that ship. When you was down there for that Chilean
convention my home, we was like why. Charlommae tried like
he was looking at me, and I was like, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:41:51):
I don't even know who she talked about. I remember that.
Speaker 4 (01:41:53):
Story and he was like he tried, like he was
there with some woman. I was like, that's his wife.
He was like he got a white and he was.
Speaker 7 (01:41:59):
Looking at me like that, Yeah, they want me to
be traded.
Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
So okay. Vocabular yes, jesus.
Speaker 4 (01:42:10):
Us.
Speaker 7 (01:42:11):
Positive note the positive.
Speaker 1 (01:42:12):
Notice this gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns
what we have into enough and more. It turns denial
into acceptance. Chaos the order, confusion to clarity. So be
grateful for something today. Okay, have a great day.
Speaker 2 (01:42:25):
Breakfast club, bitches
Speaker 7 (01:42:26):
Finish or y'all done.