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April 1, 2021 89 mins

Today on the show it was just the guys today as Angela Yee was not feeling so well. They went over the latest entertainment news following Charlamagne's "Donkey of the Day" which he gave Newsmax host Greg Kelly the hee- haw for giving his reason on why he thinks legalizing weed is a bad idea, brcause he did it once with friends and woke up 4 days later in Kenya! Also, since Yee was not here it was time for Ask C & E where Envy and Charlamagne helped their listeners with their problems even though it seemed they may have made their problems worse!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
I've seen the triangle, right. I'm figuring it out for
some reason that the solid holding down, the bag rage
and the agitator the breakfast club. Everyone just kept telling
the prepad one word to describe the Breakfast Club would
be bottle impacting the coach that people watch the Breakfast
Club for like news and really be tuned in. Man,
I don't even always call this breakfast club. It's like

(00:23):
brunch nb ye and Charlomagne wake, got ass up, get
out of bed and listen to the Breakfast Club. Good
morning usca yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo

(00:43):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo Way. Angela is Choomagne the guy
what's up piece to the planet in thurn Down. I
heard um. I think I said ANGELI wasn't feeling well.
Are she sick or something? Yea. I want to see
what other feeling well. But I want to tell y'all something, man.
First of all, thank you to everybody who um listened

(01:07):
to We've Got Answers or started We've Got Answers yesterday
on Audible. It's an Audible original that I dropped yesterday,
because you know, if you're a black person who gets
tired of answering questions about racism to your white people's
your white friends. If you're a white person who feels
like you want to ask questions but you don't want
to come off as a racist or bigot, it, we
put this project together just for you. So I put

(01:29):
together like a black brain trust of people that I
highly respect, from doctor Claude Anderson to Teslin Figure Road,
to very D K. Williams to send it and Need
and Turning, brother Nori Muhammad, David Ban a lot of
different individuals, and I really, really, really and proud of
this project. I really do enjoy it. Welcongrats. Man. Let
me tell y'all a little story. So you know, in

(01:51):
the morning, I drive to work and I'm driving, I'm chilling,
I'm relaxing Headcock's pack and I'm just you know, just
thinking about all nice things in the world. Right to
my music up a little bit. That's not your music.
It's my girls mom riding to the music, but no
cruising down the highway. And I'm just chilling. I'm in
my son. I loved to the right and I see
Bay and I'm like, what the wh was? Gear out

(02:15):
was a huge billboard on the side of the road
when you come through the Lincoln Tunne. You see Charlemagne's
big ass head was pause pause coming through the Lincoln Tunnel.
He got like a big billboard and it says we
got answers. I haven't seen the check Yeah, not as huge.
Almost crashed. I try to put my phone out to
take a picture. You never do that, like you try
to take a picture of fast and I couldn't get
the phone out. I'm trying to slow up and people

(02:35):
behind me is beeping. It's on the Jersey side of
the New York side, so the Jersey side right before
you get through the Lincoln Tunnel, so the Linkol Tunnel.
If you're not from New York, New Jersey, it connects
Jersey in New York City. It's one of the major
water raide ways between the two. But there's a huge one.
They spent a lot of money on that one. Yeah
it's me. It's not the cheap one. It's me. Tamka
Mallory at many K Williams and doctor Claude Anderson on
the billboard right, yes, yes, yes, drop on the clues

(02:59):
bomb doctor Claude and see the author of power Nomics.
He's on a billboard. It should be. It's a billboard
and the one in he's talking about, and I think
it's another one in La on Sunset Boulevard. Yeah, now
this one. I haven't seen either one of them. Right
before you go to the lincot Tone. I'll take the
linkol tnel sometimes in the morning, and this morning when
I took it, I've seen that big ass billboard. I
tried to take my phone out to get a picture,
but it was it was too late. Thank you. Audible.

(03:22):
Audible's high class, but for its Seriously, I would love
for y'all to listen to the project. We've got an answers.
I think it's I'm very very proud of it because
it's very it's very very informative, and I think it's
a conversation that a lot of people want to have
but they're scared to have. So all our all our
white listeners on the breakfast Club, Uh, this is fore right.
It's not just for you, but it is for you

(03:43):
and can learn a lot. And the commercial is dope
that your shot was really really dope, real real. Audible's
high class. But I just want to ask you one question.
So in the commercial, you know, men and women come
in and you tell them, you know, hey, I want
to know about racist and we go out three. I
want to know about this out five. But one dude
came and when you told him three, you looked over
the counter and looked at his ass as he walked
for you see it too, right, because he looked a

(04:06):
little aggressive. Oh so you want to see his as
it was an aggressive white He looked like an aggressive
white male. I was just making sure that everything was
cool and cop aesthetic. Okay. They didn't want to call
for security, didn't want to do them like they do us. Okay,
all right, but just you know you check them out,
keeping an eye on them. All right. That's all right,
all right. Now we got some great guests today. Yes
to McBride's sisters will be joining us. Now. If you

(04:28):
don't know who the McBride's sisters are, they have a
wine called Black Girl Magic Wine. That's right behind you.
They ain't a yes, sir, My wife was actually sending
these out is um yeps over the holidays. It's really
really dope wine tastes great. They stay, they got a
whole bunch of things that they're working on, and we're

(04:49):
gonna talk to them. You don't really see too many
sisters black people in general in the wine business. And
what they're gonna talk to us about how they got
into the wine business. Now they're sisters, but they didn't
grow up with each They kind of met each other
when their father past. But they'll tell you all incredible story. Yeah,
incredible story. So we'll tell you all about it. Everybody
who don't really effort their half siblings, this is a

(05:09):
good uh good reason. Reason is maybe why you need
to give him a call, man, maybe why you shop.
All right, well we got front page news. Next ye's
not here. Uh that means we're winging it, winging it
on this five Thursday morning. It's okay, Yeah, we got
to talk about the Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine. We'll
tell you about it when we come back. It's the
Breakfast Club. Come on, let's go all right morning. Everybody

(05:30):
who sings that song? Who is it? That's Pop Smoke singing? Yeah, okay, okay, okay, yes,
Pops little Baby and the Baby. Hell, I love that.
I love that tune. Man, it's just like I know
how to shoot and I know how to fight. All right, Well,
let's get into front shooting and singing that you love
that I love that love that love that joint. Listen, man,

(05:52):
I am who I am? What you want me to do?
Goodness gracious, Well, today is opening day in baseball for
some of your favorite teams. Today, the New York Yankees
open up. It's gonna be the first time they're gonna
have fans in the stands in over a year. So
it's gonna be eleven thousand fans in the building. I
think that's twenty percent capacity. None of this makes no sense.
They do this all the time. They put they're increasing

(06:13):
the capacity in venue. But then you got to the
head of the CDC saying that we're headed for doomsday, Like,
which is it? Yeah, well, it looks like millions of
Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine doses have been ruined. They're
saying fifteen million doses have been ruined. They say Johnson
and Johnson hired another company to help make the vaccine.

(06:33):
They did something wrong, and fifteen million doses will be
thrown away. But they're saying the ones that are out
right now you're okay, that don't even make no damn,
that's what they're saying. They're saying the ones that are
out right now, Johnson and Johnson, you're good money, but
fifteen million doses had to be. I'm old. I'm not
an anti vaccine by any means, but yeah, I'm still

(06:55):
I'm still very skeptical about this COVID vaccine. So y'all
continue to go out there and do your thing. I'm
watching from Afar and now fires US vaccine saying that
it's one hundred percent efficient when it comes to youth
ages twelve to fifteen. I didn't know there was a
vaccine that was one hundred percent efficient. I've never heard
of a vaccine and having one hundred percent efficiency. Yeah,
that's what that's what they're saying. When it comes to

(07:16):
youth twelve to fifteen, they're saying it's one hundred percent efficient.
I don't know even the flood shot not one hundred percent?
Is it trim That's what they're saying on CNN. Now,
I'm not confront I've been hearing all types of cases.
I just went to the Immune dot Org right, and
it says no. The first line is no vaccine effective.
Give this to hi police, give that to impoliction. I

(07:41):
saw this yesterday on CNN too, and I saw the
guy say that, and I was like, I've never heard
of a vaccine being one hundred percent effective. Well, it
says among people sixteen to twenty five. I don't know, man,
I don't know what's going on out here in the streets. Yeah,
but you know, I've been seeing a lot with the vaccine.
I've been seeing that, you know, some people taking it
and been fine, Like I said, my parents are fine,
my wife is fine, I'm fine, dramas fun. And then
I've been seeing people that have been having some crazy

(08:02):
side effects. So, yeah, that saw somebody's skin peel off. Yeah,
I know somebody personally who developed Yeah, Poulsy balls bells,
Pauli balls polsy. But they said it's only temporary. So
it's just like, just don't know. You just don't You
don't know how the vaccine's gonna affect the body, and
you don't know how COVID's going to affect your body. So,
like you said, it is a crapshoot, you just don't know.

(08:24):
I know what, mass I trust, Okay, I to the vaccine,
and I still see mass. I trust in vitamins, inducing
our trust and masking our trust and washing my hands.
I trust absolutely now. In some sad news, four people,
including one child, were killed in a shooting at an
office building in Orange, California, Wednesday. Two other people were
injured in the incident, including the suspect. Police don't know

(08:47):
what happened or why. They're getting more details. And that
happened last night around five thirty pm LA Times. Is
that being considered a mass shooting? Should be? Right? Uh? Yeah,
it should be. They're saying that this is at least
a twentieth mass shooting since the Atlanta spot attacks two
weeks ago. Lord A Mercy, I'm telling you, man, a
good investment for any place that you know, any building

(09:08):
that has people, is arm security. Absolutely. I don't care.
I'm churches, grocery stores, you know, corporate buildings. Hey, man,
invest in arm security because I don't know what the
hell is in the people nowadays. All right, Well, lot
is front page news. Get it off your chests. Eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you're upset,
you need to vent hit us up right now. Maybe
you had a bad night or bad morning, or maybe

(09:29):
just want to spread some positivity. Eight hundred one O
five one huh, shut up. It's the breakfast club, good boy,
the breakfast club. Wake up. Wat you're trying to get
it off your chest, your man or blacks. We want
to hear from you on the breakfast bluck. Hello, who's

(09:50):
this yo? The Steven? Hey, what's up? Stephen? Get it
off your chests, broum. I need to get off my STU.
So I committed to a relationship race and some kids.
I was like, you know, Amy, got some control coming up,
so we set up you look up the tickets. You
said it even for the kids, like third as is
that true? Kids are? Kids are three and under? Free?

(10:11):
Oh three or another? Okay? Okay? And also the starlomine
or homicide just say somebody die, don't say don't even
try to pronounce it him yeah schalom his words at
the side. And also can I shoot my Instagram out here?

(10:33):
Sure it's uncle Puna with a paid you in a
l underscore Puna, Uncle what Puna? Okay? I brought I
see the car show Man July third in the landing Man,
And like I said, kids three and under absolutely positively free,
So bring the kids on out. Hello, who's this blessing? Guys?

(10:56):
Don't you doing it to you? Sound familiar? Yeah, I'm
better familiar. I just want to see that I don't
under the feel better and I just want to send
out some positive energy out this sad. A lot of
people know that I'm sharing Stone, A lot of people
know that I you know, I dropped the garbage shout.
But also I just opened my own black business and
I shot that out. Sure, So I just started my

(11:21):
own lemonade business and it's called Stone Tropical Linematee and
uh it's the best linemate that sounds there. It's very fresh.
And if any one of you guys want to shot
got to hit me up on my I G the
real sewn Stone one f C A T sewn Stone,
one of the SCA M S N E. And also
I want to shout out my boy Drink. He just

(11:42):
dropped a project on YouTube. His name is nyc Hi
and it's called Cotail. No, wait a minut, Wait a minute.
I'm glad that you I'm glad that you're supporting Nick G.
But I'm also glad that the record is called Coattails
because that's what you're doing. You're riding Nick GI's coattails
right now. You know what I'm saying. That's exactly what
you're doing, Nick gbat Trive and you've been riding in

(12:03):
cotails ever since. Okay, sewn Stone, Hello, who's this? Good morning?
This is Michelle calling out of Atlanta. Hey, Michelle, get
it off your chess. I want to actually fest spread
some poppitility this morning to all the small business owners
out there. Just want to let them know the stand
Shawn during this pandemic that we will survive and if

(12:24):
I can't, I want to shout my business out good.
All right, Um, so I have a pet taxi service.
My website is tax set at eet a xi Transit
dot com and it can follow me on Instagram at
paxbe Underscore Transit. So you just be transporting people's pets around. Yeah,

(12:45):
you know what, take back your time and we'll take
care of your pet. Okay, all right, well thank you mama.
All right, thank you, Get it off your chess. Eight
hundred five eight five one on five one. If you
need to vent, hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, Breakfast Club. It's your time to get it

(13:07):
off your chests. Whether you're man or blast so plea
but have the same insty. We want to hear from
you on the breakfast Club. Hello, who's this good morning?
This is AJ from Georgia. AJ, good morning, get it
off your chests, broum. I just wanted to get on
the air. I listen to you guys every day and
I want to thank you guys for the opportunity to
express myself. But I've been going to the doctor, me

(13:29):
and my wife for the past couple months to try
to figure out why we weren't able to have a child.
And long story short, they told us it's not you know,
it's not anything wrong with the egg or anything wrong
with me, but uh, she she basically needs IBS and
the doctor is pretty confident that if we get this

(13:51):
procedure that we'll have a kid. So I don't know,
I'm shooting my shot with you guys or anybody that
you guys know, or for the listener, or try to
raise some money for that procedure. We have insurance, but
the insurance doesn't pay for that procedure specific a go
fund me. Uh you know, we're not really on social
media like that. But this this is we just got

(14:14):
done with the appointment. I want to say last week
where they finally finally told us that I IVS would
be successful. So this is my first outreach. Well let
me tell you something, my brother. Um, you know, I
don't think it's anything wrong with with with with crowdfunding,
you know, like like Killer Mike said, if everybody does
a little, everybody nobody got to do a lot. But
I mean you got to have a place where people

(14:36):
can actually donate, you know what I mean. Yeah, you
can't if you can't just call the radio station and
say hey, I need some money, like where we're gonna
send it? Yeah, I got you, I understand. Um, I
just I'm in the process. I'll go ahead and see
what I can do as far as go fund me
is concerns. But I just wanted to definitely get on
here to see if you know, you guys can help

(14:59):
out a little bit. Yeah, so we can, but you
gotta help yourself a little better. You got to create
a spot where people can do it. I will say this.
You know, IVF does it necessary. It's not, it's it's
very it's it's not that efficient. Um, there are other
ways where you know people can help you get pregnant,
you should definitely not help him get pregnant. No, we'll
help his wife. Now if you want to try and

(15:20):
be shut up. I think he wants to try to
help get you. There's holistic ways that that work. Uh,
there's other ways that work. Because IVF is very expensive.
I mean you're talking it could it could run you
up thirty forty grand depending on how many procedures and
shots and all that other stuff. So I would also,
you know, you can definitely raise the money, but look
at other holistic ways that can can actually help as well. Yeah,

(15:42):
we've been we've been looking into a lot of stuff,
you know, but they ten pointed the main issue as
far as like her her too, you know what I'm saying,
And listen, that's the main issue. So he looked at
us and he told us and we've been to two
doctors and this is the user that has the highest percentage.
For you guys, davgate it because I'll tell you this

(16:04):
right and I don't even think we spoke about it before.
For my last child, Brooklyn, Uh, me and my wife
couldn't get we couldn't get pregnant, which was weird to
us because every other time, I mean, it happened so fast.
So we tried IVF and it didn't work, and that
procedure costs a lot of money. And um, right after it,
we uh just you know, regular sex and she got pregnant.

(16:25):
Um and that was from dtox and myself and she
dtox and there was different, different holistic things that we
did that. You know, I don't know if it worked
one hundred percent or maybe it could. It just could
have been God. But it did work. But IVF didn't work,
and it was very very, very very expensive. Set up
to go fund me, bro, Yeah, set up a gofund me.
I would check. I would check doctor Jesse, who's been
on here before. She has the dtox now she deals

(16:48):
a lot with it. Go to dtox now dot com
and they can definitely help you with your problem. You
could usually check them out first and then try to
IVF for good luck. BRO, appreciate it, get it off
your chest. Eight hundred five eight five one on five one.
If you need to vent, you can hit us up
at any time. Now when we come back, we got
to talk young Jock. Young Jock. Uh, he has a
spray on beard. And he's getting roasted for it, and

(17:09):
we'll talk about it when we come back. You can
shut up, you can relate. Shut up. I can't even
believe you got the audacity to talk about my bed
is real, like nigga. Please pullet. Put my pullet. It's
real something, but it ain't real. Hell, it is real
here all right, we'll talk about it when we come back.
It's the breakfast Club. The morning, the breakfast Club, all right, morning,

(17:32):
everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy. We
have a breakfast club. Let's getting some uh, let's get
to the rumors to talk young Jock. She's filling the tea.
This is the rumor report with Angela Yee on the
breakfast Club. The audacity of you to report this story.

(17:53):
So young Jock is getting roasted after debuting a fake beard.
That's right, Envy did it first. No, Now, I guess
young Jack has a spray on beard and people are
making fun of his beard. Um, he actually literally sprayed
it on, and people are upset about his nasty beard.
They talk calling it mud beard, calling it a bunch
of different ways. The audacity of you, the audacity of

(18:16):
you to bring this up. Come pull my head. We
have audio. Young put your face on live for a
thousand dollars. Nobody said it looked like black mudge now
public health. I guess he couldn't grow his bed so
he decided to draw it. You can replace envy with a
a young jock, can get those same jokes off. Okay,

(18:37):
let me ask you that question. Comes, Let me ask
your question. When y'all paint your bids on? You know,
when you drown yourself in so much Beijing, you look
like DMX covering in blood on his second album cover.
Who do y'all think y'all fooling like? We can see you, Bro,
my bed is real and the problem is, y'all don't
just get it on your head, you get it on
your flesh as well, whole chin looking suspicious. You know,
there's a statistic that says men will spray on bids

(18:58):
get pulled over by police that said times the raiders
men who don't do you know that, Bro? I have
a real bid. My bed is real, Young jocks is fake.
There's a picture you have the nerve don't touch dramas
as a person with a real bid in the room.
Do you believe dj NV's bid is real. No, and
I can't believe he has the audacity he's throwing stones

(19:18):
when he lives in the Beijing house. Yeah, exactly. You know.
Shakespeare once wrote, swear by one's bid sweared by the
hair on my chinny chin chin. If somebody with that
paint on their face swears by their hands on their
chinny chinchin, they like, it's not even this speare all right? Well,
Shout to Diddy, Shout out to my brother, Shout out
to Rick Raw, Shout to all my brothers out there. Man,

(19:40):
I see y'all out there. He just want to burn
everybody this house down because they wear Beijing as well.
It's just I just want y'all to know we can
see you. Okay, my bed is real. I don't know
what you're talking. Please, let's keep it moving. Romeo. Romeo says,
being a black man out there in the world is
never sunking. I stopped for a second. We're not gonna
just slid by this because you keep saying your bid
is real. Because that's not a lie. The bard is real,

(20:01):
my bed is real. You said my color of it
is not. The beard is real, but the color of
it is not your shout to call. That's your hair,
but the color of it is not Rick Ross shout
told my brothers out there and struggle without the struggle. Now,
as I was saying, little Romeo talks about driving around

(20:22):
the campus of UCLA and being careful if you're a
black brother. I remember the most recent time I was
at UCLA. Ucla, you get pulled over over there, you
better have that camera recording because they don't play no games.
But the guy pulled me over at gunpoint, a black cop,
and he was like, is this a stolen vehicle. I'm like, bro, relax,
like just come check out my registration and get my

(20:45):
driver license? Is this a stolen vehicle? And then when
he saw it was me, said, oh Romeo Miller, Oh
you're good. I thought she was just some random black dude. Yeah,
that's horrible. And if you're a black cop and you
look at other black men, is just random black men.
Don't think for one second white people don't see you
the same way. You ain't gonna always be in uniform, bro, bro, Yeah,
and you know the same I think about it is.

(21:06):
You know I used to get pulled over a lot
all the time. Driving a car and getting pulled over,
and it's it gets frustrating, and it gets to the
point when you get pulled over, you used to get
pulled over. You get pulled over. See how much? Yeah,
how many times I pulled over a lot? I just
told you the statistic that says men which bring own
bids get pulled over by police at six times. The
radio man who don't. I just said that. I'm not
being serious with you. Now. The bonder Roof Festival, a

(21:28):
music and arts festival, seems like they're opening up this
world again now. The Bonnaroof Festival is taking place September
second through the fifth. Is a four day festival. Artists
like Tyler the Creator, Megan the Stallion, Young Thug, Little Baby,
A Little Baby, Run the Jewels, Kevin Gates, Janelle Money, Lizzo,
Jack Harlowe, g Easy, Nellie Flow Millie, just a host

(21:50):
of others. So yeah, in Tennessee, SA, people can show up. Yeah,
that's four day admission. It is three hundred and twenty
nine dollars and VIP packages start off a thousands, not virtual,
not virtual. Wow, there's a camping festival too. Oh so
you gotta stay over, Yeah, so it's kind of like
you're creating your own little bubble in a way. Maybe
if you've got to stay over for four days though. Yeah,

(22:11):
well they haven't said, you know how they're testing people,
if you if you have to be tested, or what
it's gonna be. But that's gonna be a lot of
people to see this. So the world is open. Back up,
The world is open, sir. Yeah, all right, Well that
is your rumor report. Like I said, angela ye is out.
So when we come back, we got front page news.
I don't know what we're talking about next, but we'll
get to it when we come back. Oh Biden, never

(22:32):
heard of them, all right, but we're gonna talk about
it when we come back. It's a breakast lub of Morning,
the Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same.
When a train, it's a vehicle at a railway crossing.
The results are often deadly. Be cautious at crossings, and
if the signals are going, don't be tempted to try
and sneak across the tracks. Even if you don't see
your train stop. Trains can't brought to you by NITZA Morning.

(22:54):
Everybody is stej Envy Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We
are to breakfast club. Let's getting some front page news now.
It sports to know today is opening day for a
lot of your favorite baseball teams. I know the Yankees
have opening day today. They're only allowed, I believe, twenty
percent capacity, so it's only gonna be eleven thousand people
in the stadium today. All right, Now, let's talk about this,

(23:16):
uh Derek Shavin trial. Now, yesterday the bodycaren was released.
Yeah you see that. Unfortunately I did. Now, you know,
I can't really watch this trial. And the reason I
can't watch this trial is because it brings back all
those memories and it puts me in a dark place.
It's traumatic. Now I've been trying not to watch the

(23:37):
news either, you know, because the George Floyd ca is
a traumatic And I tuned into CNN and MSNBC for
a little while yesterday and I had to turn it
off because they keeps showing the video of George Floyd
over and over and then with the new body cam
footage that I saw what a cop had the gun
point of that George Floyd. And he's just like all
of us are when we're in the President of police begging.

(23:58):
He's begging for his life, like please, miss the officer,
don't shoot me. And I don't think police officers understand.
I'm trying to comply with you, right, correct, you got
a gun in my face exactly, and at the same
time you're telling me to do all of these different things.
Give me your license, give me your car. I'm not
I don't want to move. And I saw George going
through those different emotions. Correct, he put his hand on
the steering where he put his hands in the air.

(24:18):
He didn't know what to do except for big for
his life and after officer not to shoot him. I
don't think police officers understand the complexity of that when
you're a black man. Well, the body camera showed that,
you know, George Floyd was some dude. The officer's knee
was on his neck and he was pulling his arms up,
so he was using it was almost like he's using

(24:40):
his arms to pull George Floyd closer while I continue
to put the knee on his neck, so he's putting
more pressure on his neck. So that's what the body
cam showed yesterday. Now, also we have testimony of mister Martin.
He's the cashhier of this store. And let's let's play
his audio. What's going through your mind during that time period? Disbelieve,

(25:00):
Thank good, white guilt. If I would have just not
tooking the bills have been avoided. Yeah, And I don't
understand why, um, they keep trying to tell us George Floyd,
you know, was possibly intoxicated, he was high. What does
that matter? If being drunken high is a reason for
officers to kill people, why all the white people in

(25:21):
Floyda during spring break don't be getting killed? Could they
be drunken HIGHU day mind drunk? And I don't understand
what this one have to do with the other. It
makes no sense to me. Yeah, he said that. You know,
Floyd allegedly gave him a twenty dollar bill that appeared
to be fake, and he told him to come inside
and talk to the boss to pay for it, and
that's when the officer was called. In my opinion, that

(25:42):
has nothing to do with the officer putting his knee
on that brothers n and using his own arms to
pull more forth so he can have more pressure on
that brother's neck. And they keep trying, they keep trying
to say it was the intoxication. You know, that is
what caused Georgia understated. If you can say that if
he was fighting back, but he wasn't fighting, he wasn't moving. Listen,
he was not moving, he wasn't fighting back. I don't

(26:03):
care if he was whatever he had, he was not moving.
I enjoy getting drunk, I enjoy getting high off edibles.
I love plant based medicine. None of those things have
you know led me to almost die. It was the
knee in his neck, Yes, okay, that's what That's what
killed George Floyd. The knee from Derek chopping in his neck.
You know what else? Having me thinking to watching the

(26:23):
court case. I appreciate due process right, but it's amazing
to me that in the courtroom people can be skeptical
when there's so much evidence, a whole video from all
these different angles, but they're still trying to find doubt
in this story. But then you look at some place
like social media, where it can be lies, it can
be rumors, it can be allegations. All that's taken in fact.

(26:43):
So it just makes me wonder how people can be
skeptical and doubtful about things you actually see, but matter
of fact, about things. You have it, and I know
we have to go through due process, and I know
we have to go through trial. But some things that
just feels like do we really? Some can be quicker
than we really in this case the video. In this case,
it should be quicker than a see do we really? Yeah?
My goodness, in this case he should be quicker than others.

(27:04):
That's well. Joe Biden, he unveiled a two trillion dollar
job proposal. It's an infrastructure and climate crisis proposal where
they're gonna modernize twenty thousand miles of Rundown highways, roads
in Main Street, in ten thousand bridges. They're saying it's
gonna bring so many jobs, so they're gonna be five
hundred thousand charging stations it's supposed to bring like they

(27:26):
sit close to a one hundred thousand jobs. Now, my
only thing with that is it just seems weird all
the time that we find this money that we can
never find where the hell he got two trillion dollars
from the same place he got the eighty six million
to give Ice to build those hotel like conditions for
the kids at the border. I haven't read upon that
infrastructure plan. And I saw Joe Biden talking about it yesterday,

(27:48):
but I wasn't paying attention. Yeah, but you know, he's
getting two trillion dollars. They're building up a lot of
these rundown highways, roads and main streets and bridges. But
even but even with the proposal's gonna get the money
from I think, Yeah, but you look at all these
schools that are effed up. We can be helping these
schools out. We look at all everything else that's effed up,
these the projects and how they look, the kids that

(28:08):
they can't eat, and black people, black people in reparations,
loans and all that. But but we find two trillion
dollars for infrastructure climate plan. Not to say we don't
need it, but it's if it's that easy to find
that money, can't we find it for other things that's needed.
It's not when it comes to the people. Whenever they
need money for anything else, they spend one point what
seven trillion dollars on a goddamn failed fighter jet. But

(28:29):
when it comes to actually giving money to people, they
got to vote, you know what I'm saying, and go
through this whole process. It's such a struggle, and the
money actually needs to go to the people who need it.
And not only that. We talk about the stimulus checks
all the time, right, and people are grateful for the
stimulus checks for the help, right. But how many stimulus
checks were released? Three yea three checks released over a

(28:50):
year and a half. So let's say you get the maximum,
which is what three four thousand dollars if you have
a bunch of kids I don't remember, how is that
gonna hold you down for a year and a half.
How Like how they can't for a year and a
half to pay mortgage, to pay your rent, to pay
if you have a call, your electricity, your phone bill,
your kids, your food, all that money for a year

(29:12):
and a half. The jig is up on them. But
you find two trillion dollars for infrastructure climbing plant, the
jig is up on America. America's faking in DJ VS BID. Okay,
you know what it was. It was serious and it's
the truth, though, tell you that it's not real. It's
the same way we can look at Americans telling this
whole concept and freedom and justice and liberty for all

(29:33):
and equality, it's all being nonsense, you know, right, that's
front page news. Now when we come back, the McBride's
sisters will be joining us. That's right. The McBride's sisters
have a wine called Black Girl Magic. That's right. Yeah,
my wife was sending this out for the holidays as gifts.
But they have an amazing story. They have two sisters
that created their own company and the distributed distributing one

(29:54):
all over the country. They're doing well. They started from
nothing and they are successful. We're gonna talk to when
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the
Breakfast Club. Morning. Everybody is cj Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne
the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. We got some
special guest in the building. Yes, indeed, the founders of

(30:14):
the largest black woman owned one company in the US.
We have the McBride's sisters. Welcome ladies, Thank you, congratulations,
thank you, thank you. Robin and Andrea. That's right, have
such a Andrea, you have such an interesting story. Y'all
didn't even grow up together. We didn't. We grew up
in different countries. Wow, break that down. Yeah, how does

(30:36):
that happen? Right? Yeah, so I grew up we were
both born in La in California. Andrea grew up in
New Zealand and I grew up up the coast in
Monterey in California. So we have the same dad, but
we have two different moms, and neither one of us
had a relationship with our dads, so we didn't know
about each other. So Andrea's mom was originally from New

(30:56):
Zealand and she grew up in her mom's home country,
and I grew up with my mom. Didn't have Neither
one of us had any other brothers or sisters, so
we thought we were only children growing up, and we
didn't find out about each other until later in life.
I was twenty five, Andrea was sixteen, and our dad
was sick. He was terminally ill, so he asked his
family to please find both of his daughters. He didn't

(31:18):
know where we were, and this was back in the nineties,
so it took quite a long time, but they finally
found both of us and we got the chance to
meet actually here in New York. Yeah, for the first time.
For us, it was like an instant bond. Yeah, when
we first met, you know, once you kind of get
passed or like the shock and hugging and tears and everything.
It was like, what was it like where you grew up,

(31:39):
and we both grew up in these small, rural like
world class whine making regions and independent of each other,
we wanted to be whine makers, so that was kind
of a thing that we bonded over when we first met.
And then like when we met at the time, my
mom passed away when I was young and our dad
had passed away and I was living and foster care.

(32:00):
So when I met her it was like a big deal.
And growing up, I was good at athletics, so at
the same time, I was being recruited by most major
universities in the United States, so I was like, what sport,
track and field in valuable? So I was like, this
is my vehicle to get back to the USMB close
to my sister. So, um, it was just two weeks

(32:22):
and then it was like a lot of phone calls
and writing letters. Did you spray perfume on them or something?
I didn't spray perfume. Now kind of weird that a
romantic thing. You weren't being romantic. How did you get
into the wine business? And both y'all were into it individually. Yeah, Well,

(32:43):
because we grew up, we both grew up in places
that make wine, right, So we grew up with vineyards,
you know, in the background there was wine making families
all around us that it was kind of part of
like the places that we grew up. So we figured,
what are the chances that both of us grew up
in places that have that similar ground on the opposite
side of the world from each other, and then we

(33:03):
meet each other and find that out. We thought that
was probably a sign of some sort for us to
think about that. And then when I came back for university,
Robin had moved back to him on Terray and I
was in southern California, and like when you drive up
that coast halfway, it's just all central coast wine country.
So um, we would just like meet halfway and just

(33:25):
found ourselves, like getting to know each other as women
and sisters. Um. But then just kind of talking about
our dreams as our bond grew. Uh. Well, one day
we were like, why don't we do it? What's stopping us?
And we have two pretty big problems. One is like
we had no money and the wine and wine business
and um, and we don't know how to make wine.

(33:46):
Also that that's another another problem. How did y'all raise capital.
Everything you need to know on the planet, the answer
is on the internet for free, you know. So, like
we just started to look up up like how do
we do it? And we figured out that the best
place would be to learn the business of wine first,

(34:06):
and we were able to get a federal importer's license
and at the time it was eighteen hundred dollars. And
then what we did was we went down to New
Zealand and found a whole bunch of small family growers
and basically said, we can help build your brands in California,
bring your wines into the US, and at the same time,
we'll come down every year for harvest and you teach

(34:27):
us how to make wine. So we were learning the
business of wine while also learning our passion and becoming makers.
And we did that four from two thousand and five
until two thousand and nine. We made her first wine together,
and then we launched our company. So we actually started
she was still on her junior year in college when
we started the importing business. Yeah, and then launched the

(34:50):
company in two thousand and ten. And your question about
like how do we raise money, I know you're all
seen the statistics about black women down the doors to
get of money to a couple of black women in
the wine business who had no money and no experience.
That didn't happen. So from that first eighteen hundred and
ninety five dollars, we built our business for the next

(35:11):
fourteen years. Off of the selling one case of wine,
we bought another case of wine, so we just had
to build it on our own success for a very
long time. This is such you know, I didn't I
didn't know the whole story, but I was in this
so I always go to this black own liquor store here,
and so they had this front and center, and I

(35:32):
just liked the name of it, like I saw the
Black Girl Magic, and then I was like, let me
pick this up. And then I saw I posted it
actually in my Instagram stories just because I thought it
was a beautiful bottle and I liked the Black Girl Magic,
and then everybody started hitting me like, oh, that's the
McBride's sister. So that's when I went and I looked
at the whole story behind the wine, just because it's
not that often that you would see something called a

(35:52):
Black Girl Magic wine right in the store right and
most important to us, and I think different to us
getting to this business was we wanted to make it
accessible to everybody. So for the most part, like all
of our complete range or like sixteen wines you know,
are under thirty dollars the majority or under twenty dollars,
and they will have ninety plus point scores, which you

(36:15):
know in the wine industry like anything above ninety points
is super elite. So our whole ethos from day one
has been to just transform the wine industry, to lead
by example, and to cultivate community. So break that down
for a lot of people out there that the drink wine.
A lot of people don't know how to pick a wine.
You go into a store and there's a zillion wine

(36:37):
bottles that they don't know if it should be a
red or white, or if it should be a sparkler,
and how much they should pay. So like, what makes
your wine a good bottle of wine? Well, let me
stop by saying this. If people want to learn about
wine like that specific sort of like situation, we created
a wine school that's dope. Yeah, it's Cold McBride certified
and we're big believers of the thousands of wine and

(37:00):
surround the world. They all fit into nine styles. So
if you learn these nine styles, you'll be super empowered
on your journey. So, um, we would encourage people. It's free. Yeah, um,
so people need it because you know, people don't know
what wine glass they should use, you know, I see
people if yeah they should be smelling, if they should
be twirling? Like, people don't know, So break that down again. Yeah,

(37:23):
and what do you what do you pair with what?
When you talk about males, like what type of wine
are you supposed to pair with? Different things? Well, like
for us just in general on the wine industry side
of things, and the way we approach wine, like our
motto is like break the rules, drink the wine. So
we're always just like whatever you like, like that's the
place you're you're at on your journey and just like
embrace it. And then for the most part, now, like

(37:45):
when you go into a store wines that are between
I would say like sixteen dollars and twenty two, twenty three,
twenty four dollars, it's not going to be a poorly
made wine. You're gonna get a solid wine. Yeah, Like
like is not gonna give me a headache? No, any
wine will give you a headache if you drink too much. Yeah,
so drinking moderate, maybe maybe at six dollar bottle. But

(38:07):
what we also did too with these nine styles is that,
because you know, wine, information can be a lot, and
so we paired each style with like an iconic musician.
So it makes it really easy to kind of remember.
We take you through videos, we taste, we tell you
what food goes with that wine, what stemware, all that stuff.
All we got more with the McBride sisters when we
come back, don't move. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning morning.

(38:30):
Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We
are the breakfast Club. Naphew just joining us. We're kicking
it with the McBride sisters. Now. During the verses battle,
I see DeAngelo had a bottle of champagne. What's your
relationship with Dangelo? Wow? Well, we know were more married.

(38:55):
There's a kind of relationship. I'm sorry I heard wrong,
but no, we you know, on the last verses there
was a beautiful display of mcbrycist's wines. And you know,
during Lady, he was giving us a lot of shout
out and I was like dying a little bit. I
was like, if he just The first album I ever

(39:17):
bought with my own money was D'Angelo Brown Sugar. Wow.
So I was like, I died a thousand times the
whole night every time he said it was crazy endorsement.
He bought the wine himself. How did that work? Our
wines are available, you know, all across the US, and
Target is one of our fantastic retailers that carries our portfolio,

(39:39):
and they have an initiative called Black Beyond Measure, which
is really like highlighting and supporting black owned businesses. So
they had an opportunity to participate and they chose us
as the BROWND to be involved. Great. Yeah yeah, so yeah,
shout out to Targets. Yeah, absolutely, absolutely crazy crazy. I

(40:02):
mean like we are the largest black owned wine company,
like in the US, in the world, but we're also
in the top one percent of old wineries that some
terms of science and scale size. Yeah, how is it
being black women in this business? Because as we know,
like you said, for a woman black owned business, what
has that been like for you guys? Have you faced

(40:23):
a lot of obstacles because of it? Yeah? It's great
now on the other side, yeah, yeah, it's great to
be in this space. Now, I mean, we definitely had
you know, additional challenges when we started in the business.
Um that really wasn't so much on the consumer side.
It was the business side where you know, they looked
at us like that, there's no way, how could you

(40:46):
too possibly know about wine or how could you know
how to run a wine business because we were we
were young and we're black. Were young and we're black,
and we're women. None of our parents were you know,
owned a winery or whatever. So like for many years,
we just constantly were faced with just you know, a
lack of credibility. When we came into the room, it
was like where's your boss? You know, it's like, no,

(41:07):
we own the company and the people are showed up
like how or tell us you know, well, you know,
no one's really gonna trust you know, wind me by
by black women. We don't think consumers are going to
buy it because they've never seen you know, black women
that make wine before. So it was just for us,
it was as constant having to try to convince people
of like our worth in the room, or our worthiness

(41:29):
as producers, or the quality of our wines and um,
but you know, it's cool, it's all good, Like we
were up for the challenge, so, you know, and we've
been doing this for fifteen years, sixteen years, and honestly,
it just forced us to be great and greater than everybody. Yes,
how many people have debo back since then? That data
you in the beginning, how many people have deb back? Like,

(41:49):
let's get down, know the numbers are great or great? Yeah,
and some of our best accounts and some of our
best customers are those same people that were very skeptical
and you know, it took years for us to break
into those spaces, but you know they're allies now. Yeah.
I love the unapologetically black name because I'm sure it's
people that I was saying, you can't name it black
girl magic? Oh yeah, um yeah, our industry is crazy. Um.

(42:16):
When we were trying to like bring it out and
launch it, you know, we work in a super highly
regulated industry, you know, and trying to get distributors to
sell it was really hot, you know because yeah, yeah,
and even we were told it might offend some people. Yeah,
oh god, that's funny, because that's why I bought it. Yeah. Yeah,

(42:38):
well we met, we met celebration. Yeah, and who was
offended by celebrating and like for us, like you know,
Black Girl Magic, it's like the best grapes from our
vineyards going to the Black Girl Magic program. It's exceptional
wine for exceptional women. We're paying homage like to the
women in our family, our community, and just because the
wine industry has ignored black people in general when it

(42:58):
comes to drinking wine, and so we wanted to be
unapologetic about it. Like this, we made this for you.
How do you store wine? Because I noticed you know
how people store wine. It has to be temperature control.
But when you go to a liquor store, it's just
you know, I like I'm looking at it now, it
just sit up. So how are you supposed to store wine?
Does it really matter? Or it does? It does. So
you absolutely want to make sure that your wine never
gets warm. It will turn in the bottle right, So

(43:21):
it's like room temperature or cooler or like seller temperature,
which is like fifty five to sixty eight degrees, Like
keep it in that range and the wine is fine.
If you have a wine that you're going to keep
around for a long time, you actually want to like
store it laying down so that the wine keeps the
cork moist, which some wines are meant to age, but
other than that, the real key is just don't let

(43:41):
it warm up. Don't let it get hot at all,
because then it's you're going to lose it. Now that
the recent changes in like the social and political climate
like directly reflect like upticking sales, oh yeah, yeah absolutely.
So you know, we had like the first blackout Tuesday,
and I think we found out about it like the
night before, and you know, we pulled everybody up at

(44:05):
the company and we're like, tomorrow is not going to
be about us, Like, let's try and shine a line
on the black Vitnor community. And so we had already
been working on a list of like trying to find
us a list of like black owned like vitnors. It
was hard to find. So at the beginning of last
year we started putting this list together, mainly because we
were trying to if people were interested in going national

(44:28):
with their company, if they want to go to mass retail.
We wanted to try and help help people figure that
out because normally we're the only black owned and also
women owned privately held company when you go to like
large you know, the larger account. And so we put
out this list of like sixty seven we had at
the time on Blackout Tuesday, and we were just like

(44:48):
told everybody, just you know, support black vitners, and that
thing went viral and a large percentage of like our
black buttner community sold out immediately, like had wine club
subscriptions for like up to two years. We saw like
a huge uptick in our business. But differently like during
that time and also too, you know a lot of

(45:09):
people are just like corporations like what's my black strategy?
You know, so they're you know, trying to figure out how,
you know, they can start to place black owned companies
you know, outside of the wine industry too, right on
the shelves, which which you know, you just have to
think about, like are they in this for the long term?
You know, it's obviously reaction yeah yeah. But the other

(45:30):
thing too, is like with all of that that went
on last year, consumers really had a voice. So like
when we shared all of those wineries and people were like,
you know, okay, maybe they had heard of like a
few a handful of black owned wine companies and they
found out there's all these other ones. Consumers are really
picking up the phone and you know, talking to their
stores and to the retailers and like demanding it on

(45:52):
social media, like we want to see these black own
brands in the stores. And so the stores were like, oh, perhaps,
so they're trying to figure out like how they can
get this stuff into the stores. And I made a
huge difference. Consumer demand is so much more effective for
brands than us going in and trying to prove that
there is consumer demand. As a community, we are so
powerful we can decide where to put our money, you know,

(46:14):
And like we put out this one post like just
keep giving basic instructions on like this is what you
can do. Go into your store and tell them that
you want these black on brands. And we actually got
this email from this really large corporation like saying like
like these are the ways of working because they thought
that we had this like crazy salesforce of like thousands
of people going into going into their stores like trying

(46:37):
to sell in and they were like, oh, you know
this only happens corporately like Da da da. But we
replied to them and said, you know, these are just people.
These people are these are your customers what they want
in your stores? You know, listen, welltle move. We got
more with the McBride's sisters. When we come back, it's
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee,
Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club, kicking in

(47:00):
with the McBride's sister. I was a pandemic because you
touched on it a little bit, I know, because a
lot of people drank during a pandemic, So I know
business was booming, but we were, you able to supply
the demand. We were, like, you know, fortunate for us
when the pandemic had you know, we were able to
supply the demand and we were ready for it and
had infrastructure for it. One thing that we didn't anticipate, though,

(47:23):
was where we thought our e commerce business was going
to be like in three years, like happened in like
sixty days, it did, you know. Um, So that kind
of like opened our eyes up to like the potential
because why she's pretty old school. Like where every every
other industry has advanced like direct to consumer, the wine
industry hasn't advanced in the same like leaps and bounds.

(47:45):
As a result of the success that we had last year,
like in twenty nineteen with the launch of it, like
our sheet we created we have another brand called uh
she Can in a way very very clever and cute
name too she Can, and it's like we really created
this like it was for us. It was three things.
It was like our innovation. So it's putting like premium

(48:06):
bottled wine in a can, which took us a while
to figure out. I had been obsessed about that idea
for years, but they can technology wasn't quite there yet.
To make sure that our wine, you know, quality was maintained,
and then paying homage to our moms and then but
also to we started a professional development fund for women.
So the first year we awarded forty thousand dollars in

(48:28):
scholarships to women in the wine in spirits industry. And
then last year we sold the figure in May of
the one point one black owned businesses, I think fifty
one percent were saying, you know, by May that they
were going to have to shut her for good, and
only four percent got PPP five percent or deny the
federal funding. And so we were just like, that's crazy.
So we decided to specifically focus on black women entrepreneurs,

(48:52):
and we partnered with Morgan Stanley and on Silicon Valley Bank,
and we awarded three hundred thousand dollars to thirty women
black owned busines. Is that before COVID were super healthy. Yeah,
they were doing well that being in business, but just
like and then we also partnered with Facebook that created
this whole mentorship, leadership program and basically community because you know,

(49:13):
when you're an entrepreneur, like it can be pretty lonely,
and I think especially for black women, like you need
community to like tryin um, just have somebody to talk
to about, like what you're going through the challenges of
being an entrepreneur. Because we didn't want to just each
of the women got you know, a ten thousand dollars
cash grant or their business, but we didn't want I

(49:33):
mean money is great, right, what it's like. We wanted
to be able to help make connections and provide services
to help their businesses sustain and thrive and to help
them as owners to continue to grow and become a
part of this community. So we brought in additional partners
that can help help these women to you know, advance
themselves as entrepreneurs and as owners in their business. How

(49:54):
can somebody apply to that, she can't find them application parts?
It is an application, So applications open on May third,
and you can go on to our website, I'll mcbright
sisters dot com and we have a whole area about
the about the fund, and there'll be a link there
as soon as the applications open up. You know, I
wanted to ask y'all, two y'all talking about other black brands,

(50:14):
have you seen a growth in the black presence in
the wine industry because I only know too, I know y'all,
and I know Brown, the Brown family. Yeah, yeah, And
that's the thing. There's quite a few. There's actually a
hundred and something that we found. Now last year we
learned that there were sixty seven, but we also knew
of like a handful, you know, like maybe a dozen
or so makers and families that we were familiar with.

(50:37):
But with sort of this change in tide and this
change in consumer interest and retailer's interests in black owned brands,
there are many right that are at the forefront now
and it's for us, it's like, it's amazing, you know,
we don't We never wanted to be the only ones
that are national retail. We wanted to have a whole
category that showcases diversity in wine because we know it's there.

(50:58):
How does it work? Is it like the liquid business
where like say like an LVMH came in the partner
with jay Z on his champagne? Is it like that
in wine? Does happen? Okay, it absolutely does happen. I
mean it's still the alcohol business right between spirits and wine.
But they're definitely globally like really big players that own
lots of different brands, They create lots of different brands,

(51:19):
they acquire brands and companies. That's that's absolutely a part
of our businesses as well. And I think you know
what is the number now, percentage like seventy or eighty
percent of the wines that you see on the shelves
are actually owned by like three companies. Wow. Have they
approachiate yet? Yeah? People come around. Yeah I'm not ready
to do that. No never, no, no, never say never.

(51:41):
But that that one's the thing that's tricky. So like
Black Girl Magic, so as we you know, our approach
or people have conversations with us for Andrea, and it's
really difficult to see like who would we ever be
okay with owning because because we're Stwards, we're Stewards or
Black Rown Magics, we don't own Black Rown Magic would ever,
who would ever take care of that brand? That the

(52:04):
meaning behind those words the way that we do. Even
if you'll retained majority ownership. Oh, if we were retaining majority,
that's a different story. Yeah, let me get out of
your business. We're people think like, what are some of
the health benefits of wine? You know, technically we're not

(52:27):
allowed to say there are any Oh I didn't know that, right,
But however, however, doctors aren't licensed alcohol companies. But but
there are conversations about specifically around red wine and some
of the qualities that come from red wine has um
contact with the grape skins, right, and so there's there's

(52:50):
said to be some benefits there in terms of heart health,
um on cholesterol, things like that. So, you know, people
find it beneficial in a lot of ways. We cannot say,
go drink wine and make you healthier. That's not just
to clarify or compliance people. Compliance people are listening to it.
Do y'all have to stomp on grapes? Is that a

(53:11):
real thing? You do not have to do that, but
that is a real thing. That's I mean, historically that's
how grapes were made. And people still do it. It's
really more like part of a harvest festival or kind
of for fun, but it is effective. It does work,
and you absolutely can make wine by stomping on the
grape and we you know, we make millions. That's gross
one it seems pretty goes to me too. I don't

(53:33):
like the idea of people's feet being in my drinks,
but I might add to the flavor. It adds, may
add a flavor. But yeah, so for the amount of
wine that we make, there's not enough feat so people
do go work out. Yeah, we appreciate you guys for
joining us and make sure you go support. What y'all
doing is dope. And I mean you're not three daughters.

(53:54):
So it's just ill to see, like the McBride sisters.
I literally just telling my because I always tell one
of my daughters, you know, why do I call you
a planet? I call her planet and then our name?
She said, because the world is mine, And then my
younger daughter goes, the world is mine doing the world
is both of y'all to go over the world together.
So it's just dope to see y'all collectively moving as
a union like that. And for us, it's like you know,
our daddy grew up in the South and picked cotton,

(54:18):
our family or sharecroppers and then obviously go into slavery.
So it's the fact that now we're doing this, it's
obviously not just for us, you know, um and superspicial.
So we have so much gratitude for everybody that purchases
our wine and supports and so we have to show
that gratitude back. You know, you can't tell our community,

(54:39):
you can't tell anime nothing, our aunt Yeah and Holabama
the family names on a bottle of wine. Don't don't
you walk through her door. She's got our pictures, look
at my nieces. Like there's a huge sense of pride,
particularly for our family coming from Alabama and the Deep
South and all of that history. To have, you know,
the family name on the bottle of wine is a
big deal, big all right, Well, how can they buy it?

(55:01):
It's going to me to our website everywhere. First of
all everywhere. But if you go to our website, you
eisode and um, you'll see the stores near you and
you can purchase from our website also. And if it start,
doesn't have and tell them to get it yeah right
again and be loud about it. Yeah. McBride's sisters is
the Breakfast Club. Come on to thank you guys, Thank
you guys. Got club. Now, if you live in New

(55:32):
Jersey and you got to travel to New York by
the Lincoln Tunnel, you'll see a big ass head. It's
Charlemagne's face. He's on a billboard. Uh, take pictures and
well it's not it's not just me, it's just for
the new Audible project. Um, We've Got Answers that that
we released yesterday and it's myself, Tamica Mallory, Evani, Kay

(55:52):
Williams and doctor Claude Anderson og doctor Claude Anderson on
the billboard. Yes, definitely check it out. You can't miss it.
And download the We've Got Answers Project on Audible. It's
free for Audible members. I'd love to know what you think,
all right now. Rapper Nelli Chopping was arrested in South
Florida on burglary and drug charges. Now this is what
they say happened. They say pots What's is his real name?
Brian Potts and another person was caught on surveillance cameras

(56:15):
wearing a ski mask and jumping over a gate at
Superior Towing company in Florida. He wasn't shooting a music video. No,
he was not shooting a movie video. They say that
a car was told and they thought the car was
in the toe yard and hopped the gate to get
the car back. I thought was like enlightened now and
he was being more conscious and things of that nature. Yeah,

(56:38):
but you know they told his card. He wanted it back.
So you put on a ski mask and jump the
fence and you're a multi millionaire rapper. You ever got
your car told and you just want your car back,
and you feel like they did it disrespectfully. They had
no reason doing it. Well, this was the New York
when that happened. Yeah, that's why I would try. I
would try to steal it out. And he's a millionaire,
he says he's a millionaire. I thought he was a millionaire.

(57:00):
I'm sure he is now. Um. The only problem was
he jumped the wrong fence to the wrong toe yard.
Uh No, the problem was that he had on a
ski mask and he tried to jump the fence. Period.
But that was the problem too. But that's the problem.
It was definitely the wrong toe yard that he jumped
the fence and he was arrested. I think he earned

(57:20):
that one. I mean, you know, I hate I hate
to see brothers going to jail, but I think he
earned that one. It's stupid, but it happened. Sometimes. They
told done time in New Orleans, and I thought about
hopping the gate too, and no you didn't, but I
just decided it bad. No you didn't. You never thought
that I did to get the car out once. I
didn't think about it. You just so upset that they
told your car you black. I didn't. I signed said
I could park there, and they told my car and

(57:41):
now they want three hundred dollars. I'm like, I just
just hoped this gate. So you're upset about choices that
you made. I listen, kids, when the car gets told
please don't put on the ski mask and jumped the fence,
get it back, you know, I guess I got to
throw that out there. Yeah. Now, Kuavo and Swedi could
be answering questions. The LAPD opened an investigation about the

(58:04):
elevator altercation. They want to see what happened. They want
to see if there was any domestic violence, if there
was any problems, if anybody will be charged so they're
doing an investigation. I don't see how and why, but
that's they are. Now Charlemagne, this means that he has nothing.
This is good. This is just because I want you

(58:24):
to Now, Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, let me
tell you about jen Shaw. Now show Jen Shaw right now,
she's on the show and she has everything on the show.
Let me break it down the gen Shaw. She looks
super duper rich. She got assistance upon assistant, Her assistants
have assistance, she got bred. Everybody's been trying to figure
out how she's making all this money. Nobody knows. Even
on the show, when they asked, they'd be like, I

(58:45):
got businesses dialaying, So nobody knows. Well, she was arrested.
You want to know why? Why? All right? Because it
looks like allegedly she was busting the Salt Lake City
for having a conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy
to commit money lawn drink. Now, allegedly she has a
telemarketing scheme with her and her assistant and they target

(59:06):
elderly people. So she's been arrested. So that's where people
are saying that she's been getting the money, she's been
scamming it from all elderly people. That's the best that
you got. You know, you call my name and got
my attention. You don't can't ask good you don't watch
the show. People be like, Hanshi hadle this money, you
get all these caushole this jewelry, she got all his
Louis Vaton and Erna has and Fendy and this to
any other. People are like, well, how do you get

(59:27):
your money? And she just says, I have businesses diale.
Now she's allegedly scamming the elderly. No, you don't care, right,
get you. And lastly, United Masters that's Steve Stout record label.
It's an independent label announced a fifty million dollar investment
by Apple. And here's Steve Stout talking about it. Typically,

(59:48):
artists that are independent don't feel like they have the
same opportunities as the artists that are signed to legacy labels.
This is gonna sort of give every artist the same
opportunity democratize the music business for that matter. So yes,
you're gonna see a lot of cross promotion and marketing
that comes from Apple with United Masters artists, not that
they're not gonna do with every other artists, but it

(01:00:09):
now gives us an opportunity allow our artists to get
the same promotion and marketing as artists that are owned
major labels. Yeah, Steve's own to be on Breakfast Club tomorrow.
I got questions, you know what I mean? Like, I
want to know how much of that fifty million dollars
is actually going to the artists? You know what I
mean is that how much of that fifty million is
actually going to marketing and promo? How How will that
fifty million dollars benefit the artist? It seems like, like

(01:00:31):
you said, there's gonna be a lot of marketing, a
lot of cross promotion. You'll see a lot of artists
wearing Apple products in their videos and Apple to be
paying for that. I'm sure you'll be seeing a lot
of billboards. How do you spread the money out though?
How many fifty millions spread out over how many artists?
So we'll find out with Steve style comes to Yeah,
I want to know. Yeah, all right, but make sure
this is the saying a money playing. Somebody's getting rich,
but you know, but the artists getting the crumbs. All right,

(01:00:55):
Well that is your rumor reporting, Charlomage. Where giving that Donke?
We need great Kelly to I'm in the front of
the congregation. We need to have a word with him.
You remember he great Kelly needs to be on the
news here in New York City, but now I think
he's on Newsweek or something like that. We need to
talk to him because he's against plant based medicine, okay,
meaning weed, and we need to talk about it. All right,

(01:01:15):
we'll get to that next and don't forget after that.
Ask C and E if you need relationship advice or
any type of advice. Ye is out, so we'll do
it all right. So if you're having problems in your relationship,
phone line to wide open. Let the brothers see and
need help you out. Mister Breakfast Club Morning, the Breakfast Club,
your mornings will never be the same. Angela here and

(01:01:36):
the General 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. Call eight hundred General or visit
the General dot com. Some restrictions apply. Donkey of the
day being dunky of the day, a little bit of

(01:02:00):
a mist like a dog the other day. Now I've
been called a lot in my twenty three years. That
Donkey of the Baylor from Mere Right, Okay, this could
be an April Fools joke. I'm not sure, but Donkey
of Today for Thursday, April first goes to the Newsmax
anchor Greg Kelly. Greg Kelly is a man who doesn't

(01:02:23):
like weed, marijuana, cannabis, pot, grass, ganja, whatever you want
to call it. He's not with it. This is Greg
Kelly and doctor Kevin Sibbet on his newsweek show talking
about refers plural. Listen, New York State legalizes the recreational
use of marijuana, and we join more than a dozen
other states now where you can light up for no

(01:02:44):
other reason at all than to get high personally. I
think this is a very very bad move. Doctor, First,
to you, you're not cool with this, right, this is
a bad thing. I know, all kind of gateway drug
all that, not to mention all the mental health issues. Yeah,
it's a really bad idea. You know, today's marijuana. It's

(01:03:05):
not your woodstuck weed of the past. Let me tell
you something. I am not a weed head by any means. Okay,
your uncle Charlot. When I was a young lad growing
up in Monks Corner, South Carolina dropping a clue bump
fromsk Corn of South Carolina. I used to smoke a
lot of weed. In fact, myself and some of my
partners when we was in our teens, we caught ourselves
the infamous Buddha heads. We all took weed like names.

(01:03:26):
There was Bobby, buddha it Kabadism, Mikey Marijuana, to name
a few. Me well, I was Charlie chronic. What I
didn't realize back then was I was shut up. Don't
judge me. I was young. What I didn't realize back
then was I was prone to having severe anxiety attacks.
The weed was not helping that. I just didn't know
what it was back then, and I just thought it
was the life I was living along with the weed excreen.

(01:03:47):
Paranoid just came with the territory. And when I saw
Chris Tucker, you know, playing Smoky and Friday, hiding out
in the chicken coop after smoking some weed, I said, oh,
so it's just perfectly normal for me to be paranoid,
scared and go hide out in the woods just because.
But then I went to jail for a Sultan bratty
wouldn't tend to kill. If you want to know why,
it's in my New York Times best selling Black Privilege.
I've told you all this story a million times. Don't
need to rehash. But while long probation, it just became

(01:04:08):
too much of a hassle to smoking stay clean. So
I was doing everything from golden stale, the catch claw.
I had partners telling me they would give me the piss,
but it was just all too much. So I just
quitch smoking. Okay, we to prison, easy choice for me,
But then every now and again I would attempt to
do it. And that's when I realized smoking weed, is
this really not for me? Because it makes my anxiety
go through the roof. Back then I had no idea,

(01:04:29):
But now I fully understanding to this diet. If I
smoke weed, I have panic attacks. Now edibles, that's another story.
I can do edibles. Okay. I don't know what it
is about the edibles versus of smoking, but the right
dosage of edibles and my god, ten milligrams twenty no
more than thirty of a nice Indega screen, it's heaven. Okay.

(01:04:50):
I will lay around the house on the weekend when
the kids go to sleep, high off plant based medicine,
no anxiety, no stress, eating everything, and the sleep man
that's sleep is fantas pastic. So yes, I'm saying all
that to say I am a fan of plant based medicine.
On a bigger note, I am happy that all these
states are legalizing weed, especially the two states I spend
the most time in, which is New Jersey in New York.

(01:05:11):
Not only do I want weed legalized, I want every
brother and sister who is in jail for a non
violent weed offense to come home. All the folks who
because all these tough on crime drug bills that Joe
Biden wrote, by the way, I want them home if
you are in a state where weed is legal. But
you know, this is America. We all don't think the same.
So we have the Gray Kelly's of the world. And
the reason Greg Kelly is getting Donkey of the day

(01:05:33):
is not because he's against weed being legalized recreationally. I
don't care about that. It's his opinion. He's getting donkey
because it is tweet he posted. Listen, this is Greg Kelly.
If you don't believe me, his Twitter handle is Greg
Kelly USA. Could be an April Fool's tweet because it's
that's stupid. But he tweeted and I quote, smoking weed

(01:05:53):
aka grass is not a good idea. I've tried it
back in the day and it was worse capital letters
then anything that happened to Hunter Biden. I don't know
exactly what that means. I do know Hunter Biden just
revealed he's battled addiction his whole life, alcohol and drugs.
In fact, Hunter Biden said he was smoking crack every
fifteen minutes. It's in his new memoir Beautiful Thing. So

(01:06:14):
I guess he's saying weed was worse than anything that
happened to Hunter Biden. That's false. But then he goes
on to say I choked up with some buddies in
Kentucky and woke up in Nairobi, Kenya with no idea
what happened. Oh, I did not leave out this part.
He said he woke up four days later in Nairobi,

(01:06:37):
Kenya with no idea what happened. So you smoke weed
with your buddies in Kentucky and woke up four days
later in Nairobi, Kenya, And then you put don't do drugs, great, Kelly,
you smoked weed in Kentucky and woke up four days
later in Nairobi, Kenya. Now, I don't know what part
of Kentucky you are in, but I know Louisville, Kentucky
is eighty thirteen miles away from Nairobi, Kenya. I googled it. Okay,

(01:06:59):
the flight time in sixteen hours and thirty two minutes,
but forget how long it takes to get there. You
said you didn't wake up until four days later. That, sir,
is what the kids call chap all right, Greg Kelly,
I'm not the highest grade weed in the dispensary, nor
am I the strongest avenger, but I have a feeling
that to you, Chap ten America is the strongest avenger.
Greg Kelly, what's your sign? You seem like a chop rockhorn. Okay,

(01:07:22):
I saw I tweet you posted about being mad. McDonald's
didn't have the Big Fish anymore, which I thought was
crange because you seem more like a Chap ten D's
kind of guy. Great, Kelly, if you did a drug
that called you not to wake up for four days
and you ended up in night Robi, Kenya, by where
in Kentucky? You need to file a police report? Okay?
There needs to be an investigation. The hardest drug I

(01:07:42):
ever smoked in my life was cocaine mixed with wheat.
And that's because I was smoking with some dudes I
didn't know from Florida. That got damn Florida, all right,
A matter of fact, that devil damn Florida. All right.
Hate to tell y'all this about the cocaine in wheat,
but it was an amazing high. I would never do
it again, have never done it again, Okay, but it
wasn't amazing high. I'm saying all that to say I
didn't pass out for four days, nor did I wake
up in Kenya. Okay. I don't care who you ask,

(01:08:04):
Snoop Dogg, Whiz Khalifa, Willie Nelson, Cheech and Chong, they
will all tell you, Greg Kelly, that you a lie. Okay. Look, man,
if you don't want weed to be legalized, fine, If
you don't think people should smoke weed, fine, but don't
make up stories that ironically make you sound high as hell.
Not just make you sound high, but make you sound

(01:08:25):
like you ingested some drug where scrogging and weed. You
need to check your boys, because if you passed out
after smoking some type of drug with them, woke up
four days later and Kenya. That means they was dragging
you around like Bernie's Corps. And I wouldn't be surprised
if there was a game of stinky fingerplate. But you
don't have to worry about that because it didn't happen.

(01:08:45):
Stop the blood clot capping. Please give Craig Kelly the
biggest Hea Hall. Nobody just gotta lie because they don't
want you to do something. Yeah, gotta make up that
kind of lie just because you don't want us to
do something that's never happened to nobody. All right, I
ain't gonna front that didn't make me not want to
do it. That gonna make me like I smoked some
weed and I end up in Kenya four days later.

(01:09:08):
I didn't even get on a plane. So and so
who booked the trip for me? I don't know. So
nobody booked the trip. Who took my passport? If somebody
packed clothes for me? Who did all? I just magically
ended up in n Robie. Bring me that screen. I
needed that strap. I needed that screen right now. I'm
trying to go back to Africa. South Africa don't matter. Now,
take me back that back to Africa screen. Yes, whoa

(01:09:30):
who got the back to Africa screen out there? I
need it? I think did Johanna's burd I need to
go back to johnd What give that to me? Now? Geez,
I just don't name it the Mandela that would be disrespected.
You don't do that now, don't do that. I can't
do that. All right, we know how you niggas think.
Thank you for that donkey of the day. I can
see it now on the on the on the little package.
They see nothing Indella's face anyway. All right, up next

(01:09:54):
ass seat. And you need relationship advice at any type
of advice, Charlemagne and Envy are here for you and
E whatever you need. You're having problems, call us up.
We'll help you. We've been through it all. It's the
Breakfast Club. Good morning, we're going on. You can call me.
It's time to act and oh let's get it. Ask
Charlemagne and dj Envy anything call up now eight hundred

(01:10:16):
and five eight five one oh five one to Breakfast Club.
It's that time. Ask Charlemagne and DJ Envy anything, nick up,
pick up. It's time to ask an e morning. Everybody
is dj Envy Angela yee, Charlemagne. The guy we are

(01:10:37):
to breakfast club year is out, so it's tough for
as C and E. If you need relationship advice and
who do we have on the line? Good morning? Good morning? Hey?
What's your name? What's the matter of Nita? Why you
sounds so upset? Mama? Um, my boyfriend and I we
lived together, but he decided he does not want to
be in a relationship with me anymore. But we still
live together. We have to coexis. He doesn't drive to

(01:11:00):
work at drive him to work every morning. Oh, that
has to stop. He broke up with you, and now
he still wants the benefits of being able to be
able to sleep with you and get your your car
and be able to use your car and use your
lights and your electricity and all of that. Yeah, nah,
I gotta stop right there, Mama. He doesn't have a
driver's a drive, so I wouldn't feel bad if he did.

(01:11:21):
He feel bad when he just broke your heart and
broke up with you and said he don't want to
be with you no more? Did he feel bad like
you're driving? That's why he broke up with you. You
don't like your drug no even call him on three way.
Call him on three way right now, call him on
three way. I don't care. Call him on call him answer?
What's his name? Let me feel he'll pick up him.

(01:11:44):
He don't pick up. He don't love you. What kind
of job you got? Oh? She must be calling hello,
we're not available now, please leave your name. He didn't
pick up. So what do you want us to do?

(01:12:05):
I just want advice, Like y'all think I should stop
driving them the work and yes together, Yes, you're not
gonna you love that man. You ain't going nowhere. That
pep too good. You've been having too much jum protected sex.
You ain't ready to walk in. And it's a five
year relationship. So I don't want to leave you exactly. Yeah,
but you gotta you know right now he's just using you.

(01:12:27):
The fact that he broke up with you, he could
still sleep with you, he could still use you to
take him around. You gotta stop that. You gotta let
him know, like look like like, oh, if it's over,
it's over. I'm not driving you around. No, I'm not
doing that no more. You find you find your new
bitch to drive you that. I agree with. You gotta
set boundaries and being that he don't want to be
your man's certain um perks. He don't get. So you
can't be a luber no more. Nope, you know what

(01:12:47):
I'm saying. You can't give him the poom poom on
the you know what, cook, none of that stuff. He
gotta do all that on his own. Treat him like
a roommate. That's right, that's it. Tell him so, I
guess we're roommates now, So treat him like a roommate.
You don't have sex with my roommates. He got to
sleep on the couch. He can't sleep between the same bed.
I don't drive my roommates to work. All right, Okay,
all right, you ain't gonna listen. You're gonna sleep with
him the night. You better listen. Watch all right, Mo'm

(01:13:10):
gonna sleep with him to night. Don't lie. Good luck.
I'm all right. I want to I want you to
call us back next week and tell us how this went. Please? Now, Hello,
who's this Aaron? Hey mama? What's up at C? And E? Yes,
I have a question I want to help. Do I
have a right to be mad? Or am I being pitty?
Me and my stiance and he's been together for five

(01:13:31):
years and we've spend fly full holiday together, like we
don't even have to have a conversation about it's just automatic.
But this year for easther, he just told me two
days ago that he was going to church and then
work without you. And it's like very last minute. So
he tells you. He's very organized, very pomp. He is

(01:13:54):
very very organized. Hello, y'all been together five years. So
wait a minute. So he said he's going to church,
ain't going to work, hanging out with his family, and
didn't tell you and invite you. Yes, I was talking
about it the other day, trying to see what I
was going to wear to church, and he was like, oh, no,
I'm going to church and then I'm going to work. Well, listen,
he's making as he's he's doing something he really shouldn't

(01:14:14):
be doing right now. He's breaking a rule. A rule
is spending holidays with his side chicks. His side chick
invited him to church on Sunday and he's going with her. Yeah,
I'm not gonna lie. Sound's kind of odd that he's
not taking you to church and not taking you to
work when you've been together five years. You've been doing
everything with him, and that all of a sudden he
doesn't want to go with you. I'm sorry to say
that he might. He might have another family on the
side Monde. Now I don't think he got another family

(01:14:35):
because y'all been together five years. But he has been
with this side chick for way too long, and he's
getting too close to her, and he's going with her
to church on Sunday. You go to church on Sunday.
You make sure you take your way as to church
with him on Sunday, and you're gonna find him Easter
egg hunting with another family and you're gonna have a fist.
But he don't want me to. You better go. What
that means you gotta call you got over, you got money?

(01:14:57):
You better pop up at that church if you know.
I know that's right, pop up at that church the
way Jesus popped up on a resurrection Sunday. Okay, all right,
good luck and tell us how it works out. Okay,
thank you, all right, see that we help it lives.
I love it as an eight hundred five eight five
one oh five one. If you need relationship advice, hit
this now. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning time. Ask

(01:15:20):
Charlemagne A dj envy, anything up up? It's time to
ask morning. Everybody is d j Envy, Angela yee, Charlemagne
the guy we are the breakfast club in the middle
of ass c and let the record show our camera
guy Nick and dramas are brought up, said that we

(01:15:41):
give terrible advice. I thought it was great advice. I
think it's great at us two couples in a matter
of four minutes, Well, at least we give them a reason.
We're not just telling them to leave like Angela E
do and we'd be like leave, let's leave. We're giving
them options. Hello, who's this? What's up? Ranch? Man? What's
your question for C and E? All right, here's my thing, man.
I kind of got my tough into a similar entangle. Man. Uh,

(01:16:02):
maybe at this guy had described I got a talk
stop and we were talking about smoking, and you know
it was a little questionable to begin with there, but uh,
what happened Now, wait a minute, you at a truck
stop with another guy, you were smoking weed, and then
what happened, well what I thought was weed. Yeah, I
ended up getting a little bit more high than I
thought to went back to my rig. Oh you found

(01:16:24):
him attractive. Hold on, let me sit up for this one.
Hold on, now, you said you said so you found
him attractive. Yeah, wait, attractive, attract you found him attractive? No, man,
I'm gonna get into detail, but I'm gonna tell you
that I woke up and I was entangled in the
seatbelt and uh, this was this was probably twenty four

(01:16:45):
to thirty two hours later. This was an upstate New
York that it had started. Oh, so you talking about
the donkey the day I gave the Great Kelly, So
something like that happened now And basically, but my question
would be is because I woke up and I felt weird.
Everything smelled weird? Am I responsible? Smell like what it
smell like? I can't even I can't, I can't even

(01:17:07):
I can't even put you. I feel so uncomfortable even college.
Are you responsible for what, sir? For what had happened? Man?
I felt like a different person. Well, first of all,
I don't I don't know what happened happened, but it
sounds like you're implying that he was penetrating. This guy
took advantage of you, And no, you're not responsible if
you got high with this person, and you know you

(01:17:27):
were high and you don't remember what happened, and he
had sex with you, he raped you. Yeah, I don't
know if there was a penetration, if he had just
gone rooting around looking for something that baby he thought
he was gonna found. Well that's where it is. Am
I responsible? Do I even want to think about this?
All I know is I was tied up, I was wrangled.
So when you woke up, what position were you in? Seriously? Like,
what what do you you? Did? You wake up like

(01:17:49):
and you had to pick yourself up off your stomach?
Like was you on your back? Like? What was you?
Where was you at? Were your pants down? Were? Like?
What happened? Yes? I mean I had a sturt on,
but the front of my head was in the cab
and my rear end was in the back team the
entire tru And you don't know who this guy is
at all? No, I have no idea. So he just

(01:18:11):
was more confused, and I was so embarrassed about the
whole thing. I told you some of my buddies, but
I've kind of become a running joke. Now, Yeah, you're
not responsible for this. So what happened to you is
not your responsibility. I don't I don't know what to
tell you. I was taking advantage for if you can
remember the guy's truck. I would definitely call the police, yes,
because it's not right, it's not funny. You were raped, Yes,

(01:18:35):
And I think you need to call the police to
get this guy arrested. And this guy has done this
clearly before before. Absolutely, you know what I mean. He
was a professional, he had plans, and it wasn't weird.
That's the only thing to work out for it was
this whole situation to some people get funky. They want
to get weird with this whatever they can inside of
that ram. Yeah, you get a smoke on it. Let

(01:18:55):
me tell you something. I respect you, and the main
reason I respect you is because you're telling this story.
A lot of men don't tell this story enough. Stuff
like this does happen to men, and you know we don't.
We don't take it as seriously as we should. But
I feel I feel like you want to say April
fools right now. Yeah, I'm not gonna lie, man, I'm
super weird, bro. I just I heard I heard what

(01:19:17):
you guys just talking about. That was the first thing
that popped up into my head. There have been a
couple of situations that are bigges thing this awful though
where that could be through. I got a couple of
buddies that I've got in over their head and I can't.
I can't going out those stories because it probably this
is not an April Fools yoke. No, oh man, unfortunately
not d it is what it is, all right, Well,

(01:19:38):
you know, I would try to think about it. I
definitely would go to the police station. Maybe somebody else
has left the report like that that's similar to yours,
and hopefully they can catch the person. Yeah, drug, But
because I'm sure that, I'm sure it's more guys with
this more story, because if he was sitting at a
trump stop, you'd definitely be plotted on people. And it's
not your fault, brother, It's not your fault, my guy. Well,
I appreciate that if you're day stopping big, I'll probably

(01:20:03):
give you a time discount depending on how I feel
on that day. But appreciate you. Be good. Don't both
doing anything I didn't do. Okay, I don't even know
what that means, but I can guarantee you that I won't.
All right, it's not your fault. I think that was
the April fools, bro. And if it does happen, you
should go to the police because man or woman, you're raped,

(01:20:26):
absolutely and it's not right. Um, So hopefully it wasn't.
Uh hopefully, I mean I don't even know. Hopefully he
gets to help, hopefully gets to the police station, because
I'm sure if this guy did it to him, I'm
sure he's probably done it before. And I would think
get a guy on the streets, because you think that
a guy who does that the other guys, that's what
he's banking on. He's banking on this dude will never
tell right, because you know what I'm meaning, barrassed absolutely?

(01:20:48):
All right, Well, we got rumors on the way. We'll
tell you about Travis Scotts. He's making a lot of money, yea,
and we'll tell you all about it the Breakast Club,
Go Morning, the Breakfast Club. This is the rumor Report
with Angela. Ye now drop a bomb for Travis scott

(01:21:12):
Why he set a record yesterday for the highest rate
of sale in a debut for any variety pack and
Anne has a bush Seltzer history. Hell are you talking about?
So you know he has this spike Uh, the Spike
Seltzer that he has that came out a couple of
I think, like a week ago, two weeks ago. But
the sales are through the roof and he's making a
lot of money off of it. These things is selling
off the shelf and he's making bookoo dollars off. I mean,

(01:21:33):
Travis Scott makes a lot of money in endorsements, and
clearly we see why because his you know, his fans
are a rapid They go out there and they consume
the stuff he's endorsement. You know. I was having this
conversation with my son the other day and we were
talking about influence, and he means about someone's like Drake
is the biggest artist, and we were going back and
forth and I was like, yeah, but I think Travis
Scott has the biggest influence between the two. Maybe I'm wrong,

(01:21:53):
but every time Travis Scott put something out, it goes
through the roof. Whether it's McDonald's, whether it's Jordan, whether
it's whatever he does, he has a huge influence when
it comes to it. Yeah, I can agree with that.
I mean, I mean, Hope Hope had that same kind
of influence, right, even somebody like a little Wayne. Like
when people want to look like you and they want
to dress like you and they want to be you, yeah,

(01:22:15):
you can pretty much sell them what you're pushing all
right now, all people trust you, you know what I mean?
They trust they trust what you what you're pushing on him. Now.
Yesterday Travis Scott said, I'm not gonna lie. Who'll be
putting mayo on fries? Your your your your in laws.
Probably I'm generous. I'm just saying I don't know why

(01:22:36):
he put that out. He says out now, I don't
eat mayo with fries, but I will say this. I
had a nanny, and my nanny loved mayo with fries
and used to get my children into eating the mayo
with fries. But we stopped at immediately. It was like,
now that's that's just that's just disgusting. I don't like
calling people nanny because I'm from Charleston, South Carolina, so
it's like, you gotta come up with another word and
Charlatan's I can line of nanny mean doodo? You ain't

(01:22:57):
saying nanny. No, Yes, I don't like that. I don't
like in the inn the poopoo was that I don't
know nothing about that. Also, a nanny anny also Two
Chains was out and about yesterday. He was in the
gas station and when he walked out, he's seeing that
they were bootlegging his album. They had it on CD.
He was pretty pissed off about it, but he bought
all the copies of his album that was in the store.

(01:23:18):
But I was like, who still play CDs? I have
no idea. That's just like, I don't even know if
they still do it. But they used to be in
Time Square trying to sell you CDs and I'm like,
who has a CD player? Yeah? What album from Two Chains?
They bootleg and he got a million of them? Was
it the mixtape? Was it? So help me God? Okay,
the new one, So help me God. Now Remy Ma,
she was on Wendy Williams and Remy says, I did

(01:23:38):
not shoot nobody. And I believe when you went to prison,
you did it for shooting a woman. Now, CC, this
is the thing. Everyone that is in prison is my guilty,
the same way everybody that's walking around in the streets
is not innocent. Didn't not know this girl wasn't my
best friend. All of these things that was said over
these years were not true. But one shut in prison,

(01:24:01):
no one cares. And once you come home, I'm not
going to spend the rest of my life trying to
prove to people like I didn't know this person. I
found out her last name, when yall found out when
get rid of in the newspaper. Was there a reason
for you shooting her? Or did you have a gun?
And it's just well, I didn't shoot anybody. Whatever Remy
said she didn't do she didn't do it. I believe, Okay,
respect Miss Mackie, drop on a clues bombs from Miss Mackie,

(01:24:21):
got damn it? Love Remy mar you hear me? Shout
theoth my guy, Pat poos, Peace card, pap what up now? Also, lastly,
twenty one Savage he said to executive produce Spiral Now
from the Book of Sore Now. This is a produced
horror film from Chris Rock and twenty one Savage is
doing the soundtrack, which is pretty dupe. I love twenty

(01:24:43):
one Savage. Twenty one Savage get busy, and that makes
so much sense because twenty one Savage has a he
has a super villain vibe to him, you know what
I mean. But they're like a good super villain though,
like like Magnet almost. Yeah. So the film will be
out made fourteenth, and the soundtrack is produced by twenty
one Savage like a that Chris Rock and Samuel L.
Jackson or in it, and I can't wait to see it.
I can't wait to check it out. Yeah. I don't

(01:25:04):
usually watch hard movies. You know what I'm saying. I
don't pay people. Yeah I want to. I want to
see what Chris Rock and Samuel Jackson do with that,
um that that hard franchise saw though. Yeah, all right,
and that is your room and listen. UM for everybody,
thank you for supporting We've Got Answers. It's the audible
original that um I dropped yesterday. And if you're out

(01:25:26):
and about in LA or you know you're in New
York and you see the We've Got Answers billboard with
myself and Queen Timka Mallory and Queen Ebony Kay Williams
and Triple og King doctor Claude Anderson on it. Um,
take a picture and send it to me because I
haven't seen it yet. But you know, we Got Answers
as a project that I put together. It's for if
you're tired of having to educate your your white friends

(01:25:47):
about racism and white people. If you got questions you
want to ask Black people but don't want to appear
racist or bigot it, this is the project for you.
And I asked him with the whole Black brain brain trust,
you know, doctor Claude Anderson to Mika Malley, every k Williams,
David Banner, Norri Muhammad, Reverend, doctor William Barber, Eric Alexander
Brooklyn Borough President, Eric Adams, Humility Davis, Nina Turner, Teslin Figuo,

(01:26:09):
doctor Alphie Noble, an attorney caral Minna Smith. And it's
available on audible right now free if you got an
audible membership, So hit me up. I think people really
need this energy in the ecosystem. I want to know
what you think about it. Definitely check it out. All right, Revolt,
we'll see you tomorrow. Everybody else to mix this up next,
let's go the Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be
the same. Mountain Dew is partnering with HBCUs and an

(01:26:32):
effort to uplift the next generation of badass Black innovators
and entrepreneurs 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 we are the
Breakfast Club. I just want to remind Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, Atlanta, Georgia,
anybody in those surrounding areas make sure you join me

(01:26:55):
at our car show. That's right, It's the Drive Your
Dreams Car Show, your favorite celebrity cars, exclusive cars, cars
from the paid in full section. Also bikes bikes too,
So it's gonna be a lot of fun and goes
down July third, July, fourth weekend. Hopefully you get your
tickets and also if you want to submit your bike
or your car, or you want to be a vendor,
you can always email dj Envy Car Show at gmail

(01:27:18):
dot com. Let me shout out to the beat in Atlanta,
and also shout out to Lincoln Tech for being my
partners in this car show. We do it each and
every year. I think this Atlanta one is gonna be
the biggest one by far. I think so too, especially
being at it's probably the first car show that people
have experienced in a whole goddamn year. Yeah, two years,
two years, it'd be like two years. Yeah, because I

(01:27:39):
couldn't do it last year, so September to September. Yeah,
it'll almost be two years. A year and about a
year and a half. And tell them about the grand
prize that you have for somebody who has a better
paint job than your beard. Any car that has a
better paint job than the bid on Envy's face is
getting like a special like gift. Right. No, there's gonna
be face painting though for kids. Thank you for that plug.

(01:27:59):
Yet we all gonna be painting kids faces, same kids
who paint Envy's face every morning, they're gonna be there painting,
painting your face. It's gonna be face painting for kids.
It's gonna be a video game section for kids to
be able to play video games. It's gonna be a
lot of fun, So get your tickets a kid. Of course,
we only have a limited amount of tickets. Usually we can,
you know, have as many tickets as possible, but because
of quarantine and pandemic, we have to limit it a

(01:28:20):
little bit. So we still have a lot of fun.
Still gonna be some people there, but it won't be
as packed as usual. But that's a good thing. So
you'll get to spend time and see the cars and
really really enjoy. So I'll see you guys July third.
We gotta shout out to the McBride's sisters for joining
us this morning. That's right. If you've ever had Black
Girl Magic Wine and you want to know the story
behind Black Girl Magic Wine, it's all about them McBride's sisters. Man,

(01:28:40):
So you know, make sure you go to Breakfast Club's
YouTube page Breakfast Club Power one O five one and
check them out. All right, Well, when we come back,
we got the positive note, don't move. It's to Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning. Everybody is stej Envy and Jela yee.
Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club now, Charlomage,
you got a positive note I do for I want

(01:29:02):
to thank everybody again. You know who has h checked out.
We've got answers on Audible. That's the Audible original I
dropped yesterday is free with an Audible membership. So you know,
if you get a chance this weekend, make sure you
check out. We've got answers on Audible. And my positive
note is sent it on that the first step to
receiving an answer is being brave enough to ask a question.

(01:29:24):
Breakfast club you don't finish

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