Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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. Charlotte
nick stood them playing in this Thursday, and we have
our guest hosts back today. It's her last day hosting. Yes,
I'm sad about that, Miss Pat. Welcome, Good morning, Miss Pat.
(00:23):
I'm going home, back to the A, back to the
playing hooky all week Sometimes you gotta sleep with other
black men. Jesus, crazy, Jesus. How are you feeling this morning,
Miss Patt? I'm feeling fine. I am. I am getting
ready to fly to Kansas City. I got five sold
our shows in Kansas City, just one Kansas City improv.
(00:46):
I'll be there tomorrow night, y'all tomorrow. So you got
two shows on Friday to Saturday morning, yeah, fries. Yeah.
So if they got the tickets, they can't get tickets.
It's sold out. Well, I just added the show. You
just added the show. So if y'all in Kansas City
you're listening, could be your tickets to go check out
Miss Pat this weekend. And uh, funny, funny, funny, And
of course she's on tour too, So she's doing her
theater tour. So what starts this fall? This fall? Tickets
(01:08):
on sale, that's right, and they can get tickets away
Miss pat Comedy dot com And it's all your girl
Done made Miss Pammy dot Com. That's part out of
his back cooking Cooking BT Show, Sewan BT plus Miss
Pat Show, Go Ahead, Podcast Ahead, Miss Patten. I'm actually
doing a podcast in Nashville too, coming up. Go to
my website live podcast on a live show doing the
(01:29):
festival are down? Yeah, doing a pat Down lot. I
like the pat Down Lot. Okay, okay, Miss Patt. Well
this morning, John Legend will be joining us. I'm just
sending and thinking all that money, Miss pat getting shan't
buy breakfast all week? Why are we buying her breakfast?
That's a that's a nice thing to do, thank you, sir.
It's a polite thing to do. So some people don't
buy breakfast. It's a polite thing to do something Jesus
(01:53):
all right, But yeah, John Legend to be joining us.
He has a miss Skin care line he's gonna be
talking about, and the host of other things. So we're
gonna be kicking it with John on legend in a
little bit. And then we got front page news coming up.
Test figure Roll will be joining us, figure out breaking
down something. Whatever we talk about the front page news.
We got to talk about Whoopie Goldberg. H need to
leave Whoopee the Goldberg to Helen Loo And I'm so
tired of y'all making whoop Berg apologize and stuff, especially
(02:16):
this one. This is stupid. We're gonna talk about it
when we come back, because we all said this word
zillions of times. I don't even know there was, say
five times this morning. I said it yesterday me too.
All Right, well let's go in. They clearly don't understand
black culture. No nobody understand black. Do not understand black.
But we had to do it. Remember we did it
with Lizzo when she said, what's bast we'll talk about it.
We'll talk about the front page news. We'll do that next.
(02:38):
It's to Breakfast Club in the morning. Morning. Everybody is
DJ Envy Charlemagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club.
We got our co host, Miss Pat joining us today
to today it's our last day. Was upset and sad
about that last day, for now, for now, back whenever
she wanted to play hookie. She could come play hook. Yeah.
I appreciate you. You always had that house you could
(02:58):
go to when you cut school. Yeah, yeah, I appreciate
this house. All right, well, let's get right now. Arizona
launches an anti woke education hotline tes What does that mean? Yes, everybody,
Good morning family, Thank you again for being here. Arizona's
top education official, Tom Horn, launched a hotline this week
(03:20):
for state residents to report K through twelve class curriculum
and lessons that they deem inappropriate. Let's roll the tape
and see what he had to say. We've asked parents
to call in when they become aware of inappropriate teaching.
As you mentioned, that would include lessons that focus on
race or ethnicity rather than individuals and merit, gender ideology,
(03:46):
social emotional learning, or inappropriate sexual content. And then when
we get those calls, we investigate them to see if
there's inappropriate teaching that detracts from academics. Why are social
emotion and learning rap them and that we need social
emotional learning. That's that's one of the things that my foundation,
the mental you know, Wealth and Lines, is pushing to
having school social, social and emotional learning that teaches you like,
(04:09):
you know, social and emotional skills, self awareness, self control
that helps you in life. Well yeah, well, because it's
really not about that. This really is connected to the
critical race theory and what's happening in Florida. It's really
it's not about anything except race. And like you just
heard the superintendent say, he wants to make sure that
they are not detracted from teaching standards. They do not
(04:32):
want things focused on race or ethnicity, and they want
to focus more on the merits. Now you heard a
little bit of the clip, but in the longer interview
from the clip that you heard, he went into you
know how bad woke academics was. He said that we
are all brothers and sisters under the same skin and
that race should not play a part of it. And
he said the critical race theory is about making race
(04:53):
primary and not pushing personal ideology. He also said that
the majority of parents, outside of a few print calls,
but the majority of parents are excited about this, and
to remind folks, he actually uh is a Republican that
ran on this policy. His entire platform was centered on
fighting critical race theory and stopping the liberal indoctor nation
(05:14):
of school children. So I'll throw it back to you guys.
If the voters voted him in for this reason, and
he put it he said out out right at the gate,
I am going to stop wokeness. They voted him in
and they seem to be going along with this. So
do you guys think it's too munch us over the line?
Is it really about race? You know? What do you
guys think? I mean, when I saw the interview, he
can explain everything, but I just want to know why
(05:35):
social emotional learning is wrapped up in there. I know
why everything else is wrapped up in there, But why
he puts y'all got to do with uh race? Well,
that's y'all got to do with gender identity. He just
wanted to make sure that the kids learned that the
Native American gave the land to the white folks and
they didn't take it correct. So you got to use
the right term. Because my kids came home and saying
(05:55):
that they would go to a white school. Oh and
my my daughter snapped my niece and say, no, no, no, no,
they took it. Don't you come here with that mess.
You know this. We wasn't slay. We was volunteary living
in the back of the land and cook every day.
And the white man jumped on top of us and was, Okay,
that's what they wanted to I want to continue to
push the lives correctly. They don't want to scare their
work kids. Now we gotta jump into Whoopee Goldberg. Now,
(06:18):
Whoopee apologized for saying something on the View yesterday. She said,
I'm very sorry, yeah, speaking of woke and which you
can and can I say? Whoopie Goldberg is apologizing yet
again for comments she made on the View. Now, she
and her co workers were discussing possible criminal charges against
former President Donald Trump in the alleged hush hush money
(06:40):
scandal involving Stormy Daniels, and she used the word jip.
Take a listen and let's see what she had to say,
and we'll talk about it. On the other side, Peter,
who is still believed that he has got you know,
gyp somehow and the election, will still believe that he
cared enough about it his wife, you know, to pay
(07:01):
that money from his personal thing. But I just don't understand.
I didn't see I've never I never knew jip was
a word that would you know, offend people man for
the week. Yeah, Why do we keep back in like
words can't have more than one meeting? Why do we
act like context doesn't matter. These folks don't understand our culture.
Until yesterday, I didn't know meant anything else other than
somebody got over him. And that's what I thought. And
(07:23):
we even saying for him. I mean, and I could
swear it is something that we said in school. He
jipped us, right, that's right. Yeah, And and she apologized
for she said, you know, I come. In fact she
talked about she said, I come, basically paraphrasing from a
generation that used the word, and she meant, no, you know,
no no harm by it. And as you guys just mentioned,
it is a informal verb that means the con swindle,
(07:45):
being robbed, defrauded, and something. Yeah, it's a real words.
I thought so too. Well it's well it's a slang.
Well it's a slang, an informal verb because okay, uh
that that means of being robbing, defrauday. And the term
is offensive to the Romanian people because they were once
(08:05):
perceived as fraud in frauds and thieves. Now, when I
was doing this ye, stop stop and speaking and speaking
of the N word. There's something else I didn't know.
Have you guys heard when I did a deep dive
on this, have you ever heard of any MENI mighty mole? Yes, no,
(08:29):
it is originally Yeah, he's right, that is also deemed
racist and offensive because I wanted to really try to understand,
like why was jip defensive? So I did a deep
dive and went down the rabbit hole on that, And
you are exactly right, any MENI Mighty mole meant catch
(08:50):
a negro by the toe and that defensive. So apparently, guys,
jip is another I guess thing on the list that
offends a demographic and um, you know it calls WHOOPI
Goldbergs have to apologize yet again. Yeah, hey man on
behalf of Willoby SMD. We know what that means, right, Okay,
(09:13):
we know what that means. Right, I don't tell when
we get out the air, you know what you don't
know what that means? Yes, Manacause, you gotta stop. We
gotta stop acting like words can't have more than one meaning.
We understand context matter. Y'all know, she wasn't talking about nobody.
She was using the word jips for what it means.
Yesterday I used it all the time, only gave me
one polynyi, but you got back for another one. You're
(09:37):
not about to talk about you for They don't. They
don't do that to anybody. Now you're not gonna say
jip no more now, but I know you. Now you're
about to stop. You're gonna stop trying to say you
say jip all the time. And I'm saying, in the
proper context, isn't in the dictionary? Dad? Did you get
that from the dictionary? Yeah, it's literally. Then I'm saying, yes,
I don't want to hear that nonsense. I don't hear
that nasse in the dictionary. Stop acting like words have
(09:59):
just one me. They don't. Y'all know that context matters,
even though if you don't know what context means no context.
All right, Well you got about twenty one seconds. I
don't want you by your time. You're good, I'm good.
Lasts from page News. Get it off your chest eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you
need to vent, hit us up right now. Phone lines
(10:19):
are wide open again. Eight hundred five eight five one
oh five one. Is the breakfast club? Good? Morning the
Breakfast Club. It's a new days. Your time to get
it off your chest? Wait? Wait, will you're mad or black?
Sid me get up and get something? Call up now
eight hundred five eighty five one oh five one. We
(10:40):
want to hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello,
this is Malcome Malcolm, what up? Getting off your chests?
Welcome in the middle. What up? Ye? How you donna understand? Bro?
Because words morning, understand day. But you're looking at a
lake when that world wasn't a dictionary, it wasn't rotory.
(11:06):
Hey man, I'm from monks Corn to South Carolina. I've
never heard that term in my life used for anything
other than to say somebody cheated you or swindled you.
Where you from out? But that's how the robbingtory because
that Romanian are known for robbin and swindling people. If
you robin swindle someone, you must your bro. It's okay
(11:28):
for someone to call you and and they're not saying
it because they're blackness it because they think they're ignorant,
My brother. The word the N word is more widely
known as a racial slur. I've never known jip and
if you and if you look up the N word
in the dictionary. There's no positive connotation to the word
at all. The word gypsy actually is a verb that
(11:48):
needs to cheat and swindle. Yes, there is definition that
positive if you're using it as a verb to say, yo, somebody, Jimmy,
we don't know nothing about no people. That's just a
word that's that's like saying swiftly. So if there's something
there's a culture of people called swifters, I don't know.
I upset by noon. Hello, I forgot Oh you right,
Taylor Swift fan base. Damn, you're right. Hello, Hello, Hey,
(12:10):
what's your name? Destiny? Hey, Destiny, get it off your chest. Yes,
I just want to comment on the whoopee But the
Whoopie gold Bird situation, that's crazy that she had to
apologize for that. I mean, I understand we're at a
point where we're trying to be more aware of what
we're saying get possibly offending other people. But it's getting
(12:31):
ridiculous at this point. And five years ago I said,
what's gonna be crazy is what's gonna be offensive? Five
years from them, at this rate, we ain't gonna be
able to say nothing like like literally, I remember back
in the day when the only offensive word was goddamn.
But you remember you could you couldn't say you can
say god. Damn you if you can say they didn't
(12:53):
even want you to say god, then we got a
million more things we can't say. Unbelievable. I'm running out
of words. I gotta hello, who's this you know? Good morning?
Good morning morning? What's your name? Bro? I just wanted
to hey, good morning guys. I called a couple of
times before us well from Jersey. I wanted to talk
about as far as how people will tell you, well,
(13:14):
tell you things that you already know is not the truth,
in order to erase histories. So like you were talking about,
as far as I'm drawing the blank right now, but
equally January six, there's a side of the political party
that once you believe that what we saw in real
time didn't happen, or that it wasn't as bad as
we as as it really was all it was just
(13:36):
a dust stuff And even now they waited a year
and a half to show us a different video that
was more than likely edited and standardized to make it
seem like it's you. Well, what took place wasn't necessarily
that bad. The same thing with American history. So they
want to use these code words that sometimes we fall
in the chap too and instead of just being latent
(13:58):
with what the actually the actually were. So if you
want to talk about what flavor, we could think American
history and putting all of that umbrella. But I think
that long term gold is if we go ahead and
discredited enough and don't talk about it, then in a
generation two it didn't happen. Of course, that's exactly what
they're trying. They're trying to do exactly what they're trying
(14:19):
to do. But we're taking your calls. Get it off
your chests. Eight hundred five eight five, one oh five one.
If you need to vent, hit us up now. It's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. But why
did we go up? He looks like a slave every time,
what you mean every time she's got to apologize natural
television everybody. I'm so sick of it. Yeah, I'm so
(14:41):
sick of you know, I'm just waiting whooping to snatch
up bro off and walk out the stages. And that's it.
I'm sick of y'all giving me. I'm spouting out she
didn't made enough money, shouldn't have made enough money. Yeah,
I'm so tired of him do and this to whoopee man,
especially for something that I didn't know anything about, the
(15:03):
word jip being of prinsip to anybody. I didn't know
that the word jip had any association for a a group
of people. It's in the dictionary. She used it for
somebody that cheated you, swindled you. I didn't even know
it was in the dictionary. I thought it was just
a slain word. And she used it for Trump and
she was so right. Man, Come on, man, right, come on,
how are you gonna apologize for something you called Donald Trump?
(15:25):
Donald Trump? Don a pod jock but nothing, he calls
nobody Jesus. All right, without your wig on the floor
and walk out. That's got a wig on, but it
would be funny. But all the time, y'all, jim Met,
get it off your chest. Eight hundred and five eighty five,
(15:45):
one on five one. If you need the vent, you
can hit it something now. We got rumors on the way.
We got to talk John Moran. He sat down yesterday
for one on one interview with Jail Rolls. That's right
with the homie Jaylen Rose and we're breaking down. When
we come back, it's the breakfast Club of the morning,
a breakfast club. Are you looking at me? Games back?
What the hell? Why are you start speaking a tongue?
All of them? Night morning, everybody? We are to breakfast club.
(16:08):
DJ MB Charlomagne, the Guy, and of course we got
our co host, Miss Pat. Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk TikTok thro my or you've gossip and or
you chatting the rumor report. I mean, I guess we're
on the breakfast cloud. This were the tea spills right
right on the breakfast club. Now the TikTok CEO shau
(16:28):
Zi Chew, he talks about if his kids are actually
on TikTok so you have two kids, I do do
they use TikTok so? At what ages? Are they? Eight?
And six? Okay, TikTok is here in the US if
you're below the ages, if you're below thirteen, you get
a very restricted version of TikTok. And in many other
countries around the world we don't allow us this one
(16:50):
below thirteen. I guess the question is I know you
said it's a legal requirement that that that kids under
thirteen have to have a different app effectively. But I
guess the question is do they have to have an
app at all? Could you at it so that the
kids couldn't have access to it? Is it something you'd
ever think about the last time I checked. No, Dan
says no in terms of the legal requirement, doesn't allow
me to do this. But I can get back to
(17:12):
you on this. So he said, that's a TikTok version
that allows kids thirteen and under, and his kids did
not on that version either. I've heard damn that every
owner of a social media app say that. And you
know the creators of the smartphones and all of those
devices your kids are addicted to, they all say they
don't be letting me. My kids don't have any of that. Yeah,
now my kids are tickets. I have a phone. I
have a fourteen year old with no phone. I say,
(17:33):
you gotta do like I did when somebody to grab
you screen cut it out. Man, you should have a phone.
Hey don't have a phone. So it's an incident. It's
something that he's out about. Get on the bus and
keep I picked him up with my husband, pick him up.
We just they just I'm not into all that and
It's kind of crazy how we grew up in the
nineteen hundreds with none of that stuff. How do we
(17:53):
even get around the pay phone? At least we used
to print out maps and ride around like pirates, map questions.
You know what I'm saying. Yeah, the phone, the I
phone got you around with malcor Man. Right. Yeah, you
have to print it out and then you have to
make a left at the McDonald's, and you gotta make
the right at this restaurant or this motel, a hotel,
and then you knew landmarks. It's gonna be a mailbox
with a red flag and you're gonna turn right right
by that mailbox. You have to remember all of that
(18:15):
that were back when people were reading. Yes, we don't
have to read anymore. You have y'all don't date when
you married. But you've talked to somebody and they'll be
talking in their phone and then you get there and
they don't talk nothing like what They just takes messages.
You like, ain't the way in the hell you text
me that? So you you know, I got a brother
in law that can't read, but text really well because
of the voice. Remember, remember when you have to you
(18:36):
have to remember phone numbers. I can remember all phone
numbers from when I was a kid. Me too, Grandma
phone number, Mama phone phone number, white phone number because
she'd been together twenty five years. Like her house number. Yeah,
help my wife's house number. Man, you don't have to
remember any of that. So our brain cells are dying now.
So that's why I don't get the kids a phone.
And literally my daughter let them play about on the weekend,
(18:58):
maybe an hour or two, and then that's it. Really,
how do you know the kids that bridge? It ain't
not even just because of your kids, Huh, They ain't
my kids. I didn't have that. Their brain sailed day.
Their mama was smoking crack, So don't put that on me.
I didn't smoke no drugs with my kids, and they
brain still died because I got impregnant in the graveyard.
(19:18):
But keep going what well? John Moran he had a
conversation of one on one with Jelling Rose yesterday and
they spoke about him being in the club with that gun,
and gilling Rose asked him if the gun was hits
you at the spot shotgun Willis. I've been there, you
were holding a gun and we both know how dangerous
(19:39):
that can be Who's gun where you holding? Well? The
gun wasn't mind you know, it's not who I am.
I don't condone and any type of violence, but I'll
take you know, full responsibility, you know for my actions.
Made a bad mistake. Um, and I can see image
you know that I painted, you know, over myself, you know,
(19:59):
with my recent mistakes. But knowing the future, UM, I'm
gonna shure everybody who job really is. You know what
I'm about, and um, you know, change this narrative. Boy,
he was rehearsed like it a woman. What was that second?
I can't even remember. But that's when you get in
(20:22):
trouble and just what you're gonna go out there and say? Script?
Don't you get off the script? Who I am? Who
the jo? The young man is holding himself accountable, he's apologizing.
You gotta get a young brother from grace man absolutely
got I mean, he didn't hurt nobody. I mean he
you know, he was, he's young. That's what happened. When
(20:44):
you give young people money, they want to have fun
too quick. That's what I mean. I said all the time.
Stop giving them young folks all this money and put
it in the back in and let him work real hard.
I just don't understand why why certain people in the
culture think that uh violence, are pretending to be violent.
It's considered fun. It's tough to get the girls. Nobody
(21:05):
wants someone off for a long time. That's been going
on this the nineties. Everybody want to be hardcore. Everybody
want to be nobody wants to Corny who wears glasses
look like it is. But we were all, you know,
victims that you are. Yeah, I was. You were thugged
out a lot of stupid stuff. No was you you
thug that I wasn't. I wasn't no fake dug out.
But I did a lot of stupid stuff Like I
used to back in the day when I was DJ
(21:26):
and the club. I used to carry a little two
two in my shooter to get in the club and
do stupid stuff like too little sot used to put
used to put between the butt cheeks. That was for pleasurement.
I never said that. I never said you weren't around
with a bitch gut that's the with your grandma. God,
(21:50):
shoot yourself, don't you your life? Tell nobody you had
that little plays would have got the light skin beat off.
He said, it tough too. I had a little doucee
back in the day. I had to duce to some
MoMA nolo blinds my tims. Back in the day, you
used to do that because they pat you down when
(22:11):
you're going to club, and they had to do to
Mary J. Blige real Love boots. I called the boots
that Mary J used to calling the Real Love video
and we had to do them. I used to call
them back and off me. Stop stop, just say you
had the forty five. You gotta be all right. I
just been a boy your pants and played like all
of that was a part of your paints. Don't ever
tell nobody. Don't you ever repeat that story again and
(22:33):
use the word duce. Dudes in your boots? He said
it tough to dude due in your boots. Turned to me, man,
that sound like a gay slur. Dude, do send your boots?
That I'm about the question question I forget I have
no more audio. Does the new name DJ Douce douce
in your boots were changing in the name tailor, I
need to drop DJ Douce. Do send your boots? We
(22:56):
turned to me, You know what that says when we
come back we got Front Page News. Test is gonna
be joined us. We're gonna be talking. That's broun tough.
Oh my god, you private school, that's private. I want
to Saint Francis Preparatory High School only day in your
(23:18):
I want to Saint Joam Nan as well. You know
what play game stanak you figure play game and du
front page dudes and the next. I hate y'all's to
Breakfast Club of Morning. Miss packs here the breakfast Club.
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(23:40):
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recruitered dot com slash Breakfast wanting everybody in stech Nz
Charlomagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. We got
our co host, Miss pat with us at it's time
for front page News. Now we got test figure roll
on the line, figure rot the hood. Whish for now
for someone to start off with kareer mobdude Jabbar you
(24:01):
know he sold his NBA championship rings for two point
eight million dollars in an auction. Not bad, I mean
the reality with the point of holding onto That's exactly
what he said. According to ESPN, Jabbar's four championship rings
and other memorabilio were up for auction. And what I
(24:24):
love about this story such a feel good story to me,
is because he actually took the proceeds to donate it
to his Skyhook Foundation in an effort to help kids
who are interested in science, math, engineering, and technology. He
went on to say that when it comes to choosing
between us storing a championship ring or trophy in a
room or providing kids with an opportunity to change their lives,
(24:46):
he said that the choice was pretty simple. He also
went on to say, looking back on what he's done
in his life, instead of gazing at the sparkle of
jewels or gold plated, gold plated things that he did
a long time ago, he says that he wants to
make sure that he's impacting kids. He says that he
no longer has is personally attached to those items, and
(25:06):
he wants to create new history for himself in the
future of others. I just thought this was really, you know,
a dope story. To talk about how he um you know,
gave all of that away, giving it to the kids
and actually being able to see the fruit that he's buried.
That's real. So those rings that just symbols is something
they can never take away from him anyway, you know
what I mean? So why not use that capital to
(25:26):
help people? I think we all like that in certain ways.
I know I'm a holder of a bunch of stuff
back that I ain't never had any too. I don't
want to ever throw away things that I ain't never
hadden it. Man, Well, I don't have no trophies, so
I guess I got old person's on me probably, you know,
I don't know if he said all of them are
what he sold, because I would still want something to
(25:48):
get to my kids, so my kids could have so
they can get their grandkids, you know, something that kids
have money. Pass that capital down, don't give it to charity.
What would be the most you would buy for something
like that, like for your favorite player, one of the
former Cowboys, Charlot Mayne, would you break Brandon and spend
I think one thing went for like sixty thousand dollars. No,
I wouldn't know. I wouldn't like if you're saying to
(26:12):
get them kids, even if it went to charity. No,
I got a Dallas Cowboy football at the house that
all of him signed. No, like Dak Prescott. I got
a Tony Romo Jersey signed. Karen Stillball got me that.
But they don't mean nothing because they didn't. He needs
something to me. But I mean they're not working, They're
just for his Yeah, I knew the Cowboys. What's coming now?
New York City Mayor Eric Addams, what's going over? Eric Adams?
(26:34):
He dancing, Yes, you gotta hangover right now. Just left
the club. Shut up, man, Well, he said, he left
the club. Well, this particular story, he is pushing his
Christianity hard. New York City Mayor Eric Adams said, forget
all of that First Amendment mess y'all talking about. He
said he is not separating church and state. While he
(26:54):
was attending an interfaith breakfast at the New York Public Library,
he said on the speech that he walked and talks
with the Lord and he will always be a child
of God, he said. He claimed, he said he cannot
separate his religious beliefs from him being mayor of mean
flat out said it. In fact, He told the audience
that don't tell me to separate church and state, because
(27:15):
state is the body. Church is the heart, and if
you take the heart out the body, the body dies.
He said, I cannot separate my belief because I'm an
elected official. He said that when he puts policies in place,
he does it with a godlike approach. He said he's
always a child of God. He will not apologize for that.
And then he went on to say, when we took
(27:36):
prayer out of schools, that is when the guns came in.
That that can be debated, but that is his position.
And so I guess maybe that explains while he why
he is going full Old Testament on his tough own crime. So,
even though he was in front of religious leaders, a
lot of people objected to it and said that he
needs a refresher on the First Amendment question, Tess, have
you ever met a godly politician? Like seriously, when when
(27:58):
we reach KRYPTI and we see how they be I here, governor,
have you ever really met a godly politician? I have, Joe,
depends on what day, it depends on what depends on
what politician he over there talking crap getting that money
have you ever met one time as a godly politician? Well,
you know, even if they are, the bottom line is
when you swear in you it's not about your personal
(28:21):
ideology or your personal soul. People got to figure it out.
Do you want to just like we talked about it
in the other hour, do you want people to push
their personal ideology or do you want them to stakes
to the constitution? So you can't pick and choose. So
even if he was godly or or the worst center
on earth, you are sworn in to uphold the Constitution
of the United States. Shout out to all my veterans
in the building. You know, I'm a veteran. So it's
(28:42):
not about whether he's godly or not. Burst amendments that
separate church in the state. And that's just what it is.
And if you don't want to separate it, then go
to the full pit. That's real because because it could
the same could be for people who like our white supremacist.
You don't want to bring in that ideology, absolutely, and
they do, and they pick and choose. You know what,
when they when they're gonna be a Christian when they're
not gonna be a ri And so it just muddies
(29:04):
the water. I'm never a Christian. It cost too much.
It cost too much to be a Christian. You go
to church, air time you stand up, they they pass
a collection play. So I just quit. Every time you talk,
I say, I'm a PREFERMENTU pad. I'm gonna stop now,
gonna stop now stop, Hey, salute to YouTube. Tis getting
an award tonight, man, you're getting the Champion to Change
(29:25):
award from the UCLA Black Lawsuit and Association. Right, Yes,
I am black girl man. Drop a ball for test. Yeah.
And I just want to you know, I want to
thank you guys for allowing me to sit up here
this week. I always you know, sho man, I'm very
a spiritual person. I'm a sinner, but I'm a very
spiritual person, and I believe everything happens for a reason,
(29:47):
and I just wanted to inspire everybody just for a second.
If you can hear the sound of my voice. You
may be driving into a job that may not align
with your purpose, and I just want you to know
to keep driving, keep pushing. I've done it all from
I have been sweeping floors, cleaning toilets, selling shoes, you
name it. I've been on the bottom. I've been on
the top, my daddy, my mother, my brother, my most
(30:07):
of my immediate families in the ground. No one has
put me in this business. In fact, I've been put
out of more rooms that I've been put in. And
so I will be accepting this award tonight on the
third month, on the sixteenth day. My mother died in
the third month in twenty sixteen. So that is confirmation
to me that my guardian angel is saying I have
(30:28):
a testimony in my tests. I believe that it is
definitely orchestrated that I've been here with you all week
long listening to Miss Pat's story and how your girl
unmade it. So shout out to all my survivors out
there that got it out the mud, know that I
see you, I'm listening, and this is for us. Tell
us figure, y'all, make sure y'all subscribe to this great
shot no Chasing podcast on the Black Effect. iHeartRadio podcast Network.
(30:52):
To congratulations to absolutely you just gave me chilled. That's right,
and don't stay out too late because we need you
tomorrow morning. Right. I'm on Whist Coast time, y'all, So
it's like three am here all right, thank you so much, Tess,
thank you. All right. When we come back, we're gonna
be kicking it with John Legend. John Legend will be
joining us, and don't move. It's the Breakfast Club, the Morning,
(31:14):
DJ Envy and Charlomagne the Guy. We're brothers. We're happy
ever seeing at least I am the verdict still out
on Envy, I'm black. The Breakfast Club one oh five one,
The Breakfast Club. Your morning's will never be the same morning.
(31:36):
Everybody is DJ Envy, Charlomagne the Guy. We are the
Breakfast Club. We got our co host this weakness, Pat
joining us, and we got a special guest in the building. Yes, indeed,
John Legend, welcome me back, fellas. How you feelings, Pat?
See John Legends on sad for night Scharlomn John Bunisin.
(31:58):
Is he one that he got has he? Of course? Yeah? Us, Yes,
they got like a few years ago. Yeah, I've been back.
Were not cold maybe maybe on Zoom I think ain't
too cute on zoo. Shut up. They got a lot
of filters on zoom. You can play with it. Not
like it up a little bit. Family. Congratulations, everybody's been doing.
(32:21):
Everybody's good. We got your wife three kids. Now it's good.
You know, do you hate seeing every time I watch
Million Dollar List in La, they always referenced you in
your house and your old house some way that I
don't like that they keep saying our names. And Rihanna
lived that at that same house too, and we already
sold it and then they're trying to sell it again,
(32:42):
but we ain't got nothing to do with it. Now.
Every shows like, yeah, that's the house that John Legend
used to us renee Christian house. They come like, this
is weird that house's been going. Yeah, yeah, we don't
live there anymore and we're not trying to sell it
somebody else's, but they're using our name plenty. How you
look so refreshed with a new born in the house? Man, Well,
are you segue to my loved One skincare of that?
(33:05):
Because you look at that nothing you could do, Luke,
We have a new skink. We do have a new
skincare line, and you know it's formulated for melodin rich
skin and the focus is really on moisture. So if
I'm looking moisturized, it's called loved old One, Loved One,
(33:26):
loved One. Yeah, loved one we made you want to
go down that lane? Well, you know, I've been working
in skincare doing deals with other brands, and I was like,
why not start my own? And I didn't want to
start it unless we had a real reason for it
to exist. When we started doing the research on the business,
we realized that there's a lot of black and brown
folks that wants skincare that's actually formulated for us and
(33:48):
that takes into considerations the unique differences that our skin has,
and there weren't very many companies that was actually doing that,
and so we said, why not create it? Not only
did we want to create it and formulate it for us,
but we wanted to make sure everybody could afford it too.
So we're selling everything for fifteen dollars to last right now.
We're selling it at CBS and Walmart, places where people shot.
And so we're like, why make this a celebrity skincare brand?
(34:11):
The only celebrities and their friends can afford? Make it
told that everybody can afford it and formulate it for
a population that's been underserved and hasn't been catered to
in this business. Well, can be pap putting on our
hands right now because we got some good moisturizing. If
you we got moisturized, we got oil. Tell you what happened?
(34:32):
You know this pap put the wrong one on her hand,
paid started let rubbing on the black man. Never look good.
The moisturizer is really good and the oil is really good. Yeah,
oh this is nice. It's creamy rich, creamy, rich and creamy.
(34:55):
Put on your list. This we got jokes. But the
fact is black and brown people actually lose moisture more
quickly than lighter skin. And so when we talk about
being Ashley, like, that's a real thing, and we're more
likely to be Ashley because we lose moisture more quickly,
and so a lot of our products are focused on
moisture and hydration. Yeah. I'm getting a facial yesterday and
(35:17):
she was telling me that you have to put a
serum in your face because your face. I never heard
this term, but she said, your face drinks and serum
actually is what hydrates your face. And you're finding different
ways to protect your skin. Barrier and moisture, moisturized hydrate.
It's good. It's a product. The only way for artists
to create generational wealth. I think it's a combination. I
make a lot of money playing live and make a
(35:39):
lot of money on my music. But I think having
products allows you to make money without having to be
out doing a show all the time, you know, So
it gives you the ability to create wealth that can
build and can be generational because these products can outlive you.
They can be in stores forever. And we're trying to
build a brand that people really trust and will make
a part of the daily routine that they're gonna be
(36:00):
buying for decades to come after I'm gone. Are you
try to entertainment? No? I love it, Okay. I love
making music. I'm always writing, always recording. I just put
album out in September, for another solo version of the
album out in February, and I'm gonna keep making music,
keep playing shows. That's always gonna be my first love.
I think it'll be my main job for the rest
of my life. Well, i's a better question. Are you
tired of being the main product? Like? Are you tired
(36:22):
of having to get up and go do the physical
work in order to make I feel like I can diversify? Honestly,
I think that's what I'm doing, is making it so
it's not all writing on me being present every moment
and I'm always gonna make music, always gonna do shows.
But this allows me to diversify. Now, you know with
autists selling their catalogs. You sold your catalog. I sold
a piece of my publishing. Yeah, what made you think
(36:44):
to do that? Because I've seen so many people selling
their catalogs that because a lot of times people say,
you know what, I'm gonna keep my catalog so I
can continue to eat, my kids continue to eat. But
you but it's diversification too, because what you're doing is
saying you're letting this other company invest in this piece
of your business. And then you're saying, I'm to take
that cash they give me and invest in other things.
And so for me, it makes it so you're not
(37:04):
completely relying on the ups and downs of the music industry.
But you're saying, I'm gonna take some of this money
and invest it in other things. And that's what I did.
Did you bring that down a little bit more, because
you know, when black people tend to do things like that,
people like, oh, you're selling your catalog, you're gonna have ownership, like,
but white artists, dude, I'm watching all the white artist selling.
Plenty of people are doing it, and honestly, I did
(37:25):
it at the time when I felt like they were
offering a high premium when it comes to the multiple.
So basically the multiple is they see what you're making
per year and they offer you something x times at
per year amount for your catalog. And I felt like
the multiple they were offering me was very generous. I
was going to take that cash and invest it in
different things, so it wasn't all relying on my music
(37:45):
career to make the money. What are they doing with
the music? What's the what's the upside for them? Basically,
they're doing the same thing we were doing before. They're
getting it placed in movies and the regular revenue of it, streaming,
all the other money you bring in from your catalog.
Just taking that money in and so they're taking a
bet that maybe they can find ways to grow it
beyond what it was, you know, normally getting That's a
(38:07):
bet that they took, and I figured, let let them
take that bet on my music, and then I'm gonna
take this cash to get me and bet on other things.
I have one question, is this this showers yea everything's
unisease good. Yeah, so it's facing body wash fac somebody
moisturizes a shave cream. Everything's unisex formulated for melanimrish skin.
I'm gonna use it on me. The place is hidden.
(38:29):
You donna love it, you don't love it, I'm sick
you washed your son, or you have to fight, I'm
gonna use it. I just want to make sure I
ain't putting them smelling like no man down. Only two
of the products or even have a light sent but
both of the sense of very natural and and it's
definitely unisex. You're not gonna smell Mannish shaving cream here.
(38:51):
And I ain't gonna everybody needs a shave I'm be
growing them whiskers down now. So I'm gonna use somebody
which fitted. It's just I get chats hair sometime. And
the thing about shaving, you know, and all the other
things we do to our skin that can strip the skin,
that can make it feel dry, and everything we do
is focus on moisture and hydrations. So the shave cream
(39:13):
is gonna be nice too. You're gonna like it. Oh,
have mercies. You look at shaving style, Miss Pat, Miss Pat,
don't fight him, No, don't fight him. All right, we
got more with John Legend. When we come back, don't move.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, bring everybody is DJ Envy,
Charlemagne the guy. We all the Breakfast Club. We got
our co host, Miss Pat joining us today and we
(39:34):
got John Legend in the building. You ever look back
and think about some of the moves you made and
when people challenge those moves back then, and then it
all unfolds and it'd be like you see the vision,
like I'm just thinking of Kanye West, right, And when
you first decided, you know, this is not where I
want to go. It's not the route, and people like
you're crazy. He's this, he's a genius and you should
stay there, and you decided to take your own lane,
and then you see how it unfolds. Well, those same
(39:56):
people kind of follow what you did. All of these decisions. Though.
There were people in my camp that didn't want me
to sign with Kanye when I signed with him, because
I signed with Good Music and I signed through Good
Music to Columbia Records. So all of my first few
albums were through Good Music to Columbia Records. And you
give up certain things when you signed to an artist
production company. But I felt like it was the right
(40:17):
move for me because creatively we were in a great
place together and his star was ascending as a producer
and as an artist, and I felt like being part
of that team was gonna propel my career to a
place that it needed to be, and it did, and
it was really important for me to be with good
music for my first few albums. My career wouldn't be
what it is without that. And then when it's time
(40:39):
to move on, it's time to move on. But we
had a really successful run together. You make these decisions
and you know, hindsight is twenty twenty and everything looks good.
Now it's like everything worked out, it's all good, But
at the time you know it's complicated and it's difficult
making these decisions and you're not sure if it's going
to work out. And you like to think that you
you know, you can foresee the future and you can
(41:00):
plan ahead, but you never know how it's going to
work out. But it worked out. As so many things
you give up when you signed to an artist company.
Will you give up a piece of your revenue? So
but the bottom line is with any of these deals,
You're like, would I'd rather have one hundred percent of
a smaller amount or fifty or sixty percent of a
larger amount. And so you got to do the math
and say, is it worth me signing with somebody giving
(41:22):
up a portion of my revenue? Are we going to
grow the pie together and make something bigger that we
all can share together? They have any concerned about you
being R and B and him being hip hop? Like no,
I think it actually made it so I had my
own lane within good music. It made it so that,
you know, I wasn't really competing with the other rappers
that he had signed. I was in my own lane.
But why did you lead a voice? I didn't really
(41:43):
leave the boys. I just am not doing this season,
but I'll be back. Okay, okay, Well you take a
break because like we're having a kid. You know, there's
a lot going on, and it's tired of hitting a bail.
I turn it around for these seconds. Turn I mean,
it would be kind of deceitful to say I'm really
(42:06):
taking a full paternity leave because I'm doing plenty of
work during this time, but I'm doing a little less work.
And it was a perfect time to take a break
and uh, you know it's Blake's last season. Let him
have his moment and then, uh, Blake is my guy.
He tweeted me one day, almost faint. It was by
people with buying checks. That wasn't him that way, that
(42:27):
was in Miss pat. It was what do you think
about the current state of R and B? I know
one time did he said R and B is dead?
In this conversation has been going on and on for
the last couple of months. Which your vision of RMB,
which it's not dead. I feel like there's a lot
of great artists making great music. I was just on
Spotify listening to music in the car today and a
lot of it was R and B and a lot
of it was current and a lot of it was dope.
And I feel like there's so many really good artists
(42:48):
making R and B and no, it's definitely not that.
Who who does John Legard listened to I was listening
to says Up today. I was listening to Summer Walker.
I was listening to Daniel Caesar, I was listening to her.
I was listening to Frank Ocean, I was listening to
I mean, we could have some new Frank, that would
be great, Leon Bridges, It's not that. I mean, occasionally
I listened to myself, okay, but most of the time
(43:10):
I'm focused. Like when when I'm making an album, I
listen to it all the time, and I'm like tweaking,
getting it exactly right. And then once it's out, then
you know, I let it be out. But my kids
actually love it, and so they'll ask me to play
it in the car a lot. So I end up
listening to myself in the car with my kids when
I take them to school. Dan, Yeah, I can't do that,
my keys. I curse in my coming. I got like
(43:30):
occasional curse word in my songs, and so we just
try to ignore that. And my daughter will laugh, she's that, dad,
you said a bad word. But you know, keep moving.
You intentionally put out an album every two years, because
I do not exactly intentionally, but I'm like, I'm intentionally creative.
So I like to schedule time in the studio. I
like to when I'm off tour actually actively make time
(43:52):
to make new music. And by the time you know
I do that for like six or nine months, it's
time to put another album out because I got enough
material for it is any song that you created that
you just can't stand anymore. But like I hate performing it,
I hate doing it. No, I mean I have enough
songs that I don't have to play any song I
don't like, really, and there's none of my popular songs
that my fans want to hear that I don't like
(44:13):
to play. What was incredible. I loved it, Honestly. It's
like a masterclass every night. She's just an incredible performer.
Her mistique, just everything about her. She seems so mythical,
like not even a real person, Like she just disappears.
Like the last tour was the one we did together,
and that was twenty eleven. Wow, it's twenty twenty three.
(44:36):
She has she's chilling, she's still even then. Did you
interact with her though, we did, and she was super
cool like you would honestly you'd be intimidated by her mistique,
but in person, she was very chill, and she had
her family along on the tour, and all of her
people were really kind to my people, which isn't always
the case when you go on tours somebody else who's
(44:57):
the headliner. They were all super like kind and interacted
with my musicians and my band we just had a
great time on tour with them. But if the headliner
didn't want you, they could just say that, right. So, man,
I've been part of when early in my career, I've
been part of tours where the headliner would do things
like make sure your decibel level was lower and control
(45:18):
your stage position. You can't have a band or you're
gonna have Yeah. And then once I started having an
opening artist, like, I remember that and I never would
do that to them. Yeah, I never would do that
to them. I was always I would always give them
what I felt like was the proper shine, and I
never was scared that they was gonna upstage me. I
was just like, let's give these people a great show
(45:40):
that includes the opening act having a great show too.
It's a difficult opening up for somebody because you can
do these tours on your own, but now you actually
have to open up for somebody. Was that it was
actually kind of easy because doing two hour shows is
a lot, and doing a forty five minute show is
very comfortable. Those artists that are fronted on you like
that back in the day, now that you to e
got winner to you hold that against them like I don't. Honestly,
(46:02):
I'm good. I'm happy. My career is great. I've done
very well and had wonderful tours. Like, I'm not gonna
worry about small things that happened at the beginning of
my career. I got of coution. You ever get on
stage and be singing and then before you get your lyrics?
Oh yeah, oh, because they happened to me too. Us.
Oh yeah, of course, y'all remember that, Joe. Yeah, I'm
tired you compaying yourself to John Legend. I'm not world class?
(46:32):
What do you do? Uh? Sometimes sometimes I actually laugh
about it because I honestly think fans like having those
human moments in the show. That's I'm saying it makes human.
Sometimes I'll be like that up and excuse me, and
I'll just be like, I messed that up and started
it started over, And the fans love it because they
get a real moment, because they don't want you to
(46:54):
be perfect, and they don't want you to be lip
syncing and and all that. They want you to be
a human. That's why they come to the show. Like
if they wanted to listen to the record, they could
listen to the record we'll keep it up. We got
more with John Legend. When we come back. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, Bring everybody in. DJ Envy Charlemagne
the guy. We all the Breakfast Club. We got our
call host, Miss Pat joining us today and we got
(47:14):
John Legend in the building. Charlemagne, How did you come
up with the name? We loved the one for the
loved one. My team came up with it. Obviously, I
put love into a lot of what I do. My
wine is called lv A. Bunch of my music is
of course love music. And I felt like, when you
think about that skincare ritual, it's about self love, but
it's also something you share with the people you love.
(47:35):
And so we felt like that name would be dope.
We made it kind of different with the kind of
raised oh and the one. Some people say loved oh one,
and we got to correct them, but once they learned
what it is, loved the one just you know, rolls
off the tongue. How long did it take for you
to like get all of that together, like you have
to go with different products. Yeah, we started like a
year and almost a year and a half ago, and
(47:56):
so we started with the idea that this needed to exist,
that there is a gap in the market that melonated
skin wasn't being paid attention to. And if you look
at the actual the policy that goes into it, the
FDA doesn't even require you to test on any shades
darker than like white. Basically, yeah, they don't actually require
you to test on it. So if you're testing efficacy,
(48:18):
you don't have to test it on brown and black skin.
When it comes to dermatology, the dermatologists don't even have
to learn about the conditions that brown and black skin
are more likely to face. And you look in their textbooks,
they're not even seeing pictures of our skin. Absolutely, and
so there's a big gap in skincare when it comes
to thinking about the different needs that melonated skin has.
(48:39):
And so we figured there's a real opportunity here to
create something special that our people can use confidently knowing
that we put a lot of care and research into
developing it for us and then making it affordable for everybody.
Now it makes all the sensant word because you know,
we always say that black people love the skin you're in,
but how about to take care of it too, So
take care of it and we want to give people
the opportunity to take care this game in a beautiful
(49:01):
way that's effective but also affordable. And that's why we
wanted it available everywhere, available at CBS ten dollars, fifteen
dollars for everything that's affordable, not an Oscar's dinner party. Yeah,
did you know what was gonna be born? That's why
y'll about the Douno cards. We were like, it was
like our insurance in case it was boring, but it
was not boring. Must have biggers, y'all pulled them out.
(49:22):
We had a good table. Now we didn't actually end
up playing. We just had him. We just had him
with him just in case. Yeah, we had a good table.
Gotta union d Wade queenland Tief. I know we could
have some space going to but yeah, we had a
good table. We had a good time. Oh so the conversation, okay,
I get with you. So the conversation was good, So
it was no need to We didn't actually end up playing.
(49:43):
They might have played after we left, because we left
right after dessert because we both had to fly east
on a red eye. I don't know if they played
after we leave. Maybe they needed after we left, you know,
because you see the list that they put out a
rolling Stone to the Greatest Singer's List. To see that list,
what did you think about the list? He's laughing his laugh.
I don't understand their criteria. It was like it was
(50:08):
a lot of people left off. Leave aside the fact
that I was left off, but left there was a
lot of other people left offs. I'm like, it didn't
really make sense. But I feel like they just something
called them the trolling Stone, and I feel like they
just wanted to spark conversation and uh be a little
bit controversial, and they were controversial. Did you read the
(50:29):
Franklin's comments on some of the singers on there. Franklin's
day was not a frank I was like, yeah, sayce Queen,
(50:49):
she came back. Who was you thinking about? You think what?
I think? Wow? I just wasn't Who was it? It
was Shaka Khan wasn't on Blast. You was on something else.
(51:14):
Sha was on something else. Yeah. The thing is like,
what is your criteria? Is it like actual like pure
vocal ability, because there are definitely people on that list.
They're not I wouldn't call them great singers, but they're
very like successful artists and so are you basing it
on their vocal ability or you're basing it on just
their pure success as a lead artist, And then you
(51:37):
know there's there's different ways to make that list, and
it just seemed like it was all over the place.
I hate when they brings success into it. Yeah, success, money, accolades,
Like let's just talk about raw talent, like even when
it comes to the rap, when it comes to the singing.
But it's like, but you know, there's a there's an
argument for that too. Like if you're talking about football,
you talk about Tom Brady as the goat, you're not
(51:59):
saying he's the most purely talented quarterback. You're saying he
won the most championships, he had the most success at
what he was doing in football. And so there's an
argument to make a most successful list. But if you're
gonna call it the greatest singers, I feel like singing
they should be good singers. I agree it was according
to who wrote the list and who here was he
(52:19):
or in it. Yeah, I don't think anybody but singers
can make those lists. And I don't think anybody but
rappers should be able to make the rap list. Did
you see the Billboard hip hop list do you think.
I mean, it wasn't terrible. I thought it was more.
It was less controversial than the singing list. I thought
it was too early for some people, like I think
it's too early to put Damar and I love, I
(52:40):
love Kendrick Lamar, but it's too early to put him
in there. How many albums is he in now? I
was like four, Yeah, but it's a decade, yeah hip hop.
I think for me it got to be at least
fifteen to twenty years. Me personally, I just think he's
never missed yet. Yeah, he hasn't missed yet. You know,
Kendrick has never missed and his skill is impeccable, like
his skills and MC is impeccable, and he's never missed
(53:01):
with an album or a tour, not even a video. Really,
like so many people, you gotta jump over to be
number two. I understand, I understand. I understand. I think
Jay is number one. After that, I think it gets
difficult because I think it mixes a lot of different factors.
But I think Kendrick should be in the conversation because
(53:23):
he literally is that great and he's and you just
compare his raw MC ability against any rapper of any era,
and he's right there. He's in my top five. Now
let me ask question. A rapper that doesn't write his
own is he in that list? But who are we?
Who are we saying is not writing that own? Because
it was time it was Kanye, it was times it
(53:43):
was Drake, there was times it was a couple of people.
But that's all rumors. I mean, I never saw Kanye
being ghost written. And I've been in the studio with
him a lot. He writes. I'm not saying he's written
every single thing, but I never saw him being ghost written.
I've seen guys in the room like bounce ideas around.
But Kanye is a writer, so we should top five.
I've never been the studio with Drake, so I have
(54:05):
no I can't test the fime. So while you said
Kendrick should be in at Jay, I'm gonna say Nas,
I'm gonna say Biggie, anybody from the South. I honestly
I would put Andre in my top five. Yeah, yeah,
but we appreciate you for joining us. Can we can
we have a package to send to somebody right now?
Can we do that on five right now? We can
(54:26):
give somebody? Uh oh, yeah, we give somebody, let's send
them some love. Where can you get this everyway? Said CBS. CBS.
There's two thousand CVS stores to have it, Walmart dot
Com has it, and we're rolling out at five hundred
Walmart stores, so it won't be every Walmart store, but
it'll be a few beautifully you know not. Yeah, we
wanted to be like we wanted to be in mass retail, okay,
(54:48):
and we wanted to sell it at prices that everybody
could afford. And so um, that was an intentional strategy
because we feel like there's plenty of celebrities doing things
that are more exclusive, more expensive, and we decided we
wanted to do it affordable and accessible. And the regular
people like myself appreciate this guy. CVS person, You need
(55:09):
to hush your fast. I'm no longer shop little at CVS,
but I would be there buying you a caller one
on five right now. If you want this package eight
hundred five A five one O five one. You get
the shaving cream and get the facing body moisturizer, you
get the toning miss, you get a cleanser, foliotting cleansing,
and you get a facing body washing. Oh I don't
get the oil. Oil. That's one of my favorite was
(55:33):
the oil for it's more moisturization. I usually use the
moisturizer than the oil. And it's got a really nice
light sent it ain't loud, it ain't heavy, loasted, oil
ain't heavy. It's really good. Fives and John Legard, we
appreciate satisfied, customer satisfied. I'm I'm here for black products.
(55:54):
That's all I do. I was just there for the
makeup the other day. Take me where the black people
and I just buy. I buy because you gotta support
our own because for years people that look like has
made stuff for us that wasn't false. So when I
see somebody black, dude, So everybody, Sep Charlomage, I'm gonna
get support. Everybody, Sept Charlomage Legend. Breast Club Morning. Everybody
(56:20):
is j n V. Charlomagne, the guy. We are to
breakfast Club. Our co host, Miss pattis here. Let's get
to the rooms. Let's talk young mma name or you've
gossiping or you chatting report I mean, I guess we're
on the breakfast Club. This were the tea spells right
right on the Breakfast Club now, Young Amma's health was
(56:40):
concerning to a lot of people. Her barber posted a
picture of her in getting her haircut, and in the
footage you can see that they believe she was slurring
her speech a little bit and her eyes were very yellow.
Usually when your eyes yellow is a sign of jarnis
or liver disease. So people were concerned and she left
this note on her Instagram. She says, as many of
(57:01):
my supporters know, I've been dealing with various personal health
issues the last couple of years. I really was a
hospitalizing was successfully treated for several conditions. I'm doing better now.
Will take some time, but I'm on the road to
recovery and look forward to the future. I'm in good
spirits and everything will be explained in the music plus
the documentary. Love y'all, don't worry. I'm good. Bless up
(57:22):
Amy No. I wish her much more good health. I
hope she gets better for whatever she's dealing with. And
when I hear stuff like that, I'd be like that,
ain't nobody business, but I guess it is. If you
post online and then people see you, and then they
got questions, you don't have to explain yourself, right, I
guess you feel to need to. But we haven't seen
the man in a while too too, So when people
see I'm sure they're excited because they expecting new music,
(57:44):
and then when they see her, they just, you know, concerned.
I was. I felt the same way when I saw
ab Be Sure, Yeah it was really I was like,
what is in the real room? Abbe shut and he
came out. He had some health problem. I'm glad he
will now you still cute? Abby? Sure? Yeah, I'll be
definitely a bounced back. He forgot what it was do
I forgot what. I forgot what he was dealing with.
(58:06):
But yes, who's everybody dealing with? Help issues? Man? That's
why I don't post nothing. If I post something isn't
me on the toilet, then you know I'm letting it go.
But he is different with you, miss Patt. If you
ever post up and you then lost weight, people gonna
know something wrong. Slomne is like that. You help me out.
(58:28):
We could jump him if you want whatever you want jumping.
Remember that little too shooter you at. We could shoot
him with the two too. These two send the boots
now fifty cents you see never oh, fifty money never
never still for fifty never. You just don't want those problems,
was the problem. Well It's former brand manager of one
of his liquor companies was found guilty of embezzling upwards
(58:51):
of two million dollars from the Branton Company. Well fifty
took him to court and it's now suing him. He
was cleared earlier this month to start collect think on
the six point two million dollars debt, and that man
ain't got it. He asked that man for his house.
He said, I'm gonna poxing your floor. Fifty is allegedly
taking the guy's house all his assets, including bank accounts
(59:13):
and cars. Fifty's gonna say, the car show is coming up,
so if he got some cool cars, we can use
it from the car show. That's what happened when you
see somebody and they don't have the money to pay
you when you win. So fifty posted a picture of
the gentleman's house and said, I need you out of
my house pop Monday. I think I'm gonna put some
POxy floors in this place. I'm gonna keep it and
his family pictures around so you know, as a theme
for the place. Traveling includes leave that man alone later
(59:41):
for twenty thousand dollars and would not leave all alone.
I was I'm scared of I think it was less
than that, remember he added interest, Yeah it was. I
think originally it was like a two thousand dollars and
everything came to twenty thous. I don't even think she
still she paid him in for you, He's still the
bigger issue is that man stole six men in dollars
and fifty six right, how much to upward to two millions?
(01:00:04):
Come on, man, come on, come on, six point five
million dollar house. You should be in jail. He didn't
go to jail, White, oh White, And I didn't say
he went to jail fifty to get his money back.
And lastly, we got to talk about Whoopie Goldberg. Now
she apologized or something she said on the view, and
people are saying, well, maybe she didn't need to apology
to apologize. This is what she said on the view. Peter,
(01:00:25):
who is still believed that he got you know, jip somehow,
and the election will still believe that he cared enough
about his wife, you know, to pay that money from
his personal thing. But I just don't understand now she
said the term jipped. Now, as a kid and growing up,
we just thought jip was being cheated, defrauded, or swindled.
(01:00:48):
Even if you're look into the dictionary, that's what it means. Well,
I guess it's offensive to some people. And she apologized.
You know, when you're a certain age, you use words
that you know from when you were a kid or
you remember saying. And that's what I did today and
I shouldn't thought about it a little longer stop said it.
(01:01:10):
But I didn't, and I should have said cheated, and
I used another word. And I'm really really sorry. She
could have said cheated. But guess what she said, jipped.
And there should be no problem with that because we
got to stop acting like words can't have more than
one meaning. Why do we act like context doesn't matter?
You know what I mean? And these folks don't understand
our culture. Okay, until yesterday, I didn't know jipp meant
(01:01:30):
anything else other than somebody cheated. That's true. And she said,
I have to start thinking about the words. But but
thinking about it how because I would have never thought
jip mean anything but cheated us window it really means, say,
I gotta stop being black on National TV. That's all
it is, because she was just being black. Yeah, I
mean that's what we grew up. I mean, I'm fifty
and whipping might be sixty something and who didn't grow
(01:01:52):
up here in that d maybe like new people, the
new kids. But that word has never been offensive to anybody.
And we can broaden it and say, yes, she's black,
but it's in the dictionary. So I'm using a word
that's in the dictionary in the proper context. How are
you gonna act like I'm being offensive to people? Well,
what is the proper content? Then it's so if the
context in content, what context, context, proper context, contest context,
(01:02:17):
you use the word and the proper context, Well they
felt like she That's what I'm asking you. What is
their proper content for that word? If it wasn't if
she didn't use it right, But it was so offensive.
But words can have more than one meaning. And I'm
tired of the word police, you know, policing people on
the words that they use. You know, they're making people
take it out of songs when it doesn't mean anything else.
And it's it's getting to the point where what can
(01:02:38):
you say if you say anything you're gonna be scared
to speak because they can. You can say seizure. Huh.
Can we still say seizure? Yeah? What you mean like
like seizure, like like takes up? You put a fuck
in his mouth, swomb in his mouth? Depends on what
context you use it. I'm sure I don't know. In
five years, who know what you're gonna be able to say?
They don't never try to cancel the dictionary. I never
(01:03:00):
go after to marry him and webster him, go after
the Bible. I care what y'all? Probably all kind of
stuff in the Bible you can't see no more. Let's
talk about it when we come back. Talk about five
eight five one on five one. We're talking Whoopy Goldberg.
Should she have to apologize? Man? Whoop? Should have said
SMD suck my d? After whoop? You should have said,
all right, well whoop you ain't got Now she has
(01:03:22):
asked him. They'll probably depended by that. Yeah, yep, you
don't know what she identifies that. Boy, you better shut
I'm just joking, all right, boy, you better shut up
like that. You don't know, do you? If you up? Boy?
Do you boys? Shut up? What that too? Shoot? What
we do dudes. Damn, man, we give me your nugget
(01:03:42):
for you want to know, I'm giving my duce dude
in the boot too. Four after the hour of marec
Hecho needs to come to the front of the congregation.
We like to have a word with him. Okay, I
hate y'all. Man, No, you don't change the dugget to
the duce dude. All right, I do sound like a
gay slur bro what dudes dudes in the boots? There
was not man, I feel like I need to apologie.
You should apologize for day. Yeah, we're gonna need you
(01:04:03):
to apologize. Man taking his pills, dot his boots. Oh
my goodness. All right, donkey to Day's up next and
we're taking your calls after that eight hundred five A five,
one oh five one we're talking will be Goldberg. Should
she have to apologize for that? No, it's the Breakfast Clove,
co Morning the Breakfast Club. Your morning's will never be
the same. An audible pick of the day is The
(01:04:25):
Light Podcast with Michelle Obama. In this uplifting new series,
Michelle Obama discussing meeting life's challenges with Oprah Tyler Perry,
David Letterman, and others listen free at the Home of
storytelling audible dot com. Slash the light was donkey up
the day, Damn the hea hogs. I ain't trying to
(01:04:48):
be dunkey today no more. They should be embarrassed by
what they already did. I'm not making these people do
these things called donkey of the day. And it really
caught me off guard. Damn Solomon. Who got the donkey
o the day to day? Well, jess hilarious. Donkey are
to Day for Thursday, March sixteenth goes to Marec Hecko. Okay.
He is a twenty six year old British man who
(01:05:08):
was sentenced to twenty six years in prison for murder. Yes,
he's been found guilty of murder for stabbing forty four
year old Adrian Ellingford. Now let me tell you the story.
Adrian was piping his ex girlfriend. Man all right, let
me explain. Prosecutor said, Marec was in a relationship with
a young lady for seven months, only seven months, and
then they broke up and made because she didn't approve
of his drug use, but Marec continued to be obsessed
(01:05:31):
over her. Then the young ladies started dating the other guy, Adrian,
who was married with two sons, ages ten and twelve. Yes,
he was cheating on his wife on the night. Okay,
so on the night of the murder, Adrian was staying
at the young lady's house. So many violations happening in
this situation. Cheating on your wife, stand at your mistress's
house overnight, Just terrible rookie mistakes being made by a
forty four year old, grown ass, married man with kids.
(01:05:51):
But he was staying at the young lady's house and
he woke up in bed and he heard somebody in
the house. A short time later, after getting up to
see what it was, came back in the room, collapsed
on the floor with a knife stuck in his back,
and he was pronounced dead at the scene from two
stab wounds. That's right, Marec Hackle broke into the house
while his ex was in bed with this married man,
and he went and got a knife from the kitchen, and,
according to the New York Post, stabbed the man with
(01:06:13):
such force that the blade scruck a bone in the
victim's chest and the handle of the knife broke off.
Jesus Christ Michael Myce Friday the thirteenth, He was playing
Jason huh. This is also why you have to take
stalkers seriously. Okay, obsessed boyfriends, There's nothing cute about just
kind of behavior, because humans get possessive, possessive and they
think that you belong to him. Because this man was
(01:06:35):
showing up at her job, he was showing up at
her house on everybody wouldn't stop sending her messages and
videos all that, only to end up breaking in our
house and killing the man she was sleeping with. Now
that's not even the sole reason he's getting dunk here
to day. The reason he's getting dunk here to day
is because of how he got caught. I mean, he
would probably gotten caught anyway, but he really handed this
one to the police in the Chick fil a bag.
(01:06:56):
Would you like to know how marec got caught? Well,
I want to know the knife company. The knife company,
Oh because why because it broke off? No, it was sharp, Oh,
it was sharp. He might have sharpened kitchen knife. Though
it went all the way through. It did go all
the way through, did go all the way through. But
the reason he got caught is because he told the
police on himself. Yes, he came back to the scene
(01:07:18):
of the crime to deliver a message. What you are
about to hear is Marik distabled the murderer drunk after
returning to the scene of the crime. Let's listen, what's
your night. I'm not gonna tell you my name. I
don't do it because I know what happened. IM me
to know. Figure it out what happened. If you don't
(01:07:39):
have me, you don't know what happened. I don't know.
Did some guy I come here? Yeah? He have some guy.
I don't know what happened. I don't know what happened.
He just got so. So you think something's happened to
a mail in this address. I know what happened. What happened.
(01:08:05):
That's a hell of a confession and what a sex accent.
Have you ever had somebody drunk confessed something to you
in that way? Misspect? Yeah? Really? Yeah? Tell us more.
My kids I gave you the crabs. Well, your kids
father must have been drinking brandy like my rec Ecko
was drinking brandy. Jesus, Okay, le could gives you courage,
(01:08:25):
someone that can make you extremely honest. Clearly we know
which one that Brandy does. Okay. A drunk tongue is
an honest one. They say it's only three kinds of
people that tell the truth. I don't know if I
believe all of them. But kids, they gotta tell me
what they call kids because my little seven year will
be lying. They're angry. I believe that to a certain extent.
But most times when you're angry, you're just trying to
hurt the person's feeling, so you say anything and they're drunk.
(01:08:46):
I believe that wholeheartedly. The drunk tell the truth. And
you should never forget what someone says to you when
they're drunk, because drunk words are sober thoughts. Please let
Remy Mark give him a rec Ecko the biggest hee
haw hee ha he huh you stupid motherfuck? Are you dumb?
Now did you respond after your um? Baby daddy said
(01:09:07):
he gave me crab? He gave me a shampoo. That's
sweet him. See that's thoughtful. Now that's thoughtful. Now that's thoughtful,
baby daddy, that's thoughtful. Give the crabs and get crabs.
It was an eighty two. Everybody had crabs. Look at
his face. My husband at home, like, I told you
(01:09:28):
about telling them hard a story. That's true. My husband like,
stop telling people your pass because they take up a
part of your pass. And I'm not my husband. Meet
people like I did not shoot her in the chance
it was not me daddy. My husband is not my
(01:09:50):
baby daddy. I got two kids by him too. Oh yeah,
I never said it was it was another It was
another piece of crap before him, go ahead. Yeah, that
was another piece of crap. It was a piece of
crap because he's a crap. I'm sorry. My husband's a
good man. Oh I'm so glad. I was in the
shower when I called it. I'm gonna be jobless and unmanned. Alright, well,
(01:10:12):
thank you for that. Donkey of the day. Now, when
we come back and got to talk Whoopie Goldberg, all right,
shouldn't she be apologized? And that is the question. We
ain't talking to you. We're asking the people out there
eight hundred five eight five one oh five one with
Tiki calls. When we come back as the Breakfast Club,
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. It's topic time called eight
(01:10:39):
hundred five eight five one oh five. Want to join
it to the discussion with the Breakfast Club. Talk about
it morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy Charlomagne, the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We got our guest hostmans Pat
with us, and we're talking Whoopee Goldberg all right now.
Whoopy Goldberg had to apologize yesterday for something she said
on air. And this is what she said. Peter, who
was still believed that he got you know, jip somehow
(01:11:04):
and the election will still believe that he cared enough
about his wife, you know, to pay that money from
his personal thing. But I just don't understand this was
the apology. You know, when you're a certain age, you
use words that you know from when you were a
kid or you remember saying. And that's what I did
(01:11:24):
today and I shouldn't. I should have thought about it
a little longer before I said it, but I didn't.
And I should have said cheated, and I used another
word and I'm really really sorry. So we're asking should
she have to apologize? No, start with you, miss Pat,
what do you think? I don't think you have to
apologize for being who you are? I mean, Whoopi Goldberg's
(01:11:44):
in her six it does that's the term, don't they
use that? R back dead? And I don't know why
as a face of everybody, people just damn cry babies
these days. I'm with you. I don't think she should have.
White people would never apologize on a view. Yeah, I mean,
and in its context, like we said earlier, I mean
she she used it talking about somebody being swindled. That's
the definition and the dictionary, So I don't think she
(01:12:06):
should have to apologize. Charlemagne. Let me tell you, I
had a great therapy session yesterday, you know, and I'm
saying that to say what I'm about to say. It
comes from a very happy, healed whole place. Okay, suck
my d on behalf of will be Okay, suck my
d dildo d What do you want? An organic gem
(01:12:30):
or whatever you want? Because I don't know why we
keep acting like words can't have more than one meaning.
Why do we act like context doesn't matter? Gypt is
in the dictionary. She used gypped for the context that
it applies to. She was not talking about no race
of people, She wasn't using it as a slur. She
used it the way the dictionary Mariam Webster's says to
(01:12:51):
use it. And until yesterday, I didn't know gypp meant
anything else. And he right, because you know what envy,
Charlemagne stand for, dark chocolate and him, I don't know
that sounds about go to the phone line. Hellos this Hello, Hey,
what's your name? Man? Karen? Hey Karen? Now you know
we got called I did, and I've seen your last name,
(01:13:12):
and I'm sorry if I pronounced it wrong. I read
it as but it's posse pusy, like Gary busy. But
it's okay pooz Oh that's interesting, all right, miss poose?
What are your thoughts? Push poozy pusy, Hey, miss pusy.
He men like nap. I do sound like some nappy grill. Okay,
(01:13:37):
go ahead, mom, I'm sorry. What I should see? It's
the word qasion the dictionary. Why should see? What? I agree?
Losing everything? Yeah? Tell him from a difference. I'm from
a different culture, culture, different country, and we use certain
world tool from Jamaica. I've gotta yes, Ian Charlotte, tell
him something. Blood clock mother, then blood clout, Mama. There
(01:14:00):
you go, there you go, well, miss Hussein. You hold
on one second. We're gonna get the stuff to you. Right,
no lists your citizenship? Hold on? Hello? Who's this good money?
How are you just fine? What's your thoughts? Okay, let
me ask you one question. First, what did um? I
(01:14:22):
can't offend a group of ego by using that word. Yes,
they said what Romanians? I think it was there. Yeah,
they said Romanians, which I never knew until yesterday. I
didn't know that was a slurk towards Romanians. Yeah, how
are you blessed? Black? And how he favored wonderful so
in mine? Thank you? And and they hello, how are
(01:14:43):
you good morning? Man? Are you good morning? You're going okay? Now,
everybody is defended by something. Now I want to add
that if everybody can be offended by something, I'm offended too.
Every time they used the word black and I agree
it was black ball. Oh it's so dark, it's a
black lives. I think we should anymore. Yeah, I think
(01:15:08):
we should start a campaign. We should start a campaign
to stop the negative connotation of all things black. I
agree with you. Man. What's your last name? Um? Yeah,
last name is black. But she but she's right though,
black in society is always something bad. Why you gotta
put black with ball? Black ball? Stop putting my people
(01:15:31):
with balls, black ball, black mail? You wear black and
funerals villains wear black. I'm offended by all of that.
Make them apologize to us. Yeah, let's let's let there
you go. Thank its black. Somebody something negative on the
news or wherever there are. Oh, it was so black,
it was so dark. That's right, that's right. Black is color.
(01:15:54):
Black is not a negative. Black is very positive and
very beautiful. You put the wall. I laugh in your house.
That's why Artie feeling still. I'm with you, gas Black,
But let me add Can I just say one more day?
And I faded to charlemainey Man. I faded, what love,
but can you please stop saying the N words? You
(01:16:16):
were doing so well? And Yannuel, you didn't say the
N word once, And I was like, oh, I love
him for not doing that. You're right, miss Black. He
only doing that because I'm here. I leave today. He
wasn't doing the moll man A promise, cat, you promise
you leaving go hang up on me black. The black
(01:16:39):
is right though I'm trying. I promised myself in twenty
twenty three, I wasn't gonna say the N word no
more for board. He's N words. Boy, my good, it's
all right. Eight N word. I've been here all week,
lord n I ain't talking to you. I'm on the
opinion all week an by that was working full time
eight hundred five and five on five. When we're talking
(01:17:01):
Whoopee Goldberg, should she have to apologize? Call us up
now it's the Breakfast Club the morning, it's topic time.
Call eight hundred five E five one oh five. Want
to join it to the discussion with the Breakfast Club
wanting everybody is DJ Envy Charlemagne. The guy we are
the Breakfast Club is Pat our guest host is hanging
(01:17:23):
with us this week. Now if you're just joining us,
we're asking about Whoopee Goldberg. Should she have to apologize? Now?
It comes from something that she said on a view yesterday.
Let's listen. People who still believe that he got you know,
jip somehow and the election will still believe that he
cared enough about his wife, you know, to pay that
(01:17:43):
money from his personal thing. But I just don't understand.
Stop making Whoopee apologize for everything. Man, Listen, if Whoopee
wants to apologize for things, I'll understand. But at some
point we got to sit down and have a conversation
about just how to educate correct individuals because we're acting
like these words don't have more than one meeting. What's
the point of having the sources and dictionaries and everything
(01:18:04):
else if we're gonna act like these words only got
one meeting because you know what, people kill me on
Twitter when I use them two dares wrong? Oh lord
R and t r E. That's right all the time,
Get rid of We only need one. Hello. Who's that? Hi? There? Now?
What's your thoughts on WHOOPI Goldberg? Mama? Okay, So here's
the thing. The wording hip it is an offensive word.
(01:18:27):
It derives from spy from the Romania. Right, it is
how long? How long? How long did you know this?
When did you find this out? No, my grandmother did
you know? We have gypsy care in Georgia, that being
the grocery store and they always begging for money, always
come with some stobs or it isn't you know? That's
where it comes from, Like I've been do that. But
(01:18:48):
the thing is that she whoopy may not have known it.
You know what I'm saying where it actually comes from,
you know what I mean? But I like she should
apologize only because of the platform that she's on, you
up and saying like, hey, I didn't know you know
it was an offensive word. I apologize. So why why
are these words in the dictionary? Then if this word
is in the dictionary and you looked up the word
(01:19:09):
jip and it says it means to cheat a swindle,
why can't I use the word if it's in the dictionary,
Oh it is, you know, I never knew it was
actually difference. I'm saying, let me ask you something. You
said she should apologize because of the platform she's on,
So let me ask you this. As she said that
(01:19:29):
same thing on BT she apologized, Oh no, because they ain't.
As we got free wing, I want to I'm just saying,
why can't she be black, should be able to be Whoop,
should be able to be her full, unapologetic self on
the view. And I'm ready for Whoop to retire if
y'all gonna keep doing Whoop like this? Man? Hello, who's this? Okay? Jessica?
(01:19:53):
Good morning morning. How are you you're doing? Grave? So
what do you think about Whoope? Goldberg? She'd have to apologize? No,
I basically think that they've got every black person something
that we do no reason at all. I just feel
like it's a continuation of the don't like what we say,
So it's a stigua. It's a group that just doesn't
(01:20:13):
like what the black community has to say, whether it's
one word or a phrase or just anything. They just
don't have They just don't like what we say, and
it's put out there that way. That's very true. And
you know what, it was an interesting A lot of
these people will try to act like systemic racism or
institutional institutional racism doesn't exist, but don't things like this
(01:20:34):
prove it. If this is a slur that we've been using,
and it's in the dictionary right, and we've been using
it in what we thought with this proper context. But
now y'all telling us that it's offensive. Isn't this showing
that there is absolutely institutionalized racism in America and it's
at the root, it's in the road of everything we do.
When she apologized and said I should have said keating,
(01:20:54):
it's the same thing. If you look up what a
synonym is florid, all of it's the same. I don't
even though we can use the word cheatah, how do
cheatahs feel about that? Well, she said it, she said
it in the thing. She said I should have said cheated. Yeah,
but how do cheatahs feel about that. What's the cheating
the cheetah the one that do the um? What that
that poteator chip? The cat? Yeah, the cheatah cat, the
(01:21:14):
cheetah cat. Yes, well the cheetah cat. Don't talk the
one on the commercial the do the cheat shut up?
Man's man, Man, the cheetos cat is offended because y'all
keep calling people cheatahs. Man, that ain't right. He don't
shut your ass. What's what's the cheatos cat name? Man? Yeah,
I got Chester cheetah Chester cheatah is offended because y'all
(01:21:36):
keep calling people cheata cheetahs. Ain't no better. Okay, don't
be calling people cheatahs. He said, I don't call them cheatahs.
Let's say cheese up like him. My goodness, all right,
what's the mother of the story? I don't know when
the mother of the story? I think, whoopee. I mean, like,
I agree with you, whoop and get out of that.
Day's gonna let you be you get out of that early,
because I want to tell you now. You gotta see
though here at the breakfast club they hired because I'm
(01:22:00):
co hold, that would be great. Become cold and whatever
you're gonna you can say it. Oh, here's that word gypsy.
Yes you can say. You can say it over here,
whoop it? And we love you. That's right? All right,
Well we come back. We got rumors. We gotta tell
you about that Drake concert. It's gonna be hard for
y'all to get tickets and expensive. I'll tell you all
(01:22:21):
about it when we come back. It's the breakfast Club.
Good morning, a breakfast club wanting everybody is dj n
V Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast Club. We
got our guest host, Miss Pat joining us. And let's
get to the rumors. We gotta send a rest in
peace from or you gossip and you chatting? Is the
(01:22:45):
rumor report? I mean, I guess we're on the breakfast club.
This were the tea spills right on the breakfast club.
All right, we gotta send a rest in peace to
Bobby Calledwell if you don't know who that is? He
down the Age seventy one les players joint. Guess you
know I love yes Jack to let you know I
(01:23:14):
got a thing for you and I can't go shalomgne.
I might have produced the baby on that I bet
you I didn't know he was white. He white. I
didn't tell yesterday. I didn't know he was white till yesterday.
I feel bagged. I never thought about it, just like
this music. He white, Yes, he's white, like white white.
(01:23:35):
He could be transracial. We don't know if he'll shut up. Man,
I don't know. We don't know what. So ain't no
translations back then you were just white shalomagne. He might
have well, he probably didn't have the language for it.
We don't know. I never had. I never seen a conversation. Yeah,
but if you don't know, like his records were sampled.
Biggie Smalls sampled that. Uh, sky's the limit? Two pounds
(01:23:55):
sampled this record. A bunch of people sample this record,
so definitely rest in piece. That was the jam at
my mama house. What a what a sliss mother? Look
a bull? And I had whatever what that boy used
to do people during God damn she said she would
go outside and falling the payments, get her whole face up.
(01:24:17):
He was drinking bull in middle school? What yes, we was.
That's Oh that's a nasty sting, man, is it now?
Drake and twenty one Savage? If you're trying to get
tickets for this, it looks like it's gonna be kind
of impossible. According to fans, tickets in a hundred level
seats in certain cities are starting around five hundred dollars,
while seats higher aka than nosebleeds are starting at almost
(01:24:38):
two hundred dollars a ticket. Man, if I paid two
hundred dollars for some nosebleeds, I feel like I got jim. Yeah.
So people are upset about this, they said, between the
fees and everything else, keeping out, look at the bottles
a little bit episode. Who you were using a word
as in the dictionary? Okay, keep talking. They're gonna walk here,
(01:24:59):
greasy ass, but they're gonna blackball me. And then I'm
gonna be so offended that y'all keep calling it black balling.
Why black gott to be the negative connotation? Okay, uh,
keep it up. They're gonna put you in one hand
cup because now, lastly, and this was some sad news,
but it was good news, but it was sad news.
All right. This probably won't mean anything to you too,
(01:25:21):
but Puerto Rico and d All played yesterday in baseball
rep for your people, leaving people for your people. Man,
black up here all the time. I'm not gonna stand
in the way you repper for your people. Have Spanish music.
That's all you got. I turned up a little bit,
all right, so, um that means Dominican Day coming or something.
Maybe be lining up his DJ gigs. This was pretty big. So,
(01:25:44):
like I said, Puerto Rican and d Are played last night.
Puerto Rico one right, they won last night, but one
of the great one of the best pitchers on the
team after they won, was cheering and getting excited and
then got injured after celebration. But he's supposed to be
starting guests in two weeks for Major League Baseball because
he plays for the Mets. So people are saying it
was great that they won, but he injured himself, so
(01:26:05):
he can't play as the you know, in the Mets
game in the next two three weeks. Why was he
playing over there in that little league if he played
for the Mets, asked about resident Puerto Rican over him.
So right now, it's like the World Cup for baseball,
and uh, obviously he supporting Puerto Rico. So he played,
and he played a free game and unheard a million
dollars leg and he gotta come back over here. We
(01:26:27):
gotta take care of it. It's still baseball season, base
like a couple of weeks. Oh, no, he's not. He's
gonna be out full. I'm saying baseball. They played, They
played four hundred games of season. Get him played. He
missed the first few games they played, like, I think
more eighty ninety two games, nine hundred and sixty two
exactly this crisis. Well, I was close. I said two hundred,
(01:26:51):
said four hundred. Right, Well, that is your rumor. If
did y'all see the story that Pentagon officials have suggested
that there's an alien mothership in our solar system that
could be sending many probs to Earth. I didn't believe it.
Last week officials stated that these are supposed alien aircraft
could send small probs are planet in order to study Earth.
That that is news, that is actual. I didn't believe
(01:27:11):
because you posted it. I didn't believe it. Could you
posted it? Well, you post all the stuff about aliens. Absolutely,
he says. He says aliens grabbed him one time. Oh
you are alien to somebody in fact. No, I'm not
just you. I never use a fake name talking about that.
I'm just saying other people in other universes, other creatures
of beings, or whatever we are. People can't with you.
(01:27:37):
I'm not going to malls. I'm not even going with
the mall. I'm going to the malls from the south,
I said, Mars and our ass. Oh my goodness. All right,
well alien to somebody to I know, that's what I mean.
I'm not looking at me so angry that you called
(01:28:00):
me extraterrestrial. We all are, miss fat. That's what I'm saying.
I ain't no extra rex. You make that sound like
a dinosaur, big as dinosaur, big extra dinosaur. You look shout.
(01:28:20):
I can't. Man, Well, that is your rumor report the
People's Choice mix us up next. Don't move. It's the
Breakfast Club of Morning. Djos in your boots, Breakfast Club.
Your mornings will never be the same. Did you know
one word can change everything? Zach Levi returns as Shazam
and the new movie Shazam Fury of the Gods. This
(01:28:41):
film is a musty event with epic action and a
whole lot of fun. March seventeen, See Shazam Fury of
the Gods only in theaters, rated PG thirteen. By everybody
is DJ n V Charlemagne the guy. We are to
Breakfast Club. We have Miss Patti here, So Miss Pat,
we appreciate you for for the last four days. Like
we had a lot of fun. We had a lot
out of fun. Thank y'all for having me. It was
(01:29:02):
I had a great time. Anytime you want to come
play hooky, Miss Pat. You know what I'm saying. You
can come to the Breakfast Club. That's right, tell them
about your tour when they can get tickets to all
that other stuff out the TV shows. Everything you got,
go giving back the Lanta after after the day, giving back,
going back home to that, when you're going back, when
you're gonna be on your business, by your business. Okay,
(01:29:24):
I don't have enough of your little bit there, y'all.
Go to Miss Pat Comedy dot com and get your
ticket for my tour. Call your girls. I'm made it
that starts this fall in the fall, and I'll make
sure you check out the third season on the Miss
Pat Show on BT Plus and the Amazon uh and
also Nashville. I have a podcast coming your way, so
(01:29:46):
go to the Zany's Comedy Club. Almost sold out for
the podcast, the Miss Pat Podcast Live, Miss Pat Podcast Live,
and this weekend Kansas City. I added another show for you.
Come on because you're gonna work the hell out of me,
gonna work my wigle loose. But I'll be there for already.
Go ahead, Miss patmis pagetting to it boy, that's right.
When we come back. We got the positive notice to
Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Charlomagne,
(01:30:09):
the guy we are the Breakfast Club. Miss Patts here,
that's right, the Charlomagne. You've got something going on in Atlanta. Yes,
April twenty second, The Black Effect Podcast Festival is happening
in Atlanta at Pullman yards Man. It's a daytime event.
We're gonna have music, We're gonna have food. Most importantly,
some of your favorite podcasts. They're gonna be live, like
the eighty five South Show, Big Facts Podcast. Michelle Williams
(01:30:30):
will be there doing her checking in podcast, just to
name a few. Go get your tickets, man, that have
been bright. Go to Black Effect dot com for more info.
Was hosted by myself and my good sister Jesse. Hilarious
and I can't wait to see y'all on April twenty second,
And thank you to everybody that's been you know, purchasing tickets. Man.
I am so appreciative. We are so appreciative here at
the Black Effect and iHeartRadio. We keep moving tickets like this.
(01:30:52):
We're definitely gonna have a sold out event, so I
love it. Can't wait to see yall April twenty second
in Atlanta. All right, Well, leave us on a positive
news that have noticed this man. When you stopped looking
at people as humans and start seeing them as only energy,
your whole perspective will change. Breakfast Club bitches, you know
I'm finished or y'all duck