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April 16, 2021 101 mins

Today on the show we had a variety of guest come through on the show with th6e first guest being the newest artist out of Northe Carolina, Morray who spoke on his come up, loving his wife and new projects. Next we had Lathan Thomas and Lisa Price come in to speak on Black Maternal Health, ‘Love Delivered’ Program and more. And lastly they had Cariole Horne call in to speak on her recently winning her case after intervening in police misconduct, Creating New Laws and more. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to 2 women who were busted for trying to use a $1 million bill at a Dollar General Store!

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
She taking free and Charlottagne the guy my dad ass up.
The breakfast club is ry. I love coming here. I'm
never not gonna come here. You guys are good to me,
and lietun them away was gonna be 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, and that aspect

(00:26):
radio is still important. The breakfast club for my name,
Come on respected. Good morning USA. Hey ma'am, Hey man,

(00:47):
it's Friday. Good morning, ma'am, good morning. That was your day, ma'am.
I'm good. It was a long, long, long, long day
for me, but it was a good day. I was
actually cleaning my house day yesterday. You know, you have
company and you're like, I gotta clean this whole house
just because I just it's been hard, like being home

(01:07):
so much and things are accumulating. All my packages are
getting delivered to my house. I have like a whole
stack of boxes in the front, just trying to get
it together. And then um, one of my friends is
here and she ended up having me up to like
one in the morning just talking. Well, it's a nice thing.
Who who's your friend who's here? I'm out of Raji
guess okay, you know she's on my She's on my

(01:30):
Master Year comedy show that's on Facebook right now for
we the culture. All right. Well, of course I've been,
you know, playing out everything for this car show and
I'm doing one in Jersey, so I've been playing that out.
So that's been my life for the last couple of days,
making sure everybody has a great time with these events
that I'm doing. Charlemagne, what's popping? What happened? Nothing? What
we're doing? I'm sure. Yeah, you're coming here and singing

(01:53):
R and Bela the other day you get me here,
So I've just gotta make sure I'm always singing R.
But you gotta find your little pocket some joy where
you can. Guys and gals out there, Okay, what makes
you happy? Did you set your intentions this morning? Did
you wake up, did you read your affirmations? Did you pray?
Did you meditate? What did you do? Did you get
here on time this morning? Did you say to yo yo,
yo yo yo? Or did you come in here singing?

(02:16):
I feel like I'm on time? Tell you something about life?
In life? You know, I can identify as whatever I
want to identify, ask and guess what I am on
time this morning to tell me I'm not You don't
know my life? Okay, I am right. Do you know what?
Then you on vacation, man, if you want to identify

(02:39):
being on vacation, do it all right? Okay, show prerogative. Well,
let's Friday. We got some special guests joining us this morning.
We have a Lisa Price, who is the founder of
Carol's Daughter Lisa Price. Yes, and a Latham Thomas who
was a celebrity dueler. She's a duel She's not a
celebrity duels. She definitely my wife and my wife did
not have to have a c section for our third

(03:01):
child because of because of Lathen and the doctors definitely
told her that she was going to have to have
a c section. Latin was like no, no, no, no.
And because of Layton we had that vaginal birth. So
I lovely the glow may then on your glow. And
also new artist because it is black. And one more
thing I was gonna say, it is Black Maternal Health

(03:22):
Week this week, so I just want to make sure
you guys all know about that because black women are
three to four times more likely to die in childbirth
than any other race, both and white women. And we
have a new artist name Murray joining us this morning.
Carolina Zone North, Carolina zonn. Well that's my Carolina Bredren.
All right, well, let's get the show crack in Front
page News. What we're talking about. You know, I wish

(03:44):
I had some good news for you on a Friday,
but unfortunately, most of the news that I had this
morning there was eight people killed after a mass shooting
in Indianapolis. And will tell you what we know so far.
All right, we'll get into that next. Keep it locked
us to Breakfast club. Good morning, Breakfast, get into Front

(04:07):
Page News West. Well, let's start with this shooting that
happened late last night in Indianapolis at a FedEx facility.
At least eight people were shot and killed and it's
near Indianapolis International Airport. Now. Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers
responded to that shooting and when they arrived they found

(04:28):
an active shooter incident. They said, this is a tragedy,
but we will come through it with flying colors. According
to the department spokesperson, they said the gunmen had died
and the public is not to believed to be in
immediate danger. They said it was too early to tell
whether the shooter was an employee at the facility. We're
still trying to ascertain the exact reason and cause for

(04:48):
this incident. At least four people were transported to local hospitals,
including one person with critical injuries with injuries consistent with
gunshot wounds, and two other people were treated at the scene.
No law enforcement officers were injured. They're injured. People took
themselves to hospitals in the area. And this Indianapolis hub
for FedEx employs more than forty five hundred team members.

(05:09):
It's the second largest hub in the company's global network,
according to a representative. Yeah, we know what the cause
is most of the time though, right mentally and emotionally
unstable people with access to weapons. Yeah, and you know
the sad thing about it. You know, they were saying
that everybody had to check in their phones when they
go to work, so people couldn't call the police right
away because they didn't have their phones on. Their phones

(05:30):
are in the locker, which you mean to tell me
they live. They work in a facility where people check
their phones, but they don't check for guns pretty much.
I can't. We make no sense pretty much. I'm telling
you all of these facilities have to have you know,
metal detectives and stuff. Now, sorry, a lot of facilities
with a lot of people have to have mom security.
That's just the world we live in. But you know,
in certain places, you're allowed to carry a gun no

(05:52):
matter where. It is, like even in certain venues. And
the only reason I know it is because I want
to do these seminars and call shows. It's like I
asked metal detectives, who like, no, this is an open
carry venue. Yeah, but he allowed to carry. But even
in those open carry states, if I'm not mistaken, a
lot of those venues have the right to refuse you
with your weapons as well. So it's like, you know,
those are the type of precautions we got to take
in twenty twenty one. Well, police did arrive last night

(06:14):
at eleven pm, and they responded. They came in and,
like I said, they believe there's there's no more harm
that can be done. Two employees inside the building at
the time said that they heard as many as ten gunshots,
and they said at first they thought the sound was
from a car, but after hearing more. That's when one
of them stood up, Jeremiah Miller, and saw a man

(06:37):
with a weapon, he said. He said, after hearing the shootings,
I did see a body on the floor behind a vehicle.
They then left the building and watches about thirty police cars. Responded,
they said, thank God for being here, because I thought
I was going to get shot. Hey man, we live
in the United States of anxiety. You can wake up
every day and pick your trauma. Okay, every single data
is something that keeps us on age, and if there's not,

(07:00):
you ain't paying attention, all right, And I just want
to let people know who have gotten the vaccination. According
to the CEO of Viser, they say a third COVID
vaccine dose is likely needed within twelve months of getting
fully vaccinated, and he also said, as possible people will
need to get vaccinated against coronavirus annually, which I think
is what they had already been saying. Now when it

(07:20):
comes to Johnson and Johnson, they are saying that a
man in Mississippi has been partially paralyzed and unable to
talk after getting the Johnson and Johnson vaccine. He's paralyzed
on one side of his body. According to his family.
He suffered a stroke soon after stepping out last week
to get the one dose shot. Yeah, it's over for
Johnson and Johnson. Okay, he's a father of seven. He

(07:45):
was rushed to the hospital. They determined that he had
a stroke as a result of a blood clot in
his brain. And how many days did he take that shot,
because I know at one time they was saying between
six and thirteen. How many days did that fall him? Well,
he stepped out to Yeah, he went to go get
that one door shot and according to his aunt, he said,
they called me and said he had the vaccine and

(08:06):
that something is wrong, and then he was rushed to
the hospital. Oh, right after he got the shot. So
not even anytime. Wow. There's a good story on Yahoo
about how America is about to hit the vaccine wall
in demand for the vaccine is dropping without Johnson and Johnson. Now,
they were saying that even in the Jacob Javin Center,
which was one of the biggest centers in the country,
they said there's six thousand open slots where people can

(08:27):
get the vaccination and people are not signing up. And
right now they're saying about fifty eight hundred fully vaccinated.
People have caught COVID anyway in the United States. But
you know it's not one hundred percent effective, though no
one ever said that. Y'all said it was ninety something.
Y'all said one of them hundred out of how many people,
seventy seven million people are fully vaccinated. Even with the vaccination,

(08:50):
you can still get it the vaccination and so you
don't die. Sure, is a very small percentage, but that's
what they're saying. They say, and you still can't get it,
that's what they saying. You still should wear a mask,
but it's less likely that you will die or have
serious injuries due to COVID. That's why I don't say
fifty eight hundred a smaller centage, because you didn't say
that when people were talking about COVID initially, meaning when

(09:11):
CNN started their counter at a thousand people, two thousand people,
three thousand people out of three hundred something mil million,
y'all weren't saying that's a small percentage, So don't do
that with this. People were saying it was a smaller
it was still state of emergency getting a vaccine. Vaccine
does not mean you will not get COVID. That's what
they're saying. They're saying that ninety vaccine. I don't know

(09:33):
what the hell it's ninety five percent effective and preventing
symptomatic disease in clinical trials, No one thing. I got
my steam boss on me right now, bringing my arms
juice the hell y'all talking about? All right? Well, that's
front page news. Get it off your chest eight hundred
five eight five one oh five one. If you need
to vent phone lines a wide open callers now, it's
the Breakfast Club. Go morning, the Breakfast Club. I'm hey,

(10:00):
what's you doing? If this is your time to get
it off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed five one,
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello?
Who's this? Hey? Peter and blessed man. How are you
guys doing today? Hello? Sant oh, Hey, Sean Stone are
you hey? Good day guys. How are you guys doing today?

(10:23):
Charlotte Man, Anvy ANGELA ye, what's up? Man? Y'all feeling
good to that? Yes? Sorry? Peace King? How are you hey?
I'm blessed man right now, I'm at work. It's just sad.
What's going on in the world right now? You know,
a lot of people dealing with anxiety. Like matel you
know what I mean. I'm afraid of the police, man,
for real, for real, I'm afraid of I'm afraid of
the police. I'm afraid of regular mass shooters. I'm afraid

(10:45):
of getting sick. I guess you know. Pick like I say,
pick your trauma, bro, pick your point and which one
you want. I know one thing is I'm not taking
that back. Then. I'm gonna continue feeding up on my
team marks, continue doing the right thing for my body.
But mvy, I need your help, man. I needed to
help with my credit, man, so I need information for
the credit due. Yeah, you can go to his Instagram

(11:07):
and he got a link in and um he could
definitely help you out, you know with on Instagram is
the credit dude? Yeah, dude, if you're listening, Sean Stone
needs to help. Man, I'm trying to do a big
thing for this year. Man. Yeah, get yeah to him.
He does He does people pretty well. And he doesn't
just charge people. He charges what he takes off your credit.
So if he can't get nothing off, if there's a problem,

(11:28):
he does not charge so and thank you every jel. Yeah,
I'm not sure if you know that, I started my
own business. It's called Stone Tropical Lineman. I'm just wondering
if I can send him guys some linemaid up there.
I'm very clean, even though I love that and listen,
you know what, it's crazy. I was just talking about
lineman because my grandfather used to make homemade linemate all

(11:48):
the time. It's the best I've ever had. So I'll
be interested. I want I want to see what yours
is like. I want to send you guys something. I
want to act if it's okay for me to send
you guys something. I'm trying not to get sick. Bro,
I'm trying not to get sick. Avoidant clean dude. I
washed my hands even though I meant something, Bro, I
stayed clean. Bro. Please, I would hope so sanitation worker
should be the cleanest. Yeah. So that's what I'm saying.

(12:11):
I really want to get my business off the ground.
I am a black man out of here, and I'm
just trying to do the right thing in life period.
You know what I mean. I ain't trying to run
up and hurt nobody. I'm just trying to do Send
it up here, broll, try it out. You know that
just hello, who's this yo? This was tid call it
from Cleveland? Was up? Got to get it off my chest?

(12:32):
Your scholt nine Angela, yee, you pretty thing. Keep doing
your thing. And this is you Envy, Jerry Envy. I mean,
this is you man that still show The Bachelor? Right then? Yeah, okay,
I've seen one full episode that Bachelor is the very
first one. I didn't know that that was the first episode,
but it caught my tenchi because it was a system
on it. It was hot back into death. I bet

(12:54):
you still live that dude played this dude, what's his name,
Colon Underwood? Yeah, I knew he was a homosexual man.
It was on the news last night. That's how I
knew about it. He had to know he was a homosexual.
What I have caught a little bit that I that
I've seen from the back. Wait a minut, Wait a minute,
can I can I say something? You said? You said
that mister Underwood should have known he was a homosexual.

(13:16):
Of course, he knew he was a homosexual, wed st
in his He didn't want to accept that, he said,
he tried to pray it away. I just say he
should have known, I said, he knew because he knew, Yeah,
he knew it was this wasn't just wasn't new. He
didn't have an a testing me in the last few weeks,
a months, or years. You know. The little bit that
I've caught from this broadcast is that at least ten

(13:37):
of those honeys every episode, and I'm talking about the
women only. Okay, they really they really trying to get
a good dude and move on with their life. Now,
the rest of them might be just there to get
on TV or they got They kind of one way
or the other about whether they get one. If they
get a winner, that's cool, that's nice, but if they
don't see what they got on TV. But at least
ten of those honeys on any other episode of trying

(13:57):
to get a good dude, and he played them, he
played dumb, he played the one that he ended up
pick picking. He's short, he's short at that chick's family.
And I'm questioning whether the producers or the Bachelor are
getting ready to play the audience that watches that show
and bring that dude back on and let him pick
from a rack of dudes. But of course, of course,

(14:18):
and that would be a man's plan. Yeah, I think so.
I think that's what it's going and maybe i'm and
maybe you and MV can host it. Who you and
Charlotte Man, No, you ain't talking about me, because I
promise you you wouldn't house that. Now, don't don't lie
to me. Now, you wouldn't host it if they came
to you, which I would not host that show. I
wouldn't host it. Is not support that kind of behavior.
I really don't kind of behavior. When I say that

(14:40):
kind of behavior, this is what I mean. Are you listening,
I'm listening. And you want to be homosexual, that's your business.
I ain't really got an issue with that, but that
dude was playing people and even homosexuals. I'm sure I
don't want nobody that got a history or playing people
like that. That's not even that's not even that's that's
not even my reasons. And I want to host it.
I wouldn't host it because I don't watch the show. Yeah,

(15:00):
well I watched the show and I would host it anyway. Yeah,
And I'm sure it was difficult for him to come
to terms, but that that's why it took him a
while to be able to openly come out. It's not
easy in dramas. If you want to be a contested
we can hook that up too. Get it off your
chest eight hundred five eight five one on five one.
It is the Breakfast Club, the morning, the breakfast Club.

(15:23):
This is your time to get it off your chest.
Whether you're man from you on the Breakfast Club, but
you got something on your mind, let out hello, who's
this man? What's going on? Man's nick? G Man? Get
it off your chest? Man. I just want to tell
y'all man, thank you for letting me get on here.
And a lot of people have been listening to our music.

(15:45):
Man n V. I think you checked out my boy
a Jack Stack Instagram yesterday. Um Man, we're just happy.
A lot of good things are happening. Shout off Mellow
for doing his fireman joining and we got a new
video dropping on four twenty. Everybody gonna check out my
boy and a Jack Stacks a j at Stacks on
Instagram and check me out. I got a new song

(16:07):
on my buyout at Mary with children with two els,
And thank y'all, man, I really appreciate a lot of
good things for happening. Yeah, Hello, who's this Harry? What's up?
Y'all what's going on. I'm try giving up all my
money to these credit repair companies, and I was wondering
if you can help me out. And I've been trying

(16:27):
to hit you up on I me and my wife
our credit scores like, but what mine is like in
the lower six husband up at fives. But I just
got stuff on there some like years and years back,
like seven eight years and some of my pleasure reports. Man,
I'm trying to I'm trying to do it, Like how
y'all doing it? Man, I'm trying to get some problem. Yeah,
well you should. Um, I tend people to the credit dude.

(16:49):
I just like him. He's he's a good dude. And
he doesn't eat. Only charges for what he takes off
your credit. He doesn't ask for no money up front. UM.
I like that. I think he's fair. I use him
for anything that I have. He's got my into the
eight hundreds. Well actually two of the two of them
in the eight hundreds. One of them still set like
a seven seventy. But he works hard and he's he's
easy to get on the phone. He as a strong team.
I would say trimout on Instagram is the credit dude.

(17:10):
Credit dude, Yes, sir, and I think it's t is
Thha or t thh credit dude. Yep, his name all Hello,
who's this Jody? Hey, Jody, get it off your chest, Jody. Okay,
I have a very serious question for you guys, and
I think everyone should hear it. Um. So, I read

(17:31):
on the news today when I was looking when I
woke up that if you get the vaccine and you
died afterwards, your life after you get to shot, your
life insurance another. I don't know if that's true. So
I'm no, I don't know if that's true. Everybody need
to do their own research or no. I don't know
if that's true. But that's good to talk, Okay. I
just I just read an article already saying that that's

(17:52):
not that's false information. I do know that if you
the COVID nineteen vaccine isn't approved by the what FDA
is it? Yeah, that's what it's saying. Yeah, so it's
not approved by the FDA. If you take it, you're
not able to sue any of the pharmacuper companies later
that I know. I don't know about your life. You know,

(18:12):
my family will be able to take care of me
if something that happened, I think it's good for people
to know. Okay, well, thank you. It said it's false information.
I'm looking at these insurance the Insurance Commissioner and says
the public should not believe misinformation on COVID nineteen and
life insurance. Hello, who's this yo? Once I broke it
off your chest? Yo, I just wanted to shout out,

(18:33):
shout out y'all real quick? Uh, Charlemayne V is like
crazy even thought to y'all, what's up? Brother? Okay, nice
little Friday. Shout out? Thank you sir. Now, one thing
I wanted to get off my chest. I'm a wrapper
out here and do ball man. I think I was
like kind of wondering, like, dude, this was kind of
like he said, he's out to cut out here. You're like,

(18:54):
get to it, bro, get to it. Get to get
to it. Bro, what's up that rat? You? What you
want to wipe my ass? Real quick? What do you say?
I should have knew that? What you say? Now? Let
us all right? You know competition, there's oppositions. They should

(19:18):
be worried. I'm about to dist them. I've been to
building for play. The hero can be descriptive the cashing center,
to go and get it, to go and get them,
you don't understand as fault around to split them, the
house with them, the wolves down, to kill them. I
should have been a Lano centers good dreams and trying
to live them. A timers nimble can tasted bit and
they talking levels and good at riddles, to taste the
rainbow and the talking skittles. I found a pot of
goal and time. I don my albums in them. Want

(19:40):
to be young King, Young King? What's playing? B? King?
What's playing B? Playing B? Yeah? What's playing B? What
else you got playing for your life? Do you like it? Yeah?
Like young King? What you got? What else you got?
I know there's got to be some other options on
the table. Whatever that's small balls? He didn't here? You
got bro? All right? Hold I give you or Angela
is telling me, I know you're on that freaking chill out,

(20:03):
said nothing. I'll give your waist on lickings, bites on neck.
I make boyfriends mad and girlfriends. I do what I want.
You got a boyfriends dress? Get the action. Let me
get some panics to the side, eating a garden together,
kill water river A young King young King, Young king,

(20:25):
So there's no plan B Like, there's nothing else you
want to do? What you're like? What you like? How
young king? What else should I do? Man? I mean
you can go get a trade, you know what I'm saying.
Learn how to do something with your hands, like you
can get on the phone with trade and learn how
to install air conditions. You can. You can be an electrician, plumber,
you go to school, be an engineer, like I would
get a trade. I followed you and Jacksonville. You'll never

(20:47):
you'll never not have money. And Charlot man who who
you know? Right? Like me? Definitely nobody would have record. Okay,
what's your Instagram page? Marcole you stay with it? Marco
all right? Yo, take the Barco and Barco the artist.
All right. I have a good day man. Before real

(21:09):
think about getting the trade. I gotta stop leading, Stop
leading these kids in the wrong way. Man, he's gonna
cry in the car. Telling the truth. Now, if you're
telling the truth, you'd be right. Get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one o five on you.
You got some rumors on the way, you can wrap them. Well,
let's talk about Nightly Pop now, Lonnie Love was on
and she was asked by Nina Parker if she's ever

(21:30):
broken a rule in somebody's house, So we'll tell you
whose house. She got tapped on the show that at like, ma'am,
you can't do that, ma'am. All right, we'll get into
that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Listen,
Oh my gosh, report got angel. It's report Breakfast Club.

(21:57):
Well on Nightly Pop, Lonnie Love was on and Nina
Parker was asking her about breaking rules, if you've ever
been in somebody's house when you were being nosy and
got cut. And here's what happened. I went to Tyler
Perry's house. You know. He told me don't take pictures.
But I was so excited. You know what what happened
because I was like looking all around. I said, Tyler,

(22:18):
ain't nowhere around to sneak this little picture. It was
a childish campino. He was performing, yeah, And I was like,
I just want this one memory. So I like tried
to like do my little fall like this, and I
felt this, I know, and I turned around. It was Tyler.
He said like that. I was like, oh, you know
when you say you only want one memory. You're giving

(22:39):
way more credit to your smartphone than your brain, because
if you cool out and just enjoy the moment, you'll
have several memories stored in the best place to have them,
and that's your mind. Can't post your embarrassing I'm not
gonna lie. They tell you don't take no pictures, and
then you get cut taking a pictures. Just weird to
say I only want one memory. Like what you mean,
you're there, enjoy the moment. You probably got several. I

(22:59):
mean that was memory that which he just explained. You
know what's so funny is that there are times when
you're like, you look back, You're like, man, I wish
I had a picture of that day, but unfortunately sometimes
you're in positions where it's just not possible. I like
enjoying the moment all right. Now. After fifteen years, LaMarcus

(23:20):
Aldrid just stepping away from basketball. He actually posted a
letter about his departure. He said, today, I write this
letter with a heavy heart. My last game I played
while dealing with an irregular heartbeat. Later on that night,
my rhythm got even worse, which really worried me even more.
The next morning, I told the team what was going on,
and they were great getting me to the hospital and
getting me checked out. Though I'm better now what I
felt with my heart and that night was still one

(23:42):
of the scariest things I've experienced. But that being said,
I've made the difficult decision to retire from the NBA.
For fifteen years, I put basketball first, and now it's
time to put my health and family first. I respected
drop on the clues bos from LaMarcus Aldridge never met
the brother, but that's a very wise choice, and he's
letting me know he got his money right. Yeah, but

(24:03):
this this would have been the year that they probably
get a ring. So he doesn't care about none of that.
He just cares about his health in the family, which
maybe maybe pretty close. I'm sure he cares, but yeah,
that's what makes it a difficult decision. And he's one
of only twenty five players in NBA history with over
nineteen thousand career points in eighteen thousand plus career rebounds,
seven time All Star, five time All NBHA health first,

(24:24):
Health and family first. I respected, and like I said,
it lets me know he definitely got his money right,
because if his money wasn't ready to be very hard
for him to walk away even with our Brooklyn Nets
also released a statement letting us know that they fully
support Lamarcus' decision and while we value what he's brought
to our team during his short time in Brooklyn, his
health and well being are far more important than the

(24:44):
game about He's played it for seven days? How many days?
For it hasn't been a month now, it wasn't to
make all right? Well best we wish him the best
of black And that is your rumor report. All right,
thank you miss eing that front page news. What we're
talking about. When you know, closing statements are set for Monday.
Closing arguments are set for Monday in Derek Chauvin's trial,

(25:07):
so you know he is not testifying and he actually
invoked his Fifth Amendment, right, and we'll give you some updates,
all right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, So Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be
the same. Do you want to elevate your sleep right now?
Save up to three hundred dollars on top rated brands
like Seals and Sleepies at Mattress Firm. Plus get a
free adjustable base when you spend six ninety nine or more.

(25:30):
Every night, save Big, Sleep Better shot the semiannual sail.
Now morning, everybody is j Envy, Angelou, Ye, Charlomagne the guy.
We are the breakfast Club. Then let's get into front
page news. Where were starting you. Well, they have just
released the video of Adam Toledo. He was at thirteen
year old, the Mexican American boy who was fatally shot

(25:53):
by the Chicago Police Department for Sir Eric Stillman in
the Little Village neighborhood in Chicago. And the body camp
footage was just released publicly publicly yesterday and it has
released a lot of emotional reactions with that release of
the video, protests have happened. Now, this originally went down
on March twenty ninth, and uh now we've had a

(26:16):
chance to see the footage. So the family actually saw
the footage a few days earlier just to be able
to process it, and then they released it for the
public yesterday. But the bodycam footage shows all shows the
officers at the scene when the shooting took place, including
the officer who fired the single shot that struck thirteen
year old who he was the seventh grade Adam Toledo

(26:37):
in the chest. It's just a really difficult thing to
I don't know if you guys have watched the footage,
but really to watch, to watch the video, we're in
a constant stated trauma here in America. I'm not watching that.
So there were multiple nine one one calls that were placed.
Officers arrived on the scene with body camera footage, and
that footage shows about one minute and forty five seconds

(26:58):
of the officer driving to the scene in the little
Village neighborhood, and he got out of his vehicle and
he was yelling, please stop, stop right effing now to
Adam as Adam appears to pause, and they told them
to show your hands. They said, hey, show me your hand,
your effing hands, drop it, drop it. And Adam does
turn around put his hands up. He has nothing in

(27:19):
his hands, and they killed him. And didn't they lie
on the young man and say the young man had
a gun. You know, they're saying that on the video.
He appears to make a tossing motion with his right
hand behind the fence before turning to face the officer,
and that's when the officer fired. So they're saying that
he threw a gun. I don't know. Yeah, Now, why

(27:41):
would I trust people who can't ever tell when someone
has a gun. They mistake everything that a person has
in their hand for a gun. Like these people look crazy. Man,
I don't even have any words anymore. It's like I
told y'all were in a constant trauma loop in America.
This is the United States of the anxiety, and some
of us have more things to trigger us than others.

(28:03):
And this is just another trigger. And what has been
a super dramatic week, it really has. Man, I'm not
gonna lie. That's why I'm like, man, I wish I
had some good news for y'all this morning, but unfortunately
I don't. Now, let's talk about Derek Chauvin. He invoked
his Fifth Amendment right yesterday and the defense rested their

(28:24):
case in the case of him killing George Floyd. Have
you made a decision today whether you intend to testify
or whether you intend to invoke your Fifth Amendment privilege?
I will invoke my Fifth Amendment privilege today. Is this
your decision not to testify? It does your honor all? Right?

(28:45):
Does anyone promise anything or threatened you in any way
to keep you from testify? Both promises or threats your honor?
What could he say? What is that he could possibly
take this thing and say nothing? We watched the prosecutor
prosecutors who would have been allowed to cross examine him
if he did take the stand. So the defense rested

(29:05):
their case. Prosecutors did call doctor Martin Tobin, who testified
last week, to take the stand again for a short
rebuttal against the defense's medical expert. And so now Monday
is when they make their closing arguments. Yeah, I'm nervous.
What do you guys? I don't even know like what's
about to happen. But I'm really super nervous about this

(29:26):
because at first, when I first started watching this trial,
I was like okay, but now I'm not so sure. Yeah, yeah,
I mean it's a part of me that's like, you
know what, this one feels different than others. But then
it's another part of me that that it's like, no,
it doesn't feel different than a M. E. R I
K K K A. You know. So I don't know.

(29:47):
I really don't. All right, all right, well that is
your front page news. All right, shake it off, shake
it off, shake it off, shake it off. All Right,
it's a Friday when we come back, we're speaking with
a new artist from the Carolina. And you know what
this brother Murray Moray, he brings a lot of joy.
All right, I will say that he's he has a
lot of good energy. Yes, we need it right this morning,

(30:10):
right now? All right, Well we go talk to Murray
when we come back to Don't Move. It's to Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. More than everybody is DJ Envy.
You want to do it, man, I heard you do
it when you didn't get today. Good morning, everybody, shr
boy DJ and I made a guy angela club. Go morning.
Now you have to say we have a very special

(30:31):
guest in the building. I'll talk to myself. Okay, we
got a very special guest in the building. It's me
lcome to sid what's called a feeling less black and
Holly favor Are you? I love that? And I'm the
same thing baby absolutely. People that don't know who Moray is,
he has a bunch of singles out right now. One
of his biggest is quicksand that has over fifty five
million views on YouTube. And uh, we got your pitre

(30:55):
to hear your story. And you know one thing I
would say about you just just doing my research. You're
always smiling and always happy, man always. We don't see
that that much goodness. Gracious, nothing upset you, brother, You're
just happy all the time. Did upset me? But like Bro,
I I've been listening to this show forever, So how
the hell I come here and be upset? Like Bro,
I'm gonna smile because what the Charlotte mane right here,
right there? We live now. You started off in the church, serious,

(31:21):
the church prayed played a good role in my life.
I ain't gonna lot. God is always first. I don't
care what I do, I don't care what I said.
I don't care how my life is. He number one.
And your mom made you sing I Believe I Can Fly,
which got you in the quie because you do a
lot of singing in your music. Yeah, she embarrassed me,
but it's cool. That's what mother's doing. She put me
in the most purpless suit she could find. I don't

(31:42):
know if she went to like embarrass your kid dot
com and like order that, but like her, my grandma
put me from the church and maybe singing I Believe
I Can Fly. R Kelly in front of the whole church,
and I was nervous until like people started saying, you
know you babby to go ahead boy, when you hear that, yeah,
I did. How many times your mom did you sing
that song in front of company? Man? Not that song
a lot? Because songs when we sing a lot was
filled my cup. I got, I feel my cup. Let

(32:05):
it overflow. Okay, the gospel songs old song I grew up,
Jehovah Witness. I wouldn't up. He was happy. I can't brother.
It turned turned to the head of the choir. Yeah,
no cat. My mother when I was a little she
she ran the children's quiet. So you know I had
to be numb along. That's my mother. She gonna say
it was nevertim It wasn't because you was like, it

(32:26):
wasn't because you was the best singers. So waited turn
left because you're a gospel singer. You're in the choir.
You you know, you went through the church and then
it went left somewhere, and then you went to the street,
and then you started, you know, running in people's house,
and so when did it turn left? I ain't gonna lot.
When I moved from North Carolina moved to pa like twelve,

(32:48):
that's when I like it was hard to get acclimated
to the city life. And I ain't gonna lie like
I saw the follow everybody because I felt like that
I had to fit in somewhere. Or why did you
move from North Carolina up to Pennsylvania. I love my mother,
so I'm gonna say this first, she did best, um,
but you know it's hard when you're raising the kid
by yourself. I got kicked out a lot of school,
so we had to keep chaining districts. So when we
had to move with her sister in pam Petsylvania because

(33:08):
we had no way to go, so we ended up
staying there for like six years. And and that was
the six years where like I realized what I didn't
want to do in my life. I wonder, right, at
what point did you realize your mom was just doing
her best? Because you know, sometimes we were hard on
our parents till we get older. So when did you
realize that she was just doing her best. When I
had my own kids, I saw the putting myself with
her shoes, understanding like she she really did help them best,

(33:31):
Like she hit you could better, So thank you, mama.
You get kicked out of school for fighting would you
played football, that's football team, but no, cap I played football,
and then I was in the alternative school, so I
had to walk from my school to the other school
to play football. I ended up getting to it with
a teacher and had button or whatnot. And if he's teacher,
I was a very story. We need details matter. If

(33:52):
I take your coat off, if you want to, yea,
let me get a little comfortable. It's gonna it's gonna
be a little it's rain. I love you back. He's
gonna say it right now. You feel me? And I
got a little for your honey. No colt. But I
was dating a girl. She was she was in high
school and I was at alternate school. So I was like,
I feel sensitive, Hello, love letter, Hello, I love you
can wait the beat them cheeks up? You know how
he vibes beat those cheeks up? No or no? Maybe

(34:20):
that's all I care about it. So I was like, yeah,
I wrote a little letter and my mind was super sensitive,
super sweet. I folded up a little. I love writing
on it. So he like, yo, what you're doing? I said, teachers,
I canna ahead and write letter school and chill up.
I dum dumb my work because I was like doing first.
He like, nah, Grandma ripped it through in the trash.
I'm like, oh, bro, you know how to give it up?
Please stop because I don't even want to. I don't
because I'm like, I don't even want to take it

(34:41):
with you, bro, like I gotta chill you feel me.
I wrote it again. Well, try to grab the other one.
I'm saying, oh, bro, I'm about to peel you because
this is weird now, like listen teacher, No cat, it
was alternate school gym teacher. No, it's they're like to
grab you, slam you like they like, yeah, it's not
like a teacher. They called intervention special list okay, when
the teacher can handle you. They called it to come

(35:02):
grab you for me. So that's what he was. I'm like,
your bro, you got a chill because like, we're not
about not about to be easy for you, like you
not about just throw me around, So chill out. Boy,
to understand, I wrote it again, he grabbed it and
nails like, so you was one of them kids because
they had me in these classes for a minute. Your
discipline was so bad that they put you in with

(35:22):
lectory medio classes. No, it wasn't it was all right? Boom.
I went to the middle school, and then like I
was too bad for the record school, so to put
me in the trails in the back, and then the
trails in the back. I was too much. So they
kind of build a school for kids like me. And
I was in that school and I kind of couldn't
graduate to go to Like you go there for a
while and then they let you out go to the
other school. But I have made it that far. Didn't
made you eat lunch earlier than everybody else too, We

(35:47):
understand it. But I do understand those sign had a
couple of doors, feel like going to cold to eat
like a dam something. They have me in those for
like god, they're white cheese, ham, bread and white middle
What do you think about that education? Like if you
have to say something for parents now whose kids are

(36:08):
being put in special classes, what do you what do
you think about that? Like do you think it's helpful,
do you think it hurts? What do you think needs
to be done? For real? I ain't gonna a lot
of talks about I'll act up. It was because of
stuff that I was lacking in my household or lacking
in my life. So even like now I realized I
was really just acting out because I really missed my
my pop or like I really missed my my family,
and I I was just looking for the wrong attention

(36:28):
when I could have winn about it the wrong we
I didn't know that until now. So I think parents
got to understand, like if your kid is acting up,
your kids acting out, try to figure out what's going on,
because it may be something to not telling you or
don't know how to express before you just beat their
ass like be also like yo, talk to me like
it's okay, it's okay, you feel scared, it's okay, you
feel upsets, okay, but tell me why you're feeling this
with let's let's let's go through the motions because at

(36:50):
the end of the day, it's a conversation could save
everything that's true. Now listen, after you had but it, dude,
what happened? Um? They put me out of your sess.
I got bad, of course, like all I mean, Um,
after that, they called the cops. I went to I
got a lot, I got rested, went to the little jail,
thinking would have canna be then let me on proprobation.
I went to court again, and I got locked up

(37:10):
for like eighteen months. Damn that was I was. I
seen somewhere that you you got your g ED when
you was Yeah, I got my g D. But I
wanted to play football when I came out. But you know,
I got kicked out out of the alternative school, which
was my last resort. So I knew that's what happened.
But I hope so I can get my g D
come out to go to high school. But so you
got to g D and thought you gonna go back
to high school. I didn't know. I thought, like I

(37:31):
can get that and then get that too like a bonus,
Like this ain't the real diploma. I say, let me
get Yeah, not in big decisions to some big decisions.
You say you had had to start taking care of
yourself since you were nine. Yeah, why why? But like
I said, my mom worked a lot, so there's a
lot of time, like I had to watch myself. And
when you when you were a black kid, you understand

(37:52):
that like the open the door such as that, and
watched TV because lunch was in there, relaxed, so like
a lot of a lot of times when like like
but the selling Kenny for school, like my mom wasn't
there to monitor that. So when when they would give
me the cash, I kept that giving them chocolate bars
like there was they was pre ordering, like I was
getting the cash for the pre orders. So I have

(38:12):
to give you just giving me money and I'm not.
I'm like, yo, how much is this? It's like a
thousand dollars, like four hundred dollars. It's like a million dollars.
Right now, I'm buying vicing candy for the hood. I'm
flashing like icerem truck. He was loving me, so he
can't do burn balling up, buying everybody for everybody, gum

(38:35):
ball eeballs and everything was lit. All right. We have
more with Murray when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We still have
brand new orders from the Carolina's Moray in the building Yee.
Before quicksand, you had a series of odd jobs that
you did, right, and so can we talk about that,

(38:56):
like as you having to work because you had a
family to support the full time. Yeah, like like everybody
like if you here before they wrapped they were the
big dope dope head big dope guys or they now
out of nine five for me, I worked because I
didn't want to do that. Okay, so I didn't want
to get locked up again because I already got caught
up on a charge moth camps. I'm not trying to
go back to the the jil for this boat. It's weird,
Like I want to just live my life for my family.

(39:17):
So I worked. You worked at hog plants and chicken plants,
dog plants, chicken plants, hog plant, the chicken plant, the
hog plant. I cut the guts of the pig, like
the small tests of it. Yeah, like you gotta put
it on a little rack. And when you cut it
like be spurting up like did that make you start?
Did that make you stop eating pork? I don't eat
hot dogs, sauces, nothing in casings. And what about the

(39:38):
chicken plant, It was like a line. They plucked the chicken, cut,
cut the head off and send it to me and
I just put on the rack and we just cut
the wings like that. So I was on the last
prob I didn't have to deal with the blood. I
do with the last proces, not that it was always frozen.
And you know what I mean, Dominos. Domino's was the
fire job. I ain't a lot to you. I'm a
hell of bread like you see how I am? Like
I go to your crib. You don knows what's happen?
My boy? Hey, good as yeah, my boy, let me sip. Yeah,

(40:01):
I love you. I'm out. I just like you probably
have some weed, a little bit of weed. Come on, now,
that's about for my customers, not a call center. What
did you do with the call center? I work for
P ANDC Bank. I basically help people like with their accounts,
tell you how much of your accountable what you're spending.
So so, after getting locked up and all that, all that,
you work for PC in the bank and they called
you up, like, hey, bro, how much I got my account?

(40:23):
I look, I'm gonna put you onna put your my
mind shut. Imagine being brokeish the day before, you got
no weed, you hungry, and your lunch breaker and call
you he got a one hundred thousand dollars on his account.
You got his socialist, his name, his first last name, address,
everything you need to take this man money? Oh my goodness,
but you know you can't Jesus Christ, the seat was hot.

(40:43):
You never did it. You never put your hand in
the cookie job a little bit. I can't for a
couple of reasons. I don't want to be done to
me because I know I got her a comma coming
to me. I don't want that kind of camma. But
it's like, damn, yeah, brother, damn, I'm hungry this The
account looked juicy, like, right now, what's the most you

(41:04):
ever seen? I've seen? Uh. It was a retired football player.
I forgot his name. He had one point seven million
dollars account and he was complaining about a three dollars
feet he received. Well, goddamn right. You see people like
dj NB, I don't like them. I don't like them money. Yeah, true,
but it's money that you knew it was coming out.
Check images cost three dollars, sir. You wanted to check image.

(41:28):
You wanted your face and your old team on your check.
You got it. Yea. So during that time with these
add jobs, you were writing music and you were performing also, right, yeah,
I was. I was writing my music, I was going
to studio, I was performing at little clubs. I was
trying my best to still do it. But when you
got a nine to five and that your money count
for all your bills. It's hard to pay for four

(41:48):
dollars studio time was like, god damn every time guys
four dollars. I can't get a free day and not
come back. Yeah, you did Uber and you also did constructions.
How was Uber? I wouldn't want you as an Uber
Drift might be a little and you might be a
little chatty. Makes for a great interview, Yeah yeah, yeah,
but the Uber driver, I don't know. No. As a
Uber driver, I definitely was Chatti and people love you

(42:10):
because I found the all a business. I was shouting
making the Uber no bulls. I want to know all
the team. Who's gonna be the donkey other day? I know,
no cats, a wife, all the stories I'm gonna like
it's crazy. The white folk getting drug start kissing in
my back and see, hey, hey, hey hey, leave your

(42:31):
clothes on, white boy, put your shirt back. It's weird,
weird with the widest thing of it happened in the Uber.
Uh some girl tried to suck a dude and my
back sheat and I was like, of course, why why,
I'm not about to see nobody johnsing him up back
seat like one star rating as you should not go
ahead and Scott, now you give your you mentioned your wife,

(42:53):
you give her credit for help taking your rap career
to the next level. Of course, no, my wife is
that's my rock. Ain't gone to I ain't always been
the perfect man. I ain't gonna lie to pretend like
I am. But that's my that's my dog, that's my homie,
that's my friend, that's my that's my best that's my everything.
And I gotta give her that credit because at the
end of the day, without her and I probably stood
right in the same song I've been writing because everybody

(43:14):
told me I had a bunch of yes man, or
that's hot, that's hot, and she was like it's not.
She was the one, but you could do better. And
I always and she still do to this day, like
I got buzz now and she's still be like, nah,
I don't even record that, but but go ahead and
try again because that beat is hot. Like even so,
what were the records you made after that criticism? Uh,

(43:34):
quicksand and biggest session was the first two because after
that and then after that, I was like, dare I
think I think I found my flow? And then kind
of like progress from there how to quicksand take off
um motion Leasy called me. He was like, um, well,
my director the dictor quicksand was like, yo, bro, this
is dude, try to hit you up bout signing you.
I'm like, a bro, it's probably not even real, Like
I don't even don't worry about it. He's like, nah,
this is a little like he leget you know, fatimy.

(43:56):
I'm like, what get my wife number because her phone
was on, my phone was off. I handle job. No no,
But when I say my wife, she saved my life. Bro,
no cap I was a bum asker. I don't care.
I don't care what nobody got to say about this.
You were you were a brother under modification, Yes, not
a bum. I own my I have no problem saying

(44:17):
she took care of me and that she was the
man and a woman at times. I have no problem
for it ain't the case now, so I appreciate so like, um,
I ain't allow it was the question how to quick
said were trying to call? You called your wife? Got
my hands over all right, So yeah he called my
wife phone and some some some Afghan dude with like
a quaff and blonde hair. Was like, yo, bro, believing

(44:39):
you bring your songs amazing. I'm like, who the fuck
is this? I said, Bro, would you would represent? Well?
I'm trying to start my label up. Like what was
the name of it? I don't got a name yet?
What damn what? I'm all right cool? But like, what's
I see the contract? Now? You want to contract? I don't.
I don't know what the happened, right, like I was,

(45:01):
And it sucks because at the end of the day,
like I was, I was at the point in my
life where I felt like I was gonna go nowhere.
I felt like my wife's probably gonna lea me eventually
because I had a job for a while. I felt
like I felt like it was like really over and
this to call me and I looked up, like, Yo,
this is supposed to be. It's gonna be. I sent
the contract to my cousin. She a lawyer. She didn't

(45:21):
graduate it yet, but don't worry about that. She read
it almost a lawyer. You show you not in a
bad contract right now? No, no, Cat, I should have
made you to come CEO. I ain't gonna talk about
the contract, but let's put the money. Look like, I
ain't gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna talk about it.
Almost says this. I know I'm in the best situation
I could ever be in. Like I put this man
to the point I trust him. And then when he

(45:43):
called me and he told me the truth. Yo, you're
not about to be rich fast. I'm not about to
give you a bunch of money. We gonna work together,
you feel me, like you put them fifty percent work.
I put the fifty percent the bread, Like, what's up?
I'm like, well, then you want to put me that way? Cool?
And then all of a sudden we put out quichtion
and then he put his hands on it and look
at it. Now, if he don't do right about you,
just hit me. We got a dunkey of to day
slot ready for him. I don't even worry about it,

(46:05):
but I want to, Hey, I want to go back
to something. Man. Salute to your wife, because we have
these conversations all the time about brothers that are just
trying to make it, brothers that have ambition, brothers trying to,
you know, just put themselves in position, and how long
should women stay with them? In fact that y'all stay
down to y'all came up. Man, that's big man. No,
that almost never happens, and she didn't have to. She

(46:27):
had plenty of reasons to leave me, and she always
told me like like, as long as you want to
hurt me to the point where like I can't come back,
I understand, And now I understand. I would never try
to hurt you again, even though I'm in a spot
and like, No Cap, to all the females that's been
in my damn, please stop. I love y'all, but my
wife for y'all, so listen, So was you cheating when
you was broke? The one time, No Cap? I did,

(46:49):
and she forgave me. She didn't have to, and I
didn't even expect. And my mom was already divorced. Who
was married, TI was already divorced. She about to leave mes. Well,
she stugg with me. Granted I had to work hardest,
but I was wible to take that. I wasn't bro
no Cap. She She could have been a can, She
could have cheated back, she could have did whatever she
wanted to do, but she didn't failing to hurt somebody
that's done so much for you, bro No Cap. When

(47:12):
I look at my wife. I get very sensitive because
I understand, like that's my blessing, like my wife. It's
like like I can't I can't even explain who she is.
I could explain that, like she's my everything. Well move
we have both with Murray. When we come back it
is the Breakfast Club, Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ
Envy and Ngela Yee. Charlemagne, the guy we are the

(47:32):
Breakfast Club was still kicking it with Moray. Charlemagne. You
know my one of my favorite I think it is
my favorite record of year, So Fast Switched Up? Okay, yeah, yeah,
Is that is that based on the true story? Yeah?
Like no, cat switch stuff is based on a lot
of events that happened in my life. With people who
show me their true colors and people who show your
true colors. You got you gotta believe them one when
they tell you who they are at the beginning, they
always show you. It's always you always have a first

(47:53):
instinct like listen, but like you, you let it pass
because at the end of the day, you try to
give it a chance and be who they're gonna be.
But then they show you who they really are. Now
you're surprised. Does that happen when the money started coming
in or not, but before the money, Like, I think
it was the worst for me as far as like
people switching up, because when you broke, you don't gotta
shig co how to feel about you because because like

(48:15):
you bummed you this you that you that I'm gonna
put you like people will walk out your life easy
when you can't give him nothing. But I feel like
it's harder now with money because they're gonna say yes
and say hell yeah because you got money now. So
it's hard to tell who switched up when you're rich
because end the day, they're gonna play that role while
you're around. Regarless, you had to pull up. You have to,
you pull the gun out for your guy. You're a

(48:36):
funny guy. I mean, yeah, you feel you but yeah,
you know what I mean. We we're gonna say I
always have my back and he know who he is.
And you think there's ever any chance for reconciliation. Yeah, yeah,
of course, don't hear me. The other day, I'm like, yo, um,
what's up? How you've been? I see you turned up.
I ain't tot you like because you're popping, but I
just want to say good luckly, good luckily. And see

(48:57):
that's the worst, right because now you don't know who
you if you your trust because you popping exactly. You
never wrote me before, but I know you heard the song.
Every homie that I ever had beef with, or I
ever like not number when the heart up, they all
wrote me. That's how I know it was you. Like
the song was in general for everything that ever wrong.
But then that route me. Now I know you don't

(49:18):
because I didn't tell you the song was about you.
You just wrote me them hit the dogs, hollegue? What's up? Right?
Are you feeling? Hell? You your her? Switch? Who's like?
Who's this whole that's talk about? What's about you? It's
about you? Because you you ask him it's about you.
Nobody else asked who the song about? Song either dope
was not you. You want to know who the song
is about because it's about you. Do you do? You?
Do you? Rep? The Carolina is a Pennsylvania What what? What?

(49:39):
What's in you? Two six snow cat Fairville. I put
the Ville because it told me how to be a man,
but I also because it told me what not to do.
I had my kids in Faville. I got married in Fairville.
I became a man. I went to high school in
PA and got locked up in PA, the stupid PA.
I would not that. I don't want to claim the city.
I don't want to claim not that I I want

(50:00):
to claim the city. I don't want to claim that guy. Yeah,
I want to leave him where he had because I
feel like he did a lot of people that I
can't say sorry for. People are gonna hear me talking
like yo, and if I hurt you, I want to
say I apologize because at the end of the day,
I was in a different misset that I am now,
I apologize. If people know anything about North Carolina, North
Carolina produces some great lyricists. Man, you're talking Fontein Poo

(50:22):
from Little Brother. You're talking Jay Cole, You're talking Rapted,
You're talking the Baby. You're talking about Josie Moe, who
I love. None of them ever reached out like like
Cold or or the baby. I heard a dream her
room was put to sign a dream you ail at
one point no people to send a co sign thing,
and he signed a Dreamville. How did he co signed
for people that don't know? UM basically just wrote like

(50:43):
you know super amazing and that's the coach I em
were talking about Rode on your Instagram. Yeah, no, cap
and not not to mention like I've talked to him
after that and like or he's a solid ass dude,
Like he didn't give me no like oh, I'm the
king of Fairville or I'm this I'm he gave me. Like, yo, bro,
this is how you can survive in this game. This
is what you want to watch out for. The twit dude,
you want to read everything, like gave me real big
brother advice for somebody you don't even know that. He

(51:04):
didn't have to do. You didn't have to coach on me,
but you want to arch your way and did that.
So like Silent, I always appreciate him for that. No, Cap,
I saw you tweet out recently too. I used to
try to protect my name and situations, but now I
just want to protect my peace. Yeah. I feel like
a lot of understand like they're get tried or like
oh or they got to play a tough guy in

(51:24):
certain situations. Well like honestly, you know, boy, you talking
to was a bitch for anyways, Like, bro, I probably
punching your ship if you want all your homies right here.
I probably want in this club, like, stop playing with me,
be yourself. I'd rather protect my peace and leave. But
I really want to just be a nice guy. Like
and I think people are they're upset and don't want
me to be. But I don't care, because why I
have no reason to be sad? Bro Like, I still

(51:46):
live in the same crib. But when Moe called me like,
I still live in the same holes in my live
in the same crib, bro about to say the same
holes in your what and my windows? I got holds ondows.
Can I have an ap on with if that was
a case? But but not like I still live in

(52:08):
no cats to to this day, it's humbling for me
because I'm like, yo, like I really along. Once I
leave it, I'm gonna take picture and be like, yo,
you can always go back to it. Do you want
to leave or you do You're not ready yet. I
want to leave the house because it's small, but I'm
I want to stay in the ville. But is it
hard to live in that same house and people? You know,
because when people see a record, they see fifty five million,
they think you've got fifty five million hours. Yeah, so
is it hard to still live there and you got

(52:30):
family and friends. Well, it's no Carolina, so it's it's
legal carriage. So if anybody come in my career, that's
on you. Heven me. But I don't have that fair Ville,
don't give me that. Like, No, they got love, bro,
Like they show me when I go to the store
to get back with I get the hugs, last pictures,
and I love that. Bro. I love what I'm bringing
to whatever I'm bringing because it's bringing me nothing but happiness.
How does the way that you write and record now?

(52:51):
How has that changed? Because I saw after you signed
your deal you deleted your old music. You're saying it
wasn't mixed and mastered properly. And then obviously your wife
told you, okay, you gotta be more personally in your music.
So now how do you write now? It's like I
write off emotions. I let the beat tell a song
and I just write with the beat. Like if the
beat come on and I hear like sensitive or sad,

(53:13):
I'm probably gonna think of something I went through that
sensitive and sad and write and right to that because
that's what I feel. Is it hard to be vulnerable
about about your feelings not in the music, not at all. No,
cap I think I'm learning, like I could be sensitive
and still be myself. A lot of people think that
is part of yourself. Yeah, like you crowd you, you
get upset, are you sad? You're a bitch. Now you're

(53:34):
a bitch for holding it in. You're afraid to tell
me who you really are. A lot of us got
fragile egos as men. You know what I'm saying, If
your wife tell you something or somebody takes you that
know you for real, it will hurt your mother everything.
Then argue with his girl and know such. He was like,
I never wish I did that, Like you're gonna tell

(53:54):
everybody my business? Like, nah, it's just look it's crazy.
But like we all sensitive, bro stopped playing games. Understand
you can be sensitive and still be a tough like
you can still be both when you're putting out a
whole project. April twenty eight, I got my mixtape coming out,
Street Sermons, Volume ones coming out and trying to all
original music. Yes all me no no, hopefully no no

(54:15):
samples don't like that? He yes, no, I just mean
I really I really want to just see what I
can do. I wanted to put the pressure on myself
to be like Yo. I want people to get more Ray.
Understand who more Ray is before I start give him
all these features, so it's not like, oh, Morray pop
because of more pop, because of Yo. He helped. Just
just no more way first and then we'll see what
the features like album coming out when again, tell him
get more information Instagram, Facebook, Black Planet, MySpace, whatever you got,

(54:39):
TikTok all that no cap. You can find me everywhere
on the one handle more rate to one m O
R R A Y D A and the number one.
I got my mixsape coming out Street Sermons Volume one
April twenty eighth. Um trying to get these videos out
as well, and please check out my song quick Sentence
coming out right now. He about to drop it for y'all.
Is how off the presses? Keep it better than A

(55:00):
that's just keeping number one and don't fucking second guess
bow Wow. Is gonna be interesting watching you grow man,
Thank you. I see some bright things in your future. King. Okay, yeah,
you could do anything. He could have took all he
could have took all of our jobs in here today
that when well, it's more Ray it's the breakfast club.

(55:25):
Let's get into quick sid let Melipp Flipping Mars. Flipping Mars.
It's two real estate agents called flipping Mars and they
want their least back. Earth is on the LEAs, h'all.
I don't know if you know it or not. Earth
is on the least and aliens are coming back to
get it. Okay, UFOs being videotaped and the government confirming

(55:49):
that they are your folds are becoming more and more common.
Should pay attention. Our cousins are here. Well, I'd like
to buy some property in Mars. Me but a Mars
real estate agent if you know when? All right? M
all right, Well let's get to the RUMs. Let's talk
Liz out. This is the rum of report with Angel

(56:14):
Lizzo was on Instagram and she wants to make sure
that you know that it's very important to commit to
at least one intentional act of anti racism a day.
Here's what she said. Putting BLM in your bio and
posting a black square is no longer the bare minimum.
You have to do an intentional act of anti racism
every single day. Have you donated to bill out a protester?

(56:36):
Have you bought from a black business in Asian business.
Have you bought from any person of color today? Have
you seen someone getting harassed for the color of their
skin and intentionally went over there and stopped it? Have
you educated yourself? This is the new bare minimum everybody.
I want a clue bond for Lizzo. Not mad at
none of that. I demand that all white people use

(56:58):
their privilege to combat prejudice. I agree with her. I
like it, not mad at it at all. All. Right, Now,
yesterday we were talking about the former bachelist our Colton
Underwood and how he had came out as gay, and
he did an emotional interview on Good Morning America with
Robin Roberts. Well, according to Variety, now we told you
before that he's starring in a new reality show. Well,
what is it about. It's an unscripted series that focuses

(57:21):
on Colton Underwood living his life as an out gay
man for the first time. And he also has a
gay guide on the show. And that gay guy is
somebody that's gonna guide him through this, right, And the
person is actually Gus Kenworthy, and he is a skier,
an Olympian skier, and he's gonna be the perfect mentor

(57:43):
for Colton Underwood because he's gone through it too. He's
openly gay. They have a lot of shared interests and
that's the information we have so far about this show.
And Colton has since wiped his Instagram page clean, and
then he shared a collage of polaroid shot showing him
posing with a horse, running with a dog, and drinking
coffee and things like that, posing with friends. He said,

(58:05):
I have a lot to learn, but I've come a
long way to the people in my corner. I love you.
Without you, I wouldn't be here. See, it's a big deal.
He's going through a lot right now and he's gonna
share that journey with you on Netflix. All right. Javonte
Davis is going to be headlining Showtime spring summer boxing schedule,
so get ready for that. He is going to be

(58:26):
fighting Mario Barrios on June twenty six, and they just
announced that yesterday for Showtime, So get ready. And another person,
I want to talk about our girl, Clarissa's Shields. She's
gonna make her MMA debut and that's gonna be on
June tenth. So she has a date, yea, she has
an opponent. She's gonna be finding Brittany Elkin on June tenth.
According to the Associated Press, it's gonna be in Atlantic City.

(58:49):
By the way, all right, Selds, that's the homie like
Teena Javante Davids fight too. So dank I didn't. I
just dawned on me that Colton Underwood has a whole
show coming out on Netflix. That's what she said. Oh no, wow,
so this is all more publicity for that show. You can't,
by the way, you can't. He can't really trust this guy.
Just want you to know that this is okay. You
can't trust for what guy? Because he did he did

(59:11):
what he had to do to be on The Bachelor, right,
and now he's coming out and saying this, and now
he's got a show coming out on Netflix. Now we
know he's even really gay. He might have been doing
that for the Netflix show. Well, I'm sure that it's difficult.
A lot of people who haven't think of how many
people haven't come out and haven't come to terms with
the fact that they're gay, don't want people to know
and think that Okay, I'm gonna just pray it the
way like he said, he tried to do. No doubt.

(59:32):
All I'm simply saying is I don't know if we
can trust this guy because because he played a role
to be on the Bachelor. Yes, he played a role
to be on the Bachelor, and now he's just announced
this Netflix show. He could be playing another role now
to be on the Netflix show. That's all I'm saying.
But think about how think about how many people don't
want to be gay who are gay, you know, who
don't want to so they try to live their life.
And I'm not talking about all the people. I'm talking

(59:55):
about him. All I'm simply saying is let's just watch
the situation. He played a role to be on the
bachel Look, now he's announced this Netflix show. He could
be playing a role to do this Netflix show. I'm
the same monitory. Let's watch it. That's all I'm saying. Well,
that is your room report. All right, thank you, miss
yet man, we need a woman from Tennessee named a

(01:00:15):
Manda McCormick and another woman named Linda Johnson to come
to the front of the congregation, even though Linda didn't
really have nothing to do with it. But we'll talk
about it for after the hour, all right, we'll get
to that next is to breakfast Club. Come morning, the
breakfast Club, Your mornings will never be the same. Piece
to the planet Charlemagne, the god here this year has
been tougher on mental health. Gentle Mind is here to help.

(01:00:35):
Gentle Mind has developed an innovative new tool for groundbreaking
insights into your unique genetic predispositions. Go to mental health
map dot com to be e powered on your mental
health and well being. You get you are unk. I'm

(01:00:58):
gonna fatten all that aud want this man to dolden
blows many chap. You had to make a judgment who
was going to be on the Donkey of the day.
They chose you. There was a breakfast club. Bitches, Who's
donkey of the day to day? Yes, donkey today for Friday,
April sixteenth, goes to a Tennessee woman named Amanda mccarmick. Okay, now,

(01:01:20):
Amanda mccarmick was with a woman named Linda Johnson who
was a relative. And I know you're asking, who are
these young ladies? Well, there are two women who I guess.
We're trying to close the wealth gap by any means necessary.
Fun fact, did ye know that the wealth gap in
America to day is over twice what it was in
ancient Rome. Okay, the top one percent of the richest America,

(01:01:40):
the top one percent of rich Americans control almost forty
percent of all wealth, and ancient Rome, the top one
percent controlled only sixteen percent of the country's total wealth.
I'm using that example because that wealth gap was one
of the contributing factors the Rome falling, and it will
be one of the contributing factors the America falling if
this country doesn't correct its course. Now, some would say
America has already fallen I don't think we've completely failed yet,

(01:02:02):
but America has fallen off. Okay, several reasons for that,
But in light of this story, let's just talk about
the fact that American debt will eventually ultimately destroy the economy,
just like it did and you guessed it ancient romes Hee.
America thinks it can just print money when it wants. Well,
they can print money when they want. But printing money
whenever you want does not save economies. No, no, no,

(01:02:25):
said Destiny's children. See the Roman emperor Nero devalued Roman
coins by using less silver, which allowed him to create
more Roman coins, but he said a terrible example because
Roman emperors that came after him did the very same thing,
and over time inflation ruled everything around Rome and that
currency became worthless. Okay, sound familiar America, Well it should. Okay,

(01:02:45):
we own the path the usher bucks for everybody. The
dollars you have in your pockets right now, with all
those old white slave owners on them, in the future
will be looked at the same way those scrippers and
Sapphire Script Club looked at those usher bucks. Now we
went to ancient we went to ancient Rome. We went
to Las Vegas, only to find our way back to
Tennessee with am Manda McCormick and Linda Johnson. See, I

(01:03:06):
was reading this article in the New York Daily News
this morning and they reported on this story which came
courtesy at the Smoking Gun, and it got me to
thinking about all this stuff. So let me tell you
the story. Number one. The wealth gap in America is
so bad that Amanda McCormick received a letter from a church.
They didn't provide any additional information, you know, what the

(01:03:27):
name of the church was or anything, but she received
a letter from the church. Inside dad letter was a
million dollar bill. Did you hear what your uncle Shlotte
just said. Amanda McCormick received a letter from a church
with a one million dollar bill in it. One million dollars. Now,
think about it. I'm a Manda McCormick. I've been praying

(01:03:49):
to God for a financial blessing because the wealth gap
in America is kicking my ass. I received a letter
from a church with a one million dollar bill in it.
How am I supposed to know it's fake? I even
feel is fake. This country prince money whenever, however it
wants to. All I see is numbers on TV two trillion,
hit one point nine trillion. There people getting millions of
dollars for something called NFTs, which is just pictures of feet.

(01:04:12):
It's just money being tossed around all over the place.
Why wouldn't I think this million dollar bill is real?
Never mind the fact that Dolly Partons on it. Maybe
it was Molly Cyrus or some other famous white woman
from Tennessee, doesn't matter moral. The story is desperate times
make people believe what they want to believe, and she
believed this million dollar bill was real simply because she
wanted to. Now, Amanda McCormick did when any woman in Tennessee.

(01:04:36):
Who just got a million dollar bill would do? She
picked up a relative, which was Linda, and went to
the high end luxury brand store known as Dollar General
drop on a clues bond for Dollar General okay, where
she proceeded to load her shopping cart full of several
gift cards to various businesses, and she said she was
going to use the money to purchase items for care
packages for homeless individuals. She went to the counter with

(01:04:59):
a shopping cart for all this stuff and handed the
cash hit a million dollar bill which might have had
Patch summon on it. Okay. Who in Tennessee is going
to turn down a million dollar bill with the legendary
one of the greatest coaches of all time Patch summon
on it? Okay, God bless the day. I'm making all
this up. I don't know if Pat sum it was
on it or not, but I do know the cash
here called the police for a suspicious incident, you think,

(01:05:20):
and that's when Amanda explained she was sent this million
dollar bill from the church. Blah blah blah. Now, the
incident was classified by the Sheriff's office as fraud by
false pretenses, but Amanda and Linda were not arrested. Instead,
they were hit with what I think is a way
more severe punishment for a woman in Tennessee, and that
is they were issued a verbal no trust pass warning

(01:05:43):
prohibiting them from returning to the Dollar General store. That
might be worse than jail for a woman in a
certain tax bracket in Tennessee. Now I know what you're asking,
because the Smoking Gun asked the same questions. Why did
Amanda McCormick think a church would give her a million bucks?
Because the Bible it's full of miracles that if I
tried to tell you happen to me now, you would

(01:06:04):
you would say to me, excuse me, mister, please? Do
you spell your first name Nigga with a hard er rga.
So if she was paying, praying for a blessing and
NAT came into mail, the question should be why not?
Why not? Okay, why should she not believe the church
sent this money? Well, Uncle Charlotte, maybe because the United
statesman doesn't produce one million dollar bills. Nonsense, We print

(01:06:26):
money whenever we want to. With all these trillions going around,
there has to be one million dollar bills because it
makes it easier to count the trillions okay, Amanda, Okay, Well,
here's the important question, in fact, the most important question.
You thought the church really sent you a million dollars?
Your thought America actually prints out million dollar bills. But Amanda,
did you think that the dollar General, the dollar General,

(01:06:48):
the one dollar general would have changed for a million
dollar bill? You're on? I rest my case. Please give
a Manda McCormick the sweet signs of the Hamiltones. Oh
you are the dogee of the day, all the do gee,

(01:07:10):
oh the day? Ye? What what you want to play
a game? Oh? God? Okay, all right, you really wanted Friday?
Damn it? Well, I guess we'll play a game up.

(01:07:31):
Guess what race it days? All right, I'm Manda McCormick
from Tennessee. Got a million dollar bill from a church
in the mail. Decided to go to Dollar General to
ball out dj envy, guess what racious? I'm going with? White?

(01:07:52):
Explain why McCormick last name and the fact that they
didn't get arrested makes me feel white? M Okay, okay, okay,
I can see why you would say that. ANGELI Ye,
Amanda McCormick, Tennessee, received a million dollar bill in the mail.
From the church decided to go to Dollar General on

(01:08:12):
ball out. Guess what racis. I'm gonna say Caucasian because
I would have went to Louis Vatton just like a nigga. Gee. Uh,
both of you are absolutely positively correct. Mannaise was heavy

(01:08:32):
and donkey of the day this morning. Amanda McCormick was
indeed a white woman too much. Got damn manaid, I'd
have been right online at Louis Vatton with that million
dollar bill. Dude had definitely been some new luggage. They're
not getting arrested, was the biggest. Absolutely, all right, well

(01:08:53):
thank you for that. It's ready to wear, because I
can never afford. They're ready to wear. Louis Batton is
too expensive. But with a million dollars to water, right
to jail, all right, when we come back. We have
a Latham Thomas, she's been here before, and Lisa Rice.
She is the owner of Carol's daughter. So we're gonna
be talking to both of them when we come back,
So don't move. It's to breakfast club. Good morning, the

(01:09:14):
breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We are the breakfast Club. We got some
special guests joining us this morning. Yes, indeed, we have
Latham Thomas, who's been up here before. Welcome back, thanks
for having me. And we have Lisa Price welcome found

(01:09:34):
of Carol's daughter. Yes, welcome, welcome, Welcome, ladies. First, I
have to ask I have two young girls and your
hair looks amazing, and trying to keep the curls and
my daughter's hair, it's like my wife says, we got
to retrain it. I don't know what she's saying. Before
we leave, please tell me what you use to make
those curls stay. Okay, So what is in my hair

(01:09:58):
today is our Goddess Strength line Um. It is amazing
for helping to strengthen the hair and specifically for the
curl definition. I'm using the Goddess Strength of Um Divine
strength leaving cream. So that that's what's in this today.
And it I mean, I know why make it, and
I'm supposed to say that it's great, but I make

(01:10:20):
it and it's great. Clearly you your best billboard. Absolutely,
I know too much about curly here. My kids haven't.
Now we have to retrain it and we have to
do this and in the morning when it falls I'm like,
I have no idea. All I know is my wife says,
do not get it wet, just let it go. Yes, yes, yes,
I'm it's Actually my mom's favorite products are Carol's daughter,

(01:10:42):
so I always when y'all tell me the emails for
the sales, I always stock up and send her all
of them. Annoy oil, Thank you, thank you, And I
got in the Goddess hair oil. My hair smells good too.
The room smells amazing. Right now, by what would you
suggest for Shaw the mainsail? If you know? All you
suggest for Envy's beard because he died right he actually

(01:11:05):
has grades like I do, but he puts all that
black stuff on it. Now, Yes, we don't write and Latham,
I want to thank you. You said you set me.
There's amazing bats for International Women's Day. And one of
the things we got to put you all up on
is Thissphoria oil, which I really love. It's an intimacy
arousal oil. So just putting that out on your head.

(01:11:28):
And we're here to day to talk about a number
of things, but the black maternal health crisis. Yes, as always,
I don't I hate that we keep having to have
this conversation. But clearly things aren't changing. Yeah, I mean,
we're still at a place where we're a critical mass.
And um, the crisis in the United States is that
we're in the most dangerous country in the developed world

(01:11:49):
to give birth. UM, Black women are still three or
four times were likely than white women to die during
childbirth through the childbirth related causes. And right now, since
we're waiting for policy changes, we have an incredible Black
Maternal Health Momnibus Act that was presented to Congress. Corey
Booker is one of the leads on pushing that through. Um,

(01:12:13):
we've had convenings even this week during Black Maternal Health
Week around you know that like a conversation. You know,
even at the White House level. Kamala Harris just led
a conversation like this, and so there's there's so much
being talked about. But really what we're here to talk
about today is what we're doing, what people can do,

(01:12:33):
how we can have sohole determination in our communities and
and strive to make a difference starting today, and we
can all advocate, we can all be folks who are
striving towards change. Um. You know, the systems are broken
and they're not designed to actually support us. So we
need to figure out how to design new systems and
new spaces to support ourselves. So now, what is the

(01:12:57):
main problem that you say, You know, a woman gets regnant,
she goes to the doctors, she gets tested to take
a blood testing, So what is next what should women
be doing to make sure that we don't have these problems?
So structurally, right, we're looking and I think Lisa can
speak to this from her own experience as well, right,
because we both have children who are older now, so
we can look at this from a greater time horizon
and not be looking at it from you know, having

(01:13:18):
younger children, but seeing over the years our own experiences.
And also what we see today is there's systemic racism
is a huge issue. Like people like to say like, oh,
well were they eating, were they going to their doctor's appointments,
where the research shows that people do go to the
doctor's appointments, but they feel dismissed. They're not being heard
and not being listened to. Their pain is dismissed. We're

(01:13:38):
seen as being impervious to pain, right, and so we're
usually underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed and undertreated, right, And so living
in a time like COVID where people have comorbidities that
may show up by the way and rear their heads
while you're not getting adequate care because the care is
telehealth for instance, then guess what happens. Things could be

(01:14:00):
treated during a pregnancy can become lethal at the end
if they're you know, especially if there are things that
you know could could really impact your health right or
the baby's health. And so one thing is you know,
having consistency and providers, which is really important, access to
really good and fair medical insurance. We need to have

(01:14:20):
safe affordable care, you know, throughout pregnancy and the entire
reproductive continuum because things happen outside of pregnancy as we
know that impact health, right, like choices come up and
everything is on a as need basis, right. But I
think it's really important to have education, and that's one
of the things we're really excited to talk about today
because a lot of people have confusion around what choice

(01:14:42):
really looks like in maternal health. So if you have
a DULA who's working with you throughout your pregnancy, your
DULA gives you questions to ask when you go for
the check though, and the other thing that happens is
there's an assumption when we talk about the black maternal
health crisis, there's an assumption and that oh, black and

(01:15:03):
brown people are of lower socioeconomic status, different level of education,
different you know, salaries, so forth, maybe they have insurance
or not, and it's all tied around access and poverty
and it has nothing to do with it. You can
be affluent six figures, great hospital, great doctor, and still

(01:15:24):
die because they're just not listening to you. I was also,
you know, noticing when you go to the hospital, a
lot of times they do things by protocol. Right, it's
not person from person to patient of patient. Right, I'm
just thinking even when I have five kids, but my
last child, my wife went to the hospital and they
said how many centimeters they check? Okay, you should go
back home or my wife was like, no, it doesn't

(01:15:47):
feel like going back home. I'm staying here. And it
was a big thing, and thank god she did because
we almost had a complication. But I think it's everything
is to protocol. Yeah, we have to change that. Yeah.
I think this is why know intuition is really important, right,
because she felt and you felt like something like this
doesn't feel right. We're gonna, you know, make an executive

(01:16:08):
decision to here for our care. It's really important to
be able to speak up, and that's actually advocating an action,
right and so so part of that looks like having
informed consent. You know, when prior to a medical treatment
or procedure taking place, you need to be told at
every single juncture what is happening. And so I'm just
because you had an experience and and the baby turned

(01:16:31):
out healthy doesn't doesn't invalidate the pain that it took
or that it caused or the complications that you endured.
All Right, we have more with Latham Thomas and Lisa
Price when we come back. Is the Breakfast Club? Good
morning morning, everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne the
guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it
with founder of Carol's daughter, Lisa Price and Latham Thomas.

(01:16:54):
This is Black Maternal Health Week. Now, Charlemagne, you definitely
explained what duelas do, but what did a benefit? So
there's so many benefits um from a clinical side of things.
You know, we actually have studies that show that you know,
the presence of adula can decrease the use of pain
medication can increase the UM. The instances of vaginal birth

(01:17:16):
can decrease C sections by like twenty eight percent. My
wife yes, yes, yeah, she had an incredible birth. UM
can can also help to increase breastfeeding, maternal satisfaction, bonding.
All of these things are possible, but UM. But the
one of the things that I think is really important

(01:17:36):
and it's critical is to decrease C sections and increase
vaginal deliveries because what people don't understand, like how you
how you're born matters, and all births, I mean, c
sections are sacred, you know, all births are sacred because
you know, how you get here is how you're meant
to be here. But we also honor all types of
birth outcomes and all types of feeding, right, And so

(01:17:58):
it's about being non judgmental and being able to provide
people with the tools they need to like move through
that process. But what happens during that time, like do
you change the doctors because this doctor is telling you
you have to have a C section, right, and you're
saying no, So now do you change the doctor? I
think it depends on whether or not you can arrive
at an understanding. So there are times when people do

(01:18:23):
change doctors, and sometimes you can't because of insurance. But
it's just having the duela there. You have that pause
to ask another question. So, for example, if the doctor
doesn't feel that the labor is progressing, it's very common
to give women potosan to increase the contractions. But then

(01:18:45):
the potosan is something artificial that's being introduced. Now, I'm
sure there are times when medically it is needed, but
it is prescribed way too frequently, way too quickly. A
duela would say, you know what, let me let me
walk with mom, and I'm gonna take mom up and
down the hall for a bit and we're gonna we're
gonna see if we can get this going on our own.

(01:19:06):
So can we hold off on the potosa maybe and
then mom and Dula go walking up and down the
hall and maybe things progress and they don't have to
go to that route. If there's no duela there, if
you don't know, you don't know that you can ask
that question, then you get potosa. Now your contractions are
not only horrible, they have no rhythm. With potosa, it's

(01:19:27):
like ten seconds, here's another one, fifteen seconds, oh, there's
another and you don't have the rhythm anymore. So now
you feel even less control because now I can't even
control my pain. And then you get defeated. And then
when somebody starts talking about to see sectually, you're like,
you know what, there might be a good idea because
I'm tired your first time. Yeah, you have no clue. Yeah,

(01:19:52):
like you said, and you have nobody to talk to.
That's why I'm you know, a duel. I wish we'd
had a dula the first time. I just remember the
doctor when we were delivering and we had five kids,
and this was the first baby. I don't know what
it's called, but they have to slice with the knife.
Oh gosh. My wife was so mad after. But I'm there,
you know, looking, I don't know what to say. I
don't know the questions to ask. And my wife was like,

(01:20:13):
the doctor didn't have to do that, you know, I
had four other children and didn't have to do that.
But they were so in a rush, probably because they
had so many other deliveries. It was like if whoever
invented that procedure had to sit when they urinated my wife,
it wouldn't exist. They said it burns like so it's

(01:20:34):
a cut into the erectile tissue between the vaginal opening
and the anus, right, and so uh so to create
more ease for a baby to be delivered, a doctor
might make that cut. It has to be medically necessary.
There are so few reasons to do this cut. And
the baby was five pounds six ounces. There was no

(01:20:56):
reason that cut. But I didn't know, like you don't
know as a fault, you just yeah, all right, you know.
But I mean a lot of things that we see
that we accept as normal. So like somebody laboring on
their back, right, So if you're on your back, then
your hips are closed. If you're squatting, your pelvis is
thirty percent more open. So why would you not just
get upright and squat and use gravity to bring your
baby down and to not have any tearing. Right, But

(01:21:18):
there's never a reason to cut into that tissue. I
can say this so clearly too. For people who get episiotomies,
that erect out tissue like it has to heal, and
when when you're having into when you're having intercourse, that
tissue actually engorges and it makes it really uncomfortable. So
a lot of people for years, sex is uncomfortable for

(01:21:41):
them because of that cut. I was going to ask,
you know, when when me and my wife first started
having kids, they said thirty five was the age. After
thirty five, it's it's you know, you have to be careful.
Then it went up to forty, and then they said
forty is the age you got to be careful after
forty trying to have kids. Is there an age limit
of when it's necessary where you can't have kids and say,
well you got to be extra extra careful or is

(01:22:02):
it one of those things where you can go around
things with women that are a little older. I'll share
a little bit on that. What I would like to
say first is biological age and chronological age. You're not
run concurrently, which means that like my however many years
I've been on this planet, does not necessarily correlate with

(01:22:22):
like my biological age, which will show how I've metabolized stress,
like how I what I may eat, where I live environmentally,
like there's a lot of impact on our bodies, right,
and it's it's different for everybody. So this idea that
at thirty five that every single person across the globe

(01:22:43):
has ovaries start to act crazy uterus has fallen out,
organs are prolapsing. Like this is not the case now,
everybody is different, but like, I think there's a perpetuation
of this idea of aging that is uncomfortable for people
because we don't respect people in that become ancient. In
this culture, we don't we throw people out with age, right,

(01:23:05):
and so, um, it's a mechanism also for control too.
So I think part of it is that like we
have to you know, there's regenerative practices, there's foods, there's herbs,
there's all kinds of things that we can do. But um,
yes there is science and yes, like eggs do age.
We're born with all the eggs will ever have and
actually when we're in fetal development, those eggs are also

(01:23:26):
being developed and shedding. But I think the point is is, like,
you know, preserving your your health and well being is
something that we should show up to every single day.
We should show up to the office of Health and Wellbeing, right,
Like that's that's lifestyle, right, And so I just I
don't like that people try to use science to make
completely to help people determine and usually rule themselves out

(01:23:52):
of possibilities for life. Choices or life decisions based on
what a doctor. One doctor said, right, right, Well, for
love delivered, then y'all, y'all gonna ease a lot of
people's pain. Right And and is it also too that
as you get older, that there's more of a chance
that you'll naturally have twins? Yeah? We yeah, they say that,

(01:24:12):
Um yeah after thirty five, thirty seven. Um, you know,
especially for black women. Yeah, the statistics increase for for
twin like spontaneous twin pregnancies. Yeah. God, Like, let me
give you a couple this one last time. Let me
get into Lathan Thomas le Price. Thank you for joining

(01:24:32):
us so much, Thank you, thank you. Is it love delivered?
Dot com? Carol's Daughter Carol dot com backslash Love Delivered.
Can we say it together though? Yeah, let's do it together? Okay,
Carol's daughter dot com backslash Love Delivered. You are a dope,
argue a harmonize. You gotta come up here. We can

(01:24:55):
talk all things. Carl Carol's daughters so honored and this
is so great. I'm like, I'm like, I'm on the
Breakfast Club. Thank you, thank you, Breakfast Club. Good morning, thanks,
hey morning. Everybody is DJ injury and angela Ye Charlomagne

(01:25:15):
the guy we are to Breakfast Club. Let's get to
the rumors. Let's talk new music. It's about angela Ye
on the Breakfast Club. All right, it's Friday. Say you
know what that means? There is new music out now.
Seweetie has put out her pretty Summer Playlist Season one

(01:25:37):
and this is her forecasting talent that she thinks is
next up now. One of the songs that's been getting
some attention on there is a song that she's on
Kenji j. It's it's called Seesaw featuring Seweetie, and people
are saying that it seems like she's addressing Quavo. Listen
to this, my fright filling dangerous. I thought it was
my angst, but as not some reality telling me about

(01:26:00):
a problem to say you're gonna do better. But it's
always just how you fumbled the baddest great track. You
a dumpy You've got nerve selling me all these stres
when you're brown. That's a big trick. How you figuring
ain't the woman that you thought you was? Humping thoughts
and as assists you just about you going out now,
you know, like a mummy because I'm up now. I
ain't want to hear that Sammy. I'm a low song
bust out. I heard some direct bars in there, Yeah definitely,

(01:26:25):
and she said you she said you said I was
not the woman you thought of something like that. I'm
want to close man, sweaty out here, body and bars,
y'all want all right, I'll show out today is why
It's out. Slime Language two twenty three tracks long, all
kinds of guest appearances, Chavis, Scott, Drake, Big Sean, Little
Baby Kid, Cutty, Oozy, Skepta, A whole lot of people

(01:26:45):
are on this album. So here is uh Solid. This
is Young Dug and Gunner featuring Drake, Farming somewhere out
and Lenny. You know that's the high Away. I need
some more support from you right away, since I've been
make donations. See you like United Away stories you told
me about him. I can see that it's night and

(01:27:05):
day you told me you walcome from here to my
blood room and feel like it's my house always. And
I'm still hard body. I don't feel no Boddy and
well some writing. I'm my faan shehels solid. I get
it the because I'm well, said Sadi city is an

(01:27:26):
I gotta finish it. I'm on opinions. I'm gonna get
into that later. I'm gonna tell you something that's a
very mature. Ask that Drake asked that young lady said,
I want some moral support. Ask you a woman for
Ask you a woman for some moral support this weekend,
Guy ral support. Very mature. Also Conway the Machine I'm
mocking ni is out today with our features from Benny
the Butcher, Westide, Gunning, two Chainslue to all kinds of people.

(01:27:50):
Big Scar, Big Grim Reaper is out today. Also Memphis.
I'll keep telling y'all Memphis got the best rappers in
the game right now. But y'all don't want to listen
to me now. There's also a new song that's been
released DMX Whiz Beats and French and Montana. It's called
been to War People doing life for Jail Sam. I'm
just saw the drugs. I came with the walls. We

(01:28:13):
don't run the came you're trying to control. I'm a
march to the beach. I'm my home Trummers getting home.
Many we eat Little Wall Hall Summer. I'm been to jail.
I did numbers. I've been to Hell and I've been
Centrano whatever you take it, no way. I'm playing the

(01:28:34):
game in the hall season stop it around and the
throat up in the car long Live X long Live.
That's from the soundtrack. That's from the soundtrack from Godfather
Harlem the Epics original series. It's a lot to get into.
I'm definitely getting to the yslub. I'm definitely getting in
the conways, um somebody else you just may Scar definitely
big Scar all right, and of course you know, keep

(01:28:57):
on checking for these new music updates. I wish I
had an hour to talk about everything this out today
because people will be like, you missed this, you missed that.
But you know, unfortunately can't get into everything now. You know,
we love talking about investments on the show, and the
NBA stars Carmelo Anthony and John Wall have put some
money into a cannabis brand now, so it might be
something worth people looking at. We saw which has happened
with coin base. So if you're looking to put your

(01:29:19):
money into an industry that is high growth in more
ways than one, they're saying cannabis might be the ticket.
With all these states legalizing the use of recreational marijuana
and John Wall and Carmelo Anthony are now investors in
l E U n E. I don't know the right pronunciation.
It sounds like loon loon. It's a California based marijuana company.
So according to CNBC, they reported that they have joined

(01:29:42):
NBA agent Rich Paul also La La Anthony and music
manager Anthony Sallet you know him and Nas have their
company together in a new round of funding to help
that company raise five million dollars. Just putting that out there.
And in the NBA lamar Odom he was talking about
his one of his last conversations with Kobe Bryant and

(01:30:02):
how Kobe Bryant offered to help him with his dad.
He was on the All the Smoke podcast and here's
what he said. I had been gambling and they had
the old had kind of got like a little too steak.
And if you're in a bad situation, especially about some money,
he ain't the one that you're gonna want to call
gather it up the strength. I put my pride to
the side. He was like, you know, after he went

(01:30:25):
in he went in on you first and did he
was just like, how your people call my people and
the figure that out, Kobe better than me. You lose
your money gambling gambling. You gotta eat that. You gotta
you know, when you make a phone call to me
for something like that, it got to be life and death.
You gotta be you know you backed up on some
medical bills. Are you about to lose your house or something? Gambling?

(01:30:48):
But but Kobe's in a different tax bracket than you are,
And then his relationship with him showing lamar was a
lot greater. But I'm with you and you do this shit.
How are you gonna sit there and judge me and
then tell me you would shot shot up? I don't
want to hear from you know more about it. I'm like, nah,
be you gamble? Noah think think is shaming me. You
ain't in the same tag brackets, Kobe, you know what

(01:31:09):
I mean. But as I was figuring about, like you gamble,
you're gambling. Not coming for you money again? Sorry, And
gambling is an addiction though we've seen that before, and
addiction I do. And then and they could have triggered
his other addictions. He may have wanted to try to
help him. He said, we'll figure it out. So maybe

(01:31:30):
it was condition. Maybe it was help you. Who knows
unless you're in a situation like Alonzo and Training Day
where the Russians gonna kill you at a certain time.
If you ain't calling me telling me nothing like that,
I'm not helping you with getting out of your gambling debt.
You gotta figure that out on your own, because what
they're gonna try to do, they're gonna try to after
I paid off, You're gonna regamble to try to exactly

(01:31:51):
not gambling. No, you on your own with that one. King,
Love you though, what that is your rumor? Love you,
Love you, brother, But you gotta wear that debt. Yeah, amen, Okay,
I thought about it all right, revote. We'll see you
guys on Monday. Everybody else to People's Choice mixes Up. Next,
Let's go the breakfast Club. Your morning's will never be

(01:32:11):
the same. Bumpy's back, Oscar Winna Forrest Whittaker returns as
crime bus Bumpy Johnson, and the acclaimed epic series Godfather
of Harlem returns April eighteens only on Epics, Get the
Channel or the app Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne,
the guy, we are the breakfast Club. We got a
special guest on the line, Carrie Old Horne, Thank you

(01:32:34):
for having me again. Thank you, Charlomagne. No, man, it's
a pleasure, especially being that we hear talking some really,
really really good news. First of all, we gotta tell
them carry Horn story. You know, she's a former Buffalo
police officer who back in the day, she stopped the
fellow cops choke cold on a suspect, correct which which
they terminated you for, right am, I explaining that correctly. Well,

(01:32:57):
he doesn't like to be called a suspect. His name
is Neil McK all. These charges were dropped. I'm sorry, Neil, Yes, yes,
but they fired you for that, yeah, for doing the
right thing. They made up a story that I jumped
on the officers back, which was impossible because there was
a suspect between us and we were face to face.
So they basically said that I just went there and

(01:33:20):
just was out of control and they took your pension away.
You were fired and you had to fight and fight
and fight, and damn they had suited to get everything back.
So so what happened? Now? Where are we at now?
So then in September the council passed Carryo's law, which
is the duty ten Tavine was a law that I
wrote in twenty sixteen, and I just did not know
how to get it passed. So Terry Watson, the founder

(01:33:43):
of Strategies for Justice, he helped along with my team,
they helped me get that passed and actually was it
actually was an effort with protesters and everybody. Everybody chipped
in to help help get that law passed. Then the
mayor signed did like a month later, and then yesterday

(01:34:05):
the judge ruled for me because we filed the lawsuit.
The attorneys I have awesome attorneys also, they filed the lawsuit,
and yesterday the judge came back with a decision and
to give me my pension. Hey the firing, and so
I'm pension eligible. That's that's the term I'm supposed to use,

(01:34:27):
pension eligible. I want to revisit them back then because
but we're seeing right now while we're watching this Derek
chav In case, right and what's happening with him is
how many people that were witnesses wish they could have
intervened or done something to stop Derek Chavin from killing
George Floyd. And you actually did intervene. So Can you
tell us what was going on in your mind at
that time? There was a man named Mark Virginia who

(01:34:51):
was killed by Buffalo police, and that's what I thought
of when I saw him choking him. Mac. I thought
of Mark Virginia, where there were other officers there and
nobody stopped to choke hold to kill to save his life.
So that's actually what I thought of, And so you know,
I yelled to him, Greg, you're choking him. And then

(01:35:11):
when he didn't stop, that's when I decided to step
in grab his arm. And that's all I did, was
grab his arm from around his neck. But then by
the time they finished with the story, it doesn't matter.
You're a hero. Exactly what we would want any police
officer to do in that situation, and you know what

(01:35:31):
I did, It didn't that same place police officer end
up getting going to jail for something else after that, Yeah,
he did. He choked another officer on duty and then
he banged their heads before teams on the police car
that he was arresting, and one of the teams was
shot with a BB gun. Also in the George Floyd case,
we saw that no officer did anything. That's the purpose

(01:35:55):
of Carrio's Law, it's the Carrio's law duty to intervene
because then it so a law that you have to intervene.
But we need to make an a national law because
it makes no sense to just have it here in
this city, where an officer here can move to another
city and get on that department. We actually needed a
federal law. So it's great that it started here, but

(01:36:19):
it needs to be a federal law, and you can
go to caryos law dot com and get all the
information to jump on board. For that, you have to
have a law in place for officers to do what
they say they have they're supposed to do what to
protect them serve. Yeah, so I didn't want any other
officer to go through what I had gone through for
doing the right thing. So I've tried to figure out

(01:36:42):
what a solution would because you hear the problems all
of the time. So I wanted a solution and what
will force the officers to do it, because if you
don't force them, a lot of them are still not
going to do it because they don't want to cross
over that blue line. So that's why I thought of
the law. So now that we have the law, they
have to do it, and it's important to get it

(01:37:02):
passed u throughout the country, and my attorneys are on
So when he popped up with the bow tie and
that Law of America book behind him, I said, well,
that's the attorney right there. Now. We were asking earlier
a run about you know what happens now? Does she
get a pension back? We were talking back pay and
is she an officer now? So can you break it

(01:37:22):
down what exactly it is? Actually what happened with this
ruling is she was reinstated until the date that she
was fired. Basically, they put everything back as though it were,
you know, fourteen years ago. So she gets back pay
for those two years and that brings her up to

(01:37:43):
twenty years of service, which makes her pension eligible. So
we've got to do some stuff to do the paperwork
for the pension. But she's back to where she was
as though this ridiculous decision had not happened in the
first place. We have to talk about later, you know
what happens for two thousand and ten to twenty twenty,
But that's a that's a separate Conversation's gonna say that.

(01:38:05):
Let's say she didn't want to retire. She should still
be being paid for right now. Like she's she's a cop.
She should be paid for it right now. Much more
difficult questions, but I hear we're gonna deal with that now,
miss Horn. They're saying, you know, I'm reading the headlines
and they're saying that you know you've been vindicated. Do
you feel vindicated? Do you feel like this is justice

(01:38:26):
to a certain point, yes, I think that the attorneys
did an awesome job. They did. They really did an
awesome job. I really didn't understand how he was working,
but he was like, trust me on this, Ron, he said,
trust me on this. I was like, okay, like, you know,
I've been trying to fight at all of these years
and I didn't get anywhere. So I have to trust

(01:38:48):
them on this. And thank you, Ron, Thank you so much.
And I don't say anything, heyst what is the instants
are into a peace into swea it was. I think
this was justice a long time in coming, and we're

(01:39:10):
so happy that Carriel has been vindicated. Now, let me
say really really quick, because Carriel is a little too modest.
She had opportunities years ago to get kind of minor
settlements in this but she refused to do it because
of the broader issue, because of Carryo's law. She said,
it's not just about me, It's about a much, much

(01:39:32):
broader issue, and that's a matter of principle. And that's
one of the reasons that we took on this matter,
because she is so principal, and you don't say that
a lot most people are me me, me, me me,
carry ols Like, it's not just about me. Other officers
all over the country are facing this and we've got
to force them to be to be able to intervene

(01:39:54):
when they see this kind of foolishness going on. So
she just you know, she stood firm, listen, everything, but
she's still affirming and so thank you Carryall. No, Ron,
you're absolutely right because every single time Miss Horn reaches
out to me, it's never about her pension or anything
going on with her. It's always about Carryo's laws. You know,

(01:40:15):
this is happening for Carryall's law. This watches for Carryall's law,
This for Carriolle's laws. So you're absolutely right, she's not.
It's not a self serving thing at all. Much lovey,
thank you so much, thank you all right again, and
thank you to carry on Horne for joining us UM
and I'm so glad that they gave her pension back. Man,
I'm glad they gave her her pension back too. She
was supposed to be on CNN this morning, but they

(01:40:36):
canceled the interview because of breaking news. But she'll be
on TMZ later. Man. I love carry On hone and
I think that her story needs to get out there
a lot more. But also carry ELL's law needs to
be federal because I do think it's a crime if
you're a police officer and you don't intervene when another
police officer is failing to do their job of protecting

(01:40:58):
and serving. So salute to Carryall Horn. No. So I'm
gonna be out in Arizona this week and Saturday Night Live.
So anybody out in Phoenix, Arizona, come hang out with
your boy. Now. You got a positive note, I do, man,
and I want to tell everybody to make sure you
go get Tomka Mallory State of Emergency, How to Win
in the Country we built. It's available for pre order
right now, but it comes out May eleven. We got
the advanced copies in. It makes me feel good to see,

(01:41:19):
you know, different people hitting me up telling me how
much they're enjoying the book and loving to see the
early reviews. So make sure you go a pre order
to make a de mallory state of Emergency, How to
Win in the Country We Built. It's out May eleventh,
but it's available for pre order now on Black Privilege Publishing.
Okay now. Depositive note is simply this. As you heal,

(01:41:40):
your attractions changed too, all right, Toxicity stops looking like
excitement in peace stops feeling like boredom. Have a great
weekend breakfast club. Finish y'all. Dune

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Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

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