Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And congratulation. It's the Breakfast Club ten year anniversary and
years years at the Breakfast Club, doing your thing, doing
what you're doing and being honest with you. You had
a job for teen years. Everything's duty over there. Wow,
ten years. Shout out to the best joining man. Hold on,
(00:22):
hold on, hold on, Damn y'all get oldie. I've been
holding it down for ten years. Djenf Angela Ye and
Charlottagne's the guy man, y'all being together longer than some
people have been married. I'm proud of y'all the voice
of the culture. Peace, love and uh, let's go to
twenty congratulation. Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo
(00:55):
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. Good morning, Angela yee, Charlomagne, the guy
peace to the planet is Tuda, Good morning, Good morning.
Here are you? The birds are chirt ping. I almost
(01:17):
then't making it in there. Ain't even gonna lie. What
happened last night? Shout to the brothers from the E
Y L podcast Shot and Troy. I was with them
last night as they do market Mondays. They talk about
everything that's going on with the stock market. They talk
about everything that's going on with financial literacy and generational wealth.
So season and now we're on their show. Last night
(01:38):
had close to eleven thousand people. They throw a live chatting.
We were just talking on night, just helping people out
with investing in real estate and investing in stock. So
that was amazing. So shout to those brothers, man. I
love what those brothers are doing. Uh, make sure Troy
Millings were sharp aloud, the Master Investor. I mean, they
have a good program. So we go on their last day.
Make sure you listen to you lose your podcast on
(02:00):
the Black Affect I Heart Radio podcast network available everywhere
you listen to podcast. But why you ain't making it
in though? So I'm gonna tell you that was late.
So that ended like ten o'clock. But you know when
I get home, so it was about a thirty minute drive.
You know, I gotta watch The Bachelor. I don't know that.
I don't even care. You know, it's muddon days. I
got to watch the first batch The Bachelor. No, what
you do? What you thought it was? I see your
(02:23):
nose up there. You smelling. No, No, it's about the Bachelor.
We were watching The Bachelor last night, and oh my god,
it's getting great. That is his hometowns. Don't don't do that.
This is it was great sweatpants night on the Bachelor. No,
he didn't have a great sweatpants but it's hometown right now.
Let me tell you about hometown. Hometown is where it's
down to like four girls, four women, and he has
to go to their hometown and he meets their parents.
(02:45):
But because of COVID, he couldn't go to their hometown,
so they came to him, so he got to meet
their parents. So can you imagine, you know, you got
a daughter. She's dating this guy for a couple of
months and she's talking about marriage, and you got to
meet this guy for the first time. Very interesting, very entertained.
Want to call on them in the pandem. You'll call
for them on the pandon. But it's pretty good. It
is great. It is really really good. I'm excited. I
love that show. Yo. Remember when Denza was sitting at
(03:07):
the table with Hoyt and training day and he told
Hoyt to tell him a story and then told him
that lame ass story. So he told him, reaching his
pockets and pay for the meal, pay for breakfast. That's
how I feel this morning. Okay, we watch you about
to tell me something nice? Goddamn Bachelor. You don't watch
the Bachelor? All right? Well, how is everybody else's say
a good night? Later? Yeah? What about you? You anything fun?
(03:31):
Was it talk? You can't? You can? He's not a top.
Come on now, clearly yesterday you know, I've been dealing
with my house that I bought in Brooklyn, So I
was dealing with that, but I was really I've been
distracted yesterday all day, just dealing with this break in
that happened at the juice Bot. I've been talking to
like all these different police officers, so I think they
(03:53):
apprehended the person. Um so yeah, so now I feel
much better. But when I tell you so much? Any
different people calling me different precincts and Queens and Brooklyn.
And then I've been sending this video because we had
video footage of the person. But they recovered our Uber
eats tablet right the person was breaking into another location
in Queens and had it on them. Yeah, well, I
(04:15):
mean the video of the person. Did they say who
the person was or what is conditional? Not yet? Did
he seemed like he needed some help? I'm the breaking
into multiple businesses? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean just the way.
But you know, he looked the way he was walking
like he didn't look healthy. That's what I'm saying. He
looked like he needed some type of help. That's why exactly. Yeah.
(04:35):
But I was reading about what's been happening in New York.
They said, because so many businesses are closed, a lot
of people are also going into those empty businesses and
going to the wall and breaking into open businesses that
are next door too. That's another thing that's been happening. Yeah. That,
and uh, these brothers out here is high tech. Man.
I don't know if you know, but if they're trying
to rob you or they're trying to get you, what
(04:56):
they're doing now is they put this little device on
your car so they can see doing that. That's two
years old. Were you talking about? Did you know that job?
We had a conversation to hear about checking out cards
in the parking lot. Well number they did that to Safari,
but I didn't know if people really knew that. But
they're still doing that a lot. That's how they know
if you're home, they can see on the tracking device
that you're not home, and that's how they know to
break into your house. Hey, man, if you can figure
(05:17):
all that out, you can get a job. That's what
I can figure all that out. Man, Just go get
a goddamn job or started app or something. You can
figure something else out. If you can do all that, geez,
let's start the show, all right, front page, that's what
we're talking about. Well, let's talk about legalize it. You
guys live in New Jersey, so there's some big news
for you there. All right, we'll get into all that
(05:39):
when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Come on
it like everybody in cej Envy, Angela, Yee, Charlomagne the guy.
We are to Breakfast Club. Let's getting some front page news.
Where were starting you? Well, Joe Biden has announced some
changes in the loan program that's aimed at supposedly helping
small and minority owned businesses. And you know, this looks
(06:00):
like something good because we talked about this paycheck protection
program ever since COVID started. It is supposed to help
with federal assistance for these businesses, but unfortunately, many of
those businesses did not get the money. Now, these changes
are supposed to facilitate loans for contractors, for self employee people,
for non citizens who are lawful US residents, and business
owners with previous non fraud convictions. So they also said
(06:22):
there will be a fourteen day window starting March to
ninth for businesses with fewer than twenty employees to apply
for relief. Here's what he said on Wednesday. The Small
Business Administration is going to establish a fourteen day exclusive
PPP loan application period for businesses and nonprofits with fewer
(06:43):
than twenty employees. Small Business Administration will also remove barriers
that have stopped many business from being able to apply
for these loans. We're making it so that a student
loan default or a non fraud related criminal record does
not prohibit someone from applying for the program. We're all
should making it easier for those one person businesses to
(07:05):
secure forgivable p p P launch. I mean, loans are
like most things in America, though it gets to black
business businesses last, if it gets to black businesses at all. Well,
of the problem is a lot of people don't know
how to properly file. That's the problems most people who
have small businesses, don't have a huge accounting team and
can't have people file for you. So if you don't
(07:27):
file the right way to proper way, you won't get
the loan. Yeah, a lot of people did try to
do it and didn't get that money. And so this
is supposed to help specifically minority women and veteran owned
businesses and people in rural areas. And it's true. We
saw a lot of these huge companies, you know, got
in front of the line, got all this money, and
then what happened to the smaller businesses that were suffering.
(07:48):
And see, that's the problem because a lot of times
when they use that minority language, it goes to white women,
you know what I mean, it goes to the poor whites.
They usually end up getting that relief first a minority
white women. When they say minority yeah, gold to white women.
Well that's like minority and women owned businesses, because they
say minorities and then they also say women yeah, and
(08:09):
those women white most of the time. A lot they
said at least four hundred thousand small businesses have closed permanently,
and so that has been an awful situation. You can
see it, I'm sure no matter where you live, you
see a lot of businesses that have shut down. All
right now they say the thing about socially and economically
disadvantaged individuals. That usually means Paul White's all right, well
(08:33):
that is your front page news. All right, get it
off your chess. Eight on't drip five eight five one
oh five one. If you need to vent, hit us
up right now. It's the breakfast club. God morning, the
breakfast club. Wake up, wake up, your time to get
it off your chest. We want to hear from you
(08:54):
on a breakfast club. Hello. Who's this from the Bronx?
What's up, broke? Get it off your chest? Yo? Yeah.
I was talking about Ryan's yesterday. He is a good
YouTube kid, but his dad is really annoying. I'm trying
to tell y'all. I'll be trying to tell y I've
never seen it. I've never seen it. I can't do
everything with him. I can't do everything like you do.
I got other things to do. I gotta cook. You want, though,
(09:16):
they want me to dance like Ryan's dad. I can't
do that. Well. Ryan making all the money, so his
dad is living off his child, which is which is fine,
But you know, I just don't. He's just annoying. Speaking
of money, I'm actually I'm actually grateful too. I got
a promotion at my job. I'm thankful. I hope everybody
have a good day and a blessed congratulation. Congratulations, Thank you, y'all,
thank you. Hello. Who's this from Canton? Hey Morgan? Get
(09:39):
him off your chest? Didn't know, Hio. I'm sorry, can't Hi.
I just need men to come a little for men
and women to come a little harder for their women.
They shouldn't been waiting till Valentine's Day to receive flowers,
I mean every other month or just anything. I don't
feel like men really appreciate their women. Um. Another thing, Charlemagne,
(10:01):
I love you. I have like really bad anxiety issues,
and I feel like it's kind of steering for depression.
So I was wondering if you have like any suggestions,
because I feel like I set everyone out. I don't
have any more friends because I just I just closed
everybody out. So I don't know, are you going to therapy?
(10:24):
I have really bad social anxiety, so I just it's
like I can't I'm not able to explain because when
I started to explain them my words get twisted up
and it's just, oh, I know you know what might
be good for you? Then what might be good for
you is tell it therapy. So you might be better
off talking to somebody over the phone. So would you
like to would you like to get some free therapy?
(10:44):
I give you some free therapy. You want free therapy? Yes, yes,
I'm gonna give you. We're gonna. I'mnna get you six
months free therapy. Courtesy talk Space, courtesy of a CIA Records.
Courtesy of an artist named Toby. Okay, hold on, okay, okay,
wait one more thing? Can? I said on my Instagram? Yeah?
It's under four and more than one? Okay? Now do
you want to stop out? I want to stop out. MO.
(11:06):
Thank you for being here for me. I know I'm
just like have my ups and downs and stuff like that,
but thank you. I love you. It's nothing. Thank you.
Hold on you Get rid of therapy? Animal sent or
a copy of Doctor Rita Walker's The Unapologetic Guy. The
Black Mental Health is such a great read. I swear
by that book. Get It off your Chest eight hundred
five eight five one on five one. If you need
to vent, hit this up now, it's the breakfast Club.
(11:27):
Good morning, the breakfast Club. This is your time to
get it off your chests, whether you're mad or blast.
So plea better have the same in We want to
hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello, who's this chat?
Check from high Check Society. Good morning, practice clubs morning,
(11:49):
get it off your chests, mama. Okay, so one I
wanted to say, y'all need to stop letting y'all kids play,
y'all call of duty. Okay, they're emotionally, I'm intelligent and
they don't know how to loose. And it customs damn much. Yes,
and he kept saying, getting what that Mac thirty looks?
That Mac thirty? What the humbles of Mac thirty loucks?
I black kids playing on night with real people. You
(12:11):
need to play with the robots like the rest of
the kids. They're bad. What are you doing? But that's
the way, that's the way they socially interact with each
other nowadays. No, no, nos, she they're online is for adults.
You put your kids on the box because I can't
be called a m ask for by some kids who
don't know how to lose. I feel you, but you
on I don't even know what the mac thirty is either.
That's that must be a new gun. What my gun stopping?
(12:32):
You know that because you know you're the only one
up there to be acting like he a gangster too.
Damn bass to get in my drawers. Don't do it?
What all right? Did? She says? I'm getting her draw
heard somebody getting her drum. Keep your draws up, I'm
married getting Keep your kids out the line. My kids
don't play caller blue. You know what draws? You're a
(12:55):
moon from? Truly? What's up? Put your pants up? Yeah,
Charlot man out that they don't. I got some exclusive information.
So I was calling because y'all was just talking about
the PPP program. So the way that you get it, um,
you have to file as a sole proprietor. Right. So
the way that you do that is you have to
(13:16):
fill out a scheduled C form. When you feel that
form out, you had the option of saying that your
income was cash. Now, this is not telling y'all to
go out there and scam the government out these forms. No,
because with the with the scheduled C form, they're not
(13:36):
looking for perfection. They're looking to see if you deserve alone.
They're not looking for perfection on that UM particular document.
So when you feel that form out and then you
go to UM get the PPP, they're going to ask
you to upload that document. So don't don't put nothing
crazy on it or anything like that. But the reason
(13:56):
is they won't go for your actual credit. They won't.
They won't go to sound illegal to me, perfectly sound illegal.
It sounds like you from Philly and you're not a
dream chase and you're a dream scamra. That's what it
sounds like. You know, I didn't personally get the loan
because I didn't apply for it. I didn't get the
loan because I started my business this year. If you
started your business anywhere after February fifteen two and now you,
(14:20):
if you would have got the loan, I could have
listened to you. But you can't. You mean you ain't
get the loan because I have someone that teaches people
how to get the loan, and the lady only at
I don't want to put her on blast. He's on Clubhouse.
I don't want to. But she's on clubhouse already. I can't, Yeah,
I can't. She's on Clubhouse. That is a reliable source. Okay,
(14:43):
it's wrong with y'all. Get it off your chest eight
dred five eight five one on five one if you
need to vet hit this up now. We got rooms
on the way. Yes, and let's talk about Megan the Stallion.
Somebody was just praising her song wop and it's not
the most likely person that you would think, but it's
super dope. All right, we'll get into it next. It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Everybody is
(15:06):
DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne. The guy we are the
Breakfast Club is Bobby schmirder Home. Yet, that is my question?
Do we know? I have no idea. I see that,
but we know said he was picking him up. Quabo
said he's flying there to pick him up. I want
to know it is Bobby schmirder Home. Yet I think
Quab was already here. I saw Quible giving a Roddy
revel a bunch of money on social media. I've seen that.
(15:29):
All right, Well, let's get to the rumors. Let's talk
Megan the Stallion. It's about this is the rumor report,
Angela Yees on the Breakfast Club. Well, Megan the Stallion
and Maxine Waters had a conversation for Harper's Bizarre Online,
(15:50):
and one of the things that they talked about was
the song Whop. They told me to look at that
was it? Well? And I did. Don't worry, don't worry,
don't worry, don't worry, don't worry. That I said, Now,
that's our that's today, and that is the ability for
women to take charge of what they want to say,
(16:12):
because I had paid attention to the young you know,
Gangster Wrap, a time when you know, men were in charge.
They say whatever they wanted to say, but women, you know,
didn't say for a long time what they could say
or wanted to say or dare to say. Okay, okay.
Very important to note that wapp is the latest evolution
(16:33):
of women expressing their sexual desires. Though max Maxine is
an old g she shouldn't know that. You can't forget
about Salt and Pepper and TLC and Little Kim and
Fox Brown and Tren in Gangster Bull, Missy Elliott, you know,
Kyle Nicki Minaje like, you know a lot of women
sexual desires now. Magan the Stallion also was talking about
protecting black women and why is that so hard to do.
(16:56):
They feel like it's controversial and all I'm saying is
protect black women, and now people are taking it like
it's I'm saying something crazy. So just to be supported
by another black woman who you know sends the same message,
I feel like, you know what, I am doing the
right thing and I'm gonna keep doing it because Max
Seine Water saying I can that's right. That's social media
saying that too. Though social media is not real life.
(17:17):
I promise you'all majority of the opinions on social media
whole no real weight in the real world because we
know protect black women as the model. All right, now,
Quest of Love. After having a very successful documentary that
actually with at the Sundance Film Festival, he has announced
that he has his second feature film coming and that
(17:40):
feature film will be on sly Stone, So that should
be really exciting. And you guys, if you don't know
who slid Stone sly in the Family Stone is, you
know they had that song and you always hear on
commercials hot fun in the summer time. And he's a
super creative person. I think a lot of R and
B and social artists have kind of my old and
(18:00):
fashioned themselves. After him. I know DiAngelo used to study
sly Stone before he would perform, and just see how
he actually did his work. They had great songs, dance
to the music everyday people, all of that. So now
he's doing a documentary on sly Stone, so I think
that'll be really dope. Family a fair, m that's the record.
Everybody who know it's a family fair. It's a family
(18:23):
and they had that time. I wanna thank you for
letting me be myself. Don't forget about lose booty booty
a right, never mind? All right? And the club? Okay,
how's it going? Just google? You can google alright. Fred
(18:44):
the Godson has gotten a street named after him in
the Bronx, so it's official congratulations as his friends and
family were celebrating his first postumist birthday after releasing his
latest album, Ascension. So it's a nine song tape with
no features, and now he has a street named after him,
so that's pretty dope. He did pass away last year
(19:06):
in April due to complications with COVID nineteen probably includes
boons with Fred to gods rest in peace, all right.
And Nellie has found a buyer for his house. You
know he has that abandoned house that was in Saint Louis.
He had listed it for six hundred thousand dollars and
just a few days later somebody bought it. There's no plumbing,
there's no flooring, there's a lot of renovations that are
(19:27):
left to be done. It's it's a nice property. It's
a mansion out there. But I mean I hit Nellie
because it looked like the comps were grade, looked like
the properties in the area looked like they were pretty good.
I hate him to see if he wanted to sell it,
But he didn't hit me back. Somebody, somebody He bought
that house back in two thousand and two for two
million dollars. He was planning to flip it. But it's
(19:48):
just been sitting there for the past twenty years. Yeah,
it was on the market for six hundred thousand last week.
Would you would cost to renovator a lot? It's huge, boys,
I would say about one hundred and fifty hundred to
one hundred really now it's gonna cost mine than that. Also,
if you do a mansion like that, wouldn't you want
to do like top notch renovations. There's no plumbing, there's
no flooring, plumbing and flooring is not it's not that expensive. Yeah,
(20:12):
but don't you don't you have to buy flooring? Don't
you have to buy I'm sure you have to fix
everything up, and then I'm sure you have to buy
everything in that house. The house wasn't in bad edition
in flor Flooring is not that expensive sitting there for
twenty years. It's been sitting there for twenty years. Though,
you don't think that it's gonna need upgrades. But everything
(20:33):
you need to come to one of my classes. Man,
where where you get construction loans? You don't have to
use your old money to fix these properties up. I
don't have that kind of I can't even get that
kind of loan. I can't get a loan one hundred
fIF You don't. You don't have to use your money,
which you mean you got good credit? Right, I don't
need to get Then you ain't got to worry about it.
Then that's all I got. You ruin my credit, ruin
(20:56):
your credit. Lady, ladies, you've had your credit ruined. Buy
a waffle with me? Got him? It's ready to rule
somebody's credit? What's rong with you? Guy? Is so crazy?
Wrong with you. All right, Well, imagine the yean that
(21:20):
is your rumor report. You want me to ruin your credit?
What's wrong with you? Man? No, I don't want you
to rule my credit. You stay over there. Okay, I'm married,
you married out, so crazy me? This is good? But no,
all ladies know it's always a waffle colored need grow
with hazes of lies, ready to ruin your credit. Only
(21:43):
yes it is. I hate the man. But for my
ladies out there, do not let anybody do not co
sign on nothing for nobody. Put no money down in
your name, nothing for nobody. Not let anybody have your credit. Okay,
because that that's a true that's right? All right? Well
that is you're kinky, bro, You're really really kinky. I
(22:08):
don't know what's going on with you. Are your house
life right now because the way you come at me
and dramas the last couple of days, a liar to
drop dramas. You're a lie. You've always been a liar,
like no kind of cree. All right, Well, we got
for a patient was next year, but we're talking about yeah,
get yourself together, you guys, we all got to talk
(22:29):
about I know they've legalized recreational marijuana and the jet
right talk more about that. That's right's appropriate. It does.
I did have an edible late laughing right now. I
don't know what is clearly or maybe I went to
(22:50):
sleep and I didn't get the high, but I woke
up with it. I'll be okay, all right, Friday's next
to the Breakfast Club morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela
Yee Scharlam the guy we are to breakfast Clublet's getting
too front page news where we're starting you. Well, it's official.
New Jersey has become the latest day to permit recreational
(23:11):
marijuana use. They approved a series of bills yesterday that
regulates the sale of cannabis to anybody over the age
of twenty one. Good job, Governor Murphy dropping in clues
bonds from Governor Murphy. Now, but when are they letting
the brothers and sisters out of the jail who are
locked up for non violent weed defenses. If that doesn't
happen to an this is one of the most hypocritical
pieces of legislation of a path. Yeah, it definitely needs
(23:35):
to and I think that's something federally that needs to
take place too. But I actually thought that was the
hold up. I thought that they were trying to figure
all of that out. That's what they said. They were
trying to figure that out. And also as far as
the licenses of concern, making sure that minorities get the
licenses since we've been affected. What are the boasts? Yeah, Well,
the legislation does further provide for them to reinvest cannabis
(23:57):
revenues and designated impact zones, and it also directs the
Cannabis Regulatory Commission to promote diversity and inclusion in business ownership.
And it contains critical employment protections for people who engage
in lawful behavior with respect to cannabis. So that was
in the official news release. And listen once again, you know,
if they don't, you know, let the Brothers assists out
(24:19):
of jail who are locked up for non violent we defenses.
This is absolutely one of the most hypocritical pieces of
legislation of a path and it's got to be a
bit of sweet celebration, because that's just wrong. You got
people who in you know, jail for life in New Jersey.
But weed is legalized all right. Now. Spotify is planning
to monetize podcasts now. They're launching a new Audio Advertising
(24:43):
Marketplace to Spotify Audience Network, which will allow advertisers to
reach listeners across Spotify's originals and exclusives, as well as
podcasts via Megaphone and their creation to anchor. So now
there's going to be ads and that way people can
make money if they have a podcast that's on the
Spotify network. They haven't been anybody. They haven't been monetizing
(25:04):
on Spotify. I think for the creators, it'll help you.
As far as they're gonna have a paid advertising thing,
so now I guess it's gonna They haven't launched it yet,
but they're gonna. Um, well, no, that's what I mean.
They haven't been doing paid advertims on Spotify. I thought
they've been doing that. I don't know. Yeah, I think
you're gonna have to pay for a certain podcasts now,
(25:27):
from what I'm understanding what you're saying. Yeah, I think
podcasts behind the paywall is whack anyway, though, I don't
think that's how podcasts is supposed to be digested. It's
like radio, right, It's like satellite radio is cool, but
to rest your radio will always reign supreme over satellite
radio because it's free. That's why. That's why I feel
like podcast shouldn't behind the paywall. Yeah, but but but
you don't pay for remember like Serious satellite radio, right, yeah,
(25:48):
and they actually, but that's the purpose you pay. You
pay a monthly subscription, so you don't have to pay
for commercials. You can just hear give me a straight through. Yeah,
but why why I pay for radioca? Some people don't
want to hear the commercials. To rest your will always
range the pre simply because because think about it, when
Howard Stern left Wind went to Serious, the reason why
he got the money that he went he got was
because it's paid subscription. Absolutely. I just don't think stuff
(26:10):
a lot everything shouldn't behind a paywall, and I think
this kind of conception should not be behind the paywall
podcast aladio my personal opinions. Yeah, I mean, I think
you just have to be have an audience that's willing
to pay the audience. I don't see nothing wrong with it. Monetized.
You ain't gonna pay for advertisement, you keep everything to yourself.
I think that's fall Actually, all right, now, let's talk
(26:33):
about a seventy five You remember that seventy five year
old protested that was shoved to the ground by police
in Buffalo. What that happened? And he actually ended up
suffering a fractured skull. This happened on June fourth. It
would look awful. Martin Gugino was his name. Well, those
officers in Buffalo, they did file charges against those two
police officers, but a grand jury earlier this month's declient
(26:55):
charges the case was dismissed. I don't see how I
knew that. That was a couple of weeks ago there
anoder when they pushed Homie on the floor and he
did asks charges. That's crazy. So that tells you a
lot of the seventy five year white man gets pushed
you the ground and nothing happens to the police. What
does that say for the rest of us me in trouble? Yeah,
they said that the officers were simply following departments procedures
(27:19):
and the directives up their superiors to Claire Niagara Square,
despite working under extremely challenging circumstances. That was their rationale
for why that was okay. So even though this man
stuff for a concussion and a fractured skull, spent nearly
a month in the hospital, apparently these officers did nothing wrong.
All right, well that is your front page news. All right,
(27:41):
thank you, miss ye. Now let's talk about young thug.
Young thug yesterday posted on the social media that he
was in Vegas and he lost eight hundred thousand dollars
in the casino. Man Vegas at one eight hundred thousand
for me, man I am. He said he wild out,
he threw through drinks and everything. So we're asking eight
(28:01):
hundred five eight five, one on five one gambling, what's
the most you ever lost? Eight? I love going to
the casino and gambling. I like to play blackjack sometimes
we let launched. Y'all got money to gamble? Well, I
think I'm very like I will talk about it. I
(28:23):
have a whole plan in the system of how I gamble,
when I gamble, Charlman, I don't gamble at all. I've
been unemployed seven times in my life. Okay, I don't
play with my money like that. All right. I want
twenty four hundred dollars one time off for one dollar
in the slot machine. And I'm a Dallas Cowboy fan.
What the hell would I be gambling for? Why would
I ever been on them? Yeah? Right? Eight hundred five
(28:43):
eight five one on five one call us up. Now
let's talk about It's to breakfast club. Good morning in
right now at your opinion to the breakfast club top
breaking down eight hundred five eight five one five one
to breakfast Club, It's topic times the phone call eight
(29:09):
hundred five eight five one oh five. Want to join
it to the discussion with the breakfast club, talk about
it morning. Everybody is tj Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy.
We are the breakfast club. Good morning now if you
just join us. We're talking about young Thug. Now young Thug.
He was on his Instagram and talking about when he
was in Vegas manas at one eight hundred thousand. For me,
(29:31):
man I am yeah, he lost eight hundred thousand dollars.
So we're asking what's the most you ever lost? Gambling?
Me myself, I don't gamble. I'm not a gambler. And
if I do go gambler with my wife, I make
it seem like it's an event. Meaning if I was
gonna take my wife out for dinner and a movie,
if I would have spent four hundred, that's all I'm gambling.
(29:52):
If I lose that, four hundred's gone. I don't I
don't go further than that and four hundred. If I
lose that, I'm crying. But if I win fifty two
hundred dollars, I walk away like I'm not a gambler.
I'll never get ten thousand gambling because I don't spend
that much to gain, but I just rather put it
in other things. That's me personal. The biggest I enjoy gambling. Yeah.
The biggest gamble I take is when um, I dabbling
ice cream, because I know I'm like Tolson Doller. That's
(30:14):
about it. Biggest risk I tacked. Well, I love to gamble,
and so I've learned a trick. And my trick is
that when i'm gambling, if i'm up whatever I put in,
I put that money, I put those chips in my pocket,
and then whatever else I have after that, I feel
free to gamble with that, and if I lose it,
it's fine at least I walk away even but I'm
not dipping into my pocket to take the money that
(30:36):
I've won back out. And the most I've ever won,
I've won six thousand dollars playing blackjack, and I won
twenty four hundred on the slots. That's the most i've
ever won. I try not to lose. I never bet
that high. I just I just won't. I'm not Nope,
I'd rather use that. But you don't have to bet
that high. That's what I'm saying. All you do is
take the money that you're as you're winning. I put
one chip in my pocket, like say I put up
(30:57):
two hundred dollars, right, I put it twenty five dollars,
tipping my pocket once I'm up, and I'm back at that,
like say I have two twenty five. Then I keep
on gambling. If I lose, I'm out. If I keep
on going up, probably four hundred dollars. All right, let's
go to the phone. Hello, who's this, Yeah, it's your boy,
Sterling Stack. I'm calling from Columbia. Stuff to herlan. What's up? Brother?
(31:18):
What's going on? My brother? I ain't hurt from you
and forever man, Man, we're still around. We're still around
the man. You know everything's good, Yes, sir, So what's
the most you have the Lord's bro? Man, Listen your
first time I went to the casino, I went to
Biloxi the Grand Casino. I spent one hundred dollars and
I won, like maybe like seen grand. So there's gonna
(31:38):
be my new occupation now, right. So I take my
girl band. Two weeks later, my cousin, I get everybody room,
I go down there and I lose about four or
five grand with their life. This is gonna be my
new occupation, you know. But they got me. You yeah,
And that's the thing. When you went a little bit,
you feel so confident, and then you start calculating in
(32:00):
your head. I only put up a hundred, and I've
won ten grand. Imagine if I would have put up
a thousand, I would have had a exactly when I
tell you what's so bad? Like, they got me off
the table when I was down and we wouldn't eat
breaking yo, I told them I had to go to
the band from my rant back downstairs to the black
jack table, loss every dollar in my pocket. I had
to break in my career around for me at a
(32:22):
discount and send me money just so I get everybody home.
That is a shame. As soon as you started going
to the ATM and doing all that and putting your
card down at the table, it's over. No, it was.
It was bad, man, it was bad. But you know,
but I went to Bakers two years ago and hit
a lick, so you know, you know it's always to
come back, all right, right, hold on to that. That's
the problem with gambling, man. You you gamble until you
(32:44):
don't have nothing left. You're supposed to gamble until you
up and then leave. Hello. Who's this? Yeah? Just Orlando, Hotlando?
What's uping? What's the most you have? A lost man? Gambling? Uh? Man,
I lost twenty five hundred. Uh that her? And that's
that's that's that's the worst feeling you can ever have.
That's like the walk of Shade when you gotta go
(33:05):
to the crib and look at your wife. Oh man,
who Now, I did win some money gambling and horses
when I was in college because at the racetrack right
by Hampton, I really didn't know what I was doing.
The trial factor. Yeah, So I want a couple of
times that I really didn't know what I was doing.
I was trying to analyze the horse and you see
what the horse was fastest in the last race, and
(33:27):
what horse the train is good. I try to do
all that, but I didn't know what I was doing.
And I want to tell you you probably saw me
because I was the number one handicapit there and uh,
me and my boy we used to go there all
we stay going there. Yeah. I used to go there. Yeah,
I used to go there all the time. I didn't
know what I was doing, but it was just fun
(33:48):
to see people cheering and stuff. But you the number
one handicap there, number one handicapital. My last name is Gamble.
So that's what I did. I ain't want to raise
up State New York. I'm not mad at that. I
enjoyed it gambling. I enjoyed like I would be in
the casino. I remember the first time I ever played blackjack.
I was there till like seven in the money. You know,
they don't have no windows. You don't know what time
it is. Next thing. You know, you're like, damn, I've
(34:09):
been sitting at this table this long. Ain't doing all that.
But eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
We're asking what's the most amount of money you lost?
Young thug lost eight hundred thousand dollars? What about you?
It's the Breakfast Cloud, good morning, call me and your
(34:31):
opinions to the Breakfast Club to come on one morning.
Everybody is cej Envy, Angela Yee Charlomagne the guy. We
are the breakfast club. Now, if you just join us,
we're asking what's the most money you ever lost? Gambling?
Rn't young thug said he lost eight hundred thousand dollars.
That's a lot of money. But hey, we're asking you, Hello,
(34:54):
who's this. This is our Josh. I'm calling in about
the gambling Josh, what's the what's the most you ever lost?
Gambler brother? Okay, well it wasn't me personally. I gambled
my brothers Red October Kanye shoes to game that I
had it in my spirit. I knew I was gonna win.
(35:15):
It was the Miami Heat burst the Spurs. He should
beat your ass, man, he should have beat your ass.
I he did. I mean when we don't speak in
terms right now, but he forgave me, but he didn't
forget me. But I tried to buy his daughter some
Yeasys and it didn't. It didn't work out. So when
we still ain't talk, he loved them. Damn shoes come,
(35:36):
Red Octobers go for seven thousand dollars and you can't
get him anymore. And you gambled his seven thousand dollars.
Red octobers and you lost. I'm gonna bring your ass. Damn.
You maybe found worse that ain't funny. He can't even
get he can't even get those again. They seven thousand
us right now they go to, oh my gosh, what
(35:57):
size is it? What size is it? Oh? He wearing
side ten? Yes? They a matter of fact, there's a
bit right now for sixteen thousand dollars. He should work
your ass twice. Yeah, help you got stop? He's breaking
up the whole thing, my brother. I hope he now,
I hope he here, hang up, hang up, Okay, okay,
(36:17):
I'm hanging up. Damn, I can take one as two.
You wanted to beat me up twice, and he will
beat me up twice. He deserved that. A See, that's
why I'm goad of the only job I can imagine
my brother taking my sneaker is that I waited a
line for that's worth ten grand? And you gamble on
the heat? Hello? Who's this? Anthony? Anthony? What's up? We're
(36:39):
talking about gambler problems? What's the most you ever lost? Gambler?
Eighteen two, eighteen thousand, two hundred dollars, Yes, sir, playing
one playing craps, shooting craps. Let me ask you this
that what's the most you ever won? I won before
the pandemic last year, I won twenty five thousand dollars
and I went out to face I guess with only
(37:01):
a thousand. Okay, so you up. You're still up the
crazy problem. I don't even know how to play none
of them games. I don't know how to play craps.
I don't know. All I know was blackjack. I don't
know how to play. All I know I played pokon
on my phone. I don't know how to play poker too.
(37:21):
I enjoyed. I love being in the casino, but they
don't give you drinks anymore. When you sit at the table,
you gotta just sit there. Now, well, i'll tell you this.
Last week for Super Bowl, I was out there and
I was at the crap table with a Asian gentleman
and he was shooting fifty thousand dollars a shot. He
was winning. Now to say he was winning, I said
(37:42):
he was. He just said he was playing. That's crazy.
And he left the table with three hundred thousand. Now
he could have been down half of me and on me,
but that's what he left me three hundred thousand. I
ain't got the half of that one, thank you. Brother.
You know what the worst is when you're at the
table with somebody who doesn't know what they're doing and
they mess up the game. Everybody else at the table,
(38:02):
Oh my god, so much, people like it doesn't matter, Yes,
it does matter, It doesn't matter. You gotta get up
and walk away, like I can't be at this table
with this person. All right, Well, what's the mor little story? Guys?
You gotta play to win, No, put that keep that
money in your pocket and in vestage. You gotta be
in it to win it. Baby dock market is doing okay.
Now real estate is great, right now, that's all a gamble.
This is zillion. The one thing you can do. Don't
(38:24):
listen to ye and if you don't know how to play,
don't sit at my table. And I hate when you
guys come to my table smoking cigarettes. Man, that money,
make that money, my goodness. We got rumors all the way, yes,
and we're going to talk about meek mel. He says
he has apologized privately to Vanessa Bryant, but first this
happened online. Would tell you what went down, all right,
(38:45):
we'll get into it. Next is to Breakfast Club. Good morning,
all right, well morning everybody is DJ Envy Angela, Yee, Charlomagne.
The guy we are to Breakfast club is Bobby Smurder
home yet somebody giving some updates? Good morning, Mama Smurder?
Are you after rhetorical questions? Are you asking questions that
you may or may not really know the answer to. No,
I don't know the answer that something. Trust me. When
(39:06):
Bobby's murders home, everybody or no, it'll it'll be on Instagram. Okay,
follow DJ Academic, Yeah, shave room real shit? Sure? All right,
all right, all right, yeah you're back here. Yes, I'm here.
It's gonna be a celebration in Brooklyn, and Bobby's murder
gets home this morning, this afternoon, or whenever it happens.
I mean, let's be clear, based off the laws of
(39:29):
hip hop, right, the laws of the street. If snitches
get stitches and snitches get you know, banished in YadA, YadA, YadA, right,
shouldn't somebody who held it down get celebrated? Absolutely? And
I think he will. I think he will. I think
a lot of orders saying they're gonna make sure they
take care of the Oquavo said he's picking them up.
I know, Thugga Thucker said he got something. I got
a bag for you, thug. Actually he posted me when
(39:49):
I said that before, and he said, um, Charlotagne finally
said something. Right, that's what he said. You guys came
a long way. Who I've never met young thug in
my life. Well, he said he was gonna tort you
you one time and tie you up at one time.
But then't yeah, and then didn't you guys speak? And
he said he wanted to come on the show. No,
I never never spoke. He wanted to come on the show. Yeah, yeah,
(40:11):
but you guys came a long way. Told you that
was cool. That was a good time. That was a
good time. Was a twenty sixteen Yeah, twenty sixteen. Yeah,
we're gonna tie you up and told you you boy,
you've heard that before. Shut up. I don't even know
how to hold time, My goodness threatened me. Right. We
(40:34):
got rumors coming up, Yes, and we'll be discussing a
new podcast that Barack Obama is doing. It feels like
an unlikely peering. All right, we'll get to it next.
It's the Breakfast Club Go Morning my Heart radio station Anthimmy.
(40:56):
All right, Well, Vanessa Brian was on Instagram and calling
out me Mill over the line that she had an
issue with. People thought it was disrespectful to Kobe Bryant.
Here's the line and if I ever let him going
out with my trab being novel? Kobe all right, and
we had a whole discussion about this up here on
the Breakfast Club. I said, I'm sure Vanessa Bryant has
She's been very vocal about how she feels about people
(41:19):
even posting tributes to Kobe Bryant at this time, so
it did feel insensitive because she's been vocal about it.
She has her daughters, you know, who also are seeing
all this, and I'm sure they're aware and listen to
Meek Mill. So she posted darre Meek Mill, I find
this line to be extremely insensitive and disrespectful period. I
am not familiar with your music, but I believe you
can do better than this. If you are a fan, fine,
(41:39):
there's a better way to show your admiration for my husband.
This lacks respect and tact and that's how she felt
about it, or nothing to say if Vanessa is offended,
if Vanessa is offended. Only thing you could do as
apologize for Meek Mill right right. So then I don't
know if this was just bad timing, but he posted
on Twitter, I'm going back savage in this ish f
your feelings. I don't think we are on the same signal, y'all.
(42:01):
I don't see what y'all see. I'll be looking at
the net laughing like I did what I say random
ish all day on. So so it becomes a trend
to hate on me every once in a while. But
I feed off that ish. I'm a beast. Literally, I'm
gonna stay on this one hundred m chase to feed
the kids. I'm ana dip from the crowd and stay
in the VIP. And then he said, I apologize to
her in private earlier today, not to the public. Nothing
(42:21):
I say on my page directed to an internet viral
moment or the family of a grieving woman if you
care about someone grieving. Changed the subject. But that's a
long ass tweet. First of all, a few different tweets. Oh,
it's a few different lines. Let's go back to what
you said initially. So after Vanessa tweeted that, he tweeted out,
I'm going back savage mode if you're feelings. Yeah, but
we don't know if that was necessarily two hit Homoimon.
(42:43):
We don't know if that was necessarily towards come on,
come on. I refused to believe Meek is that clue.
He might not have seen that at the time. He
might have been still going got I gotta shoot meets
some belle Meeks emotional, I Q gotta be way higher
than that. I refused to believe he saw Vanessa Brian
saying no way and didn't tweeted that I don't. I
don't believe that can't even be a possibility. You know
how some comics got great comedic time. Miek is the
(43:05):
opposite of that. Meek just pops in at the wrong
time and we end up laughing at him instead of
you know, yeah that was towards six nine and some
other street stuff that there was no use. But I
do fail in this particular situation. Vanessa Bryant has been
very vocal, even saying I don't want to please don't
post anything from the accident, even not wanting anybody from
the NBA to do tributes this year, just because she
(43:28):
said it just hurts too much. So I kind of
feel like mentioning his name. We should know that's gonna
not be good either. We knew it was gonna hurt
of feelings, I'm sure, but you know, there's so many
rappers have done things like that before, and then they
play word play and it sounds dope because they think
it's wordplay, But then don't they don't realize how they
affect her they hurt. I think we're also for getting
(43:49):
one important thing. What's that the song wasn'tupposed to come out,
and Meek did record the song, and I have it
on very reliable sources that he was told don't put
the record out. The record wasn't to come out. It
was leaked, so let's be let's be clear on that
too as well. Right, I would have probably just said
that then. And I also feel like, you know, publicly,
people heard this and it made the round, So why
(44:10):
not just said one, I apologize the song wasn't supposed
to come out. Well, I thought he did say that.
I just think that's as simple. That's just a simple though.
I think he did say it was leaked. All right. Now,
Barack Obama is doing a podcast with Bruce Springsteen. That's
a Spotify exclusive original podcast that feels like a weird
(44:30):
pairing to me, but it's called Renegades Born in the USA.
It's an eight episode podcast, and here is the trailer,
the surface. Bruce and I don't have a lat in common.
He's a white guy from a small town in Jersey.
I'm a black guy, mixed race morning hawaire. He's a
rock and roll hy common. I'm not as cool in
our own ways. Bruce and I have been on parallel
(44:50):
journeys looking for a way to connect our own individual
searches for meaning, truth than community with the Charger story
of America, and over the course of a few days,
all just a few miles from where he grew up,
we talked. It doesn't excite me, so I thought it
(45:15):
was just me the Boston barock. Not so sorry, guys,
maybe I'm hating. They'll be talking about their hometowns, their
role models, modern manhood, and the divided state of America today,
how we can all move forward together now. They did
have a stream on event yesterday, so other news from that,
(45:36):
they announced a multi year deal with the creators of
Avengers Infinity War and Avengers End Game, so they'll be
doing that They also launched a podcast from Abra dubern
A focused on social change and cases of police brutality.
A few different things that they announced that also, like
we said earlier, they're also testing the ability for podcasts
to earn revenue through paid subscriptions for fan only content
(45:59):
on the platform. Not that that Marvel stuff you mentioned,
and I know you said it was doing like a
documentary stuff like that, I'll pay for. I'll pay for
like scripted audio content, you know what I mean. Stuff
that is that that's like movies and TV shows, things
of that nature, but just regular podcast No. They also
did a Warner Brothers DC deal for original spot podcast
(46:19):
that will includes stories about characters like Superman, Low's Laying
wonder Woman, Joker, cat Woman, Riddler, Back Girl, Harley Quinn,
DC's Trash. I'm a Marvel guy, but everybody that you
just named, I might pay for joking Holly Quinn. I
like joking Holly Quinn. All right. Lionel Richie has a
new bad well not new. He's been dating this girl
(46:39):
since twenty fourteen, but they were trending yesterday and the
reason why his girlfriend Lisa Parigi, Like I said, they've
been dating for seven years now, she's thirty years old
and he is seventy one years old. So people were
reacting to the nearly when he was on sixty five
from Where Are There? Yeah, yeah, you have it all
(47:00):
night long when you seventy something years old and your
girlfriend ain't know all night long. Jesus don't need some
blue choes, some prayer whatever, I think, right right, Cat Daddy?
A lot of women like line of Richie though, Yeah, yeah,
(47:21):
oh really yeah, a lot of women love a lot
of Richie. I don't know, Cat Daddy, they do, so
I guess he understand I didn't know, so I guess
he understands because his daughter was what nineteen dating a
thirty five year old, So I guess if it makes
sense he did, he understands. He's cool with it. Seventy
and thirty is crazy and it ain't even crazy for
(47:44):
him though. It's just like I'm looking at her like,
why are you want this seven year old man? Why
are you here? I don't know. I know, like I'm
not gonna be seven. Know what's going to happen if
he dancing on the ceiling dropping the clues bumb a
lot of Richard, y'all know, his knees is gonna be hurt.
It ain't gonna be dancing on the stands while here.
(48:04):
I know, business on his knees should be all back action, okayed,
back the whole time, be on some women's in partment.
You take control, you know, that's what you do. That
is your rumor report. Wow, alright, Lottle Richard. I ain't
mad at him though, All right, all who's your ass
(48:26):
giving a dog? At two? Um? H? Eric Spencer, Eric
Spencer need to come to the front of the congregation.
I like to have a word with him. I did
take it edible last night, but it was only because
I couldn't sleep. But I think I took it way
too late my time. Did you take it man? For me?
It was late. It was like nine thirty. That's too late. Yeah,
that was too late. That's too That's why you've been
a little giddy old ball the lord because I fell asleep.
Touch you, failing. I don't know what's wrong with you
(48:46):
this morning. But I ain't touch you. No, you touched dramas.
But that's a lot done the days up next, it's
the breakfast lob morning. It's time for Donkey of the day.
I'm a Democrat to being dunky of the day a
little bit like a day now. I've been called a
(49:11):
lot in my twenty three years. Yes, Donkey to Day
for Tuesday, February twenty third goes to twenty nine year
old Eric Spencer of Brooklyn, New York. Okay, let me
tell you something. I am convinced, totally sold on the
fact that humans of a certain demographic have no idea
between what's criminal and what's not criminal. And it's all
social media's fault. Social media has created such a false
(49:34):
sense of reality. It's such a virtual world where feelings
of facts forget what actually is. It's all about how
a person feels. So if a person feels like they
want to let everyone know about something illegal they did,
they just do it because they feel like it. It's
no consequence to their actions, and why and why why
should they, you know, feel like there's consequence to their
(49:56):
actions social media? Every day it's like the wild wild West.
It's so much criminal activity happening on social media that
I could easily see why people would think it's okay
to show the things that they do. Okay, but guys
and gals new Slash the FBI using social media for investigations. Okay,
they absolutely use social media posts to help identify and
(50:16):
track down suspects. Yes, you can't be online with a
bunch of drugs. You can't be online waving guns and
threatening people. Trust me, The FBI, Facebook and Instagram are
just sitting around plotting on your dumb ass. And that's
what happened with Eric Spencers. Do you all remember weeks
ago when you saw a bunch of brothers robbing a
Soho Soho channel store. What's it called? Yeah, there you
go Sohole Channel? Yeah, but remember when they did that
(50:39):
in broad daylight? Yes? Now, if you're like me and
you see the words Chanelle and it translates the channel,
then you act in your wage. See'all, don't go chasing Chanelle.
I stick to the Puma sweatsuits and Good Fellow T
shirts from Target that I'm used to. So when I
saw this crime, not only did I think it was
just ridiculous that they were doing this in broad daylight,
I said to myself who they selling this stuff too?
(50:59):
At a time, I'm like this, during this pandemic, you're
gonna steal Channel bags and then take them around people
who don't have any disposable income to buy them. I
don't get it, but it's not for me to unders
name because I'm not a criminal. But Eric Spencer, it
was indeed one of those guys in that Channel store.
What's it called now? Yeah? Well, uncle Charlot, how did
he get caught? I wonder Let's go to ABC seven
(51:21):
New York for the report. Please bring the leader of
a brazen rob ray at the Chanel store in Soho
in Manhattan earlier this month has been arrested in Fort Lauderdale,
floor A. Prosecutors say twenty nine year old Eric Spencer
of Brooklyn, when a foe man who burst into the
store while it was opened on February second, grabbed nearly
one hundred and ninety thousand dollars worth of goods. Spencer
allegedly brandished a gun during the heist. Prosecutors say the
(51:43):
next day, he bragged on social media that he could
open a small boutique with what was stolen. Three other
suspects still on the loose a hundred and ninety thousand
dollars worth of Channel products. You couldn't help yourself, hunt, Eric.
You know it's interesting even if there is no code
in the streets anymore, and nobody is teaching these kids
how to move. What happened to learning from movies? You
(52:05):
can watch American Gangs the one time once and realize
why Frank Lucas shouldn't have wore that floor length chiller coat,
that fur coat and that fur hat. Okay, cost him
his whole operation. Kids, if you don't have old jees
around you know who telling you, who are telling you
not to bring that kind of attention to yourself, then
listen to the movies things that are watching American Gang
still listening? What is that you? What's what you got on?
(52:30):
That's a bad, bad, bad night suit. That's a cloud.
That's a costume with a big sign on it that says,
arrest me. Understand you're too loud, You're making too much noise.
Look at the loudest one in the room is the
weakest one in the room. I tell you though, y'all
dying for attention, getting arrested for attention? What about Good Fellas?
The guy did a big score. All they had to
do was lay low. Danio told him, don't buy anything.
(52:52):
Listen listening while it's your wedding, getting it's my mother
talker on names. I just got mad. Stupid pulls out there.
Everybody's wanting to sneak it, excited about it because you're
gonna get pitch. That's why. What are you stupid? I
tell you? What's did? I tell you? You? Don't buy anything, emmy,
(53:16):
don't fight anything. Basically, what both those fictional gangsters are
saying his attention is the worst drug known to man,
and social media is y'all drugged choice. Now let's update
all of that for this era. What Eric Spencer did. Damn.
I started to say the equivalent of wearing the fur
quote front row to the fight. You know, I started
to say, it's the equivalent of buying something after hitting
(53:37):
a big illegal lick. But in fact it's worse because
cops can only assume you was doing something you had
no business doing when you, you know, looked apart, when
you look rich, but when you actually on social media
with the items you stole from the channel store and
you online saying and I quote so many double s
items that he could open a small boutique. Now what
(54:00):
does that mean? Rich? Negro envy? What does double see me?
That's the logal she no logals CC two C I thought,
I thought that you get when you get ass shots.
CC never mind, listen, man, As much as I hate
to see black men getting locked up, it's like y'all
really be earning your charges. Okay. In life, you get
what you deserve, and you get it because you deserve it.
And the fact that Eric has thirty two prior arrests,
(54:21):
including fifteen felonies, I don't think he will be seeing
freedom anytime soon. And it's his fault. Okay. I don't
even know to tell you young anymore, because you don't
know the difference between right and wrong. You don't know
the difference between good and evil. You don't know the
difference between crime or no crime. I would say this
is the teacher teachable moment, but y'all ain't gonna learn.
Nigga's gonna nigg Please give Eric Spence to the biggest
(54:44):
sea hall, and it's Coco. She knows it's the ccum.
I'm gonna tell you what happens. I didn't hear the
end of it. Can we play guests with racidists? You know?
Good and well? All right, listen, I'm gonna tell you
something though. The reason this dude got caught because vy
didn't do twelve days of Christmas this year. If anybody
(55:04):
did twelve days of Christmas this year, he'd bought all
of them Channel bags and down, he'd bought all them
hot Channel bags. All right, But I don't. I don't
buy stole the property anymore right now anymore? Don't buy
stolen property anymore, I'm said, anymore? Who back Homa? True?
(55:25):
Back home true. I feel like if I buy something stolen,
then you open up the dates for somebody to come
and rob me. That's a good time. So I don't
buy anything stolen. But if it's stolen from a store,
and if it's stolen from a person, that's different. But
if it's stolen from a star brand, yeah that's a
little different. What's the difference? Whose door still losing all
(55:46):
the star But I don't want to start. I don't
have to worry about that kind of Calma, Babe, if
you're listening, he got a point, babe, if you listen,
you got a point. Because if it don't come from
a person and it comes from a store, store got
in short, That's what I'm saying. In that bag probably
only cast two hundred to make, and they sell it
for five downs. Now listen, bad if you listen. He
got a point. I'm not encouraging stealing at all. We're
(56:08):
just having a hypothetical hood conversation about if you buy
stolen goods. Okay, if you buy stolen goods, if you
buy them from somebody that stole from an actual person,
I think that's bad karma. If they stole from a store. Yeah,
I don't want a store. Yeah. Does it sounded good?
(56:30):
It sounded good? How many other people ran up in
that Channel store? Charlie would saying with three other people?
You want to go through the Channel store right now?
You want you want that that her pies discount? What's
they called? Not her pieces? Man? Now we don't buy
no stolen products, man, not right? And despite the pandemic,
By the way, I was reading about how her mess
bags are still those birking bags are still flying. Yes,
(56:51):
during this time. Who wouldn't know to call that her? Man?
I see that, and I see herms r mas just
the name of it. All right, Well, thank you for
that dog to day up. Next, we have Malcolm X's
daughter joining us. Her name is a normal pronounced this
name so wrong? Yes, ELIASA Shabaz she we'll be talking
to her next she has a new book. All we're
(57:12):
gonna talk to her when we come back, so don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club, corning the Breakfast Club. Well, good morning,
how are you today? Pretty good? How about you? Blessed
Black and Holly favorite? Every time I see you you glowing,
like just glowing or on a thousand. Okay, well maybe
that's living right. Yeah, absolutely, But we obviously are here
(57:36):
today to talk about your young adult novel, The Awakening
of Malcolm X. And there's been a lot of new
developments also, just you know, as a blade, I saw
this letter that was released from ray Wood, the officer
FBI agent that went under cover that actually framed and
was responsible for Malcolm X working in conjection to get
(57:56):
him assassinated. So what were your thoughts when you saw that? Well,
Angel I can say that I'm just as curious as
you are uncovering the truth. We always wanted to know
what the truth was surrounding my father's assassination. We know
that he posted you know, great danger, and so it's
(58:18):
you know, we're just as curious as you are to
uncovering the truth. Absolutely, you know it must still be
difficult to hear all these things coming up too, because
that's your dad. You know. For a lot of us,
he's a hero and he's such a great figure to us.
But for you, that's your father. So I know it's
not easy to have to hear these things coming back
up over and over again. Well, I think whatever you
(58:40):
do in the dark always comes to light. And you know,
immediately I think of my mother, and I think, you
know of this woman who had her home fire bomb
on the evening of Valentine's Day as she lay asleep
with her husband, that a bomb would be thrown into
the nursery where her babies, where my sisters and I slept,
(59:03):
and then that a week later she would witness the
horrific assassination of her husband. And in spite of all
of those challenges, you know, she raised her six daughters
with just so much love in a in a very
small bubble, and made sure that we understood who our
father was, who her husband was, so that we didn't
(59:27):
grow up feeling that our father left us, but we
knew that he loved us and would be proud of
any kinds of accomplishments we were making. And if we
didn't do something right, she would say, your father would
be disappointed. So you know, I always take my hat
off to this woman. She continually gave and she instilled
the values that just as one must drink water, one
(59:49):
must give back. And you know, so from my mother,
a young woman in her twenties to experience that, for me,
you know, that is probably the most difficult part. And
so yes, we are very curious and definitely want to
uncover the truth. I was reading that you were saying
that um, that you were saying that your mom didn't
(01:00:11):
really speak much about the things that he did and
you had to get a lot of that knowledge from
his autobiography. Is that true? My mother focused on instilling
love and making sure our identity was intact, so that
when we would leave her, you know, under her wing,
that we would be able to navigate through society's injustices.
(01:00:33):
And so we didn't learn about the icon Malcolm X,
because then you had to introduce hate. And if my
mother was, you know, a witness to the brutality this surveillance,
you know all of the challenges that her husband and
she endured. Certainly she wanted to protect her babies and
(01:00:53):
and and of course even to witness his assassination. You know,
there's a picture of my mother, she was a registered
nurse at the time, with my father with all these
bullet holes in his chest and she's undoing his tie,
you know, to help. I could only imagine how traumatic
that had to have been. So my mother focused on love, um, kindness, joy,
(01:01:16):
all the things that my father I wanted for um
any oppressed people to to have, you know, the opportunity
to know that they're worthy of love, self love, and
you know, respect for for our humanity, you know, Queen
Queen Ayasha, you know um on the anniversary of his death,
how do you feel? How do how do you how
(01:01:38):
do you more? Well, you know it's not really easy,
but you know I continue in the tradition of what
my mother always did, and my mother always had, you know,
we always had a memorial celebration. It was a celebration
of life for our father, and it was at Abbasini
and Baptist Church for a very long time, and then
(01:02:01):
you know, now we have it at the Shaba Center.
So you know, we continue in that tradition. And fortunately,
because of this pandemic and virtual programming, we had people
from all around the world, and so that's you know,
a great opportunity to fellowship in that way. You know,
I love the idea of a young adult novelty Awakening
(01:02:24):
of Malcolm X, which is which is spotlighting Malcolm's formative
adolescent years in prison, because I think it's very important
to really dive into that, that that whole process of
who Malcolm was. Because I often say this generation wouldn't
let Malcolm Little become Malcolm X because of his whole
Cancel coaching thing. So what can this generation learn from
your father's adolescent years in prison? Well, first of all,
(01:02:46):
that you know, I wanted to make sure that my
father's story was accurate. That his father was the chapter
president of the Marcus Garvey Movement, the Universal Legro Improvement
Association in the nineteen twenties, which commanded millions of followers worldwide.
That his mother was the recording secretary for this organization,
(01:03:07):
and that his family was targeted, and that his father
was lynched by the Black Legion, which was a splintered
group from the KKK, and that his mother was put
into an institution. His father purchased land that was reserved
for whites only during the height of Jim crow. And
(01:03:27):
once they lynched his father and put his mother away
and separated Malcolm and his siblings, they took the land.
And so Malcolm as a youth was running from his identity,
running from the pains that he experienced during Jim Crow.
And when he finally was arrested, his family had the
(01:03:47):
opportunity to encourage him to read again. And one of
the things we discover is that Malcolm was always bright, smart.
All of these values that we see in Malcolm was
mostly because of the foundation that his parents and family provided.
And so it speaks to the importance of us smart,
(01:04:08):
forward thinking adults to be the village for our children
when we know they're in pain, when we know that
their identity is you know, questionable. And so while in jail,
my father continued to read. He studied the dictionary, not
so he can learn how to write. He studied the
dictionary because he was a star debater on the debating
(01:04:30):
team of the prison that debated against Ivy League schools.
And he studied so he could understand the etymology, the
root of words, because he always wanted to be prepared.
And you know, there are so many interesting things about
the awakening of Malcolm X. I had the opportunity to
(01:04:50):
work with Tiffany D. Jackson, who is a phenomenal young
adult novelist, and you know, we wanted to focus on
the humanity of inmates. We know they are approximately three
million people in our nation's prisons today. But do we
know that the United States spent eighty one billion taxpayer
(01:05:13):
dollars on correction facilities, not education, That after school programs
went our correction facilities, and that since nineteen seventies, the
incarcerated population has increased by seven hundred percent. And this
is what's happening to our children. And so each of
us has to ask ourselves, are we going to be
a part of the problem by doing nothing and pretending
(01:05:35):
that we don't understand these things? Are we going to
be a part of the solution by rolling up our
sleeves and demanding change. We have more with Eliasa Shabaz.
When we come back, it's the Breakfast Club, corn wnting.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Schlomagne, the Gay. We
are to Breakfast Club. We're still talking with Malcolm X's daughter,
Iliyasa Shabaz Sheloman. You know, even though the book is
(01:05:56):
historical fiction. Do you see parallels to today's current event? Absolutely?
And that was really the purpose of this book because
you know, the same systemic issues are here, the same
I mean, it's all nothing has changed, and it's not
going to change until we do something. You know, we
have to learn to control our own narrative. And we
(01:06:18):
can't sit back and just think that someone's going to
do something for us. My father said only a fool
would sit back and allow his enemy to teach his children.
If we want change, we have to be willing to
do the work ourselves. And I think that now there
is a multiracial movement that's driving our nation towards a
more civilized space because of our young people, that a
(01:06:40):
synthetic identity is being born. Our society is moving forward,
and bigotry and all its ugly hate is losing, and
a new error has yet to define itself. And so
we have to, you know, surmise that cheaters lose. Character wins,
moral character wins, and that should be a lesson for
our young people. What would you advise people to say,
(01:07:03):
because we talk about change, but you know, Donald Trump's
in office, Joe biden In's office, do we see him
helping us, and we say, we have to do for ourselves.
What would you consider us to do for ourselves? You know,
we have to get our collective leaders together. There's not
just one leader, but coming together, organizing, strategizing. We see
all these dynamic young people. I mean I watched Angela
(01:07:26):
Rye and Brittany Packnett and many of the Congressional Black
Caucus members. I think that it's important for us to
come together in this collective leadership and organize amongst ourselves
to figure out what our strategies are. And that's you
know a lot of what my father did in the
nineteen fifties when young people were marching, protesting, demonstrating. My
(01:07:51):
father came along and said, look, we demand our human rights.
As your brother, we demand our human rights ordained by God.
He was willing to do the work, and look, we
all organized to do so. And so it's important for
us to first make sure that we understand, you know,
these assassinate all these different divisive tactics, you know that
(01:08:14):
have continually happened, and ensure that they don't happen again.
That if there are eight billion, six hundred million people
in the world and eighty percent of us are people
of color. We should be able to come together and
figure out how we can get this boot or for
our necks. What does by any means necessary mean to you?
(01:08:37):
Because I think a lot of times when people here
that phrase, they automatically think, wake up with violence on
the mind, Like you know what I mean? What did
that mean? You? By any means necessary means that Again,
if we're talking about collective leadership, then we have to
know that we are worthy of self love, that we
are worthy of equality education, that we are worthy to
participate in mainstream society. And so it means that we
(01:09:00):
have to invest in ourselves just as my father did.
My father read everything that you could imagine, and he
refused to allow anyone to pigeonhole him. And and you know,
and so I would say the same thing for us,
that we have to be diligent with the same kinds
(01:09:20):
of um, you know, the same kinds of examples. You know,
I want, I got a couple more questions where we go?
But um, you know, you mentioned a couple of Ostrong's
voices earlier. You mentioned Brittany Packet and Angela Rye. I
wonder why it feels like the sisters are on the
front lines and more vocal than the brothers. I would
throw Tamika Mallory and as well, like why why do
(01:09:41):
you why why do you think that is right now? Um? Well,
I think this has been something. You know, this has
been historical. You know, the black woman. You know, we
look at you know, just like you said, the women
that you mentioned, or even Stacy Abrams who delivered you know,
almost a million votes to help us win, you know,
half of this democratic victory. Just think who would be
(01:10:02):
in office right now. But I think it's important to
understand that black power is not exclusionary. It simply says
that we are going to be at the table, and
that is something that we can't forget. My father said
that a society is measured by the progress of its women.
When you teach a young man, you teach a community.
(01:10:25):
But when you teach a woman, you raise And I
think that that we have seen such evidence of that. Absolutely.
Um I do want to talk to you about chapter
four two though, because, like you know, you use one
of his quotes with a common goal of twenty two
million African Americans respect as human beings and we can
never get civil rights in America until our human rights
(01:10:47):
are first restored. You know when when when you read
that quote, how how you think he would view that
that that goal in twenty twenty one because I always
say that now, like we're fighting for civilities, but they
don't even respect this is humans. Well, that's right, and
that is one of the reasons why he was assassinated.
You know, he internationalized first the struggle for black people worldwide,
(01:11:10):
because remember in the nineteen fifties, we didn't even know
that we were, you know, of the African diaspora. We
didn't know that blacks in the Philippines, blacks in Australia,
blacks in China, blacks in the America's, blacks on the continent.
We didn't even know we were all experiencing the same oppression.
(01:11:31):
So he internationalized that struggle for us so we understood
that we came from Africa, we have a land base.
And then introducing a human rights agenda to the civil
rights movement so that we could take, you know, be
strategic about this and take this, you know, to the
Supreme to the United Nations Supreme Court and challenged those
(01:11:55):
for violating our human rights. Yes, I think that is
extremely important. And when we look at the Constitution, when
we when we look at all of these um documents
that were uh created, you know, we'll see that, you know,
we weren't included as as human beings that we were.
We were just property. And so we have to correct history.
(01:12:18):
And again that is addressing our education curriculum. And uh
you know, yeah what the Awakening of Malcolm X and
novel is out right now by il Yasha Shabaz. Yes,
amazing read that. I really did enjoy reading that. I
was like, um, I think for a lot of kids
(01:12:38):
in school or even like somebody my age, you know,
it wasn't it was a great read. So and you listen,
you know, every time I hear myself on the radio
or doing some kind of interview, I sound like I'm
so I'm just being so passionate, and in retrospect, I
always say that I want to, you know, tone it down,
(01:12:59):
but it's difficult to tone it down when we look
at these you know, horrific conditions that we are forced
to live. And I just hope that all of our
young people, you know, remain strong, remain focused, that you
don't look at these or don't fall for these divisive
tactics because at the end of the day, they you know,
(01:13:22):
they are just that they're divisive, and they prevent us
from accomplishing our goals. And it is extremely important with
all of those great people that we have, all those
shoulders that we stand upon, that we are able, you know,
to to win. That's right. Well, thank you for joining
us so much, man, and we appreciate you and everything
that you're doing. And pick up a book right now
(01:13:43):
and thank you, thank you so much, thank you very much.
Let's get to the rum as somebody's home. Listen, Oh
go God, breakfast club, where are you doing, envy? Bobby
(01:14:10):
Schmurder is officially out of jail. I know there were
a lot of false alarms for months and people were
saying he was about to get out, and we were like, okay,
let's wait till he's really home. But he is officially
out of jail. So congratulations to Bobby Schmurder. Everybody's excited.
We've seen the footage of them in the private jet
going and then we said we saw him on FaceTime.
(01:14:31):
So now he's out of jail. Happy for that, brother,
and I hope he gets rewarded for him doing what
they say people should do in that situation. He didn't.
He didn't snitch. Nope, right, he did his time like
a g So I want to see how hip hop
street culture rewards him for that. I wonder if he's
still signed to Epic Records or did they release him
when he got locked up, because I'm sure whoever what
(01:14:53):
he gets told, he's gonna have a big bag. Some
label's gonna be off from a lot of money to
do a deal, and and I hope he gets all
that money. All right, Well, welcome home Bobby's murder. Now,
let's talk about this high school football player. He was
talking trash to Cam Newton. That video went viral. Your
(01:15:28):
I don't mean that it wasn't funny. It was hilarious.
It was hilarious, suf funny. Okay, you had that even
that man's camp. Man, that man put on the camp
to teach you, young man, how to play football and
the better yourselves. And you're talking about you're about to
be broke. I felt sorry for Cam because I was
that child. Okay that the child still exists with For me,
I don't care how much money you got, I don't
(01:15:49):
care who you are you're gonna get these boss, okay,
and Cam hit him with the wrong comeback, that rich
I'm rich. Bit That don't work on a human who
securing himself at all. He went the right route with
your daddy at But what if I ain't got no daddy.
You're trying to play me, you know I'm saying. That's
why seth Owens apologize. He said, First and foremost, I
(01:16:12):
want to express my deepest apologies to Cam Newton, my
entire organization, my coaches for my actions at the tournament
this past week, and I did not intend for it
to get as far as it did. First, I would
like to start off by saying, my parents never taught
me to be disrespectful to people as a football player.
I let my competitors side get the best of me
and it was a huge miscommunication. So he said that
(01:16:32):
he realizes a lot of people took it as disrespect.
I never meant to humiliate and let anyone down, and
he said he's very appreciative for even being allowed to
be a part of that community. Well Cam should have
said to him with Luke young Ken, you hear at
my camp because you want to be in the positions
that I've been in Yes, I'm a free agent now,
but don't forget. I forgot more than you've ever learned. Okay,
my Highsman Trophy winner, I got a national championship, I
(01:16:53):
was the number one pick I want to MVP in
the NFL, and I went to a super Bowl. On
top of all that, I'm rich. You're here because you
want to accomplish a quarter of what I have. But
you're about to beg now. But you're about to be
on sign now that don't take away nothing I've done.
You ain't got no team now that don't take away nothing.
And you're here because you want to accomplish a quarter
of what I have. And guess what you will if
(01:17:13):
you shut the f up and listen for watch the
video tape. You see how nice I get. Oh and
here's an update. Um, yes, Bobby's Murder is still signed
to EPIC. They are. Yes, So Sylvia, there all there
Epics listening. Good morning Epic, Come morning by, Good morning Sylvia,
Good morning Bobby s murder. We shout out that pic
(01:17:35):
once we see how much how much bag they give up?
Bobby smurder By tell us it's okay, got the bag
you know, I love you to try. At least they
didn't drop him that whole time. Right, that happens, and
I'm sure they were supportive and you hold on to it.
It's like stock but welcome on Bobby's murder. All right,
(01:17:56):
well that is your rumor report. All right, thank you,
miss yeah, let me shut out to earn your leisia again.
Last night I was on their podcast, well not the
podcasts they do what are they called the Market, Monday Market,
Market Monday Market, where they talk about everything that happens
in the stock market. They bring up different people to
talk about different things. So season stopped by the yesterday
to break down some real estate stuff and talk about
(01:18:18):
this seminar that we're doing on the fourteenth in Atlanta,
and just all the love that we got last night.
I want to say thank you those brothers, and I
love what those brothers are doing. I'll definitely check out
their podcast. You can listen to it on the Black
Effect iHeartRadio podcast network, available everywhere you listen to podcasts.
All right, now, let's get to the mix revote, We'll
see them all. Let's go morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
(01:18:40):
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy we are the Breakfast Club
is Black History Month. What we're doing today, Man, I
want to take the day to salute my partners. You
know what I'm saying, my personal partners and business partners.
Three brothers who I highly respect because I've really seen
each one of them grow from the ground up. They
are truly aking Black history right now. I'm talking about
(01:19:02):
Carlos Miller, I'm talking about Chico Bean, I'm talking about
DC Young Fly, collectively known as the eighty five South Show.
Got a salute Clayton English as well. Um, these brothers
have a mask over three hundred plus million views on
YouTube independently, and they are a movement by themself, but
they are a force when they are together. They had
stunt it for Vegas on the show this week, and
(01:19:25):
he described them as this. This is like white people,
Ellen bro, What you mean to tell me this? The hood?
Ellen Bro? My mama used to watch My mama watched
The Trap to watch edin fo South. But every week
they get better and better. It's like a soap opera.
You don't know, I did the Trap Matron's goals. That's right,
(01:19:46):
the Hood, Allen, all right? But you know, not only
are They great to watch on YouTube. There is nothing
like an eighty five South Show live. Okay, since it's
Black History Month, let's throw to They're old to Black
Black Queens. Titled black Women of Magic, The Breakfast Club
presents a new Black History Month legend, Black women a man,
(01:20:11):
we love you, raise kids. Black women got the cool,
whileas under their black women are magic, they raised their kids.
Black women got the cool. Come on, hey man, magic,
black women is magic. Black women is maggin. And that
(01:20:35):
was another new Black History Month legend courtesy of the
Breakfast Club. Salute to the eighty five South Show and
make sure to download their podcast now on the Black Effect.
iHeartRadio Podcast Networks. Salute to the whole eighty five South
Show team. Chad will up my brother all right now
when we come back. We got the positive notice to
Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee,
(01:20:57):
Charlomagne the guy we are the Breakfast Club. Charlomagne, you
got a positive note. Yes, I do have a positive
note of today. It comes from a Booker T. Washington. Okay,
Booker T. Washington said success is to be measured not
so much by the position that one has reached in life,
as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying
to succeed. Breakfast club, y'all Finish or y'all Dumb