Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Some morning show you a little room anywhere else? So
your brother frond top that yeahs the world's both stagers
want to show the camera the mother. I agree, show
is listen cy DJ Harry the Capital casually eat. The
(00:20):
only one who can keep these guys in chest Charlomagne
the Guard. The brit was good morning us yojo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
(00:42):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Good morning Angela eat,
good morning. He's Amy Charlomagne, the guy he used to
have planned. Oh lord, now he's you know, that's what
day it is. Guess what day I got help? It
was Gay was at it, he said, guess what day up?
Dave a little all right? Damn it man. He almost
(01:02):
had Bill get it. He almost had. He was there,
he was bringing pared through. He threw the alley. He
threw the alley, just threw a way to her. You
didn't even jump yet, didn't even you don't even jump yet.
We get it next time. I'm excited today. What you know,
I started a book club, so I got these. Uh
my first book is to Rogie b. Henson's Around the
Way Girl, it's her memoirs. Okay, And I got my
(01:23):
autograph books that I'm giving away for people. In the book,
you signed it yourself. Why would I sign books? You
didn't say she signed it. I said, I just got
these autograph books. Why would I get them? In? No,
you didn't join the book club. It's not for you. You
You don't even read. Yeah, you wouldn't even read it.
And you type to listen to an audiobook, but didn't
put me put your headphones on and listen to your
(01:44):
music at the same time. Sounds like me. There's another
Green Smoothies for Life. I'll read that one. That's like
green Eggs in him. Oh my, alright. I've been sitting
on Tarage's book for a long time, by the way,
I've been meant to read that. Oh, I read it already.
It's good. I love the story that she tells because
you don't know, like, how did to Rogie Pihanson get
into the into the career that she's into. How did
(02:06):
it all go down? All the struggles that she went
through to get there. It's a great reach. She talks
about having a son and her son's father who was killed.
She talks about her relationship with her dad and sounds interesting.
She talks about how she ended up in the Malcolm
X movie as well, which a lot of people probably
didn't know because she probably was like six. No, she wasn't.
(02:28):
And yeah, story she told us that story, how she
drove down that crazy and told us, how do we
hear this story? I told you, I know somebody told us.
I told you guys from the book, and I thought
it was very inspirational what she went through. I'd be
forgetting to Rogie and og now. Also, last night was
our Christmas holiday party, which seemed like it was just
(02:48):
extremely early this year. Good old. I have like twenty
of them to go to next week. I'm glad we
got ours out of the way. I like. I like
early parties. I like when the party thoughts at six seven.
Also a goodbye party to our producer Q, who's been
with us for six years. He is leaving now. I
posted a picture of a QQ and I have never
ever taken a picture before, and I got some interesting
(03:10):
comments because I said, you know, we're saying goodbye to
our long time producer who's been with us since we started.
He's been at Ihart for fifteen years, right and One
person thought that he was just Envy's friend. Oh, he said,
I was just next to him in the cut all
the time, Vy Shooter. If anybody needed somebody to be
sitting behind him in the cut, it would be me
on this show, da pretty much now. I said that
he's leaving to pursue his passion, which is Chick fil A.
(03:32):
He's going open over a chickfilate ladies and gentlemen dropping
a clue bombs with Q and his chickfilater be open now.
One person says, something don't sound right. That don't sound
like no good reason. His passion is not a good reason.
What he went to school for and to follow his
passion after fifteen years is not a good reason. His
passion is cooking right. Culinary Arts says, when you call
up when you're a chef, you're certified licensed. He's never
(03:55):
bought one dish in here ever in the six years
that we've been on the air. I think it was
six years this week for the breakfast drop. You don't
even know what que is leaving to do, though, have
no idea. You keep saying he's no, he's not doing
anything with cooking. He's gonna be helping people with their diets.
If you have diabetes, is gonna tell you what you
need to eat? Yeah, yeah, that's true. Because you know,
(04:18):
yesterday at the holiday party, I was hating when everybody
was like, you know, congratulates to que. He's going on
the big and better things. I'm like, what did he
We don't know what he's doing. They well, that's what
he's doing. What he's saving lives? All right, God bless you.
And he cried yesterday too during the he said he
lost his voice. We did this nice video for him.
He started crying and choking up. All right, Trevor No,
(04:39):
it's gonna be here this morning. Trevor No, will be
joining my uncle time, my fellow come. Yeah, you need him.
Today one happened. Let say, like what happened yesterday? They
were coming for you with your be clear about one thing.
I don't never need nobody. That's number one. Okay, Why
were they coming for you? Because I tweeted out that
it'd be dope. Women of color created a platform to
(05:05):
control their narratives and have a voice like Tommy Lard
and some women feel like a lot of us have. Okay,
so how do we empower them? That's my next thing.
I mean, a lot of women are empowered. No, how
do we I want to empower them to make them big.
That's all I'm saying. Boy, let's get the show popping.
How was that trolling? What were talking about? Front page news? Um,
let's talk about the arrest of the man and Ronald
(05:28):
Gasster who killed the x NFL player Joe McKnight. A
lot of people were upset that this, uh, this man
walked out of jail and thought there was going to
be no charges. Well, now he has been arrested in
the sheriff is talking about why was there a delay
in arresting him. Okay, we'll get into all that when
we come back. Keep a lot Just to breakfast Club.
Good morning, well ye Charlemagne the guy we are the
(05:50):
breakfast Club. Why am I on the front page of
Twitter this morning? Jesus Christ, I don't even know that
could happen. Let's getting some front page news now. I
know this is not right. You see it says tonight
in the NFL they play on Wednesday. Eddie, Eddie, there's
no Wednesday night football. Oh my, Eddie. Even Envy knew
(06:12):
that wasn't just reading. I was like, got a question.
Fotball is Monday, Thursday and Sunday. All right, all right,
well tomorrow the Oakland Readers play in Kansas City Chiefs.
Good luck tomorrow. All right. Now, let's talk about the
update with the Joe McKnight case. Right, So, they did
finally arrest and charge UH Ronald Gasser, the man who
(06:34):
was accused of shooting and killing former NFL player Joe McKnight.
They charged him with man slaughter. And this just happened
on Monday. Everybody was very upset because they're like, why
is he walking out of jail after we have video
footage of him shooting and killing a man. We have
witnesses who said the man was Joe McKnight was apologizing
to Gasser at that time and he stood above him
and shot and killed him. Well, according to the sheriff,
(06:57):
the sheriff UH is saying that there were statement that
they got only from Ronald Gasser. Those are the only
statements that they had received, and they said that he
feared he wasn't fair because of a nite making threatening
statements and otherwise, and that's why that was the only
statement they had. They had to release him. They thought
it was best then, arrest not being made for strategic
reasons until we could get other witnesses, so he said,
(07:18):
they finally collectively came together and decided that they were
prepared to draft and arrest warrant for his arrest, not
to throw racing it. But if he would have been black,
they wouldn't let him go. That's just how I feel.
They definitely wouldn't let them go. They hadn't found all
the details that night, and they definitely would have been
charging him. I have never seen them let anybody go
like that. Right, It was a verbal altercation, and Gasser
did pull out his weapon and fired three shots. I
(07:38):
don't think a verbal altercation is ever a reason to
feel like you have to shoot and kill someone who
has no gun or anything. But we shall see what happens.
I think the pressure is probably what really made them
arrest him. Let's talk about Dylan Rufe. All right, Well,
the trial is ready to begin for the Charleston church
shooting suspect Dylan Ruf. He's twenty two years old and
he is the person who is responsible for killing nine
(08:01):
people in a church last year in Charleston, South Carolina. Now,
um the opening arguments in this case are expected to
start to start today. Actually good because I can't wait
till Diller Ruf gets convicted. Because I've already promised the
city we're gonna do a big ass fish rid Okay,
I want to d We're gonna do a big ass
fish ride in eight for three when you get this.
It's over a year ago. And he went into that
church with the intent of killing African Americans. And I
(08:23):
know y'all saw the mistry that happened in the Walter
Scott case. That's not gonna happen with Diller Rufe. No, right,
you don't even gotta worry about that there, All right,
Well that's front page news. And tell them why you're mad.
Eight onundren five eight five one oh five one. If
you're upset, you need to vent, call us right now.
Maybe had a bad morning, bad night, maybe had a
long night, whatever it may be. Phone lines are wide open.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. Call
(08:43):
us up right now. Tell them all you're mad. It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, Hey yo, this is a
man rapper. Good morning, y'r food. I'm gonna tell you why, man,
I'm gonna tell you why man? For real? Man? He yo,
my girl keep coming home smelling like paul o'calog so
like like that ain't for girls like I love. Something's
going on for real, like like like I'm heated about that,
And now I need you to tell me why you
are mad? Why are you mad? On the Preface Club?
For real? Hello? Who's this? Hi? This is MICHAELA from Florida. Hey, Michael,
(09:07):
let's tell them? Are you mad? I am so mad
at Charlemaine. Look, I'm usually never matter, sarld Man, because
you always said some like awesome wall crazy stuff. But
the fact that he even compared and wants anybody to
be like Tommy Lauren, it's just crazy. Like you were
the one that said that she was using her platform,
(09:30):
said pretty much put out there about the Black Lives
Matter movement. But then you want somebody to be like her.
I never said maybe. I never said I never said
I don't want somebody to be like her. I said
that we should crea you want us to use Okay,
you're right, I'm sorry. You said you wanted us to
use our platforms like her. So you want us to
go around talking about stuff we know nothing about. I said,
(09:52):
we need to create I said we need to create
a platform. I said, we need to create platforms. We
can control our narratives and have a voice like Tommy Lauren.
But why would I mean of all people though, of
all the people that are on TV that are also
creating better narratives for black people. Why did you feel
like you have to compare black and black and let
(10:12):
Cina walk females to her. Let me ask you a question.
Let me ask you a simple question. Is that is
that little white girl not popping right now? She is?
I want a woman of color. I want a woman
of color to be popping just like that. Okay, what
do you want us to be? Do you want us
to be popping for the same reasons? Why she is? No?
I never said that, I said platform. I didn't say
nothing about her. Well, I think that I think a
(10:32):
lot of people look at him to learn as the boogeyman.
So when you say her name, automatic Ladys buzzword exactly exactly.
And I think that there are black women who have
powerful platforms. So how do we empower them? No rhymes
is very powerful. No, No, they are. But I specifically
say the young women of color with an online news platform,
(10:56):
not directors and writers. We know Ava is a b salute.
Shine is a beast young women of color with an
online news platform to tell our truths and control our narratives.
But Timmy didn't start the Blaze network that she's on, right,
wasn't she tapped to do? But you know what Tommy
did do Tommy. First of all, nobody watches the Blaze.
Let's be clear on that. And if you go to
(11:17):
try to watch her content online, you have to pay
for it. What Tommy did was start taking clips of
her shows and putting them up on her Facebook page.
Her Facebook is what blew her up. She gets hundreds
of millions of views on Facebook. So when I'm telling
these sisters to use social media platforms, that's what I mean.
And I'm not talking about tweeting and tumbler. I'm talking
about let's create an online news network like the Young
(11:37):
Turks or these I've seen an organization out of Houston yesterday.
I wrote their name down so I could shot them out.
I shot them out later they got but they're a
black online news network. Let's create an online news network
and use this power we have on social media to
blow it up. So the problem isn't that these women
don't have these social media platforms, is that we don't
blow them up. Well, it was two things. First, I
(11:59):
put out the comment that you know, I want women
to color to have these platforms. Then I got informed
that it is women of color that have these platforms.
So if they are, let's blow them up. Let's put
them Not that they don't exist, it's that we don't
discuss platform Let's bring them on the Breakfast Club. Let's
put them on ball Alert, Let's throw them on World
Star like and let white people get mad at them
so we can come and defend them to say, let's
(12:21):
have that conversation a little bit later. Trevor Noah is
coming up. We'll talk to him in a little bit.
And also we got the rooms coming up in a
little bit. Keep it locked. It's the Breakfast Local Morning.
The Breakfast Club started her platforms, and she actually raised
money for auton Sterling and she did that whole go
fund me. She got her own show on HBO from
going on YouTube and having her own absolutely, and that's
(12:41):
that's my That's proves my point. We need an online
news network and we need somebody that's on there talking
about issues that affect us, and there's controlling our narrative periods.
So it's not that these women don't have platforms and
aren't trying to promote what they're promoting and aren't socially aware.
You're saying that we don't have a platform for these
women because Tommy Larren didn't create that platform. But we
(13:03):
didn't create the platform. But she took it to another
level by using Facebook. She got on the Blaze, was
spitting those crazy narratives, and she used her Facebook page
to blow up her content. Period. Who watches the Blaze?
Nobody watches the damn Blaze. I just feel like sometimes
for black women, we have it hard because if you
talk so aggressively and crazily, people don't give you that plator.
We gotta stop worrying about that, because for the next
(13:24):
four years we're gonna have. You know, that girl's gonna
be on a Rally Factor tonight, Tommy Lawren is gonna
be on Bill o'relly tonight, So we can't worry about
talking aggressively. We need somebody that can talk aggressively. We
need somebody radical. And I'm not saying you gotta be
jumping out the window with false narratives, jump out the
window with truth. It definitely puts out some false narratives
out there, but the truth will be way more impactful
than any false native she puts out there, because guess what,
(13:47):
Black people don't have to lie about the oppression that
they faced in the America. They don't have to lie
about white supremacy. All we gotta do is tell the
truth about it and we can create a spat period.
I just feel like I do follow a lot of
powerful black women who make all kinds of shot them out.
My girl of Alicia Butterfield Jones, who actually used to
work for Russell Simmons, then she worked for Barack Obama,
now she works at Google. I think y'all are taking
(14:07):
this somewhere so we know that it's powerful. But I
think the way that's saying online news networks, we need
an online media news personality that's what women of coloring
because women of color voice resonates different than everybody else.
I don't care women's voice, women periods voice resonates different
than everybody else. We need a women of color representing
(14:29):
for our narratives in that online news space. I think
the misunderstanding is that. What we're saying is we need
to support these women and help them create larger platforms,
just like they support Tommy Lawrence that follow her. That's
really what it is. Not that these women aren't existing
and don't use their platforms, is that we're not supporting
for the ones that exist. Let's empower them. That's it.
Let's pick them up, Let's bring them on Breakfast Club,
(14:50):
Let's put them on ball alert. Let's blow them up
the same way Tommy Lawrence blowing up. All right, that's
all I'm saying. Well, guys, these rumors what we're coming
up in the room. Let's talk about the Grammy nominations,
because righte before we were leaving yesterday, the Grammy nominations
came out and we didn't really get into it because
it just happened. So now let's get more serious about
that and talk about the most nominated and all types
of records that were broken with this Grammy's all right,
(15:12):
we'll get into all that when we come back. Keep
it locked. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning. I'm I'm sorry,
hell hell Na, I'm wanting everybody in CJ MV. It's
so mean. It's you big black troll over there. All right, Wow, gosh,
you're so angry. Oh my gosh, stop. Okay, shot to
(15:33):
hell up? Oh my gosh, Now I'm abusive. All right,
let's get to the rumors. Let's be surprised. The rum
guys don't play fair. Angela Ye the Breakfast Club. Well,
(15:54):
congratulations to our girl a Beyonce. None of us really
know her personally, but she did get nine Grammy nominations,
and she also made history. She's the most nominated woman
in Grammy history with sixty two nominations. To bombs from Beyonce.
Y'all know him A Pinket Swift where knows called him.
I don't know what you're talking about. We don't know
(16:15):
our personal I know you, right, sister. That's still our
girl though, no matter what now. Drake and Rihanna East
got eight nominations, and Chance the Rapper got seven nominations
for Coloring Book. That was his stream only album. So
let's talk about some of these nominations and who got nominated. Also,
Designer got a nomination. Check out his reaction you got
(16:37):
nominated for Grammy. You're just gonna play his reaction without
no subtitles or nothing. I don't know nothing about Brooklyn Well.
He's nominated for Best Rap Performance for Panda So Anderson
(17:00):
pat got nominated, and alongside Chance the Rapper and Dram
and Yadi are up for Best Best Rapping Song Performance
for Broccoli So So Yadi's nominated for a Grammar Yes
drop on a clues Bond for Little Yattle Boat all right,
with the clues Bond for Dram too. Damn it that
mumble music is popping out here in these screens. That
(17:21):
melodic mumbling is winning. All right. Now, let's discuss um
Album of the Year. Who do you think should get it?
There's Beyonce for Lemonade, Justin Bieber, Purpose Drake with views
Adele with twenty five, and Sturgil Simpson, who I don't know,
not even close. Even you didn't even listen to all
those other albums I heard everybody Surgile, I don't know
who that is. Who might be amazing, It might be
(17:44):
all right. Best Rap song. Fat Joe and remy My
featuring Friends of Montana and Fred All the Way Up,
Kanye featuring Rihanna, Famous Drake for Hotline, biling, Chance featuring
Little Wayne and Two Chains No Problem, and Kanye West
featuring Chance, Kelly Price, Kirk Freakland and The Dream Ultral Being.
Who I want to win or who was going to win?
Who I want the win would be fed Joe. I
want Joe to win. So do you think it's gonna win?
(18:07):
I think Kanye the Ultra Light. I was thinking maybe Chance,
Chance got a good chance, no problems with a big
Chance got a chance, all right? Best rap album, Chance
the Rapper Coloring Book, Day La Soul, and the Anonymous
Nobody DJ Khalid Major Key Drake for his views album
Schoolboy que Blank Faced LP or Kanye The Life of
(18:27):
Pop Kanye The Life of Problo. That's still my favorite
rap album of the year. Chance Rabber Coloring Book is
my second chance? Is? I think Kanye Dope? I just
want Calde Kanye Life Pablo was very slept on. The
reason Kanye Life The Pablo was slept on was because
of all of Kanye's antics outside of music. He's damn
did it bigger than his music at this point, but
that that album was amazing, And the last thing I'm
gonna ask y'a all about his best R and B album, Okay,
(18:50):
BJ the Chicago Kid in My Mind Layla Hathaway, Layla Hathaway,
Live Terriss Martin, Velvet Portraits, Main Condition, Healing Season, and
Maya Smooth Jones. Maya, Yes, that was everybody's reaction on
that album. Yes, Maya, Maya, Maya Rarely Free, Little Mina,
let A Little Sexy, keep Leuf from Baltimore, DC. Mine. Yes,
(19:11):
that was in Cisco video back in the day. So
which one of those people? I ain't hit None of
those Well, I heard BJJ was but heard nothing. Yeah.
I like Harrison Martin too. I'm gonna have to get
Mayas album. I'm gonna listen to mine. Yes, I'm positive Google,
I'm one hundred percent positive as Maya. Okay, how this
belt m ya could be m I. I don't believe that.
(19:35):
Not m i A Okay anyway, I'm ANGELI Yea was
doing club. Ain't know she was getting I was a
music nominated for Grammars. We congratulation, Yes, congratulations to everybody
who was nominated. A lot of people were excited. I
saw drums reaction Anderson pacts that he woke up and
to the good news He's a Grammy. Imagine being a
Grammy nominated for the ain't nominated Malibu for Best R
(19:56):
and B Album, Anderson Pact he was nominated though, So
all right, congratulations to all of them. I'm angela ye
and that's your rumor report. Thank you, Missy. Now, when
we come back, we have Trevor Noah. He'll be joining us.
You'll chop it up with him. So don't go anywhere.
It's the Breakfast Luve Corn. That was Bryson Tiller with
(20:17):
don't Morning. Everybody is DJ MD Angela Yee, Charlomagne the God.
We are to Breakfast Club. We got a special guest
in the building, my fellow coon, Trevor Noah. We're both
uncle Toms. Is that? What is that? What we are?
This week? We are? Oh, that's nice this week, you
guys because the meeting with miss Tommy Lauren. That's nice. Now,
I'm gonna be honest, Trevor. I was insulted when I
(20:38):
can't take it, but I was insulted when they was
coming at you. Why are you insulted for me more
than yourself because you grew up in South Africa during
a partie. Yes, first of all, this may sound crazy
explaining to people what the partid is? I mean, are
you crazy? Christian. That's hilarious. I'll expand it to no.
I mean, I feel like everyone should know this. But
(20:59):
a part I was basically a system of laws in
South Africa, a system of laws that were designed to
oppress people of color and all people of color. Parts
I made it illegal for black and white people transact
with one another. My parents included, you know, at the
time when they were a couple, it was against the law.
Me being born was against the law. I could for
him to be here. Yeah, my dad couldn't be on
my birth certificate. My parents couldn't have me on the
(21:21):
like you had to have a registry of all the
people that lived in your house at the time. My
grandmother couldn't have that in her house. But I think
most importantly, the thing a lot of people don't realize
is APARTSID essentially was perfect racism. Like I'm still learning
about how perfect the system was in terms of like
they went around the world. The government actually set up
a commission to go around the world and study racism,
and America was one of the places they came. They
(21:43):
went to Australia, they went to the Netherlands, they came
to America, and they were like, what is the racism here?
How does the state oppress people of color? What can
we use from this system to take home? And they
did that. They went to South Africa and they made
the most perfect racism ever. And that is the world
I lived through. I'm lucky because I was six years
old when it was officially ended. I mean, but as
(22:04):
anyone knows, when officially a thing ends doesn't mean it
goes away. But you know, I yeah, my family lived
through that, and you know, our country still lives through
those effects. But from one through six is a very
important age of the child's life. There mind is shaping
its development. It was times your parents couldn't even love
you in public. Yeah, well that was my whole life.
But I didn't know any difference. I didn't know that
these things were happening. My dad didn't walk with me.
(22:25):
But I grew up with kids who didn't even know
their dad, so I was like, yeah, well there's there's
my dad. At least I know I have a dad.
So I didn't think that I was suffering more than
somebody else, which is how you were born in race,
so you didn't know anything different. Had it and it
was taken away from you like my mom, my mom,
when we walk in the street. I write about this
in my book, Like when we walk in the street,
my mom would dress up as if she was my
nanny because that was the way she would not look
(22:47):
like a black woman had this mixed child with a
white man. So but I didn't know that. I was
just like, that's how my mom dresses. And we said,
we do still further effects of racism today, and there's
people who will say, well, you know, we need to
get over it. You guys would never slave, so how
and you even speak on what slavery is like, and
everybody stopped complaining and blaming, you know, being black for
for certain things happening in this country. Well, this is
(23:08):
this is what I say to those people. I go
to argue, that is to say that effects don't matter,
to say that effects don't don't compound. You know, everything
that happens in the world has an effect everything that
happens to you. So if you have a system that
promotes your well being, you are going to grow in
that world. So if your great grandfather could have some
(23:30):
money in a house and a piece of land, and
then his child, and then his child and his and
then it's going to go on and then it's going
to get to you in some way, shape or form,
even if it's just in the way of knowledge. Knowing
how to own a place, knowing how to get credit,
knowing how to live in a different world. These are
benefits that you have, you know. So when you say
that to somebody, that's I don't understand how anybody can
say that, where they go like, oh, well, I started
(23:52):
from nothing. I'm like, no, but you didn't start from
nothing though, That's the thing. You don't understand. You started
from nothing in your world, But it's not nothing nothing.
I just said that because Tammy Lawrence did something similar
to that previously. So yeah, but that's that's the thing.
I understand how people go, why you being a victim?
You know why? And it's like, no, no, no, there's
there's a difference between claiming a victimhood and standing up
(24:14):
and saying that the playing field is not level. That's
a fact, and it is hard to see. It's the
same way it was hard for me to see that
as a man, I had to acknowledge that. I never
thought that as a man, I lived in a misogynistic world.
I never thought that as a man, I was in
a place of privilege or power, and I realized this
year that I just realized that this year. And the
only reason I realized that is because if my life,
(24:35):
women have always been the strong as people, whether it's
been your mother, yes, but you don't realize how much
they were either keeping from us or how much they
were going through it at the times. I'm like, oh,
I didn't know that y'all felt insecure and stuff. Yeah,
But more importantly for me, I didn't realize that women
lived in a world that was inherently misogynistic. Like small
things as well fireman chairman, for instance, in our lifetime,
(24:56):
we've seen a change the chair person, right, you know
what I mean. It's small things like that tell you
where you're supposed to be run for president and exactly
people wouldn't vote for her just up the strength that
she was a woman, or the fact that women don't
even make the same amount of money as a man
for the same job exactly. So these are things we
have to acknowledge now A lot of the time. The
problem with that conversation, I feel is it becomes if
I acknowledge it doesn't mean I have to give mine away,
(25:19):
and that's where people shut down. So I go, you know,
like people go. So if I acknowledge that black people
have been and are being oppressed, does that mean I
have to give up my freedom? Then we all got privileges.
I feel that way truly. I feel like women have
privileged men are privileged. White people have privileged. Black at privilege,
like we all have our own unique privileges. I don't.
I don't know that women have privileges per se in
the conversation of power, but I hear what you're saying.
(25:40):
There are benefits. There's a different having benefits to being
go against us all the time completely something that well,
I can do it, but you're a woman, so it
was different when you do it completely. I mean yeah,
But men have those double statars. Our double standard is
a stupid forman Like women can't play football, like, no,
they probably shouldn't. We men shouldn't play football either, you
know what I'm saying. But women's reputation can be destroyed
if she sleeps through three men. But if a man
(26:02):
sleeps at the un right now, my reptation will be described.
It would be expected. So so yeah, So I mean, Tommy,
Laura because you guys got a bad last week. I
mean I heard sell out, I heard they called him
(26:24):
the devil? Um what else they call you? Sam Bowl?
First of all, one thing I've I've come to love
and learn when it comes to like the American presses,
you have to know that they will frame the story
in the way that it seems like that is best
for their narrative. I got. So what happened with with
with Tommy was this after the show, I know that
it's hard to come into my space. It would be
(26:46):
just as hard for me to go into a conservative
space and have these conversations. Right. Uh, she was gracious,
She comes in, she says the things that I don't
agree with, and I was open about that on the show. Right.
What I didn't like was afterwards people who claimed to
be progressive saying things like, oh, you know this C word.
Oh I'm glad you put this dumb blonde bitch in
(27:07):
her place, And I'm like, no, you, that's not you.
See what you've just done now is you've taken up
a cudgel of misogyny to use against her claiming to
be You get what I'm saying, You're the same person
you can't. You can't do that when it suits you.
You can't be like, no, I'm for women's rights, but
that bitch over there, it's like no, but then you're
you're going against that. And what I didn't like was that.
I was like, I don't stand for that. I honestly don't.
(27:29):
I fundamentally disagree with many of the things she says.
So I said, let me meet up with you and
your producers. I'll come with me and my producer and
we just want to sit with you and say thank you.
We're not for what has happened here post the interview. No,
but then what's great is what's great is they cut
out my people, which is I mean, that's what happens, yeah,
in the picture. And then it's just like, oh, like
you know, that's why they don't show me walking out
(27:50):
because I'm walking out with my people, and it's get it.
I get that, though, but I but I get it
these things Did you put that? That's no? Actually I didn't. No,
I didn't. My people paid for the drink. Funny enough,
you know the small details online You're like, I bet
he paid for her drinks. That's funny. No, but look,
I understand I don't know. No, I don't. I don't
(28:11):
understand why, but but I get that. You know what
I find funny if someone goes, you wouldn't talk to
this person if she wasn't a blonde, beautiful woman, And
then I go, no, you didn't notice when I spoke
to an average looking white man. Because I've had many
conservative people on my show, you know, I talk to
them afterwards. There are people who I still meet with
(28:32):
today where I go, like, explain your world, let me
understand your world. Then I go, so you the one
who notices. I completely get if somebody is in a
situation where they go, I don't appreciate that. I don't
think you should give these people any airtime. I got
two things you're mistaking. One, I do not believe that
we're in a situation where we're providing exposure for a
person that has hundreds of millions of views on their videos.
(28:55):
You got a video I got sixty six million views
on right, that's one video by average. Do you get
what I'm saying. So, you're not providing a platform for
this person, right. What you're doing is you're trying to
get into their space and talk to them as a person,
or more importantly, you're trying to talk to the people
that would never hear you in the first place, because
when that person comes into your space. I mean, it's
the same reason artists started featuring people, because they were like,
(29:17):
all right, we're trying to get you to crossover. Think
about how many people became fans of jay Z after
the Lincoln Park thing, and then the other way around
as well. That's that's what the whole thing was. We
got more coming up with Trevor Knows It don't go
anywhere as the Breakfast Club Go Morning. That was notorious,
big big popa Morning everybody as DJ M v Angela. Ye,
Charlomagne the guy we are to Breakfast Club. We got
(29:39):
a special guest, Trevor Noah in the building. Aye. Now,
I didn't have a problem with your interview. I think
for Charlomagne, the problem was after your interview they some
people just saw a picture of Charlomagne with her and
it was like a jokey kind of picture and they
had a problem because they heard what she said on
your show. Then they saw that and it just looked
like they were hanging out. He was joy joke on
his show. The same thing. But I think with Charlomagne,
that wasn't an interview that happened up here. It was
(30:00):
just people we try to get it for anyway, I
think a lot of people miss when we said that
I was going to have a conversation. Since February, I've
no one time meet since February. I first came in
contact with her. I went on show. I saw you, Yeah,
you went on the show. Do you feel like she
has changed her mind or has a different perspective on anything.
I don't think these things happen overnight. I think it's
insane to think any of these things will be changed overnight.
(30:23):
We have a legacy and a history. I mean, you know,
like South Africa and the US are very different because
in terms of oppression, you have to acknowledge in South Africa,
black people of the majority. I never claim that they're
the same. I never even claim to know the answers
to these things, or what I don't understand is why
we don't understand that these things take time. And one
(30:43):
thing I've learned consistently and constantly from reading. One thing
you learn consistently is racism does not stand up well
to contact, and that is one thing that I've noticed
continuously people are in contact with someone of another race.
You find, and consistently, I don't mean just meeting you
in the street, I mean like into your life. You
(31:04):
find that racism doesn't hold up because racism is based
on race, and race is a construct that has been
created to oppress people, and it is a fallacy at
the end of the day. So when you meet the people,
you start to see the people behind the thing that
you've been taught like exist, but it doesn't rate. It's
hard to hate black people if you have black It's
extremely hard. Hard. Look at it. Look at in the US,
look at in the US, look at in many countries
(31:24):
in the world. Places where people will say, like you know,
they go like they go in America, where where do
they hate Muslim people? The most places where they are none.
They'll be like, do you know any Muslims? They'll be like, no,
But I don't need to I don't need to know
them to know that I hate them. Know you they
give Donald Trump where to come in contact and be
friends with more Muslim people. Maybe I think it's too
late for guys like Trump. Trump seventy years old and
it's been in it. It's it's hard to change a
(31:46):
seventy year old billionaire. He's stuck in his way. Like
that's I'm like, why I think he hasn't too much
money they want to change. That's hang. Old people are
stuck in their way. He doesn't have to do business
with you. He never has to see a Muslim person
in his life if he doesn't word too. He has
so much money, but he does do business with Muslim people.
Though we don't. We don't know the answers. And that's
the thing I come to realize all the time. That's
whether it's race, whether it's economics or anything, we are
(32:10):
all trying to figure it out. Yes, no one has
figured it out. Right. I'm not saying I have a solution,
you know. I'm not saying your way is wrong, and
I'm not saying my way is right. What I am
saying is no one seems to have figured it out yet,
so none of us got the answers. Yeah, so I'm
going let's let's think of it. Let's think of it like,
let's think of it like scientists. They go, Yo, we're
(32:32):
all trying to cure cancer. We're all using different methods
you call me if you figure this out where you
when you have a breakthrough, you call me when you
have a break Do you call me when you have
you know what I'm saying. And I feel like that
as well. I go, I read, I try and learn,
I try and approach it in the way that I can,
and I go, You do your way and I will
try mine. And that's all I can do. On Twitter,
(32:52):
I do, Yeah, I will not because yeah, tweeting at
all kinds of information. If he hasn't blocked you yet,
you're not doing your job. Yes he didn't block me,
he blocks Oh no, I don't think Donald Trump blocks
many people. I don't think he he I never thought
of him as that type of guy. Think of them,
(33:13):
you know what. I think. It's like, I think it's great.
I'll tell you no, I think if Donald Trump, I
think it's great that he's on Twitter. You know why,
because then we really get to see what the man
is thinking all the time. Because the people are roused him,
they try and put varnish on it. They go like, oh, no,
he didn't mean that. He didn't and he's like, no, no,
I meant it Like they were like, oh no, the
China Taiwan call. That was a hey, that was just
a call. He didn't he doesn't have anything against China.
Then Trump tweeted, oh yeah, I have something against China.
(33:35):
Now we know where we stand. I like that. I
like knowing who the person is. You know what I'm saying.
I'm like, why do you want to obscure that? In
the New York Times, let's not be divided? And you
said divided people are easy to rule. You said that's
how patide was able to exist. Can you expound on that? Well,
here's my thing. Everyone will take it the way they
want to take it, and they'll fight it or accept
(33:56):
it or whatever. It is greatest things that are part
I did within its world. It's it's so frustrating, is
how powerful it was because it's sold seeds of discontent
among people who were the same. That was the power
of apartheid. Let's remember black people on ninety percent of
the population in South Africa. How do you govern ninety percent?
How do you keep them oppressed? Well, what you do
is you convince them that they are not one. You
(34:17):
convince them that they are all different groups. So you
split them up. So you go, no, we did a tribally.
So we went like o Zulu, it's Suana, it's Betty,
it's song that we separate the people. You live there,
you live there, you live there, you live there. And
then what you do is you separate people who are mixed. Now,
so you go like, Okay, yeah, I don't care if
your parents are mixed. You're a new race. We're gonna
call you colored, you know. And I was in a
(34:37):
situation where I never got to live in that world
because I lived. I grew up in a black family.
That's the only world I knew. That's the stories I
tell in my book. I go, My family was like, no,
you're staying here, And the reason they hid me was
because they were afraid of that happening. To me, that
is the best thing. We're all fighting in this world.
And you start to realize, you go like where is
it coming from? Why is it happening? You go like, oh, no,
(35:01):
you're holding us back. No, No, Charlemagne, you're bad for
black people. And it's like, Charlemagne really the worst thing
for black people, Yes, Charlemagne really the worst thing. You're like,
really of all the things that really you're like real,
You're like you like no, no, no, But you're like,
are you for real them? Yes? Are you mean yes
vot id rights? You know you're gonna vote I D
(35:22):
laws and then you gonna be Charlemagne's the worst thing.
Mass incarceration, but Charlemagne is the worst thing. Then I'm like,
it's so easy to do that because what happens is
you can get caught up in there. It's like here,
let's let's fight here because that thing seems so big,
we may as well just punch each other on the
way there. So I go. I'm trying, I listen, I learned,
I read. I don't claim to know everything. I'm not
even saying South Africa is perfect. We're not. But one
(35:44):
thing we have in South Africa, and I know, change
my life, my family's life, my grandmother's life, everyone's lives,
is that we had an Acknowledgements, the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission in South Africa. We sat down and as a nation,
we had to go Slavery is real. This is what
the people did. These are the lives that they took
mass incarceration. These are the stories. These are the people
(36:05):
coming out and saying, yes, I came after you because
you were black. This is what I did to your people.
People can argue about whether or not the effects worked up,
but one thing, one thing that was gone from that
was the acknowledgements that as a person of color, you
were not crazy. And in America, it feels like that
hasn't happened in America, that hasn't been like a yes, okay,
(36:27):
let's be honest. This country was designed to oppress you. Okay, fine,
at least that just so that as a person of color,
you can go, I'm not crazy, right, because oftentimes you
feel like you are. So how do we engage in
the discussion here in America? Because I don't I don't
know about that. I say to people all the time.
I'm going like, I'm not saying the wee, I'm just
offering my own suggestion, you know what I'm saying. I
(36:47):
see I see life like a video game. I don't
know all the moves. I know the moves that I know.
I know which moves of mine work right, So I'm
gonna do those moves. Sometimes I'm gonna meet someone who's
gonna teach me a new move. I'm gonna use that
move in the game. And sometimes when you're playing I'll
be like, hey man, I don't know if this will
work for you, but whenever I find I'm up against
that boss, I used this move. I'm not telling you
how to do it. I'm just saying this is what
(37:07):
has what works for me in my world, and then
you can tell me the same thing. We got more
coming up with. Trevor knows don't go anywhere and keep
a lift. It's the breakfast club. Good Morning. That was
Reari which needed me morning. Everybody's DJ M v Angela yee.
(37:29):
Charlemagne the guy we all the breakfast club. Trevor Noah
is in the building the Chalomagne. He told the Times
we can be unwavering in our commitment to racial equality
while still breaking bread with the same racist people who've
oppressed us. I know it can be done because I
had no choice but to do it, and it's the
reason I am why I am today. Do you think
America could really do that? Because it seems very deep
rooted in America? It is, it is deep rooted. But
(37:50):
just because it's deep rooted doesn't mean it can happen.
Here's the thing I realized with racism, and this is
like my mad theory. I have not scientifically studied this
at all, but this is what I believe. With racism.
I go fund de mensally. I believe we treat racism
the wrong way because I think we should treat racism
like a disease and not as a choice. I believe,
I believe that racism is hereditary. It has passed down
(38:10):
from generations generation, just like alcoholism, because if you are
not born ray, if you're not in a world where
racism exists, you don't become rady. It is taught to you.
You can head it and you can get it later
on in life, just like you can become an alcoholic
later on in life. But that is something that can
be changed. The problem I have is when you shun racists,
when you cut them out of society, where do they
go to. I don't understand that logic. When Donald Sterling
(38:32):
with the Clippers has his racist tirade, what happens to him?
They give him a billion dollars and he goes home?
Is that guy not racist anymore? Now you've got a
racist billionaire the worst kind? Like we need conversion sun
therapy for racing. You are you're the extreme guy in
the party anyway, Like you said earlier to change somebody
(38:53):
who's seventy eighty years old rich And no, I don't
know if we can change that. But I do believe
the way we treat racism though, is not you're like,
you're going so, so let me get the straight. A
person is racist, they get fired from their job. A
person is racist, we kick them off a TV show.
A person is racist, we ban them off Twitter. Person's race.
So all we're doing is we're banning these people. Where
do we ban them too? That's all I want to know. Like,
(39:13):
when you look at the world, you go, you realize
that these things exist beyond race, right right, You do
realize that. So you go to other countries in the world.
And I can tell you stories like that from my
friends who grow up in African countries where there are
no white people and it's a tribal thing. So they'll
be like, ah, you've got that Zulu name, you can't
get into that place. Or you're in Uganda, you're from
(39:34):
this tribe, then you can't get a position. You're in India,
you tammel. All of a sudden, they're saying to you,
oh no, no, no no, no, you can't rise up, no
no, no no, we don't. We don't accept you in the
in the Hindi community. Do you get what I'm saying.
It's like it happens, that's a tribal thing. Unfortunately, that
happens all over the world. The thing we're dealing with
in America is the racist side of that name. And
(39:54):
it's almost like you you want to evolve to the
next step where maybe you're dealing with the next ism
or almost you're a problem with America. America deals with
too many ex screens. Like there's no nuance in America.
You know what I'm saying, Like we don't think that
there's any shades of gray in America. He has he
has to be one of the other. Yes, And I
think that's the problem with America. Well, I mean, that's
one of the issues that we face in the world.
(40:15):
But yeah, but that's that's an issue that we have
as people. It's either it's either good or bad. That
one last question, is Charlemagne the worst thing for black people?
I'm gonna I'm gonna go on the record and say, Charlemagne,
you are the worst thing that ever happened to black people.
And I'm and I'm glad to know I'm glad to
know you. I'm glad to know you. Know what, I'm
(40:38):
gonna walk out with you in the streets, Charlemagne, and
I'm gonna take you out for a drink. Charlemagne, and
I'm gonna try and change you as well. Charay. You
know what, all these people here, all these people here,
they try and they try and get me out of
your world. I'm I'm gonna staying you with charlomagn I
need to have conversations. I'm gonna staying you, oll. But
for real, though, I just think I listen with the
Daily Show, it seems like over the past week, people
(41:00):
who are discovering, Wow, Trevor know is really good. I
think it was like it was a little tough because
he was replacing a legend. Yeah, I mean, you can't
replace John. That's what I try to try and tell people.
Did you ever tell him change the name of the show? Like, hey,
ying the name of the show? Let me, well, you couldn't.
You got to look at as a gift and a curse.
You're taking over a legacy, and so the gift of
that is that you have inherited a legacy. The curse
(41:20):
is that there is a legacy to stand to live
up to. I always go with this, I go. John
has been the greatest mentor to me. He's the person
who plucked me from obscurity in my world. He was like,
I saw your videos and I was like, I like
this guy, I want to basically, that's exactly what That's
exactly what he did, and he brought me into his world,
(41:40):
and so and so. At the end of the day,
I go like, you know, John has told me about
the pros and cons of the job, the world you're
living in. In any space where you have an opinion,
there are people who are going to say that it
is wrong, what is right to it? That's you guys
know that better than anybody, you know. So you just
got to go out there and do the best that
you can do. Educate yourself as much as you can,
engage with, you know, viewpoints that you may not agree with.
(42:04):
At the end of the day, I'm just trying to learn.
I'm trying to be honest. And that's what I'm doing
is I'm learning with my viewers. I go, what a
great time I'm learning, We're learning. The president just learning.
What a wonderful time learning together? Oh No, he's learning
every day. But what it means to be president, I'm
sure every single day Donald Trump is like, really, that's
a thing. Every day every day, don't Trump is shocked
by something. I can't wait till they're telling them about
(42:26):
u FO. I know you know he's tweeting it right? Oh? Absolutely.
Oh here's an interesting fact. Do you know that if
the president tells us about anything, it's no longer classified?
He classified? So I mean, Donald Trump information, I feel
like you could trick it out in it's coming or, Trevor.
I'm glad you came, man, because, like I said, when
they was going in on me, I was cool. When
they were going in here, I was like, do you
know this guy's story? Do you know where he comes from,
(42:47):
what he's been through. That's why he has such patience,
I guess in the face of quote unquote white supremacy.
I appreciate you, man, Thank you very much. I appreciate
what you guys man huge fans of the show. So
I mean, thank you very much for having me right. Well,
there you have it. It's Trevor, Noah, it's the breakfast,
good morning. You want the latest, guys have been Entertainment
News but then don't go anywhere because the rumor report
is up. Next breakfast club, Oprah. Listen, just oh goshu
(43:15):
reports report breakfast club. But Oprah, it's gonna be sitting
down with our First Lady, Michelle Obama. She's getting the
final interview with her before they leave the White House.
It's called First Lady Michelle Obama says Farewell to the
White House and Oprah Winfrey Special, And that's gonna broadcast
on CBS on December nineteenth, and there's gonna be a
(43:37):
second airing that's going to premiere on OWN on December
twenty first. So the First Lady, we'll be talking about
what it's been like being the First Lady for the
last eight years, the legacy she's leaving behind, and what
she has planned for the future. So I'm gonna definitely
be watching. That will be sad, man, everything it is.
I'm already sad. Everything you see from the Obama's for
the next two months gonna be so sad. It's gonna
(44:00):
be sad watching them walk away. They the shit. It
came about a breakfast club though. You wanted to final
sit down, all right, Chloe Kardashi, And you know she
has her gene line Good American Jeans. Did you know
that her jeans have been the biggest denim launch in
apparel history? Really, do you know how much she made
on the first day of sales? One million dollars? Wow,
(44:22):
on the first day. For today? What do they sell it? Listen,
I have no idea. I didn't even know much about
these genes. What's so special about the genes? They come
with a button, animal something I don't know. I guess
it's just the fact that she has a huge following.
Remember when she was posting from inside the Yeah, it's
not a sweatshot and she got mad that people were
saying that it was a sweatshop. Well, when they've been
(44:43):
selling out, but they're gonna have these styles available again,
and they said it was super duper expensive. People mad
that they were mad at advice. Yes, they arranged from
one hundred and forty nine dollars to two hundred and
five dollars. Wets makes that brim right. So there's three
key styles and you can go on Good American dot com.
That's where you get it if you care about these genes.
And they haven't met Nordstrom as well. Yeah, so that's
(45:06):
where you can get him. That's crazy. A million dollars
on the first day. All right, and I love this story.
This is very inspirational. The Rock. Now he talks about
having only seven dollars in his wallet and having to
move back in with his parents back in nineteen ninety five.
And now look at how much money The Rock is worth.
Right here he is talking. It's a brand new series
(45:27):
from seven Bucks Digital Studios. It talks about successful actors, athletes, musicians, comedians,
influencers and just real people who are inspirational when they
reach that turning point in their life. And The Rock
actually is kicking this off. Check it out audio. Oh
we don't have the audiope? Okay, well I thought I had.
It was very important. Well he went from having yeah,
(45:50):
it definitely got that story, all right, it went from
seven he had, went from having seven dollars twenty one
years ago, and now guess how much he's worth. Sixty
four point five million. Just say he hated you. That's it,
you hate yo. I had him up there, sixty four
that's all. Yeah, no, but sixty four point five. So
(46:12):
that's an inspirational, great story. All right, Well, that's it.
That a sound benefiting from the rock door angle. I
would have loved it. Um yeah, I have that all right.
That was the room of report Yore giving your donkey too.
Oh man, donkey there is going to somebody who I
know very well. Me second time this year. Wows the
(46:34):
second time this year? Wow, second time this year. I'm
getting donkey today. So yes, Charlotte and God please come
to the front of the Carnegation. We'd like to have
a word with you. Okay, yes, all right, we'll get
to the next keep a lock to the breakfast Local
morning falling. I was born to donkey. It's the donkey
(46:56):
of the Death bast Club. Let's go back, chuck the
hell up. Look donkey today for Wednesday, December seventh, goes
(47:16):
to Charlemagne to God. Oh yes, I'm giving myself donkey
today because last night on Twitter, I tweeted out, would
be dope if a young black or Hispanic liberal use
social media to create a platform to be a voice
like Tommy Lauren did. Then I tweeted out, if you
don't like the narratives people are painting of you, create
your own platforms to control your own narratives. Then I
(47:36):
took out the word liberal and tweeted would be dope
if for a young black or Hispanic wokewoman use social
media to create a platform to be a voice like
Tommy Lauren did. Now, I wasn't saying anyone should be
like Tommy Lauren. I'm simply saying we should build an
online news platform and use social media to blow it up.
See this young lady works for the Blaze network, but
(47:57):
nobody watches the Blaze and when you try to see
that content on line, you have to pay for it.
What Tommy did was start taking clips of her show
and pushing them through Facebook, and now her content is
popping and whether we like it or not, at least
for the next four years, she's gonna be a voice
for the young conservative right. So I feel we need
a young liberal minority voice for the left. And hell,
it doesn't even have to be political. We just need
(48:17):
a young minority voice in that space. And I feel
it needs to be a woman of color, because a
woman's voice, to me resonates and connects with a lot
of different people. Now, the reason I give myself donkey
to day is because I got slanted for it. I
will take this olt because I tell you, people all
the time in life, you either when are you learned?
That's what the L stands for learning, And last night
(48:38):
I learned you have to be specific on social media. Okay,
Amenica Belvett said to me on social media, what shee
to God should have said is black women should create
an online news show like Tommy Lauren, not platform wrong
word to use. I can see that because it is
plenty of women of color with platforms and voices on
Twitter and Tumbler, and clearly women of color the loudest
(49:01):
voices on those platforms. I say it all the time.
Last thing you want is a bunch of crystals and
jamal and muse on your ass. Okay, So yes, I
acknowledged that women do have loud voices on these platforms.
Most of the social justice hashtags, including black Lives Matter,
are powered by women of color on social media. But
social media is the engine that makes it go. We
(49:22):
need to build the car. Okay. The online news network
is the car now. I also got informed last night
that it is online news network. Some of them I
heard before something I never heard of until last night.
The advice show in Houston is one I never heard of.
Salute to them. I have to salute Francesca Ramsey who
has MTV decoded in the Last Name Basis podcast. I
(49:42):
knew that one. It's literally a bunch of them they
was sending to me last night. So, for the online
news networks hosted by women of color that do exist,
all black online news networks period, how do we amplify
their voices instead of sitting around and discussing on social
media what Tommy Lauren is doing. Why can't we discussing
large numbers these online news shows hosted by women of
(50:02):
color and make them bigger. I am on the front
page of Twitter this morning. Was trending all last night
because women of color collectively came together to slant of
my black ass. That's power all right. Every Sunday night,
Insecure on HBO was the number one trending topic on
Twitter because of women of color scandal how to get
away with murder? Anything women of color put their hands
(50:23):
on via social media, whether it's putting their hands on
them in a good way, are a negative way, it
amplifies it. Okay, So don't you think we could do
the same for online news network once again? Let me
go back to my initial tweet. Would be dope if
a young black or Hispanic woe. Women use social media
to create a platform to be a voice like Tommy
Lauren did? I said, use social media to create a platform.
(50:45):
The platform is the online news network, using social media
to push that online network, same way Tommy is using
Facebook to blow her platform up. Is the thing that
we need? Okay, It's a saying, and that's saying is
I'm responsible for what I say, but not for what
you understand. I don't wholeheartedly agree with that. I feel
like I'm responsible for what I say, but I have
a duty to phrase it in a way that you
(51:06):
do understand. Maybe I didn't do a good job of
doing that last night via social media. Some people knew
exactly what I was saying. Others felt defended because they
thought I was saying to be like Tommy. Others felt
defended because they already have these platforms and aren't getting
the light shined on them. I overstand all of that.
So all I want to know right now is how
are we going to create more online news platforms hosted
(51:28):
by women of color? Okay, for the online news platforms
hosted by women of color already that already exists, How
can we blow them up and amplify them. I'm here
to assist them whatever way I can. Okay, same way
y'all can go in on me and cause me to
train and put me on the front page of Twitter.
Surely we can bring attention to women of color with
online news and network. So for all those who don't
(51:49):
feel I conveyed that message properly last night, allow me
to give myself the biggest he hall. Now what we're
gonna do gay So that means that for the breakfast Club,
we'll be looking for those women to come and give
them out loyally. That's how we amplify our voice on
our show, because it's very important that for the next
four years we control our narratives. Man salute to people
(52:10):
like Angela Ray she hitting me up last night, Crystal's
Jamal Lemieu, Francesca Ramsay Simone saying there's all women of
color in those online news spaces. But I still believe
we need that young minority liberal wonte voice on the
left to come back to false narratives that will be
coming from the young conservative voice on the right. So
I'm here to help. Let's make some things happen. Everybody
(52:32):
talking about what people are giving. Well, we got things
to give over here too, Okay, we can help you
amplify your voice. So you're giving yourself done to day
for people not understanding what you shout out. I'm not
going back down. It's wrong. But you about to confuse
me again, all right. You just phrasing what he was
trying to say in a way that people could understand
what he meant instead of saying that because people felt
(52:52):
like he was saying these women don't exist. But what
it is is we need to support those women that
do have these platforms, and we need to create more
of them. So you're giving yourself. Don't give a day
for saying something wrong. I want to be clear because
day for people now understanding you right now, I just
specifically I probably did not convey the message. That's all
I wanted to hear. You were wrong, Yes, that's what
(53:13):
I would say. I was wrong. I said I didn't
convey the message the right way. I was wrong and
not conveying the message in the ways people understood. But
some people did understand. But for people that didn't understand, gosh,
I'm giving myself donkey ya, that's not woke out. Yeah,
I don't even know what that means. You used it.
Oh my god, I just want me to be a
bad guy. I'll be the bad guy. You get Donk
(53:35):
Donkey I am. I'm always the bad guy. I am Charlomagne.
That God is the worst thing that ever happened to
black people in the history of life. There's nothing worse
than Charlomagne the God when it comes to black people. Okay,
I am disgusting. I need to be checked out of
because you kind of give everyone else do for not
understanding I did not do that, and can You're never
(53:56):
again do something like that when I'm trying to push
our ugly Christmas sweaters. All right, I'm trying to put
Christmas sweaters and then Charlottagne puts that on Twitter and
that kind of like, there's an idiot. You're just thinking
about profit. I'm I'm trying to uplift and empower people
and you're telling me talking about some ugly Christmas water.
(54:16):
We don't do that. Right before I post again, we
don't want to win. Oh my goodness, I really drink Manmosa.
Thank you for the downcad today. This room is straight.
I'm so sick of this can't take it. I can't
take people. Next time, I understand him. All right, you
guys are all dunking. You guys are all donk. That's
not what happened, all right. Next is asking me one
(54:42):
if you need some relationship advice, know him right now.
If you need to get God, No, I need to
drink five five one to five one to ask me.
Is next if you need some advice, calling Nash to
help you out with all your problems. It's the Breakfast Club,
the Breakfas Club five five one or five one if
(55:04):
you need some some advice and relationship advice. Hello, who's
this all? This is meanly from Rochester, New York. Hey,
what's up the rock baby? What's good? I? Yes, I
was just calling in this morning because I had a
question about relationships in the or place. Okay, yeah, I'm
seeing someone at my job and it's starting. I think
I'm starting to develop the devout feels. But I don't
(55:27):
know if he is. So I'm starting to feel like
should I just follow? We should be friends? So you're
sleeping with somebody at work? Yes? And so what was
the agreement that you guys have? And let me ask
you this? What's your policy at work about relationships in
the workplace. Do they have a policy or everything's good?
Everything is good. We heard of policy. Okay, Now, is
he in a relationship with anybody else? Y'are sneaking around
(55:49):
or you guys are both? He wasn't a relationship, but
he said he's not in a relationship anymore. You believe him. Yeah,
they don't live together anymore. Okay, all right, so she
moved out, So he just got fresh out of a relationship.
He might not be able to jump into something new
right away, but he told you that. Yeah, so he
has told you he doesn't want to be in a relationship. Well,
(56:10):
he said he just want to take things slow because
he was with somebody for a long time, which is understandable. Yeah,
and he was straight up. But the problem is that
you feel like you like him more than he likes you. Yeah. Yeah, Now,
and have you been seeing anybody else or just him? No?
Just is he seeing anybody else? No? Okay, So you
(56:30):
guys kind of burning a relationship because you're only dating
each other exclusively. Yeah. My whole thing is this. If
you like somebody and things are going okay and there's
no real issues, then I don't see why you want
to overthink it. Oh okay, so I'm overthinking yeah, because
we don't know. It's no issues, it's just that we
work together. So I'm just concerned about it not working out,
(56:51):
and then we still have to work together. Sometimes you
put that in the atmosphere when you get so nervous
that something's not going to work out. What if I
like him more than he likes me, But if he's
not doing anything that you feel it is disrespectful to you.
If he treats you well and you like him, and
you can tell that he likes you and it's only
been three months, then I don't see why you're putting
so much on it. Okay, Like, why don't you do
(57:12):
what he says? He said he wants to take it slow, right, right,
So you guys might as well take it slow. You
understand that he just got out of a relationship which
he told you he was open and honest about that.
The woman doesn't live with him anymore. You believe him, right, right,
So the problem is in your own head. I think
I like him more than he likes me. So what right?
If it works out, it works out. If it doesn't,
(57:32):
it doesn't. There's just nothing you could really control right now,
just go ahead and enjoy yourself, enjoy the relationship. And
you don't got to break something off because you're scared
that something might happen in the future that you have
no idea, that there's no indication that it could happen. Okay,
that makes sense, all right. Just always bear in mind
that he was honest with you. He did tell you
he needs to take it slow. He did just got
out of a relationship. So be patient. Okay, and remember
(57:56):
you guys work together. You all should at least be
friends with each other. Yeah, okay, thank you, all right, right,
good luck, mama, thank you. Ask ye eight hundred five
A five one oh five one. If you got a
question for ye calling now it's the breakfast Club. Good morning,
(58:17):
you got my soul. That was Bryson Tiller would exchange morning.
Everybody is DJ MVY Angela, Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We
all the breakfast Club. Now, let's get some more questions
for ye. If you got if you need relationship advice
or any type of advice eight hundred five A five
one oh five one. This one's gonna make you mad,
but let's do calling number five me Man, Hello, who's
(58:37):
this Hi? This is Jamie from Milwaukee. Hey, Jamie, all right,
what's the problem? Jamie? All right? I have a question
for you. What would you do if you found your
fourteen year old daughters vagina and pictures on her phone?
What I told you you was gonna be mad, I
asked her. And out of all the things she's lied
(58:59):
to me about this, the one thing she actually told
me the truth a year okay, And so what was
her explanation? She took pictures of it, she sent it
to somebody. You know what. I didn't even given a
chance to explain or whatever. I'll just went, you're our
own postal owner, and I just I want to know
what child would do? You know? Okay? So here's an
(59:20):
interesting story. One of my friends, he has two sons, right,
and he's raising his two sons on his own, and
he had an issue at the school where a girl
from school sent a naked picture to his son, who's
also fourteen years old, and that is child pornography, by
the way, him having that on his phone is child pornography.
So he ended up getting expelled from school for having
(59:42):
that picture on his phone. The problem is that we
didn't grow up in that era where people were doing that.
We didn't have those cell phones where we were taking
pictures and news of ourselves and sending him out. And
we see so many celebrities and regular people doing that
online that people think that's just a regular thing. And
people kids have to understand that when you put something
that out there, it's something that can live forever. It's
(01:00:02):
something that can be sent and shared with the whole
entire world. You know. Yeah, and I think that's something
as a child people don't understand. But go ahead. I
drove at school bus. I've been then. They carried everything
and throughout my whole life ever since I've been out
of high school. And I lost my job over there,
it was like to me, it was the best job
I ever had. And until this case is over and everything,
(01:00:25):
they you know, they're trying to be leaning with me
because they understand that she really did, you know, do
something extreme, and I would have never done anything like
that to her, but my god, it was just like
my her life lasts before my eyes. And you know,
I know, Charlotte, man, I know you got kids, and
you've got kids, you know, daughters. Yeah, and I just
want to know, like, what what would you have done?
(01:00:47):
Because I'm getting booked and the sheriffs are all telling me,
you know, you did the right thing. I would have
did the same, but yet still I'm going to jail.
You know, they're telling me, like, you know, I would
have decided I would to did more to her, and
you know, but yeah, whooped the out? You beat it up?
I told her, but up, and then I messing to everybody,
told me the problem, what you mean to her? But up?
(01:01:07):
Like this is a popping and the black eye, I
got a built and I did what I thought my
mother would have, did what I thought her mother would
have did, and so on and so forth. How bad
like black eye? Bad? Like no, no, she had a
black eye, no broken bones and not like that. But
she is yellow. She bought her color, so you know,
(01:01:27):
it looked a little worse than it was. And she
you know, you know, it's very it's very hurtful to
you that she did something like that. And I know
that you do it, but she doesn't. She doesn't understand
what could potentially happen from that. And that's what you
really need to say to my daughter, though, like care
what anybody says. She understood, Like my kids at homeschool,
my kids. I breasted my kids, you know, like I don't.
(01:01:48):
They've never even been in daycare. Like I'm a mom
teaching them. My motto is, I don't even want to
teach her to teach them something before I've already taught them.
You know, I'm the only thing you my husband sitting
to school the next day. You shouldn't have send to
the school the next day, but you did, was right? You?
You should be able to discipline your child as long
as you're not putting any time back to or hurting her.
(01:02:09):
But back to these pictures, right, I really do think
it is important for you to just make sure that
she understands that you love her. And that's the reason
why you don't want to see her doing anything crazy
that could affect the rest of her life. Yeah, she
seems to understand now, but you know, I just want
to know what it would the world would do? What
would you do? You know, what would you do, Charlotte Mayne?
What would you doing me? Because what I did landing
(01:02:32):
me in some water, and I don't you know, I
don't wish that on anybody. But I mean at the
at the time. Now now they're like keeps spelling in
school and because she's not living with me in my home,
and they're like, they took her away from her. Yeah,
they took I have three other children, they're they're here,
you know, everybody's all the other kids don't like to
get a beat on the report card, like you know,
(01:02:53):
we're straightened their old kids. My youngest is, my oldest son,
skip the grade, skip the first grade. Like my kids
are intelligence And now you know what, your daughter is
really suffering the most from this because she's been taken
away from you. She's on her way back home now.
But like I'm trying to, like, you know, stretch it
out because my other kids were mad at her, and
I wanted to make sure that, you know, everybody was
(01:03:16):
forgiving before you know, she came back in the home.
But yes, you know, it sounds like it's time for
you guys to have a er fan. Y'all gotta have
a nice family sit down and put everything out on
the table and explain and just really just overdo everything
with the love right now. I'm sorry, Yeah, because you
said she doesn't understand what she did is wrong. You
feel like she'll never do something like that again. I know,
(01:03:37):
I know she won't. I hope she won't. You know,
this is she's done. Like she's been my problems house.
He's been the one where you know, I really don't
have a problem on any of my other kids. She's rebellious,
and she's at that age. I'm sure when she's rebellious too,
because I remember being that age and really just going
against everything. You know, the ended up being reell you
said the first, but you know what, you have faith
(01:04:00):
at her, but you know what, it was probably needed.
Like my mom used to put hands on me. My
dad never did, and I know for my wife, my
wife's mom put hands on her definitely, and she deserved
those hands. But I think now you need to have
a conversation would and really talk to her and really
try to be a friend and really get into a
head because you don't want her friends to get in
their head and her to do some more stupid ish
right right, Well, you don't want her to fail alone
(01:04:22):
and ostracizes right now either or that you're you don't
love her or anything like that. So you really need
to just let her know that you want to do
what's best for her. That's your daughter. You love her,
and you want to make sure that she goes down
the right path and that she doesn't ruin anything for herself.
She doesn't embarrass herself, she doesn't get bullied at school,
she doesn't have something that's out there for the whole
world to see that will be with her for the
rest of her life. And you just have to let
(01:04:43):
her understand that. Sorry, Mama, asking eight hundred five eighty
five one or five one. If you got a question
for you, you can call like that was very deep today. Yeah,
and you know what, there's not always a one answer
that we can give you for anything. But that lady
lost her job, man, and all she was trying to
do is really just discipline a daughter. And that's really
crazy and lust order for a little while. Yeah, But
I mean, if that's the case, if you have to
discipline your child, don't bring him to school the next day.
(01:05:06):
This is the truth, all right. We got rumors on
the way, Yes, let's talk about Drake and French in Montana.
They did some ten snipe commandments and I want to
see what you guys think about these rules that they
live by. All right, Aline, and more. Keep it locked.
This to Breakfast Club. Good morning. You want the latest
guys have been entertainment news. But then don't go anywhere
because the rumor report is up. Next Breakfast Club. Almina guy.
(01:05:31):
We all to Breakfast Club. Now let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk Donald Trump. This is the Rumor Report with
Angela Breast What Donald Trump has been named Time Magazine's
Person of the Year. He did an interview on NBC's
(01:05:52):
Today Show with Matt lower That's where they revealed the
winner and who was going to be on the cover.
Check out what he had to say. Good morning. Last year,
when Time did not choose you as a Person of
the Year and chose Angle of Merkel, you said Time
Magazine will never pick me as person of the year.
They proved you're wrong. How do you feel about this, Well,
it's a great honor. It means a lot, especially me
(01:06:14):
growing up reading Time magazine and you know, it's very
important magazine, and I've been lucky enough to be in
the cover many times. But I considered this a very
very great honor. I mean, sadly he is the person
of the Year because he was the executive producer of
celebrity apprentice. He's now a forty fifth president of the
United States of America with no political experience whatsoever. Who
(01:06:35):
else came up like that this year? Nobody? Well, in
twenty twelve, he had tweeted out I knew last year
that Time magazine lost all credibility when they didn't include
me in their top one hundred. So I guess now
Time has their credibility back because he is the person
of the year. All right, Drake and French and Montana
they have these ten Snipe commandments. Now. French Montana like
(01:06:56):
these rules so much, these rules that they live by,
that he actually had them printed out and framed Some
of the things in their bro code. Thou shall never
pillow talk or discuss the business with the ting true
on any import from the US, Canada, Europe, or any
other region that shall practice a maximum three day export
rule to avoid frustration. What does that even mean that
(01:07:17):
you can only fly a girl in for three days? Oh? Okay?
Thou shall always be honest with a brother about a splash.
Thou shall never tell a ting about another man splash
in order to execute his own splash. This one was
even more alarming. That shall only splash unprotected if it's
a must splash, or you are to fry, or you
(01:07:40):
trust the vibe, or you plan to keep the vibe
for a minimum of six months with four interactions within
the a lot of time period. Basically, when you say
trust a vibe, that means that you just feel like
she don't you don't look like she got nothing? Yeah,
you probably do. What's that air wax thing you do?
You probably try that? And what was done? You said?
If you if you feel comfortable around it? What was it?
You trust the vibe? You plan to keep that vibe
(01:08:01):
for a minimum of six months. No, these guys are crazy.
That's not how any it is. That sounds like French
like that's terrible. And you know what, I hope one
of your girls Trapp wanted and enrichne Gros. If you,
if you, if you know that they are here doing
like that, make them feel like they to one that
shall always lie to protect a brother's reputation or the
(01:08:21):
chance of a splash conversion in the near or distant future.
Men don't cheat. He's a great guy. That shall always be.
That shall be allowed to hunt in all jungles unless
a trespass has been enforced verbally, So everybody anyway you want,
unless you say she's off limits, right, all right? That
shall I use communication with a brother to avoid being
blindsided by other hunters and poachers. They got too much
(01:08:45):
that nobody got ahold of that yet, but it would
be too busy on me because that's very misogynistic. Don't
do this sounds crazy. It sounds like women are definitely
being objectified as an export. I guess y'all got too
much on your plate this week dealing with me and Trevor. No,
but this just happened. And listen. That's how Never you
hand to hand currency exchange to guarantee a splash unless
hunting and exotic locations, they don't pay unless you're international. Well,
(01:09:10):
if you're in an exotic location, you should have flew
something out. You know what I'm saying. I would say,
y'all have to pay for it at all period. Come on, guys, exercially,
if you're gonnahit it raw, you're paying it. Hit something wrong?
All right? He might be old rules and regulations, Well
he just posted them, all right. I hate to switch
(01:09:32):
gears to this, but come on, no, t I and
Tiny's Daughters is unique and Um and Little Wayne and
Toya's daughter Regina are going to be joining Growing Up
Hip Hop Atlanta. That's the cast that's gonna be there
in Barrow. I was actually actually producing the show, So
that's gonna be on air in twenty seventeen. So congratulations
(01:09:53):
to those young ladies for being on Growing Up Hip
Hop Atlanta. They've joined the cast. Speaking of Atlanta, STEVIEJ
saying that he got beat up by Joscelyn while she's pregnant. Now,
recently they had posted a video he was over there,
she was cooking for him, so it seems like they
made up. You know, they hadn't been getting along at all.
Now she is saying. He's saying that Joscelyn showed up
(01:10:13):
uninvited to his house Sunday. That was the same day
she was cooking for him and busted up his face
and injured his eyes. Now he Um is saying there
was another encounter where she threatened him, lunged at him,
hurled paperwork, and unleashed a profanity lace tirade. So I
don't know what's going on, but he is filing a
report about this, and he's saying that he wants her
to get mental help right away. Oh now you want
(01:10:35):
Jocelyn to get mental help? You just realizing that she
needs mental help. I'm telling you, mental health is the
knew I got hacked. Bro, I'm telling you, soon as
somebody goes too part to your liking, you're like, just like, no,
Na serious, some people that way. She's been needed, but
she's pregnant to so hormones racing tools. Right, there's never
anything he said attack or hit somebody though, all right,
(01:10:57):
I'm angela, yeah, and that's your rumor reports. All right,
thank you, miss yee. I got some applause. Eddie just
in his own world. He really enjoyed the show. He's like, oh,
we made it all right, shout to revote. We'll see
(01:11:21):
you guys. I don't know when you guys are coming
back Friday, sure revote, Yeah, but we're not gonna see
him tomorrow. Right, we'll be in buston that, we'll be
in Boston, so maybe Friday, but we'll be live, Yes,
we'll be live from another location. Won't be all right?
Everybody else to people's choice mixes up. Next, you want
to hear something at dj MVY eight hundred five eight
five one or five one for your requests to Breakfast Club.
(01:11:42):
Come on, this is the rumor report with Angela Yet. Well,
Jeremiah has some of my favorite songs and he was
performing on stage in Chicago. He did two songs and
then this happened. So he said, there's some haters. F y'all.
(01:12:15):
So people were complaining because they paid their money. He's
on tour, party next door. Why he only did two
songs though? Well, he went on Twitter. He said, Chicago,
you know I love y'all. I didn't say f y'all.
I said, ah, there's some haters F y'all, okay, and
he would say he said he was talking to I
guess the sound people that cut off his ears while
he was performing, so I guess he couldn't hear anything.
(01:12:36):
He said. Truth is, they didn't want me to perform tonight.
It's sad people would take your money and blatantly make
it seem like I only want to do two songs.
Maybe he's mentally ill. Why is everybody mentally ill with you?
I guess they cut him off after only two songs.
So he's saying it was He wasn't saying the crowd.
He was saying he did walk off the stage. But
he's saying. He wasn't saying f y'all to the crowd.
(01:12:57):
He was saying the sound people cut cut him off. Well,
let's not rush to Jed he could be mentally. I'll
stop it all right now. Chloe Kardashian people were saying
that she had a sweatshop after she posted some videos
on Snapchat talking about her good American jeans and how
they are made. Listen to this. We are at my
good American Dunham factory. Look at these roles and roles
(01:13:20):
of Dunham. Don't get up all the pressures on you
and my good American clients hand expanding each pair of Dunno,
you don't absolutely crazy. She is actually putting every single
hole in the rip Dunham by hand on every single
pair of jeans. That's absolutely crazy what people staid of
(01:13:44):
saying she had a sweatshop, and they were criticizing her,
and she fired back and said, watch in mouth. All
make salaries and all are employed in LA. Know your
info before you chime in. So she says that it
means the world to her that her jeans are made
in the USA. The fact that she even had to
respond that is ridiculous. Let't you know, people be having
jokes exactly like Jesus Christ. Come on, you know you
(01:14:05):
just be like l ol, Come on, y'all, y'all noticing
a sweats Yeah, if you know you're paying your employees,
what's the problem. Yeah, But she got offended and upset
about that for whatever reason. All right, Mariah carry Now,
there were these rumors that part of the reason why
her engagement got broken off was because of her choreographer,
and he thought that she was romantically involved with her choreographer.
(01:14:27):
But apparently now it seems like the two of them
have been together quite a bit, and there's actually, according
to us weekly pictures of them, they were all over
each other. They were not wanting to be more than
a few feet apart. They sew him in the ocean,
He picked her roup, he kissed her. She was jumping
into his arms, and he bent her back over his
knee like they were dancing. They were holding hands, he
(01:14:48):
gave her a piggyback ride. All of that. Well, the
only problem is this is her choreographer. So apparently some
people are trying to say that they're dating now, and
that does seem like dating Maria is probably actually looking
for love now, I mean, that's how j Loo came up.
Remember she started messing her choreographer as after a while,
you gotta just lower your standards. Okay, you're dating Nick
(01:15:08):
Caidd and you had a couple of kids. He's worth
fifty million. You dated a billionaire that didn't work out.
So now you got a really date for love and
he's thirty three years old. Who's gonna love you more
than a young choreographer. That's what I'm saying, Mariani and
the world to him, he needed the job security. Congratulations
did him drop on a clue bomb from ran carrying Bay. Now,
now let's go to court. We'll talk about Kevin Roper.
(01:15:30):
That's the driver who struck Tracy Morgan and nearly killed him.
He has pleaded guilty yesterday to vehicular homicide and four
accounts of aggravated assault from that crash that killed of course,
Racy Morgan's good friend James and McNair. Now, as part
of that deal, he's going to do a three year
intervention program that includes three hundred hours of community service.
(01:15:51):
If he stays out of trouble, then the charges will
be dropped. The judge will sign off on that deal.
And of course we know Walmart did reach that settlement.
You don't go to jail for kill people. Why because
it was an accident? Yeah it was yeah, okay, all right.
And Designer, by the way, his charges are also dropped.
His charges for a possession will go away, his record
will be clear. They have sealed the case dismissed the
(01:16:12):
charges yesterday also, so this was a good news for
a Designer. He initially had been hit with intent to sell,
menacing and possession of a loaded gun, but they never
shown a gun. The drugs were steroids that were most
likely prescribed to the driver, who was also security, So
all of that is cleared. Design ain't selling little drugs.
Click clearly using them, but he definitely not selling. Probably
(01:16:33):
want to cluse bombs for designing, Devin. I'm glad to
hear the brother got his charges drop ye all right,
I'm angela yee And that's your rumor report, all right,
miss Yee, now shout to revote. We'll see you guys tomorrow.
Everybody else to People's Choice mixes up next, you want
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