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September 22, 2020 88 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's time. It's time time to wake up, taking financially
and Cholomagne the Doctor to practice club bitches the voice
of the culture. People watch The Rectorace Club for like
news to really be tuned in. It's one of my
favorite shows to do, just because y'all always keep you one, honey,
y'all keep your Really, they might not watch the news,
but they're on Twitter, they're on Facebook, they're you know,

(00:22):
they're listening to the Breakfast Brother. It's yo ass suh.
Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo

(00:44):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Good morning, angela ye, Good morning, Damny Cholmagne. The god
piece to the planet is Tuesday, Yes, this Tuesday. Good morning.
That's all? Who this is? Goobody? Come on in Toronto.

(01:08):
What's happening? Good morning? Good morning? Oh y'all, this morning.
How are you angela ye? How are you DJV? What's
happening in these streets or not these streets but at home,
I'm exhausted yeoke this morning like whoo. I don't know. Yeah,
I'm just saying I just can't get excited. I'm telling you,
I'm over it. I can't get excited for this Zoom thing.
No more. I just can't do it. It's it's it's

(01:28):
ruining my my nurse. It's bothering my nurse, it's getting
all my nurves. It's something with my nerves. My nerves
don't like it. That's all I'm trying to say. I
think fromments just been a little bit. Look, I'm grateful
for it, but so I feel like I worked so
much all day and people just think I'm not doing anything.
As somebody asked me to do a Instagram live the

(01:50):
other day and I was so busy. I just didn't
even get to and I'm like, dude, I'm busy. Like
then he sent me a nasty message and was like, oh,
I see how it is, and I was like like what, yeah, company,
and my press juices are coming back. We have a juice.
It's like, it's not like I'm just sitting at home

(02:10):
doing nothing. Yeah, and then it's just get exhausted being
on Instagram live all day or being on Zoom all day.
Not that I'm complaining because I'm grateful that you know
the opportunities are there, but I would much rather be
in the studio. I need interaction with with y'all. I
need to be around people. I need to get up
in the morning and be commuting on my way to work.
It's good for my mental health. Just waking up and

(02:32):
jumping on zoom. It's not the same level of excitement people,
you know, for me, it doesn't you know what, no
one bothers me. Man. This virtual school, bro, this virtual
school is kicking my ass. I ain't even going front.
You know, having a big family is amazing. Or when
it's virtual school time and you're running between three classes.

(02:53):
You're trying to tell a four year old she got
a color in between the lines, and you're helping a
first grade with his math. Then you got to run
to a second grader to help with hubble placation, and
you're going back and forth, and and all they want
is a snack a cookie in between it all. So
you don't say, none of your kids in school, they
go half day. Yeah, my my my oldest goals are

(03:14):
half day. My second oldest goals all day. She's five.
They don't have all day they have. They have days,
so you have to do They go from nine am
to twelve, and then there's a break from twelve to one,
and then they do one to three, and that one
to three is virtual. And you got three kids. You
can't put them next to each other because they're all talking,
so you got one of different rooms. So you're running

(03:34):
back and forth, and they necessarily don't care about the class.
They say, where's my snack? Dad? Can I get a
Can I get a snack? Can I get some apple slices?
Can I get some strawberries? It's crazy because they're not
They're not really focused. It's hard to be focused at home.
I can imagine if I feel that way about being
at home to work and not really focused, imagine how
the kids feel when it comes to school. They got
only toys right around the corner. Teaches are reading stories

(03:58):
and they know kidding story after day about the story
about an aunt and I and the teachers like, so
where did the aunt go? Myself was like we stepped
on it. I was like, oh Lord, have mercy. Lord, man,
I'm gonna be honest with you. Man. When you realize that,
you know we're in this position because our government and
the way they handle coronavirus. That's enough for me to

(04:19):
vote on November third. That's enough. That right, that that alone, right,
there's enough when I think about the last six seven
months that got taken away from us and how our
lives have been altered this year. That right, there's enough
for me to vote on third. Actor said, No, one's
looking at the United States and saying that our response
to coronavirus was amazing. Nope, not at all, because we're

(04:42):
still in the house. That's right, all right. Well, Dave's
maid's Latasha Brown and Bunby will be joining us this morning.
What are they doing? They do this summit each and
every year. So this this summit, uh today is gonna
be on voter suppression. So they're gonna be talking about
voter suppression, taking call I was gonna say, taking calls,
but talking to people. They're gonna be doing all types

(05:04):
of different things all day long, talking about voter suppression
and trying to get people a register to vote. And
Michelle Obama is doing the same all day long. She
has your favorite celebrities talking about voting and not just
who to vote for, just to register to vote. It
ain't about who you're voting for. They just want you
to get out there and register to vote. So many
people haven't voted, so many people are not registered. So

(05:26):
today is a national voter Registration day, so everybody's trying
to get people a register to vote. Yeah, they definitely
want you to vote for Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harrist.
But it's the hip hop Political Education Summit, right. Yes,
that's Dave Made's, Latasha Brown and Bunbay. So there's a
lot going on today. So we're gonna kick it with them,
and we got front page news. What we're talking about
using well up, they are saying that Ruth Bader Ginsburg's

(05:49):
vacancy we'll be voted on before the election, and that
is for the Supreme Court. So we'll give you the
details on what's happening with that. All right, we'll get
into all that when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, Hey, wanting everybody is DJ Envy, angelu Ye, Charlomagne,
the Gad. We are the Breakfast Club. Let's getting some
front page news now. Last night New Orleans played the Raiders.

(06:15):
Last night The Rates one thirty four twenty four what
else we got? Ye? All right, Well, let's talk about
Donald Trump now. He was asked to respond as far
as as far as Ruth Bader Ginsburg's granddaughter, saying that
her dying wish was that I will not be replaced
until a new president is installed. And here's what Donald

(06:36):
Trump had to say. Well, I don't know that she
said that, or was that written out by Adam Schumer
and Pelosi. I would be more inclined to the second. Okay,
you know that came out of the wind. It sounds
so beautiful. But that sounds like a Schumer deal or
maybe a Pelosi or a shifty shift. So that came
out of the wind. Let's say, I mean, maybe she didn't.
Maybe she didn't look the bottom line. As we won

(06:57):
the election, we have an obligation to do what's right
and act as quickly as possible. We should act quickly. Hey, man,
gangs gone. Okay, I've never seen two people not give
it f the way. Miss McConnell or Trump don't give
an f. They all about business, whether RBG said that
or not. Trump and McConnell don't care. This is about
power at the moment, Republicans having in Democrat's warning Senate

(07:19):
Majority Leader Miss McConnell did valahole to vote on the
Supreme Court nominee. And the reason he's saying that this
is not unusual, he said, when President Obama was asking
Republicans for an unusual favor, that was when everything was divided.
The government was divided this time as Republicans running the
presidency and the Senate. And that's why you should quickly, Powell.

(07:42):
They got the power. Yes, they had the power to
do it, and they're gonna do it all right. And
then I want to make sure I just mentioned this too.
In Louisville, Kentucky, they are closing some federal buildings this
week and operating under a state of emergency. The city
is awaiting an announcement by State Attorney General Daniel Cameron
about the investigation into the killing of Brianna Taylor. So

(08:02):
the United States Courthouse there will be closed to the
public through Friday, September twenty fifth, and all schedules in
court appearances will be continued or converted to video conference
proceedings at the discretion of whatever judge is presiding. We'll
be interesting to see what happens um you know, this
is America. In America, I've learned that we don't get justice,

(08:22):
so I'm not looking forward to it. But if it
does happen, I'll be pleasantly surprised. But we'll see. All right,
A load is your front page news. Get it off
your chest eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
If you need to vent, hit us up right now
again the number eight hundred five eight five one oh
five one. Get it off your chest. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club of year. If this is

(08:52):
your time to get it off your chest, whether you're
mad or blessed, eight hundred five eight five one oh
five one. We want to hear from you on the
Breakfast Club. He about who's this from? Mike from Ain't
not much? What's going on y'all? So I look it
off my chest like yo, Like why are women so complicated? Right?
So tell me if I'm wrong. If your girl or

(09:16):
your wife be like, hey, baby, I think I need
some breaks, and you I take a car to the shop.
I'm gonna go ahead and help you get some breaks on.
And she gets to the shop as she doesn't need breaks,
but she gets I'll go work done. If that's still
your responsibility. Yes, if that's your wife and your girl, Yeah, yes,

(09:38):
yeahs done. But it don't matter. Something's wrong with the car,
you gotta take care of it. Yes, don't matter what
you're saying. She went there to the dealer and they
they they forgo to get some other things. Right now,
I don't think it's for neggling. It might not have
needed it. She might need it with breaks, but she
didn't need breaks. So if something's wrong with the car,

(10:00):
responsibility to take care of it, period. That's That's like
if your wife said she wanted to go shopping for something,
and then she went to the mall decided she didn't
want what she originally told you she want, but she
still wants something. Got It happens all the time. Oh
yeah yeah, But she don't need breaks she got. She
didn't need breaks. She got done. You know. And another

(10:20):
situation we had was kind of like you okay, So
we went to Disney and I pay for everything. All
she had to do was pay for the airbnb. So
we hearing up to get the discount on the tickets.
So she wanted me to help pay for the airbnb,
and I'm like yeo, like I pay for the flight,
I pay for the park tickets, I'm paying for the food.
All you gotta do is pay the airbnb? Am I

(10:41):
wrong for that? Is that your wife? For your girl?
My fiance's gonna be your wife. She ain't over money,
all right, isn't it both? Your money's really now? It's
not both for our money. My money is. You're not
ready to you're not ready to get married. King. Some
people do that money like that. I mean I but
I know some people do though, But thank you. You're

(11:02):
trying to set a precedent. He doesn't want to have to.
If they have an agreement on something, he wants her
to honor that agreement. Also, yeah, but if I get married,
there's no separation all in my household. It's it's one
pot and it sounds like a conference. People do different things.
That's what I said. Get it off your chest eight
on drink five eight five one five one hit this
up now was the breakfast club. Good morning the breakfast club.

(11:30):
This is your time to get it off your chest.
Whether you're man, Thank you from you on the breakfast club.
But you got something on your mom? Hello? Who's this?
This is Kayla again? Hey DJ AND's k how are
you grant? How y'all doing good? Goods? Holly favor owe

(11:54):
yea all the time? Well, um, I called because to
get off my chest. I know y'all gonna ask you
that I am from Glen County where Amad was killed,
shot and killed. And over the weekend, yes, sir, over
the weekend, Um, we had another young man get killed
by police violence. They said that he shot at them,
but he didn't and they made it rain on that

(12:15):
young man. His bad right now, and he had just
got out of prison, he was he just got married,
he was doing really good. And I really feel like
it's a bad spirit roaming around Glen County that's killing
our black young men and we got to do something
about it. I wonder why that story hasn't gotten national
attention yet. Well, it just happened. And m Broun's look

(12:35):
is snugged between Glen County. It's snugged between Jacksonville and Savannah.
So you know with jackson Ville and Savannah right that
they have more clown than we do. So it's like
if if our thing don't go national ourselves, but we
don't say something to somebody, then we ain't gonna get
no justice. But the mad killers went home and went
to bed and went to sleep, and day's sleeping, no cell.

(12:56):
You know what I'm saying. So it's like I'm from
Glen County, I'm from Bloods like I'm the young lady
that thinks you're really fine. It calls up there all
the time. I'm being serious today though, and I'm not trying.
I don't be trying to Yeah, I don't be trying
to send you dj NB. I just don't do life
can do my husband first of all. First of all,
you don't have to make no excuses for thinking us

(13:17):
all together like well serious today. The other time she
wasn't I know, but she her x has been with light. Yeah,
I got a group of all together and it's okay,
you got bad tass. I'm sorry. No, well no, no,
it's not that. It's just you know, the black of
bed is with it the juice. But one thing I
can say about Fairskin is very confident, fair skinned man.

(13:40):
But now you know, off on the st album I said,
still ain't nothing fair skin their fair skinned men is
not confident at all. They'd be so insecure are but
I know, but that's why they have to act so
confident because they are Instagram. But anyway, you tell us
young man's man doing your things? Young man name? I

(14:01):
think his name was Antoni. Oh yeah, keep on keep
fighting with that virtual school thing. It's hard, but it's
pays off. But his name is Antonio. I believe his
name was Antonio, but that he was. Yes, the shout
out the dad part, shout out the Dixville, shout out
the Green County, shout out cool cooler clothing. That's my

(14:23):
nieces clothing. You're telling me that there's a place called Dixville. Dixville. Yes,
it's Chagne. If you can't Chagne, why can't you ever
be serious? That's why nobody takes this show serious. You
know what I'm saying. Oh, yes, this is a serious matter. Yes,

(14:45):
this is a serious matter. Another young black man is
dead in America. That's right, this is a problem. Well,
thank you for carling. Oh, y'all welcome, see y'all lady,
All right, miss ye, you gotta get us some babies. Now,
you're very treaty. You need to reproduce morning. Look, he applies,

(15:07):
want to what goodness? Gracious, I have a good morning?
Right as the mayor of. As the mayor of I
was like, that's all you guys heard as I heard
a lot in that call. So what's on your first
agenda as mayor of Dixville, Charlomann, Well, I'm about the

(15:30):
band bike riding okay, no bike riding after dark? Okay.
We don't want no men on banana seats and a
little short shorts riding around Dixville. That could probably cause
some problem for residence. Okay, that's number one. I hate
you man, all right, we got rumors all the way. Yes,
I talk about Michael Jordan and his entrepreneurship. Will tell
you about another team that he has starting. All right,

(15:51):
we'll get into that next. Keeping locked this to Breakfast Club.
Good morning the Breakfast Club. This is the Ruble Report
with Angela Ye. Well, Michael Jordan is teaming up with
a NASCAR legend, Jenny Hamlin, and they are starting their

(16:13):
own racing team and Bubba Wallace will be one of
the drivers, the first driver actually, so congratulations to them.
Michael Jordan wrote, growing up in North Carolina, my parents
would take my brothers sisters and meet the races. And
I've been a NASCAR fan my whole life. The opportunity
to own my own racing team and partnership with my
friend Denny Hamlin, and to have Bubba Wallace driving for us.
It's very exciting for me. That's great. I love it.

(16:34):
Michael Jordan, I love it. Michael Jordan's black, Bubba Wallace
is black. I love them. Black people come together to
do great things. So it's loot to those brothers. So damn. Now,
Michael Jordan owns a basketball team and a NASCAR team,
that's right. And it's not too many minority faces in Nascar.
I have another friend's name is John who also owns
a NASCAR team, So I love to see more minority
faces in Nascar. Love it. And you know, Bubba Wallace

(16:57):
just had that controversy with the news and all of that,
and then they were going in on him because they
were saying it wasn't really a news and I'm sure
that was a lot of trauma for him that he
didn't want to have to go through. All right, Bobby's
murder has been denied parole unfortunately, and will remain in
prison until twenty twenty one. Law enforcement sources said he
was denied parole after his interview with the board last week.

(17:19):
They did not give a reason why, but they said
that he will almost certainly be held until the end
of his maximum sentence, which is December eleventh of twenty
twenty one. That's why he gave y'all six years already. Like,
what reason would y'all have to deny Bobby Smurder parole?
You know he's gonna come home. You know he's gonna
have a job opportunity, So what's the problem? Said he

(17:42):
did have eleven Well, they did say he had eleven
violations while he was in jail, including drug possession, fighting,
and having a shank. So that does matter a lot
with the parole board. That'll do it. Yeah, all right.
Mel Gibson is reportedly making a passion of the Christ sequel.
Did y'all watch that first one? I did that first
of all? How can you make a part too to

(18:03):
the story of Jesus? We know, we know, we know
how that ends because the first one did so well.
That's why that's the reason why I'm not gonna I
cried all during that movie. But the new film, they said,
but depict his biblical resurrection and the events that followed,
so passing to his crucifixion. They showed him through to
his crucifixion and then after and what happened after that?

(18:26):
All right, congratulation. Then if they're not gonna make Jesus black,
I don't want to see it. All right, Congratulations to
DJ sus One. He is now Wendy Williams new DJ.
Of course, everybody's asking what happened to DJ Booth. There's
a lot of rumors going on and what happened there.
DJ Booth is, uh, you know, he's a great DJ
as well. But now DJ says one, we don't know
what happened behind the scenes, but they're saying that Wendy

(18:48):
and DJ Booth don't even follow each other in social
media anymore. Salute to DJ suss One. How long before
the Wendy Williams and DJ sus one dating room would
start to pop off? They in stall popping off already?
I thought they already did. Guy so booans us my guy,
I love. I just think it's Wendy would make such

(19:11):
an amazing couple. Like they about the same size, same height.
They looked like they would make an amazing front court
for the Knicks, but also an amazing couple. So I
wish him to do. We just congratulates us one on
his new game. We are that's it. We did same
sneak aside, but you know, congratulations to the book. Yes,
yes man. And another person who's back at work because

(19:33):
Wendy's back at work also is Ellen degenerous. She returned
to her show and here's what she said about the
taxic work environment. Claims, I learned that things happened here
that never should have happened. I take that very seriously,
and I want to say I am so sorry to
the people who were affected. I know that I'm in
a position of privilege and power, and I realized that
with that comes responsibility, and I take responsibility for what

(19:55):
happens at my show. We have had a lot of
conversations over the last few weeks about the show, our workplace,
and what we want for the future. We have made
the necessary changes and today we are starting a new chapter.
I mean, that's all she can do, right, apologize. You know,
once you acknowledge something and you apologize for it. After that,
the best apology has changed behavior, and we got to
learn to give folks grace. Ellen didn't commit a crime, right, Well,

(20:18):
here's what else, she said, because she does want to
make this the best season she's ever had. There were
also articles in the press and on social media that
said that I am not who I appear to be
on TV because I became known as the be kind Lady.
The truth is I am that person that you see
on TV. I am also a lot of other things.
I sometimes I get sad, I get mad, I get anxious,

(20:40):
I get frustrated, I get impatient, and I am working
on all of that now. Ellen also gave twitch her
DJ co executive producer credit, So that's another thing that
happened to Twitch out. I hope you got more money
for that and not just the credit. And once again,
the best apology has changed. Behave. That's it you can

(21:01):
try to do moving forward to moving all you can
try to do moving forward to do better. I don't
know if this is true that he makes over a
million dollars a year on her shell, so shout the twitch.
I believe that. I definitely believe it. All right, I'm
Mandela Yee and that is your rumor report. All right,
thank you, miss Yee. Now we got front page news.
What we're talking about. We are going to be talking
about Louisville, Kentucky. And they are right now on lockdown,

(21:24):
well all the courts and everything until Friday. And we'll
tell you why. All right, we'll get into that when
we come back. Keep a lock. This to Breakfast Club.
Good morning, Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same.
We want to pay your bills. Win one thousand dollars
towards your expenses thanks to our partner of the General.
Get a lot for a little at the General Insurance
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(21:47):
the General dot com today. Go to breakfast Club online
dot com to enter and get rules morning. Everybody is
dja envy, Angela yee, Charlomagne the guy we are the
Breakfast Club. Let's getting some front page news. The last
night of Monday night football the Raiders beat in New

(22:10):
Orleans thirty four, twenty four. Now, what else are you
talking about? I will as such. You're talking about football.
You know, the NFL find three head coaches for not
following league policies regarding the use of face masks on
the sideline. So the Demomroncos head coach, Seattle Seahawks head
coach in San Francisco Fort United's head coach all got
a one hundred thousand dollars fine each, Love or staff

(22:34):
head coaches. The head coaches, you said, I wish they
would do that in real life. In real life, I
wish they would find people for not wearing a mask.
It doesn't have to be one hundred thousand dollars, but
nice lott on hundred dollars of pop. If you're not
wearing a mask in public, would meet people put they
goddamn mask on. I'm sure. Yeah. The problem with that is,
you know, everywhere people are not wearing masks, Like like
I said, when I go to Atlanta, I felt like
I was the only one wearing a mask. That would

(22:56):
be difficult. You have to do a different place as
different states, you know. Yeah, right. They were saying they
were multiple examples of coaches just pulling their masks down
from time to time and individuals wearing masks that didn't
completely cover their noses and mouth. So after the news
of the fines, they said that the New Orleans Saints
head coach and Vegas Raiders head coach might be facing

(23:16):
similar actions since they were shown without face coverings during
Monday's game and that's crazy because Sean Payton is the
coach of the New Orleans Saints. He had on a
Brianna Taylor maask. But don't They got to pull a
mask down to talk though, Yes, and they're tested before
the games. That's a lot, man, especially for people that's
never wore masks before getting into the swing of wearing

(23:37):
masks all the time. It's very difficult, very very difficult. Yeah,
we got sometimes to be like running or you have
to do too much. It's kind of hard to you
gotta pull it down for a second so you can. Yeah,
we gotta gotta make sure. We gotta make sure they're
not really getting fine because they're making political statements. I
don't know about the other coaches, but I definitely know
Sean Payton, the head coach of the Saints, had on
a Brianna Taylor mask. Right. Well, they're not saying they

(23:59):
didn't have on mask. It's just saying that they didn't
have them covering their noses and mouths and kept pulling
their masks down from time to time. All right, Now,
some of the federal buildings in Louisville, Kentucky, are going
to be closed and police are operating under a state
of emergency, and that's because of the expected Brianna Taylor announcement.
They're awaiting a grand jury decision in the case of

(24:21):
Brianna Taylor this week, and they said the guidelines, whatever
they are, would be effective immediately. So right now, in
anticipation of this announcement, they don't you know, we don't
know what's about to happen, but we do want to
make sure that Brianna Taylor gets justice. Yeah, I hate that.
I expect the worst from this country. You're not about
to get me to get my hopes up because I'm

(24:43):
thinking about what's the lost the last high profile case
of a black person getting killed by police where justice
was actually served. I could be wrong, but I think
it's Walter Scott in North Charleston, South Carolina, saluted at
eight four three my home. So I'm not sure what's
going to happen with Brianna Taylor, but I don't expect
this we con system to do the right thing. I
know that much. Well, that's why it's always important for

(25:03):
us to vote and be part of this process because
it does matter who's in office locally, and that way
you can put some pressure and Levis is teaming up
with Rock the Vote to help get as many people
as possible registered and ready to vote this fall. You
can text Levis to seven eight eight six eighty three
and get registered, find out key dates, and get all
your voting how to's from Rock the Vote. So just

(25:23):
think about what issues matter to you the most and
vote with whoever is in line with those issues. All right,
And lastly, I want to say that US marshals have
found thirty five missing Ohio children as part of the
Operation Safety Net. Some of those children were tied to
human trafficking. It's a joint effort between local and federal
law enforcement. They said it was a success as they

(25:45):
found those thirty five missing kids between the ages of
thirteen and eighteen, and over twenty percent of them were
tied to human trafficking. And those kids were located in Cleveland, Akron, Mansfield, Columbus,
and as far away as Miami. So there's still five
open cases remaining. Yeah, they're finding large groups of kids
a lot lately, but I'm not hearing enough about the

(26:05):
people who are actually taking these kids being interested. That's
who I want to see, you know, in custody. If
they're finding the kids. I need the kids to start
pointing us in the direction of the people that's taken them,
because that's the scum. We gotta get off the damn street.
And for anybody anything looks out of place with any
kids that you see are in your neighborhood or you
know of a missing child, you can call in tips

(26:25):
to the US Marshals tipline. That number is eight six
six four nine two six eight three three eight six
six four nine two six eighty three three. And why
at these stories of being being broadcasted more. I don't
see these stories. You don't see them at all. I
don't see them on TV, Like where's the big headlines
for these large group of kids that are always getting

(26:46):
found lately, just like the second or third story I
heard like this, Yeah, I'm not sure. All right, well
that is your front page news. Now when we come back,
we're gonna kick it with Bunby, Dave Mays, and Latasha Brown.
Today they're doing a hip hop polyarol education summit. They
we talking about voter suppression and that's actually gonna happen
today between twelve and seven on Revolt t V. All right,

(27:09):
so we'll talk to them when we come back to
Don't Move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the Guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We have some special guests on
the line this morning. We have my brother from another
Bun B on the line with a bun nice Roger

(27:32):
show Bro. Thank thank you so much, sir, Thank you
so much, sir. We also have Latasha Brown on the line.
Good morning, Good morning queen. And we also have our guy,
Dave Mays. Welcome back, Dave, Dave Mays, good morning, good morning, gentlemen,
lady everyone. Now we're back for another year the Hip
Hop Political Education Summit. Every year Dave Mays does something

(27:53):
around hip hop and summits and political and giving back
and giving people knowledge. So what are we doing this year,
Dave Mays, Well, this is an outgrowth of the hip
Hop Week started in Milwaukee City, Milwaukee two years ago,
that I worked with last year when I came to
see you guys. But we've created us a new organization
and a new event, which is the Hip Hop Political

(28:14):
Education Summit, taking on voter suppression. That's happening later today
Live it's a live stream. Anybody can tune in from
twelve noon to seven pm. It's it's great if you
can go register at hip Hop Political ed dot com.
But basically, this is a call to action for the
hip hop community. You know, really really, I woke up

(28:36):
a month or two ago feeling like, with all the
stuff that's going on out here socially and politically, that
hip hop needs a stronger voice. You know, in a
sense you can say before there was Black Lives Matter,
there was hip hop. You know, hip hop was Black
Lives Matter in the late eighties throughout the nineties in
terms of being that that movement to give voice to

(28:57):
all of the exact same issues that are finally making
it into the mainstream discourse recently. And so, you know,
although hip hop has changed a lot over the years,
and there are still many people out here that do
have a voice, it feels like this is really a
time in our lives where we need to kind of

(29:17):
step up and get more involved in this movement so
that hip hop isn't marginalized during this critical time. So
I called up some folks, some leadership in the community,
and asked them if they would get together with me
and hold this summit. Bakari Katswana is the co organizer
with me as well as Latasha Brown from Black Voters Matter.

(29:40):
H FUN is one of the people speaking on it.
And we decided to take on the issue of voter
suppression with this first summit, and we feel that's just
a critical issue right now, you know, that one that
affects the hip hop community, you know, in very specific
ways and that people need to be educated about. So
we have an table lineup of people all day, different

(30:02):
panels and speakers and performances and interactive components for folks
who you know who will be sharing a lot of
information and knowledge on what we can do to compare
the issue of voter suppression. Hey, Bud, I want to
ask you what relationship do you think hip hop and
politics have. Oh, we have a very close symbiotic relationship.

(30:23):
You know. Chug Diese had a long time ago that
hip hop was seeing in for the hood and I
think for us hip hop historically we've been a little
bit detached from the process, right especially for entertainments. You know,
we don't really deal with a lot of the things
that the average working class person has to deal with
in this country. Personally, but we have a connection to

(30:44):
it because the majority of our basics is in those conditions,
and the majority of us come from those conditions. And
I think what happens is is that hip hop, which
becomes the point of entry for most young black people
in this country to everything that concerns them, has kind
of shifted the gigs recently when it comes to politics
to try to give people a frame of reference for

(31:08):
what's happening politically in this country and to try to
I guess, to be a voice of it, right like
trying to explain it breaking down the layman's terms. Black
people for many years have been somewhat indifferent. Young black people,
I would say, within the last twenty five thirty years,
have been a little bit in different to politics because well,

(31:28):
for one of the conversation really only happens every four years,
but the politics that concern most of us on a
daily basis happen all the time. Right, So for me,
it's not just about bringing attention to this presidential campaign,
which obviously is something that everyone needs to have a
level of concern about, but it's really more about local politics.
You know, people always say I don't see anybody you

(31:50):
know we're voting for, and I can understand that. But
the way that we get to that is by lifting
people up from the bottom of the process. So good
city council and become good mayor has become good state reps,
state senators, senators and eventually potentially presidential candidates. And you know,
there's so much misinformation and disinformation that exists within social media.

(32:14):
When I talk to people about voting right now, the
main thing I hear back is, man, I don't trust nobody, right,
And that's that's that's done on purpose, right, that's a
concerted effort to make people indifferent or not, you know,
mistrusting the process. And so, as a person that I
know has a level of influence with people, I built

(32:34):
up a trust factor with my base, and usually when
I say, hey, we need to be doing this, most people,
you know, follow my lead. And so right now, I
feel like this is something that we need to be
engaged in, and I'm hoping that my brothers and sisters
follow our lead on this one. Natasha, let me ask
you a question, but this critical election coming up now,
how do you respond when people say I don't like

(32:55):
either candidate? I think that's part of the the problem. We're
centering this work around the so political parties. This ain't
about a popularity contest of who we like the most, right,
this is literally about power, and fundamentally, we got to
shift the conversation instead of being about participation to power.
So when we talk to folks and say and their
young folks or people on the streets that say that
they don't trust the process, we're not trying to evangelize them. Said,

(33:18):
we understand how you feel because I felt that way too, right,
and we literally saw what we shift the conversation is well,
what is it that you care about? And I have
never met we don't even tell people. We don't even
say the word ampathetic because I haven't met any black
folks that don't care about something. And so fundamentally, for us,
it is I'm asking what you care about and if
you listen, if you humble yourself enough to listen long enough,

(33:41):
and literally you can back out. You can actually come
to make a connection. Part of the reason people feel
powerless because it was designed for them to feel powerless.
So if you center them as part of the power
and make the connection, that's a different kind of conversation.
So even when we were doing work in Alabama, this
one about and the Johnson war More, a race which
was a Senate race that we that was flipped from

(34:01):
a Republican for twenty five years to the Democratic race. Literally,
our commercials said, this ain't about the Democrats, This ain't
about the Republicans, This ain't about him, This ain't about him,
This is about us. And so fundamentally, I think when
we're talking to folks one, we're truthful and honest with
them that voting is not the panaceas gonna solve all
the issue, but it is a point and a tactical strategy,

(34:21):
a power to reduce the harm in our community. All Right,
we got more with Bunby, Dave Mays and Latasha Brown.
Where we come back, so don't move. It's to Breakfast Club,
Good Morning, wanting Everybody's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the
guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it
with Dave May's, Bunby and Latasha Brown. You know, we
were talking about it earlier. It seems like the Democrats

(34:42):
really lean on celebrity a lot. They lean on a
lot of the artists opposed to sometimes what's going on.
What are you both of your thoughts on leaning so
much on the artists, leaning so much on the celebrities. Well,
I understand that the idea and the concept of it
because of the platform that's afforded to us and the
level of influence that we have people. But just because
your celebrity doesn't mean you're informed. You know, So if

(35:05):
you're going to follow, you know, people from the entertainment community,
I encourage you to do your research on those people
and do your research on the things that they're talking about. Like,
don't just listen to me because it's me. You know
what I'm saying. Um, take what I'm talking about, go
back and do your research about it. Make sure that
you fall in line with what I fall in line with,

(35:26):
and vote accordingly. You know what I'm saying. My job
is not to tell people who they need to vote for.
My job is really to tell people to care about
voting in the first place. That's the problem about celebrity.
I was feeling, like, you know, I was saying, the
Democrats mean a lot on celebrity to push the narrative,
And what are your thoughts on that? Who y'all want it?
This is a whole nother show. This is a whole

(35:47):
nother show. I mean, I got so many feelers around
that number one. Even at the end of the day,
there's some of the thols are on the ground grinding
at the end of the day. I'm like, at the
end of the day, this is what I do. I'm
I'm a little upset with even the celebrities that will
jump out take a position around on some of the
voting pieces. Ain't talk to nobody on the ground that's

(36:08):
doing the work right. And the bottom line is, even
if you're telling folks not to vote, you can afford
to do that because at the end of the day,
you if they cut off a lot of the safety guards,
your taxes, you're a different kind of tax bracket. You ain't.
But I'm talking to it, working with folks that we're
going to court with that's getting evicted. When some of
these safety next for it cut down, our people are

(36:28):
suffering on the ground. So I think that on some
level that needs to be some level of discipline, even
in our community around celebrities, like we all got our lame.
I'm not gonna come in but being tell you what
to do rather to spit a couple of bars, right,
But at the end of the day, those of us
that are on the ground that's literally fighting every day
for power, that I'm not clear about. Why is it

(36:48):
that that group, right that why are we not literally
talking about and talking about and underminding the strategist where
we're working out behinds off and sometimes putting ourselves in
a line of danger. Politics ain't about your opinion. This
is about power. And I can tell you the difference
because I go to the court rooms that when there's
a certain DA in office and another DA in office
that can make the difference between whether our folks get

(37:10):
twenty years to life in prison. So we've planned with
folks lives because we up on this opinion thing that
This ain't about your opinion. This is literally around fundamentally
how we're going to get power or at least how
we reduce the harm happening in our community. And so
part of what concerns me around the celebrity piece is
it's not grounded. Oftentimes, it's not grounded in the real

(37:33):
work that's happening every day to the people who are
most vulnerable. Because literally, when you when we see these
courts packed with these judges. That's impacting our folks on
the ground, y'all when we're seeing all of these pieces
cut out that there's no protection for workers or for
poor folks. That's our people on the ground that were
working with every day. And so I just think that
we've got to be mindful around. I'm glad you're a celebrity,

(37:54):
you got an opinion, but that don't make you an
expert because you can rab. You know, it's so crazy,
like even in reference to something that they're doing tomorrow.
One of the reasons I chose not to participate anything
because I said that exactly. I was like, well, where
are the people that are actually doing the work on
the ground, Like, I'm tired of y'all talking about everything
except for what our actual interests are, right right, you know.

(38:16):
I think it's because at the end of the day,
that's easier if we do these sound bites, because the
truth of the matter is every four years and I'm glad,
but he said that every four years, there's always been
this this issue around and negroes up. Let's come, let's
round them up so they can vote right. And so
under what we do at Black Voters Matter, we work
three hundred and sixty five days out of the year.

(38:37):
Because the truth of the matter is real power is locally.
If you're talking about police brutality, you need to go
after the police chief. Guess how he's elected locally. When
you're talking about these court systems that's in these states,
you're talking about, a DA can make the difference between
somebody getting six months or life in prison. My point
is that fundamentally we're literally talking about power. This isn't

(38:57):
just about what this election we're gonna do. It's really
around how they shape it. Two things, One, how are
we going to reduce the harm that's having to our community?
And secondly, how are we going to literally shape something
different so that we can change radically change all of
these systems that we're on now. I know when thing
people are also concerned about is how to vote at
this time, right with these concerns about pauling places, with

(39:20):
the concerns about mail and voting and all of that.
So can we discuss that so that people who are
listening actually have the information that they need. Yes, they can.
Actually if you are the first thing you need to
do is check your status right now. We want you
to check your status. You can come to our website www.
Black Voters Matter fund dot org slash vote you can

(39:43):
actual find out if you're registered. If you're not registered,
there's a link on there where you can you can
register right then when you can find out your early
voting to date. The second thing is, if you're registered,
you can't vote early. We're telling everybody to vote early.
We ought to see this election about just the two candidate.
We are not in a position that we can leave
any power on the table. Ultimately, we gotta get it.

(40:04):
Whatever it is that's going to help provide some protection
to our communities. We've got to do that, and so
we need folks to come out and vote and vote early.
You know. The third thing is that it's not just
this conversation around this individual voting. We have to vote collectively.
Whenever we work together, y'all, we weave. We have shown that,
we've demonstrated that's literally why there's been so much effort

(40:26):
to suppress the vote. That the fundamental piece around some
person to vote is because folks understand the power. Right.
It's almost like if you if you're in a basketball
game and you down a couple of two points, you know,
that the referee is cheating. What You're just gonna go
sit on the side like, oh, they're gonna cheat anyway. No,
I'm trying to get it. And so fundamentally, I folks
got to think in that kind of way, we cannot
leave anything on the table as long as our community

(40:50):
is under attack. When are we gonna stop putting the
burden on black voters to show up for Democrats and
start putting the burden on I'm gonna crash the show
up for black voters though. I mean, I think that's
a great piece. I say that all the time. But
I'm not asking people to show for the Democrats. I'm
asking black folks show for black folks. Like to me,

(41:10):
voting is a tactical strategy. And so even when we're
talking about it, I know the difference between Listen, we
got a party, This ain't no regular election. We can
talk about this like this is a regular election, but
this ain't no regular election. There is a president in
office who is adamantly openly aligned himself with white supremacists.
I'm from Alabama, y'all. I'm from the deep dirty South.

(41:30):
I can tell you the difference or when you got
folks that are in office and in power that politically
align themselves with the white nationalist agenda. Right, that ain't
good for black folks. So we got to really see
what this is really about, right, not just about these headlines.
This isn't about the Democratic candidate. This ain't about the
Democratic Party necessarily. This little is around tactically, what do

(41:51):
we do to reduce some of the harm happening in
our community, put some level of mechanism protection, but also
build something different. And my organization has been doing that
like we were some of the ones that have been critical.
We're critical, we fight Republicans, we've been critical of the Democrats.
We fundamentally say this is about us. And so as
you're dealing with politics, it ain't about your best friend,

(42:13):
It ain't about having constant loyalty. What it is about
you making a decision of tactically, what is going to
be the best decision to provide a literal leaf for
your community and your people. And that's literally how we're
engaging in the process. I don't move. We're still kicking
it with Dave May's, Latasha Brown and bun By and
today's National Voters Registration Day show, Keep It Lock this

(42:34):
to Breakfast Local more warning everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still
kicking it with Dave May's bun By and Latasha Brown Yee.
But some of the most harmful misinformation that you've seen
out there. You know, we see what's going on with
Facebook and them having to try to figure out a
way to regulate all of this fake news that gets

(42:55):
spread and that people keep on and reposting. But what
are some things that you're seeing that it's completing that too,
that's been really harmful when it comes to voting, Democrats
eating babies, begrats, a part of these secret groups, right Yeah,
you know, I think Q and nine is very detrimental
to the process right down. A lot of disinformation for that,

(43:15):
but just the fact of them trying to convinceue that
your vote doesn't matter to me. I'm sure Latasha has
different frames of reference based on the work that they're doing,
but for me, it's just the fact that there's so
much confusion around what's real and what's not real, who
to believe, who not to believe, and people just end
up like yo, I don't know who to believe. I
don't know if I should be listening to the Democrats.
I don't know if I should listen to the Republicans.

(43:37):
I don't know if liberals telling the truth could servatives
telling the truth. It's a lot of fake dudes. It's
a lot of deep state talk and all of that,
and so people just get frustrated with the process and
be like, you know what, I ain't even getting down
with it. I'm just I'm staying out of it. I
do want to just share something. I'm even in that
question what you say, aboumb I mean part of it
too is both got to pay attention. We're talking about

(43:58):
power right now. That's why the end of the day,
people want to just jump up on what they hear,
and we gotta pay attention at the end of the day.
If you ain't clear that Trump is a racist, I
ain't got I don't know what else to say to you, right,
I really don't. I mean, and I'm saying that because
on one hand, what I hear that is really more
damaging is that when those manipulative messages, particularly that are
targeted towards young folks and black men, that in some

(44:21):
ways that this whole idea that Trump is going to
be the candidate that give money. Well, if that's the case,
then why when he spent there were billions of dollars
on a stimulus package, right, eighty percent of black small businesses,
that eighty percent of black businesses didn't get anything. In
addition to that, fifty percent of black small black businesses
are slated to clothes in the next year. So, y'all,

(44:43):
we gotta be real. We keep hearing these these sound
bits and make that some folks attached to I think
sometimes just to be contrary. But the bottom line is
when you look at the numbers, we ain't getting paid. Right,
when you look at the numbers, even when you look
at his first step at when you look at the
Department of Justice, he said one thing, he let a
couple of black folks out so that he can actually

(45:03):
have a lift. They pay ten million dollars for an
add on the Super Bowl. But still the same man
as soon as when folks were shot, when black folks
were shot like dogs in the street, he couldn't wait
to fly out there and staying in and solidarity with them.
This is the same man literally stands with the police.
So at the end of the day, we need to know,
like what what we know when my grandma will saved

(45:25):
by the devil, we know the devil is manipulatid and
so fundamentally we got to pay attention to literally if
you with us, you with us. You ain't just with
us when you want to literally create and sole confusion
and chaos. But fundamentally, how are you literally advancing or
supporting the advancement of our communities. You can't do that
and then stand with the same people that kill us.

(45:45):
You can't do that and stay in and make these
statements that you're not gonna have You're gonna protect the
white suburbs. You can't do that when you literally undermine
it everything that literally protects our community. So we gotta
call it what it is and know what time it
is and stop getting caught up in the this this
opinion space and really be what's real and what's real
and what we know to be true. Atosh, I agree

(46:06):
with you, but you know, it's a lot of people
who feel the same way about Joe Biden. Though they'll
be like, what has Joe Biden done for black people?
They will point to the ninety four Crime Bill in
the eighty six mandatory minimum sentence and in the eighty
eight crack laws. He's been in the Senate for damned
in forty plus years. What is he done to push
us forward as a community. But I think that's a
great point. That's why I said my focus of voting

(46:28):
is about tactically, who is going to be aligned better
for harm against us because at the end of the day,
in the South, we always I've never had the opportunity
to literally vote for the perfect candidate. I have to
make a decision of tactical decision all because let me say,
I ain't met too many white politicians that ain't graceful.
So let's not add like that's something new, right, So

(46:49):
let's not add like that's not why it spread in
this country. But the truth of the matter is we
have to have enough discernment to be able to know,
because we know in the South, right, we have to
make enough discernment that we know that when you got
somebody that's talking literally the whistle blowing around consolidating white
power and white nationalists and the danger that if we

(47:09):
can't discern that that ain't the same thing. I understand.
I do think that they need to be We should
be critical of everybody that is representing us, of anybody
that we're voting back. At the end of the day,
a decision is going to be made, and so you
got to make a decision around what do what is
going to create less harm in my community, while at
the same time you focus and you organize and hold

(47:31):
those folks accountable. So for us, it ain't just voting,
is voting and doing the work. But at this point,
we got to have enough discerning it, y'all to really
be able to make the distinction between those who are
trying to consolidate white power to try to limit black progress,
literally are aligning with folks that are killing us and
shooting us in the street. From the difference of what

(47:51):
some of the policy that I can deal with the policy,
I can deal with the policy, it's a whole different
ball game when you got somebody that's undermining and literally
working to undermine and use racism as a tool to
keep themselves in power. I feel like, you know about
the point you're making about Biden is really relevant. A
lot of people look at things that way, and and honestly,

(48:12):
for me, you know, it's been disappointing to see that.
You know, for example, there's been no zero talk about
reparations things like that and not being addressed as they
should be going into this election. But I think at
the end of the day, you know, this is an
attitude and a and a feeling about things that's been

(48:33):
pervasive in my experience over the years within hip hop,
and I think, you know, it's time for a change,
and it's a starting point. You know, we have to
start somewhere. Like everyone else has said, we're not going
to have the perfect candidate. But if we don't change
our mentality and start to think about things a little
differently and the importance of getting involved, you know, I

(48:55):
don't think we'll ever see the kind of change that
we all would like to see. And also, in the
words of Larry Hoover on the classic Resurrection album from
the Ghetto Boys, you know, real gangsters go to the polls,
and I think I think Larry had had that idea
right many years ago. So hopefully we can you know,
kind of infuse that back into the mentality of today's generation. Now,

(49:19):
for everybody listening that wants to tune in today, how
can they tune in what should they be looking for
what time these things happen? Breaking down for the purpose
of this thing, the Hip Hop Political Education Summit UH
later today at starting at twelve noon is you know,
it's to focus on voter suppression and the issue of
voting that it's a fundamental right that everybody in this
country deserves to be able to exercise, no matter what

(49:42):
their circumstances are. So we're not you know, this isn't
going to be a lot of discussion about Trump versus
Biden or you know, who to vote for. This is
really about, you know, making sure that folks have access
to this cornerstone of democracy, the fundamental right to vote.
No matter who you vote for or if you choose
to exercise that right, you should still be able to

(50:04):
make that choice. So we're streaming live from twelve noon
to seven pm. Gets available on the Revote TV YouTube
and also on their Facebook page all day and also
on Twitch at the Behind the Rhyme channel. We have
everybody you know from hip hop icons and leaders like
Chuck D, Big Daddy, Kane, Damon Dash to Rhapsody Core Day.

(50:28):
I'm really excited he's going to be participating to bring
that young voice and perspective. And then we have other
amazing folks like doctor Cornell West, doctor Michael Eric Dyson,
mayor Ras Baraka from newer Senator Corey Booker, Congressman Andrea Carson.
I mean, it's it's an incredible lineup of folks that
you'll be able to hear from and gain a lot

(50:50):
of insight, knowledge and perspectives throughout the day. Later to
Day twelve twelve, noon to seven pm, please be sure
to log on and check us out the Hip Hop
Political Education Summit. Again, thank you guys for calling in
and checking in. Latasha Brown, thank you, buy, thank you,
thank you. All Right, it's a break to saying you guys.

(51:11):
Appreciate y'all, appreciate y'all. Thank you. It's about this report
Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Well, The Real started
their latest season yesterday with their new co host, Garcel Bouvo. Now,
Genie May posted herself from home as she was getting

(51:33):
ready to work virtually to do the first episode of
the new season, and she posted a picture of her
fiance Jeez. We left her a note good morning, congrats,
my love, so proud of you, and she said this,
we'll get our sixth set up here so we can
come to you live from our home studio. But the
best part is look at my good luck chron for today,

(51:56):
my note from my beautiful husband. I love him so much. Well,
everybody was in the comments. I saw a tr saying
because you got married. I saw Lonnie Love saying was
either flower girl because she referred to Jez as her
husband man, Geez and love Jess and Jenny my love man.
We call them gez Ma, that's what we call him
in these streets. And Jeez need to get Jenny ma

(52:16):
a little snowman chain, not a big one, just a nice,
little subtle snowman she can wear on the reel so
the streets know what time it is. Great, Unim make
Jennie my lottle Geez little snowman, little snowman. I just
z happy. As long as Jez and Genie are happy,
I'm happy, right. And people do that all the time.
You're engaged, you're together, you say that's my husband because

(52:37):
you know it's about to happen tomorrow. Stop it now.
In addition to that, Garsia Bubo had her first day
and they brought Jamie Fox on to wish her well.
Listen to this, Garsel. Congratulations on your new job on
the reel, and it makes sense because you are the realists.
I love you beyond. You're gonna bring something to that

(53:01):
show that is so wonderful and beautiful and at the
same time, you know what you're talking about, So let
it all hang out. I'm sending you blessings on your wonderful,
wonderful accomplishment. As you know, she worked with Jamie Fox
on The Jamie Fox Show. She was fancy. He also
saying fancy to her as well. Forever fancy. I love
it now. It was not all roses though for the Real. Yesterday,

(53:23):
Amanda Seals was not happy. She said that the Real
stole her smart, funny and black concept and she posted
a picture and she said, once again, the Real demonstrates
it to low class and even lower vibration. Just so
we're clear, this is an egregious bite of my smart,
funny and black brand in an attempt to bring black
awareness into the programming of the Real. They couldn't find
any other way to do this without it being a

(53:44):
bite of my creation. Yes, I'm saying this on social
media because the continued thievery of black people's work, even
when supported by other people of color, needs to be
called the f out. And also because this is the
most energy I'll give it before going on with my
day and creating more dopeness that will inevitably be pilfered
by the less talented, ethical ancestry connected individuals of our species.

(54:07):
Happy Monday votes. Can we talk about that last bar?
What's that? Less less talented, ethical, ancestrally connected individuals of
our species? I swear as soon as I read that,
I heard the beginning of eata. That's what I heard
as soon as I read those three lines. But that

(54:31):
is people say imitation is the best form of flattery.
It's not like, come on, man, my bread. Nope, no,
it was not the real, the real. No, they got
that from a man the seals like it was. It was.
It was bad. It was like a Gordon Guard trail,
like we know what y'all was trying to do, but
it was a terrible knock off. Now, she also added,
knowing networks they did this because they knew I'd posted

(54:52):
it with boost ratings. Well, that was an eventful first
day for the Real's new season. M All right, Now,
that brat she was talking to Candy on Candy's episode
of Speak on It, and she discussed her past romance
with Alan Iver, saying, now, she said she was pretty
much the perfect girlfriend. Listen to this. So how did
that even come about it? Did he even know that?

(55:14):
I think he knew, but we never talked about it.
I met his whole family and stuff. I used to
wake up and pick his clothes out, and cook breakfast
and jacket off when he woke up in the morning,
you know, the things he liked. Just make sure he
was happy. And he spoiled me and made sure I
was happy. Like I was like, this is amazing. Like
I was like, this is it. But then I think,
you know, basketball players hose Okay, she had a baby, mama,

(55:39):
some kids. He had a lot of stuff going on.
And then she said, here's where things went left. I
think the last draw was we were sitting at a
hotel in the hallway outside the door, just talking because
some of the homies was in the room chilling watching
the game or something, and this naked, half naked bitch
walks up the hallway tell me about she looking for him.
I'm sitting there with him. I'm like, bitch, I know

(56:00):
you must see me sitting here with you still gonna
say you're looking for him. I must have molly wopped
down the hardway. I said, I can't do this, and
I kind of like faded out answering the calls and
just had to pull back, and then it eventually fizzled out.
I mean, when you were young, if you're a woman
not beating up other women for you, did she really
love you? Yeah? Body, no, man, she want that woman

(56:22):
to have to physically fight another fight enough like that.
You should never go a woman in that situation. But
you got to know who the woman. You gotta know
who the woman you are you're dating. Some women will
swing on other women, the people back in the day.
I'm sure the brat Molly wop yeah. Yeah. And by
the way, she was disrespected if she would her man

(56:43):
and a woman that she knows and messing with her
man just walks up like it's all good, trying to
play her like she don't know. Okay, back in the day,
something could go down. I remember those rooms back in
the day two of the Bratton Allen Noon because I
really magazine. Yeah yeah, because after the bra and everything. Yeah,
and she was hot in the hood after she did
King Magazine because you know, brothers didn't know she had

(57:03):
all of that under them back and club King Magazine
spray with people weren't used to seeing her like that
in that way. I remember that King Magazine like, whoa,
we see you all right, Well, we're just happy to
see her in love and being open about who she
is and who she's in love with and all of that.
So congratulations to her on feeling like she could put
herself out there like that because you never would really

(57:24):
see her too much in relationships, and that's what she
was talking about. She would keep her personal life under
wraps so much and she'll still put hands on you.
I guarantee it. Yeah, absolutely, And that is your report.
The Brad just looked like one of those people that
you just don't ever try, regardless of what age. No,
you definitely don't play with the Brad. No, Nope, not

(57:47):
gonna happen. All right, thank you for those room with
Charlomage who given that, don't you? Four after the hour,
we need a young woman named Emily Owens to come
to the front of the congregation. We would like to
have a word with her. Let's just say, Emily is
with but the one Dan'll bleat me. He'll bleat me
all right. I was like, this guy's crazy. All right,
we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Cloud. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same.

(58:11):
Into for a chance to win two high end cell
phones with twelve months of service in twenty five hundred
dollars thanks to Simple Mobile. Simple Mobile. Out with the old,
in with the simple to enter and get rules visit.
Let's don't be a dusty because right now you are
some real It's time for Donkey of the Day. So
if we ever feel I need to be a donkey man,
give it with the heat rock. Did she gettles? I

(58:35):
had become Donkey of the day. The Breakfast Club bitches
you donkey of today for two day September twenty second
goes to an Oklahoma woman named Emily Owens. Emily is
twenty eight years old, and she refused to cooperate during
a traffic stop, which set off a high speed chase
and guns being drawn in a neighborhood. Now here's a

(58:56):
few details. Emily was initially pulled over for now wearhing
her seatbelt. She also didn't have a license on her insurance.
The only form of identication she had on her was
her medical marijuana card. Body camera footage shows what happened next.
Let's listen to the bodycam footage please. Since I had
to run your license since you don't have it with
you came back suspended and now I'm waiting to see

(59:17):
if you have warrants through Woods County? And where do
you think I was going? Huh birthday? Well, listen to me, Okay,
calm down. If they don't end up extraditing you for
the warrants, I'm just gonna site and release. You. Just
need to call your ride. Never give me right now,

(59:39):
Just let me go because I know your license is suspended.
Driving no more? But can I please, I'm up to
the rune. I guess he told you what's going on.
But I can get you to step out of the vehicle. Former,
are you kidding me? Why you have warrants through Woods
County and they're com gonna get you? Man? Now, let

(01:00:04):
me tell you something about me. Leonard McKelvey, Uncle Charlotte,
I never ever go out in these streets if I
have to poop, okay, poop crap defecation. Baker loaf, bombed
the bowl, cook a butt burrito, chop a log, nanny,
whatever you want to call it. I don't leave the
house if I have to do it. Why because I
am traumatized at the fact of having to nanny and

(01:00:25):
then getting locked up for a minor and fraction. See.
I don't know how it works in white America because
I'm not white. But I've been placed in handcuffs for
unpaid tickets I didn't even know I had. I've been
to jail for driving under a suspended license, and you
know my license was suspended. There's nothing worse in that
holding cell while you have to launch a butt shuttle. Okay,
It's something that even now, as a grown ass man,

(01:00:46):
I still do because I have PTSD from the times
that I had to sit in a holding cell and
keep the Browns from going to the Super Bowl. So
I understand Emily's paint. PTSD is real. Post traumatic SAUTA
is a real thing. So I understand, but fall that. Okay,
the law is the law, Emily. And when you're driving

(01:01:07):
without a seatbelt, you don't have no license, no insurance,
your only form of ideas of medical marijuana card, and
you curse the cops out and take them on a
high speed chase. Oh, you gotta go to jail. Okay,
Emily is what literally? Now this does get better? Okay. See,

(01:01:27):
even though Emily took the police on a high speed chase,
it didn't last long. The news reports say several blocks.
Emily drove with speeds topping seventy miles per hour. Emily
ran through a bunch of stop signs and a school zone.
Think God, kids weren't getting out of school. Then she
eventually stopped and surrendered after officers put those pistols to

(01:01:47):
her and said knock this shit off, and she said, no,
I need to get this out. Let's go back to
the police officer's body camera to hear what else Emily
had to say. Get out of the vehicle, now, step out.
Now charges, two county charges. You could have already been

(01:02:09):
on your way to jail. Not too many getting the car. Look, man,
just like the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals, Paul,
Emily is just trying to get those rusty nuggets out. Okay.
She asked if she could let some butt dumplings fly
in the back of the police car. Now, I'm not
the highest grade of weed in the dispensary. But I
think she really had to let out an aerial snake.

(01:02:30):
Emily said, there is a brown dragon in her butt
trying to spread its wings. But this is not a game.
She needs a throne to sit on. Okay, play that
second part of the body camera footage again. Get out
of the nickele now, step out. Now charges, two county charges.

(01:02:53):
You could have already been on your way to jail,
not too many getting the car. The officer says, you
could have already been in jail. Emily says, but not pooping.
Valid observation. Emily. Clearly, these officers are missing the point.
Forget the high speed chase, forget your warrants. You have
to poop, and the officers won't let you. Who do

(01:03:14):
they think they are? Now? I'm tired of talking about this.
Emily is right what she needs to be and that's jail.
And if she had to let some fanny fudge go
half as bass she's claiming she did in this body
camera footage, I pray for herselmate. Emily is currently in
the Garfield County Detention Center and she faces several felony charges,
and I think now is as good a time as

(01:03:35):
any to play a game of guess what race it now?
Listen fold over for not wearing a seatbelt, didn't have
license or insurance, only form of ideal was a medical
marijuana card. Curse the cops out and didn't let them
on a high speed chase, pulled their guns out and
didn't shoot her. Oh and one more very important clue

(01:03:58):
that I left out. When they search their car they
found a pipe with meffin side. But also think they
didn't let her poop, which is very key. Dylan Roof
got burger king, but they didn't let this young lady poop,
So they don't assume you know what she is. But
djen v yess what right she? All right? These are

(01:04:18):
the keys the clues for me, meth right. Also the
fact that the police pulled out a gun and didn't shoot.
But I would say cursing out the cops. M I
gotta go with White said she is called Kajan, All right,
ANGELI ye you heard the clues. Pulled over for not

(01:04:39):
wearing a seatbelt, didn't have a licensere insurance only from
of ideal with a medical mari want to call it.
Curse the cops out and didn't let them on a
hot speed chase. They pulled their guns out on her
and didn't shoot her. And one more very important clue.
They found meff in her car when they searched, but
they didn't let her poop, which is very cheap. Angelie. Ye,
yess what race shears? I would have to say that

(01:05:01):
she appears to be Caucasians, just because there's, yeah, the
white privilege of being able to curse out the cops
and think you're gonna get away with it and then
pull off. Yeah. I think I thought the meth, but
they ain't. Little poop though, what is it? What is she?
What does she tell us? Tell us? Tell us, tell us,
tell us? There's no tricking you guys. Emily a k

(01:05:25):
a young poop emoji is Caucasian. I knew, I knew,
I knew her young. Her trooper is white? Okay, yeah,
m all right, Well, thank you for that donkey of
the day. Do you guys watch ship's creep? No? I
heard about it, though I don't watch. Ye they want

(01:05:46):
a lot of Emmy's. All right, thank you for that
donkey of the day. Yes, indeed, Now when we come
back eight hundred five eight five one oh five one
let's have a wedding talk now, talk about it a
little bit easy, right. So somebody had shared an invite
to read it's wedding shaming forum, and on that invite
it was talking about when you rs VP, what can
you choose from for the meal? So according to the RSAP,

(01:06:09):
if you give a couple of gifts worth up to
two hundred and fifty dollars, you get roasted chicken or swordfish.
But the more you pay for the to give to
the couple, the more the better meal that you might
get to choose from. So above that, you know, between
two fifty and five hundred you get slice steak and
poach salmon. Now if you do between five hundred and
a thousand dollars, then you get to pick from a

(01:06:30):
filet mignon or lobster tails. Now I've never heard of
that before. I think that is TACKI I've never heard
of that before in my life. The only the only
type of I guess, I guess levels at a wedding
is who gets to eat first? But everybody eats the
same thing. You know what I'm saying. But I've never
heard that before in my life. You're supposed to you're

(01:06:51):
supposed to. When you go to a wedding, you're supposed
to really pay for your plate. So that's what you're
supposed to do as a gift. So let's say the plate. So, yeah,
that's what you' supposed to do. Supposed to pay for
the plate. So when you give cash, let's say you
have a steak in bashed potatoes. Let's say, and let's
say that's usually around seventy five dollars and it's two
of you, you're supposed you can't get nobody they charged.

(01:07:14):
They charged so much more waiting because you gotta also
think it's open bar. If it's open bar, right, you
have to pay for your plate. Yeah, that's what you're
supposed to think. You pay a hundred dollars per plate.
I didn't charge nobody for food in my wedding, and
we had an open bar. You don't people for food.
But where the saying is the gift giving? The gift
giving rule is you're supposed to give a present or
money equivalent to what it would have cost for your seat. Correct.

(01:07:38):
I didn't know that. I had no idea. But you
don't know what that cost is, because what if somebody
has a wedding they don't have a lot of money.
That means you pay them less, which you mean because
somebody has a low budget wedding because they don't have
a lot of money. And he's actually saying, I have
friends with money, I have friends that don't have money,
and I have friends that are broke, and I want

(01:07:58):
to invite them all, but I can't for this wedding.
So if you don't have money, don't order the expensive,
expensive stuff. Excuse me. But if you got money, order
the expensive stuff. That's that's basically what he's saying. I
think that's tacky. I think that everybody should eat the
same goddamn thing at the wedding, the same choices. That's it,
all right, nah, I mean I wouldn't not I agree

(01:08:19):
with you. I think everybody should pay the same name.
And I don't think if you have a wedding and
you're getting married, you shouldn't expect what people are gonna
be giving you as a gift, you know, I mean
them coming is your love and just showing your respective love.
You have not gone to a wedding because you were broke,
Like I don't even have money to go to this one,
because when I was younger, I would get invited to
weddings and I would be like, I don't even really
for really have money like that. I had no idea
you had to pay to getting the weddings. All of

(01:08:40):
this is new to me. You gotta pay at the door.
What's to come up? No, you an't gotta pay to
get at the door. But that's what you're supposed to do.
You're supposed to pay the plate. Whatever you think your
place cost, that's what you're supposed to pay. I had
no idea. I've never heard this in my life. This
is all new to me. Please somebody school me, all right,
eight hundred five eight five one on one. Do you

(01:09:01):
think this guy should be charging different rates at his wedding?
So he got the high rate, which is lobster in scripts,
then he got the steak rate, and then he just
got the chicken nugget rate at eight hundred five eight
five one five one. Call us up now is the
breakfast Club? Good boarding? It's topic time called eight hundred

(01:09:23):
and five eight five one oh five. Want to join
it to the discussion with the breakfast Club? Talk about
it morning? Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee Charlomagne, the
guy we all the breakfast club. Now if you just
joined us with talking marriage and wedding. Now, I don't
know where you got this story from, so break it
down a little bit. Ye. Yes, it was an article
that I saw and it was about a couple's wedding

(01:09:44):
RSVP and so On the invite, it says, so that
we may prepare your preferred dinner, please circle your gift
level and indicate a meal choice. So there's the Loving Gift,
Silver Gift, Golden Gift, or Platinum gift. And the lowest
tear was the Loving Gift up to two hundred and
fifty dollar, as you get to choose from real chicken
or swordfish. And I'm the highest tier the Platinum Gift
that was one thousand to twenty five hundred dollars, and

(01:10:07):
you get to choose between a two pound lobster plus
a supernir Champagne goblet for Lehmann Young. Things like that,
I'm not here to judge when I am here to
have an opinion. Hackey attack attacke. Okay, I have never
heard that in my life, all right, But but I'm
also not a person. I'm a person who didn't pay
attention to any of the planning of my wedding. That

(01:10:30):
was all my beautiful wife. But I've never been to
a wedding or I had to pay for a plate
nonetheless ordered packages for what I get to eat based
on what I for You is a gift, Yeah, that's
that's the whole thing. That's what's recommended as a gift.
That's recommended when you go to somebody's wedding, you pay
for your plate. I get what he's doing. He probably has.

(01:10:52):
He probably has friends on all different spectrums. He probably
has friends with a lot of money, friends that are
just okay and broke friends. So he doesn't want to
make people feel uncomfortable. You know, when you go to wedding,
you want nice thing. He just doesn't want to have
chicken nuggets and French fries. He wants to have nice food.
And you know, people really expect that money back, like
like it's it's big and a lot of coaches where

(01:11:12):
they shower the bride and groom with with money because
weddings are expensive, right, and usually the gifts that you
get back help you pay for that wedding. Yeah, that's
the hope that you get. But you can't like force
people to get Now, let me ask you this. If
you bring a date to a wedding, say you're the date,
are you supposed to pay? Or does the person that
invited you pay? What do you mean you're a part

(01:11:34):
because it's until you got you bring a date, you
gotta pay for two plates? You gotta you're supposed to
pay for Okay, so the date doesn't have to pay.
Like let's say I ask a guy to go, so
now I'm paying for me and him? Yes, man, I'm
so confused by all of this. Is paying for a
wedding thing. I invited you to my wedding because I
want you to share this special moment with me and
my bride. The wedding should be paid for by her daddy,

(01:11:57):
which is usually tradition, or by the group room whoever
got the bread. That's not the people's attending responsibility. The
people attending's responsibility is not to pay for your wedding
and all that, and and it is custom that the
bride's daddy pays for the wedding. That we gotta stop that,
we we gotta stop. We gotta stop that I got

(01:12:18):
three girls. We gotta stop that they got to go
fifty No that lime green car you got, Hell no,
we do. You definitely paying for some weddings. I can't
these these brothers out here can't wait to marry one
of your daughters. And they know they wedn't gonna be late.
Definitely not, definitely not. They got to pay. They got
to pay themself, and they're gonna have to do it
just like this Chicken Nuggets and fred front As. You

(01:12:39):
gotta come with this whatever. But let's go to the
phone line. By the way, a Chick fil aicated wedding
ain't bad because I love Chick fil A. You know
what I'm saying, chip filicated wedding will be kind of fire.
All I'm simply saying is I don't think it's the
people's attending the wedding's responsibility to pay for your wedding.
That's tacky. But let's go to the phone lines. Hello,
who's this, Hi, Sony, Hey Sony, good morning, Good morning,

(01:13:01):
m V, good morning. Charlene, and I were asking you
heard what you were talking about. This wedding where they
have three different options you can choose. One is a
smaller option, one is a high priced option, and one
is in the middle, what do you think about somebody
doing their wedding like that? Well, first of all, I
do have a wedding planning business, so I am a
wedding planner, so I deal with okay, this kind of

(01:13:23):
topic often, okay, But first of all, asking someone to
choose like a play like that is rude. That's one. Yes,
it makes me actually believe that this person does not
have the money that they actually need to put on
their wedding. Because you have a wedding, you know, of
course you're you may be expecting if it is an

(01:13:45):
unwritten rule that you are supposed to bring a gift
to a wedding, but you're gonna you have to prepare
that those gifts are not gonna cover the cost of
your wedding. That's not what it's meant to be, you know,
It's just something extra, It's an added on bonus. So
it's very day class. Say, for this person to be
asking people which tiers they want to be in, Is
it okay, your money instead of a gift for your wedding?

(01:14:08):
Is that okay? As a wedding planning people do that
all the time. They ask for donations absolutely to sponsor
wedding that happens all the time. Yeah, So when you
send out your wedding invitations, usually either list your registry
or you can list what's called a honeypun. A honeypun
allows people to send money and you can even use
it for your honeymoon, or you can use it to
take a trip. You can use it for renovations on

(01:14:30):
your house. So yes, when you do send out your invitation,
you can make it clear what kind of gives you
ali to receive, but you know you just need to
be thankful either way. That's right. How much should a
person give if they're going to a wedding like equivalency financially,
how much should you give? I would say a minimum
fifty dollars I've been perfectly, that's right. Whatever's on that registry, right,

(01:14:57):
and so you know, if they have a registry, whatever
you want to pick on the registry. I used to
go fifty dollars at least older people like grandparents, they
usually right check they usually to about one hundred dollars um,
just because they're over an older generation. Um, so it
really just depends. But you should try to bring something
and this is coming from a wedding plan and what's
your name again, queen, my name is. My name is Tony.

(01:15:20):
Like the TV, what's your business called, It's called Love
Always Planning LLLC. I'm located in Hampton, Virginia, Une seven,
five seven. That's very difficult, I mean because most people,
when they do get married, they don't necessarily have a
lot of money to get married, so they're nickel and dimond,
so they really really really look forward to that money

(01:15:42):
coming in, they really do. Who's I've never heard you
before in my life. I didn't know people were having
weddings because they was trying to raise money. I did
not notice raise for it. I didn't know that. What
if it's a destination wedding and you've paid for a flight,
every all of that, and you gotta get a gift
both destination, Yeah, you gotta pay for your flight. Well
usually when this destination you are supposed to pay for

(01:16:04):
a gift, yes, and then you pay for your flight
in your hotel room. But let's let's come back. Let's
talk some more about an eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one is the Breakfast Club? Good morning
and your opinions to the Breakfast Club top on eight

(01:16:25):
hundred five five one five one winning Everybody is DJ
Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast club.
Now if you just join us, we're having wedding talk.
You want to break it down a little yee. Yes,
this couple, their wedding invitation went viral, and that's just
because they were asking for different tiers of money and
that's what would dictate what meal you were able to

(01:16:48):
choose from for the dinner. So the more expensive meals
you had to give a better gift. Is this tacky
as hell? And never in my life that I think
that this type of stuff is what people expect from
you when they'mvite you to that wedding. I thought you
was inviting me to your wedding because you want me
to share your special day with you and your significant other. Yes,
I will get you a gift. I'll get you something

(01:17:09):
off the wedding registry, but don't expect me to, you know,
buy packages to help you pay back affall pay a
wedding that you can't afford. If you get invited to
a wedding and you don't go, should you still give
a gift? Yes, that's that's that's actually the Constellation Prize.
You go to the wedding registry and you get something
off the registry. But if you get invited to a wedding,
you should I think you should go because I'm not

(01:17:30):
the first paid for If you can, but if you can't,
all right, well let's go to the full line. Hello,
wat stuff. I did not know about this. Yeah, she's
supposed to. Hello, who's this? This is Corey Man? Hey, Corey?
Come on? And brother, sounds like you got something to
say morning? Is this is this live? Is this just
in me? Is Charlomae and Angela there? Yes, sir, that's

(01:17:50):
who've been here for the past decades. I get that.
I get that. I get that. Hey, let me tell
you something, dog, I just moved back to New York.
I love New York radio. Wedding. Have you went to that?
People paid for their food? Thank you? Brother? I mean
you don't. You don't write. You don't write on the
you don't right on the envelope. This is for the food.

(01:18:12):
But that's how you base what you give. That's the gift.
Why y'all the only two that noticed? Hold on, angel
that's how you think too. But no, when you go
to a wedding. You have to give a gift. You
don't just show up empty handed now, but you move
in the gold posts. Y'all say, paid for the place
ball younger, you sa broke Now, Well, I'm saying we

(01:18:35):
gave less money when we were younger because we didn't
have it like that. But yes, you're supposed to give
it now. I don't have it like that now. But
I'm not gonna base what I give on what the
food is. I'm a base I'm not that that's the
whole point. We don't think you should. But this particular
person has this on their wedding, invite it. I'm in
agreement with Charlemagne the God. What I'm saying is it's

(01:18:58):
open bar. Sometimes you can heavy for them, for the
for the for the bartenders. Okay, if I give a gift,
I'm giving the gift out of the kindness of my heart.
I am blessing those that I go to that wedding
and they have invited me and my family or me
plus one or me because I'm just What I'm saying is,
I will go there and party hard, and I will

(01:19:19):
give out of the kindness of my heart what I
would give out of the kindness of my heart. I
don't understand that food thing. I'm sorry to come at
you like that envy, I believe definitely putting you at
the chicken pigging friends five table brothers pigging fresh frides.
Now we just started food fighting for him, by the way,

(01:19:40):
you know how you know how disrespectful that is to
the attendance of your wedding if you actually have tears.
So it's just like certain friends eating certain food, other
friends eating other food. It's like they're looking at each
other like, oh, so you you give your best friend
this and you give me this? Why you invite me that? Like,
you can't do that? Man, you have to you at
the bottom to a liquor side. What about a wedding
that you you have to pay for the bar, cash bar?

(01:20:01):
What do you think about that? That's tacky too. I've
been there. I've been I've been in one of those before.
I mean, I can't afford if people can't afford it,
you just you. I mean you're there for because that experience.
If they can't the choice of no drinks at all,
or you gotta pay for your drinks, people will pay
for their drinks well than I have. That's why some
people need to go to the courthouse. Friends, all right,

(01:20:27):
what's the moment of the story. I don't know if
there is a moral to this story. I just I'm
just shocked that it's people out there making folks pay
for food that they wed. And that's insane to me.
I wonder if anybody's ever made a profit from their wedding.
Oh my god, I don't know. I don't know. Anyway,
we got rumors the wedding sponsorship. Um, yes, Loupe Fiasco.

(01:20:49):
Is he a better lyricist than Kendrick Lamar? This was
something that was playing out on social media over the weekend.
What all right, we'll talk about it when we come back.
What I didn't see that it was Loupe Fiasco beter
than Kendrick Lamar. Yeah, that's not a what you're not
gonna let me talk about this. We'll talk about what
is it? We'll talk about it. We'll talk about talk
about it. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.

(01:21:16):
She's filling the team. This is the rumor report with
Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Yes, so we were
playing some audio from um Young Miami from over the weekend.
Apparently she is single. Now here's a reminder. Well, south

(01:21:36):
Side was on live and people were asking him about
his relationship status and what happened. And here's how he responded,
Good mother that I ain't you know, I ain't gonna
ain't that kind of I ain't like that, I ain't
mad like that, none of it. I ain't fro a
bad mouth for it. Took a turn where I went
my way, she went her way out. Wish her to bist.
That's g him. Salute the south Side. I like that.
Don't kick. Don't kick nobody's back in or try to

(01:21:58):
say anything to get no press. I respect that sloop
the outside man. All right. Gabrielle Union is hosting an
all black casts reading of Friends, and that is to
raise awareness for when we all vote. So that's going
to feature Sterling, Kate Brown, um Uzo Orduba, Ryan Bath,
Asha Hines, Kendrick Sampson, and Jeremy Pope. That's actually taking

(01:22:18):
place today from six pm to seven pm at Zoom
where it happens. Why are you picking these white shows
to do though, like I saw, because like like us
are doing Golden Girls, they doing Friends? Like why are
they doing that? Why not they do? Why are you
not doing like Living Single or two to seven? Like,
why are you not doing like classic Blacks doing shows
that that didn't really have a lot of black people

(01:22:40):
on them, if any at all. And they're okay, I
get it, now makes sense and that'll be directed by
Sally Richardson Whitfield. Okay, got you all right? Now, there's
all kinds of issues going on, no reason, you know
reason from CDE. He has a song called the Soul
Part two and he actually she called out logic on

(01:23:01):
the song. Listen to this looking to pronounce my name wrong?
Tell me that I ain't did much. See y'all must
take my name for logic. Y'all got me cof tough?
How you compared to gonna take from the culture versa
they're gonna for it's born. My limits are sore and
the industry snore. Leave my city. Not I'm here to restored,
I'm here to explore. I'm nipped to the corn, I'm
not fit a fourth and I'm not I'm not gonna
have my block looking forth, his name gets confused with

(01:23:23):
logic for some reason. I can see that logic reason,
but yeah, not really I means maybe, but rampanclues Bob
for reason, that is one of my favorite rappers to
listen to. That young man gets busy. I look forward
to new Reason music. He does get busy, all right.
And in other news, Lupe Fiasco. This turned into a

(01:23:45):
conversation about whether or not he is a better rapper
than Kendrick Lamar or lyricists. What do y'all think? Is
Loupe a better lyricist than Kendrick? He's a better lyricist.
I mean, Loupeg is dead busy, he's nice, I don't
I personally, I don't think so. Um to me, no,
but let's not act like it's outrageous to debate the

(01:24:05):
two because Loupe is a top tier, god level and see,
in fact, I would say yeah, I would say a
Loupe walked so Kendrick could run. The difference between the
Kendrick and a Loupe is that Kendrick's lyrics actually connect
with a mass audience. Kendrick is able to take what
he does lyrically and package it in a way that
makes it connect with a lot of people from a
lot of different walks of life. So to me, that's

(01:24:25):
what makes Kendrick um not only a better artist than Loupe,
but you gotta factor that in when you talk about
who's the better lyricist, because Kendricks lyricist. Well, it all
started on Twitter, right, somebody posted who's the better lyricist
Loupe or Kendrick, and Loupe responded Loupe, of course he
should though he is. That's what I would do. Yeah, absolutely,
what else he gonna say? Now? Just a couple of

(01:24:46):
years ago, Loupe had also said Kendrick wasn't a top
tier rapper in his eyes, and that's a lot I
need to clean your glasses. He did say that Kendrick
makes He said, yes, Kendrick is a better artist than him.
The way Kendrick is. Kendrick is definitely a better artist.
I don't think that's debatable. But Kendrick is a better
artist than a lot of people, just because of the

(01:25:06):
way Kendrick, you know, takes his time with his music.
And I mean, you think Kendrick has been out what
a decade, gave us what four albums that all can
be debated classics. But just as far as lyrics, Loupay
and Kendrick aren't that far away from each other. Just
Kendrick packages his lyrics better and I think that gives
him the slight edge in the lyrics conversation. All right,

(01:25:27):
Well I'm Angela Yee and that is your rumor report.
All right, thank you, miss Yee. And today at eleven
thirty eight am, I'm gonna be on my Instagram live
right today as National Voter Registration Day and all day
long or Different Lives, they're doing so many different things
with Michelle Obama, j Lowe, Fat Joe, Kalot and just
all getting people make sure that they are registered to vote.

(01:25:50):
So that's what we're doing today. I'm DJ and from
eleven thirty to twelve, and then Fat Joe and Kalot's
on after me. There's a host of different DJ's performing
and people talking doing interviews, from Misha Curry to Chris
Paul to so many different things. So that's today or
my IG Live. You can go people's ig lives and
check them out, but I will be on this morning
at eleven thirty eight our all right, shout out to Revote.

(01:26:13):
We'll see you guys tomorrow. Everybody else to People's Choice
Mixes Up. Next, it's the Breakfast Club good morning, So
Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be the same. Into
four a chance to win two high end cell phones
with twelve months of service in twenty five hundred dollars
thanks to Simple Mobile. Simple Mobile. Out with the old,
in with the simple. To enter and get rules, visit
breakfast Club online dot com. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,

(01:26:37):
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Good morning.
We gotta shout out Dave May's for joining us this morning.
Dave May's, Latasha Brown and Bun b. They're doing a
hip hop political education summit today for twelve to seven.
You can check that out on Revolts YouTube page and
streaming live all day along people that are being talking

(01:26:58):
is Big Daddy, Cane Bundy, Dame Dash, Chuck d Cornell West, Michael,
Eric Dyson and a host of people Ross Barrock from
New Jersey. So a lot of people talk in ninth
Wonder so definitely check that in again. That happens today
from twelve to seven on YouTube. Revote shout to Dave

(01:27:19):
maysing them for stopping through today. Yes, and I also
want to point out that today you know I've been
doing these pop ups at Brooklyn Roasting every Tuesday up
until the election from my coffee brand Coffee uplifts people,
and today the Krabby Shack is there until seven pm.
I know a lot of people love the Krabby Shack.
These are small black owned businesses in Brooklyn who we

(01:27:40):
are supporting doing these pop uplifts is what we're calling them.
So come through to Brooklyn Roasting on Flushing Avenue today
and try out some Krabby Shack as well. All right,
all right, when we come back, we got the positive note.
Don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne, the guy were the
Breakfast Club. Now, Charlemagne, you've got a positive note. I

(01:28:03):
do have a positive note, man. A positive note today
is very simple. Sometimes the people around you won't understand
your journey. They don't need to. It's not for them.
Breakfast Club, you don't finish for y'all, dumb

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