Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The Waldmost Dangerous Morning Show, the Breakfast Clubs Club. I'm
glad they showd y'all together. Y'all are like a megaphorus.
Y'all just took over every this Chris Brown, I've officially
joined the Breakfast Club. Say something. I'm with it, waldmot
Dangerus Morning Show, Breakfast Club is good money us yo
(00:35):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo Good money. Shallam good morning
ANGELA yee piece to the planet. Is Monday, Yes, Happy Monday,
Happy money. How we feel? Man? What's the day? What's
(00:56):
the April twenty six? Okay, a few more days at
a left? Man? The year? The year really is flying by,
by the way. I mean, I'm sure, yeah, I'm sure
it's not going no faster than any other year, but
it just feels that way for whatever reason. What'd you
do this weekend? I was in New Orleans this weekend
and I was meeting with the supermarket chain. Rouse is
(01:16):
about my Press Juice Sister and Fresh Juice and my
coffee coffee uplifts people to get my products in stores
so that's exciting. Okay, congratulations on that they have over
sixty supermarkets. Coffee is like legal cocaine. People that love
caffeine really really really really really love caffeine and they're
listening to me right now and they don't even want
(01:37):
to hear my voice until they can get they shot,
you know of that brown powder. Yeah, but coffee has
a lot of health benefits really yeah, and the caffeine
and coffee is natural. You know, caffeine comes from the plants,
the coffee beans. They actually make caffeine to help prevent
the insects from attacking them, so it's like a feel
(02:00):
force field around them, and that's what creates a caffeine.
I had no idea what did it. Health benefits the
coffee because every time I drink coffee, I just get
the runs. Yeah. Well, actually it's very good for that
for your your digestive system. Oh so that's a good thing.
That's a great thing. And it's natural and it improves
your energy levels and they said it helps you burn fat.
It can also the caffeine can improve your physical performance.
(02:22):
And there's also a senil nutrients and coffee all of
those things. It can lower your risk of type two diabetes.
But the thing is that it's what people put in
coffee sometimes that can be harmful. Cream. Yeah, okay, wow, Angelie,
he's really in the coffee business because I didn't know
there was any health benefits. I don't though people drink
cofee because they wanted to wake up in the morning.
(02:42):
It can lower your risk of some types of cancer.
So the best thing you can do is have black coffee.
But I add almond milk to mine, which is not
so bad either. Okay, we'll drop on a clues bonds
for all the coffee drinkers out there, okay. And it
was started in Ethiopia, so it's our thing. Okay, whatever
you gotta do to you know, get up in the
morning as long as you're drinking any coffee and listen
(03:03):
to us. Morning guys, morning, Hey, good morning. We got
we got something that's light coffee coming in this morning.
And that's right. It may not have to health benefits
the coffee, but boys, gonna wake your ass up, that's right,
Doctor Umar Johnson us this morning. Well, how did that go?
Doctor Umar Johnson has been here us being fifth time
on the Breakfast Club. Was you here for any of them.
(03:26):
I don't recall. I don't think I was there one
and a half times. Once I was there and then
another time I had to leave halfway through to catch
a flight. Yeah. Yeah, So for all you people who
don't drink coffee, but you need a little pick pick
me up her this morning, doctor Umar Johnson, to definitely
do half four year this morning, goodness, pick me up
her or put me down or something. And that conversation
just wouldn't end. We want it was like, what didn't that?
(03:48):
I want to half? No, I wasn't that long. How
many times you try to wrap it up? Mad times
an hour? In seventeen minutes? And I think Charlemagne and
I asked maybe three questions, maybe four, doctor Umar Johnson.
All you gotta do is just put him in front
of a microphone and let them go. You just got
to steer him in the right direction. Now, So there
you go. What you want, what you want to talk
about police brutality, let's discuss it. Yeah, you want to
(04:08):
talk about interracial relationships, let's discuss it. And why his business?
Why why he why he doesn't believe in them? But
it's about business and not not bigotree. We'll talk about it,
all right, I wouldn't be here without an interracial relationship.
Well he should have been hit the defender. No, baby not,
that's the one thing I said. Well that's the reason
why he's probably not here today. All right, Well let's
(04:28):
get the show cracking front page news. What were we
talking about. Well, Chicago police say they've arrested the man
in connection to the murder of jazz Line and Adams,
the seven year old girl who was fatally shot while
at McDonald's drive through. All right, we'll get to that.
Next is to breakfast club wanting everybody is DJ Envy
Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are to breakfast club.
Let's getting some front page news. You're out the computer.
(04:53):
Don't believe it on the computer. I hit the button.
All right, Okay, what we starting you? Well, CDC it
is showing that more Americans are missing their second dose
of the COVID nineteen vaccine. So people went in and
got their first one, but they set up to eight
percent of people did not go ahead and get their
second one. But part of that could be because of
how things are being reported, right, Like you might go
(05:14):
to one place, to one entity to get their first dose,
and then if you go to a different place like
a mass vaccination side or a retail pharmacy and other
vaccination efforts, they might not be LinkedIn, so they might
not know that after you got that first one, you
did get that second one. And people are scared. You
know what I'm saying, because you know, around the way
you hear people saying that they had bad reactions to
(05:35):
the second shot. Yeah, I definitely didn't. And they said
that the first shot gives you eighty five percent efficient
receipt rate, So they said a lot of people just
don't want to come back for the second shot. They're
saying is they're like, I'll take the eighty five percent,
but I don't want to get sick. So they're just
not gonna because when you black, all I got to
hear is, you know, one person that I know getting
the balls policy, bails policy, whatever it is, another person
(05:56):
saying that they had a reaction and went into a coma.
It's just like huh okay, y Well, the FDA and
the CDC have also lifted the pause on that Johnson
and Johnson COVID nineteen vaccine, so it has been a
proof for you. So once again, and all of this
is after Now they're saying is a total of fifteen
women who had blood clots from it. But you can't
lift you can't lift the pause on Johnson and Johnson.
(06:17):
I mean Johnson and Johnson is always gonna be a
pause in certain circles, especially especially in hallm Okay, all right,
it is. Yeah, So what they are saying that is
what these fifteen women. Now, what they're doing is giving
you that warning. So the risk they said in the
benefit of the vaccine shows that they're preventing tremendous disease,
but you need to be cognitive of the fact that
(06:37):
you could potentially get a rare blood clouding disorder. And
it's fifteen women, So basically it's on you. It's like
people who smoke cigarettes. You know, we're gonna give you
the warning, can tell you that it causes cancer. So
we're telling you that it caused blood clots. But it's
on you if you want to take correct Yeah, like
all those commercials where you see side effects may include
and then there's thirty things listed, so we never really
fine print. By the way, Yeah, I can guarantee you
(06:58):
that's going to make people not want to do that
because there is such a risk involved with it. All. Right, now,
a man has been charging connection to a seven year
old girl's murder and the McDonald's drive through, and this
was a horrifying story for us to hear. But Chicago
police say they have arrested eighteen year old Marian Lewis,
and he's the person who's been arrested in connection to
(07:19):
the murder of jazz And Adams. She was with her
father waiting in line at the McDonald's drive through and
according to the Chicago Police Department, they told reporters that
he was involved in that shooting, but did not say
that he was the one who pulled the trigger. They
said there everything appears to be gang related and that
there are still two other suspects that remain at large.
They said, you can learn, but you cannot hide. We
are going to bring you to justice for this crime.
(07:40):
The Adams family deserves nothing less. According to authorities, they
found two weapons in his vehicle, including an AK forty seven,
and they did confirm those weapons who were connected to
Jazzin's murder. Yeah, that that young man will be telling
on all the other two suspects this week and rightfully
so because I don't even know how you could remotely sleep.
I don't know how you can asleep when you kill anybody,
but remotely when you kill a seven year old girl. Well,
(08:04):
the two other suspects have been identified by the police,
but they have not been charged. They said that we
don't know immediately now if either suspect was in custody yet.
Oh got you got. He's being held without bond on
the charge of murder and eighteen other charges, including three
accounts of attempted murder and aggravated assault of a police officer.
And I did a little research and I saw what
they went through to actually get him, and it was
(08:26):
like a definitely a high speed car chase situation. Well,
then't people like that you got to take off the street.
And the reason you got to take them off the
street because if they would do something like that to
a seven year old girl, what you think they're gonna
do to you or somebody that you love? You know,
did they say they knew the seven year ruld was
in the call? They just didn't kill that. Everybody probably
don't care. Yeah, we don't know about that. I mean
(08:46):
that what happened was the two guys that were the
ones who he was the driver, right that they that
they captured the two other guys who were the ones
who got out of the car because they have footage
and started shooting in the car. They actually hit the
father and his torso and so he's in the hospital.
And then they shot and killed a young seven year
old jazz and Adams. And by the way, I mean,
you know, if you let off for the McDonald's drive through,
(09:07):
it's not like you give a damn about who's in
whatever car, you know what I mean. McDonald's. Yeah, they
found him by his Facebook page and then he got
in the car was at AUTI, so they had identified
his car and it was like a high speed car
chase and uh, you know, he got out and then
he tried to car jack other people. It was like
a family in the car with two kids in the
back that couldn't get out of the car seats, and
(09:30):
he shot through the glass window trying to get the
card him. Well, that is your front page news, all right,
get it off your chests. Eight, don't drip five eight
five one oh five one. If you're upset, you need
to vent phonelan to wade open. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning the Breakfast Club. Wake up, wake up, You're
(09:54):
time to get it off your chest. Blast. We want
to hear from you on Hi. Hello, who's this The
destructs from Jersey? Hey, what's up? Bro? Getting off your chest?
All right? So look last month this guy called up
said he was to save when he was trying to
get a house, and you told him that he could.
I'm kind of dealing with a similar situation and I
was hoping you could pass the plug. What are you
(10:16):
trying to do? Run by a house? But right now,
I'm a sucide. So I don't get a lot of money. Okay,
where are you from? I'm from New Jersey, New Jersey.
How much do you have? How much do you have
a savings? If any in savings? I basically you got
my stamming have what I basically like a little bit. Okay,
all right, so you have you have boys in savings
(10:39):
and you're trying to purchase a home and you're trying
to have any income coming in. Yeah, I got my
own social Security okay, all right, Well um I will
plug you with. It's a lenda. His name is Matt
he Um. He deals with faha and he could probably
guide you to. Sometimes they give him grants to people
to help people with their down payments. A lot of
(11:00):
that is tightening up right now because there's a lot
of money that's not there anymore. But if you hold on,
I'll put you on to Matt. He helps a lot
of people get it, you know, fh loans and grants
and try to help people out. He just helped a
couple over the weekend. I did the seminar on the
Lando and he was able to get them something. So
hopefully he can help y'all. Brother, I really appreciate that.
I hold on a lot of right, charlottamagne, don't you change? Um? Okay, okay,
(11:26):
how much they called you gay, don't you change? Okay?
All right. I don't care how much they call you gay,
but don't you change. Hello. Who's this? Good morning, Charlottage,
Good Marta, Angela. What's going on? What's going on? Y'all?
How are you guys feeling this morning? Let's black and
Holly Favor blave Wise, my friend Lavewise. Hey, I just
(11:51):
wanted to go back to that earlier something you're talking
about that shooting. There's been twenty five shooting this weekend
in New York City alone, can't talk about police reform.
Took about wanting to have the top treat us better
if we out here lightening it up, Yes we can.
Why do we say stupid stuff like that we can,
but we then we do that. We're giving them reason, right,
(12:11):
We're giving them reason to despectors from the obvious right.
So please, I'm just giving a disclaimer that everybody the summer,
we want to be outside, but we can't be outside
if y'all gonna be lighting it up, we can to.
I'm grown up to come back outside and shot. I'm
not trying to have it, you know what I'm saying.
And we gotta stop. We gotta start backing. Like America
doesn't have a gun violence problem. I saw, of course
(12:35):
they do. But America has a gun violence problem period.
I saw the guy to oscar Is talking about that
last night. So yes, you can talk about America's gun
violence problem and discuss police reform at the same time
talking about the problem. And I'm telling the people that
have guns that don't need to be having no guns,
stop shooting a place up because we don't need it
this summer. Right that I agree with shoot out with
(12:59):
the guns and chill out with the shooting, because right
now we're trying to be back outside the summer time,
and this is not it. Yeah, because I don't lighten
it up, but we don't. We're not trying to do
that summer right and have some fun to make up
for last summer. That's right, because I don't care if
it's a seven year old girl in the parking lot
of when McDonald's drive through, our a mass shooting at
a concert or a church or somewhere else. America got
(13:21):
a gun violence problem. Absolutely, get it off your chests.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If
you need to vent, hit us up now. It's the
Breakfast Club, the Breakfast Club. This is your time to
get it off your chests, whether you're Man or blast.
So we better have the same and we want to
hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello. Who's this? Hello?
(13:43):
Just Mark Marcus himself. Get it off your chests. It's
good man. I was trying to thank Solo man man
a real break up. You and Charlomagne broke up. Na
I said, I was thanking here for helping me get
through a real break up. How I did that me
man introduce himself kid to life? Man, oh man, what
you start doing meditating? Therapy? What you was doing? Therapy?
(14:06):
Take care of putting me first? Man, it's amazing. Hey,
that's a beautiful thing. You know why, because you're your first, last,
and best. Love is always gonna be self love, sir, exactly. Man, Man,
I really want to get your book. Man, I've been
trying to get on and get your book. I don't
let me see. I don't think I got no extra
matter of fact, I'm gonna take your info because I
might have some copies at the house. All right, Man,
(14:27):
I want you to Instagram. Man, I'm big Single. I'm
out here, big single. That's your name on Instagram? No
King Underscore, Wayne King Underscore, Wayne Yeah King underscore? W
A Y N three? I like big single, better big singles,
more catching, my goodness, more catchy Instagram name big Single? Hello?
Who's this? Man? What's up? Broke? Get it off your chest? Man?
(14:50):
The work your cool words? You're breaking that. What's up
with your phones? This morning? Bro talk? You ain't saying
team so Luke sant Man? Hello, who's this the morning?
The breaths? You guys doing how you doing robber, what's
(15:11):
up getting off your chests? Oh, I'm blessed man, I'm
blessed them in a good mood. Um. I just helped
my my wife launch her first business and we got
our first sale, which is exciding. Um just real quick.
It is Teaching Love Box of Fish on Instagram. Um,
and we're just it's targeted teachers, man, and we're just
trying to trying to bless these teachers because you know,
(15:34):
they're hard at work and uh, you know it's it's
serious for them, you know, so um but uh but yeah,
I just I just want to say that, you know,
hard work pays off. And uh. And also our Teacher
Lovebox we do, we do a rapper. We do try
to get back um every moment. It's it's something free
and it's something way more u than with the you know,
(15:57):
uh the boxes and purchases. So um this this month
we're giving that way. They just twenty five a gift card. Um,
but we try to do more. So it's excited. Yeah. Yeah.
The raffle, the monthly raffle every month is Teacher Love
(16:19):
about Official. It's the twenty ninth of every month. Um,
it's just you know, something that in our hearts we
want to really get back really, you know, thank them
for the hard work they do. You know what's cool?
All right, brother, Okay, get it off your chests. Eight
hundred five A five one oh five one. If you
need to vent, hit us up now. We got rooms
on the way, yes, and a lot of activity over
(16:39):
the weekend. As you know, the oscars were last night.
We'll discuss that. Also DMX's funeral and the public one,
not really public, but it was at the Barclays. They
had that for friends and family, and then on Sunday
they had one that you could watch on b ET.
So we'll discuss all of those things this morning, but
I think we'll start with the oscars. All right, we'll
get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
(17:00):
the Breakfast Club. It's about Angela needs fund. The Breakfast Club. Well,
the askers were last night, and you know it's a
bit different right now with COVID restrictions. People were saying
(17:23):
it kind of dragged on, and I saw a lot
of chatter on social media about people being upset about
Chadwick Boseman not winning. But let's talk about some of
the people who were there last night. Regina King was
the first presenter, and one of the first things she
talked about was a Derek Shavin child listened to this.
We are mourning the loss of so many and I
(17:43):
have to be honest, if things have gone differently this
past week in Minneapolis, I might have traded in my
heels for marching boots. Now. I know that a lot
of you people went home want to reach for your
remote when you feel like Hollywood is pre to you.
But as a mother of a black son, I know
(18:04):
the fear that so many live with, and no amount
of fame or fortune changes that. That's right. I don't
even know why people get upset when folks have those
conversations on those platforms. That's much more substitutive than going
up there and just thanking a bunch of people. We
don't know more what a right substitutive. What I'm supposed
to say, that's not the right word, definitely. So I
(18:25):
think y'all know what I'm talking about. We got you
and now. Tyler Perry was honored with a Humanitarian Award,
and amongst the things that he was talking about is
refusing hate and how his mom taught him that after
he told the story about helping a homeless woman. Listen
to this. My mother taught me to refuse hate. And
in this time and with all of the Internet and
(18:46):
social media and algorithms that everything that wants us to
think a certain way of the twenty four hour news cycle,
it is my hope that all of us would teach
our kids, and not only to remember, just refuse hate.
Don't hate anybody. I refuse to hate someone because they
are Mexican, or because they are black or white or LBGTQ.
(19:07):
I refuse to hate someone because they are a police officer.
I refuse to hate someone because they are Asian, all right.
And her also One Fight for You from the Judas
and the Black Messiah soundtrack is the song that won
for that for original song. By the way, I loved
her outfit. But here is what her speech sounded like. Musicians, filmmakers,
(19:28):
I believe we have an opportunity and a responsibility to
tell the truth and to write history the way that
it was and how it connects us to today. A
knowledge is power, Music is power. And as long as
I'm standing, I'm always gonna fight for us. I'm always
going to fight for my people. And fight for what's right.
And I think that's what music does, and that's what
storytelling does. Okay, oscar One on her just about to
(19:52):
drop her debut album, which is so strange to me. Wait,
she's dropping her debut ye so Day announced this weekend
she's dropping debut album. I was like, debut, What was
the first one? Maybe like a bike safe or or something.
I definitely don't look at her as dropping her debut album.
She got a lot of songs I love. I don't know. Okay, anyway,
let's um Daniel Kaluya for Best Supporting Actor and that
(20:15):
is of course for Judas in The Black Messiah. And
in his speech he talked about Fred Hampton to chairman
Fred Hampton, how blessed we add that we lived in
a lifetime where he existed, Sam, he was on this
for twenty one years, twenty one years, and he found
a way to feed kids, educate kids, give free medical
care against old odds. He showed me, he told me him,
(20:36):
Hup Newton, Bobby Seal, the Black Panther Party. They showed
me how to love myself. And with that love they
overflowed it to the black community and to other communities,
and they showed us that the power of union, power
of unity that when they played divide and conco we say,
you're not in the Sam, thank you so much for
Sean and me myself. Very well deserved award. He deserved
every bid of that award. You know, there was a
(20:58):
moment that when viral where his mom looked a little
bit taken him back. And here's what that moment was, like,
there's so much what to do, guys, and that's on
everyone in this room. It sain't no single man job.
That's some real and I look to everyone, every single
one of you. You got work to do, John Sam,
And I'm gonna get back to what Tuesday morning, because
tonight I'm going up. We're going up, you know what
(21:19):
I mean. Enjoying ourselves, not because we celebrate. You got
to celebrate life. Man, we're breathing, but walking. It's incredible,
Like it's incredible. My mom met they had sex. It's amazing, Like,
John Sam, I'm here, he's right. Her face was like, boy,
if you don't stop, he's right though. Mom met his
dad sex and now he's here. Yeah, yeah, we know
that's how we got here, all right. And two Distant
(21:40):
Strangers won an oscar and the Best Live Action Short
Film category, and that starts Joey Badass and tray Von
Free is um is the person who actually wrote Did
he write this or directed? He wrote it? He wrote it, okay,
So Trayvon Free wrote it, and didd he is one
of the producers, Terrence, Jay van Lathan, Kevin dur In,
(22:00):
amongst other people. And here is what Trey Bonfrey had
to say. On average, the police in America every day
killed three people, which amounts for about a thousand people
a year. And those people happened a disproportionately Black people.
And you know, James Baldwin once said, the most despicable
thing a person can be is indifferent to other people's pain.
(22:21):
And so I just asked that you please not being different,
Please don't being different to our pain. I thought he
gave a phenomenal acceptance speech. And I have no idea
why nobody clapped after he said that, not even the
black people. Maybe something was wrong on my TV, but
I didn't hear any reaction to what he said. And
I thought what he said was very, very accurate. And
if you were upset about what he said, and you
(22:42):
haven't seen the movie Too Distant Strangers, because there's a
movie about police violence. You know what I'm saying, It's
a really good movie. And shout out to Joey bats.
I didn't even really realize when I was watching it
at first that that was him. I don't know. I
was watching it and I was like, he looks so
familiar because the way he was dressing everything. Yeah, it
just did and look like Joey Badass to me, which
(23:02):
is a great thing. Yes, saluting my guys on Van
Lathing and Nick me they were executive producers on that film. Uh,
you know, well, William, salute to Terrence J and d
D and all in. But I've been watching Van and
Nick and Trey Vaughn get this going from the beginning,
way before anybody else was involved. So I'm extremely proud
of those three brothers in particular for being Oscar winners. Now,
(23:26):
all right, well that is your front page news. I
know we have more to talk about, but we'll get
into it. All right, we got front page news. Next.
What are we talking about? Yes, and let's talk about
Derek Chauvin. Does anybody have any sympathy for him as
a human being? Well, discussed. All right, we'll get it
to that. Next, it's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, So
Breakfast Club, your morning's will never be the same. Our
(23:47):
Audible pick of the day is Half Like, a fantastic
Atlanta based story about sisterhood and love from best selling
author Taieri Jones. Your first thirty days of Audible Plus
are free. Sign up at audible dot com. Last breakfast
Club Morning, everybody, apj Envy angela ye, Charlemagne the guy
we are to breakfast Club. All right, let's get in
(24:08):
some front page news. What we thought. Well, let's start
with the lead prosecutor, Keith Ellison and Derek Charvin's murder
child did admit on sixty minutes that when the jerry
came back with a guilty verdict, his reaction was that
he felt gratitude, he felt humility, but he also felt
a little bit bad. Listen to this. You first heard
(24:30):
the word guilty, you thought what gratitude? Humility followed by
a certain sense of I'll say satisfaction. It's what we
were aiming for the whole time. I spent sixteen years
as a criminal defensive lawyer, so I will admit I
felt a little bad for the defendant. I think he
deserved to be convicted, but he's a human being. I
(24:53):
get what he's saying. I don't agree, but I get
what he's saying. Like like, I give you an example.
I didn't think I would feel imp the compassion for
Eric Holder, the brother who killed Nipsey, but I did
when I saw him. I saw a black man who
was filled with a lot of hurt, a lot of pain,
a lot of trauma, and hurt people, hurt people. But
I don't feel that way towards Derek Chauvin at all,
(25:14):
not even a little bit. So I understand what he's
saying a tiny bit because I have had compassion and
empathy for people I didn't think I would have it for.
But I don't see how you could have it for Chope. Well,
he did expand on when his thoughts were listened. Somehow,
I did not expect to hear from you a note
of compassion for Derek Schouvin. I'm not in any way
(25:37):
waivering for my responsibility, but I hope we never forget
that people who are defendant in our criminal justice system,
that there they're human beings, They're people. I mean, George
Floyd was a human being, and so I'm not going
to ever forget that everybody in this process as a person. Yeah,
but humans make choices, you know what I'm saying. And
humans make good choices and humans make bad choices. And
(26:00):
when you make bad choices, you got to deal with
the consequences of those bad choices. So it's very hard
for me to feel sorry for Derek Chavin when he
did something that evil. Yeah, but I mean, like I said,
I did have I did have find myself having compassion
and nimbathe for you know, the brother who killed Nipsey,
just because I just wouldn't want to hate somebody that
(26:21):
much the way I saw that brother hating it. And
you know what else was interesting. You know there was
another young man that came forward that he actually did
the same thing too, for nearly seventeen minutes, and they
have video of that too. Did y'all see that? No, No,
I'm not, I'm schlving back in twenty seven story see
the video. He hit a black teenager in the head
so hard the boy needed stitches. Then he held him
(26:43):
down with his knee for nearly seventeen minutes, and he
was ignoring complaints allegedly from the boy that he couldn't
Breathe has committed fatal force. He's used fatal force before,
He's killed somebody in the line of duty before. Yeah,
So for reasons like that, I feel like he just
wasn't feeling like they were any repercussions from this. So
oh yeah, for that, I didn't feel bad for him
(27:04):
at all. But I don't know not this Okay, Now
we're going to transition into another situation that happened. Authorities
in Virginia have released disturbing body camera video of a
deputy who was shooting a black man who was holding
a cordless phone and he had just received a ride
home by that same law enforcement officer. That is Isaiah Brown,
thirty two. He is alive. He survived more than six
(27:26):
rounds fired at him Wednesday, and he's in the hospital
fighting for his life. And the deputy has not been named.
But he was holding a house phone when he was shot.
What happened was Brown got home, he dialed nine one
one because he said his brother wouldn't let him into
his mother's room to retrieve his car keys and other items.
He was on the phone with nine one one at
the time of the shooting, and the officer mistook a
cordless phone for a gun. And I read somewhere where
(27:49):
the same police officer had given him a ride. He
gave him a ride. Yes, he had given a ride
home earlier. The same officer is the person that helped
him out because I guess his car had broken down,
and then he was called and came over there and
shot him up. He was holding himself. I phone. It
was around no, it was around two thirty am that
(28:10):
he gave him a ride home. And then he said, uh,
you know your car's broken down, so why do you
need your keys? That's what the dispatcher said to him.
There's just another example of how they use you know
how fatal force is the only option they use for us,
and it's just simply unnecessary. It doesn't matter if it's
a knife, are they're mistaken a gun for a phone,
doesn't matter if we unarmed, armed, handcuff, complying, not complying, running,
(28:32):
standing day, shoot first and ask questions later. How you
just give his brother a ride home he calls nine
one one, You respond to the same place you just
dropped him off back and you end up killing him,
shooting him, shot him ten times. He's on the phone
with the operator, shot him ten times. Come home, man, stop. Yeah,
and he was actually complying with putting his hands up
(28:54):
and everything. So all right, well we'll keep our eye
on this case as well. And that is your front
page news, all right. Now, you guys are talking about
coffee this morning. Oh yeah, we're talking about coffee. Um
talking about everything. We're just talking about. I was talking
about that health Benefit's a coffee this morning, right, we're
talking about you need to pick me up, to pick
me up. We got one coming for you, doctor Umar Johnson.
(29:17):
He'll be joining us next and we'll talk to him
in a second. And I just to Breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. Everybody envy, Angela yee, Charlottagne the guy.
We are all to Breakfast Club. We got a special
guests in the building, the prince hipan Africanism absolutely piece
and Black Power five okay, number five, number five. You know,
(29:41):
doctor Umar, you've become one of the internet's favorite people.
To me, man, I love it personally, I love it.
What do you think of it? I don't know. On
one hand, I appreciate the circulation of the message. On
the other hand. I think sometimes they go too far
to where their trivial live in a very serious message
(30:02):
talk to me, you know. So, I don't want people
to lose the centrality in the importance of my main message,
which is the liberation of our people, and coming from
a school psychologist perspective, the need for us to make
sure we're saving our boys from that school to prison pipeline.
And I think sometimes that can get lost in all
of the humor. So I'm not against it, but I
(30:24):
wish it was a little bit more balanced to it.
But at the same time, I can't complain because it
has helped bring a lot more people to the message,
and it has helped me save a lot more parents. Absolutely. Now,
the last time you were up here, we were talking
about your school and MG Academy, the Frederick Douglas Marcus
Garvey Academy. It's a bittersweet report, brothers, because let me
(30:46):
make it real simple, so y'all can understand this. We
have two schools, right they look across the street at
one another. The Marcus Garvey building is the elementary school
and the Frederick Douglas building is much larger. It's the
high school. Now, if you were focusing on the Garvey
building right now. Right if you were to say how
soon can that building be ready, it can be ready
(31:06):
in three weeks. We only have three weeks worth of repairs,
three weeks worth of HVACT, three weeks worth of electric,
three weeks worth of plumbing. So if hypothetically speaking, if
a black tradesman, a black h vactor said, I'm gonna
come volunteer. I'm gonna fix the system. You have to
pay for all of the materials, but I'm gonna donate
(31:26):
my time. If an electrician, if a plumber said, we're
gonna donate our time to fix the system, but you
have to pay for all the material the school would
be up and running in three weeks. That's all we have.
The problem is charlemagne an envy is I haven't come
across black folks who are willing to donate their time.
That's one. So we have to raise enough money to
(31:49):
pay market rate for those repairs. So the HVAC the
bills that I'm getting are ranging from two fifty on up.
The plumbing the bills I'm getting are ranging from like
a buck fifty on up. You see, So we have
to raise about three hundred thousand dollars just to handle that,
where if we had some black folk who was willing
to donate their time, the school would be up and
running in three weeks. I wonder if people if they
(32:11):
change their perspective of how they look at this, right,
like you bought the building, but I would look at
it like a startup. We own it, no mortgage. Yeah,
I would look at it like it's a startup. Good shape. Yeah,
they're modern, they're not old. The only thing we have
to do is the plumbing, the electric in the HVAC.
We don't have to do no new construction. It's only repair.
And that's why it's so frustrating for me because it's
(32:33):
only three weeks worth of repairs, not a month, not
a year. Three weeks worth of repairs in the school
beat up and running. So if our Mexican, the school
be done. If I were Chinese, the school be done.
If I was East Indian, if I was a rab,
if I was European, g if I was Italian, the
school be done. It's only because it's us that we
(32:53):
don't take something like this as serious. So it's like
raising money. It's like raising money in another round for
a startup company raising the money in another round for
like the startup, well, give him tell what he's in donations, donations, donations, Well,
the donation should go to a cash dot me slash
FDMG school. So if you're on the cash apps, dollasign
FDMG school. If your PayPal it's PayPal dot me slash
(33:16):
FDMG academy. So cash app is FDMG school, PayPal is
FDMG academy. They can also mail checker money order and
that information is on my website at doctor Umar Johnson
dot com. Why do you think that you know you
said if you were a Mexican or if you were Asian,
Why do you think that that black people don't want
(33:36):
to support or is not supporting or do you feel
that you know you're not getting support that you should
be getting. Now here's the point, and that's a great question, Envy.
It's not that black people don't support other black people.
We are not used to being responsible for building our
own institutions. Are you following me? If I was opening
up a nightclub some sort of a summer of basketball league,
(34:00):
I would have the support. But we are not accustomed
to being responsible for building our own institution. So For example,
if you look around America, can you show me a
single independent Black community in fifty states? Fifty states? You
can't show me one Black community where we own the hospital,
(34:22):
the bank, the school, in the supermarket. So those are
the four essential institutions of an independent community. You don't
have those four in any black town anywhere in the
United States. And we are a two trillion dollar people.
How do you explain that? And I would say slavery
one of the psychological residuals of slavery. It took from
(34:44):
us that natural desire to want to control your environment
and your destiny. If you notice when ethnic nationals come
to America, the first thing they do is look for
where are we going to build our first community. That's
the first thing, because it is natural role to want
to control your environment. It is natural to guarantee your
children their future. Black people don't do that. But when
(35:07):
we wake up, the first day we think about is
what can I buy to make myself look more important
than other Black people? You see, so our whole orientation
towards life is different from other groups as a result
of slavery. What's your biggest issue with the public schools?
My biggest issue with the public schools under the remote
learning platform of COVID. I got a couple issues issues.
(35:28):
Number one, these schools, while our children are learning at home,
are still trying to get them tested for special education.
Why if he's at home learning through a computer, of
course he's not going to be as motivated. Of Course
he's not going to do as well because he has
to learn through a computer. Children don't learn from computers.
(35:49):
They learn from people. If the teacher was boring in
the classroom, she's going to be extra boring through the laptop.
So there's a process laws there that public schools are
not taking into account, Charlemagne, And as a result of that,
they're sending parents letters requesting permission to evaluate your child.
Are you kidding telling parents you don't sign that, because
(36:11):
even if you sign it, Charlemagne, they get evaluated. School psychologist,
which is what I am, comes back and says he
has a reading disability. Okay, how are you going to
deliver his special less services if he's at home, If
he can't learn through the computer with the regular teacher,
What is your special led program going to offer this
boy or girl that's gonna rectify that? Nothing? Nothing, So
(36:35):
the schools are using this as an opportunity to get
paid because every time you put a child in special LED,
the school gets more money. So this is just a
quick hustle. And I'm telling black parents, hell no, if
you want to improve their academics, bring them back into
the classroom, because guess what. As much as a lot
of children did not like going to school, a lot
of them are ready to go back now. They've been
(36:57):
home too long. And even though some schools have converted
to hybrid where they go to class two or three
days a week two or three days at home, a
lot of them have not. So I'm hearing from children
on the street, doctor Umar, I'm ready to go back
to school. But there's a discrepancy between white suburban public
schools and black inner city public schools. They're showing that
(37:18):
amongst the white suburban public and charter schools, sixty percent
of them and greater are back in school. But when
you look at the black inner city hood schools and
lower are back in school. You know why because the
white teachers aren't as motivated to go back into the
school and teach the black kids. But they don't have
a problem going back into the school to teach the
white kids. It's racism, all right. We got them all
(37:40):
with doctor Umar Johnson. When we come back, don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club, Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Shalomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We're still kicking it with doctor Umar Johnson, Shalomagne. Let's
which years a little bit man, because people feel like
we can we can breathe again after the Derek Shavin verdict.
And you know, George Floyd's brother said, justice for Floyd
(38:03):
means freedom for us all. What are you think of it?
But Floyd didn't get justice because Floyd isn't coming back
from the graves, right. And I want everybody to pump
the brakes and understand something. No laws have been changed,
no laws have been added to hold the police accountable
for the unjustified murder of armed black people. So we
(38:24):
are right where we were before Chauvin was convicted. And
the only reason why he was convicted, to be honest
with you, it had nothing to do with black justice.
Derek Chauvin was convicted for the same reason O. J.
Simpson was acquitted. Now, I don't know if O. J.
Simpson was guilty or innocent, but that's irrelevant. The reason
OJ got off in ninety five is because the Rodney
(38:45):
King riots in nineteen ninety two cast Los Angeles County
untold millions of dollars in damage. Do you really think
they're gonna let the city burn down a second time
when we haven't done making the repairs from the first right,
it's the same thing in Minnesota. Now listen, I'm not
I'm not. I don't disagree with that, but that's the
same thing Fox News is saying. Fox News is they're
(39:06):
saying that it's because that people were protesting and some
people were rioting and looting, that the jury was afraid
to convict theirn cholding. I don't like that. Off the hook, Well,
most jurors were white. You only had four blacks, you
had two mixed rates. The others was Europeans. I don't
think the jurors were afraid per se, but I believe
(39:27):
that they were very reasonable and they said to themselves,
this city just burned a year ago, countless millions of
dollars and damages that had to be paid out. If
we do not convict him, it's gonna burn again, and
not only is Minnesota gonna burn, half the cities in
America are prepared for protests. And let me be clear,
(39:47):
they were not concerned about the black protesters. The black
protesters did not break the law. They were concerned of
the white anarchist groups and the white militia groups who
were going to operate under the cover of the black
protester to destroy infrastructure and damage property. So they were
not afraid of black people protesting. They were afraid of
(40:09):
the white anarchist groups. That's why he got convicted, because
they didn't want to flip that price tag. It was
not about black justice. It was white capitalism that convicted Chauvin.
I don't I don't disagree with that at all. But
only the only thing I pushed back on with that
is the fact that I don't want people to think
that what Derek Chauvin did wasn't wrong, because you saw
it exactly was absolutely wrong. And here's what makes the
(40:32):
case so pathetic. The whole world saw what happened indisputable,
and yet everybody still was on pins and needles to
see if he would be held a canabis. And then
you heard the judge tell him and his attorney that
because of the comments that Queen Mother Representative Maxie Waters
may you may have grounds to appeal the case. But
first of all, he could appeal the case anyway. But
(40:53):
why did the judge have to remind him that you
have the opportunity here to appeal the case. And because
he doesn't have a record. Under Minnesota law, Derek Schauvin
can do as little as twelve and a half years
and be home to enjoy the rest of his life.
But here's a point I want you, gentlemen to recognize.
I'm gonna go to President Biden. President Biden, your first
(41:17):
day of office, you signed an executive order to protect
the life in safety of transgenders. I have no problem
with that. But you did it on your first day.
But he sat up here with you Charlemagne and told
black people that if you don't vote for me, you
ain't black. So if you went out of your way
begging black people to vote for you, why haven't we
(41:40):
got an executive order or any other activity coming out
of the oval office from President Biden to protect black
people from police. Look what he's doing with the anti
Asian hate. President Joe Biden signed an executive order that
is exclusive two Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. I don't
(42:00):
have a problem with that. But if you could protect
the Asian American and Pacific Islander from violence, why can't
you do the same thing for Black people. They've been
dealing with violence for one year as a result of COVID.
That's what it's called, the COVID nineteen Hate Crimes Bill,
to protect Asians as a result of discriminatory treatment that
they've been dealing with for how long one year? Black
(42:24):
people have been catching hell for four hundred years and
we have yet to get an executive order from Joe
Biden to protect us from the police. And also Charlotta
Magne an envy to further highlight the racism of American government.
The Transgender Executive Order is not for people of color.
(42:44):
It is not for minorities. It is not for disadvantaged communities.
Guess who was for transgender The anti Asian Pacific Islander
Hate Executive Order against hate is not for people of color,
It's not for minorities, is not for disadvantage Americans. It
is exclusively and only for Asian Americans in Pacific Islanders.
(43:07):
Why am I bringing that up? Because when Barack Obama
was in office, all these negroes running around screaming for Obama.
I still don't know why said that Barack Obama can't
do nothing specifically for black people, because this is America.
So if you have to make laws for all Americans,
Charlotte Mainian envy, how do you explain the fact that
the Asian Americans got a law just for them yesterday
(43:31):
the United States Senate and historic precedents past the anti
Asian hate crimes built at a vote of ninety six
to one. And why are they catering to the Asians?
You know why? Because the amount of white people in
this country is shrinking. And whenever the amount of white
people in America shrinks, America looks to find other white
(43:52):
groups or other minority groups that they can build an
alliance with to protect their power and their interests. Who
better than the Asians. They're just as conservative politically as
many middle class white Americans. They are just as economically
comfortable as many middle class white Americans. They don't like
black people just as much as many middle class white Americans.
(44:12):
Not to mention that this can go a long way
towards building relationships with Asian countries. On the continent of
Asia that America can't afford to build an alliance with Russia.
Let us be clear about something. The continent of Asia
is a big problem for the US government. You got
three power nations on that continent. You got Russia that
America can't stand. You got China that America can't control.
(44:33):
And you got India, which is one of the fastest
growing populations and it is quickly becoming the it giant
of the world. Kamala Harris is not the vice president
by accident. Kamala Harris is the Vice president on purpose
because America needed to send the Nation of India an
olive branch to improve their relations because America can't afford
(44:54):
for India to get tight with China or Russia. This
is politics, and they're going to use the a Asians okay,
as probationary whites. They're going to upgrade them to probationary
white status to make sure that they stay on the
side of the white man and not go on the
side of the black man. Don't forget about the George
Floyd Policing Act. Oh, that still hasn't passed yet exactly exactly,
(45:16):
but you're passing bills for everybody else, but nothing for
black people. And part of this is our fault because
we didn't make no demands on Joe Biden before he
got elected. Yeah, I do disagree that a lot of
people made demands of Biden, but then you had other
people saying no, not people Charlotte Magne. As a community,
that's that's hard. Black black people are monolithic. We can
never get monolithic, but they can still put a platform out.
(45:41):
Very true. But to my point, you had people that
were putting platforms out, but then you go, but you
got other people saying, no, we gotta get Trump out.
Don't rock the boat right now, wait to tell Biden
gets in and then make demands. Right. But the problem
we made as a community is we made Donald Trump
escapegoat for racism, just like we made but Rock Obama
the angel, you understand, for government, we make Donald Trump
(46:04):
the devil. You don't do either one of those. The
US government is a system, it's not a person. So
when you make Donald Trump the scapegoat for all of
American racism, you let the government off the hook. You
don't reduce a system as powerful as this to an
individual or a personality. The problem, which is what I
think you're saying. So we don't disagree on this point.
(46:26):
We are disorganized, and it is the disorganization that makes
it difficult for us to put forward a unified platform.
So what happens is people are self anointing themselves as
the representatives of black people. That's why I do not
vote for black people who are registered as Democrats or Republicans.
I only vote for independent candidates because if you are
(46:47):
not an independent candidate, you don't have an independent program,
you are not an independent thinker, and you ain't gole
to bring us no independent freedom. The Democrats are a
waste of time. If the Congressional Black Caucus can't make
Joe Biden do anything for black people, then they need
to dissolve themselves. We don't even need them anymore. They're useless,
all right. We got more with doctor Umar Johnson. When
we come back, don't move. It's the Breakfast Club, Go
(47:08):
Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee Sheloming, the
guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it
with doctor Umar Johnson. Sheloman, do you believe there is
any policy or legislation that will stop police executions of
black people like you think like if they implemented George
Floyd Police and Act, will it stop that I have
to that act. But my suspicions are it doesn't really
(47:31):
have any teeth in it, because when I look at
the act that Nancy Pelosi introduced, the Police Reform Bill
right around the time that the George Floyd riots kicked off,
it didn't have no teeth in it. Number One, it
is a hate crime. These police killing us are committing
hate crimes, and nobody is treating them like hate crimes.
(47:51):
So the first change in the legislation is that it
all has to be treated as a hate crime. Second
change in the legislation, the civil suit payout come from
the police officer's pension, and it comes from the police union,
and it comes from the Fraternal Order of the Police.
Make them pay, because you can't tell me that you're
gonna make black taxpayers pay, you understand for the criminal
(48:14):
behavior of police. How am I getting a victory if
I'm the one who has to pay for his mistakes.
Make the police pay and charge every murder as a
hate crime, and I guarantee you they'll think twice before
they start killing black and the George fla police, and
that's what they want to do. They want to get
rid of qualified immunity because if you get rid of
qualified immunity, and that's exactly what will happen. Exactly, you
need to get rid of qualified immunity and stop making
(48:36):
police think that their lives are more important than black folks.
Look at the situation with the sister who got shot
the five times. Now, let's talk about that Kaya Brant.
They're claim and she the one who called the police.
They're claiming that the police had a right to shoot.
Even coons nigroes are running around saying, well, she had
a knife, so that justifies her being killed. Because I
(48:56):
work in school, Charlomagne, I have seen lunch room aids
with no police training, no bulletproof vest, no Knight proof vess,
no gun in their pocket. I have seen elderly black
women and elderly black men take knives and other weapons
out of the hands of students during lunchroom riots. So
(49:17):
you mean to tell me that a sixty seventy year
old man can disarm a teenager in a lunch room,
but a train armed police with a bulletproof vest can't
get a knife out of the hand of a sixteen
year old. But yet in still you have white males
who are conducting mass murders all across this country. Almost
(49:37):
every other week, we're getting a mass murder in America,
and almost every one of these fully armed, fully violent,
murderous white men were apprehended by the police without being
shot and without losing their life. So explain to me
how a white man with an AK forty seven can
be taken without a police officer firing at a bullet
(49:58):
after he had murder s seven eight people, but a
sixteen year old girl with a butter knife cannot be
apprehended without a bullet being shot. That is nonsense. They
killed them because they knew they would get away with it.
I'm not gonna lie I must be a cool because
I don't agree with you in this one. And I'm
gonna tell you why I do agree with you. Those
people that walk walk around with them assault rifles, and
those and those white boys that they run around that
(50:20):
don't get shot, they should get shot immediately you come
out with a gun, should lay your ass down. Not
even a question to ask, yes, but the situation. My
only thing is this, when the police pulled up now
you're talking to somebody whose fathers retired cop. Right, And
when that cop pulled up, he doesn't know friend of fall.
He doesn't know who called the police, right, Okay, he
does not know. It wasn't like sign police understand they
(50:45):
got a call. Hey, I'm getting jumped. Somebody has a weapon, right,
comes down that call. He puts his hand out. First
thing he says, is you see that girl running towards
the other girl with a knife. Up Right, police can
use deadly weapon to two things, to defend himself and
defend another person. Okay, fired this firearm stopping that girl
(51:06):
from getting shot. Now people could say four times, five
times was a lot. That was a lot of shots.
But his whole thing was to disarm that girl. And
at first I was upset why they shooting that woman?
But then I had to sit back and says, let's
say that was my daughter sitting on the back of
that car and somebody was coming at her aggressively with
a knife. She wasn't defending herself herself. You can't do that.
(51:28):
But they jumped there before and they came to her
at this point right here, when I'm telling you what
the cops seen, the cop didn't see the fight, Okay.
The cope was the girl being aggressive to the other girl.
That's all he seen. Okay. So at that point, if
I'm the father and that's my daughter, I would want
to make sure my daughter didn't get stabbed, okay. And
that was the only reason I said, I understand why
(51:49):
that cop did that. She shouldn't be dead. Let me
ask you a question. If you are the police correct
dj NV is the police officer, you get out the car,
you saw the exact same set of circumstance instance, do
you shoot her five times? Why or why not? I'm
not gonna shoot the five times? Why because this is
my community and I know what happens in the community.
(52:09):
I understand the fight. In other words, you value her life, right,
But I'm exactly this is gonna be took her life
because he did not value it right. Let me ask
you another question, Envy. If she was a white girl
with that same knife, does she get shot five times?
If I'm a police officer that white if that will
(52:30):
not you with the white Going back to the white officer,
if the girl with the knife was a white girl
and that was a white neighborhood, does she get shot
at all by that same gun never even comes out.
I would hope. So she's a granddaugh you know it,
and they know I'm not say you know, you know
(52:50):
she wouldn't you know, she wouldn't have got shot if
she was white. I would hope. So if if if
anybody is aggressively going at somebody with a knife, I
would hope that how many videos you know, they got
a video of a of a white guy stabbing a
cop in the neck. The cop goes on, I'm stabbed
in the neck. He pulls out his gun, chases the
guy stops in the middle of the chase to pull
out his taser. The taser way absolutely come on immediately too.
(53:15):
And you said it yourself if you said they're trained
where they can shoot, they're not required to shoot. In
other words, police are expected to exercise discretion like any
other professional. He made a decision. And when you look
at the video, I didn't hear him say stop. I
didn't hear him say drop it. If I'm not miss
(53:37):
he did he did? He did do that. He didn't
do that. He did he did because I didn't see it.
He didn't. And he said, and she said, I'm gonna
stab the out him. So, like I'm saying, so, why
ain't shooting in the lake in that case? You know
you're right, but then not trained to do that, like
it seems something. It's a b white she would not
have shot at all. So you can't blame it on
the training envy. This was racism. I posted you today,
(54:01):
posted the video yesterday of a white man question if
she didn't shoot her and that girl would have stabbed
that girl and killed that girl, what would have Everybody
would have said the cop didn't do anything. I'm gonna
argue that it would have been impossible for her to
kill the girl because the police, who are athletically fit,
could have engaged her in less than five seconds. You
could have tackled her cold bed. By it. She was
(54:25):
already emotional, she knocked out, She knocked down one girl
before she got to the girl in the pink. Cop
was right there the whole time. So the cop watched
her knocked down one girl and then go to the
next girl in the pink. He could have intervened anytime.
So the point that we're making is not that these
situations aren't tense. It's not that they're not dangerous. It's
not that the police are not stressed out. We're saying
(54:47):
because white people in America have historically and systemically devalued
black life. It has created a context where it is
justifiable to kill, for police to kill black peop people,
even when we are innocent. That's the point that we're making. Yeah,
fatal force is always the option when it comes to
black always the option. We're talking to doctor Umar Johnson. Now,
(55:09):
last time you came up here, you got a lot
of flak over what was it? What was it over?
What is your opinions changed? You were saying that you
feel that black men shitting or black women shitting date
outside of their race. Did you not hear the Anthony
Thompson Junior situation? Thank you. I was going to go
back to that envy. Anthony Thompson Junior is dead because
now his girlfriend was mixed race, so she was African,
(55:31):
but the mother was white. He's dead because his girlfriend
had a white mother. Dating outside your race is dangerous.
If you don't believe me, look at the Shawn Watson
down in uh in Houston, Texans. Most of those massage
girls were white. Let me ask your question, doctor Umar,
are you totally against interracial relationships. I am totally against it,
and I want to make sure you understand why it's
(55:54):
not because cut it out, cut it out, don't do that.
In for it, because I wouldn't have a name for it.
A snow bunny crisis. Okay, I am against the snow
bunny crisis. And I want your white listeners to understand
because people be trying to say stuff like he's the
(56:15):
black hitler. I'm not the black hitler I am. I
am in no way interested in hurting or harming the
life of any human White Asian Chinese. I believe in
respecting everybody. The reason I'm against interracial marriage in Van
Charlemagne is because marriage is an economic contract. It's an
economic contract. Most women do not marry down in status,
(56:38):
they marry up. And if you don't believe me, show
me a rich white woman married to a broad gass
black man. Have you ever seen a rich white woman
marry a broad gass black man. No, you have not,
and you never will because marriage ain't about love, it's
not color blind, and it is totally economic. So if
(56:59):
most women will marry a man of greater economic means,
and women generally live longer than men. When a black
man dies, his entire estate goes to a non African
woman and she is free to do whatever she wants
with your black money because you're no longer around to
control how it gets spent. It's not about hate, it's
(57:21):
about loving. Black people were about to close out because
you gotta go. But I do want to ask you.
You said that you know marriage is not about love.
So when it comes to same seculations, it's not about love.
When it comes to interracial it's not about love. If
you think it's about love. Have you ever went into
a divorce court, and so if people argue about getting
a love back, you haven't seen somebody sat on half
my love back. Have you ever seen you ever been
(57:42):
a divorce court and see somebody say I gave him
twenty years of love. I want to have my love back.
I ain't never see nobody go to the divorce court
to get their love back. They go to divorce court
to get money, property, assets, four or one days and
everything else. So when we when we see you love
God to do it. When we see you on social
media asking for a queen, I'm not asking for a queen.
(58:04):
I'm letting the queens know that I have not chosen
my queen. And if you think that you have what
it takes to stand by the prince of Pan Africanism,
I would like to know who you are because I'm
so busy. I can't meet every woman. I'm too busy.
But you choose it for business, not you're not trying
to choose it for business. Her head better be nappy,
her whole body better be natural. That's right. Her head
(58:24):
better be nappy. Happy to be nappy. No, we've no
perm no straightening, no blind hair. Listen, I open up
a revolutionary academy to Frederick Douglas Marcus car the academy.
We're trying to change the consciousness of African children. How
to hell? I'm gonna be the lead of a Pan
African institution and my wife got a blind weave and
a damn head. What does that say about me? Show
(58:46):
me who you love and I'll tell you who you are.
Give me a Twitter and Instagram to doctor and Instagram
at doctor Umar Johnson, Facebook at doctor Umar E fatun Day,
email d R U M. A. R. Johnson as doctor
Umar Johnson at yahoo dot com and phone number eight
four four four Doctor Umar. That's eight four four four
(59:06):
d R U M A R. Doctor Umark Johnson at him,
don't at me, don't add envy, don't at breakfast club.
You got all the twitters and instagrams. Talk to him
if you got issues with anything. He said, Black African power.
That's right, Doctor Lumar. Johnson's the Breakfast Club the morning
she's filling the team. This is the rumor report with
(59:27):
Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Well. DMX's memorial service
was inside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn on Saturday, And
as you know, April ninth, DMX passed away. He was
fifty years old. At White Plains Hospital. He suffered from
a heart attack and he was on life support and
in a coma. And so let's talk about what happened
(59:49):
at this It was a lot. And let me tell
you something, watching his children try to speak that was
so difficult to even see. But Swizz Beats of course spoke.
And he encouraged every abody to do their will. Things
that I'm witnessing from my brother's passing. A lot of
people ain't your friends, a lot of people ain't your family.
And I need everybody to do a will. You have
(01:00:10):
to do your will. You do not want strangers, blood
suckers hand doing your business when you're not here. You
want the ones that you love hand doing your business.
But I'm gonna make sure my brother's straight. I'm gonna
make sure my brother family straight, my brother kids are straight,
and everybody in here better do the same as well. Yeah, right,
somebody knew, somebody received that message. Somebody knew exactly who
(01:00:33):
Swiss was talking to in that moment. Now that we
all make sure you have a will in a life
insurance policy, and the younger you get it, the cheaper
it is. That if anything ever happened, you know that
your family's taken care of, they don't have to worry
about that bill. They can just you know, focus on
grieving now. Kanye, of course, and we've discussed this, was
doing Sunday Service and DMX participated in Sunday Service previously.
(01:00:55):
So and and by the way, Kanye also did these
Valencia Good shirt's a collaboration for DMX, which raised a
million dollars for the family. Also and so DMX's daughter
did a song and she actually it sounds like it
was a version of slipping for herself. But she's an artist. Also,
she's twelve years old Sanova Junior. Here is her performing. Yo,
(01:01:17):
my dad taught me to be strong. I learned so
much from him, so I dedicate this song to him.
A Y'll growing, I'm learning to hold my head up.
Y're growing. I'm learning to hold my head up, and
you'll growing. I'm learning told my head up. My Daddy's
still holding my hand, so I gotta stand up. She
did three verses of that song, memorized that it was amazing,
(01:01:41):
so dope, so cute that that young lady has a
lot of talent. A lot of times. I know he'd
be super proud of that. Now to share Simmons, his
ex wife and his fiance also shared a really nice
moment and hugged each other on the stage. But she
loved a man and that's why I loved you. So
as she comes up, yeah what what the Shearon said.
(01:02:06):
It made me and my wife tear as we were
watching it, just talking about their history and how they
started and all that, and wow, it was it was
a it was a tear jerk. I don't know. I
don't know if a lot of you guys say I
just want to say one thing, you know, you're doing
a report. She said that, uh, DMX trained his dog.
Now this is so left, but I just thought this
was genius. He trained his dog to steal pocketbooks, so
(01:02:29):
he would tell the dog something and the dog would
grab the pocket book and run off. And that's the
first time she met him, so that's why she told
the story. But I'm like, goodness, crazy heart. Before I
used to rob people with the dogs to say that, yeah,
but I would say with the dog, I thought it
was I got my dog with me. I know, he
was like get them and Boomer would grab the back
and run. I'm like, most people can't train the dog
to potty train and to go to the bathroom outside,
(01:02:50):
Like that's crazy. All right. But DMX's fiance also spoke
at the memorial service. I never thought that our story
were in this as it has, but it's stilled with
pages upon pages, some memories they kept alive within my heart. Now.
So now, thank you, Earl, thank you for the love,
(01:03:13):
thank you for the journeys, thank you for accidens please,
thank you for the story of us, and thank you
God for real sients X. Wow, all right, well that
is your rumor report and of course all the Rough
(01:03:35):
Riders is on stage. Rough Riders co founders Y and
D were the last ones to speak during the service. Um,
everybody was there. No, I saw people speak after Wall
and Dyed the share spoke after Wall and D and
the other fiance does the name. Yeah, they would last
to speak at the ball plays, not at their church. Okay,
(01:03:56):
all right, well that is your rumor report. All right,
thank you, miss Charlom who youre giving that donkey too?
You know, we need a woman named Michelle Stillwell to
come to the front of the congregation. We would like
to have a word with her. Okay, And if you
look tasty, you might want to tuck your cheeks. We'll
talk about it, all right, we'll get to that next.
It's the Breakfast Club. Comord, the Breakfast Club. Your mornings
will never be the same. Piece to the planet Charlemagne,
(01:04:19):
the god here. This year has been tough on mental health.
Gentle Mind is here to help. Gentle Mind has developed
an innovative new tool for groundbreaking insights into your unique
genetic predispositions. Go to mental health map dot com to
being powered on your mental health and well being to
make sure you're telling them to watch out for Florida.
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx and
(01:04:41):
all of Florida. Yes, you are a donkey. The Florida
man a tap and atm for a very strange reason.
It gave him too much money. Florida man is arrested
if to definitely say he's rigged the door to his
home and an attempt to electrocate his present wife. Police
arrested in Orlando man for talking a Famina to Breakfast
Club Donkey of the Day with schlam Haine. A guy.
(01:05:02):
I don't know why y'all keep letting him get y'all
like well donkey today for Monday, April twenty six, goes
to Michelle Stillwell. She's fifty five years old and she
helps from the great state of Florida. What did your
uncle Sharla always tell you about Florida? The craziest people
in America come from the Bronx and all the Florida,
and Michelle Stillwell proves my point. Now. Michelle Stillwell was
in Florida and she decided to call an Uber to
(01:05:24):
run some errands. In fact, her daughter called to Uber
for her mom. Okay, and she asked the Uber driver,
whose name is Michael Hasty Junior, to take care of
her mother. Well, little did Michael know he's the one
who was going to need to be taken care of.
Let's go to WFL eight NBC eight for the report.
Please there is you video tonight of a disturbing weekend
(01:05:46):
attack on a local Uber driver. The driver says he
was scratched, strangled, and bitten by his passenger, and now
he wants to know what Uber is doing to keep
drivers like him safe. We spoke with a man who
says he's Michelle Stillwell's husband. He claims his wife doesn't
remember anything about the attack, including taking a chunk out
of the driver's neck. D like Michael Hassie says he
(01:06:13):
thought he was going to die. It was hands down
the most traumatizing thing that's ever happened to me. In
Passie was working as an Uber driver when his passenger
turned on him. Police quickly arrested the passenger, fifty five
year old Michelle Stillwell. The police report says Stillwell could
have been drunk. Passie says Stillwell's daughter called the Uber
for her mom. He says she slept most of the
(01:06:34):
ride before violently waking up blocks from our home. Well,
c ume hungry. Now your uncle shaula brother Lennard. I
get on this radio all the time, and I tell
you all we want to do every day of our
lives is a void crazy. That's all we attempting to do.
Ladies and get him avoid crazy. But sadly sometimes crazy
finds us comes right to our front door. In this situation,
(01:06:54):
right in your back seat. This is why I could
never be an Uber driver. Dropping a clued box where
all the Uber drivers out there? Man? The reason I
not gonn never be an Ober driver is because you
are forced to interact with a bunch of different energies
throughout the day and night. Some of those energies were friendly.
Some of those energies a Michelle. Still, Well, I'm just
trying to get you from point A to point B.
(01:07:15):
And now I'm a snack. Okay, not even the kind
of snack I want to be. Because it is springing
summertime and if you've been working out, you're feeling handsome. Okay,
you wouldn't mind someone jumping in your car calling you
a snack. But tell me I'm a snack, don't show
me with your mouth. Well, Actually, it's okay to show
someone with your mouth if you think they're a snack,
(01:07:35):
just not like the way Michelle still well did okay?
Would you like to hear how the buffet was sounding
in the car? Listen, Hey, do you have the cops
on the way. I don't want to I want to
(01:08:00):
get out. Imagine how she sounds at dinner. She probably
eats with her mouth open. Yuck. She probably orders her
steak rare, eats it with no utensils, just picks it
(01:08:21):
up and bites into it. Look, Michelle was charged with
two felony charges of aggravated battery and tampering with a witness.
And she could have been drunk, or she could have
been hungry. Or she could have been a flesh eating
daywalking zombie. Maybe she was a vampire. Maybe we are
looking for all these reasons why she did what she
(01:08:41):
did to that uber driver, When the reality is the
only logical reason for her behavior is one word, two syllables,
and that's Florida. It's Florida, two syllables three right, okay,
When the reality is the only logical reason for her
(01:09:01):
behavior is one word, three syllables and na's flow. Right, duh?
Please give Michelle still me in the sweet signs of
the Hamiltons. Oh no you are do gee, oh the
da gee, oh the day. Ye. Now we're sure Florida
(01:09:29):
is three syllables Florida du Florida. That's how Florida Florida. No,
what Florida? Not Florida Florida. It's not Florida. Who says
the rut? I ain't never heard nobody say Flora du Florida.
I never heard nobody say that, you're not spell Florida.
(01:09:50):
I know that I know the rapper Flora. Let's ask
the English major Florida. U. Yes, it should be floriadda
three flora Flora du Floria. Ride up? All right, flow
ride up? A lot of people just say Florida, flow
ride up Florida. Alright, low low, low low low. Oh man.
(01:10:10):
We didn't play a game, but okay, all right, you
want to play a game. You don't want to play
a game? Come on, you know what race this was?
You don't think, so let's play game. All right, we've
seen silence. Let's play a game. Then it's time for
a game of guess what racing. I didn't think that
(01:10:31):
this needed a game agains what race it is? But
anybody wants to play. Michelle Stillwell, fifty five years old,
gets in the back seat of a uber, wakes up
after twenty minutes of sleep, and takes a bite out
of the uber driver's face. Guess what racing is? Ye? Well,
you heard me already. I've seen silence of the lambs,
so I'm gonna say Caucasian. Okay, all right, dj envy.
(01:10:56):
Michelle Stillwell gets in the back seat of a uber
okay for twenty minutes, wakes up and take some bite
out of the uber driver's face. Gass, what raciit? I'm
going with white? Well? You both far correct? Occasion? All right?
(01:11:20):
All right now, earlier last hour, doctor Umar Johnson, he
was here. We were doing an interview and the phone
lines lit up. People had some things to say. So
let's open up the phone lines, let's talk. Let's have
a discussion. What were your thoughts? What do you think? Come?
What's on your mind? After hearing him hearing the good
brother speak eight hundred five eight five one O five one,
call us up right now, phone lines a wide open again.
(01:11:43):
Eight hundred five eight five one on five one. Let's talk,
mister Breakfast Club. Good morning, phone call in right now,
call me at your opinion to the breakfast Club, top
break it down. Eight hundred five eighty five, one on
five one the Breakfast Club. It's topic time called eight
(01:12:08):
hundred five eight five one oh five. Want to join
it to the discussion with the breakfast club, talk about
it morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy.
We are the breakfast Club. Now. Doctor Umar Johnson stopped through.
He was here last hour and he was talking about
a lot, a lot of different things. I mean everything
from you know, into racial relationships to you know, how
(01:12:31):
we can hold police officers accountable for you know, the
disproportionate amount of black people who get killed at the
hands of the police. He sparks conversation. That's what doctor
Umar does. You know? Doctor Umar to me, is like
anybody else. Some things I agree with, some things I
don't agree with. Some things I don't know anything about, right,
you know what I mean? And the things I don't
know anything about, I go, I go, I go and
(01:12:52):
research to see, if you know, to see if he's
in the right ballpark with these things, you know. But right, so,
so let's open up the phone line and get people's opinions.
Eight hundred five eight five one five one. One thing
I do know about doctor Gumardo what's that he absolutely
cares about the liberation of black people period. Hello? Who's this? Brian?
Hey Brian, what's going on? Gomonnic what's going on? Good?
(01:13:17):
What do you think about doctor Umar's interview? What were
your thoughts? Man? It was crazy because I think where
we are right now in America, we have to fight,
we have to fight civil rights and everything that's going on. However,
I think it's des a member to us in our
community when we have people when we defend the wrong,
(01:13:37):
when we would defend the wrong ideas in the wrong
tactic to the things that fight against us. This situation
with this young girl, when I first seen it, I
was bugged me out. But much like you said, I
thought the first thing I thought about was Wade, if
that girl in the paint was my daughter and she
was allowed to be sad, and it was it was
(01:13:57):
caught on camera in the nothing what will we do?
Would be such an outru And so what happened on
that d as much as is as much as it
is on this and everybody defending the fact, oh the
cops shipping shot as the cop shouldn't the cops did
this job. I don't think. I don't think nobody's saying
(01:14:19):
the cops shouldn't have intervened. We're just simply saying that
young girl shouldn't have been killed to night. And when
you when you watch the police killings of of of
black people in America, you can't look at these things
on a case by case basis because it's clearly a
system that allows them to use fatal force against us
more often than not that white people get apprehended. Yes, no, no,
(01:14:40):
but but not Okay, okay, we can we can argue,
we can argue against that. However, when it's when it's
an officer doing what he's supposed to do. Now, however,
remember what my brother y'all, y'all, y'all, y'all keep saying that.
But yo, Michael Brown was legally justified. Trayvon Martin was
legally justified. To marry Rice was legally justified. All that
(01:15:01):
stuff is legally justified. That's why laws have to be changed. No,
but but no, I agree with that. But hold on, Charlomagne,
you asked why couldn't he shoot in a leg? You
know why cops don't shooting in the leg or shoot
for the arms. So they're not trained to No, no, no,
they stopped that training years ago because if they missed
and shoot somebody else, then that's the other lawsuit. Can
(01:15:22):
you putting yourself in a different predicament? So at this
point in tip what cops do if they shoot for
the biggest part of the body, which is the chess? Right? No,
I absolutely agree. Now it was a tragedy that the
girl that that the young lady lost her life. Absolutely,
the young girl should not be this job. And in
all the cases we could talk about so many different
cases where the cops abuse their power and killed black
(01:15:44):
people and killed minorities. But in this one they weren't wrong.
Y'all keep saying that, butses are legally justified. The reason
Darren Wilson got off is because it was legally justified
to kill Michael Brown. The reason George Zminmin got off
because it was legally In my opinion, this one wasn't wrong.
(01:16:05):
You said, it's just difficult because you see white people
all the time committing crimes and doing things like that,
and they're not cops don't care that there black people
like lives. Not only is Angelie correct, but the statistics
that prove it, black people get killed at three times
in some places, five times the rate of white people.
(01:16:25):
All that is wrong, But in this case, that officer
was right. All that you said, you're absolutely right? Now
is a man? How many times? How many times do
you feel like if I was white? That wouldn't have
happened to me. If I was white? The cops wouldn't
ask me if I was white, they wouldn't follow me
around the store. Now, what way can't why can't we
factor all the social media? Social media? Every time you
(01:16:48):
turn on social media? What is it's our culture. It's
our culture out there yo, our culture doing what our
culture dependent on social media as you know. Let's that's
that's so feliciauld kill us because of that. Let me finish,
Let me finish our conversation. I said, you have cops
that come into our community. Yes, they do not live
(01:17:09):
in our community. But if you sit down and you
watch social media for a week and look at how
black people are are shown on social media, and then
you go into these neighborhoods, you thinking, oh, listen, this
is what I'm dealing with, my brother. Let me ask
you a question. And this is all in historical context.
We have seen the white colonizer murder, pillage, and rape
(01:17:33):
all over the world. But yet he got us thinking
we're the villain. Why we don't look at them like that? No,
I didn't say that. I didn't say that. I didn't
say me the villain. I said it's the way that
we're shown, the way that we're We've watched hundreds and
hundreds of years of colonization, murderous colonization from from white folks.
If you want to go back in history. Every time
(01:17:56):
they show us, let's think about tars and how do
they show black people. You're not listening to what I'm saying.
We have watched hundreds and hundreds of years of pillaging,
of colonization, of murder, of rape, all of this from
one sector of a community on this planet, and we
don't look at them like that. Yeah, yeah, absolutely so,
how they're gonna look at us like that because of Instagram?
(01:18:16):
Absolutely that you name when you talk about treyvon Martin
and legally justified even though but though those were wrong,
they were wrong. This one's wrong this one when he
was not wrong, Man, it was not wrong. He he
saved that girl's life in the pink, That's what he did.
He saved that girl's life. And it got to the
point we talked about what's right or wrong? You know
(01:18:36):
how you know how many adults were there watching, those watching?
I agree, But if he guess what, you make your
whole point null and void. When you say, because you
said it already, that was a white girl, that wouldn't
have happened. I don't know if it wasn't. I don't know.
You said it wouldn't have that wouldn't happen. I don't know.
Maybe wouldn't, Maybe wouldn't. But we know it wouldn't because
because statistics showed that black people are killed at five
(01:18:57):
times the rate of white people. Right. But we could
talk about all these statistics, right Yo, when when you're
talking about this particular case, there's those things gram attorneys
and say, oh, you should have shot him in the leg.
You know how hard it is to shoot some money
in the league were they running? Or you should have
shot him in the hand and the knie for the
flu out. Ye gods watch too much movies. Being a
police office is very hard, but we gotta stop saying
(01:19:18):
these things are a case by case basis because it's
a system. No, it's not a lot of system. They
didn't shoot the girls, and that girl would have stabbed
the girl in the Why Isaiah Brown this one? Then
they would have said how come they didn't? Why is
Isaiah Brown in Virginia dead this morning? Why did he
get shoot shot ten times? Every case is different, No,
it's not. When it comes to different, it's not. Every
(01:19:39):
case is different. Every case is different. You can't say, well,
I can't, but listen, you guys, I know what. I
just want to intervene for a second. I just want
to say, I know this is a very passionate topic
for all of us, but the truth is that when
white people do things like this, they don't get killed.
They don't get shot. And we've seen it happen where
they run over protesters with different things happen where they
(01:20:01):
pull we've seen people pull guns and attack them and
they white people and they don't even get shot. When
that would be justified as if that was my daughter
and she was about to get stabbed like that, I
want I would want anybody to stop any threat of
my daughter. Again, you said you want to stop that,
don't even gotta kill him, right, but intervene. You don't
have to kill kill. They don't shoot to jine. They're
(01:20:22):
not gonna shot your pinky toy. They don't shoot black
people to injure. But let's talk about it. Eight hundred five.
I think about it. If that was your daughter that
got killed, you wouldn't have wanted that to happen either.
If my daughter was chasing Listen, and this is so
so real and so honest. If my daughter was chasing
somebody aggressively with a knife, about to kill somebody, and
the cop pulled up and shot her to stop it,
(01:20:43):
I would under even if the girl came, If the
girl came to your daughter's house to fight him, right.
But this is the problem. The problem is the cop
does not know that when he pulls up, the cops
don't care because she's black. Tell my daughter if she
was about to fight somebody, stay in the house until
the cops come. But if my daughter was aggressively stabbing
somebody after put owing somebody on the floor, and the
(01:21:03):
cop told her to stop and she didn't and she
got killed, I would understand can't we admit that bias does?
Can we admit that bias does exist within the place
department exist? That's what the main thing saying. Every case
is different. Eight hundred five eight five, one h five one.
Let's talk about this to Breakfast Club. Call me and
(01:21:30):
your opinions to the Breakfast Club top on eight one morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We're talking about doctor Umar Johnson's
interview and Hello, who's this Hello? My name is Max. Max. Yeah.
So I'm a rocking guy and leaving in New York
(01:21:53):
for ten years and all this time I've been dating
on the Black cause Spanish women and carry me. I'm
married on the game. His princess went together like six years. Congratulations,
she's four years ad. And I just want to say
that this doctor is saying you cannot date out of
your race and sounds so like, gracious, you's got to
(01:22:15):
stop thinking like this. You know I do not agree. Okay,
now I didn't hear that. Perfect. I have no problem
with people dating outside their race. My dad is Chinese,
my mom is Black, and I'm happy they got together
and created me. Doctor Umar doesn't like it though, well, no,
Doctor Umar said he has no problem with the products
of interracial relationships. You can be not okay with it
(01:22:39):
and then have no problem with the product, but you gotta.
I don't. I don't agree with dad either. I don't
agree with it, but I think what he said is interesting.
Bless you Eddie. Hello, who's this? Bless you? Eddie's dating
a white woman? Hello? Who's this? This is Hardy? Hey Mark,
(01:23:02):
I'm doing well. How you doing? Honestly, I'm trying to
get money of you guys, and honestly I respect hey
the one you guys this good morning. I'm gonna truck driver.
I appreciate like you guys always um come up with
some great job and you keep hand to say, oh
got you, got you? Got you all right. The reason
why I'm calling because I gotta really kissed me up.
Because I'm a vetman. I served my country like anybody
(01:23:25):
else too. My cousins are black and white. From matthe
Doust and two I'm married to a Barbadian woman. I'll
trust me. I'm the lucky one on that one. And
I've had three kids. Whether I've better with two, but
it's just what he said was long, like, oh, I
don't white people all white people. I understand that. But
the only way the weekend survived in this world with
(01:23:46):
this ricism. There's all of us gonna have more love
in the heart. So's the white people that I can
stupid woman had very I'm rid of them. Wow, why okay,
gonna try more form or on a date to die
to die off? Yeah, we said that. We said that
(01:24:08):
fifteen and twenty years ago. Though we thought that we
thought that generation was gonna die off, but then we
saw that the racism get passed down to the younger generations.
All right, well, doctor umour Johnson called up eight hundred
and five a five one or five one, And what
we have to stop doing as a culture is when
you hear something that you don't like, you say, all
of a sudden, that person is canceled, that ish is whacked.
I mean, just listen, listen, listen. Community, you gotta have
(01:24:29):
a dialogue, and you gotta be able to have a conversation.
And the cancel culture thing when it when it comes
to certain things, I absolutely positively agree and somebody says
something that you don't like, and you automatically want to
cancel that is is whack. It's just just an opinion
at the end of the day. Like I said, some
things that with with anybody. This is for everybody. Some
things I agree with, some things I disagree with, some
things I simply don't know, and things I don't know.
(01:24:50):
I listen to what a person's got to say, and
then I gonna do my own restart on it. Yeah, correct,
but it said, okay the mute people, Yeah it is.
You gotta protect your piece, you gotta protect your end.
I'm mere people, and I restricked them. But I don't
cancel it all like cancel culture stuff. I hate it.
It does not give people a right to have an opinion.
And if they have an opinion that you don't like,
you're automatically want to cancel them. And then that's not
how we should be in our community. We should be
(01:25:12):
able to have both sides and be able to have
a conversation and break down it and still be able
to say, you know what, I didn't like his opinion
at from but it's all good. We own the different things.
But the way that people all with this cancel culture
is really bad. It is really bad. But anyway we
got rumors all the way. Yes, and I want to
know what talk to Umar Johnson had to say about
Caitlin Jenner announcing that she is running for California governor.
(01:25:32):
All right, we'll get into that next. It's the breakfast
Club of the morning, The Breakfast Club. Oh all right, Well,
Sweetie has says that she is going to all artists
(01:25:55):
boot camp and that's just to get everything under control
for herself. I'm always a fan of people improving what
it is that they're doing. So it's an artist development
boot camp. And here's what she had to say. I'm
actually in a boot camp right now, artist development. So
by working me, what turns place in this artist development
boot camp? What happens well for me? I'm gonna focus
on what I struggle with. I struggle with breeding control.
(01:26:18):
I'm gonna work on my dance, move my details, all
that good stuff, my just body, my stamina, my everything. Yeah.
Most artists, more artists definitely need to be in some
type of artist bootcamp. I think a lot of times
these artists blow up so fast because they be you know,
making these songs on their own, putting them on streaming services.
Then they pop off and they get with a label.
It's just like, yes, investing these kids and make them
(01:26:39):
better at their craft. Yep. Well, the full interview is
on Apple Music. It's interesting because it reminds me of Motown,
right what they used to do at Motown where they
would go to Barry Gordy's house and no matter how
big you were, he said, you had to come here
and still do artist development. Right, Still do the choreography,
Still do media training, Still do all of those things. Yeah,
what do A and ours do now days? Like you
(01:27:01):
an artist, make albums, huck you up with producers, but
what if the what if the artist is already doing
all of that look alone? You send them beach. You
try to help them with features like before even did
he used to do that? Did he used to have training,
media training, They used to do breathing techniques. They used
to do all that with Bad Boy even when we
had money bag Yeo. On the other day, he was
(01:27:22):
saying when he wanted somebody like he wanted Jenne Echo
on the album, he just asked Yo Gotti to do it.
Sometimes and sometimes they might think of collaborations for you
you wouldn't think of. Sometimes they have a song that's
perfect for you. Maybe the hook is already done and
they're like, this song would be perfect, so they're still
a place for it, right ye? All right now, Caitlin
Jenner has announced that she's running for California governor, and
(01:27:44):
she has filed the paperwork to run for office. She
wrote on Twitter, Californians went better and need better from
their politicians. Taking on in Trent, Sacramento politicians and the
special interests that fund them requires a fighter who isn't
afraid to do what is right. I am a proven
winner and the only outsider who can put an end
to Gavin knewsom'ssastious time as governor. I think some people would, uh,
you know, his support of Donald her support of Donald
(01:28:06):
Trump would would hurt her in that situation, right, I
would think so, especially in a state like California. Yeah,
so we shall see what happens with that. But I
know they said the family is not supporting her and
her run. All right, now, let's discuss blue Face. I
saw that blue Face was trending over the weekend. By
the way, blue face was trending with r Kelly. I
(01:28:27):
don't know if you guys saw that, but there was
a video that surface where he was telling everybody all
the women, there's women living in his house and it's
full of bunk beds, women are sleeping in them, and
he told everybody they had to get tattoos. Listen, we're
getting tattoos today home. Which one is it? That's gonna
be it? Right there? Why are Kelly? Though? Why not Flavor,
(01:28:50):
Flavor of a Ray or anybody who had a house
full of women at some point? Why are Kelly? Yeah, well,
they're saying it looks like very holtish is what people
were thinking. It look like a cold too. Now it
looks like that. What they're saying is he's been working
on this reality show for the past several months, kind
of like a bad Girls Club type of thing and
(01:29:12):
streams exclusively on only fans. That's all I'm saying. Why
are Kelly? He could be shooting for a reality show.
That's why I said Flavor loving radio like head just
jumped off Kelly. Jesus all right now. Adrian Broner has
posted a video and people were scared about a post
that he did about feeling suicidal. He said, I swear
to God sometimes I wish I was dead. MFS, don't
(01:29:34):
appreciate me on God, just take me away from this
is before I do it myself. And a lot of
people did to reach out to him, and he posted,
my brother stopped me and he put thank God. I
saw a fifty cent reached out to him as well.
He said, damn, ab must be hit right now. We
love you boys, just time to lace up. Call my
phone and here is Adrian Broner. They stopping him. He
(01:29:56):
almost did it, but they got him. They finally got him.
Look to do he was about to do it. But yeah,
it feels like, you know, Adrian Browner be going through
it because we've seen him just post certain things on
social media at different times. So I'm glad you got
(01:30:18):
brothers around him that love him and care about him
and can intervene in those type of situations, because sometimes
all you need is somebody just to show up for
you and pour into you. So I'm happy he has
that all right. Tyres was also trending, and that is
because he was shaving his new girlfriend's vagina on social
media and she posted a picture of her feet up
(01:30:40):
and you can see his head at the bottom of
her feet, and she said, I will never ever let
go of my king. But there's your man shave you though?
And then he you see a picture of him holding
up the razor. Yeah, Tyrese has to stop telling us
that he's depressed over his divorce because it doesn't seem like, no,
not at all. He wanted he wanted his wife back
like three weeks ago, and now he shaving poomp pooms
(01:31:01):
on Instagram? Is yeah, is he officially divorced? I guess no? Okay?
I mean if I listen, you post to move on, right,
you can move on definitely? But you know, yeah, you know,
like Jesse Raya says, get over him by getting what
did she say? Get over her by getting under me?
What is is that? How it comes under you? They
don't have a waxing in a little Yeah, And why
(01:31:23):
are you doing all this on Instagram? I gotta call
it tirees man's reas you too old for this? Oh
my goodness, he's too old for this? Right? You can't
be out here? Just is he trying to make his
ex jealous? Or what is that? Like? You're doing a
little Some people have some people have a shaving fetish.
They like to shave. Don't do it on the gram trees.
You forty something years old, like you look like these
young boys. Now you doing too much? Now I gotta
(01:31:43):
reach out to tyreees. I think that's like ten. You
never asked you a woman to shave nothing? No, and
if I didn't, it wouldn't be on Instagram. Wait what
you guys? Man? Escape there? I don't myself. I got
a man escaping or act? Have you ever gotten you?
Have you ever gotten an ground hair? Am I? But
(01:32:06):
hold on? You watch the cheeks for me. I do
not watch, but you know, take care of that. I
don't do nothing with my cheeks. I don't know what's
going on back then. I have no idea. I do
my pews myself, but I don't know what's going on
with the cheeks. So you just leave it back like that?
(01:32:27):
What else I supposed to do? I never even thought
about it? What should think about it? Think about it?
I'm cool? Every How do you do you put one
leg up? Or how do you do it? How do
you reach it? Gets? All right? That is your room report? Yes,
all right? Why do you sit down? Do you sit
down and spread you? How do you do it? I
(01:32:48):
never heard of man? They waxed there on ass that's
why I don't. Yes, you know he shaves it. Do
you get on your hands and knees and do it?
All right? The vote will see tomorrow everybody else and
people's choice is up next. All right, Harry Man, It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, Breakfast Club. Your mornings will
never be the same. Angela here and the General Insurance
(01:33:10):
has been helping people save money for nearly sixty years.
They offer the quality coverage you deserve at prices you
can afford. Make the right call and go with the
General called eight hundred General or visit the General dot com.
Some restrictions apply. Morning, everybody in stj envy Angela yee.
Charlomagne the guy we are to breakfast club. Let me
shout out to everybody in Orlando. I was in Orlando
(01:33:31):
over the weekend doing my real estate seminar. I got
there was six brothers that role or that flew at
me down there. Two of them have never even got
on a plane before. So the fact that we were
able to take him down to Orlando and teach them
how to do real estate, and they were interested in
investment properties in and buying their own property. So they
were super duper excited and also in Orlando. Congratulations to
(01:33:54):
Edgar Balanga. He won his seventeenth fights. He didn't knock
him out though almost did put him on his ass
five times, but shout the Eggabalonga and his whole team. Man,
it was a great fight, great weekend. Well, I was
in New Orleans over the weekend, so I definitely want
to shout out. Y'all know I love New Orleans, so
I was out there. I actually had a chance to
see day I like Tryna cut. Of course, we went
(01:34:15):
to one of my favorite restaurants there, Murrow's, and Larry
Murrow has been on The Breakfast Club before, so I
know you guys are familiar with him. But I just
saw everybody. And thanks again to Greg from we that
I linked up with him too while I was out
there to get my products in the supermarket. It's a
big deal to be able to do that, So I
appreciate everybody at Rouses for just working with us on
this coffee company cup and on Drink Fresh Juice. It's
(01:34:39):
been a lot of work for me behind the scenes,
so I'm just grateful that it looks like something's happening.
And shout out to my guy Fee. I actually went
with him and his new artists r J. They were
feeding the homeless yesterday, so I love seeing things like
that take place, dope and last but not least, I
want to shout out to DJ Scoop Dude. He had
a pop up shop out there for his clothing line,
Bread over Bed, and he did a lip service elaboration.
(01:35:00):
So it was an eventful weekend for me. So thank
you New Orleans. I always have a great time there.
All right, well, we'll be back with the positive notice
to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is stej Envy,
Angela Yee. Charlomagne the guy we are to Breakfast Club
Atlanta went up. Man. I can't wait to see you
guys July third. That car show is going to be crazy,
a lot of surprises. Shout to the beat in Atlanta,
(01:35:22):
and if you're in a surrounding city or whatever, you
can make it a destination week. And I know a
lot of things are canceled because of COVID, but we
are Atlanta's open. It'll be socially distancing, it's gonna be great,
and it's not too many tickets left, so hopefully I
get to see you guys in Atlanta. And we've been
talking about this movie. I know, we talked about quest
Love and his directorial debut. It's called Summer of Soul. Well,
(01:35:42):
they actually put out the trailer yesterday during the Oscars,
and I'm excited for it because it's never before seeing
concert performances by Stevie Wondering and Simone Sly and the
Family Stone, Gladys Night and the Pips, and these are
all people actually got to see in a Simone performed before.
But it was a six week in the summer of
nineteen sixty nine the Harlem Cultural Festival, and a lot
(01:36:03):
of people don't even talk about it. We talk about Woodstock,
but we don't talk about this Summer of Saul with
these iconic artists. So this is going to be really amazing.
And you can watch Summer of Soul in theaters and
on Hulu on July second. But you guys saw the trailer, right, Yeah.
Trailer looks dope, man, Yeah I did. I don't know
why I was thinking that this documentary was about Soul Train,
though maybe because of course Love's love for Soul Train
(01:36:25):
the whole summer. So I don't know why I was
thinking this was about Soul train. They did show. Don
Cornel listened to trailer a little bit, though, Well, I
remember when he first announced it, and so this is
really exciting that it's finally coming to fruition. They said
the footage actually sat in a basement for fifty years
and had never been seen. Imagine that. I remember D'Angelo
used to say, slying the family Stone was who he
(01:36:45):
modeled himself after when it came to performances. So I
can't wait to see it. Congratulations of course, love when
it came summer. So that comes out actually in theaters
and on Hulu on July second, same weekend as your
car show. Great, No, Charloman, you get a positive note
I do. In the fotherive note comes from Don Miguel Ruise.
You know I love Don Miguel Ruise. I love told
Ti Wisdom. If you've never read the Four Agreements, you should.
(01:37:06):
But Don Miguel Ruise says, when we believe in lies,
we cannot see the truth. So we make thousands of
assumptions and we take them mistruth. One of the biggest
assumptions we make is that the lies we believe are
the truth. Breakfast Club, you don't finish or y'all dumb,