Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Dang Jo dank maybody come to the breakfast club. I
call this the hot seat aloud. You are control. I'm
not even doing here, so Peggy yo are yo so petty?
The world's most danti this morning Jo dj on his
bitch Angela stay in everybody's business, but in a good way. Charlomagne,
(00:21):
the guy, the ruler, rubbing you the wrong way. The
breakfast club ain't for everybody. Good morning usc yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
(00:42):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo. Good morning Angela Ye, good money danby Charlomagne
the Guy. Peace to the planet is Monday, Yes, it's Monday.
Back to the work we good morning was happening as
a body feeling. How was everybody's weekend? It's Monday, man,
(01:03):
you know you know how it is on a Monday morning. Yeah,
I'm actually mean too. I was in DC over the weekend.
I had to go to a baby shower, and then
because I was in DC already, I stayed and went
to Danielle Rawlings driving comedy show. I've seen that online,
I've seen that on social media. How was that because
I seen one part where people were beeping the horns
(01:25):
and I'm like, no, people could say we got that
all the time, right, you know what I mean. Donelle
says something and then they just start beeping the horn
and they're beeping over him. So how did that work?
Was it that bad? Or now they were they were respectful. No,
it's great that you beat the horn like because you
can't clap. Yeah, you know what I'm saying. Some people
beat the horn to claps. But when you're in the car,
you have the radio turned to a particular station, so
(01:45):
you can hear everything fine in the car. So the
beeping is just like applause, but you don't hear You
can still hear them clearly through the speakers in your car.
It's like going to a driving movie. Yeah, they've been
doing They've been doing that for a while, Like they
did that all through the presidential campaign. I hosted a
driving event for um Jamie Harrison, Carlos Miller. Carlos Miller
shot his comedy special like that driving Coloda hornets. You
(02:06):
know they can't I mean, I'm sure they're laughing, but
you just can't handle they're in their car. Yeah, No,
I had to do one too, but it was I
didn't see a comedy a comedian do it, so I
figured it might be annoying. Is it exactly on time?
Because you know sometimes a driving movie there that might
be like a half a second off, so the joke
is just a second late in his mouth, like you
know in the movie. But well, it might be bad
for the comedian because comedians um comedians. They laugh, yeah,
(02:28):
exactly exactly when they say it was probably really difficult
while they were up there. To be up there and
people are just deep in the horn, it probably does
throw you off a little. Okay, all right, Like radio radio,
we used to not get in no response, were just
talking out the way. Absolutely. Yeah. I was out in
Atlanta over the weekend. Of course, I'm doing my car
show there a July third, So there's a lot of
(02:48):
planning that you have to do and you don't. I didn't.
I didn't realize how much went into it because usually
it's here in New York, New Jersey, and I could
just swing by the arena and measure things out and
do things like that. But no, I actually have to
go to Atlanta a couple of times just to make sure,
it's bigger than the space. It doubles the space that
I usually do it in the New York, New Jersey.
So there's a lot going on. But they allowed me
to do more things. I might able to have vendor trucks.
(03:09):
I'm able to have more cars, maybe have a lot
more things. So it's gonna be it's gonna be a
lot of fun. July three in Atlanta, It's my celebrity
car show with your favorite celebrities. Call Shout to the
Beat in Atlanta, Shout to Lincoln Tech Nashville, Lincoln Tech Atlanta.
We gonna have a lot of fun. It's gonna be
a lot of planning, but it's gonna be amazing. So
I can't wait to see you guys. Absolutely and listen.
(03:30):
We have a great show this morning because last week
we were supposed to have this queen up here, but
we had some technical difficulties. But we got it right.
We did, so we're starting the work week off correctly
with Sarah Jake Roberts Ladies and Gether. She has the
new book out Women Evolve Her, amongst other things. I'm
sure you listen to her podcast of the same name,
So we'll be talking to Sarah Jake Roberts about her
(03:51):
new book and a bunch of other stuff. Absolutely, well,
let's get the show cracking front page news. What we're
talking about. Well, mourners have gathered in a Minnesota city.
A man was shot by a police officer during a
traffic stop. He then tried to drive and crashed and died.
The Groundhall Day. Welcome to Groundhall Day, ladies, and get
him all right, Well, we'll get into that next. Keeping
locked this to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning, everybody is
(04:13):
DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We all to
Breakfast Club. Let's getting some front page news. Where we
starting you, Well, let's take it to Brooklyn Center, Minnesota.
It's a city of Minnesota where a man was shot
by a police officer during a traffic stop. He was
actually stopped because he had too many air fresheners on
(04:33):
his mirror, and he got back into his car and
he was driving away and he crashed several blocks away
and he was later pronounced dead. So the family of
Dante Right is speaking out about what happened. And here
is his mother, Katie. Why the drop I heard? They
(05:03):
don't run up? And then like a minute later, I
called in the shot put it on pleas that's so
sad man. Yeah, it's amazing to me that during the
(05:24):
Derek shouldn trial, offices in Minnesota would still feel emboldened
enough to commit these kinds of crimes I know, right,
like to pull somebody over because they have air freshness
on their their rearview mirror, Like, like, come on, that
is so old school. We used to get pulled over
that when I was a kid, and they used to
get her ass for that as a kid. But now
you still pull They need to change that law. There's
(05:44):
a law that you can't have anything hanging off your
rear view mirror and your license plate cover. You can't
have a license plate covers, you know, the chrome thing
that goes around your license plate when you get a
call the dealer US he puts on you. Those are illegal,
so you should be able to actually sue the dealer
for putting that on your plate. Really, but you can't
have either those on your car. So if you do
have those on your calls, just take them off. That's
a way to pull you over it and check to
(06:05):
see what you're doing or what they're smell in the
car and officers. Man, this is what happens when you really,
truly feel like you don't have to deal with the
consequences of your actions. And you know, I don't, I don't.
I don't know why the young man ran, you know
for certain, but I'm almost sure because the police officers
pulled guns on them. And I'm so I'm so sick
of police officers acting like having a gun in your
(06:26):
face is normal. You have a gun in my face
and you're giving me directions, and I'm shook because of
all the other times I've seen men and women get
gunned down by the police. How do you expect me
to react normal? You have some why he ran? Did
you see the video of the US Army lieutenant driving
his car and they spraying in with pepper spray and
threw them on the floor and all that, and he
did nothing and they wouldn't even tell them who they
(06:47):
pulled him over. Yes, well we can give you that
story right now, the Black Army lieutenant Karen Nazario. That's
happened in December. A patrol car activated its siren and
emergency lights behind Karen Nazario. Now, this is a stretch
of role that It was very darkness in west of Northope, Virginia,
and he didn't want to stop just anywhere safely, so
he went maybe about a mile further, pulled over at
(07:08):
a gas station that was well lit, and at that
point two officers approached him, guns drawn, yelling at him
to get out of the car. He said, what's going on?
He was dressing his uniform by the way, and kept
asking them what's going on? And they said, what's going
on is you're fixing to ride the lightning sun. That
was the response. Yeah. How about when he said I'm
(07:29):
scared in the officer told when you should be, you
should be. Once again, I'm so sick of police officers
acting like having a gun in your face is normal.
Let me pull a gun on you and just hold
it in your face and let's see how you react.
You got a gun in my face and you're giving
me directions, and I'm shook because of all other times
I've heard of people getting gun down. I can't hear
you over my own fear. And I don't know what
(07:50):
you're even stopping before they're saying. They're saying he had
no tag display that he took a long time to
stop that he had extremely dark window tins, but he
had a newly purchased tahoe. He had two temporary plates
inside of his car. They would tape to the rare
window and on the passenger side. And they knew about
the temporary plates, but they still continued to stop him.
They pulled their weapons, they detain him, they threatened to
(08:11):
murder him, They sprayed him with pepper spray, They searched
his vehicle, all of those things. Once again, man, stop
with the fake patriotism. Okay, stop with the fake patriotism.
You get mad at Colin Kaepernick when he takes a
knee and says that he's, uh, you know, disrespecting the
American flag. He's disrespecting America. What's more disrespectful than doing
that than somebody who actually went out and protected and
served this goddamn country while he was in the uniform. Yes,
(08:35):
take your seatbelt off. Are you gonna reach for your
seatbelt with guns in your face? And they d ranked him,
you know what I mean? He was like, what are
you some type of whatever it was. They weren't acknowledging
his actual position, which he's lieutenant. If I'm not mistaken, Yes,
he's lieutenant Les. Imagine the police officers from the Simpsons
doing that, the the gi Jos. How stupid that would look. Okay,
stop with the fake patriotism. They did ultimately let They
(08:57):
did ultimately let him go, but they said that if
he said anything that they would, you know, something would
happen with his job, and if there were some type
of criminal charges, then that would mean that he wouldn't
be able to be in the position as a lieutenant
that he is. Yeah, they gotta pass to George Floyd
Policing Act. Okay, because these officers really understand that they
(09:18):
have no consequences to their actions. You're gonna have to
start taking away these officers pensions, you know what I mean.
You have to start putting these officers in prison. But
until there's consequences and and and and repercussions to their actions,
none of this is gonna have a chance. It's just
not all right. Well that is front, get it off
your chest eight ondred five eight five one oh five one.
(09:38):
If you need to vent, hit us up right now.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. I'm
telling you, if this is your time to get it
off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed eight five one.
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello,
(10:01):
who's this yo? What's up? NVS? Mellow? Y'all doing today? Mellow?
What's up? Bro? How was your weekend? Man? Mellow? How
you doing? Ye? Yo? My weekend was great, But I
don't even want to talk about that because I do
got to put your love too, but it's not even
worth it right now. Man r I P DMXIM sing
in prayer has been healing energy to your family, man,
and all your loved ones, all your fans out there.
(10:22):
You change the world, brother, man r I P word.
I don't know why we ain't start to show off
like that with some DMX, but it's a lot going
on now. Y'all were posting all weekend though, like real,
like I didn't believe it to y'all posted. Y'all don't
care about being first. Y'all care about being like yeah,
n You know that's interesting that you say that, though,
because stuff like that happens on what what happened Friday?
(10:45):
You know, we spend all weekend talking about it. By
the time we get the radio Monday, it's like we
did we feel like we did it already, right, and
I have a lot of prep about DMX for this
morning too, so we'll be talking about him all morning.
Well a fact, that's why I'm like, you know what,
you know, I just gotta I want to didn't want
to say, you know, RP sending Hill and family, You're
not literally, yo, the world gotta change, man, for real,
(11:06):
Well you're gonna be. You're gonna sit around getting old
waiting on the world to change, sir. Trust me, like
I said when I put you out on to what
I'm doing for this thing, I'm definitely changing the world. Brothers. Yeah,
I love it. Thank you brother. Hello, who's this Hey?
Ain't good morning? I'm gonna get it off your chest. Yeah,
I want to talk about how I'm actually happened because
(11:28):
this weekend I actually saw two black women made event.
Rustlemania is like this one years Oh yeah, I saw
everybody at WrestleMania. I saw my guy Kaz and while
at WrestleMania Tampa. Yeah, Night one, it was Bianca Belair
and they thought, but it's night down Women's Championships and
(11:48):
they made event at Night one and it was the
first time two black women every day who one Bianca
Belair did okay and she sponsored by Rick ross out.
Um yo, she should be Rick rossing her shot out
some type of synergy since he got bell champagne. That
would just make so much sense to me. I got
(12:09):
on a bell at jacket this morning too, would you say?
I say that would be cool to Yeah, I mean
she's very She's really cool though. You guys should really
check out. All right, let's go all right, Thank you mama.
Get it off your chest. Eight hund five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
us up right now. It's the breakfast club, the morning,
the breakfast club. This is your time to get it
(12:34):
off your chest. Whether you're man, Thank you from you
on the breakfast club. You got something on your mind? Hello?
Who's this from Detroit? What's up? Get it off your chest? Man?
I'm my first morning, my first morning on mornings. I've
been working graveyards like two years. I'm up early checked,
(12:57):
I'm tired. Yeah, it's monday, man. You know I'm in
here listening to our board op dramas. Tell me how
bad bunny looks so sexy? Last night at Russell Meania
Wild Time. He did a great drama. That's all I said.
He stole the show. Thank you a long time listening
to y'alls. And also because I showed my girl from
(13:19):
Lovejo you know you have to. Hey, I appreciate it
her name be being there and she does have a
beautiful black business that she opened. It's all Big B Accessory.
Everybody sit up here and follow her pain on Instagram,
Big B E Accessory, Undersports well, Big B Accessory, l
(13:46):
LC underst I love that he didn't try to promote
his own page. Instead he promoted his girl. Oh man, no, man,
I'm showing her all love story, nothing else. Somebody, anybody
check it out? Just sell her out, man, look right now.
Promo called on their page right for sending it off
on everything got you? I love it. Look at him
(14:07):
going high past women everything. Man. Also, she ain't feeling
good today. I want to shot and love. Hope you
feel better baby, and La. I love it. King appreciate
your brother. Thanks you taking it far man, y'all think
it is hello? Who's this? Hey? It is all this manager?
Why what's up? Hey? What's up? Broke? Get around your chest?
What's up? I got three things to get out my tip.
The first thing give. So I listened to y'all every morning.
(14:30):
So I'm feeling it work on Friday because I'm working
in the solar field right now, so we get out
early because it's all it's all it's raining, thunder and enlightening.
So my better goal did and I have a charger,
So I'm thinking to myself, why could my better imposs
to go to it? Well, my dumb every day when
I get to work an hour early, I see that
(14:51):
and I listened. It's all a long morning. Thank you better?
End going did? Thank you? Sir? I end? I end
up going up there my better It costs me two
hundred and ten dollars. And guess what else they're gonna say.
They're gonna talk about to Oh yeah, you need to
ask you it's called eighty nine dollars. You also need
to label only also gonna run you one hundred and twenty.
(15:13):
I end up being five hundred and ten dollars. Damn hey,
that's a lot of money, man, because I rather study
this weekend. At the average or over fifty percent of
Americans don't have two hundred and fifty dollars to spare,
so five hundred dollars a lot of money, sir, Yeah,
thank you, yes, sir? What do you mean the other
two things in one? So I see an ad over
(15:35):
the weekend on Instagram. I don't know how true it work,
but it was like, oh, d's ain't Emmy was talking
and he was talking about a breakfast of Big State
or something like that. Yeah, bas breakfast. Yeah. But this
this guy puts on these mixtapes and they they allow
people to spit, then they put them on the platform
for people. So if you want to be heard, maybe
(15:56):
your artists that can't get on some of the platforms.
It's a mixtape that they do calls for breakfast and
I hold that, okay, I ain't bash you on that.
If you get a tangig, all right, bro, it's good,
Daddy asked, because there'll be a lot of scams going
on with these yeah nabs. But you know what the
crazy thing about it, there was a scam going out
that said I was giving away to twenty thousand dollars
on Facebook. So I guess somebody hacked it. We had
(16:18):
to change the passwords quick because I ain't giving away
on twenty thousand dollars, man. I try to win now.
But they are doing a mixtape. But this they do
this mixtape and they put it on all the platforms
for people so people can hear them. They pick I
think fifteen people. They get like a hundred submissions and
they get the best fifteen people and they try to
give people a you know, some kind of you know,
to get on the platforms that they can't and I
(16:39):
host it. I listened to a lot of them, the
fifteen people, and it goes from there. But they do
that once every six months. All right, get it off
your chess eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
If you need to vent, you can hit this up anytime. Now.
We got roomors on the way. Yes, and of course
let's start off talking about DMX. We have some tributes
that we want you to hear. You know, we put
out some new music right before he passed. But give
(17:00):
some more details as well. All right, we'll get into
that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Listen.
Oh it's well. I rest in peace to DMX and
(17:22):
our condolences to his family. I saw his ex wife, Tashira.
She posted about a great tribute and it was her
birthday too. Over the weekend, by the way, so imagine
having to deal with that at the same time. But
he was fifty years old and the family did release
a statement. They said that he was a warrior who
fought to the very end, he loved his family with
(17:43):
all of his heart, and we cherished the times that
we spent with him. So a lot of people were
paying tribute over the weekend. It took me a minute.
I had to like get off of social media, and
then I got back on and I was just reading
a lot of just in a DMX everything that everybody
was saying. What I love was the random people that
came across him and the impact that he had on
our lives. Yeah, And I was like, if that's anything,
(18:04):
that's how we should all want to be remembered as
somebody who was as giving as he was and did
all these random, spontaneous, amazing things for other people. Now,
one person we saw a pay tribute was a Black
Rob and people were concerned for his health. Here's what
Black Rob had to say from a hospital bed. We
(18:25):
don't have it, Yes, we don't. Okay, playing is crazy
is helping me out. Dolan is making me realize I
do on man, how do you feel about x X. Yeah.
(18:47):
So a lot of people are concerned about what's happening
with Black Rob, and according to reports, to saying that
he has revealed that he's been home, he's homeless. He
was discharged from the hospital after putting out that clip.
And here's more of what Black Rob had to say. Yes,
now I here, I actually do that with this man
(19:10):
for five years, four strokes. It's crazy. It's hard, man,
you know what I'm saying. I don't I don't got
no house to live in except probably man apartment. Man
from me and my me and my men be trying
to get together. Man, I'm telling you, man, it's strange.
It's hard man. You know what I'm saying, Man, I
(19:33):
need some I need some West Man. My side was
killing me. Definitely, no disrespect the Black Rob, but I
just want to say that that thank you the DMX.
You know a lot of people don't say thank you.
I got the opportunity a chance to say thank you
to his face. Many of times. I tell a story
all the time when I was selling beats, when I
was starting out as a producer, not too many believed
(19:56):
I know fad boy to beat. That's my brother and
DMX heard the beats for me to LA. He brought
four beats, paid me over price for the beats for
me and my partner, and I always said thank you
to him. He always meant a lot. He was my
start as a production person in the industry, and anything
anything ex ever called forth for his bloodline, label or whatever,
I always made it happen. He was a great person,
(20:17):
a great person to be around him. The energy was
always there. I felt like when he was when he
was around, it always felt like God was watching. So
I just want to say thank You's family. Russell Simmons
said that DMX saved deaf Jam. He said, I wish
we could have saved him. Sure enough, he saved death
Cham and it was a moment for us and lots
of other things happened around that time and def Jam exploded,
(20:40):
but he pulled us out of the mud. I feel
like he saved us, but we didn't save him. Whilst
people say, oh, save yourself, but no, we should have
given him more love and we have to be responsible
to the next DMX. So it's a teachable moment for
me to be more responsible when I can, to reach
out to those in need, to just be better. I
(21:02):
wonder what people mean when they say gave DMX more love,
because DMX got a lot of love from a lot
of different That's what I'm saying. I don't understand what
they mean when they say give DMX more love. I
think DMX was an annointed individual and told him that
on several occasions. And I was also thinking over the weekend.
You know, we say things like, oh, now that person
is finally at peace. I really feel that way about
(21:22):
Earl Simmons, and as a fan of Earl Simmons, the man, DMX,
the artists, I don't feel robbed. It felt like with
you know a lot of other celebrities passing and feel like,
you know, they got robbed. You know what I mean.
I eat Nipsey, a pot A Big and Kobe. I
think DMX lived a really full life. He left everything
on the table. He gave us everything he had and more.
(21:42):
And I think his death is gonna bring people closer
to God because of the way he lived his life,
how he always gave God the glory. He was clearly annointed,
and watching the videos of him praying and testifying wherever
he went was very powerful and very very positive to
me this. Well, here is Swizz B two also was
very close to DMX and here's what he had to say.
Brother was a different type of brother. I've never seen
(22:02):
him live his life for himself. You ain't never seen
dam Mix with the lambicinning. You ain't never seen him
ice that one NOO jury. He did not care about
any of that. Dam Mix was the biggest. And let
me tell you why he was the biggest. He was
the biggest because he prayed for everybody else more than
he did for himself. He'd get on that stage and
pray with fifty thousand people, knowing that he needed more prayers,
(22:25):
and everybody that he was praying for. A man suffered
every day. Nobody was suffering because he took everybody pain
and made it heads. Hey man, I always say that
X X was X. He was not what he did,
he was not what he had. He was X. And
you know, it's it's a blessing to be able to
show up as your true self, your true authentic self,
(22:46):
all the time and not be enough. And the things
you're hearing about him right now is exactly how how
you should want to leave. People are not gonna forget
how DMX made them feel He made a lot of
people feel filled with the Holy Spirit. So dropping the plan,
like I was saying. Earl Simmons, his ex wife to
Sheriff Simmons. She was celebrating her birthday, her fiftieth birthday,
by the way, over the weekend, and she did post
(23:08):
to mind. If you want to start balling crying, man,
go look at her page. But she said, happy happy
birthday to me. What a ride, what a journey. And
she said, I celebrate my life today, grateful to God
for the fifty years He's given me. But now I
also celebrate my ex husband, my best friend, my spiritual partner,
my mentor. But I also thank God for his life
and his peace and his journey and his life lessons
(23:28):
that was passed on and that will live on for
generations to come. And in the next hour there was
some new music that DMX had to release and will
also play that for you, brother Earl, not going nowhere.
That is a true spirit, not a ghost. You know
in that movie a Bullworth Day said you gotta be
a spirit. Can't be no ghost, Brother Earl, was an
absolute spirit. You know what. I just want to see
one last thing you know over the weekend, Anthony Anderson
(23:50):
hit me, know Anthony Anderson, comedian actor, and I told
the story about me flying to LA and him leaving, said,
and him, you know, wanted to drive call and he
was driving down a hundred miles power down rodeo drive
and stopping at a dirty pool hall of play pool
and him speaking to people and all this stuff. And
Anthony Anderson said, the crazy part is I never knew that,
you know, he was part of that movie. And he
said there was times when it was like the MX
(24:12):
is flying remote con Droe cause, but that's who he was.
He wanted to show everybody love. I've never been in
La at the time, and he wanted to show me La.
And it had nothing to do with him shooting a
million dollars film and him supposed to be on the set.
He was just like, I just want to show my
brother a good time. And and you know, to this day,
I just say thank you. All right, Well, that is
your room a report now front page news. Next, Yes,
(24:35):
imagine you get one point two million dollars deposited into
your account by accident. What do you do next? All right,
we'll get into that next. It's to Breakfast Club. God Morning,
but Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be the same.
Mountain Dew is partnering with HBCUs and an effort to
uplift the next generation of badass Black innovators and entrepreneurs
with the Real Change Opportunity fun pitch competition, empowering students
(24:58):
to go out and do is it Mountain Duwe come
slash Real Change to enter. Hey morning, everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We all to Breakfast Club
and side up. We're playing DMX's music all week long,
all morning long. So if you want to hear X on,
let us know which one it is. We'll try to
get it on for you. But let's get in some
front page news where we starting you. Well, a nine
(25:21):
one one dispatch, her working for the Jefferson Paris Sheriff's Office,
was arrested, and that was for allegedly refusing to return
more than one point two million dollars that Charles Schwab
had mistakenly been deposited into her brokerage account. Kelly Keilan
Spiedoni was fired. So what happened is this right? They
(25:41):
put the money into her account by accident the next morning,
and they realized it right away, but they couldn't just
recall it, and so the next morning they tried to
reach out to her. She wasn't answering the phone, she
wasn't returning text messages, she wasn't returning emails. But she
did move the money to another account immediately and used
some of that money to buy a new car and
a new house. Now, though that money was put into
her account, they said, it's not her money. She has
(26:03):
no legal claim to that money. Even if it was
put in there by mistake. It was an accounting error.
So now she's being sued by child Schwab and Co.
They said the company has accused her of dodging their calls,
dodging their text messages, dodging their emails and everything to
return that much. She should not be being sued. And
you have to put yourself in other people. We've talked
about this before. If I'm praying right and I'm asking
(26:25):
for a blessing, I'm I mean I'm God in Finnished
watching Bishop T. D. Jake's sherman rightfully mine, rightfully mine
was his sermon yesterday, by the way, And I'm praying
for a blessing and then at one point two million
shows up in my account. That money is rightfully mine. Okay,
the banks have to start being held accountable for making
these mistakes, not the people. What kind of bank does
she have? Let me? And the reason I asked this
is I don't know about you guys. One, if I
(26:48):
transfer money over to another account, it don't transfer over
right away. It takes a couple of days. She got
it the next day and was able to buy a
crimp and well, it was Adelity. It was a Fidelity
Brokerage Service account that she had, so the company meant
to transfer eighty two dollars and fifty six cents. Instead
they transferred a little over one point two million dollars.
(27:08):
They said immediately they tried to stop it because they
realized it right away and they wanted to reclaim the transfer.
It didn't work, so the next day they sent a
reclaim request to the institution that administers the account, but
they said the request was rejected because the cash was
not available because she took it out right away. I
think that she should get something. I think anybody everybody
should just no, no, no, no, no, jail. I'm talking
(27:31):
about some money, because when the bank makes that kind
of mistake, that mistake should be on the bank, and
that can cause a lot of psychological trauma to a
person if they are in really dire need, which most
Americans are, and they end up with one point two
in the account. Didn't just get snatched back. Just think
about that. But they did recover about seventy five percent
of the money thus far, but the rest of it
they haven't been able to get. Now, what if you
(27:52):
overpay something, right and you want to get your money
back from a company, should they be able to keep
it not if you over pains overtake, ye, the oasta
and they get the money, and then this was a
mistake too. No, it's differ between overpaying and taking a
whole lump sum of money and putting it in somebody's account.
That's a big difference. When people send out a cash
app or a PayPal by accident and they went their
(28:13):
money back because they didn't mean to send it to
that person, they're not getting it back. They'll get some
of it back if they could get some money on
the cash app on the phone, depending on if they
spent it or not. But that money was put in
her account as an error. She knew it was an error,
and she spent it anyway. So they need that money back,
and they don't you know that. They're contacting you, they're
texting you, they're emailing you, they're coddling you, and you're
(28:34):
just ignoring it the next day and you took it
out right away. You gotta get, you gotta get just
gonna be some repercussion. If we live in a country
where over fifty percent of the people don't have two
hundred and fifty dollars despair, you gotta get folks some
type of incentive for receiving what they what they have
every right to look at. It is a blessing. If
you imagine just getting up off your knees from praying
(28:56):
and asking God to bless you, and then you open
your and all of that money is there. She shouldn't
be in jail for that. You can't do that. It's
like if I if I dropped my wallet. You can't say,
oh my God, this is a blessing and ball out.
You can't do that. It's the same thing. That's somebody's money,
that's not the banks money. I'm not saying that she
shouldn't give the money back. But I'm saying she should
get something and she should not be in jail for this,
because you have to understand that she probably was scared
(29:23):
at that point. Non they know all your information. This
is your account. Are you gonna hide? Where are you
gonna go? That's my point. This is America two twenty one.
I would be scared to death if some money magically
appeared in my account that officenden I started getting all
these phone call from people. I would think this is
some type of setup. I'd be afraid. If you take
the money out and spent it right away, just take
(29:44):
a picture for the Graham and give the money back.
That's it. No, no, all right, but that is like
imagine being starving and somebody put to play the food
that like to a child, and then you take the
food way. It's like, oh that's not yours. This kid's
still sitting there hungry, like you gotta give the kids something?
Got too man? And this Eric, come on, man, all
right now when we come back, who's joining us this morning? Yeah, no,
(30:08):
that's usually Charotte Charlemagne, Sarah, she's a new book out,
Woman Evolved. Let's start this. Get we got somebody coming
up special. Who's joining us, Charlomagne, Well, you know we're
doing this again because last week we had technical difficulties
and I watched I listen to this woman's podcast, you know,
I watched her when she you know, fills in for
her father on Sundays at time. She has a podcast
called Woman Involved, and she has a book out right
(30:29):
now called Woman Evolved. Sarah Jake Roberts will be joining
us this morning. We got it right this morning. There
we go. We'll kick it with her when we come
back to Dope Movies, to Breakfast Club, Good Morning, the
Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne,
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We have a
special guest on the line, Take two. That's why we
(30:51):
was supposed to. We actually did this interview last week,
but the audio sounded disgusting and trash, and I try
to tell him, but nobody listens to little Ole Envy.
Nobody listens a little and you didn't speak. You sent
text messages in the middle of an interview where no
one's looking at their phone because they're doing an interview. Well,
it's very hard to take a guy with all that
Beijing on his Chin series ye Jake's Roberts, what's her family?
(31:16):
Good morning, Good morning. Sarah's got a new book out,
Cahol Woman Evolved, Break up with your fears and revolutionize
your life. What is this book about, Miss Roberts. This
book is about Eve, really, the Eve from the Bible
who I don't know if you're like me. I used
to say, like, when I get to Heaven, I'm going
to drag Eve. But as I was studying, no, because
(31:36):
she had one job, Like, I don't know how far
we can get into this, but we gave her one
job and she failed at it miserably, at least I thought,
until I started studying her life and realized that I'm
actually more like Eve than I cared to admit. She
knew better but didn't do better. But her story doesn't
end the moment she eats from the forbidden fruit. There
is redemption connected to her story, And when I discovered
(31:58):
that redemption, I felt like I wanted to rescue Eve
and any other woman like her who knows what it's
like to get stuck in life but still want to
move beyond where they are. Can we stay here for
a second, because I've always looked at even She's always
been perceived as evil in the Bible. I've never even
thought about the redemption aspect of Eve. I don't know
(32:19):
why I even never got to that part. What is
the redemption aspect of Eve? Well? Even ends up ultimately
paving the way for Jesus to enter the world, So
those who believe in the Christian faith know that she
is ultimately the gateway for divinity. And yet we see
that her actions in the garden have really vilified not
(32:39):
just her, but so many women have been affected by
it corporately as it relates to equality and professionally in
our society and culture. Eve's kind of the woman that
set the tone for what it means to be a
woman in general, and I feel like as we rescue her,
We're going to see other women begin to see how
they can take their place in the world as well.
(33:00):
Jesus died for our sins and he came after Eve.
Is it like retroactive forgiveness for Eve? You know? I
would like to believe that. I think that at the
end of the day, I think there's so much the
Eve story that gives us insight into what it means
to be humans in general, and the idea that God
(33:21):
told them to be fruitful and multiplied to have dominion.
I hear tones of leadership there, and I felt like
that speaks to man's belief that men and women can
serve and having dominion over the earth. So I think
that Jesus ultimately gets us back to God's original intentions.
So Eve, it's kind of our homegirl, because she puts
it back in our place. Now. I was growing up
in the church. You know, you know your dad is
(33:43):
Bishop TD Jakes and how your dad is Bishop TD Jakes,
And I just feel like that would be difficult growing
up in the church. Like a lot of Prussia, the
world is watching you, the congregation is worth watching you.
So so how was that? It was a lot of pressure.
I'm grateful that we kind of were adults when social
media began to take its place, because listen, because if
(34:04):
we would have been growing up in this day and
age when I got pregnant, I got pregnant at thirteen
and Hald my son at fourteen, like this would have
been stuff that went viral. And yet in the context
of our church community, there was a lot of heat.
But we were sheltered and that it didn't take on
this you know virality that we see things taking place
on now. But it was difficult being raised, as you know,
(34:28):
the daughter of TD Jakes with everyone looking, especially when
we've had some struggles in mountains to time, like I had.
M said, he was so shocked. He said, you know,
he didn't know you would ever to have a boyfriend
of dating anybody. So he was like he was just shocked.
It was a scene I will never forget. It was
as if all the air went out of the room.
Sarah walked in the door and told us that what
(34:50):
she had hidden for us for a long time. I
was shocked she'd never been on a date. I was disappointed,
I was hurt, but I was committed because to me,
finally is loyalty. Yeah. Yeah, what was that conversation like
when you went to your dad and said, hey dad,
(35:11):
Bishop TD Jakes with this congregation in church, how is
that conversation? Okay, so my sister snitch, she told my
parents that I was pregnant. But I do also think
it's important, like you guys know Bishop TV Jakes, but
like Bishop td j did someone I saw Sundays, you know,
Saturday nights and Sunday morning. It's Monday through Friday. He
was my dad, you know. And I think any daughter
(35:34):
who has to tell someone who was like their superhero
that I'm in a situation that I don't think you
can save me from finds it challenging. And yet he
tried in his own way to put on his cape
and rescue me. And yet even with his attempts, I
started to work through my own shame and guilt and insecurities.
And that was like almost a ten year process of
(35:54):
finally finding my words. After that ten years, so from
fourteen to twenty four, you didn't get to a place
of worthy till you was twenty four. Yeah, for sure,
I think that it's one thing to do something that
the church doesn't agree with. But anytime the church doesn't
agree with you can leave the church and find community
somewhere else. Right, But when you are a teenage pregnant woman,
(36:16):
like whether you are in the church or in society
and culture, like, there is really no community that says
you're welcome to here and we understand you. And so
it did take me a long time, some toxic relationships
and bad choices to really try and figure out like, well,
where do I fit? And it wasn't until I really
came to the consciousness that I fit anywhere I am
(36:37):
place that I began to see my life change. Do
you think you suffered from impostor syndrome? I know we
talk about that a lot as women, how we feel
like we're not worthy to be in the spaces that
we're in. Do you feel like you dealt with that?
I did deal with that, And it's funny. I feel
like even with the Women Evolved, when I was writing
the book, I felt so confident about it and the
(36:58):
content because I just like was praying and that God
would help other women who were like me, other Eve women.
Like if you say Women Evolved, you can hear like
Eve's name in there. So I wanted to rescue every
Eve that would ever pick up this book. And yet
as it's been time for me to kind of push
the book, I've had to step into this place of
authority in leadership and belief on what's happening in my life.
(37:19):
And that was very much so something that initially felt
like imposter syndrome. But when I realized, like I be
wrong here, like this is where I'd be wrong this
is what I've been called to do. Like I'm anointed
to do this, I step into my anointing and my
confidence in that as opposed to what my fears and
insecurities say. So you never had any reservations at all
(37:39):
about getting in the same space as your father's, not
like your father's just you know, any old pastor or
spiritual leader, I mean as Bishop TV Jicks. While I
didn't have any reservations because I feel like I kind
of stumbled into it. If I would have intentionally decided
to be in ministry, I may have had the time
to have second guests and guests and thoughts. But I
was just sharing my story about what it means to
(38:00):
be a woman trying to heal, trying to recover and
grow and find her worth again. And then when I
realized it was affecting people and I was like praying
for them, I'm like, well, this feels like ministry, And
so I embraced it as ministry, but I was still
consent to do it my way. And I feel like,
even though there are similarities to my dad and I,
as you know, grace and anointing like that, we couldn't
(38:22):
be more different in some aspects of how we engage
with the culture in the world around us. We have
more with Sarah Jake Roberts when we come back her
book Woman to Evolves out right now, we'll talk to
her some more. It's the Breakfast Club, Go Morning Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy we
are to Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Sarah
Jake's Roberts, Charlomagne. When I watch your sermons, you know
(38:45):
when you are on some Sundays or you know, when
I listened to your podcast, you don't come off as
a traditional pastor. Do you do you consider yourself a
traditional pastor our spiritual leader. No, but I don't think
anyone should be like a traditional hazard because I think
we all have our own unique grace and anointing. But
I mean, on my podcast last week, I did a
Dmax tribute episode because like, I'm not going to act
(39:07):
like the nineties didn't raise me, in the two thousands
didn't shape me, and like I understand what it means
to be a black woman in particular, like in the
culture and navigating faith, and I feel like I've got
to bring all of myself so that people can trust
me with all of themselves, and together we get to
evolve into whoever it is God had in mind when
he created us. You're the perfect balance of ratchetness and righteousness.
(39:30):
And I'm gonna tell you something about DMX. That man
is annointing. The same feeling I get when I'm around
your dad is how I feel when I'm around DMX.
That man is annoying. Kid. I believe that I watched
a lot of his interviews and even watching like Daniel
Levato's YouTube documentary Dancing with the Devil, like I recognize
that when you're battling with a disease that it can
(39:52):
be difficult to work through. But at the end of
the day, his anointing continue to shine no matter what
he went through. And I felt like even seeing people
out side with the prayer vigils at the hospital, I
just felt like, that is a sign of your anointing
comment through no matter what you've gone through, you brought
people together to pray, and I think that's powerful. You know, Sarah,
you said you wanted to drag Eve right at one point?
(40:15):
Have you have you ever wanted to drag people who
speak on your father and say that he's fake and
he's in it for the money. Have you ever wanted
to put holy hands on somebody for that? Absolutely? Absolutely
and without a shadow of a doubt. But I think
that when people see you as a larger than like figure,
and I know you guys can relate to this, like
when they see you as larger than like, they forget
(40:37):
that at the end of the day, like you are
a person. You have friends and family and children, and
you matter to them like this is someone who we're
going to do life with, whether y'all applause, listen to
the show or not. And so there is this element
of protection that you wish you could have for people
who are in the limelight. You know, I don't mind
being in my dad's shadows because that means that I'm
(40:59):
under the protect when there's heat, you know, And so
as I step out of that a little bit, I'm
more thankful that he's shown me how to walk this
walk out. So what about forgiveness, though? Is it easy
to forgive when you talk about you know, people going
at your dad or even you being a team a
pregnant teen mom. And I'm sure the congregation had things
to say is it easy for you to forgive? It's
(41:21):
not easy always. I think it depends on what's happening
and how low the blow is, you know. But I
think forgiveness is something that you're constantly reminding yourself that
you've forgiven. Like sometimes I get frustrated with Eve, or
sometimes I get frustrated with myself for someone who I'm
in relationship with, who I'm forgiving, and it feels like
I'm constantly renewing my mind to the reality that I
(41:42):
am walking in forgiveness. I don't think forgiveness is something
that you flip the switch on and you're automatically walking
in it. I think it is a decision that you
have to remind yourself that you have made over and
over again. It was so free. And to hear you
say that about forgiveness, because that's something that I'm constantly
working on because people are always, oh, you gotta forgive,
you gotta forgive. What I'd be like man, Instead of
saying God bless the person, I just say I hope
(42:05):
a person gets what they deserve. That's it. And I
don't even mean that in the positive a negative way.
I just hope you you want to come to have
a nice day. Nope, have the day you do you deserve,
you know, But Charlomagne, you've evolved a lot. Like I
listened to Brilliant Idiots. I've listened to it for years.
And I think even seeing your path and the whole
black men don't achieve movement like I think, to see
your growth, I think it's really great for you to
(42:27):
be stepping into this place with your influence. Our mental
health is important where we're talking about our spiritual journeys
and whatever capacity that is. And so I think even
you freeing people to be able to say, you know,
I hope they get whatever they deserve, and I hope
they trip over a rocket at their hues there always
sliding off of their feet. It's very powerful. You know.
(42:48):
We want forgiveness too, So if we want people to
forgive us, we have to also be willing to forgive. Absolutely.
I think it's more difficult to forgive when you haven't
practiced self forgiveness. And if you don't know how to
forgive yourself, then it's even more challenging to feel like
I need to forgive someone else. It depends what they did,
It depends depends what they did. If you should be given.
(43:10):
In my opinion, some people are just you know. They said,
the main reason for forgiveness, though, it's for yourself, like
for that burden of being angry and having these feelings
towards somebody when you could let you have, Like letting
that go does feel free. Well, DMX said that you
can just come to a place of forgiveness by just
trusting people to be who they're going to be, and
(43:32):
in a way, that is free because it's like, I'm
not going to keep expecting for you to walk with integrity,
to say the right things and do the right things.
I'm just going to trust you to be you. In
a way, I feel like they're forgiving and forgetting are
two different things. Just because I forgive you doesn't mean
I've had to forget it. And I feel like that's
exactly what DMX was kind of speaking to and that
clip that we've seen recently. And I also think empathy
(43:53):
is really important too, because people come from different spaces
and different backgrounds in their life and it might cause
them to act in a certain manner that we don't
understand because we don't come from that space. But I've
met so many people that on the surface, you might say, Okay,
what's wrong with this person, But then when you hear
about their background, how they were raised, to struggles that
they've gone through, it kind of makes you feel more
(44:14):
empathy toward why they may act the way that they
do now, and then you can go back and be like, Okay,
they do need some help. Yeah, I totally agree. I've
seen this a lot of parential relationships. A lot of
people I talk to are dealing with like, how do
I forgive my parents for not giving me what I
needed emotionally and spiritually? And I feel like to your
(44:34):
point that it's easy to see it from the perspective
of a child who was in need, But a lot
of times, when we've taken the full picture of our parents,
we realize that they didn't get a lot of the
things that they needed in order to show up in life.
I try to break that down in the book, just
how we zoom out of the picture to see the
fullness of a person so that we're not just defining
them by our experience with them, you know, And how
(44:58):
do you deal with faith and with people in congregation
with your faith? And the reason I ask that is,
you know, during the pandemic. It feels like some people
might have lost some of their faith, and you know,
just seeing family members pass away and family members get sick,
you know, the elderly and younger kids and everything going
on in the world. What do you tell people during
that time or during this time? Man, I give people
(45:19):
permission to be where they are. I think one of
them mistakes that we can see played out in religion.
Sometimes it's forcing people to be like, God is good
even when your heart is breathing. God is good, even
when you feel fragile. Like there's literally a part of
the book where like is God good? Question mark? Of
course I know the answer is yes, But there are
moments where you don't feel the goodness of God. And
(45:40):
I think we've got to give people permission to be
there so that they can experience God and their grief.
You know, NB, I wholeheartedly believe that it was never
God's intention for us to have pandemics. So God's intention
for us to experience racism and the social injustice that
we experienced. And yet this is very much a part
of the reality of what it means to be human.
(46:00):
And so the promise isn't that everything will be good,
or that your heart won't break. Sometimes the promise is
if you keep walking this thing out, I can show
you how to work everything together in a way that
it turns out for your good. For your good doesn't
always feel good though. All right, well move we got
more with Sarah Jakes Roberts. When we come back, it's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
(46:23):
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We're still kicking it with Sarah Jakes, Roberts, Charlomagne. It's
so many great messages that you have in Women Evolved.
One that I really love is you talk about past
failures and you say, you know, past failures should not
be the focus. Why should past failures not be the focus?
I mean, it's like driving forward but looking at the
(46:44):
rear view. I mean, I lived, like I said earlier,
like almost ten years looking at this past failure of
you know, just a team pregnancy, which was actually the
fruit of an insecurity. But that was still the only
thing that I saw for ten years. And in that
ten year, understand, you know, there were so many other
ways that I could have been shown up in the
world so many different ways that I could have been healing.
(47:06):
And so to look forward is to say, Okay, here's
my wound, here's my openness, here's my my brokenness. But
how do I heal where I am now instead of
looking at the damage that brought me here in the
first place. How do you think having a baby at
fourteen helped you evolves as a person man my work ethic,
because at fourteen, when you have a baby, like when
(47:28):
other kids are like thinking about high child child NBA
is crazy. My daughter's eleven now, and I just I
see how young I was at that moment, Like she's eleven,
and she's ready for lip gloss and she wants nailed,
and so she thinks she's more mature than she is.
And I realized just how young I was to be
(47:48):
thirteen years old finding out I was pregnant, and so
instantly my mind switched into that of like what should
I be doing as a mother? Who am I going
to have to become? And so I think that that's
contributed a lot to my work ethic. I think it's
made me wise for my years, as people say, because
I'm able to talk to women who are fifty sixty
years old on a journey of evolving. Not because I
(48:10):
am their age, but because I understand the weight that
life puts on you at a really early age. You know,
we had we had the Great Bishop td J's your
father on this week. He said that you hit your pregnancy.
Is that true? Oh yeah, I was four months? Oh yeah?
Who why are we telling folks were pregnant? Why would
we do that? Yeah? I was four months pregnant before
(48:32):
they found out. Four months pregnant. Wow, and you said
your sister snitched on you. She sure did. She wrote
a letter and left it in the mailbox with her handwriting.
And yeah, you know it took me about ten years
to forgive her for that too. But she really did
(48:53):
you a favor, she did. She definitely did me a
favor because I'd probably been given birth in the bathroom
before they found out. But um, my sister, she's always
been that way though, when she like doesn't mind saying
what needs to be said, regardless of the outcome. I'll
never forget being in high school and they were talking
about team moms. Of course I wasn't bringing my son
to high school with me, so they didn't know I
(49:14):
was a mom and she stands up in the middle
of the Catholic and she was like, my sister had
a baby at fourteen and she ain't no hope. I
was like, oh God, why right? Why? But she volunteered information.
That's what she doesn't. We love her because she says
things to people on Instagram and Twitter that I could
never say, and yet she just lived her life the
(49:34):
way that she is. She's amazing. You know, sometimes it
takes for people to really hit like the bottom for
them to evolve. Do you feel like for yourself, you
had to really hit a low point for you to
realize what you needed to do. Oh yeah, definitely. I Um,
this is like I wrote about this in my memoirs.
I won't go into details, but I had this moment
where I had cut up and someone called the police
(49:57):
on me, and the police were like, I'm not going
to arrest you, but you're going to have to go
see a CPS officer. At this point, I had two
children and I was walking out of the CPS office
and I was thinking to myself, if you don't stop,
if you don't get yourself together, you're going to end
up in prison. You're going to lose your kids. The
very thing you're trying to do to prove that you're
a good mother. You're losing because you're trying so hard
(50:19):
to build an image for other people. And I really
feel like that was the rock bottom where I said, like,
I'm not going to go out like this. There's got
to be something better for me than where I am
right now. But you do realize that's why people like
myself gravitate towards you, you know what I'm saying, because
you've been through real experiences. You've you've you're openly flawed,
You've you've you've had wounds that you tried to heal.
(50:42):
Like I don't like people that come off as perfect.
I hate perfect acting people. Yeah, I mean, I didn't
know that that's that would be what people gravitated towards
me for. But I do think that as we talk
about people in faith in general, I think a lot
of times when we see people leaving communities of faith,
it has to do with the fact that like they
don't see themselves, Like I don't see myself up there,
(51:02):
so I don't see how I'm supposed to do these
things that you're telling me to do. And yet we
do see these little like meat. Groups like I would
say what my husband and I are able to do,
where we do leave an authenticity and even my father
as well, authenticity and transparency because at the end of
the day, I don't want you to just do what
I say. I want to live a life that shows
you that it's difficult for me to do it too.
(51:24):
But at the end of the day, we keep reaching,
we keep stretching and pressing towards that mark because we
do believe that there's a higher calling. Now this might
be a stupid question, but do you do listen to
hip hop? How did you feel when you used to
Brenda's Got a Baby? This is a great question. I think.
I don't know. You know, I do feel like I
(51:46):
felt like you know, I can understand Brenda. But you know,
for some reason, dear Mama sit out in my mind
more because I wanted my son to be able to
say that to me. Now, even though I wasn't a
crack fee. You know, I think the idea of this
broken mother whose sons still found a way to honor
and value her really played out in my heart is
something that I hope my someone will be able to
(52:06):
say about me. Wow, you know my last question, because
you know we're talking about evolution. When you evolved from
your past failures, when you evolved from the times you
came up short. We have to give each other grace.
I ask your father that I ask your father this
question this week. Ask Kelly price it this week. Why
doesn't this error give more grace? How important is grace?
(52:27):
Grace is so important? But I think that it's so
easy to make a judgment. We don't really have a
generation that has to sit with things, because even the
way social media said that we're moving from one headline
to the next headline, and grace is something that you
have to really sit in. It's something that you have
to stretch your heart to make capacity for. And yet
(52:48):
I think, because we're constantly inundated with information and experiences,
that we make a quick judgment so that we can
move to the next thing. And I think that what
we're going to find in My husband and I talk
about this all the time. We don't fully understand the
implications of social media. But what I do think we're
going to find over time is that people haven't had
an opportunity to fully process the information overload that we're
(53:09):
exposed to every single day. It's way too much. It's
way too much. Well, I mean, I think it's only right.
We didn't do this with your father. I don't know why,
but it's only right that we end with a prayer.
If you don't mind leading us in a prayer. Absolutely, God,
we acknowledge your presence. We acknowledge that you are all knowing,
You are all powerful, and yet there are moments where
(53:30):
we know nothing and we don't always feel powerful. We
invite your presence into those parts of our lives, into
our marriage dynamic, into our family dynamic, into our dreams,
our hopes, our purpose. You are all knowing, You know
the path that we will take, and so we ask
that you would bring us into alignment with what you're
(53:50):
going to do in our lives. That you would help
us to release anything that doesn't look like you and
embrace the goodness connected to our identity. Forget of us
for thinking too small. Sometime it's thinking too big, and
allow us to step with confidence in the assurance that
you are always with us in Jesus name, Amen, Amen.
(54:11):
Queen Sarah Jake Roberts, the book is Woman Evolved. Break
Up with your fears and the revolution now your life.
Sarah Jakes Roberts, you are so necessary man. I told
you this before, but you and your father man, y'all
really helped helped a brother like me get through twenty
twenty with your words. Man, so so so thank you
for being you. Thank you, thank you, Thank you guys
for letting me come back on twice. I did the
breakfast clause twice, the one you know what they said,
(54:34):
they just said it didn't record. Okay, I'll be back
now when when, when everything clears up. I definitely want
you in mister Torreyan studio. I think that would be
incredible for our listeners. I always love that. Thank you all,
Thank you so much, Sarah Jake Roberts. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning. This is the rumor report with Angela. Well
(55:04):
before DMX passed away, he was back to work and
he was planning for this to be a big comeback year.
There were rumors that he was working on a brand
new album with Swizz. According to reports, that album has
been completed and was getting ready to be released this summer.
Now they're also saying that he has a documentary that
he had been working on. In that documentary was supposed
to come out on HBO Max. So I'm not sure
(55:26):
where they are with that right now, but you know, supposedly,
hopefully something like that will get a chance to see.
He was also working on doing more movies as well.
So here's a new song, X Moves Now. This song
was released a few hours prior to DMX passing, and
it features Bootsy Collins as well as the drummer from
(55:47):
the rock band Deep Purple and the guitarist from the
rock band Yes, I Make moves to give me where
I'm going. If it makes perfect sense for extra be
(56:16):
doing rock music with that voice, in that energy, I
want to doctor def Jam. I'm not supposed to come up. No,
this was actually a different project. Okay, this was Yeah,
that was a collaboration. But the label that actually put
this out, Cleopatra Records, put that that out right before
he passed away. All right now, def Jam Yeah. Def
(56:39):
Jam also compiled DMX's prayers for lifelong Inspiration a Dog's
Prayer EP, and that hit streaming services early on Friday.
Track number two of this is called Prayer three, was
played during his vigil outside White Plans Hospital on Monday,
where hundreds of people gathered to celebrate DMX and spread
some positive energy. Lord Jesus, it is you who wakes
(56:59):
me up up every day, and I am forever grateful
for your love. This is why I pray. You let
me touch so many people, and it's all for the good.
I influenced so many children. I never thought that I would,
And I couldn't take credit for the love they get
because it all comes from you love. I'm just the
(57:20):
one that's giving it. And when it seems like the
pressure gets to be too much, take time out and pray.
And that's that. You be my crutch. Mmmmm, y'all cried
over this weekend. Man, when DFX passed. I cried, Like
I really teared up and cried because it's he's such
he was such a good person and such a given person,
(57:43):
and and and the circumstances of why he started using
drugs and the whole story, and you know how he
talks about his mom and how is he you know,
he was supposed to go visit a group home and
his mom left him at the group but like his
whole life. Yeah, it made me really cry, man. Yeah,
but he was he was still in an annointed individual.
I say it all the time. Every time you was
around DMX, you saw and you felt God. And if
(58:05):
you didn't recognize God in DMX is because you're too
busy looking, you know, in people in places where you
believe God should be. But that don't mean God is there.
But he was definitely a DMAX. Yeah. What I love
seeing was everybody telling their random stories. Like one girl
was on social media and she was talking about how
she heard him in the hallway at the hotel she
(58:25):
was staying, yet she ran out there to talk to him,
and he's the reason that she forgave her father who
had addiction problems. I saw a lot of people just
telling these stories about running into him and what their
experience was like. And I think that's great. Like I
think just the way that he lived his life, the
way that he's being remembered right now is extraordinary and
(58:46):
it's inspirational. All right, that is your rumor report? All right,
Charlemaie who giving a Donken too? Oh man, we need
that police officer in Virginia. What's that bum ass guy's name?
Is his name? I can't remember his name right now,
but he need to come to the front of the congregation.
We like to have a world with him. All right,
we'll get into that. Next it's Joe Gutterres. Yes at
(59:07):
the next whatever, it's the breakfast Club. Come morning, the
Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same. Your
Angela here and what your real Insurance has been helping
people save money for nearly sixty years. They offer the
quality coverage you deserve at prices you can afford. Make
the right call and go with the General called eight
hundred General or visit the General dot com. Some restrictions apply.
(59:30):
Don't be out here acting like a donkey. It's time
for Donkey of the Day. I'm a big boy. I
could take it if you feel I deserve it. Ain't
no big deal. I know. Charlotmagny got grow out funny.
You gotta say something you may not agree with. Doesn't
mean I'm doing what's getting that donkey that donkey that
don't don't don't don't don't donkey other day right here,
(59:52):
you can call me the Donkey of the day. I
mean no harm. Yeah, Donkey of the Day for Monday,
April twelve, goes the Joe Guterrez am I pronouncing his
last name right, Joe Guterrez Gutierrez. Here's the police officer
accused of using excessive force during a traffic stop in
Winds of Virginia. First of all, we saw the video, Okay,
(01:00:15):
I hate having to use the words accused for things
that we all saw. Saying he's accused of using excessive
force still creates doubts in the brains to some humans
who don't want to accept the fact that there's absolute
systemic racism in law enforcement, that a large majority of
law enforcement officials having plicit biased towards black and brown people,
and it results in situations like this. Okay, calling him accused,
(01:00:36):
all right, saying he's accused for something we all saw,
it's a slap in the faced all intelligence. And once again,
you know, they get the benefit of the doubt, a
presumption of innocence even though they are on camera that
we don't get for nothing. Okay. Now, if you didn't
want to be triggered this weekend and you avoided the video,
I totally understand. I didn't watch the whole thing. My
damn self had to turn it off. It's too much, okay,
(01:00:57):
because as a black man, I cannot watch that video
out immediately putting myself in that situation and the way
my anxiety is set up, I can have a panic
attack just watching this brother's trauma. So let me explain
to you what happened. It's a really simple A police
officer in Virginia confronted a uniform black Army lieutenant at
gunpoint and pepper sprayed him during the traffic stop. Would
(01:01:21):
you like to hear some of it so you can
hear how ridiculous this all sounds. Well, let's go to
w VEEC ABC thirteen for the report police. It's the
traffic stop getting national intention. An Army second lieutenant is
suing the Windsor Police department after he says that traffic
stop turned violence. Now the town of Windsor is responding
to calls for transparency. On Sunday, the Town of Windsor
revealed they conducted and completed their own investigation into the
(01:01:44):
December traffic stop with Army second Lieutenant Corona Zaudio. The
investigation shows that department policy was not followed and disciplinary
action was taken. Officer Guccierz, the man responsible for pepper
spraying Zaudio, was fired from the department. Windsor Police. It's
also implemented additional training back in January following the investigation.
(01:02:05):
Now the Virginia State Police has been called to conduct
a separate investigation. The town of Windsor did not release
any information involving the second officer, Daniel Crocker. Can we
hear some of the actual traffic stop? Do we have
some of that? It's only myself? Why are your weapons drawing?
What's going on? Do you have a car? Now? I'm
serving this country and this is how I'm treated? Yo?
(01:02:25):
What guess what? I'm a run two? I don't know. Bay,
get out of the car. What's going on? What's going
on the sun? I'm honestly afraid to get out? Can
I get out now? I have not committed any crimes.
You're gonna stop my croology. You're not walk with it
at this point. Right now, you're you're being detained. Okay,
you're being paid fig violation. I do not have to
(01:02:47):
get out of the veh because you haven't even told
me why I'm being stopped up. I don't even want
to reach my seat. Take your seatbut off and get
out of the car. You made this way. Won't do
it all to be? Oh? He made it what difficult
than it had to be? He did. America is the
most fake patriotic country in the world. Citizens of this
country don't really love America. Y'all love the idea of America,
(01:03:10):
not the reality of America. I really wish America would
just admit that freedom, liberty, and justice is not for all. Okay,
I really wish they would just admit that when they
said we the people, that that wasn't inclusive of all people.
I mean, it couldn't be when black people were laeled
three fifths of a human and those same documents would
looked at as property, not people. Okay. For white folks,
it was we the people. For black people, it's we
(01:03:30):
the property, okay. And that systemic racism has invaded every
single institution in the country, but probably no place greater
than law enforcement and the medical system. So much so
that regardless of what race you are, when you have
that blue uniform on, you become what you may have
once hated. Okay. And regardless of what uniform those of
us in the lowercast system have on, we still get
(01:03:51):
treated like niggas. Okay. Do you realize how ridiculous this
video is? Okay, let me break it down in terms
of cartoons. So you can't understand a mad Chief Clancy
Wigghams in the Springfield Police Department from the Simpsons doing
something like this the Duke from G I Joe, you
can't even imagine that, right exactly, Not to mention, neither
of the same people who probably feel Colin Kaepernick was
(01:04:12):
disrespecting the military by kneeling during the national anthem, will guys, Okay,
this is why Colin kneild. And if taking a knee
during the national anthem is disrespecting the flag, then please
tell me what is Pepper spring a second lieutenant in
the Army during a traffic stop. Considered. If you ever
needed proof that America truly doesn't give a damn about
his veterans, active or otherwise, man, this is it. Okay,
(01:04:35):
I've gotten on this radio instead of a million times.
If you serve this country, you should never want for anything.
You should get free room and board. You should get
the best free healthcare. You should be able to get
a free education at any university in this country whenever
you want. You should be tax exempt, Okay. You should
get a stipend every month to take care of expenses
like bills, food, etc. If you are a military veteran
who has put their life on the line for this country.
(01:04:58):
You should be treated like a goddamn royal. Okay. At
the least you should not be standing around begging for change,
and at the least you should not be pepper sprayed
while you are in full uniform. If they do that
to this brother, Karen Karen Karan Nazario, then our black
assides don't stay in a chance, Okay. And I know
(01:05:18):
y'all racism apologists will say, why didn't need Jos comply?
Why was he resisting? I'm so sick of y'all acting
like number one, I can't question the police when I'm
pulled over. Yes, I want to know why I'm being stopped.
And two y'all And by y'all, I mean you racism
apologies and police officers. Have you ever had a gun
in your face? Have you ever just had a gun
(01:05:39):
pointed at you? Not only a gun in your face,
but a gun in your face by someone that you
can't just defend yourself against. Okay, anyone other than a
cop pulls a gun out on me, I can pull
mine and defend myself. I can't do that against police
officers without facing severe consequences and repercussions. Okay, severe consequences
and repercussions they would never get Okay, but y'all acting
(01:06:03):
like having a gun in your face is normal. You
got a gun in my face and you're giving me commands,
and I'm shook because of all other times I've seen
and heard of people getting killed by police. Sorry, if
I can't hear you over me myself. Okay, we keep
backing like these and random insiness. We keep backing like
police officers don't understand the power they possessed. They say,
if we just comply, if we just obey, everything will
(01:06:23):
be fine. Listen to this brother, Karan Nazario attempt to
explain to the officers that he's scared, and rightfully so
listen and then listen to their reply. What's going on?
What's going on? Sun? I'm honestly afraid to get out,
can I? I don't even know what the hell he
said in the beginning. Okay, he's talking like he's from Ascard.
(01:06:45):
Did he just threaten his brother with lightning? What did
he say? Played at the beginning part? Again? What's going on?
What's going on? Sun? What the hell is he? Well?
I don't even know what he's said. You're about to
ride the lightning, I guess, meaning they are about to
get about to taze him. Well, dude, who is he
the officer thunder? What the hell is he talking about?
Are you about to get hit with lightning? Okay? I
(01:07:06):
don't know what the hell he's saying, and I don't
have time to figure it out when you have a
gun in my face. But when I tell a police
officer I'm scared and the copy replies, you should be, well,
I definitely heard that. I definitely understand that. And once
you stay that, to me, as a police officer, what
is there to discuss? This sounds pretty non negotiable to me.
Sounds like former officer Joga Terrez has his mind made
(01:07:26):
up and I'm probably about to die. Okay, Now Joga
Terres has been fired and Karen Nazario is suing, saying
that the officers violated his constitutional rights. You think, okay,
and I know that he will win and I pray
to he wins. But this officer being fired doesn't seem
like enough at all. He needs to be arrested and
charged with a crime. The wins All Police Department fired
(01:07:46):
him and they said that their policies were not followed. Okay, Well,
being that their policies were not followed and this guy
went rogue, then I think that's a sault, all right.
That should be a sault with a deadly weapon. That's
a crime point in presenting the fire on that's the crime.
He should be charged. Okay. His pensions should be used
to pay whatever civil suit. Karen Nazario wins. That's why
(01:08:07):
abolishing qualified immunity is so important because if you get
rid of it now, you can directly sue police officers
and other government officials. Imagine if you could sue these
nutass police officers for damages in civil court and it
came out of their money, money they currently have and
their future pensions. I guarantee police officers would immediately start
moving different if the consequences to their actions were losing
(01:08:30):
their pensions and prison time. But as it currently stands,
nothing happens to them when they do stuff like this
to us. There's a quote about veterans I read once,
and it was the willingness of America's veterans to sacrifice
for our country has earned them our lasting gratitude. Is
this what lasting gratitude looks like America because to me,
(01:08:51):
this looks like, oh this is the mother Eppan thinks
I get. Please, let rem Mark give Joe Gatirez the
biggest he haw he haw he ha stupid mother? Are
you dumb? I have no idea if I was pronouncing
anybody's name right in that hole, I don't think he was.
What you tried, that's the that's the that's the best
thing about it. God knows my heart, and y'all know
the story. There you go, all right, Well, thank you
(01:09:12):
for that donkey today. Now up next, let's talk Kid
cutting Now. Over the weekend, Kid Cutty was performing on
Saturday Night Live and he wore a dress. It was
an off white dress. I guess me, off white dress
like the color. No no to design the vir dress
company off white. Oh, he designed the dress for him.
People are saying this was a tribute to Kurt Cobain
(01:09:34):
because Kurt Cobain wore a similar type of dress. So
we're just asking what are your thoughts. Let's open up
the phone lines eight hundred five eight five one on
five one. We'll talk about it when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning in right now at
your opinion to the Breakfast Club topic break it Down
(01:09:54):
eight hundred five eight five one on five one the
Breakfast Club, It's topic time called eight hundred five eight
five one oh five. Wanted to join it to the
discussion with the Breakfast Club talk about it morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Angela yee. Charlemagne the guy we are
(01:10:18):
the Breakfast Club. Just a second ago, Charlemagne gave officer
in Virginia donkey today and when he said, ride the lightning.
People are hitting me and I thought it was a taser.
I asked the police officer. They said, that's being tased,
but they said it means the electric chair. I guess,
what the hell are you gonna find an electric chair?
He just carried those in your cars. I don't know,
but I guess that's what he was. Former police officer
(01:10:39):
Joe Guterres, Right, yes, all right, now, if you just
joined us with talking about Kick Cutty. Over the weekend,
he was performing on Saturday Night Live and he wore
a dress. This dress was designed by Virgil who was
one of the owners of Off White. You know, he's
also a designer for Louis Vutan as well. Now, they're
saying this dress wasn't. Kick Cutty tweeted Very just designed
(01:10:59):
the chests for me. I told him I wanted to
show love to Kurt with a floral Prince sun dress,
and this man made a masterpiece. Thank you, you're fffing genius.
Love you man. We did it to Virgil and then
he said, I'm doing a collection with off Fight and
the dress will be included. All right, So we're asking
eight hundred five eight five one O five one, what
are your thoughts on the dress? Yee m? What do
you think? Um? I think it was too tight on top.
(01:11:23):
You know, fellas, when you wear a tight T shirt,
you know when you know, sometimes you uee to fill
us with a tight T shirt and it rolls up
on the neck. That's what it kind of did on
this cleavage and his under arm areas. Yeah, I just
thought it was too tight on the top. The bottom
was fine for me, but I think the top of
it was just looking a little restrictive. M if Leland clevelange,
he needs to do some push ups. Why the hell
does he have Cleveand Okay, I don't want to see
(01:11:44):
no man titties, all right, but I don't care I
can't tell you how much I don't care about this situation.
When when people told me about it, I asked the
same thing I asked with anything. Why they told me to,
why it was a tribute to Kurt Cobain. Nothing else
to think about it in my mind. And plus this
has been done a million times before. Dennis Robin in
the wedding dress that I believe Andre three thousand Ward
(01:12:04):
dressed like Garbs. Before we saw a young thug asap Rocky,
Kurt Cobain, Martin in Big Mama's House, Martin and Chene
Nay Jamie Fox's Wander. We've seen this a million times.
I don't care. I'm actually more disappointed that Cutty didn't
do something more original, But I could care less that
he was wearing a dress I could care less. And
by the way, April fifth is when Kurt Cobain actually died,
(01:12:24):
So this was in tribute because it was close to
that date. And it's the kind of a similar dress
to the one that Kurt Cobain wore on the cover
of the magazine The Face in nineteen ninety three. Dukes too,
if I'm not mistaken, some little short short jean shows
little short jean shorts. I ordered it for you for
Father's Day this year, so I know that it's it's
slim on the top and you got kind of wide
(01:12:46):
wide hips. Would you why would you want me to
wear it? I'm not wearing a dress. I got it
for you. It's the style. Well, you wasted your money,
so off White, you wasted your money. Give it to
your son. Let Logan wear, that's all. He's not wearing it. Well,
I can't Logan wear. I think it. Let it fit
you because he's not into that. But I think that
not in the one. I'm not into it either, So
(01:13:06):
well because I got hits in some asks. You want
to see me in the sun dress? I know a
sun dress season, but knock at off. I did like
about the dress was the cut of it. It's the
type of dress that kind of goes in at the waist,
so it gives you a waistline, but then if flares
out at the bottom, so it does. I think it's
perfect of I'm upset that Kid Cutty wasn't more original
because Kick Cutty is. You know, he's always been an innovator.
(01:13:26):
He's always ahead of the curve on things we've seen
you know, rappers and dresses men and dresses them. What
did you want him to wear? Don't what? What did
you want to see him in? I don't know, I
don't know. I just I just I just wanted more.
But I get it though, because it was a trip.
It was a tribute to Kurt Cobain, so I understand
if he was paying how much of the Kurt Cobain.
I totally get it. Not mad at that, right. He
(01:13:47):
wasn't wearing a dress just to wear a dress. It
was and in tribute, Yes, yes, yes, all right, Well
let's go to the phone line. Hello, who's this? Hello?
This is dwre You doing a dl Was something man,
kick Cutty wore a dress over the week? Or were
your thoughts? First of all, I want to say hello
to all y'all. Man, I love all y'all, man, Thank
you king all. I want to say, man, it's something
(01:14:08):
crazy how Hollywood is changing our black man. It just
seemed like they're trying to emasculate them. You know what
I'm saying, Kid Cuddy blood Nahs, you got Playboy and
CARDI like it. Just a list just keep growing, you
know what I'm saying, old to you? Young man. Yeah,
you young see I I've seen this a million times already,
(01:14:28):
you know what I'm saying. I've seen Dennis Robin in
the wedding dress. I've seen Martin Lawrence in Big Mama's house,
Martin Lawrence dressed up in Chene, Nate Wanda, you know,
Jamie Fox dressed up his Wanda, Tyler Perris. But I've
seen this a million times, Andre th thousand, so this
ain't new to me. So I don't even understand what
y'all be talking about when y'all say like or to
try to emasculate men, and YadA, YadA, YadA. It's been
(01:14:49):
going on forever, Like come on, man, it just seemed
like right now, it seems like it's just almost like
they trying to put shit like you know what I mean, Like,
but how is Hollywood doing it? If it was a
decision he made to do it, it's not like that
anybody forced him. Hollywood didn't force him. I feel like
they're getting paid, you know what I'm saying, because they'd
(01:15:10):
be certain things they'd be standing about for so many
years and then they just randomly, you know what I mean,
just switch like He's like, are you twenty three. I've
seen this a million times before, sir, you know what
I mean. And the great part is when when Martin
used to do it his wand I mean we just laughed.
Jamie would do it his wand did we just laughed
(01:15:33):
and like, oh, that's just Andre being Andre being a
centric Like I don't I don't think it's an attack
on black masculinity. All right, ladies, all right? Well eight
d five eight five one oh five one? What did
you think of Kid Cutty wearing a dress on this
Saturday Night Live performance? Let's talk about it. It's the
Breakfast Club comring, call me the Breakfast Club top on
(01:16:00):
how did five five morning? Everybody is j Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy? We are the Breakfast Club. Now, if
you just joined us with talking about Saturday Night Live
and Kid Cutty he wore a dress over the weekend
and we're just asking your thoughts. Hello, who's this Rick? Whatever?
(01:16:23):
What's going on? Yo? When it comes to kick Cutty
right like, this is America. Anybody who do what they
want to do. I don't think he hasn't been doing
seen cloudy that, but I just want to know what
it has to do in hip hop, like it, it
doesn't make any sense just saying Kim Cutty is showing
some kind of uh the looting Kurtkobane. When the last
time you heard people Bane Cutty in the same sen
(01:16:44):
like Apple the argument or no kid Cutty kick Cutty
as a Kirk cooleban tattooed. You know what I'm saying.
He's always talked about how you know Kurt Kurt Coban
inspired him. Yeah, but I know they both have two
inside old doors tissues like that, But like what once there? Well,
I don't I don't get it. This is not him.
I don't see how him pop. Well, the song was
called Sad People. Kurt Cobain died on April fifth, so
(01:17:07):
it's close to the date of the actual Saturday Night
live show, so that's why he was paying tribute. Yeah,
and it's music too, Rick though. I mean, at the
end of the day, musicians inspired musicians are inspired by
other musicians, Like they don't have to be rapping rap. Yeah,
I get that, but I just I just feel like
I don't I never got a filial Kick Cutty and
and christ Cobain. But I guess if you said he
had a tattoo and put sense, but it still doesn't
(01:17:30):
make sense my book. I just feel like him. I
feel like I don't seed the two ideas something together.
And he's not the first one to wear dress the
Rocky Walls dress. Ye first first, not about the dress.
I just need the ideas. I don't know, but the
general public, I don't know if it's continuing something together.
I mean it might have been more powerful just to
wear Kurt Coleman T shirt. Yeah, but I'll be honest,
(01:17:51):
I mean, way what he wants to wear. I I
necessarily they don't care whatever makes him, whatever makes him happy,
you know. I mean, I know I don't give a damn.
I can't tell you how much I don't give a
damn I could because because from just him wearing the
dress standpoint, like I've said, and other people up that
called up here, I said, We've seen that a million
times from a million different entertainers and athletes and rappers.
I just to me, I'm like, damn, I'm more disappointed
(01:18:13):
Cutty didn't do something more original. But I get it
if it was a tribute to Kurt Cobain. But I
got a salute Demitria lucas Man. She brought up a
good point on our Instagram. She said she doesn't care
about the dress, she cares about the Cobain of it all,
because Cutty is a human who openly battled depression and
suicidal thoughts, and he's closely identifying with an artist known
as much for his music as his suicide at twenty seven.
(01:18:36):
So she was like, you know, somebody needs to do
a wellness check on Cutty. I tend to agree with that, yes,
as a Cutty fan drop. I think the correlation between
the two kind of bounced off of Rick Setting, and
what you're saying is Kurt Cobain was ridiculously vulnerable in
his music, right. He laid it all out there and
told you I was feeling he was suicidal, all that stuff,
and that's what people loved about Cutty. So he took
that attitude of being vulnerable and brought it to a
(01:18:57):
space in hip hop that was not open to that
kind of conversation before him, not to make Cutty who
he is. And I think that's why the tribute with
the death of Kobe as I don't think it's necessarily
a dangerous thing like he suicidal, just paying homage to
a person made him feel comfortable enough to be open
about what he was going through. The second thing you've
ever said on this raider that made sense, Drama, congratulations,
I'll tell you, man, and listen. At the end of
the day, he wore that dress and now everybody's talking
(01:19:18):
about it, and that was kind of the point the first.
The first was something about Spanish people. You know, Drama
was something Drama said about Latinos that made sense, which
is rare because he doesn't even speak Spanish. That's not true,
but he claimed all Rutino and he hated Bad Bunny.
Two years ago, Lulu and Lallah told me, they told
me guy's crazy movie. That's crazy. That's all. Now all
(01:19:39):
morning he's been here, Like, man, I really wish Bad
Bunny would have didn't have his shirt on that WrestleMania.
You will say anything every day, say anything other thing
you said that. I heard him. He was like, yo, Bunny,
He's like, yeo, why Bad Bunny had a shirt on?
He was like he had disappointment in his voice. That's right,
he said, I wish he took that shirt off. I
heard him myself. See God, I hate this place. You too,
(01:20:00):
All right shirt on Dramos. Did Bad Buddy have a
shirt on a reformation? You noticed he had a shirt
on what do you mean it? He had a whole
off of up. I noticed that, which never man. Yea,
we got rumors all the way. Let's talk about Sweetie
and Quavo. There were rumors that Quavo had reposed this
Bentley which were squashed, but now he brought it back
up and it looks like Sweetie is responding in a
(01:20:22):
fun way. All right, we'll get to a nextus. The
Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. It's about the
rumor report, Angela yee fund the Breakfast Club. All right,
(01:20:43):
this morning we are talking DMX au throughout the morning
and d rough Riders founder D and former manager Craig
Broadhead and spoke to Lisa Evers and they were talking
about DMX's legacy and also about the recording of this
new album that's coming out. And here was what D
had to say about the album that was recorded in Nashville, Tennessee.
It's just sad that he ain't gonna be about the music.
(01:21:04):
We did all the albums, but this zone right here,
especially like you probably never heard no music like you
heard on this one that we did just now. This
is probably one of his great albums, one of the
best classic. So it's just gonna be the Death Jam album. Yeah,
I mean his next album is on def Jami. I
would assume, right, yeah, everybody, that's what Yeah, Swiss because
(01:21:26):
when Swiss was on Breakfast Club a couple of years ago,
he said that DMX had resigned with Def Jam and
they were working on the new album and one if
that's the project he's talking about, has to be right, Yeah,
I would think so. All right, now let's talk about Sweetie.
People are feeling like she's responding to Quavo claiming that
he took back the Bentley that he got here got her.
In case you haven't heard it, here's a snippet from
that song sneaking. All right, Well, Sweetie did a skit
(01:21:58):
and this is a cute skit. This is her Risk
Bonds where it's basically her. She's playing both roles and says,
I know that's wrong, besties or front of me is
And here's what the skits sounded like. Nope, I haven't
seen them. I can't find them anywhere. But why an't
you driving my car? Us I don't know. Don't be
losing my keys. I'm your best friend. I would never
(01:22:19):
see your keys. You write her, I'll bet give me
a her besties for lying. Oh, yes, she's playing it's
both yes, two different roles, but she's playing both rous
And then she's hugging her bestie and the girl that's
saying that she didn't take the keys, which is herself,
it is holding the keys behind her back. Oh, I'm
glad she's smiling about this situation. You know what I'm saying.
(01:22:42):
I would say, all you can do is joke about
it because people are gonna have things to say. Yeah,
because I would say, she's gonna cry in the car
if Quabo takes that Bentley back, but there will be
no car to crying. Yeah, she got her own money,
or she could buy an old card. Ugh, I'm sure.
All right now, this happened last week. The first woman
who had accused to Seanna Watson sexual assault has spoken out,
(01:23:02):
and her name is Ashley Solely. She's a massage therapist,
and she had a press conference that was arranged by
Houston attorney Tony Buzby, who was representing her and twenty
one other women who have filed lawsuits against him, and
here's what she had to say. DeShawn Watson assaulted and
harassed me on March thirty, twenty twenty, in my own
home doing what I love most, slash therapy. I blame
(01:23:25):
myself at times, which is insane. I can no longer
practice the profession and I love the most without shaking
during the session. Flashes of Watson's face rushed to me.
In the moment I think of his genus touching me,
which sends me into a tail spin. I suffer from
panic attacks, anxiety, and depression. All right, Deshauna Watson, on
(01:23:49):
his behalf, is denying these accusations of the women who
are led to use massages as a pretext to prey
on them, and the lawsuits. He's accused of exposing his
genitals to the women and forcing at least one to
form oral sex. And you know this is sexual assault
Awareness month. By the way, April is sexual assault Awareness
a month. So just putting that out there as well
for you guys. Now. In the wake of all this,
(01:24:10):
beats By dre terminated their relationship with him, and Nike
also suspended their endorsement deal with Deshaun Watson. And we
will keep you updated on what's happening in that situation.
All right. Kim Kardashian's shapewear line, Skims, it's reportedly worth
one point six billion dollars after a new investment. Yes,
there was a recent series of investments of one hundred
(01:24:31):
and fifty four million dollars and now they're seeing skims.
It is worth one point six billion dollars. Wo wow,
she is not playing everything. You've got to respect the
people because they're whatever they want about. Oh, she got
on because it was sex tape. It's a lot of
people out deal with sex tape who don't go on
to build billion dollars in plies. I don't know now.
(01:24:53):
The stylist who is prepping Janet Jackson, who prepped Janet
Jackson's look for the two two thousand and four Super
Bowl appearance with Justin Timberlake, is speaking out and told
Paid six at Justin Timberlake is actually the one who
pushed for the wardrobe malfunction in an attempt to outdo
Britney Spears and Madonna and Christina Aguilera, who had months
earlier kissed at the MTV Video Music Awards. According to
(01:25:14):
superstylist Wayne Scott Lucas he told Paid six instead of
doing something bigger than their performance, he wanted a reveal.
So in the end, as you all know, justin Timberlake
tore off part of her top and briefly revealed her breast.
He said, I wouldn't call it a wardrobe malfunction in
a million years. It was the most functioning wardrobe in
history as a stylist. It did what it was intended
to do. So he's working on a tellabook. He'll tell
(01:25:36):
that story in full for the first time and reveal
other secrets from the world of fashion and show business. Oh.
I mean, that's that brother's story to tell, and he
has every right to say it. But he could have
said that decades ago when it happened, and it would
have helped Janet Jackson out in the moment, like jointed.
What's the point of saying it now, right, don't know?
All right, Well, that is your rumor report. All right,
(01:25:57):
thank you, miss ye now shout out to revote. We'll
see you the more everybody else. The People's Choice mixes
up next, and let's start to mix off with some Dmax. Right,
let me know your request is Breakfast Club Good Morning.
So Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be the same.
Mountain Dew is partnering with HBCUs and an effort to
uplift the next generation of badass Black innovatives and entrepreneurs
(01:26:17):
with the Real Change Opportunity fun pitch competition, empowering students
to go out and do is it Mountain Dew dot
com slash Real Change to enter Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club,
Good Morning, Good Morning, Happy Monday and Mondays are great
for me right now because I look forward to my
(01:26:37):
show on Facebook and this episode two a mastery of
comedy for we the culture on Facebook. So make sure
y'all tune into that. We have four veteran comics who
are mentoring four up and coming comedians. On this episode,
these comics are going to hit the stage for the
first time in front of their mentors and it doesn't
go that well, so you gotta make sure you check
it out. Also, today I had went into an inn
(01:27:00):
view where Kwando Rondo and I think they're putting some
of that out today, So make sure you guys look
out for that too, absolutely and salute the my man
Kodak black too Man Salute the Yak. Yeah, put out
a record called, uh what is it East to Eastern
Miami and um he gave me an Envy a nice
(01:27:20):
little salute. He said, if you don't look at me
the way Envy looks at Charlomagne, he don't want it.
So so he didn't say that salute the Code I
didn't say that part. He mentioned us, but he didn't
say that part. But what did he say let me
hear it. Yeah. I liked that line, but I think
if you don't look at me the way Envy looks
at Charlomagne is very appropriate to you know what I'm saying.
(01:27:42):
So he didn't say that salute the code Black. Yeah,
you gotta come, y'all gotta come visit the breakfast club.
He han't been to the breakfast club in a minute, man.
All right, when we come back, we got the positive
notice the breakfast club comoning boarding everybody in stj Envy
angela Ye, Charlomagne and the guy we are the breakfast
club that shout out to everybody in the latter was
the land over the weekend planing up the car show,
(01:28:02):
measuring things out and getting things right. And then I
also stopped by a couple of my favorite spots, bqis
I love the food there. So I stopped by BQI.
Shout to Darrel, and then stopped by Revel shout to Tory.
And we also got a shout out to Sarah Jakes
roberts for joining us this morning, Women Evolved. It's a
new book is out right now go pick it up. Yeah,
I'm glad we finally got the got that interview correct.
(01:28:24):
Who were supposed to do it last week, but we
had technical difficulties. Man, but man, Sarah Jake Robertson is
a force in nature. I listened to her podcast, Women Evolved.
I watch it when she fills in for the Bishop,
Bishop td Jakes, her father when Bishop isn't given his sermons.
So salute to Sarah Jake roberts Man, her and her
father are absolutely necessary. I told people yesterday, I don't
know why y'all don't add Bishop td Jakes to your
(01:28:46):
self care Sunday routine, because that sermon he gave yesterday rightfully, mine,
Lord have mercy. He was barring up people in that one.
So salute to the Jake family. All right, well you
got a positive note. I do the positive notice, simple man.
It comes Jim wrong. If you are not willing to risk,
you