All Episodes

November 10, 2021 85 mins

Today on the show we had comedian and friend to the room Aida Rodriguez who spoke on her special "Fighting Words", cancel culture & Latina representation in comedy. Moreover, Charlamagne gave his "Donkey of the Day" to a Utah man who shot at his father over wrong order of chicken wings, and Angela helped some listeners out during "Ask Yee".

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FM

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
And Charlomagne the guy my dad asked up the breakfat
club is kay yok yokay. I love coming here. I'm
never not gonna come here. You guys are good to
me and lietuna them. I was gonna good deal for
a lot of people in hip hop generation. The breakfast
club is where people get the information on the topics,
on the artists and everything like that. In that aspect,

(00:24):
radio is still important. The breakfast club on my name,
come up, respect it. 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 yo yo yo yo yo yo.
Good morning in Jolo y goad money. He's Charlomagne the guy.

(00:44):
Peace to the planet. Guess what day it is, Guess
what day it is? A good morning, Good morning to you.
How are you? I'm doing great? How are you guys
doing it? And blessed black and highly favored, happening man,
happy to be alive, happy to be here. Life is good,
Life is good. Can't complain now, shout out to La doon.

(01:06):
We know La doone. He does close the line. My
God versed my enemies. Okay, he's also an actor. He's
an actor. He's been in Power, he's been in a
couple of sitcoms and movies. And yesterday was his birthday.
So you had a little shin dig out in Jerseys Saturday. Okay,
wasn't a popular get together. Everybody just you know, celebrating

(01:28):
his life and showing him a lot of love. So
happy birthday. A good guy, yes, doing all. He always
pulls up to my TV show, The God's Honest Truth.
He always comes to the tapings quite often. Well, yesterday
when I see him, I had a Rodriguez. She was
at dumble House doing a talk because there are specials
out on HBO Max. So that was nice. I have
this um. Dumble House is part of this thing called

(01:49):
Soho House for people who don't know about it. It's
like some um. You have to pay an annual fee
to be able to go to the different Soho houses
and they have these different events there. So she is
talking there to promote her special Yeah, they just don't
let anybody there. They decline a bunch of celebrities. It's
for for people that are well off or no people. No, no,
that's not really what it's for. It's actually they don't

(02:11):
like you to First of all, when you go there,
they tell you they don't like people to wear suits there.
They want you to come like super casual. They don't
want it to be like a stockbrokers thing. And they
give discounts to people under a certain age too, so
that they want to make it more like a fun, artistic,
creative type of environment. Also rich, I'm just happy to
have a costcool card. Okay, So yeah, I ain't paying
for that. And for people who don't know who Ida Rodriguez,

(02:34):
she'll be here this morning, Yes, comedians, she'll be joining us.
She has a special out right now, so we'll kick
it with her. If you saw Tiffany Hattish is um
Day Ready Special that Ida was on the Day Ready
Special as well. You know what I'm gonna do this week,
And I'm gonna try to see if I can get
a Sam's Club card. You don't have a sample. Why
would you have to see if you can get one?
You can go online right now and do it. No.

(02:55):
When I was in college, I allegedly stole out of
there and definitely they banned me. So I want you
still Samshu, are you still out of SAMs? What did
you steal? Everything comes in bulking SAMs, the DVD players
back in the day. How did you put it under
your jacket? No? No, no, no no, just quickly. So what
we would do We go on Sundays and we dress
up a neck like we're coming from church, me and

(03:15):
my friend little showing, you know, little show, and we
would go there with the shopping cart and we loaded
up with DVD players and then we just roll right out. Yeah.
I don't know if I would even trust that in SAMs.
You feel like you'll just get tackling the SAMs. And
Sam's got them metal detectives that don't play at all.
That was before that, So clearly you didn't get away
with it. No exactly. Ain't no stealing out of SAMs.
Let me just take this DVD player and walk out.

(03:37):
Ain't no getting out of ants, stealing out of SAMs,
and no stealing out of Costco. I don't think. I mean,
if somebody has ever accomplished those goals, good for you.
I don't think it's possible. Somebody told me that's why
I got You know, in certain stories, they're not allowed
to stop you if you still I found this out,
So people will just walking take stuff and the people
that work there just can't do anything. Oh no, this
is back in the day of the tackle me in college,

(03:59):
tackling in Costco saying I don't really feel that way.
They're not playing about Costco SAMs. I'm gonna well, yeah,
well I'm good at Costco. I would just say you
try Sam's Club. Have your wife do it, have your
wife's steal. All right, let's get the show cracking front
page News. What we're talking about. Well, since you're talking
about stealing, let's talk about what's going to be even

(04:19):
more expensive. As you can see, prices are going up,
and we'll talk about certain options that we're used to
being cheap that are now about to get even more expensive.
All right, we'll get into that. Next. It's to Breakfast
Club morning. Everybody you see j Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. Let's get into
Front page News. What we're starting you, Well, let's start

(04:40):
with things that are about to be more expensive in
the grocery stores. And they said even hot dogs, burgers
and Delhi meats are about to get more expensive. Now
a lot of things have gone up. Higher end meat
cuts like steak, velle, pork chops. Those prices have surged
over the past year, but things like ground beef and
lunch meat haven't gone up too much. Hot Dogs actually
cost less than they were at the same time last year.

(05:00):
But now they're saying all those prices are about to
go up. Inflation is real. Inflation is real. I'm no
financial like for it. What I was always told of,
inflation is the sign of a healthy economy, and this
usually happens after like you know, there's there's there's a
there's a downturn, like like after a global pandemic, because
this is like economic recovery is what they call. But
the problem is on people making more money to pay

(05:23):
for that stuff. Like you look at gas prices shooting
up and all these or people making more money. I
don't think so, I don't know if they're making more money,
but I know people are more willing to spend when
they when they when they have more money, So I
guess because of that's probably all gone now. But all
those PPPs and I think that's done. Unemployment, people who
had a lot of bread and corporations raise prices when
people are buying more, it's just hard to also have

(05:45):
to pass those prices to the customers, Like I know
in the juice bar, the price that everything has gone up.
It's impossible to even get shipments of cups. We used
to get boxes of cups in and now they only
let you order one at a time, one box, so
we're always low on cups. And then the car has
gone up tremendously, and then it's hard because then you
have to tell customers, well, now we got to raise
the price on this because it's costing us so much

(06:07):
more so, and I'm noticing things are locked up now
more in CBS and Walgreens, Like I don't ever remember
deodorant being locked up like it is now. And I
see a lot of shells empty, like certain things that
you used to try to buy and they go in
the store and you're like, where's all the products all right? Now?
Congress has a new requirement for automakers. They want you
to find a high tech way to stop people from
drunk driving. So it's one of the mandates that they

(06:29):
have aimed at improving auto safety because there's been a
lot of fatalities on the road it's part of that
one trillion dollar infrastructure package that Joe Biden is expected
to sign soon. So they said monitoring systems to stop
intoxicated drivers would to roll out in all new vehicles.
This is going to happen as early as twenty twenty six.
I'm not mad at that. I don't know how to
ask gonna work. Remember when they used to they had
that seatbelt thing at one time where the seatbelt automatically

(06:51):
came down on you. You know what I'm talking about. No,
it was a thing with a seatbelt. I tell you.
It does work though, when it starts beeping NonStop and
you like put your seatbelt, that works. I know in
some cars they have the thing where you have to
actually blow into the device before you can start the car. Right,
you know what, I think it's stupid. You know the
brother who you know killed the young lady that played
for the Raider as well as his name Henry Ruggs. Yeah,

(07:14):
this call was going one hundred and fifty six miles power? Right,
Why should a car go one hundred and fifty six
miles power? Why should a regular car that you drive
in the street go one hundred and fifty six miles power.
Why speed limits most places of seventy eighty miles power?
Why would you have a car that goes that fast?
Why would you have a card that goes over the
speed limit? A lot of people track those cars, those

(07:34):
those sports caused a lot of people track them. Do
what you mean when you say tracks, and they put
them on the track and they go around the track
like race car drivers. You can you're allowed to buy
cars to go on the track. Like a lot of
people got buy those high performance cars to go on
the track. But it feels to me like automatic weapons,
right Like I'm not like when you the big joints
like the AK forty sevens and the choppers, It's like,
why make those for sale for regular everyday people? Right? Well, currently,

(07:55):
convicted junk drivers have to use breathalyzer devices that are
attached to an ignition interlock. They blow into the tube.
It disables the vehicle if they're a level is too high.
But the legislation doesn't specify what technology. It just has
to pass the performance of a driver of a motor
vehicle to accurately identify whether that driver may be impaired.
I think that's a positive thing. I think so all right,

(08:16):
well that is your front page news. A little annoying,
but it's definitely safe for everybody. A hunt of us
since people since that day was don't work for whatever
reason and they lifts and whatever else, like ride so
many ride chairs out here now, it's like kind of
crazy to get called drunk driver. Yeah, one poor decision
can affect your life, people's lives that you don't even know,

(08:37):
people around you, people in the car with you. So
I just would see it having a problem, like you're
blowing it. It It wouldn't start. You wouldn't drunk, like I
just see having a problem. But I think it would.
I think it would definitely help with a lot of
people because you used to. When you blow it, it it
starts right. Get it off your chest eight five one.
If you need to vent, hit us up right now.
Maybe you had a bad morning, a bad night, maybe

(08:57):
a coworkers being annoying so early in the morning, whatever,
and maybe talking about power one. Wake up, wake up.
You're trying to get it off your chats. We want
to hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello, who's
this hid your morning? Just Dessandra from New Jersey, Sandra, Hi,

(09:23):
and I want to talk about the missing girl from
East I heard it. I heard that she went to
the store and they believe she was possibly kidnapped. Yeah,
she went to the store. But what I'm not understanding
and why did it take Eastars police and my book
friends and Trance we had take my book friends. Why
didn't take some mom a two weeks to really put
out information about the young lady being missing? And then

(09:45):
from my understanding talk about after the out of jackson Um,
there was no we put out from falla fob or
something like that to notified other police departments that you know,
somebody is missing. None of that took place. So FBI
was informed we out looking before last night and another city,
another town rather and when the police offers at ride,

(10:05):
you had no idea what we were talking about because
he didn't get this a mixed tobour. Even now we're
going to almost a month. Wow, she's been missing since
October fourteen. That's fourteen, she's fourteen. Wow, So why didn't
we have to put that information out before long? Right?
Only for if they missed in a car. I think

(10:27):
ambler is only for car because I think they look
for a car. But I'm not one hundred percent show.
But that information should have been on a long time ago.
I just heard it this morning for the first time.
I'm just hearing about it right now. Right, that's that's
and that's how do we do this here? And you know,
you guys know everything. How did you guys how this
here about her? Yeah, you're right, and I live in Jersey.

(10:47):
I saw it on the news this morning because of
the reward money that they have for Because of the
reward money, so today we talked to the office probably
going to do a print comfence and probably announced more money.
So you're gonna our people are been in farm because
the money and father. But how did you guys and
other people just now knowing about the fourteen ye old
girl business? Right, I'm just I'm just saying about it

(11:09):
because of you. What's her name? Even? So hard now?
So I'm gonna saying day four because it's very hard
to for now. I think it's like just more very sad,
very sad. Is there any way that you guys can
utlamin also back here abi this year my good friends
should Resember fact his daughter was ruled out her house.

(11:31):
Don't even in your town and your stats. I come
out of twigs, ruled out her house by her girlfriend
and Hawks brofriend boyfriend, and they started until they saw
her eleven times he shilled her. So I think I
heard about that. Yeah, the police department down here did
the same thing. They waited for like weeks before they
even Shay coming help. But because three, you know, was

(11:52):
adding about fighting his daughter, he went down here. He's
a black skater. He went down there with the panthers
and they looked for his daughter. He's not fire, just
doing them. I'm the boy listening and we we just
talk about it a little bit more excited on mine. Absolutely,
you're talking about it now because you know somebody sometimes
when we I mean, we can't hear everything. And like
I said, I'm from Jersey and I just heard it
this morning. I'm about to post her on my Instagram

(12:14):
and every shank you form for calling and filling us in.
Thank you so much, thank you, Thank you guys so much. Alright, now, hello,
who's this Nick? Nick? What up? Getting off your chess?
And many so I'm going to tell you said why
was you going to car? It goes one hundred lost
hour because the boy up the raiders. You know street order,

(12:35):
yes to the street anyway, So you know what I mean?
Thank you all saying like you know it's America, right,
So why would you want to car it go that first? Well,
why would you want to be limited to that same
machine gun? You know supposed to write their arm? Right?
What's the point? What's the point of the speed limit
is only eighty miles four? Like you got you gotta
tell you, gotta give me a reason why you driving
on a highway and you have to go one hundred
plus miles pole, especially when the speed limit is only

(12:58):
eighty Like, tell me why what's the point on the
Maybe I don't know the very really too many for real,
but other reasons why you're to go that fast? The
only thing is why would they limit shoot? Want to
go because you because because people? Because you can kill
yourself and you can kill other people, even if you're
not drunk, just going that fast, you could kill somebody. Yeah,
I mean I kind of agree. And I got a
lot of hot performance cars that go fast, and you

(13:20):
could hit probably over two hundred miles an hour. I've
never wanted to go that fast, and if he wanted
to go close to that fast, but I mean, I agree.
I mean, I don't think cars should go one hundred
and sixty miles four when the speed limit is only
eighty maybe in Europe where it is the old Obama
where you can go any however fast you want. But
I also believe that in in machine guns, I don't
think civilians should have machine guns. I don't care if
you're going hunting, you don't need to shoot it dead

(13:42):
thirty six times while I ruined that meat. Yeah, that's
just my person, and I believe in the right to
bear arms, But having a machine gun for a civilian,
I just don't think that makes sense. So you called
up here to debate something that you don't even really
have a clear argument, though I was actually I looked
it up because they were saying in some countries, like
the German Auto Bond, you can go over that, you

(14:03):
can go over one hundred miles per hour. And they
also said in order for cars to be able to accelerate,
you know how they'd be like, oh, it goes from
zero to sixty in this many seconds, it also has
to have the ability to go that fast for the acceleration.
I don't see the point, and we don't we don't
sixty because zero to sixty eight, I mean certain cars
I got calls point sixty two two, But I just
don't know. I mean, you don't have all those cars.

(14:23):
But it's just I've never thought about, you know what,
I'm gonna go one sixty today. I mean some people do.
By the way, we don't have an autobon. And if
you're going over one hundred miles per hour and you wreck,
you're you're guaranteed to die. But you know, only difference
is they make cars that are different for Europe, that
are different for America, that is different for Toronto, that's
different from Japan, because sometimes you can't even bring those
cars over here unless you fix them to, you know,

(14:46):
to meet American standards. So they said it almouth, the
amount of power has if you lower how fast it's
able to go the efficiency of the engine. All right, Well,
chess eight hundred five eight five one five one. And
we could also a limit on their causes. I got
a limited on my son's call. My son has the
same exact corvette that the young man drove, and my
son can't go nearly that fast. Logan Hold seventeen about

(15:08):
eighteen seventeen just because he can do one fifty, he
may say effic one day he can't. I got a
limit of on that and that's good though. What I'm saying,
imagine all the people who don't. They just want to
hit the friends and somebody. It's the point, get it
off your chests. Eight hundred five eight five one on
five one. It's the breakfast club. Good morning. The breakfast
club is your time to get it off your chests,

(15:34):
whether you're man or blast. So you better have the
same in We want to hear from you on the
breakfast club. Hello, who's this dirt Jersey? Hold you? How
are you briefing so damn hard? What stands? You just
walked up? I'm gonna call y'all like Ella, and I'm
just like, I need to hear this out. Okay. I
found a complaint in just mons I put the privation

(15:56):
officer in New Jersey. They can't ask about what and
they illegally incarcerated him because I foiled a complaint because
they don't like black people. My nephew has mental health
issues and based on an evaluation, he qualified for not
guilty by reason of insanity at the time of the
sin and when he signed his plea she was she

(16:17):
was not on his medication, so they still sent it
to the prisoner because I found a federal lawsuit against them.
If you google my name right now, you'll see my
federal lawsuit Wesson name and O y R E. S
H I a last name d O N G. S.
I found several complaints of how they cheat black employees.

(16:38):
Black employees are treated like slaves. I found it with
no attorney. They said I was incompetent and suspending me
for not answering an email that was sent when I
was out of working f MLA. Damn. They came after
my nephew, my dad, she was eighteen at the time
to clo it out of hospitals. The diagnosaur was schizophrenia
and everything, and it hurts. I'm about to cry. I'm

(16:58):
trying to because you're dealing with me. Okay, I'm an adult.
I can deal with try racism, but you're coming out
to my innocent nest now he is solitary confinement dawn
because they trying to kill him in prison. You have
the correctional officers saying he and in for race. What. Yes,
I'm trying to I've been trying to get help. What's
those for the longer? Well? How can people reach you

(17:18):
in case there's any attorneys who are listening? Um, West State,
West City? Are you in Jersey, in New Jersey, in
Middlesex County? If you go to bomb Consulting. My IG
page is his go fund me. I need help. Okay,
I see you now, Okay, we got thank you, Mama. Hello,
who's this? Mike? Mike? What's up? Brother? I wasn't good man,

(17:38):
blessed black and Holly favor. What's happening now? Marsh? I
know you're not supposed to pat yourself on the back
too much in this life. You gotta be humble, but
I just want to say something about myself. During about
the holidays, I was thinking, like I just ain't because
I came from blank. I think a mother, came two
other brothers. Man, and I'm doing what's step and I

(18:01):
want to look at it. I got a m man,
I got I got beautiful kids. They gotta play, and
I'm doing really good. When I was a kid group
and everybody, I thought I won't be nothing, but I
can't to be like wise real good dude, and you
got a good and I got a cook crib and
I'm catch my fami day and I thank God for that.

(18:23):
There you go. That's all. That's every brother, and that
you should definitely tell yourself that every day. That's not
patting yourself on the back and so and if you
are so what, thank God, bro, thank God for it all.
I know. I know, man, and I can't believe it.
And and and my family like, oh, they're kind of
man that I turned out that way. I just thought
I was that way all up because I had my

(18:43):
home path. But I'm on a sup love it and
I am doing greed y'all. I'm telling you, I'm proud
of you, kid, I'm proud of you, but I'm doing
it so good. And I swear to God, I'm proud
of you. King. I am proud of you. Keep you
keep going and growing, don't stop. Get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five A five one oh five one. Now
we got rumors on the way, yes, and we are

(19:05):
going to talk about the sexiest man Alive for twenty
twenty one. Last year it was Michael B. Jordan according
to People magazine. So we'll tell you who is number
one on that list this year. I'll give you a hit.
He's in this room on this sheet of paper. All right,
we'll get to the next is the breakfast club. Good morning,
the breakfast club. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela yee, Charlemagne

(19:28):
the guy. We are to breakfast Club. Let's get to
the rumors. Let's talk Nas. It's about is the rumor report?
Angela need f the breakfast clubs. Well, this is a
beautiful thing. Nas has a podcast and he's also going
to be hosting with miss Info. So it is to

(19:50):
celebrate fifty years of hip hop as hip hop approaches
his fiftieth anniversary. It'll be exclusively on Spotify later this month,
and so the positions itself as a hip hop history
lesson in podcast forum. Here is the trailer. It's all
about the Bridge fifty years of hip Hop podcast. This
is our opportunity to go deep and explore how hip

(20:12):
hop went from the microphone, turntables and sound system to
big business and a worldwide culture phenomena. Yep. Every week
me and Nas talked to our personal heroes and the
creative forces that shaped hip hop and helped it grow.
You ever wonder what hip hop legends talk about behind
closed doors. I think that's gonna be dope. It is.

(20:34):
They're gonna be guests like Ice Que, Mary, Dave Blige,
GJ Jazzy, Jeff Corday, NAS's brother Jungle. So that's gonna
debut November sixteenth, and it will be new episodes premiering weekly.
Shout the Nas, Shout the miss Info. That's gonna be dope.
Dopey didn't do it. They're doing a doc on the
Showtime tog. Yeah, it's a series done Showtime too. So
the way that's working, it's a series of documentaries and

(20:56):
also a collection of new EPs from top tier hip
hop producers like Premiers with Beats and Hipaway, the celebrates
hip Showtime don't miss with documentaries. By the way at all,
I was watching the Attica last night on Showtime. Listen.
I told you that Teddy Pendergrass on Gregory One, Amy
Winehouse Woul Tang like Showtime absolutely mixed the best documentary

(21:18):
on a clues bons for Showtime. And since we're talking movies,
let's talk about On the Come Up. That's written by
Angie Thomas. Angie Thomas is the same person who wrote
The Hate You Give And you saw that member you
kept saying, I saw a thug. Well, this is another
book that she has. The movie you kept calling it thuge,
So on the come Up, So they have announced that

(21:39):
there'll be a pretty exciting cast. So now Lathan is
directing and co starring in it, so that's really dope.
meThe man Mike Apps is in it as well. I
see they also have Little YACHTI set to be in
it some way somehow, So we don't know who's gonna
be playing who, but I think that's exciting. And I
actually did this book on the come Up. It's a
young adult novel and I did this from my book

(22:00):
with some of these young girls and when I tell you,
the response was amazing to sit there and talk to
them and have them relate their real lives to This
book is such an amazing book. So I can't wait
to see On the come Up. Yeah, my daughter loves
Angie Thomas books. She read to Hate You. Given she
saw the movie and it was another movie. It's another
book she has one. Okay, I thought it was another
one other than that though. Now she's a young girl

(22:22):
who's a rapper, and uh yeah, so you know what
I'm saying. I thought Angie Thomas had other books. Oh,
I know another one. Those are two books that this movie.
They already had said they were going to adapt it
into a movie, like a couple like maybe three years
ago they were talking about it. So it's happening all
right now talking about people writing. And R Kelly's cellmate

(22:42):
in Brooklyn, a man who was convicted of threatening to
kill government officials, has a comic book now. The comic
book is depicting his life with R. Kelly and jail,
the two of them together. Brendon Hunt has submitted the
drawings to the Brooklyn Federal cart is part of his
former request to have his sentence be time served. And
so the features him and R Kelly meeting in a
jail cell and follows their day to day activities doing yoga,

(23:04):
listening to music, working out, and getting buffed together and
then they become quote unlikely friends. So he's hoping to
get this comic book put out all right. And congratulations
to Nicki Minade. Super Base has become ri Double a
certified Diamond. This one was released her before the streaming error,

(23:25):
she wrote, and she said she is very grateful for
her fans. Thank you for over a decade of support.
Barbed special Things to Esta, Deane Kane, Juice, till A Swift,
Sophia Grayson, Rosie Ellen Young Money, Cash Money and Republic Okay,
dropping a clues box with Nicki mina big accomplishment. It
is Ray. It's a hell of a plaque. All right,
Well that is your rumor reports. All right, we got

(23:46):
Front Page News Dex's what we're talking about. Yes, and
we are going to be giving you some updates on
what's happening with Matt Aarberry's trial. Con crem Rose that's
the name of it is. It was the prequel to
the Hate You Give You came out in January. All right, Yeah,
all right, Front Page? Who was the nextus? The Breakfast Club?
Good morning, So Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be
the same. One of Brother Pictures presents King Richard, based

(24:08):
on a true story that will inspire the world. Watch
Will Smith's portrayal of Richard Williams, father of two of
the greatest sports legends, Venus Serena and a Plan for
Greatness in theaters and on HBO Max King Richard, November nineteenth, rated, PG. Thirteen.
Morning Everybody is CJ mv Angela Yee, Charlemagne the gud
we are the breakfast club. Good morning, Let's get in
some front page news. What we're starting, well, let's start

(24:32):
with the trial for the three men who are being
accused of killing what they did kill Amada Aarbury. Now,
they said that the man who initiated the chase that
ended in a Mad Aarbury's death changed history about why
he suspected that Ahmad Aarbury was running in his neighborhood
and was a criminal. According to two police officers who
testified yesterday, Glenn County police officer Jeff Brandonberry told the

(24:57):
Jerry that Greg McMichael, one of the three white men
on trial for murder in the case, at first told
him that Arbury had been recorded by security cameras breaking
in all these houses out here. He later on shifted
his story and said that he only went into and
targeted a single home, one that was still under construction
with no doors or windows. It testified that McMichael told

(25:19):
them they had seen two or three videos that showed
this guy breaking into or being or wandering around into
this house. So Greg McMichael, his adult son Travis McMichael,
on the neighbor William Roddy Bryan are charged with murder
and other crimes in the death of Arbury. Prosecutors are
saying the men had no legal reason to pursue Arbury
with guns as there's no evidence that he committed any crimes.

(25:40):
They do have video where he can He can be
seen wandering through the open frames interior of the house.
He doesn't touch anything, and he ran after a neighbor
outside called police. Now, this was a house that's under construction.
There's no doors, no windows, and there were a lot
of people who would go in and wandering around the
house that was under construction, so it wasn't just him. Yeah,
I just wonder when you were a lawyer, how do
you feel defending like this? You saw that video? You know,

(26:01):
damn well, you see the same thing the prosecutor see that.
They had no reason to bother that man. He had
no weapons. They killed that man in cold blood for
no damn reason. How do you feel defending that. I'm
sure they're racist and if they really really believe that
something he did something, or he still called the police,
who are you? Because you can't like, who are you?
You think you're gonna chase somebody with a shotgun and
kill him and like they really chased him, cornering him.

(26:24):
And I know that has to be really hard for
his family to imagine what his last moments were like.
I mean, the sad part is they can see what
his last moments are like, that's even more traumatized. All right, now,
let's discuss One of our listeners called in this morning
to talk about Josiah Moore At, the fourteen year old
who has been missing since October fourteenth. The family is
holding a search held a search party yesterday on the

(26:44):
corner of Amhurs Street and Central Avenue in East Orange,
and there was also going to be a prayer vigil
that's going to be happening on Friday. So they have
since increased the reward of fifteen thousand dollars after an
anonymous local business owner's donation, and they are trying to
find her. She went to the store she was last
seeing around ten am at Poppy's Deli store in East Orange.

(27:05):
Her mother asked her to go and get some groceries.
The footage shows her entering the store with an older
male who paid for her items, and it does not
appear to show them leaving the store together. According to police,
she got home to her mom. She had lost the
card the family used for groceries, and so she told
her daughter to retrace her steps to find it. And
that was the last time that she saw her old
on so they the video camera shows her going in

(27:26):
but not coming out. No, it doesn't show them leaving
together with the guy that paid for the groceries. It's
an older guy who paid for her items. The footage
does not show them leaving the store together. So, yeah,
she went back home and realized she had lost the card,
went to go retrace her steps, and that was the
last time her mom had seen So when they retraced
the steps, did she go back to the store, did
they see that? We don't know. No, they don't know

(27:46):
where she went. That was just the last time she's
been seen when she went out of the house to
go retrace her steps. It bothers me that I'll live
in New Jersey and I'm just hearing about this story
this morning. Yeah, first time I heard about it was
this morning, Like that is something I'd have been involved
on sofa and whatever I can do to you know,
playing before that story, higladdus higladdus man. I mean that
is five foot five. She raised about one hundred and
thirty five pounds and she was last seen wearing khaki pants,

(28:10):
a black jacket and black boots. If you have any information,
please call the East Darns Police at nine seven three
two six six five zero four one. Lord a mercy
feeling energy to that family. Prayers up definitely for that family.
I hope they find, you know, I hope they find
that young lady alive, safe and shown. That's what I'm
hoping for. And that is your front page news. All right.

(28:31):
Now when we come back, Ida Rodriguez will be joining
us comedian. She has a special out right now, so
we're gonna talk to her with all right, so don't move.
It's to Breakfast Club Corning, the Breakfast Club, The Breakfast Club.
Your morning's will never be the same morning. Everybody is
DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we are the

(28:53):
Breakfast Club. Good morning. We got a special guest in
the building. That's right. What's up are you dad? I'm dude,
I'm happy to be here. What's up? How you're doing? So? Yes?
Special is out now. Congratulations, fighting words. It is on
HBO Max. Thanks, and it's not just a special. There's
also documentary components to it. That's a little trauma porn

(29:16):
for the white people who want to feel sorry for me,
They're gonna watch the nut. Yeah, but you went to
Puerto Rico and you went to the Dominican Republic while
you were filming this special, and so can you talk
about what that experience was like for you? You know,
I went to see my father. Um. I hadn't seen
my father since I was a baby, and I wanted

(29:37):
to document it. I wanted to see what it after
it happened, because it was in the moment and I
wanted to see it from outside. But I wanted to
normalize that. I wanted people who haven't met their fathers,
who meet them later in life to feel like release
the shame and the guilt because I used to be
ashamed of that. They used to always say you you

(29:58):
you were legitimate, you don't know your dad, you know
all that stuff when I was a kid, um, because
ghetto kids are cruel, and I was like, um, I
want to I just want to normalize that. I want
people this is not just a black and brown thing.
There are a lot of white people who don't know
their fathers whose fathers abandoned them, a lot of people
of different cultures, and for some reason, you always think
about it like he's Dominican and they're like, yeah, you know,

(30:20):
you're Dominican. Daddy got a lot of kids from a
lot of different people. They were right right. People kept
coming in and he'd be like, that's just this, yes,
facts and they all look different, like you know that
I know of with him six but that those are
the documented ones and not you know, maybe he's telling

(30:41):
the truth. I mean, but um, is that something you
always long for? Yeah? I needed to. It's so funny
because it just answered a lot of questions for me
why I have these issues and relationships with men, And
it came from all of it came from that very moment.
And not that everybody has daddy issues because they like
to say that about women, but I do, and my

(31:01):
issues come specifically from not knowing this man and trying
to find him in other relationships with the people that
I've been involved. What was the first thing you wanted
to ask where you've been like I did? I said,
you know, the first thing I asked him was like,
are you gonna give me a hug? Because he got
really awkward with me the moment doing doesn't have what

(31:25):
you went either. Well, he also knows that my mom
is like fire, so he was expecting me to be
angry and hateful. And you know, I forgot. I forgave
him a long time ago, long before I ever met him.
But um, he also looked really skinny, you know, he
looked a little emaciated. And I was more concerned about

(31:47):
him when I met him. And everybody that knows me
was so upset with me because they were like, even
in that moment, you forgot about yourself and thought about
the man who didn't take care of you. Right, So
when you asked him, where have you been? What was
his reply? He put it all on my mom. Actually,
he told me all his baby mamas were whacked. It
was like, there's a kind of denominator here, sir. He said,

(32:07):
they all cheated on him. And I was like, I
was like, with all respect, you can't talk about my
mother because my mother was there. Also, my mother was
fifteen and you were twenty seven, So we let's not
talk about that because we I was like, what's the
statue of limitations? You know? And it was a very
very interesting exchange. It is because, like you know, over

(32:29):
the years, you do learn to give your parents grace
for certain things just because you realized they were doing
the best that they could. But it's like not being
there for your child. I you know, that's just something
I can't come to terms with me either, you know.
And when it comes to people of color, black people
in this country and around the world, and you have
these issues that are very common people get tired of hearing,

(32:52):
but slavery and white supremacy, but it all comes from
that right that that's in the DNA of the people,
is in the psychology of the people, and it doesn't
go away because we're allegedly free. And so people like
you and you who have made conscious decisions to be
fathers and your you're fighting the stuff that has been
put in us. But some people don't have the tools

(33:14):
for that fight. I you know, I had kids young,
and I wanted to be I'm modeled. I wanted to
be an actress. I wanted to be a comedian. But
I never put it before them. I always said, if
I honor them, God would honor me. One part I'm
related to you talk about your daughter on the special
and you had said that. She told you, I hate you,
and I remember those like when you grow up and

(33:34):
you get to those years where you cannot stand your
parents and you hate them, and you were like, good,
I'm glad you said it first. Yeah, because it's funny
because that kid teenage. I talked to teenagers all the
time and they're like, oh, I can't stand my parents.
I'm like, they can't stand you either. Like we just
don't say it. We've been socialized not to say that
to our kids. And you know, when people talk about

(33:55):
having postpartum syndrome, they get taken down. But the reality
is you got to normalize that. It's hard being a parent,
and it's even harder being a good parent, like especially
now when you're battling the internet, you know what I mean,
Like it's so much materialism. It's all this stuff that's
telling your kids there's something wrong with them. The most
lauded people in the in the world are superficial and made,

(34:19):
you know, made in the lab. And you got your
daughters saying, oh, I want to be like that, and
you're like, no, they don't look like that for real.
This their souls are black and they they're hurting on
the inside. It's really hard. And you know, I like
people who are honest about not liking their kids. You
know what I'm saying to people, They cut They didn't
want me to say this, but I had to joke

(34:39):
that said, the people pretend to like their kids are
the ones that set them on fire and blame it
on black dudes. You know. I mean, you're saying, there's
time is that you don't like your kids? You know?
Of course I am, absolutely yeah, And it's like in love,
like I adore my kids and love them. I love
them more than I love myself. But there are days

(35:01):
where I'm like it out of my face and I didn't.
You know, I didn't beat on my kids like my
mom used to beat us, like we stole something, as
they said. I've never I never put my hands on myfs.
By the way, that's one of my favorite threats. Oh yeah,
well you luck, you didn't grow up in the nineties. Yeah,
I wouldn't say that. Yeah, everybody, all my friends know.

(35:22):
They always tease my kids because I always should have
raised them. I put my hands on luck. You didn't
grow up in the You got sons, don't so bigger
than me? Oh, yeah, if I didn't, like he said,
will be his ass tho if he had a heart too,
Like you know, he's still scared of his father, but
if he realized I'm stronger than even someplace he's diesel.
He definitely told me rough, Well, I remember you would

(35:44):
jump on absolutely. I mean I punched my son in
the chest more time. You don't think I would call you,
but I'm going to jump your son. Yeah, for the
morning show, definitely. Oh my god. You know they don't
love to hate you. You'll be what y'all side? Oh
my gosh. I can't imagine the memes. They'd be like
and envy and he's a child abuser and they both

(36:10):
got beat up. But I wasn't Having your kids with
you two on this journey always great. They deserve every
single ounce of any success that I get. And and
they have integrity, right, they're both quality. My daughter is
an amazing writer. She's in a really good writer's room
for a TV show, a major TV show. My son
is a director who and he's a great director, and

(36:32):
they want to make it on their own, and so
they're like, we're not trying to ride your cotail. And
I was like, you guys made the sacrifices in life
so that I could do what I want to do.
And this is yours because I know that they're gonna
take it, and they're gonna they're gonna multiply it. What
I'm all about it say, I'm here today because of nepotism,

(36:52):
right like, because I have a relationship with y'all, and
y'all brought me here before I'd had my own special
and it was I'm here because of the relationships that
I've made and I'm not ashamed of that, and I
don't think anybody should be. I am on a platform
with three Black American people, and Latin people won't put
me on their platforms. I had to text you for

(37:14):
decent in Merrow. All right, we got more with Ida
Rodriguez when we come back, don't move. It's the breakfast
Club morning. Everybody is cej Envy, Angeluyee, Charlomagne the guy.
We are the breakfast Clubs to kicking with Ida Rodriguez Comedian.
Now do you feel your own community doesn't support you? Listen?
I am I am where I am because Black American

(37:36):
people made way from me, created space for me. Because
I've always claimed my own blackness, and I've always been like, yeah,
we do some messed up stuff. Tiffany Haddis put me
on Netflix. Shaquille O'Neill put me on Showtime. Tamra Goings
and Valerie Benning, two black women who are the producers.
They put me on the shot Comedy All Stars. Wanda
Sykes put me on Last Comic Standing. And not that

(37:58):
they put me on it. I earned it because I
worked mine behind off to be good at what I do.
But there was it wasn't you know, it wasn't HBO.
Max Anthony knows the Latin people there that are you know,
Dominicans and Caribbeans gave me a special one. We're the
first one to headline me. But they wouldn't have known
who I was had it not been for a Tiffany,

(38:20):
had it not been for Wanda or Shock. So I'm
always going to stand in gratitude Black American people who
have always made a way for Latin people in this country.
And um and I love my people. That's not me
hating all my people. That's just me stating the truth.
Whether what about Latin women in comedy, Um so, Latin
women in comedy, there's there's no one that's ever broken

(38:43):
the ceiling um. And to talk about people who claim
their blackness, because Hollywood can be so Hollywood is so
white in every aspect, even in the Latini that spectrum,
which is why you hear a lot of the pain
from dark Latin Latin people from darker hughes being very
upset about being erased that they don't even want to

(39:04):
call themselves Latinos anymore. So it's just so complicated. So
when it comes to women in comedy, there are some
women Sadakonterreda's who's Puerto Rican from New York, Sheyla Rivera
who was an astronaut rocket scientist that paved the way
for someone like me who never had the opportunity to
go the heights, you know, to get where they should

(39:27):
have gotten. That were brilliant comedic women that made noise,
that were Puerto Rican the half flavor, and then nobody
just didn't see it. That's why the special has to
do well, because it's gonna create a way for other people.
It ain't no fun if the homies can't have none.
It can't just be about me. Talk about the significance
of having a stand up special. Oh, man, it's it's

(39:48):
the culmination of the of all of the work. It
is the epitome of the dream of a stand up comedian.
It's the super Bowl for a stand up comic, you know,
to have their own special, and it is it's all you.
And for me, I was involved in every aspect. I
wrote my own jokes. I did have help from some
other comedians that guided me that tag jokes that said

(40:10):
remove this, here, do that. But I was told You're
never gonna be on Shop All Star because that was
that was one of my goals, like I wanted to
be like the first Latin woman to do it. They
told me I was never gonna get a comedy special
like this is other comedians male comics um that I
was never gonna get a TV show. I'm never You're
never you you you came in the game too late.

(40:30):
And also there just isn't you know, Latin women just
don't have they don't there's that doesn't exist, so I
gotta create it. How do white people react to you
when you have to do stand up in the rooms
that are mostly white because some things that you say,
I know people have walked out of your shows before
and you're very unapologetic and makes strong statements and sometimes

(40:52):
it just I've seen it get a little bit awkward,
even a special So what's that like for you? That
makes my soul full? And I tell you why. I
opened for Paul Mooney. When I first started doing stand up,
I was his baby, and he used to call me
his little Marilyn McCoo bitch, and I didn't know what
I was. I had to always like what he was, like,

(41:14):
you my little Jane Kennedy bitch, Like that's what he
used to call me, bitch. I never got offended. He
used to always tell me I better not ever see
you look like I'm not gonna say the word. We
can't even say this word no more. But he was like,
I better not ever see you look masculine on stage.
And he used to always tell me if they don't
get up and walk out when you're telling your truth,

(41:35):
you're not doing your job. So Paul Mooney had just
passed away and I was in Austin doing Moon Tower.
I was doing this theater show and about like five
or six white people got up and walked out, and
I was like, that was Paul Mooney blessing me from
the other side, saying, baby, you on your way. I
remember doing a comedy show, and yes, I don't like
this white girl. This white girl who's a comedian and

(41:56):
she knows who I am. I go on stage and
she's doing she knows who she is, and she knows
who I am too. She does this joke, these comedic
runs on the piano of introducing comedians, and her joke
about me was that I had a knife hidden and
how many kids I had and how many fathers I had, right,

(42:17):
And so then I went on stage and I said,
there we go, another talentless white woman who got to
where she got because of who knows who she slept with.
We all know white women can. I used to have
this joke that was like, you know, women of color
can't do what white women do. White women can sleep
with fifty men and married a senator. We can't do
that because we have social consequences in the hood. And

(42:39):
she was upset with me because I retaliated. But that's constant.
It's like we have had to listen to people talk
about us. We didn't have the mic and they were
talking about us. Then deaf comedy jam comes along, and
now you hear the perspective of the people who you've
always heard being framed in that way. So it feels

(43:00):
good to be able to say what I want to say.
And I respect the white people who stay. More white
people stay than leave. And if you look at my shows,
they come see me over and over again, just like
they used to go see Paul Mooney. And not that
I'm comparing myself to the great because that was my
king and I adored him. It was. It's just validation

(43:22):
for me that some people want to hear the truth
and some people like to be punished, but they understand,
Like you know, That's why I love saying cracker and
on the radio and television because I have this whole
concept called de cracktrification and how you have to de
cracktrify America, and I compare it to denotification in Germany
and the good white people, I make them draw a line,
and you're saying, either you a good white person or
a racist, bigot, crack ass cracker, which one of you?

(43:43):
And when you break down, like just American history and
the things that black and brown people have gone through
in this country, good white people with logic understand absolutely
the crackers. That's holding onto the ball. And some people
are proud of being called crackers because of the root
of what that word comes from, right, you know, they
really feel like So when you think about it, Um, listen,
I don't do comedy for the people who don't like me.

(44:05):
I do comedy for the people who rock with me.
And I'm not for everybody, and neither is anybody else.
I don't subscribe to what I don't like. I just
think that if you don't like it, then stand up.
And the first time somebody walked out, Yeah, what was
your mentality? What did you do? Because I'm sure it
was kind of startling at first? Or did you expect it? No?
I didn't expect it. I got And maybe there's this

(44:28):
feeling comedians will describe when when you're either gonna bomb
or something starts going awrye, you start feeling hot on
the inside and it's like nerves. And I felt like, uh, oh,
this is gonna be bad. A couple so you said
a joke, a couple got up and started walking out.
You gotta be nervous, like, damn, it's just gonna start
where everybody gets yes, And then, um, you know it

(44:49):
happened to me. It was in Texas and this couple
who was everybody was having a good time, and this
couple was sitting in the front as a white couple
and the man I was like, can y'all stop talking?
And he said, can you start being funny? And then
I was like I started, and then I was like
I went in and then the audience turned on them
and everybody they threw them out. I never worked at

(45:10):
club again. He's not really working out. They got thrown out. No, no,
but they but he was like before they got thrown out,
he got up and he was like, you know what,
I don't need to be here. I paid money for
funny and I'm not getting funny. And then I just
I don't remember what I was saying to him, but
then the audience just started turning on him, and boom,
when they started walking out, I was like, this is
it felt like a anchor man. When they perfume and

(45:34):
everybody just started running am uk, I was like, this
is gonna be bad. When I was in Austin, I
remember that moment full circle where people walked out and
I didn't even I didn't even dignify their exit by
acknowledging it and that hurt more because the audience was roaring,
and I was like, oh, focus on this, let them

(45:56):
walk all right. We got more with Ida Rodriguez when
we come back. It was the Breakfast Club, Good Morning Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we
are the Breakfast Club is too kicking it with idaod
rege Yea. I was thinking that watching your special, real
life Obtivations can be so funny, right even then trying
to like create a joke you talk about, you know,

(46:18):
everybody being anti abortion. Oh and my family, yo, when
I was talking about my family, yes, yeah, I was.
I said that joke here before when I came, and
I finally was able to put it on stage for
the special. Because you know, there's this big divide between
Latin X people, Latino's Latine and Black American people. As
if you know there there we tell the lies. There's

(46:41):
a lot of white supremacy within our community. And I
have family members who felt like me having a baby
from a black dude was taking the race back, and
so they were religious. They were the religious like my
mom don't believe in nothing, and she got the best
soul on the planet. And then the most religious people
were my family are the worst, and so I was

(47:02):
I told the truth. I was like they were they did.
They were Christian and they were anti abortion until I
got pregnant from a black dude, and then they became
pro abortion. The name of Jesus. They were like, He'll
give you, and I was like, you know, this is
interesting to me. I took that with me. I think
we talked about it. I think we talked about it before,
and everybody always talks about it. Why what's the problem

(47:22):
with black men and Latino women. It just seems like
Dominicans Puerto Ricuez don't want black men in their house.
Like why. I think that it is internalized self hate.
I think is racism. There is the belief that if
you marry somebody white, or you mate with somebody, why

(47:43):
I have children with something white. This is what they've
We've been told, you're taking the race forward because everybody
is aspiring to be white. Not everybody, but that's what
the aspiration is. We gotta get to the whiteness. Everybody
scared of black men, and everybody loves black men. Everywhere
I go in the world, people got children with black
men because black men are the men that are a

(48:04):
commodity worldwide everybody. You don't ever hear people be like, oh,
I'm gonna give me a dude from Thailand, Like you
know that, right? I thought my dad is Chinese, which
is very odd for people. They're like, your father's Chinese? Happened? No,
But you know, like it's it's just it's so ridiculous
to not admit the the elephant in the room black men,

(48:26):
whether they're even Latino. Like especially remember that you know
y'all y'all be talking about and the light skinned dark
skinned wars, that crazy craziness. But secretly those white women
wanted the dark skinned black men in their beds, you know,
like look what they had to deal with. I do
love how Latinos have politically been able to leverage that though,

(48:49):
because you just don't know how they're going to vote.
Like you got the ones that I think they're white
in Florida, they might go conservative. One detectives might think
they white, they go conservative. Callie New York, they go blue.
So you know, I like the way y'all be able
to leverage it politically. How do you feel about the
reception from the special now that it's that I know
it's a long journey to get everything done, and you

(49:10):
also managed to get this done during a pandemic. Yeah,
that was it was all right. I feel good about
I've had so many messages from people saying I also
meant my father. You know one thing that I admire
because there was a lot of pushback for me using
the word Latino or Latin X people saying we're not
We're not identifying as that anymore. We're identifying as Afro

(49:32):
Puerto Rican, which I think is beautiful, or Afro Dominican.
We don't even want to say Latino. I have a
very different take on it, and this is my opinion,
and if you disagree with it either. One thing I
respect about Black American people and what they're doing right
now in America is claiming their americanness, because for some reason,
there's been a long time of Black American people attribute

(49:54):
this African American label where they were not claiming their
marriage in this when they built this country, and just
like slaves built this country, slaves built to Puerto Rico,
they built Panama, they built Cuba, and so I'm not
not going to claim being from my Latin American this

(50:15):
because my ancestors built that bitch too, and so I
know I came here to be funny or supposedly, but
this is like, that's this is the comedy that lives
in me, and that's what the stuff I want to
talk about is that I'm not gonna not claim, you know,
Puerto Rico, regardless of what it called the colonizer called it,

(50:35):
because my ancestors built that bitch too, And so I
just think that it's important for us to be able
to have perspective about the work that was done before
us and stop disrespecting our ancestors work because we see
it as weak as stuff that we would never be
able to handle, because we can't even handle when somebody
tweets or something and tells us to die. Oh. I
hate when people say when I'm not my granddaddy, we

(50:59):
are not our answer or whatever it is, it's you listen.
And for the most part, I've got nothing, but you know,
I've gotten so much love for the special and um,
so many people have showed up for me. And I
know I know somebody was trying to get me canceled online.
They were it was on it was she said that.

(51:19):
I said, I would. She was like, this is the
chick that said that, um, Puerto Rican, Puerto Rico is
better than black people because Puerto Ricans have their own country.
And I'm like, I don't know if I ever said
anything like that. I don't know what I said back
in the day, but I know I've never said anything
like that because that just is not route what I
would say. Um. I do do acknowledge that Latin American

(51:42):
people do have cultural react. They have a lot of
cultural ties to Africa and their indigenous ties. A lot
of stuff was maintained and preserved through folklore and other
things that American black people do don't have, have not had,
and that. But because they were it was stolen and
taken from them. And it wasn't because they're not savvy

(52:03):
like Puerto Ricans are. It's just the reality of what
was preserved. My grandmother would take care of me with leaves.
You know. She wouldn't be like, go get an antibiotic.
She was like no, I like that was stuff that
was because she was illiterate. It was given to her
by grandmother and great grandmother. And that's something that I
don't think is better. I'm just saying it is real,

(52:25):
and that's why we have to respect Black American people
and their and their journey here because it's very different
there are What about the Jay Balvin controversy. Can you
shed some light on that, because I saw they were
upset at him for having two black women on Alicias
that was and then they and then they also went
in on the girl, the the artist that's Dominican. And

(52:48):
you know, I think what Jay Balvin did was egregious, right,
I think that was that was ridiculous, dehumanizing, the dehumanizing
of black women's bodies. It needs to stop. It's been
it's been happening forever, and it needs to stop. Jay
Boba needs an education. Jay Bobma needs to be able
to because Jay Bobbin does go out and get other

(53:08):
artists and uses this privilege to say, hey, I'm gonna
I'm gonna bring this person aboard. I know I'm gonna
get I'm gonna get creamed for this. But I'm a
big proponent of addressing the systems. And yes, we can
take down individuals for them doing agregious stuff, but we
focus so much on people and their acts and we

(53:29):
because it's easier to take those down because don't nobody
want that smoke with Warner Media, they don't want that smoke.
Att It's easier to take somebody down who looks like you,
sounds like you. I think what he did was awful,
but I think we need to start focusing on the
system that perpetuate this stuff and make a lot of
money on our pain and oppression, and stop trying to

(53:50):
take other people down because we jealous, because we want
They spot in the Heights at a similar issue. Well,
you know, in the Heights is I understood what was
going on, and I just believe that there's a way
to handle this situation that creates more for us, you know,
and that for me, it's like I'm trying to create
I'm trying to create equity. I'm trying to create an

(54:12):
opportunity where a dark skinned black Latina can get an
opportunity to make her own show and become her own showrunner.
I'm gonna do that. I'm gonna easter array this, you know,
because the reality of it is, there's a lot of
these months to on social media trying to burn down.
They are just exercising their pain. It has nothing to

(54:33):
do with activism. That's what was the special about, and
made sure I got paid. You know what, she said,
You're gonna get paid like a white man. When I did,
they that was her thing. She took a pay cut.
She was like, all, y'all gonna get paid like a
white male comedian. And we did. Thank you for joining
us this morning. The congratulations for real and everything. That's

(54:59):
not how hard you you worked on getting this to
come out, and it is such an accomplishment. So I
do want to say that we are so happy, so
proud of you, so glad that you've been here now
multiple times to be able to even share this space
and be able to be on this journey with you.
I appreciate you guys showing up for me and always
showing me love. And I say always about black and

(55:19):
brown people. I love us and I won't stop. So
give it your best shot. Boom or Ida Rodriguez Club.
Good morning. This is the Rumor Report with Angela Yee
on the Breakfast Club. The Houston Police Department and the

(55:41):
FBI are conducting a criminal investigation into the trampling deaths
that occurred at the Ashtra World Music Festival. Now, according
to reports, they're saying they want to know if this
could have been prevented in any way, But it's also
entirely possible that it was not preventable for whatever reason,
and that's something they have to know as well. So far,
at least fourteen lawsuits have been filed against Travis Scott

(56:01):
and festival organizers Live Nation and Score Moore and Harris
County District Court. The laws who's accused the organizers a
prioritizing profit at the expense of contentgoers health and safety,
and accused Travis Scott and Drake also of inciting mayhem.
You know, in my mind, I would think, of course
it could be preventable, but I would love to know

(56:21):
how it couldn't have been prevented, as there a scenario
where it's just too many people to contain. Well, there
was a lot of scenarios. I heard them break it
down one day. Were trying to close some of the
roads around so a lot of the people that didn't
have tickets couldn't come because a lot of people have defence.
There was a couple of things that they tried to
get the city to do and try to get the
police department to do allegedly, and some of that stuff

(56:43):
didn't they couldn't get done, So I mean that might
have Well, it's complicated, they said, because it's a lot
of people involved in a lot of different entities as well.
So they said, there's a lot of videos that they're
going to have to look at. But you know, it's
Harris County that owns the park and RG Park where
the festival was held. But then there's also Harris County
Sports and Convention Corporation. They oversee the event. The City
of Houston issued the permits and had first responder authority,

(57:07):
and then there were third parties like Live Nation, obviously
Travis Scott because he founded the festival, and private contractors
who provided medical and security could possibly be liable if
investigators conclude that their actions or that their negligence contributed
to the injuries and deaths. But you know what the promoters,
you know, they have meetings upon meetings upon meetings. They
have to have all types of security measures, ambalance and

(57:29):
health measures. Then they do a pandemic type of measure,
then they do a weather measure. There's like there's mad
meetings going on to these events. Now, thirties did discover
that protocols for a crowd church were not listed, and
the Astro World Festivals, Event Operations Plan and the Houston
Fire Chief Samuel Pina, said that he believes absolutely that
Scott should have stopped the show as the chaos became

(57:51):
increasingly evident. He said, the one person who can really
call for and get a tactical pause when something goes
wrong is the performer. Yeah, but the performer responsible for
the police. They can pull the show. They can stop
the show, but not only I really cause the friends.
What about the police come on stage and stop the show.
They could talk to the saleman and stop the show,
pull a plug and pull out. They can do they
can stop. To imagine that, like the police are making

(58:12):
us stop the show. I just wonder if people they
done it before. One of these people saying that have
ever stood on the stage and looked out of the
crowd of fifty thousand people now the venue? How can
you see everything that's goings. Have an insurance policy totally
twenty six million dollars, but that's nowhere near what the
injured and families of the dead are gonna be seeking.
They're saying, there's certainly possible. They certainly have coverage when

(58:35):
it comes to live Nation. When it comes to Travis Scott,
we don't know what type of insurance coverage there is,
but we do know the venues liability insurance is twenty
six million. Well, now this changes things moving forward and
regard the festivals, because I mean, events like this have
happened that festivals before, and I'm sure that every time
something like this happens, things change. I wonder how this
is going to change, you know, this era of festivals

(58:55):
moving forward? Now, we told you that day in Vegas
that Travis Scott dropped out of that festival he was headlining,
but because of all of this, he just can't focus
on that right now. So Pose Malone has been added
to close out and headline instead. All right, Now, Tianna
Taylor was doing her show in LA and I see
a lot of performers doing this now, and so she

(59:17):
actually stopped the show because she saw there was a
fan who was slumped up against the barrier. Here's what
that sounded like. I'm a gonna tire you good. Okay, Yes,

(59:40):
I have seen a few performers doing this, but they're
not in front of fifty thousand people, and it's much
easier to do that when you're performing in front of
a smaller crowd and fifty thousand people, and they're doing
it after Astra World. So it's it's you know, it's
it's more sensitive to people's Again, our condolences go out
to all the families, and my heart goes out to
them because imagine just you know, going to a concert

(01:00:03):
and then you or your family member doesn't call him
that nine year old who's in a coma right now.
It's tragic all across the board. All right, now, let's
talk about People's twenty twenty one Sexiest Man Alive. Stephen
Colbert announced who is number one? That was the last
test and you passed, Paul, you passed. You're sexy sex Paul,

(01:00:27):
You're the sexiest man alive. Are the sexiest man. You're
the sexiest man alive, the sexiest man. So that's Paul Rudd,
who is the sexiest man alive. Congratulations to him. Dropping
a clue bottle for aunt Man. Congrats the aunt Man. Okay,
who wants store Captain America? The Black Panther? The sexiest

(01:00:48):
Avenger alive is aunt Man. I don't want to recount
question who votes on these things? Who's on the Sexiest
Man Alive Committee. Who's on the board, I don't know.
I don't know who this Paul is. Oh, but who's
who's on the board for sexiest Man a lot? I
don't know, but past people who told you last year
was Michauld be Jordan. It just Elba has gotten at
Ryan Reynolds. So I don't know how they come to

(01:01:09):
these conclusions about who the sexiest man Alive is. It's
just strictly physical, I think. I think it's more than that.
I think so I think they need to stop objectifying
these men. And he starts to start looking at these
men's intellecting the things that they do for the community. Okay,
in their philanthropy and things that nature. You don't just
objectify these men. Sounds like a hater. Why do I
sound like a hater because I don't want men to
be objectified? What about when women say they don't want

(01:01:31):
women to just be objectified? Isn't that what the MISUSA
pageants everybody is complaining about? Now? I think it's more
exactly when a man. I think they like his sense
of humor as well, a lot of that too. I
just want more things than just the physical. I'm a
funny guy to be looked into when it comes to
these sexiest man alive things. Stop objectifying these men for
their physical appearance. I want to recount John Legend won previously,

(01:01:53):
Dwayne Johnson, David Beckham and all of that. Nope, all right,
And he did say that his wife, Paul ready to
say his wife was stupefied after he told her the news,
and he feels there's a lot more people that deserve
it before him. All right, And that is your rumor report.
Damn it should have been me. M hm. So you
look at you, looking at me? You agree, I'm looking

(01:02:16):
at you because you look stupefied. That's what I'm thinking,
the same thing Paul Rod's wife is thinking. This stupefied
individual over here. I'm like, okay, all right, what are
you giving You don't get that bid is blowing this
morning too, That's why you got that hoodie on. That
dying a lot of day. Look at that fresh Beijing.
I don't think we don't notice. Don't think we don't notice.

(01:02:37):
You don't know. You have to go back to one
of these videos. Early this week. You had some grades,
a lot of grades. Now all of a sudden, you
back to my brother Rick Ross. Are you better shout
to Kevin hard right, Beijing Gang drop on the bomb
for the Beijing Gang. That's all your name man, Okay,

(01:02:58):
that's all you named out right now? Alika Unga Slife.
I think that's his name. Definitely it's not. But he
needs to come to the front of the congation. We
like to have have a world with him. What's her
name again? I don't know. We'll figure it out all right.
It's a Breakfast cloud body, So Breakfast Club, your mornings
will never be the same. Angela here talking about my

(01:03:20):
friends at the General Insurance that you offer flexible payment
plans and the ability to choose your payment date. Plus
they let you choose how you pay, whether that's with cash,
card or chat. Call eight hundred General or visit the
General dot com to learn more. Today, some restrictions apply.
I was born to Donkey. It's the Donkey don't get

(01:03:51):
devil Breakfast Club. Yeah, Donkey today for Thursday, November tenth
goals to a bountiful Utah man name Alika Unga Sulifu.
Is that I pronounce his name? Let me here, Alika Shuliafu. Okay,
there you go. Alika Suliyafu. And I don't mean bountiful
as he's a generous person. I mean that's the name
of the town. That's the name of the town in Utah.

(01:04:12):
What the hell they do living? What the hell are
they doing living in Utah with a name like that?
Say his name again, Alica Shuliafu. Now I don't know
the race of this man, but I know Utah is
ninety point six percent white. All right, I'm not the
highest grade weed in the dispensary, but Elika Sulafu doesn't
sound Caucasian to me. Now, one point five percent of
the population in Utah is black? Are African American? Others

(01:04:32):
make up five point oh four percent of the population.
I'm so confused. I thought black was African American. Do
they mean, like you can call them black? Are African American?
And what exactly is others? Does it matter? Okay, what
matters is Alika found himself in a situation. See he
is being held without bonn on suspected charges of felony,
attempted murder, in felony discharge of a firearm. What was

(01:04:56):
the reason, Elica? Let the hammer plan? Bam, Let's go
to KST. You fox their team for the report. Police
a bountiful man is he accused of shooting his father
or shooting at his father over chicken wings. Charging documents
indicate the victim brought back wings for his son, thirty
one year old Alika Suliyafu last week. When Suliafu saw

(01:05:17):
the wings were not the specific type he liked, police
say he started to argue and then got a gun
out of his father's bag. Police say he fired a shot,
but his father ducked just in time, and then Suliafu
continued to fire as they wrestled over the gun. One
bullet flew into a neighboring apartment, but none of the
shots hit anyone. Suliafu is now charged with attempted murder.

(01:05:43):
Believe you me, Believe you me when I tell you
that a good piece of chicken can make anybody believe
in the existence of God. Always say, I don't understand
how you could be vegan, because if you've ever bitten
a piece of chicken, it's just worth all right. But
I don't care if these wings of fried, grilled, smoked, biked.
I don't care what kind of rubber is on it.
I don't care how it's glazed. I don't care if

(01:06:04):
they are drums or flats. I don't give a damn
if they ranch flavored, sweet barbecue, parmesan, garlic, Terry Yacki,
honey barbecue, buffalo. I don't give a damn if the
chicken wings are organic, the GMO. I'm not throwing away
my life for no damn chicken wings. And why would
you shoot at your father because he bought home the
wrong order, you trifling human? Probably wasn't even his fault.

(01:06:25):
It was probably the restaurants. I also want to know
how bad can you ruin a chicken wing order? Myself?
I prefer grilled chicken for dietary purposes, and I love
honey barbecue, Terry Yackie playing barbecue and buffalo. But if
I order one of those, and let's just say, instead
of Terry yoke they bring me honey barbecue, all right?
Or if I ask for grilled and they come fried,

(01:06:46):
I'm not gonna waste the food. I'm not gonna trip,
especially trip enough to let the hammer fly. All right,
you love chicken wings that much, well, guess why theyin't
no chicken wings in jail, not that I know of.
All Right, If some white sauce ends up on you
in prison. I can guarantee it ain't blue cheese. But
I have to feel empathy for this human Elika, because
something's wrong. All right, You're not shooting at someone over

(01:07:09):
some chicken. It's clearly something deeper there, right, That man
is projecting a pain that a ten piece limon pepper
can't fix. But you still have to give people to
credit they deserve for being stupid, regardless of what cars
said stupid? Do you understand that if we lived in
a world where people could just shoot at you because
you got their chicken order wrong, Kentucky Fried Chicken would
absolutely be the most dangerous place in America. Bullets would

(01:07:32):
be popping off like chicken grease and CAFC if you
could shoot that folks for getting that order wrong. And
how you from Bountiful, Utah doing things like this? Do
you know what the word bountiful means. It means to
give generously. That's what it feels like your father was doing,
giving generously. All you gave your father in this situation
was grief. I am sensitive to any mental or emotional

(01:07:55):
issues this man Alika may have been having, but we
all must be held to the consequence of our actions,
and in this case, uh, the price Alika had to pay,
it's probably worth. Please give Alika what's his name, Alica Shulia.
Please give Alika shuliafu the biggest he hall. I love

(01:08:18):
me some chicken, but not this much. No? No, all right? No? What? No? What? No? What?
Just no? Alright? Just ask? Is not playing the game
of guests with racist it's the question or Okay? I
was confused. So if it's not blue cheese, what's the
other white sauce? Manch A Ranch all right, asks decks

(01:08:42):
eight hundred five A five. You thought that I me
Leonard and Kelly Charlotte Maney got Uncle Charlotte, brother Leonard.
You thought I what's going to fall for? I know
you better than that. I was waiting eight hundred five

(01:09:02):
eight five, one oh five one. If you need relationship advice,
any type of advice, call ye right now. It's the
breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Need relationship advice,
need personal advice, just need real advice? Call up now
for ask ye morning. Everybody's DJ Envy, Angela, Yee, Charlowe

(01:09:27):
and the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. It's time
for asking ye Hello, who's this? Yeah, man, inde color
for how they loomed him and shout out the earth.
Cause this is part two of my confession. The first
time you called, you called to ask you because you
had cheated on your wife, right, shout up for Instagram, okay,
with somebody from Instagram. And so what happened after that?
We spoke on ask ye and you gave me something

(01:09:50):
advice on how to take my time and get her
the time and space that you need him. Then she
finally came around and say, okay, we've been together for
a minute. We could probably do this, just don't do right, okay,
So leading my Instagram ca Okay, that's a good first
step and my faceboo too. All right, so you mean business.
You're not going to cheat on your wife anymore. Right?

(01:10:10):
So now what the girl called me and say she's pregny? Okay,
So the girl that you cheated on your wife with
who you met on Instagram is now pregnant. Right? Are
you positive that she's pregnant or do you think she's
saying that because you deleted everything she could be putting
my leg I say go get the prince to test,
and she didn't stall on going and get it, and
I say, let me see it for myself, Jane saying,

(01:10:31):
old pictures so it could be all right. I'm gonna
tell you what my advice is in this situation is
it's very I think stressful when you know that this
woman could at any point try to contact your wife,
because if she's doing this, either she is pregnant or
she isn't. But either way, this is going to be
something that potentially could come up. Right, she wants you

(01:10:53):
to think that whether or not she's pregnant, and she's
probably going to contact your wife. That's what it feels like.
And when you have something like that weighing on you,
not knowing when it's going to happen, your wife would
much rather hear this from you than from some woman. Okay,
so sir, you done major bed that you have to
lie in. But you cannot lie to your wife and

(01:11:15):
you have to let her know what's going on because
one of two things could happen, well, one or three things.
Either she's gonna ride or die with you and it'll
be you and her. And you know, if this woman
is pregnant and does have a child, you do have
a responsibility that you are obligated to take care of
because of whatever transpired between the two of you, or

(01:11:35):
if she's not pregnant for real, or if it's not
your kid and she is pregnant, then that's somebody that
you can cut off permanently. But either way, there's a
chance that your wife is gonna find out. Yes, I
need and that's a hard conversation to have, but you
have to let her know. Look, moving forward, I am
always going to be honest with you and let you
know everything that's going on in my life. And so

(01:11:58):
here's the scenario. Now, I'm just so nervous. We ja
so much. I feel like I'm about to lose it all,
and you know you could. But listen, we've seen people
stay together even after the side piece has a baby
had a baby. We've seen it happen. So I'm not
saying it can't happen, you know, Like you said, it's
fifty fifty. We don't know. But I do know this.

(01:12:20):
If she hears about it from that other woman, or
if you have to tell her after the baby's here,
that ain't gonna be good either. Okay, I'm gonna go ahead,
let her go to day dare right, all right, So
what if she isn't on the breakfast Club before you
get to tell her? Damn? Have you thought about that?
Was smart? Huhna. I don't think she listened to radio

(01:12:42):
or her job. But if she do, there breakfast club
got millions and millions of listeners. Bro, somebody knows your voice.
What's your name again? Don't tell her her name? What
is it D? And what are you calling from? D? Hotlando?
So churnity? No be a license plate? Please did too much? Swere?

(01:13:04):
All right? All right? Take care in Hotlanta? All right, man,
look at the bright side. He's in Alta. He can
get a boyfriend after this. Shut up, man, you're on
the roll this morning. I ask ye eight hundred five
eight five one on five one. If you need relationship advice,
any type of advice? Is the breakfast club? Good morning?

(01:13:26):
Some real advice with Angela? Yet ask ye morning? Everybody
is cj Envy Angela? Yee? Charlomagne the guy we are
the breakfast Club. We're in the middle of asking ye, Hello,
who's this? This is mel good morning? What's your question
for you? Um? I'm basically have been in a relationship
for the past five years. Going on six years, and

(01:13:51):
she has been constantly cheating on me. Um, she's only
admitted one of them only because the girl basically sent
me all the text messages between them. Okay, she was
in a relationship with her for almost a year and
I didn't even know it. So you've been in a relationship,

(01:14:11):
but your girlfriend hasn't basically Okay, So what's the what's
the question here? I honestly don't know what to do
because we do have a daughter together, and I've been
trying to hang in because of my daughter and because
I know she can be a good person. She does

(01:14:32):
a lot, and like recently we found out that my
daughter's epileptic and I lost my job, and her income
right now is the only income that's coming in the house. Listen,
you said she's a good person, right, yes, but she's
not a good girlfriend. No can say that. And do
you believe that she'll still take care of your child?

(01:14:53):
Your child together? Um? I don't. Honestly, I don't know,
because it's like one minute she wants to be there,
one minute she doesn't want to be there. But then
she tells me like she's gotten gifts from this girl
that's like five and she's basically told me that that's
the only reason why she was talking to us, because

(01:15:13):
she was buying her things. Okay, now, what kind of
morals does this woman have if she's gonna cheat on
you for somebody that's buying her gifts? Is that somebody
you even want to be with? Honestly, I don't. I
just don't know how to let go. I don't know
how to move on, right. I just first of all,
you have to think about your daughter. Do you want

(01:15:34):
your daughter to see this relationship and think this is
what it's like, because I'm sure some of those things
spill over into the household. Yes, it does. You're raising
You're raising a young girl, right, Is this an example
of a positive relationship that you want her to see? No?
Are you happy? Honestly? Know about okay, try to make

(01:15:57):
myself happy? She's a wrong but honestly no. Okay, Well,
I want you to be able to find happiness, and
you're not going to find happiness by trying to make
yourself happy and letting somebody do whatever it is that
they want to do and you still stay there and
be with them. She's cheated on you multiple times, She
had a whole relationship. Her justification was that she was

(01:16:20):
getting presents. She won't even admit things to you except
for the fact that you saw all the text messages,
so it was undeniable. She has a problem. You don't
have a problem. She has a problem. Yeah, and she
says she also said too, when I found out about
this girl that she was cheating on, she also said
that it's because I have an attitude problem. Of course

(01:16:41):
you do. I have an attitude problem for you right now.
Why wouldn't you? And that's one thing I told her, Like,
you don't realize, like sometimes I have Dajiano, Like she
would safe thing to this girl that she says to me,
like because she worked a lot, so she would wake
up in the morning and text her good morning baby,
and then two seconds later will text me the same thing.

(01:17:04):
I just feel like, do you want to be in
a relationship with somebody where you have to go through
their text messages to find out what they're really doing?
Then you find those things out and you stay, and
then they keep doing those things and then they try
to blame you. Yeah, she has to get some serious
help for herself. But for you, I don't want to
see you in that situation. You're a strong woman, you
have a daughter who looks up to you. You will

(01:17:25):
find another job or a way to support yourself. But
what I don't want to see is you being miserable. Okay,
thank you, You're welcome. All right, all right? Ask Ye
eight on dread five eight five one O five one.
If you need relationship advice or any type of advice,
you can call Ye. Now we got rooms on the way, yes,
and let's congratulate Summer Walker will tell you what she
has earned and will also tell you what she has

(01:17:48):
to say about her baby. Daddy London on the track,
claiming that he contributed to her album. Listen, Oh my God.
Will Smith was on Good Morning America because as you know,
his memoir Will is out right now, and one of

(01:18:09):
the things that he said is that they don't have
a conventional relationship, but they're working. Listen to this why
everybody's so fascinated with what's going on with you and Jada.
We are pursuing the kind of love that everybody dreams about,
and we just know that the road don't look like
everybody think it is supposed to look. But you know,

(01:18:29):
don't try this at home. Children. You don't give relationships necessary.
I don't feel like I'm necessarily equipped yet to give
relationship trouping includes bond for the Willie Lama. Okay, I
cannot wait to read Will's book. That's my Saturday and
Sunday meets me time reading Will all right. Will Smith

(01:18:51):
also gave his co stars bonuses for when King Richard Well,
King Richard right from that movie, and that's going to
be coming out I think next Friday. So what he
did was it's a simultaneous HBO Max and theatrical release,
so that means people aren't gonna get paid what they
would get paid if it was just in the theaters.
And so basically he personally gave everybody some money. Hey,

(01:19:13):
Will Smith's it gives great thoughtful gifts. He sent me
a box yesterday for his will book. That was absolutely
positively one of the greatest presentations I've ever seen in
my life and by far the greatest presentation for a
book ever. It gets incredible, all right. Now, Summer Walker
has earned the biggest twenty four hour debut of a
female artist of all time on Apple Music with her

(01:19:34):
album still over it. So congratulations to her of all
time yes, and the initial twenty four hour period. Well,
it's on the Apple Music so you gotta think it's
not like Apple Music was around way back in the day.
I would think Taylor Swift for Taylor. That wasn't around
for Taylor. I mean for twenty four hours. It quickly
shot to number one. It's her debut album too, though,
I said, debut album. Well, congrats to summer Walker, absolutely

(01:19:58):
dropping a clues month someone. Well, twenty four hour debut
by a female artist. Yeah, so that's a big deal.
It's on. It was number one on the All Genre
chart and all of it's still over. Its twenty tracks
currently occupy the top twenty two positions on the chart. Yeeks.
Good for her though, I love that album, so they said.
Her Spotify streams are also highlighted by a career best

(01:20:20):
debut of No Love that racked up to seven hundred
and sixty thousand streams in only ten hours, So congratulations, yes,
all right now. Summer Walker also had some things to
say about London on the track, because you know, his
name is all over that album and somebody had posted
that you know, he got paid off of his own
disc album and he posted fair exchange and she wanted

(01:20:44):
people to know that that is absolutely not true. She
said he didn't write ISH and he didn't produce ISH either.
He does hand pick the people. He wanted to do
all the work and attach his name to it while
he was out. I don't know if I could say this,
but let's just say having sex with other women while
I was pregnant. And she said that he might have
contributed to Still Over it was a sprinkle a wind
chime effect on a song that was already done. The

(01:21:06):
last album, he actually did the work and it was
a great project. He's super talented. But for this album, no, sir,
But I guess the City Boys is up taking credit
for issue ain't due and not actually having to take
care of the kids you made who all right? Well,
you know all of that passion went into making a
great album. So congratulations to Summer Worker on this album

(01:21:27):
breaking records all right now. Aaron Rodgers has been fined
by the Green Bay Packers and also receiver Alan Lazard
after a review found the team and his two players
did not follow protocol for COVID. The Packers would find
three hundred thousand dollars and they were individually find fourteen thousand,
six hundred and fifty dollars each. That doesn't seem like

(01:21:47):
a lot at all, not even a little bit. And
and he don't seem like he's getting tortured in the
media the way that you know he would be. Now,
both of them attended a Halloween party despite being unvaccinated,
so that is a violation of protocol as well. If
you guys recalled Aaron and Rodgers was very dodgy about
whether or not he was vaccinated. Are you vaccinating? What

(01:22:10):
your stance on the vaccinations? Yeah, I've been any nice.
You know, there's guys on the team that haven't vaccinated.
I think it's a personal decision. I'm not going to
judge those guys. It's it's an interesting issue. So he
tried to play with words a little and he did afterward.
This was him taking responsibility. You know, I made some
comments that that people might have felt were misleading, you know,

(01:22:32):
to anybody who felt misled by those comments, I take
full responsibility for those comments. Leading do you remember have
to carry you? Evn't got on Instagram a live and
was explaining himself. He got crucified again in the media,
and then Aaron Rodgers goes and does this interview and
says things like, you know, he's getting his medical advice
from Joe Rogan. Yeah, Media souths like it was like

(01:22:52):
come home, man, It's like where's the crucifixion. It's crazy,
all right, and it's low find Is he gonna miss
any games? Apparently not. He just paid fourteen thousand dollars,
which is nothing to him. All right, Well that is
your rumor report, all right. Shout out to revote everybody
else and People's Choice mixes up next Les Guilt The
Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same. Warner

(01:23:15):
Brother Pictures presents King Richard, based on a true story
that will inspire the world. Watch Will Smith's portrayal of
Richard Williams, father of two of the greatest sports legends,
Venus Serena and a Plan for Greatness in theaters and
on HBO Max King Richard, November nineteenth, rated, pg. Thirteen,

(01:23:35):
Will Never tell us morning. Everybody is dj Envy Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Now. Shout
out to Ida Ida Roderiguez for joining us this morning.
Big Ida. Yes, her special fighting words is on HBO Max.
Right now, man, I just really really really dope. So

(01:23:57):
salute Ida Rodriguezz absolutely and shout to all the Latino
artists that are giving me their call for the car show.
They came out to support their Dominican brother. That's what's up. Man.
If they didn't show up for you in Florida, I'd
have been upset. Prince of Royce Farruco, Nikki jam unwell,
thank you, and then shout to my brother Nori fifty,
Dwayne Wade, calid Yo, Gotti, flow Rideer, Trina and a

(01:24:20):
host of others that's gonna be giving me their cars.
I really appreciate it. Can't wait to see you guys
in Miami on twelve. I can't wait to see that
Latino picture with you and all the Dominican people that
in Spanish Latino people that gave you their cars. Huh,
what's should I? White jeans? Puerto Rican flag, no Dominican flag?
All right, man, when we come back, we got the

(01:24:42):
positive doe Dope moves to Breakfast Club. Gooboard it morning,
everybody in tj Envy Angela, Yee, Charlomagne, the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. That's Charlomagne, you got a positive note.
I do man, Listen, every single thing you do matters.
You have been created as a one of a kind.
You have been created in order to make a difference.

(01:25:03):
You have within you the power to change the world.
Don't forget that breakfast club. You're finish or y'all done.

The Breakfast Club News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Charlamagne Tha God

Charlamagne Tha God

DJ Envy

DJ Envy

Jess Hilarious

Jess Hilarious

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.