Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's introduced my solo d injury, Angela Yi and Charlomagne.
The guys, well, y'all came a long wait. I think
that y'all have a certain amount of respect for you
know what everybody else does, and y'all are just the
best of what y'all doing. This platform, the reach y'all
have that you earned, make space for somebody like me.
You guys have a direct line to the coaches. Oh
(00:21):
my god, I don't want the ready good Dolomagne empty.
All I do is read about the breakfast Club every morning. Good.
You guys are trending every you know, I dragged my
ass out of that. I'm like, uh, what happened on
the breakfast Club to that good morning usca yo yo
(00:50):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Good morning
Angela Ye, good money. He's damn me, Charlomagne. The guy.
Piece of the planet is Monday. Yes, it's Monday. Back
to the work week. Yeah man, tight as hell. Yeah,
I am too. A great weekend though I had. I
(01:11):
had a great weekend. UM shout to bat Facebook gear
and I my wife and I we hosted the NABACP
Image Awards, the pre virtual show. Of course everything was
virtual this year, so we hosted that, so that was great.
Had had a fun time doing that, and then I
watched award show on Saturday night. It was it was
a dope award show. And then the after party with Cassidy.
I just thought that was dope. And congratulations to uh
(01:34):
DJ d Knice he got the Entertainer of the Year.
Well deserved, well deserved. Yes, ex absolutely, I love to
see DJ's winning. I think d Knice. I think as
far as like virtual U virtual events during the pandemic,
I think DJ DJ D Knight set it off everything, Yes, right, yep,
I would think so. Yeah, he set it off for everything.
(01:55):
I think just out of the goodness of his heart too,
just because he wanted to have a good time club
you know, have you everybody quarantine together Club Quarantine. And
it wasn't anything planned. It was organic, before he even
gave it a name. It was just a couple of
people on his live and every day he would do it.
And this is when the quarantine just started. And I
just remember, you know, we were in the house, there
was nothing to do, so you just start cleaning and
(02:15):
doing stuff in the cribs. So we just had the
music rocking and it just took off from I think
a couple of hundred to a couple of thousands that
one Saturday night, That one Saturday next He've been building
up to it, you know, then that one Saturday night,
it just like exploded. Yes, right, shot out shout to
the brother DJ D nice. What about you, guys, I
know you all over the place sheet. I'm in Detroit
(02:36):
right now. I had a big wholesale day from my
store that I opened in January here in Detroit, private
labeled Extensions. It went extremely well, so I'm really happy
about that. You know, when you have a new brick
and mortar location, one of the main things you need
to do is build brand awareness so people even know
your store is there. And just so you guys know,
if you are thinking about opening a business, the number
one the reason the most brick and mortar locations fail
(02:59):
is location. So always have to make sure you get
a really prime location to think about where you're putting it.
Pull up the comes from the area, see how other
businesses are doing. But we had a great day, so
it was fun. It was a lot of work, but
I'm happy it all came together. Thank you to traits.
All Right, you know what I'm seeing this morning? When
I heard just wanted driving and they were saying cases
in the Tri State are in New York, New Jersey,
(03:19):
Connecticut is shooting up, and I was like, okay, yeah,
we're actually number one and number two in New Jersey
and then New York. Then they said Texas, what wasn't
shooting up was actually going down, and they are you
don't have to wear masks. Everything is open, which is
strange to me. That doesn't seem weird to anybody, No,
not of you factor And he heard what's it called
herd immunity, Yeah, that just seems weird. Texas is open
(03:42):
hurd humanity. I don't know what humanity hurt immunity. Yeah,
it just seems weird. So if it works for Texas,
then you know, why isn't it working for the rest
of the world, the rest of the country. I don't know.
Let's ask doctor Frausty, Doctor Fauchi. Don't seem like he knows.
Nobody seemed like they know because they were just mad
at Texas was saying open opening up Texas. I'm saying,
don't wear masks, but their cases are shooting down New York,
(04:04):
New Jersey. We still dining, still have to wear masks,
Still can't go to games, still can't do a lot
of things. I don't know. Yeah, they're trying to understand
what's happening, because you know, there's a new strains that
are going around. I don't know. All right, Well, Front
Page News is next. What we're talking about? You, well,
(04:24):
you know what, let's talk about what's happening with coronavirus
and this pandemic and these numbers, like you said, in
New York and New Jersey are now leading the country
in COVID nineteen infections. But what is happening with the pandemic?
Will give you some updates, all right, we'll get to
that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning. I don't
know if you guys been watching NTABAA tournament, have you?
(04:45):
I watched some of her last night, would you way
the afternoon, I think I saw who was playing Gonzaga
Bulldogs and Craton. I think, yeah, well they're down to
the elite eight of Gonzaga Verse, usc Baill Arkansas and
Houston versus Oregon State. So those are the last eight teams.
So we'll see who takes it. And you see La
versus Michigan. No, I forgot them, you see us Michigan. Yes,
(05:08):
all right, now going well, let's talk about what doctor
Fauti is saying with these spikes and COVID cases. And
he said it's because of premature reopening measures throughout the
United States along with the COVID variants, that's what is
to blame for this recent spike. And he said this
searge was foreseeable. They have been saying that there would
be a spike. He said, I've said many times that
(05:29):
when you're coming down from a big peak and you
reach a point and start to plateau, once you stay
at that plateau, you're really in danger of a searche
coming up. And unfortunately, that's what they're starting to that's
what we're starting to see. The vaccines fight the variant. Yeah,
they said, it is, it does, it is supposed to.
And as you know, we just said New York, New
Jersey now lead the country and COVID nineteen infections. We
(05:51):
have the highest rates in the country. Even though there's
vaccination efforts. New York has not seen a dramatic reduction
and infections, and at this time, you know they are saying.
Governor Cromo has recently invited the state's largest stadiums to
host sporting events and concerts, again at limited capacities, while
also allowing indoor fitness classes to resume in New York,
(06:13):
even though Mayor Bill de Blasio is objecting to that. See,
I don't never understand things like that. So when the
cases go off, that's when you overup. It don't make sense.
But then Texas wises or not, it's nobody knows. Hey, man,
whatever we've been doing the past year, keep doing it
all right, where your mask, wash your hands, social distances
much as you feel like it. I guess not eve
(06:33):
been working though. It's the craziest man, all right. Now,
there was a CNN documentary that was on last night.
I'm not sure if you guys had an opportunity to
see this. On COVID War, the pandemic doctor speak out
and one person who was speaking on this is doctor
Deborah Burkes. Now she also is talking about the negligent
management of the pandemic by former President Donald Trump. And
(06:57):
here is what she had to say. Because she used
to be like one of the top people to talk
to about anything that has to do with diseases, and
then she got hired to work by Donald Trump. She
thought she was going on the inside to work with
Trump and that would be beneficial. Well, here's what she
had to say about the pandemic. I knew I was
being watched. Everybody inside was waiting for me to make
(07:19):
a misstep so they could remove me from the task force.
To CNN report in August, that got horrible pushback. Everybody
in the White House was upset with that interview and
the clarity that I brought about the epidemic. What happened, Well,
I got called by the President. It was very uncomfortable,
(07:42):
very direct. I'm very difficult to hear. Were you threatened,
I would say, it was a very uncomfortable conversation. Yeah.
I saw the promos with that duck. I didn't want
to watch it because it had a we are on
the other side of this pandemic feel, when the reality
is we are not. We're still in it, right. So
it seems like every time she tried to speak out,
(08:03):
you know, Donald Trump did not want her to talk
about what's having it turned very political, this pandemic. It
turned into a real thing on politics about whether or
not to wear a mask, and then mask wearing became
this whole thing where if you know, Donald Trump didn't
want to wear his mask, he made a political when
really it's just something that can save lives absolutely. All right,
Well that is your front page news, all right, get
(08:24):
it off your chest. Eight hundred five eighty five one
o five one. We're doing a different this morning. If
we're doing Friday. You know that Trav and Nick his
name is Nick Gi, right, Nick, challenge each other to
a source, right, yeah, challenge each other to a duel.
That's right. Uh, their long time listeners, and Nick g
was actually riding with Trav and then Trav turned on him,
(08:44):
and they turned on each other and then they started popping.
It got really entertaining. So now Trav is one and
old when it comes to breakfast club battles versus. That's right. Okay,
he's one and old. Keep going, that's right. So when
we come back, we're gonna play both of their songs
they're Dish Records, and then we're gonna open up the
phone lines and then allow you guys to pretty much
(09:05):
say who won. All right, so we'll do that when
we come back. Eight hundred five eight five one oh
five one is the Breakfast Club, come morning, the breakfast Club.
I'm telling I'm telling you, calling you. This is your
time to get it off your chest, whether you're mad
or blessed. Eight hundred five eighty five one five one.
(09:26):
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.
All right, now we're back. Usually this is getting off
your chest, it says, we just change it up a
little bit. Now. Friday, Uh, there was a war going
on outside a child line, that's right, a sword fight,
a duel, duel of the iron mics. Two of our
long time listeners, Trav and Nick G. Now. It all
(09:46):
started because Nick G called a pain and he was
actually showing trave some love. Nick jumped in drave DMS
or something. We showed him love. It was like, I
appreciate our respect and you killed whatever whatever, and Traff
didn't like it, said get off his DP. So Nick
was like nine scrange of trapped the Russian man off
his penis. I didn't understand that. I didn't understand it either,
but we put them both of the line. They started
arguing and decided for a duel. So now let's hear
(10:08):
both of their records. We are gonna play both of
their records this morning. Let's start off with who we
wanna start with. I think the challenges should go first, right,
who challenges who first? Trap me, trave one and old
NICKI gotta go first. Okay, so Nick Gi his Nick.
What's the name of Nigi's joint? Okay? Here it is
Juanna Howard. I'm not playing, and I'm gonna probably have
(10:29):
his jokes for life. Like Flow, I'm gonna probably had
his jokes for life. I wrote the book to this
ship like I will see the God. I'm in the
mirror and all I can see us God. I wake
up when I defeat the eyes. The flowing sick for
way too long. After this, we're gonna need ditt the eyes.
(10:49):
I'm not surprised by people when they be telling the lies.
I recognize that most you guys live in the skies.
I can see it in your eyes. Traviing ain't gonna slide.
I'm just floating, no beating. Don't let this hurt your pride. Besides,
I'm running things. I feel like Derrick Henry when you're
the realist in the state. You know they want to envy.
I'm simply saying I'm not playing. I'm gonna probably have
(11:11):
his juice for life like I was, Ye the flow
to elite. You gotta put this this on repeat. All
I know was go going. I never been to DC,
but I leave a marvel every time I go away.
Get this thing ju beating me. It's gonna take Kyrie
and a lot of safe. Oh you thought you was
the only one. Don't get it twisted. I would do this.
It's Tenny one. I showed you love on the club
(11:32):
and this is how you do me. Now watch me
shine till I'm blind builty? Yes, all right, so that
with you on how it? Nick Gi. Now let's get
into trav It's called chav defending champion, swinning champion one.
If you can keep his streak going, It's called twin bid.
Twin bid, Yes, twin bid. What's that mean? I don't know.
(11:53):
I thought a bid was jail jail. His name is
aka twin got okay? All right, Well let's hit trop
them like balls fell like the dome, bitch um the
truth now regular bike new regular ball, bitch um the
proof dropping like balls, feel like some dom bitch them
the truth, no regular bike, no regular ball bitch um
(12:15):
the proof bitchard mcdog bitch MC dog bitch m A
dog bitchard mcdog bitch M A dog bitch m a
dog trap them like balls, fiel like some dom bitch
um the truth, No regular bike, now regular ball bitch
them the proof. I do not I call no regulars
against regular I only my regulars. None of these again
(12:36):
better than us cheating on me. That's no Braine though
they didn't down here on the gramop. That's why you
both your meagle didn't get them off of their pay.
So ayslow feel like a pet small beads we've been
smoking on knicks. Feel free to live with these against
I stacked my chicks and I did. I walk the
dog on these agains. Let them just do what they do.
Dropping the com on these city you shot me feeling
(12:57):
like clue. Drop them like balls, feel like some dom
bitch them the truth? All right, now you heard both records.
Now what's up to you? What do you think? Eight
hundred five eight five one on five on phone lines,
A wide opens right, Who's gonna win this? Who's gonna
end up? On top. Who's gonna end up on the bottom.
Oh my goodness. All right, we'll get to the next.
Let us know. It's the Breakfast Log the morning, the
Breakfast Club. This is your time to get it off
(13:22):
your chest. Your man get from you on the Breakfast Club.
But you got something on your mind, let it out.
That's right. We are the Breakfast Club. Usually this is
get it off your chest. But we had two individuals
battle this morning, Traving, Nick g long time listeners. I
don't know where they went left. I think she was
showing them love, and Trap just went at them. So
(13:43):
they we played both their records this morning. Nice little
do a little iron, Mike's a little sword fight. Yeah.
Nick Gi was more of a battle rap, a battle record,
and Travel was just regular a single Nah Tram sound
like Trap sound very aggressive. I have an opinion on
both songs without keeping them down. Now, Yeah, I like
Nick GI's record better. I'm not gonna lie trave like
(14:06):
Nick's record better. I mean Nick he wasn't he wasn't.
He didn't sound his angry. He just sounded like he
was floating a little bit not and is this smooth beat? Yeah?
And he had a nice little some bars in that.
I like the Kyrie irving to beat me. You're gonna
need Kyrie in a lot of sage. I liked that
little line because you understand that Juwan Howard title, what
about you? I guess you say the coach? I don't know.
You know, I'm very partial to Trav at all times.
(14:30):
It was a tough one for me because I did
think Nick g did his thing. That means she's like Nan,
But but no, I thought, you know, I always think
Travis is dope at what he does. I'm gonna ride
with Trav. All right, all right, let's go to the
phone line. What about you and Nick? Damn? I mean nig,
(14:50):
I mean and this record in this battle? I think
NICKI record the battle? Who's this? My name is kay?
Hey k Who you think got that that battle? Definitely?
NICKI def Hello, who's this? Hey LECOI who got that battle?
Who won that battle? I give it to the first guy.
(15:12):
It was more clever, you know, he trying to give
you guys a shout out and the flow water out. Yeah,
the first guy was Nick like a blowout, traff, Hello,
who's this? USh? This type of he wanted we went
you get that battle. What what what you heard? What
(15:33):
she said? He wanted? Oh god, nobody said that. Damn
gold Man calling out of Charlotte manum I got. I
got Nick gi on this one man traff It was
a little repetitive man. Nick had a lot more lyrics
going on with it, and the delivery was a lot better.
(15:54):
I agree. I might have taken things for granted, thinking
he got this too quick, you know what I'm saying,
and like he might have just been lax with his
stay on that side, Hello, this side, Hello, staying over
here with trash Florida? What's up? Who you got in
that battle? Bro? I got Nick, damn do a good job.
(16:17):
But Nick Gie, he gave me like the drinke bar.
I I'm not gonna lie. I wouldn't say drake though, Buddy,
there were a couple of bars in there. I was like, Yo,
somebody liked drinking, really for that's those bars the right way?
I'm not. I did think that let's go to one
more line, one more person. Uh, let's see who's on? Hello,
(16:37):
who's this it's going off? Fair? Yo? I like, I
like trying the funny too, but your Nick is walking.
I feel like that too. Damn damn chess. Nobody else
had your back for me. It seems like this seems
like he doing this attracted, like instagrams just started. That's right, Nick,
(16:58):
Nick side the effortless Nick time, the effen traps on
like he was trying a little too hard. I know,
child going crazy right now? Damn it man, Well that
is it? I mean Nick ganimous unanimous decision. Nick had one,
I mean trap had one vote from Angela Rode. Nick.
(17:20):
Nick is on top, Travis on the bottom, baby, damn child.
Nick is on top, Travis on the bottom. Well, if
y'all want to go see him on Instagram as aka
underscore twin, you can drop your comments there. Oh you
ain't going to shout out Nick geez. I don't know
his what's his age? I don't know either. Well, Travis one,
Nicks one and though Ni crazy on Instagram, he was
(17:45):
like this breakfast cup versus is a little different. Who
can make the better record? Me and our Bundy? Wow,
tune in tomorrow? Who said that? Traf? Yep? Our Bundy
just had his polk had moment. He just going had
six touchdowns in the final state game. Did our Bundy
do without Bundy stats what I don't know the top
of my head. This was this Polk Championship game. How
(18:08):
Bundy water is all I'm saying. All right, Well, he's
married with children. That's Instagram. That's why I said that
Bundy married with children. But Instagram. Yeah, but two hours
and children, Well that married man with children just walked
you definitely did. Okay, all right, well we got rumors
of the way, ye yeah, who this is a tough morning.
We're gonna talk about Boosty. His Instagram got deactivated again
and we'll tell you why. It is a long story
(18:30):
behind it, all right, we'll get into that next. It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. It's about
this is the rumor report angela ye, the breakfast Club. Well,
Boosty's Instagram was deactivated yet again, and he posted zuck
(18:54):
at zuck from Mark Zuckerberg. You just a racist? And
how did this all happen? What happened behind the scenes.
But it all started with this video that was circulating
where Boosey was in a store, he was with the
baby and he slapped somebody. Nobody knew where it came from.
But here's what happened. You came rap. I hope that
(19:21):
was one take. Yeah, it was for a video shooting.
Boosey paid him. I think five hundred dollars for that. Well,
we're gonna get to that now. So what really happened
was he was actually soliciting to find somebody who would
be willing to get slapped on camera for the song
period they were shooting a video. Four listen to this.
So I got five hundred and fifty four dollars. Whoever
(19:41):
let me slap them out them on a period video.
I won't come on that big playing with me. I'm
just gonna bat him. It's gotta be real, though, DM me,
you won't get schmack man wivety four fifty four. I
was wondering why that specific amount as well. Maybe that's
just what he had in his pocket at that moment.
(20:03):
I don't know. I don't know, but that's why context matters.
I know social media lacked at ninety nine percent of
the time, but if you could provide it, do it.
Because when I saw the slap, I thought it was
real too, did you? I mean, it wasn't a real slap.
Don't he really slam me? I know he really slapped him,
but I thought he, like Boucy, had really got into
it with somebody in the store. All right, well there's
the explanation. But now his Instagram is deactivated. And if
(20:25):
y'all remember this happened to him before and he really
needed it back because he said that's how he feed
his family. You get a lot of money on Instagram. Yeah,
periods of tough tune. The hard record had really dope.
Baby snapped on that, all right. Congratulations to Summer Walker
and London on the track. They welcomed their baby girl together.
The baby girl was born on March twenty fourth, according
(20:45):
to reports. No congratulations to them. Congrats to them, yep.
And did y'all know Cassie also had a baby too. Yep.
Cassie and her husband Alex Fine are celebrating as well.
They had their second child together, their daughter, Sonny Sinko.
And if you saw Jason Debrello and Jenniferms are having
a baby as well. That's all the baby talk, all right, Yes,
(21:07):
congratulations everybody and Cameron He shared that he has at
least two hundred thousand people blocked on social media. Here's
what he said. I got at least a minimum two
hundred thousand. Some people block animals. Don't ever feel bad
about blocked. In swat, it's yes, somebody coming in your
house and be like, I don't like your curtains, I
(21:30):
don't really like the furniture. We'll get the count. You
don't like the courage, You're like, why are you here?
You don't like a bunch of but you're still are here.
I agree with him. Oftentimes you gotta save people from
themselves become Some folks will stay on your page, stay
following you just to hate on you, and they're only
hurting themselves when they do that. Stave the lane from
(21:50):
themselves and block them. No, it's so funny. I said
that years ago. I said, I blocked everybody who says
something negative. It says something is to me, I blocked me, y'all. Look,
oh you're being too sick to do. I think ibody
said that. I said, I do the same thing. I'll
block you, And I said, I will block you, and
if you comment on the block or like the block
of some nasty comment, I'll block you too. But I
think it's two approaches right. Sometimes you want people to
(22:11):
continue to see you shining. You know what I'm saying,
It's like, if you hate me so much, just I'm
gonna give you more things to hate on. All of
this stuff's gonna continue to make you sick. But sometimes
you got to save them from themselves because they really
just hurting themselves. So just block them, block Like, why
do you follow? Why do you follow me? If you
hate me? Why? Why are your way to say how
much you don't like? Somebody blocks a lot of wasted energy.
Let me save you from yourself all right now, Beyonce.
(22:34):
Her storage units have been arribbed of one million dollars
in luxury goods according to report thieves who actually went
into her storage units in LA and they got a
lot of luxury handbags and dresses. According to reports, it's
worth more than one million dollars. It's three different storage
units that are rented by her Parkward Entertainment production company,
and thieves broke in two times earlier this month. Is
(22:56):
the here's my question. It's a storage unit company. Are
there responsible when something like that happens? I'm not sure?
Thank you insurance now you sign it says you're not
They're not responsible. Well, and you know that happened to
Miley Cyrus as well. Her storage unit got hit up
in January. It feels like this could also be an
(23:17):
inside job, because then how do they know whose is
who's Yeah, that's true too. I'm just saying, I just
want to tell ladies out there. I mean, most Beyonce
dresses in wardrobe, I'm sure one on ones, one of ones.
So if you're wearing it out there, they're gonna know
it's Beyonce. You're gonna look, You're gonna look stupid as
hell walking around with Beyonce's items, all that glittery stuff,
all that sparky stuff. Who are you gonna sell that too?
(23:37):
Were you gonna go if you don't give Beyonce goddamn
items so Blue can have her hand me downs? Wrong
with you? All right? And who is the world's sexiest
bald man? Come on, come on now, why are you
going to ask such it's obvious questions? Definitely Now they
found the answer based off of Google searches and blogs
and reports and how many times people were mentioned. Say
(24:00):
who do you think he's the winner? Come on, I
tell you who made that. I tell you who made
the listen, and I tell you who's number one on
the list. John John Travolta, what I don't know. He
was bald, Floyd Mayweather, Bruce, Willis, Pitbo Diesel, Michael Jordan,
(24:21):
Jason Stathum. Number two was Mike Tyson, Yes, how you
see that tattoo? And number one Prince William. No, he's
not sexy to you. He's not even really bald. He's
like the like the old man. That's not hate, that's
(24:45):
not hated. Bald, bald and being bald. I'm bald. He's
y'all had a little fuzz growing in, didn't you here
grow Now? I ain't gonna then he's not bald, say
Charlemagne sexy, but I'll take Charlemagne over that prince whatever
his name is. Here you going, oh you well, okay,
that sounds crazy, that's fine crazy. I'm just saying so,
(25:09):
I'm I'm just saying, there's nothing wrong that you should
be able to, you know, then take him. Then take him,
and that is your rumor. I may not take him.
I'm just saying, that's what you say, pick Charlemagne over
the prince. The prince look crazy. With the number one
clearly though clearly had to hear that right. Clearly that
top ten was European beauty standards clearly, Mike Tyson, Mike Jordan,
(25:33):
you're right, you're right, But the fine ways to hate
Prince he's not completely completely and it looks trash, the
rumors trash. By the way, I don't know why any
of y'all men do that. Y'all look so stupid with
the head just on the side of your head. The
ball in the middle just go balls, look dumb, stupid,
and then you try to line it up on the side.
It just looks stupid. Let go and let guard. All right,
(25:54):
all right, Front Page News. Next we'll be talking about, well,
let's talk about the Derek Chavin trial, the former Minneapolis
police officer who killed George Floyd. All right, we'll get
into that. Next, it's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning, So
Breakfast Club, Your mornings will never be the same. Mountain
Dew is partnering with HBCUs and an effort to uplift
the next generation of badass Black innovatives and entrepreneurs with
(26:15):
the Real Change Opportunity fun pitch competition, empowering students to
go out and do is it Mountain Dew dot com
slash Real Change to ENTERMHD one new york I Heart
radio station. Well, why do you hate people? Man? I
never said that. Weapin crazy. Yes, it's got so bad
(26:37):
hit make that ball less man morning everybody, It's DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are the breakfast Club.
Let's get into front page news. Now, NCAA basketball March Madison.
Any of you guys watch? I watched the one game
this weekend? Which game? Gonzaga versus Creighton? What Gonzaga ZAA?
(27:00):
All right, so day down to the Elite eight. Now
the Elite eight? R you haven't I know? Its Oregon State, Houston, Bayla, Arkansas,
Gonzaga USC and in Michigan UCLA in Michigan. Last eight
teams did a women's Elite eight. How can you give
me the women's dad Bela versus UKNNEDI and NA Texas,
(27:24):
Texas versus South Carolina and Louisville versus Stanford. Let's go game, Coox,
drop one a clues bond for the game. Cox, dammit
Coach Don Staley always got them in a competitive position.
All right? Well, today is the day, and that's when
Court TV is back and people will be watching opening
arguments underway for Derek Chauvin. He is the former Minneapolis
(27:48):
police officer who killed George Floyd. So you can actually
watch that and get that coverage live as they're on
in court. What do y'all think about that? I'm not
thinking about it because I don't expect justice. But that's
just because we rarely see it. So I'm just sitting
(28:10):
back watching. I hope we get justice this time. I mean,
we've seen the man put his knee on George Floyd's neck.
I don't I don't see. I can't see where a
jury would be like, oh maybe this No, Oh, you
don't know America. You don't know America. What country we
live in? Right? Okay? Now, recording reports, they want us
to know this is not that George Floyd trial. They
said there's a tendency to use George Floyd's name under
(28:32):
the assumption that his name is more widely known than Chauvin.
But news outlets are being very thoughtful about how they
name this trial. They want to make sure that they
know this is not George Floyd. He's not on trial.
A lot of times we don't talk about the person
who actually committed the crime. So it's in Minnesota, versus
Derek Chauvin and Derek Chauvin on trial. All right, and
(28:55):
now let's talk about what happened in at Oklahoma County
Detention Center. An inmate held a correctional officer hostage, took
his radio and keys, and released other inmates before he
ended up getting shot and killed by police on Saturday.
They said that hasta situation took place during a medpass
that's when they give out medicine to the inmates. There
(29:16):
were thirty seven inmates house on the floor. It's not
clear how many were released and how many were involved
in the incident, but they said that this all took
place in a segregation pod where the quote inmates that
are most difficult to handle are housed. When you say released,
where did you be released? Like this? I get them
out of their cells. Yeah, you know, but I saw
(29:38):
my sogn posts about it, and he said, you cannot
die human humans showers and basic human rights and expect
them not to react this way. It's called self preservation
prey for them. Yeah, you got a point. I mean,
if you're not allowing them to shower, you're not giving
them food and other basic necessities. Yeah, they all want
to turn in the animals. That's a fact, all right.
(30:00):
So yeah, they said there was a lot of things
going on there where people weren't able to access. And yeah,
so I don't know, unfortunate situational because that mate was killed.
All right, and that is your front page news. All right,
Thank you, miss ye. Now let's open up the phone lines.
Eight hundred five eight five, one oh five one. Shout
out to Miss Jones. Miss Jones is a woman that
(30:20):
got me started in morning radio. She is doing a
reunion podcast where she talks about all the old episodes
and the things that she was doing. And we were
talking with Mayo over the weekend and I asked, may
know why he weren't you know what got him into
loving hip hop? Why why he would do loving hip hop?
And he said, because it's business. And I said, explain yourself,
and this is what he said. He had a conversation
with Mona Scott and this is how he said. The
(30:42):
conversation went. You said, Mona Scott says she doesn't watch
the show, nor does her kids. When I went to
Mona house, I think we had started filming and we
went she was like having a cook out and we
talked about the show, and she said, you know, I don't.
I don't watch the show. You know, my husband, we
don't watch the show. Kids don't watch the show. Right
then I understood what this is. Sometimes you do things
(31:04):
and it's just purely business. All right, let's talk about it.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. Let
me ask you, charlomagn you're a producer, you do you
do a lot of production in television. Would you ever
do a show that you couldn't watch, or that your
family couldn't watch, or that you wouldn't watch just for
the check, just for the bread, just for the check. No,
(31:25):
not just for the check. But I'm sure I would
do things that my family wouldn't watch because I got
young kids. But I mean your kids. That's why they
say your kids. But you know, I mean because there's
there's a lot of things that I do with my
life that I wouldn't want my kids to watch. But
just yourself, Like, would you produce a show that you
know you wouldn't for the check? No? Absolutely not? What
about you? Yeah, Um, I can't. I don't. I wouldn't
(31:46):
think so. No, I can't say doing that, although I
do have my podcast lips service. I wouldn't want my
parents to listen to that, but they do, all right now.
Mowna Scott also spoke over the weekend and she was
talking about loving hip hop and some of the flat
that she gets. Can we play that clip right there
on this one? There is a right for every black
(32:08):
person to tell their story. This right here was about
the women in hip hop who have relationships with these men.
Their stories have a right to be told. So that
is something I will stand fast in and you know,
argue down anybody any day of the week. What is
sometimes infuriating is that my white male counterparts, my white
(32:31):
female counterparts, aren't held to the same scrutiny. There are
shows that run the gamut from the you know Housewives
franchise and taking out the Atlanta Housewives to you know,
Honey Boo boo. There are tons of shows that show
the full range of white people and it's okay. And
nobody is hanging any of those producers out to dry
(32:54):
or saying that they are bringing down their culture. She
got a point with that now. And by the way,
you know, it's interesting because a lot of industry insiders
don't don't you know, use their products like we do.
Like you always hear the stories about Steve Jobs and
Bill Gage and how you know they didn't let their
kids use cell phones until they turned a certain age
and things of that nature or something, don't let them
(33:14):
use the social media at all. So you hear do
you hear these type of stories all the time. So
let's open up the phone lines. Let's get your thoughts.
What do you think? Eight hundred five eight five one
oh five one. Let's talk about it. Let's have a
discussion this morning. It's topic time called eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one to join it to
(33:35):
the discussion with the Breakfast Club. Talk about it morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. And now if you just joined us,
we're talking about Mona Scott. She was doing TV one
Uncensored and said this about loving hip hop and her brand.
There is a right for every black person to tell
(33:55):
their story. This right here was about the women in
hip hop who have relationships with these men. Their stories
have a right to be told. What is sometimes infuriating
is that my white male counterparts, my white female counterparts,
aren't held to the same scrutiny. There are shows that
run the gamut from the Housewives franchise and taking out
(34:19):
the Atlanta Housewives to you know, honey Boo boo. There
are tons of shows that show the full range of
white people and it's okay. And nobody is hanging any
of those producers out to dry or saying that they
are bringing down their culture. All right. Also over the weekend,
I was on a Miss Jones podcast. She does a
(34:39):
podcast each and every week. It's a reunion show where
she talks about some of her old shows and some
of the things that she went through. Mano was there
and I asked Mano this question about him being on
Love and Hip Hop and why he decided to do it.
You said, Mona Scott says she doesn't watch the show,
nor does her kids. When I went to Mona house,
I think we had started filming and we went she
was like having a cookout and we talked about the
(35:01):
show and she said, you know, I don't I don't
watch the show. You know, my husband, we don't watch
the show. Kids don't watch the show. Right then I
understood what this is. Sometimes you do things and it's
just purely business. So we're asking eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one, what are your thoughts? Now?
Start with you? What do you think? I mean? It
depends on the appropriateness of things. Like I was saying earlier,
(35:23):
I wouldn't want small kids listening to lip service, my podcast,
or even my parents for that matter, just because it's
my parents. I don't know if I need them to
know my all my business, but you know that is
what it is. But I do even feel like the
Breakfast because it's certain topics you wouldn't want your kids
listening to. I would assume people tell me that all
the time, so maybe it's more mature. I don't know. Okay, Charlemagne,
(35:44):
what do you think? I honestly would have to know
the context of Mona Scott's answer, because it's a difference
between I don't watch the show and I don't watch
the show because I think it's negative and I don't
want my family to be influenced by that, like for example,
Bill Gates and Steve Jobs saying they don't let their
kids use their products because their products are addictive, but
have no problem with our kids being addicted. That's unethical
(36:05):
and hypocritical to me, you know what I'm saying. But
Mona saying she doesn't watch the show, I would have
to know why because I don't. I don't listen to
the radio. I don't, but I'm like, I'm just riding around.
I love to the radio, and I don't. I just don't.
I mean, not because I think it's negative or anything
like that. I'm just because I think he felt it
was negative. But I mean, I'm one of those people
(36:26):
that if I don't want to just do something for
a check where it's it's pushing my community down. If
that's how I felt, if that was the situation, It's
kind of like, yeah, I sell cracked, but I don't
want my kids or my family. You sell cracked, but
I sell cracked the community to make money. And I'm
not comparing crack to TV, but it kind of feels
like the same way, Like I'm not gonna do something
for a check that that belittles my community, you know.
(36:47):
I mean that's say I would have to know the
context because she might just not watch the show because
she don't watch the show, like I don't listen to radio,
and it's not an intentional decision. It's just that I
got my screaming services, I got podcasts like when I'm
But it's not because of this something negative. You just
don't because you have other things to do, and I don't.
I don't. I don't go on breakfast club page and
watch our YouTube videos because you look you, I mean,
(37:09):
you record it, you do it. But even still, like
some people may go back and watch themselves critique depthelves
and they may, you know, go back for more information.
I just you know, I don't tend to do that.
All right, Let's go to the phone line. She may
not just want to bring work home. Who knows? I
don't know. Hello, who's this? What up? Y'all? The kids?
Ain't dad man? Good morning? What's going on? Bro? Hey?
(37:30):
This is my boys? Hey? This this Hey ain't Charlotte man,
but that's my boy up? What hey? I want to man,
I feel like I look better than the fridge to Charlettagne.
Don't feel bad. You probably do. Yeah, yeah, we uh
my thoughts is man Mona scott Man. She got the
nerve not to watch it and her family. Man makes
(37:51):
me feel kind of like, you know, I don't know,
I'm angry of it because I feel like some of
the shows she put out, she she's making the culture
look real bad. So for her to have the nervous
say she don't watch it, I think she don't watch it. Okay,
all right, don't say that while you're smoking on a
cigarette now, because I guarantee you the people who run
them cigarette companies don't let their kids smoke. He's thank you, bro,
(38:12):
See you know what I'm saying. Job, I'm not. I'm
just saying that, just like I just think it's a
lot of industries that don't let their kids partake. He
lose this, Charlie, What up? Charla May? What's going on
with up? Pepper? What's up? Bro? What are you thinking about?
When MoU Scott said, man, yo listening, man, I feel
like I feel like man Bolus Scott Pepper just like
Mama d Water, just that you just got a better
(38:34):
wig to let your player stupid man? All right? Man, YoY, yes, sir,
A can't me that anybody ever telling me looks like
but it's like, yeah, I can't laugh laugh at Joe
jos but eight hundred five eight five on the talking
(38:54):
on the Scott. But I wouldn't say Mona Scott. It's
like she's done so much for the culture, so I
can't just say she's putting our colature down when it
came to Missy Elliott and h ll cool Ja and
helping with fifty and all the things that she's done.
So it's not just Okay, this is all she does
and is negative negative, negative. No, she has done a
lot for our culture. But we're just talking about this.
Call us up now. It's the Breakfast Club the Morning.
(39:23):
Call me your opinions to the Breakfast Club Top one Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne, the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We're talking Mona Scott. Now, Mona
Scott was on TV one unsensed and said this, there
is a right for every black person to tell their story.
(39:45):
This right here was about the women in hip hop
who have relationships with these men. Their stories have a
right to be told. So that is something I will
stand fasting and you know, argue down anybody any day
of the week. What is sometimes infuriating is that my
white male counterparts, my white female counterparts, aren't hell to
(40:08):
the same scrutiny. There are shows that run the gamut
from the you Know Housewives franchise and taking out the
Atlanta Housewives to you know, honey, boo boo. There are
tons of shows that show the full range of white
people and it's okay. And nobody is hanging any of
those producers out to dry or saying that they are
(40:29):
bringing down their culture. Also, I was talking to may
Know about Mona Scott and him being on Love and
Hip Hop and he said, it's just business. And he
said he had this conversation with Mona at her crib
at a barbecue. You said, Mona Scott says she doesn't
watch the show, nor does her kids. When I went
to mona house, I think we had started filming and
we went she was like having a cook out and
(40:50):
we talked about the show and she said, you know,
I don't I don't watch the show. You know, my husband,
we don't watch the show. Kids don't watch the show.
Right then I understood what this is. Sometimes you do
things and it's just purely business. Mona is right when
she says she gets more flagged than her male counterparts
for making the same kind of shows, because even now,
(41:11):
like Loving hip Hop, Mona hasn't her production company hasn't
produced that show in Forever, like she gets a credit
on it. But I think, if I'm not mistaken a
big fish entertainment, big fishing rand by a bunch of
white men, you know what I mean. But you don't
hear nobody bringing down the black community. But I guess
for Mona, she also has put herself on the show too,
so it kind of makes the face of it. Yeah, yeah,
(41:32):
it makes people affiliate her with it a lot more.
But although Andy Cohen does the same thing. That's why
I said, I don't watch Real Housewip like that. That's
why after y'all last week, you know which is one
after he has he has the shows where he said,
you know, watch what happens, which one is more radget
loving hip hop or Real housewid Um? I would loving
hip hop? Loving hip hop? Okay, I would say, I know,
(41:54):
I know a lot of people do loveing hip hop.
Would say they never got the opportunity to show the
things that they're working on, if they will working on
music or if they were trying to open in the store.
They were saying, it's hard to get those type of
things in the show. I know for the Housewives franchise,
and even they show a lot of the stuff that
they're doing, Like you've seen Candy's restaurant, You've seen Candy's
dungeon line, You've seen um Porsche doing the civil rights
(42:17):
thing in marchin like, you see a lot of that
as well. So it's balanced, right, there is balance. I
don't know if there's that much balance on love hip hop. Hello,
who's this? Yeah? Jasmin good more than what are your thoughts?
So I feel like there's nothing wrong with what she
producing at the end of the day, is real. We
really like people really act like that. And then I
feel like black women were held to higher standard always.
(42:41):
We're always expected to be to know, to control of
ourselves and to be this and to be that. But
at the end of the day, that's just not it's
just not fair, you know, because, like she said, her
white counterparts produced shows that don't show their race in
the death lights, but like their glorified like nothing said
about them. I get what you. I see both sides though,
(43:03):
because you know, the reason that white people are able
to showcase there a whole spectrum is because it's way
more white shows. What I mean, there's not a lot
of black shows. And when it's not a lot of
black shows. You know, we expect the highest standard of
ourselves to be shown at all times. But I would
say this too, it's also what these networks are willing
to grab, you know, loving hip hop, black people fight
(43:24):
in black people are arguing a network would pick that up.
But I remember the first person that was interested in
my family, the Casey crew and showing a positive light
on television was Mona. She was the first person that
tried to get that greenlit, and everybody in first was like, no,
where's the drama, Where's this? Where's the that? And the
TV networks wanted the drama in the beef, in the
BICKERYM see. So that's what I'm saying. Mona gets to
(43:46):
blame a lot of times just for I guess, conforming
to create the kind of show that these networks want. Hello,
who's this yo? It's been timing back to the little
well can tuck you? Man? What's up? Man? What's going on? Brother?
We're asking what are your thoughts? Listen? I feel like kids,
if you're gonna create a show and not allow your
family to watch it because you feel like it all
(44:09):
offer you know, bad characteristic to them, why allow other
black families because all is doing at the end of
the day, I feel like it's turning down the image.
Whether people are saying or not, whether it's good entertainment
or not, it's still turned on the image of black
people because at the beginning of the show starts off,
you know, like you said, talking about the guru and
(44:29):
highlighting their career, but at the end of the day
they end look fighting. So at the end of the day,
more people was talking about the fights than actually their careers.
Shout out to Camys Show and Carty b they actually
came up off the show. But it's like one out
of one hundred. So I just feel like, if I
ain't gonna talk a gun out here, if I ain't
(44:50):
gonna sell a gun out here, why would I introduce
my kids or my family to a woman. And you're
not wrong, but once again we got to know the
context of her answer, Like it's a difference between I
don't watch the show and I don't watch the show
because I think it's negative and I don't want my
family influenced by that. I don't know why you don't
watch the show, right, So what's the more little story, guys?
(45:10):
I just think we just need to have more balance
on television. Then I don't necessarily think that's just Mona Scott.
I just think that these TV networks has to allow
more of a balance. And at one time they like
the Ratchet because it brought the ratings. But it has
to be a balance. It has to be positivity, it
has to be a little bit of everything. But us
as consumers, we need to watch both sides of it,
because sometimes when they put the positive stuff on air,
(45:31):
we don't watch it because we like the Ratchet Thish war,
but we have to make sure that we support both sides.
I think, yeah, I don't even know what ratchet is
nowadays because there's nothing on TV that compared to what
I see on social media. So I don't even know
what the bar is anymore. All right, now, we got
rumors all the way, yes, and we are gonna be
talking about these Satan shoes and artists put out these shoes.
There's only six hundred sixty six pairs available and we'll
(45:56):
give you a little information on how you can get
them and the controversy surrounding them because there is some
human blood in them. I'll pass, all right, But we'll
talk about it next, keep it locked. This to Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Ye, Charlomagne
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Let me send
the congratulations to my cousin, doctor Jasmine Walker. She received
(46:19):
her first choice match at Abington Jefferson Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
She is now a doctor. So congratulations to my cousin.
We love you and the family loves him, so proud
of you. So congrats. This is the Rumor Report with
(46:39):
Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Well, Little in Aazac
put out his video for Montero called Me by your
Name and by the way, I just checked it. It
has almost thirty two million views since it came out
on Friday, and a lot of fans were excited about
it because it talks about how it fails to come
out as a member of the LGBTQ Commune. Some people
(47:01):
have criticism about it filled with biblical references, and he
was going back and forth with people on Twitter. He said,
there was a mass shooting every week, that our government
does nothing to stop me sliding down a CGI pole.
Isn't what's destroying society. People who had issues with him,
you know, sliding down this pole. He's going down to hell.
Then he gives Satan a lap dance while he wears
(47:23):
pat leather thigh high stilettos. By the way, little Nazex
looks good. Okay. He also said, showed my three month
old niece that called me by your name video and
she said, uncle, that was quite the stupendous visual. Why
in heavens would any individual being raised over such a
sensational showpiece? He said, I'm gonna go cry, y'all, and
it just was a lot of controversy. Joined a. Lucas said,
(47:44):
I think the biggest problem for me is the fact
he don't understand Oldtown Roade is every kid's anthem. Children
love him for that record. They tuned in and subscribed
to his channels. So with no disclaimer, he just dropped
some left field ish and all our kids seen it.
He responded, I literally sing about lean and adultery and
old tell road. You decided to let your child listen,
blame yourself. A lot of people were weighing in. He
(48:05):
also put out these Satan nikes that contained human blood
and they're called Satan shoes. There's a bronze pentagram and
inverted cross and a drop of real human blood in them.
So Nike actually had to make a statement and say
that they were not involved and it's not an official release.
They said, we do not have a relationship with Little
nas X or a mischief. Nike did not design or
(48:27):
release these shoes and we do not endorse them. Now,
since all the controversy, Little nas X did issue this apology. Okay, guys,
I see everybody's been talked about this shoe, and I
just want to come forward and say sorry. Sorry. So
that's the lowdown on Little nas X. But y'all think, yeah,
(48:50):
so Nike had nothing to do with these shoes. There
was a designer that readed these shoes over. Now, they
did a Satan and Jesus shoe. So the Jesus shoe sneaker,
he has a white sneaker, and then the Satan shoe
was the black sneaker, right, and then am I getting
that right? Jesus? Oh, Jesus sneakers were old, but they're
going for like fifteen I haven't seen the video. I
(49:13):
just saw some snippets on social media. Um, but yeah,
I don't do Satan. I don't even know why I mean,
these people want to play with that, you know, sixty
six human blood. I'm not with all that. I'm a country,
asked Negro, who grew up in Mons Corner, South Carolina.
My mom was a Jehovah witness. My grandmother was a Baptist.
Get behind thee Satan. I renounced Satan and all his works.
I'm just a smart New Yorker. I ain't mess with
nothing that has nothing to do with Satan. Buck six six. No,
(49:35):
I'll tell you what if my blood and those sneakers,
I want royalties, okay. If my blood is in those sneakers,
I need equity. And those goddamn shoes okay. And and
what if you just look at the Jesus shoes and
the Satan shoes and you were, like, man in Satan
shoes way harder than the Jesus shoes. Can you go
to hell for that? The black ones look a lot
better than but if he had black ones, look a
(49:58):
lot harder. I didn't even seen the Jesus when I
saw the chick filate ones. He posted those look kind
of fire too. Are you happy now? He said? Those
are fake? But I don't know. I can't keep up
in the moment really was fake. I thought that that
was real. I haven't seen him anyway, I would chickilationship,
I said John three sixteen on him. Well, if anything else,
(50:20):
I did like the song Montero. If I didn't even here,
you didn't watch the video, I don't do satan. As
soon as I saw the snippets, I'm like, okay, I'm cool.
I was messing with it either, all right. Now, halle
Berry is responding to racist comments that came from a
New York radio host in Buffalo, who, by the way,
is fired. And here were the comments that he made.
(50:43):
Rob laterman, she we have ours, and I'm gonna may
get into trouble for I have them to the attractiveness
of women that I find to be attractive. So I'll
go I will never go to a Serena Williams level,
but I'm very comfortable with a halle Berry level. I
need a little bit of mulatto still coming through it.
(51:08):
I don't get what he was talking about. So he's
comparing attractiveness of black women to different settings on a toaster.
So basically, he talked about Serena Williams. He talked about
Gil King, he talked about halle Berry and the complexion
as compared to settings on a toaster. They're different complexions. Yeah.
What's his name? Rob Leaderman? Yeah? Rob Leaderman. You woke
(51:30):
up and shows unemployment. That's when you wake up and
you say to yourself, you know what, I'm tired of
this job. But what he said, how can I go
out with a bang? When you start off with I'm
probably gonna get in trouble for this, That's when you
should stop. You goddamn right. Especially we got fired right
away by the way. He got fired, and halle Berry jested.
Halle Berry said, disgusting. It's ridiculous. This type of nonsense
is still being broadcasted across airwaves. All black women are
(51:53):
beautiful and worthy. Rob Letderman GTFOHT Monday Man. Okay, get it,
he's got it now. Roblenman told The Buffalo News that
he was horrified by his own remarks after he listened
back to them. See how someone could be offended by that.
I get that. It sounds terrible and it is terrible.
Now Can I take back those words? No, if you
(52:15):
listen to them where they're meant to be hurtful, absolutely not,
he said. He wants to learn from this and that
he is remorseful to anybody that would be hurt by
what he said. I need to see what the show
prep meeting was like, Okay, off the rail you think? So?
How do you just think that he had to be
thinking about that at home. It's not clever at all,
not at all stupid, all right. Oscar de la Joya
(52:37):
has announced that he is making a comeback. He's forty
eight years old, he's retired, but he does plan to
come back to sports. Here he is talking about it.
I feel like it's something missing. Man. I keep seeing
you in the ring, but I don't see you in
the ring. I mean, talk to me. Why why don't
you uh? I mean you're you're part owner of a
trailer fight club. Why don't you uh? I think you
(52:59):
should tell Lemni shoe not made July thirty, I'll make it.
Might comeback. First of all, dropping a clues mom for
Snoop Dogg being part on a trailer smart man, smart
man to get in getting in on Trascardella. Joya was
with Snoop Dogg and they were doing the Jake Paul
versus Ben Asking press conference on trailer and that's where
he announced his July third fight. But y'all think who's
(53:23):
gonna fight? He doesn't know yet. We don't feel like
he didn't say yet. I think Oscar de la Joya
wasn't need money, That's what I But he has Golden
Boy Promotions that does really well well. But think about it, though,
when you see the money that Mike Tyson and you
know Roy Jones Junior made called Floyd whenever they come
out and do exhibition matches, it's kind of hard not
to want to get out there and get some of
that money, you know what I'm saying, even if you
(53:43):
may not necessarily need it. But these guys are getting
tens of millions of dollars just to go out there
and spar a little bit. Why not he's getting that
to not have to fight? Nah. I don't know he
getting that much, nah, because I know he lost Canelo Alvarez,
he still got Ryan gonn see it, But now he
trust me. The guard didn't make a quick twenty thirty
million dollar. Why wouldn't you go do that for eight
rounds and nothing exhibition You get hitting the head and die,
(54:04):
and they're not going out there to bang on each
other like that. Roy and Mike didn't. Mike Mike took
it serious. You see, Roy was was not after the fight,
but they said, you want to do a rematch? Roy side,
I gotta go home and talk to my wife about
this one. Well, they put that money on the table,
he'll come out there. Same thing with Delahoya. You're gonna
get the money. Why not? I mean he owns a
soccer team. He's worth like two hundred million dollars. You
(54:27):
think he's doing that just to get a little money
With Dana White's there a good friend of yours, Oscar
de la Hoya, has announced he's coming out of retirement
to Bucks again. Cocaine isn't cheap, gotta make money Dan.
I want to clue pumps for Dan white Man because
that's a stereotype of lines that the cocaine and drugs.
(54:47):
You know that cocaine. If it was a black man,
he said, oh crack about to be expensive, y'all would
have to question. Let me ask you that Delahoya do cocaine?
How do I know? Do you know that you've never
read the stories? I don't read the stories, and I
don't hang out. I feel the hood, But White knows better.
That's not racist. That's racist. That's not that's not all right, guys,
that's your rumor report. I've never heard that. I think
(55:08):
you talked about him using cocaine before. He admitted to
cocaine and alcohol us to the f So that's why
everything you know about people, I'm tired. Are you not
knowing cocaine us? Oh god, oh my god, that's racist.
He admitted it, not what he say. Apologize. That was
a big story manogizing young You know got drugs are
(55:33):
a problem in this country and we can't be sitting
here making jokes about it. Okay, I apologize. You just
said something's racist. That clearly you guys. Can we move on, please,
we have a time schedule here. Rumor report, thank you,
I jumped off the ledge a little bit. All right, dad,
thank you. You ain't saying apologize. I had my coffee
this morning. I'm sorry. Ch absolutely know. By the way,
that then of white comment was from last year. I
(55:55):
just want to throw that out there, from August of
twenty twenty. Guy, we gotta go, yes, donkey going to
it's a it's a it's a story about why you
should make better choices when you're young. We'll discuss for
after an hour. All right, it's the Breafast Club. Go morning,
the breakfast club. Your mornings will never be the same.
When a train, it's a vehicle at a railway crossing.
(56:16):
The results are often deadly. Be cautious at crossings, and
if the signals are going, don't be tempted to try
and sneak across the tracks, even if you don't see
your train. Stop trains Kid brought to you by Nitze
Donkey of the Day. I'm a Democrat, so being Donkey
of the Day a little bit of a mixed club,
(56:38):
so like a dog the other day. Now, I've been
called a lot in my twenty three years, but Donkey
of the Day is a new wife. Yeah it's Monday, guys.
I hate to start the week off like this, But
Donkey of the Day from Monday in March twenty nine
goes to two teenage girls okay, thirteen and fifteen years
(56:58):
old from Washington, DC of US. These young lady names
aren't released because they are minors. But man, if trouble
is easy to get into and hard to get out of,
was ever two persons, it would be these two young ladies.
Now r I P to Mohammed Anwar sixty six years
old to Springfield, Virginia. He's dead for absolutely nothing, well
not absolutely nothing. He's dead because this thirteen and fifteen
(57:20):
year old girls made a poor choice. And that's what
life is, ladies and gentlemen, a series of choices. Okay,
Destiny is not a matter of chance. It's a matter
of choice, that's right. Life is all about making choices. Kids.
I know it's hard, but always do your best to
make the right ones and always do your best to
learn from the wrong ones. Okay, these two young girls
definitely made the wrong choice. This thirteen and fifteen year
(57:42):
old made a choice that is going to alter the
course of their lives forever. BA let's go to WWUSA
CBS nine for the report police. The detective says that
one of the girls admitted that the two of them
took the Metro here to Navy Yard with the intent
of stealing a car. They countered Muhammad Anwar sixty six
and in a Honda Accord. There was a bit of
(58:05):
a struggle. Anwar got ahold of one of the girl's
cell phones. The two girls were in the car. He
was on the driver's side, trapped between the car door
and the driver's seat. One girl says that the other
girl jammed the car into gear and started swinging the
wheel while Anwar, the Uber Eads driver was trapped back there.
(58:30):
The car hit something here, the door slammed into Anmar.
Then the car spun around, took a hard right turn
here on end street right by that stadium, went up
on two wheels. Anmar was thrown and crushed and he
died at the hospital. I know, yeah, alat of y'all
(58:51):
watched that video this weekend. I did not. I really
wish social media didn't allowed his kind of trauma to
be shad. I don't watch videos like this, But what
that news reporter just described as what was shown on
that video on social media in HD, and I can
only imagine to hurt the pain and the trauma Muhammad
Anwa's family feels because that video will live forever online
(59:12):
and unfortunately, you know, I mean if the video will
live for ever online, and it shouldn't, okay, nobody's last
moments alive should be broadcast for the world to see,
but the last that is the world we live in.
But there is another side to this, the fact that
the thirteen and fifteen year old girl. For whatever reason,
they started to car jack the Uber East driver. Where
they hungry? Were they trying to rob him for food?
Where they trying to rob him for money? I don't
(59:33):
know what caused them to make such a poor choice,
but now they are charged with felony murder and armed carjacking.
The younger girl is from the Southeast section of DC,
the older girl from Fort Washington, Maryland. Two kids. Life
ruined forever and we don't know what for. Yes, I
would like to know the reason they made such a
poor choice, because he can be used as a preventive
measure in the future. What I'm telling you the lesson
(59:55):
to be learned here is that trouble is easy to
get into and hard to get out of. I know
for a fact that whatever that thirteen and fifteen year
old girl had planned wasn't supposed to end like this. Now.
A family has a gofund me page set up, you know,
for the funeral of a loved one. Muhammad anwar after
gofund me says a beloved husband, father, grandfather, uncle and
friend who always provided a smile when you needed one.
(01:00:17):
He leaves behind a family near and far who cherished
love and miss him dearly en quote. Can you imagine
being the parents of this thirteen and fifteen year old girl,
the range of emotions one must go through when they
are mad and sad at the same time. You're mad
they made such a poor choice, which you're sad because
now you know, you know, your kids are property of
the state. But it's gotta be confusing because they are
(01:00:40):
just kids. Does this society make it possible for them
to bounce back from this? Should they be able to
bounce back from this? Can you chalk up something like
this it's just a mistake. Do they go to juvenile prison?
And it's so for how long do these kids lose
their lives because they took one? I truly don't know.
I mean, we were all kids, and I know for
(01:01:00):
a fact the life I was leading either of the
kinds of things my parents dreaded, you know for me,
and thank god I never ended up in a situation
like this. But please, please, kids out there, learn from
these two young girls mistakes and remember life is a
matter of choices, and every choice you make makes you
Please give this thirteen and fifteen year old girl the
(01:01:21):
biggest he Hall I really don't know. I mean, they definitely,
you know, gotta be be held responsible for the consequences
of their actions. But you know, yeah, but how severe
are those consequences. Well, let's let's talk about it. Eight
hundred five eight five, one oh five one. What do
you think should happen to these two children. It's you know,
(01:01:46):
they took a life, so it has to be some
type of consequence. It does have to be. What does
that mean that their life their lives are completely over now,
I don't think so. Thirteen and fifteen, I don't think.
I don't think they had the intention to kill that
gentleman when they were to steal that car. And like
I was telling what the producer right now, what people
are doing is they're getting these teams to steal cars.
(01:02:07):
And the reason being as if the teams get caught,
they get no jail time. They only get a community service,
they get a slap on the wrist, but if an
adult does it, they get jail time. So they pay
these teams three thousand dollars to five thousand dollars to
steal these cars. And then when they steal these cars,
they usually sell these cars overseas and they get twenty
thirty thousand for these vehicles. So that's a big business
in the hood. That's what they're doing. Hey, go steal
(01:02:28):
these cars. There's two three thousand, and most teams to
be like, oh I go stealers car go steal three thousand.
I don't have to have a gun and go do it.
And this what this is what can happen. But I
don't think these these children's lives should be in jail
for the rest of their life. I don't think they
should do life in prison. Two young girls. I don't
know what. I don't know what the consequences should be.
But it's worth a discussion. Let's talk about it. Eight
(01:02:49):
hundred five eight five one on five one. Let's discuss
it's the breakfast club. Go on it the breakfast clubs.
It's topic time called eight hundred five eight five one.
Want to join it to the discussion with the breakfast club.
Talk about it morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee.
(01:03:13):
Charlemagne the guy we are the breakfast club. Now if
he just joined us. Charlemagne gave Donkey the day to
who thirteen and fifteen year old girls um from the
DC area who carjack the uber each driver and the
carjacking ended up with them catching homicide charge because if
you watch the video, somehow another homicide ahead. What did
I say? Homicide and murder? And you know they're charged
(01:03:37):
with it right now, all right, So we're asking what
do you think should happen to these these girls? Um,
I mean it's a tough one. Um, the thirteen and
fifteen I don't think they had an intention of going
to kill somebody. They made a horrible decision that that
caused somebody their life. So what should happen? Should they
get life in prison? I don't believe so definitely juvenile detention, Uh, definitely,
(01:03:59):
who flee some some type of programs that put them
on the right track. But I honestly don't know, Like
I don't, Yeah, I would think these they are thirteen
and fifteen years old. You can't put them in prison
with adults. You gotta be and you gotta figure out
how do you rehabilitate these children because they're only thirteen
and fifteen years old, But they do need to have
(01:04:21):
accountability and understand what their actions have caused. So you know,
I don't think you want to give up on these kids.
But it's just gonna take some serious work. Yeah, I mean, listen,
I don't know either man. Thirteen and fifteen year olds
absolutely will make poor choices. We were all thirteen and
fifteen at one at one point. Sadly this poor choice
caused someone in their life. I definitely think they have
(01:04:43):
to deal with the consequences of their actions. But I
don't want their whole lives to be taken away from them.
But this is something that will follow them for the
rest of their lives. It's gonna, you know, they're gonna
have to do a lot of therapy, you know, mentally
and emotionally, you know what I mean, Spiritually. I don't
even think they should get it half their lives. I
think they should do maybe a year and two in
juvie and some type of program to make sure they're okay,
(01:05:05):
to make sure they graduated high school and put him
in college. And because it was easy for us to
say because it wasn't our family member, who you know
what I mean that that that family Mohammed Anwa's family
may want to see them suffer, you know what I mean?
Since since since that guy would never get his life back,
Muhammed and Wa, they may feel like these kids don't
deserve a life. I don't know, but think about some
(01:05:26):
of the things that we did when we were thirteen
and fifteen that you know, it could have went either way.
We could have maybe hurt somebody, and you know, oh absolutely.
The first time ever, the first time I ever went
to jail was for a Sultan Brady would attend to kill.
And that's because my homeboy shot at somebody when I
was in the back seat and the bullet hit this
It was three people in the in the car that
(01:05:47):
they shot at. The bullet hit the fourth seat, the
head rest of the fourth seat that nobody was sitting there. Wow,
if somebody would have been sitting in there, they'd probably
been dead right now. And I'm sure I would I
would have been in jail right I used to throw rocks.
I don't even ask why. I used to rocks at
buses as they were driving by in Queens And just
imagine if one of those rocks hit the bus driver
and the bus driver crass. It's nothing that you think
(01:06:08):
about now, you'd be like, damn, I was done. But
it's just you know, let's go to the phone lines. Hello,
who's this Hi? This is Maria. Hey, good morning Maria.
Now you are a CEO. Yeah, I'm a CEO at
a female prison, and I've seen firsthand what prison does
too young adolescents, so I'm so against this. They go
(01:06:29):
in being innocent at times, and they come out worse.
I think they need maybe six to one year in juvie,
some community service, heavy counseling, but prison, prison, it doesn't
serve them all right, And that's great because you're somebody
who's there and sees what happened to a lot of
these girls that go in. I've been a seal for
ten years and I've seen the worst of the worst.
(01:06:53):
If you're an adult, granted, yeah, go to prison, if
you kill someone, you've done heavy criminal act, yes, But
these young people, young girls, young kids, young boys, no see,
go in at seventeen years, eighteen years old, and they
go in being innocent for in some cases like shy Um,
(01:07:15):
maybe not too sure about what their life is gonna be.
They come out worse. I've seen them in three years
turn around become gang members inside the prison um doing
things they never thought they would ever do. And it's
just something that people don't believe. So what do you
think it's what do you think should happen to these
young girls? Heavy counseling, maybe six months to a year
(01:07:39):
in juvie and prison, prison, now they need heavy They're
too young. They're too young. It's very young. I saw
the video like um, you guys were saying earlier. Maybe
they were put up to this to do something that
they didn't know the outcome. And it's a story. It's
a very sorry, such waiting for everybody, for both families.
(01:08:05):
All right, well, thank you, Mama, be safe out there too, Oh,
thank you? All right eight hundred five eight five, one
oh five one if you just joined us. Charlemagne gave
Donkey the day to these two children for I'm gonna
tell me the story about fast children. Yeah, thirteen and
fifteen year old girls in DC car jack the uber
each driver, which led to an accident happening that took
(01:08:26):
the life of muhammedan War the uber each driver. So
all right, what should happen to these girls? Let's talk
about it. It's the Breakfast Club. God morning, call me
your opinions to the Breakfast Club top eight five five
(01:08:46):
one five one morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club, if you
just join us. We're asking what should happen to the
thirteen and fifteen year old girl. They were trying to
call Jack a uber each driver and as they were
trying to do it, they crashed and each driver died.
So we're asking what should happen to these thirteen and
(01:09:08):
fifteen year old We have Eric, Eric, good morning, good morning.
What do you think should happen to these young girls? Justice?
Justice and mercy? And I get there. To me, they're
on the same same level. They definitely need to summer
consequences for their behavior. I don't believe that this is
the first event that's taken place in either one of
(01:09:30):
their lives that's led them to do something like this.
This is a progression. They've probably had some other things
going on in their life in the past, whether it's
their living situation, whether it's how they were raised or
their lack of But there's definitely you know, and the
justice issue is there for me and I stay infirm
all that as a mother because I do have children
(01:09:51):
of my own. As a thirteen year old child or
a fifteen year old child of mine did something like this,
I would be devastated and would want mercy for them,
as we all would. At the same time, I am
also a firm of believer of justice. Now rather these girls,
I don't know if they're African American, I don't know
(01:10:12):
what color they are, if they're if they're Mexican or what.
But if they did justice, or if they get thrown
into a system where they're not rehabilitated, it's a whole
other issue on another level, because there has to be
rehabilitation for them to be able to come home and
enter back into society and be functional and be better
than they were when they went in. However, if they
(01:10:33):
don't go in, will they be rehabilitated out in the
lights living the life that they live, or will there
be continuous robbery, Will there be continuous murders, There'll be
continuous things that continue to take place in their life.
This may be the intervention that they that they need.
And it's sad that we have another family that have
lost somebody. And this is often what happens in our community,
(01:10:56):
you know, this is often what happens and with young
African American children, or brown children or even white children
that that are in a bad living situation and come
up in poverty that are fitting for themselves, trying to
make it, trying to survive, trying to do what they
need to do, or maybe all they know how to do. Yeah,
you know, the thing is, we just don't know, you
know why. You know, because I was I was raised amazingly,
(01:11:19):
but either sometimes as as a teen or a kid,
you do stupid things like I threw rocks at busts
because I thought it was funny, you know what I mean.
But I didn't think about them. If that rockets a
bus driver and that bus driver losers control and he
crashes and everybody dies when that bus That's not something
that my mind was thinking of at thirteen years old.
What if this thirteen if? What if these two girls
were actually starving, you know what I mean. I'm making
excuses for them, but I mean they did Robert uber
(01:11:40):
East Driver. What if they were actually hungry. I don't know.
I don't think that they were robbing or uber East
Driver because they were hungry. I think, you know, the
gentleman who spoke and he was talking about doing dumb
things when we're when we're young, I mean, our brains
aren't developed at thirteen and fifteen years old. So of course,
you know, some people do different things for fun, like
throwing rocks at us, are jumping off of bridges. Are
(01:12:01):
thrill seekers. You know a lot of a lot of
young children are thrill seekers. They're bored. They have no way.
You don't have guidance, you don't have no one showing
you the way and kind of leading you and telling you,
and and and watching you and having a good hold
on you and directing you in life. You kind of
just start bouncing right and you do what all You
just do what you're out there just doing it. You're
just filing, You're just doing what you do right, and
(01:12:24):
and then this situation is like this happened. But you know,
there has to be an intervention or are you There
has to be somebody that talks to them and explains
to them how real it is and how real it
can be, because now the situation is this, They're going
to jail, okay, whether it's juvenile or if they bound them,
(01:12:45):
they bound them over because at fifteen years old they
can go to an adult prison. Right, well, you'll be
in a jupidile unit. But thank you for calling mamma
I mean, it's it's stupid and having kids. Your kids
could do stupid things and you just don't know about it,
you know. I mean my parents never knew I did that.
I was at my friend house, you know. Yeah. I
wish these prisons. I wish these prisons were actual correctional facilities.
I wish that they could put these kids somewhere that
(01:13:07):
they could actually rehabilitate them. I wish to hello, who's
this yo? Hello? What's up? Man? What's your name? Bro? Hey?
What's going on? Hey? First off? Good morning? Feed they
Charlemagne the guy you are the pre club? Hey, my
name is Kay Are from Landing my Way in Detroit.
I just wanted time in real it sounds like envy
(01:13:29):
and Charlomagne. It's showing sympathy for these two girls. I
don't like that. I think you should keep the same
energy to for any other killer out here. I think
it's because these girls are I don't know for sure
from the video, but I think the young black girls,
and yes, I don't know what they are. I don't
know what they are. I don't know what they watch
the video, honest, hold on, let me speak first. I
(01:13:50):
know I got limited time I think because they are
y'all trying to show timpathy. I grieve prisons should be
paration of facility. But come on, bro, they killed this
man for no reason. Bro, they need to go to
prison to make time. Bro, come on with that. Man.
I'm not saying I'm not listening. I'm not saying I'm
not listening the whole Wait a minute, I'm not saying
that this shouldn't be consequences of their actions. I'm saying
(01:14:11):
that they're thirteen and fifteen years old. Did you make
good choices at thirteen and fifteen? No, But I know
I know better than kill somebody. I don't go down
there trying to kill it. Their attention may not have
been to kill someone. Their attention wasn't to kill that man.
I can't see putting thirteen year olds with you know,
thirty year olds in prison where where we're a parents,
(01:14:31):
where we're the parents, there are are the parents gonna
be held accountable there because the life was We don't
know that, we don't want to hear none of that.
We don't know that, we don't know the context of
that situation. But I do know that the thirteen and
fifteen year old dude deserve some grace, right, Yes, they
just they have to deal with the consequences of their actions.
But I don't think that we should just throw them
away stuff. Now. I listen, I'm an African American male,
(01:14:56):
and I understand it before. I understand the sympathy, and
I understand the prison of being rail facilities. But they
look like young black girls, and I feel like that's
why we're giving them a little bit more simpathy than
any other killing out. I don't know what comes at
thirteen years old, and I know at thirteen I did
a lot of stupid ish and I know at thirteen
my kids did stupid ish. Now, in anything that you do,
it could be there's consequences and things could have happened.
(01:15:18):
I talked about it all the time when me throwing
that rock, like I didn't think I could have killed somebody.
I wasn't. My intention was not to kill somebody. But
let's say that that happened I made a stupidness. You
would still have to deal with the consequences of your actions.
Your life shouldn't be thrown completely away at thirteen fifteen
years old. No, that's so sad though, that this happened.
That somebody's life was taken from them. And by the way,
(01:15:40):
if these prisons were actual correctional facilities and we could
actually send them somewhere where they could get rehabilitated, I'd
be cool. I wouldn't care we how much time they got.
But yeah, I just don't think you can't mix these
little teenage girls with adults. Yeah, because we don't, because
because we know that these prisons aren't real correctional facilities.
So it's like you're gonna sending them there at thirteen
and fifteen, they gonna come out more angry than before
(01:16:01):
or whatever they're dealing with right now, and they need
some help. That's what they need, all right. Well, we
got rumors all the way. All right, Well, let's switch
gears for a second. Y'all ready for a white boy summer.
We'll tell you who thinks this is how it needs
to go down, all right, we'll get into that next.
It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, the breakfast club. Listen,
(01:16:23):
oh got its breakfast club? Well? An Earlie Tappa was
arrested over the weekend. They said he's facing multiple charges,
including burglary, carrying a concealed firearm, possession of marijuana and
possession of xanax. So that is I don't have the
(01:16:46):
full update, but this is what we know as far
as this news is breaking. That's sometimes sometimes that's the
Young Rappers starter back, right, zanex guns, right, I hope
that I know. Well, we'll see what happened, all right now,
DJ Envy, You and Gia Casey actually hosted a guess
it was it like a reaction to the winners of
(01:17:06):
the NAACP Image Awards. No, it was a pre show
for the NABACP fifty. It was like a recap of
lashes and we talked about the fifty second which aired
later on that day. So it was a recap and
we talked about the new awards and who we thought
were gonna win awards and what we missed and you
know what people wore and all that other stuff. It's
pretty dope, I know, now, I know. Was Maxwell part
(01:17:26):
of this this year? Right? Yeah? Maxwell performed, He killed
the two He did this thing. I know, and now
you and now Gia loves Maxwell. She's expressed this on
several occasions and music music. She said he was fine.
But here's what you got to say. As we were
getting ready for the NAACP Image Awards. So who else
(01:17:47):
do you want to see? What else do you want
to see? You know what, I'm very excited to see
this year, all of the well dressed people, especially the
men that get sharp for the night and the women.
I leave that part out up that party on board, Like,
you didn't hear me. You don't hear me say that?
And she never said Maxwell, That's what I heard she
(01:18:09):
was talking about. She was talking about Maxwell. She never
said it was fine. She had her bedroom voice. She said,
you know what, I'm excited to see Maxwell. All right.
She didn't say that Maxwell heard her. She said she
loves his music. Stop. We all heard her say, Maxwell bros. Okay,
remember when he was in a bathtub. Remember when she
was talking about that? All right? Continuing, all right enough,
(01:18:37):
whoa she could be so fortunate enough? All right, now
ride a wave. When he was on the Breakfast Club,
he was talking about his love for at sharing. If
I worked with somebody, it's because like then, mom, I
knew them when I was like, I was a fan
of them before music, and I just got to see
what it's bought. Sharing was I was listening to be photos.
(01:18:59):
You know what I'm saying, you know Ed my own dog.
I'm just saying, like you going out, feel what's your
favorite that sharing song? Man? I'm interested. I find your
head mans on my bedroom floor. I'm putting together Ed
Sharing Rodwave collaboration. We're gonna make that happen. Yeah boy,
you do that DWave yet? Man? Yeah? Man, stop playing
(01:19:22):
all right, Well, Charlemagne did tell us he's been having
sleepovers at Ed Sharon's house, and he did make that connection.
So here is Rodwave thinking Charlomagne only get ahead and
shout out on Charlemagne the guard Bro. He said something
and he did it. You know what I'm saying, I'm
gonna put me in with introduced one of my idols.
You know what I'm saying. By introduced me sharing like
that give me the chills, you know, said hearing from Bro.
(01:19:45):
You know what I'm saying. He said it was gonna
do it. Didn't get it, so big up Charlomagne. Man,
I appreciate that. Man, love that. First of all, I
never had to sleepover at that house. I did Sharon's house.
I did once. Did you if that's a sleepover? You nice?
It wasn't gonna sleep over sleep Oh, he's got in
a state. He's got a whole compound, So I don't
(01:20:06):
know you slepped over anyway is a music definition of
a sleepover? It was business. That's my guy, though, is
a music business and he loves hip hop. So he
was already up on a roadway. If he actually loves Roadway,
if you have some really nice things to say about
Roadway and his music, he actually said that. He actually
(01:20:26):
says Roger's music will be international because it translates everywhere.
And if I think I saw this weekend, Rob's gonna
have the number one album in the country this week. Yeah. Nice,
that's good Slimmer party talk. He did have fun when
he stayed over right and everything right. It was business.
(01:20:50):
I mean business. You can't go watch the interview me
and that Sharon did like two years ago, maybe three,
I don't remember how long ago that was. Shut up
here and you're mixed in with your beard. That's my that.
He is my second favorite ginger first, all right, Sharon Osborne,
(01:21:10):
we don't know that Jared Narsborne is out at the talk.
They have parted ways. They made this announcement on Friday
after this controversy between Sharon Osborne and things just went
left after that as she was trying to support Piers Morgan.
So that's it, and Sharon gonna sue the hell out
(01:21:31):
of CBS and she gonna walk away with a big
ass bag, mark my words, because they they're not gonna
be able to justify. You know, well, did she walk away?
Did they let her go? Like? Which one was it? Listen,
they've parted way. She gonna sue CBS and walk away
with a bag. They're gonna have to give us some
type of big ass s everage back and watch all right,
now get ready for a white boy summer chat Hanks,
(01:21:57):
it's saying that's what he wants into this look. I
just wanted to tap in really quick. I just got
this feeling, man um that this summer is, uh, it's
about to be a white boy summer. What you know,
checking how you want? I'm not talking about like Trump,
you know, NASCAR type white I'm talking about you know me,
John b Jack Harlowe type white boy summer. You know
(01:22:22):
can vibe with that? Well, every season is a white
boy season, okay. And I mean they are the dominant
cast here in America. It is what it is. But
I guess Chet is saying other races are gonna want
them a white boy to summer, like you know, other
other races of women are gonna go after white guys
or something. Is that what he's saying. Maybe he's just
having a fun white boy summer with his white boyfriends.
What's John b doing? Though? That was a very old reference.
(01:22:45):
I got it, I understood it. Check. I wouldn't expect
a young man like you to use such an old reference,
but it was such balance because he said John and
he said Jack Harlow. Therefore I know exactly what kind
of white boy Chet Hanks is talking about. He's not
talking about like, you know, white boys, white boy He's
talking about people who happened to be white at Sharon,
not yeah, but at Sharon will fall into that category. Yeah,
(01:23:08):
all right, well that is your rumor reports. All right,
Thank you, missy, and shout out to the whole beet
and Facebook staff for allowing me and a wife to
do that. We had a lot of fun. Shout the
rhynd to shout to Kanye Orlando with everybody over there,
and salute the gear too. Because she asked you a
question about you know, are you baige light skin or
some other type of light skin. And I thought that
was dope. Oh we got it. Let's hear it. Boy,
(01:23:29):
we got it. Yeah. Just couldn't let it. Just couldn't
let it go. No, I liked this for a lot
of reasons. Maybe we don't have it. I guess we
don't have it. All right, Well, we did have to revote.
We'll see you later. Everybody else. She called you a crew.
That was the people's choice. We have it if we
haven't played dramas. Okay, we don't have it. No people's
(01:23:49):
choice mixing time. We got it over. Then let's go unbelieved.
This is true. But I have one question for you,
which categ glory of light skin do you qualify for?
Are you the beige or the AT Crew? No, No,
you can't put me into that white category. You said
white white man, But I would be more definitely think
(01:24:11):
that you fall into the beige category on the beach. Okay,
I'll take a crew a little bit. But you gotta
love Anthony and I love DJ AT Crew that's your
new name, And salute the give for being the brains
of the operation. Because I love that question because it's
a way to get in front of the envy. Isn't
really black comment something for the NAACP. I like that
(01:24:36):
talking about white people. Forget that was smart? All right,
Let's go very smart to Breakfast Local Morning. So Breakfast Club,
your mornings will never be the same. Angela here and
the General Insurance has been helping people save money for
nearly sixty years. They offer the quality coverage you deserve
at prices you can afford. Make the right call and
go with the General called eight hundred General or visit
(01:24:58):
the General dot com. Some reject and supply c j Enry,
Angela yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Now it's women's history months. We repping today, easy, Well,
today we are repping for Tracy Oliver. It was just
announced that she inked an eight figure overall deal at Apple.
She also wrote the movies Girls Trip and Little And
what makes her so legendary is she co wrote Girls
(01:25:20):
Ship for Kenya Barris and she is the first black
woman to write a movie that grows more than one
hundred million dollars. She also developed an executive produced the
remake of First Wives Club for BT Plus, which is
currently in production on his second season, and she has
a comedy series at Amazon that she's executive producing. Now
that Tracy Oliver has this eight figure overall deal at Apple,
(01:25:41):
she'll be developing both TV and feature film projects for
them with an emphasis on diverse and meaningful stories. Here
is Tracy Oliver in conversation with Grace Buyers and Megan
Good at Paley Front Row twenty twenty. It's Woman's History
Month and we're celebrating the most influential women. To check
out this phenomenal woman. So I knew I wanted to
(01:26:04):
do something career wise that had something to do with
the arts, but it never really occurred to me that
I would be a screenwriter. And I took this class
called Actors Who Write, Writers who Act, And in that class,
I wrote something for the first time for another actor
and it was so I guess inspiring for me and
(01:26:25):
refreshing to see that person deliver my words that I
thought to myself, maybe there's something here with writing. So
that was the first time that I started to write that.
By the time I graduated from college, I was kind
of almost totally behind the scenes. I was directing and
and writing for women of color. Honestly, those are the
(01:26:46):
people that I was the most inspired by because I
was writing stuff that I wanted to originally act in myself,
and then it became an inspiration for me to write
for women that needed my voice or women that needed
opportunities that other people weren't writing for them. And so
I became that person in school that was writing for
(01:27:08):
the women that weren't given an opportunity to act a lot,
and that was another phenomenal woman in history. All right, well,
congratulations to Tracy Oliver. We celebrate you and salute to
you this morning for Women's History Month. All right, yes, congratulations.
Now when we come back, we got the positive notice
(01:27:29):
to Breakfast Club the morning morning, everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy we are to Breakfast Club. Charlomagne,
you got a positive note, do man. I said this
during Donkey Today, but I want to reiterate. It's a
good way to start the work week off man. It's
a good quote to put in your brain from John C. Maxwell.
(01:27:50):
Life is a matter of choices, and every choice you
make makes you always remember that when you make a choice,
you also choose the consequence. Breakfast Club, you're Finish what
you're done,