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July 24, 2020 96 mins

Today on the show we had the duo Killer Mike and El P call in where they spoke about Run the Jewels. politics and more. Also Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to the now Washington Football, Football team for not putting much thought in the decision of changing the teams name and we had Dr. Osera call in to speak on financial freedom and more.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Jael and Charlomagne the guy my dad asked up. The
breakfast club is right. I'm not okay yo yokay I
love coming here. I'm never not gonna come here. You
guys are good to me and lieutenam. I was gonna
good deal for a lot of people in hip hop generation.
The breakfast club is where people get the information on
the topics, on the artists and everything like that. In

(00:22):
that aspect, radio is still important. The breakfast club with
my name come up, respecting good Morne in Usa yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo

(00:43):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo good more than
angela Ye, good money, Davy Cholmagne the guy he's still
up playing in this Friday and Toronto good, Yes, it's Friday.

(01:09):
The weekend is here. I had a great day yesterday.
My daughter finally was allowed to walk across that stage
and graduate um because of because of COVID and coronavirus,
of course, they pushed back graduation. Graduation she supposed to
graduate in June, I believe, no before Junior. No May,
she was to graduate May. She could a graduate around

(01:30):
Mother's Day, but it was pushed back to yesterday. So
it was great. I mean, I'm a happy dad. She graduated.
It's a small ceremony. Um. They only allowed six people
per student, which was pretty dope because they actually allowed
the student to sit with the families because they didn't
want all the students sitting with each other. It was outside,

(01:51):
of course, under her tent. It was just it was
just a really great graduation. So a happy graduation to Madison.
I think he started school like two weeks so, uh,
she really has no summer. And then after we went
to a restaurant called one thirty Club in Jersey. Amazing, amazing,
amazing food. This first time the family has been out

(02:11):
since the whole thing to eat together. So that was
pretty dope. So again, congratulations to Maddie. Yeah, congratulations, congratulations
And you said COVID and coronavirus. COVID coronavirus, you know
what I mean, as if we have two threats out there.
Congratulations to Maddie though, Yeah, it was, it was, it was,
it was, it was great, man, it was great. I
didn't cry. I thought I was gonna cry, I'm gonna cryer,

(02:33):
but I didn't cry. And I think I didn't cry
because I don't want to say I was over it.
But she to me she graduated in May, you know,
but it was just kind of like, uh, but it
was still a very experience. Though she got the pictures.
You know, there's something that she can say she did,
you know, get to do that a little pumping, pumping
circumstances there, a little dance to pomping circumstances. Yeah, I know.

(02:53):
I never got to march across the stage, not because
of any pandemic, just because I was a bad kid
and I graduated in night school. But that's suff I
got kicked out Ofto High School. So I don't even
know what that experience feels like. And when your daughter graduates,
you should walk with her. You should ask the school
if you walk with it. You know, some people do that,
like like today yesterday, Like yesterday there was some parents

(03:14):
that you know, went up on the stage that actually
gave their kid to the diploma for you know, different reasons.
You should ask to do that walk across the stage,
should do I don't care. I don't care that. I
don't care that much. I remember when I graduated from college.
It was it was raining so hard. We just wanted
to get out of there. It was pouring that day,
and so it wasn't, but it should have felt like

(03:37):
just because everybody was just trying to get out of there.
We couldn't wear their little outfits we had picked out.
It was just sitting there in the rain. And then yeah,
that was it. Then we couldn't even really do much
because nobody wanted to be outside. Everybody ran inside after Yeah, Well,
the most important thing was my parents were there, and
that was my whole thing. You know, my parents wanted
to see their grandchild graduate out of high school and

(03:59):
start college. So the fact that they were there and
able to see that and they were happy and made there,
it made there. Yeah, So that was the most important
thing for me. So now on to the bigger bread
of things. That's right, coology. I just rolled out of bed,
wrote out of bed at five fifty five. I'm not
gonna front. That is the one good thing about working
from home. You know. It's not like I do that

(04:20):
every morning, but this morning I did it, and it
felt great. Yeah, I'm tired today. I thought about saying
that the connection didn't work here, go back to sleep.
Thought about you thought about lying for a connection. All right, Well,
let's get the show Cracking running. The juns will be

(04:40):
joining us this morning, Mic, that's right, so we'll kick
it with them. And we have a pastor and doctor
joining us, right, ye, yes, doctor Stories, and he has
this d free uh seminar that he's been doing and
that he's been helping people be financially free for the
past fifteen years. So for the weekend, there's a two

(05:02):
day seminar that past the Stories says. And he's the
same person that actually coordinated to sit down between the
women's Records basketball team and don Imus when he called
them nappy headed. We get it, you know. All right, Well,
let's get the show Cracker front page news. What we're
talking about. We are going to be talking about Biden
and Obama and their video that they have for Joe

(05:26):
Biden's campaign. All right, we'll get into that next. Keeping
locked us to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is
DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the
Breakfast Club. Let's get in some front page news. But
we're starting ye, Well, let's start with football. Thursday's opening day,

(05:46):
and each player and coach took a knee before the
national anthem. And the game was between the New York
Yankees and the Washington Nationals, and that was all in
support of the Black Lives Matter movement. Each of the
team's knelt beside one another, and they were socially distancing.
And then when they knelt, a clip of Morgan Freeman
talking about social injustice played over the loudspeakers, and then

(06:08):
they stood for the national anthem. And that's why athlete
activism is great. Protest through sports is great. That's why
anybody who thought that sports would be a distraction, if
you're being honest with yourself, sports is gonna be one
of the main ways that they keep awareness on all
of these issues because the news cameras have moved away.

(06:29):
People correct, sorry, they just had to fat. Also, throughout
the first pitch, I don't know if you guys saw it,
but they're comparing it to fifty cent because it wasn't
that bad. I didn't see it. Was it that bad? Apparently?
Goodness kind of people get why do people get mad
at guys like doctor because you can't throw a pitch,
or get mad at guys like fifty cent because they
can't throw a pitch. They're not athlete, not easy, that's

(06:50):
not what they do. You still wanted to at least,
I mean, fifties was just ridiculous. Fifty didn't even throw
it towards the home plate. It looked like he threw
at the third base. Like there's certain things that you know,
the bulls should go that way and it should be
going to the right all right now at all, Joe
Biden and Obama paired up together and they did a video.
It was socially distanced to talk about the campaign and

(07:13):
also discuss what's wrong with our president now. One thing
they discussed was healthcare and insurance. The next stage of
this is going to be if the stimulus can keep
people afloat, then we have to deal with recovery. And
the recovery is building back, but not just building back
as you've been talking now, I'm talking about building back better.

(07:34):
That includes childcare, that includes turning, making significant investments in
infrastructure so people can make not just a living wage,
but a union wage, making sure we have a build
up an entire new public health system and making sure
everybody has healthcare. And well, now we have a chance,
we can add a public option now right that means

(07:57):
economic equity packages for black people, since systemic racism put
them into conditions that they are currently in, so we
got to systemically do something to get them out. In addition,
Barack Obama spoke about how he is confident that Joe
Biden will be able to handle this public health crisis.
You and I had experience dealing with public health crisis

(08:21):
and in each instance what you and I understood and
why I have so much confidence that you're gonna be
able to deal with COVID in the way that other
countries with our kinds of resources are dealing with it
right now, which is smartly. I have confidence that you're
going to actually listen to the experts. Yeah, and you're
not going to quit on trying to actually bend down

(08:45):
the curve of disease and transmission rates. Yeah. They still
sneak this in though they still subtweeting. They got to
speak straight. They're talking around the fact that this president
and his administration have done a horrible job of coronavirus
called it off for what it is directly by name. Okay,
say what it is, because people kept these messages and
sound bites, so don't need to sound like you are
sneak this and the stub tweeting. We know what it is,

(09:07):
so say it all right, Well that is your front patiens.
Earlier I said football, I guess I meant to say baseball.
I'm still a little out of it, but you know, yeah,
and I just watched the pitch. It was. It was.
It was like a baby throwing the pitch. He didn't
even get it. Nowhere in their home played it was.
It wasn't a nasty though, but it was. It was
doctor Okay, why would he be Why would he be

(09:29):
able to throw a pitch? He's doctor Fauci. Why would
we expect him to go out there and throw one
hundred and five mile power fastball right down the middle.
I didn't expect that. Nobody expected that. But you know,
it's like playing again. But capt with your son thought
doctor Fauci was gonna throw a good pitch, then you're
one of those people who thought the executive producer the
celebrity apprentice, Donald Trump is gonna get a good president. Okay,

(09:49):
people do what they do. All right, all right, well
that is your front 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.
It's the breakfast club going on it the breakfast club.
This is your time to get it off your chests,
whether you're man or blast, so people to have the

(10:10):
same industry. We want to hear from you on the
breakfast club. Hello, who's this here? You're good? What up? Traff?
High traff? What's uggye? How you doing? Broom? Okay? You
know I'm doing good? What's going on? Sorry? He says,
what's happening now? I'm telling I'm chilling. I got um.

(10:32):
Actually two things. First, I was gonna say, the real
is back, the village back, the lebron James the rat baby,
shout out to j Cole. He dropped two bangers, two
bangers on you, Charlotte Maine, two of them. Man, shut up.
You know I don't respect you because you went quiet
when he dropped that uh, that that that doud that
everybody was killing him over with a little note name this.
You disappeared. You ain't had nothing to say. Then you

(10:54):
didn't show up talking about Joe brun go back back, bro,
there was nothing to say about no names this one, um,
forget no names. This the record he put out, oh
us snowing the bluff. There you go, man, I was
talking about that record all the whole day in my
own my Instagram. Bro. Anyway, Secondly, Tom Hanks, I kind

(11:16):
of went down like this little wormhole on him. Right.
So look there's this actor that made some very heavy
accusations about him, right, and then like he made this
video saying that he's not suicidal, he would never commit suicide.
And then he jumped off a bridge all Rout sixty
six right and said he committed suicide. They said he
committed suicide. If you go to Tom hanks page, Tom

(11:39):
Hanks has a picture on his page there's a glove
and the cash and says it's an open road and
it says that Steward Routs sixty six road killed. Question mark.
I hope not Hanks. It's just scary man. If you
start to like it's really looking like Tom Hanks. But
all right to think, I think I think you need
to stop being an Instagram investigator. You just put a
whole murder on far As, Like like what do I

(12:00):
get out of that. I have no idea what you
so you just said? You just called up here just
acque as far as gump of being involved with a murder,
I gotta do that to what's time? Hello? Who's this Sylvester?
Y'all doing breakfast club? Gets? So I stayed up, I
mean California right now. I stayed up this late or

(12:20):
early because I wanted y'all to drop one of clue
bombs for AOC and that piece that she gave to
Congressman you who she? I mean drop dropped the bomb
for I haven't watched the hip. I heard about it.
I see everybody's talking about it. Well, yeah, no, he
called He called her out of her name because she

(12:41):
was making a correlation between the rising and poverty in
New York right now. And even with that being said,
I think right now is the perfect time because I
think poverty has a direct correlation to the fact that
slavery still legal in this country. And I feel like,

(13:02):
while we're calling for team names to change and statutes
to come down, that now is the time to call
for an amendment of thirteenth Amendment. Yeah, I agree, and
I understand that y'all got to hear things from politicians,
but everybody in their mama who grew up in a
certain environment knew that once the unemployment rate hit the
way that it was hitting, that there was going to

(13:23):
be more crime in the hood. Sir. That's why we
understand to fund the police thing better than a lot
of people, because we know what that money will do
for those communities. It will provide opportunity, and you gotta
get those people's opportunity if you want to crime and
come down. Exactly like you said, if you put the
if you put certain communities systematically in this place, then
it's your responsibility to systematically help them get out of

(13:47):
that place. So I just you know, I hope that
you all and you've done it before in the past,
but I think it's a perfect time to reintroduce that
conversation that like now, we need a little bit more
than symbolic gestures, and we have to amend the thirteen
and thank you brother, get it off your chess 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. I'm I'm telling what ho

(14:17):
this is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five eighty five
one oh five one. We want to hear from you
on the breakfast club. Hello, who's this? Please? Hey, get
it off your chess. Hi. I just wanted to say
good morning and shout out to my husband our wedding anniversary.
He is tomorrow, so I just wanted to let him

(14:39):
know a guy bther and appreciate him for all that
he does for me and Um, I can't wait to
journey on for the next forever years. Oh that's Peter.
What's his name? His name is Angrew? Okay, queen, guys,
you wholl mad? You don't got no bull. You're so mad,

(15:02):
you don't got no anniversary. I don't want to like that.
You disrespectful. I thought that. I feel bad about that.
I thought she was done. Hello, who's that? Good morning?
This is I fear. I'm calling from Take the pledge
by black dot Com. I called last week, m Um.
I was just kind. The fact that made me happy.

(15:23):
According to fords Uh, they reported that Yelp revealed that
the support for black owned businesses has increased by seven
thousand percent, So that's a good thing. So I just
want to commend everyone for um increasing their consumption of
black owned products and for patronizing black owned businesses. And
I also want to challenge people to try to replace
at least like one category your products with black own alternatives,

(15:45):
whether it's like skincare or haircare, or it could be
something specific like band aids or like candles or anything.
And then also um, last week, dam you were saying
that you didn't know where to go to sign like
these black owned products. So I just want to shout
out Angeli he and Charlemagne for giving you some suggestions.
And then I also wanted to encourage you to join

(16:08):
the Facebook group black Own New Jersey. They have over
one hundred and ninety thousand numbers. And I found a
black dentist from their side to doctor Hopkins. And I
also found a person who makes like canvas pictures. You
can find anything there literally, anything you need, you should
search it up and if it's not there, somebody would
suggest something for you. And then one more thing, my

(16:29):
mom was coming at my next first thing that doctor
Sandy was too expensive for me last last week, so
I just wanted to apologize. I mean, I was broke
back then, I didn't want to discourage people. No, seriously,
I didn't want to discourage people from going to her.
So yeah, doctors any does amazing work. He checked out

(16:51):
Charlemagne's video from when he went to the view. His
skin looked amazing. So that's all the poof you need.
She wants the money, so shout out to doctor CND.
All right, thank you, mama, doctor is a miracle worker.
Drop on a clus bunce with doctor Sandy Best Derma
College from the planet black Woman. All right, get it
off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five, one oh

(17:12):
five one. We got rumors on the way. Ye yes,
And let's talk about a new song that is being produced.
You guys, remember we are the world. But we'll tell
you about what the twenty twenty version is going to be.
All right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela, Yee,

(17:35):
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get
to the rumors. Let's talk Kanye West. This is the
rum of report with Angela. Yes. Well, according to sources,
it looks like Kim Kardashian and Kanye West have been
talking about divorcing for a long time after six years

(17:57):
of marriage. They said even before this latest bipolar episode,
they both had mutually decided that there have been sufficient
communications to establish they both feel the marriage has ended,
and so they're saying Kanye has now been following a
different path, both in terms of his announcement for a
presidential bid as well is in the terms of the

(18:20):
way he has chosen to communicate and the things that
he has chosen to say. So that's what's leading to this. Also,
according to reports, and according to TMZ, Kanye is not
even trying to speak to Kim Kardashian right now. He's
been ducking her phone calls and rejecting her police to
come and join him in Wyoming. So there's been very
little communication between the two of them ever since he

(18:42):
went to his rally in South Carolina last weekend, and
they haven't been spending any time together at all. By sources,
when they say sources, when they say sources, didn't mean
Chris Jannis pr team, I'm sure you know that you're not.
That's the only person that's leaking, because it seems like
it's coming from her side, right now, of course, but
you know, imagine, imagine if you're with somebody, right and

(19:03):
they're a huge Trump supporter and they say all these
things publicly that you don't agree with. That has to
be difficult. Kim is a Trump supporter, me, Kim goes
to the White House and then K's conversations with Jared
Kushon and Donald Trump is part of her prison reform.
I don't know. I don't know what who she for
real is, but I'm just saying I was just thinking
about for myself. I don't mean necessarily Kim, but just

(19:26):
imagine what that must be like. Kim has defended Trump
on several occasions. I also see Kanye trending on Twitter
because Donda didn't drop today. Why do we continue to
fall for the same old tricks? When is the last
time Kanye dropping out? More time? People, there's still was
the last few projects. Yeah, but I don't think, why
do you fall for the same old tricks? Oh my god,

(19:46):
I think it's more than that this time. I think
I think the I think the gentleman has a problem.
I think his marriage is in trouble. I think he's
spiraling out of everything. I think he's having a problem.
I don't think it's just I'm just doing this to
promote my album. I doubt that it doesn't seem like
that seems yea, y'all, y'all do realize he's done this
the last few projects posted drop albums on certain days
and doesn't and then they come out later that afternoon

(20:08):
to come out a week later. He's done this on
every single project he's done for the last couple of years. Well, yeah,
and I saw Applies tweeted out they only played crazy
when they got an album coming out and then TI
also seems to think that Kanye's tweet about Little Baby
was just because he does want to work with Little
Baby and never really reached out to him, but he
knew that would do it, so TA said, Oh, he

(20:29):
just came up with that one in the moment because
that was the request. The man knows how to create
compelling spectacles like no other that he does, and he
does throw tantrums like a man child when he wants something.
Instead of just asking for he'll throw a tantrum about it.
I'll say he can't get it or people are trying
to deny it to him, and then he usually ends
up winning he ends up getting his way. All right.

(20:51):
It looks like Kim Zosiak and Marlon Wayne's have made
up ever since he said that she looks like the
White Chicks character, which a lot of people have always
said about her. And if you guys remember, he had
posted a picture of Kim Zosiak on his Instagram page
and captioned it, no we are not in production and
White Chicks to the f And she was very upset
about it. And now she's saying, okay, the two of

(21:13):
them ran into each other, and here she is at
the airport in Atlanta letting TMZ know what happened. I
was walking out of Noble Yeah, and he said, yes,
you're still you still did he apologize you? No, he
just said I think he touched Coral man. That was like,
that's like a prideful apology. So I didn't really know

(21:34):
who he was just because the mask and like, so yeah,
and then he said that to me and I was like, no,
we're good. I can't stay mad at you. And then
I was walking on. I was like, you know, let
me talk to this. I went back in and I
was like wait and I said, no, we're good and
took a picture. I'm so happy that Marlon and Kim
squashed the beef that could have gotten out of hand.
You know what are you talking about? Shut off? Not
for real, yo, they both got shoots. We don't need

(21:54):
no you stop it, man. Thank God that beef was squashed.
Thank God squashed. Thank you Lord. All right. In Jamaine
du Purio's producing We Are Real the World inspired charity song.
It's called Change, and artists are include John Tay, Austin Neo,
Kelly Rowland, Monica Miguel, Gary Clarke, Junior Joejoe, Eric Bellinger

(22:18):
and Angel So. He said he took a page from
Quincy Jones when it comes to artists rejecting the opportunity.
He said, I've had a few people who rejected being
on the song a week ago. Those rejections had me
in an ft up space. I'm trying to do something
good for the cause, so I had to get myself
out of that funk. I'm a songwriter, so when someone
rejects one of my songs, I started thinking the song
sucks immediately, he said, that's when I started reading. I

(22:40):
read that when Quincy and Michael Jackson debut All the World,
Prince came to the studio and he rejected being on
the song. When I saw that, it relieved me because
I'm like, that's why Prince wasn't on the song, because
he didn't like it. I also read Sendy Lauper thought
the song sounded like a soap commercial, and a couple
of others said they didn't love the song. So that
gave me my next week of confidence, and I started
reaching out to the Detroit choir. He said, it's a

(23:00):
song that represents this current time that we're in. Yeah,
people probably rejected it because we are the world is
such a high bar. So when you start calling people
up saying we want to do another Weird of the World,
they're like, that's a very high bar. The touch. But
what also made Weird of the World iconic is the
fact at the time it seemed like they had every
a list rapper around. I'm not rapper artist artists, artists,

(23:26):
every a list artist around, even if Prince and everything.
But you know what though, but he remember what he said,
He said he started with Michael. So once you have Michael,
which you you see a artist like Michael, I'm doing
it now. Wanted with let's say, like, yeah, I'm in Orihanna,
they'd be like, yeah, I'm in you know, yeah, very true.

(23:49):
All right, Well to this day I still know how
to do with Are the World and Sign Language? Really random?
Fat person? Why were you person? That's when school we
had to do a play and I played the Statue
of Liberty. It was called the Statue Speaks, and we
came to life when I had to tell the story
of how the Statue of Liberty got to got to

(24:11):
New York and got delivered. And there were some tourists
that came to look at me, and I told them
my story, and then we all did we All the
World and Sign Language anazing story. Angele, you drop on
a clues bomb? Fancially, can you do the right you ready? Yep?
There comes time when when the world together one. Yeah,

(24:34):
there are people that you can see the same and
it's time to lend their hand. You're not doing it.
Let's go to all the world. We all the children.
We are the ones who make a brighter day. So
let's start giving would make it and you look like

(24:55):
one of the kids who would receive. Oh my goodness.
Now we got front page news coming up. What we
talk about in front page News Yes, we'll be talking
about Donald Trump. He has canceled the Republican National Convention
in Florida. Will give you the reason why. All right,
we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast cloak a
Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela, Ye, charlomage na guy,

(25:17):
we are the Breakfast Club. Let's get in some front
page news where we starting. Ye, Well, let's start with
Donald Trump. Now, he was on Fox News talking to
John Hannity and he was discussing sending federal agents to
high crime cities. Here's what he said, let us go in.
We'll clean it up. Now. In Portland, we had to

(25:39):
do it because that was that's their anarchists. So we
went in and we've been very very strong. But we
want to go in and help the cities. We want
to help Chicago, we want to help all of them.
Detroit's having problems. We'll put in fifty thousand, sixty thousand
people that really know what they're doing, and they're strong,
they're tough, and we could solve these problems so fast.

(25:59):
But as you know, we have to be invited in
the present. I don't want to ask you have to
do something that's much stronger than being invited in. You know,
once again, man, these cities don't need force, they need funding.
We keep saying that, y'all. If you want to help,
don't send federal agents, send federal aid. These people need
money and resources. They needed to be They need to
be provided opportunity. They need to be money putting into

(26:21):
these cities so they can have job training programs and
better schools and STEM centers, more money for mental health
services so these kids can deal with their trauma and grief.
All you're about to do is go into those cities
and traumatize them even more because they already feel like
the government don't give a damn about them. Now you're
really about to show them, y'all don't give a damn
about them. Yeah. That's not a long term solution at all.
And I'm glad that you know, they want to clean

(26:43):
up a mess that systemic racism created, but that's not
how you do it, right. They need they need opportunity, resources, funding,
that's what That's what cities like Chicago need. Come on,
all right. Donald Trump has also canceled the Republican National
Convention in Florida, and that's because of the surge in
coronavirus cases. It was supposed to be in Jacksonville, but

(27:03):
cases have continued to spike in Florida. So during a
briefing at the White House, he said presidential nominating delegates
but still meet in Charlotte, North Carolina, which was the
original planned location, but that there would be no large events.
He said, I looked at my team and I said,
the timing for this event is not right. It's just
not right with what's happened. To have a big convention.
It's not the right time. It's really something that for me,

(27:23):
I have to protect the American people. That's what I've
always done. Oh please, since when did he start making
smart disease and wise choices? Knock at off? You have
to iron you that whole federal militarized agent situation. Those
same militarized agents will either protect Trump when he refuses
to leave the White House on January twenty if our

(27:44):
escort him out when he refuses to leave the White
House on January twentieth. Either way, it's gonna be interesting,
all right. Now. There are some new guidelines for the CDC,
and those guidelines are coming in favor of opening up
schools and these are guidelines on education, childcare, all of
those things. They said that children don't suffer much from
coronavirus and they're less likely than adults to spread it

(28:07):
and suffer from being out of school. They recommend that
local officials should consider closing schools or keeping them close
if there is substantial uncontrolled transmission of the virus. But
they've been coming up at these guidelines and saying they
were going to release them for more than a week
now after Donald Trump has demanded that they alter their
recommendations for opening schools. The CDC director said it is

(28:29):
critically important for our public health to open schools this fall.
School closures have disrupted normal ways of life for children
and parents, and they've had negative health consequences on our youth.
The CDC is prepared to work with kindergarten through twelve
schools to twelfth grade schools to safely reopen while protecting
them most vulnerable. Hey man, my daughter is twelve. You
got to convince her because my daughter already says she

(28:50):
don't feel comfortable going back. And I'm respecting my daughters wishes,
you know, because she's at that age wide I trust
her instincts and I want her to learn how to
trust her own into wishing. So if she feels that way,
I'm not mad at it. You know, I got to
make sure trying to trick me because you don't like
According to the CDC, they also said that children off

(29:11):
to get food, mental healthcare, speech language therapy, and other
services at school, and so not being in school can
lead to severe learning loss and the need for in
person instruction. It's very important for students with heightened behavioral needs.
Well what about the teachers though, what about those older
teachers who work there, and principles and stuff like that,
They got to be around those kids all day. The
kids may be asymptomatic, but what about the teachers. Yeah,

(29:33):
but they still gotta you know, the bad thing is
these kids got to go to school so parents could
get out and go to work. A lot of these
parents don't. Can't, you know, can't stay home with the
kids all day if they got to go out and
make money, if they got to go out and work.
So and you know how difficult it is for a
kid to learn at home by their computer and not
have you know, the actual teachers show them how to
do things and all that. It's very difficult. Well, I'll
tell you what. When them kids go to school and

(29:54):
then they go back home to their parents, and you know,
some of them stay with their grandparents, and they still
it's still asymptomatic. They can pass it on to those adults.
I don't know, man, I just think that they should
give the option like here in New Jersey. I don't
know how it is across the rest of the country,
but in the Jersey they're not even giving you the
option to have like online courses, which is stupid. Like
the school should make it to where if people some

(30:16):
people want to come to school, great, those that don't
have online courses available, right, all right? And just that
you guys know, the US has surpassed four million COVID
nineteen cases. Yesterday they added over one million known cases
in just fifteen days, as states are reporting record breaking numbers.
How many people are how many people are dying though,

(30:38):
that's the thing, how many people are dying from the disease.
The mortality raiders dropped. But no, no, I think a
thousand thousand people died in America yesterday, right am I tripping?
I thought I read that somewhere. All I know, you're
gonna catch McDonald's soon. How many people? McDonald's then serves
billions billion? Right? Yeah, over a billion? Has that numble grown?

(30:58):
I've no one been the Saints as all you say. Yeah,
it's been the same for since we've been kids about
McDonald's now absolutely yeah, all right, well that is your
front page news. Now when we come back, we're gonna
kick it with Run the Jewels, right LP and killing Mike.
We're gonna talk to them when we come back, so
don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast

(31:19):
Club wanting everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee Choulaline the God.
We all the Breakfast Club. We have some special guests
in the building, Run the Jewels, welcome up, Thank you
for having them. What's going on? Its happy to be here,
Happy to be at the Breakfast Club. Same and I

(31:39):
ask you guys a more personal questions just relating to
this album. Um, the last song, A few words for
the firing squad, right, uh, okay, you got married a
couple of years ago, so it hasn't been super long.
And obviously killing Mike. We know you're an amazing wife,
and so I wanted to ask you guys, how the
heaviness of the world affects your life at home and

(32:00):
how your wives feel about everything that's been going on
right now, and how have your relationship has been affected
just with coronavirus, the pandemic, police brutality, the protest, everything
that's been happening. How has home life been and how
has a change. She's been amazing and she's been understanding
in that regard, and I know that she's affective as well.
I'm doing everything I can to try and make her happy.

(32:21):
Right now. We're out at the beach right now. It's
her birthday and I just I brought her out here
to just get away from all the sub I know
for me, she that song is very important, and I
know it's from Mike as well. That's where I coord
felt like a chance for me to say something like,
this is who you married your husband is, this is
the reason why I do what I do. I have.
You know I have a past and I have principles,

(32:43):
and I want you to understand me because you're putting
all this love and energy into into supporting me. So
that record for me is very special. Mike, y'all know
me and severyway y'all know, some morn is I'm a
live waking her off. It's a murder off, and she
wants to murder to me and others where we just
two regular parents, a dad and a mom to taking

(33:05):
care of kids. That kind of I brought to the situation.
So it's allowed us to grow more in the path
of my grandparents. So she's really reverted back to a
lot of the very simple, very basic southern teams, and
I've reverted back to my grandfather and growing a garden
and fishing with Greg Street, and you know what I mean.

(33:25):
I've realized that I have been on the road so
long that I've missed a significant portion of my kid's life,
whereas and now I've had a chance to be with
them and to actually just be with my wife. You know,
my wife travels with me. And when I realized at
a certain point that it's unfair to her in the
last tour, she chose to stay home more. And I
didn't like that as much. So God said, hey, I

(33:47):
got one for you, buddy. Now you guys at home together.
Now you got to learn how to communicate a better
and effectively. Now you guys can take the time to
grow businesses and grow stronger bond and really be the
matriarch and patriarch of the families. I love my wife's
like um, like Envy loves to you. You know what
I mean, you gotta And I can remember being at
good table at UM what you see and Um, when

(34:10):
we were all at that Tyler Perry team together and
I look at you and your misses to my left,
I look at Joy reading her mister to my right,
and I don't care what differences has been had at
that table. I don't care what bread's not reader I was.
I realized how normal that moment was, that we were
just people with our the people who supported love us.
I mean, when I was a good night, we were

(34:31):
just a bunch of black talking, you know what I mean.
And I've had to have so many more of those
nights that I realized, as much as my dream is
that I got how happy I was with my dreaming
and one of the the jews, that I had missed this
bigger happiness of being able to celebrate it with my family.
And that's a that's a radically different feeling. So I've

(34:52):
grown tighter and my bond is strong with my wife
and we've been able to do bigger and better business together,
which I love. And we've been able to be more
to and throped around Atlanta, and I've been happy just
to be home with I love her. She just came
back from to Ghana, so I'm just getting over two
days of being mad she was gone. She still won't
get up and make it to the breakfast club in
the morning though, when you guys are, oh, you should

(35:13):
wake Sha up because I'm actually in my house before
Angel let me know what we got five so she's
getting them. You can't wake her up right now, right
out and came now she can mask, so you know
what I want to get to her, guys starts on too.
I was thinking about this because all these television shows

(35:35):
and movies that we grew up watching, right that meant
a lot to us, because this is like a television
show also album and right now what they're doing is
a lot of stuff today wouldn't fly, you know, like
of course the Dukes of Hazard. You couldn't have that
show on with the Confederate flag on the car today.
What happens with that content? You see? What gone with
the when they took that off the streaming services. So

(35:57):
what do you think about all these television shows at
movies from back in the day. It's making a ton
more money for specialty cable because I still watched The
Duke's Hazard. I just go to the I just go
to the Country channel, and I do the same thing
I did without eight I nor the out at the
top of the car. I listened to Life's Advising Couter

(36:19):
and Uncle Jesse, I lost Daisy and Bowen Luca. Pretty
cool because you have to remember, as we're only fifty
six years in the freedom as a people with black folks,
I've been seeing the Confederate flag my whole life, and
it's been benign as a snake with no teeth and
no venom. What I've missed and what I'm scared of
with television now is I remember learning about race and

(36:41):
class in a very powerful way watching All in the Family,
watching The Jeffersons, in particular, when George saves the life
of that clansman because he learned CPR earlier in the episode,
and the guy looks over and says, you should have
let me down, and he realized the black man as
a kid, that allowed me to be tough enough to
understand that there's some people that are vehetnmamly dug in

(37:03):
the ratism. You're not going to change them. But seeing
things that challenge perception around me just help me growth.
I see all life shows like a different world in
the Cosby Show, I can separate the show from the
horrible things that have been done. But that show taught
a lot of boys how to be husband's brothers dad.
So I steell watch a lot of the old show.

(37:25):
You know, maybe shows like The Shy there are doing
that by putting different lifestyle when our faith and saying
these people exist they contend. I'm thinking that that shows
like The Wire have done it. But I don't know
where we're gonna go to the the next ten, fifteen, twenty years,
because if we start to be too offended by everything,
we stop being willing to be challenged to accept new
stuff and be empathetic. As Maya, what do you try

(37:46):
to think about the funding the police and everything that's
going on the police and even with the rise of
the shootings going on across the country, It almost my
opinion it seems like police officers are not responding per
se as they should be. I think we should stop
saying triggered words that they give up. You know, both
of our fathers haven't been involved in law enforcement. We

(38:06):
know that America is never going to defund the total
local in this the police departments, and if they do,
then you will have a federal police agency and that
will become your destopol So I'm just telling people when
you're saying defunded police, I think what people are saying,
or I know what the real objective is is to
take some of the fundings that police get to become
more military military like and put that into other things.

(38:29):
When a lot of this ship soft man. You have
overfunded military flight tanks, you have overfunded military like uniforms
and guns and ammunition, and you have underfunded the police
Athletic League things that will greater connect the community. You
have underfunded loan programs that will allow policemen from a
community to live in the communities they police. Or quote,

(38:50):
you have underfunded the police payment Atlanta Police that they
got a raise this year, they deserve the raised years ago.
And there are other things we can funder wrapt education,
trade for rams that we don't have to pour so
much into our police, essentially making them a marine corps
on the street, which is not a bad thing to have.
The Marine cause shouts out of the Marines. But we're
making them a military force of occupiers versus of servants

(39:14):
and protectors of the community. All Right, we got more
with Run the Jewels. When we come back. It's the
Breakfast Club the morning everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne,
the guy we are the Breakfast Club, were still kicking
it with Run the Jewels. Charlomagne. I want you to
unpack a line for me. Man. It's on the new album.
I think it's on Yankee and the Brave. He said,
I got I got one round left on a hundred

(39:35):
cops outside outside, I can shoot it them with one
between my eyes. It's the latter ear don't matter, it
ain't suicide. And that the dude say it was the
goddamn lot. It seems like that's saying to describe the
black experience in America, like those are the two options music,
get killed them and kill yourself. Like unpacked that a
little bit from me. There's a time that's going to

(39:55):
come in this country that if we keep at the
pace we're going that citizens are going to have to decide,
is my freedom and liberty greater than the comfort of
government control and living black? And you often feel this earlier,
you feel the brunt, hairy, heavier, and people don't have
to believe you. But the attitude is that because the
spirit is that I got one book. You know, I'm

(40:17):
not going around looking to hurt nobody or be hurt.
But at some point the world is going to mount
itself against me in a way where like that hero
versus that coward, Trey var versus that coward George Zimmerman,
you gotta fight to the very depth. And that is
the black experience for me. The black experience is one
like that line wasn't a hopeless line. Sometimes the odds

(40:38):
and so far against uff that that's what it is.
But like friend Haston, they're gonna kill me. This is
gonna be in my mother's sleep. Well, I'm just gonna
kill myself when I'm not gonna give these devils and
these predators and the evil mother the satisfaction of knowing
to kill the broken, you know. And if we stand
in that solidarity, if everybody does that little bit a
lot hasn't doesn't have to get done, you know, we
have to understand it. The greatest part about this moment

(40:59):
of being black or being a part of the politariat
to any part of any people's struggle right now is
the motherfucked back on the ropes. They are fraid in
this moment. You know, May you mentioned Treyvon and a
lot of these abolitionists. They want to abolish the police
and adopt like a community watch program. But when you
think about how wrong that could go, what do you

(41:20):
what do you think about that? My thing is what
it's going to be the vetting system for the community. Well,
each community decide what their laws are. How will they
decide that? So I'm not saying it's not possible. I'm
saying what does it look like for each community? Because
the way it looks in Atlanta maybe something radically different
from the way it looks in Detroit. That's why it's
quite planning, strategized, organized, and mobilize. It's possible white communities

(41:43):
do it. But while we're dealing with what we got,
what we can do is adjust things. The big thing
we can adjust it's the thirteenth Amendment. The thirteenth Amendment
allows for slavery in case of imprisonment. It literally says
that now we have contracts where private prisons are guarantee
even eighty percent occupancy. So if I move to a
town outside of Atlanta and that town is a struggling municipality,

(42:06):
that town has the ability to invite a private prison there.
The private prison comes there and say we must have
eighty percent occupancy or you're breaking your contract. All of
a sudden, this town that used to be a town
I used to drive through turns into a speed trap,
adult trap. They got five police dolls, they searching every car,
and people who get caught with three rams of marijuana
get one year because that one year you're in there

(42:28):
helps keep that eight percent. And it turns into an
evil system where a prosecute or prosecutes for pay the
judges do it. So we have to start to say
to ourselves, what does policing look like on the big
let's get that change on the local level. Why don't
we have community review boards that are empowered to fire fully.
You're ever going to defeat police unions is by using

(42:48):
public pressure on politicians and demanding something. You're going to
have to test pensions because it's your money they pay out.
So I just want us to just know that as
the community were you, there's never been a more opportune
time for you to radically change policing on the local level.
Now take that precedent to the poll. If your mayor
doesn't agree, get that motherfucker out of office. If your

(43:12):
judges and prosecutors are compliant and police brutality, bot those
see motherfuckers out of office. And if we don't do that,
at some point we have to allow ourselves to say
we take some blame and letting these evil mother live
when we could destroy them politically in the right. Now.
You know, I'm thinking about the Reagan record, and you
start off the records, I think it's the freedom of

(43:33):
some bulls. When we ever do it bigger, just keep
settling for a little. I feel like we keep settling
for a little, especially as yes man. How do we
change that? I think it's no better time. I don't
think the answers come from two rappers that are stalled
in the morning on radio. I think the answers. I
think the answers come from people, um like the brother

(43:56):
Dasman I was talking to last night, who was getting
m felons read, voting rights rest restored, in Florida. He
asked ability in Florida to change that entire state based
on getting over a million people their right to vote,
that you can radically change things through voting. The money,
we can do things like participating our senses so they
know where we're at. There's a way to change the

(44:16):
system in the right now. But I don't think it
comes from two stone rappers in the morning. It comes
from the people that are organizing racial justice now New
Georgia Project developing options. It comes from them because those
are the people that are doing it every single day,
and we should make sure those small groups. Like Judge
Osha Jackson from the cab County. Judge Jackson set up

(44:37):
a restorative program through her court using her own money.
Using her own money, she allowed people who would have
faced time, you know, minimal time to see a bullet
time that would have radically changed the rest of their life.
She set up a program that was restorative that allowed
those people to get back on page. Her program is
going to be picked up and mimicked by the State
of Georgia due to a woman named Miss Ali who

(44:59):
comes out of the jew a court system in Georgia
under Judge brad Well, work with Judge brad Bard, who
was a friend of mine who, instead of giving my
home way, was against disciple time in jail, allowed to
become an organizer and radically changed. It is like to
be a husband and father with these kinds of people
leading the way I think that changes. I agree with Mike.

(45:23):
Isn't it ironic that we have people fighting to get
their rights to vote right there? Rights have been taken away,
and then people who would say, hold your vote, don't vote.
It's just crazy that we have both of those things
happening simultaneously. I think that everyone is a little bit
confused as to how to perceive because nothing has ever
seemed to really work, and I think that we find

(45:44):
ourselves arguing intellectually and just trying to figure out, like, well,
what the is where is my power? I know that
I have gone through many different changes in the way
that I approached the way that I engaged with the system.
There were years when I refused to vote because I
had personally decided that it was the sham. I have evolved.
I started to realize a lot of that perspective was

(46:05):
rooted in entitlement. A lot of that perspective was rooted
in the fact that I did personally feel a lot
of the effects of the policy changes and what happened
on a local level in the communities that were really
affective by So now I do participate, but I think
that everybody is very confused about how like, all right,
you put yourself in a situation where you know that
you know this one of trunk got to get out

(46:26):
of office, but then you get to a point where
you're like, well, what does that mean? Does that mean?
When I'm enjoycing someone that I don't necessarily agree with
intellectually or politically, I like to say, Nina Turner should
be president in the United States, and I would like
to play everyone to get behind her. I think to
answer Angela's question, Malcolm makes said about any means necessary,
and that's the black people out there. If you have

(46:47):
a municipality where you are dominated in that municipality, it
makes sense, or you leverage a swing vote, it makes
sense to organize your vote for whichever party member is
going to do the most for your community concerns and
the wider community concerns. That's your duty. If you have
the ability to use your vote as a threat to

(47:08):
say we will not vote because you're a swing vote.
You do something and you hold that, you hold that line.
Voth have work. So I just want people to know
the vote is important and if it is important, to
use it and leverage it. Let's mother organize man. Charlemagne
has been telling us what's happening important. Charlemagne told us
wo won't half a year ago, he said, Mike, I
don't see it. This mother might not leave. Now I's

(47:30):
like year that hell out of here, he said. Now,
all you gotta do is actibate Marshall mall. So if
their experiment and triving in Portland, what do you think
is gonna look like in Detroit or Chicago or Gary, Indiana?
Blackall organize your vote. And Trump told us last week
you that was Sunday. It was like, yo, he loses,
Are you gonna leave the White House? He's I don't know.

(47:52):
I'm not a good loser. I'm like this mother telling
us what he plans to do. We got more with
LP and kill a mic ak a run the jewels.
When we come back, it's the breakfast club, good morning pointing.
Everybody's dj Enzy Angela Yee Charlomagne, the guy we are
the Breakfast Club was still kicking it with Run the Jewels. Charlomagne, Mike,
what'd you think of Ashville, North Carolina approving a reparation

(48:16):
plan for his black residence. Anything we're going to have
is going to start at a micro or a small level.
Jarn Tryers has been since nineteen eighty nine. Goblins Denily
Dial last year had been pushing since eighty nine to
get the study of reparations study. The Angel Project said
Black people are old in excess of fifteen trillion dollars.
Bob Johnson, who went to the White House and requested this,

(48:39):
said that it comes out to about three hundred and
fifty thousand per person. I averaged it maybe af about
four hundred and fifty five hundred thousand even. But not
only would it be a past statement, we saw him,
you'd have to figure out how much land people should get,
how much education tax and centers break something to truly
make up for two hundred and fifty year. Heads start
to try to put us here. And everyone knows that

(49:00):
if our community is stronger economically, the greater community is stronger.
And that's just not me saying that cities like Chicago,
all of a sudden, you have kids that are educated,
you can reverse the evil redlining that happened for over
eighty years in that country. And then you can get
this country where everybody's won the full esteem, and then
you get a country that can truly be dominant without warfare. Wow,

(49:22):
I know, I know, I know y'all gott to guard
an LP on vacation. I want to ask you one
more question. Run the Jewels is a critically acclaimed rap group.
But I saw one negative critique of the album by
a man named Eric Schreiber, and he said, rather than
offering any social insight of clarity, the group's lyrics demonstrate
a good deal of confusion. Members Killer Mike, and LP

(49:43):
match every healthy statement with several backward ones. How would
y'all respond to that? How do we know what he's
talking about? You got a nice specific line, sir, But
hold on, hold on, hold hold on. First of all,
not at all. No, we're not above criticism. I mean
we don't have to. Everybody doesn't have to love everything

(50:03):
that we do. But but be clearing your fatigue, American,
That's all I'm saying. Oh, hold on, hold on, Mike
hold On, Mike, Me and Mica al two set Gone. Friend,
we are making rap music. We are confused, and we
are not here to offer a political solution in a
rap record. We're here to represent the feelings of two

(50:23):
dudes that I think connects pretty well to the feelings
of people on the street and in the world. No, Mother,
you can't just criticize me like when throw on my
t I cast. You can't just criticize me without Mother
telling me your criticism. That I argue with the young
woman the other day. She said I didn't like your

(50:44):
speech with the mayor, and I said, oh really, I said, well,
what didn't you like? I don't know. I haven't listened
to it. Hey, this is simple. My thing is, you
want to criticize my music, fine, but you gotta honestly
give an example. I'm not above criticism, but I just
might see. Please just say some real like I just
don't like them. Okay too, So forgive me for being passionate,

(51:07):
but my my real work, ELL's real work benefits the
world in a real way. Because you're watching a movie
on audio. So I just challenge you to realist and
get really stone have sex with whatever guy or girl
you love and just get stuff on shrooms and weed
and listen to it as an action adventure television show.

(51:28):
So they're gonna be moments of morality. They're going to
be moments of utter perversiveness and something weird. But if
you allow yourself to suspend the disbelief of Jamie and
Mike and you'll meet them at the after the show.
But just get into the characters and Killer Mike and LP.
I just want to say, listen again and we'll do
lunch and then if you don't like it here you
can get sat on with it. I will say his

(51:48):
critique is a little off though, because he even talks
about killing Mike's speech in Atlanta when exactly he doesn't.
That's what I want. If you send me man, just
send me Iffy, damn it. I don't listen to those people.
If I didn't, Iffy, I gotta shout this right quick.

(52:11):
You've been riding a bike, right so I gotta give
a shout out to my man Bear, Courtney Bear Seals
and he's just a man. He's getting me into it.
There is a beige, brown and black bike called Listen
growing in this country. You are a leader, I love you,
and I gotta I gotta shout out State Bicycle Company

(52:33):
because we raised a good amount of money for protests
and black lives. Um mattereen, we did that to a
kill your Master's BMX bike that we did as a
one off. There were only two. I have one, but
we're gonna produce that bike and we're gonna do some
more good in the world. So Bear got me on
the bike. If Bear Masfie seeing you next to a
Ferrari and a bike, said maybe I should take this seriously.

(52:55):
So I'm jo I'm enjoining it. I'm getting my cardio up.
I'm losing wei. And you know what is the time
just you and the boys go out and you're doing
something positive, you're just riding it. Hen't do it, man,
They can absolutely positive to get this women out there
riding and they will out ride me in a minute.
But still not up. Hold on, I do that be

(53:17):
we will do that to her, Mike, don't do that
to her. You gotta get up answer, aren't you up? No?
Don't do shade liked you want me to bring the
fall in here? Ye? Held we look, we gotta take
she got me just got there she got eleven thousand dollars.

(53:38):
Bit you're talking about real quick, Mike. I just want
to I just want to say, just for what it's worth,
because you mentioned is um something that we're about to announce,
But when we gave away this record, when we put
this record out, hey shake, When we put this record out, um,
we we actually um gave her a free record out

(54:01):
as well, Like not only do we sell up, but
we gave it away for free as well, and anybody
who wanted the records to have the record. And one
of the things that we have people to do is
donate to an organization called the National Lawyers Build, which
is an organization that helps protesters with legal work to
get out of you know that that are scooped up
by the cops, and that provides washaws protesters and the
and the public through that and through getting our album,

(54:23):
has donated over one hundred and eighty thousand dollars to
That's fun. So I just want to thank everybody for
doing that. And it's one of the things that make
me and my really proud that we have the type
of year with people, because that's like tangible good that
that for us we could do together so I just
wanted to shout out all the Jewel runners for making
that happen. That's important and that's actually gonna put some

(54:45):
real work out there. So thank you. So the lawyers
jode Is Dope is part of the Master Since Committee,
and that's like the lawyers legal workers. They even give money.
The law students provide the political activist protesters. Really, you
appreciate this, This is amazing. Lets I want to hear
too much political talk, man, Let's play that out of sight.

(55:08):
Let's do all right where we have it. It's the
Breakfast Club is running the Jewels wanting. Everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
All right, Let's get to the rumors. Let's talk the
fight of the century. It's about. This is the rumor report.

(55:30):
Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club Mike Tyson versus Rory
Jones Junior contract is signed, so that is going to
be on trailler a social media app. I don't know
if I want to see that, though I want to
see it, but I don't know if I want to
see it. You never have that feeling like you want
to see it, but you like, these two old men

(55:51):
are gonna hurt you. They can, they can hurt themselves.
I'm surprised the Zone didn't pay for that fight, But yeah,
I pray for both of them. I don't want to
see any one of them hurt. Go ahead, popular, I
know Michael's more popular than Roy Jones back in the day,
but as a fighter, Roy Jones Junior had a much
better career and Roy Jones Junior is one of the
best pound for pound boxes of all time. Okay, Roy
was a champion of four different way classes. Let's know,

(56:12):
let's not get that twist. But who now that was Yeah,
that was fifteen years ago. Who's in shape now both
of them? Or Jones just stopped fighting like a few
years ago. Bee. Roy Jones last fight war in twenty eighteen. Um,
So it's exactly. It's an eight round exhibition match. It's
happening on September twelfth. It's being called The Frontline Battle,

(56:35):
So it'll be available on pay per view and on trailler.
There'll also be an undercard and live musical performances from
artists that have not yet been announced. And now my
son told me Nate Robinson is going to be on
an under call Nate Robinson. I'm sorry, go ahead, Yeah,
YouTuber Jake Paul will also be fighting Nate Robinson on
that undercard. Listen, you know, I'm always rooting for everybody black, Okay,

(56:58):
But as if I was a betting man, even though
I don't gamble, my money would definitely have to be
on Jake Paul everybody. Ye yes, yes, Well he fights
on those undercards. Uh, and he's fought on his own
pay per view before. Did Jake Paul get busy? He does,
But we don't know if Nate Robinson was a previous
box z no, that's but you don't know if Nate

(57:20):
getting busy. I hope So, I hope Nate just doesn't
go in there and think, hey, yea, I could go
beat up this white boy. I hope he doesn't think that,
all right, Well, for Mike Tyson, he said he's personally
not getting rich from the fight. He said his cut
will go to charity. He's not getting anything. So they
paid about fifty million dollars for the rights to the fight,
and for very Jones Junior, he has the potential to
make more than ten million dollars for the fight if

(57:42):
the pay per view numbers are pretty big. Wow. Listen,
I'm gonna beat there. I'm not gonna sit here and
act like I'm not gonna be there to see that one.
I'm watching Roy Jones Junior and Mike Tyson. I just
pray for both of them, and I don't want to
see any one of them hurt hurt each other. And
the reason I will be watching that fight is because
I love to see people the five their age so
to speak. You know, people say, oh, ye old fifty,

(58:04):
you shouldn't be in the ring fighting, YadA, YadA, YadA.
We'll see and I think it's a good time because
we all need some stuff to watch too. And in
September twelfth, it's not going to be fans in attendance,
so you can only watch it. Yeah. I don't want
to hurt themselves though. Like I just remember zab you
the fighting with a year ago, and how he had
brain damage or his brain was bleeding. He was in

(58:24):
the hospital for a couple of days. I just don't
want to see that for those brothers. And they're gonna
go hard. Roy Jones Junior and Mike Tyson that food
are gonna go hard on each other and if you
read Jay Prince's book, you know, Jay Prince tried to
make this fight happen um a while ago. I don't
know why it didn't happen, but yeah, all right Now,
to Raji p Henson's gonna be starring in an Empire
spinoff that's based around Cookie. So her new production company

(58:46):
will also produce the show, as it was announced, and
Lee Daniels and Danny Strong will be her co executive producers.
So congratulations to her for that. That's dope. Drop on
a clues box with to Rogi p Henson and she
got a first deal with a twenty year century Fox,
I believe, so salute to her. And in more Black
Girl Magic news, Jerry Reid has pulled in their record

(59:07):
numbers of viewers for the premiere of her MSNBC show
to Read Out on Monday. She got two point six
million million overall viewers. It's the second most watched regularly
scheduled episode to air in the seven pm hour and
MSNBC's history dropping the clues bonds for Joy and read
I love that MSNBC has a run in that time slot.
You know, you know what, I'm disappointed, and I'm disappointed

(59:29):
in CNN. And the reason I'm disappointed in CNN is
because you remember in twenty sixteen, when Barack Obama was
leaving the White House and we didn't know who the
next president was gonna be, CNN gave a platform. There's
so many black voices that we trust now, whether it's Angela,
ry Bakari, Seller's, you know, Van Jones, like, there's a

(59:50):
lot of dope people who they're not doing that this
time around. So it's good to see MSNBC given a
black woman a platform, especially at a time like this.
I would think that they he's so many black voices
and faces on these news networks right now, but it's not.
It's weird right and enjoying read's first guest where Joe Biden,
Hillary Clinton, mayor Keisha Lance Bottom from Atlanta, and the

(01:00:11):
Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot. Yeah, it's just very tone death
of these news networks not to have more black faces
on at a time like this, it's just very very
tone death. So the MSNBC for for somebody up there
having a clue, because people and not just as commentators,
Let's have them as you know, regular paid on all

(01:00:33):
the time, have their own shows all right, Ryan Henry
hasn't built his only fans page, so that should be
exciting for some people who have seen that he's been
working out. It's twenty eight dollars and forty nine cents
a month. And yeah, so he put on social media.
He posted a picture and he said, well, not for y'all,

(01:00:54):
it's for them and Lincoln Bio if you want to
see Ryan Henry's only fans from black in Chicago keep
making money. How you feel about that? How do you
feel about I don't feel any type of way about that. Now,
let's be real. A lot of people, Ruby Rose made
one hundred thousand dollars in two days on only Fans,

(01:01:18):
and her content was very PG and it's a lot
of the same content she already posted on her social channel,
so it wasn't nothing crazy, so it's not all X rated.
And Ryan Henry said that he's going to be doing
only PG cooking content, so it's not nothing riskue like that.
How do you feel about Ruby Rose? I'm a fan
of two totally different. Um, your energy shifts totally about

(01:01:43):
Ryan Henry. You got all angry and defensive asking about
Ruby Rose, because one speaks to my interests and wanted
just a random I don't know why you pulled me
into the Ryan Henry conversation. Wow. And the Dream also
used that used only fans to his album to his
last album, Sex Tape four. So just that drum messed

(01:02:07):
the Dream. I like her. Oh she likes only fans.
That's dope. Okay, so like the Dreams only fan All right,
he's on Why are we going down this road? I
don't understand now. I do want to say, if you
guys do subscribe to any only fans pages, Bobby Lights
has an amazing one. If you have an opportunity to
see his trump No, no, no, you want to go

(01:02:28):
down Bobby's old time bro. All right up Manzela yee,
And that is your rumor report. Brought to you by
Blackest King. Streaming July thirty first, experienced the new visual
album from Beyonce with music from The Lion King. The Gift,
a celebritory memoir that reimagines the lessons of the Lion King.

(01:02:49):
Blackest King starts streaming July thirty first, only on Disney Plus.
All right, thank you, miss ye Now, Charlomage, who are
you giving that donkey too? Let's talk stupid executives. Coach,
really clueless executives. It amazes me that people can systemically
do things to hurt people but can never systemically do
things to help people. We'll talk about it. We need
the Washington football team to come to the front of

(01:03:10):
the carregation. We'd like to have a word with him.
All right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning. Let's don't be a dusting because right now
you want it's time for Donkey of the Day. So
if we ever feel I need to be a donkey man,
the head sheet I had become Donkey of the Day.

(01:03:31):
Breakfast Club bitches, talk you today. For Friday, July twenty
fourth goes to the Washington Football Team. I say Washington
football team with a question mark. I know when you
heard me say that, you said, what is the Washington
football team? Now? I looked it up this morning. Washington,
DC is home to twenty two flag football teams that
play under the DC Gay Flag Football League. The DC

(01:03:54):
Defenders of the x XFL began playing in February in DC,
but we all know them. Most famous football team in
DC is the team formerly known as the Redskins, the
fifth most valuable franchise in the NFL now known as
strictly Washington Football Team. You can't make this kind of
stuff up. Let's go to Fox Business News for the
report police the most boring name in the history of sports.

(01:04:19):
It will tell you that ESPN is reporting that effective immediately, Washington,
DC's NFL franchise. Who's going to be calling itself? Quote
the Washington Football Team pennic adoption of a new name. Now,
I've heard of unemployed people being between jobs. I've heard
of people who are moving being between houses. I've even
heard of people of faith being between blessings. But I've

(01:04:41):
never in my life heard of a football team being
between names. All those executives up there making all that money,
none of y'all could think of anything better to do
in the meantime. Okay, y'all didn't have any better entertainment
for the halftime show. In fact, during this intermission, we
didn't even need a performance. We could have just went
to get Okay, y'all couldn't think of nothing better. I

(01:05:03):
understand Redskins is offensive. Okay, I'm glad they are changing
the name, but bro, they have been the Redskins since
nineteen thirty three. In fact, they would have Boston Redskins,
and then when the franchise moved to DC in nineteen
thirty seven, they became the Washington Redskins. So eighty three years,
eighty three years, you have unapologetically been the Redskins, ignoring
everyone who said that name was offensive. But now, all

(01:05:25):
of a sudden, it's such an immediate need to change
it that you just decided to be Washington football team.
The only person who ever changed their name to nothing
was Prince, but at least Prince had an interesting symbol.
Y'all could have done that. Okay, y'all could have said
y'all Washington Football Team and then gave the world a
great logo that could have worked for the moment. I

(01:05:46):
would have rather seen that in the meantime. Okay, then
what y'all did, which is nothing. I'm also not mad
at the simplicity. Sometimes we complicate things by giving it
these extravagant names. But you can't just, you know, be
Washington football team. You have to add a the so
Washington the football team, Like Chance the Rapper, are Benny

(01:06:09):
the butcher, Tyler, the creator the changes things chant Rapper
Benny Butcher Tyler creator Right. Okay, Washington football team, that
all sounds stupid, but when you add a the Washington
the football team, that sounds kind of hard. Now we
might have something. Okay, Redskins have a lot of fans

(01:06:29):
out there, all right that that DNV area Rep's hard
for their squad to ROGI p Henston, Kevin Durant while
Dale Earnhardt Jr. They love their Redskins and they deserve
better than this. And furthermore, the name should be a
no brainer. Okay, you've been offending indigenous people all these years,
offending Native Americans all these years. Sit down with some

(01:06:51):
Native Americans and come up with something that they all
find empowering, and boom, you got your name. It's really
just that simple. How is it so easy for y'all
to systemically offend but you cannot systemically uplift? And I
don't think you understand the impact that this no name
change has on black and brown people. All Right, there's

(01:07:11):
a comedian named don Elle Rollins. Your mayor heard of him?
Ashy Larry. Okay, you know Ashy Larry. Right, Whenever there
is a comedy show and it's like Monique and Friends.
Dave Chappelle and friends. He's always one of the friends. Yes,
that guy, right, funny individual, brings a lot of joy
into people's lives. And currently he is miserable, all right,

(01:07:33):
more miserable than usual. Sick over Washington football team. Okay,
when you script the team's identity, when you script their name,
you script the identity of the fans. They feel nameless,
they feel lost. Okay, what are they supposed to do
with years and years of merchandise? And in DC you
have to be specific about what football team you're talking about, because,

(01:07:54):
like I told y'all earlier, they have twenty two flag
football teams that play under the DC Gay Flag Football League.
So right now, Brothers like Donnell Rowlings are not okay, okay,
they're sick. Literally. In fact, a well fed check had
to be done on Donielle Rollins because of this no
name change. Okay. A brother who had to perform the

(01:08:16):
welfed check called up and told us what happened when
he had to do a well fed check on Donnielle
Rowlings due to Washington's no name change. Okay, listen, I
was in the whole child, and so we had to
do a welfare check. So I go in the room
and I turned the corner and he's laying but naked
in the middle of the thad fetal position. So at

(01:08:37):
this point, did you know it was Donnelle Rollins. Yeah,
I knew. So after that, I smacked the side of
the wall. I'm like, damn, I started smacking the wall.
All of a sudden, he wakes up. He's like, hey,
my god, Wow. Pray fall brother Donielle. Pray pray for
brother Ashy Cheeks. Pray fall Washington fans once again. Washington

(01:08:57):
football team. Sit with some Native American. All right, same
way you use the slur that offended Native Americans all
these years, find a name that empowers Native Americans, indigenous people.
And if you don't want to do Native Americans, just
find a name that uplifts and empowers a marginalized community.
All right. DC was known as Chocolate City. All right,
They're still known as Chocolate City. Okay, so maybe name

(01:09:19):
of something that empowers black people. But literally, all you
culturally clueless executives who work for that franchise, your mindset
should be we offended for eighty three years with Redskins.
Let's uplift and empower with the next name. Simple please
give the Washington football team the Sweet Sounds and the Hamletones.
Oh no, you are the dogee the day, the dogee,

(01:09:51):
oh the day. Ye yes, man, and please man, pray
for Danielle Rollins. Uh today, let's let's let's do hashtag
pray for Ashley Cheeks. Hashtag let's and pray for Ashy Cheeks.
I mean, just we want to send some positive vibes.
You know, go to Donal Rowlins on Instagram. You know

(01:10:12):
what I'm saying. Uh, he's not really active on Twitter,
So at Donald Rowlins on Instagram and you know, just
just going to whatever his latest pictures are pictures he
posts all day and just put hashtag pray for Ashley Cheeks.
You know what I mean. Brother, we had to they
had to do a welfare check on our brother because
of this name change. Some people take this, take this
these name changes seriously. Man. All right, all right, well

(01:10:33):
we comeing years old. We've been a Rescuings fan for
a long time. It's your hash all right, Well, thank
you for that. Donkey to day when we come back, ANGELI,
who who are we kicking it with him? We have
pastor stories joining us. He is the senior pastor of
First Baptist Church of Lincoln Gardens in Somerset, New Jersey.
He also is the former Secretary of State of New
Jersey and the former chairman of the Federal Election Assistance Committee.

(01:10:56):
And he has this financially free series that he does.
Everything is free, free online classes, and this is an
initiative he's been doing for fifteen years. So they are
actually going to have a virtual conference this weekend and
he'll be talking about that. And you can go to
my dfree dot org for more information or to sign
up for this free webinar. But Pastor Stories, we'll be

(01:11:17):
joining us, all right, and we'll kick it with him
when we come back. Don't move. It's to Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Back. You're kicking out the
world's most dangerous morning show. Morning. Everybody is dg Envy Angela,
Ye charlomagn nagad. We all the Breakfast Club. Now we
have a special guest joining us. Now breakdown who this is? Ye?

(01:11:41):
Pastor Stories is joining us and he's the senior pastor
of First Baptist Church of Lincoln Gardens that's in Somerset,
New Jersey. But he also does this these free webinars
and free online classes for financial freedom. So we have
they have the online seminar going on this and we'll
be talking about that. Welcome sir, thank you glad to

(01:12:03):
be here to Sorry, this is an amazing year for you, Okay,
because first of all with the First Baptist Church of
Lincoln Gardens. What's happening this year? Well, I plan to
retire in November if coronavirus left me. Yeah, I was
wondering are you still planning? Are you still planning to
do that? Because I know you said last year in
November you were retiring. Well, I there's a church about

(01:12:26):
fifteen months notice. But we didn't anticipate this virus. And
right now we're still doing everything virtually. So I'm really
thinking hard about the needs of the church and whether
or not the transition can actually happen on time. But
if it's not on time, it'll be in time. Now,
why are you tiring? Are you focusing on other things?
Is it time or you're tired or you have other

(01:12:48):
things in the world. Well, I'm not tired. I'm in
good health. The church is strong. We've got five generations
that are regular participants in the ministry, and I think
it's time for me to transition. Walters are strong, you know,
who wants to hold on to the point where the
thing is almost dead and then they try to bring
somebody into revive it. So I think it's time for

(01:13:09):
guys like me, with my background and experience to make
way for younger leaders while things are going well and
while I'm still healthy enough to support the transition. You
did the same thing when you when you fired your
wife too. We won't talk about that in public, no,

(01:13:29):
but you said there was time to bring in younger people,
right and you want to make sure that we always
are doing that because we see young people are out
there on their front lines right now when it comes
to the protesting, when it comes to everything that's happening.
It is important for us to make sure that the
next younger group of people are ushered in. Well, that's
exactly right, you know. I think when I was coming along,

(01:13:50):
a lot of the older leaders presented the younger people.
In fact, they created barriers for us. And if you
look around Black America, whether it's churches, organizations, h DCUs,
many of them are weak because the old line leadership
held on too long, and I think what we're responsible
for is transitioning out while we can still breathe and

(01:14:11):
talk and create and be resources to younger people. Princess,
the activists today, you know, young people are doing what
I did back in the nineteen seventies. I was protesting
police brutality, putting cops in jail. I've got experience, I've
got knowledge, but it's not my role to jump out
in front of the camera and own the mic to

(01:14:31):
lead these protesters. So now I donate money to the protesters.
I give them strategic advice. They're using my church on
Saturday to start and finish a march, and I'm teaching
the young activists. I'm lending support, but I'm not trying
to hold on to the microphone and be in front
of the camera. Now, what is the Free Global Foundation? That?
What does the foundation do? But thank you, it's It's

(01:14:53):
d Free And the foundation teaches churches, community organizations, Greek
letter organization, and how to use a strategy to help
their members become financially free. The strategy is based on
the books that I've written. The books that I've written
based on my own experience. As I said, I was

(01:15:14):
an activist in the seventies. We didn't use the word
woke back then, but you know, we used the word conscious.
But if I updated, I was woke, but I was broke.
I was leading protests, but I was getting calls from
bill collectors. I was on a guilt Noble's TV show
like it is all the time, talking about black power,
black liberation. But I had no insurance, no savings. And

(01:15:35):
when my father died at forty seven, my forty four
year old mother became a widow. And if my father
had not had an insurance, I could not have supported
her at all. She'd have been homeless had she depended
on me. So I lived for about twelve years, paycheck
to paycheck, credit card to credit card, and I was
flaunting a lifestyle that looked one way, but I was

(01:15:59):
living in reality that was completely different. And so in
that sense, you know, I was a hypocrite because I
was considered an emerging young black leader and I was
leading social protests but had no financial footing at all.
And so d free is a description of a strategy.
It starts with minimizing debt pay as you go, It

(01:16:21):
continues to focus on delinquencies, pay your bills on time.
We spend billions of dollars a year just on late
fees because we're an organized and then delinquency, living with
a budget below our means. And when we talk about
financial freedom, when we talk about black economic strength, we
often talk at the top. We talk about supporting black businesses,

(01:16:43):
which is good. We talk about owning black businesses, which
is good. But the reality is, if we're living above
our means, if we're paying last month's bills were next
week's check, if we have nothing said, and if we
have no strategy for increasing our credit scores and our saving,
then we're just talking. We've got half tagged, but we've

(01:17:04):
got no real strategy. The Foundation trains organizations for free,
and we spread the curriculum. We have a strategy, We
have a curriculum, We have tools, and we give them
away for free. What do you tell people today during
this pandemic, because you know, usually they say, you know,
you should have enough for maybe three months or six
months in your account, but obviously that a lot further

(01:17:26):
than six months, you know, seeing what's going on out there.
So what do you tell people now with trying to save,
even trying to survive and trying to make sure they
are okay. Well, the people that I'm close with, I
tell I told you so, because we've been preaching this
now for fifteen years. This is our fifteenth anniversary of
the brand and the strategy and the curriculum. And while
I don't want to beat people down, the fact that

(01:17:48):
we've been begging people for fifteen years to watch what
you spend, to spend strategically, to save money, to live
below your means, and to identify strategy for increasing your wealth.
We don't. We don't talk enough about things we can
do with what we have. And so that's number one.

(01:18:08):
Number two, as I mentioned, if you look at you
look at the stock market. You know, when you talk
about the stock market, you generally think about rich white people.
But right now we're on Zoom. If you had bought
one share of Zoom stock in February, you'd have paid
seventy dollars for it. Today's Zoom is worth two hundred
and sixty one dollars per share, which means that some

(01:18:30):
of our brunch money, and some of our social money,
and some of our going out money, if it had
been aimed at Zoom stock, we would have increased our
wealth four times, and so I think during pandemic it
gives us a perfect time to really assess our finances,
to really identify where our money goes. You know. I

(01:18:52):
used to say to my dad, Dad, I don't know
where my money goes, and he'd say back to me,
it doesn't leave home while you're sleeping. I mean, your
money goes where you take it. And before we can
increase our well, what we have to do is to
assess where our money is currently going. If I'm paying
one hundred and eighty five dollars a month for premium
cable but only watched Bravo and b Et, then I

(01:19:13):
need to really switch from premium cable to basic cable
and do something concrete with the money. That I say,
SODJ is that kind of focus and common sense everybody
can do. Its strategy that the de Free Global Foundation teaches.
We have more with Pastor stories when we come back,
don't move. It's the breakfast club. Good morning, pj Envy,

(01:19:36):
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast club.
We're still kicking it with Pastor surez Ye. We have
a whole conference in virtual conference that you're leading up
that's happening this weekend July twenty fourth to the twenty fifth,
So let's talk about that from crisis to clarity. Yeah,
you know again. As an old time social activist, I'm
inspired by the two thousand cities that saw protest over

(01:19:57):
the last three months in response to Joy Floyd. I'm
optimistic about police reform. I love what guys like Sean
King are doing. You know, I talked to him on Saturday.
He's working on replacing twenty three thousand district attorneys around
the country. I mean, that's great stuff. But at the
end of the day, we don't want people to be

(01:20:18):
woke and broke. And so this Friday and Saturday, we
are pausing to celebrate the fifteen years that we've been
trying to help our people from the bottom up in
churches and neighborhoods and youth groups. Understand that we need
a financial strategy, and we've got speakers. Miss Angela Yee

(01:20:40):
is one of our speakers because she's been a part
of our movement. She came to my church for one
of our conferences, and I didn't even know who she
was because you know, I'm old. I watched Good Morning America.
But our young people listen to the Breakfast Club and
the place was packed with young people listening to her
talk about her entrepreneurial dreams, her home ownership, and so

(01:21:04):
she's one of our speakers this weekend. We have a
young guy, Tarek Brooks, who now runs Sean Combs Enterprises.
I met Tarik when he worked for Bob Johnson. Tarik
is the only young person who has worked for two
black billionaires during his career, and he's going to talk
about how he got started, what he did with mister Johnson,

(01:21:26):
and what he's doing with mister Combs. We've got a
woman named Shane Harris who's the president of the Prudential Foundation.
So we've got great speakers and panels to talk about
what we have done and where we are planning to go.
And I gotta bring this up right when you actually
had to sit down with Dynamis and the Rutgers women's

(01:21:47):
basketball team, when Dynamis had those comments and call them
nappy headed. You know, I don't even want to say
it again because I hate that. So anyway, I just
want to know what your thoughts are engaging with people,
because right now there's a lot of things that are happening.
A lot of people are saying, you know a lot
of white people that we've been seeing online that have
been going viral saying awful things to black people. And

(01:22:09):
I just want to know, as far as engaging when
these things happen, what are your thoughts on how people
should handle that well. I think we should be upfront
and direct. When don Imus was on the radio and
he maligned the integrity and the image of those young
women who play basketball at Rutgers, who, by the way,
happened to attend my church, I called him directly and said,

(01:22:32):
why did you do it? I met with him to
explain to him that just because he hears black people
using that language with other black people, that it is
not the same dynamic as him being on national radio
using that language to denigrate those women, Because what is
a term of endearment for one group is a term

(01:22:54):
of disgrace and embarrassment used by somebody else. And what
we did was we arranged a meeting between don iMOS
and the Rutgers women's basketball team, and we insisted that
he's sitting and listened to them, explained to him why
they were so offended the impact of his words on
their lives, and he apologized. They accepted the apology, and

(01:23:16):
they moved on and finished their academic year. But I
just don't believe we should sit back and suck it
up all the time. You know, Black people, I think
in the last couple of months have risen above to
suck up. And white people need to understand that all
Black people are trained from our childhood to choose our
battles to kind of suck it up. And every generation

(01:23:40):
has to suck up less than the last generation. You know,
when I was a child, I watched Targan on TV
and we just kind of sucked it up. We don't
tolerate tars and images anymore, and we can't tolerate people
denigrating us and offending us with impunity. And that's why
I confronted don iMOS. Absolutely conference one more time that

(01:24:01):
you guys are doing so people can get in touch,
they can check it out and they can be a
part of it. The site where you can register as
my d free dot org. And it's free. We've got speakers,
we've got information, we have resources. It's Friday from eleven
to five, and it's Saturday from eleven to five, and
it's a time to interact with information. Of course, because

(01:24:24):
it's virtual, it means that you can go back and
you can access information. One of the downsides of virtuality
is that we can't connect and hug and slap each
other high five. But the good news about the virtual
is that our content remains alive for as long as
it's available, and so we're very excited about it. I'm

(01:24:47):
grateful to what the Breakfast Club does. Angela has been
our strongest link. But you know, you not only did
with gossip, but you did with gospel. You not only
focus on entertainment, but entertainment and it's because of resources
like these that were able to spread the word, empower

(01:25:07):
our people, and uplift a generation despite all of the
onslaught of hatred and barriers. Our history and our heritage
is such that we've always managed to do things for
ourselves when others were opposed to us. And so thank
you for the opportunity, Thank you for the support and
for the work that you do. Well. Thank you, ever,

(01:25:28):
we appreciate you for checking in and good luck this
weekend on the conference. Thank you, Pastor story Bless the
Breakfast Club. Everybody is DJ end, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the Gay,
we are the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk logic. This is the rumor report with Angela

(01:25:52):
Yee on the Breakfast Club. Yes, So Logic put out
his album No Pressure, and I saw that the song
so food Too has been trending since yesterday. So here's
a part of that for you. Joe, Joe, different conversations
with people, crazy how one day the elections would get
to think each we go on on to spend the precious sequel.
We're not taking it back. We keep in it, pushing

(01:26:14):
people get a change, but you'll finally deep in the cushion.
Even when I'm in it feel like I'm losing listening
in the piece and the Bama cruising and I think
I got another head. I could feel my body brusing.
What's the conclusion or rather my propers than something jogging
than got them. It's like breeding nostra damas that I
need to greese. You better believe I know how to
turn a profit with each Let me tell you how
old I am. I thought that there was an actual

(01:26:35):
soul fool Too movie coming out, like with Big Mama
and all of them anything from I thought the same thing. Say,
I meant to click on it all morning, but I
really thought it had to do a big Mama them.
I didn't know it had nothing to do damn logic.
All right, well the fool logic logic food again got
no seasoning on it. Why is it call soul fool? Anyway?

(01:26:57):
The first installment was I think back in one for
a team. But I saw a lot of people talking
about this new album and saying it's better than his
last two albums and they love it, so maybe something
to consider. Listening to Dan all produces a logic fan.
He was in there complaining about something this morning. What
was he complaining about. I don't know. You were saying
something about they were using the same beat or something.

(01:27:18):
I wasn't complaining about that. He was just pointing it out.
He said he didn't sample. It's his beat he used
to beat off under pressure from his old album. What's
wrong with that? Though? Like, I don't know. People are
excited because people love that so much, so they're excited
to hear that that was a bat pics. I agree.
I think more hip hop artists need to do that.
If it's a dope beat. Like everybody should do their
own versions to the song. Reggae artists do it all
the time. What they call it yth rhythm rhythm, that's right.

(01:27:42):
I like rhythms like like, I like that. Punda logic,
pund logic, logic like I like I like rhythms. All right, now,
let's talk about the top ten highest paid celebrities on Instagram.
Who do you think is a number one spot for that?
Kylie Jenna? She's actually number two? Okay, Kim kay, but
she was formerly number went. Noe. Kim Kardashian is number

(01:28:04):
four on the list. Number one is Jess Hilarious? Uh no,
she is not. Okay, y'all don't know. The Rocket is
number one. The Rock is number one, Okay. Who's number two? Uh?
They said that, according to these numbers, he gets paid
a million dollars per post. Wait a minute, When you

(01:28:28):
say a million propos, you don't mean just random post
or you mean like when he is advertising something? Yeah? Yeah,
got you? So there you have it. Yeah, that's amazing.
Imagine that a million dollars propose logical mercy. What also
in the top ten list is Ariana Grande Selina Gomez, Beyonce,

(01:28:48):
Justin bieber taill Is Swift Um Nicki Minaj is up
there as well. So what do they what do they
promote the let me go to look at Beyonce. I
don't have a see Beyonce's Now. I was wondering too,
because I mean they did this less. I'm like, WHOA,
I didn't know does promotion a post? But maybe what
they fit the way they look at it is according

(01:29:09):
to your numbers, how much you are supposed to get
paid per post? I don't know? Oh got you? Because
I see like Beyonce posted the Blackest King trailer, she
posted Black Parade, she posted Chloe and Holly, she posted
Brianna Taylor. But those are all things that are personal
to her, so I don't And also when you do
these posts, you also just do what you want to
do too. By the way, when you're at that stature,

(01:29:29):
obviously you're not gonna just be posting flat tummy t
or something like that, you know, so let me tell
you if I was at that statue, I would be
posted flat tummy T. What's the other one? Rock? The
first rocks last to post about some goddamn tequillas. That's

(01:29:54):
his Yeah, that's killer. Oh okay, what's it called. It's
called a tara mona arimana. I love to tequila drink.
I would love to they have tarremanna reposato. I'm sure
there was evan yeho a repositato extraanjejo. All right, now
here's another story. Now this story made no sense to
me because, according to reports, right they're saying the epinem

(01:30:16):
is stress that Mariah Carey will discuss their sex life
and a new book that she has coming out. She
posted about her book, she said, it took me a
lifetime to have the courage and the clarity to write
my memoir. I want to tell the story of the moments,
the ups and downs, the triumphs and traumas, the debaccos,
and the dreams that contributed to the person I am today.
Through Though there have been countless stories about me throughout

(01:30:37):
my career in very public personal life, it's been impossible
to communicate the complexities and depths of my experience in
any single magazine article or a ten minute television interview.
And even then, my words were filtered through someone else's lens,
largely satisfying someone else's assignment to define me. So she's
doing this memoir. In her own words, she said it

(01:30:58):
was incredibly hard, humbling and healing. She said, my sincere
hope is that you are moved to a new understanding
not only about me, but also about the resilience of
the human spirit. Now, the reason this story doesn't make
sense right that Eminem is stressed about what she might
say about his their sex life together because they had
a personal relationship level is that Mariah says that they

(01:31:20):
only met a handful of times and then it was
strictly professional. So why was she writing her book then
about their sex life. First of all, Eminem would be
in a total hypocrite if he was ever upset about
somebody writing anything about him. Okay, that is true that
the facts. Eminem has written a lot of things about
a lot of people. But there's no need to be
stressed unless you're doing things in the bedroom you're not

(01:31:41):
proud of. I mean, what's the worst Maria can say?
M's terrible in bed? He got a little ppe she
put a knuckle in his like, what's what's the worst
that she could say? Like him? But if it's all
three of those things? But no, the source says that
a little people terrible in bed and I put my

(01:32:02):
knuckles in it, then I would have Then I would,
I would. I would be mad at Mariah for shaming him.
That's that sex shaming. And I would be a little
nervous if I was him, and him, I'll be a
little nervous of all those things Eminem wrapped about him
and doctor Dre having unprotected sex. The whole time, I've
been lying my ass off me and Dre, but not
the closet fing hats off. And then Drake comes in
with the sucking marshal lad Lib like, come on that

(01:32:23):
com Nothing can hurt him. That's why, and that's why
I don't believe the story. They said that he's stressed
out that Mariah's gonna say that he was bad in
bed or a selfish lover, because he's always been insecure
about that. But Mariah says she never slept with him,
so why would she even say that in her memoir?
Were you getting these sources to cite your sources? Well,
I saw this all day yesterday, but this is from

(01:32:44):
the Jasmine brand, but I saw this on a lot
of different sites. Also. Hey, I just want you all
to know to the Rock was advertising on ice cream
called Salton. I've seen that ice creams too. I don't
know if that's his, but they gave him a million
dollars if that's what it was. I've seen that ice
cream post. He posted about this to kill a lot,
But that makes sense because it's his. Okay, hold on now,
Voss Water. He's got a Voss Water post, Millie. I'm

(01:33:06):
not gonna lie the Rock kind of Thoughty. It's like
a flat tumby team Model. He advertises a lot of
stuff I didn't know. Listen, right now, we're all working
from home. Yeah, we're working from home. I'm to take
I want somebody to kill it, teram, M'm gonna. I'm

(01:33:30):
gonna get some of they don't they selecting the store.
And by the way, since you brought up ice cream,
I just want to say I normally can't ice cream
because of my lactose issues, but they do have this
amazing dairy free ice cream that I've been having that
I just want to recommend to people. It's called Daia
Daia d a i ya. It's dairy free and all
their products are. But I'm just putting it out there

(01:33:51):
not to add or anything. It's just something I've been
having that's amazing. Care all right, well, I'm Angela Yee
and that is your rumor Report. Brought to you by
The Blackest King. Streaming July thirty first, experienced the new
visual album from Beyonce with music from The Lion King.
The Gift, a celebritory memoir that reimagines the lessons of

(01:34:12):
the Lion King. Blackest King starts streaming July thirty first,
only on Disney Plus. Did they give you a millie
for a million for that? Yes? Good? All right, Well,
shout to Revolt, We'll see a million. Thanks. Okay, well,
shout to Revolt. We'll see you on Monday. Everybody else,
shout to Jeezy. This weekend is the twenty fifth anniversary

(01:34:33):
of Thug Motivation one oh one of the greatest hip
hop albums of all time. If you don't think so,
debate your mother, because I ain't got time. All right,
So we're gonna do it all about jeez. This morning,
all about Thug Motivation one oh one. So get your
request in. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are

(01:34:55):
the Breakfast Club Now. Shout to LP and Killer Mike
for joining us this morning. Run the Jewels. Yeah, that
album is out our TJ four, so make sure you
go uh scream that however you get music. And I
want to say too man, Happy early born day to
my niece Nihila Simone. Nihli Simone's born day is the
marrow drop on the Clue's bombs for young Nyla. Okay,

(01:35:15):
happy parthday, Nilis Simone. I don't know how old she is.
I think like twenty four tomorrow or something like that.
But wow, yeah, salute the young Nila. There you go,
all right when we come back, we got the positive note.
Don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is TJ Envy, Angela yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are
the Breakfast Club. Nay, what are you doing this weekend?
And then you're doing a conference right yes, my dfree

(01:35:38):
dot org my the letter d free dot org and
we're talking about financial freedom and there's a lot of
people that all beyond speaking. And so if you can't
watch it live, you can also watch that online afterwhere,
but it's completely free for you to sign up and
watch all right now, Charlomagne, you got a positive note?
I do, Man. I want to tell everybody out there,
evict that victim mentality. Okay, let go all that your

(01:36:02):
past does not have to poison your future. Just because
you've been through some hurt and pain, or perhaps one
or more your dreams have been shattered, that doesn't mean
God doesn't have another plan for you. Okay. God still
has a bright future in store for you. So evict
that victim mentality, deal with that trauma and do what
I do. Pray and go to therapy. Breasface Club. You

(01:36:24):
know I'm finished for y'all, dumb given if

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