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March 20, 2020 83 mins

Today on the show we made an exception with having Andrew Yang in the building where he spoke about possibly running for Mayor in New York, giving $1 million to the people of NYC and more. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to Evangeline Lilly for not self quarantine and being too woke and we opened up the phone lines to see if some of our listeners are still not staying inside and the reasons why.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's time time time to wake up teaching. Angeli and
Charo mean the Doctor to Brekfast Club bitches the voice
of the culture. People watch The Breakfast Club for like news,
to really be tuned in. It's one of my favorite
shows to do, just because y'all always keep you one, honey,
y'all keep you Really. They might not watch the news,
but they're on Twitter, they're on Facebook, they're you know,

(00:22):
they're listening to the break The Brothers gets your ass
a yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo

(00:42):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo Good morning Angela ye, hey,
good money. Dambi cho Meane the god piece of the
planet in his Friday We signing out there first and foremost?
How are we signing out there? Not too good? Delay?

(01:05):
Mad delay? I don't feel a delay on my end.
I don't. Yeah, I don't hear delay at all. Maybe
it's just yeah, I think I was hesitating a little
bit because I'm at the house and I don't want
to yell too loud, and you know, even though I'm
in the basement. I don't know, it might resonate through
the house. I'm not sure. Yeah, with everybody in the
crib today, I'm sure I think that people know this

(01:26):
is a test. You know, coronavirus has us all in
the same boat. We're all unemployed and on house arrest.
And being that we're on the house arrest right now,
we're broadcasting from home various individual homes. Yes, I'm broadcasting
from my crib in my office right now. So I'm
sure with me screaming and yelling, I'm sure I woke
up that the whole house. But what we got a

(01:47):
daddy voice on? You got your daddy the kids to
sleep voice on? Right now? I do? I do because
I really don't want well, two kids are grown adults,
but three of them I don't want in here until
about nine o'clock. Yeah, it's very different in the studio.
I'm in the studio in Detroit, so I haven't moved
to my home yet. So said guys, handle this? Yeah, yeah,

(02:08):
well sound fine. You can you can perform properly? Yes,
Charlomagne around me? Yes, I can yell and scream. Yeah,
you can yell and scream. Charlemagne and I can't well.
Andrew Yang will be joining us this morning. Let me
tell you something. Andrew Yang is a former presidential candidate.
He's now seeing a commentator, and um, Andrew Yang is

(02:32):
announcing something really big today. You know, it's a lot
of problems going on, but not too many people have solutions.
Andrew Yang, I think, is presenting a solution to some
of the problems that are going on right now due
to this goddamn coronavirus. A matter of fact, let me
not urs now. I remember him saying that his phone
was ringing off the hook because everybody's talking about these
stimulus packages and giving out checks and that was the

(02:56):
universal in basic income he was talking about. Yeah, they
stole style. I mean he took it from Martin Luther
King Junior. And then you know now that now they're
taking his style to to stimulate the economy. So yeah,
he's got a lot to talk about this morning. All right,
righting him next, WHOA, all right, that's not crazy anybody

(03:16):
but me. Oh my goodness, he's an autobid. You got
the auto Just relax, you sound like, all right, we
are gonna since we're talking about Andrew Yang, let's talk
about the coronavirus stimulus bill that they have unveiled. Senate
Republicans haven't builed this massive stimulus bill, and they're saying
this could actually help with the economy. All right, all right, listen,

(03:39):
it's the World's most dangerous morning show on a fire
We are broadcaster from home and hey got his auto truth.
But I think we'll be okay. It's the World's most
Dangerous morning Yes, Charlomagne sound crazy to me now, Charlomagne
sounds crazy. Goodness ration, Yes, you sound like future Charlotte Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela yee, Charlomagne the guy. We

(04:01):
all to breakfast club. Let's get in some front page news.
All right, you ready page news, Yep, let's go. Senate
Republicans haven't billed a stimulus bill that's going to give
twelve hundred dollars tax rebates. But that's for people who
earned seventy five thousand dollars or less last year. Now,
as your salary goes up, the rebate gradually decreases, and

(04:22):
by the time you get to ninety nine thousand dollars,
you get nothing. So if you made ninety nine thousand
dollars or more or last year, you won't get any
of this twelve hundred dollars check. But if you are
a lower income person, they said that you'll get less
as well a minimum rebate of six hundred dollars if
your income was at least twenty five hundred dollars. They
also proposed a five hundred dollars per child rebate. Okay,

(04:45):
check to check that. Don't mean you're not living. Check
to check this because you make ninety thousand dollars a year,
because you still got taxes. This is what forty forty
five thousand dollars a year you're making. I mean, I
guess it's a start, but you got ninety days. I geah,
you know, I guess there's prioritizing certain people. All right
now California, everybody except California. The state has ordered they

(05:09):
are nearly forty million residents to stay home. The California Governor,
Gavin Newsom is the first statewide mandatory restriction that has
been issued in the United States. So far in California,
nineteen people have died and more than nine hundred people
have tested positive for coronavirus. So the restrictions are in
place until further Notice, now, what does this a mean?

(05:29):
While under this order, such things like going to the
gas station, pharmacies, grocery stores, pharmas markets, food banks, convenience stores,
restaurants that deliver, they are all going to remain open.
So will the bank, so will local government offices that
provide services, and law enforcement agencies. But things that they
consider non essential, like dying in restaurants, bars, gyms, convention centers,

(05:50):
things like that are going to be shut down. Also
in LA, two Lakers players have tested positive for coronavirus
as well, so the Celtics have also said one of
their players tested positive for coronavirus. Yeah, it's really um
shut it down in the Philadelphia seventy six ers, making

(06:12):
a whole government mandate across all fifty states. Let's just
go ahead and do this so we can get it
over with America. Stop being spoiled, okay, and thinking that
you're gonna be under martial law, and let's actually do
something to flatten this goddamn curb. You know, if Donald
Trump wasn't president, if it was a president that people
actually trusted, nobody would have a problem with a government mandate,
a lockdown for two weeks. But being that he's a

(06:32):
freaking a future dictator tyrant. Nobody wants to be under,
you know, a government mandate a lockdown from him because
it feels like martial law. Yeah, all right, now. CNN
had a town hall yesterday, if you guys had a
chance to watch that, and amongst the things, they had
a lot of experts on their doctors. They had doctor
Anthony Fauci, who's the director of the US National Institute

(06:53):
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and he said, there's a
good chance that you can't become reinfected once you've had coronavirus.
So she said, I've been dealing with viruses my entire
professional life, and the viruses in which you get infected
and you get a complete response, where you clear the virus,
you can be protected. The duration of the protection varies.
It might be a lifetime. If you get infected with

(07:14):
me zose, it's highly likely that you are protected for
life from re exposure. Highly likely, maybe a bit less
depending on how long you live. Other viruses we have
less experience with, but he said, from his experience dealing
with these viruses is a good chance you can't get
reinfected once you do have it all right? Also traveling, No,
you cannot, cannot, cannot, OK. I was like, what are

(07:35):
you talking about? Yeah, that's great, you can us. Domestic
air travel also sees a virtual shutdown. There's more restrictions
that are being discussed. So TSA officers are also testing
positive for coronavirus. Is a public fair and so there
is less of a demand for air travel naturally right now.
And they said there might be a domestic travel band

(07:56):
at some point coming soon. That's under consideration right now
by the Trump administration. And they're talking about grounding many
or all domestic flights, and that hasn't happened yet, but
as you know, internationally, a lot of those flights have
been grounded as well. Yeah, where are y'all going? Anywhere? Updates? Listen?
Shout out to Laura who actually she's in Atlanta. She

(08:18):
flew to New Jersey to get her hair done and
flew back. That's what I'm talking about. That's exactly what
if thirty dollars, Yeah, get some fresh bundles. They put
all to get some fresh bundles. Your head costs more
than your plane ticket, she tell us down somewhere, and
I love what New York is doing when they shut

(08:40):
down New Mortgage is not allowing people to pay mortgages
in three months. New York Governor. He said that yesterday, correctly, Yes,
he said that, um, they are going to get and
Bank of America is doing the same as well. If
you have a mortgage with Bank of America, then you
will have a break for now. I think I think
it's rank that all mortgage companies should do this until week.
Until week, get out of this. People need help. Like

(09:00):
people are not working, people are are suffering, they're scared.
I gotta call yesterday from an employee that was scared
and mad. Unemployment line wasn't answering the phone. The website
was shut down. You gotta help people shut down for
three months. You gotta help people. Man, all right, get it.
I tell my tenants I actually gave them a break

(09:21):
for this next month, and I said, you don't have
to pay at all. That's great. Also, we gotta stop
with the cute nicknames. No more wrong name. Call them
by his full name, the coronavirus. Okay, you give you
give nicknames. You give cute nicknames the people you like. Okay,
all right, Front Page News, get it off. Your chest
eight hundred five, eight five, one oh five one. If

(09:41):
you need to vent, hit us up right now, let's
just talk. Let's vent eight hundred five eight five, one
oh five one. If you don't know, if you just
joined us, we're broadcasting from our crib. So if it
sounds a little choppy, a little iffy, this is a test.
I'm in my crib. Charlemagne's in his crib. Angelie, you
still in the train. We're broadcasting nothing. Okay, try to
get this. This is nothing, God damn it. So y'all

(10:03):
better enjoy what we're doing. Okay, stop cursing your home, bro.
Eight hundred five in the studio. I feel too comfortable
right now. All right, it's the breakfast Club, the morning,
the breakfast Club. It is your time to get it
off your chests, whether you're man or blast. So people

(10:25):
to have the same industry. We want to hear from
you on the breakfast club. Hello, who's this good? Karen?
What's up your chest? Brow? I wanted to spread some
good news, and I wanted to tell y'all thinks. I
don't think y'all know how I'm pointing. Y'all are out here,
Charlotta magne henvy and you y'all sometimes feel like you
just think of how y'all y'all do for people on
a regularation. Thank you someone, but everybody got time to

(10:47):
be thinking about that boto like you do. Ask she
when she humbly talk to people and give them good
a good advif then she traveled to cities the country's
controvel to state this country doing seminars, been powering our sisters.
You know, seances is what they can do, how they
can come o, they can grow up and blow up Charlemagne.
You constantly big enough a pus right, Oh, y'all do

(11:08):
pretty much fund raisers. They help brothers to go to college.
Then you chackle mental awareness and you donate your brothers
and sisters are helping sisters and brothers wooden mental illnesses
because you know how to fake the you right. Yeah,
definitely appreciate Now we appreciate you for recognizing. We appreciate
you for recognizing the work. That's nice it is and

(11:29):
even envy you travel this country poland seminar sean be
pout to be bosshon and they need to paint your
family and friends. Y'all do this to people, y'all don't
even know. So I just want to y'all know we
appreciate y'all man, and because we wouldn't even be in
the position that we're in without you. So that's right.
We got your Universal Basic Income check coming in the
mail for you know, bigging us up this morning. Thank

(11:50):
you for that. Thank you. Brother. Hello, who's this? Hi?
My name is Nita. How are you guys? Good morning?
Get it off your chance, mamma. Hey. So I was
calling me because I realized that there was one group
of a population of children that weren't being talked about
for the coronavirus, and that was kids and thought to
care and how their lives are changing so drastically because

(12:12):
of it, and I just wanted everybody to just take
a minute to think. You know, I've seen my friends
complaining about their kids be at home, driving them crazy.
But these kids, they're taking from their families and they're
put with complete strangers. And now they can't even do
visits because all the service providers are canceled. The case
workers are not doing visiness at all this month. So

(12:33):
for the next thirty days, who knows what's gonna happen
to them. And it's just because these are these are
my kids, you know, and I'm in Jersey and I
just don't see anybody talking about it. So I just
want everybody to know, just to be grateful because these
kids are with strangers and they can't visit their families.
On top of that, they can't see their friends because

(12:55):
school is closed. So just everyone be grateful and just
keep these kids in your prayers because they need it.
I like, I like praying, but you know, faithfoot out
faithfood out works is dead. So what what can we do?
What can we do for these kids? If anything jop alright,
don't happen. D you hang up on it? Oh, get

(13:15):
it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five one
oh five one. If you need to vent, you can
hit us up right now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. This is the Ruble Report with Angela
Years Club. Yes. So, actor Daniel J. Camerville yesterday that

(13:40):
he has tested positive for coronavirus, and he went on
Instagram and talked about just how he found out that
he had it, but his symptoms were where he got it.
He is from Loss, He's from the good Doctor. He's
from Hawaii. Five oh. I actually saw him in the airport,
like last month when I was going from LA back
to New York work as well. Um and that New York.

(14:03):
Did you have contact with him? You longld No, but
you know what. We were in the sky club and
I only know that because my makeup artist sounded. Adan
was so excited. She was like, oh my god, Daniel
Dick Kim is in here. When we LECP, No, I didn't.
It was an ACP Image Awards, so whenever that was.
But I was like, forty five days ago. Yeah, it
doesn't matter. You watching. So we're all isolated from each

(14:28):
other right now. So anyway, he did say to test
a positive. Here's what else he said. I wanted to
let you know that yesterday I tested positive for COVID nineteen.
I was asymptomatic during all of this time. As the
flight was close to landing, I started noticing some scratchiness
in my throat. I called my family doctor in Hawaii

(14:49):
and he told me to monitor my symptoms. But later
that night I started feeling tightness in my chest, body aches,
and my temperature started to rise. So he then told
me to get tested and wanted to bring attention to
the prejudice and violence against Asian people right now, and

(15:10):
why he thinks that it's really harmful for political leaders
to try to rename coronavirus the Chinese virus. Here's what
he said. Please stop the prejudice and senseless violence against
Asian people. Randomly beating elderly, sometimes homeless Asian Americans is cowardly,
how heartbreaking, and it's inexcusable. Yes I'm Asian, and yes

(15:31):
I have coronavirus, but I did not get it from China.
I got it in America, in New York City. And
despite what certain political leaders want to call it, I
don't consider the place where it's from as important as
the people who are sick and dying. If I did,
I would call this thing the New York virus. I
wonder if some Asian people who test positive are keeping

(15:52):
at himself just because of the negative stigma I guess
attached to Asians in the coronavirus right now. I hope not,
because there's everybody catching it now. It doesn't matter who
you are, what what background you have, it's it's everybody's
catching it. I said. They said, like between forty to
seventy people are going to end up getting it. That's
a lot just forty to seventy. Yea seventy million meanty

(16:15):
to seventy percent of people. Oh okay, yeah, you just
said forty to seventy. I'm like, that'd be great. Yeah,
now you didn't say at first first. All right, Tom
Hanks in the meantime is doing not great but still
okay while he's recovering from coronavirus. Now. His sister told

(16:37):
The Daily Mail, I've communicated with my brother. He's not
great still okay, and my shock, no, he's an actor,
not a god. But medical care in Australia is good.
So fortunately for him, he's you know, I guess it's
still a little under the weather, but doing a lot better. Now.
I need to know what not great means, though, don't
you want to know what not great means. He's probably
still a little bit sick, just like Daniel da Kim

(16:59):
is saying he's ring. He didn't even actually ever have
to go to the hospital or anything. So for Daniel
Dick Kim, he's you know, people are still feeling a
little bit sick, like if you have the flu. It
would help, yeah, it would help for people to tell
their stories because then people will know when they're just
dealing with a cold or the flu or you know what,
this really might be corona, you know, because I'm tired

(17:20):
of taking my temperature every four hours, being scared, not
knowing what to expect, not knowing what I'm looking for. Like, yeah,
you just like that, the mama to your butt. You
just like that, the mama to your butt. I know
what that is. Well, some people have no symptoms at all,
So it's just it's really different for everybody, right, Some
people are asymptomatic, some people get extremely sick. Some people
just get a little bit sick. So I don't think
there's a one size fits all. Some people have a

(17:42):
scratchy throat. I did read they said that if you
have some like diarrhea and problems with your stomach and digestion,
for some people, that's like the first symptom that something
I need to know that I need that information all
right now. Miley Cyrus and Demi Levada are among the
people who have been on Insta Graham Live. There has
been a lot of chats going on and they they

(18:04):
talked about their own relationship with each other. They've had
an aunt and a friendship and Miley Cyrus opened up
about the twenty thirteen MTV Video Music Awards and how
she struggled after that because of the memes that went
viral about her and how she couldn't even wear a
bikini anymore. I listen to this two or three years
where I wouldn't wear short I stopped wearing like skirts

(18:24):
on stage all this ship because after the VMAs and
I had all my cute little new body suit, everyone
started comparing me to a turkey and making it putting
a turkey in my outfit. So then I won't because
I was like just like so skinny and so pasty,
and they like kept putting me next to this turkey,
and I was feeling so about myself that I did
not wear a bikini for like two years, and no

(18:45):
one thought that that would have ever made me feel
some type of way. That's what we were talking about.
Memes can be so much fun, but they can also
just be so hurtful. Okay, yeah, that has to be hard, man,
when people are just making fun of your body and
what you look like, and then it's just embarrassed. That's
the era we live in, though, Like, like, that's the
era we live in. Unless you've never shared a meme

(19:06):
of a person you're guilty like like like, I don't
care what the meme is. Even if it's a meme
that you think is innocent, it's somebody out there getting
clowned about it. Right. Well, Miley Cyrus and Demi Levado
have known each other since they were fourteen years old
when they were Disney starlets, and they said that, uh,
there was it looks like they was a little bit

(19:26):
of flirtation going on during this Instagram live and maybe
at some point they hooked up. Listened to this. We
connected then because we just saw something each other, maybe
their spirituality or maybe it was I don't know, but
um or maybe we were just gay. I hate to

(19:49):
tell your next question. Yeah, it sound like they hooked up. No,
they're really gay. They're just being gay because they're born
and quarantined before I think something that happened in the past.
You know, they just at Oh you know, and listen, people,
protect yourself against that because you'll be sitting in the
house board the next thing you know, you start calling
x Is and reminiscent. That's what that sounded like to me.
Just now. All right, Well, I'm Angela yee, and that

(20:10):
is your room of reports. All right, thank you, miss Ye.
Now when we come back Front Page News, what we're
talking about, Well, we are going to talk about these
breaks on mortgage payments and we'll give you some more
updates on what's happening with coronavirus, the stimulus package. What
can you expect? You know, there's all these store closings.
People are out of work right now, people are getting
laid off. So what are we gonna do moving forward?

(20:31):
We'll tell you what some things that have been discussed are.
All right, we'll get into that next. Keep the lock.
This to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
angela Ye, Charlomagne the guy we all the Breakfast Club,
Good morning. Now. We are broadcasting live from home at
my crib in my office. Charlomagne's in his basement, and
angela Ye is still in Detroit. Yeah. I'm too comfortable

(20:55):
in him. So if I let a couple of curse
words fly, you just hit the dump button, Eddie My goodness.
All right, well let's get in some Front page news.
We start hello, yeah, Well, let's start with this family
in New Jersey. Now, four members of this extended family
have died within days of one another, and three others
are hospitalized. It all started with the death of Rita

(21:16):
Fusco Jackson that happened on Friday. She was the second
person in Jerseys confirmed to have died from coronavirus, and
then her brother also tested positive for the virus and
died on Wednesday. Her brother Carmine Fusco. Hours later, their mother,
Grace Fusco, died, she was seventy three years old, and
then Vincent Fusco died and really sad situation and three

(21:39):
of their other children remain in the hospital. About twenty
other relatives are being quarantined in their homes. So here
is what one family member has to say. It's like
the second we start to grieve about one the phone
rings and there is another person gone, taken from us forever.

(21:59):
It's not like it was one by time we got
over my first sister, not over. It's settled in our brains.
We got the next call. We're just begging for help.
We never want to get that call anytime soon ever again.
Because of this, that is. And it's a damn shame too,

(22:20):
because I was watching CNN last night and I think
They said that that they can't even get a test
for the coronavirus the twenty people that are quarantined. But
what's the details of the ages? Though? I know the
one woman was seventy three? How old was everybody else?
I think the kids fifty one? Um, they were in
the fifties. I'm not sure. But that's the reason why
I got into that argument with my pops. Man, I'm like, yo,

(22:42):
stay home, like I can't see you right now. They like,
do you know how bad you would feel if you
bring that home? That's why they want everybody just to
stay to f home and stay away. Yeah. Yeah, And
that's why I want to know the ages, because you know,
people you know keep saying that it's you know, just
to the first person to gold to people, the first
person who pass was fifty five years old. Then the

(23:02):
mother who passed was seventy three years old. Yes, and
so it goes on from there. Then the brother passed.
Now let's discuss another person who has tested positive for
a coronavirus, and that is Sean Payton. And he's the
head coach of the New Orleans Saints. So that's the
first NFL figure to have a positive coronavirus test that
we know of publicly, he said, appreciate the will whiches.

(23:25):
I'm feeling better and fortunate to not have any of
the respiratory symptoms. Four more days at home has tag
beat COVID, and that's what he had to say. The
team retweeted his message as well. He said he started
feeling unwell on Sunday, he was tested Monday. He said
he's self isolating at home and feeling fatigued, but he
doesn't have a fever or a cough. So there's been
more than three hundred and eighty cases that have been

(23:47):
reported in Louisiana. A majority of those are in New
Orleans or in the New Orleans area. Now, we told
you about the CNN town hall, so one thing that
was discussed was if you do get coronavirus, can you
get it again or will you be immune? Well, here
is about what doctor Maria van Kirkhov had to say.

(24:08):
The answer is, we don't know yet. What we are
looking at and what sciences are looking at is to
see an immune response amongst individuals who are infected with
this virus. We don't have a robust data on this yet.
What could happen is that when someone gets infected, that
they develop an immune and antibody response, and that that

(24:30):
could provide some protection going forward. We don't have data
to be able to say whether this is possible or
not all right now, in California, they've ordered their nearly
forty million residents to stay home, and that is to
prevent the spread of coronavirus there Governor. Governor Gavin Newsom
has been the first person to order a statewide mandatory

(24:52):
restriction in the United States. So so far in California,
nineteen people have died and more than nine hundred people
have tested positive. They said these restrictions will remain in
place until further notice, and they said half the state
is projected to be infected by the virus in two months.
So that is what he said is straight talk. They

(25:12):
just need to do a government mandate all across the
whole country and put everybody under those same restrictions. And
I feel like if we had a president that people
actually trusted, then people wouldn't mind that. But being at
Donald Trump, you know, it comes off as a dictator
and a tire and it feels like martial law. And
so I think some people are just naturally rebelling, and
they wouldn't want to want to listen to him telling
us that we got to be on lockdown. But that's necessary.

(25:35):
But this is needed right now. This is serious, and
I feel like people had issues with how our government
was treating this at first, like it wasn't a big
deal and nothing to really worry about. And now it's
sound the alarmed time. And we should have done that
from the beginning, as we have what was happening in Italy,
had what was happening overseas in China, and said okay,
we have to make sure that this doesn't happen here.

(25:56):
You can even see in Florida people at the beaches,
no social sing and they finally and Miami shut down
the beaches there. But I don't understand this sense of
safety that people are having right now because I sound
like Darth Vader to Charlemagne. I mean, you know, I
think it has to do a lot with the parents too,
Like I'm thinking about it. Yeah, and I get it.

(26:16):
There's a lot of kids out there, and there's a
lot of teenagers out there, But I won't allow my
daughter to go out like I'm not allowing my eighteen
year old in my sixteen year old to leave the house.
You know you still sound like dar Veda, Charlemagne. I
just reset, Charlomagne, you said, right, well, that is your
sayings to reset. That is your front page news. I'm Angela,

(26:38):
all right, thank you, miss ye. Now, when we come back,
if you don't know yet, we are broadcasting live from
our home, so if it's if this is the first day,
so there's gonna be a little technical difficulties. So that's
why we sound like Darth Vader at time, and sometimes
we sound like future. But we're getting it together. But
when we come back, we're gonna kick it with Andrew Yang.
Andrew Yang will be kicking it with us, so we'll
talk to him when we come back, So don't move.

(26:59):
Get your ass up. Is still the same thing. It's
the Breakfast Local Morning, the Breakfast Club back. You're checking
out the world's most dangerous morning show Morning. Everybody's DJ
Envy Angela, Yee, Chalamagne, the gad We are the Breakfast Club.
We got a special guest in the build it out
only guests this week this week. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

(27:21):
we had to make an exception, so you know it
must be very important. We have Andrew Eyang you could
see CNN commentator Andrew y good morning. Thanks for having me, guys,
I didn't know it was the only guest, Like, I
feel very special. Thank you. Yeah, you the only guest
to actually come in. So have you have special Yeah?
I know we got something special to talk about. But
have you experienced any bigotry because of the coronavirus or

(27:42):
the China virus? Is a president? The president calls it,
not directly, but you know, I mean, as an Asian American,
like you can't help but feel bad for the fact
that your community is getting called out in that way.
I mean, it's pretty dark. What did you think when
when he called it the kind of virus in him
saying the reason I called it that is because China

(28:03):
was saying that it was started from American soldiers. I
think it's the same old bullet distraction employee that Trump
uses whenever things are going wrong for him, and this
is definitely very much going wrong for him, given that
his administration dropped the ball so egregiously on this for
weeks and you can't get those six weeks back. Yeah,
I was shocked that he actually told the truth this

(28:25):
week and say, look, this is a pandemic. You know,
it's like you ignore it and then you swink the
other extreme. You know, I wouldn't be surprised if he
then change his tone again and again because he can't
keep the same tone for more than two or three
days at a time. Now, if you are president during
the time, would you have shut the country down early?
What would you do if you are president right now? Well,
the first thing is you try and suppressed and contain

(28:46):
the virus. When there are a limited number of cases
where you could actually do what's called tracing people. Where
you have cases, you try and monitor who they came
into contact with. Missing that window was crucial because at
this point it's almost impossible to do any kind of trace.
You have so many people that have been in contact
with other people that have been tested positive. So at

(29:08):
this point now we're in mitigation mode, and mitigation mode
is incredibly painful for us. All where you're shutting down
the economy, you're not allowing people to get together in
groups of well not allowing but it's like you know,
discouraging groups of or ten plus for two months. And
the reason I'm here today is because I understand what

(29:29):
that means in terms of people's day to day lives,
ability to feed yourself, because if you look around here
in New York and around the country, think about the
industries that have been affected. It's not just people who
works in restaurants and bars, and that's a lot of people.
That's not just cooks and waite staff and managers, parking attendants.
But then you look at all of the people that

(29:50):
rely upon, frankly, going out at actually doing their job
every day. So that's personal trainers, nail salons, security guards,
usher every sporting events canceled. Do you think about that
in terms of the economic loss? And so to me,
the decision to shut down the economy is in some
ways as dangerous as the virus itself, because if you

(30:13):
have millions of Americans sent home and their money is
going to dry up pretty quick. You know, you're looking
around saying, am I going to be able to feed myself? Like?
Can I pay my rent? Are we paying rent now?
Because you know there are people who've been sent home
in this way. To me, that's a massive danger a potential.

(30:35):
So we're already in a recession like right now, and
the question is how deep and dark, is it going
to get and can it become a depression? Manuchin projected
that if we didn't do anything big, we'd wind up
with twenty percent unemployment, which is great Depression era level
rates of unemployment. So you have the virus and then
you have all the economic havoc and devastation and deprivation

(30:56):
being caused by the clampdown in response to the virus
and system Yeah, and overwhelming the healthcare system because right now,
I don't know about you guys, but like, uh, if
I got sick right now, I mean, you try and
get tested. But how confident would you be that you'd
get a test in the right time? For me, it's
almost impossible unless you are you know. But we have

(31:17):
a certain level celebrity, so I'm sure we could get one.
It seems like all the celebrities and athletes are getting them. Yeah,
I guess I'd pick up my celebrity hotline. But so
the healthcare system is being overwhelmed by both real cases
showing up but also everyone being like, hey, you know,
I don't feel so good. Can I get a test? Uh?

(31:38):
And what does that mean? The big thing I'm concerned
about right now in addition to the obvious is that
so my kids schools shut down. I mean everyone's schools
have shut down at this too. Yeah, And so the
question is what would be the signal that would allow
the schools to reopen. And so in order to have
that signal, you would need to have some kind of

(31:58):
data on the decline in the infection rate or a
number of places. But right now, because our testing is
so inadequate, we don't even know what that rate is.
We don't know what the data is. And if you
look at the number of cases that are going to
be reported, it's going to be going up for quite
some time. So that, to me is the biggest danger

(32:20):
is that we wind up in this mitigation stage, and
we're essentially in this mitigation stage indefinitely because there's never
a catalyst to say, all right, it's gotten better. So
you asked what I would do. The big thing I
would do for the American people right now is I
would say, look, here's where we are, here are the
numbers we have, here's a dashboard, and if we do
a great job flattening the curve, self quarantining, decreasing the

(32:43):
infection rate, then this is the goal. At this time frame,
and if we can keep it under this level, then
our healthcare system's capacity will grow to be able to
handle this, and then we can look at potentially reopening
things at this point. So if we do a great job,
and I want you all to do a great job,
but right now we're all in the dark. We don't
know what we're shooting for. We don't know what the

(33:03):
goals are, we don't know what success looks like. And
so we're all at home with our kids trying to
figure out what's next. American citizens have to be willing
to give up a little bit of civil liberties in
order to like really self quarantine though, right like the
government is gonna have to say, look, everybody has to
stay home. Hey, what do you think about that? You know,
San Francisco has done it. Do you think that we
should do it? And China did it? Right, didn't trying
to have one hundred percent shut down. China shut it

(33:25):
down pretty thoroughly. Like you know, it's like that you
look at what they've done, and it is true, we've
have very different societies, you know, Like I came in
today obviously I'm in the studio with you all, and
certainly there was less traffic and foot traffic than normal,
but there's still people out and a lot of people
are still driving around and everything. What do you think
about New York? Do you think we should shut down

(33:46):
New York? I think that because people are not gonna
stay home, especially New York is New York. Is it
not going? They gotta make it government park? Like, do
you think we should just shut it down? I think
that it's tough because there are a lot of things
that people are going to rely on. Let's say you
quote unquote shut it down and I'm at home, then
what am I gonna do? I'm gonna go out to
the bodega and try and like get some groceries or exactly. So,

(34:09):
then you have to look around and say, there are
all of these things that people will rely upon, even
if they're at home, even if they're just sitting there saying,
you know what, I'm gonna order some delivery, like who
the heck is the delivery person? You know, So then
you'd have to at least make some calls as to say, well,
people that are vital to the continuing functioning of the
infrastructure we rely upon, like sanitation, Obviously they need to

(34:31):
go out police firefighters. So I think that a total
lockdown would be a bit much at this stage, but
certainly if it's optional again you can stay at home,
then you should. All right, We got more with Andrew
Yang when we come back. Don't Move is to Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Chalomagne,
the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking

(34:53):
with Andrew Yang. Chalomagne. Let's talk about solutions. You're doing
something with Humanity Forward, which I think is dope. What
are you? What are you doing? I'm to announce that
we're going to give a million dollars away to the
working poor in New York City and beyond a whole
million dollars, you know, one million. Yeah, because we know
that people are suffering right now. We know that there's

(35:14):
a lot of fear, a lot of uncertainty, a lot
of need. And you've probably seen the announcements about how
the government seems like they're poised to send checks to everybody,
but we had taken your staff, taking your Universal Basic income,
they're taking that. That's your plane. Yang. Yeah, yeah, there
are a lot of Yanggang now over in the DC
that it's crisis time, but we can't wait that long

(35:37):
drop on a clue. Momsman Andrew Yang, he's given a
million dollars to New York City, just the whole city,
all five boroughs. Well, we're focusing on the Bronx, and
we have a couple of partners that are going to
help us get the money into people's hands directly in
a way would be most effective. So we're working with
an organization called Neighborhood Trust that is community based financial

(36:01):
planning nonprofit that actually helps people figure out how to
get money and save it. And so it's perfect because
we're going to work with them to get money into
the bank accounts of the working poor in the Bronx,
and then they actually are going to give like a
complimentary fifteen minute like hey, you know what you're gonna
do with this money kind of style. But we're also

(36:21):
going to be donating money to tipped workers wait staff
who've lost their jobs. And then we're just going to
be giving money away to the general public on our
website Move Humanity Forward dot com. Wow that if you
just come, we're gonna give two hundred fifty to five
hundred dollars micro grants to people who just come and
tell us why they need the money. We can't do everyone, obviously,
but we're gonna do all week can, and if we

(36:42):
get enough money, we can do more. What's the website again,
the websites move Humanity Forward dot com. This is a
million dollars out of your pocket. It's a million dollars
that was donated to the nonprofit I started maybe two
weeks ago. And so you know, if you get money,
this is how we should use it. We gotta donate. Bro. Yeah, absolutely,
I know things are tight because we are at a recession.

(37:03):
So I gotta talk to my financial advice to say
how much I can't. I gotta talk to my wife.
How about that? I talked to my wife to her too,
But I think we definitely gonna donate to this call.
This is a great cause. Oh thank you guys. And
what I can tell you is one hundred percent of
every dollar you donate is going to go towards just
directly into some someone's hands who needs it. So five
thousand dollars can go a long way to Oh yeah, man,
five thousand dollars could be you know, twenty people a

(37:26):
getting two hundred and fifty bucks, and then you'll probably
see those stories posted on social media. We'll freaking yeah,
we'll actually just say it's like, look like this could
be from Charlemagne. I'm in for that. I mean, I
got you five. I mean I got you five grand Yang.
I like this. All right, to talk to my wife,
but I might match. I gotta talk to my wife first,
but I might match you. I'm hearing that you're considering
running from me of New York, Andrew any any any

(37:48):
truth to that. Well, you know, I'd love to help
in any way I can, and certainly, if I can
help the people in New York, I'm gonna do everything
I can. My campaigns issues were around national issues, frankly,
but we're looking at the mayor race and certainly wouldn't
rule it out. I like that for you. I like
Andrew Yang mayor of New York. Oh thanks, man, I
like that. Yeah. There have been a lot of people

(38:09):
that have reached out saying if you run, I'm in,
I'm in. I'm in, and you know, it's it's very gratifying.
We'll definitely look at it. So you think you think
that's a possibility, it's a possibility for sure. I mean,
you know that there are other possibilities too, Like, obviously,
you know, if the Democrats beat Trump in the fall,
there's a good chance that I joined the administration in

(38:30):
some form. So there are different things on the table.
Had Biden promised you a cabinet position, we've talked, and
I mean I'd have a place in the administration. Is
the pretty clear message. You endorse Joe Biden. But I
remember you saying you wouldn't endorse a candidate who didn't
endorse universal basic income, and Biden never has. Well, what
I said was endorsing universal basic income would be a

(38:53):
way to get me to come out and support you.
But I also said I'm going to support her. Of
the nominee is and Michigan. The math was clear that
Biden was going to be our nominee. So I thought,
look like, we don't have any time to waste in
terms of pulling people together to beat Donald Trump. How
do you unify the party though? How do you get
Yangang or even Bernie Brows to say, you know what,

(39:15):
we will support the establishment because Joe Biden is every
bit of the establishment. I think that's why Bernie is
such an important figure. Like if Bernie says to his people, Look,
job one is beat Trump. Joe's a good man, and
Bernie and Joe are actually friends and friendly. So I
think if Bernie comes out really strong and clear to
his people and says we have to come together, and
if Biden signals that he'll make concessions and adjustments based

(39:39):
upon Bernie's priorities and in terms of the democratic platform
or the agenda the administration, I think if those two
can come together, then the party will unify to a
much higher degree than if people sense that. You know,
it's only skin deep, right, correct me if I'm wrong.
But isn't what America doing. What America's doing right now
by giving out all this money, that socialism. It is

(40:01):
not socialism, I'm happy to report. So it's capitalism where
income doesn't start at zero. So people think of socialism
as free money. Socialism is not free money. If you
look up the definition of socialism in the dictionary, it's
when the means of production is appropriated by the government.
Putting money into people's hands actually helps markets function better,

(40:24):
it helps businesses start. It's actually good for the market economy.
It's one reason why I'm so passionate about it is
that if we do not take this step of putting
money into people's hands, capitalism is not going to work
as well. I mean, it's not working out well now
like people see it around. That's why everyone's getting pissed off.
So to me, putting money into people's hands is the

(40:44):
necessary future of capitalism because markets are not going to
function if we don't have money to spend. The Trump
administration reached out to you though, right then they reach
out to you about universal basic income, but with their
whole cash relief thing, they're doing it. Our teams in
touch with their team. We sent over a bunch of
studies that show that if you put money into people's
hands and makes them happier, healthier, mentally, healthier, more trusting,

(41:05):
more productive. So they're looking for any ammo to obviously
support the policy that they're clearly going to end up
implementing in the next number of days happily. I mean,
I just hope that checks get here quickly. But it's
still crazy, right, they stole you, so basically everybody's seeing
you were right. He got it from Martin King Jr. Yeah,
that's true, but they're basically saying you're right. Do you

(41:28):
think it's easier to get things done as an old
white man in this country? If you were an old
white man, people would have listened to you more. I
think it would have been a tough message, regardless of
who the messenger was. I'll tell you, guys a story
that you'll appreciate. So I was with a black mayor
who supports universal basic income, and then he came to
me afterwards and says, like, you can get away was saying,
I can never say it's like like the magical Asian

(41:49):
man saying we should get everyone money is actually like
not a bad look the scheme of things. If I
was an old white dude like I probably would have
come across as like a socialist or something more so
than I do, because people sense that I'm an entrepreneur.
I like progress, I like innovation, and I just think
putting money into people's hands is the vital next step
to actually build a future. We're excited about it, but

(42:11):
Trupe is gonna get it done. But if you when
you say it's like, oh he's crazy, that don't never happen.
You know, I even said it to you one time,
Like people think that the only reason you know you're
even in this because you're just promising to give people
money and now they're doing that. Yeah, clearly old white
men have an advantage in that department. Well, certainly, if
you're in power and it's a crisis, it's a lot

(42:32):
easier to send all the checks out then if you're
on the outside saying, hey, we should send everyone checks.
All right, we got more with Andrew Yang when we
come back, don't move. It's to breakfast Club, Go morning.
Everybody is j Envy Angela yee. Chalomagne, the guy we
all the Breakfast Club, was still kicking it with Andrew Yang.
Chalomagne is then into this coronavirus stuff, you think, and
that's one of the problems, one of the big problems,
because we know the virus is going to be with

(42:54):
us for a while. The question is whether the spread
is such that it's actually affect schools and businesses and
bars and restaurants. And but the virus is going to
be with us until we get a vaccine. So the vaccine,
let's call it a year and a half from now.
Post vaccine, we should be all right, because if you
vaccinate everyone, then it's under control. So the question is

(43:15):
what does the next year and a half look like?
And no one obviously thinks that we're going to be
in this lockdown mode for that long. But there is
a world where we come out and then the virus
comes back, and then they say, hey, we need to
lock it down again for a particular period of time.
Could I think about like a bola and swine flu
and bird flu and scars and zica, Like what what

(43:38):
happened to all those? So the big issue here is
that those diseases were more deadly, more virulent than the
coronavirus that we're dealing with now. And you'd think, okay, well,
the coronavirus being less deadly, that's a good thing, and
it is a good thing, but it also means it's
a lot harder to get rid of because it's just
kind of around, like you can be asymptomatic. So the

(44:02):
diseases that actually a more lethal burnout more quickly, and
because this thing is less lethal than those diseases, it's
likely to linger for quite some time. Why it's so
easy to get money at times like this but not
for everyday issues like poverty, because like the hood is
needed to bail out forever. Yeah, I agree. You know,

(44:23):
this is why doctor King was fighting for this in
the sixties. The fact that it went from being something
that he was fighting for to essentially off the radar
for so many decades, to me is mystifying. It's like,
we've needed this the whole time. It actually came close
to passing Congress in nineteen seventy one, and that, to

(44:44):
me was the moment, Like if we'd passed a version
of universal basic income in nineteen seventy one, imagine all
of the pointless misery that would have been alleviated from
then till now. But I agree with you, it takes
a crisis to get new ideas across the finish line sometime. Yeah,
Because I mean, they give you hell, they give Bernie Head,
they give a little bit more hell, and they're like,

(45:04):
where y'all going to get this money from? But now
you're asking for a trillion in Dallas. This is one
of the things I said to people around the country.
I said, the biggest lie in American life today is
that we don't have the money. Because when the banks
needed money, we printed four trillion dollars for them, and
no one remembers anyone looking around being like oh do
we have that money. It's like when the banking system

(45:25):
we just print the money needed four trillion, we gave
it to them. Trump tax cut that was one point
five trillion that went to big companies, and most of
that money went to share buy backs, you know in
the top like one or two percent. And so if
we're broke, like if if like families are struggling, then
someone looks at them like, well, you know, what can
you do? But if you're a giant bank or drug

(45:48):
company or a military contract or what have you, they
just can't give you money fast enough. So to me,
the change we have to make is we have to
start treating ourselves and our people better than we're treating
the giant companies. Now, anything you regret doing on the
campaign trew. I regret a lot of things, and I'm
really proud of a lot of things too, you know. Um,
certainly the the whip cream thing seemed completely like innocuous

(46:12):
at the time, and then like some people made a
big thing out of it. I was like, um, come on,
think Carter, you got some phone? What you think? Yeah?
Oh yeah, Like what I what I do wrong? Man?
The choir robe with the Black Church I just looked
like pandering. Why did you put the choir robe on
and sing at the black church if you were there?
So what happened was like I was there with the choir,

(46:36):
and then the people in the choir wanted selfies with me,
so I went in and they were taking selfies, and
then one of the people who were singing literally put
the robe on me, and then uh, and then they
were singing, and then obviously like you know, I'm there,
I've got the robe on, so I just sing too,
and then someone uh takes the video of it. Yeah,
you couldn't say no that black pressure ain't no joke happened.

(46:58):
Sometimes you couldn't say no. I enjoyed it, like I
I'd feel terrible if someone thought it was anything other
than like me trying to be a part of the
community or supportive. So it feel stupid. It actually felt great.
I'm glad you stand in bye it because perception is
not reality. Because the perception you're like, oh, he looks stupid.
But if you felt good, he felt that's all that matters.
Praising alone and what made you want to be a

(47:19):
CNN commentator because some people think that was your play.
The whole time. He was like, oh, Andrews wanted to
get into race, get famous and use this to sell books,
and well that's a really weird way to go about it.
I'll tell you what. So what happened was I suspended
my campaign and then CNN called the next day and
it was like, hey, you want to come on and
talk about stuff. And then to me at the concern

(47:42):
at the time was that, frankly like the movement was
going to lose steam, and I said, well, this is
one way I can maintain a degree of public visibility
and notoriety and keep pushing the agenda so that you
know it said yes, and it was honestly a short
term deal, but it looks like I'm might be there
a while longer because like it seems like a good fit.

(48:03):
Did the child is Gambino and Dave Chappelle endorsements help
you think? Of course? Geez, you know. I mean Dave
freaking went and performed shows on my behalf in Iowa
and South Carolina. I mean, I was like the greatest
thing ever. Yeah, Donna Glover had like a freaking fashion
line dedicated to the campaign that was like an awesome
both awareness and fundraising tool. I'm in touch with those guys,

(48:23):
like I thanked them obviously. After them we suspended. And
Dave just texted me two days ago when they came
out with all this give money away stuff. He was like, man,
like you know, like you were right, like you know
we we pushed him in the right direction. We see
in the government bailing out all these different people, they
are willing to give the money in case for reparations
for Black America. To me, step one is we I

(48:47):
mean right now is step One's like they carry the
crisis and then get money into people's hands and then
we should turn towards reparations. But I think you need
to be a stronger, more integrated society for them to
actually realistically move reparations forward. And uh, and so that's
job one is try and pull people together. You mean
like we need to be more organized about it, not

(49:08):
even like it's not even like black people need to
be more organized about it. I mean that we need
to get our country to a point where it can
realistically reckon with our past. And that's not to me,
a Black problem. That's like, that's an American problem, right,
So you got to try and get America to that point,
and then we should trying to move reparations forward. Now,

(49:28):
with with everything going on, how long do you think
it it takes to we get semi back to normal.
Every indication I've gotten from the government indicates that they're
planning on a time frame of um at least two
months because the checks that they're looking to send out
our early April in mid May, so they're projecting that

(49:51):
this crisis stretches on throughout least Memorial Day. And so
that to me is a realistic expectation. If that's the
way the federal government and is playing it, let's say
after Memorial Dad, only because we don't want everybody thinking
you can go out, you know morel Dave's very first
of time. Yeah, and obviously, like you know, who knows,

(50:12):
Like maybe things will happen in a positive way before then,
but that seems like what the government is trying to
prepare us for. Well, thank you for joining us, Andrew
Yank Thank you you're giving a million dollars to New
York City most Humanity Forward dot com. Let's do it.
Let's genuinely move humanity forward. This is a lousy time,
but hopefully we can come together and take care of
our people. And he's gonna run from May in New York.
And he taught us that the only way to get

(50:33):
things done in this country is to have old white
men pushing. There you go. That's right, So reparation universal
bids again. Come. We need old white men to get
behind these things and make it happen. Uh. He said
that I didn't know it's the Breakfast Club. Good morning.
It's about report Angela Gee on the Breakfast Club. Yes, so,

(50:58):
Fadi Wab has responded to a report that was on
the Breakfast Club. Now. According to this report, he was
ordered to pay his former employee one point one million
dollars Seana Morgan, who was a former tour staffer that
said that he damaged her reputation and fail to reimburse
her for work related expenses. This story was reported on
several different sites like Vibe and boss EP and Hip

(51:20):
Hop DX. Well. He had this to say about the
report heard on the radio that I was being involved
this I got to do with my old company and me.
We'll let y'all know that I don't got nothing to
do with me. I hope y'all stopped using my name.
Stop saying my name feel me like we already said
the outsist me and her personally, Um, that million dollars

(51:43):
you got to do with her and art you have
the company. I'm no longer RF, so I could stop
putting my name with that. Man, When the hell do
we talk about that? I missed that store that was yesterday. Yeah,
that would have been one of the ones. You know
when somebody comes up to you in the street and
you're like, yo, man, what y'all said about me on
the break wasn't true. I'd be like, nick, I don't
know what you're talking about, and they swell. I'll be like,

(52:03):
well you got that from somebody. It wasn't like you
made it up. Well, yeah, no, it's all over it.
If you're looking at right now. It's on Hot New
Hip Hop, it's on Vibe, it's on Bossip. So he's
saying that that is not a true story. So that
is funny wop side of the story. So we're, as
a fair outlet, we're playing what he had to say
about that. Now. Eminem was on Mike Tyson's podcast, and

(52:24):
amongst the things that he discussed, Mike Tyson talked about
how the movie The Hangover actually helped to revive him.
I'm on this movie, I'm doing this set and stuff.
I'm just a mess back then, so I do this movie.
I don't think this movie. You know, I'm high all
the time. And then I'm in a restaurant. I come
out the restaurant. You see one of the little busses,

(52:45):
you know, the tour bus. They see me. They must
have went to the movie and so the preview because
the movie wasn't out yet. And then when they saw
me it must have been thirty. They all got off
the bus and saying we love you, we saw you
in the movie. And then my friends zippo not no
longer what they said, Hey, we got set in. They
we're back. That's crazy that Mike Tyson said that that
movie revived him, though, because to me, Mike Tyson has

(53:05):
always been Mike Tyson. Mike Tyson meant that so much,
he meant so much to black men and black culture
that he always was Mike Tyson to me. But that
was never fell off in my eyes. That was for
hour age. Though for a lot of the younger kids,
they just know Mike Tyson from Hangover. Well, he didn't
say younger kids. He just said, I'm back. You know
what I'm saying. I mean, just to see Mike Tyson
and made you look at him in a different light too,

(53:27):
because he was funny, he was acting. You know, people
were very intimidated by Mike Tyson and a lot of
that he went through. And Living Colors showld me Mike
Tyson that a sense of humor though, I mean, just
the way they used to portray him on that. I
don't think he liked that though too much. No, he didn't.
But actually that's really when you see when you see
how they used to play him on the Living Color
and didn't see him in real life, that's really how

(53:47):
he is. Yeah, but you know he was mad about that.
Though he definitely approached them about that. I don't think
he thought it was funny, all right. Another thing that
was discussed on Hot Boxing was Eminem talked about what
his greatest achievement has been. Here's what he said, how
does that feel? You have a twenty three year old?
It definitely is crazy. It definitely is crazy. I have
a niece that I have helped raise two that's kind

(54:09):
of like a daughter, pretty much like a daughter to me,
and she is twenty six, and then I have a
younger one that's seventeen now. So when I think about
my accomplishments, like that's probably the thing I'm the most
proud of is being able to raise kids. That's crazy.
Think about Eminem when he was younger and he had
Halley and raising his daughter and how young she wasn't

(54:30):
now he's they're in their twenties. Yeah, because all, yeah,
that's crazy. It is a great accomplishment, though only when
the kids are successful. It's not a great accomplishment when
the kids aren't successful. Kids turned out pretty okay in life, Okay,
if your kids, if your kids turn out, you know,
a little off, you know, in jail, you know, doing
things they ain't got no business doing. You can't. You

(54:51):
don't feel too accomplished. Successful is any that's just them
like out of jail, no drugs. Yeah, that's right. Successful.
But there's always a chance for people to turn their
lives around too. That is true too. All right, now,
let's talk about what else they said on this podcast,
Tyson and Mike. Tyson and Eminem also talked about just
being really good at their job, but that doesn't necessarily

(55:12):
translate to life. You were the best fighter. Yeah, but
but in life that's not a good way to think.
And fighting it is great, but in life it's reckless.
Isn't that interesting? Yeah? To be successful in one field,
it's disastrous in another field. Right. Yeah, with you, you
were great and rap, but in life you will kind
of shake. Yeah. It was the pressure of all a

(55:32):
sudden boom and your faith and the judging people are
judging you, and you got the loads. We have a
little weird self esteemating and that people are judging the
same things about it, and we get defensive, and when
we get defensive, we playing to the game. Yeah, you
should listen. We have time, because I want to know
what he's talking about. I want to know why he
feels that way, Like, why does he feel like that

(55:53):
didn't serve him well in life? Because it made him
so much money, so I would think it would make
his life better. So I wonder what he means about that.
Does he mean that he can't turn it off so
he always wants to fight even when he's not in
the ring. I don't know. Um. And in addition to that,
Mike Tyson had this to say about eminem being treated
like an N word and Eminem had no idea how
to respond, And you're not no guy somebody gave anything.

(56:14):
Everything you got was not even given the slave for it.
You the only white guy than to be a name.
Answer that. I don't want to know what that means too.
I need more on that, Like, how has Eminem being
treated like an N word? Because he's saying a man
In this case, he's saying N word as a black person.

(56:34):
So how has the Eminem ever been treated like a
black person? Eminem became Eminem because of the privilege of
his white skin. We all know that. You don't think
it's because he was a good rapper, though, man, don't
We're not about to have this conversation. Everybody the mother
knows he was a good rapper. But he became a
superstar because he's white. He said that himself. Those words
will come out of his mouth, all right, But let's
just because it's not just because not only because he's white, right,

(56:57):
it had to start something. Being white helps a lot,
a lot, because that Eminem would be red Man if
he wasn't white, and red Man's grip. There's actually a
lot of white never that have never been successful too.
At the same time, but I understand that all the
white kids supporting his music is what made him this
mega selling artists. He does get busy, but the fact

(57:19):
that he's white took him to another come on Stragybody
knows that, but he does. I will say that I
remember when Eminem was trying to shop for a deal
before he got signed, and people would not pay attention
to him or listen to his demo. Even so, as
a matter of fact, the DJ and producer of Mathematics
from Wouting, he always talks about how he had that
demo for the longest and never even bothered to listen

(57:41):
to it, and how many people had that and just
because he was a right white rapper, they didn't want
to pay attention to it. Call him that's what calls
him to get treated like an N word. That well,
I don't know why he said that, but I'm just
telling you the reality of what people have said about
not wanting to listen to his demo when he was
first getting started, before he became a mega star. It
wasn't easy putting the door right. All right, ladies, all right,

(58:03):
that is all and that is your report, all right.
Up next is Donkey to day. We are giving that
donkey too, Charlottage. You know it's a young woman, she's
not too young. But her name is ever Jelene Lee
Lily or ever Jail. I don't know how you pronounce
her name. I call it a wash I call it
a wash well, I call it a washp because you know,
I watched Marvel movies. But she needs to come to

(58:24):
the front of the congregation because she's one of these
people that's gonna keep us in the house for a
long time because she's not listening. All right, we'll get
into that next keeping lock this to breakfast club. Good
morning time for Donkey of the Day being Dunky of
the Day, a little bit of a mix like a
do other day. Now, I've been called a lot of

(58:52):
my twenty three years, but Donkey of the Day is
a new wife. Donkey of the Day for Friday, March
twentieth goes that of Banji Lean Lily. Okay. If you
don't know who that is, but you are a fan
of all things Marvel like me, then you know Eva
Eva Jeline. What the hell is her name? Evangeline Lily? Okay.
She plays the character of a Hope Van Dyne aka

(59:14):
to Wasp from aunt man in the Wasp. I didn't
even know her real name until this morning when I
read this story. Some of y'all also probably know her
from loss. I know her as the Wasp. But today
she is a lesson to us all. I am using
her as an opportunity to teach because she too woke.
I hate wokeness. Okay, you have heard your uncle Charlotte
say this a million, billion, trillion times. All woke people

(59:34):
need some damn sleep. Okay. Sleep loss dumps you down.
Sleepiness causes you to be depressed. Sleepiness makes you forgetful.
Sleepiness and pass your brain functions. It messages with your
memory and decision making. And this is exactly what people
don't take into consideration when they woke all the time. Okay,
go rest yourself, because right now, during this global pandemic

(59:55):
that coronavirus has caused, we don't need anyone to get
caught sleeping, because you getting caught sleeping isn't just impacting you,
It's impacting all of us. See Evangeline, Lily, it's one
of those people who still wants to be outside. Casanova,
I blame you. Casanova was out here all last fall
and winter screaming, he outside with it. Then him and
Uncle Murder did a song about it. Next thing, you know,

(01:00:17):
everyone in named Mama. You know, up until a couple
of weeks ago, was outside with it. We outside with it.
Now I'm gonna cancer. I'm a natural homebody. I don't
give a damn about being outside. I like to be
in the house, minded my black ass business. So when
I saw everybody outside with it and the dead o winner,
I just didn't understand it. If it was bringing summer cool,
I get it, But being outside with his five degrees?
Who got time for that? And see, some of y'all

(01:00:37):
been outside so much the last few months that it's
really become a habit, and now that it's time to
break that habit and stay in the house to flatten
this corona curve. You don't even know how. And some
of y'all don't want to because you feel like the wasp.
You feel like Evangeline Lily. Okay, now I'm gonna read
you what she posted yesterday on Instagram, and I know
some of y'all gonna agree with her, and I'm gonna
tell all of y'all why that is stupid after I

(01:00:58):
read it. Now, Evangeline Lily posted on Instagram yesterday hashtag
morning tea. Just dropped my kids off at gymnastics camp.
They all wash their hands before going in. They are
playing and laughing hashtag business as usual. Now. What makes
this all the more stupid is that Lily not only
lives with her two young children, but also with her father,

(01:01:19):
who has stage four leukemia. Leukemia already mixed the immune
system weeks, so if her father catches coronavirus, it's probably
a rap. But nope, Evangeline is throwing caution to the
wind because, in her words, the coronavirus is just the
respiratory flu and perhaps a political ploy by the government. Okay,
she posted on Instagram, there's something every election year. She posted,

(01:01:40):
where we are right now feels a lot too close
to martial law for my comfort. Okay. She continued by saying,
let's be vigilant right now, keeping a close eye on
our leaders, making sure they don't abuse this moment to
steal away more freedoms and grab more power. See, this
is a combination of her just being stupid, but it's
also a combination of us not trusting the Trump administration
and we have no reason to Okay, it's an administration

(01:02:02):
that we can't trust giving us orders and US rebelling
against them because they've proven that they aren't for all Americans,
just to rich and elite. And we've seen this administration
script away civil liberties before. So when they tell us
stay in the house, we don't want to listen to them.
And we didn't think Trump was a tyrant who wanted
to be king. We would listen to national and local
officials more when they tell us stay home. But here's

(01:02:22):
the thing, whether you agree with the government or not,
whether you think it's a political ploy or not, you
got hys don't you? You got his? Don't you? You
can hear and see what's going on around you, right,
common sense should tell you follow the money when you
see the NBA, the NHL, all these corporations and companies
shutting down. Evangeline, she's in Hollywood. All production is halted
on everything, TV show films. When you see the money

(01:02:45):
stop circulating. Not to mention people dying, Not to mention
all these folks getting sick. Common sense should tell you
that it's something going on, and for the safety of
your kids and your sick father at home. Even if
you don't care about the rest of us, care about them. Look,
we need people that make being inside is cool as
y'all made being outside. Okay, the whole gang inside with it,

(01:03:06):
practicing social distancing. You know why, because with no social distancing,
or with social distancing, one person in five days can
infect two and a half people. Okay, So in thirty
days I can turn to four hundred people, but the
fifty percent of the people stay inside. One person in
five days will infect one point two people, and in
thirty days only fifty people will be infected. If you

(01:03:28):
have seventy five percent of the people staying inside, one
person infects point six twenty five people, not even a
whole person. So that means in thirty days only two
and a half people will be infected. What does that
translate to staying home? Okay, being inside, the whole gang
inside with it. Okay. You can have all the conspiracy
theories you want. You can believe it's a government ploy,
you can you know, think that that it's not real, whatever,

(01:03:51):
but understand, the virus is absolutely real. Okay, it exists.
It's not a hoax, it's not fake all right, It's
a real virus. Regardless of why it is here, or
how it got here, or who's behind it. It's here,
so move accordingly, because the life you save will probably
not be yours. I know, thinking about other people as
a hard concept for some the grass, but grasp it

(01:04:11):
so we can get back outside. Please give Evangeline Lily
the biggest Hea Hall. All right, well, thank you for
that donkey today, Charlemagne, Yes, indeed, all right. When we
come back, let's open up the phone lines. Eight hundred
five eight five one on five one. Do you have
a friend that just won't sit there ass at home?
Or maybe you are that person that won't sit your

(01:04:32):
ass at home? Let's open up. You still want to
be outside, you want to get coronian your ass crack?
All right, let's open up the phone lines. Why won't
you just sit your ass down? Why won't you just
stay inside? Eight hundred five eight five one on five
one fullos right now it's the breakfast Club. Good morning
in right now at your opinion to the breakfast club,

(01:04:56):
top break it down. Eight hundred five eight five one
five one back first club wanting everybody is DJ Envy
Angela yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are the breakfast club
that was Poison. Thirty year anniversary of that record, I'm
gonna be honest with you, a great record musically aged well,
lyrically not so much. No, but it's probably the biggest

(01:05:18):
records of our culture, don't you. Don't you agree? I
think that's a fact. But that backstage, that backstage under
age I didn't age well, not at all, nah, but
still one of the biggest records ever classically classic. Ye.
All right, Well, let's go to the phone lines. Eight
hundred five eight five one on five one. We're talking
about people that just won't stay the ass home, people

(01:05:40):
that just gotta be out. We're talking to them. Do
you have a friend or maybe that's you. Let's go
to the phone lines. Hello, who's this? Hey, what's up?
What's up? Bro? You one of those people that just
can't stay at home? I want to stay at home
with my job. Won't let me. I'm telling came back
from Bike week A lot of the real rollers that
he came back from bike weekend Daytona Beach, and soon

(01:06:03):
we got home, we heard the National Guards shut down
Florida and stuff. So I filled my job and they're like, oh, okay, well,
come on in the work I'm like, what, so I
know the words, and then the next day my wife's
is off thing two having canes and flew like systems.
So I call again and send them and even hay
Acount work from home, and they're like, uh uh, so

(01:06:26):
you you was in Daytona Beach spreading the coronavirus to everybody.
Tell me what you do for work. I'm discrunching the
man's cell phone tower company. Oh yeah, we need you brother, Yeah,
but he needs you wife got symptoms, his wife got
at work. He control the cell phone tower on. It's
like I asked the Congress to get them let let
me work from home. And we have all the technologies

(01:06:47):
to do all the meetings on teams and Skype, and
they want to have a compass to meet in the
compass room with twenty five people. I'm like, I'm not
going in there more than yeah, but we need you
to keep the phones on, So just figure out a
way the social instance would still work because we need
your brother, yeah, but we need him enough then we
don't want anything to happen to him. Hello, who's this
mina from California? Hey, one of those people that just

(01:07:11):
won't stay home. She don't sound like she in the
house now in California, got a whole lockdown. It's my friend.
She will not stay out of the Script Club, but
she works there. What I thought it was closed? I
thought everything was closed. I thought it was closed people.
But um not in Savannah, Georgia. So hold on, does
she danced the ball? Ten? What does she do? And

(01:07:35):
it's people still coming to the Script club right now?
Kill people like people coming to the show club. I
warned her, like, you know, all this stuff is going
around and passing around bloods and all that stuff is
not good. Oh my god, he's still smoking blunts and
smoking who can not changing the filter? Let your friend know.
Let your friend know, man that you know, Corona can

(01:07:56):
kill you fast if it gets in your ass crack,
could go through your ass crack right to your heart.
Please let her know immediately. All right, it's all funny games.
Are your friend got corona? Ascrack? I eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one? Are you one of
those people that just won't stay home? Or maybe you
got a friend that just won't stay home? Call us
up right now. Let's talk to him. It's the Breakfast Club.

(01:08:18):
Good morning, call me your opinions to the Breakfast Club. Top.
Come on eight hundred five five five one morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the God. We are

(01:08:40):
the Breakfast Club. Now if you just joined us with
talking about people that just won't stay home? Are you
that person? Do you have to be out and about?
Are you going around shopping? Huh? What about your friend?
Do you have a friend that just won't stay home?
We want to talk to you, guys. Eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one. Hello, who's this? This
is Carmel from Brooklyn. They ain't Carmel from Brooklyn? Are

(01:09:00):
you one of those people? I just can't stay home.
I can't stay home. I have to take care of
your grandparents who grandparents? Grandparents passed away? Yeah? Wait, grandparents?
Taking care of your hypothetical grandparents? I work at a
resilian Yeah, I really, I've really been thinking about y'all
because I was wondering about the care takers because they

(01:09:21):
have to be around the elderly. But then y'all still
got to go home and be in the world. So
I wonder what kind of precautions y'all are taking while
y'all around those elderly folks. We have a whole set
of new precautions that we have to take, specifically for
the crew and a virus. We have to wear masks
all the time. We got to wash our hands all
the time before we can come into the facility. We
got to deep check out for our temperatures. And they

(01:09:43):
ask us a bunch of questions every day. So we're
taking all the precautions to make sure everybody's safe, ourselves included. Well,
you're necessary, carmel like you have a reason to be, y'ad.
You're taking care of other people. So to me, you're
putting other people before you. So I salute you, but
the scrippers stay your ass home. Thank you, you appreciate
and all the service you're doing. Hello, who's this? This

(01:10:04):
is Latitia from Alabama. We could tell you on the
road right now, so your ass won't stay home. Why
are you out and about you? What do you do
when your employer puts the bottom dollar over the safety
health of their employee? You come in coughing every day,
go to work, You come in coughing every day. Fakes

(01:10:27):
mething crazy. It is ridiculous where I work at it.
There are six cases reported in about five to ten
minutes from my job. The hospital is like up the
street from my job. What do you do? What do
you do? They sent out a letter this is the BS.
They sent out a letter that set for us to

(01:10:49):
stay away six feet from our customers. I work for
a loan company. There is no way possible that you
are able to do that when you come in close
proximity with the customers on a regular basis. Is there
any reason for a long company to be open right
now if everything's closed? Yes, the money ain't moving. Why

(01:11:14):
y'all can't work from home? That's crazy because they don't
allow us. They don't allow the people that are in
the stores from working from home. Only the corporate offices,
the higher y'all not giving out no LANs right now.
The money is not moving. Some people say, we're already
in a recession. Now they're going to spend it. That
is the point. And if you're in a hotspot area,

(01:11:38):
I mean not just it's just ridiculous. The kids is home.
I mean when the company puts their dollars ahead of you,
that really tells you you're working for the wrong company.
That's a fact, shows you right with their morals and
their ethics are well. I'm sorry, I am with jobs
right now. Try to be healthy is possible, Try to
you know, sanitize everything that you can, Mama, and why

(01:12:00):
your hands continuously okay? And you know the workers don't
want to salute man. I want to salute all the therapists,
all the psychiatrists, all the the spiritual advisors like people
that you know, keep us mentally healthy, that are available
via phone or FaceTime or skype at a time like this.
Salute to y'all. Man, you really are appreciated. Absolutely. Also

(01:12:22):
the sanitation, the people are working in the hospitals, the
people that actually have to stock those grocery stores and
work at the grocery stores because you see, you know,
millions of people a day and you're still out there
doing that. We appreciate you, guys, even a young man. Man.
I went to the grocery store last week and it
was a brother that had to get all the shopping
carts back then, and you know he was pushing like

(01:12:43):
forty fifty shopping carts. Salute to that brother too, man,
I had to salute to him a little tip, man,
I agree with you. Salute to everybody at grocery stores.
Salute to people who's still working at restaurants because it's
some people who are still ordering takeout. I'm not gonna
front last week or this week. I went to Paula's
Soul Food and Hackensack, New Jersey. Salute everybody in paul
is just everybody that's still providing things that people actually need.

(01:13:05):
You are appreciated at of Lift and Uber drivers who
are still working. I know Uber each isn't charging right
now for delivery charges and all of that. People who
work at best Buy. Best Buy is still open. They're
doing like curbside so you can order it, go pick
it up outside and things like that. So people are
still working and making sure that you get the things
that you need. Yes, and listen, all right, one more

(01:13:27):
thing too. It's been on my mind all you liberal
progressive folks who like to change language and always monitoring words.
When we're gonna come up with a better word for
when people got a disease, because there's nothing positive about
having a disease, nothing positive about having the coronavirus. We
need to come up with another word for that, y'all. All.
I want to change words and be confusing us find
a new word for when somebody has the actual disease

(01:13:48):
instead of positive because it's nothing positive about all right, well,
all right, now we got rumors all the way. Yes,
let's talk about a young berg. Now he talks about
the time when a lot of rappers wouldn't stay and
buy him, and he names one person in particular. All Right,
we'll get into that next. Keep it lock this the
breakfast club, Good morning, the breakfast club. She's filling the tea.

(01:14:14):
This is the ruler rapport with Angela Yee on the
Breakfast Club. Yeah. So walka Flocker and Tammy Rivera are
promoting their news we TV reality show Wacky Walker and
Tammy What the Flocker, And one thing that they did
discuss recently was prenups. Now Here is what Walker had
to say about not wanting to have a prenup with

(01:14:35):
Gary with the tea. Love don't don't stand on the
same pedestal as money, and money could never stand on
the same pedestal as love. If you love a person,
it shouldn't be money. They shouldn't be sick, it shouldn't
be fashish't be no color, no shape, nothing Now for me,
if I marry you and I'm this rich guy. You're
rich too, but you got but I suppose to the
man to make your spirit rich. That's what's wrong with couples. People.

(01:14:57):
People look at the money and don't pay attention to
the spirit. That's that's a big difference. Because I could
make my wife spirit so rich to the post, she'd
be richer than me financially. That's an interesting perspective. I mean,
I can see people who look at it as you know,
there's love, but then there's business. But you know, I
also feel like, you know, when you when you do
a prenup, you're kind of saying you're kind of leaving

(01:15:18):
the door open a little bit for things not to
work out, maybe you know, necessarily, not necessarily, Like if
you're in a relationship like me, or me and my wife,
or you and your wife Charlemagne, where you've been together
since sixteen seventeen or whatever eighteen, you know the person
is there for you. But now you think it's somebody
who's a multi millionaire that meets somebody you just don't
know what they're there for. Very true, very true. It's business.

(01:15:41):
I was watching this movie while I was at home.
You know, during all this time a marriage story. Did
y'all watch that on Netflix? So this couple got married
on there, And I think sometimes people don't anticipate what
could potentially happen to protect themselves, and they spend so
much money going through this whole thing with having to
get a divorce and paying the lawyers all this money
when they could have really sat down and worked it

(01:16:02):
out themselves. But it can be really expensive if things
don't work out and people do things that you might
never expect. So I can understand both points of view,
Like some people might be like, all right, you know,
we don't need it, but I can understand also just
feeling like, look, I never know anything could potentially happen,
so let me make sure I'm good so I could
see it. Yeah. Yeah, into Envy's point, you know, when

(01:16:22):
you get into relationship young, like we did you know,
I build my wife's in high school? We had nothing,
so we want to think about no dan pre numbs.
What were we going to split up a pack of gum? Yeah?
So again, you know, it's just hard to tell. I
don't think anybody ever gets married but the intention of
getting divorced, but the reality is it does happen. So
for some people. Prepare yourselves right. All right, now, let's

(01:16:46):
talk about Shaquille O'Neill. He's been having a good time
as far as surprising people. He was popping into some
video lessons. You know, first graders in Georgia were getting
their classes online and he actually surprised them and you
can see him keep popping up in the video chat Hello. Yeah,

(01:17:20):
that was pretty cool man. Salute to Shack Man. Thank
god for Shack. The world needs more Shock. They're doing
their lessons over FaceTime. So he is a family friend
of one of the students, and so that ended up happening.
I don't think people putting enough emphasis on Shock's business
document too. Man. Shack's doing a lot of stuff on
the entrepreneur front. Shock gonna be a billionaire. He definitely is,
and I think so too. All right now, young Burg.

(01:17:42):
He recently was talking about how a lot of artists
didn't want to touch him after all the things that
he went through, and one person he talked, he Goular
that would not work with him was jeezy. Here's what
he said. I ain't gonna lie like I was at
the video and this when I was in a bad spot,
like it wasn't like a bad spot, but so much
that happened to me, and like Streets ain't really won't

(01:18:03):
be around me like that, you know what I'm saying,
Like Jeezy ain't won't be in a video like it
was like a rule, like I can't be in those
shots with Jeez. Well, Charlomagne spoke to Jeez also, and
here's how Jeez responded when he says that artists said
that he would not put them on. One of the
critiques was, Jeez has never put anybody on music. I've

(01:18:23):
tried to put people on, but everybody was part of
my first project. They don't you know drama. He might,
he might beg to differ, but that that gaister Grills
wasn't in the hood like that until Young was on
that thing Trapper died. I would agree, right, but he
probably says something different. But I know better because nobody
else got the mixtape played in the club for five
or six hours straight word for word with the DJ drops.

(01:18:46):
He knows. Yeah, Me and me and Jeez got a
conversation dropping today called twenty twenty Hindsight. It'll be out
at twelve twenty pm on YouTube. But I could be
Young Burg got to understand that though Young Burg was
going through whatever he was going through, and when people
was treating him like the hip hop Pinyada and he
was getting his chain snatched and all, Yeah, I can

(01:19:06):
see why a certain artist wouldn't want to work with him.
There was a lot of fboy ish and I think
he even knows that, but you know, it is what
it is. He bounced messing them back in the day
when people cared about their reputations, their street reputations, you know,
because nowadays, if you gotta hit, you gotta hit. He was. Plus,
he wasn't making beach back then either. Now was he?
I don't think so. I don't remember making beat he
was still he was more about artists. He was Young Burg.

(01:19:27):
Now he's hit maker, the producer. Yeah, i'll take I'll
take a beach hitmaker, but I don't want no verse
from Young Burg. Other things that are dropping today The
Weekend has a new project, Mac Miller side a Baby. Um. Yeah,
there's a lot of new music and I guess we're
home so we're able to listen to whatever we need
to listen to. Shout out to everybody that has new
music coming out. Also, just pointing out this weekend on Saturday,

(01:19:50):
season seven of b et Being is starting and I'm
kicking off the new season being Angela yeese, so you
can check me out. I think that comes on at
ten pm Eastern bet Her so I'll be featured on
bTB and you get to see what a day is
like in my life and it was pretty cool. So
thank you to everybody at bt for including me. And
we're kicking off season seven on Saturday. All right, I'm

(01:20:13):
I want to watch I want to watch the Madame CG.
Walker's story on Netflix this weekend too. I think that's
a good thing, especially if you've got you know, young daughters,
sent them around and get them to know the history
of Madame CG. Walker. Man, I kept thinking that it
was out already. So last week I was watching on
Netflix and I'm like, where is it? Where is it?
But it wasn't out yet. But I would definitely be
watching that this weekend. Can't wait? All right? Choice mixes

(01:20:36):
up next, get your re question. It's the Breakfast Club,
Good Morning Wanting. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne,
the God. We all the Breakfast Club. Now it's women's
History Month and who we repping today? Ye, well today
we are representing for Simone Bio. She is the gymnast
with the most world medals, that's twenty five, the most
world gold medals, that's nineteen, and she is the female

(01:20:58):
gymnast with the most world all around title. So congratulations
to her. She is such an inspiration for so many people.
And here she is on CBS News talking about her motivation.
And this is all right after she won the twenty
sixteen Rio Olympics. Five Olympic medals that year and four
gold ones. It's Woman's History Month and we're celebrating the

(01:21:19):
most influential women and check out this phenomenal woman. But
I was thinking about about your performances and how you
are probably what many other athletes are hoping to become.
Like you're their goal, You're their motivation. Will I be
able to pull off a Biles? Will I be able
to create a move that someone names after me? Can

(01:21:42):
you tell us like a little bit more about that
move and where it even came from, how you invented it? Okay,
so a little while ago, or like three years ago,
whenever I was making the skill up, I was doing
the first pass in my routine. If you look back
at the video, I was trying that skill one day
and I landed a little bit short. I partially tore
my calf muscle, and my coach said, well, if you

(01:22:03):
just throw a half twist, no one's ever done that before,
so you could potentially get it named after you if
you ever make a World's team. And it'll also take
the strain off of your calfs because it's a forward landing.
So then I just started playing around with that in
the gym, and that's how it came about. And that
was another phenomenal woman in history. Yes, congratulations to Simone Bios.

(01:22:27):
We are celebrating her during Women's History months. She is
the person who many people refer to as the greatest
gymnast ever. All right, all right, when we come back,
we got your positive notes, so don't move. It's to
Breakfast Club. Good morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee Charlomagne,
the god We all the Breakfast Club. Shout out to
Andrew Yang for joining us this morning as well. That's right,

(01:22:49):
huge announcement that Andrew Yang made this morning giving away
a million dollars to the people of New York City.
Go to the website move Humanity Forward dot com and
you can put your name in and um, you know,
try to get some of the money off. You want
to donate, like like I did. You can donate because
the money is definitely going to a good cause, going
to everybody who's going to be out of work during

(01:23:11):
this coronavirus global pandemic. So suit to Andrew Yang, and
I hope you run it from man in New York.
I hope so too. All right, well, shout out to
Andrew Yang for joining us again. Now you got a
positive note, yes, man as a cancer a homebody. Um,
I know that having plans sounds like a good idea
until you have to put your clothes on a leaderhouse.
And to me, happiness has always been staying at home.

(01:23:32):
So this weekend and for as long as we have to,
let's stay our asses at home. Okay, let's flatten this
goddamn curve. So when we can get this money circulating
back and back into this back into this economy, Okay,
we the whole gang inside with it. Have a good weekend.
You'll finish. So y'all done,

The Breakfast Club News

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Charlamagne Tha God

Charlamagne Tha God

DJ Envy

DJ Envy

Jess Hilarious

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