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April 14, 2021 87 mins

Today on the show they had comedian/actors the Lucas Brothers come by where they spoke about recently writing for "Judas and the Black Messiah" movie, new projects and more. Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to a man that couldn't control himself when it came to Tickle me Elmo and Angela Yee helped some listeners out during "Ask Yee" with a discussion popping up about checking your partners phone.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
In the morning. You in the morning. I'm talking right.
You know you're about to experience a morning showing like
any yo to the breakfast club. What you guys are
doing right now? That's the hump culture. Breakfast club is
my morning sick. I need it and I love it.
Something you like, You're really not popping until you do
the breakfast Club. Been waiting. Come to y'all, show man.

(00:23):
I know you gotta be a big time so let
me be up and here you gotta be you gotta
be big time. At La and Charlomagne the Guy the
breakfast club bitches take good morning Usa 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 money. Charlomagne the Guy, Peace to
the planet. Guess what day it is? Guess what day
it is? Yes, it's Wednesday. It's hump dam mid a

(01:06):
little week. Good morning, what's happening? Good morning till you?
What happened to Atime? Man? Good morning to Atime anytimes
telling the screets We spoke about that. Remember the movie
he just did, Oh he did a movie and everything.
I talked about it on the air and then he
hit us up like I didn't know he did a movie. Okay,
all right, slu the atime Man, I was riding in

(01:28):
this morning and listening to that Miguel four pack. Okay,
that a dealer cheek dropped on a clue what's it called.
What's that word called, cheek cheek? Yeah? Yeah, man dropped
on a clue bomb for Miguel Man. I love Miguel Man.
Miguel is incredible. And then you know, your your your
your title playlist just goes down, you know, random songs
that they started playing all type R and B records,
So they started playing old Miguel, like how many Drinks

(01:51):
in the Dawn. They didn't play Chris Brown Back to Sleep.
Then it hit me with Ari Lennox and Queen Nager.
Then he came with Beyonce Drunken Love, So you hold
Me this morning? That sounds like I'm not hardy. I
feel good. Okay, I feel good. Okay, that's when R
and B dust to It makes you feel good and
I feel you know, I never mind, but no. We
were having a debate on the Brilliant of his podcast

(02:14):
about Rihanna versus Beyonce and a versus twenty songs, twenty songs.
I think Beyonce got it. Yeah, I said Rihanna at first,
but I didn't say it with much confidence. But yeah,
you can't bet against Queen Bee, you know. I mean,
I'm a picket smith when free knows called it. But
you know, when you start handing the drunken loves and
the loves on top, like Rihanna got fourteen number ones,

(02:35):
I think she got the fourth most number ones ever.
But Beyonce got a lot of cultural smashes. Absolutely so
does Rito. But I don't know if it's it's it's
as much as Beyonce. Beyonce going to Destiny's Child catalog,
she would probably have to, yeah, I mean not she
wouldn't have to, but she probably would. She did. Yeah, yeah, yeah,

(02:56):
but you know, but I'm fresh off jumping out the
car listening to the surfboards though, So that's you know,
prison at the moment, right. You know that drunken Love
that I used to Man, I used to play drunken
Love so much up here. I used to come here
every day listening to drunk and Love. And we used

(03:16):
to be in his surfboard. Don't lie in me and
being our old board easy marine this morning? Have you
got nothing to do it? But so I really got
to do it? Butts up here, Jesus Christ, My goodness,
now front page news. What we're talking about. But let's

(03:36):
talk about this Johnson and Johnson vaccine. They have paused
the use of that vaccine over blood clock concerns. And
Hallom they paused Johnson's all the time for man, says
Johnson and Hallom. They paused it all the time. Okay,
all right, well this is for you, Bay ahead, drop
a clue, Bob, goddamnit. That's what I'm talking about. That's

(03:59):
how you start the morning. Our beautiful body is grinding
up in our club, my goodness, drunk and lie we
be yall night? Hey? You done? Hey? First of all,
nobody liked it like that. Okay, let me know when

(04:20):
you're done. I need you to be into it too.
I need you to be into it too like you
guys at Okay, I need to MENTI missy back, what's wrong? No,
I'm in drinking man. When we start, well, the US

(04:42):
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the US Food
and Drug Administration are recommending that the US paused the
use of Johnson and Johnson's COVID nineteen vaccine. They said
they were six reported US cases of a rare and
severe type of blood clot. One person is currently critical condition.
Another woman died. The six reported cases were, among them,

(05:04):
more than six point eight million doses of the Johnson
and Johnson vaccine. Now, what if you've got that vaccine?
Should you be concerned? Here's what doctor fault he has
to say. It appears that this adverse event occurs within
between six days and thirteen days. So if you're beyond
four weeks and you've had it a month or two ago,
I think you really don't need to worry about anything.

(05:25):
If you are in the timeframe of within a week
or two of having gotten vaccinated, this is a very
rare event. It's less than one in a million. Shod
that you still want to be alert to some symptoms
such as severe headache, some difficulty in movements, or some
chest discomfort and difficulty breathing. But like they said, one

(05:47):
in one million. Believe that. Stop listening to them. Yeah,
I mean, for from six people, you think they'll pause.
The whole exactly is that any of those symptoms like
he aches, abdominal pain, leg pain, shortness of breath within
three weeks after vaccination, then please contact your healthcare provider.
According to the statement that has been put out now,

(06:09):
as far as the effects on women, it feels like
it could be something how like birth control pills are related.
Is that hormonal? Here's where doctor faults. He had to say,
these are women of child bearing age. Does this suggest
that could be hormonal? Absolutely, and that's one of the
things that we want to investigate. There have been similar

(06:30):
types of phenomena that have occurred during pregnancy. Clotting abnimaladies
are known in women who take birth control pills, So
certainly there could be a hormonal aspect to this. Hey man,
I'm going back to what all the doctors told me
last party. All told me just wait at least a
year if you can. They said, when that first batchet

(06:52):
of vaccines come out, you know, don't be in a
rush to go get them. This is what doctors told me.
Doctors who that I use, not just black doctors, he's
the white doctors. Has occurred among women? Cases occurred, kay?
You All six of these cases occurred among women between
the ages of eighteen and forty eight, and symptoms did

(07:12):
occur six to thirteen days after vaccination. Now, you guys
brought up vaccine hesitation. Here is what doctor Fauci has
to say about that. Will this fuel vaccine hesitancy? Well,
certainly that is a concern. The question that is often asked,
does this have anything to do with the other vaccines,
the MR and as from MODERNA and from Faiser. You know,

(07:33):
absolutely not. There's no negative or adverse or red flag
signal coming from any of those vaccines, which is very
good news. In other words, they are very safe. What
I don't understand is what all these vaccines out there.
Shouldn't they pretty much have the same thing in them
because they fight in the same thing. Shouldn't it I
don't know. Ask doctor Faulchi, since you believe in him

(07:55):
so much. I mean, I don't I believe in the doctors.
And what the doctors? You have a doctor or my doctors.
My doctors took the vaccine. I took the vaccine, My
parents took the vaccine, my wife took the vaccine, my
daughter took the vaccine. Were all all right, you know
what I mean? But you don't know the long term impact,
you know. The CDC. The CDC is examining the case
of a woman who died after getting the Johnson and
Johnson vaccine in Virginia. She was forty five, forty five

(08:18):
years old. But we don't know the long effects of
actually getting COVID either. So it's it's you do it,
if you do it. That's true. But I know one thing.
You can't recall the vaccine after it's in your body.
I know that much, Okay, but I don't. I don't
think it lasts. I think it lasts up to a year.
But the vaccine, Yeah, so you gotta get it again
every years, just like the flu shot. I don't get

(08:40):
that either. All right, Well that is your front patents.
Haven't haven't gotten that either, Okay, all right, awkward, get
it off your chest? Eight play some more and b man,
I need him more. Hype man. That Chris Brown back
to sleep on for the screech one time. But that
Chris Brown play that. Don't play with him looking at

(09:02):
me when you play that record. Man allays talk to
Johnson's Where Johnson's Johnson one five one, this guy's horn
to get it off your chests. As the breakfast logal
morning the breakfast club. This is your time to get
it off your chest. Whether you're man from you on

(09:23):
the breakfast club, but you got something on your mind, Hey,
good morning, get it off your chests. Um. So I
work in the r I'm not a nurse nor a doctor.
I'm this registration, but I work in the yard. So
my opinion with the vaccine. UM, when people get to
vaccine is, of course we all know that they are

(09:43):
not approved by the FDA nor Medicare. I saw that.
That means people are I saw that. I was wondering
from people are getting these vaccines. Later on down the
line in shurance company is going to ask you did
you ever get to the vaccine? And that's gonna give
you fikey situations. The Medicare or adventurance companies are going

(10:04):
to decide if they're going to increase your prove you
or not cover you. And that's the team of Medicare.
Because all vaccines or medications have to be approved by
FDA and Medicare. Well, let me ask you a question.
I keep hearing people say that FDA didn't approve these vaccines,
but it's that true because how can they How can
they Paul, they didn't improve it. Well, it's an emergency maxine.

(10:26):
So that's two different things. Emergency and approval is it's
two different scenarios. Yeah, you approved the vaccines because they're
studies regarding it, like the flu shot. This years of studies,
which is vaccine. It's just a study. So like say,
for instance, when you get a sixty five years old
medicare asked you certain questions like is the government take

(10:49):
you for a research program for a vaccine or medication?
Well you get that when you're sixty five. They should
be asking that's that now and attaining us that now,
but they're not technically. So technically this round of vaccines
is all a bunch of guinea pigs. But you know
what it does sell? I looked at up right, I
went on the own website, the FDA dot govern says

(11:09):
the FDA has authorized three COVID nineteen vaccines for emergency use. Right,
that's what she just said, that it's for it's for
emergency use, but it's not. You can't use it still
in age is twelve to fifte twelve to fifteen. But
so I for emergency use, what does that mean? Because
it's still approved. Right, it's an emergency. I don't know.

(11:30):
This is for the experts. That's exactly why I'm not
taking that vaccine no time soon. Hello, who's this? This
is key from Houston man. Let's bro get it off
your chests. So it's two things I want to get
off my chests. First of all, Houston, man, we got
to get it together. We don't work together as an artist.
We don't do anything together like we're supposed to. Houston.

(11:51):
There's only one radio station. I'm not gonna say the
name of the other one, but they being truth, Yes,
we know that the Box Artist the truth. Yeah, yeah,
I think thank you for saying that. Charba Bain't, by
the way, but Charlotta Magine. By the way, I wanted
to bring something up because nine years ago you said
something about mister s and uh later, you've been passing

(12:12):
my butt cheeks. Man, I don't understand exactly what's going on,
but I hate and you said mister free passing it out.
You have been importingly, sir, I'm free. I've been free
but cheeks. We've been passing out but cheeks. I have
not passed out my butt cheeks. You get a butt cheeks. Okay.
I gave Envy a replica of some butt cheeks, but

(12:33):
I haven't passed outline. You are the open for your brother.
You'd be safe out there. Get it off. That's funny
as how to say you to open one for your
butt cheek because you just think of a big old Scott.
It crazy. Eight hundred five ain't five one on five one.
If you need to ben, hit this up now. It's

(12:54):
the breakfast club Go morning, the breakfast clubs. We want
to hear from you on the breakfasts. Hello. Who's this Joe?
This is Jamill calling from North Carolina. What's up, bro?
Get off your chess, hey man. I just wanted to
spread a little bit of positivity this morning. That's all.
What you got, What you got. I'm blessed back in

(13:16):
holly sleep. As my uncle Charla would always say, there
you go. All right. I want to thank God for
my life helping songs. I'm doing well today. I can't
complain at all. My family's doing okay, okay, And I
just want to say that I'm praying for this country
during this pandemic. The people have lost their lives to COVID.
The people that have lost their lives, the police brutality,
the people that have lost their lives to the match

(13:36):
shootings that have been going on these last couple of months,
and this company, UM Country, needs a lot of healing
and the company needs for our officials to step up
and do what they need to do in order to
make things that ain't happening. You ain't even got Yeah
when I see you and that one, Yeah, Rome has fallen, sir. Hello,

(13:59):
who's this? Hi? This is Karma Karma from Atlanta. Hey, Karma,
that's your real name. Yeah, that's my real name. Hey,
I just wanted to get off my said, um Charlomagne. Um,
you just really helped me. I just recently lost my
dad and I recently lost um one of my little

(14:19):
fur babies. And when we talked about when you talk
about mental health, it just made me realize that I
actually have to take it into consideration. I suffer from anxiety,
I already suffer from depression. And when I'm just hearing
about you talk about how you were able to just
sit down with sird therapists and just get it out
to wait and how you feel so much better, I

(14:40):
actually decided to just take the first step and I
hear y'all talk about talk space so much, and I
signed up, and um, I'm gonna try to suffer an
the cry, but no cry, feel your feels, cry, let
it out. It's fine. I just want the same job,
whichcause everything has I'm so difficult, and I'm trying to

(15:01):
start my business. I just feel like I have been
had and it's still I just want to thank you,
thank you so much. Well, we're sending you a lot
of healing energy this morning, a lot a lot of
a lot of healing energy. Man, and and and understand
that's what life is about, you know. I always say
I don't feel like there's any any anything is so

(15:22):
a good experience or a bad experience. Just one long process.
That's all. Life is one long process. But you I
promise you you will be fine when it's all setting done.
And well, just one more thing, Um, y'all are the best.
Just keep doing on what y'all doing. And I'm all
twenty three and y'all are in fun a single day.

(15:43):
So I love you too so much, thank you very much. Wow,
thank you. She's twenty three. I mean she's been on
she's been we've been on the radio since she was
thirteen thirteen years old. That's right, Lord, have mercy, get
it off your chests. Eight hundred five eight five, one
oh five one. If you need to vent, you can
hit us up at any time. We got rooms on
the way. Yes, And let's talk about Bobby Brown. He

(16:05):
is on the Red Table talk. The episode comes out today.
I'm gonna tell you what the topic of discussion is.
All right, we'll get into that. NeXT's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Now next hour, the Lucas Brothers will be joining us.

(16:26):
Lucas Brothers. They are wrote um Judas in The Blacks,
co wrote and co producer Very to the Black Masside.
They're twins. They're comedians. They wrote a bunch of things.
They have a special on Netflix. Yeah, two talented individuals.
I first met them back in the day when they
were writing for Friends of the People. All right, well,
we'll talk to them next hour. But let's get to
the rumors. Let's talk Bobby Brown. It's about report Angela Yee,

(16:57):
the Breakfast Club. You know, one thing people say a
lot is how does Bobby Brown deal with everything he's
had to deal with with all the tragedies and his family. Well,
he's on the Red Table talking that episode is coming
out today. It's been five months since the unexpected death
of his twenty eight year old son, Bobby Brown Junior,
And in the upcoming episode, he's basically talking about addictions

(17:21):
and controversies that have followed him for decades, the tragic
death of his son, and who he thinks is responsible
for the deaths of his ex wife, Whitney Houston, and
his daughter Bobby Christina Brown as well. Here is the teaser.
These kids today, they're trying different things. They're trying to
get as high as they can possibly get. That's a
real problem because they don't know what these drugs are

(17:44):
being mixed with these days. Right, There's been so many deaths,
specifically with pentanel. There's murderers out there right now that
are creating these these synthetic drugs that are killing these kids.
It's like the committed to murder. Oh yeah, that's gonna

(18:04):
be a sad one to watch it, but it is.
And the episode is entitled An Urgent Warning from Bobby Brown. Yeah,
I stand on the fact that you know, the best
messaging is just say no, and that right there is
just another reason to just say no. Like they got
GMO drugs. It's not the organic holistic drugs that we
grew up on. Okay, trust me. Being able to go

(18:25):
to you know, facilities in other countries and do organic,
pure drugs, that's a privilege. So I would encourage folks
to you know, get help with their addiction as opposed
to encouraging them to find safe spaces to do things
that we know it's going to kill them here in America,
just say no. But we also know addiction as a
disease and we don't want to shame people who are
struggling with addiction either. Something I just said, we should

(18:46):
folks to get help with their addiction. That's what we
should do. We should put more money into the treatment, right,
you know, but just saying no. That campaign has been
around since before we were born, and clearly it's not working.
So we got to make sure that there's all different.
I'ven used to get people help to think. I mean,
people are still using rugs to tell people don't use drugs.

(19:10):
Continue saying don't. You can't say hey, use drugs, but
just make sure that no, don't use drugs. People used
to say, don't don't smoke weed. Now we we just
legalized it is. But it's still a lot of people
who don't smoke Weedie, It's like it's a lot of
people who don't do drugs, right, but now we just
regulated right all right now, will killing anybody have y'all
I've never heard of somebody old imagine if you don't

(19:32):
know what it, ma'am man, but you're getting straight off
the street, that's right. It refer to me as ma'am
from now on, respectful. Thank you. Y'all have no understandming
of nothing that goes on all right now? Will Smith, no, ma'am,
does it not like George's controversial new voting laws. And

(19:54):
Will Smith and Antoine food Choi have pulled the production
of their new movie Emancipation, And that's in response to
those voting laws and voter suppression laws that are happening
in Georgia. So they felt compelled to move their film
production work from Georgia to another state. So they're the
first company that has said, the first production that has
says they're not going to do something in Georgia. Because
of this, as you know, there's been talk of protesting.

(20:15):
They said, at this moment in time, the nation is
coming to terms with its history and its attempting to
eliminate vestiges of institutional racism to achieve true racial justice.
We cannot in good conscience provide economic support to a
government that enacts regressive voting laws that are designed to
restrict voter access. So they're out of there all right now.

(20:39):
Because I know a lot of people that work on
those movie sets, and even with the Baseball and Major League,
I know a lot of people that work on the
stadium or our community are black folks in minority. So
the fact that they pull them from there, are we
really hurting ourselves. I don't think those big brands really care.
They got enough money to survive. But what's really hurting
is the fact that we can't work on those movie sets.
We can't be runners, we can't do we can't be

(21:00):
actors or actresses like that hurts us a lot more.
I think, yeah, you can in another in another city,
but just gonna be Atlanta people won't be Georgia people.
I mean, if they moved to New Yorker to be
New Yorker's work. It won't be Atlanta that needs it,
you know, I mean where it's mostly minorities in Alana. Yeah,
I don't have any proof to back this up, but
I do think it hurts us, you know, more than
it hurts you know, white people, because there's a million

(21:21):
other industries in Georgia. Film used to be the number
two industry in Georgia. I don't know if it still is,
but it's not like white folks are gonna gonna pull
out it. So I feel like we are the ones
who end up losing jobs and opportunities. But I don't know.
All right, now, let's talk about the French Prince of
bel Laire. Bellaire is the new show, but it's not
a reboot. During an exclusive interview with e news um

(21:43):
all finds a Ribero describes a new series. He said
it's in the reimagining of the original fresh Prince, and
he said the new series will be a whole new
look at the idea. He said, we sometimes there a
lot of things into one word. One concept. That reboot
would be taking the actual show and characters and bringing
it back. This is a totally different show, he said,
for starters. It won't be a fun, loving family sitcom. Instead,

(22:05):
it's a dramatize take on the story told in the
iconic theme song from The Fresh Prince of bel Air.
He said, it's based on the theme song. It's completely different.
So is it a prequel? Is it when Will was
living in Philly and he was getting in trouble which
called him to be shipped to bell Air in the
first place. Well, what he's saying is it's a whole
new show and it's based on the theme song. So

(22:26):
I don't know. But it's a drama, so it's not
even a comedy, and it's a whole different concept. Yeah,
because in the theme song, he was living in West Philadelphia.
He got into a fight with some people. His mom
got scared and shipped them off, which is actually dope, right,
because you would have to dig deeper, because I'm like,
just because of a fight you got shipped off to
bell Air. It had to be something really intense and
serious to ship them all the way across the country. Yeah,

(22:47):
So it's basically his journey from the streets of West
Philadelphia to the gated mansions of bel Air. With the
reimagined vision. They said, it'll dive deeper into the inherent conflicts, emotions,
and biases that were I supposed to fully explore in
the thirty minute sitcom format. Ready for that, all right now? DMX,

(23:07):
his versus challenger Snoop Dog, was actually on Fallon and
he was talking about some of his memories of DMX.
He talked about meeting him back in nineteen ninety four,
before most of the world even knew who DMX was.
And here's some of the stories that he told on
Fallon at a concert nineteen I think it was like

(23:31):
ninety ninety four. And then we went back to the
studio after that. He brought up a story that was
so deep and instrumental to our relationship. He was like,
when he first met me, I was like away from
him and he was saying, what's that man, what's up?
And I was like, get at me Dog? And he
was like, I took that and I made that into
my song get at Me Dog, because the way you
got at me and said that I was like that slip.

(23:52):
So that night inspired him to create that song get
at Me Dog, which was one of his biggest hood
records that he put out. Now, of course, he told
that story during versus, so maybe people didn't catch that story,
but always an interesting and good win. And thank god
that versus did go down because we had a chance
to see Dmax and Snoop together celebrating each other and

(24:13):
with some good viral moments from that. Here's what he
had to say about versus. It meant the world because
it gave the world a chance to see two dogs
that naturally loved each other celebrating each other in the
name of hip hop. You've seen a lot of interaction
between me and him, engaging in our songs. You've seen
a lot of conversations and a lot of love. And
we had got in the building with us that night,

(24:34):
and that makes me feel good about Dmax's transition, to
know that he's off to a better place and he's
finally got his Andrew Williams, Yeah, which is why I
don't understand when people say Dmax didn't get love and
folks waited until he died to sew him love. Absolutely, positively,
not he was getting loved before the verses, but the
verses absolutely provided Earl Simmons with his flowers X always
got love and he definitely always got love a pair

(24:57):
absolutely and in Drink Champs. He did Drink Champs last
this past February, and you know they definitely gave him
his flowers on Drink Champs. So yes, X God, Yeah,
DMX was an icon living Okay, So I don't think
that I don't think that people didn't show him the
proper respect everything that he was going through. I do
feel like people were super supportive and had a lot
of left for DMX because he had a lot of

(25:18):
love for people. All right, Well that is your room
of report, all right. Now we got front page news.
Next we were talking about, Well, let's talk about the
police officer who shot and killed Dante right and has
now resigned. Will tell you what her statement said and
what else is going on? All right, we'll get into
that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning, So Breakfast Club,
your morning's will never be the same. Mountain Dew his

(25:40):
partnering with HBCUs and an effort to uplift the next
generation of badass black innovatives and entrepreneurs with the Real
Change Opportunity fun pitch competition, empowering students to go out
and do is it? Mountain Dew dot com slash Real
Change to enter Hey morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angelou Ye,
Charlemagne guy. We are to breakfast club. Good morning. Let's

(26:03):
get in some front page news. Where we start you
all right, Well, let's start with the officer who shot
and killed Dante right and the Brooklyn Center police chief
have both resigned. And this is in Minnesota. Police officer
Kim Potter resigned from her position Tuesday after shooting and
killing Dante Ray. We've been talking about this, you know.

(26:24):
She was part of that police department for twenty six years,
A twenty six year veteran. She submitted her resignation effective immediately.
Wrote a letter to city official. She said, I have
loved every minute of being a police officer and serving
this community to the best of my ability, but I
believe it is in the best interest of the community,
the department, and my fellow officers if I resigned immediately.
The mayor said, we did not ask her to resign,

(26:46):
that was a decision that she made, and they also
said later in the evening that they had not yet
accepted her resignation. They said, we're still working through our
own processes and making sure that we take the steps
that are necessary to accept the resignation. Let's just say
team is evaluating the current circumstances, which are very complex.
I don't I don't get it. I need somebody way
smarter than me to explain this to me. Can you

(27:07):
just resign in the middle of what it's supposed to
be an investigation? Resigned at anytime? But I'm wondering if
that resign gives her any benefits? Meaning does she make
sure she doesn't lose this? Does she automatically get this
if she resigns during this I'm just curious to watch it.
I would like to know if you resigned, you still
get your pension, Like, what does that mean? I don't Actually,
I don't know. I don't. I don't understand. Well, you know,

(27:28):
like they just said they have not yet accepted her resignation,
So we'll see what happens, you know. But that's the
information that we have. That's fine. Didn't the police chief
resigned to Yes, the police chief also resigned. Why did
the police chi right? They said, I don't blah blacklash
of him saying all the back saying it was a

(27:49):
mistake so quickly. They are sleeping in that white men
don't just resign when they're wrong. He probably collect Now
that's what it is. You have cops resign last year
and they said they didn't like the changes that were happening.
But why would he get fired the police chief? Why
would the police chief didn't get fired, that's my point.
But why if Johnston saying he resigned to keep his pension,

(28:11):
why why would he have gotten fired? Me? Like, why
deal with this? If fired? If I had got my pension,
why what would he get fired for it? Because he
didn't do the shooting. He didn't do anything. And yeah,
he said it was a mistake, but she said it
was a mistake, right, But I'm saying, why deal with
the headache? If you're older, you got your pension already,
just retire something deeper going on what I'm telling you.
I don't know what it is yet, we'll find out,

(28:33):
but you know what they were. So anyway, the Brooklyn
Center City Council on Monday, they did vote to fire
Potter and police Chief Tim Gannet, but they both submitted
letters of resignation on Tuesday. Oh okay, well that makes sense.
So they voted to fire him, so they probably was
gonna get fired. Okay, that makes sense. Yeah, so uh
there you have now. Dante Ray's father said that he

(28:54):
cannot accept the cop depends for killing his son. Abby
Wright said that this mistake just doesn't sound right. Do
you accept that explanation, mister Wright? I cannot accept that
I lost my son. He's never coming back. I can't
accept that a mistake. That's nothing, that doesn't even sound right.

(29:16):
You know, this officer that's been on the force for
twenty six plus, for twenty six years, I can't accept that.
I would like to see justice served and her held
accountable for everything that she's taken from us. Stout asking
stupid questions the parents who have lost people. Do you
accept that? Would you accept your child just being murdered?
His son is dead? Who the hell do they think

(29:37):
black people are? I sometimes wanted to do people understand
what death is when someone you love gets killed. Don't
ask me do I accept that? Don't ask me do
I forgive the killer. Don't ask me to make peace
with the killer. Let me feel this and go through
whatever emotion I want to do. I accept that. What
kind of question is that to ask a parent who
just lost the child? Well, that was Robbing Roberts on
Good Morning America talking to obviously Abby Wright, who has

(30:01):
as well. Ask Katie, right, But I think sometimes people
ask a question to be able to hear their parents
express how they're feeling. But do you accept that it's
a parent who just lost their child. They gotta be
a bit of question that I think that. Yeah, I
think the answer is pretty obvious when you ask that,
But it might be just asking that question to get
people to understand the emotion that comes with it and
hear that emotional response. Ask me how I feel. The

(30:23):
human eyes that ask me how I feel? I'd rather that,
all right, accept that that is your front page news,
all right. Now, when we come back, we have the
Lucas Brothers joining us. Lucas Brothers are comedian writers, producers.
They just recently co wrote and co produce Judas and
The Black Messiah. So we're gonna kick it with them
when we come back. So don't move. It's the Breakfast Club.

(30:45):
Good morning, the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is tj Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
We got some special guests with us today. That's right,
we got the Lucas brothers. Welcome it up, man, I'm
glad to see y'all still looking very military, even though
y'all nominated for an oscar. You know, you can't change

(31:07):
change it up too much. If y'all don't dress like
this is the Oscars, I'm gonna be disappointed. A right,
good points and that's the ware tuxedos man. Really. Yeah, well,
we might keep our military jackets over the Texas. You know,
which which one is Kenny, which one is Key? I'm Kenny, okay,
and maybe I'm Keith. Yeah, let's go back for people
that don't know who the Lucas brothers are. I know
you guys are from New New Jersey, So explain your journey, man,

(31:30):
it's been crazy. So we're born September thirteenth, nineteen eighty
five at um D and J Yeah, New Jersey during
the height of the crack epidemic, and uh, you know
it was turbulent upbringing. Yeah, drug war, drugs, killing, killing, eighties, nineties,
stealing cars and it was crazy. We were the car
jacking capital of the universe, you know what I mean?

(31:52):
What was that movie film? You know it made people mad,
you know, but it was still the only representation up
nor right, right, So we when our father went to
prison where we were like six or seven, he was
like caught up in that game and you know, doing
what he had to do to survive, got caught. And
so we kind of grew up but not kind of
single mom, you know, like that poverty, moving from like

(32:16):
different places and you know, seeing that we probably shouldn't
the scene when we were like when we were kids,
it was wow, it was wow. I struggled in high school.
He didn't really struggle on I was pretty good. He
was a pretty good student that wait a minute, see
there's no way and I'm struggling. You could just be like, yo, broh.
The thing is we hadn't seen sister sister yet, so

(32:38):
we didn't have like like a sitcom play that we
could do. So I was just like beast in class
and he was struggling. I was like, dude, just I
was struggling so much and he was doing so well.
I was like, I gotta turn it around because like
it's on me. Yeah. Right around my sophomore year, I
started to like shift and uh start studying heart and
we were able to get into college by the grace

(32:58):
of God, and we study philosophy in college, we thought
we were gonna get our pH ds in philosophy. Like
we were convinced that that's what we wanted to do.
You guys are the same major, and that's that's interesting
because you said your dad study philosophy in prison. Right, Yeah,
that's made up philosophy. So we staided philosophy. We're gonna

(33:24):
go to get our pH ds. But we you know,
we needed money, man, Like we were broken, Like, I mean,
philosophers don't make that much money. And then they were
telling us, like, graduate school for philosophy is tough. It's
hard to find a job. Eight years. I'm like eight
years for the philosophy. That's some philosophers do make money.
Philosopher Jackson made a lot of money until he didn't. Right,

(33:48):
Cornel was you know, he's a philosophy absolutely using it
for himself. So it could have been done. But we're
not Cornell West. We we thought maybe we can do
something a bit more practical. So we went to law school. Right.
I went to Duke, he went to NYU. He wasn't
passionate at all about it. I thought that I really
wanted to be a lawyer, but it just didn't work out. Yeah,

(34:09):
and then Right around that time in law school, I
started experimenting with drugs, Like I started smoking and I
started doing it adderall I was drinking and like I
was starting to like because the stress of law school.
I never felt anything like that before. And I'm from Newark.
I've seen that's violence. I've seen like people using drugs.
Didn't never want to touch a drugs. Then I get
to law school, I'm like, damn, I can't take this exam.

(34:31):
Didn't you do three years of law school almost finished?
Were almost finished? We did like with two years and
like ninety eight percent of about thirty year. We had
about two weeks left before our exams and we were like, okay, man,
we want let's go do standout. I want to go
back to the law school thing. Have you ever unpacked that?
Because you came up in the hood, so that seems
so normal with the fact that when you was in

(34:52):
law school you was like fish out of water kinda
that's exactly what. Yeah, it felt like Alice in Wonderland.
Like I had never seen people use drugs so openly
from like privilege. It's got what you as a black man, right,
because you see people in the hood, they're usually leaning
on drugs for for trauma reasons, right, and y'all y'all
doing it for fun, not going to jail exactly like

(35:14):
it blew our minds? How can they especially at law school,
you know these guys other people are gonna be right
policies right, laws, right, and they're breaking the rules, and
these policies are going to affect you know, black people.
So it was like a weird sort of situation where
you're like, how can I study this and know that
these these people are gonna write these laws that affect
my people, but they don't even care about the rules

(35:36):
of the laws. Get back to it. So y'all decided
not to finish law school, say after and stand up
and let's do comedy. Yeah, when you're working on comedy
or did some of the family gonna sa y'all funny,
I'll like listen nobody. I think it was just like
I went I did some stand up in New York.
I went to like a club. I did a club
and it was just I sucked, but I liked it.
But what makes you do that? But you know what,

(35:57):
let me try. I was losing my mind. I think
I was losing my mind, Like I was literally like drinking,
doing drugs. And I was like, get man, I'm not
I'm not gonna do this law school anymore. And I
was just losing. I was breaking up with my girlfriend
at the time. He was breaking up with me at
the time, and I was just like I was on
one man, Like it was crazy, but I was on

(36:18):
stage and that was the only time I felt normal.
And he went to his first show. No, he sent me.
He sent me a clip of it. You didn't even go.
I was in North Carolina. He was in New York, right.
He sent me a clip of his first show, and
I was like, yo, this is terrible, the worst set.
And I thought that I know, I knew he was
having like a crisis of mental health. And I was like, dude,

(36:38):
man like just do it a few more times, but
you know, get back to the books because this ain't
But he kept with it, like he still kept going
to the open mics and he still kept, you know,
trying to get better at it. So after like a
couple of weeks he called me again. It was like, yo,
I think we need to quit law school. I think
we need to And I was like, crazy, I want

(37:02):
to be a lawyer. And then put three years into this.
I'm not gonna just drop it for comedy. But he
was very persuasive. And then that's when I had that
moment of clarity, like, man, let's just do it. Let's
try it. So he wouldn't been a good lawyer, because
that's what I said. I used my three years of
legal education just to convince him to drop out of
law school. Now what did your mom say? Your mom,

(37:22):
you know, struggled to get you in good school, worked
hard for you. Yeah, she's so excited my boys about
to be attorneys. And he like, Mom, now we're dropping out,
we're gonna be what I mean, she thought we were
losing our minds. I mean, she knows like our whole story,
so she's familiar with our father not being there. She's
familiar with the drugs. So he's like, you know, maybe
you guys should go to therapy or something. Make sure

(37:43):
you think about what you're doing before you're doing it.
Just being a mom. But eventually, when she saw that
we were serious about it and we were made us happy,
he was he was completely on board, right dad. You know,
he thought that he's gonna get some free legal advice
right once we dropped out, he got upset. He's been
super supportive. I love how you said, my mom knows
our whole story, like people like my mom is my

(38:05):
day one? Oh really? I mean you can't lie to her,
like you know what I mean, You can't lie to
pretty much your mom. You can't lie to your mom.
She just sees right through that. We got more with
the Lucas Brothers when we come back. Don't move. It's
the Breakfast Club, Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy
Angela Yee. Charlomagne, the guy we are the Breakfast Club

(38:25):
were still kicking it with the Lucas Brothers. Charlomagne, do
you think censorship artists, uh woke culture that we're in
right now, is that going to dilute the art? No?
I don't think so. I think that it's going to
make because even more, what's the way to look for
making us like I think I didn't creative? You have
to be creative. You have to be a little bit
more considerative because I think about it. Look, there was

(38:47):
a period when black face was like the top style
of comedy. People like and people like you can't do
black face anymore. I'm sure the people who were doing
black face were like, this is ruining comedy, this is
hurting the purity. But it's like, no, you just have to,
you know, adjust and make better comedy. I think that's
how evolution works. It's like you just have to if
people are like they don't make fun of trends or
don't make fun of gays, and now we can't do

(39:09):
those things. I think it makes our comedy pressure. I
think it makes it purer because now you're, you know,
got to be a bit more inventive. You gotta just
be a bit more creative and clever. But does it
really reflect reality, meaning like a should get a certain
type of license to reflect reality or right, if you're
not able to reflect reality without people offending people saying,

(39:31):
oh that that shouldn't be in the movie. It's offensive, Like,
but it's a movie. I'm trying to tell a story here, right, right, right, No,
I see what you're saying. I guess I just think,
like it's not just about you know, telling the freest
form of comedy, but it's also like a moral and
social component to the comedy that we do. Right again,
you can choose to be offensive, you can choose to

(39:51):
say whatever you want, but you have to be prepared
for the bass. Know, you can do whatever you want,
right So, but for us, it's like you still got
to take risk, but got to you have to. I
mean that's art. Art is risk taking. Yeah, I mean,
you guys are doing a remake of Revenge the Nerds.
I heard with Seth McFarlane right that movie would be
considered problematic, toxic, reinforcing great culture. It was problematic, you

(40:15):
know in the nineties, we didn't notice. How do you
remake that for this era, you know, times of change.
I feel like we have an opportunity to comment on
the film in the eighties, you know. I think that
like they did in twenty two Jumps dree or twenty
one Jumps dree R, they took an approach where it
allowed for them to, you know, create a new story

(40:35):
but also comment on the past. And I think that's
what we want to do because he that's my thing.
Nobody's acknowledging the shift in culture, right, right, there was
a shift in culture. The stuff that you used to
could have get away with the music, music, movies, whatever,
You just can't anymore. But we haven't acknowledged that. Yeah,
it's almost like we just started handing out retro after
speeding tickets, Right, it's weird. I think I think there's

(40:57):
been a shift in the number of things. I feel
like there's been a shift in science. We've we've gone
from you know, straight Einstein's sort of relativity to sort
of a quantum sort of perspective of science. And I
think that that's reflective of in the Internet, where everyone
has a point of view and everyone feels like their
reality is real. Like like everyone says we're speaking out
of truth. Everyone's truth is sort of legit. I mean,

(41:19):
even if it contradicts someone else's reality. And that's quantum,
you know what I mean. Like everyone's perspective is legitimate,
even even flat earths. Like if they believe it, why
is it not? You know, like they truly believe it's truth.
If you put forth evidence that you know their beliefs
are erroneous, they're still going to believe what they want
to believe. Right, So you're putting yourself at a disadvantage

(41:40):
trying to use reason to a person that doesn't even
use reason, Right, what do you think about putting their disclaimers?
You know, how they've been putting disclaimers like on movies
and TV shows just to get people like, Okay, this
was filmed during this time. I mean, I think that
that's a more effective approach than just completely banning something.
I mean, I think that maybe that works. But again,
I think we're assuming that audiences aren't intelligent. We're assuming

(42:04):
that they can't differentiate between what's offensive and what's not offensive.
It's and then you're gonna have a small minority of
people who go online and say take this down. But
I think what's happening now is people are being very
reactive to those minority of voices. Yeah, I feel like eventually,
hopefully that they'll be like a leveling out where we're like, Okay,
maybe we shouldn't be that reaction there, Maybe we should,
Maybe we should have some sort of due process in

(42:26):
assessing what we do with a particular piece of art,
because it's a very slippery slope. Like I even saw
what they did with a YG this weekend with the
meet the Fokker's record, right, and I think they took
it down, but then they put it back because they said,
if we take this down, and we're gonna have to
do this all across the boards, so many things people
could be offended by, Like it's like you can't go
down that role when it comes to art. I think

(42:47):
we need to make a distinction between offense and harm, right,
I think we need to. I think when we're assessing
how we limit someone's liberty, like is that exercise of
liberty harming the person or is it offending a person.
If it's harming, then I think we can take a
more proactive approach to the piece of art and maybe say, hey,
maybe we should consider taking it down if it's just
offending someone, Like I think you have a right to

(43:08):
be offended. I'm saying, I don't think that that offense
should equate to completely eliminate in a work of art.
I think we have to. I think we have to
be able to process offense and have honest conversations about
that which offends. But I think that that that shouldn't
result in, you know, a boycott of someone's work of
art that they've put years into, Like if it's harmful,

(43:29):
if it's causing violence, if it's like causing like blatant racism,
then you got like black face for example, that that
was harmful to black people. You know what I mean, like,
Birth of a Nation's directly harmful to black people, so
it should be removed. I mean, I don't think that
that's a problem. I don't. I don't have an issue
with that. But if it's just offensive, I'm like, yeah,
we gotta have thicker skin. They don't move. We got

(43:50):
more with the Lucas Brothers. When we come back, it's
the Breakfast Club more DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the
guy we are to Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it
with the Lucas Brothers. Charlomagne, Judas the Black Side. Well,
first of all, you've done a lot more than us
in The Black Side. I remember aller friends of the People,
you know what I mean? You little round? Who else

(44:10):
was on that? Jermaine Fowler, Josh for Bennewitz. Yeah yeah,
Like if you think about it now, that show should
have been a hit. It should have been, but you know,
you know, sometimes things fell to launch. I mean you
think about Okay, see the Thunder. They had all the
talent in the world, they couldn't get a championship. I
don't remember when network that was true TV. How you
go from TV? The Oscar nominated I meant to say,

(44:43):
how do y'all go from that to Oscar nominated? What
are the steps? What's the process? It's a grind man like.
It was crazy for us because, like it was, we
were going to nowhere fast. Scotch Show gets canceled and
we were like, let's just go to Lucas. Lucas Bros.
Moving gets canceled. Like so we got two cancelations under
our belt with five years and we're so we escaped
from New York and humiliation in our minds and we

(45:06):
go to LA and we're like, all right, we're gonna
figure this out here. We're gonna you know, we're gonna
gonna figure out I act, We're gonna write something. Before
we went to LA, we were already like thinking about Judas.
You know, we were already right right right, really brainstorming
like some of the beats of the story or we're
just doing a lot of research. Around twenty twelve, twenty thirteen,
we started doing a ton of research about Happen. We

(45:26):
didn't know how to turn it into a film, but
we knew like, this is something that we would like
to potentially turn into a film. So we went to
LA with the goal in mind of either getting the
script deal to write, to write Judas, or to sell
pitch somewhere. We just we had ambitions going into Cali,
but we were still so focused on comedy that it

(45:46):
was sort of like a balance in act, trying to
get Judas made, but also trying to like, you know,
get our comedy career, you know, back on that. I'm
back back on track. So we're in La. We're pitching
the story around town, getting no traction. People like this
doesn't make any sense, It's not gonna make any money.
It's it's a period piece about a black revolutionary socialism.
What are you guys crazy? And we're like, yeah, all right,

(46:08):
we are crazy. So we we kind of went away
from the material for a bit, went back to comedy.
We were doing this pilot with Effects Killer Mike. It
was for him and that eventually went to Netflix and
go to Effects. So we did the pilot for Trigger
Warning for Effects and Shaka King was directing it, and
that's how we That's how we met Shaka and Uh

(46:30):
we knew that after we got rejected from all of
our pitches, we were like, I think we need to
work with a filmmaker who can can can take this
idea and make it into a film, And so that's
when we we're like, we gotta, we gotta, we gotta
reach out to Shock. And then we hung out with
Shocking in our apartment in Hollywood, listening to music, just
vibing on cinema, and we sort of pitched him our
idea and he said it was great, and we started

(46:54):
to develop a beefier outline. And then but simultaneously, We'll
bursting the other writer, and Oscar Nominee was, you know,
working on his own script, and Jamaine Fowler, our boy
from a full TP, he knew, he made the connection.
He knew Will, he knew that we were working on
our thing, and he just brought us all together. We
we used our story outline that we worked on with Shatka,

(47:16):
and so Shotka and Will went together and basically rewrote
will script using our story outline, and they wrote a
brilliant script and h it went. They sent it to
Ryan Coogler, but we didn't know that Shatka knew Ryan Coogler.
But once I mean once Ryan got it, that's when
things started to like pick up, because I loved the

(47:37):
script and he definitely wanted to make it, and he
wanted that to be his first project for on its
new production company in Proximity, and so things just started
to get crazy. Yeah, first it was like we were
nowhere and then Shotka Will, Ryan Charles, I'm like, what
the hot? All in a year that just started happening.
We were like what the uh? And then we went

(47:58):
out with you know, the script with Macro with Ryan
with Shocko or Will and us Macro financing half, Acro
financing half, and the white Man still saying no, white
Man still say still said we put on half the money.
It is gonna be a bidding war where we think
that you know, this is we got Khluia, we got
we got Keith, we have our stars, we have a

(48:19):
brilliant script, we have these great producers. And still you know,
it's a struggle. Think about that, all of that already
attached Daniel, Keith, Ryan money, Macro half money with Lucas
brothers and the White Man like, no, I don't think
people realize how hard it is to get a movie made,
and especially when you have a dream team like that

(48:42):
and you still can't get tracking, Like that's how hard
of it? And Ryan after Black Panthers, billionaire black panther,
the hottest producer in the game and still but fortunately
enough Warner Bros. You know, they they put up half
the money and they wanted to distribute it. They love
the script, was shoot it. They lit it, They let
us shoot it, and it just came out as perfect

(49:04):
as I thought. Why did Warner Brothers get it? I want,
I need, I need white people to understand how coolest
they can be. So I want to know why did
Warner Brothers get it over every other black executives, black exacts,
black exacts something they get it. Nigia really like he
was the key. What's her last man? I don't know
how to nag Kikendal. I think I may have mispronounced that,

(49:26):
but yeah, she's she's a brilliant executive, and she was
the one who sort of he saw the importance of
the film. She loved the script, and she was the
one who sort of just powered it through luth Nages.
That's why diversity matters. That's exactly why. Because you're telling
these stories and if you're sitting across from a group

(49:47):
of white people, they just don't even hear it. They
don't know the language. They don't know the why it matters. Why.
This is how we have to describe Fred Hampton. The
white people were like, Fred Hampton is the velvet underground
of civil rights leaders. You thought perhaps that they'll see
the connection. They did. It was like, you know, many
white executive problems, like Okay, Ryan Cooper is coming here

(50:08):
to talk about doing Black Panther Another Black Panthers that
was at Marvel. But maybe we could probably like try
to mess around it. Now. I see you twitted it
if you guys wouldn't ask as you are returned from
stand up and you're cutting off half your family. Yeah,
but we're gonna do that before. Yeah, I mean we
got to figure out how do we figure out who
we're gonna cut out? Yeah? Well what family members you got? North? Oh? Man?

(50:31):
Just the ones who haven't talked to me in years
and like hit me up for money. So like the
ones who like didn't know I existed, Like like, oh you,
I mean your cousin from your father's side, can you
let me buy all three hundred dollars like a man?
Get that? Yeah? Man, it's crazy, it's crazy. It's like
comfortable because they think you got money, because you got
a Oscar nominees, like, you don't get paid for this.
You gotta pay your way for always had to get

(50:54):
extra money for an ask A nomination. It's it's expect
you're close with your dad while he while he was
in jail. What you close with your dad? We were
close at first, you know, we went to go visit
them a bunch, and then we moved to North Carolina.
Our mom remarried, so we sort of became distant. We
grew a little distant because we couldn't visit them as
much and we weren't really calling them, and that was

(51:15):
like that must have been like five or six years.
And then once he got out, we started to work
on our relationship. But you know, it was a lot
to unpack. I mean, yeah, you know, as we got older,
we started to fill the ramifications of not growing up
with a father, but a lot of anger ramifications of
growing up with a father went to prison. So it's like,
you know, you just have rage. You hate the law,

(51:36):
you hate the government, you hate all that, and you're
trying to figure out ways to cope, and uh, it
was tough. It was tough. It's still tough sometimes to
to to speak with our dad because of so much
we missed out on so much, you know what I mean,
And you can never forget how much you missed out
on right, Like even like to this day, I go
to the park and I see a dad like throwing

(51:56):
the ball with their son, and I tear up a
little bit. I'm like, man, it's kind of I wish
I had that, Like it's it kind of sucks to
know that. It's sad, man said right now, the way

(52:17):
he continue you tear up father and sons. Man Like,
I can't even like scroll on Instagram when I see
people like saying, I'm like, girl, it just it's hurts.
You want to shut up, shut up? You want to

(52:39):
go place you might be in the make up for
you know situation. I do have one final question. How
do y'all maintain your own identity as twins? Oh that's
a great question. That's a great question, a great question.
We don't. No. You know what's crazy is that for
a while we tried to like that aish I didn't right,

(53:01):
just like I want to be Keith, he wants to
be Kenny. We went to law school. We were just
trying to do our own thing, and we just had
a breakdown, and uh, I think we realized, like we're
just stronger together. U. And why do you need an
individual identity? Like why why do we why do we
emphasize that so much? Like why is that such a
thing that we place an importance on that it was
supposed to be normal? Like normal normal is being a

(53:22):
single ten of being an individual. And I think that's
why people get so stressed out. Why is that normal?
But everyone's like has a desire to get married. So
are we to have a desire to have a family
or we have it? So there's this notion that the
individual supreme. But we rushed to these group identities so quickly.
We have sports teams, we have our family, we have
you know, religion, religion, any political part. We rushed to

(53:45):
these eternity exactly exactly. So I think we have to
readjust how we see what normal is. It's not necessarily
about the individual, it's not necessarily about you know, willing
yourself to greatness. It's really a community type thing. And
I think that he and I kind of see that
and we're like, we have a group identity, right right, right,
And we just so happened to look exactly like weird group,

(54:09):
but a group nonetheless. Well, I hope y'all win the
Oscar man man. Y'all gonna give a phenomenal speech. I
really think y'all will give a great speech. And I
want to see y'all up there with the military Jack
the military Jacke at least the pins something. I think
we will keep our pens up. I'll keep the FREEHERI Lucas,

(54:31):
it's the breakfast Club goal morning. She's filling the tea.
This is the rumor report with Angela Yee on the
Breakfast Club. All right, So Krondo Rondo drop part two
of our interview sit down that we did last month.
And in part two, and by the way, I just

(54:52):
want to say, understanding is a word, because I know
people were quoting that word. It's a It's a mixture
of understanding and agreement. Thank you in the Urban dictionary.
Stop me, it is now. And so one of the
things that he talks about was his best friend, little
Tim getting shot the night that they were in the
parking lot. I look up and I've seen my parting

(55:14):
on Wow. He got shot four times a couple of
months before, right with a couple of incidents upen in
my whole time he'd been shot five times. What he
was telling me. What he was telling me was a
lot of people didn't know that when Little Tim got
shot in the parking lot that night, when King Vaughan
was unfortunately tragically killed, people didn't know that he already

(55:37):
had just recently been shot just a couple of months
prior to this. So that, like I was saying earlier,
there's been a lot of incidents that have been going on.
He said. The only reason this one obviously is popular
is because of who was involved, and because it was
on video, and so a lot of people don't know
what happens behind the scenes. Did he say he got
shot nine times and five months. Yeah, if you've been

(55:57):
shot nine times or five months, you need to give
you a life to God. Okay, that means you never
get a chance to heal from any gunshot wounds. Nine
times and five months. But then he was in jail.
He's been in jail and you know he's home now,
but he was in jail after he got shot, so
he was going through a lot while he was locked up. Also,
you know, I haven't gotten shot now. There was also
a rumor and people were saying that Krondo Rondo had

(56:18):
looked like on the video he tried to take King
Von's chain. Here's what he had to say about that.
And there were other shootings going on, and that I
knew was so many people shooting. Man, if you was there,
you would be hurt from everything that's going on, because
nobody really know. I see my partner shot up. Like
a lot of people are saying that I was trying

(56:39):
to take bro chain, like ma'am when they come to jewelry, ma'am,
victory sixty thousand all of chain man like ma'am. He
did come. He did come me, ma'am about nine hundred
times during the course of the interview. It's why I
don't mind young nigga business. I stay all of these
young niggas where you feel me. I'm forty two years old.

(57:00):
I am a sir. When you are a sir or ma'am,
you have to carry yourself as such. All right. Well, anyway,
he wanted to clear up that rumor because he was
saying that he definitely was not trying to take anybody's
chain in the incident. And he also said, now this
was interesting that in that parking lot, he didn't even
know that it was King Vaughan until the next day.
I never in life, ma'am, never in life. Hey words

(57:24):
with them every and at this point didn't know who
it was either, Maam. I didn't know this was him, ma'am.
I swater, God on my soul, ma'am. Like like, ma'am,
this is a neighborhood. I did not know that was
him to the next day. So wait a minute. When

(57:45):
they got into the fight, he did, he didn't. I'm
keeping my boy stayed out of young nigga business right. Well,
you know, if you hear like the course of the
whole interview is what he's saying is he takes lean
every day. He was sleeping the car before the end
didn't happened, and he wasn't even trying to go to
the club, so he was while his friends were inside.
He was staying in the car. He remained in the

(58:06):
car because he hadn't planned to go there. He just
wanted to stay in the car. A little tim said,
I'm gonna stay outside with you. He didn't want to
leave him. Man, we don't need no explanation, man, what
is the earth? I'm just trying to make sure you guys,
what are they doing versus what? Oh? Yes, ya got
me in. But you know, he's going through TSD, Like

(58:30):
he's had people come into the house to speak to him.
It's a lot, you know, for him to have witnessed
and gone through. So we wanted to tell his side
of the story because there's a lot of people saying
things that he feels like aren't true. So he wanted
to tell from his side because he was there. So
this is what he's saying. And right now we just
know his side of what happened. Man, I feel like praying. Man.
I ain't mess with y'all. I feel like praying. Man.

(58:51):
I need to stage myself man. Okay, yeah, so that
is your rumor reports, yes, ma'am. All right, man, I
see y'all a young nigga business. Okay, that's just all
of y'all out there. Yeah. I just I just I
just pray. I mean, if you I think if we

(59:11):
care about people's lives, and I don't think that he
wants anything to happen. So that's the whole point of this, right, Like,
we don't want to see more people get we don't
want to see more people get killed. They do disrecords
like that I don't a whole lot going lawns. It is.
They do disrecords against each other. It's like a ny
I just told y'all I need to see that man. Okay, well, sir,

(59:34):
who are you giving a donkey too? Well, sir man,
they's a dude named Kevin van Loving And and I
have a feeling that you are going to love this
story because it's about one of your favorite things. Almo, what,
I don't know what you're talking about. Oh yeah, sure,

(59:58):
I'm looking at you different after this story. Oh my goodness,
all right, dunkey, today's up next. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be
the same. Angela here and the General Insurance has been
helping people save money for nearly sixty years. They offer
the quality coverage you deserve at prices you can afford.
Make the right call and go with the General called

(01:00:19):
eight hundred General or visit the General dot com sum
Donkey of the day. I'm a Democrat, so being donkey
of the Bay a little bit of a mixed club.
So like a donkey. Now, I've been called a lot

(01:00:41):
of my twenty three years that donkey of the Bay
is a new wife. Yeah, donkey Today for Wednesday, April fourteenth,
goes to a home inspecting Michigan named Kevin Wayne van Loving.
What a name Van Loving. If this guy doesn't own
in nineteen ninety two for the Econo line, I would
be disappointed. Okay, at least in nineteen ninety seven Plumoth

(01:01:03):
voyage and maybe a Voswagen eear old van. Maybe moral
the story is he should drive nothing but vans. When
your last name is van Lovin, you only have one
vehicle of choice, and the license plate of that vehicle
has to say Van Loving. Sneakers too. Okay, when your
last name is van Loving, you can only wear vans,
the old school black and white ones with the jash crap. Now,

(01:01:25):
some would say that if you drive a van and
wear Vans, that's the child sex offenders start a kid.
I'm just saying, if you profile pedophiles, this kind of
fits the description. But maybe I'm making all this up.
This is probably a personal bias that I'm projecting, so
never mind me. But back to mister van Lovin. Now,
mister van Lovin is a home inspector and he was
inspecting the home of a twenty two year old woman

(01:01:47):
in Oxford Township. He was inspecting the property before a sale. Well,
something in that house turned Kevin van loving on. I
don't know what type of afro djak he used before
he inspected that. Maybe he ate some chocolate, maybe some figs,
some oysters, asparagus. Maybe something increased his lobido, his sexual function.

(01:02:10):
Something got him so hot and bothered in that house
that he had the pleasure himself right then in there.
Let's go to WJBK Fox to Detroit for the report.
Police before selling an Oxford Township couple let this man
into their home on Gill Street for a routine inspection.
They left, never suspecting the fifty nine year old man
would allegedly fulfill his sexual urges with their child's Almo doll.

(01:02:34):
The debsurbing sexual act revealed when movement in the child's
room triggered the nursery camera. The ambag shows when Kevin
van Leuven picked up the tickle me Elmo doll. The
homeowner shocked when she was alerted on her cell phone
after hitting record, she immediately contacted the Oakland County Sheriff's Office.
Our deputies confronted him and initially he denied it, and

(01:02:55):
then they told him it was on video, and then
he apologized. He's been ard with aggravated indecent exposure and
a misdemeanor charge of malicious destruction of property. But perhaps
what's even more disgusting after abusing the doll, van Louven
put it back. I never thought I would find someone

(01:03:15):
who loves Almo more than Rashawn Casey aka dj Envy.
I have so many questions. I know people say we
shouldn't can't shame, We shouldn't shame people for what they
are into sexually, but that's ps Okay, that's some twenty
twenty one. I've been woke too long, and I need
some sleep because I'm not thinking straight when i'm sleepy. Rhetoric, Okay,
If I can't shame Kevin van loving for this, in

(01:03:37):
the word shame needs to be abolished all together. Now,
can I try to understand Kevin van Lovin? Sure, let's
unpack this. How many times has Kevin Wayne van Lovin
sat his ass in front of the TV and masturbated
the session me screed? I wonder I also wonder if
he sat down with a therapist or psychiatrist, Could he
or she bring this back to something that happens in
his childhood. I mean it's Almo, as in tickle me Elmo, right,

(01:04:02):
and tickling equals flirting. I read somewhere, and by somewhere,
I mean google that from adolescents and you're roughly seven
times more likely to be tickled by somebody at the
opposite sex. And the most common reason the tickle is
to show affection. So maybe when he was a baby,
as a young lad, he got tickled a lot and
the thought of tickling turns him on. I don't know, Okay,

(01:04:23):
So when you're a creature, that is the symbol of tickling.
Maybe when you see that, you get turned on. When
you see that, that that symbol of tickling, that is Elmo.
A lot of people don't like tickling, but tickling is
a physical expression to love. So maybe just maybe he
saw Elmo and he wanted to show his love. Some
people do tickle fights is for play, people's stage, tickle

(01:04:44):
fights in the bedroom. Nothing I'm saying makes sense, does it?
Of course not? Okay? God may not make mistakes, but
humans do. But I hear stories like Kevin van Loven
and I know they say, don't question God, but sometimes
you have to recognize that I didn't give you the
same brains he gave everybody else. Okay, there was certain

(01:05:04):
periods in time that God was just creating anybody and anything,
all right. Genesis one twenty six says God created man
in his image according his likeness. Right. Well, humans, sometimes
we just like to try things, or it gets the
water to see what sticks. I think God did that
when he was creating some humans. Some humans he just
created with his eyes closed. Kevin van Loving might have
been one of them. Okay, God made him and forgot

(01:05:26):
about him, so didn't Mister van Loving all these years
has been left to his own devices, wandering around life
aimlessly by himself, without God's guidance, only to end up
on Chesame Street masturbating next to Oscar Grounds trash can
while Elmo just minding his business performing Elmo song hit
that tune for me dramas Come on now, m Kevin

(01:05:53):
van Loving is somewhere hut and parting right now. That's
what does it for Kevin van Loving? Catchy? Okay, enough
enough enough, okay, Kevin van Loving is reinforcing all the
pedophile stereotypes. I told you driving the van and wearing
vans is the sexist fend to start a kid. You

(01:06:15):
know how many people Chris Hansen caught who fit that profile.
And this guy, Kevin van Loving, Okay, you got caught
sexually assaulting at Elmo Dall in a nursery. That sounds
pretty pet old file to me. Okay, Elmo is three
and a half years old. Do you know that three
and a half years old? You sick bathter. This is

(01:06:37):
what Kevin van Loving here has when drunken love plays
why swerving on a swervin swerving on a big surfing
and good. Please give Kevin van Loving Let really, Mark,
give Kevin van Loving the biggest he huh heh heh

(01:06:58):
you stupid mother? Are you dumb? Do it envy? Oh?
You don't want to do the voice today? Huh? You
want to play Elmo to day? Do you? I was
gonna say, well, I'm just curious. You won't play a game.
You want to play a game only if you do
the voice. Ask me in the voice you are play, Yes,
I do. Let's play a game of what Kevin van

(01:07:24):
Loving Michigan home inspector walked into a nursery and a home,
saw tickle me yamo dog and had his way sexually
with it. Guess what racy Angela start with you, I'll
say Caucasian? Okay, what makes you say this with such confidence? Um?

(01:07:47):
I don't know. It's just what I wanted to be. Okay,
uh Rashan. I want you to do. I need you
to answer in the voice the whole time. Okay, Kevin
van Loving Yes from Michigan, Home and factor. You're very
familiar with home inspectress. Right, he was in a home inspecting,
he was in a nursery, saw Elmo doll, had his

(01:08:09):
way with the Elmo doll sexually. Jess what race he is?
Let me chuck light? The hell did you Ben Dover
like that? For the hell? Were you checking? Look like
you wanted somebody to check you. Hell's wrong with you?

(01:08:29):
I don't know. I don't put his muck shot up.
Oh we don't. We're not donna revolve you both are right.
This is absolutely a colonizer. Okay. This is the highest
levels of caucasianary. Okay. The man he's was very heavy
in this story. All right, all right, all right, thank

(01:08:50):
you for that. You gotta register the sex offender when
you do stuff like this. If you're Kevin van Loven,
I'm sure. I'm sure that guy asked, well, it's a dog,
so I don't think so. All right? Anyway, ask e
is next eight hundred five eight five one O five one.

(01:09:11):
If you need relationship advice, called ye Now it's the
breakfast Club of the morning. The Breakfast Club. Need relationship advice,
need personal advice? Just need real advice? Call up now
for asking morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela, Yee, Charlomagne,

(01:09:33):
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. It's time to
ask yee. Hello. Who's this? Oh? Yeah, this is last
week from Jersey. Good morning. What's your quest to fore? Um? Yeah?
I just want to know what I should do about
my relationship or right now I'm I'm going back and forth,
back and forth. You know, I'm break up with my girl.

(01:09:53):
She break up with me. You know, we both love
each other. We're supposed to be getting married, but you know,
we never really drink up within twenty four hours, you know,
because we lived together, you know, so recently we just
broke up. And I feel as though, is that you
know I told our leases up? Should I just gonna
keep going back and forth, back and forth. You know,

(01:10:13):
but I really love her. I just don't know what
to do. You know, what do y'all keep breaking up over?
It's like I would say, it's miscommunication, a lot of miscommunication.
One minute, it's like it feels like I'm coming off
a little bit strong. When I calm that down, you know,
and realize it is miscommunication, I'll talk to her right,

(01:10:34):
But then she's already in the minds that has then
you know, I'm coming off gonna I'm gonna come off strong.
It's already in her head that it's gonna be an
argument at the end of the thing, instead of this
coming to an agreement, like all, we're gonna be at
a middle ground and just work it out. Here's a
couple of things that I think number when. Those are
the worst when you're in a relationship and y'all are

(01:10:56):
always breaking up every other day. First of all, your
friends get sick of hearing about y'all. Get to give it.
No one believes you. Y'all broke up. Oh, now y'all
back together. I had to make a pact one time
with a boyfriend that I had where we said, look,
we all get into arguments because being in a relationship,
part of that is knowing how to argue in a
healthy manner, right, because you're not always going to agree

(01:11:16):
on everything. Obviously, there's gonna be times when y'all need
to figure out how to come together and work out
issues that you might be having. That's just as important
as being in a relationship is knowing how to healthily
be able to argue and get over it and move on.
And so one thing you should do is make a
pact with each other that you're gonna stop this silly
breaking up all the time just to get back together,

(01:11:37):
because soon as you say I'm done, it's over. We're
not together anymore. It just becomes this whole other issue.
And y'all know it's not even too and no one
even believes you guys, right, yeahs, I'll posted up one
problem like, yeah, I'm single. Everybody's like, nah, I'm not
believing you this time, or they like, oh, I can't
believe it, because you know, you guys are mist for

(01:11:57):
you will not mist for each other, but you know
you speak perfectly for each other, right, So what y'all
need to do is when you're not in the middle
of an argument, discuss the things that you could both
improve on within yourself and then for each other, and
be receptive to hearing that criticism, because that's important. It's
obviously y'all bump heads on things you need to figure out. Okay,

(01:12:19):
if we get into an argument, orf we have some
type of miscommunication, this is how we're going to handle
it moving forward, so that y'all have a game plan
because it is a team effort and it is a
situation where y'all not always going to be smooth. But
how do I handle it when things aren't smooth? And now,
as far as your lease, when your lease is up,
do you guys want to renew the lease? What is
the discussion about that we were playing before about moving

(01:12:42):
you know, out of the neighborhoods and stuff like that,
and that's good, but now it's just starting come to
the point where it's like, oh, should I just move
by myself and handle what I got to handle? You
by yourself and handle what you gotta handle. And then
if it's meant to be that's literally yeah, and there's
and y'all can still be together and not live together. Yeah,

(01:13:04):
So if that's how you feel you want things to
be then yes, like get your own places until y'all
can get to the space where Okay, let's spend a
year you in your place, I'm in my place while
we have this lease, and then let's figure out if
we're going to be able to move forward and move
past these differences and figure out how we can come
together and work through things and not break up every
other day. It drives everyone around you crazy too. Yeah,

(01:13:24):
it's driving me nuts. I'm to be honest. Yeah, so
that's what I really think. And listen, so many people
have that issue. Yeah, it's more so like, you know,
I'll go into my separate little you know, side, and
I'll get a little tax like, oh, come over here
right quick, you know, let's I think we're going to
talk about it, and it's just like more like a

(01:13:46):
cuddle session, right And look, it's just to me, it
seems like y'all love each other, you know, you want
to be together, but the arguing is like dysfunctional how
you'll communicate with each other. And that's the problem that
y'all need to fix, because there's nothing normal about arguing
and breaking up every other day. Yeah, thank you? All right,
enough haling, all right? Ask ye, thank you eight hundred

(01:14:09):
five five one oh five one. If you need relationship
or any advice or any type of advice, hit ye.
Now it's the Breakfast Club Morning some real advice with
Angela yet ask ye morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela, Yee,
Charlomagne the God. We are the Breakfast Club. We're in
the middle of asking yee Hello, who's this? This is Anna, Anna,

(01:14:32):
what's up? What's your question for you? Hi? An issue
with my relationship and it's been to where like, okay,
I went through his phone, and then I stopped going
through his phone, and then he would go through mind
but then don't want me to go through his and
I'm trying not to be a hypocrite and him, you know,
he's a hypocrite. I don't understand. And it's become an

(01:14:55):
issue and it's just like, do you not go through
your up your significance? There's phone? We leave them alone,
Like how would you like? Why are y'all going through
each other's phone? Because it seems like a deeper issue
than just touching somebody else's property and reading their personal messages.
What is the reason behind that? That's what you really
need to get at well. It has been issues like

(01:15:15):
in the beginning, I did you know what might be
something that might pop up and I'm looking, I don't
look right, so I would go through it and then
it would be a bigger issue that has happened, and
it has been you know, infability not its just it
didn't seem right to me. And so I feel like
since that happened, it's just been more of an issue like, okay,

(01:15:38):
can I trust you and everything else? Like I trust
him now, I haven't been through a phone or anything
like that. Everything's been okay, but it's being like, you
don't down you know, he might just pop on my
fault if he is not to be a problem, because
like and you know, it's different. Couples are different, right,
Like some people have access to each other's full access
to each other's phones, no problem, and some people feel like, look,

(01:16:01):
you don't know what me and my friends are discussing
family members. I don't really need anybody going through my phone.
And it's also a symbol of do you not trust me?
Why are you going through my phone? It's not like
you just use my phone because you forgot yours at
home or anything like that. It's because there's trust issues.
And that's what it really is that y'all need to
work through, is the trust issues. The phone is just
a symptom of that. But the real issue is y'all

(01:16:22):
don't trust each other fully for some reason. He doesn't
trust you, right and see, and that's the thing ago
when he's going to phone, there's nothing in my phone.
There's nothing to find on my phone because I don't
love look at he is and it's like, ok now
it may not be a big field, but you feel
hiding some funny And that's where I don't like communication.

(01:16:44):
Everything fall short even though we have right that little
stuff that is being good, And you know, it's like
a timper tat thing, like you found some stuff on
his phone, So now he's trying to go through yours
to see if he could find something so he could
be like, well you did this, because maybe it'll take
away some of the heat that's on him for stuff
that you found on his phone. And you know, some
people will tell you, what, if you go looking for something,

(01:17:05):
you're gonna find something. But the true to the matter
is if you're looking for something, it's because you think
something is going on, right, because you wouldn't be doing
this if you felt confident and secure. Yeah, so y'all
need to figure out how do you feel confident and secure?
And you need to discuss those things. What is it
that you can do for me to make me feel
more secure? What can he do that's gonna make you

(01:17:26):
feel like, Okay, he's not doing anything. What are some
of the steps that he needs to take? Really communication
and making sure that you at least enlighten me or
some of the things that's going on, regardless if it's
hetty or if it's not like you know, it would
be better for me to know about some of the things.
So then when I actually see here, and let's say
I see it, you know, I won't be upset about

(01:17:47):
it because about it right over, explain everything to me.
I don't care if it's a little I just want
to know what's going on, who you're communicating with, who
this person is, so that I feel comfortable and he
should be okay with that. Have you told him that, Yes,
we have kind of have been getting better, but it's just,
you know, I don't know. I feel like it's for

(01:18:08):
open relationship, you know, for us to be open for
each other and everything else. I feel like, you know,
a function shouldn't be a problem if I so, I'm
going to ask you, can I go through I mean
not to the moment and do your phone? You know,
let me see your phone runs like it should be
an issue of you standing over me and looking over me,
like you being fuficient about it. Right, Well, maybe what

(01:18:29):
y'all need to do is make a pact with each other,
like if as long as you are fulfilling these things,
because I'm sure there's some things that he needs you
to do also for him, right right, it's a give
and take. If you guys can be open and receptive
to those things, then maybe you make an agreement. Let's
not go through each other's phones anymore. Let's try to
do this with trust and see what happens. Now things
fall apart, then it might be you having to figure

(01:18:51):
out is this a situation I want to remain in
and staying if I'm not feeling secure. But let's work
on trusting each other. And it's a process because y'all
don't have trust right now and it might take away
to build that backup. Thank you. And I had a
question for the marriage been too, because how are you
guys relationship blacks like, how do you mirrors blacks along, like,
how did you guys get to the point where you're

(01:19:12):
at with your wife shutting the hell up and listening,
ain't laughing and trust me and trust me those phones
have been gone through too. Yeah, my wife has access
to my phone. Actually she pulled some stuff on Instagram
for me, So I mean right now, but I'm just
saying it was a process to get to that point. Um,

(01:19:35):
when I grew up and I realized what I wanted
and my wife is the love of my life and
I don't want to do nothing stupid to hurt her. So, yeah,
we have an open relationship where I opened. As far
as our phones are concerned, I can leave my phone
on accounter. She knows my past cold, she knows the
past goals everything I know. The past goals to all
her stuff too, Like it's I'm trying to get to
that's where I feel like, you know, it shouldn't be

(01:19:56):
a problem, like that's my problem that it feels like
it's a when it came to stuff like that, And
I don't want to problem because at one point I
didn't even have to tassle on my fault. Right, But
you said don't want him going through your phone? Right,
I don't mean I never cared. That's about that's my thing.
I never cared if you get or didn't. My issue
is like you have on your phone. I don't even

(01:20:18):
have a poom and then he has the necessary assword
onto his Facebook. It's like, why do you have a passwords?
Why so you're not concerning about his phone? Because I
felt like you were saying you didn't want him going
through your phone and he keeps doing it. Well, I
don't feel like he should. My phone is I haven't
been going through years. I don't care if you isn't
the fact that I feel like it should be equal

(01:20:39):
for that. I just don't want you to feel like
y'all got to go through each other's phones. I want
you to get to that point. But if you're using
his phone and he's using yours, it's not because you're
going through it. Yeah, that's true. Well, thank you so
much for your health, and thank you guys. You guys
have a wonderful morning. Peace right ask ye eight hundred
five eight five one o five one. If you need

(01:20:59):
a relationship of advice, you could hit you know, we
got rumors on the way. Yes, and let's talk about
Serena Williams and her new deal. All right, we'll get
into that next. It's The Breakfast Club. Good Morning, The
Breakfast Club. Listen, Oh, got its report? Breakfast Club. Russell

(01:21:23):
Wilson and see Eira are going to be hosting NBC's
Roll Up Your Sleeves TV special that's happening on Sunday. Now.
There'll be influential people like Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Charles Barkley,
Shaquille O'Neill, Doctor Fauci of course is involved, and they
said it's going to educate viewers, raise awareness and dispel
concerns surrounded the COVID nineteen vaccines. I don't know if

(01:21:44):
this is the week to do that. When they're recalling,
they recalling vaccines. How can you dispel rumors are people's
fear around the vaccine when you're actually recalling the vaccine
because it's doing things to people. For the Jonathan Johnathan one,
at least the show will aim to inform and encourage
these who have vaccination concerns to learn the facts. Now
do you say on the show, all of them except

(01:22:06):
for Johnson and Johnson. We can't speak for that, but mcdern,
this is only about mcderna and father. Do you at
least say that, do you acknowledge that at least? Yeah?
I mean they kind of have to because it was recalled, right. Yeah,
Doctor Fact he's on it, and he's already spoken about
Johnson and Johnson being paused for now because of concerns
about blood clots for women. By the way, all of
it with all six people that had complications with women,

(01:22:29):
So that Sunday all right. Serena Williams has inked a
first look deal with Amazon Studios, and she spoke to
Vanity Fair about it. I just signed a first look
deal with Amazon Studios, and so we're working on to
create some scripted and non scripted stuff and products and
just bring really interesting stories that really touched the heart
to the screen. Also doing a docuseries on yours truly,

(01:22:55):
but just you know, kind of following following it around,
but through my through my eyes and through my lens.
And so I'm actually joining the EP credits on that
as well. We're dropping a Clues Monster. Serena Williams, I
love it anytime folks get money to create A'm all
for it. She was actually talking to Michael B. Jordan
during Vanity Affairs inaugural Cocktail Hour live event, and he

(01:23:17):
gave her some tips too, if you want to check
that out. All right, Bridgeton has been renewed first seasons
three and four already buy Netflix. So yeah, season two
hasn't even happened yet, but they've already renewed it for
seasons three and four. In a statement, Shanda Rhyme said,
from the first time I read Julia Quinn's delicious Bridgeton series,
I knew these were stories that would captivate a viewing audience,

(01:23:37):
but the evolution of this adaptation would not be a
success without the many significant contributions of the entire Shondaland team.
This two season pickup is a strong vote of confidence
in our work, and I feel incredibly grateful to have
partners as collaborative and creative as Netflix as Dope, because
it helps you create such an intricate storyline, because you know,
you know where you're going, you know many seasons you've got. Yeah,

(01:24:00):
I mean, there's gonna be some surprises the next couple
of seasons of British. You're on it. I didn't say that.
I just sat. It's not happening. I have no faith
in you, don't believe in you at all. You're a
liar all right. Now, Javanti Davis had posted on his
Instagram story, I don't know if y'all saw this, I
can't stop cheating on my girl, and then he said,

(01:24:21):
I'm effing retarded, all right. So those are the posts,
and his girlfriend is NSSA rich girl Nessa, and she posted,
I hate my lurking skills. I'll be finding exactly what
I'm looking for, including the whole family and Grandma don't play.
And then I guess it was revealed that it looks
like from these posts that we're going back and forth
that she's talking about Bernie Burgos's daughter, And so then

(01:24:46):
Bernie Burgos's daughter actually went and was going back and
forth on social media as well, So it turned into
a whole big thing. But Javante wants people to know
he was on snapchat that he is not cheating. Here's
what he posted and now, just so nothing won't think
I'm gonna here cheating what this? So he's sewing who

(01:25:11):
he's with to show that he's not cheating. He also
said that he's not the person that posted that. He
said none of that BS was me, So I don't
know if he's trying to say somebody else posted it.
I don't know. No, are we sure she didn't get
a hold of her of his password, you know what
I mean, and got into his account the post that
I'm just asking here, that's embarrassing. I don't know if
I want to post that, Like if I'm the girlfriend

(01:25:33):
I can't stop cheating on my girl, Yeah, what I
want to post that? Then? And then it's the exactly
Then it's the effort retarded part. After that, it's like
she's doing that on purpose, like that's the point of
to shame him. I don't know. I have no idea
what happened. But he's saying it wasn't him. All right,
that is your rumor. Okay, all right, well shout out

(01:25:54):
to revote. We'll see tomorrow everybody else the People's Choice
mixes up next. Let's go. Everybody is DJ Envy and
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club Now.
Shout to the Lucas Brothers for joining us this morning.
Salute to the Lucas Brothers. Man brilliant, you know, talented
individuals who are now OSCAR nominated. I mean, I just

(01:26:14):
I just like to see people come up because I
remember when they were doing Friends of the People on
True TV with with my guy a little rel and
Jermaine Foyler in the late great Kevin Barnett. And to
see them, you know right in the movie. Now that's
as Can nominated. You know, it's super inspiring. So salute
to the Lucas Brothers. Man, New New Jersey Zone. All right,
Bridge Cuty, All right, morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,

(01:26:40):
Charlomagne the guy. We all the Breakfast club. That's time
to get up out of here. Man, you guys have
a great day today. Also today I'll actually be doing
a live at one pm and I'll be with Coach
Jesse and it's called Save Our Moms, the Black Maternal
Health and Equity. So it's on the hills of the
first ever proclamation of Black Maternal Health Week that was
founded by Black Mamas Matter in twenty seventeen. And I'll

(01:27:04):
be talking to Coach Jesse, including some other very special
guests as well, be talking about these critical health issues
and what we can do to save our moms by
advancing health equity legislatively, in the healthcare system and personally.
So make sure y'all tune in for that at one
pm today. All right, Charlomage, you've got a positive note
for the people I do man. The positive note is
simply this. Setting boundaries isn't always easy or nice, but

(01:27:27):
it's necessary, spiritual and empowering.

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