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July 20, 2020 88 mins

Today on the show we had reggae artist Buju Banton where they spoke about Talks Positivity, Spiritual Essence, Growth and more. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" Marco Rubio and Dan Sullivan and we opened up the phone lines to see if anyone could relate to Envy when it came to helping a stranger or minding your business.



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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Dan dang eybody, come to the breakfast club. I call
this the hot seay around can live. You don't control
I'm not even doing here. I'm so big, yoyo, you're
so bad. The world's most dangerous morning Jo dj Cain
of this pitch, ANGELI I stay in everybody's business, but
in a good ras Jolomagne, the the ruler rubbed you

(00:23):
the wrong way. The breakfast clubs for everybody. Good morning
usc 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

(00:44):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo. Good morning angela ye, good morning,
ji damvy, sound like you underwater, Cholomne. The gay. Peace
to the planet is Monday, Good morning, Toronto. Whatever this

(01:06):
room men is extremely big, so I think it echoes
a little. Okay, you I am in Mexico. Oh why
are we gonna do this in Mexico? Imply a del Carmen.
Yes we can anywhere. Well, all you need is internet.
Oh he is internet. I always hope that the internet

(01:27):
is good by the time people get up, because you know,
once people start using the survey starts getting a little
it gets the you know, the internet gets a little world,
except that I'm not using Wi Fi, so you plugged
in't good? Good? Good? Good? How is everybody's weekend? Mine
was amazing. Yeah, I'm implying del I'm doing an opening

(01:48):
for Rohan Marley's beach house out here, so I'm out
here for that. But in the meantime, I'm just enjoying myself. Okay,
I'm beautiful. And mine was very relied, and it was
very very light. I didn't feel I didn't feel anything
heavy this weekend, which is always a good feeling. It's
always a good feeling to wake up and just feel
just feel feel light. Yeah. Yeah, mine was the same.

(02:13):
I didn't do much. If you live on the East Coast,
you had a heat wave or a heatwaves started to
friends today. It's a heatwave is any three days consecutively
over ninety degrees. So we had two today, it's gonna
be the third, and it's been hot. It's been warm outside.
But I didn't do much at all. I just relax, man,
That's that's the best thing about it. I relaxed. I
went to my parents' house, visited them, make sure that

(02:35):
acnition was on, make sure they were good money, make
sure everything was good with them, because I knew it
was gonna be hot. I also met with the Senator
of that side of Queens. His name is Senator Leroy Comrie,
and we just talked about things that we could do
for the kids and the youth out in Queens to
help to make sure violence stays down and to give
him more activities. He's been in the in that area

(02:55):
for like thirty forty years, so it was good to
just sit down and speak with him. So that that
was pretty pretty fun. But had a good weekend, man,
it really really had a good weekend. Yeah, I mean too.
I didn't do nothing, got drunk by accident on Saturday.
You know, you'd be at the house and you'd be
so comfortable just minding your business. The next thing you know,
you're gonna drink a whole goddamn bottle to kill. Not
a whole bottle, but almost a whole bottles gracious, Oh yes, sir.

(03:16):
It's a good feeling though. All right, I'm a grown man.
I'm gonna do those type of things, all right. All right, Well,
let's get the show cracking boot You bottom Town. I'll
be joining us this morning. Yeah, it's a legendary. Yeah,
we're gonna kick it with Bootju Bonton talk to him.
And we got FROMT page News what we're talking about. Well,
of course, we have to give our condolences to John

(03:37):
Lewis's family, so we'll start with that and then we'll
talk about the NFL. All right, we'll get into that next.
Keeping locked this to Breakfast Club. Good morning. I want
to get everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the
Gay We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get in some
front page news where we're starting you. Well, first, let's
start with the rest in piece to John and Robert Lewis.

(03:59):
He had us died after a six month battle with cancer.
We just watched Good Trouble also, which was as it's
on Amazon Prime Video, so if you want to see
that documentary, it shows what a great historic civil rights
leader that he is and was, and how he has
been honored and respected. His family also released a statement.

(04:19):
They said, it is with unconsolable grief and enduring sadness
that we announced the passing of US Representative John Lewis.
He was honored and respected as the conscious of the
US Congress and an icon of American history. But we
knew him as a loving father and brother. He was
a Star Wars champion in the ongoing struggle to demand
respect for the dignity and worth of every human being.

(04:40):
He dedicated his entire life to non violent activism and
was an outspoken advocate in the struggle for equal justice
in America. Yeah, everybody should watch. Everybody should watch the
John Lewis documentary Good Trouble. And I think that anyone
given John Lewis flack for forgetting, you know, beat down
a Salma, doesn't have the heart to even put themselves

(05:02):
in that position. Also, they don't understand the mental scrimp
it takes to put themselves in that position. And they
and you should go watch how they used to take
non violent training classes that ensure that you know, they
didn't react to Yes, that was tough to watch, YEA.
Classes that they had to take to prepare for people
to be yelling racist slurs at them and attacking them.

(05:23):
And you know, here's some of John Lewis and his
own words in nineteen sixty three, we cannot register the
vote simple. The calls of the color of our skin.
Fifty years later, the scars and stains of racism still
remain deeply, and there an American society, the mass and

(05:43):
cons racing, a million of American immigrants hiding and fear
in the center of our society. Unemployment, homeless, sniffer, probit
vober or the renewed struggle for voting right South set
to eat one of us today. Rest in peace. Yes,

(06:06):
he was only twenty three, and he was a keynote
speaker at the historic nineteen sixty three March on Washington.
He was a follower in colleague of Martin Luther King Junior.
He's been arrested over forty times, and that is for
all the protests that he participated him, yeah, forty times
when he's a protesting. I think five when he was
in Congress, if I'm not mistaken, all right, Some top

(06:26):
NFL players are warning that the season is in jeopardy
and they are demanding that the league do more to
combat coronavirus. What looks like a coordinated Twitter barage happened yesterday,
with top NFL players across the NFL calling on the
league to enhance their coronavirus safety protocols. Russell Wilson posted,
I am concerned my wife is pregnant. NFL training camp
is about to start and there's still no clear plan

(06:48):
on player health and family safety. Byron Jones said, the
NFL continues to ignore major health and safety concerns, putting
the twenty twenty season in jeopardy. America wants to watch football,
and we went to play make necessary changes. Yeah, I
was surprised about that. I thought they had all of
that in place already. I thought that was the main
reason that they was even starting the NFL season. I

(07:09):
thought that I thought that would have been the first
thing they did, make sure that the you know, players
were protected and that they would be a healthy, healthy,
safe environment for all. I didn't know. Yeah, they didn't
have anything in place. When the players start talking, they
don't feel comfortable. That that's a problem. I mean, they
should feel comfortable with players when the play, they can
if not, think they could sit out, But all the
players seem like they just don't feel comfortable. Now, rookies
are set to report as early as tomorrow, followed by

(07:31):
quarterbacks and injured players Thursday, and the rest of the
rosters July twenty eighth, So that's what the plan is
as of now. I wonder if you get put on
injured reserve, if you get coronavirus during the season. I
wonder about that about basketball and football. I guess we'll see. Huh,
all right, well that is your front page news, all right,
Get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five

(07:53):
one oh five one. If you need to vent hit
us up right now. Maybe had a horrible weekend and
you're upset, or maybe you had a great weekend then
you feel us. Whatever it may be. Eight hundred five
eight five one oh five one, Get it off your chest.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Did
your time to get it off your chests? Whether you're

(08:14):
man or blessed so so you better have the same minute.
We want to hear from you on the breakfast Club. Hello,
who's this? Josh? Hey? What up? Jobs? Get it off
your chance? Brother, Yo, I'm gonna flight attend lift for
an airline. I just want to get it off my chest.
To the fact that these people flying with no masks
or if you're like the know nothing to go like,

(08:34):
We're just trying to do our job. He didn't yell
at we didn't fall it back. We're trying to protect
ours others, both other people we were on display to
since you walk and we gotta keep the mask on
the entire flight four hours, six hour others night and
we gotta keep it on. And then when you buy
the tickets it says you have to's require to wear masks.
It's policy. And then you walk on talking about I

(08:55):
don't have to wear it. What is the funny of
you flying? And what is the funny you following policy?
If you feel like you don't have to wear a math,
you feel like somebody's men didn't need to do it,
and you don't want to do it, rent a call,
try where you want to go, right, You got you
can't just be worried about yourself. There's other people that
are affected, and you gotta fly with your mask on
and that's the rule, or I get off the flight. Yeah,

(09:17):
I thought that it was mandatory, though it is saying
take it off. They want to take it off, or
they say they don't feel like wearing it, or you know,
you got to people all it's not a it's not
a law. I don't have to worry. It's mandated, it's
a policy. By the company, and the company doesn't follow
state rules. It follows federal You pun by state laws.

(09:40):
I don't have to worry. No, it's Airline's a federal
vote and the airline changes their policies. Mandated to wear mask,
have to wear the math and they complain, I don't
want to win a match, just law. I've been flying
four hours. I just do like two three flights, and
I had to put the matter teaching every one. You're
complaining about two hours. You're going from New York to Florida,
and you I want to wear about What airlines need

(10:01):
to do is start passing out parachutes and tell people
on the flight, if you don't wear your mask, we're
gonna have to ask you to leave midflight. Well, thank you, brother.
You know what too, And is this there's a bunch
of different masks, and some masks are heavier than than others,
and people should know if it's if you're gonna be
with a mask for a long time, carry one of
those lighter masks that that's a little easier to breathe,

(10:22):
because some of those masks that people make and they
give out, they're so heavy you could barely breathe. Through.
So so you just gotta get the right mask. And
you know it's interesting when you eat or drink anything
on the plane too. You have to take it down
for a second. So, hello, who's this you? Hey? What
oout trial? Happy birthday, Travan, you're going on Charlomagne? He says,

(10:46):
what's the word that'd be? Birthday? Trave Why don't you
put your birthday today? I know my birthday was on Saturday.
My birthday was Saturday. Is that's what I'm calling this?
You know myself? All right? Was the real one's birthday?
You know that the good old cancer energy was in
the air. You know, Carcer Gang is out here, okay, sir,
you know we hear baby and we out here. Yes, sir, um,

(11:11):
did you check out what I sent you when I
was on your lives? You know, I mentioned to you
that that that beauty does regae music and he was
really shocked by that. But he's he's asking Jamaican. I
sent you like a few of hers, like ask for reygae. Ye. Yeah,
she's really dope. Ah all right, Joe, all right, now
get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five

(11:33):
one o five one. If you need to vent hit
us up now, it's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the
Breakfast Club. I'm telling, I'm telling, what's you doing of yo?
This is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five five one
five one. We want to hear from you on the
Breakfast Club. Hello, who's this? You know? This is sunny

(11:57):
out of Miami, Sonny. What's going on? Get it off
your chests? Bro? Yeah. I wanted to talk to Charlemagne
about this issue with the ninety four Crime Bill. I'm
curious that if he's ever actually read the entire bill
and what parts specifically has a problem with a part
specifically that I have a problem with. I pretty show
it's a mask and conceration that it caused. Well, I mean,

(12:18):
the Master carture was supposed to target drugs and get
drug dealers off the street, so of course it would
increase the prison population. But what is the problem with that?
I mean, did you want drug dealers on the street?
Violent drug dealers on the street. What's the problem with
a bill that that disproportionately puts black and brown people
in jail? But black people were that led that that

(12:40):
led the more prison sentences led the more prison cells
over aggressive policing. I understand, I understand, But in nineteen
ninety four, if you were alive back then, I know
you were back in South Carolina, but in the major cities,
we had a major drug problem and a violent drug
problem where they were shooting in broad day life for
drug territories and they were so important to our community.

(13:01):
So and if not stiffer sentences or um, you know,
putting people in jail, then how would you have proposed
to deal with that problem? Um? Probably by backing grant programs,
you know what I'm saying, Um that not that, not
that ninety four crime Bill imposed tougher prison sentences that
at the federal level. You know what I'm saying that
I think a lot of these people could have could

(13:21):
have got some type of reform, you know what I mean.
They could have went to rehabilitation for for not just
drug selling drugs, but for drug use. Like they didn't
have to go to jail for twenty thirty years for waiting.
They didn't have to go to jail for twenty thirty
years for a twenty year of crack cocaine. So so
what I'm saying to you is if if I'm at
homeowner in Flatbush, Brooklyn and Mike Block is being terrorized

(13:43):
by drug dealers who are shooting up the streets, my
kids can't walk home safe. Everybody, everybody, everybody, everybody, everybody
wasn't shooting, though, is what I'm trying to tell you.
My brother, if you go to jail for twenty five
thirty years for a twenty year rock or twenty five
thirty years for un marijuana, it's like, come on, But
those drug laws were targeted at specific groups of drug dealers,

(14:04):
not just small and targeted as at African American drug dealers.
What he's saying is, yeah, you're right, there was drug
dealers that was shooting in drug dealers that was shooting
broad daylight. But also it affected drug dealers that put
him away for life for having small amounts of marijuana
or small amounts of crack cocaine and doesn't give people
a second chance. That's what he's trying to I'm trying.
I'm trying to explain that to him, But I don't
know why that's going over your head so much. Why

(14:26):
are you hitting me with these heavy questions. Earlier in
the morning, I just got it. He's been waiting a week. Hello,
who's this? Hey this Stephanie. How are you doing? Hey, Stephanie?
To get it off your chest? Hey man, I'm just
I feel bad about this stuff. Got that Kanye. Kanye
West said about Harriet Tupman yesterday. Everything he said was

(14:46):
just absolutely inaccurate. Well, you know what's gonna happen. He's
gonna a couple of weeks. He's gonna clear his Instagram
and clear his Twitter and saying that he needs time off.
He's gonna apologize and said that he was dealing. I
bet he does. That's what he does every time. Turn
the stuff over. Kanye is dropping an album on July
twenty fourth, Okay called Donda. All right, that's that's what.

(15:10):
That's what that's what. That's what this is. Kanye was
dropping an album on July twenty fourth called Donda. Okay
and nobody else. We're falling and we're falling for the
smoke screen again, all right, nobody does. He was having
a bit of a breakdown though it looked a little
bit like absolutely. I mean, that's what it felt like
to me. He's gonna apologize, He's gonna say he had
a breakdown, and he's apologized, and he's gonna delete his

(15:32):
Twitter and Instagram, and no he's not Why the album
July twenty fourth, I'm telling you he's putting on the
album July twenty fourth called Donda. He actually put the
track list out this weekend and deleted it and he's
gonna delete his Instagram and Twitter and apologize. Why don't
you come through the same thing. It seems like it
always happens. The sad part is I spoke to Kanye
yesterday and um, you know, but we'll talk about Kanye,

(15:55):
talk about Kanye. Let's talk about it in room. It's
all right, Well that is get it off your chest
eight hundred five eight five, one oh five one. Now
we got rumors on a WIGI. I mean, we might
as well get right into it. Then let's talk about
Kanye West and his first campaign rally. All right, we'll
get into that next keeping lockets the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. This is the rum of report with

(16:20):
angela year Breakfast Club. So Kanye was in South Carolina
and he had his first presidential campaign event there. This
happened Sunday evening and that was a day before the
state's deadline to file signatures as an independent candidate. He's
running as an independent, and amongst the things that he

(16:42):
talked about was Harriet Tubman and how she did not
really free the slaves, actually free the slave slave, but

(17:07):
it's not a real power. You don't see them. Very
disrespectful statement, very disrespectful to our ancestors. But it hurts
me to not understand what he was trying to say.
He was trying to say, even though Harriet free the slaves,

(17:28):
we are still not really free because we could never
truly be free. And a white supremacist society can't say
nothing like that. Definitely, I know, but didn't come. Nobody
ever said to fight for true freedom and true true
liberation was over though, So I don't you know whatever.
So so you spoke to him yesterday, what was the conversation, Like, um,

(17:51):
exactly what I just told him. What he said was
a very disrespectful statement, very disrespectful to our ancestors. And
he was trying to explain to me what he said.
He even he explained it in there too, when he
was like, you know, you still gotta go to work
and this and that. But I'm like, you're working slavery
are two total different things, you know what I'm saying.
It's not like you're getting whipped across your back, and
it's not like you're you're you're in chains, you know.

(18:12):
But I do understand the concept of us not truly
being freed. That's why you got people out here on
the front lines fighting against police brutality. That's why I
tell freedom and eighty seven protesters got locked up in
Kentucky last week fighting to get the cops to kill
Brianna Taylor arrested. We are not truly liberated in this country,
but because of people like Harriet Tubman, we are definitely
closer to that true freedom. So you are the Secretary

(18:33):
of Defense, Okay, Okay, yeah, you're doing a great job
so far. In addition to that, it's not what the
Secretary Offense does. That would be the secretary of state. Guys,
come on, y'all went to college secretary of defending all right, now.
You also talked about abortion. He also invited some young
women from the audience to speak on stage about issues
that concerns them. And here's what he had to say

(18:54):
about abortion. Okay. When he said he said he wanted

(19:16):
to give everybody that keeps a baby a million dollars,
a million dollars. And he said abortion should be legal,
but that there should be more support for those people
who do need it. You know, if they gave people
a million dollars for having a baby, you know how
many people would be having baby all day long, all
day long? You know. I think he said something like
that too. He said, like it should be what did

(19:38):
he call it? I forgot the term he used, but
it was a term that he said. Yeah, even if
you adopt a baby, you should get paid a certain
amount of money as well. But I'm just saying if
people got a million dollars per baby, that would be
the scam would be better, way better than credit cards.
I'm five right now? You know what free? How much

(19:59):
do they tell at that million? Get up right there?
Kanye Asa said that marijuana should be free, and he
did take some questions from the audience. Now, in addition,
how about how about making marijuana legal? First? How about that? Right?
In addition, he spoke to Chris Kalin and she did

(20:20):
an interview with him that she posted, and she asked
him about who is running mate would be And here's
what he said. So I'm not sure if you heard
of Jake Simmons. She's a black woman who's also running
for presidency. Have you thought about maybe teaming up with her?
So I reached out to Jake to possibly be my
vice president, my running mate. You know who my favorite
candidate from my running mate is Woo. I'm presented as

(20:42):
a riddlety when we were trying to figure out my
website because everybody kept on selling my website because now
I'm in the dirty game of politics right right, but
they're selling every option, right. So what I did is
put the initials of this city down and then I
put Kanye twenty twenty. Who would that be? South Carolina? Oh,
Sean Sean Carter jay Z Now that would be Now

(21:05):
you would blow some minds with that one, because you
blew mine. Did you present it to him? You know,
I ain't talked to my brother about me. You know,
it might be a news day. You never know you're running.
It might change something. This sidy gotta have. That's about
dropping the clues BOXX for the homie Chris Kallin. That's
my partner right there. And um, yes, Kanye said Jay Simmons,

(21:26):
who we had on last Friday and just I don't
know if he was really thinking about jay Z or
he was just in South Carolina and South Carolina's initials
at SC, so that's he was freestyling. I really don't know.
I don't you think jay Z would be up for
the job or not. I think you'll pass. Stop. Stop,
anybody talk to jay Z to check and see if

(21:47):
they're running together. Stop stop, stop, stop listen. I know
people keep saying Kanye isn't mentally well. They say Kanye
needs to be on this madge that man may not
be true U, but we have to stop acting like
this isn't Kanye. This is who Kanye is. This is
who Kanye has always been. Money and status don't change
who you are. It magnifies it. Kanye was like this
when he was trying to be the best rapper, producer.

(22:08):
He was like this when he was trying to break
into fashion. Now he's like this when he's trying to
run for president. Also, we got to stop saying Kanye
is a distraction, because everything is a damn distraction and
whatever we choose to give energy to it as a distraction.
We give Kanye West their energy. We don't have to
pay Kanye no attention, but we do because he's a
person who's mastered Law thirty seven and the forty eight
Laws of Power, and that is create compelling skepticals. Well,

(22:31):
he is a presidential nominee. Oh stope, A're talking about
none of them. It's literally a hundred other presidential nominee.
Libertarian Party, the Green Party. We had Jade Simmons on
last Friday. But then you can you can ignore them.
You can we ignore it. We could ignore Kanye if
we wanted to go Right now, it's still good. I'm

(22:52):
praying and want you to pray for their family as
well as I did do as I was reading all
about this. But as you know, Tamar Braxton was rushed
to the hospital in the late hours of Thursday, July sixteenth,
and she took some prescription pills she was drinking. Now
the family is speaking out and they're asking everyone to
pray for our family. To Wanda Braxton, Trina Braxton, and

(23:15):
Tracy Braxton all addressed this on their Instagram pages on Friday,
and despite all of the drama that's been playing out,
they definitely were at the hospital with Tamar and they
are turning to faith right now and their time of need.
So fans are making sure that they pray for their
family and we will keep you updated on Tamar Braxton
and how she is doing in the hospital. But I

(23:38):
don't know if you guys saw this. She did write
an email and she's got some issues with her TV
network that does their show, and she said, this has
to do with the cruel white slave masters who once
chained our forefathers and the oppressive police forces that now
terrorize our communities. You needed to play into the stereotype
of this dysfunctional black family, so you prayed our affairs,

(24:00):
you heightened our insecurities, and you turn it's against each other. Well,
I hope those ratings were worth it because you just
you succeeded in destroying a great black family. Damn frays
up for Tamar Braxton. Absolutely yeah. So don't why that
energy is in the air. I don't know why that
that energy of darkness, that energy is suicide. It's in

(24:22):
the air. Like I said, I had two friends commit
suicide in the month of June. I don't And I've
heard a lot of people talking about it in ways
that I've never heard them talking about it before. I
don't know what's going on out here, but I prayed
that spirit off everybody, right, And Tamar was responding to
we TV executives had sent an email they were talking
about their efforts to support the black community after the
police killing of George Floyd. And then she responded with

(24:45):
that email. And in addition to that, they said she
was mad that she was supposed to be working with
Mona Scott Young as the producer of her new show,
Tamar Braxton Gets Your Life, and that was another issue.
She was unhappy. But that person, well, Tamar and anybody
else you know going through any dark phase of their life,

(25:06):
pray and go to therapy. By the way, Okay, you
gotta have all that on deck nowadays. You gotta have therapy.
You gotta have your sacred purpose coach. You gotta have
somebody to constantly talk to figure it out. Please, whatever
you go, and don't make no permanent decisions off temporary feelings, please.
All right. Well, I'm Angela Yee and that is your
rumor report. All right. Now, we got front page news, yes,

(25:27):
and we will be giving you an update on what's
happening for the NFL season coming up or you know
what's not happening. We'll give you those updates. All right,
we'll get into that next keeping lock this to Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We all to Breakfast Club. Let's getting some
front page news where we're starting you, Well, let's start

(25:51):
with the NFL and what's happening. Top NFL players are
saying this season is in jeopardy and they want the
league to do more to combat coronavirus. Players are demanding
to be tested every day, especially given the hot spots
that have recently popped up in different parts of the
United States, and they also want to make sure they train.
They also want to make sure the trainers, doctor, everybody

(26:11):
is getting tested. Russell Wilson posted, I'm concerned my wife
is pregnant. NFL training camp is about to start and
there's still no clear plan on player health and family safety.
Malcolm Jenkins said, it blows my mind that the NFL
is unwilling to follow the recommendations of their own experts
regarding player health and safety. So those are some of
the concerns that they have. They said it's not clear

(26:32):
what level of positive testing will require a team to
shut down into operations and how that might be handled
within the league schedule. But they did say last week
on Thursday, seventy two players have tested positives so far. Yeah,
that's scary. I mean, that's scary being a player and
not knowing and not feel comfortable going to work or
playing with other players. That's very scary. Especially you know

(26:54):
Russell Wilson's talking about he as a kid on the way. Yeah,
I get him. I'm completely understand. Yeah, And I also
wonder why those things aren't already in play. I thought
that would have been the first thing the NFL did
to make it safe for him to even come back something. Well,
you know, the season is going to kick off on
September tenth. The super Bowl is scheduled February seventh in Tampa.

(27:14):
Still and so uh they're moving forward all right now.
Donald Trump just did an interview on Fox News Sunday,
and amongst the things he was talking about, of course,
you know, being right it's very important to him. And
here's what he had to say. I'll be right eventually,
I will be right eventually. You know, I said it's

(27:34):
going to disappear. I'll say it again. But it's going
to just this credit. I'll be right. I don't think so. Right,
I don't think so You know why, I just describe
it because I've been right, probably more than anybody else. Well,
what if he's wrong. What if COVID nineteen doesn't disappear?
What if COVID nineteen is like let's say, racism or
white supremacy or herpes. What if it doesn't go away,

(27:55):
then what's the president? Well, there's some questions he had
to answer about that as well, and he was that
part Trump. He tries to play it down, he tries
to make it serious. This is very serious. Seventy five
thousand cases a day. Show me the death chart. Well
I don't have the death chart. Is a thousand cases

(28:17):
a death? Excuse me? It's all too much. It shouldn't
be one case. It came from China. They should have
never let it escape. They should have never let it out.
But it is what it is. And by the way,
they are six thousand and the whole European Union. You know,
test we find cases, and many of those cases heal automatically.
We're finding in a way, we're creating trouble. You know,

(28:40):
in moments like that, it really does behoove you just
to take your l I think people can respect it more.
If you just said we dropped the ball, we gotta
call it our pants down. I dismantled the Global Pandemic
Team in twenty sixteen. I didn't take it serious enough.
Oh I'm not taking it serious now we fed up.
I think people can respect that a little bit more.
All right, Well, that is your front page news us

(29:01):
also real quick though. It's amazing. It's amazing that that
Trump interview UH aired yesterday morning, and in the focusing
on that, we started paying attention to what the hell
Kanye West had to say. And you gotta ask yourself
one simple question, Joe Biden, where are you at? Where
are your sound bites this weekend? Okay, Joe Biden needs
some sound bites for the weekend. I ate something. Kanye

(29:22):
had a point when he said, Joe Biden never gave
us no hot song or no dope ass sneakers. That's
that's a fact, my goodness. All right, Well, that is
your front page news. Now. When we come back, Booju
Banton will be joining us. We'll kick it with boots
come back, So don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club, pointing everybody in DJ Envy angela ye

(29:45):
Sholomae the gay. We are the Breakfast Club. We got
a special guest and an icon on the line. Right
now we have Boo good Martin. Good morning brothers. How
are you? Have you belated born day two? Are you
a kid? Fel like me? Yes? Cancers a very specially
Monton little can Syrians know that you're calling is special?

(30:07):
I'm woning what they do the bed like we do,
very vocal, very firm, very principal. Well, I want to
start up by saying congratulations. You know I'm a huge
fan of year as you one of my favorite artists
of all the time. You very much. Congratulations until Years
Going Gold, Yeah, classic album that I listened to to

(30:27):
this day. So I just want to first start off
five congratulating you on that. Absolutely, thank you very much.
I thank it us. There's a lot of a lot
of work, and those who know the journey of bocher
bands and know that it's quite odd for a song
to get Google for twenty five years, right, It's like
the artist could have died in between all of that, right,
But then if you look at the dynamics are rolling

(30:48):
into the shinow. Then you know you have to ask
yourself that time is really the master m. You know
some people they go out farers say how do you
spend your time? You know that's something smoomarker. You cannot
spend time. When did you realize you had that gift?
And I want to thank you? But if you kill yes,
you have a gift, and you and Butterfu you are

(31:09):
the gift. We are allowed a gift. Well are created equally,
but not equally appoint you. So when you're finding your appointment,
your work earnestly towards it because you're not You did
not make yourself, were created by the Greek. I am
thank you the Butterfu can y'all was gonna say that
before y'all took care of my wife. That was her
only birthday President. She wanted to fly to see you,

(31:30):
and she went to Trinidad and no Barbados. She seen
you in Barbados and she was so happy to taking
the butter can you. But that's respected was her soundtrack
growing up, and now it became my kids soundtrack growing
up because we played in the house. But what I
realized is that a lot of artists nowadays. We don't
have that same feeling. It's not that same connection, it's
not that same message. So what do you say to

(31:53):
things out of the similarity? Then sleep, God does not
make mistake My emergence from the dens of prisoner was kindly.
I was indeed preserved for this time. The Brothers music,
I cannot knock it. I can say to them and
encourage them. Look at this scenario. You got a kid
and your kid is two, three, four or five, six,

(32:14):
seven years old, You're taking a kid to school and
you're playing your music. If all your kids here before
you go into the classroom, I'm gonna ever, I'm gonna
shoot him up. I'm gonna set this amount to smack
on the car up. What are you doing? What are
you doing as appearing? So look at that scenario. If
the music cannot be played in my car where my
children is gonna getting joy and out of the turn

(32:36):
it down. I showed the God, then it's Good's a
situation I have to take to those measures. I need
to recalibrate what I'm doing. I want something to uplift me.
I want something to take me someplace else, not to
let me wall in my sorrow, but to give me
a strength that let me know Mark, it's gonna be okay.
Where can I find it? That's the question. How hard

(33:01):
was it to stay this positive when you were in
that gated community, when you when you were in print,
and how hard it the stay positive like you are now? Um,
if you're in the streets, you're in prison. It's a
much smaller place to be prevealed. So I was never
one in the streets, so I couldn't be one in prison.
And a stang. I find myself mentoring a lot of

(33:23):
people at one point, you know, driving the car. You
find that in those places, those places are designed. I
told it to break to you, my spirit, but to
destry the very fabric after you. In my mind, A
weak mind cannot emerge strounk from those places. Just speak up,
because they spend every day trying to subdue it. You're

(33:44):
not giving an opportunity just to learn the next stone
and new ideas and creative things. Because again they said
you're inconcerated. But then there was so much illicit stuff
for sale that you wonder if you're reading inconcrating. The
challenge is if you're not on we have now foundation
and spirituality. You're like a ship left to the wind.

(34:05):
If you have even a modicum, it's not ayota, it
will be okay because then you're in a place where
you can cultivate your growth. You know, I was there physically,
but not mentally. Never. I lived in my mind's eyes,
and in doing so, I cultivated peace. He's not against
my persons, because you cannot tell me that the greatest

(34:26):
intelligence apparatus on earth. Who's eager to see a media
in an age that does not know that? So you're
through relinquish that bitterness towards your fellow man. And I
will not say Father forgiving them, because they knew not
what they have done. No, I said Father, forgive them,

(34:46):
but they know what they did. Okay, yes, sir. And
that's to be really hard for you because you know
yourself right, and then the media puts out a story
that you know, this is not how things went down,
but they try to make it see like you're engaged
in the activities that you know this, and that is
the way it is. The United sneaks of America's court system.

(35:08):
The world can kept in darkness forever and a system
the universe is carling out to us or we ken
this at each other level that even even the angels cry,
we have no love for each other none. We destroy
anything and everything that seems are appeared to be good.
We were rushed to us the evil. We flee from

(35:29):
the truth. We're living an upside down existence and all
this have to stop. Woo. You know you got you
had guy set up? You think that they targeted you?
Just silence you. Yeah, because there was a WEEKI leagues
report that came on from two toos that sister said

(35:49):
I saw the homosexual Jermic and I got away scotch free,
which was furthest from the truth. What really happened at
an agitation with a guy who came out of his
mouth the wrong way and had to put him back
in place. You know, I didn't know his affiliation to
any group or homosexuals or anything like that, and then
he started using that as an angler, and all of
a sudden, I find myself. My government sent a diplomatic

(36:10):
attount to the United States embassy, and I was on
the radar from two toes and six those who talked
about neutralizing me, And then that wasn't a part I've
got planned. So the Father removed me from them, you know,
but you got when you came home and you left
that gated community, your first concert. How did that feel? Amazing?
Talk about that? You know that concert was as a

(36:33):
fulfillment of prophecy, because it's written out unto Judah shall
let gather and after people be, And the people did
gather from the four corners of the earth to see
the son of Judah upon his return. Let me say
something to you before I wait a further world is power.
The world is power. In the beginning was the world.
Let ye be light, and there was light. The world

(36:54):
is power. And if you use the world and your
car upon the money and call upon our kind of stuff.
David enter the port. They were into orn as elementals,
but true, oh Di menshon. Insight is so limited we
might not be able to see them, or we can
see the energy shifts. So that concert goes out. So
our closing of court tip what to keep pushing positivity.

(37:16):
There's no tour about the forces of evil of very
strong idea everywhere, but the forces of we, the goop fools.
I have to keep fighting the goop fighting words. Soon
positive energy keep telling them about as we love them,
not wanted say for practicing. Right, all right, we got
more with Bouju Bonti. When we come back, don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club. Come on, DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne,

(37:40):
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club were still kicking
it with Booju Bonton. Now after you were released and
you did your first concert in Jamaica, there was so
many people. I've seen the video. There was black, it
was white, it was Asian. There were so many people there. Yes,
so the world peem to get out in one one
d I was celebrated, music celebrated with Chicano friends weeny one, Uh,

(38:05):
there is common. DJ College was there for the mind.
You know he wanted to go fat. Joe said he
heard him that he couldn't go fat. Joe was like
when joeya crap when him side thought to the flights
because Jorlia Crop, we're gonna way back, you know if
people know that. But we me pawned Joy even job
out when he was a little kid. She told him
the Bronx with fat walking through the huntrel In the

(38:27):
Bronx from Steph Landon was there Chronics coffee just beautiful,
Oh Blue, I got you have to give me a
good Fat Joe's story, because Fat Joe one of the
greatest story tellers of all time. I know you and
him got a story together. Tell us to tell him.
I heard he took you in the Bronx. I heard
he took you to the Bronx a couple of times.
Tell us about those situations a couple of times. No,

(38:49):
we were always in the Bronx. She'd be at Jimmy's
in the night, and we know I'm gonna go to
the studio like you know what I mean, I'm gonna
when I come to America, I would always be Queens
those days. Joey used to dry of a green Mercedes. Right,
so if I if I'm at the hotel, I could
tell this is the car because the August you lead
to one side. That's when he was Fat Joe, that

(39:14):
he was really fat fat. Yeah. But you know, I
mean to make some good music too, those always clean fun.
You know, I'm a prince superman and you know, joy
enjoy some principleman. So we get a long fear in
the way, you know what I mean, We have cop
bumping the club sometimes and some try, I mean brothers
acting like we don't like that, we don't go. I

(39:36):
don't really don't go to fight now that Joe told
me sometimes you might have to put hands on somebody
water Twice they said no, Lorn, listen. You know what
I talk about them things that at this guy ye
a gude news. I don't like that at all. Things
you know, Hey, he wearing a wire, bulls he wearing
a wire? You wearing a wire? Bolls. You don't listen
to Jos. I'm gonna remember too much. Driver a right there,

(40:02):
let me ask you this, boo when you first got home? Right,
I know your business has always been good, so I
know so many people had to be coming at you
asking you to do things. How did you figure out
who you can trust? What moves you wanted to make?
I don't change my friends, let's start there. I don't
like new friends because I believe you take time to
know a person. I'm too old now to spend next
twenties trying to figure out somebody. I don't start into

(40:25):
that became the acquaintance or we can be good. But
friendship thing is something I take thy year. It's a
brotherly thing. You know, I need time to move you.
So a few friends from nineteen ninety six I've been done.
Joey baterfolk who've been friends meet Joy College, DJ Terrell
and Daddy Saw. Those are the guys originally started next
ninety six Stone you in Miami nineteen ninety six, right

(40:46):
as until Shino, I'm making cool. The Daddy Saw I
died or became even close as friends, you know what
I mean. But when I went to prison, I realizing
I really need to revamp my whole organization setting. So
I called my friend up and I really did not
have to call him because it was always dear from
DJ College Because you know when me and DJ colleague before,
you guys know him as the DJU. That's my boy

(41:07):
right there. You must be honest, you must be layal.
They must have integrity. These are the trees I've von.
So are people to ardd so we can say, Charlottagne,
I've got ten thousand dollars. Hold it from me. I'm
going to Kimbuctu. And when you come back, you said, boogie,
here's your ten thousand dollars. Man, how was your trip?
You don't give me nine thousand nine hundred and fifteen.
Tell me one dollar drop in the toilet, and this

(41:28):
is to change you that out, you know what I mean.
So I'm timing can become a people. We're we can
read them truly. You know you need to work on
these things, you know, you know, Boojo. I know that
I read in Billboard that you don't consider yourself an icon.
And I'm I'm going back to the concert for a
second because the Minister of National Security when when you
came home, he said you didn't deserve a hero's welcome,

(41:52):
So I wonder, I wonder what your energy is on that.
After I that's time Jemmy and car is I found
my plan to shan country. We don't have a racism.
We have classes in him I opinion, and he's entacled
to it, because even a dog is entact with his
own opinion and choose who to buy it and who
not to buy it. But I can't tell him one thing.

(42:13):
It's not a hero. And either I am not an
icon and I am not a hero. I've never claimed
to be one. But I don't think he is one either,
and I don't think he will ever be one either.
And I can assure him that the name Butcher bands
and little more remembered than his what he say his
name was again, I know, I know it's title. I
can't remember his name these things because I didn't live

(42:36):
my life predicated on being a king of the dancellar,
a king African music, or an icon. Because I see
these and Superstar, all these monikers, I see these tycles
as things I used to fool my people. Because when
you shook the title away and you look at the
character of the person that attached these things to do

(42:57):
you want to run far away. I'm just a man
and put my music moan, be a servant to the people.
You know what I mean? You know why did you
watch the verses? Data were Beanie Man and Bounty Killer,
and I like to see them together in the room.
It was beautiful. And I like the fact that they
didn't wind into a situation where they were arguing and
creating more divisions but unity. Because when people hear about

(43:19):
a Beanie Man, I'm going to kill a situation, the
first thing come to their mind is abroad all old clash.
And they did not do that. They disappointed all that negativity,
and that to me was the high point of all
besides the four or five hundred thousand people tuned into
my brothers. That to me was spectacling that we did
not feed the foods what they wanted. Would you do

(43:41):
versus now? I was talking about that when people are like,
what verses would you want to see? I was like,
I would want to see Boojoo And I was trying
to figure out who could you either match up with,
you know, one of them? So lack more than empt
you do a simples here or more John reies with you?
Then you know what I mean? You listen to you
have you know fans is to the music in this
tree to four months that the world has been done.

(44:04):
How many people take time doing an introspect shot be
a destruction? I seen it, I remember a part of
it all. I see this destruction and left right and
said that and the people I think should be vocalized silent,
And I've got a great problem with that. So now
if one album's fun twenty five years, ketty much in
the world cat a lot o talking that talk, yo

(44:26):
want to I want to go back to Instagram because
on the song trust you said all over Instagram or
mess with me psych So so what aspects of social
media message with your mental health to move? No? When
I see old people usualize it, I have to ask myself,
why can't my people use these tools to say We've
been fractured, I'm fragmented, I'm divided for so long. And
if we've been given all these tools, I just come

(44:48):
up with a person I look at it from this time.
If we've been given all these things to talk Instagram, what'side?
Why can't you more use it more positively to be
more effective communicate because instead of wilding up, posting your meed,
pusting yourself in your bathroom. So what I'm saying, where's
my people headed? Yes, we understand that they can be

(45:09):
used to have fun. I there's nothing wrong with that,
but when does when does these SWO use it to
these The race followed, all right, we got more with Booju.
When we come back, let's get into a Boojubontan mix.
It's the Breakfast Club Good Morning. So that was a
Booju Bontan mini mix Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne,

(45:32):
the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking
it with Bouju Bontan Charalomagne. A lot of people are here.
You talk Booju and they'll say, oh, he's he's talking
so positive, and he's talking about the effects of the
music and the things that it makes them do. But
then there was a time where when you came home
in the Roster community, they weren't sure if they would
welcome you back because of your dealings, your alleged dealings
with cocaine. Well, you tell this, I don't do five

(45:56):
for some guy with tyli or come. Most of them
see it like a long time, but they want them
feel themselves. I'm feeling us. I'm feeling the community was
looking at that community years ago. So I don't really
care about that because who know, I know is have
gone jaman strips. So when I really not them, when
I really have a vidance no one, Because if the

(46:20):
wiki can do that to me, and you can't forgive them,
why I'm we can I forgive my brother? They can't
say none to me if me hit them out, separate
me from the love from them. Why do you think
they're trying to put that on you, that you that
you have a cocaine head. Well, because there's two weirds
that destroy your man. If you go and they're talking
about character first, then you're moving for the ultimate kill. No,

(46:40):
when the destroying character is that you If you put
him in a payed the file, he's done for easy kill.
You put him out a coke head, you know he's
gone for because his words will not be taken to
be of any weight. So these character assassinations they proceed,
they come before them ultimate kills shotting up. But the

(47:02):
world is like that because when you're prosecuted, you shall
see your friends and your enemies and your loved ones.
You shall see everybody for who we are. Persecution, persecution,
that's right. What are your thoughts on the racial divide
going on in America right now? Especially being at your
music is always uplifted and it's still pride and the
AFROC Careers Advice as also affected. I am I am

(47:25):
a victim of the divide. I was sent to prison
in the United of America and trumpt of charges with
father um through um jewelry woman, corrupt, George corrup, prosecute
a corrupt agent, corrup drug dealer. Wouldn't put upon me
to try and get miles stopping at them in them
drugs business. So it's wicked. It's a weak and wicked,

(47:48):
wicked system predominant's clue towards the destruction of the black
careers and the black mass. But I think personally as
black people, we've been too passive for were too long,
and we allow a lot of things to take place.
We are with a lower of freedom because we know
most people at old is not happening to me, It's okay,
I don't know that. That's what they talk women starting

(48:09):
collectively that the P and F one black man is
the pnfil and suffering enough one and suffering a file.
We have a unity. We need economic change. We need
sustainable group, sustainable development, proper living infrastructure, proper schools funding.
We need so much things as a people, and it's

(48:30):
so sad. I wanted to ask you this earlier when
you were talking about music that you could play in
the current funny your kids? Are you okay? We're doing
like wicked Pea and rather performing. No. I played them,
but I don't flit them from the children them And
when am I grow up? And the song of me
mick women, I'm playing in front of my children was
never played in my office. Yeah, I heard that. I

(48:50):
didn't know what wicked was when I used to listen
to them, but I definitely used to sing along sounds
like those. They're not all of brass that that would
be something suggestive, you know, right, do something that are okay?
Because I like people I don't like. You must make
the mind think. Let me feel what you're smoking, Booge.
Let me make sure you ain't smoking. Reggie over there,

(49:11):
make sure it's trust me. Reggie means very regular. That's
what that means, he says. Make sure you got something decent, Charlottman. Yes, sir, listener,
I want to say something to you. You have a
very great platform, and god, I was locked up. The
guys listen to you a lot. And I want to

(49:31):
say thanks for being such a vocal person for the
black community during America. But while you're being vocal, protect
yourself because once you become vocal, your tread. Okay, yes, sir,
all right, trust me. I know. I want to ask you, Booge,
what do you think this moment is for? Man? Like
everything that's going on in twenty twenty, the coronavirus, you know,

(49:53):
the way before, it's a wait in the recalibration of mankind.
But what I find strange, though, Charlott mine is the
fact that no, they wants you to wear a mask
into a bank. And before you wear a mask, I
feel like I said up right, what other books had

(50:15):
a big impact on you when you when you were
behind in the gated community. Check out the Negamadi texts,
the Negamoti texts, and read from selected Autoris alterrans and
speeches of his Imperial majesty. So I mean I read
a wide arrange of book. I've always been avid reader
because I know that's where it is written in a volume,

(50:35):
and the course he's just written in a volume. My brothers,
they don't want to take up a book. You want
to take up a bottle because the volume is on
it too, So we don't know that they won't give
it to us. You go search and find it whatever
we want. The truth, the knowledge got to get about
for a lazy ass and stop the the news. Let's
to start the critical thinkers independent thing. Because bons ideas

(50:58):
off each other without arguing and taking sides and becoming
bitter enemies over positions. So it's a time for us
to go back to who we were as a people,
returning back to our God, Try find him, try to
seek him, because we've gone a warring after strange and
lose ethery and entities. So these still my people and

(51:21):
all that lad live understand and all these things must
come to pass be as if it was not so,
our father wouldn't have told us so. So we will
live to see this wor right side up. We live
to see this world right side of sister it sai Wei.
Kidness cannot continuing and injustice cannot continuing. We're making us stand.
We're listing a provis and globally you're rising up. All

(51:43):
the way across the world will listen to Upside Down.
It is depicting exactly what's going on. And this album
was made before all these things begin to unfold. So
then again I have to give times some praise to
the true God of creation for the inspiration that he
has blessed out with in this time from my people
to comfort them, to whole meditiate shan. Yes, sir Booze,

(52:05):
you appreciate the conversation, my brother. Thank you so much. Brother,
definitely pleasure all right, No goodness and mercy guy don't
protect you all. And to all the people are I
want you to know that love the Lord. I'm staying prayer,
I stay away from evil. Don't let the forces get you,
because we don't get angry. Vita feel the wickedness, go
get your gun. So on the weakness and bodness ensues.

(52:27):
So with got being said, brothers, thank you very much
for the moment in time, my brother bless us Peace
King the Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be the
same morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy,
we are the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk August Housino, it's about the rumor report, Angela

(52:56):
Yee on the Breakfast Club. Yeah, start seeing. It was
on Young Money Radio when he was talking to Little Wayne,
of course about the entanglement situation. Now here's what August
out seeing it had to say about why he even
told his personal business as for what people may say
or whatever, or if it's looking like I might, I'm

(53:18):
doing something for attention. Absolutely absolutely not. What's perplexing to
me is that, you know, I never think it's anybody's
business to know my business right and my person my
personal my personal business right. But when my personal business

(53:38):
starts to affect my lifestyle in my livelihood, like I
lost you know, partnerships and deals behind that situation, because
it looked to the world as if August I was
seeing it was some you know, reckless New Orleans that
I'm just pushing up on somebody's wife. I mean, he's
doing it for publicity, but his story to promote, like

(54:01):
when you are an artist, all of your life experiences
become promo. He's got an album out. He just did
a song called Entanglement and released that. He's turning Lemons
into Beyonce six album. It's fine, it is what it is.
Yeah right, Yes, we're gonna play some of that in
a second. But what he's saying is not that. He's
saying that he lost a lot of deals because of

(54:21):
that relationship, and people didn't believe him. So people thought
he was just pursuing a married woman and it made
him look bad. So he wanted to set the record
straight on what really happened and okay, why he did it.
It's his story to tell, all right. And in addition
to that, he's saying that he did indeed have a
conversation with Will Smith and did get his blessing, even

(54:41):
though they're saying that's not true. Here's what he said.
Everything that I've spoke on in my initie interview is
and was and still is my exact truth. I said
and had a conversation and two men, we had a conversation,
and that's what it was. And I said, we shut
down as two men like yo boom, you have my love,

(55:03):
you have my blessing. And that's the situation as a whole.
All right. It sucks though that. I'm sure everybody that
does an interview now is that's gonna be the hot topic.
But he also put out I do reference back with
Jada said in the Red Table Talk interview, though nobody
can give the blessing except for her. Okay, and um,

(55:26):
here's part of the Entanglement song in case you haven't
heard it yet, and yes, Rick Ross is on the song.
Also he un your head you time I got the

(55:48):
kid like that was Rick Ross's idea. Actually the Gross
said that Augus should drop an album called Entanglement, but
he just put out album, so why not put out
a single and didn't put that single on the album.
That's the beauty of having those screaming services now idea

(56:10):
you can add records. That word entanglement. Boy, let me
tell you something that is right word though that wasn't
the word she used, is actually the right word. When
you look up the definition of entanglement, it is indeed
a complicated or compromising relationship or situation. So technically that
was the right word, right, and then complicated relationship definitely.

(56:32):
And when we did the interview, I said disentangled, So
I guess it is an entanglement. So yeah, I guess
that's the word people are going to be using from
that one. That's crazy, all right. In addition to that,
Keke Palmer has broken her silence. Someone happened with Stray
and Sarah and Kiki with the show being canceled, and
she wrote, I want to speak on this simply because
I hate the narrative that if you speak your mind

(56:54):
as a black person that you will in some way
be punished. I have seen this going around and at
first I ignored, but in this climate, I really this
is a dangerous message to send to our generation and
the generation coming up. If anything, my speaking out showed
the corporations I work with how important my voice is,
and anyone that has a POV. The reality is I
was never signed to SSK as one word, a seasonal show.

(57:15):
The business is dynamic, and instead of thinking me as
a series regular, see me as a brand that works
with the corporation Disney ABC News, and this particular show
I was on is no longer. That does not mean
the relationship I have with them dies. That means it evolves.
I hate talking about business because it can seem a
bit weird, it gets quite technical. But when I see
such fear mongering comments, I want to speak out so

(57:35):
that no one ever feels or things that speaking out
will cost them their job. I'm sure a cannon has before,
but let's also recognize when it has not. So she
just wants to put a stop to that false narrative
that because she was outspoken, the show was canceled and
she was taken off. She said, no, that's not how
it went. I agree with her, you know what I'm saying,
because it is dangerous for people to think that you
can't speak truth to power without being punished. But let

(57:57):
me tell you something, even if truth to power is
spoken and you get in trouble, so what is good trouble?
Word to John Lewis and if you lose something, it's
probably not for you anymore. All right, Well, I'm Angela
Yee and that is your f report. All right, thank you,
missie Charloman. We got Donkey today coming up, Yes, and
I need Senators Marco Rubio and Dan Sullivan to come
to the front of the congregation. We'd like to have
a word with him place. All right, we'll get into

(58:19):
that next keeping lock this to breakfast club. Good morning,
It's time for Donkey of the Day, being Dunky of
the day, a little bit of a like a day now.
I've been called a lot of my twenty three years,

(58:41):
but Donkey of the Day is a new wife. Donkey
of Today from Monday, July twentieth goes to Marco Rubio
and Dan Sullivan, two Republican Senators, Dan Sullivan representing Alaska
and Marco Rubio representing Florida. What does your uncle Sharla
always tell you about Florida? Kids, The craziest people in
America come from the Bronx and all of Florida. On
a scale of one, the gun played Marco's about a

(59:02):
one and a half. But he represents Floyda nonetheless. All right,
dropped on a clus bombs from my guy gun Play,
Happy to Day, the ball dates, and my cancer Brendan.
I think his one day was Saturday, Yes, Saturday. Now
back to marcol Rubio and Dan Sullivan. This weekend, when
Representative John Lewis transitioned to his next assignment, the outpouring
of love on social media, as you can imagine, was

(59:23):
a lot. Everybody was showing the great civil rights icon
John Lewis love and Marco Rubio and Dan Sullivan were
two of those people. Marco Rubio posted a picture with
the caption, it was an honor to know and be
blessed with the opportunity to serve in Congress with John Lewis,
a genuine and historic American hero. Dan Sullivan posted a

(59:44):
picture with the caption it was an honor to have
served alongside John for a small portion of his impressive
career of service, and to have joined him at the
opening of the Smithstonian National Museum of African American History
and Culture, a year's long effort of the Congressman. Great captions,
great words, great tributes, But there was one problem with

(01:00:06):
both sendais Let's go to see Ann for the report police.
Here's what Rubio originally posted, Rubio and Sullivan were both
honoring the late John Lewis, talking about how inspiring a
finger he was, but they both posted a picture of
Elijah Cummings. Cummings, of course, passed away last October. He's
the last Congressman to pass away before Lewis. A lot

(01:00:29):
of similarities between John Lewis and Elijah Cummings. Both black,
both ball headed, both politicians in the House of Representatives,
both civil rights activist, both both have transitioned. But if
you claim to appreciate someone so much in your caption,
if it was such an honor to serve with a person,
if you have such fond memories of a person, you
should at least know what the hell that person looks like. Okay,

(01:00:53):
if you thought Elijah Cummings was John Lewis, then who
the hell did you think John Lewis was. I really
think they do stuff like this on purpose. They probably
bet like, hey, I bet you two hundred dollars you
wouldn't post a picture of a logic Commings and say,
r I p John Lewis, And then he goes, well,
I bet you four hundred dollars you won't post that
same picture with the same R I P. John Lewis

(01:01:14):
after I do it. I mean, come on, bro, black
people only make up twelve percent of Congress. I believe
it's what fifty two black people that are currently African
American representatives in Congress. I know the age old stereotype
is that white people think all black people look alike. Well,
my question would be, if something has proven true, is
it still a stereotype? Are just good old fashioned truth.

(01:01:35):
It's not even like y'all deal with black people all
the time, so all you gotta do is remember the
black people you actually work with. Guys, Come on, we
all have cultural blind spots in regards to each other,
but it's a big difference in having a cultural blind
spot and not seeing the other person at all. If
two senators don't know the difference between John Lewis and

(01:01:57):
Eligic Cummings, then how invisible are the rest of us?
Do they see Black America at all? What I saw
this weekend with Rubio and Sullivan posting pics of a
logic Cummings and saying, R I P. John Lewis, it's
just a harsh reminder that they don't see us even
when they see us. Please let me Mark give Marco

(01:02:19):
Rubio and Dan Sullivan the biggest he ha he ha
he ha, you stupid motherfar are you dumb? Jesus? All right, well,
thank you for that donkey of the day. Yeah, okay,
Now you got some action this weekend, right you? You
text me this weekend and said you was laying on
top of a white man or something. I did not

(01:02:39):
say I was laying on top of a white man.
I was riding my white man laying Well, here you go.
I was riding my bike like I do. I usually
leave about seven in the morning on the weekends to
get the ride so I could get back in the
family still sleeping. And as I was riding my bike,
you know, I usually ride through neighborhoods which I don't
live with huge mansions. And I'm running through this one

(01:03:01):
neighborhood and I see this white guy laying on the
ground in his driveway. His car door is open. He
had a box of cigarettes on the floor and I
seen him laying there. So I pulled over and I'm
like yo, and he doesn't move. So I called nine
on one, nine one one withsh emergency. Hey, there's a gentleman.
He's laying on the ground, he's not moving. So the
nine one one operator says, okay, well, can you walk

(01:03:22):
over there and check to see if he has a post?
And I said nope, and he says, whoa why not?
I said, honestly, I'm a black man in this white neighborhood.
And if I walk over to him and his family
comes out and sees me standing over him, or he
wakes up, who knows. They might think I'm trying to
rob I'm not. I'm not doing it. And it was like, okay,
we'll send a police call. So, you know, I turned around.
I said, well, I'm getting out of him. Then I

(01:03:43):
started to pedal, and I felt bad. I'm like, what
if he's choking? What if? What if it's something where
I could have just, you know, maybe rolled them all
you wanted to give him mouth to mouth. I didn't
say that. I did not say that. I didn't say that.
I don't know he was between thirty and forty. I
would say between thirty. I say, defensive him living and dying, right.
So I turned back around, and I was nervous, but

(01:04:04):
I said sid So I walked a little closer to him,
and I just thought of yellow yo yo, yo, yo yo.
And then he kind of woke up and he looked frazzled,
and I was like, look, bro, just riding my bike. Man,
I've seen you laying here. And he got up and
he went back in. Butcaine. I don't know what it was.
I don't know if stereotype. It sounds like cocaine to me.
It was a heat wave too, right, wasn't there a

(01:04:25):
heat wave? Yeah, but this was seven in the morning,
so it wasn't that hot yet. It was like, you know,
eighty five degrees eighty six degrees drunk. What was wrong
with him? Could have been drunk, whatever it was, But
you know, I felt bad because I would not At first,
there was no way I was going over to him.
I was like, I'm just not like the way the
world is right now. I was more concerned with myself

(01:04:46):
being getting back home than they're worried about him. Who
could have been dying, Like he could have been choking,
he could have been having a seizure. We don't know.
I don't know. Like, just so y'all see what I'm doing.
I'm walking over here. Yeah, but that don't mean because
you don't want to, that's what people do nowadays, They
go on live just to make sure. Yeah, so let's

(01:05:07):
open up the phone lines. Eight hundred five eighty five
one on five one. What would you do in that situation?
You ride in your bike, you see a guy laying
on the ground. It doesn't look good for him, his
car doors open, he had a box of cigarettes on
the floor. I'm like, what do you do in that situation?
Do you ring the doorbell or see if his family
gets up? Do you try to wake him up? Do
you check for a post or you do what I did?
Call nine one to be like, I'm out, let's talk

(01:05:28):
about it. Eight hundred five eight five one on five
one is the breakfast Club? Good morning a breakfast club?
DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the
breakfast club. Now if you just joined us, we were
talking about my ride over the weekend. Now, if you
don't know our riding, that's what this story is about.

(01:05:49):
Hashtag riding and laying. No, it's not. I was riding
my bike. I usually ride around seven in the morning
while the house is sleep and so I'm riding my bike.
I ride through nice areas. Look at hu man Chance
it's just something that motivates me. I enjoy. And as
I was riding in one of these neighborhoods, I looked
over and I see a man laying on the ground.
His car door was open, he had a box of

(01:06:09):
cigarettes on the floor, and he was passed out. It
looked like so I yell, yo, yo yo, nothing. So
I called nine on one. He ain't nine on. What's emergency?
I told him the address is a man laying here
on the ground. They said, well, can you check for
a pulse? I said no. They said, well why not?
I said, honestly, because I'm a black man in his
white neighborhood. And if I walk over to him and
his family comes out or he wakes up, he might

(01:06:31):
think I'm trying to rob him. I don't know, I'm not.
So y'all come get him. And I got on my
bike and I started to ride off, and then I
kind of I felt bad. I'm like, damn, I could
have possibly saved this man's life. Whipp't if he was choking,
if you've had a seizure, and I could have just
the mouth put him on yeah nobody, Yeah, but maybe
maybe give him mouth to mouth, maybe help the brother

(01:06:52):
the stomach, give him off the mouth, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, No,
you don't put him on the stomach for mouth to mouth.
You said, well, why you want to put I want
to stoma me. Yeah, because sometimes you have food, you
might have to put him on the stomach to throw
the food out. I don't know. Got you got, you
got you got, you got right head with your fantasies.
But anyway, talking about I felt bad because I was like, damn.

(01:07:12):
The first thing I the first thing I thought of,
was not to help this individual that was there was
to be like, damn, I'm in this neighborhood and I
might be looked at it the wrong way. So I'm
answer opened up the phone lines eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. What would you do in
that situation? Start with you, chun, what would you do
in that situation? I would have minded my black ass business.
I would have called nine one one as I'm peddling
away from the scene of what could be a crime, okay,

(01:07:35):
and said, hey, there's a man passed out in the
driveway of such in such neighborhood. They know the neighborhood
is a nice neighborhood. I'm sure you said it's a
bunch of mansions there, so that means the police will
be there in two seconds. And no, I wouldn't have
felt bad. I wouldn't have felt bad at all, because
I understand my place in the ecosystem, and as a
black man. If I'm in the driveway of some white man,
when that white man is passed out in the driveway

(01:07:55):
and I'm standing over him, and I already know how
that looks to white people because I know how they
see us. So guess what if that man dies or
something is really wrong with him and you didn't provide help,
guess whose fault that is America's because this wicked white
supremacist system doesn't allow you to freedom to simply go
help that white man without fearing something could go wrong,

(01:08:18):
just because you're black and he's white. So I think
you handed it the right way. Person. Well, I did
go back, and I did. I got a little closer
and I yelled again, and it frazzled him and he
woke up. But you know the first thing, I was like, Nah,
I'm not going over there. What would you do? I
wouldn't have did that. I wouldn't have went over there
and yelled at him, because what if you'd yelled at
him he just look up and say, oh, black man,
pull out a gun, Bob, You're right, I got time

(01:08:38):
for that. I kept ida, kept peddling and dialing nine
one one. Is I'm riding away from the scene of
what could be a crime. Yeah, I will definitely call
nine one one, I think. I mean, that's a hard
one to say, you know, but I feel like my
instincts would have had me try to help in any
way past stay there. I wouldn't believe you. I saw.

(01:09:00):
I had one time where Angelie said, my mom and
dad told me I could never leave my stoop in Brooklyn.
So I was sitting on my stoop and one day
my friend was getting jumped, but I didn't help because
I couldn't leave my stoop. Well, she didn't get jumped.
It was a one on one fight. But and it
was my neighbor that was doing it. She wasn't dead.
I didn't think she was dead on the ground, and

(01:09:21):
I was like, and I was like seven years old,
but I think now, I think now, you don't want
somebody to die. Would have felt terrible, so I wouldn't
I would call nine one one, and I would have
stayed until they got there. But I understand it's different.
Like I'm a woman, so I don't know if they
would have come if first instinct wouldn't to think I

(01:09:42):
did something. Who knows, I can't say it. But I
also think women might have a different type of instinct.
A black man, we got a different type of instinct too,
and our instinct says, oh, white man in the driveway,
man down nine one one. I'm riding through this neighborhood
on my bike. I just passed it such and such house.
There was a man and driveway. Could you go back
and check on him? Nope. I'm black, he's white. I

(01:10:04):
don't know what the problem is. I don't want nobody
to think I did anything, but this is the address.
Have a night, all right, Well, let's go to the
phone line. Hello, who's this? Hey? What's going on? Brother? Hey?
What's going on? Good morning? God? What would you do
in that situation? Bro? You're riding your bike, you see
a man passed out, A white man passed out on
the ground. You're black? Do you go help keep it moving? Man? No? Man,

(01:10:27):
I fell on my black and kept boring, like I
need to see it one thing. Man, you don't even
call nine one one No. No, look, I'm gonna say
a friend, keep going, damn it. Man. You want to
why you can't be mad at this man? That's that's
what happens when you're a black man in America. We
don't have the freedom to simply go help that white

(01:10:48):
man without fearing something could go wrong. That's America's fault.
I don't. I'm not. I'm not mad at this brother
for feeling that way. Eight hundred five eight five one
on five one. I was riding my bike. I seen
a white man. He was laying on the ground. He
looked like he was passed out. What would you do
in at a situation? Called police? Hashtag lane, you better
stop it. I called the police, but they asked me

(01:11:09):
to check for a post and I wouldn't because I'm like,
if I if I go over there and I'm standing
over that man and his family comes out and sees me,
what they're gonna think I'm trying to rob him? You know,
if he wakes up, what is he gonna think I'm
trying to rob him? So I wouldn't. I was like, na,
I'm not, I'm not doing it. Like I called police,
you better hurry up over here. What would you do?
Eight hundred five eight five one o five one? Is
the Breakfast Club? Come morning? It's topic time because the

(01:11:31):
phone called eight hundred five eighty 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 if
you just joined us. Were talking about a situation over
the weekend. I was riding my bike and I was
riding through a neighborhood where the huge mansions where I

(01:11:53):
like to ride because I just like to look at
different things when I'm riding. And it was a man
passed out on the ground. His car door was open,
cigarettes on the floor, and um, I called nine one. First,
I yelled, he didn't move. I called nine one. They said,
check for a post. I said no. They said why.
I said, because I'm a black man in his white neighborhood.
And if I'm standing over him, who knows what he's
gonna think? You know, what would you do in that situation?

(01:12:15):
Would you do it? I left and then I went
back and I felt bad. I went back, and I
just started yelling yo, yo yo, and then he kind
of like he got frigs when they woke up. But
what would you do? Hello? Who's this now? You know,
I understand your concerning things like that, but you know,
we don't leave people on the side of the roads
like that. You know what I'm saying. It's good that
your conscience told you to go back. Oh boy, don't

(01:12:38):
do that. Don't believing people like that now, See I
told you women, we react definitely. I think, yeah, how
many police do you know how many police officers have
killed the black person who called the police because something
was wrong. You know how many people who have been
the victim who became the victim at the hands of
the police. They don't look up in that way. I

(01:13:00):
was doing this riding my bike and I'm thinking to myself,
what if they thought I tried to rob him or
like the lady the other day she was riding her
bike and they called the police on her and the
guy said, yeah, she was looking at to see what
garage doors were open. Nah, this is I got five
kids and a wife to take kids. I got a
family and I'm not playing around. I called the police
and you know, I was scared. Thank got, I'm not

(01:13:21):
helping somebody. I honestly don't know what's gonna happen next. Nope,
that was the right thing in doing. Your fields were justified.
It was a good thing to quarter a police. But
me and myself been a woman, I think I would
have went over and walked over to him. I think
the things we have to worry about aren't the same
as the things that you have to worry about. That
is not true. Black women have gotten my police officers

(01:13:41):
attacked about police officers when they've called the police. It's
been stories like that in the news recently. A black
woman called the police because something happened at a location,
and then the cops come over there and arrest the woman,
are assault the woman. That happens all the time. I
just think with our instincts. First of all, I think
if it's a woman and a man, and a man's
laying on the ground and a woman calls the cops,
I don't think instinctively like they'll think we overpower the man,

(01:14:03):
you know, the way, the same way that happens with
the black man. I don't think it happens. Not saying
it never happens, but I don't think it's the same.
But if you flip it right, and I thought about
this too. Right, Let's say Charlemagne, your daughters outside on
the floor and you see a white guy leaning over
your daughter. You don't know what happened. What's your first reaction.
It ain't gonna be like, hey, what's going on? You're
gonna tackle him. If you got your pistol, you might

(01:14:24):
shoot at him, because all you're thinking about is somebody
to knock your daughter on the floor. Correct, man, Yes,
And y'all don't know why y'all keep back, and like
black people have the freedom to simply go help help
that white man without fearing something could go wrong. It
happens all the time just because somebody is black and
just because that person is white. Always, Like, there's so

(01:14:44):
many stories about that in the news, about situations like
that that go left. People call the police because they're
the victim, and then the police come and then they
become the victim. No way, let's go. Let's go to
another line. Hello, who's this yo? What's up? Man? As
though calling from Hamper, Virginia sail road man seven five seven,
what's up? Already? Ain't a whole lot. Man. Hey, look,

(01:15:05):
similar story to that man. You know, A couple of
years ago, on my way to work, the sun had
just come up. Man, I just just so happened to
find a gun, you know, side the road, picked it up.
You know, first, I'm thinking leave it alone, you know,
mind my business. But you know what I'm thinking, I
got kids, I'm a coach. You know, this could be
the one that take one of these young kids away

(01:15:25):
from here, you know. So, you know, man with no record,
I say, I'm gonna call a non emergency number. Man,
I call a non emergency number, and I told him
for They arrived to the job, Hey, I'm a black man.
The job looked at me sideways, you know, like why
are you telling them that? You know? But mind you
who I work with, you know, so, and the police
show up, you know, they look at the gun, they
get the serial numbers, and they say, hey, okay, thank

(01:15:48):
you sir, We'll take your phone number down. Better believe
they called me at the end of that day, about
four to thirty and asked me to come in with
my ID, fingerprint me, mug shot me. You know, all
behind me finding this happen. You know, and so that
could have went left. You know, I don't know what
had happened with this gun, you know what I mean.

(01:16:09):
But I'm thinking up the kids, man, you know, you
understand me. I'm thinking of this could be the one
to take my own kid away from here, you know.
Now mind you the mentality twenty years ago, and I'm like,
oh man, you know, here's a lick, you know, But
now it's different, you know. And so, but that that
incident embarrass me more, you know, than me being arrested,

(01:16:30):
because I'm thinking I'm doing the right thing, but now
I have to go turn myself in, not turn myself in.
But bub shot me saying front me, I d me
stay in contact. And I asked them to do one
thing when you find the rightful owner, because it comes
back clean when you find the owner because you contact me.
Never did it happen, you know, never did the owner

(01:16:51):
contact me, not looking for anything. But at the same time,
just you know, this is what happened for finding your pistol,
you know, and so again and you know, similar to
what for Envy was saying earlier. You don't know what
to do in certain situations like that, you know, and
that I do mind your black ass business. You're right there, man,

(01:17:13):
you know, but again, I'm thinking of the kids, I'm
thinking of my area. I'm thinking of who I am
as a person. You understand what I'm saying. So you know,
most of the time I think probably would have been
picked up and would have went through pick Dick, Tom
and Harry hands. But I tried to do the right
thing and it led back to me getting saying printed
and the whole nah man. And you know what's crazy

(01:17:34):
about that? That happened to me in a similar situation.
I was leaving a club one night on Queens Boulevard
and there was a guy laine on the floor. He
got it was a hit and run accident, and I
called the police and I told him exactly as a
guy laining on the floor, and they did the same
exact thing. They wanted to know. They wanted to see
my car to see if I hit him. They wanted
me to come down for questioning and all that, and

(01:17:54):
they got to the point, I'm sitting there like I'm
trying to help somebody, but you're putting me through the ringer,
like I'm I'm to want to die, because when you're
black in America, a black man in America, you're always
a suspect. And the funny part is it's white people
listening to the breakfast club right now and can't believe
we wouldn't help this person in the driveway, as if
the system is designed to be fair to us. You

(01:18:16):
have no idea what it is to be black in America.
Your experience in America is totally different than ours. That
it's totally different than ours, And that is absolutely one
of those times while yes, you may want to do
the right thing, but you always got to think about
the white thing, and that white thing is systemic racism
and white supremacy, and that's the mindset black people have
to have in this country just to survive. You don't
have the freedom to simply just go help them. No,

(01:18:38):
you know, sorry, not in that situation. The situation you
were in absolutely not riding through a neighborhood that's probably
predominantly white, a white man passed out in this driveway,
your black ass on a bike and six in the morning,
you already looks suspicious. Okay, little biker shots on you
know what I'm saying, six in the morning, with the hell,
what the hell you're doing riding a bike? Ever call

(01:19:00):
you did the cops ever call you back? After that? Now,
when the cop pulled up, And when the cops pulled up,
you know, I told him what happened, and I said
the guy woke up, and the guy got up, and
then cop was like, well, you know, show me what
the house. I'm like, let's the house, make it right.
And then your first left and I took off. I mean,
as soon as you call the police to have your number, so,
I mean, it's not a problem, lady. I don't I
don't know what happened to guy woke up. I just
kept it moving. I got out of Dodge's America's fault. Man.

(01:19:23):
This wicked white supremacist system doesn't allow us to freedom
to simply just go help that white man without fearing
something could go wrong, just because we're black and they're white.
It's just the way it is. Sorry, all right, Well
they got rumors on the way. Let's talk about Megan
the Stallion. She has spoken out after getting shot twice
in the foot, and we'll tell you what she's saying

(01:19:44):
right now on Twitter at another problem example, Megan the
Stallion shot in the foot. They had her get out
the car, put her hands up in the air and
walked backwards and she's bleeding. Yeah. I thought that was crazy. Yeah,
all right, well we'll get into that. We'll talk about
it when we come. I'm back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club's team. This is the rumor

(01:20:11):
report with Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. So by
now we all know that Megan the Stallion was shot
in the foot two times. Well, she went on Twitter
to address what was going on, and I know we
discussed this up here and I was saying, I'm sure
she's very traumatized by everything and it's not ready to
speak on it, but she will when she's ready, and
she tweeted out Black women are so unprotected and we

(01:20:32):
hold so many things in to protect the feelings of
others without considering our own. It might be funny to
y'all on the internet and just another messy topic for
you to talk about, but this is my real life
and I'm real life hurt and traumatized. So people have
been making all kinds of memes and jokes, but it's
not funny. Oh. Social media is not the place for
sympathy and to the matter, and we got to stop

(01:20:53):
back and like, social media is the real world, and
I totally understand, you know, what it is that she's
going through. But if she's going to social media thinking,
let anybody's gonna be on there given her prayers and support,
that will be few and fall between between the means
and the jokes. That's just the reality of life, right right,
I don't think And she hasn't been extensively talking about
anything on her social media. I guess she let people

(01:21:14):
know because they were saying she got arrested, so she
wanted to set the record straight on that. And then
but this as well, you know, it is so hopefully
that made some people think, you're right, it's not funny
someone a black woman gets shot in the foot and
that could have ended tragically for her. So you know,
just check y'all jokes, all right? And te Payin in
the meantime, went on social media and he said, all right,

(01:21:36):
so what's the temperature on Tory because I was just
about to drop a song with him and Todd dollars
time and so I guess after everything that happened with
Tory Lanes and nothing's been confirmed yet, but a lot
of people said, no, is it a heat wave? Serry,
what is the temperature on Tory? I don't know. We
don't really know what happened. Yeah, until we know what happened,

(01:21:57):
you know, we can't say right now. There's allegations, is rumors,
but this true story has not come out yet, and
they say that meg the Stallion is not cooperating with
authorities on that part. So I still want to know
why police had Megan the Stallion exit the car with
her hands up and walked backwards while she was the
one shot in the foot. I still don't understand how
that was kind of crazy. He's treated like a suspect.

(01:22:19):
I don't get it all right Now, Nick Cannon, they're
saying his daytime talk show is getting postponed after all
of the controversy that he's been in. They said it
won't premiere in the fall it's originally planned. It's been
shelved now until fall twenty twenty one, about a year
after its original premier date. In September, they said, after
conversations with Nick, we do believe that his public comments

(01:22:41):
don't reflect his true feelings, and his apology as heartfelt
and sincere. We want to continue the healing process as
he meets with the leaders of the Jewish community and
engages in a dialogue with our distribution partners to hear
their views. We are standing by Nick and our hope
that by fall twenty twenty one, he will be able
to use extraordinary talent and platform to entertain, enlightened, and
unite his audience. On the Nick Cannon talk show, that's good,

(01:23:03):
council culture over cancel culture, ill write. In the meantime,
Nick Cannon was on social media and he shared a
photo of himself and Ryan Bowers, a rapper who reportedly
committed suicide, and he wrote, just when I thought it
couldn't get any worse, twenty twenty is definitely the most
fed up year I've ever witnessed. After waking up and
barely rising from my own dark contemplation of continuing my

(01:23:27):
physical existence on this planet, this powerful warrior actually had
the balls to do it. Yeah, that's horrible. In that
one line right there, that that bothered me to do it. Yeah,
And I don't like the committed suicide. I don't like that,
Nick Cannon. It's contempleting suicide. As I said earlier in
the show, I prayed for the spirit of suicide off

(01:23:47):
off everybody, and I want everybody to go out there
and therapy and healing. But yeah, I don't like that
had the balls to do it? Yeah I didn't. I didn't.
I didn't like that. But that's coming from somebody who
who was thinking about a side and he feels like
he does not have the balls to do it. So
he's coming from a side of feeling hurt and feeling
like I want to do it, but I just can't.
So that's he's coming from a side of hurt. It's

(01:24:09):
not coming from a side of anything else, but that
why not, why not have the balls to live? You
know what I'm saying. Like, because he's hurt and he's
thinking about suicide, you know what I mean, he is
a side coming from a place of being hurt. He's
coming from from a dog place. Yeah. I just don't
like that that term had the balls to do it
because it almost makes it sound like it was something
good to do, you know, because he's feeling like you

(01:24:30):
don't have he's feeling like I don't have the balls
to do it. He's like you, I mean, he's almost
saying I no, no, that is good. But that's where
that's the side he's coming from though, you know what
I mean, he's coming from that side he's venting. So yeah,
that's his feeling, all right. Now everybody man, everybody go
to therapy, not going on. Yeah, and Chris Chris I

(01:24:50):
just got his first tattoo at the age of fifty five.
So he was with his sixteen year old daughter and
she got a matching tattoo as well, and they shared
photos of the experience on her Instagram. St You guys
don't have tattoos, so it's a crown, it's a small
keen uh logo. You do all of them, all of them.
I got Wolverine on my arm holding a microphone, Wolverine

(01:25:13):
from the X Men. I got Charlemagne and old English letters.
I got what's supposed to be evil. So it says
like lush, greed, envy, hate, and it's all going up
in flames, and it says, only got my name on
you out right after lust. Now I will say my
never so deep tattoo, Uh beans a lot to me

(01:25:34):
because my mentor, one of my one of my mentors,
doctor Robert Evans, and his son Blessed. Those are my partners.
Loved him to death. But other than that, yeah, I
can get rid of all of these. I actually do.
I am gonna get rid of these. One thing actually,
just as a follow up from last week, James Harden
with that face mask that he had on that people

(01:25:55):
were upset about, the Blue Lives Matter mask. Apparently he
is saying he was not trying to make a political statement.
He said, I honestly wore it just because it covered
my whole face in my beard. It's pretty simple. So
he did not know the symbolism behind it. I knew that, Yeah,
we figured that. But he's finally said it from his
own mouth. You know. It's just so people who were

(01:26:17):
thinking that he was supporting that can know he did
not know. It. Gotta be gott to be counsel culture,
not canceled coaches. Sometimes people just don't know. I looked.
I can tell James Harden didn't know what the hell
he had on his face. I didn't even know what
he had on. Did y'all know what he had on?
I said that bed, I know what it was. I
was like, I know, I didn't know. He didn't know.

(01:26:37):
All right, Well, I'm Agela yee, and that is your
room of report. All right, thank you, miss Yee. Now
shout to revote. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Everybody else
to People's choice mixes up next. Happy birthday to Pop
Smoke today would have been first birthday. I believe he'd
have been trade one. Let me tell you something. When
you hear stories like that, you better understand that age

(01:26:59):
is a blessing. Okay, all you people out there to
be lying about your age, you better give yourself than
goddamn yes. Because Pop Smoke didn't make it to twenty one,
think about that, man, where would you have been in
life with you to path away at twenty one years
old and got killed at twenty Come on, man, God
bless Pop Smoke and remember ages of blessing should be.
You should be counting every single year. Get as old

(01:27:19):
as you possibly can. That's right. So let's start the
mix off with some Pop Smoke. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, I'm wanting. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club now. Um.
Shout to boot J Bontum for joining us this morning. Yes,
new album is out now, Upside Down, very very very

(01:27:40):
good interview. I enjoyed having conversations with my man Boots.
You seems who seems like he's tapped into a higher
level of consciousness. And that's what we need right now. Yes,
and that album tells Shiloh the anniversary, they just celebrated
that too. So anyway, Gold twenty five, what is it
twenty five years later? Twenty five years later? That's right,

(01:28:02):
all right? When we come back, we got the positive note,
don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlemagne the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. Now, m Charlemagne, you've got a positive
note for the people I do. And the positive note
of the day comes from the Great Harriet Tubman. Okay,
Harriet Tubman once warned, everybody, never wound a snake, kill

(01:28:26):
it before it kills you. Breakfast Club, finish for y'all,
dumb

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