Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Fifty percent righteous fifty out to sit down become the
most prominent form. What yo ass up early in the morning.
But they tell me it was y'all. I said, oh,
hell yeah, I'm getting them choice smaller ship three people's choice. Actually,
let's see, I've got you chomomazing people who I can't
(00:22):
believe you guys are the basket. What did we know
this breakfast club? Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo. Good morning Angela ye got money
Cholomagne the gott piece of the plane. It is Tuesday, Yes,
(00:47):
it's Tuesday. Definitely Tuday. Another day of having no headphones
that worked. Damn, people ain't here just be oh here
go I about to stand people in here just be
stealing yos their headphones. Oh, I mean you know the
phones had probably been here for one hundred million, thousand years.
Work better? Well, good morning. I want to shout out
to all the parents out there still can Oh boy,
(01:11):
we shout out to all the parents out there. Uh, yesterday,
you know my wife is pregnant. She's doing November, so
the doctor told her to chill out a little bit.
So I've been taking care of reins that she would
usually do. So yesterday the kids had all types of
activities and and you know, with me doing so many jobs,
whether it's the breakfast club, it's real estate, the car
show and all that other stuff, you forget how much
your wife does. You're an idiot. Then you're an idiot. No,
(01:34):
I don't care how much I'm doing. You absolutely positively
see how much your wife does. I got I got
four kids. Yeah, if you didn't see that before, not
you see it in the house. But you know, yesterday,
you know, my kids have activities like you know, they
have you name it, gymnastics, soccer and acting and everything
we could possibly put him in. And yesterday Daddy was
(01:55):
the uber driver. Bro. I went from state, I was
in the city, the city. I went from town to town,
from town to town to the point where my wife
planted out where you know, it's it's a game of interest.
You got to make sure you there long time. You
gotta have their food, you get they gotta be able
to eat at a certain time and drive. I just
I just want to shout out to all the parents
and mom's out there. Man you do Oh, here we
go a magnificent job. Yeah, you must really work a
(02:15):
lot then, because that's my life every day. That's all
I am as ab up and down the road. Yeah,
we haveny nanny's and my wife used to do it,
but I had to do it yesterday. But I enjoyed it.
I really had a lot of fun. So shout to
all the parents and especially all the moms out there. Man, man,
man cannot do what a mom does no period. I
don't even know why we even try to play ourselves
(02:35):
and act like we can. It just does not happen.
And it's no way, shape or form, And it's so
disrespectful when you be like, hey, you gotta eat this, Mommy,
don't make it like this. You know she's right, And
guess what, I and I cannot make it like bommy
makes it. You know, I'm just in here trying to
do my best. Mommy's not here and you are eat
it like this. You gotta let your kids read the
four Agreements and start with number four. Always do your best.
(02:57):
Daddy just doing his best. Okay, Yes, I am not
your mama, all right, because guess what we both need her? Yeah,
all right, yeah, yeah, all right, Well let's get the
show cracking. Carlos Watson will be joining us this morning.
Give people some background. Are Carlos watching? It's Carlos Watson.
You tell me you're invested in this company. I did
invest in Azzi Media. Yeah, he's the founder of Ozzy
Media and they've been around since twenty thirteen. But as
(03:20):
of late in the past week or so, he's been
in the news a lot because there was all kinds
of joma that happened with his company. Actually he closed
the company on Friday, but now he said that he's
back up again. Rich people problems. Boy, somebody somebody's gonna
invest to. He'll break it down. It got real nasty.
So we'll talk to him. And also eighty five South,
my guys, they'll be joining us. Yeah, they'll be hosting
(03:42):
U the BT Hip Hop Awards tonight, So we'll be
talking to Carlos Miller, DC, Young Flying Chico Bean via Zoom. Unfortunately, yes,
because they all over the place, but yeah, we'll be
talking to them today and the BT Awards or tonight
at nine pm. So they'll be hosting that and we'll
talk to them in a little bit. But let's get
the show cracking front page news were talking about. Well,
yesterday there was an outage on the Facebook, Instagram and
(04:05):
What's App, and we'll give you some details. All right,
we'll get into that. NeXT's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
Hey morning, everybody is DJ Envy angela ye, Charlemagne the guy.
We are to breakfast Club. Let's get some front page news.
Now I'm mond to night football. The Los Angeles Chargers
beat the Vegas Raiders twenty eight fourteen. Now tomorrow w
(04:28):
NBA fans out there. The Sky take on the Sun
tomorrow at eight and Mercury take on the Aces tomorrow
at ten pm. Let's go Aces. A root for the
Aces because Asia Wilson dropping on a clude box for
Age Wilson eight oh three, Columbia scall day. Now what
else we got easy? Well, Facebook, Instagram and What's App.
They had outages yesterday from millions of people across the
United States. Both the mobile and the web browser editions
(04:52):
were not working as of eleven forty two in the morning.
Facebook said on Monday evening to the huge community of
people and businesses around the world would depend on us
where Sorry, We've been working hard to restore access to
our apps and services and are happy to report they
are coming back online now. So what they are saying happened,
they said, our engineering teams have learned that configuration changes
(05:13):
on the backbone routers that coordinate network traffic between our
data centers cause issues that interrupted this communication. This disruption
to network traffic had a cascading effect on the way
our data centers communicate, bringing our services to a halt.
It was crazy. It wasn't it a woman that they said?
It was a Facebook whistle blour. Yes, she used to
work there and she did an interview on Sunday and
(05:35):
she was talking about how Facebook puts their finances ahead
of the safety of kids, for example. We know that
though like they don't care about You know what if
people are addicted to social media, and I really don't
think people realize how addicted they all to social media,
and I would I would. I would want everyone to
ask themselves, what were you missing yesterday? And once you
got back on, what did you do other than post
(05:56):
about not being on that day. I love the fact
that it was out. I think it opened up people's
minds to think of other creative ways to do other
things on Twitter promote your business exactly everybody. Everybody's saying that,
But that's a lie. You know, it was only six
hours exactly they spent They spent the time people, they
spent the time waiting to get back on. But that's
(06:17):
a long time for people that have businesses and use
their Instagram and Facebook to promote their businesses. So it
gives you way to be like, damn, if this ever
goes down, I need to think of a backup plan.
Same thing with the pandemic. If I see that's how
some people think, but I think I would hope most
people would think of a backup plan just in case
I just wanted to go down. Don't just rely on
Facebook and social media. That's all they posted. Hello literally everyone. Yeah,
(06:41):
I just wonder if people are using social media or
a social media using them. Feels like social media is
using us more so than we use them. All Right, Well,
Mark Zuckerberg's net worth dropped by about six billion dollars
in those few hours, according to Bloomberg, and he was
That makes him number five on the world's Richest People list,
So that that's at one hundred twenty one point six billion.
(07:03):
Once he lost that six point why why do he
lose the money? The stots dropped his HM, yeah'll go
back up. So maybe it was a good time to
buy the dip. I don't know. And congratulations to Bubba Wileace.
He's the first black driver in fifty eight years to
win a NASCAR Cup race, So congratulations to him. And
here's what he had to say. Yeah, I never never
(07:24):
think about those things. And it's obviously brings a lot
of emotion, a lot of joy. The significance of doing
it here it's almost appropriate, isn't it, Bubba? You told
me last year here a low point for you to
get the first win here significant? Yeah, for sure. You
know this is all those kids out there that I
want to have an opportunity and whatever they want to
achieve and be the best time what they want to do.
And you're gonna go through a lot of bullets, which
(07:45):
always gotta stick true to your your your path and
not let the nonsense get to you. In fifty eight years,
he's only the second black driver to win a NASCAR
Cup race. By the way, congratulations. The first one was
window Scott back in nineteen sixty three. All right, well,
I'm Angela Yee and that is your front page. I
was gonna say, shout out to all the black racing teams.
(08:06):
I don't think there's too many of them. Shout to
New York Racing Team. I know that that's a black
racing team. It's not too many. I think maybe it's
three of them in the whole thing. So shout out
to all those brothers out there. All right, get it
off your chest eight hundred five eight five, one oh
five one if you need to vent phone lines a
wide open where you pissed off that Instagram was down
yesterday and upset or didn't it? Maybe it didn't, Baldy,
I didn't even know, you know what. I try this
(08:27):
in know what's happened. It didn't work. That's how I realized.
I didn't realize how connected all three of them, because
all three of them are down Facebook, Instagram, and what's
happen to call us up right now? Let's talk about it.
Hit it off your chests. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. Wake up, wake up wall you're trying
(08:49):
to get it off your chest. We want to hear
from you on the Breakfast club. Hello, who's this? Yeah,
good morning. This is Ryan from Fire Arts and Brushes
Up Run you know if your chest. Yeah. I had
a big issue yesterday with Instagram being out because I
run a sipping paint business through Instagram and I was
corresponding with some potential clients and I think I may
(09:12):
have lost them. Now. That's why sometimes you got to
move over to email after you make the initial contact
on Instagram. Yep, email problem. You can't rely on something
that we don't own, so you got to put it
on a bunch of different platforms so you can so
as soon as you get like she said, hey take
my email, let's let's let's email or let's talk on
the phone. Why y'all acting like this thing was down
(09:34):
for six weeks or even six days, but for seven hours.
It's a lot for people to business. If he's corresponding
with people that are coming to a sipment paint that
night and then all of a sudden, we don't have
each other's information. It was supposed to be that night,
you had a siting paint last night. I know it's
supposed to be like in a couple of weeks, but
you know, the guys would call me to set it up.
We were negotiating prices and that kind of stuff. What's
(09:55):
wrong with the phone? What happened to their phones after
last night? All day to day you but it shouldn't happen.
Now I can't. I can't get back on to flight
arts and brushes. You know it sound like you're making
this up. So I'm that curious. Sound like you're making
this up as you go along. Letna be honest what
you're saying. I don't know why people lie. That's that's
what I've been trying to figure out. What you know things,
(10:16):
but a liar is not one of them. But you
know what you could do now for that one? You
understand that, you know, get that in contact number and call.
You can speak to people on the phone. It's okay,
that is an option. You just said it was called.
He said it was email. He said he couldn't get
the um now he said, calling to hello, who's this Hey,
it's Tyler hat Hey, Tyler, good morning, to get you
off your chest. I can't believe I'm even on this radio. Man.
(10:37):
I'm good. I'm driving the North Carolina Jacksonville right now,
so I'm black well, we'll talk about it. Get it
off your chests. My name called healer implant, So she said,
I'm partially down. And uh one of the teachers had
told her one day that when her her coal healer
implants went out on her. She told the teacher that
her ear stopped working. Mind you, she's only five, and
(10:59):
the team told her charge your ears lords. What the hell? Yeah, man,
I threw it messed up and she was she aware
of that the kids condition though, yeah, yeah, you could
see the Korela implant say. They're on the outside of
her head. They're basically put on to the top of
her head, so they could allow her to hear. Oh well,
(11:21):
I mean, well, is that an option? Does it charge?
I don't know, so I'm not making fun, but does
it charge? And maybe the teacher thought the actual device
was that that it needed to be charged, right the
five year old man and uh, my sister already had
told them that she has for really her implict in
her ear. So for her to tell tell the teacher
that I can't hear and they tell her to go
(11:42):
go charge of ears. She can't do that on her own. Now,
I'm with you, and she needs help with she's only five.
I'm with you. And then my daughter her first day there. Man,
she had her book bag, her lunch box and everything
on her and she was going to a morning program.
And the people at the morning program that just go
to class morning, it's time for to go to class.
(12:05):
But she's a five year old. It's her first day
in the school. You know, have some all day need
to walk into the classes. All I'm saying, be careful
with our freshian cargo. Absolutely, that's what that's what I
hate about. That's what I hate about sending kids to school.
You know what I'm saying, because so many people treat
it like it's just a business. But these are these
are kids, man, these our hearts and souls. Get it
off your chests. Eight hundred five eight five one on five,
(12:26):
rue if you need to hit us up now, it's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning. The Breakfast Club is your
time to get it off your chests. Whether you're man
or blast, we better have the same and we want
to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello. Who's
this yo? Dj n B Charlotte made the God angela Ye,
(12:47):
good morning, good morning morning. So what I want to
get off my chest. I know, DJMB you go through
this all the time. I'm half black. People come up
to me to ask you on my nationality years and
that I'm spanished for the recons. But my dad's black,
my mom's wife. It gets me frustrated sometimes I want
to know what you do about that? Would we know
(13:08):
he told about me. I don't pay any mind. I
don't pay it any mine. I mean I don't care.
I mean it doesn't bother me. It's not like something like,
oh my god, this grinding my gears. No, I don't care.
You don't like when people saying you do mend again,
so I'll joke back. I'm saying black, but I don't
upset me to the point where I'm going to corner cry.
But people ask you, they ask what if they ask you,
what are you? Bro make up your mind? You just
(13:29):
you just say it's not a problem. But now you're
saying you're not get mad, and that upset. I'm trying
to understand, so people just say what are you? Yeah,
they asked me what my nationality is. I'm like, I
told him to guess, and they usually go a Spanish
for the recon. I wish envy would I wish Envy
would human me one day and say guess what I am.
(13:51):
Now I understand that he's annoyed that people come up
to him that don't even know him and just say,
what's your nationality? Like, yeah, I get it. It's annoying,
Thank you, brother. I don't have a problem like I
never really understand why people get mad at that. There's
so many nationalities and so many people. If you see
somebody you want to ask, why does that bother people?
I don't understand, Well, he's by that. It's inquisitive, like
(14:12):
what are you? Oh, you're this and that? Okay, that's stop.
I'm in the entitled to be bothered. But if you
have something in your mind, you know what I mean? Like,
if you in your mind you know what you are,
I can see why that would be annoying because you
think you would hope everybody else sees it too. But
what are you showing me? Black? One? Pure God? Okay,
you don't look black to me? Hello? Who's this? Look
(14:32):
more on the white side. I'm ninety s I've actually
ninety seven percent in West African. I've done my African ancestry. Hello,
who's this? Y know? What's going on, Philip Brown? Listen,
yesterday was too crazy. Everybody stupid or a social media
man and need to get off of it. Social media
is just to everlasting change of pool a pool bo
(14:54):
people we don't care about. That's right. How did you
know everybody was going crazy over Where'd you see that
on the le if you're on YouTube, Google anything? All
the talk about Facebook? Yeah, it was news like it
was on CNN, MSNBC. I'm like, okay, so you don't
use social media? No, not like that, because you know
what I'm saying. You start comparing yourself for people who
(15:14):
do put up the highlight charm. I literally, I said,
I told Duval this is about a week ago. I
was like, your winded. Social media become like a university
of higher learning, like I remember ten years ago, and
it was literally just the playground. It was literally just
a place we went to have fun. We unplugged. People
don't unplugged no more. Nope, Hello, who's this? You know? Listen,
(15:37):
what's up? Broke it off your chest? I want to
send a shout out to this miserable person I met
this week and who worked at the Barclay Center. If
you are a miserable person. Do not pass it on
the other people. What happened? All right? So I was
working at J Cole concert. First of all, he's my
favorite artist. I was playing to work this concert. I
(15:59):
worked the concert. Um, I'm also an artist. So I'm like, man,
I hope I could get get a chance to shoot
my shot tonight. I'm standing on the side of the
stage right and J Cole stuck in leg up on
the speaker and it ended up falling off the stage.
I caught the speaker. We put the speaker back on. Now,
if you have seen it, you would have known that
(16:19):
whole chain of speakers would have fell off. So okay,
I just saved that from happening. The shot. And woman
sees me, yeah, she goes, uh, yeah, you don't belong
over here. You gotta you gotta go. I'm like, okay,
now I go to where I'm supposed to be. But
you know, and you guys have been to the bar
play center, you know where where the cars come into
(16:40):
where downstairs, And I just waited over there respectfully. You know,
I could have pretended I was a part of the entourage,
snuck back there. I didn't do anything like that. I
just waited quietly, um while, you know, while going back
and forth and working, and the same miserable worker came over,
where do you belong? Oh you don't belong here now,
(17:03):
reported me, and a whole bunch of nonsense. But you
could just tell, man, she was just a miserable person
and she wanted to pass that on to whoever else.
You know, now you're leaving out the part where you
was trying to slip Jay Cole your mixtape and you're
telling j Cole you rap on. I just said that.
He said that wasn't a mixtape, and and I don't
get down. You just said shoot your shot. I didn't
(17:24):
want to. I didn't want it. That could go any
That could mean anything. You said, shoot you she's a manager.
But was she a manager? No, she wasn't a manager
because because she could have got in trouble, maybe Jay
Cooles people would have killed. Respect that. It was just
the way she went about it. But what did she
want about it was just Nasky and Charlo. Man, Come on,
I'm about to shooting my shot. What you want of
these men? Man? You said shoot your shot? Didn't he
(17:46):
say that? You said you wanted to shoot my artists
before I said that shot, I'm worried about. I don't
know what kind of picture you wanted to paint. But
where Okay, I got a question, where are you? Where
are you? Not where you were supposed to be? Though
he wasn't you know, he was somewhere else. No, No,
I wasn't. I wasn't where I was supposed to be.
I mean, it's not like I was making a disruption
or or like I went about it like you know,
(18:08):
I work in production, so I try not to invade
people's face. I get it. Yeah, but she was, she was.
She was security. But I will say, out of every
venue that I've ever been to, any any concert hall
or any arena, the ball players usually the nicest people
I've ever been to. A lot of people work at
(18:29):
the back laces. This is the nicest place. I was
surprised because at the at the Garden that that like that. Yeah,
I would say, you know, I love the ba I
would say the ball lace is better than the garden
to me and Buddy on all these arenas, but I
love it the garden to We gotta do your job, Bro,
that's it, good job, all right? Joe Man, He's like
man on my side. Five eight five, one oh five one.
(18:49):
Now we got rooms all the way. Well this sounds
like true love. Imagine you have two toilets installed right
next to each other so that you and your significant
other can poop side by side. Why all right, we'll
get into that next. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning,
the breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Ye,
(19:10):
Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfasts. Indeed, let's get
to the room to salt. Make the trainer reporter breakfast
club trainer, Megan Trainer. I don't I don't know Megan Trainer.
(19:31):
You don't know who she is. I do not. She's
a singer. She had that song it's all about that.
You know you don't know that song. You just said
it's all about it. Sound like he's playing all about
the Benjamin's what's singing again? I'm not gonna sing say
you don't remember it's a song about her butt being big.
It's all about it. Y'all don't know Megan Trainer. I
don't know that was the record. I know the record.
You're talking about it like that. I can't see it's
(19:55):
all about the ball. You just got the word you
because a red toy was Mega Training. That's what that's us. Anyway,
The point of the story is Mega Trainer and her
brother Ryan were on the Why Won't You Date Me?
Podcast and she revealed on that podcast she has two
toilets side by side in her house because she wants
(20:18):
here and her husband to go to the bathroom together
a lot of times in the middle of the night
when we were with the baby, like, we got a
pee at the same time. So I was like, can't
we please have two toilets next to each other? And
we've only pooped together twire. I can't be near him
Winnie poops because his poops smell foul. But when I'm pooping,
I encourage him come on in and we like this one, yes,
(20:38):
because I don't poop. I didn't. I didn't have a
good like poop life before. Okay, now we're learning about
nutrition and I'm seeing like my poops are like great
now and healthy and every day. And I'll look at
him and I'll be like, Darrel, do you see this
massive thing that came out of me? Why do you
think her? Don't think though, maybe just what was going on?
(21:00):
Guess what race it. Maybe she feels like because of
her diet and being healthier. It doesn't smells bad now.
It smells different at different time. It's based on what
you ate. I've never not smelled something my poo. He
never smelled like roses. I can tell you that much.
You know, and when you married, there's times you got
to give each other's face. Yes, we have a union,
(21:20):
but we're also individuals, and individuals need a long time.
The bathroom is definitely parted at a long time. I
don't mind the toilet side by side, but there's never
a reason for us to be doing those synchronized. Yes, exactly,
not at all. I thought it was a bidday. I said,
you saw it wasn't a biday at a biday in
the toilet, but nah, not side by side, hole in hand,
talk about hey, how was your day. That's not even
how bows work. I know somebody who sits on her
(21:43):
husband's lap when he's going to the bathroom at times.
All right now. T Payne has blamed a nurse for
giving his ninety seven year old grandmother COVID. He posted,
bro my ninety seven year old grandma is in the
hospital alone with it that she got from her FFing nurse.
What is wrong with people? Man? Please, y'all just explaining
(22:05):
to me. Just help us end this ish people. Please.
So according to Tea Pain, he somebody said we could
assume the nurse was vaccinated and asymptomatic, so clearly he
had no clue they had COVID. But that doesn't fit
the agenda. And Te Paine said she was not asymptomatic.
She was sent home and the hospital had to contact
every patient she had come in contact with. Grandma got
(22:26):
tested when she got there and was negative, then positive
after the nurse was sent home. There's no agenda. People
are a holes, all right. So well with prayers to
te Pain, no for hoping that his grandmother is safe.
Definitely send a tea Paine's grandmother healing energy, all right.
Saturday Night Live the new season had a huge drop
in ratings according to the numbers. Owen Wilson was the
(22:48):
host of the forty seventh season over the weekend, and
they're saying the ratings plummeted thirty five percent from last
season's opener. It got just three point five million viewers.
According to Nielsen. They do it expect though, there's gonna
be a big jump when Kim Kardashian hosts this weekend,
so we shall see. But they said the weekend's ratings
were in line with the final two episodes of last season,
(23:10):
and they're saying that might just end up being the
new normal for Saturday Night Live. They don't factor in
anything else. They don't factor in like digital or you know,
people who might be watching through means other than linear TV.
I don't think so, well, this is just Nielsen ratings,
and I guess it compares it to where it was
at last year with those same ratings, So not sure
our crust. I did see a lot of clips though, circulating,
(23:31):
and I saw some controversy over Pete Davidson playing Dog
the bounty hunter. All right, well that is your rumor report.
All right, thank you, miss ye. Now we got front
page News next. What we're talking about, yes, and we
are gonna be talking about COVID of course, and we'll
give you some more updates. And Shata has Bro, the
toy company has brough. They sent me up some cool
(23:52):
my little Pony stuff. Oh you love my little pony. Yeah,
I don't know what my little pony. I don't know
if it's a show a new show coming out, but
they sent some some free stuff. So my daughter's gonna
be in love today when I get over there. Yes,
for we think I was gonna be playing with my
little pony stuff O win the floor. You were so
excited I thought it was for you. You shut up
all right. Front Day's news is next to the Breakfast localore,
so Breakfast Club, your Morning's will never be the same.
(24:15):
Angela here, don't you wish everything was as easy as
getting quality coverage from the General Insurance. The General offers
the quality coverage you deserve at prices you can afford.
Switch to the General and you could save over five
hundred dollars. Call eight hundred General or visit the General
dot com. Some restrictions apply. Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy. Angela, ye,
Charlemagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. Let's getting
(24:37):
some front page news. Now. In Monday night football, the
Charges beat the Raiders twenty eight fourteen. Now in w
NBA playoffs, the Sky take on the Sun tomorrow at
eight and the Mercury take on the Aces tomorrow at ten.
Let's go Aces, dropping a clue bun for the Aces.
Asia Wilson eight h three, Columbia, Stop Carolina all day
that what else you got? Easy? All? Well, let's talk
(24:59):
about the jack pat the powerball jack pot of six
hundred ninety nine point eight million dollars. It's the eighth
largest in US lottery history. One person one in California
and matched all six numbers that were drawn last night.
So congratulations to whoever that person is. I definitely played.
I played the cash apption yesterday. Man, I played four
(25:21):
hundred and ninety six million dollars. Hey, mother, my mother
in law looking at me crazy. We're in the grocery store.
I'm like, I'm going to play lottery, like like, hey,
you never know. Okay, it's six hundred million dollars all right. Now,
the CDC has issued holiday guidelines because of COVID. This
is weird, Okay. So, according to the agency, Charlemagne looked
(25:41):
like an old man. Right now, I'm pulling out his tickets.
He could barely see. So he got a whole lot
of tickets like thirty feet away from his face. I
usually went like four dollars, you know what I'm saying,
at least get the powerball, right yeah, hey, I'm sorry. Now,
the safest way is to celebrate, they said, is virtually
with people who live with you only or outside and
at least six feet apart from others. They're also urging
any unvaccinated American to get their vaccination as soon as
(26:05):
possible for maximizing protection against it. And they also recommended
additional safer ways to celebrate, like a virtual dance party
and collaborate with friends and family. On the playlist, Yeah,
I saw another one. They listed what they said, put
a fan in the window. I'm like, that's how we
grew up. We grew up with a fan in the
window in a single wire trailer. Yeah. They said, keep
(26:26):
fresh air circulating while celebrating indoors, open the windows indoors
in place of window fan in an open window to
get rid of stale air and put in fresh air
from outside. Can you still do that? Can you still
put a fan in the window nine days? Yeah? Absolutely? Okay,
all right. Also wear mask indoors for or even outdoor,
for crowded outdoor seating, and for activities where you're going
(26:47):
to be in close contact with people. And of course,
if you're sick or you have symptoms of COVID nineteen,
do not attend or host a gathering. Okay, guys, I
think you should know that. And fans in the window
that was the original auto tune. By the way, you
put that fan in the window and you go through
the fan in the man. The original metal fans metal
(27:09):
fans at the school used to have that wouldn't go
nar Metal fans crazy, nobody put their finger in. Then
you just say, oh, I wouldn't go Nar Metal. If
I wouldn't go, the metal fans look dangerous. They would
all right. Now. There was a press conference yesterday where
Joe Biden was emphasizing that they want to put a
House pass bill to address the debt ceiling on the floor,
and they're saying Congress cannot wait until October eighteenth to
(27:30):
raise the debt ceiling. Here is what Joe Biden explained.
There's a cap on what we can borrow, called the
debt limit, and only Congress can raise or lower that
debt limit. Raising the debt limit is about paying off
our old debts. There's nothing to do with any new spending.
The reason we have to raise the debt limit is
(27:50):
in part because of the reckless tax and spending policies
under the previous Trump administration and raising the debt limit
is usually a bipartisan undertaking that what is not happening today.
America's never getting out of debt. That's why nobody, anybody
out there that's that's an in debt. You shouldn't be ashamed.
It's the American way. Okay, you are a true patriot
when you're in debt, all right, you're just like your country. Well,
(28:12):
the reason this affects everybody is failure to raise his
debt selling in time could halt payments that people rely on,
like paychecks to federal workers, Medicare benefits, military salaries, tax refunds,
Social Security checks, payments to federal contractors. So that's why
it's really urgent. And Joe Biden also addressed the Republicans
who were supportive when Donald Trump raised it and are
(28:34):
trying to block this now. In four years, they incurred
nearly eight trillion dollars in additional debt. And Republicans in
Congress raised the debt three times when Donald Trump is president,
and each time with Democrats support. But now they won't
raise it. They won't raise it even though the falling
(28:55):
on the debt would lead to self inflicted wound that
takes our economy over a cliff and risk, jobs and
retirement savings, so security benefits, salaries for service members, benefits
for veterans. It's so much more. All right, Well, we
will keep you updated, and that is your front page news.
There was a great cap in that first Biden police too.
(29:15):
We need to isolate that played the first Biden one,
the first Biden clip. He said, cap so so great.
There's a cap right there to isolate that. Just isolate
that one part, Daniel, take that. We need that. That's
a good cap, a great cap in four years. All right,
all right, all right, now, thank you for that front
page news. Now when we come back, we have Carlos
(29:35):
Watson joining us. Now, who is Carlos Watson For people
that don't know, that's a good question. He's the founder
of Ozzy Media. It's like a multimedia company. They have
a newsletter, a YouTube channel, multiple television shows. Any hosts
the Carlos Watson Show. And he's in big trouble right now.
He actually decided to close down his company on Friday,
(29:57):
but then yesterday he decided not to so, but tell
you he'll explain what's been going on. All right, all right,
we'll get into that. Next it's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning,
the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlemagne the guy. We all to Breakfast Club. We got
(30:18):
a special guests in the building. He's been here several times.
We have Watson, the co founder n CEO of Ozzy Media.
What's happening in Carlos and good to be here. It's
been a difficult week. We're good to be here. Yeah, yeah,
all right, before we get into that, I know you
always have to ask people how are you doing? But I,
like you said, it has been a difficult week, So
how are you feeling? Other than my mom passing? It
(30:41):
probably is the toughest week I've had. And I know
people have tougher weeks, so I'm not confused. I know
people have tougher weeks, so I'm not trying to put
my week in that space. But uh, but but it
was a tough week. I love AZZI. I think we
built something special as a media company. It's not easy
building anything for everybody from the beginning because people might
not who break the whole day down. And he's a brother.
(31:05):
Ladies and gentlemen, you haven't heard from from Miami live
in California. Now worked on TV UM doing shows at CNN, CNBC, MSNBC.
UM had worked in business before at McKenzie and Goldman,
and a few years ago for family reasons that started
to move to California and decided to start a media
company called Ozzy. And it started with newsletters and then
(31:27):
we grew into TV shows on Hulu, Amazon, PBS, BBC,
A and E others. Who want to Emmy last year
so some strong work for our show with Oprah, which
was great. And then podcast We've had a half dozen
good podcasts, including doing some with iHeart, which has been great.
And festivals. I think I've seen you guys around Ozzie
Fest in Central Park. So we built a nice company,
(31:48):
seventy five plus people, worked with lots of great advertisers,
doing good work. And about a week ago there was
a piece that I felt was a hit piece in
the New York Times by a guy named Ben Smith
that I was aimed to take us down, and it
almost did. We suspended operations on Friday. It looked like
we were going to wind down, and over the weekend,
you know, I ended up hearing from lots of people
(32:09):
some of our readers, some of our viewers, our listeners,
I heard from some of our investors, I heard from
some of our advertisers. I was I was really appreciative
of that, and they were like, we need Ozzie's voice
in the world, like why are you going to go away?
Don't let that happen, And so as embarrassing as it
was in a way to kind of make a big
announcement on Friday and then all of a sudden change
(32:30):
your mind. Um, I did do that, and I announced
that Ozzie's coming back, that Ozzie's not going anywhere. Somebody
told me that you and Ben might have some personal
issues because he used to work at BuzzFeed and BuzzFeed
was trying to acquire Ozzie and you didn't. Yeah, so
what happened when you said he took you down and
wrote a letter to take you down? What was in
this letter? How do he try? Article in the New
(32:50):
York Times? Yeah, so it was article in the New
York Times. There are two pieces to it. One piece
is there was a bad incident where my co founder
presented himself as someone he wasn't impersonating it in the
middle of a fundraising so he was a co founder
so called Goldman Sachs present himself as a YouTube executive.
I think this was a serious mental health issue. I
(33:11):
know some people haven't been in that space before and
so it's hard for them to conceive of that. But
it's difficult. But you was the CEO had to know
what was going to be said on that Golden SAX call.
I mean, it was a call you're trying to raise
the forty million nallars. It's portrayed like that, but you
know that whenever somebody makes a big decision like that,
they don't have like one call, like it's three months,
it's dozens of calls. It's in person meetings. They want
(33:33):
to meet your customers, they want to meet your employees,
they want to talk to your other investors. They want
to talk to people you don't even tell them to
talk to. And so literally we were far down the
line and this was one of the last things to do.
And so the good news is that they didn't invest
because it would be even a bigger problem. Obviously did yep,
And you know, to their credit, they've been gracious. You know,
(33:53):
three four months after that, they were like, look, that
is what it was. We've known you for years. We
know that's not who you're company is that your company
is something much bigger. And they did a pretty big
advertising deal with us, which you know, I don't think
they would do right. It wasn't the forty million dollar
investment you were seeking. But they did still advertise. They
still did advertise, which is meaningful. And you know, I
still have lots of friends there, And uh so you
(34:15):
didn't know that, you didn't know that your CEO was
doing it? Like, like what happens in that moment in
real time? You like, bro, what's wrong with you? The
Goldmen folks called the YouTube folks who then his assistant
called me. I realized what was happening, and you know
it was it was tough. It was tough. What's the
times man? In all? How soon after the call and
all on the same day, they called me probably a
(34:37):
better couple of hours. I'm not sure, but I think
they probably called me a couple of hours. And then
I was on the phone with Goldman and I was
on the phone. I think I was on phone Goldmen
the next day. What was the purpose of saying he
worked he was an executive YouTube? Um? I really think
it's something that doesn't make sense. And I think he
believes that it was a medical issue and a mental
health issue. I think he thinks that that's not who
he is. And um, I certainly, working with him for
(35:00):
almost a decade, I hadn't experienced him like that before.
Was that the reason why they didn't invest it was
they were pretty close to saying yes, did you sadver
tides with the CEO? Yep, he's we've asked him to
step down. So you know, there's a lot of people
out there to say, you know, reading that you know
this mental health is used as you know, you're just
using it as a scapegoat, and that you know he
was he might have been saying that he worked at
(35:21):
YouTube to say, hey, I'm a YouTube exact this place,
as the numbers are great and this is why you
should invest, and that you know, the whole mental health
is just using it as a scapegoat to get around
that it has a very specific lie to tell. Yeah, yep, um,
you know, I don't know what to say about it,
and I know and I know that skepticism is there,
and I know that people are going to look into it,
and I trust that Goldman looked into it, and I
(35:42):
trust it. If Goldman felt like it was something other
than that, that they wouldn't have done a pretty meaningful,
you know, advertising partnership. YouTube after this continue to work
with us, signed us a new partner, promoted some of
our best episodes with Doctor Fauci and Ava du Vernay,
and a couple months after that, gave us a written
(36:02):
offer Google, which is YouTube's parent, to invest twenty five
million dollars. So I don't think they would do that
if they thought that there was something brought her wrong.
What about Ben though, there's something personal between the guys
who it was at that incident that sparked the whole
article in the New York Times. That's that's that sparked
(36:23):
the whole article. But really I felt like part of
that was salacious. And we can have a conversation about
whether people's medical histories should be out there, and we
can have a conversation about whether he should have even
been allowed to write this piece. This is a guy
who has been after us for several years. Two years ago,
in August, he sent me an email copy to CEO
(36:44):
N So, I think you guys should get together and
talk about the possibility and then buying us. They spent
three months buzzfeeding from August twenty nineteen to November. About
November twentieth, they spent about three months looking at our financials,
looking at our traffic, talking to our team, having us
meet their team, going all through that, and at the
(37:05):
end of that, they gave us a written offer for
two hundred and twenty five million dollars. Now today he's
saying the company's jump Why'd you spend three months and
offer us hundreds of millions of dollars and now you're
saying it's jump off. We turned it down twice and
after that he quit the company because he was on
his last legs and he was saying, I don't really
(37:26):
feel like new media can work. And he went to
The New York Times and his first column in March
was I once thought I could make new media disrupt
old media, but I feel like I can't make it work,
and so I'm going back. And I have felt since
then that he looked at us as someone who spurned him,
and he didn't even tell his editors about this when
he wrote the piece. I had to tell his editors.
I said, that's I think there's a major conflict of interest,
(37:51):
And I said his editors, I said, has he told
you that he went up and down and through it
tried to buy us? We said no. And he still
owns major ships of BuzzFeed. He stands the game if
Ozzy goes down, right, And I would also think that
if he brought this to the owner of BuzzFeed, this deal,
that he would profit enormously, enormously. We have more with
(38:13):
Carlos Watson. When we come back. It's the Breakfast Club,
Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne,
the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking
him with Carlos Watson, the founder and CEO of Ozzy Media.
You know, he has the Ozzy Festival. He's been in
some hot water the last couple of days. So what
would you say to people that say, you know, because
(38:33):
everybody fudged the numbers all day long, other stars. What
if people that say, what was so bad about what
he did? Yeah? He lied, he was it's in exact
So what is so bad to the point where the
company would have to shut down? You know, it wasn't
about that Envy. I made a big mistake I took
advice that said, hunker down, don't say anything, just go
(38:53):
quiet and we'll go away. And my gut, I knew
it wouldn't that's something what would happen. And so basically
after the piece came out, all of last week, all
these people with gripes. People we fired, people who were
on my show for a month and then quit and
then spent the next year trying to get back on it,
sending me text as recently a six weeks ago. All
of a sudden, they all were finding ways to do gripes.
(39:14):
And the more other people saw people being able just
to get their fifteen minutes of fame. And I know
it may sound crazy some people, the more other people
came out of the woodworks and doing it, and so
it was almost a little bit of a feeding frenzy.
So I made a mistake I should have. My instinct
was to jump in right away and have the conversation
because I know we do good work. I think I
(39:36):
should have been more on it. I was going to say,
I see along those lines, Eugene Robinson, who was your
former editor at large, I guess he stepped down or
I'm not sure what happened there we fired him. You
fired him? Yeah, okay, So I see. Now there's all
these other exposes about what the culture was like working
at Azzi. So can you address some of that because
they were saying there were people who were working insane
(40:00):
whereas and you know, they were saying, Carlos can be
very charming, but then he can flip the script on
you and you know, get an rate. So can you
address some of those allegations of what that workplace experience
was like? And you know, it's it's hard to because
almost no matter what I say, it's going to sound defensive, right,
But here's what I will tell you. I'll tell you
that over the last eight plus years, we've hired almost
(40:20):
a thousand people part time and full time. Over half
of them have been women and people of color. You know,
we have paid people well. I think we've given people
good opportunities. Even some of the people who criticize said
there were good opportunities. But I would say a couple
of things that I heard. People said, we work long hours. Yeah,
you have to do that as a startup. I wish
I could say that it was otherwise, but you do.
(40:41):
People said that you push too hard. I think I
would say to that, I'm sure that there are times
when I have pushed too hard, and I'm sure there
are times when if I had a chance to do
it all over again, I would have pushed differently. I
think there are people who've said that you bully. I'd
say that's definitely not true, or at least I believe
that's definitely not true. Let me say it that way.
I think in general, we built a good culture. But
(41:02):
you see it sometimes on yelp, per glass door, other
things where or you see it on Twitter where it's
the unhappy people who were making the loudest noise. And
last week was an opportunity for anyone who had a
grudge to come at it and come with it. And
I hope this week, now that I'm speaking out more,
I hope you'll hear from more people who felt like,
you know what, Ozzie gave me my first chance. So
(41:23):
of all of the things that are said, I am sure,
almost like anywhere, that we could be better. But if
you ask me, do I think we had a toxic
culture or that no, I don't think we did. Do
you feel like you're being attacked more because you're a
black person that owns a company. Yeah, I clearly think
that there's a racial distinction. Do you fear jail time
because of that? Because I've been hearing that all weekend,
(41:43):
or ain't gonna make an example out of out of car?
Do you fear jail time because of it? Um, I'd
be really disappointed if if that is the case. But
what I'm just curious. I don't know. But what has
happened over the last week envy is that people have
thrown crazy things. I mean, here's three or four of
the things they said. One they said that we're making
(42:03):
up our numbers in terms of the audience. And instead
of saying, you guys may care about website traffic only,
but we don't. We care about newsletters, we care about podcasts,
we care about TV show views, we care about live events,
and those are our numbers. And because those are like
impressions that come from numerous different places rather than just
yeah and so. But because it's not the way they
(42:24):
do it. It's like saying Amazon can only do books. Well,
Amazon doesn't only do books anymore. And so yes, we
started digitally, but we moved on we started doing other things.
I mean, clearly, the YouTube numbers mad at though, because
I mean, your guy pretending to be a YouTube executive,
and I understand and getting impressions from everywhere else, But
if you were fudging the numbers specifically on YouTube, and
(42:45):
that's we weren't fudging the numbers on YouTube. And you
can't fudge the numbers on YouTube because the numbers on
YouTube are out there for everyone to see. But one
of the things you keep hearing from them, charlottegne As,
they say, well, but you paid for them. I was like, well,
doesn't HBO paid the advertise a new TV show to you,
Doesn't NBC paid to advertise a new new show to you,
Doesn't Uber paid to try and reach you. Doesn't Geico
(43:06):
try and pay to reach you all the time? Like,
stop talking about marketing like it's some illegal thing, Like
it's not. It's smart. Otherwise, what's the other choice? The
other choices you let some random algorithm choose who gets
to see your stuff. I would rather take control and
say I want to make sure Angela, Envy, Charlomagne all
see my stuff, and I think that's smart. Why would
(43:27):
we leave it up to the algorithm, Because what is
the algorithm? Favor clickbait? It's not gonna favor a serious
piece on rising stars, or on mental health and the
climate crisis, or on changes that are coming in artificial
intelligence and how it might affect black and brown people.
That's not what the algorithm is gonna favor. I heard
a lot of people say this week, you know, it
(43:49):
was shocked that AZZI considers itself black media, right, because
they were saying, you know, he doesn't make any noise
in the black media space. Black people don't go the
Azzi for black news. What do you say to that.
I'm black and I'm a majority owner of our common stock,
and I would say to you that we have an
incredibly diverse workforce. I'd say to you that we are
(44:10):
overrepresented from our content standpoint, including the show We Want
an Emmy for called Black Women Own, the Conversation with Oprah,
and with Own. So I get that there are a
bunch of people who over the last six to nine months,
they saw us rising, they were upset about it, and
Roland Martin did wrong. He did wrong, that's not okay
(44:30):
what he did. Soling that O'Brien. They were all on
Twitter trying to pretend like we're not a black owned company.
When he knows we are, or that it's somehow illegitimate
for us to get it. So, look, I think being
black owned is one thing, but you know, sometimes they
put black faces in those spaces. But you know, what
are the shows on the network hosted by black people?
What's the content as catering to a black audience. Carlos
(44:53):
Watson show is hosted by a black man and disproportionate
as a disproportion of black audience, meaning more than eleven
to twelve percent, which is, as you know, our percentage
of the US population. So what about the podcast many
podcast hosted by black people? We've had a TV shows, Yeah,
great question. A majority of the TV shows hosted by
black people. We have had at least one and maybe
(45:17):
two of our podcasts of our six podcasts hosted by
black people. I would tell you that when you look
at our reporting staff, it's often been as much as
a third black. We've always been good, Charlemagne at having
an incredibly diverse workforce. That's been purposeful, it's been intentional.
I've traveled the country and traveled the world to make
sure that happens. We've always had fully paid internships, which
(45:39):
lots of black and Brown kids have taken good advantage
of when we get lots of good kids their first
chance and hire many of them to go forward. When
we started our AUSI Genius Awards, which is a summer
program where we give ten thousand dollars the college students
who have big ideas where they want to write a book,
do scientific research, etc. We're the ones that gave one
of the first big opportunities to Amanda Gorman before people
(46:01):
knew who she was, or Brandy Meryweather or a whole
series of other young people. So I feel really good
about what we've done and what we do in the community.
I hope we continue to be an important environrant presence.
All Right, we have more with Carlos Watson. When we
come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning Morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy we are
(46:22):
the Breakfast Club. Were still kicking with Carlos Watson, the
founder and CEO of Ozzy Media. You know he has
the Ozzy Festival. He's been in some hot water the
last couple of days. So what do you invest to say,
like a rod you know you brought you came up
here with a rod one time, what are your invest
to saying I'm an investor too. By the way, thank you.
You know what, it's been a traumatic week for everybody.
What I was grateful for is over the weekend some
(46:44):
of the folks who were most traumatized by it, rather
than just sit back, they were the ones who they
got on the phone with me and they were like,
you can't go anywhere. We've seen you work those eighteen
hour days that people are talking about seven days a week.
We know that you haven't taken salary in almost three years,
so that you could make sure more people didn't get
laid off at the beginning of the pandemic. We've seen
the good stuff you're doing, Like, don't go anywhere, right
(47:05):
the plan moving forward? You know we're gonna we're gonna
get back in it. We're gonna begin sharing our newsletters again.
I'm gonna go to our audience and tell them where
we are and what's happened, and where we've been and
where we're going. You'll start seeing our TV shows again,
I hope in the next month or two. They said
you were lying about the TV shows too, saying that
you had to deal with any and you didn't really
have a deal with any Yeah, and that was a lie.
(47:25):
And on Monday Annie canceled the show that was planned.
They paused it and pulled it. Now, the gentleman who
came up with this thing our first producer. He's a
guy who was with us for a month, and I
appreciate the work that he did. But then he left,
and over the last year he's probably sent me three
or four emails or text saying, congrats, you got Matt
(47:48):
Damon on the show. It's on Amazon dot Prime. You're
killing it. And now he's out there grabbing fifteen minutes
of fame saying they made this up. YadA, YadA, YadA.
That's not the case. Is it disappointing to you that
more people aren't coming to your defense who've worked with
you and who've had great experiences. Yeah, And you know
I thought about that a lot too, Angel, and I
hope it'll change this week. And one of the things
(48:09):
I realize is that even people who I know and
love and people who worked hard at OZ, you've been
there for years. You know. I got a text from
one of my guys this week, and one of the
guys I was closest to and he said, you know,
I felt like I had to distance myself from you
this weekend because all the stuff, you know, was so bad.
I had to move on. And I realized that I
made a mistake last week by not getting out there,
(48:31):
because I think I needed to be in it because
otherwise people believe stuff like that A and E stuff
or the Sharon Osborne thing. I don't know, you've heard
the Sharon other kind of crazy stuff. Like all this
crazy stuff literally came through unfiltered. So let's see what
happens over the next couple of weeks. I'm really pleased
at the first person who actually helped me with the
business plan over eight years ago. She was the first
(48:52):
person I called, and she said, I'm sad about all
the crazy stuff I heard, but there's no way it
can end like this. I'm in with you, and let's
see what other people say. People saying since you brought
it up, yeah again, you got all these people grabbing
these fifteen minutes of fame. Sharon Osborne. We Ozzy Fest,
as you know, it was healthy successful summer festival music
(49:13):
ideas fest. You guys had a class because of the
name Azzy, right, and she's got something called oz Fest,
and so she tried to sue us, and we're like,
we're not backing down. No one wants your name oz Fest,
and no one wants to be confused with something involving
Ozzy Osbourne. And I said, you know what, we gotta
go at it. And they kept trying to make me.
They kept trying to make me kind of say, we'll
change your name. Like we're not changing the name. And
(49:34):
so in the end we settled. We agreed to give
her shares in the company about fifty Sharon Osborne and
so jokingly I said, because anyone who owned shares yourself included,
I said, is an investor. And um, you said ned
in twenty nineteen or whenever I said it, I said
it on the air somewhere. And then Sharon Osborne, who
got booted from the talk and is looking for a
(49:55):
moment of relevance, decided to pile on and said, Carlos
Watson's trying to I'm an investor. What thoughtful person would say, hey,
you know you should invest in me? Because Sharon Osborne
is how does that sound? You think that's a winning pick?
And I get what she's saying. Technically, she's not. She
was rewarding some equity, but she's not. She didn't invest.
All right, I get your point, but you also get
(50:15):
my point, which is that I wasn't. I wasn't going
around telling lots of people, Hey, Sharon Osborne's an investor.
I said on TV in a joking moment when someone
asked me about it, I'm gonna be honest, callee between
you and your Ceoh, y'all played too much. That's what
it sounds like to me. Why y'all plan? You know?
(50:36):
You know what? And I beg you don't go there
because what I yes? And and and if people keep
going there, Charlemagne go down that road, which is why
I did the Today Show, which is why I did
squad Box again. We have made mistakes, like all of us.
But because you do something stupid or sloppy, that doesn't
mean it's illegal. And can we can we be better
(50:57):
with data? Of course? Can we be better with marketing?
I hope we definitely can't. Are there smarter things I
probably could do in terms of having a good culture
and being a good leader, definitely, and I think we
will do them. I heard a lot of people say
last week, especially black people there. They weren't coming to
your defense because they don't feel like you've ever been
there for black people who say that. I'm not gonna
say no names, but I've heard I've heard people well
(51:19):
they say they say they've never even heard you speak
about you know what. That's not true and send them
to me. What about the seventy five employees who worked
for Ozzy? Are they're keeping their jobs? I hope that
most will, but but part of it will be up
to them. What do you say to other black owned
media who've been fighting for ad dollars? Do you feel
like you owed them an apology because your situation might
affect them raising funds in the future. You mean, do
(51:41):
I owe them an apology because someone who wanted to
buy me and wanted to benefit from buying me and
I said no too, did a hit job on me. No.
I don't owe somebody to apology because Ben Smith who
tried to buy my company and got mad when I
said no and kicked off this kind of crazy feeding
frenzy that. No. I hope people see this black man
not surrendering. We're taking it. Go learn from it and
(52:04):
keep going forward. Since you're the person who can clearly
raise the captain. You know what I'm saying, why not
connect with people in the black media space who are
doing that work, like the Roland Martins, like the Black
Star Network. I would love to and I hope and
know and believe it's true that we also, even before this,
have given back and we will continue to give back
and give forward. And whether I can help with fundraising
(52:27):
or otherwise, it's interesting, Charlmonne. One of the things even
before this I want to do. Now do more, As
I've said that, I want to do some black boot camps.
You know, they used to have these books what they
don't teach you at Harvard Business School. Want to have
something that they don't teach you As a black entrepreneur,
what would you say to like a rolling our Black
Star Network who feel like they couldn't get the advertising
dialectude and that they would reach out those people would
(52:47):
say they already invested. Don't let it be crabs in
a bucket. Don't only be crabs. People can invest in
many different I'm asking like, yeah, why should it only
be one? It should be many. A coming back you
better believe it is, and I really think Angel that's
gonna be the moment. That would be the moment. People
you're like, you know what, Ozzie came back, right, I'm
an investor in Ozzy. What if I want my money back?
(53:08):
How do you plan to get invested in money back
by making the company successful and hopefully one day either
I'd love it if we had the chance, and it's
hard to do, but i'd love it if we had
a chance to take the company public. And I'd love that.
You know, one day you look back and you were like,
you know what, I believed in them, and then they
had that traumatic moment and for a second I was thinking,
(53:30):
you know, why did I do this? But they stuck
with it and I saw them come back and I
saw them get stronger. So I'd like, I'd like to
do that. But clearly, I'm sure with you and a
lot of other people, I'm gonna have to earn your
trust back. How do you plan to do that? Like,
what do you tell investors like me moving forward? You know,
just the truth, which is that this is gonna be hard,
but it's worth it. The last eight years were real
(53:51):
We built real stuff, five newsletters, a dozen TV shows
either on the air, on real networks like Hulu, Amazon, BBC,
pb A, any lifetime, half a dozen podcasts, three festivals
plus all of that is real. We're gonna build it
back better, and you know, the first three to six
(54:11):
months will be crucial. I think, again, whatever we do
has to be good work. And I think the other
thing I will tell you is watch the team. I
think whatever team we come back. You know, I don't
know how many of you guys are football fans that
we have football fans here. Yeah, of course, yeah, you
guys remember the Oakland Raiders, which one which in the
seventies and eighties. You know, look, they had a lot
of people who were who were cast offs, right, They
(54:32):
had a lot of people who who at the time
weren't the prize, but they put all that together to
fight back harder. And I hope that'll be end up
being true about Ozzie, because we've got terrific people, and
I hope a lot of folks will come back. And
I hope a lot of folks if we end up
doing what we'll say we're gonna do. I hope people
will will read and watch and listen. Are you gonna
talk to somebody these people who has really criticizing you
like the Roland Martins. Would you sit now and rolling
(54:54):
love to roll. We're gonna make that happen. You know,
I was disappointed in Roland, if I'm honest, But you
know what, maybe I was wrong, and so I'm happy
to learn and grow when disappointed you to the more.
I thought it was a little bit of a crabs
crabs in the bucket sort of thing. I thought that
immediately he saw us in trouble, and he just more
than anyone. He was the one retweeting and posting, and
it was almost assassination. And given his experience at CNN
(55:18):
and what happened to him, I thought he'd be the
last person being involved in that kind of thing. And
so you know, it is what it is, and and
I've got to learn from that and I've got to
get better. But if you ever see me doing that,
let me know. I hope, I hope you will never
see me doing that. I hope even if we have differences,
you and I'll have the conversation. I won't be out
there trying to assassinate people in public along with the mob. Absolutely,
(55:41):
all right, Watson, it's the Breakfast Club, Good morning, this
is the rule of report with Angela yet all right, Well,
Dave Chappelle, his new special on Netflix, The Closer, that
he filmed in Trade is now available, came out at midnight,
(56:03):
and I have a couple of you went some spoilers
from it, a couple of quick clips because you're gonna
want to watch the whole Thing's over an hour, all right. So,
he of course talked about getting COVID, and I know
you probably heard on the news. I did. I did
get coronavirus, and it was it was something else like Okay.
First of all, when doctor told me I had coronavirus,
I gotta tell you, I'm surprised how it made me feel.
(56:25):
I felt dirty because I had been walking around Texas
just touching door knobs, hands almoist, tipping this with cash here,
take this to your family. I must have killed thousands
of people just trying to get tonight's show together. So
(56:46):
I hope you appreciate it, because a lot of time
for me to get this one off, all right. Then
he also talked about having to quarantine after that at
the quarantine for ten days at least, it is he
gonna stay in the room. I didn't go nowhere and
it started making me nuts because I was just sitting
room and watch videos on date. Now you know what
I was watching. And I hate to say this, but
there was a lot of videos, sadly of black people
(57:10):
beating up Asians for no reason. All these attacks were unprovoked.
I couldn't believe it. And I was sitting in the
room watching this. She was stressing me out. I was
stressed already because the whole time, when you get coronavirus,
at least the first five days, you wait see how
sick you're gonna get. It turns out and this is true,
I didn't get sick at all. Look at me. I
(57:32):
am the Magic Johnson of coronavirus. Now he also addresses
the baby, and okay, so this is an interesting one
because he talks about the baby and how the baby
got canceled recently, even though he's had some other things
that happened. Here is what Dave had to say about
the baby. The baby was the number one streaming artist
(57:53):
until about a couple of weeks ago. Now you know,
I go hard in the paint, but even I saw that.
He was like, God, damn the baby. Oh he pushed
the button, didn't he bunched the LBGTQ community right in
the hates. But I do believe, and I'll made this
point later, that the kid made a very egregious mistake.
(58:13):
I will acknowledge that. But you know, a lot of
the LBGTQ community doesn't know the baby's history. He's a
wild guy. He once shot under and killed him in Walmart.
Nothing bad happened to his career. Do you see where
I'm going with us? In our country, you can shoot
(58:34):
and kill it, but you better not hurt the gay
person's feelings. That joke lacks a lot of contexts because
he was self defense. He was with his daughter and
somebody tried to attack him in Walmart. Yeah, I don't
think it was more of the point of stand your
ground law applies and say that you can't you can't
just say he's a wild guy and he killed somebody.
(58:56):
I think most of the people there understood the whole
context of it, and what he was talking about was
laughing when talk because it's funny, but that but you
still got to put context with it, because you know,
you're painting a picture of the brother that you know
isn't isn't necessarily true. It was self defense. But the
baby was there at Danielle's show in Charlotte. He came
both nice by the way, while Danielle was taping his
(59:17):
Netflix special, So I guess they have a good relationship
and that's why he you know, he didn't get I
don't think he got charged with anything. I think he
was defense right. But anyway, that special is out now.
The Closer absolutely hilarious. I already know people on Twitter.
Some people are mad, some people are entertained. But I
will say, as controversial as some of the things that
(59:38):
he says are, he's very funny and intelligent. So I
advise everybody to watch that. Yeah, one thing that Chappelle
has mastered the art of he knows that. You know,
he's not saying things to get to get amends. You know,
he's he's fully aware that when he says things, some
people gonna agree, some people gonna disagree, some people gonna
find it funny, some people not gonna find it funny.
A lot of people don't move like that now because
(59:58):
of social media and because of cancel. They try to
say the right thing all the time because they're afraid
of the backlash. Comedians got that leniency too. They can
do that well. Successful ones I feel like too that
also don't have to worry about certain things. I think
Dave's at a point in his career where financially he
doesn't have to worry about maybe I'm not going to
get this opportunity. People that can do that too. All right, Now,
(01:00:20):
let's talk about doctor Dre his divorce battle. Now they
are saying, according to page six, that this alleged mistress
has been unveiled. He has denied an affair with this
woman Killey Anderson, but there's been rumors of this in
tabloid since twenty thirteen, and there's also been rumors that
the pair have a child together. But now there's some
paperwork and the woman Killey Anderson owns a tanning salon
(01:00:44):
and she has said, according to this paperwork, to have
been in a relationship with doctor Dre with whom she
had a child. So when anybody works there, she has
some sign of confidentiality agreement that they would not pry
into her life and that they would keep all things
that they learned about her life private. Well, according to
this paperwork, she ended up violating A person violated the
term of his employment by asking other employees, what they
(01:01:05):
knew about her, about her child, and what was the relationship,
the nature of her relationship with doctor dre So now
I guess that information is out about one of the
alleged mistresses as everything is being revealed in this lawsuit
with his ex wife and this bit of divorce. All right, Now,
Britney Spears and Madonna, that kiss that they had at
the two thousand and three MTV Video Music Awards is
(01:01:27):
being auctioned off as an NFT. Now the actual photo
of that kiss was taken by a Hollywood photographer, John Shearer,
and he's entering the NFT space with cryptograph, so it's
a one of a kind moment. They're also going to
be raising money for a good cause for GLAD. I
still think the NFT stuff is a scam a picture
because it's the original picture, but we don't really know
(01:01:48):
if it is the original picture, but it is the
original picture. It's being taken by the will. And then
the good thing about it is that every time you
sell it over, the person who originally owned it still
gets a percentage if it sells again and again and again,
so you continue to make money off of the NFT.
What does the NFT stand for about the way non
non fungible token. I think that's what it is, something
like that. What does that mean? It's the original of whatever?
(01:02:13):
Awesome land man, focus some stocks something that you could
I don't know. Listen, a lot of times people question
things when they're new, but you also don't want to
miss out on them, right, But you're buying something that
you know ahead I can't speak on. I have no idea.
It's digital, so that's why it would be hard. It's
like using blockchain technology so that it can't be replicated.
(01:02:34):
All right, Well that is your rumor report. And just
to be accurate. The baby he did have his charges
against him dropped. Yeah, his charges were dropped because it
was self defense. Yeah, he was charged with carrying a
concealed gun. Yeah. Actually he came up here right after that.
Let me came up here and spoke to us about
the whole thing. I don't no, No, that was the
other thing. That was the thing of this house. He
(01:02:54):
told that story told the first time he came here. Yeah,
all right, all right with charlemagn who are you giving
your okao? Man? This this really warrants a discussion. But
there's a married couple named John and Judy John Walworth
and Judy Corey. They need to come to the front
of the congregation. We would like to have a word
with them. Okay, we'll get to that. Next. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Your morning's will
(01:03:15):
never be the same. Our audible pick of the day
is Founding Fooboo by Damon John. The trailblazer of hip
hop fashion, started his revolutionary clothing line in his mom's house.
Here how he did it in this inspiring memoir. Sign
up for a free thirty day audible trial at audible
dot com. Slash Breakfast Club Maine. Say the gang don't
(01:03:37):
get out the shape man you are or don't you
donkey Today does not discriminate. I might not have the
song of today, but I got to don't get that.
So if you ever feel I need to be a
donkey man, give it with the Breakfast Club bitches. They
just don't kive Today Today. I'm very perplexed by this story.
(01:03:58):
Don't You Today? For Tuesday, October fifth, goales to a
now married couple named John Walworth and Judy Cowry. I
really don't know what kinds of relationships people be having
with their significant others. I don't judge. I just wonder
because I read stories like this and husband and wives
be doing things to each other that I would never
think of doing. Okay, not chad jing. Just wondering, all right,
(01:04:21):
Not telling people how they should move, just wondering what
the hell it's happening. Now. I know you're like, why
in the hell is this married couple getting donkey? In
the day, we'll gather around, ladies and gentlemen. I would
like to tell you a story. There was once a
man named John and Judy. He grew very fond. That's
all I got. I have no fairytale bass here, because
this story is not a fairytale. In fact, this story
(01:04:43):
actually makes me want to have a conversation with John
and Judy, simply because I would like to understand the
dynamics of their relationship. Maybe I can learn a thing
or two. Okay, Now, I've been with my wife twenty
three years, married seven I believe, proposing twenty thirteen, got
married twenty fourteen. Maybe I long eve been. I've been
when my wife twenty six married twenty when y'all got engaged,
I don't long y'all engage, not too long, maybe less
(01:05:07):
than maybe five to seven months? Seven months? Seven months?
Was there ever a point in you know that engagement?
Are you even in your life that you thought of
suing her? Fanny reason? Suing her? No? Yes, I'm not
a fool. If if you sued her when y'all was engaged,
do you think y'all wold have still gotten married? No way,
same feeling? Is not even a chance. Okay, not only
(01:05:29):
would I have not sued my wife if I did
sue her, Clearly I don't want to marry her, but
I guess we don't got that. John and Judy love.
Let's go to newsweek for the report. Please, A Cleveland
man who fell down the stairs after tripping over a
pair of his then fiance shoes cannot sue her despite trying,
a judge ruled on Thursday. John Walworth fell down the
stairs of his now wife, Judy Corey's basement in February
(01:05:50):
twenty eighteen and suffered several broken bones, as well as
eighty thousand dollars in medical bills. Walworth claimed he didn't
see the shoes because he was carrying the large box
into Corey's home. Her request the three judge panel ruled
that the shoes were open and obvious and that they
would have been seen by any person taking reasonable precautions.
According to records, Corey and Walworth have known each other
(01:06:10):
for decades, began dating in twenty fifteen, and became engaged
in twenty seventeen. They were married in May twenty nineteen
and remained married. I really don't understand John fell down
the stairs after tripping over a pair of his then
fiancee's shoes. It's his now wife, Okay, it was her
basement in February of twenty eighteen, suffered several broken bones,
(01:06:32):
as well as eighty thousand in medical bills. According to
court filings, John claimed he didn't see his shoes because
he was carrying a large box into her home at
her requests. There was a three judge panel that ruled
the shoes were open and obvious and that they would
have been seen by any person taking reasonable precautions. But
forget all that, I mean, don't forget all that, because
that's a big part of the story. But John and
(01:06:53):
Julie have known each other for decades. They began dating
in twenty fifteen. It became engaged in twenty seventeen, being
married in May twenty nineteen, and I'm still married. Now,
at what point is it okay to sue your fiance?
And at what point after your sue do you see
yourself saying, yeah, I'm gonna still marry this dude. I
have so many questions now. He was bringing four one
(01:07:15):
gallon vinegar jugs from Judy's car to her basement. He
tripped over her shoes, fell and broke bones in his
left arm and hand, underwent three surgeries and several months
of physical therapy. I want to know was Judy with
him throughout this whole process. If Judy was helping this
man through his rehab and he still attempted to sue her,
how in the hell did she still want to marry him.
(01:07:37):
Wedding vals safe for better, for words for Richard, for
poor and sickness and health to love in the chairs,
still death to us part. This is after marriage, though,
and even in marriage, those vials don't say anything about
your significant other suing you okay. His attorney argued in
court that Judy failed in her duty as a host
to protect a social guests from dangerous conditions that she
(01:07:58):
created her fiance they're going back and forth and caught
about whether or not her shoes were concealed or whether
they were out in the open. Man, forget all that.
How did these people still walk down and out together?
Business is business, But that's your fiance, your wife. I
can understand if y'all was getting divorced, or I can
understand if y'all didn't get married after he attempted to sue.
(01:08:19):
But I just need to know how. I need to
know why. I'm not mad at y'all. Y'all clearly more
healed than me. Okay, your relationship is clearly standing on
a solid foundation. I'm not saying mine isn't. I'm just
saying I don't see how the hell you sue your
fiance and still marries him. Is this common? It's this coming?
Am I missing something? I have no idea. I honestly
(01:08:42):
don't even know why this is stupid. It just feels stupid.
Therefore him giving it the credit it deserves for being stupid,
Please give John Walworth and Judy Cory the sweet sounds
of the Hamiltones. Oh no you are dokee the dagee,
(01:09:06):
oh the day ye. So they sued each other, and
they still went on. John sued Judy and then they
went on and they were engaged when he tripped and fell.
Now think about this, right, I know, I know it
sound crazy, mate, Please, I'm trying to find some clarity
to the situation. Close your eyes. No, close eyes. No,
(01:09:28):
me and you married? Right, No, men, you're about to me,
He goes. Okay, now I'm until you Me and you
are about to get married. Okay, I tripped. We come
up with this idea. You sue me, we get the money,
and we break it down anyway. Yeah, but it's gonna
cost me to sue you. We get the money back
to Why would I be suing you? I know what
you have. Yeah, but you're suing the insurance company. You're
suing a person. Yeah. It's now like coming out of
(01:09:50):
your pot, coming out of your pocket. Me and you're
about to get married. I sue you for let's say
a hundred thousand, we get sixty the lords. I think
you guys should do that so we can really understand
out we can pay for the wedding out of it
in Okay, Now you're making some sense. I'm just trying
to figure out. Now that makes a little bit. Now
we know how he's mine works, so they for nessing. Okay,
all right, now see that makes sense, and they probably
get a little bit of money for the wedding and
(01:10:11):
the honeymoon. You go. But the lawsuit you know, wasn't
wasn't able to go through the judge route against they try.
But I mean if that was the case, okay, I
can see that, all right, a little scam scam, thank
you man, all right, nopeen y'ays we're not married them.
I never closed my eyes. I'd never closed my eyes.
And if you imagine me close my closed my eyes,
something's wrong with you close clos Thank you for that.
(01:10:33):
Dog kay, better shut up. I tell if everybody would
change you a Tucky chain, better Tucky chain that you
better do, chay chain, chain chain. I'm not promoting anything,
you know you on video anything chain, I'm not promoting anything.
You know what you say? What do you say? The
body cap? That's right, that's right? You know, hey, drive
(01:10:57):
your dreams. Call shows coming up? All right? Now, we
have the eighty five South Show, my guys, Carlos Miller,
Chico Bean, DC, Young Fly. They're hosting the BT Hip
Hop Awards tonight. That's right, so we're gonna talk to
him when we come back to Don't Move. It's to
Breakfast Clog Morning the Breakfast Club the same morning, everybody,
(01:11:18):
it's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne, the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club have a special guest joining us, our
guys eighty five South Show. What up Fellas? What's going
on now? Tonight is a big night. You guys are
hosting the b ET Hip Hop Awards. Congratulations again, I like, yeah,
and congratulations to u. DJ Envy. You was on us,
(01:11:39):
You was on the Red Clop and hosted rested like
you was great, performed at a casino in the seventh
find me to the Move. I think you want back
minutes they made for me, the guy yelling in my ear,
get him out of here, Get him out of here,
and they'd be like, look at this, he ain't got
(01:12:00):
no shocks. Look at his ankle. They for twenty minutes.
I thought you were congratulating him because he won a
DJ of the Year award or something, since you guys
already know he did. No, no, no, we don't know
no win ms. Give you spill tea for a living.
They didn't told us don't let nobody know who won.
The first thing you say is who won. So he
(01:12:22):
did win. He didn't get Angela. They didn't give out.
I didn't seen him win, No he need I was there.
I didn't tell you what he did win, though he
won Suit of a Night when he came out with
the catfish skin suit. You one. I'm gonna tell y'all
something though y'all know y'all killed it last year. Oh,
(01:12:42):
y'all gonna acknowledge DC, young fly. He's been saying, y'all,
D D D D. I'm on here, man, Oh, what up? DC?
I ain't even seen you. Can't y'all, don't y'all don't
miss me get y'all didn't see you, bro. Y'all doing
a whole interview without me. Man, we thought you were
sleeping or something. I wasn't. I wint on y'all. Let's
(01:13:03):
talk about the fact that their friend they had us
like we were traggetting the club. We was in the
lobby of the Zoe. I don't like being in the
lobby of Zoos, my bad man. We had soldier boy
on man o soldier God well, we were the first one, right,
(01:13:26):
boy soldier. But y'all know y'all killed it last year
because it was virtual, and they bought y'all back to
do it live, and if y'all know, y'all beast on
that live stage, so it only makes sense. Mo deaf man,
We love man. You know. You know, all were doing
is is being professional and leaving it up what we
do already. You see what I'm saying. So it's like,
all right, eighty five South got a host. Eighty five
(01:13:48):
South gotta be the host of BT Award. Okay, eighty
five South gotta do this. So it's like we we
really just leveling up in elevator already what we already
be doing. So what was the difference? What was this
between last year truly and actually being there to people?
It was actually a lot more work because we didn't
have nothing to work with. I mean, the you know,
we were in the studio just making it happen. But
(01:14:11):
you know, it's like you said, we used to the
live show format, so it was just it was easy
breezing for me. This it's really just about the energy
that you get to feel. You know, It's a certain
energy that you feel when you're amongst other people and
you get to see the response that people have live
to what it is that you do, because you're not
just performing for the people that live force, you performing
for all the people that's gonna watch. But the energy
(01:14:32):
you get from the people that are there just drives
it up, you know what I mean. It makes it
feel more big and energetic, just being able to be
amongst people. So that was the best part, just being
able to feel that exchange of energy again. Because y'all
roast anybody at all? I asked up before y'all y'll say,
YA might have to rule some people, did y'all rolls
to anybody in the in the audience? No, but we've
seen ya suit though. Wait, y'all see this soup. Y'all
(01:14:55):
think we're playing for when you see this suit? He
had to suit on like dude out the window. That's
the type of suit he had. All he looked like
by athers hours from now to five, brain and get
some get on some oil in your draveway and then
make that look. That's what the sup looked like. We
(01:15:16):
had a little debate up here about I said this, right,
I said, b teacher, try to lock eighty five South
showing for next year already. Now, if they did try
to lock you guys in for next year. Would you
be down for that or do you feel like now
we gotta wait? I mean exactly to it in exactly.
(01:15:36):
And I found about that that we thought, you know,
we thought we was you know, we did it two times,
but we're the first ones to do it virtually. But
we seen Mike Epps did it five times. So you know,
I mean, they definitely can lock us in again for
next year. We try to get the record too, you know,
so he definitely the price is gonna go up though.
I mean, you know you ain't gonna be able to
(01:15:56):
put me in this year yesterday's price. It's not not
That's exactly what I said, ye meeting anybody, because I
know there was a lot of legends in there, ll
Cool j a lot of people out there any at all.
And this this is the one that I was outstide
handling some business and they was like, hey man, you
come in here, this fat Joe need to hold at you.
(01:16:18):
And I was like, the hill fact, Joe need to
hold me. He ain't never needed to holt me. That
was the only I was like, what he but didn't
that happen? He really needed to hold that, so did
anybody anybody gets six of them over y'all roasting them?
(01:16:39):
Anybody really come in and do that? Too? Crazy? I
feel like I heard say name. No you ain't saying
no name, carlaj he kicked us off his little red carpet. Okay,
why gonna be my little red carpet? You know, man,
I just you know you asked about who was starstruck.
Every time I see Nby and he remember my name,
I feel special. He did sound I see him, he'd
(01:17:01):
just be like, hey, man, what's up, dude? From that
thing you don't remember my name from? Stop? Man? That
was cool. He called you Clayton Inglis the first three
times he called you Clayton the first three times. Oh yea,
he was up, you know, salute to him. He was
dead too, so I was, you know, it was. It's
always good when DJ every remember you, not chopped figuring
out I'm dressed like a house, because he had definitely
(01:17:23):
remember me if I was dressing like some real estate
and he tried to flip and you don't want him
to flip your ass now, chick, chicken, your ass now
too far? Let me call man. He good, you know, Yeah,
he grateful at least two. I had to ask Chalmin
(01:17:47):
on your wall, cheeko, who that is? Charmaine on your
wall to the right, that her tough man? That ain't man?
Y'all better cut it out. That man playing too much.
(01:18:11):
I haven't got more with the eighty five South Show.
When we come back to Don't Move, it's to Breakfast Club,
Go Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We're still kicking
it with the eighty five South Show. Of course, they're
hosting the Beet Awards, the Hip Hop Awards tonight at
nine pm. Gee, now listen. I gotta ask you if
you had to say who had the hip hop Album
(01:18:33):
of the year? All right, when it comes to money
bag Yo Tyler, the creator Megos Magda, Stallion, Kalid, twenty
one Savage and Metro Booming or J Cole, who would
you give album of the Year to hip Hop Album
of the Year from the that guy? I forgot the
list right now, Barty bag Yo Tyler, the creator Egos Magda, Stallion, Callid,
(01:18:58):
twenty one Savage and Metro Booming. Jacole who had Album
of the year. Oh man, she trying. She's trying to
get y'all to tell her, man, no, nothing real, try
to that's the best way I would. I would give
Album of the Year to who y'all bumped as the
soldier boy. That's why you know I'm gonna put the
(01:19:20):
album of a year or two, just make the stallion
she deserved. Man, she don't never wear no clothes, but
she ain't got cold. She danced, I know she t
That's why I just love man. She just she don't
want everything went up to me. How how are you
gonna ask this to the question asually to get mad
and ain't sufficient enough. That's why her rapping, because I
(01:19:47):
just chromo with it had the same clothes on like
from the video with boots and the little drums and
clothes on. Man, this is the reason to get somebody
album of the Yellow. No, that's not the exact same outfit,
but they won't put no and maybe working. I liked it.
(01:20:13):
She got the boots and the braws. First she got
too much talent, but then to just not put no
clothes on the man, that's fact, and that's fact, and
that's he could do more thing. She's man that's not
the boots and little come on bro and got videos
(01:20:34):
for clothes off. No an old outfit. Yeah, but y'all
acting like that's not her choice. Though I'm not saying
it's her choice. I'm just saying I think that sometimes
she gotta say, you know what, I'm just gonna put
my rebox on and do this right here for the hood. Well,
(01:20:55):
I mean put her nikes on. Then you know what's funny.
And they gotta and they got a picture of himself
young in the outfit just like that. You don't have
them little shorts with it, man, the cow man, don't
(01:21:16):
judge that man. We were born in the seventies. Y'all
wasn't born in no seventies. You know that was the
style back then. Now, cow, but you had the shorts
ready to see some of the pictures you got from
old Get you the beach at the first wall, and
no no putting up I no, no, no pictures that
(01:21:39):
you already got. Sharlom off than that man. Man, stop
talking about my great great grandmama like that man, that's you,
sharlot man. You reincrd NATed. We know I wanted to
look cheek go too because you know Chico On. You
(01:22:02):
know he's on the Gods on his Truth My Late
Night show and this week, man, he did something special
with ice wear vessel Man at Inception in Form. I
want to stay out Carlos Miller in that case. You
know what I'm saying. He was our mastery of comedy.
So shout out to Carlos Miller. That's right. Yeah, I
was about to say you did that. I didn't even
know that. What that is? Who? Man? Hey lor picture on?
(01:22:27):
Hey loo? I had your picture on the show Friday
Lows because I was talking about black men don't cheat.
I showed your picture twice on the show. Man, Hey man,
I appreciate it. All right, where we go again eighty
five South tonight, b et make sure you tune in
(01:22:50):
and we appreciate you brothers. Man must love love. We
appreciate your love. Man. See y'all, I'm like a club
fell definitely when when you flip your ass, don't say nothing.
(01:23:12):
Chill out? Breakfast the breakfast club. What's so funny? Life
is beautiful? How are y'all this morning? Y'all feel good? Yeah?
(01:23:32):
I'm sending healing energy to everybody out there who needs it.
I hope you feel blessed black and Holly Favorite this morning.
What's happening? What about for the people that's not black?
You know, I hope they feel blessed and whatever they
are and Holly favored, they should embrace it. There you go,
you know, But I don't know why we have to
do that. I was sluting black people. Okay, why can
we just leave it? Come morning, everybody. I hope everybody
feels good. I'm selling anybody. I think I was being
(01:23:54):
very specific when I said I'm blessed black and Holly Favorite,
and I hope everybody else out there is too that.
What about that Dominicans out there that's listening. You're not
even Dominican. I didn't say, oh yeah, we said what
about the domin Either claim your set or don't one
or the other. Are you Dominican or not? This is
your final answer. You're a liar. You're a liar. Supposed
to say that's the cat chain. Bro, all right, you're
(01:24:16):
not supposed to be promoting I'm not promoting nothing, man,
Let's get your rum let's talk sage. Still it's about
report angela Ye on the Breakfast Club. So ESPN personality stage.
(01:24:36):
Still was on the Uncut with Jay Cutler podcast, and
on there she was discussing different things like racial identity,
since you guys are talking about race and also having
to identify as a single race because she is biracial.
She's African American and Irish Italian. So she also was
told that Barack Obama chose black and he's bi racial.
And here's what you had to say to that, when
(01:24:58):
you call out your sensets. I'm like, well, I don't
know when the last time I filled out my senses was.
But if they make you choose a race, She's like,
we're gonna put I a walt boat. She's like, well
you can't. He was what Barack Obama chose black and
he's by racial. I'm like, well, congratulations to the president.
That's his thing. I think that's faint and considering his
black God does know where to be found. But as
(01:25:18):
white mom and grandma racing, But hey, you do you,
I'm gonna do me. What does that mean? I don't
even understand what she's trying to say, Like, your father
not being in your life determines what your racist? Yeah,
I mean he identifies he's black. If that's the case,
I know a lot of brothers and sisters shouldn't identify
black then either, Like is that something that just applied
to by racial people? Like the logic not logic, And
(01:25:40):
I don't know what does she claim? She says she's
by racial, but that's not on the census, right, so
that's she has doesn't remember the last time she' filled
one out anyway, so apparently she's not even feeling out
the senses. Isn't that illegal? Ah, it's not illegal. They
just encourage you to do that. They're gonna want to
get resources to resources for your community and then you
should fill it out. Well, that's very irresponsible to her,
(01:26:01):
It is definitely irresponsible. And another thing that she talked
about and I just want to play both of these
because I want to talk about what Jamil Hill had
to say to her on Twitter. But she also talked
about the way that women dress, women journalists and how
they get her rest. I mean, I've had talks with
young women and I've said to the a couple of them,
They're like, well, would you look at my tape? Would
you do this? And I've said, listen, I would love to.
(01:26:23):
But the way that you present yourself It's not something
I want to be associated with. So when you dress
like that, I'm not saying you deserve the gross comments,
but you know what you're doing when you're putting that
outfit on too, Like women are smart, so don't play
ki and put it all on the guys when we
And again I'm not saying it but deserves anything, but
we need to be responsible as women too now. Carrie
(01:26:46):
Champion tweeted out lesa, my dad wasn't around when I
was younger. I'm still black, And Sarah Spain tweeted a
reminded to women journalists and women everywhere that what you
wear should have no effect on whether or not you're
safe at work. Jamil hill So tweeted to on top
of thinking former President Obama shouldn't identify as black because
he didn't have a relationship with his black father, Stage
(01:27:07):
still also thinks female journalist who dress a certain way
know what you're doing when you're putting that outfit on
clown behavior. I would love to know who those young
women were she was talking to, Like, I wonder how
that message would received like that. I wonder how a
young woman in her field would take that. Like hearing
Stage still tell them, you know, he shouldn't dress a
(01:27:28):
certain way. I wonder how they received that as young
girls in the business, right, because really it is that men.
If there's an issue with men having things to say
about how your dress, they're the ones that really need
to be addressed how they look at women and what
they have to say about that. So and I also
feel like it doesn't matter what you do, people are
going to criticize it. They'll be like, oh, that dress
is too short, is too tight? Iss to this is
(01:27:49):
too that you shouldn't be wearing that Nobody should be
judging you based off of how you're dressed. I also
wonder how you named after something that brings so much peace,
Like I literally burned stage to clean spaces of negative energy,
but this stage just bought all this negative energy. They
still canceled it. Jesus Christ. Okay, now, my god. Now.
Cynthia Bailey has revealed the reason that she left The
(01:28:10):
Real Housewives of Atlanta. She did open up during a
news daily pop and here's what she had to say.
It was time. Was it a mutual decision? Well, I
have been thinking about it for a while, Like, you know,
just the whole transition, like I knew it wasn't anna
last forever, and I felt like, you know, ten years
is a good run. Then the whole thing happened with
(01:28:31):
us going on Hiata, so they gave me more time
to think about it, and then I got really used
to not really going back. And when they did come back,
they actually offered me a friend contract, and I thought,
you know what, that may be a perfect way for
me to transition. And then I just thought, you know
what got the court. She can't be demoted to friends
after being that's like going from being the main piece
(01:28:52):
of the side piece. You got it, It's time to go. Yeah,
that lets you definitely know it's time to go. I
know who's on the new cast or I've seen what
one or two people, but I wonder who else. I
saw Claudia Jordan and Shamari Devot putting it out there like,
hey guys, we were one season wonders. We were ready
to come back. Maybe start giving them slices of peaches,
like you know, like the main cast members have a
(01:29:13):
whole peach with everybody else got like sliced. Nobody would
have hold one slice of peach when they also give
them a couple, a couple of slices, they hold the peach.
I know a CON's wife. I know who else was there?
What's the lady that came back? Remember the mansion? I
can't remember my name came back? You don't watch a girl?
(01:29:35):
I mean, that'll be interesting to see that. People want
Fager back still. Yeah, all right, well that is your
rumor reports. All right, thank you, miss ye the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club Now. I shout out to
royst To five nine four two, Doug fab fifty, Ice
Web Vessel. They are all confirmed to have their cars
(01:29:56):
at my car show in Detroit. So I'm excited about that.
I got a lot more surprises for Detroit. So if
you haven't got your tickets, get your tickets. It's it's
gonna be a big family day, all right. It's you
name it, exoted cast, celebrity calls, great food, amusement rides,
carnival games. We're gonna be doing giving kids candy for
the for the best cost to them. So it's a
lot going on. So if you haven't got your tickets,
(01:30:17):
get your tickets, right, And I want to suit everybody
that's coming to the Mental Wealth ex Bowl. This Sunday
World Mental Health Day. Man. You know, it's my first
ever Mental Wealth ex Bowl. It's gonna be a day
of mental health and healing education. We got a bunch
of different panels and breakout rooms and it's gonna be
you know, vendors there. So you know, if you're looking
to get started on your healing journey, you know, um,
(01:30:41):
I will have a lot of different people and resources
that can that can get you on the good foot, Okay.
And it's free and it's open to the public. And
it's this Sunday from eleven am to four pm at
the Marriott, Marquee and Time Square. You can go to
Mental Health Exbowl dot com for more information on that.
Can't wait to see y'all on Sunday, man, so we
can love on each other and you know, just enjoy
(01:31:03):
the day. It's gonna be a fun time. Well, I mean,
it's gonna be a lot of different people that you
know what I'm saying. You know, I got a panel
with my man, Jay Bartnette, Jason Wilson, and Ryan Munday
that Maxwell will be moderating. I'm definitely gonna be loving
on them. You know. My good sister Debbie Brown she's
doing her podcast dropping Jim's Live there with my good
sister Ania co Pax. Everybody, everybody that goes, you're gonna
(01:31:23):
be loving them. Maxwell is gonna be there, not that Maxwell,
oh Maxwell, Maxwell Jones. Yeah, Yeah, I'm definitely gonna be
um loving all my people. It's a damn mental health
education in healing, you know what I mean. Shanty Dodg
is gonna be there. She's moderating a panel with Doug
Reed and David Johnson Andrea Brown. That panel is just
about racial trauma and mental health. But we got a
(01:31:46):
whole lot of things going on, man, eleven am to
four pm. I'm gonna be there the whole time. So
pull up on us on Sunday, all right, when we
come back. We got the positive Notice the Breakfast rug
below holding everybody is Angela ye guy, we are the
Breakfast Club. Oh and listen slew to the eighty five
South Show. We didn't think Carlos watching. Are the eighty
(01:32:07):
five South Show. For pulling up today and this Thursday,
make sure you catch us in Atlanta. Man, We're celebrating
the Black Effect Podcast Networks one year anniversary with live
podcasts event hosted by Flame mun Row with my homegirls,
my niece Wheezy and Mandy B. They'll be doing Horrible
Decisions live, and we got the eighty five South Show, DC,
(01:32:28):
Young Fly, Carlos Millian, Chico Bean also doing their podcast live.
Go to Black Effect dot com slash b Live, you
know to get more information and to get your tickets. Okay, okay,
now I'm Shuloman. You got a positive note, I do.
I first want to tell people too, man, thank you
for everybody that's been subscribing to the Gods Honest Truth
podcast courtesy of Comedy Central and the Black Effect iHeartRadio
(01:32:53):
podcast network. It's available everywhere you subscribe to podcast right now.
So if you missed the show on Friday night, the
show comes on Friday nights at ten pm on Comedy
Central to God's on This Troop, but the podcast of
the show comes out on Mondays, so it's available right now.
So salute to everybody that's been, you know, subscribing to
that and downloading that. And the positive note is simply this,
(01:33:15):
don't let history repeat itself. You have the power to
stop the patterns. Breakfast Club, y'all finish it, y'all dumb