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February 2, 2021 90 mins

Today on the show we had Nate Parker call in where he spoke about his new film "American Skin", police brutality, protecting his children and more. Also, after Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to Courtside Karen who through a fit at the Lakers vs. Hawks basketball game, we opened up the phone lines to see if any of our listeners recently been encountered by Karen. Also, we honor Michael Jordan for pushing his skills to the limit once he takes something someone does or says Personally!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Go in the morning. You wake up in the morning.
I'm talking right. You know you're about to experience a
morning showing like any yo. Bakfast Club. What you guys
are doing right now, that's the hub culture. Breakfast club
is my morning sick. I need it and I love it.
Something yo like, you're really not popping until you do
the breakfast club and waiting come to y'all show man.

(00:22):
I know you gotta be a big time celebrity to
be up and here. You gotta be gotta be big
time at lay and Charlomagne the guy the Breakfast Club,
bitch you good morning usc yo yo yo yo yo

(00:45):
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo Good
morning Angela Yee, good mondy danby Charlomagne the Guy. Piece
to the planet is Tuesday, Yes, Tuesday, still stuck in
the crib. Snow came down. I think we got seven

(01:09):
inches of snow. Man, I ain't seen as much snow
in a long time. I've been living in New York
since two thousand and six. I can't remember the last
time I've seen snow like this two over two feet
of snow. Bro, Bro, that's crazy. You guys are in
New Jersey. I'm in Detroit, and normally Detroit has worse
weather than the Tri state area, but we it hasn't

(01:31):
been bad here now. We got about twenty seven twenty
eight inches of snow. So yesterday I had to run
the CVS because one of the producers asked me I
had to do something. So I needed a blank CD,
so I ran the CBS to go get it in
the snowstorm. It took me an hour and a half
to get the CPS. Right, such thing is running out

(01:51):
in the snow storm? Yeah, a blank CD. Yeah, it
was a long story. So I went and got it.
It took me an hour and a half to get
there and back usually takes ten minutes. Then I realized
I left my wallet at CBS, so then I had
to go back out to go get it again. When
I say that was like a five hour day yesterday
going back and forth the CVS and the weather was disgusting.

(02:13):
The snow was nasty that the streets were at plowed.
It was horrible outside. Yeah, I'm surprised the CVS was
even open. Yeah, they closed it early at two o'clock.
I mean, some people still got to go get their
prescriptions and pills and medicine or whatever they needed. I
just needed some blink CD. So I don't get me wrong. Snow.
Snow is a beautiful thing, right, It's a beautiful thing,

(02:34):
you know when it's falling and you know your kids
are looking outside the window. And then once the lands,
it even looks pretty. But it's the aftermath, you know
what I mean, having to deal with things like the
clearing the driveway, digging the car out, digging the car
or even know, yeah my mind, I put them on
the rock, but yes, digging the car out in some cases,
it's a very strenuous process after this, what I mean,

(02:58):
And the snow, this snow right there, the snow gonna
be around for two weeks absolutely, and then gets the side. Yeah,
it gets ugly, it gets it gets nasty, it gets
it gets all dirtys it gets really really hard, and
it's still coming down now. I'm looking out the window.
Now it's still snowing. When you have to when you
have to park on the street and the snow plow

(03:18):
comes and it pushes the snow on top of your
car and you have to dig it out again. Well,
Drummas just told us that his car is actually plowed in,
so so now that that snow gets difficult, gets hard.
So now I don't even know how Dramas is gonna
get it out. He's gonna really have the day when
you're gonna have to get you have to call your
people's dramas and come help you get that snow that
car off. Just depending on where you live. I know

(03:41):
where I live, they always plowed to the right, So
whenever I know what's gonna snow, I always park on
the left side of the street. I try to park
it super early so that way I don't get cloud in.
You should have told drama that drama dramas. Dramas gets
plowed in all the time. You know what side you like, dramas,
the right side of side when you get clouded. What

(04:04):
are you talking about? What are you talking about? Okay,
we're talking about snow, man, Get your mind out. The
gutter guy in. Yeah. The only people that like the
snow like this is I'll be honest, my dog and
my kids. They love it. They want to go out
and they want to jump out. Everybody else they like Nah, be.
It is something comforting about the snow though, when it's
just sitting there, saddled, when it first falls, it's something

(04:26):
comforting about it. But not twenty seven Don't get the
hell out of here that twenty seven inches, Like there's
no where to put all the snow, like I've never
seen it where the snow is all my window like
it It's crazy. Did you just said there's no where
You just said that there's nowhere to put twenty seven inches?
You just said that early in the morning. You you
that was you? All right? Well, Nate Parker will be

(04:49):
joining us this morning. Oh man, Nate have a movie
out called American Skin. If you have not watched American
Skin yet, and you need to watch American Skin. I've
been watching some very tru movies I had. I had
an early screener of Judas in The Black Messiah, Black Messiah,
Black Massire, phenomenal film. It didn't Dominique fishback in that.

(05:11):
I don't know who. She's an amazing actor. She was um,
she was in The Hate You Give. But she's been
like a bunch of different movies and she's a great
She's in The Deuced you know what I'm talking about
she's been Brooklyn. That's why let me take a look.
I think she's saying, I gotta watch that. That's a
phenomenal movie. But American Skin. American Skin is another very

(05:32):
trauma traumatizing movie, triggering movie because of a lot of
the things that we've been discussing on this radio, like
yesterday when I gave donkey today to the police officers
of Rochester who handcuffed and pepper sprayed that nine year
old girl, and and and the reactions you would think
somebody would have like if you were the parent in
that situation. It actually happens in American Skin, if you

(05:53):
haven't seen it yet, but we'll talk about it this morning,
all right. And also all my friends that live in
the West Coast, that live in U down South, Miami, La, Vegas, Ya,
don't you don't have to send me pictures, Like you
don't have to be like, hey, how's it doing in
New York and New Jersey. We know how it is
in Miami, all right, we know how it is in La.
We know how it is in Vegas, Atlanta. I know
you don't have to send me pictures. I get it,
I honestly get it, especially if you're doing that from Florida, California,

(06:14):
because we're covered in snow, y'all covered in COVID. All right,
that's a good way to look at it. That's a
good way to look at it. But let's get the
show crack in front page news. What we're talking about, Well,
I send you BA COVID. Let's talk about these at
home COVID tests and what the plan is. The White
House is putting some money to make sure you can
get tested at home. All right, we'll get into that next.
Keeping lockers to breakfast club morning morning. Everybody is cej Envy,

(06:36):
Angela yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are to breakfast club.
Let's getting some front page news now. Last night NBA game,
Lebron James and the Lakers took call on Atlanta Hawks,
and it looks like he got into an argument with
one of the fans. I don't know what. Yeah, the
whole it was for them. They all got kicked out.
They were going back and forth. She said that Lebron

(06:58):
called her a bitch, and then she started ellen and
they went back and forth, but she had her mask
off and they asked her to leave because she took
a mask down. Why Why would those thugs harassing Lebron James.
What did Lebron James do to anybody last night to
be harassed by those thugs? He said they were just
going back and forth and um, he said, they were
just talking. Ish. We have audio. Can you play the audio?

(07:19):
Which audio? U the courtside? Karen quart side Karen, all right,
Chris has been a Hawks fan forever, whatever he has
this issue with Lebron. I don't have an issue with
Lebron and don't get Lebron anyway. All of a sudden,
Lebron says something to my husband. I sat up and go,
don't talk to my husband. And he looks at me
and he goes, sit the down, bitch, and they go,

(07:41):
don't call me a bitch here, sit down, get the
out of here, and they go, don't talk to my
husband like that, And all of a sudden, no, I'm
getting kicked out. Excuse me, I have courtside seats that
I paid for. Okay, well, I mean he called hers
been a well the NBA will showing an argument. I

(08:02):
didn't see Lebron say bitch one time. But here's Lebron's
what Lebron said after it. I'm having fans were back
in the building. We as players need that interaction. I
don't feel like it was warning to be kicked out,
but they might have had a couple of drinks maybe,
and they could have probably kept it going in the game.
Wouldn't have been about the game no more so. Did
the referees do what they had to do? And I don't,
I mean, it's fine, I don't. I don't think taking

(08:22):
down the mask or whatever the case. Maybe at that
point in time with a harmed anybody, but the people
that was right next year, I wasn't close enough to her.
I don't think any of my teammates's close enough to him.
Maybe a couple of rest maybe now, Heckelin got to
be a normal thing for Lebron at this point in
his career. Right, A lot of Lebron playing in sixteen
seventeen years, it's high school, like Heckelin got to be

(08:42):
a normal thing. I wonder if he's not used to
it because they haven't had fans in the arena and
so long. I want to have a level of disrespect though,
if he was cursing at Lebron and saying all kinds
of crazy things, and then I'm sure she started going crazy.
And she starts going crazy and then and then it's
been screaming out. Now you sit down. Yeah, no, it depends.

(09:03):
But sometimes Lebron goes back and forth. We've seen Lebron
go back and forth with our friend Michael tell Dad
each other. So he he goes back and forth sometimes.
But it was no, so I'm sure he's heard worse. Well,
they had to go. I just wonder. They're like, we
don't care if you have course, I see you gotta
go check it out? What else we got you? Uh?
We all right at a time, all right, well, get

(09:25):
it off your chest. Eight five eight five one oh
five one. If you need to vent phone lines or
wide open, call us up right now. It's the Breakfast Club.
Go morning, the Breakfast Club. I'm telling I'm telling you
if this is your time to get it off your chest,
whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five eighty five

(09:48):
one five one. We want to hear from you on
the Breakfast Club. Hello, who's this fish over? Mike Dallas?
How y'all doing club? What's up? Broke? Get it off
your chest? I beg it on my chest when you
order a ride, be ready to go when I pull up.
Stop using the five minute wait time. Well you are
that five. Sometimes y'all pull up too fast too, like okay,

(10:10):
let me call the car now, and then there's like
one minute away. I'm with you, because sometimes you don't
know when that uber's repeated. Your phone tells you I'm
pulling up. They look at that phone. I want you
waiting like you were at the bus stop. Nah, But
sometimes you don't know when, like if I want to
uber at eight am, I call it like seven thirty
because I don't know what time is you gonna be around.
And then sometimes you come alot. You gotta wait for

(10:30):
a second, bro, bro, why why do you care? You
get paid anyway? No, I want you you got to
wait after the five five minutes? They leave that. They
don't leave after the five minutes. Sometimes they do. Yes,
they can, yes, they can lift, definitely, they can lift.
A leave. No uber, give you more than five who
don't just leave after the five minutes? Leave after? So

(10:54):
every time when the five minutes is over, you just leave, Hey, Charlemagne,
when I get my kung fu game back like you, No,
you said the coach. I appreciate that. I gave it
to you in Houston, prayer of you ain't now I
got it up in the studio right now. I appreciate that. Man,
I love prayer love. All right, brother, thank you? Hello?

(11:15):
Who's this? Sway? Sway? What up? Bro? Get it off
your chest? First of all, let me say Angelie, I
just want to thank you for looking flawless last ten years.
Charlotte Maine A god? Do you like a baby ostrich
and envy? I just wanted if you can help me
get in touch with the credit guard. Man, Jose, I
got you, Yeah, it definitely. How's your credit right now?
It's uh high sexes? Damn? Okay, what you're trying to buy?

(11:38):
You're trying to buy a crib? Or call what you're
trying to do? You just want to fire? He said,
Damn like that. I know everybody's trying to play me, man,
like I'm trying to trying to help you. I appreciate it. Man,
I'm trying to get a crib man. Okay, all right,
what's what's bad on your credit? You have mad delayed,
mad late payments? What's on it? Actually? I just have
one time? Yeah not available? Yeah, you got taste, you

(12:04):
got tasted and the party in your mouth? What was that?
You got? Freak at lakes? Fun eyebrows every I just
got like a car tow on that man, but they
come off this year. All right, Cool, he'll help you out.
I um, if you go to the credit dude that's
his Instagram, hit him in the DM, tell him I
sent you, and then looking. He gets a lot of calls,
but he's been helping a lot of people, especially during
this pandemic. So the credit, your mama will give you

(12:27):
a coach line. King. My mom will know she's too.
Been helping your mom out right now. No, no, your
mom got good credit. That's what I was just saying, like, Yeah,
your mama got good out for it. Why do you
not like you said that? It's great? Do like each other.
This is how this is how we talk when we
like each other. Yeah, that's all it is. You know

(12:50):
what I'm saying? The way all right? Brought out to him.
Look out for you, man, I appreciate it. Y'all. Have
a great day. Man you too, all right? Man, Tell
you tell your mama. I said, hi, yo, when you
saw talking about people, Mama, I'm always scared that he'd
be like, my mama dead. Like, what do you say
after that? You say your mama got good credit? He go,
my mama dad, that's hey, that's just the risk you

(13:11):
take when you're taking it low. Okay, Michelle Obama said,
when they go low, you go high. Nope, I take
it to the floor with him. It's just the risk
you take sometime. That's what it's cracious. All right, get
it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five, one
oh five one. If you need to vent, hit this
up now. It's the breakfast club. Go morning. This is
your time to get it off your chest. Whether you're
man from you on the breakfast club. You got something

(13:34):
on your mom? Hello, who's this? This is Michelle? Hey, Michelle,
get it off your chest. First. Let me think good
morning to all of y'all. I love y'all's chune but
Charlotte man, yes, man. They pissed me off every morning.
Poll him up there begging for books, like, if they
really want to support you, I want a book, go bad.
Stop being in for books. It's not right to help

(13:55):
some people. But don't keep giving all your books away.
You want a book, Mama, I don't purchase me listen. Okay,
you know, Michelle, I have been blessed to be a
New York Times bestselling author a couple of times over
with black privileges, shook on anxiety, playing tricks on me.
I have no problem of giving out, giving out books
and and you know I love I love doctor Rita
Walker's unapologetic guy in the black mental health. Like I

(14:17):
bought a bunch of copies of her book to giveaway
because I think the information in it in regard to
the mental health and the black community is that important.
It is very important. But I just I think some
people just taking fantasy to big to be big. It's okay,
ain't you too? Now? Hello, who's this? What's up? Bro?

(14:39):
Get it off your chest? A little time to job
for going in on black contractors. Yesterday y'all was going
in on it like there's no such thing as an
honest contractor. I'm a honest contractor, and I'll be going
through it down here. We didn't say that a good
contractor period, regardless of color. Because you have to admit,
there's a lot of contractors who are pretty shot. I'm

(15:00):
not agree with you, but I also noticed that a
lot of people who have the most problems with contractors
never got worked, like if you don't understand what's involved,
Like it should be transparency from the beginning, right, so
you should know, like, hey, this could be this, this
could be that, this could be this. You know, so
you know it's always gonna cost more, not HGTV more,

(15:21):
but it's gonna cost more. You gotta know that. But
then it's gonna cost more than the estimate you give us.
It's undetermined because so many things affect so many other things,
you know what I mean. I'm not no, I don't
know what y'all talking about specifically, or what y'all been
through specifically, but I find myself getting in the arguments
with people who never honed a house one, never got
no housework, no worse, no work done before too. Why

(15:44):
that's why we look to you to give us a
pretty decent estimate because that's your specialty. And then a
lot of times it goes over I would say a
high percentage of times it goes over the amount of
money that you say it's gonna be. I'd rather you
tell me it's gonna cost more and then it ends
up costing less than the other way around, because we're budgeting,
so you have to think people are putting money to
the side to get this work done based off of

(16:04):
an estimate that you gave them, and then when it
comes out to be way more than that, are these
all these other extra problems? Or were calling somebody else
and they say they can get it done cheaper, or
are you say it's gonna get done in a certain
amount of time and then we're waiting because we play
for it and it doesn't. Those are all things that
are difficult because people have their own plans. True indeed,
true indeed, But again where the transparency comes right, all

(16:26):
all this should happen. But what do you what do
you say to people who never who never did nothing before,
don't know your job and telling you how to do
your job? You know what I mean? Like things happen,
and look, most of the time we're building, it's cutting pace,
so the framing and all that stuff. If you don't
know what the last person done, so you can only
give them, you can only give them what you what
you know based off of you know. But once you

(16:46):
open up and then you understand that and there's things
that you find all the time. But the thing is
like she said, there's always time. It's time where you say, hey,
I gotta I have a deadline, just especially for me
if I'm flipping the house and I have a deadline
and I'm trying to stick to this deadline and you
got me two months over my dead line, or that's
not writing and not doing things the proper way, and
you're doing it to cut corners, and it really hurts
me more because I got to open back up those walls.

(17:08):
And you're talking to three people that have done this
several times. When it comes to working with contractors and
doing things around the house or building houses or fixing
the houses. So we have those problems at the point
now where I buy my own materials and I pay
the workers hourly. The most frustrating thing about dealing with
a contractor is my father was a contractor. So it's
certain things that a contractor can tell me that I
know is bs and then I can call my pops

(17:30):
and be like, Pops, such and such and such a
he'd be like, man, that dude is ripping you off. Yeah,
I mean, but there's always somebody that's gonna say that,
you know what I mean, Like, there's always somebody that's
gonna be able to do it or say, what's the disconnect?
And again, Black people were always skeptical of each other
in general. So you know what I'm saying. I can
come to you with with with two pure attensions, and
things happen. And I'm telling you so you know you're

(17:52):
looking at me like, yeah, he come to ball. You know,
I'm skeptic from all contractors. I don't care what they are,
Black skeptic for all contractors. I'm get it. And the
worst when the job and the job is almost done
and then the contractor goes missing because they're not that
concerned because they're onto the next that does happen, and
I hate that does happen? People? Will you what if

(18:13):
we treated y'all? What if we treat a contractors the
way uber drivers treat us? What you mean, huh? When
they pull up and they don't give us we need
an extra five minutes but they don't want to give
it to us. That's not the same because you don't
know that all those involved with getting that specific work
done though, like especially getting it done right. Well, I
appreciate your honest contractor man, And where you from this,
I'm from Jersey. I'm in Atlanta right now, though I'm

(18:34):
doing I'm doing my own thing in Atlanta, and I've
been grinding for three years out here, grinding, and trust me,
the only problems I ain't gonna say the only problems,
but the majority of the problems I have are from
people who you know, that look like me. And that's very,
very frustrating. I'm telling people like, listen, you can go like,
you can have these, you can talk to other people
and you can get other but you're not gonna it's
not gonna change nothing like it still has to happen.

(18:56):
So I deal with people who want their home to
be perfect, and then people who won investments and people
were investments. You know, you're just cutting pacing. You make
it cosmetically right. Let's do this. So let's just put
your information. We can use you bro more the stories.
If you're in the Lanta Hill. At Beacon Building Services,
we get stuff done. We make dirty things clean, specializing
in pressure, Washington everything else. All right, what's your number

(19:18):
so they can I can call you six seven eight
three three eight seven four or five three and you
can highlight me on Instagram at Beacon Solution or Facebook
at Beacon Solution all that. I got it all right, however,
thank get it off your chest eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. If you need to vent,
you can hit it up. We got rumors on the way. Yes,
and let's talk about silent. So he has been arrested

(19:40):
for murdering his own cousin. Damn it man, all right,
we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. God morning,
the Breakfast Club. Listen, Oh gosh, got report, got angel
And it's the Report the Breakfast Club. Well, a lot

(20:00):
of people are watching Wendy Williams biopic were shocked to
find out about Wendy Williams relationship with Eric B from
Eric B and Rock Him and how he had gotten
a car. I guess he rented a car while they
were together and never returned it. It. Were having some
issues with that. And here is that part of the movie. Hey,
can I get your car today? Oh, let's throw with yours? Okay, Well,

(20:23):
I need it back by five so I get to
work on time. I got your baby. He did not
have me. I couldn't realize I was just a booty
call and he was using me. But instead I rented
him a car on my credit card. M Well. Eric
B has responded on social media. He posted a throwback

(20:45):
picture of himself standing in front of a Rose Royce
and said, damn, I need a rental and then he
said too hilarious. I laughed too well, it made for
great TV. But the truth is something different. Try that. Yeah,
that was strange to me when I thought that in
the movie, because I thought it was knowing that Eric
B like had birds have money. Yeah, yeah, Eric from
Eric B and rock him like I always thought he

(21:06):
had from change. So I didn't understand why he was
depicted like that in the movie. But it's always two
sides of every story. Eric may do a movie one
day and show you something totally different. Who knows what
the truth? There's always three sides. It's side, her side
and the truth. It's always three sides, And I just
wanted to Yesterday I saw after Tamika metha Man's wife,
released her statement about her issues with Wendy Williams, revealing

(21:27):
her cancer diagnosis before she had told family and people
were thinking that it was method man Pillow talking and
telling her that it was really somebody in the hospital
had leaked that information to Wendy Williams. All right, now,
since we're talking about Wendy Williams, let's pivot over to
Miss Jones. Now, Miss Jones used to have a morning
show in New York, and Envy, you really kind of

(21:48):
gotta start doing mornings on the Miss Jones morning show. Correct, Yes, correct,
She had a show, I believe for four years on
Hot ninety seven Competitor when I was over there. So yeah,
she gave me my start. She she was, of course
the main person. She was the first black woman to
host her own morning show, and she gave me a job.
But things did go a little left, and recently, you

(22:08):
guys had a reunion show and it was all sparked
because she saw you and Gia on Behind every Man.
She was on a show called Behind every Man, and
she starts talking about Envy's journey and she says the
most profound thing that God knows. I needed to hear
that Envy got his start and a lot of his

(22:29):
successes because I gave him a shot on my morning show.
So I reached out to him after twelve years of
not seeing him, not talking to him, and I just said,
I just want to thank you and your wife for
saying those things because I needed to hear it. As
soon as I hit send and V text it right
back and was like, you don't understand. I miss you.

(22:50):
And we started talking and I said, stop crying because
by this time I'm in tears, and I'm like, I
have an idea. I want to do a reunion show. No,
miss miss Jones was was tearing up and crying. We
haven't spoken twelve years, you know, was he said. She said, thing,
we stopped speaking, and she's seen that. She called and

(23:11):
when we spoke, it was just like good times, like
old times. Like you know, when when the Breakfast Club
first started, everybody was against us, so we were real tight,
real close. And that was the same thing with Miss Jones.
Everybody was against it, so we were close and tight.
We'd go everywhere in my family, her family. We would
do everything together. And then twelve years you started speaking
to somebody, so you know, we we caught back up,
spoke to each other's kids. It was it was a

(23:32):
great reunion. Yeah. I get it with Miss Jones. She
wants her props, you know what I'm saying. She wants
folks to give it up to her for things that
she accomplished in this game. That's totally understandable. And and
and it's a testament to you know how far you've
come envy, because I mean, if you was just some
washed up DJ, she wouldn't want to claim you wouldn't.
She wouldn't. She wouldn't want you to say that you

(23:52):
got her start your start with her, you know, but
a lot of people got this, A lot of people
got that start. Danelle Rawlins was on there. He got
his start on radio doing that show. Don't claim him.
I wouldn't claim Stephen A. Smith. Most people don't know
he got to start on her show as well. At
claimed Stephen a claim claims. I claimed Stephen. I claimed

(24:12):
Stephen A an NBA followed Miss Jones. But he's more
of a comedian than a radio personality. That I wouldn't
say you got to start in comedy because of that show. No,
not in comedy. But he definitely boost a career when
when he was in New York doing radio. Definitely was
Ashley Larry You and you should go pick up Miss
Jones book too. If you're a radio junkie like I am.

(24:33):
If you're a radio guy or girl or somebody that
wants to be in radio. Have you met Miss Jones?
The Life and Loves of Radio most controversial de very
good read. All right. We didn't get a chance to
get to Silento, so we'll get to that in the
next hour. But he has been charged with murdering his cousin,
and Georgia will tell you the information and what his
publicist is saying in the next hour. But we do
have Front Page News on the way. Yeah, what what

(24:55):
are we talking about? Front Page News? Let's talk about
coronavirus and what's going on with you COVID testing and
are you going to get these stimulus checks? All right?
And also with Miss Jones, she started a podcast and
the first five episodes just like the Reunion show, so
it's the band back together talking about what we're doing
and some of the amazing shows. And then she's going
to be doing her own podcasts, which I'm excited about.

(25:17):
I think she's gonna be great. So shout out to
Miss Joe. But Front Page News is next. It's the
Breakfast Club Gomotor Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlomagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. Good morning.
Let's get in some front Page News. I know we've
got a lot to cover, so let's get right into it,
all right. President Biden and sat down with a group
of ten Republican senators and they have different ideas for

(25:38):
what this coronavirus relief bill will look like now. Biden's
plan wants to send another fourteen hundred dollars per person
to eligible recipients in addition to the six hundred dollars
payments that were approved by Congress in December that totals
two thousand. The Republicans want to send a thousand dollars
checks per adult, but target them to those with a
lower income, so that would phase out at forty thousand

(25:59):
dollars for individuals and eighty thousand for couples filing jointly,
and so not everybody would get that money. Unemployment benefits,
Biden's plan would increase the federal booths for the joblests
to get four hundred dollars a week from the three
hundred dollars weekly enhancements. Republicans want to extended three hundred
dollars a week benefit through June thirtieth and provide two
billion dollars to states to improve technology when it comes

(26:23):
to COVID nineteen, vaccines, testing and tracing. Joe Biden wants
to invest twenty billion dollars in a national vaccination program.
Republicans want to provide the same amount to battle the
pandemic and schools reopening. The President wants to provide one
hundred and seventy billion dollars from kindergarten to twelfth grade
for schools, colleges, and universities to help them reopen. Republicans

(26:44):
want to provide twenty billion dollars to get kindergarten the
twelfth grade students back in school. Man, do y'all want
to help people and not man when the money coming.
That's what we need to know. I'm glad they got
all the time in the world to discuss how people
are going to eat, because meanwhile, everyday people are getting
a businesses are closing, people can't afford the basics, or
they're sitting around discussing the money they close the evictions.

(27:08):
But you know people are still not paying their rent.
People can't pay their car. Those people can't pay electricity, water,
they can't pay the landlords can't pay. Like you said,
you're printing up all this money for the basics Yeah,
you're printing up this money anyway, your minds will just
keep printing it. Let people don't hold people damn until
this is over. Yeah, I don't. They still have questions
when it comes to the big corporations. When it comes
to the big corporations, it's like, look, here's the one

(27:30):
point nine trade, and y'all gonna do what y'all gotta do.
And it comes to the people, it's all of this conversation, correct, right, Well,
this has to pass through and the Republicans have to
be on board in order to prove this stimulus dal
and they haven't improved it yet, so you know, hopefully
soon because people need that money. And if you had
COVID nineteen, according to doctor Fauci, you could get reinfected,

(27:52):
as we've been seeing, if the variants become dominant. Here
is what doctor Fauci had to say. If you have
these variants and they seem to be a looting the
vaccine a little, should we really be getting vaccines that
we should be wait for the next generation of vaccines.
The answer is, you need to get vaccinated when it
becomes available, and the reason for that is that there

(28:14):
is a fact that viruses cannot mutate if they don't replicate,
and if you stop their replication by vaccinating widely, you
will not get mutations. Why doctor Facci sound like a
mix and Mike Tyson, Stephen Asmith, and Jesse Jackson. You
must vaccinate in order for the virus to not replicate.

(28:35):
You can catch worth viruses based on who you date. Well,
I would tell you this. My parents didn't get the
vaccine last week, and I'm trying to get mine as
soon as I can. I seen Budon b and his
wife got the vaccine. As soon as I get the opportunity,
I'm taking it. Well. Health experts have identified at least
three coronavirus variants so far in the United States. They

(28:55):
have originated. It appears in the UK, South Africa, and Brazil.
So they're kind of nervous that things could get even
worse and they could be another resurgence. Now. They are
saying though more Americans have now been vaccinated for COVID
nineteen than infected, so they have been getting a lot
of people vaccinated, and that's what they said, a milestone

(29:15):
and a celebration. But they are warning the Super Bowl
is coming up this weekend, so if you want a
chair at a party or you have a little get together,
make sure it's spaced out outdoor gathering or virtual watch parties.
So what they are recommending, and you do have to
wear a mask if you're inside and maintain so just distancing,
avoid crowded and poorly ventilated indoor spaces. Now said you

(29:36):
said that more people have been vaccinated than have what
now then been infected. So right now, they said, at
least twenty six point five million people in the US
have gotten at least one dose of the vaccine. And
you know, twenty six point two million cases of coronavirus
have been in the United States since the onset. So
now there's been more people vaccinated than infected. So we're good. No, no,

(30:02):
we still need yeah, we still need more. I think
what at least seventy percent of people to get vaccinated
for her community. Well, come all, white people, y'all make
up seventy six point three percent of the population. Step up,
white people, let's go white people. You slacking all right,
too much emphasis on the black community. White people. Let's
go go get vaccinated. And if you want to get

(30:22):
an at home COVID test, they do have a company
called a loom, and the Biden and administration announced the deal.
They're giving two hundred and thirty million dollars to ramp
up production of these at home COVID tests. They're around
ninety five percent accurate, and they're supposed to give you
your results in fifteen minutes. Yeah, I've been seeing those tests.
They actually I'm going to the Super bowlers weekend and

(30:43):
to get and I'm not sure if it's to get
into the arena the sweet that I'm going to be in.
They actually ascend an at home test for everybody that's going.
So I have to take it, my son has to
take it, and that's before I could even get into
the arena. So we'll see how accurate those things are.
All right, Well that is your front page news, all right,
thank you? Yea. Now when we come back, Nate Parker
will be joining us. Nate Parker has a new film

(31:04):
called American Skin. Now, what is that about? American Skin? Man?
American Skin is about how I think a lot of
us would would would react in certain situations regarding the police,
you know what I mean, especially when the police are
doing things to your children. Like all of these conversations
we have about. You know, it's only but so much

(31:26):
I can take as a human before I react. American
Skin shows you what that reaction couldn't look like. Man,
it's a great film. Okay, we'll get into that next
Keeping locked Nate Parker when we come back. It's the
Breakfast Club, Corning. It's the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is
DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the

(31:46):
Breakfast Club. What we have? The brother Nave park on
the lines, welcome brother, what our brother? What up? What up?
We got need here to talk about his new film, Man,
American Skin, very very powerful film. But why the title
American Skin? First of all, well, brother, you know me
man like, my whole thing is about truth, you know.
And if we're gonna we're gonna talk about being citizens

(32:08):
in this country and talk about all the all the
things that come with that and this nation, the constitution,
we have to ask ourselves where do we fit in,
you know? And what does it mean to have American skin?
When it comes to rights, when it comes to equality
and equity, we have to really ask ourselves where do
we fit in in this American dream? So for me,
it was what does that mean, you know, it's interesting
because the way Lincoln Jefferson reacted is how I feel

(32:30):
like most humans want to react. I don't want to
give away the movie, but but what is it that
keeps humans from reacting in that way? You think, let's
keep it real. Most humans do react in that way.
We're the ones that don't like. Around every turn, they're
throwing that this idea of peace and locking arms, but
no one's really talking about how every other culture has
literally fought and I mean we fought as a country

(32:53):
for other people who have been killed in the streets,
you know. So I think it's again, we just gotta
be honest, bro about what it's like to be here,
what it's like to wake up. And it be a
dice role when we go outside, like I'm talking to
YouTube brothers and we're not and we're doing all right.
But when this interview goes off, we leave it, getting
our car and drive anywhere. A cock can be on

(33:15):
a freeway going the other way and we can be
down on the street and their lights on and we
grab the It's post traumatic stress in our whole country.
But does that ever change? I mean, that's happened to
my grandfather. Happened to my father, happens to me. You know,
I got a seventeen year old like, it's his license
in the next ten days, you know what I mean,
it's gonna happen to him. You know, it's has that change?

(33:37):
When does it change? Just like with the film, I
think we have to reapproach how we're willing to deal
with it and what we're willing to give up. You know,
we gotta keep it real. Like Antre Lour has this
great quote that says, um, the master's tools will never
dismantle the Master's house, right, And so many of us
want to be the end and assimilated. And I don't

(33:59):
mean to say that disparage anyone, but when you come
from nothing, you want something right. But we got to
recognize that we've given something up. I mean, we got
more than than we've ever had. We got we got
more people in holding office to look like us than
we ever had, But we also got more people getting
killed in the streets, got more people in prison. So
I think we gotta ask ourselves what are we willing
to give up so we're not handing this legacy off

(34:20):
to our children. I'm not okay with the fact that
I got me I adopted my nephew to my whole
inspiration for this film. I adopted. I have five daughters.
I adopted my nephew from my sister, right, so it
was my only son. And uh, and I'm thinking, boom,
he's gonna be in a great school. He's gonna have
all this opportunity, and you know, I'm breaking the curse.
Next thing, you know, Michael Brown face down bloating in

(34:41):
the street. My nephew turns to me as we're watching
on the news and he says, well, open, Nate, what
do I do if I get pulled over by the police.
He's taller than me at thirteen fourteen, dark skinned, beautiful
young man. And I'm like, damn, I just took him
out of the frying pan into the fire because I'm
telling him, okay, grab your phone and called me and
I'll beat there. And the I'm like, don't grab the phone,
don't grab your phone, nephew, put your feet down, put

(35:03):
your hands up, make eye contact with the cops. He
can see your baby face so he can see that
you're not a threat. You know, whatever you do, don't
make any sound and moves. Do whatever he says, I'm
thinking to myself, I'm traumatizing my nephew, right, I'm literally
teaching him that everything I've ever stood for doesn't really matter,
because at the end of the day, you have to
literally become less than human or become whatever he is,

(35:26):
whatever he sees you. So when you talk about your
sevente year old son, I'm no longer willing to just
be like, this is the way it's gonna be for
me person. If we're being honest, all of us feel
this way. So I don't have the answers. The Mill
movie doesn't have the answers. But I tell you what
if the next fifty year is like the last fifty years,
whereas you know, at least with Rodney King, the brother

(35:47):
got beat, they got arrested. You know what I'm saying,
they have to go to court nowadays, you know you
did just Choe. Eric Garner was like, ah, Dad, nope,
we're good. But you know what you say, we shouldn't
have to do that. And my dad is a retired
police officer, and the one thing rolling up as a kid,
my dad always used to say, you gotta make it hold.
You can't win in the streets with the cops. But

(36:09):
you get hold, then we could figure out how to win.
But you have to make it hold. And like that
was the thing. And that's what I told my kids, Like,
even if they rolled, swallow your pride, make it hold.
But what if you do everything right? Envy? Like that's
the thing. So I think that we have to really
ask ourselves, like, all right, what does accountability look like? Right?
Like what does police accountable? I mean I interviewed dozens

(36:29):
of cops, look them in their eyes, and they said
to me, you know, hey, I speak but on the
condition to anonymity. I'm like, cool. I didn't have to
interview any cops. I could have just been like the police,
we're just gonna make sure they look like the trash
that they I didn't do that. I said, Look, if
we really want to move forward, we gotta find a
way to get in their heads too, right, have conversations
that is inclusive of the reality of where we are

(36:51):
right now, and then we can still have that conversation
about getting home. But everything we do on high level,
like we old heads now, like like anything we're doing
right now is about all right. We're gonna make sure
from a standpoint of accountability, that we're approaching this in
a different way. Subjugation leads of revolution, right, Lincoln Jefferson,
is gonna happen if they choose the wrong the wrong

(37:13):
person's kid, right, or the wrong person's relative. The hope
is that this is like preventive, preventative measure. Well, let's
expound on that. Do you think the way Lincoln Jefferson
replied is an inevitable response to police brutality? It is
everywhere else. Subjugation leads of revolution. Like, that's real, that's
and I'm not making it up. I'm not saying go
out in the streets and do anything. I'm not saying

(37:35):
become Lincoln Jefferson. I'm just saying, at some point we
got to ask ourselves, like where's the line? You know,
I don't want to lose my children, and I ain't
no killer. I just don't want to lose my children.
So I think, is Lincoln Jefferson among us? Yeah? Is
there a way around it? I really do believe there is,
but we first need honest conversation. How police officers reacted

(37:57):
to this film very positively, it pieve it or not.
We had a chance to screen the film in Upstate
New York at the Center for Police Equity for some
police trainers. And you know, it was a scary thing
because I don't I'm not apologetic, Like I'm not gonna
I'm not gonna go and stand in front of cops
and say chow to meet and spit out the bones.
You know. If it anything you don't like, I'm not
that dude. I'm like, this is what it is. This

(38:18):
is how we feel, you know, so watch it if
you don't like it, cool, I'm out. But the response was, Yo,
we can use this for training. So I think there
is a conversation we had from so many different perspectives,
right that'll deal with the double standards we're dealing when
it comes to police and when it comes to how
we're handled. So I think there's a conversation that we
had by police. Yes, I think there are conversations to

(38:39):
be had in our community about about how we are
approaching it, what we're willing to do, being able to
close the door, like we can't forget, like what we're
doing right now was used to be illegal not too
long ago. Like we couldn't have a conversation unapologetically talking
about what we want to talk about without a white
person being present, kind of overseeing what we were saying
and how so I think that there are a lot

(39:00):
of things that can that need to be done, but
the first step is just being honest about where we're
at a right, We got more with Nate Parker when
we come back, don't move. It's to Breakfast Club, co
Money Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the
guy we are to Breakfast Club was still kicking in
with Nate Parker. He had movie out American Skin. And
when do you have those conversations? You say, you have
five daughters and a nephew that you adopted. You said

(39:22):
he about thirteen, So what age do you start having
those conversations? You know, I think every kid is different.
But as you don't want to scare your kids either,
You're like, you don't want them every time they see
a you know, a police officer or a cop car
they crying, you know, I mean, but you want to
tell them so if they ever get into a situation,
it's already pre programmed what to do, what to say
to make sure that they you know, they're good, right,
But but it's really symptomatic of other issues, like like,

(39:45):
what we're really talking about is white supremacy and systemic
racism and institutional racism. Like it's no different than me
telling my nephew or my daughter at at ten at
some point, and I've had those conversations with my girls,
like you call your skin, someone's gonna maybe call you this,
Like you got to be ready for that. In the
same way that other communities that have endured genocides talk

(40:06):
to their children at very young ages about what they
should and should not tolerate, we should be open to
those conversations like what's more scary, right my seven year
old daughter me having to talk to her about either
police brutality or racism or tell her about it and
her be scared about it at first but can identify
it when it's coming from her classmates or her teachers,
or to not tell her anything and she come home

(40:27):
one day like wait, what does this mean? And why
did they say that? And why do I feel this way?
So I think that we have to be more open
to expose our kids and things that might be hurtful
in the beginning, but empower them to know how to
deal with it. Because most people even the people that
are spewing the ignorance are ignorant themselves. But you know,
when you confront that early, I think you position your

(40:49):
kids to be able to develop not only an understanding,
but an offense. Why do I wonder why? And you know,
I think about this when we watch we watch the
police off to slam the young girl to the ground
last week unconscious. You know, yesterday police in Rochester handcuffed
the nine year old girl Pepper's Brayder. Why do you

(41:10):
think police officers don't see themselves in others? Well, because
they don't see us as them It's like the whole idea.
How how people treat their dogs in the United States
of America, right, like the dog is like a person.
When you go to other cultures, they eat dogs, That's
what they do. If you see a human like an animal,
then you're treating it like an animal. Is not even

(41:30):
in the same universe of you seeing yourself in them
because you don't see them as human, you know, And
I think that that is a stemmic. You know, when
I talk to these police officers, you know, one police
officer in particular told me said, look, Nate, he said,
when I come to your neighborhood or can I come
to the neighborhood And I say that it's administrative policing.
How you doing, sir, How you doing, ma'am? Can I
please thank you very much, have a nice day, he said,

(41:52):
when we go to the jungle, and he said that,
he was like, they hate us. It's get the guy
to cut the the courage right now. He says, it's
it's it's just the way it is. And I asked him.
I was like, wow, that's interesting, criminal police versus a
minister of policing. I said, is that in the handbook?
He's like, na, it's like what you mean. He was like,
when everyone just knows, it's like what you mean? And
when he says it's just the way, it's just the
way it is. Yeah, whatever that book it is that

(42:14):
officers keep talking about, and I keep hearing them say
that's what they did it by the book. They did
it by the book. That book is making them sociopaths.
Do you think do you think cops put on the
uniform and just automatically become sociopaths. I think this the
second you say I want to be a part of
a system that brutalizes subject gates, marginalizes, and controls and

(42:36):
intimidates people. Regardless of what color you are. The second
you step into that paradigm, whether you like it or not,
you're gonna become a part of that. So I think
that they are well intentioned men and women that have
gone into law enforcements saying, look, this is how it's
gonna be. I'm gonna fix things. I'm gonna be the
person that fix things. I'm gonna make sure And I

(42:57):
do believe there are people that have told that line
and been able to make it through. But the majority
of people that become engaged in these type of systems
that just by virtue of their existence, are corrupt when
it comes to how they dehumanize or treat people. It's unavoidable.
Some of the worst videos I saw in my research
are brothers and Latino brothers with the baton hitting people,

(43:19):
breaking legs, trying to prove that they're brothers with the
You know, I think it's systemic, and I think that's
another thing we got to think about, Like, yo, look,
if a cop kill someone, right, we want justice? All right,
cool that cop is fired. I don't know if we
should just be happy because if the company is creating widgets,
and the widgets are killing black people. Destroying the widgets

(43:40):
doesn't stop the company from creating the widgets. Right, we
gotta find a way to say, Okay, obviously there's something
wrong with this institution, and we can't be okay with
the fact that it just hasn't happened to us yet.
You know, Lincoln Jefferson, I love that name. I know
it's from science. In that name, why that name, Lincoln
Jefferson one is is a call to our desperation to

(44:03):
kind of to fit in in society and to try
to accept and walk in this American dream. Right. I've
met so many people, black folks who are proudly named
after people who aren't necessarily for us. This is a
man is not only a veteran who has served his time,
who has come home and things haven't been right, because
there's a lot of veterans and a lot of us
has a history. A lot of my uncles and aunt's

(44:25):
army military comeback and they struggling like they never left.
We talk about Lincoln in the same way we talk
about King, right, because there's there's two Lincoln's right, there's
Lincoln Freed the slave, and there's I have a dream king, right,
but we ignore the Lincoln who in the Lincolns Douglas rebates,
was like, nah, I don't think black people are equal.
And Jefferson, come on, Thomas Jefferson, his relationship with his property,

(44:50):
and and the fact that when he died he was like, nah,
keep them locked up. So I wanted to give a
name that was was was a call back to our
desperation as a people to be seen as as Americans,
to our own detriment. Yeah, I know how this film
is probably will resonate with black people. How do you
want it to resonate with white folks in others who

(45:12):
don't who don't live our existence if you even care. Yeah,
well that's the thing, right, Like I think, as I
said before, first, I think our voices have to be
elevated the way the country is designed, you know, with
respector who has power. A lot of times our voice
don't get to the masses. It's like, you know, there's
I'm not gonna give away the film, but there is
a line where the guy basically says, the world needs

(45:35):
to see what's happening, you know what I mean. So
by us understanding our condition or by us elevating our voices.
If nothing else, if only the continent, if only it
resonates only they say, all right, Nick, the only people
that's gonna resonate with people look like you in the
United States of America and people that look like you
on the continent. And you can't you know whatever, like
black people, African people, Africa sent all over. If that

(45:57):
was it and they drew a line and I couldn't
do anything about it, I would be I would be like, Okay,
the reality is, we have media, we have digit we
have zooms, we have so when when when the white
friends call us and jip George Floyd? Oh my god,
what can I do to help? You? Know what you
can do watch this film and talk to your kids
about racism and white supremacy and privilege, and you know what,

(46:17):
don't be afraid to draw the parallels between the double
standard and policing that we see in this film and
what we see saw at the Capitol. I think if
the best thing that people are not in our community
can do is confront racism white supremacy the same way
that we're having the front confront racism and white supremacy.
And guess what, even if you don't, you don't have
to go out and find a random black person at

(46:39):
a at a Starbucks and say, oh, can I have
a hug? Like that don't help. It's like, really, you
gotta address your internalized white supremacy. You gotta address it.
You gotta speak out about institutional racist or racism you
see in your kids private school and the barriers to
entry when it comes to us trying to get a
proper education for our kids. You gotta speak out about
the double standards when it comes to sentencing and bail reform.

(47:02):
I do think white people need to see the film.
I do. I do think cops are gonna see this.
I don't think they're gonna tell people, but I think
they're gonna be some cops they push that push that
play button or Amazon Pride because they hear about it,
and I think at the end of it, whether whatever
they feel, they'll know that there was truth in it,
and they'll know that there was a desire to gain understanding. Unapologetically.

(47:24):
I don't move. We got more with Nate Parker. When
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club, Good Morning Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne, the guy we
are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it with Nate Parker.
He's here. He has a new movie out called American Skin. Charlomagne,
I want to go back to the military thing real quick, like,
because you know Lincoln Jefferson is a military event. What
are your thoughts on black people joining the military to

(47:46):
fight for a country that doesn't fight for us. It's
it's an interesting question. It comes up a lot. You know,
I only speak personally to what to what I think.
First of all, I'll never disparage anyone that looks like
me publicly for any reason. I think that's some conversations
had to be adding in private, anything that I feel
from a negative standpoint about what black people should it
should not do, I think it's for it's for a

(48:07):
different company. But I will say this, this is as
much our country, if not more than any other people
walking around, not just because we fought, but because bonsible
for the freedom in this country, right like we fought
in every single war. Specifically, you look at like red
tails like if it wasn't for the tuskey, Yeah, man,
I don't know if we went because We went from

(48:29):
losing some crazy number like eighty percent of all bombers
to losing zero in combat. You know what I mean.
It's I don't think our contribution is a small one.
It's not a participation award. We were MVP in all
the wars. You know what I'm saying. Civil War MVPs
Lincoln knew what time it was Frederick Dougins when he
went to him and said, Yo, you gotta let us fight.

(48:49):
It's because we were losing, you know what I'm stand So,
I think that I honor all the people that look
like me have had that fought for this country, but
I would say they fought for their country. We built
the country. We continue to build it. We build it
with brick and mortar, We build it with culture appropriated
or not, it's still hours. We still build it. This

(49:10):
radio show is more important than any other, in my opinion,
mainstream media outlet that exists. And I'm not saying that
to to be negative or create controversy. God knows, I'm
not trying to do that. I'm saying it to say
when it comes to my experience, when it comes to
asking questions like how do we feel about our veterans
that look like us, that go as we speak on

(49:31):
other on other soil, as they're hearing about you know,
brothers and s Brianna Taylor, and they're healing it, hearing
about all the all the killings, and still got to
wake up, look at that watch clean that weapon, and
go out in and march and look for someone to
to to make sure that that they're doing they're supposed
to do. I think that this country is ours. I
think we've earned it. We've earned every step we take,

(49:53):
every every I still because you know, as Baldwin says,
we have the right to hold it, this country accountable.
You know, it's funny. I was, you know, talking to
my dad and of course he was in the military,
and I asked him why, well, you know why, and
his whole thing was there was no jobs. He was like,
I couldn't get a job. I had the main I
had two sisters. My father wasn't in my life. I
had to support my mother, so I had to do it.

(50:13):
And he said, but joining the military wasn't a problem,
he said. When I came back home, he said, I
think it, I'd be you know, a military vet. You know,
I just did my four years in military, I get
a job, he said. I couldn't find a job. He said.
I went from military to fixing cars at a car out,
and he said, there was nobody that would give me
a job. He said, So the only job that I had,
he said, I took. He said, I did with all
black people did back then. I took the sanitation test.

(50:35):
I took the post office test, and the police officer tests.
He said. The police officer tests was the one that
came back to first, he says, and I needed a job,
and I just feel like we don't take care of
ourt vets in this country, like our vets come home.
You see him on the side of the road twenty
five said, for food. You know, they don't have a
place to stay, they don't have no It's horrible the
way we treat our own. That's why you can't tell me.

(50:55):
You can't tell me anything about being a patriot based
off the way we our ventures at all. And guess
what we're allowed to say that the problem is we're
not having those conversations publicly and holding people accountable to
those conversations and answers. I guess, I guess this is
my final question. Do you do you think police brutality
would still be as much of an much of an

(51:16):
issue as it is if if people responded to the
injustice the way Lincoln Jefferson did an American skin. Now
you gotta watch American skin. I mean, I'm with you
to be totally honest, because I don't I don't have

(51:36):
any answers. And as you said, after a while, with
subjugation becomes revolution, it's only a matter of time. And
guess what, it's okay like the status quote or I'll
say that make us feel bad for what's happening to us,
and make us feel bad for being frustrated and being
out of options, and even entertaining the idea that things

(52:00):
an option. You know what I'm saying, Like that's wrong.
We need to be able to have all kinds of
conversation about protecting our children, because the children are not
fine in this country, ours aren't. Keeping them alive is
one thing, but even think about it like this, our brother,
if our brother Michael Brown lives, then they lock him
up for the same thing. If the God would have

(52:20):
shot me, wouldn't have died. They threw the book out,
So there's police killing. But then there's just walking and breathing.
We're being miseducated, like in the ways that it's criminal.
Like if you can't afford a proper education, you're doomed.
Everyone knows that. And so what do we do. We're
not gonna play Russians, let with our kids. So all

(52:41):
of our kids on, you know, and be I'm sure
your kids got the best education. My kids getting the best.
So you're in a situation where you're like, I'm not
gonna put them in the worst schools to prove a point. Again,
I don't have all the answers. I wish I had more,
but you know, all of us are trying to figure
this thing out. This film is just a critique which
has more questions than it answers. You know what I mean.
I'm no, you know, no hero, I'm no. I'm just

(53:03):
an artist, man, just trying to reflect the times in
a way that makes us have conversations like this so
our our listeners, our audience can approach this thing a
little differently. Absolutely well banking, man. It was early out
there man, for y'all. Anything American Skin is a must watch, man.
I'm not gonna lie. Um. I watched the Jeet with
the Judas in The Black Messiah and then American Skin.

(53:26):
It's not a good combination, two great movies. But you
will be triggered as a black person in America in
a good way. Though, you will be triggered. Don't want
to do something. That's it. Well, thank you, brother, we
appreciate you again. Reckless Club, good mother, thank you brother. Morning.
Everybody is tj Envy, Angela yee. Charlomagne the guy we
are the breakfast Club. I don't know about you, Charlomagne.

(53:48):
But the kids are up. They are in class that
virtually learning right now because of the snowstorm. And it's
gonna be a long one today. Brouh. My five year
old don't have school today. I don't know the KIDSI
school for you, Yeah, they got they got them more
virtually learning today. It sucks for them because usually they'd
have the day off because of the snow. But anyway,
let's get to the rumors. Let's talk Cardi B. This

(54:10):
is the Rumor Report with Angela. All right, well, get
ready for some new music from Cardi B. She has
announced on social media my new single up drops this Friday.
Let's go and there's some artwork with it too, So

(54:30):
she already has whopped that was triple platinum, that came
out back in August, and now she's got a new
single coming out on Friday, Okay, And I'm sure, I'm
sure it'll be some visuals to go along with that.
And I'm positive it'll be some visuals to go along
with that. That's all Cardi operation. Yeah, absolutely, all right now, Silento,
you guys remember they'll watch me with watch me na. Well,

(55:01):
he was arrested yesterday for allegedly murdering his cousin, Frederick Rooks.
After an investigation, they found him shot to death in
the street on January twenty first. They found eight bullet
casings on the scene. They didn't have a clear motive
behind the shooting, but they said they obtained some ring
camera footage from homes in the area which captured at
least one gun shot and several vehicles fleeing the scene.

(55:24):
And right now Silento has been arrested. He's being held
into cal County jail and that he's being charged with
a murder. Wow. I saw one of Silento's business partners.
I didn't read the whole thing, but he posted yesterday
that Silento has been dealing with mental health issues for
a while. Now. Yeah, we can see that he got

(55:47):
arrested for domestic violence. I think in the last couple
of months. Also, he was doing like one forty in
his car I think a month ago, and I mean
yeeks right, well, as publicists posted a police send my
clients Silento some positive vibrations. Over the past several years,
Ricky has been suffering immensely from a series of mental
health illnesses. We will continue in his efforts of treatment,

(56:09):
but we ask in the meantime the public uplift him
and his family an immediate prayer and positive energy. Yeah,
you remember when he came to do an interview and
he was late. You remember that, Yes, I do, and
what do we do? And we told him, we told
him that we'll get him on the next single. The
next single never came. Now, next single never came, The

(56:31):
next single never came, all right. Alexandria Alcasio Cortez says
that she is a survivor of sexual assault, and she
discussed this also while describing the trauma of what happened
at the Capitol. Now, she talks about what happened at
the Capitol that day. I immediately realized that I shouldn't
have gone into the bathroom. I should have jumped in

(56:51):
the closet, and so I opened the door, when all
of a sudden, I hear that whoever was trying to
get inside got into my office. And then I just
start to hear these yells where is she? And this
was the moment where I thought everything was over. I

(57:13):
mean I thought I was going to die. I have
never been quieter in my entire life. Well, so she
did talk about also being a survivor of sexual assault
in the charm that comes with this, and she didn't
even think she could trust the Capitol Police at that point.
And then all of a sudden, I hear, hey, it's okay,

(57:35):
come out, and I come out, and this man is
a Capitol police officer. But then it didn't feel right
because he was looking at me with a tremendous amount
of anger and things weren't adding up. He wasn't yelling
like this is Capitol police, this is Capitol police. And
I talked to g my legislative director, after the fact,

(57:57):
and he said, no, I didn't know if he was
there to help us or hurt us either. That's crazy.
Now in addition to this, she I get it. She
has something to say to everybody that is telling her
she should just move on. And you know, she says
that they're using the same tactics as abusers. These folks

(58:18):
who tell us to move on, that we should forget
what's happened, or even telling us to apologize, these are
the same tactics of abusers. And I'm a survivor of
sexual assault, and I haven't told many people that in
my life, but when we go through trauma, trauma compounds

(58:41):
on each other. Hey man, I don't I don't know
if you can ever truly heal your trauma. It sounds
good to say what I don't know, because you never
know what's going to trigger you. Just when you think
something is healed inside of you, it's a situation that
sets you off and re traumatizes you all over again.

(59:02):
So I think life is a process of constantly letting
the same trauma go. I mean, that's some conversations I've
been having with my therapist lately, and you know, my homegirl,
Debbie Brown, you know, just just different people. I know
that practice mindfulness. I've been having that conversation, like, do
you ever truly heal from trauma because I don't know. No,
I don't think you really do no way right, I'm

(59:24):
sure think trigger too. Yeah, all right, well that is
your rumor report. All right, thank you miss here Charlemagne.
Who are giving that donkey too? Oh man, I need
court Sidecaren to come to the front of the congregation.
We like to have a world with her. Her name
is actually Julie Anna Carlos Chris and Juliana Carlos. Her
and her husband need to come to the front of

(59:44):
the congregation. We'd like to have a world with him
this morning. All right, we'll get into that next keeping
lock this to breakfast club. Good mornings. Don't be out
here acting like a donkey. It's time for Donkey of
the day. I'm a big boy. I could take it
to be I feel I deserve. It ain't no big deal,
I know, Charlotte Mini gut gonds some funny sad mouth.
I gotta say something you may not agree with. Doesn't

(01:00:05):
mean I need who's getting that donkey that donkeys that
don't don't don't don't donkey other day? Right there the
breakfast club, bitches, you can call me the donkey of
the day, but like I mean, no harm yees donk
here today for Tuesday, February second goes to Chris and
Juliana Carlos Sodium warning the Mayonnaids is heavy on this story. Okay, FYI,

(01:00:28):
I made some tuna yesterday, and I was so proud
of myself because I used just enough mayonnaise, one forkful
and a single cana tuna which some old bass seasoning,
pepper and garlic, salt, yum meat. Okay, we was in business,
you feel me. I mean that one foulkful of Mannaids
made the tuna the right color and everything. And that's
the thing about maynonnaise. I don't dislike mandaise, it's just

(01:00:50):
that too much of it on anything ruins whatever that
thing is. Okay, you can ruin up a potato salad
are some tuna if you apply too much goddamn band as.
There you go. I was waiting for a dropmost and
that's exactly what happened last night at State Farm Arena. Okay.
See it's Atlanta. We all know Atlanta is on phase

(01:01:12):
one seventy three when it comes to reopening the city.
What is COVID to Atlanta Atlanta really might be Wakanda
because they act like it's a force field covering the
whole city that's keeping COVID out. But one simple look
at CDC statistics will tell you otherwise, because as of Monday,
seven hundred and forty nine thousand, eight hundred and sixty
seven Georgians have tested positive for COVID nineteen since the

(01:01:35):
pandemic started last March, and the total of twelve thousand,
five hundred and seventy have died in connection with the virus.
In nineteen cases of a COVID nineteen variant first discovered
in the United Kingdom has been found in Georgia. Okay,
so don't let the picks and videos on IG fool you.
COVID is very real in Atlanta, and last night was

(01:01:56):
the first night I saw folks in Georgia. Folks in
Atlanta take any type of COVID nineteen protocol serious and
rightfully so, because last night Lebron James was attacked by
a group of thucks. Okay, I don't know if they
were members of Vanilla Isis or not, but it seemed
to me that one of them took their mask off,
aimed at Lebron James and just beginning to curse him

(01:02:16):
out for no reason, which can only be described in
this climate as biological warfare. We don't know what her
COVID status was or is. Maybe she's positive, maybe she's negative,
Maybe it's Mabeline. I don't know. All I know is
if they want you to wear a mask in a
building is for a reason. And when you decide to
become a maskless heckler and purposely take your mask off

(01:02:39):
Julianna Carlos in order to talk in the direction of
Lebron James, that can only be considered one thing during
a pandemic germ warfare. Now what happened. It was late
in the fourth quarter. The game had to be stopped
because the devil that is Duke's Manna is in the
form of Chris and Julianna Carlos got into it with
a man who's got a Bible named after him, Lebron James.

(01:03:00):
Listening to some of it, We've got a lot of
jawing going on the front row and look at that.
And now the security is getting involved, and the security
is actually, i mean the referees are actually telling the
security they may want to usher somebody out of the building.
They might be gone. I think this was happening. Also,

(01:03:21):
somebody was all over Lebron. They're still I think that's
what it is a few minutes ago, and I know
he was glaring into the seats. Wow. But she's pointing
like that one meme with the Lady of the cat.
That is the most accurate description of this woman. Okay,
that that is what I saw when I saw that pale, privileged,

(01:03:42):
unseasoned piece of poultry standing there with the mass dangling
off her chin, pointing at Lebron. That's exactly what I
thought about, that white woman pointing and screaming at that cat. Now,
Juliana went on live last night. They explain what happened.
There's a few parts to this. Let me see what
I want to hear. Um, let's let's let's hear the

(01:04:02):
first part. Kicked out of the game. Husband, this is
such a listen. Let me tell you, Lebron James looked
at my husband during the game and custom out And
I stood up and I go, don't it. Will talk
to my husband. Talk to my husband one more time.

(01:04:23):
Le will you up? And you started finding shut your mouth,
un bet, and I go, you shut your mouth. Fitch,
whoa number one? If a fan heckle is a player,
a player? Can Hecko back? What I want to know? Juliana?
If Lebron and your husband were going back and forth,
do you realize you escalated the situation if you indeed

(01:04:44):
stood up and told him, talk to my husband one
more time, I will f you up. Did I hear
that right? Did she say that? Can you play that part? Drum?
Talk to my husband one more time? Level you up? Geezh,
talk to my husband one more time. I will f
you up. You were at State Farm Arena and immediately
chose violence, Julianna, I will f you up as a
call to arms. Okay, that right there means I need

(01:05:06):
to prepare for confrontation. I need to defend myself against
the potential takeover. Telling me I will f you up
means I need to get ready for combat. Word to Reggio,
say combat Jack forever now, Juliana explained first, and let's listen.
Chris has been a Hawks fan forever. Whatever he has
this issue with Lebron, I don't have an issue with Lebron.
I don't Lebron anyway. All of a sudden, Lebron says

(01:05:30):
something to my husband. I sat up and go, don't
talk to my husband. And he looks at me and
he goes, sit the down, bitch, and they go, don't
call me a bit here, sit down, get the out
of here, and they go, don't talk to my husband
like that, And all of a sudden, now I'm getting
kicked out. Excuse me. I have court sight seats that
I pay for. See, Julianna talks too much. Yeah, she

(01:05:52):
just admitted. She just admitted to a targeted attack. You
just said Chris doesn't like Lebron. Lebron. I'm sure it
doesn't even know Chris. So Chris went there with the
intent to wage biological warfare on Lebron, and you, Juliana,
are the germ that he used to attack. Oh, this
is bigger than Nino brown baby. In fact, there is
no brown in it. This is a great war White

(01:06:14):
Walkers versus the King. Now, Juliana, you said Lebron called
you a bitch. Okay, let's let's listen to that one part.
He look, she said Lebron told her to sit the
f down, bitch. Okay, just like the woman on the
meme arguing with the cat, you're hearing what you want
to hear, Juliana, Lebron didn't tell you to sit the

(01:06:36):
f down, bitch. He said to you why you got
your mask down in this bitch, which is a damn
good question. Juliana. See, fans like you are gonna make
it bad for everyone else. If you can't follow proper
COVID protocol, then maybe, just maybe it's too much of
a risk to let fans attend the games. Just when
you think you're getting back to some sense of normalcy,

(01:06:56):
here goes Juliana bringing attention to her lip injections by
in her mouth and doing what historically white women have
done when they have interactions with big black men, playing
the victim after they started the problem. That's why Mmettel
got killed. It was the catalyst for black Wall screen
getting destroyed in the late eighteen hundred. Claims that black men,

(01:07:16):
you know, had done things they didn't do on white
women were frequently cited to justify their lynches. So we
don't take it lightly when you start flapping your kylleague
Jenna lip kids to accuse black men are doing and
saying things they didn't say. Because it's a lot of
generational trauma that goes along whip fact. Please let Chelsea
Handler give Chris and Juliana Carlos the biggest he haw

(01:07:37):
he haw. That is way too much. Dan Mann is
all right, well, thank you for that. Let's open up
the phone lines. I know we ain't got much time,
so let's get right to an eight hundred five eight
five one oh five one. When is the last time
you ran into a carrac hunt? When is the last
time you got a situation with a carrot? All right?
Call us up right now. We'll talk about it when
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Go morning in

(01:08:02):
right now at your opinion to the Breakfast Club topic
breaking down five five one five one to Breakfast Club Morning.
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela yee, Charlomagne the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. Now if you just joined us,
we're asking when is the last time you ran into

(01:08:23):
a karen right that This comes from Charlomagne's Donkey of
the day who he gave donkey too? Who? What's her name?
Chris and Julianna Carlos. They were the two people who
were heckling Lebron James last night. They actually waged during
warfare on Lebron James. Because Julianna took her mask off
to talk to Lebron. We don't know if she has
COVID and not, so as far as I'm concerned, I

(01:08:44):
was biological warfare. All right, Well, we're asking eight hundred
five a five one on five one, when's the last
time you ran into a Karen? And I started off
for myself. I was with mine. Well let me not
say bite gang because I know people here gang they
think of negative. So me and my crew we are
riding up, you know, up to Nayak. And we were
riding and we went out to this little town and

(01:09:07):
when we were there, it was me. Now, everybody that
rides his professionals like professionals. I was riding with John,
who owns a NASCAR driving team. I was riding with
my manager, June. I was riding with Duro, and there
was a bunch of professionals, really good brothers. That's really
really getting it. But we like to ride to stay
in shape. We want to make sure we're healthy, we
want to make sure that we can live to see
our kids, our grandkids, and we do it all together.

(01:09:28):
So as we were riding in this town, this white
lady yells out of her carte. So we said, we
hate you back and total SMD and you know a
couple of other things. But that was the last time
I ran into a Karen. I've been carrying free the
last couple of months. What about yourself, Charlomagne. You know,
luckily I haven't had a lot of run ins with
Karen's in my life. I think it's because I grew

(01:09:50):
up in South Carolina, so I tend to avoid unnecessary
interactions with white women. Okay, even with your daughter, with
your daughter doing cheerlead and something, they run into a karena,
a cheerleader competition, anything like that, you know. But also,
you know I have I have enough historical information in
my brain to know that there's certain situations I'm not
putting myself in. You know. Sadly, this is things that

(01:10:11):
black black men have to think about. If I'm at
an elevator, right and it's like, you know, a couple
of white women in the elevator, I probably won't get
on the elevator with them the one just because yeah,
I'll just take the next one, just because I want
to avoid any unnecessary interaction, you know what I mean?
Because just like I was talking about earlier during Donkey
or the day you know, throughout the eighteen hundreds, you know,

(01:10:32):
claimed that black men had done things the white women
that they didn't do. We're frequently cited to justify that lynching.
So maybe that's just the generational trauma of my ancestors
inside of me telling me to avoid you know, uh,
certain interactions. Okay, what about you last time you went
into a Karen Um. I was on a flight and
this woman was going crazy because I guess you know,

(01:10:54):
on Delta, they don't let you sit next to anybody
the way they have the seating, and I was in
my seat. I was in my seat, and she got
on the plane and she was like going crazy, like,
oh my god, they had me sitting next to someone.
And she was complaining and she was like, I don't
know why this would happen. I know, we're not supposed
and I was just being quiet. She was actually in
the wrong seat, but she was asking them to check

(01:11:16):
my ticket, like, well, you should check her ticket and
see if she's in the right seat, Like I was Nope.
I just sat there because I was waiting for somebody
to say something to me. But no one said anything,
and I just was watching her go crazy, and then
she was like, oh, I'm in actually in row three,
that's the r Okay, I'm sorry, No, check your ticket first. Sorry. Well,

(01:11:36):
let's go to the phone. Ones eight dreat five eight
five one oh five one. Hello, who's this Brooklyn? Oh
my god, I just have to say I love each
and every one of you. Sholotte man, I love you,
please always, Oh my god? Whoever? Now anyway, So I'll

(01:11:57):
just get right to my story. So I just started
working at this hospital I'm not gonna say the name
IM about seven months ago. I have this lady who
just she pulls me all day. She complains, complains, complain.
Nothing I do is ever right, But she'll never come
to me and say anything. She'll just complain. This woman
he on herself in front of everyone last night, and

(01:12:20):
I front Road Center. How did she be on herself? Why?
I don't know. Well, she really should have been worried
about wearing a depend for one of the patients instead
of me. But I'm telling you, God would really let
you get a front road seat to your enemies. Crumble.
That's right, that's right. You know what I was gonna
tell you. I was gonna tell you if if you've

(01:12:41):
ever seen the Help, you know, maybe you need to
make her a pie. The universe work that one. The
universe work that one out for you even better, Darla
n Can you please send me a book? Yes, I
will let the producer put you on hold of Day
and put you on hold and I get your information.
Hold on, Okayma, hang up, hold on Shema. Eight on

(01:13:03):
drink five eight five one oh five one. We're asking,
when's the last time you ran into a Karen? Call us?
Now it's the Breakfast Club, Good morning, call me and
your opinions to the Breakfast Club top on eight did
five e five one five one morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,

(01:13:27):
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Good morning. We're asking, when is the last time you
ran into a Karen? Hello? Who's this first? Is foremost?
I want to say, good morning. I love the show,
listen to it every morning. Love listening to y'all every morning.
Donkey of the Gate Day definitely makes my baby. We'll
get away, Thank you, Thank you, sir, Donkey of the Gate.

(01:13:50):
Donkey and again the new segment we're starting in March.
I knew you was don be the one to do it.
I knew it. Man, he's probably even coming out. I
appreciate you. Ran up to a flock of Karen's in
nineteen twenty nineteen the GM strike. I drive sit my truck.
I'm trying to get into a plant. They're picking it first.
Someone breaks a mirror off of my truck. I get

(01:14:12):
out of have a short conversation with him. He backs down.
One of the other guys is going to come to
his defense and get in my face. I'm six six
hundred pounds, I'm not worried about nothing. Do what you
go through. We're gonna sell it right here. But dude
spits in my face. What he now? No, so when
you get out, jail at I never want to jail.

(01:14:37):
So I deal with him accordingly. And two other guys
come to his defense because he missed the whole rest
of the fight. Up after the first bunch, everybody saying
I started everything. I started everything. The group of quote
unquote Karen's said he did it. He just started throwing punches.
I'm like, dude, spit in my face. One of the
women actually said it looked like he might have spent

(01:14:58):
first like I did. Look like I'll spend everybody's Thomas
spit my face. But lord, video actually showed everything that happened,
and thank god, yeah I got nothing. All three of
the guys who end up getting beat up, all three
of them, they all got fired from GM for them.
So all three up, all three of all. Yeah, all
three of them got hands. I imagine that wouldn't have

(01:15:21):
been imagine there wouldn't have been a video, and they
would have just took their word against yours. I would
love to see the video because I want to know
who good marriagings are that came to your defense against
these thugs. Hey, I can see y'all the video because
the same day a guy when I played football with it,
send me the video, said, hey, this is your firm.

(01:15:41):
I said, yeah, that was me, send me that video.
My goodness. All right, give them the email. Give them
the email Breakfast Club amat gmail dot com. You can
just send it to our instagrams. Man, Hello, who's this? Hey?
This is Chrystal. How are you, hey, Crystals? We're asking
the last time you're read into Karen. Now I'm in

(01:16:01):
South Carolina, So Karen's a common that's why. That's why
I always avoided him. Hey, Charlomagne, good old, I'm in Columbia,
so you know all about it. Eight o three, Dad
is I'm gonna stop caring y'all in public. The other
day I'm with my eight year old daughter. I'll get
in a can off the bottom of the owl. Lady

(01:16:24):
walked up with her car. She said, yeah, my way, nigger.
Who what now? You recessive jean, poor white trash? What
is a recessive genes the ocean from the fish that's
on the top bradby ashes. She went on to say

(01:16:44):
all types of stuff. She will on to even say,
I will slap you, I said, lady, And if you
slap me, your whole family will be cooking greens all
next week for your fall pears at your house. All
that sweet, I promise you. By the way, by the way,
her calling you the N word is enough. That was enough.

(01:17:05):
I'm ready to suit up. By the end, y'all, I'm
like what I'm not my answer even my answers would
have beat joke that part. Somebody's gonna get hurt for real.
They're playing too much, like stop it, Okay, you better
watch Charry again or talking about ned it's for real,

(01:17:30):
all right, Well, thank you. What's the moral of the story, guys,
I don't know if there isn't world of the story.
World of the story is Karen's out here and these
screech bro and they've been around forever in the day.
So the only thing you can do is avoid them
or have somebody to pay your bail money. Goodness, Curtius.
All right, but we got roubles on the way, yes,
and we are gonna be talking about what kind of forever.

(01:17:51):
Let's talk about a spinoff series for Black Panther that
is in the works at Disney Plus. All right, we'll
get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Come on
the breakfas his club. It's about Angela Ye, the Breakfast Club.

(01:18:16):
So let's talk about Chad Wheeler, who played for the Seahawks.
He was arrested in book January twenty third after his
girlfriend accused him of twice tooking her until she was
unconscious while he was experiencing what he called and she
called it as well, a manic episode. Cops have described
what the scene was like. They said that it took
three police officers to detain him, and they said it

(01:18:38):
was like trying to subdue a bear. They said. When
they arrived at the scene, his girlfriend was so badly injured.
They had to subdue him. And they said, one cop said,
I grabbed a hold of chat I could tell he
was very solid and muscular. He was not easy to move,
and all three responding cops ended up piling on top
of him and it barely slowed him down. Yeah, he's

(01:18:58):
six seven three under fifteen pounds, and he hit man
and moves men for a living like black. They would
have shot him. If he was black, they would have
shot him, and they wouldn't have cared that he had
mental health issues. And they used a taser to detain him,
but they said it had little to no effect, so
he was later arrested. Now his how did they finally

(01:19:19):
do it? Then? If they did, the taser didn't work,
three men on top of him didn't work. What did
they do? They said? They said, Ultimately they were finally
able to get him into custody, but they said he
was so big they would confirmed he concerned. He wouldn't
fit into the cruiser, the police cruiser, so they had
to call for a larger jail van to take him
to the station. Isn't it amazing how they can always

(01:19:40):
figure it out when it's a white person or when
it's a black person. They have no other bright idea
other than the shoot bro. They shot the preacher that
was having a mental illness I don't want to say
a problem at the time. And he was what six
foot nowhere in there, three hundred fifteen pounds. They didn't
need three men to take him down. They just shot him,
which is crazy. And listen and you know, oh glad you.

(01:20:04):
I was gonna say he has entered a not guilty
plea though in this domestic violence case, I don't know
how you can argue that. Well, you know, they say, Chad,
will it deal with mental health issues? He wasn't taking
his medication. But I think when folks, you know, hear
people say that, that doesn't mean he shouldn't be held accountable.
Like even with all of those things, you can still
get your ass beat. You can also still go to jail,

(01:20:26):
and you can also get mental health counseling as well.
All three of those things can be true. Now, his
former girlfriend did a parent court with her left arm
in a sling, and she said that she does not
feel safe as long as he is out of custody.
She did object to his request that he'd be allowed
to stay at his home in Hawaii, and she would
prefer that he's not anywhere around her. So I can't

(01:20:47):
blame her for that, of course, but we'll keep you
updated on this case. All right. Now, let's talk about
Black Panther. This is a good news story. There's a
series in the works with director Ryan Kugler, is a
five year exclusive TV deal with Disney, and they said
one of those projects is going to be a Black
Panther TV series. Y'a all excited for that? Yeah, as

(01:21:12):
I am. Come on, man, I'm so deep in the
wand division. I mean, it's only been four episodes, but
I already love what Marvel's doing with um, you know,
the Disney Plus shows. That's actually the reason I got
Disney Plus, even though my kids have taken Disney Plus
over because they love Bluie and Sheriff Cally and you know,
all of that type of stuff. But I got Disney
Plus for the Marvel TV shows. So yes, I'm excited,

(01:21:33):
all right, Just make it sure I actually got Disney
Plus two. I had to watch Soul and now I
have Disney Plus at home, all right, Mariah carrys it's
the best. It's the best screaming service, by the way.
My kids love it because because a lot of the
stuff that I enjoy are on Disney Plus. So what's
the best service to me? All right? Mariah Carrey's extreame
sister is suing her for emotional distress, and she said

(01:21:56):
that is because of Mariah's allegations about her. She's doing
for one point two five million. Alison Carey says that
Maria presented no evidence to back up the accusations of
abuse in her book, The Meaning of Maria. She said
Mariah's book alleges that Alison gave her value and trying
to pimp her out and threw a cup of boiling
hot tea on her, causing third degree burns when Maria
was twelve. She's disputing these allegations as Mariah hasn't provided

(01:22:19):
any evidence to support them. That they'll all you say.
I was gonna just say so crazy, the things that
we go through with the people who are family members
closest to us. Well, that's why they say when you
write books, you should always change the names, just just
in case. Because the situations like this, change just change

(01:22:41):
the name. Yeah, absolutely chased the name. Ain't gotta deal
with the headaches. It's hard though, if it's your sister, right,
because you still are going to say it's your sister.
Won't people won't That still matter? Yeah, but anybody could
sue for any reason. So if you can avoid a lawsuit,
I mean, yeah, you tried. I mean, I know Charlemagne
has been too a couple of times. I've been tooed
for thirty million dollars so last year, So yeah, people,

(01:23:03):
thirty million, you know that you paid it? No, I
want them all right. Lee Daniels is doing a Wonder
Years reboot. They got the order for the pilot, so
that will move forward. The original show featured a white
middle class family in the sixties, but this time it

(01:23:25):
will have a black middle class family in Montgomery, Alabama,
also during the sixties and how they made sure that
era was the Wonder Years for them. So the show's
original creator, Neil Marlins is on board as a consultant
and that's the plan. He's also doing a Waiting to
Exhale series, So I'm excited for that. I can't sit
here and act like I wasn't all into Kevin and

(01:23:47):
Winnie when the Wonder Years was popping to Kevin and Windey.
Definitely Winnie Winnie Man shut up Vin and Windy also
though he just be trying to trigger me, that's all.
But now I was all in the Kevin and when
that was all in for all six seasons of Don't.
I don't know if it needs a remake, but I'm

(01:24:09):
interested to see what Lee Daniels dodge with it all
right now. Eas Ray recently did an Instagram live conversation
and she was talking about Insecure coming to an end
and how she also is a little bit insecure about that.
Here's what she said. My negative self talk has been
I'm entering a new chapter in my life, which I'm

(01:24:30):
discovering is you know, with the end of Insecure, and
it feels like my future is kind of just up
in the air. I'm like, what's gonna be my next thing?
And you know, am I gonna be? Okay? I do?
I have longevity in this industry, and so I guess
my positive affirmation will be you can be here as
long as you want to be, as long as you

(01:24:52):
work at it, and as long as it's right for you.
Shocking to me more than fine. She just had Lovebird
The love Birds on Netflix. She had the photograph, she
had little she has all these other things going on.
That's so interesting about those on her projects though she
was she was acting in those projects. I guess she

(01:25:12):
means I thought some of them now far as being
a producer, not that I I don't think none of
those projects in a movie yet. I thought The Lovebirds
was her project. But maybe I'm wrong. I don't know.
I'm not sure, but I don't I didn't know. I
don't think she's done no films yet, not not produced
a written one. Oh well, I felt like, I mean,

(01:25:34):
Eastery is super talented. I love her stuff, so I
can't wait to see what she does next. But I
understand the insecurity when you're when you're not sure. So
she's just being vocal about it because no matter what,
you always have to have, like you're playing ABC and
D just in case, you never want to take things
for granted. But you know we're all for I'm interested
in the HBO Max show she got that's based on

(01:25:57):
the two female rappers from Miami. I mean, that's not
that just just reading that on paper, that looks incredible,
so I'm interested to see what she does. I want
her to cast pretty v in that as well as
well as the city girls. Why not both of them
need to be on the screen. All right, Well I'm
Angela Yee and that is your report. All right, thank you,

(01:26:18):
miss ye. It's Black History monthfull we repping today. Listen, man,
today we are representing Michael Jeffrey Jordan. Here is a
Black History Month for legend. So this is a Black
History Month moment from a Black History Month legend. This
man is giving us the most legendary meme of all
time when he decided to be vulnerable and bear his
soul and cry in front of the world. And now
he's giving us another meme based off what some would

(01:26:40):
call his petty But I don't call it being petty.
I call it motivation to do what it is that
he does. Now I know the second agreement in the
Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruise is don't take things personally.
But what if taking things personally is what drives your
competitive spirit and makes you want to be better and

(01:27:01):
execute better than everyone around you. Here's the ten times
Michael Jordan took you personally. The Breakfast Club presents a
new Black History Month legendary were tough. Every time I
go in the game and come out, I got a
new scratch. It became personal with me. I knew that
Jerry Krause loved Dan Martin, and just because the Krouse

(01:27:23):
liked him was enough for me. You think he's a
great defensive but okay, I'm sure that he's not. It
became personal with me. Clyde wasn't a threat. You know,
I'm not saying he wasn't a threat, but me being
compared to him, it became personal with me. I was
a little bit upset that I didn't get the MDP
that they gave it the chart, but with that said, okay, fine,
you can have that. It became personal with me. When

(01:27:46):
I was playing baseball, Utah was in town to play
the balls. They're practicing at the facility. I go over,
say hello, John and call and this kid by Russell
comes up to me and said, man, while you quit.
Then you knew I could guard your hands. I couldn't.
You had to quit. But from that point on, he's
been on my list. It became personal with me. Carl
won't get MVP I'm not saying he wasn't deserving of it.

(01:28:06):
All I'm saying is that that fuel fired me and say, okay,
you think he's MVP. Okay, fine, the problem it became
personal with me during the finals. We got to dinner
one night, George calls over on the other side having dinner,
George Carl over there, and George Carl does not come
over and speak to him. He walked right past me.
Oh so that's how he's gonna play. That's all I

(01:28:27):
needed for him to do that, and it it became
personal with me. Lebradford Smith walking out of the gym
had said nice game, Mike. He took such umbrage and
a guy saying nice game, Mike that he torched and
humiliated him. I hated him and yeah, he carries even
to this day. It became personal with me, and that

(01:28:50):
was another New Black History Month legend courtesy of the
Breakfast Club. I definitely take things personally. By the way,
me too, but I think, yeah, and I use it
for the same type of motivation that Michael Jeffrey Jordan does. Yes,
all right, now, shout to Nate Parker for joining us
this morning. That's right, man. If you get a chance
during this Black History Month, please watch American Skin. It's

(01:29:12):
a lot of great movies that are coming out this
month that have a lot of teachable moments. American Skin
is one of them. Judas in the Black Messiah is another,
So make sure you check those out. All right, Well,
how the time to get up out of here. Shout
to everybody on the East Coast. I know a lot
of people are digging out today. Just be safe out there.

(01:29:33):
Even though they plowed a lot of the road to
still icy, so just give yourself a little extra time.
And it's cold, and if you're on the down south
on the West Coast, it's hot, f y'all. Hey, And
I want to tell everybody to man. Salute to everybody,
and thank you to everyone who has been pre ordering
Tamika Mallory's upcoming book, State of Emergency, How to Win

(01:29:54):
in the Country We Built. It'll be out May eleventh,
twenty twenty one. A lot of people pre ordering, and
I just want to say thank you for the support.
And if you haven't pre ordered, jet go do that
to make a Mallory State of Emergency How to Win
in the Country Built. It's available everywhere you purchase books, Amazon,
Barns and Nobles, all those places, all right, Well, leave
us on a positive note. Listen to this positive note

(01:30:14):
today comes from another one of our ancestors, now, the
Great Maya Angelou. Maya Angelou says, if you don't like something,
change it. If you can't change it, change your attitude
about it. Breakfast club you'll finish for y'all, dumb

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