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July 17, 2020 92 mins

Today on the show we had friend to the show Amanda Seales call in for her therapy update! They spoke on her hosting the BET awards at home, self growth, leaving The Real and more. Moreover, we also had Jade Simmons who is running as an independent candidate for the Presidential election, and Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to White House Press Secretary for fumbling her words about bringing kids back to school.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is your week of Hallau Breakfast Club to show
you love to hate from the East to the West Coast,
d J M vi Agela Ye Cholomagne, the really show
on the planet. This is where I respect this show
because this is a voice of society. Schames in the game.
Guys are the coveted morning show. But y'all earning impacting
the culture that weak up in the morning and day.

(00:23):
Want to hear that Breakfast the world's most dangerous morning show.
Good morning usc yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo

(00:44):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
Good morning, a jolo ye good morning. He's amby Cholomagne.
The guide piece to the planet is Friday, Toronto. What
uph Your mic sounds like trash this morning? Oh? I

(01:09):
thought that was yours. No, that's yours. You sound like
you're in a bathroom taking the number two and you
got to do it. Clause. I don't know what's going on.
I know you don't sound echoe to nobody else. Yeah,
it sounds echoe, sound a little crazy echoe. Yeah, I
don't know what I can do about that on this line,
uh Friday morning. I do know that I'm tired of being,

(01:29):
uh you know, home on zoom during the breakfast club.
I'd like to be in the studios and I don't
have to worry about stuff like that. But you know,
we're about a month and a half away from that.
Maybe you might not be back. We might have been
back to twenty twenty one. Yeah, I don't. I don't
think it's gonna happen. I've seen I don't know if
this is is, if this is true or not, but
they said the Viacom won't be back into January, yeah,

(01:51):
next year. Yep. I did read that somewhere. I'm not sure, though,
I'm sure. I'm sure. I'm sure if that's what they
put out, I'm sure that's what it is. Yeah. So
if they're taking those necess every steps, I see, probably
I heart doing the same thing, which I hate, but
I mean it is protocol. I guess they're trying to
make sure everybody is safe. I mean yesterday, Yeah, I

(02:14):
guess you're never truly gonna feel safe until there as
a vaccine though, right, like, that's that's the only time
people are gonna actually feel comfortable with getting back to
some sense of normalcy, even though with normal will never
be the same again. Whatever we thought was normal in America,
that's long gone. Yeah it is, but you know the same.

(02:34):
The thing with the vaccine is, you know, when the
vaccine comes out there, are you the first people to try?
Are you first people to say, am I giving my
kids the vaccine? Or you say, you know what, I'm
gonna wait, I'm gonna see with some of these side
effects what happened though, you know what I mean. So
it's a difficult one. And also I know it's difficult
for a lot of people because a lot of people
are gonna be like effic because a lot of their

(02:54):
deferments are over as a last month, you know, so
people are gonna have to start paying their mortgages and
paying telephone bills and car bills and all these other bills.
The deferment part is up. And you know, I don't
know if if companies are allowing people to say, you
know what, will give you a little more because the
companies got to pay their bills too. So it's gonna
be a difficult one, man, But we can make it. Man.
We can do this. Man. We don't have no choice.

(03:16):
The only other option is um you know, to not
be here is deaf and I want to continue to breathe.
So we ain't got no choice. Okay, no choice. Well,
we got a couple of people stopping through today. First
and foremost friend to the room, Amanda's Seals will be
joining us this morning. Seals. I love Amanda Seals. That's

(03:37):
that's my That's that's my heart right there. I love her.
Chail a lot to talk about. You know, she hosted
the BT Awards and you know she she she walked
away from the reel. You know she's still doing smart,
funny in black and just just just all in, all
around renaissance woman, entrepreneur. Yeah. And you know the crazy

(03:58):
thing with Amanda is I've seen her grind Like we
kind of came up around the same time when I
started radio. I first started serious and she first started
and she started on MTV. Then I started on MTV
and we kind of came up together. And just to
see her hustle because she always grinded. I know a
lot of people might not like her. It's it's some
people love us, some people hate her. But you gotta
respect the amount of work that she put it in

(04:18):
this industry and continues to put in. You got to
salute to her. Well, let's not forget she was acting
before all that too. Yeah, my brother, she didn't. She
was an artist. She's still an artist, but she was
a performing artist, traveling, she did a lot. So we'll
talk to a man the sales, and also Jade Simmons,
Jay Simmons. J Simmons is interesting. Jay Simmons is interesting

(04:41):
because she's from the eight four three Chalton, South Carolina,
but she's running for president, and she's running for president
as an independent, you know, and I just think she
has some some very interesting things to say, some very insightful,
thoughtful things to say. So yes, I want to introduce
you to miss j Simmons this morning. And she's a
classically trained pianists. Okay, all right, So they're a very

(05:03):
interesting person hailing from the eight four and three chart,
South Carolina. All right, So we'll talk to both of
them this morning. And I got a question. I want
to know if Kanye is still running. I heard he's not,
and then I heard he is. But I'm sure ye
had give us updates in the rumors. But now let's
get the show cracking. You asked me, I'm the one
that's gonna be Secretary of State. Oh that's right, you
all gonna be secretary of state? Asked me what our
campaign looks like? Secretary Defense over there? All right, well,

(05:25):
let's get into the joints. Calip belives two new records,
both features Drake's a shout out to everybody in Toronto.
I haven't heard him yet, so let's get him on.
Let's listen. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we are
the Breakfast Club. That was Drake, I should say Calid
feature in Drake. It was called pop Star. He has

(05:46):
another one that they released. We're gonna play in a
little bit as well. But let's get in some front
page news where were starting you. The Governor Georgia Brian
camp is suing the Atlanta Atlanta City Council and Mayor
Keisha Lands Bottoms. That's because they are requiring that you
wear face masks in public places. As the numbers of
Corona virus cases are skyrocketing across the nation. So the

(06:09):
governor says no face masks, but the mayor in Atlanta
is saying, yes, you have to wear a face mask.
Here is what Keisha Lance Bottoms have to say. We
have given very clear, data driven metrics and advice to
businesses in the city of Atlanta. I believe that our
city mask ordinance, and I believe those across the state

(06:30):
are defensible. And it is not just my posture but
the posture of many other mayors across the state that
our policies are enforceable, and they stand. Yeah, that's insane
that the governor is suing the mayor, and nor do
I know how that works. I'm meant to ask some
of my political smart friends yesterday, but I forgot. I

(06:51):
just don't know who has the power in that situation.
The mayor of the governor, I don't know. Now. Now
My question was, so they soon any you have to
when you leave the house wear a mask. If not,
you get a ticket in public in public places, okay,
public places? Okay, all right, right, So now the lawsuit
according to what campus saying lead you know that he filed,

(07:12):
he said, leads to State of Georgia. And its fight
against the worldwide novel coronavirus. And he has the power
to suspend municipal orders that are contradictory to any state
law or to his executive orders, he said. As the
mayor of the City of Atlanta, Mayor Bottoms does not
have the legal authority to modify, change, or ignore Governor
camp To executive orders. So the lawsuit is on behalf
of the Atlanta business owners and their hard working employees

(07:35):
who are struggling to survive during these difficult times. And yeah,
but the thing is, you can still go out. You
just have to wear a face covering. Yeah, I really
want to know why y'all don't want to wear a mask.
If it prevents you from getting sick, if it prevents
you from getting somebody else sick. If they're saying this
is one of the main, you know, ways to help
flatten the curve and stop the transmission to this disease,

(07:55):
why wouldn't you just simply want to put on a mask.
Don't you care about yours even if you don't care
about your fellow man, don't you care about yourself and
the people in your house? Yeah, no, it makes sense.
You definitely should wear a mask, and I could see
people having problems if people say, like, hey, I go running,
I don't want to wear a mask, like I get it.
Or I do exercise and I don't want to mask.
But if you're out in public, yes you should absolutely
have a mask on. Man, my daughter, my daughter, and

(08:16):
the back back doing chier leading practice and they wear
a mask at chier leading practice, which social distances though,
you know, put you put your mask on. And by
the way, they need to make the magamask. The magamask
is what's gonna make people wear Okay, do something that's
more of their speed. All right, wear the red magamask
at And a lot of stories are requiring that people
wear a mask. So you can do that if you

(08:36):
own a business, because that's not a public place. So
they're taking magas into their own hands. And like Starbucks,
you know they're training their employees had to deal with
customers who don't have a mask on. So that's there's
different scenarios that they're actually giving to their employees so
that you know how to deal with it. Also, you
know how stupid you have to be to be in

(08:56):
the KKK. But then don't want to wear a mask.
You out in about that. That's just because you're not
used to wear a mask in public. That's the problem.
All right, all right, well, lat is your front page news.
Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up right now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,

(09:17):
the Breakfast Club. Wake up, wake up, wake y'all, ask
your time to get it off your chest, your man
or black. We want to hear from you on the
Breakfast Club. Hello. Who's this? Good morning? This is Chris.
How are you this morning? Breakfast Club? Chris, good morning,
Get it off your chest, bubble and mama, way to work. Man.

(09:38):
I just I just want to ask this question. I
just need the people to call in and tell me
why they against this mask. They why they don't wear
a mask. Ask your question, and I say, you can't
go out. This ain't When you do go out wear
a mask. You can work, you can do everything. Why
would you want them wear a mask in a public place?
I mean, you go on the side of the storecast station.

(09:58):
Why would you want to wea I just want to
know I'm with you. I don't get it. You gotta
you gotta say to them, you know what, you must
be secretly in the KKK because you're not used to
wearing the mask in public. I mean I don't I
don't know what it is, man, I mean it if
it's helping to save lives, it's helping us, it's helping
You're not just wearing the seed. That's like, it's a

(10:19):
no brainer. I don't get it either. Yeah, don't mean
saying I don't understand a lot about twenty twenty, Like
I'm so confused, Thank you? Brother? Hello, who's this? What's
going on? This problem on Atlanta? What's up? What's happening?
I just wanted to touch bases on the topic with
Atlanta and the mayor and the governor. Uh huh okay, Yeah,

(10:40):
So I just really want to say, like a lot
of people that a's uh not wearing masks or really
don't want to enforce the mask deal in Atlanta. Is
because maryor Boda has been enforced in the mask deal
for so long and her whole household has COVID. So
oh so they saying that what they saying, what does
it matter if you wear a mask, you might can
catch it anywhere, right, you're going to get it anywhere

(11:00):
stupid so much. Yeah, but if you wear masks, it
doesn't mean you won't catch it. That means you're likely
lesly less likely to catch it. It doesn't mean you
want tread or spread it to someone else, to somebody else.
Absolutely as just like saying the majority of people wear
condoms with people still catching lamydia, are still catching herpes
or whatever, still having a baby, because all it takes

(11:22):
is one person in your household to get it. And
what probably happened in her household is one person was
exposed and came home and gave it to everyone else,
not that the whole family was out and got it.
But think about this, though, our body no bacteria, right,
so if we're covering up all day long, we can't
get bad bacteria. You're not covering up all day long.
Only when you're in public. Ain't gonna cover up when

(11:43):
you're walking around. You ain't got to cover up when
you're driving, You ain't got to cover up in your house.
But if you're in a public place with people that
you don't know what they've been, it's best that you
cover up. Bro. I mean, you do see the numbers
ride you do you do see the numbers rising as
things are opening up, right, and you would want to
take every precaution possible to protect yourself and other people.
So let's not say me. Let's say the gas station

(12:05):
workers that work at race Track and Quick Trip. They
work ten hours ship and they have to have a
mask on all day. So what's the difference then, Now,
I don't know if they have to have a mask
on all day they need to put a mask on
somebody who walks in the store when somebody pulls up. Yeah,
it's during the ship and they don't get break that
Racetrack and Quick Trip so they don't even get to
go eat or go to the bathroom. They get lunch
and they get bathroom, they can walk outside. Yeah, stop

(12:31):
stop making excuses. Okay, all right, stop making excuses. Have
a good morniment. No right, there's no right way to
doing the wrong thing. Not wearing a mask is wrong
at a time like this. If you're trying to stop
the transmission of coronavirus, period, get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one on five one. If
you need to vent hit us up now. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Did your time

(12:58):
to get it off your chests, your man or blast
so people to have the same in We want to
hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello, who's this
being pretty from Rockland? What's up? Brother? Get it off
your chest? All right? Man? I am mad at DJ
Khalid because those two Drake songs were weakened in Charlotte
Man's COVID nineteen airline. Man, what's going on with those? Man? Who? Whoa? Whoa?

(13:19):
Whoa whoa? I don't ever disrespect my COVID nineteen headline. Okay,
here's COVID NY headline was kind of weak. But come on,
I don't think. I don't think the CALLI records of
that week they just you know what it is, They
just generic, like we know what a DJ Khalid records
sound like, we know what a Drake record sound like.
And it's just like it's just it's just mid it
ain't whack, it's just but it ain't cush either though,

(13:39):
you know what I mean? And it ain't Reggie, just
mid so. But tell man, y'all say state man and
much club to y'all. Man, all right, you have a
going broba. Hello, who's this? I gave her hor few chests.
Bro Hey. I was just calling because I'm just kind
of crusted with people that people they record podcasts and

(14:01):
they put them up on YouTube and on all brand sites,
and then you know, you can say something five years
ago and then you're still held accountable for it. It's like, well,
you know, people change. Okay, welcome, Welcome to my world chair. Yeah,
it's not fair. I get you. I'm a I'm a

(14:22):
fan of you know, all all your interviews podcasts individually,
you know, Like I'm a I've been like since the
RASA interview of the Restles Club, and then anything you
guys all done individually. I could see the rope that
you guys had, you know, and the last thing I
want to say before I get off, and runners that like,

(14:42):
we need people not like Dakasi six nine, but we
need people that are in gangs. I see things that
are a fouled, like kids getting killed and innocent people
getting beat up and robbed. To say, that's not right.
You don't have to tournamentto the police, but these people
shouldn't be just terrorizing the neighborhood. Yeah. I think it's

(15:03):
a difference between snitching and crime prevention. You know what,
I mean, I don't I don't think there's anything wrong
with seeing something and saying something. That's how you keep
you know, that's how you break the cycle of trouble
in your community. All right, get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five five, one oh five one. If you
need to vent, you can hit us up at any time. Now,
we got rumors on the way, yes, and prayers for

(15:25):
Tamar Braxton. There's some breaking news of her being rushed
to the hospital. Will give you some updates on what
has happened. All right, we'll get into that next keeping
lock this the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
It's about is the rumor report with Angela Ye on

(15:50):
the Breakfast Club. Well, right now we are praying for
Tamar Braxton. She has been rushed to the hospital. They're
saying that it looks like a possible suicide attempts. She
was found unresponsive in her hotel room. They said that
her boyfriend David called nine one one. He said that
Tamar had been drinking and had taken an unknown amount

(16:11):
of prescription pills. They were at the Rich Carlton in
downtown LA when he found her unresponsive. They said they
received a call around nine forty five pm. That call
to the LAPD said that female had a medical emergency
listed as a possible overdose. We don't know what her
condition is at this time, but the spokesperson said Tamar
has had a very tough and emotional day. More information

(16:33):
will be coming in the next few days. Please pray
for her. Yeah, it is true, man, if this is true,
you know, this era we're live in in is testing
people's mental health like never before. I had two friends
commit suicide last month. Okay, r p Jadmin Water's r
ip should killed Cardie. But that's why we all have
to be gentle with each other, because you really don't
know what people are going through and why they are
going through it. And please, man, everybody go to therapy.

(16:56):
Go seek some help if you need it. People love
to say, oh, Charlomagne, all you do talk about ment health.
Charlomagne talked about this therapy. This is why a fool
you don't know what people going through. All right, Michelle Obama,
She's okay too, man. Michelle Obama has announced the new
podcast that she's releasing and it will be on Spotify
and also The Obama's Higher Ground and the podcast will

(17:19):
debut exclusively on Spotify on July twenty ninth. So she'll
be interviewing a lot of people who are close to her,
a lot of celebrities as well. And here's what you
had to say. My hope is that this podcast can
be a place for us to sort through the questions
that we're all trying to answer, a place to open
up and be a little vulnerable and have some fun
along the way. And most importantly, I hope this podcast

(17:43):
sparks ideas and topics that you can open up with
within your own circles. As alute to Queen Obama, dropped
on the clues bombs to Queen Obama, stay stay out
of my way. She's competition, now, don't boy very competitive.
I'm very competitive in this audio space. All right, don't
make me feel like you want some smoke, Queen Obama.
All right, she's gonna have Valerie Jared on. You have

(18:04):
Conan O'Brien on family members, so we'll be interesting. I'm
sure she'll get Barack on at some point. We've had Valerie. Okay,
it's not a competition, Yes it is. It's always a competition.
Have you had Michelle Obama? Rock? Huh? Huh, not like
Michelle has had Barack. But I'm sure that you've had fantasies, envy,

(18:26):
bike riding. Everything is kinting with you. I hope you
can believe in anyway. Logic has announced his retirement. He's
officially announcing his retirement with the Pressure Executive produced by
No Idea that's coming out to Lie twenty fourth. He said,
it's been a great decade. Now it's time to be
a great father. No, not Logic. He can't leave. The

(18:48):
rap game needs them. I don't think he liked you anyway.
H Man, What do you mean? No, I don't think
he liked you anyway. No, I'm serious. The rap game
needs logic because we have a producer named Daniel, and
Daniel loves loves logic, logic. I don't care how logic
feels about me or what logic is said about me
and his songs. God bless that brother. But Daniel man

(19:09):
eyes watering this morning because it is news. Did you
know Dan has logic tattooed on his stomach like Tupac's
Doug Life. He has logic. Yes, he got mad merch too,
got mad logic Merch. How do you feel about this? Daniel.
I'm devastated, he really is. And the crazy thing it
was a great album. The crazy thing is that one
of that Logic's DJ was actually up at iHeart one

(19:31):
day and Dan went out of his way to go
meet him. First of all, you gotta be a real, real,
real fan. Why to do a backflip over their DJ.
He's not like It's not like it was Jazzy jaff
you know, like you know jam Master James Penderella, somebody
you know that's a part of the group. I didn't
know that Logic had a DJ. Of course he has

(19:53):
a DJ. What are you talking about? All right? And
Nakole Kimman is this album? More are going to be
reading bedtime Stories and the HBO Max series. They said,
during these turbulent times, HBO Max wants you to just relax.
So the streamer has ordered a series called A World
of Calm, and it's based on the popular app and
it's narrated by some of those big names my Herschela

(20:13):
Ali and Nicole Kidman's Ae Kravitz, Lucy lou Keanu Reeves.
So each half hour episode takes audiences on an immersive
visual journey into another world, building on calm's sleep stories.
I love a good bedtime story. My daughters don't like
for me to read bedtime stories. If I come into
the room and I try to read a bedtime story
to them, they snatched the book for me and give

(20:34):
it to my mom. I'm gonna give it to my wife.
To your mom, Okay, my wife, Wait a minute. So
they don't like for me to read in bedtime stories,
but I will lay on the floor and listen to
your mom reading bedtime stories. So bedtime stories aren't very calming.
Yes that is true. All right, Well that is your
front page news, I mean m report. All right, thank you, missy.
You let me just say that that's your rumor report,
because when we come back, we have front page news.

(20:55):
And what are we talking about? Yes, indeed we do it,
and we are going to be talking about the NFL,
what's happening with the new season, and also the Washington Redskins.
For now, there are some accusations of sexual harassment from
the staffers. All right, we'll get into that next. Keeping
locked this to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is
DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy. We all the

(21:18):
Breakfast Club let's getting some front page news where we're starting. Ye, well,
let's start with mortgage rates. I know, I didn't know
you guys were going up. Mortgage rates have fallen below
three percent for the first time ever right now as
the economy is struggling. So the average thirty year fixed

(21:39):
rate mortgage fell to a record low of two point
nine two point nine eight percent this past week, and
the fifteen year fixed rate mortage draft to two point
four eight percent. Yeah, this is a great time to
purchase at home if you can afford it. Interest rates
are at the lowest, and the refinance as well if
you are high. If you have high interest rates, this
is a time where you can refinance and it could
save you a couple hundred dollars, maybe even thousand dollars

(22:01):
a month. So this is the time to do it. Yeah. Yeah,
it's hard. There's not a lot of inventory out there
right now, so there's an increased demand because of these
low mortgage rates. But then inventory is just not there
right now, so you got to really go hard to
try to find something. I don't think people realize how
bad the economy is struggling right now. You know, trauma

(22:21):
is high money is low, and that's why I saw
much violence in the hood in this present time. All Right,
at least fifteen women are accusing Washington Redskin staffers of
sexual harassment. You know, they've been in the news a
lot lately talking about changing their name and changing their
logo for the team. Well, now they've launched an internal investigation.
There's fifteen former female employees and two journalists who covered

(22:44):
the team who are accusing these staffers of sexual harassment
and also verbal abuse. The allegations who are first reported
yesterday by The Washington Post, and former employees accusing Larry Michael,
the team's former senior vice president of content and play
by play announcer, of talking about the attractiveness of a
college intern while he was being recorded for a team video,

(23:06):
according to a newspaper. Also, they have screenshots of text
messages in which Richard Man, the second, who was the
team's assistant director of pro personnel, they were inappropriate sexual
comments to a female employee. He was fired in the
past week. Now. The owner Dan Snyder and former team
president Bruce Allen were not directly implicated, but they are
saying that they fostered a culture in which the behavior

(23:27):
was permitted. Yes, they get to justice there seeking right well,
fortune of the fifteen accusers said that they had signed
NBA's so they were scared they could face litigation if
their names were used. All right, And what's going to
happen with the new NFL season? While JJ Watt from

(23:48):
the Houston Texans was tweeting out a list of things
that players and the NFL players associations know and don't
know regarding the upcoming NFL season and the interest of
having everyone on the same page terms what we know
and don't know, here are a few things I've learned,
he said that players do want to play, but want
to do it in the safest way possible. He said
players still have yet to receive a valid infections disease

(24:10):
emergency response from any team or league, and he did
not know how often the league will test players throughout
the season for coronavirus or how a positive test would
affect things like contracts and roster spots. But he says
they players have not been told whether there will be
any preseason games, and nothing has been agreed upon regarding
what training camp will actually look like and how the

(24:31):
ramp up period will work. But training camp start dates
are still being negotiated between the NFL and between the
players Association, They said. Rookies for the Houston Texans are
scheduled to report on Saturday, and the Texans are scheduled
to open the regular season against the Kansas City Chiefs
on September tenth. You know, I would never have expected

(24:51):
that we would be going into the fall still dealing
with coronavirus. And I would have never expected that. And
our government is absolutely doing nothing. Has there ever been
a time when lack of leadership has been more apparent
in a position? Yeah, like you American people, y'all cannot
sit here and tell me, y'all don't feel alone out here,

(25:13):
like we don't know, we don't know what the end
is for this thing. They're just telling us that, well,
you know it's there. God didn't deal with it on
your own. Yeah. These kids back to school. Yeah, and
like you said, like my son started football practice, and
I mean they're taking as serious, but it's still scary.
They go to practice, they have to stand, you know,
six feet away from each other. They're not throwing a

(25:35):
football yet, they're really just just running and do it
exercises and they have different groups. If they have to
answer questions every day. So I for kids says he's
feeling sick, that whole group has to leave for fourteen days.
If if one of the kids feel like they have
a temperature, they check everybody's temperature every day. If one
kid feels sick, if he's in that group, that whole
group is gone. So they're trying to take as serious
as possible, but they're still trying to allow kids to

(25:56):
at least come back and be able to talk to
their friends and have some type of normalcy. Yeah, and
that you're that's so mentally scressful for me as a
parent because I'm like, Okay, my daughter's back at cheerleading practice.
She started back this week. What is it safe? Like
they do the same thing. She gets there, They check
a temperature, they gotta put the hand sanitized on their
social distance in. But it's just like, should we be

(26:16):
here right now? I would say everybody else is here?
Yea bro? They sent an email out. They sent the
email out yesterday that was like, hey, parents, we know
you like to watch your kids, but you can't stay
on the gate and watch your kids together. It defeats
the point of purpose. You can't stay as parents together
talking while your kids are practice, And you got the
why are we here at practice? So why are the
kids here at practice? But the kids kids? But the

(26:37):
parents can't stay there and watch the kids and stay
together because that the feasts the purpose they want six
feet distancing. You know, it's crazy parents stay to watch
chier leading practice. And then you got the uh they talk,
you know when they talk about opening in schools up
in the fall, You're like, okay, if well, if they
can't go back to school, why are we here at
cheerleading practice? Like it's just it's just it's just scressful.
It's just very scressful time right now. Man, Absolutely, I

(26:58):
don't even know how to be a good job as
a parent. That is your front page news. All right,
thank you, miss ye. Now when we come back, Amanda
Seals will be joining us. We'll kick it with Amanda Seals,
find out everything that's going on with her. So don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. I
want everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Sholomie the guy.

(27:21):
We all the Breakfast Club. We got a special guest
on the line and friends to the room. Amanda Seals Seals,
good morning, Good morning. He's a West Cuts. She's up
at six in the morning looking all styled and fabulous.
So early. I tried to give y'all a little something.
You know, we don't never leave a house, so it's like,
here's an excuse for me to do something on my

(27:43):
face and whatnot do something with my face? Well, first
of all, I just want to say congratulations on the
BT Awards because I think you pulled that off amazing.
I know it's a different time for everyone and we
were like, how is this going to happen? But I
gotta ask you, how did that feel? Did you killed it?
Thank y'all? Um, it felt good. I mean it was

(28:05):
trials and tribulations, you know, to to do that. I
don't think people really know the order of events that
went down. Uh well, first of all, I uh well,
shout out to Jesse Collins, who produced BT Awards, and
he you know, I didn't even know he was looking

(28:25):
for me to host it. And my internet in my
crib was acting up. Felt like real Teddy Riley and
versus um, and so I ended up having to do
my writer's room in my car down the street from
my house for the for the Wi Fi to work.
So I was in my car for five hours every

(28:47):
day for the for the week before the BT Awards.
And shout to my writers Yaster, Lester Links and Kerman
and Sam Jum We really and Kennis Mobili. We really
put together, I believe a unique show because considering what
was going on and just you know, and and thank
you to Jesse Collins and Dion Harmon because MBT because

(29:09):
for what it's worth, like they didn't it. I didn't
have to like get notes like it was literally like
a man to just do what you want to do.
And it felt good to have that trust because I
really do know what I'm doing and I really felt
like I could capture the time wearing a weird ass

(29:32):
crazy time. We're in a beautiful time as well, and
you know, we are in a very thoughtful time, and
I needed to walk a lot of lines and be
in a lot of spaces at the same time. It's
be funny at the same time it's be entertaining for
no one in the immediate presence because I ended up

(29:54):
having to do the John in my house. Yeah, how
it was filled with no crowd like there was nobody cheering,
nobody saying anything. How was that? So the night before,
we were supposed to go to the studio because at
least you were gonna shoot in the studio, so I'd
have my glam squad and you know, the producer and
was expecting to at least have that. So then the

(30:15):
night before they were like, okay, crisis, one of the team.
One of your team tested positive for COVID. Oh damn,
everybody got to be quarantined. We gotta do this in
your house. Wow. So I was like, because I called Charlotte,

(30:37):
I was like, it's gonna be whack. Oh no, I'm
a little corny, is there? And I had just done
a bunch of press where I was like, it's not
like we're gonna be doing it in my house because also,
like you know, people are always doubting me anyway, So
everyone's like, it's gonna be boring. She corny, it's gonna

(30:57):
be whack. You know what they're gonna do. It's gonna
be like her insot story. And I'm like, oh my god,
it's gonna be like my ancestor. And that that was
really frightening to me, and so um, what's the first
thing I told you. I said, you're gonna take it
back to the days when you was in hallm in
the basement with the green screen. Okay, doing those sketches.

(31:22):
All right, that's that's all you had to do. You
were built for that. You really, you know, Jimmie Fox
had talked about this, but you really just don't realize
how everything you've done ends up being training for where
you're what you're doing. You that's why the process is
so important. And you know, we had already planned to
do the sketches in the different BT shows. I didn't

(31:43):
really know how that was gonna end up being presented
and how we were going to extrapolate that from being
in my living room. We had to tape everything, do
set up everything. You had to do everything. So my
ex had come into Tech that night before. We want
not read him. We will not name his name because
he does not deserve it. But I did get him

(32:05):
a credit because I'm a good woman and I got
him and I got him a large check because you know,
even though if it's someone who loves you, they will
help you out in that crisis just off the shrink.
It's like, you know, if I can get if I

(32:25):
can get my man some bread, I'm gonna get my
man some bread. Like that's just you know, part for
the course. I did end up shooting like I was
shooting by myself. He didn't help me when I was shooting,
So I definitely had to do my own makeup. I
had to do my own hair, you know, I was

(32:45):
dressing myself like, so I'm in my house, like, run
into the bathroom on FaceTime with my makeup artist. Shout
out to Renee sang Anoo, shout to my hair. Stilence,
Nikki be at my wardrobe. Silence, Brian Javar. Because we
put together our whole vision, you know, like I really
hope people got it that we were doing some playing
homage to some classic looks and styles. You know, we

(33:08):
had the Mary Jay looking there, we had a dapper
Damn looking there. You know, we gave you Hillary Banks, etc.
So we were really trying to really do a convergence
of black massalgea and really pay respects to just how
style has played a role in this whole trajectory of
black culture. I'm over to the trick. Well, we set
up the night before and then we started at like

(33:33):
nine am the next morning with the cameras and then
I filmed from one o'clock to eleven at night. Wow,
it was an exercise and efficiency and I really will
fay this like and this is no shade to anybody,
But I don't know who could have done it. I
really don't because I really had to use every talent

(33:56):
I have, all of them. Like I was running the prompter,
I'm Mike and myself. You know, I'm checking the shot.
I'm looking. I mean like producer, director, ad talent. It was, um,
you killed it, though you killed it, thank you. I
had to cry the whole next day and chow cancer fashion.
You know you're just like, hey, let's move on that end.

(34:22):
I would have never thought that you had never known.
I had a complain it as me grow in his
house and doing everything by myself. And we were really
like on jan Kie Wi Fi. We got more with
a man the Seals when we come back, don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club, Go morning e j Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne,
the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking
it with Amanda Seals. Now, how do you think you've

(34:45):
grown during these crazy times during this pandemic, I've learned.
I've really learned restraint and the power and restraint and
the love and restraint, and you know, just being able
to be more thoughtful about Yes, you need to get
what's in you off you, but you can practice the

(35:08):
pause that gives you the consciousness about someone else. And
I will say this, it was harder for me to
do that in relationship than it was like with friends
or with business, because in a relationship you just feel
like we can all let it all hang out. I'm
gonna say whatever I need to say, you will say
whatever you need to say. But when you start to
really practice just the respect of speaking from a place

(35:29):
if I like you, versus speaking from a place of
like you're gonna hear me like, it really does change
the exchange and it creates a safe space. Now can
we can we talk about the real And you led
the underground railroad to streat and now people are following you.

(35:50):
How did that make you feel? You know what? Though,
to be honesty, I don't want to forsake my spirit
of soul or integrity for this down ever again. And
it's not that I went into it thinking that because
I didn't by any means. I really went into the
reel like this is gonna be so dope, so fun,
so great, because whenever I would guess, it felt like

(36:12):
such a safe space, you know, it felt like they
genuinely wanted to hear my voice, et cetera. So, uh,
but I don't want. I don't like Hollywood. I hate
this place. Uh. I love because I thought I thought
too broad, Like you didn't change, like you can never change,
to you all who you are, Like you've never change.
I've never seen you slip, I've never seen you die,

(36:33):
like you'll remember them. But behind the scenes, you know,
And that's really the lesson. I talked about this on
Hollywood Unlock. Like you just you're so focused on what's
happening on camera, but that's the least amount of time
you're spending, right, you know, you spend like an hour
on camera. You know, the most of the time you're
dealing with production, you're dealing with your your executives, you're

(36:57):
not even really you're not even dealing with your cohes
like that. And so you just start to see like
there's a culture in different places that you work that
is toxic, and sometimes you just don't know that till
you get there. The last year was incredibly daring for me.
It's just like the level of visibility that happened last
year was like wild, and you know, some of it

(37:22):
was associated with positivity. A lot of it was like
negative things that I couldn't believe were happening. I just couldn't.
I couldn't believe that I was moving in a positive way,
and then like such negativity would be attached to it.
When I was moving in a way to what I
thought was protect women, I was led on and just

(37:46):
my character was completely by many accounts, people felt like
my character was no longer of merit. And to this day,
I'm still dealing with that simply because like a man said,
I lied, then that's it. There's no there's no proof
for anything. It's just because because I'm answered, I lied,
I lied, and that was it. Like and that's how

(38:07):
that feels, that is, I'm at you here and no
proof nothing, somebody could say anything, and then people run
with it and then they bring it up all the
time anytime there's something going on. They're like, well she
did this, well didn't she? And you're like and you're
like that and they have, they have no proof of
validity the best. Then you know, you fast forward and
there was a whole ammy party fiasco, you know, and

(38:29):
it was just like I'm going somewhere to support, but
it still ends up going like wild negative and then
because we're in this very visible space, it becomes this
onslaught and I have never had six skin. I'm a cancer,
like so it was a lot, you know, it really
wore on me, like real, for real war on me.

(38:52):
I have like a whole nervous breakdown in March for real,
and not the tissue. I know. Sorry, I'm just thinking
about it because I was in such a dark place
and I know so many people like you just get

(39:12):
to a point where you think like I can't change myself,
but the world hates me, and so then if I'm
going to continue to be myself in the world, then
then I'm gonna struggle all the time. And that makes
you want to kill yourself because you're like it's never
gonna get better, So what's the point. And that was

(39:33):
a really like real place I was in. And anybody
who knows me knows like I'm not a defeated person,
and they know that I really come from a place
of joy and gentleness, and like I needed to make
myself the Passion Project because I put so much work
into my work and into you know, not being what

(39:55):
people think I am and proving and all this stuff.
And at the end the day, I had started to
believe what they had made up about me, which is
that I'm not a loving person and that I don't
deserve love. And if you're not careful, you'll let the
people who know you at least make you feel like
you don't know yourself. And I know so many people

(40:17):
are in that place right now and they don't know
if they'll get out of that place. And it wasn't
until I started really approaching therapy and then I started
boxing because I realized I had all this anger in
me and I need to, you know, And I started
doing raiki and I really just started just letting myself

(40:40):
be open to like, whatever the possibilities are for me
to feel healthy again. And well, all right, we got
more with a man de seals when we come back,
don't move. It's the breakfast Club goal morning e j
Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we are the Breakfast
Club was still Kicking It with a Man de seals
Ye and this book you talk about when you realize
that you have made it and that you were you know,

(41:04):
you went out this one night and were yeah, black
famous and people were recognizing you and how your friends
were with you and they were like, you did it.
I mean it requires aggressive self acceptance. I wonder why
it's so easy for people for people to believe the
negative we hear about ourselves from others, but not believe

(41:26):
to positive we know about ourselves and tell ourselves. I
mean it's like, you know, look how quickly cancer spreads,
you know. And I think also, you know, we are
made of atoms. We have protons and neutrons and electrons,
we have positive and negative charges, so it's always there.

(41:48):
I think that's why the whole positive affirmation thing ends
up being so necessary, because it's as if you're building
up an emotional immune system to challenge those negatives, because
your receptors are always there, just as the of being
a being. You know, the negative receptors are there, so
you got to work to build up your positive receptors,
and that really does take work, and we don't put

(42:08):
enough energy into that work. We're actually told that that
work is corny, you know, or that work makes you
a simp, etc. But it's beautiful when you do it
because it starts to make it where like the negative
is it's growth. It's like you can't even connect to it.
It feels so unnatural because you've you've done this like

(42:29):
shy limb practice of only attracting positive. And even as
I talk about it, there's still a part of me that's, like,
you sound corny. Oh. I think that's because we are
in the negative world, so like the world is built
to me more so to run on negative than positive.
And that's why you got to make sure your world

(42:51):
doesn't run on that, so that even when you got
to go out in the world, you can come back
into a space like I want to be in a
positive space at all times. Listen, I don't don't want
you around me if you ain't happy to be around me.
And even if you're going through it, check that at
the door, like maybe we can we can not even
maybe we can make space to talk about it. But
at the end of the day, it's like, I want

(43:12):
you to be happy in this space. And so often,
I mean I said a tweet that rubs some people
the wrong way. But it's like I said, if it's
eyes light up when his boys call, but they're empty
when it's just y'all, focus on yourself, sis, focus on yourself.
I think with you one thing you said that's very
important too, man, Like you know, you have to monitor

(43:33):
who your energy goes up and down around. Like when
I see certain people on my phone, I'm like, yes,
my folks, you know what I mean. And I'm at
the point I I only want to talk to people
I love. I only want to be around the people
I love. I don't have time for anything else. The
truth of the matter is like we I will always
come back to this, like the hardest thing that this

(43:53):
world makes to me. The world makes it so hard
for you to have like internal freedom. That's good. And
when you have that, you can go work for anybody really,
you know, and you're like, I'm gonna come here and
do this little job and be out of here, you know.
And then what ends up happening naturally is you just
start moving energy, shifting into spaces that are better for you,

(44:15):
and you find yourself getting opportunities outside of you know,
the ones that you thought were only available to you
just because you're attracting something different, and I don't need
more wealth. I would be more than happy to simply
just continue to work with my businesses and my companies

(44:35):
and build those from the ground up and then nurtured
loving space, and that will feed me financially, but more importantly,
will feed me intellectually and internally. And that is more
valuable for me right now. And I understand for people
who are listening like there's privilege in getting to that space. Yes,

(44:58):
absolutely there is priv religion getting that space, and I
am so thankful for the opportunity to even have that privilege.
But I also know that I really worked for that,
you know, like that wasn't provided to me. It is
available to everyone, even though everyone's journey to it may
be very, very different. It is available to everyone, and

(45:19):
I think that for a lot of folks, it really
looks like it's only available to white people. You know,
it really does feel like that. It feels like it's
only available. It feels like it's only available to light
skin people. It feels like it's only available to pretty
people or to skinny people, you know what I mean.
But it really is available to everybody, and I really,

(45:40):
I really just I just want us to do better
at and particularly for brothers to do better at telling
other brothers like you have everything within you, to find
peace within you so that you don't have to do
the things that hurt you. And at a certain point,
a lot of people, especially men, because of patriarchy, pain

(46:00):
metastasizes into pride. And next thing, you know, you proud
of your pain, ye, And what do we do when
things we're proud of we protect them. How you're protecting
your pain? And if you're protecting your pain, how are
you gonna ever let it go? And leading with ego

(46:21):
because ego feels strong and ego feels safe. I know
about that, but um, yeah, you know, it's it's always
fun to come talk to y'all because I also know
there's gonna be like self reflection, there's gonna be career reflection,
there's gonna be black reflection, you know, and you are face.

(46:44):
It's beautiful watching you grow. Seals Yeah, seals. We love
you and we appreciate you for checking in. I want
people to know too, Like as much as I just
talked about how degrading and frustrating Hollywood is, you can
you when you find the people that rock with you
hold onto them, you know, like I hosted the bat

(47:04):
Award not just because I was the right person, but
because the right person knew I was the right person right,
And those relationships for me are real, Like Jesse Collins
is my friend, you know, like it is that positive
love that you have from those other people. So I
know that I'm you know, as I advanced in this business,
I'm in more of a place of being able to

(47:26):
make room for that authenticity. And when you do that,
you just create more of a trend for that to happen.
And then eventually, I hope it starts to knock out
all the fake and phony. You know, there's nothing, there's
no air for it to breathe absolutely, well, thank you
so much. We try to say goodbye three times. It's well,

(47:47):
actually one last thing. Go to my Funny and Black
dot com. You know, check out my production company, my work,
my my growth. You know, I want to encourage everybody
who's a creative to understand that this is the process,
but that you really can make a creative life for yourself.
And as a creative, you're going to have to create

(48:08):
your life. And in that we always know that you
may get paint on your hands, you may get you know, splinters, etc.
But it's worth it. Well, it's a man, the seals,
it's the Breakfast Club the morning. She's filling the team.
This is the rule of report with Angela Yee on
the Breakfast Club. Well, you would never want to think

(48:31):
that this is true. And we still don't know what's
going on. So some people are trying to say. According
to page six, sources that Tory Lanes was allegedly the
person that shot Megan the Stallion because of a reported
dispute inside of his vehicle. The sources said Tory fired
the shot to him within the vehicle while Megan was
outside trying to leave. There is video and the police

(48:52):
are investigating this is a case of a man physically
harming and abusing a woman. So an LAPD spokesperson is
not confirming if they was video submitted, and they also
said videos would not be released until the case goes
to court. They said the detectives are seeking information regarding
the shooting involving day Star Peterson. That's Tory Lanes and
the investigation is still ongoing. I'm not privileged to what

(49:13):
the detectives have right now. Yeah, I don't know what's true,
but if so, if that story is true, man, those
guys in Canada shoot their shot different, and that's not
what we mean when we say shoot off shot in America, Tory,
I hope, no, I hope that's not true. I pray
it's not true. It don't even sound real, Like it's like,
are we show Mercury still not in retrograde? Because every

(49:35):
other day I'm hearing a story that I'm like, there's
no way in hell that happened, like what Tory Lane
in the foot. Remember yesterday we were talking about Megan
the Stallion's producer a little Jumade the beat and what
he had to say Sunday night, and he threatened Tory
Lanes and he said, I hope y'all don't believe he
was defending her. This is a bas story. I care
about my people being straight. Give a damn about some cloud. Yeah,

(49:57):
And then I saw her bodyguards say that, you know,
Meg gonna never leave the house again without me all
without some people that uh that that that that don't
that do more than aim for the feet or something
like that. Yeah, And I'm but my thing is this
if Tory did do that right allegedly, because I don't
I don't know, we don't know nothing. Why would everybody
be keeping this quiet? You know what I'm saying, Like,

(50:19):
why would they be protecting him? Like why would you know?
What I mean? Like, well, you know, you know, because
people feel like you can't snitch, you can't tell that
whole mentality yet if that man shot her in the foot,
like she was trying to leave, now you tell you
snitch woman, and people are probably well, first of all,
they're probably still doing an investigation. Secondly, they're probably waiting

(50:40):
to see how Megan the Stallion moves forward and handles
it in respect of what she wants to do and
how much she wants and when she wants to discuss everything.
So out of respect for Megan the Stallion, maybe they're
waiting for what she needs for her support and lee.
If a man shot you in the foot, how long
would it take you to tell who shot you? I mean, like,
I can't speak for her, I don't know. It's never

(51:01):
happened to me, so I don't know what that would
feel like. I know she's traumatized, as she said, so
she's going through a lot. So maybe she's going to
tell what happened, but she's just not ready yet publicly.
Maybe behind the scenes she has and publicly she's not
ready to be under the microscope like that yet. You know,
I think it's more about it right now her. Yeah,
I get it. But the fact that we don't know

(51:22):
the full story of this situation lets me know that
it's a lot more to this situation, and it's probably
not anything that's being reported right now. Probably what it's
probably something else that we haven't even thought about. And
you know, she might be talking to the authorities, talking
to her lawyer, figuring out how she wants to handle it.
That's up to her. I hope he. I just pray
he didn't shoot her in the foot, get sight in

(51:44):
the foot. My pray that this story is not true.
I don't care how many jokes y'all want to get
off I do. Nobody wants this story to be true. No,
but the truth will come out, so we will know
at some point soon. I feel like all right. Evan Lozada,
she was on Instagram and she was talking about her

(52:05):
relationship with Chad Ochocinko and the domestic violence incident that
they had and she was triggered because of something that
he posted. Now, he was reflecting on his past actions
and somebody asked on Twitter was the secret? How do
you stay so positive? Was it therapy? Not being funny?
Really asking for myself, and he responded, I lost my
temper for once in life, for three seconds, and it
cost me a lifetime's worth of work. I got it

(52:26):
all back plus some after getting a second chance, and
nothing will ever get me out of that happy space again.
While Evelyn Lozada appeared to respond to Otosinko's tweet, and
she put up a picture of her face after the
head button everything happened with them, and she said this
took longer than three seconds. And then she also posted
this video and said, I'm sorry to my kids, my
family and friends, my fellow cast members, their kids and family,

(52:49):
the viewers, and anyone else I hurt or affected with
my actions. Listen to her what she had to say
for this man to sit up there, I'd say that,
you know, he lost his temper for three seconds is
infuriating to me. As much as I'm trying to heal
from this, it's messages like this that are triggers for me.

(53:11):
You know people read this on social media and then
are you know coming at me talking about, oh, you
made this man lose his job. It's like, if you're
gonna speak the truth, I want you to speak the truth.
It wasn't the first time. Damn man. I'm praying for
healing for everybody involved. That's all you can do in
situations like this. And I will say, you can't still

(53:33):
try to conceal some parts of yourself and claim transparency
that you'll never get to a place of healing like that.
You gotta tell it all and say nothing. Now, for
people who are critical of Evident for speaking out, here's
what you had to say about how this triggered something
while she was minding her own business. I was at home.
I'm minding my own business, and then I have to

(53:55):
deal with this. I haven't never discussed anything else that
has ever happened the incident that people know, because I
always was concerned about his kids and our kids are
always having to relive this. Yeah, I think that was
whack that people were critical. I mean, something triggered her.
She felt the way she should be able to express
how she feels like, I mean, peop are coming at

(54:16):
her because that people are coming at her because they're
making it seem like she made everything get taken from
him for three seconds, and she's like, that is not true.
And then she also talked about how she portrayed herself
on Basketball Wise because people also were like, oh, well,
you was on there being violent, so now that she
was on the other foot, and I remember when that
happened and people were saying that, and here's how she responded.
And then when it comes to Basketball Wise and all that,

(54:39):
people tend to connect my character on the show with
what happened to him, and I understand that to a
certain degree. I take full responsibility. I know I'm the
one on the show. I'm the one that hasn't been
the most positive person. I know I'm the one that
has made us look bad, and I'm sorry, and I

(55:00):
understand that I didn't always handle things the right way.
You know, when people say someone caused you to lose something,
you know for a few seconds, do we realize that
you can build something up for twenty years, thirty years,
and all it takes his seconds to lose it. Like literally,
you remember your parents used to tell you trouble is

(55:22):
easy to get into, but hard to get out of
Do we not realize that? Yeah, listen. And it's also
kind of not taking responsibility for what you did, like, oh,
there's still three second mistakes, Like no, you did something terrible,
that's domestic violence. Yeah, once again, you can't, you can't,
you know, still try to conceal some parts of yourself

(55:42):
and and and claim transparency. If you're gonna be transparent,
you know, transparency is usually what helps you get to
a place of healing. So if you're not gonna be
fully transparent, what's the point? All right? And Nick Cannon
is taking time off from his radio show. He announced
on Twitter that he's decided to do that. He said,
Morning radio family. I've decided to take some time away
from my radio show so I can commit myself to
deeper and more thorough reflection and education. And he plans

(56:05):
to use this time to talk to rabbis, community leaders, institutions,
and just established an action plan towards real impactful change.
He posted a picture on his Instagram and he said,
stay tuned. It's just the beginning. It appears that he's
talking to I'm not sure if it's a rabbi, but
somebody that's going to help educate him on the relationship

(56:26):
between Jewish people and black people, and then he posted
I heard an entire community and it pained me to
my core. I thought it couldn't get any worse than
I watched my own community turn on me and call
me a sellout for apologizing. Good Night and joy Earth.
That's the problem. We cared too much about what other
people think in regard to how we move. It takes
a strong human to admit when they're wrong and apologize.

(56:49):
And what Nick Cana said about the Jewish community was
absolutely wrong. And if you talk to some Jewish folks
and they break down while those comments were bad, you
will completely understand. So there's nothing wrong with him apologizing.
When you offend someone one and your intention wasn't to offend,
Apologizing is what you do if you feel like you
need to. But now somebody needs to go check on
Nick Cannon because that absolutely sounded crazy. That we sounded

(57:11):
like somebody that is at the end of their rope. Okay,
And it's one thing you know to to to cancel somebody,
but man, you can't cancel people. You got to counsel them.
I actually heard Stephen A. Smith say that yesterday, you know. So, yes,
he got to deal with the consequences of his words.
But we don't want the brother to kill himself, not
at all. I would hope I would. I would hope not.

(57:32):
I would hope that. You know, that's not what people want,
all right? Well that and everybody just please, at least,
you know, send Nick Cannons a love. I do see
that he's getting a lot of support, but I know
that hate comes strong and it's hard to deal with
all that one especially when you feel like I've been
doing this work, I've been a good person all this time.
I made a mistake. I apologize for it. Why can't
we move towards some sort of resolution, you see, proactively

(57:56):
talking to people and educating himself. What did I just say?
You can or something up for years and it takes seconds,
you know, the tear it all down, you know. But
once again, we got to be gentle with each other,
you know, especially when it comes to our mistakes, because
you don't know what people are going through or why
they are going going going through things. So you know, yes, man,
I do want the Cannon to kill himself. Yes, he
was absolutely wrong for what he said, you know, and

(58:18):
I'm glad he apologized, and anybody that thinks he's wrong
for apologizing, then y'all need to do some education. That's
that's the thing to what he said, that you would
understand why he felt he was wrong. When we make mistakes,
we have to apologize, be a man and apologize to
keep it moving. It is. That is your rumor report.
All right, thank you, miss see Charlemagne. Yes, sir, when

(58:38):
you give me that donktu. You know, we need to
talk about people who are underqualified, okay to be in
the positions that they're in the life. We'll discuss. All right,
we'll get into that next keeping lock this to Breakfast Club.
Good morning you are, I'm gonna fatten all that they want.

(59:06):
This man's Totten Blowers man. They're waiting for Charlemagne to top.
They have to make a judgment. Who was going to
be on the Donkey of the Day. They chose you
the Preakfast Club, Bitchy. Who's Donkey of the Day today.
Donkey of Today for Friday, July seventeenth goes to White
House Press Secretary Cayley mcanny McCanny mcnanny, Canley mcnanny nanny

(59:28):
makes me laugh. Nor nanny used to be in school anyway.
Canley is a prime example of the era we live in,
someone who is underqualified to be in the position that
they are in. The primary responsibility of the White House
Press Secretary is the act as a spokesperson for the
US government, especially in regards to the president. The problem
with every single person in the Trump administration is one thing.

(59:49):
They are all scared to speak out against the president.
If the President is wrong, they won't tell him. If
the President makes a mistake, they won't admit he made
a mistake. Okay, America, you cannot love your party over
the country. It shouldn't matter what side you on. America
is in Shamble's right now. Coronavirus don't care if we
Democrat a Republican. Hell, the economy don't care if you
Democrat a Republican. Trauma doesn't care if you're Democrat. A

(01:00:11):
Republican being sick physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually, those ailments don't
care if you are a Democrat are Republican. We have
a lack of leadership in this country like I've never
seen before, and it is showing. The economy is in
the toilet. Money is low, trauma is high, and it
doesn't seem to be any relief in site. Now I
understand how important hope is President Barack Obama. Some people

(01:00:34):
love him, some people feel he didn't do enough in
the White House, especially in regards the black people. That's
all debatable. Nobody is above critique. But if it's one
thing that man provided is hope, Hope is important. Hope
is crucial at a time like this. Hope is being
able to see that there is light at the end
of the darkness. Bro One thing that man, President Barack

(01:00:55):
Hussaint Obama was able to do was provide hope. He
could be that to get us through this administration. And
I mean this in the most nonpartisan way possible. Is
absolutely dark. No lights on in the White House. Okay,
I don't think anyone is home because when White House
Press Secretary Kaylee mcnanny, am I saying that? Right? That's
just my little in a child that keeps saying nanny.

(01:01:19):
You know what nanny is? Anyway, Kaylee mcnanny was doing
a press briefing yesterday and she was asked if schools
should open or not. She fumbled her notes because she
was too busy sticking to that damn script that Trump
administration wants her to read. You have to watch the
video to see what I'm talking about. But when she's
asked the question about schools opening, she immediately went through
a script and she fumbled her lines badly. Let's listen

(01:01:42):
to when she first was asked about schools opening. Listen. Now,
the President has said unmistakably that he wants schools to open,
and I was just in the Oval talking to him
about that. And when he says open, he means open
and full. The science should not stand in the way
of this. Okay, you heard what she said, don't let
science stand in the way of this, meaning don't listen

(01:02:02):
to the experts, don't listen to the doctors and scientists
who know what they're talking about. Listen to us. Okay. Well,
literally seconds later, I'm not even sure she took a
breath after saying don't let science stand and stand in
the way this. Listen to what she had to say. Yeahs,
Doctor Scott Atlas said, I thought this was a good quote.
Of course, we can do it. Everyone else in the
Western world, our pure nations are doing it. We are

(01:02:23):
the outlier here. The science is very clear on this
that you know. For instance, you look at the jam
a pediatric study of forty six pediatric hospitals in North
America that said the risk of critical illness from COVID
is far less per children than that a seasonal flew.
The science is on our side here, and we encourage
for localities and states to just simply follow the science

(01:02:44):
open our schools. It's very damaging to our children. There's
a lack of reporting of abuse. There's mental depressions that
are not addressed, suicidal ideations that are not addressed when
students are not in school. The science is very clear
on this. Science is on our side here. Didn't you
tell us not to let science stand in the way? Like?
Which is it? So you have to listen to these

(01:03:05):
things side by side to really understand why at this
point I feel like we have no hope here in America. Okay,
because the people who are supposed to be leading are
at the wheel with a pillow in a blanket. Listen
to how easily she contradicts herself in a matter of
a second, you got to him side by side. Listen,
the science should not stand in the way of this
are The science is very clear on this. The science

(01:03:28):
is on our side. Here follow the science, America. I
don't even have the audacity of hope right now. Okay.
I believe in me, I believe in my family, I
believe in my friends. But I have absolutely no hope
for our government. I have hope for what I see
going on in the streets, the protests, you know, the
people who are standing up against racism and bigotry and

(01:03:48):
who are actively fighting to dismantle this mechanism called white supremacy,
the people who are standing up for homophobia and anti semitism.
But I don't know if it matters. You know what's
going on in the street. Because of what's going on
and Dad Whitehouse, I have no faith because of leadership
like this. Okay, we have people who don't stand for anything. Cayley,

(01:04:09):
I don't even know what she really believes. Not only
is she reading off the script and fumbling it badly.
Listen to her back in twenty fifteen in regards to
Donald J. Trump when he was running for president, Hayley,
how sickapoles are people in New Hampshire right now? Probably
very sick, especially when they see that Donald Trump is
number two and doesn't deserve to be there. Okay, why
do you think of the Trump excitement? What do you

(01:04:30):
trump that up? I appreciate his boldness, and I think
some of his rhetoric got the base excited, but it
is not welcome rhetoric. Donald Trump has shown himself to
be a showman. I don't think he's a serious candidate. Hayley,
this is your guy. He's number two in the polls. Hey,
I don't want to claim this guy. Oh my god,
nothing wrong with change in your mind, but yikes, Okay,
I have no faith right now? Okay. President Barack Obama

(01:04:53):
said in the Audacity of Hope, we think of faith
as a source of comfort and understanding, or find our
EXPRESSI is a faith sowing division. We believe ourselves to
be a tolerant people, even as racial, religious, and cultural
tensions royal to landscape. And instead of resolving these tensions,
are mediating these conflicts, our politics fans them, exploits them,

(01:05:15):
and drives us further apart. Further apart at a time
like this is an understatement. Pray for yourself, Pray for
your family, Pray for your friends, but more importantly, pray
for America if you want to, because I really think
God is sending all America's prayers to the spam folder

(01:05:35):
right now. But uh yeah, pray please give Keyley mc
nanny mc nanny bigga. See hall, y'all know what nanny is, right, well, yes,
it's a lady that watches my kids when I'm not here. No, y'all,
y'all didn't say nanny growing up up north that. No,

(01:05:57):
I ain't knownana nana popo, nanny man nanny mean doodo
like thesis. No for that. No, we say we sail
that boy smelt like nanny anny. I never heard that. No,
we never said that. Okay, this administration, it's full of nanny,
all right, Okay, this administration beyond that nanny. Okay, all right, Well,

(01:06:23):
thank you for that dunky. To day when we come back,
Jade Simmons will be joining us that she's from South Carolina,
explaining to the people who jams three eight four three Charleston,
South Carolina, Jade Simmons, M. Jade Simmons is actually running
for president. You know. She's a twenty twenty independent uh candidate,
you know, and um, I just think she has a

(01:06:43):
lot of a lot of great things to say, you know,
she her father is an activist in Charleston, South Carolina.
And you know, Jade is just a person that I
think people should hear from, you know. Okay, so yeah,
we're gonna hear from her next. Jade Simmons. She's running
for President UM as an independent candidate. Okay, all right,
we'll get into that next. Keeping lock this to Breakfast Club.
Good Morning the Breakfast Club. That's the world most dangerous

(01:07:08):
morning show. To Breakfast Club, Charlemagne and God Angela. Ye,
we have a guest on the zoom right now. She
is from Charleston, South Carolina. She is running for President
of the United States of America as an independent, and
she has a book out called Audacious Prayers for World Changes.
Miss j Simmons, Jade was happening. Thanks you all so

(01:07:28):
much for having me from your background, right, you're a
classic pianist. What made you decide that she wanted to
run for president? Well, something we've been thinking about my
family and I for quite a few years. I would
take sense about twenty fifteen, and the key was when
was the best time? People keep saying why did you
jump in so late? But the truth is I've been
here since January We didn't announce publicly until February because

(01:07:51):
we figured if we had he filed with the SEC,
if we didn't make an official there was no way
the media was going to pick the story up. But
just let that sit there for a second. But listen,
we've been here and the key for us. There were
three things I was looking for to know if now
was the time, if this was the time of the
great paradigm ship that I believe was on the way. One,

(01:08:13):
I felt like race relations was going to be at
an all time low. I'm the daughter of a civil
rights activist. I've been speaking understanding race since I was
five six years old, and I felt like the climate
we've been in for the last four years had really
ripped things up to a point almost of no return
if we didn't have the right leadership. Number Two, I
felt like we were going to have some incredible economic disparities,

(01:08:34):
educational and racial disparities. I felt like they were going
to be exposed beyond measure like anything we've ever seen.
And Thirdly, as a Christian, quite honestly, I was getting
tired of watching my faith be hijacked on the right,
watching people pretend to worship the same God I worship,
and to me completely tramp all over the principles that
teach us to honor and love one another. All three

(01:08:56):
of those things have happened. Lo and behold, COVID nineteen
exacerbated everything, Lo and behold, the murder of George Floyd
turned things on its head. And we have a unique
moment in time. So even though we've been here for
a while and people are just finding out about us,
we feel like the time is right now. Do you
have a background in politics at all? Not at all?
And I'm excited about that. I think the last thing
we want to do is have politics as usual. And

(01:09:19):
before you say it, I know the man in the
office right now ran on that sat. But if you
put the top five things that you don't like about
President Trump, not being a politician doesn't even break the
top five. He's not even president because of who he is.
You know, his failings have nothing to do with politics.
I think we're watching him live out in leadership the

(01:09:40):
same way he's lived his life. And so what I've
been telling people as hold that's accountable. Look at how
we've lived, and you'll see how we're going to leave.
So you're talking to somebody who can pledge easily, especially
not being beholden to either side to prioritize people over politics, profit,
personal agenda every single time. If this is the year
that we need a pas alet cleanser president, I don't

(01:10:01):
know what else is. Well, let's talk about some of
your policies, Jay, because I would love to hear you
tell us what are the some of the things that
you feel like we need, what you would want to implement,
and what the plan is to get that done. Yeah,
you know we have universal buying right now, that systemic
injustices exist. It took us centuries to get here, but
now we do. So we have to have now as
a president who's not only a president for all, which

(01:10:22):
I would proudly be, but we have to have a
president who's unapologetically a champion for the African American community
and for historically underserved communities. So if you go to
Operation Restoration twenty twenty dot com will see I'm not
playing around. There's a whole page dedicated a breakthrough, breakthrough
for African Americans, breakthrough for immigrants, breakthrough for small business owners.
And one of the things that I focus on for

(01:10:44):
black Americans. We need something like a new Marshal Plan.
You know, I keep saying, we went over to Europe
back in the forties invested twelve billion dollars in restoring
their economy, yet we haven't done the same here. So
this is a conversation to me about restitution. We're talking
about educational law and forcement and economic reform, specifically now
designated to the African American community. We've been generous in

(01:11:06):
saying everything is for minorities, and that's important. You have
to keep that, but I think now we have to
have specificity. You've got to have funding going directly to
black businesses, You've got to have loans going directly to
future homeowners, future black homeowners. So I think this is
a time where we have the room, more than wiggle room,
to do some very definitive and specific things, especially for

(01:11:27):
African Americans. But again, I'm proud to be a president
of all of a multicultural background, and I think that's
what's needed right now. You know, you said something very interesting.
You know, the reason people should take you serious is
the fact that you actually did register with the FEC.
It blows my mind. I've been I said this all
last week Kanye wes to not even register, and everybody

(01:11:51):
made it seem like he was really reading for president.
Even yesterday they're like, oh, he's dropping out. He never
was in Yeah, and that frustrating. Listen, it's beyond frustrating.
And what I would say first, what I won't do
is accused Kanye of bad intention. Because I've been on
that side, people have accused me this is a career move.
I'll tell you it's the opposite. I turned an engagement
down to day because they wouldn't even let me mention

(01:12:13):
that I was running. So what needs to be done?
If people have to take this seriously, honestly, filling with
the FEC is the easiest thing you can do. They're
over a thousand people right now who said they're running.
What you want to check and see if this person
is serious about policy. So we've been here. There is
not a major publication black or otherwise that doesn't know
I'm here. So if black voices matter, I'm just saying,

(01:12:35):
it can't be only the voices that are telling the story.
You want to hear. Every outlet you can think of
knows that we've been here. They've known for months, and
they haven't covered this story because this is a two
party system and they want to keep it that way.
Republicans in damazn't agree on much, but in terms of
keeping another voice out of the conversation. In our terms,
we're being accused of not only splitting the less, but

(01:12:57):
splitting the right. When's the next time you're going to
have a candidate that can unify and potentially address needs
on both sides. You're not going to see that, and
that's a dangerous narrative, so you don't see it in
the media. So thank you guys for having me on
were I was talking to my team. We think this
is our first truly national media so we thank you
for giving us the space. All Right, we have more

(01:13:19):
with Jade Simmons when we come back. Don't move. It's
to Breakfast Club. Good morning, DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne,
the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking
it with Jade Simmons. She's running for president for twenty
twenty ye as far as being a woman right and
running for because we still live in a very sexist country.
We saw that when Hillary Clinton was running. We saw

(01:13:39):
that where in Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, just the issues
that they had to deal with as they were in
the running to be the nominee. So I want to
know what your thoughts are and how you fail being
a woman. And that's just the woman, but our black
woman running for president in this count I'm gonna tell
you what has not been as challenging was being a woman.
What's the challenging is the lack of support I've seen

(01:14:01):
from my own community. So what we've dealt with in
the beginning was mostly the narrative about the split vote,
which I feel is one of the most the smartest
narratives we have that keeps us hiding behind part of
the party lines. So when people the people who are
flocking to me right now are the unexpected. You know,
we had we did the research on who we thought
was going to be our base, and so we're excited

(01:14:24):
that many more than we thought are flocking to us.
And now we're getting a lot of support from the
younger black community, people who are looking at the two
options and can't quite frankly imagine either of them taking
us into a new era, who are saying, we need
somebody to speak powerfully and unapologetically about issues that affect
Black America. So the women piece has been the least
of my concerns. But you gotta remember, Angela, I spend

(01:14:45):
eighty to ninety percent of my time in my career
in rooms that are full of people who don't look
like me, specifically in the corporate world, rooms that are
eighty to ninety percent white men. I know how to
speak to these rooms. They hear me. I'm brought in
by major corporations to talk about hard hitting issues. They
bring me in to make them feel uncomfortable. You see
what I'm saying. And that's what we need now, is
we can't settle for anesthesia in this season. That is

(01:15:08):
quote that let us just you know, feel better and
get over the pain of Trump. We have to push
through this now and actually do better and be better.
And we need bold plans of actions for that and
a bold voice. And that's when I'm bringing to the table.
You know, how does the limited political background put you
at an advantage? You Know, one of the major things
that I believe the next president is going to have
to have is they're gonna have to be a stellar communicator.

(01:15:30):
They have to hear between the lines, read between the lines.
In terms of national conversation as well as international and
they're going to have to bring to the table creativity
and collaboration. My earlier career as an artist has me
prepared for that in ways you can't even imagine the
policies that we've come up with. People are saying, we've
never heard of that before. And these are long time
political people who say, we haven't talked about it that way.

(01:15:52):
For instance, if you're passionate about being pro choice, and
you're passionate about being and you're somebody else who's passionate
about being pro life, you never thought you'd see to
eye to eye on that issue. But we talk about
being pro humans. In other words, from my pro life friends,
if we're serious now about seeing the abortion rate decrease,
you can't just say you're outraged about the baby in
the room, not care about the babies dying at the border,

(01:16:15):
the people dying at the border, not caring about the
knees on the necks of George Floyd, and claim to
be for life. If we're pro choice now we have
to say, what about reproductive possibility? Can we make sure
more black women are not dying in the birthing room?
Can we make sure that there's not higher infertility rates
in the VA. These are issues that we can work
together on in both seas, and can we take care
of those children once they're born and make sure that

(01:16:37):
they're okay Instead of just saying you're right, Angela, how
can you say your pro life and you take away
snap in the middle of COVID nineteen. It doesn't add up.
And so what we're doing is we're holding both sides accountable.
Let's stop the stalemates, which people are still dying. By
the way, no matter what you think about immigration, whether
you're saying put a wall up or whether you're saying

(01:16:57):
let's help the people, and all those two parties are
doing our fighting, people are still dying at the border.
And that's what continues to happen when you have the
two parties really angling for position, passing bills that are
performance art. I know, I'm a concert artist. That's what
they're doing. They're not really producing for us. So, Charlomagne,
what you said is the diversity of my background adds

(01:17:19):
to the diversity of this moment. We don't need a
politician who's going to talk out of both sides of
their mouths. If I came to the table twenty years
politician on one side, you better believe the other side
immediately thinks I'm against them. What about this fund the police?
But are your thoughts on that. You have to be
so careful about these phrases that get hijack. We're talking
about realocation of funds that has been a discussion for

(01:17:41):
a long time. Defund the police is nothing radical, but
the way that we've allowed already the right to hijack
that phrase already takes away from just the marketing and
the potential for this to go through powerfully. We're talking
about crisis intervention teams. Now, we're talking about sending the
right people to the right situation. We're talking about a
cating funds powerfully so that we're not fueling the school

(01:18:03):
to prison pipeline. So that when you tell people put
yourself up by your bootstraps, bootstraps and be a productive
member of society, they've actually got a pathway to do that.
So I believe now we have to talk. We have
to be smart in the words that we use. We
have to not allow our rhetoric to be hijacked and
manipulated against us, and talk about the issue so people
can really be served and communities can really be served.

(01:18:23):
So it's a time ANGELA four A restructuring, a reconstruction
of the law enforcement system that includes police brutality. But
if we stop there and don't do education and the economy,
then we haven't really gained much grounds. The reason I
wanted to have you on is because we all know
in these elections, big banks, big bank takes a little bay.
They always say you need a billion dollars to get

(01:18:43):
into the White House. But sometimes you have people who
run who just need to be heard, who have something
to say, and I feel like that's you listen. I
appreciate it. We made a pretty hardcore pledge at the
beginning that we would not spend anything close to what
has been We think it's just it's a travesty that
that much money goes into the attainment of power and

(01:19:06):
everybody else who dropped out to this point, that money's
just gone. And so if these are people who are
saying they're serving people, do you know how many homeless
rehabilitation centers we could have built with just Donald Trump's
war chest, Alan, with Bernie Senders war chest, Alan the Bloomer,
come on, here's the thing. People got upset with me
because I didn't have a lot of money. You can't

(01:19:27):
be serious, you're not a billionaire. But then they got
it set with him because he was a billionaire and
got a lot of money. So we don't bow down
the hypocrisy in the season. You know, we always say,
if you're wondering where our money comes from, you can
go to Operation Restoration twenty to one dot com and
donate right there. Because we have pledged to really be
a campaign powered by people. You're gonna see me in
the streets here gathering petitions. You can already vote for

(01:19:50):
me in forty two other states. You'll be able to
vote for me in forty two other states. But we're
here in South Carolina. We had to North Carolina because
those are states where we have to gather signatures. And
so the funding has come and helps us for each
of these trips. But we've pledged, and I've worked with
some serious corporations, and many of them are from the
demonized industry. So we didn't want to have money in
our coffers that would make you have to wonder where

(01:20:12):
I really stood. So that was a hard pledge to take.
But we're sticking by it, and we do believe when
people hear what we're saying more gravitating toward us and
the political spectrum that we are reaching, it's astounding. We
believe it's history making. Give them the website je www
dot Operation Restoration twenty twenty dot com. Would we would

(01:20:35):
love your support. We'd also love your help in spreading
the word. We're waiting for our d nice moment. You
know what I'm saying. We're all overnight, everything just throws up.
But we asked you to look into it because we
know that the things we're proposing serves more people than
ever before. So we're serious about this and we're not
going anywhere, So check us out. I just want to
help you keep elevating your voice, Jade, in whatever way,

(01:20:56):
whatever way I can, because you know, I think that
you have a very bright future and and sit in
a public service. Thank you, Thank you very much. I
appreciate it, and I appreciate the time, and it's thank
you up. I'd love to come back and really digg
into the issues. Um. I think that's important for people
to hear um and also people to hear that I
can hold my own when the time comes, so I'm

(01:21:16):
looking forward to it, thank you so much, and hopefully
we can do it live in studio next time. The
zoom ain't doing it no justice. That'll be wonderful. Thank you,
all right, thank you, Jay, all right, take care Breakfast Club. Listen,
it's just oh Gosport guys with Angel Angela. It's the

(01:21:39):
rum report, bast Club. Well, people are going in on
James Harden and he is trending and that's all because
of a face mask that he was wearing. It has
a pro cop symbol on it, which I didn't know
that's what that was. I hadn't actually never seen that before.
And that is a response to the Black Lives Matter movement.
Is the Blue Lives Matter those who displayed the flag

(01:21:59):
and say just to honor the men and women in
blue and fallen officers. But opponents say it has become
a symbol of racism, and the co founder of Black
Lives Matter LA chapter, Melina Abdullah, said it feels akin
to a Confederate flag and so people have been roasting him.
Meek Mill said, y'all know, damn well, James Harden don't
know what that mass meant because I don't he donate

(01:22:21):
millions in real life to our people. And the story
Young Thugs said, just so you know, James Harden is
my brother. By the way, he don't have Internet, so
he obviously don't know what's right or wrong if he
posted something that's against us. But I hate when rappers
get in and where's biz, Like it's can't happen to him, Okay,
he said, let them clear it up, and so that's
people's reaction. Trey Songs in the meantime, did not have

(01:22:44):
a positive response to the mass that James Harden had
on and he basically said, I'm gonna certify clownish. I'll
say it for everybody who's scared too. Yeah. I don't
think he knew what it was, are you Yeah, I'll
be the first to tell you. I didn't know. I
had I had no idea what that mask was. Okay.
I didn't study anything hard. And this is and this
is a prime example of why we need counseling and

(01:23:07):
not canceling, like you got to educate people. If the
Brothers wearing something that maybe going against a movement. He
stands for right, because I know he stands with Black
Lives Matter right, so he feels like, you know, that's
going against the whole the funded police movement and everything.
Whatever it is, it's just like you'll educate the brother,
don't just jump on him. Because I had no idea
what that mask was. I didn't pay no attention all Right, Now, Kanye,

(01:23:29):
it seems like he's still in this twenty twenty presidential running.
Just filed the second set of documents with the Federal
Elections Commission. So, yes, Charlemagne, looks like you might have
a second job here. Uh. It's called a statement of
candidacy and it shows that he's raised or spent more
than five thousand dollars in campaign related expenses. So this
birthday party thing could still be happening. Um, okay, Well,

(01:23:50):
Charlemagne is a Secretary of Defense, So so what did
you have Kanye secretary? First of all, I don't even
want to lie. I don't want to play like this
because nobody under Stan sawcasm no more. And when we
said that earlier this week, it became a headline. Kanye
did become a headlow man to be Secretary of States.
Take it into existence. Why I don't want to do
this like I don't want Kanye West to be president

(01:24:11):
of the United States of America. We don't need any
more celebrities being presidents of the United States of America. Now.
The only reason I'm even having this conversation is because
if he is starting to take steps the register with
the FEC, then you know, yeah, it's it's a conversation.
But no, we don't. We shouldn't be We shouldn't be
fueling this fire. Caitlyn Jenner says that she wants to

(01:24:31):
be vice president and she's already texted him about being
his running mate. Would you do the breakfast club from
the White House? Chalabigh, shut up because earlier kind of
breaking news. If I ever end up in the White House,
you know, I'm not gonna say that. All I'm gonna
simply say is, we don't need any more celebrities as
presidents of the United States of America. We need qualified people.

(01:24:54):
I really do think they need to change the rules,
meaning that they need to change the quiet criteria of
what it takes to be a pres like you have
to have some type of political experience. You have to
at least been a mayor, you gotta be a governor
or something. You gotta have to hold some type of
political offers. You should not be allowed to just run
just because No. Yo, that Oval office backdrop will be amazing.

(01:25:14):
Rob Kardashian is returning to keeping up with the Kardashians.
I'm sure there's a role you could give him as well.
I hope you'll get what y'all asking for. I hope
the fact that y'all keep fueling these type of fives.
I hope y'all get another celebrity in two twenty. I
hope y'all go from Trump to Kanye. That's what I
hope for y'all. All. Right now, Monique's lawsuit against Netflix
can move forward, and that is according to the US

(01:25:34):
Dish Court judge. They rejected emotion to dismiss her lawsuit
against Netflix, so well, you know, but this was all about.
She says that she was offered five hundred thousand for
a comedy special, but her counterparts like Chris Rock and
Dave Chappelle were allegedly offered forty and sixty million, respectively.
Andy Schumer was offered eleven million initially and then it
was booted to thirteen million, So you know, discrimination is

(01:25:57):
what she is saying happen. And also she was not
able to negotiate. Normally, you are given an opening offer
and then you go back and standard practice is for
them to come back and try to figure out some
type of middle ground when it comes to how much
they'll pay you. And that didn't even happen, so that
lawsuit will be moving forward, all right. Cardi B has

(01:26:20):
become the first female artist named as CAPPED Songwriter of
the Year twice, so congratulations to her. She's making history
this year. Now. Another thing that was happening to Cardi
B was Offset gave their daughter Culture an eight thousand
dollars Birken bag, and people were having things to say
about it on social media. You know, of course they were.

(01:26:41):
I'm sure they expected that. And so here is how
Cardi B defended that gift. Yeah, kids only care about
toys and campy. Well, the thing is that kids also
go outside. You know, I'm saying, kids go to restaurants,
kids go to fancy places. And if I'm fly and
Daddy's fly, and then so is the kid. Because if
I was looking like a bad, expensive bitch and I

(01:27:01):
have my kid looking like a bum bump, then y'all
will be talking. So I'm not at the daddy ball
baby or breaking explaining the hype to me between with
these birking bags, what's what's up? I don't own a
Birken bag, so I couldn't even tell you. There's super expensive,
hard to get. I know, envy. You guys have Birken
trees in the house. Yeah, well breaking back, I don't
breaking tree boxes. Yeah, my wife has a numerous amount

(01:27:26):
of them. But they're bag that. They're very expensive, they're
very hard to getting. People really really like them. I
mean people make fake bags of them. But he bought
his bag, he bought his daughter bag. It's his money,
it's their money. They're doing them right. They can do
what they want to do with their money. Who cares,
that's their money. Deal. And the other thing I will
say about a Birken bag is don't they appreciating value

(01:27:46):
like they didn't do? Appreciate about it? Yes? Ye, right,
So I don't think it's like the worst thing that
you could buy someone because it could be worth a
lot of money, especially because this was culture's first birking
So if you think about it in that way later
on in life, yeah, people up, people were mad, Oh
I didn't know that. I didn't even pay no attention.
I know I'm not gonna be mad about what somebody
else buys for that child by that little Now, Cardy,

(01:28:09):
I bought that little baby, Michael, cause that have been
like Cardy, No, you don't need to have that's the problem,
and that's the problem. That's what Cardy said. People like
you judge if Cardie got to do it a little
Michael cause bad, you're going to cut bad. Can't be
mad at that. Nah, you ain't, Cardi. You're not making

(01:28:30):
all that money to still having the Bronx taste for
your baby. But I dropped on the flu bombs for
the Birken ain't girl brought up with charlote man. You
better not Cardy. You out of the Bronx anyway, And
that is your rumor report And fyi, y'all the name brand.
She didn't matter. If a cute bag is a cute bag,
all right, Angeli ye? Well hey, Angela, ye's bay. She

(01:28:52):
wanted calls for Christmas. Christmas? True if it's cute. So
I'm not mad. You see a coach made a come back.
Oh talking, But let me see you. You know what
I'm gonna call your bait and I'm gonna tell him
you want Michael Cores as long as it's a cute
bag for Christmas. And I want to see you wear
at you because I want. I have bags that have

(01:29:14):
no name brand at all that I've never even heard of.
So I like to shop and buy things that I
think are cute, like when I went to South Africa,
is buying all kind of bags and things. It's not
a name brand. If it's nice, it's nice. I ain't
never see you win none of those bags. You don't
be out in these screets. All right, I revote. We'll
see you on Monday. Everybody else to People's Choice mixes up. Next,

(01:29:36):
of course, we're gonna off with these two calip joints.
It's the Breakfast Club, gooboarded morning. Everybody's DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Now. We
gotta shout to Jade Simmons for joining us this morning. Also, man,
the Seals who stopped through Yep, beautiful Fridays. Absolutely was

(01:29:57):
a great Friday. Saluted Jade Simmons. Saluta man the Seals. Uh,
you know black women that just have something to say, man,
And I know I'm just I'm just happy that we
can hear from them, and I'm I'm not gonna lie
a man. The Seal broke my heart when she was
talking about, you know, wanting wanting to being suicidal in March,
and I mean, you know that stuff that I knew,

(01:30:18):
but you know, when you think about it, when you
know I had two friends commit suicide in June, you know,
Jasmine Waters and she killed Cardi And when you think
about that, that possibility, like I told him, man, of
the last thing, I said, y'all love you and I
appreciate you and I value you. And you know that
that really hurts to hear your your friends even beating
that that kind of mindset, because you know, you just
never know what somebody's going through. Man, Absolutely right, And

(01:30:42):
I just want to send some more love about Tamar
Braxton who got rushed to the hospital this last night
and they're saying that it looks like a suicide attempt.
She took pills and drank a lot, according to her
boyfriend when he called nine one one. So prayers with
Tamara Braxton. Man. We had her on the show earlier
this year. He has that to catch Aputition show that's

(01:31:02):
out right now, and you know we're just praying for
your recovery spiritually, mentally, in every way. Absolutely. All right, Well,
when we come back, we got the positive note, don't move.
It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ
Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Now shout out to everybody that's gonna join me. Sunday morning.

(01:31:27):
I'm doing a seminar or a webinar online. The last
one we had like three thousand people, so we're gonna
be doing one this Sunday. We're gonna be talking about
real estate. We're gonna have a hard money lend to talk.
We're gonna have people agents in different markets talking about
the hot spots and different markets. Somebody from Chicago at Lanton,
New York, New Jersey, and a host of others. We
have an insurance person that's gonna be talking auctionm is

(01:31:49):
gonna be sending a representative where we get a lot
of our our cheap properties from. So if you have
more information about the webinar, I just click the link
in my bio and you can get all the information
you need now. Now, um it's time to get up
out of here. Shout the Sherry Shepherd for joining us
this morning. Now. Yes, I love Sherry Shepherd, She's so funny. Yes.

(01:32:09):
So for today's positive, No, I want to shout out
to Bouja Bontan. His album Upside Down is out today.
It's his first album in ten years and one of
my favorite albums was released in nineteen ninety five by Bouje.
You tell Shiloh and So I want to quote from
the song Untold Stories, and he says, I am living
while I'm living. To the father, I will pray. Only
him knows how we get through every day with all

(01:32:31):
the hike in the price arm and leg we have
to pay while our leaders play breakfast club. I'm planning
for y'all, dumb

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DJ Envy

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