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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Some morning shown better know what. That's the people's choice.
The Sluto on my life skin brothers out there just hilarious.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
That's for the world.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
I ask just don't do no mo Charlemagne to.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
God, talk to you, to tell everybody come to the
breakfast club.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
I called mister hot seat yo.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
Yo breakfast cub.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's like being America's from poict.

Speaker 5 (00:26):
Don't feel like this, Suthers.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
I've never caused any every time I go to a
revers club, I have no romp like a foot man.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
I'm getting good morning Usa yo.

Speaker 6 (00:37):
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 charlamagnea god, Jessica,
Robin Moore, what's up yo? Peace to the planet is Friday?
Good morning, d J MV is not here today. It's
just myself, Charlamagne, the God is just hilarious, jess How
you feel this morning?

Speaker 2 (00:57):
I feel good. I actually got enough sleep. I do
fly out today right after the show. I got to
be a little of a Kentucky this weekend for shows.
How was the field Trip yesterday?

Speaker 7 (01:06):
Dead?

Speaker 6 (01:06):
The Field Trip was cool? I mean, it's just one
of those field trips, like you know for my eight
year old, where you you walked to like the library.
Oh yeah, yeah, so you walked from the school to
the library. I was just one of the chaperones.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Oh I know, he was real happy he wasn't there
reading them kis your.

Speaker 6 (01:22):
But you know no, I wasn't so crazy. They you
walked to the library. But the kids didn't check out
no books.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Oh my gosh. They read books in the library.

Speaker 6 (01:31):
They didn't like scavenger hunch where they had to find
different books in the library. But I'm like, yo, if
the kids are seeing books that they like, let them
check the books out. That should be part of the
field trip experience.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
No, for sure it wasn't. But it was cool.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
That's what I could see him in the now. Y'all
gotta get my book Get Rich or Died Broke.

Speaker 6 (01:50):
Get Get Honest or Die line Why small Talk Stucks,
which would be in stores May twenty first. But no,
they're not ready for that yet. Exactly they stood they
young adults, young adult books. I'll be trying to point
them towards the Judy Blue them and beverly clearly, but
that's not what him.

Speaker 8 (02:08):
They got they got their own things.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
To day in took.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
What's the comedy club you at this weekend? Louisville Comedy Club? Okay,
so I will be there. Shout out to the radio
station there. I think it's ninety three point one, yes,
real ninety two point one, ninety two, ninety three point one, okay,
all right, real ninety three point one. I will be
there today. All we got two shows tonight and two
shows tomorrow night. Can't wait to see y'all. I ain't
been to Louisville in a minute, and they said that,

(02:32):
I said it right, because it's Louisville. I was calling
the Louisville the first time.

Speaker 6 (02:36):
I went, I don't know who that woman is you called?
That's not what not what the city is called?

Speaker 2 (02:44):
Oh my god.

Speaker 6 (02:44):
Today we got the legend Kadeem Hardison. He'll be here
at seven o'clock this morning.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
Yes, right.

Speaker 6 (02:49):
He actually got a new line of glasses, finally, the
Dwayne Wayne Glasses.

Speaker 8 (02:53):
He's selling them. But he'll be here to talk about that.

Speaker 6 (02:55):
And I think he's on the season finale A Grown
Fish and he's on the Shy this season this yeah, yea,
So we'll talk to Kadean Hardison and my man John
Hope Bryants will be here at eight am. You know,
financial literacy conversations are always important, and John O'Brien is
one of the best at doing no, so he'll be
the talk. He'll he'll be here to talk about that.
And we got Front Page News coming up next. Do
it's the World's most Dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club. Yep,

(03:17):
it's the World's most Dangerous morning show to Breakfast Club.
Charlamagnea God, just hilarious. DJ Envy is off to day.
Now it's time for Front Page Notes. Salute to the
Paces and the New York Knicks for advancing to the
second round of the NBA playoffs. The Knicks beat the
seventy six, his Paces beat the Bucks, and now they
will be playing against each other. I got the Knicks
going to the Eastern Conference Finals to get beat against

(03:38):
the Boston Celtics. But the Knicks in the Eastern Conference Finals,
That's that's enough for New York to throw.

Speaker 4 (03:42):
A parade dropping the clues bombs for the Dick. Dammit.

Speaker 6 (03:45):
You see how they act when they win one game
in the first round, so imagine how they gonna act
when they go to the Eastern Conference Finals, and tonight
Cleveland plays Orlando at seven o'clock. The Clippers played the
Mavericks at nine to thirty pm.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Just hilarious.

Speaker 8 (03:56):
What do we have in front page does.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Before we get there? I really wish that I watched it.

Speaker 6 (04:00):
I really TV first, No, I don't watch that's not all.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
I watched Charlemaine. I have a cable, okay, and I
watched other things too. I watched court shows. I watched
the whole first season of them last night. I'm shout
off the Little Mab and Alena Waite. That is a
very good series. And season two just came out, so
I had to get into season one again and it
was really good. Did you see the first season?

Speaker 9 (04:28):
No?

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Crazy, you didn't see the second season either, obviously, so
you have to. It's really good.

Speaker 8 (04:32):
I haven't seen them day none of the pronoun shows.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
You are trying it, Okay, let's get straight into the
front pach of news. Then, since you're trying it, I'm Totlena, Okay,
rebuilding Baltimore's Bridge. So the latest on that is A
spokesperson spokesperson for Maryland Department of Transportation said the state
plans to rebuild the Franciscott Key Bridge. That bridge collapsed
in March twenty sixth As we know, the collapse of

(04:55):
the bridge caused a shut down for the Port of Baltimore,
which happens to be one of the busiest ports in
the country. It should take about four years to rebuild
the bridge, and the state is expecting the bridge to
be completed by fall of twenty twenty eight. The estimated
cost of the rebuilding is between one point seven and
one point nine billion. That causes a rough estimate since

(05:16):
nothing has been confirmed yet, but that's around the number.
And as clean up and recovery from the collapse continues,
authorities announced that last night they did recover the body
of the fifth missing person.

Speaker 4 (05:26):
Oh god.

Speaker 6 (05:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
The victim was identified as forty nine year old Miguel
Angel Lunar Gonzales. We're sending thoughts and prayers to his family.
And it's about fifty thousand tons that still need to
be removed, like as far as debris and everything else.

Speaker 8 (05:40):
They removing that debris, I know tons, it's removing that.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
What's the re route.

Speaker 8 (05:48):
In Baltimore because the bridge is down.

Speaker 10 (05:50):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
I went there like two days ago to get my
day place day to get my hair done. Y'all feel like,
look you're saying five man, man, look at my edgust
any mind. They're yeah, thank you. So yeah, it's all
types of round East Baltimore, Perry Hall, like going into
that area. I know he doesn't know notice guys, but
all my bottom on people listening, I know, I feel

(06:11):
for y'all. Traffic morning, noon, evening is crazy.

Speaker 4 (06:16):
How much is that imposed on people's commute? Like does
it add a lot of times?

Speaker 2 (06:19):
It adds a lot of time to traffic.

Speaker 4 (06:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Even my stylar sheet, her news shop is located in
Perry Hall, so she would use that bridge. And now
she said it's so backed up. Traffic is like like
an hour to two hours increased because of Yeah, it's
ain't nothing like New York, but Baltimore. That's that's bad
for them because we ain't never had that much traffic

(06:42):
like that.

Speaker 6 (06:42):
Yeah, y'all have to be dealing with that for the
next four years too. Yeah, well, mer Well got to
lead the house earlier. That was from Page News. We'll
be back next hour was front page News. But right
now it's time for get it off your chest. One
one hundred and five five one oh five to one.
If you want to call up here and tell us
why you're blessed, If you want to call up here
and tell us you know why you're upset about something.
Whatever you're feeling, you can feel your field this morning.

(07:03):
Just reach out and touch us right now. It's the
world's most dangerous morning to show the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
The Breakfast Club a new is your time to get
it off your chest. Way up, whether you're mad or blessed.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Time to get up and get something.

Speaker 11 (07:19):
Call up now eight hundred five eighty five one o
five one. We want to hear from you on the
Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (07:24):
Good morning. Who's this?

Speaker 6 (07:27):
This is from upstate New York.

Speaker 4 (07:29):
Peace, Ashley Jesse, Larry's is here? Get it off your chest?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Good morning girl, Oh my.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
God, your morning dust. Congratulations by the Breakfast Club and
your baby.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
Thank you boo.

Speaker 12 (07:39):
So I just like to dress my plass today. It
is my thirty third birthday.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
Hey, I'm going baby girl.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (07:46):
I got a exture early for you, got to call
for to call you. I'm probably about to wake up
my kids because I'm super loud, but thank you for Insterred.
I'm so excited.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
No problem. What you're doing today?

Speaker 1 (07:57):
Oh I not much.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
You just got a real early wake the kids up
just to go back to sleep.

Speaker 5 (08:03):
No, we're about to get ready for school and stuff.
But I just wanted to make sure I called that.
Oh my god, you'll.

Speaker 6 (08:09):
Be there on a Friday, and you're not doing nothing
for your born day? Nothing, not no dinner. Ain't nobody
taking you to rend a lobster nothing.

Speaker 13 (08:16):
I mean, I got some gims yesterday, but I went
until my kids get out of school for vacation, and
I'm gonna take me a little solo vacation.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
That sounds good.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
Tell me how you tell me your single without telling
me you're single?

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Damn?

Speaker 4 (08:29):
Okay, no worry?

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Well right, single by choice, because you know you single choice.

Speaker 5 (08:35):
My kids are young, and you know I don't want
they fathers, so we does Oh you.

Speaker 4 (08:39):
Don't want their father? Okay, well he don't want you either,
because he would have got you something for your birthday.
But happy birthday, and you ain't gone. You are celebrating you.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
Thank you for calling.

Speaker 5 (08:48):
I love you, guys, Tell.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
You too every born day.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Good morning, good morning, Yes, getting off your chests?

Speaker 4 (08:55):
Who this?

Speaker 5 (08:56):
What's y'all? From Brown Liquor podcast where he just said
us all is gayless, navigating life relationships and friendships, all
while enjoying your favorite brown drink, Charlomagne.

Speaker 4 (09:07):
Yes, ma'am, we were just at the Black.

Speaker 5 (09:09):
Effects podcast, uh since this past weekend, and it's just
like you said, it really is a family reunion for
all people that are in podcasting. It was such a
beautiful eaven, ain't y'all. We had so much fun. Just
you looked beautiful with your little baby buff. You were glowing, girl,
You looked so good.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
Thank you, boy, I appreciate that.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
Thank you very much for coming that. Thank you very
much for coming.

Speaker 5 (09:39):
Yes, we had a good time. And I just want
to say, y'all need some resident lesbian for the show
to trap be represented for the men. But sometimes y'all
be saying stuff to be a little wrong to get
the right for us lesbian.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Okay, we'll call up here. We want you all Brown
Liquors to call up here. That's what you that. It's
not a double one, Tandre. It's not like Brown Liquor
and Brown.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
Absolutely absolutely you got it right. It's a double one
cards or Brown lick her were Brown Liquor drinkers. And
of course because we're listening, we're brown lick Heurs we
r O w n l i q ah c R
available on all podcasts platforms.

Speaker 6 (10:20):
That's right, y'all, go like and subscribe to Brown Liquor Podcast.
Thank you for coming to the festival. We see you
next year.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
Yes, yes, you will see us next year.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
And if you want to be a regular, just call in.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
That's what Trap does.

Speaker 4 (10:31):
Trapp has called in all the.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
Time smiling our picture. You gave us a little list
when I told you about uh my girlfriend answering the
questions from brilliant idiots.

Speaker 12 (10:43):
But we watch you.

Speaker 5 (10:44):
We want you to smile on our picture next time.

Speaker 6 (10:46):
Well, yeah, I had I had just got some dental
work done, and I ain't know. I didn't know what
it looked like. I'm being honest. I didn't want to
open my mouth all the way.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
Girl will never smile. He always looked like a civil
rights leader when he's taking.

Speaker 4 (10:56):
Pictures of rights leader.

Speaker 8 (11:00):
No, I just hain't really got some dinner work. I
know what it would looked like.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
But thank you for calling. Ashley.

Speaker 6 (11:05):
Get it off your chats one one hundred five eight
five one oh five to one call up right now,
tell us why you blessed, tell us why you upset.

Speaker 4 (11:10):
Whatever you feeling, you can express it right now in
the breakfast club.

Speaker 11 (11:15):
The breakfast club. This is your time to get it
off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five one five one.
We want to hear from you on the breakfast club.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Good morning, get it off your chance.

Speaker 4 (11:29):
Who's this?

Speaker 7 (11:30):
What's going on?

Speaker 5 (11:31):
Shot?

Speaker 3 (11:31):
You got rick?

Speaker 5 (11:32):
What's going on?

Speaker 2 (11:33):
Just what's going on? How are you?

Speaker 4 (11:34):
Sir?

Speaker 7 (11:35):
I'm cool to man. I was just jamming for this
shickcom music. Man, that's late.

Speaker 10 (11:38):
I like that.

Speaker 6 (11:39):
Yeah, we play sitcom music while we have people on hold.
Not the same old born you know wait music.

Speaker 7 (11:45):
Right broa memories.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
Man.

Speaker 12 (11:47):
I just want to say you, man.

Speaker 5 (11:49):
I listened here every morning man on the way.

Speaker 7 (11:50):
Home from work right now to put my twelve hours in. Man,
you know, gotta do my man, But I appreciate you.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
Man. I tell out my ig of course, all right.

Speaker 9 (11:59):
Man.

Speaker 7 (12:00):
I followed me on I g at rich fatherhood or
I h fatherhood man platform Twitter. I like my brand
right there.

Speaker 6 (12:09):
I like that you should actually send some of the
kendricks or Kendrickson can send something to drink you know
what I'm saying because Drakes can say drink. Don't know
nothing about being a rich father, you know, yeah, rich
as far as other things other than money.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
Yeah, yes, that's fact.

Speaker 7 (12:28):
I got motherhood to rich motherhood and rich travelhood.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
We appreciate that, brother, A good judge. Send don't now
right now? First of all, now I wear a medium large,
but it will be back down to small, but medium
large right now?

Speaker 4 (12:45):
What is a medium? Loge?

Speaker 2 (12:46):
A medium large is what I have on right now.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
That's when you don't know what you're back going to do.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
I'm still growing right now. I'm a medium, but in
a few like in a few days, I could be
at large.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
I don't know. True.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
Good morning, get it off your.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Is this good morning?

Speaker 2 (13:02):
Hey girl?

Speaker 14 (13:04):
Podcast?

Speaker 4 (13:05):
What's your name?

Speaker 5 (13:09):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (13:10):
Yes, God?

Speaker 4 (13:10):
Thank yes, thank you? How are you? How you doing?

Speaker 6 (13:15):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (13:16):
I didn't even say you are so beautiful girl. I
wouldn't be like you when I was pregnant.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
What is pack?

Speaker 5 (13:22):
But I'm wondering what.

Speaker 6 (13:25):
Girl?

Speaker 12 (13:26):
You are beautiful?

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Thank you?

Speaker 4 (13:27):
You said?

Speaker 6 (13:27):
What what did I do?

Speaker 12 (13:28):
What?

Speaker 5 (13:29):
What did they say about?

Speaker 6 (13:31):
Oh that?

Speaker 2 (13:31):
I bought it?

Speaker 4 (13:32):
Girl?

Speaker 5 (13:32):
I am done. When I seen your video.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yesterday, I was why Yeah, girl.

Speaker 4 (13:38):
You know I don't.

Speaker 10 (13:40):
I know, you know.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
I don't just get online and scream at my camera.
I'd be doing it the creative way, having fun with it.
But you know, some things I don't address. But when
I'm saying it a little too much and people just
sitting here that I told y'all what I paid for
EBBS wasn't in my package, I don't. I didn't pay
for ebbs.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
So yeah, I just wanted to tell everybody. So I
am the one who did trying to main face. You
can check me out on Facebook.

Speaker 9 (14:04):
You did?

Speaker 6 (14:07):
You did the rug with my face? Yes? You know
people think I got Yes, you can't just say I
did his face.

Speaker 5 (14:19):
It's d drugs. That's d e e z face.

Speaker 6 (14:23):
Are you d Z?

Speaker 5 (14:24):
On Facebook? Instagram is d e e.

Speaker 4 (14:27):
Z dot r e g z.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
Y'all checking me out for custom rugs and walking.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
I'm gonna bring the rug in. You need to see it.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Yes, you can also hand yours. I've been meaning to
tell you. I've been posting it and everything on Instagram
and tagging you, but I know you busy. Everybody does that.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
So oh I didn't see it. I'm gonna go look now,
thank you, very much, appreciate you to come.

Speaker 6 (14:50):
Appreciate you for coming to to the second annual black
Efect Podcast Festival.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
So do you draw your abs on? That's natural?

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Now, I do not draw as What are you talking about?
Do you see it drawing on? I don't know, No, No,
I'm just asking. No, you know I have natural developed abs. No,
I didn't. I don't do app sketching or app etching
at all.

Speaker 4 (15:08):
Just mean you're gonna bounce back crazy crazy.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
Like can't wait to get in the gym. But I
do like little workouts, like little thirty minute prenative workouts
that you can still do without training.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
Okay, yeah, good morning, get it off your chance with this?

Speaker 11 (15:20):
Hey this cat full of brons?

Speaker 4 (15:22):
What good, Charla Man, I'm good, my brother, How are you, sir?

Speaker 15 (15:25):
Everything good?

Speaker 5 (15:26):
Man?

Speaker 4 (15:27):
I was I forgot. I have to be the work
this morning. Oh good Josh, what's up?

Speaker 2 (15:32):
How are you doing?

Speaker 13 (15:32):
Brother?

Speaker 3 (15:33):
Everything good?

Speaker 5 (15:34):
I said, I work out wallerlized like, for god, I
have to go to work today.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
Then what you was out there doing? Smoking weed, drinking?

Speaker 6 (15:41):
Don't.

Speaker 4 (15:42):
I don't do none of that.

Speaker 5 (15:43):
But I would go out the next game watch party
and we look.

Speaker 12 (15:46):
Out there Waller like they won the championship.

Speaker 6 (15:49):
And see, people think I'm tripping when I say the
Knicks are going to the I think the Knicks are
going to the Eastern Conference Finals.

Speaker 4 (15:54):
They're gonna lose the boss We're going to the finals. No,
you're gonna lose the Boson. We're gonna lose. I like
the Knick too, We're gonna lose the Bosson. Come on,
let's be listic here. You're not gonna be gonna get good.

Speaker 6 (16:04):
So Jason Tatum, Jail and Brown, Drew Holliday like what
we're talking about here. Okay, listen, But anyway, you're gonna lose,
but you're gonna have a ball. They're gonna throw a
parade for the Knicks for going to the Eastern Conference Finals.
Oh yeah, that's right, y'all gonna have a good time,
all right, enjoy today, my brother. That was Get it
off your Chest. We do that every morning, same bad time,

(16:26):
same bad channel. If you ever want to call in
get something off your chest. Don't have to be anything negative.
You know, it's all about feeling your feels. You want
to get something good off your chest, you can do that.
Get something bad off your chest.

Speaker 4 (16:34):
You could do that too.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
Now we got Just with the Mess coming up next.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Yeah, that means she has nothing prepared.

Speaker 6 (16:40):
That means that she has a bunch of stories that
she has to figured out which one she wants to
do it.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
Because I have to do front page news this morning.
I gotta do Donkey of today.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
You have to do so much its radio. That's what
you get for taking a job. What, Oh my god, Okay,
we got Just with the Mess. When we come back,
it's the Breakfast Club, The Breakfast Cause, uh, Happy damn Friday,
y'all of the world's most Dangerous Morning to show The
Breakfast Club. Charallamagne the God just hilarious. DJ Envy is

(17:08):
off the day and now it was time for jests
with the message.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
News is real.

Speaker 12 (17:12):
Her lines just go rive the more.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
Just don't do the lines, don't do that time talk.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
She don't stand nobody talk the world.

Speaker 4 (17:21):
Why Jess worldwids talk to on the Breakfast Club. She's
the coach of ship.

Speaker 16 (17:27):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody could get you to see.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
This's time to set it off.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
Why you already looked disgusted at your own news you
already shake in your head.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Because because as they reveal more details, I'm like, oh no,
they did not put this girl through this. But we're
gonna get to that first, we can get to Dirty
Tays sentenced to seventeen years. So Dirty Tay is is
I hate calling somebody that his name is contagious right,
and he's a little baby's artist, and I'm back. In
August of twenty twenty two, was arrested for allegedly shooting

(17:57):
a three year old boy and his fare Yeah. The
Taller and his father were leaving a barbershop when the
car pulled up next to them and started shooting. The
Tailer was shot in the head, Thank god, the bullet
was removed and he recovered. The hit was suspected to
be a gang related attack aimed at the Taller's father.
He was reportedly arrested after a traffic stop. He was

(18:18):
charged with attempted murder, aggravated assault, first degree cruelty to children,
and violating the Georgia Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act
and more. His girlfriend was with him during the traffic
stop when he was arrested, and she reportedly had the
gun that belonged to Dirty Tay. Dirty Tay originally maintained
his innocence. He told Instagram followers, I'm innocent. The news
is not always right. Don't bash me because of allegations.

(18:41):
Even though he claimed to be innocent, he accepted a
plea deal of twenty five years, so he'll end up
serving seventeen years in prison in eight years on probation.

Speaker 4 (18:48):
I have no idea who Dirty Tae is.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
He's one of the Little Baby's artists and that's his friends, so.

Speaker 8 (18:52):
Yeah, and they'll never heard a song, never heard of
him ever.

Speaker 6 (18:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:57):
I just hate like little stories like this because they'll
attach it to you Little Baby because that's his friend
and the artists and stuff. So I guess that's where
they would get the clout of the story from because
he's one of Little Baby.

Speaker 6 (19:08):
And I hate finding out about rappers when situations like
this happened. I should have heard of you, if you're
a rapper, I should have heard of you because have.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
Heard of you because your rap because your music, yeah,
not your rap sheet? Yeah, absolutely, you know what.

Speaker 16 (19:19):
I like that?

Speaker 4 (19:20):
Lord, you know you could have.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Been a little rap a little bit, but you're not.
So Moving forward, Tamar's musical preference. So listen, y'all, this
took place in twenty twenty two, but y'all know, is
one of those things as the time goes on, As
time goes on, the world gets messier, so messy stuff
circulates and it gets blown out of proportion. But people

(19:41):
are giving Tamar a lot of feedback because during a
show back in twenty twenty two, she was playing a
game of this or that and they asked her about
her musical preference and she was asked to choose between
Mariah Carey or Whitney Houston and the fans and not
have you with her answer.

Speaker 4 (19:57):
Whitney or Mariah. That was the next one.

Speaker 17 (19:59):
Fun.

Speaker 14 (19:59):
You know, I've never been a huge Whitney fan like that.
I'm not saying that I don't like her music. I'm
not saying that she wasn't a phenomenal singer. I'm not
saying her songs wasn't amazing. But for me, because you
asked me a personal question, my personal preference will always
be Mariah Carey period.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
First of all, she don't got to explain all that
her yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
And even I was gonna say even at that, I
don't she she explained it just so it won't be
news like it is today, but it resurfaced or whatever,
but it's remembered that back in the day when Tamo
was singing back up for Tony, Whitney noticed her and
praised her, saying that she's an amazing singer. So people
saw that and was confused, like where is the love
for Whitney. She never said she didn't love Whitney. She

(20:45):
just prefers Mariah Carey, and she may relate to Mariah's vocals,
you know, more than a Whitney. She might just like
Mariah Bobs better and deep, you know, because the discography
of Mariah's catalog is great, you know what I'm saying,
So she must love that. And it's also important to
add that in a different conversation that Tamar had with

(21:05):
Nick Cannon a couple of years ago, I.

Speaker 4 (21:07):
Don't ask Nick Cannon about no music.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
First of all, No, it wasn't even about that, you know,
I'm the first one to say that. But uh, he
had asked her her, asked her the name her top five,
and Whitney was her number three. Mariah carry her number one.
That's just her, that's her preference, and that's her favorite artist.

Speaker 6 (21:24):
If somebody asked me who I like between Whitney and Maria,
I'm gonna say, Mary J. Bloch, what's what they got
to do with anything? Oh my good, I'm just saying
it's my personal preference.

Speaker 4 (21:32):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
But that wasn't even an option. So she wasn't an option.
But all right, so let me ask you right now,
Whitney or Mariah.

Speaker 4 (21:40):
Out of Whitney and Mariah.

Speaker 6 (21:41):
Yes, I would probably go with Whitney just because I
got bops from Whitney and that's like, yeah, yeah, I
want to dance with somebody.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Come on now, does get it?

Speaker 4 (21:49):
Come on now to me?

Speaker 2 (21:51):
I would say Whitney.

Speaker 17 (21:52):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
And then I would say Mariah. I can't say I
can't choose one, but Whitney would be first in them
Mariah and the margin Bloch. And we don't want to
hear Mariah say oh my gosh, she ain't never say
that anyway. Don't try to play.

Speaker 4 (22:05):
Real quick.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
Let me get to this, saysm threatens to end shows early.
So she was in Australia and look a lot of
these celebrities are getting tired at this, like that it's
this thing now and it has been for quite a
period of time where your fans are so excited to
see you, they gotta throw stuff on stage like that.
That kills me.

Speaker 5 (22:21):
But she was.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
Scheduled for three shows in Melbourne and today was the
second of three, and she she threatened to end because
the to end the shows there because fans were showing
crazy behavior. She had to stop the show to ask
fans to stop. People were throwing stuff like shoes sell
Like what cell phones?

Speaker 4 (22:41):
All that?

Speaker 6 (22:41):
Hold on?

Speaker 2 (22:42):
What else? What all these just said? And other items?
But yeah, throwing your shoes? How are you gonna You're
just gonna walk back? See it called barefoot?

Speaker 8 (22:49):
Yeah, and at least throw something to want throw some
stage on stage, you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 17 (22:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (22:54):
Yeah, not your phone? Your phoney is shoes?

Speaker 4 (22:57):
Yeah, that's ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
And then what if you hit her with that?

Speaker 6 (22:59):
Like well, I think they throw the phone because they
want her to pick the phone up and then take
the selfie and then throw it back.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
But nobody imagine twenty phones being thrown at you at once.

Speaker 4 (23:07):
That's ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
You can crack your screen do all of that? Like,
how's she even gonna record? I agree, She reportedly said,
if you throw something else.

Speaker 4 (23:13):
I will leave.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
Do not throw any cell phones up. I'm a person
that's crazy. And there's more video circulated. Fans called out,
fans called out other fans in Melbourne for being out
of control, ruined everything. So a lot of fans in
Melbourne did not like it, like cause it was like,
damn y'all, y'all messing it up for us. The people
that's not throwing nothing on stage.

Speaker 6 (23:31):
It don't be that much of a groupie that you're
that excited to see your favorite artists that you just
throwing random things at them.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
So then it started like getting crazy. People started working
in the owls, doing handstance and fighting that's fine, and
fighting on a handstance, working how is that you supposed
to do to the concert? But what songs? Still a
gout for y'all to be doing all of that, But
buts sins to be doing that in the video she'd
be having slow songs that she'd be working to you
in the videos.

Speaker 8 (23:52):
Oh she does the record with Drake in Sexy Red.
I can see that.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
Yeah, I'm talking with it's other songs too, like that,
you're working on my mind? I forgot. It's called good
days she'd be big turking the good days. And that's
like a real song that she can do by lets
popping poom pum on a handstand on he this ain't
got none of them record, she says, got the body,
so she'd be just you know, flowing it. Well, yeah, Sean,
got really none of those. But listen if you got
to do it.

Speaker 6 (24:15):
And that is just with that mess and her news
is real. Allegedly we got front page news when we
come back. That's the world the most dangerous morning show,
the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (24:23):
You're checking out the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (24:25):
Yeah, she was the most dangerous morning show, the Breakfast Club.
Charlamagne to godess hilarious. It's time for front page news.
That was meek mil dreams and nightmares. Hold up, wait
a minute, y'all thought he was finished? Yes, six, y'all
all finished?

Speaker 3 (24:38):
Okay.

Speaker 8 (24:38):
Knicks beat y'all last night. Okay, the Pacers beat the Bucks.

Speaker 6 (24:41):
Nicks and Paces will play each other in the second
round of the playoffs. I predict the Knicks will beat
the Paces in the second round of the playoffs and
face the Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals. They'll lose
to the Celtics, but it doesn't matter. New York will
still throw the Knickson parade. Okay, if you don't think
the Knick's gonna get a parade, you know, if you
think the Knicks will not throw themselves a parade if
they go to the Eastern Commass Finals, you tripping. And

(25:01):
it won't even be an official parade, just the fans
of the Knicks will line up in front of the
garden on twenty third Street and do it themselves because
it'll be twenty four years.

Speaker 2 (25:10):
I think, like twenty four years since sixteen the Eastern
College Finals. I don't look at man, Yes, I'm.

Speaker 6 (25:13):
Pretty sure ninety nine, two thousand, I think with the
last time the nich was went to the Eastern College Finals.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Regrets on that, or they haven't gone yet.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
They still got to beat the Faces.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Oh no, I'm saying congrats on the twenty four years.
Then yes, if they beat the face, if they be
the basis, Yes, with the mess.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
Breast cancer screening updates so the US Preventive Services Task
Force is now recommended women get mammograms every other year
starting at the age of forty They should continue doing
this until the age of seventy four. The last recommendation
from twenty sixteen was for women to begin screening at
the age of fifty. Starting at forty was considered an
individual decision rather than medical guidance, but now it's like

(25:51):
a must do for women starting at the age of forty.
The recommendation applies to everyone assigned female at birth, including
transgendered men, binary, people at average risk of breast cancer,
and people with the family history of breast cancer or
dense breast The recommendation does not apply to people who
already had breast cancer, people with genes who put them

(26:11):
at high risk of having breast cancer, and people with
a history of high dose radiation therapy.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
To the chess.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
For the list of people who aren't recommended to begin
testing at forty, the USPSTF says they should follow plans
set by a doctor.

Speaker 4 (26:26):
Forty late forty seam late nowadays.

Speaker 6 (26:28):
Yeah, because I know I have individuals who have been
getting diagnosed with breast cancer.

Speaker 4 (26:34):
Earlier way yeah, like mid thirties.

Speaker 17 (26:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
Yeah, so actually they can't tell you know if you go,
So I like that it should be done earlier, and
don't don't y'all check often.

Speaker 4 (26:47):
Lumps often, No.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
You know what that's a good question, because I find
that people's women don't start checking until they have issues,
you know, which is bad. So I think that it
should be starting at thirty to thirty five because I've
had friends and family who who they've gone because they
feel certain pains. Yeah, and then you're going you find

(27:11):
out it's something, and yeah, you're right, that is way
before forty. So it should actually even start in your thirties,
I would say, yeah, And I think a lot of
that is can be a credit to diet and everything,
like you just never know the things that we put
in our body. Yeah, yeah, So I got time for
one more story. Yes you do, all right, So the
elderly is being scammed. I did not know that this many.

(27:32):
First of all, I didn't know that they considered you
old over the age if from sixty and up. But yeah,
you start getting free pancakes that I hop at fifty five.

Speaker 9 (27:41):
Real.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
Yeah, I think you start getting AOLP around your fifties.
Two now, yeah, but I don't really consider that. Oh,
I don't know. Well either way, the FBI revealed that
Americans over the age of sixty lost three point four
billion and twenty twenty three due to scams. Damn, that's eleven.
That's an that's an eleven percent increase from the three
point one billion loss in twenty twenty two. There was

(28:04):
also a fourteen percent increase in complaints filed with FBI
by elderly victims. Over one hundred thousand complaints were filed
with the FBI by people over sixty. The average dollar
was lost thirty three nine hundred and fifteen dollars, and
almost six thousand people lost more than one hundred thousand dollars.
Tech support fraud was the number one crime used to

(28:25):
defraud the elderly.

Speaker 8 (28:27):
Text what do they call elderly?

Speaker 4 (28:28):
Though?

Speaker 6 (28:29):
Because I think the senior age demographic starts around fifty five?

Speaker 2 (28:33):
Now, so what do they call elder They said, age
of sixty six? Yep, stand up yeap. Tech support scams
usually involved scammers claiming to be support from a legitimate
company and informing the victim of fraudulent activity or potential
refund more subscription service, Oh my god. The scammer tells
the victim that they have a refund for the victim. However,

(28:54):
money can only be sent by downloading a software that
allows the scammer to review the victim's bank account.

Speaker 6 (28:59):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (29:00):
I watched the movie by Jason Statham. That's the transporter guy,
just in case y'all don't know, and it's uh. Felicia
Rashad is the woman. She actually it's a movie about this,
and they do it the same way. And they scammed her.
They told her the only way that she can receive
like a refund of some type is if she gives
them access to her accounts, and she did and her

(29:22):
money was gone within like like seconds minutes actually, and
they wiped everything out.

Speaker 6 (29:27):
I can't believe old people are falling for those scams,
because at the tender age of forty five, I have
trouble downloading anything. You cannot call my phone and tell
me to do something technical, and I'm gonna go do
it by myself. Yeah, I'm calling somebody, you'll call them
my daughter. I'm calling one of y'all. I'm calling somebody
younger than me.

Speaker 4 (29:42):
To help me.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
That's what that's And that's what Felicia Rashad did in
the movie. She called her daughter, but her daughter didn' nansa,
so she was like, well, I guess if you say so,
you know, But it's just praying on these elderly people's
like kindness and the fact that these people are really
nice when they call them, they make it seem like
they know everything about them because they somehow hack into
your system anyway, but they can't get your money until

(30:04):
you actually give them a number like an accounting number,
routing number.

Speaker 4 (30:08):
Or something like that. That's a damn shame.

Speaker 17 (30:09):
It is.

Speaker 8 (30:09):
It's a special place in hell for people who take
advantage of the elderly.

Speaker 4 (30:13):
Yeah, okay, yep, yep. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
So the FBI Financial Crime Section is doing something about this.
They're trying to there. They are encouraging financial institutions to
do more and protecting elderly from.

Speaker 6 (30:24):
Skin damn protect the old people. That was front page news.
Now we got Kadeem Hardison coming up next. Hey, kadem Hardison.
You know, yes, Dwayne Wayne. He's got a line of glasses.
He's finally put out his own line of glasses with Deemed,
so you could get the Dwayne Wayne glasses. Plus, he's
on the season finale of series Finale A Grownish this
season and he's on the shot the Shy. Yeah yeah,

(30:45):
So we'll talk to him about that and much more
on the World's Most Dangerous Morning Show to Breakfast Club,
The Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (30:53):
Morning.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Everybody is dj n V jess Larius Charlamage the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. We got a special guests
in the building, the legend, what the dem.

Speaker 4 (31:02):
Hardest, what what?

Speaker 1 (31:03):
Welcome back, Let's go, Let's go.

Speaker 4 (31:05):
Now you feeling I'm feeling good. Bro running around New
York promoting the shy about the tour talking about some glasses.
Glass man, your.

Speaker 2 (31:15):
Own line of the Wayne Wayne flip up glasses.

Speaker 4 (31:19):
I should have did it.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
It's about time.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
It's about time because we can give it back a
little bit. Okay, we can put it into a scholarship
fund if we sell them, help somebody go to school learn.
It seemed like a good idea. This guy here, I said,
if you ever wanted to do a glasses line, I
was like yeah. And then we found these girls in Brooklyn,

(31:42):
Brooklyn stand Up Vontel is the name of the company,
Tracy and Nancy, and they make glasses and they sell glasses,
and we pair it up with them, and I told
them about exactly how I wanted them, what I wanted
them to do, and they made it happen.

Speaker 6 (31:56):
You popular popularized that style. It's not even absolutely close, But.

Speaker 9 (32:00):
How can we go?

Speaker 4 (32:01):
How can we order the first of all, because I
got to order it. I gotta support. Yeah, vontel dot com.
You got some plans over there. Oh, let me get say, yeah,
that's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
When you started wearing these, were they for prescription or
you just was trying to look cool.

Speaker 16 (32:13):
No.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
The executive producer at the time came the name an
Beast who was passed away Rest in peace. She saw
him in a David Bowie concert, and she came to
me two days before we taped anything, because I was
added to the show after about four episodes were shot,
so they had to kind of shoot us. And then
at the sin she came to me two days before

(32:35):
we shot and had these glasses and it's like, I
saw these in a David Bowie concert. Bass player somebody
had them on. Would you like to wear these? You
music could work them in? And I thought, at the time,
I thought the character was so corny. I just wanted
to hide. This was the perfect little boom I could
just if I didn't think a joke could work, if
I didn't like what I was doing, I could flip

(32:56):
them down and hopefully nobody would recognized me. Yeah, I
could go and have a were afterwards. And now I
look and look at this adult.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
Tell them again how they can get him if they
want to order them.

Speaker 4 (33:04):
Bontel dot com. Bontel dot com. Dean E E E
M E D. That's the name of the Glasses Wayne
Wayne Glasses Love. Now.

Speaker 8 (33:14):
I saw y'all did a White House visit recently, the
whole cast of the Different World.

Speaker 4 (33:17):
Yeah, that was wild. I'm more comfortable at Comic Con, actually,
but they they invited us and and Darryl Bell, who
is our team leader, hooked this all up and got
us in. And I was surprised at how overwhelmed I was,
because at first I thought this is gonna be high
security robots standing everywhere, It's gonna be crazy. And it

(33:40):
was just people in the building, just regular people in
the building going to work, and then the whole fact
that it is the House that Slaves building. And then
she was so warm and vice rejective. Yeah, Adam, vice
president receptive to us and and knew who we were. Yeah,
but you don't you know what I mean, when you

(34:01):
do the gig, you don't really think everybody's paying attention
you hear from people and you know they paying attention,
but you don't really think the whole planet is playing attention.
But yeah, she cleared the room and gave us a
good fifteen minutes and talked to us normal, and yeah,
she was just the open it was. It was like
I said, man, I was like, I don't want to

(34:22):
go to White House? What am I going to White House?
Let's go to.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
Comic Coal And how is it going on that toll
because you've been you've been in every HBCU, the White House,
and you guys have been getting such a warm reception.

Speaker 4 (34:33):
Yeah, it's amazing that the students eighteen nineteen years old,
they they know us. They scream like, I'm usher, I
don't understand that part. I really thought it would have
died that reruns. Man nah. Yeah, But the influence that
that show has had, and it's the influence, it's the
fact ridiculous we're going to those schools and we're talking

(34:56):
to them about school and they're open. They of it.
They screamed. They love to hear the stories. They love
to hear baby please. They love all of that. And
it's the retroactive love that's that's kind of overwhelming. Sometimes
we get in there and we really are not expecting
or yeah, we're not expecting it to be like that.
We're expecting it to be nice, and they go in,

(35:19):
they greet us like heroes or something. You guys are
to our community. Absolutely.

Speaker 6 (35:25):
If you got people out there who say, hey, I
went to college because of a different world, that's a
different level of impact.

Speaker 4 (35:31):
That's what I tell you all the time. That was
that was he Dominican, I'm black. I went to ABC.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
I was going to ask, you know, you ever thought
about putting the director's hat back on and creating that again,
just different a new day because you go into the HBCUs,
you see how much it's needed, you see what the
students like.

Speaker 4 (35:50):
You can recreate that because you know what works. It
doesn't even have to be called a different world.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
It could be.

Speaker 4 (35:55):
We've been actively trying to do that for about twelve
fifteen years, and since we don't own it, and it does,
like you said, it doesn't have to be called that.
But that's what everybody knows. The blueprint is there, and
I never thought for a long time, I thought this
will never happen. This will it Just it's not in
the cards, it's not gonna happen. We can't get the rights.

(36:17):
They keep him in it hard. Now I say never,
say never, because if Debbie gets excited about something, if
we can get Debbie excited Debbie out excited about something,
then anything is possible.

Speaker 6 (36:28):
And then clearly that's that setting still works because you're
on Grown Ish now and grown it has been along?

Speaker 4 (36:34):
How many seasons? Six seasons? Yeah, something like that. Yeah,
when if we did it, I thought this show should
never end. I thought, yes, let me out, let jazz out,
let us grow on and go off and do stuff.
But then bring new freshmen in and keep talking about
what's going on in the world, keep addressing the same
the issues like it seemed like like soul training. It

(36:54):
should have never stopped, but it did, and thirty five
years later, it's needed. You can see that it's needed. Hey, es, Hey,
I just love you.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
I'm just I appreciate that. I'm happy to see that
you're gonna be on the sho How did that happen?
Were you familiar with the show before?

Speaker 4 (37:13):
Yeah, I watched the first season and was in love
with it, and then booked some gigs and went out
of the country and the next thing, you know, I
turned around and they five six seasons in.

Speaker 6 (37:23):
I was like, Lina, put on, Lina, don't be calling
your company hill Entrad and now look out for hell.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
Yeah, I want to be on this show.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
What's your character going to be?

Speaker 4 (37:36):
I played Professor Elijah Gardner. He is an English literary
professor and he is that favorite teacher that inspires his
students to push harder. So yeah, so she to strike.
It happened and everybody was out of work and she
called up and was like, I got something, m you
want to come in. I was like, yes, not even
do I want to, and don't even send me a script.

(37:57):
I'm on my way. Yeah, So yeah, it was. It
was See once we got out of the strike and everything,
then it really kicked off.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
All We got more with Kadeem Hardison when we come back,
don't move. It's the Breakfast Club, Go Morning Mourning. Everybody's
DJ and the Breakfast Club Jesseelaris and Charlamagne the God.

Speaker 4 (38:12):
We're still kicking it with Kadeem Hardison.

Speaker 6 (38:15):
You know, we just had chimp fields up here, and
you made me think of something when you said you
just called Lena because I asked her what's more important
to have people black people behind the scenes are in
front of the camp.

Speaker 4 (38:25):
What do you think behind the scenes, they create the jobs,
they create the opportunities. We party with the people in
front of the screen, you know what I mean. We
all hang out, We know each other. There is a familiarity.
It's a love of trust. But behind the scenes is
where the deals get made, but where the stuff happens.

(38:46):
So it's good to know that she was inspired by
us and named her company him and grad and shot
through the ceiling with her with her talent, and it's
able to say, Okay, let me write something, let me
create something, and let's pull them let's start pulling them in.
So yeah, I think it's it's more important to know

(39:06):
people who.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
Write now the heavy Chicago based right, And then you
being from New York, did you have to like change anything?
Did you have to be more Chicago? How did you
prefer that?

Speaker 4 (39:15):
I really I just kind of you know, I knew
this guy. He's for me, an extension of Dwayne Wayne.
He's he's really like at the end of a different world.
Dwayne was teaching and he loved his students, and he
had some run ins with him sometimes it didn't go
so well, but he was learning, and I think that
Professor Gardner is an extension of that or evolution of that.

(39:38):
So you know, I wasn't trying to do a Chicago accent,
yeah going there. No, I was just keeping it simple,
and my actors did cats. I got to work with
a phenomenal and I didn't know their storylines, like I
watched the first season. Then I stopped and got busy
and then went and shot it and didn't know who
I was working with or I do to come up

(39:59):
to men Street, Hey, I'm Curtis, like Curtis Curtis Cook.
Hey Curtis Cook. I played on the show. Oh okay, nice, okay, yeah,
but but then I came back after I shot and
washed them all washed up until now and crazy crazy,
and they're all so good. I'm such fans now that

(40:22):
I've seen them on. Now I know all of them
about Oh yeah, that's dude to that's all ye. So yeah,
it's been a fun ride on the shot. Do you
still audition? I ask Kimni said, are you still audition? Yes, sir,
really auditioned the two weeks ago. Yes, sir.

Speaker 6 (40:38):
When it comes to auditioning though, it's like you're a
new person now though you know you're a o G now,
Like it's a different thing. Like they probably had a
certain vision of you from the Kadeem artists and they
knew then.

Speaker 4 (40:48):
Yeah, you're like you're an old different person now. Really
we all are. Yeah, it's nice to keep reinventing the wheel,
you know what I mean. It's I always thought I
was a really good actor, and it wasn't until maybe
seven or eight years ago that I saw something that
made me rebelieve it. Because for a while, you go
through a stretch where the jobs ain't happening, and plus

(41:10):
I don't watch my stuff. I get hypercritical. So I'll
leave it out there. That's for y'all. Y'alllways, tell me
if you like it or but I'll wait ten twenty
years before I go and look at something. It took
a long time to look at the different world.

Speaker 3 (41:23):
I watched it.

Speaker 4 (41:24):
We had a premiere party and I watched the first
episode and I never watched after that. Really, Jesus, that's bad.
I just felt that's not good. This is not what
I thought it was gonna be. Yeah, but that's me.
I see every ground ball, I miss you know what
I mean? If it gets past me, then that's an error,
and I'm like, I should have. I should have. I
should have. I could have wat didn't I. So I

(41:45):
watched it all like that, and then about eight years ago,
Love Is. I watched Love Is just because I loved
the other characters and what they were doing any other actors,
and I wasn't in a way I didn't get in
a way I was able to see it and was like, oh,
that wasn't And then I was like, I'm getting better
as an actor at fifty. So you never watch nothing.

(42:06):
You never watched the wedding crash and scene.

Speaker 6 (42:08):
You never watched when you stop back and see sexual assault,
like you never watched none of that.

Speaker 4 (42:11):
I watched the clips, but not when we did it.
I did it. The experience, the experience that I had
doing it, talking to the actor, relating and being truthful
was way better than the editor and the producer and
the sound man could mix and come up with. When
I watch it from outside of my body, it's completely different.
But when I'm here, nothing's going to ever touch that.

(42:34):
That's why a lot of the greats go do plays,
because they don't never have to see it one and done. Yeah,
and every night it can be it's your show. The
director can lead you up there and then he has
to fall back into the crowd with the rest of them,
and you get to go on and I may be
this tonight or I may be that tonight, and there's
no judgment. You get to live it out as fiercely

(42:55):
as you want. So, yeah, I'm scared of plays I've
done too.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
I wanted to know, like, we look at characters that
are iconic to us, and sometimes they can't get out
of that character, like we've seen it with Steve Verko
for some reason, he's always Steve Verko, right, yeah, and
even to you to a part, how did you get
out of that?

Speaker 4 (43:12):
So people just didn't see you as that all the time?
And was that difficult? I think people still, well, the
people still see me as that. That's what resonated most
with them. Some people love Vampire and Brooklyn, some people
always love the White Men Can't Jump. But I think
that the mass they see me as that, and if

(43:33):
that never changes, I'm okay. The industry, I couldn't get
auditions for Singleton movies or any of those like hood
movies because they thought I was a college kid and
I was like, I barely finished high school. Like, man,
that's crazy, I'm not the you tried out for boys
in the hood. You try to know I didn't. I
couldn't get a meeting. Wow. They was like, nah, we're

(43:53):
good or they would cast it before. I was like,
how these movies getting made? And I'm right here, right here.
I don't know me but I was like more Edge
from school days than Dwayne from a different world, you know,
a mixture of the two. But I was like, I'm
from Brooklyn. I could do that. I could I could

(44:13):
do that, but I could never get a meeting at crazy.
I could never get a sit down.

Speaker 6 (44:17):
You know you said earlier that dal Bell was y'all leader? Yes, right, yes,
So how do you even keep that band together? Because
you know you got O gr and B groups that
hate each other. How do y'all keep y'all here?

Speaker 4 (44:29):
Nine? We grew up together, we came to the city together,
we came to La together. We're all from somewhere else.
We had each other to lean on, We needed each other.
We hung out with each other. It was true love.
It wasn't it wasn't like they sure these the Godfather
and my kid. We are connected. We stayed connected, So

(44:50):
that's that was easy. That wasn't It was never any
kind of like I don't want to go.

Speaker 6 (44:57):
Yeah, it is interesting to do when you talk about
the movie aspect of it, because I'm like Dann, you
weren't in a lot of those nineties.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
Great none at all. He was a panther and white
men can't jump the school days. But yeah, and then
there was a gap after Panther, there was a gap.
But I couldn't. I couldn't get none of them. I
had to stay on TV at the between Brothers and
some other things. But I couldn't get in because I
got into this because I thought I was gonna be
a movie star. When I was thirteen. I thought I

(45:24):
was going to be a movie star. That's what I
want to do. And TV was kind of a also
ran like it just happened, but I really thought, I'll
do it this different world thing for a couple of months,
then they'll get canceled and in a movie star. Because
I knew West was coming on. There was some wolves
in the pack. But yeah, I couldn't get in. I
couldn't get in with those dudes. Why was the transition
so hard?

Speaker 6 (45:44):
Because I think about somebody like Jada Piger Smith, she
made the transition. She might be I can't really think
of nobody else, honestly.

Speaker 4 (45:50):
Yeah, it was I don't know. I think it went
from you know you're an actor, you're an actor, you're
an actor. Then they was like, no, we'll take the comedians,
the comedians, we want two meetings. Eddie kind of started it.
But Eddie just blew it open for anybody young and
black and shark with it. He just created that caval

(46:10):
with me and Martin and Will and everybody run through.
But then after that it seemed like it shifted where
they after Cosby, of course they wanted to do comedian
shows based on comedians they can write, they can you
know they can be, and then being an actor kind
of kind of took a side road or back seat
to it. So yeah, it was just tipset. Everything goes

(46:30):
in cycles, so wait for it to come back around,
and it's coming back around. Wearing glasses. I used to
hate those glasses and it was really something that used
to hide. My mother was telling me last night, Yeah,
you used to hate them I used to get the
calls you used to hate those glasses.

Speaker 6 (46:47):
I was like, yeah, but did you did you hate
did you hide behind the glasses because you didn't like
the roles just because you're dealing with like some type
of impostics.

Speaker 4 (46:53):
And no, no, no, it was I wasn't. I didn't
understand the role first season. First season, I just thought,
this morning, I gotta.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Go back to Brooklyn when he's killing the block.

Speaker 4 (47:04):
Yeah, this is not going good. This is not And
then by the third season, mister Cosby said, Okay, it's
time to growing up. Time to growing up, lose the glasses,
and then kind of with that went most of the
comedy out of there. The silliness that I was doing
in the first couple of seasons, which I embraced. I
was like, okay, cool, but yeah it was it was

(47:25):
calculated on his part to make him more of a man. Now,
I'm like, we's had those, we did that, We've seen
him he can do that. Now, let's see what else
is in the bag.

Speaker 1 (47:35):
All right, we got more with Kadem Hardison when we
come back. Is the Breakfast Club? Good Morning Morning, Everybody's
DJ Envy, Jess Hilarry Charlamage, the guy we are the
Breakfast Club was still kicking it with actor.

Speaker 4 (47:45):
I call him an icon and a legend. You know
him from a different world.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
You know him from brook Vampires in Brooklyn, and now
he's on the shy kadem Hardison. You mentioned Wesley Snipes, Yes, sir,
and I wanted to know how competitive was it back then,
because you said you just knew he was coming. So
it made me think of like you know, when you
and the NBA and then you got this college can
be like, oh, he's coming about to be a beast?
Was that the same way when it came to acting.

Speaker 4 (48:05):
We need dark skin brothers needed.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
Absolutely just say that because he stabbed the light skinned
brother and think about the cheer.

Speaker 4 (48:16):
Yeah, I'm not the most competitive. I know what me
is for me and you can't really have it. But
I knew the talent that was emerging. I could see it.
I could I could see just in the little the
bad video. I was like, who's that? She's Okay, that's
another one, and then it's less jobs.

Speaker 10 (48:36):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 4 (48:37):
When when when you think, oh, snap them out in front,
and then all of a sudden you looking at somebody
here and somebody here and then how did he get
up there?

Speaker 2 (48:45):
And that was a music video?

Speaker 1 (48:47):
Yeah exactly.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
Yeah's music videos were like movies.

Speaker 4 (48:53):
That was directed. Yeah yeah, yeah, so yeah, I just knew.
I knew when when I saw Tupac, I thought he
was probably the most dangerous of all the young actors.
And he was a rapper. Why was that he could
reach a depth? He got that Martin Luther King kind
of energy that comes out of him. Even the way
he talks, it's melodic. So when you when I see

(49:16):
him on screen and I hear him talk, I'm like,
now I'm hearing jazz for the first time. Now I'm
hearing somebody that then broke the mole and it's playing
a whole different style. He's probably the one guy that
I was like, oh boy, if he keeps on acting,
I'm going to get less and less. What did you see?

Speaker 10 (49:33):
Man?

Speaker 4 (49:33):
Was it when he did Different World or something else? Juice? Juice?
He was intimidated when he came on set. No no, no, no,
like I said, what's mine? But I was thrilled that
I got to direct him, because all you have to
do is say action and then cut moving on, like
there was no I'm sure about that, Chot. Maybe you
want to talk, bro. This is where you get to be.

(49:54):
I'm a great director because what I did. I had Tupockets,
Jada and Bumper and all of them. They were all
so good at it makes you look good. The best
job a director can do is hire the right people,
get to a good DP, cast the right actors, or
get good casting, and then the job it starts to
get easier, and then you can worry about the things
you would worry about.

Speaker 6 (50:14):
I was going to ask you that what kind of
person was Pop because I love hearing park story just
because him, him had big because they did such mythical figures.

Speaker 4 (50:20):
Yeah, yeah, so he was he was angry on seting No, no,
not in the space. In the space, he was darling.
But then I was out at the Beverly Centery, remember
the Belly Sending Belly Center. So I was at the
Beverly Center. I was a level up and he was
coming with I think it was Yo Yo, It's some
friends and they were coming. It was after rehearsal one
day or something like that, and I saw him and

(50:41):
before I could say something, somebody on the upper level said, hey,
that's two packed that's two packed and he was like,
it's pot money, it's pot money, and they started screaming
like they was gonna do something. I was like, wow,
bro so mad, like, yeah, they mispronounced the name. You
could keep walking.

Speaker 16 (50:56):
He was.

Speaker 4 (50:56):
He wanted to make it a point, and I get it.
It's a lot of bravado that go was on in
hip hop, so you gotta stand up for certain things.
But I just didn't. I didn't understand why he was
that frustrated with the space. They said you directed him.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
Yeah, I was Cosby when y'all wanted to use pop
because I know one time Cosby was like, I ain't
messing with the rapidy rap.

Speaker 4 (51:15):
Yeah. I never heard from him, Like I had two
brief encounters with Bill mister Konsby give him nothing. So
he never we got the call through Debbie that it
was time to grow me up. Okay. He showed up
when Whoope came to do the AIDS episode with t Campbell.
He showed up for some pictures, but he really, you know,
was behind the scenes, behind your scenes. He made sure

(51:37):
he shot his show in Queen's He said, you shoot
your show in California. There was no way to go
and they won't let me. They won't let me. Hey man,
they won't let me. Can you help me with now?
Get out there, get your paddles and get it home.
Have you had a role that is fulfilling as your
role is Dwayne when? Yeah, it's usually for me. How
much fun am I having on set? And few things

(52:00):
can top a different world because I did it for
so long and I grew up and I was it
was the beginning. It was really like my introduction to
the world. So that special. But I can't imagine I'll
ever have as much fun as I did doing I'm
Gonna Get You Sucking. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Every day Cleenan

(52:21):
would come in and just be like, go just let
us be free. And Damon, who was a huge influence
on you know, huge like Eddie, Like I used to
follow Damon around to the comedy clubs because I thought
I want to do what he does. He's that good
and that impression that he made, that kind of impression
on me that I wanted I was gonna do stand
up comedy, and he talked me right out of it.

(52:43):
He was like, you have a TV show, This is
what all the comics want, this is what you have
is what we're all trying to get. You don't want
to be doing this in the little towns and staying
at little hotels and getting up and at midnight and
going to a club and then doing four clubs. And
I was like, okay, yeah, I think you're right. I
don't want to do all of that. But yeah, working

(53:05):
with him on Sucker, working with Eddie, which he was
like an idol, you know what I mean. There was
no bigger influence than Eddie on anything I've done. So
to do Vampire in Brooklyn and to get the call
from him saying I've seen all the tapes, you only
want it could do this? Wow, It's like what but
telling me to get the money right?

Speaker 9 (53:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (53:26):
Yeah, it was incredible. You know those times that I'll
never forget. I just had the most amazing time on
Teenage Bounty Hunters, you know, five six years ago, this
little show where I was like, I'm gonna try something different.
I'm gonna try something different on voice, I'm gonna try
something different with everything. I'm just gonna see if I
can dig deeper. And they let me do it. And

(53:49):
one of the most fulfilling moves was playing Bowser. It
was hard to shake. You know. You know some people
they lose themselves far. But I was talking like that,
dude for like two years after I couldn't. I couldn't
shake it out of my voice. I got so comfortable
in it. I was having such a good time with it.
Was still talking like this, Yeah around.

Speaker 5 (54:13):
Right.

Speaker 4 (54:16):
I couldn't find I couldn't find my register that I
know that this is. And now I'm out of it.
And it sounds weird because I was so comfortable in it.
But yeah, I take the jobs for the fun. The
money is a bonus actors to say, we do it
for free. We just pay us for waiting standing right. Yeah,
So all of them have really been a joy, because

(54:38):
that's that's what I think I do best, even though
I just realized it at fifty and it's the thing
that gives me the mosture.

Speaker 6 (54:47):
But we always appreciate you, just even to get to
sit down and bill with you man icon and right again.

Speaker 4 (54:55):
Yes, Bontel dot com Deemed is what they call.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
I love them all right, thank you?

Speaker 4 (55:01):
She got so and promo code that's right, reboot now,
reboot now, get you get some get a little bit
off and they go to a good cause they'll be
giving someone the kids and hopefully get somebody into college.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
Well it's Kadeem Hardison and it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (55:17):
Good Morning.

Speaker 6 (55:18):
It's the world's most dangerous morning show, The Breakfast Club.
Charlamagne the God just hilarious. DJ Envy is off today.
Slew to the good brother Kadem Hardison for pulling up
this morning man. Make sure you go get his uh
his new line of glasses deemed by Vantel Bytel.

Speaker 2 (55:34):
Those girls are from Brooklyn too, so you know for
us a collaboration.

Speaker 6 (55:37):
Yeah, you did say that, Yes, sir, yes, just stole
my brown ones. You're gonna make me walking around in
these pink glasses.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
There ain't nothing that you don't want to shut up.
It's just the messing. Her news is real, news is.

Speaker 6 (55:48):
Real, just corrib the more.

Speaker 12 (55:50):
Just don't do no line, don't.

Speaker 5 (55:52):
Do that talk.

Speaker 4 (55:56):
Talk the world. Why jes worldwide mass on the Breakfast Club.
She's the coaches shooting.

Speaker 16 (56:03):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody.

Speaker 1 (56:08):
Could get you to see the time to set it off.

Speaker 2 (56:11):
Okay, so Simon Well Bodas Company ordered to pay nine
hundred thousand dollars private jet bill. So all of Simon's
scams have been coming to light lately. His company Petroleum
Well sim Cole Petroleum Limited Company is reportedly being ordered
to pay a debt of almost nine hundred thousand and
unpaid private jet bills. The exact amount is eight hundred

(56:33):
and eighty seven thousand. The bill came after Simon's company
failed to respond to a lawsuit by NetJets. Net Jets
is the air company that allows several people to own
the same jets, so it's almost like a timeshare for jets.
Simon's company entered an agreement with them in twenty twenty,
but didn't hold up his end of the day, so
on February of twenty twenty three, Simon was accused of

(56:56):
breaching the contract and failing to pay nine hundred and
seventy four thousand, two hundred and thirteen dollars and eleven cents.
When the bill is already that outstanding, Where do the
sents come from? Like the eleven cents?

Speaker 6 (57:07):
They want everypenny? Like, come on, y'all, I want every penny.
That's still why Simon out here just reinforcing all Nigerians.
I have no ideas christ.

Speaker 2 (57:16):
In August, they settled that Simon's company would pay eight
hundred and thirty nine thousand via monthly payments. Simon's company
allegedly only made the first payment of twenty five thousand
and then never made another payment, so he still owes
eight hundred and fourteen thousand plus interests.

Speaker 8 (57:31):
Portional on nothing to do with that bill, nothing at all.

Speaker 3 (57:33):
Please.

Speaker 6 (57:33):
His portion got up to walk away from the table.
Let them be in the restaurant by itself.

Speaker 2 (57:37):
Separate me, Yeah, Raven Simone and her wife responds to
death threats. I think this is so stupid and patty
how people are treating her wife. Raving and her wife
did an interview recently Bottoms Up podcast hosted by Fanida.
Shout out to that podcast. A clip from the interview
surface Fanita and Ravens singing a popular song from the

(57:58):
movie Cheater Girls.

Speaker 18 (58:00):
Cheat the Girls.

Speaker 19 (58:01):
Here we go round, no ro party because you know
the futures, all.

Speaker 2 (58:05):
Y'alls dancing and pe don't trust the flaw.

Speaker 12 (58:07):
Celebrate the day you waited for, party like it, ready
for so much more.

Speaker 15 (58:12):
And I've never done a concert like that.

Speaker 9 (58:14):
But wait, I was just about to say, Finita you
need to know that clearly Raven likes you, because the
fact that she just did that is wild.

Speaker 15 (58:22):
I'm mind blown.

Speaker 9 (58:23):
I also have fomo that I don't know what the
hell you guys were just singing number two or whatever,
but that's crazy.

Speaker 4 (58:30):
Well, like, what is the issue? I didn't get it.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
So the issue is like, so she didn't know the song,
and then you know how like people are so crazy
crazed out great Ravens fans and she the girls fans.
They took that and ran with that. She said she
didn't know the song. She didn't say that she didn't
know who Raven was, and so they like, you know,
if you are a crazy fan, then that's what people like.

(58:53):
People do anything say anything.

Speaker 6 (58:56):
Well, I didn't know the story, so I thought that
she was going to like play them rapping and she
was gonna say like the end, and we don't want
to hear her say that word no more.

Speaker 2 (59:02):
What now she would totally not do that. Oh yeah,
she's sh ain't gonna do that. Stop playing. So some
things apparently we're taking it as far as sending her
death threats. Raven and Miranda to address the issue, and
this is what they say. It together.

Speaker 18 (59:15):
I'm here with Miranda, my wife, to tell you to
stop it in the comments and stop with the death
threats in her DMS. It is disrespectful to her and
in turn disrespectful to me.

Speaker 2 (59:29):
Stop it it's really become wild. Stop air right now,
and letting you all know that I.

Speaker 18 (59:37):
Never have once said that I did not know who
Raven was. I only ever said that I did not
grow up watching that so Raven.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
I did not watch her.

Speaker 15 (59:47):
As a child.

Speaker 18 (59:48):
But since getting married and meeting her in twenty fifteen,
I have seen the majority of her work.

Speaker 6 (59:55):
Like, really, the thing that y'all think you'll have to
explain to ya is like insane to me, girl, And
Raven can tell the future, so she should know that. Like,
it's not going to stop the Internet from attacking her wife.
First of especially at a time like this after Kendrick
Lamar has people raging war on white people.

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
Right, That's what I'm saying, Like, I guess they told
them they really ain't gonna threaten to kill her da again,
that's oh God Jesus, Like, but I just feel like
you have to ignore that type of stuff. But also
the people will send her death threats if you see them.
You're not gonna kill her because she didn't know girls
like let's just stop every girl which is home? And
other crazy news. Cameron ways in on the Kendrick and

(01:00:32):
Drake beef on a recent episode, If it is what
it Is, plaudcast came and me shared their thoughts on
Kendrick's disc record euphor You and doing a conversation, Cam
called out an issue he had with some things.

Speaker 17 (01:00:42):
Kendrick said, no thiss whatsoever towards Kendrick Mark, not even
a little bit. Kendrick Lamar's wife is half WHITEY don't
say that. I'm saying, if you're choosing Drake and I'm
not taking something, just stay in fact. If you choosing
Drake of being half white and your wife is, and

(01:01:03):
you're using all this black cart, your wife is half white,
So how are you attacking the man about something you're
dealing with. And I don't care about my side.

Speaker 6 (01:01:11):
I'm just saying, if she's going to use the black card,
if that's what we're doing, I'm just saying.

Speaker 2 (01:01:16):
First, so you can't accuse somebody of something that they are.
Yo ain't nothing and he wasn't. I'm not saying I
don't think he accused him for being by racial.

Speaker 6 (01:01:25):
Well, no, Kendrick wasn't saying Drake's not black because he's
half white. He was questioning Drake's blackness because Drake wasn't
necessarily raised black. He's questioning Drake's blackness and regards the culture.
But Cam isn't wrong because a lot of people will
perceive it that way, you know, And they will perceive
it the way Cam said it, and they'll say, since
your wife is half white, she can't say the N

(01:01:45):
word no more neither. That's what people will do at
a time like this, just because how do we know
she say it?

Speaker 4 (01:01:50):
Though we don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:01:51):
But it's just a joke now, you know, when you
see it like in person or a biracial person, now
you're going to say you can't say the N word
no more. Like it's just a joke like that. Kendrick
made it a joke. I think another angle Drake is
gonna take this. He's gonna call Kendrick a hypocrite, if
not for his you know, wife being half white, but
for his uh you know, in a mission on mister Morale.
And the big step is that he had affairs with

(01:02:12):
white women like you talked about it on the song
Worldwide Step Becas. Even Thoughkendrick has already put it out there, Yeah,
Drake will still use it against him. It's a great record,
by the way, because he talks about his infidelities and
he doesn't min the sleeping with white women.

Speaker 8 (01:02:23):
And since Kendrick took the culture angle.

Speaker 6 (01:02:26):
And says you can't use that word no more, and
he's questioning Drake's blackness, I think Drake's probably gonna use
that against him.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
You can't sleep with my mother's side of the world
no more. Right, you can't be out here sleeping with
my cousins in them period.

Speaker 4 (01:02:36):
All right.

Speaker 9 (01:02:36):
I know that's right.

Speaker 6 (01:02:37):
I know you said everything gonna be all right, but
it looks like everythings gonna be all white. I know
Drake coming, I know he coming.

Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
I know he's coming.

Speaker 2 (01:02:44):
Just what come messed?

Speaker 4 (01:02:46):
Oh my god, Now you gotta ask me a question.

Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Oh yeah, who're giving that? Donkey two?

Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
Donkey of today Okay is going to a young man
named Kanye. He's from Florida. He's insane. We'll talk about
it for after that hour.

Speaker 10 (01:02:58):
You're checking out the break this club and make sure
you're telling to watch out for Florida Miloria Malorda.

Speaker 6 (01:03:05):
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx and
all of Florida.

Speaker 8 (01:03:09):
Yes, you are a donkey.

Speaker 20 (01:03:12):
The Florida man attacked an ATM for a very strange reason.
It gave him too much money. Florida man is arrested
after that. He says he rigs the door to his
home in an attempt to electro hit his president. Lights
Police arrested in Orlando man for.

Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
Talking a from Ludo to practice club. Bitch you donkey
O the day with Charlam Hayne a guy.

Speaker 4 (01:03:29):
I don't know why y'all keep letting him get y'all
like this.

Speaker 8 (01:03:31):
No douvall, y'all do it to yourself.

Speaker 6 (01:03:33):
Okay, donkey Today for Friday, May third goes to a
Florida man named Kanye Eddraziz Medley. Okay, he is twenty
years old and hell's from clare Water, Florida. What does
your uncle Shawla always say about the great state of Florida.
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx and
all of Florida, and today is no exception.

Speaker 8 (01:03:51):
See this young man.

Speaker 6 (01:03:52):
Kanye was arrested for domestic battery, a misdemeanor, and booked
into the county jail.

Speaker 4 (01:03:57):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (01:03:57):
According to police reports, he attacked his assist sir during
a domestic clash. Now, you know, we don't condone any
violence against women and attacking your system. It's complete nonsense.
If you can't have a healthy conversation with a sibling
to work out your differences, then you probably can't have
a healthy conversation with anyone. But this case is slightly
different because Kanye didn't attack his sister.

Speaker 4 (01:04:16):
With his hands.

Speaker 2 (01:04:18):
Nah.

Speaker 6 (01:04:18):
Kanye decided to treat his sister the way scissors fans
treated her in Australia, and he decided to just throw
something at it. Now, just if I told you this
man was twenty years old, his name was Kanye, but
it's spelled k h A and ye. He's black, and
he decided to throw a food item in his system,
and the food item hit his sister in the back

(01:04:38):
of the head, and that's why he got arrested. If
I told you to guess what food item he threw,
do you think you could do it? I'm gonna give
you multiple choice, Okay, Okay? Was it a sushi b meatloaf?
See fried chicken or d tune the tatar?

Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
Oh my fried chicken?

Speaker 4 (01:04:57):
Why why why would you just assume it's fried?

Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
Because if it's like fresh out the grease and he
threw it some of that god grease is gonna slide
down her neck, That'll be the only way that I
feel like you would be arrested. Okay, what Red? If
I did this stick to you, Red?

Speaker 6 (01:05:12):
If I give you these same choices, Red, Puerto Rican,
I say, Red, he's black, he's twenty years old, okay,
and he threw a food out of the system. If
I gave you those same multiple choice questions, what would
you guess? Just already guess fried chicken?

Speaker 4 (01:05:26):
Is it a sushi? Be meat?

Speaker 8 (01:05:28):
Low sea fried chicken? D twoe the tatar?

Speaker 4 (01:05:31):
Now I'm gonna go with the fresh fried chicken.

Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
Too, all right, Now, don't you trying to gain no points?

Speaker 4 (01:05:36):
Now? Why? Red?

Speaker 3 (01:05:38):
Why?

Speaker 4 (01:05:39):
Why it.

Speaker 19 (01:05:48):
All?

Speaker 8 (01:05:48):
I'm saying it's not a stereotype if it's true.

Speaker 4 (01:05:51):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (01:05:51):
Not only do black people love fried chicken. Everybody lives
fried chicken. And historically we love fried chicken because it
was the only livestocks we allowed to keep. Chickens wore
chickens were the only lives dog the enslaves were allowed
to keep, and after emancipation, women known as a way
to carriers, would sell trays of fried chicken and biscuits
to travelers at train stations. Okay, the only reason fried

(01:06:13):
chicken became a negative stereotype was because in nineteen.

Speaker 4 (01:06:16):
Fifteen, a man named D. W.

Speaker 6 (01:06:17):
Griffith used a film called Broth of a Nation to
show a bunch of black elected officials being unruly, drinking liquor,
eating fried chicken with their bad feet kicked up on
the death, just acting like savages. And the whole point
of that scene, the message to the audience was to
show the alleged dangers of letting black people vote. This
is not a YouTube conspiracy. This is historical fact. Do

(01:06:38):
your own Googles and you will see. Now the reason
Kanye is getting donky today is because he told police
that The motive for him using poultry as projectiles is
because he said he had not eaten and did not
want the piece of chicken the victim offered him, so
he became upset.

Speaker 8 (01:06:54):
Now let's do the math here. Jes the man claimed
to be hungry, said he had not eaten.

Speaker 6 (01:06:59):
So someone offers you food and you say you don't
want the piece of food that they offered.

Speaker 4 (01:07:05):
Wouldn't not to piss you off.

Speaker 6 (01:07:06):
Absolutely, he looky, he didn't get something thrown int him.
He's ungrateful, he's an appreciative, he's unthankful. He's a thankless human.
Begas cannot be choosers. And I can't say that you
was begging. But if you starving, one of the most
incredible things a person can offer you is a piece
of chicken. Now Here to elaborate on the goodness of
fried chicken when you are hungry is the president of
the Fat Lives Matter Committee.

Speaker 4 (01:07:28):
Big Mac.

Speaker 6 (01:07:29):
I want you to start playing Wobble Wobble whenever Big
Mac coming you Mac, talk to me about the goodness
of good people.

Speaker 3 (01:07:37):
This is a sad day.

Speaker 6 (01:07:38):
As the president of the Fat Lives Matter Committee and
a member of the Gut Gang and the Big Back Brigade,
it hurts to see one of your your members that
fallen off track talk to me.

Speaker 4 (01:07:47):
This is just as bad as disrepecting the flag.

Speaker 6 (01:07:50):
You don't throw no fried chicken, not even just as
a fat person, as a black person.

Speaker 1 (01:07:55):
This breaks my heart. That's like saying I don't need lotion,
and you clearly ashy. It just don't make no sense.

Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Then when somebody give you something, you know how we
get the extra on our hands.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
Took too much.

Speaker 6 (01:08:07):
There you go, You got the nervous say no and
you actually come on. Now, it's just it's sad to see.
And from the Book of Lizzle, you know what they
say is don't bite the hand that feeds you. If
you hungry and you asking for food, somebody giving you food.
Now here's my thing about that. Looking at Devil's Advocate,
I know she does not. The Devil's advocate side of

(01:08:28):
it is, I asked for food, you gave me chicken.

Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
Growing up, the number one rule was don't eat the
big piece of chicken.

Speaker 4 (01:08:37):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
Now maybe it wasn't the big piece of chicken. Maybe
it was a little thigh, but no, no, no.

Speaker 6 (01:08:42):
No, you only get the big piece of chicken if
you are to provide her. That's why the daddy historically
got the big piece. He treated his system like it
was his girl. So clearly they got some things going
on in that house. And you've seen the picture of
him a little off if he paid for the meat
in the house. I totally understand if he ain't paid
for the poor. No, you will eat what I get.

Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
Kanye's a little bit off, so this is not Far's true.

Speaker 6 (01:09:04):
You know what, Matthew ain't wrong when you're right. Please
give Kanye Medley the sweet sounds of the Hamiltons.

Speaker 4 (01:09:09):
Oh no, you are the dog.

Speaker 1 (01:09:13):
Of the day, the doge.

Speaker 6 (01:09:20):
Ah the day.

Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
Ye you don't know, you're not.

Speaker 4 (01:09:26):
We're not about to offer you no fried chicken.

Speaker 6 (01:09:28):
You know, in the Book of Corinthians it says you
be tripping if you're throwing chicken. Don't nobody say I
do not read the Bible at all. It's not that
that might be in the Book of Clarence.

Speaker 4 (01:09:36):
I know.

Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
Even at the Last Supper they were beefing and they
ain't throwing no chicken.

Speaker 6 (01:09:41):
So I know it's true. Come on that that is true.
That was Donkey of the Day to Day. Coming up next,
we have John Hope Brian. It is a Friday. Today
is a good day to learn something. Okay, it is
the third day of Mental Health Awareness Month. But John
O'Brien is going to come in here and talk to
you about your finances quick.

Speaker 4 (01:10:00):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (01:10:00):
He has some things that he wants to speak to
you about in regards the financial literacy. Okay, so we
have our guy, John Hopbrien coming in next on the
World's Most Dangerous Morning to show to Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (01:10:10):
The breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
Own everybody at pj NV, Jesse Larry Schela mean the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. You got a special guest
in the building, Yes we do, John Hope Brian welcome, brothers.

Speaker 3 (01:10:22):
Honored to be here.

Speaker 17 (01:10:23):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
How you feelings new book Financial Literacy for.

Speaker 4 (01:10:27):
All not illiteracy literacy? That's right. I want people to
know who is John Hope Briant.

Speaker 10 (01:10:34):
I mean other than God's child. I'm the largest minority
owner of single family rental homes in America. Say that
again please, I'm the largest minority read Black owner of
single family rental homes in America. I owned seven hundred homes.

Speaker 4 (01:10:49):
Seven hundred rental homes.

Speaker 10 (01:10:50):
Yeah, but be to be structured to structured properly. I
bought them through the Promised Homes Company over five years,
which I'm the I was. It's the sole owner of
that sold the company for one hundred and twenty million
dollars Christmas Eve twenty twenty one. Then I went to
Taco bell as the wire transfer is going through.

Speaker 8 (01:11:08):
Indeed, would you celebrate with a not your Bill broad
Day A number one Marshall.

Speaker 10 (01:11:15):
I also built the largest financial literacy organization in America.
It's called Operation Hope. At Operation Hope, we're raising credit
score is fifty four points to in six months one
hundred and twenty points and twenty four months. Nothing changed
your life more than God of Love the moving your
credit score one hundred and twenty points. We're louring debt
thirty eight hundred dollars and increasing savings two thousand dollars
for somebody making forty eight thousand dollars a year. So

(01:11:38):
we're the only nonprofit in history ever allowed to operations
out of a bank branch. Ever, so that means you're
getting the bank out of the no business. No, I'm sorry,
I can't make you alone and back into the yes business.
Now we think it's racism, It might be, but it
also might be your credit score stakes. Half of black
folks have a credit score below six to twenty. Not

(01:11:59):
poor people, everybody. Latinos are right behind us. And so
when you wake up in the morning, half of us
are locked out of the free enterprise system, and bassaror
Andrew Young would say, who was on that balcony, doctor
King was assassinated. He said, to live in a system
of free enterprise and not to understand the rules of
free enterprise must be the very definition of slavery. So DJ,

(01:12:20):
to answer your question about you know why the book,
it's a civil rights issue, the civil rights issue of
this generation period, the new move. The last move was
in the streets civil rights. This move is in the
sweets civil rights. The color is green, not black or brown,
not black, black or white, or brown or red or blue.

(01:12:41):
It's green and it's always been green. Slavery was about money.
Whatever if your days out about God or love, your
days about money. But we don't understand money. We want
to spend it, which is an emotional play, by the way,
which is tied to our self esteem or lack thereof.
But we which goes back to the mental health issues
that you and I talk about, But we don't understand it.

(01:13:03):
And you make as I said earlier, you make money
during the day, you bill well in your sleep. So
this is like this is like everywhere and everything, and
you live in a you live in a capitalist democracy,
America is the biggest economy on the planet, the sole superpower.

Speaker 9 (01:13:15):
In the world.

Speaker 6 (01:13:16):
And I wanted to set the table like I'm glad.
I wanted people to know who you are. That's just two,
that's two of my five divisions. Yes, but I want
people to know who you are and what you've done
because we live in this world where everybody's a financial
literacy guru and it got a financial literacy book.

Speaker 10 (01:13:31):
It's like, no, John O'Brien is the real deal. First
of all, thank you for that, but it just drives
me nuts. Man, Like do you want to do you
want a surgeon doing cancer surgery on you? And they
saw a video on YouTube?

Speaker 3 (01:13:42):
I mean, do you do you do?

Speaker 20 (01:13:44):
You do?

Speaker 10 (01:13:44):
You want somebody driving a big rick car that's next
to you and your family and they never took a
driver's test.

Speaker 3 (01:13:51):
They'd be like, oh, I got this. I mean this
is crazy. This is like nuts.

Speaker 4 (01:13:54):
It's big business.

Speaker 10 (01:13:55):
Though it is a big business and folks that you
know and God bless their hustle, but this is not
something to mess with people talking about the most important
other than your health and your spirituality. There's nothing more
important than your life. This is like breathing, and you
got folks selling books and tapes and seminars. And again,
I'm not messing with anybody's hustle, but this is not
something to play games with. And you cannot become wealthy

(01:14:18):
by selling books and tapes on becoming wealthy, That's not
the way this thing works. But that's a whole industry,
and it just stuns me. Man. I'm like, I've been
these boardrooms. I see the credit facilities. I don't see
these people. I don't see the folks who are the
financial and in fact hock. If you're doing that full time,
all day, all night, how.

Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
Could you possibly be in the streets doing what you're
saying you're doing that part.

Speaker 3 (01:14:42):
I have four hundred employees. That's full time.

Speaker 10 (01:14:44):
Man. I've got a CEO of each one of my divisions.
My payroll a million and a half dollars every two
weeks for the last thirty years. I mean, you can
go pull up my tax returns for my non property leads.
You can pull up my tax returns seventy two million
dollars last year. I'm the largest black founded nonprofit founder
who's running it in the country.

Speaker 4 (01:15:03):
And what do you think about the you know, Joe
Biden was talking about raising the capital gains.

Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
Tax, so that business guys who try to, like me,
sell stuff and buy and sell for hire, they're gonna
tax you at He's trying to tax you at a
forty eight percent rate. Now, But what hurts is we
just talked about all these these minorities. A lot of
them is the first time that they all millionaires in
their family. So you got guys that are a hundred millionaires,
but now you make your first million eate tax you
forty eight percent.

Speaker 4 (01:15:27):
How can that possibly.

Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
Generate the generational wealth when they're cutting it in half.

Speaker 10 (01:15:31):
So so folks who don't who don't own anything and
don't realize that they're capitalists, We're like, yeah, tax them,
tax the rich, tax rich until they get that tax
bill for that property they own.

Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
And like what whoa, whoa, whoa. I didn't mean me.

Speaker 10 (01:15:45):
So people say Warren Buckets buffet secretary, and I love
Warren Buffett, by the way, he's a cool dude. Actually, no,
his secretary pays more taxes than he does. Well, of
course she's a W two employee. So a W two
employee is somebody who gets a paycheck Buffett is not
a W two employee. I look forward to the day
i'm not. I'm mostly not, but I look for today
I'm not a W two employee. Real wealth creation is

(01:16:06):
about capital gains. Most taxes in this country are actually
paid by people like me and us. By the way,
seventy five percent of all the tax income in this
country comes from though wealthy. That's just a fact. The
poor don't have the taxes to pay, and luckily, and
I think appropriately, they get tax breaks.

Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
So that's one.

Speaker 10 (01:16:24):
But where does that those taxes come from. It comes
from capital gains and other forms of taxation. So the
tax capital gains tax is about twenty percent. So if
you're getting a W two check, explain.

Speaker 2 (01:16:33):
What capital gains is for people that don't know in
simple terms.

Speaker 10 (01:16:35):
So if so many back up. So if I'm getting
a regular check, I'm going to pay thirty five percent
plus whatever the state tax and maybe it's the city tax.
So maybe hitting in California, maybe hitting forty eight percent
of your pay check unless you have some some kind
of a carveouts and you're getting that every two weeks.
All right, if you're Tony wrestler, who's my business partner,
who's the two hundredth richest man in the world worth

(01:16:57):
ten billion dollars owner of Atlanta Hawks, owner the Atlanta Hawks. Well,
that's what we know we with he owns. Him and
Mick Arraghetti have areas management here which you've never heard
of before. That's three hundred and eighty billion dollars in
assets in the management. He gets no paycheck. He but
when he sells some stock, or he sells a piece
of real estate, or he sells a company, there is

(01:17:18):
a capital gain. There's a gain on the capital and
that one transaction is tax. When I sold my company,
I got the largest tax bill of my life, and
I was ordered to pay it. Now, did I work
hard to get my get the number down?

Speaker 3 (01:17:31):
Sure I did.

Speaker 10 (01:17:32):
But what I owed I was out under pay because
that means I made some money. I did well in America,
So I'm not mad at paying taxes. I paid seven
figures that year in federal taxes alone, and then I
had another high six figure tax in just my Georgia
tax bill. And my Georgia tax bill that year was
six hundred thousand dollars. That was an easy tax, by
the way, once you start paying taxes you start being

(01:17:52):
concerned about infrastructure, so you start seeing potholes.

Speaker 3 (01:17:55):
Hey man, was fix these potholes? What's up with that?

Speaker 9 (01:17:58):
You know?

Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
Why isn't the hospital work? And the police start? You
realized police work for you?

Speaker 9 (01:18:03):
Right right?

Speaker 3 (01:18:03):
It changed your whole mindset.

Speaker 4 (01:18:05):
Right.

Speaker 10 (01:18:06):
But to come back to your point, I think that
part of this is I agree with a lot of
what President Biden is doing, and there is no choice
but him in the re election. There is no rational choice.
The other dude is a divider and got all kind
of mental issues he needs to deal with. And it's
just not you know, the Bible says a house divided
cannot stand. It's just actually just good math. You cannot

(01:18:26):
have somebody who's dividing people. And you're trying to grow GDP.
Hopefully we can get to that in a minute of
how definitely will how you know, really diversity is a
business plan for this country. So that one piece I
don't know I'm down with. I think that you want
to double the cabal games tax from twenty to forty,
you may just literally just stop a lot of investment
in this country and you will crater the returns for

(01:18:47):
the average person.

Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
We got more with John ho'brien when we come back,
don't move. It's to breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody
is DJ Envy Jess, Larry Charlamage the guy. We are
to Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with John on
Hope Bryant. Now, I got a question. You think it's
a good time right now to anybody out there buying
a house? Absolutely, with interest rates so high, the acts
reaching that, I.

Speaker 3 (01:19:09):
Mean, you're you're prouding me.

Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
Look four years ago, they were, you know, people were
buying houses at one point nine to.

Speaker 3 (01:19:15):
Two points free money.

Speaker 9 (01:19:16):
DJ.

Speaker 3 (01:19:16):
It was free money.

Speaker 10 (01:19:17):
Come on, man, with seven and a half. It's like
Capitol on crack. It was free money, man, Like, why
and why was it free money? Because we had the
two thousand and eight crisis that almost created the entire
day on economy. People were, you know, asked getting a
mortgage loan and saying what's the payment, and people were
doing negative amortization mortgage, just pick a pay mortgage, just
like pick my payment. It was crazy stuff. The trash
man was getting a million dollar house no interest only interesting.

(01:19:39):
Oh my god, negative advertization. You owed more after the
payment you made than you owed before.

Speaker 4 (01:19:44):
I mean, god, it was crazy.

Speaker 10 (01:19:46):
So that the whole, the whole system with Craig Cray
and again Bill Clinton is a great quote. It's hard
to get somebody agreed to the truth, and the liar's
paying your paycheck. So that two thousand and eight was
a lie paying the paycheck for Wall Street. And the
government had to like, Okay, we got to repair this,
and or they did the thing they deal with the banks.
But then it's like, we got to get this. We
gotta get the cost of funds to a point where
the economy is flowing. So they took it to almost

(01:20:08):
zero like Japan did. And then when they tried to
get everybody off the capital crack, Wall Street was like
every three or four years, Wall Street, no, no, no, no,
things are gonna get it really horrible if you take
if you raise interest rates, So every FED chairman would
try to raise interest rates and wall like no, Law
Street's like no, no, no, and they and they'd be
some crisis, many crisis on Wall Street and wherever its
President's like.

Speaker 3 (01:20:25):
Whoa wha wha wha wha whah, not on my watch.

Speaker 10 (01:20:27):
So they had to wait, I hate to say it
this way, they had to wait to a crisis that
had enough credibility that was COVID. When COVID hit, the
policymakers were like, who could because there's never been stimulus
with a T in front of it trillion in the
history of the world. Think about this, never no government
has ever issued before the COVID trillion dollar anything other

(01:20:49):
than treasury bills or something. Right, So we had six
eight nine trillion. So when people say inflation now, I'm like, no, no,
you should be lucky. Though the ship's not sank, like
you should be lucky. This is not the Titanic. The
fact that we're arguing over three percent of rates. The
president needs to get us standing ovation like, we're the
only growing economy in the world. Were the biggest economy

(01:21:09):
in the world, and we went through the worst crisis
since the Spanish flew one hundred and twenty five years ago.
We went through it for four years and we the
comomy was shut down for two and here we are.

Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
So what would you advise people who are listening right now,
who might be a doctor, might be a bus driver,
might you know work in every day How would you
advise them to set up for not only their future
but their children's future. So maybe they don't have to
work for the rest of their life and they can
enjoy some of their life.

Speaker 4 (01:21:33):
What would you advise from there?

Speaker 10 (01:21:35):
So, first of all, get financial literacy. For all, get
the book. I wrote the book because now everybody can
be the clients of Operation Hope. Now everybody can have
a conversation with me. By the way, when I go
through airports, is TSA agents, Yo man, six p't eighty.
That's dope, yo man, I'm seven twelve. It is dope
that they're calling out the credits scord to me, that's
exactly what you want. We got to make smart sexy again.
We've been making dumb sexy for way too long, dumbed

(01:21:58):
down and celebrated it.

Speaker 3 (01:21:59):
So get the book.

Speaker 10 (01:22:00):
Have weekly conversations about money at the kitchen table, about
the lights don't come on by themselves. Let's walk through
the family budget. What does it cost for us to live?

Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
Let's buy that house in the hood da hyphen hood.

Speaker 10 (01:22:13):
Buy it by the worst house on the best block,
buy it, rehabit, live in it, built some equity for
two or three years. Take the equity, buy another house
in a working class neighborhood. No mansions, no blossom, buy it,
rehabit and rent it.

Speaker 3 (01:22:27):
Do that a third time. You do that three times,
you'll you'll be a millionaire. That was my mother's story.

Speaker 10 (01:22:32):
That's one of the smith who worked an hourly job
at McDonald's Aircraft and died with a million dollar net
worth having bought and sold seven homes. A person listening
to this with an hourly job can become a millionaire.
Now somebody says, what, John, where's the capital come from? Okay,
here's knowledge earning them tax credit. Now you earn thirty
eight thousand dollars a year. You're listening to this program.
You're a teacher, you have three children. Congratulations, you just

(01:22:53):
qualify for EITC. If somebody says, what's that you just
all of you just hook that person up with a
check because all you do is work and have children
in this example, and the government owes you in this
example about six thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:23:06):
It's retroactive for three years.

Speaker 4 (01:23:08):
Oh there you have it. Listen.

Speaker 6 (01:23:09):
If y'all want more of this great information, man, go
get John Holpbrien's new book, Financial Literacy for All, Disrupting Struggle,
advancing financial freedom and building a new American middle class.
And you can subscribe to John Holbrien's pop podcast Money
and Wealth with John Hopebrian on The Black Effect. iHeartRadio
podcast network. John is also it's a privilege to have

(01:23:30):
him on the board of The Black Effect as well.

Speaker 10 (01:23:34):
I'm deeply honored by that, and I really, Dolly, I'm
so sorry I should have been talking about my podcast
and I love my podcast on your platform. This is
my chance to have a ministry of hope. This is
this is my ministry of finance. Once a week on Thursdays.
To make this really approachable, like break it down, tell
people how stuff works, once a week, calmly, simply take

(01:23:57):
one topic. I mean, well, we talked about the this
this interview is probably thirty different topics, right, and a
lot of people went over their heads.

Speaker 3 (01:24:05):
They gotta do it on replay, right.

Speaker 10 (01:24:07):
I have a million viewers a week on my videos
and people, most of them are just watching it over
and over again. People are shamed to admit they don't
understand money. They're shamed to understand that they don't.

Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
They don't.

Speaker 10 (01:24:17):
People I've had adults tell me like, what's a stock,
what's equity? They're shamed. They don't know what fdi C
means Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. They don't know what SEC means.
Security is exchange, and no one told them. And now
we feel dumb.

Speaker 3 (01:24:30):
We are not dumb.

Speaker 10 (01:24:31):
If you're making it in America, you are a genius.
And now through this Money and Wealth podcast, you can
you know, have your own university in your pocket. I
want to have fifty two episodes that you can give
to your daughter, give to your child, get somebody getting married,
give to that new parent, that new couple who's about
to buy a home. Right, just listen, you know, in
your car, and make sure you are building a legacy

(01:24:54):
and in life and not just a bunch of generational debt.

Speaker 3 (01:24:59):
Marriage came from business. It was not a romantic concept.

Speaker 10 (01:25:02):
Marriage came from families trying to figure out how to
join their economic interest. Then couples even lived together, they
lived in different castles, different rooms.

Speaker 4 (01:25:13):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:25:13):
We made this all about romance.

Speaker 10 (01:25:16):
Right, And when you so you people being a marriage,
girls from strip clubs, we don't know nothing about them.
And so she might be beautiful, but you might want
to know something other than whether she's cute. When you
got here's my dropping mic for this. When folks go
to the clubs this weekend and you see somebody who's fine,
brothers and girls, you see a dude who's handsome, get
the name, get the number, and at some point say

(01:25:37):
what's your credit score?

Speaker 3 (01:25:40):
And I'm only partially.

Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
Kiddinged ladies and gentlemen, John O'Brien O'Brien follow them.

Speaker 6 (01:25:46):
On Instagram to on the It's John O'Brien everywhere at
John O'Brien everywhere. Man, make sure you download the Money
and Wealth podcast on the Black Effect I Heeart Radio
podcast network.

Speaker 4 (01:25:55):
Get financial literacy for all.

Speaker 6 (01:25:56):
This is who we should be listening to in regard
to the financial literacy man, John Hope Bryant.

Speaker 3 (01:26:01):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (01:26:02):
It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, The Breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (01:26:08):
Yepster, wasn't most dangerous morning show? The Breakfast Club Charlamagne
to God just hilarious. You know it's Friday, so you
know what we do on Fridays at this time.

Speaker 4 (01:26:16):
It's called pastor As.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Yeah, DJ, you got big Nilo?

Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
What's up girl?

Speaker 12 (01:26:35):
What's up?

Speaker 4 (01:26:36):
Guys?

Speaker 12 (01:26:36):
How you feeling?

Speaker 8 (01:26:36):
Let me tell you how much of a hustling Nila
is Nyla right now?

Speaker 4 (01:26:39):
Is currently.

Speaker 6 (01:26:39):
She's currently at JFK Airport because she's flying out to
the Lovers and Friends festival to watch one hundred people
befo him.

Speaker 4 (01:26:45):
Okay, but she's doing past the ox from the airport.

Speaker 12 (01:26:51):
Yes, yeah, we're alive from JFK.

Speaker 13 (01:26:54):
Shout out to do for actually sending me out to
Levers and Friends just to shoot some content.

Speaker 12 (01:26:59):
So I'm excited, okay, but a hundred people on the
lineup is nuts. Why would they do this?

Speaker 4 (01:27:04):
I have no idea.

Speaker 8 (01:27:07):
According to Kendrick, that's how many ghost riders Drake has
as well.

Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
Oh my god, oh my god.

Speaker 12 (01:27:11):
On that note, let's get into the first record of
the of the day we got Kendrick Park.

Speaker 1 (01:27:17):
You're colon now, but you know I'm a selfish wanted
to the crown. That's heavy.

Speaker 21 (01:27:20):
I pray it ain't my real friends, if not on
WII in w Meller, I don't like you popping there
for real for him.

Speaker 4 (01:27:26):
Mind here, it's the beef.

Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
We're gonna pushing pea.

Speaker 4 (01:27:28):
Let me see you push your teeth.

Speaker 21 (01:27:30):
You better spinning again over him when you think about
pushing me. He's terrorist storing. I'm terrorist crow for here,
I'm whooping feet you.

Speaker 4 (01:27:38):
Hear that all the short men out there, the five
six and unders we whipping feet.

Speaker 6 (01:27:45):
I love it. That's a great line. I'm whipping feet.
I'm gonna get through whatever I can get to.

Speaker 9 (01:27:49):
It is.

Speaker 4 (01:27:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:27:51):
Now, we did a breakdown in that record on Brilliant
Idiots a couple of days ago. It's been a couple
of days. How do you feel about the record now?

Speaker 12 (01:27:58):
I feel the same way I felt when I first
felt heard it. I think it's genius. When I first
listened to it, I literally.

Speaker 13 (01:28:04):
Laughed because it's funny. The accent was funny, the punch
lines were funny. But then now as we see Twitter
dissecting the record, I'm loving it even more just because.

Speaker 12 (01:28:15):
Of how you know, all the Easter eggs that are
in the record. You know, this is like Kendrick, as
he said in like that, what is it? Money power?
Respect The last one is better. Kendrick's pen is like
the utmost respectable. It's because of how layered it is.

Speaker 13 (01:28:32):
So yeah, I'm I got four black grandparents. Like Twitter's
been saying, I've seen Kendrick right now. I know people
are saying Drake is up.

Speaker 12 (01:28:40):
I think academics of them are saying Drake is up.

Speaker 6 (01:28:43):
But to me, I don't see how they're even on
the squad card right now if anything, if anything, they're
both even right now because I sat there in like
that and euphoria with push up in uh the AI record,
ta me, do.

Speaker 2 (01:28:58):
You think it's even anything? I don't. I mean, he said,
if anything, but I don't think it's if it can't
be a time.

Speaker 4 (01:29:05):
Yeah, you can't, but they can't. You can't.

Speaker 6 (01:29:07):
You can't definitively just be like drinkers up either, you
know what I'm saying, And you can't feel like if
Kendrick is up, it's a slight edge.

Speaker 12 (01:29:15):
Yeah, but he got it right now until further notice.

Speaker 13 (01:29:19):
But I feel like it's not even only because I
feel like Drake has to have some deductibles because his
first rollout got stepped on the record, came out with
the wrong beat, and then came out with a new
beat an hour later. Then the AI record got taken
down off the DSPs, like it's hidden, but then it
like goes away.

Speaker 12 (01:29:37):
It's like it's always something in the moment that's but.

Speaker 6 (01:29:40):
Then people will build it. Duck from Kendrick for waiting
too long like that you can do that all day.
I'd rather just look at the music, and I feel like.

Speaker 12 (01:29:48):
It's even in a sense of sportsmanship. Sure you like
they're both ready for work.

Speaker 13 (01:29:53):
But to me on a wrap competitive level, I'm given
it to Kendrick right now.

Speaker 22 (01:30:00):
Intro he came out blazing yep and this was and
then also just because Push Ups was such a great record,
like a great comeback, and he's addressing everybody. I was
concerned about how Kendrick would approach the next record, and
he did not fail me.

Speaker 12 (01:30:15):
So I guess that's why I'm like.

Speaker 4 (01:30:16):
Well, drag you on deck, you on the clock. What
we got next?

Speaker 12 (01:30:19):
All right? Next up, I'm gonna go with Saba. He
just dropped the new record and it's about his lock journey,
like his relationship with his hair. And it also features
my friend Oji and Jordan Ward Jordan A. Ward, and
the record is called head.

Speaker 4 (01:30:34):
Wrap was here.

Speaker 2 (01:30:35):
I played the game, but I won't have mass.

Speaker 4 (01:30:38):
Now you might see me y'all in their hand.

Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
Wrap fitted, but I didn't get it a fair facts.

Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
I assure you well, Matt, like had Sacks, I deserve
a subtle flex and a rare ring because I'm one
with the dress and Karen had cutting me immediately.

Speaker 12 (01:30:51):
Drew my hair back, and.

Speaker 4 (01:30:55):
See, those are the type of concepts I like. I
do like that.

Speaker 6 (01:30:57):
I don't think I've ever heard a record about somebody
talking about their lock journey, because they really are the
journey and.

Speaker 2 (01:31:03):
It's the whole thing, Like people love their locks, like
the whole lock journey. That's like a whole movement. Okay,
we don't appreciate it enough for people. That's why I
know I got the fake ones, but the real was, like,
it's my boyfriend had locks, and it's like a lock connection.
They don't even like when you say dreads, they call
them locks.

Speaker 8 (01:31:19):
So I think my wife she about to go on
her lock journey.

Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
I know she's telling me that'll be that'll be dope.

Speaker 4 (01:31:25):
Yeah, So I.

Speaker 2 (01:31:26):
Appreciate I appreciate that song we got next night.

Speaker 19 (01:31:29):
Okay, now, speaking of hair wraps, Erica Badu and raps
you guys together for this one.

Speaker 12 (01:31:34):
Her next record offer her album Thread.

Speaker 14 (01:31:37):
Net flixas because if we still watching TV though itstoxicated.

Speaker 4 (01:31:41):
No, she saw your love got me throwing up before.

Speaker 2 (01:31:43):
She's got kept secrets.

Speaker 12 (01:31:44):
That's how we know you care thing I heard you
always peeped it. When it's darkness, we always attract the
brightest people.

Speaker 4 (01:31:50):
Baby, you will light and ship the whole world to
the right.

Speaker 6 (01:31:54):
Nothing left, but maybe it's Lo Motion Fu Fire, Lorning
m and Eric Abad doing rhapsody.

Speaker 2 (01:32:04):
That collaboration got me excited.

Speaker 6 (01:32:07):
Two of my favorite artists, two of my favorite people.
I'm crashing something about both of them.

Speaker 5 (01:32:13):
Rightfully.

Speaker 12 (01:32:13):
So I'm excited.

Speaker 9 (01:32:14):
Man.

Speaker 19 (01:32:15):
I think Ration's been doing a really dope job with
this rollout because she's not just going to the big dog,
She's touching all the people at all levels.

Speaker 12 (01:32:24):
So it's cool to see that she's back outside.

Speaker 4 (01:32:26):
And I'm coming out yet dropping in two weeks.

Speaker 6 (01:32:29):
In two weeks, nice, yeah, Okay, knowledge about the board
now and tell them what you got coming up to
Certified Vibe all that good stuff.

Speaker 13 (01:32:36):
Oh yes, So Certified Vibe is going down in DC Saturday,
May eighteenth.

Speaker 12 (01:32:41):
It to be headlined by Day and Nucci.

Speaker 13 (01:32:43):
You know, we're gonna have a go go band in
the building, so I think it's could be really really dope.
And then also, if you guys don't already, make sure
you follow me on Instagram at nawas moment.

Speaker 12 (01:32:53):
N y La s Y M O N E E.

Speaker 19 (01:32:56):
We got playlists after the playlist, R and B playlist, raps,
just a general playlist with some of these records that
we talk about today.

Speaker 6 (01:33:04):
Okay, and I like your sweatshirt. Is that a South
Carolina game Cock sweatshirt?

Speaker 15 (01:33:08):
I don't know if Carolina.

Speaker 4 (01:33:10):
I got the game Cocks. You got dream what they're using.
They're using our colors. That ain't that?

Speaker 6 (01:33:18):
That ain't using game Yes, Carolina with the garnet after
garnet from the Carolina's gardened in blackest game car colors.

Speaker 2 (01:33:26):
That's what was in Carolina.

Speaker 4 (01:33:29):
Not South Carolina though, But it's all.

Speaker 2 (01:33:33):
That main and white. Remind me of like the Backwoods.
I was like, okay, it is.

Speaker 13 (01:33:38):
It is backwards. It's backwards, flipping the Carolina thing. That's
you know what now backwards.

Speaker 12 (01:33:46):
I feel like y'all got tout me a check this.

Speaker 4 (01:33:51):
You don't even smoke Backwoods. You don't even got nasty
black list Wait.

Speaker 12 (01:33:55):
I know either, actually, but it's okay, shout out.

Speaker 4 (01:33:57):
Back with all right, go catch your flight, Thank you
for doing from the airport.

Speaker 12 (01:34:02):
No problem. Later, guys have the weekend.

Speaker 6 (01:34:05):
Now when we come back, right es, there's this thing
called the People's Choice Mix that invY does.

Speaker 4 (01:34:09):
NV ain't even here today, so I got a mix. No,
you don't have to miss too.

Speaker 2 (01:34:13):
But he he, he pre records a mix and he
talks on it like you've been here the whole time.

Speaker 4 (01:34:17):
Does that make sense to you? And then he'd be
asking people to call him for requests.

Speaker 6 (01:34:21):
It don't make no damn sense, But that's what we
got coming up next to People's Choice mixed with DJ
Nvy right here on the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (01:34:27):
You're checking out the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 6 (01:34:29):
Yep, David Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, charlamagnea God, Jesse hilarious.
DJ Envy is off today. But you know May fifth
is not just Sinkle to Mile, It is National Silence
to Shame Day. So we could not have National Silence
to Shame Day be happening without talking to the founder
of Silence to Shame, Miss Shanty Dos.

Speaker 4 (01:34:47):
Good morning, Shanty Morning.

Speaker 15 (01:34:49):
It's so good to be here.

Speaker 4 (01:34:51):
Are you feeling heavy?

Speaker 15 (01:34:52):
I'm feeling good. It's a little cool in New York.
Feeling good. God woke me up this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:34:58):
And it's so bipolar here in New York. Like two
days ago, girl was like ninety degrees and then now
it will be forty nine today.

Speaker 9 (01:35:04):
It's like that in the A two A little bit.
But congratulations to you. So honor to be on the
show with you.

Speaker 2 (01:35:08):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 6 (01:35:10):
Now May fifth is National Silence to Shame Day. For
the people who are new here, what is National Silence
to Shame Day?

Speaker 4 (01:35:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:35:16):
So you know my nonprofit, Silence to Shame. We exist
to empower and educate communities around mental health and wellness.
And so I made up my own day in twenty
seventeen and we got like ninety million impressions that year,
and so I thought, okay, let me apply to the
National Day Register. So it's a day of awareness. It's
actually an official day. And so we utilized that day
to really continue to normalize the conversation, encourage people to post,

(01:35:40):
encourage people to donate to our organization because we are
still a small nonprofit doing mighty work, and we also
have an app coming out on Maakehift.

Speaker 15 (01:35:49):
So yeah, so I'm really excited about it.

Speaker 9 (01:35:53):
Two years ago we partnered with Dereil Booker at Microsoft
and they included us in their global hackathon, and so
here we are two years later.

Speaker 15 (01:36:00):
It's a free mental health app call Silence the shame.

Speaker 9 (01:36:04):
If you have an iPhone or an Android, you know,
you can download it and it's going to have like
you know, daily content, updated mindfulness moments, daily dosage. So
we might be able to you know, repurpose content from
a lot of our old community conversations, new conversations. As
you know, we've had a lot of artists to support
us and athletes, and so we want to be able

(01:36:25):
to put that content back out there. In addition to
new content, of course, educate the community around different mental
health challenges.

Speaker 15 (01:36:33):
And be able to push resources.

Speaker 9 (01:36:34):
And again, the goal is to provide accessibility because so
many people in our community still don't have access, like
to the basics, like Wi fi.

Speaker 6 (01:36:42):
Yeah, you know, I like that idea because so many
people are also addicted to their phones, and we know
that social media is causing so many mental health issues.
So if you're already addicted, why not give them something
good to make a habit every day?

Speaker 9 (01:36:55):
Absolutely, and as you said, you know, this smartphone right here,
you know, is challenging for some, but it can save
lives as well.

Speaker 15 (01:37:02):
So we want to meet people where they're at.

Speaker 9 (01:37:04):
That's why we're so excited about the app and then
also we're gonna be doing Instagram lives all day again
continuing to normalize the conversations. So we're gonna be talking
to Krista Renee, the actress from Sisters, who is.

Speaker 15 (01:37:15):
Our official ambassador.

Speaker 9 (01:37:16):
Also doctor Raquel Martin who is a phenomenal Sister out
of Tennessee and she is a psychologist, my brother Ronnie Devaux,
who is also a board member of Silence and Shame
Your girl, My girl, Angela.

Speaker 15 (01:37:28):
R's gonna come on and talk.

Speaker 9 (01:37:30):
We're gonna just do like ten minute segments Lamar Rutger,
ESPN host L Duncan, our Boy King J Barnett, and
so many others.

Speaker 15 (01:37:38):
So we're just gonna open up.

Speaker 9 (01:37:40):
You know, the ig lives and hopefully get people to
either share or just learn a little bit about why
these people focus on mental health. The one thing I
am excited about is, you know, this generation is openly
talking about it.

Speaker 12 (01:37:52):
Right.

Speaker 9 (01:37:52):
One of my friends said his son is ten years
old and was like, Dad, you know I think I
need to talk to somebody.

Speaker 2 (01:37:57):
Oh wow, years old.

Speaker 4 (01:37:58):
My daughter does that eight and and it's.

Speaker 15 (01:38:01):
A testament to you too.

Speaker 9 (01:38:02):
Right, you're normalizing the conversation, right, in your own household,
and we have to continue to do that. But I
think you know, even just from still talking to some
of my colleagues and the music business and other places,
the resources are there, but not everybody are using them.

Speaker 6 (01:38:17):
Like my oldest is fifteen and she started she was
talking people like talk to a therapists at thirteen, and
not because anything is necessarily wrong, it's just like why
not like I treat it like I treat it like
going to the gym.

Speaker 9 (01:38:28):
Absolutely yeah, And to that point, our theme this year
for National Silence and Shame Day and Mental Health Awareness
Month is redefining mental wellness, simply put, making sure everyone
knows that it affects your overall well being, your mental,
your physical, and your spiritual life. It's nothing that like
people say, oh yeah, I know about that thing mental health. No,
we all have mental health. It's how you think, how

(01:38:50):
you act, and how you feel. So we just want
to kind of redefine it and celebrate like taking that
journey of your emotional well being and making it a
part of your everyday regimen.

Speaker 6 (01:39:00):
What have you learned new about yourself over the past
year in regards to mindfulness and the health Wow?

Speaker 15 (01:39:05):
I learned that.

Speaker 9 (01:39:09):
One I am a little bit more of an introvert
than I thought I was, like kind of being out
there and having to promote. I feel like I from
doing like my prayer and meditation in the morning, that
I really like kind of being by myself. I like
to travel by myself. I love those introspective moments, and
it's important for me to start my mornings like that,

(01:39:29):
in the quiet, in the still, without the noise. And
I used to be the girl like I'm on, let
me see what's going on Instagram, Like I would start
my day like this, almost sleeping like this. And I realized,
like I need that piece and quiet and I need
to embrace those, you know, moments where I feel like
an introvert or where I feel like I need to
just find that balance within myself before I even start

(01:39:50):
calling people or texting or sending emails or taking meetings,
like I need that quiet time.

Speaker 15 (01:39:54):
And I really realized, like I love myself that absolutely.
And I think we, you know, for the first times,
we had to sit still.

Speaker 9 (01:40:06):
Some of us were with family members, some of us
were by ourselves, and you had to really figure out,
like do I really like myself? Am I proud of
the person that I am, how am I handling things?
And so I just had to take some hard looks
at myself and really work on getting to be the
person that I wanted to because you know, I've been
in and out of therapy, you know, over the years.
I'm still grieving the loss of my mom and sister

(01:40:27):
the last five years, but just being able to celebrate
and know that I'm enough. And it took a while
for me to sit there and feel like I was enough,
because you're walking away from the music business. Who does that,
you know, at the height of their career, And there
were times where I felt like I was less than
seeing my peers still in it and you know, not
necessarily having the same amount of you know, commas behind

(01:40:48):
those you know, dollar signs and doing something different. But
I'm I'm out here doing God's work. I feel like
I'm doing my purpose driven work, and I'm just really
excited to be working alongside such great members. We have
six staff members of Silence of Shame. But like that's
such a blessing.

Speaker 15 (01:41:04):
Like I walked away.

Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
From it all, I left it all, but this work
is more fulfilling though it.

Speaker 9 (01:41:09):
Is, and I have my own staff. I'm my own boss,
and I'm saying we're shaving lives.

Speaker 8 (01:41:13):
Well, we're talking to Shanty Does.

Speaker 6 (01:41:15):
It's Mental Health Awareness month, national challenge, the Shame Days
May fifth. When we come back, we're gonna talk to
Shanty some more. I want to talk to you about
the Great Rico Wade too.

Speaker 8 (01:41:24):
When we come back. It's the world's most dangerous moaning
to show to breakfast club.

Speaker 4 (01:41:27):
Yeah, it's the.

Speaker 2 (01:41:27):
World's most dangerous mot to show the breakfast club.

Speaker 4 (01:41:29):
Shoowed me to god ess hilarious. DJ India is off
to day.

Speaker 6 (01:41:32):
We are here with Shanty Dods, the founder of Silence
to Shame and National Silence to Shame Day is May fifth. Now,
Shanty just recently, sadly you had another passing, you know,
hip hop had another passing, the Great Rico Wade and you.

Speaker 4 (01:41:45):
You worked for Rico.

Speaker 9 (01:41:47):
I worked with Reah because I got hired at La
Face Records in nineteen ninety three and met at La
Reed introduced me to organized Noise in a little group
called Outcasts, and.

Speaker 15 (01:41:57):
He was like, these are your guys.

Speaker 9 (01:42:00):
This is what you're gonna be responsible for, you know, promotions,
and then and then eventually doing marketing and so meeting
Rico for the first time, I was like, he is
so Atlanta, but he was so passionate, and he was
really like the spokesperson for Organized Noise. Ray and Pat
shot out as a Ray and Pat, but they were
mostly you know, in the studio, but Rico was the
one coming up to the label taking the meetings. And I,

(01:42:20):
Lily literally used to go to the dungeon and you
we've all seen pictures of the original It's red clay
on the floor right, plaques and speakers all around. But
those were like incredible moments and who knew the impact
that they would have on Southern hip hop. You know.
Rico always said, you know, we always had Southern rapp

(01:42:41):
in Atlanta, but the trajectory of Southern hip hop really
changed after Outcasts and Goodie Mott were born, and it,
you know, all because of Organized Noise.

Speaker 4 (01:42:50):
How did the passing of Rigal Wave impact you personally?

Speaker 15 (01:42:53):
It was really difficult.

Speaker 9 (01:42:54):
I remember getting that call excuse me a couple of
weeks ago on a Saturday morning, and I just it
was like time stood stee and I had just talked
to Rico like a few weeks before that, excuse me.
I had just talked to Rico a few weeks before that,
and we were gonna do some things together, and he
was just so energetic because he was a little sick
as well. In February, he had had surgery and he

(01:43:14):
felt like, you know, that God had given him another chance,
and I guess, you know, now God was preparing him
to welcome him into the kingdom. Little did we know,
but I cried a lot, you know. I went over
to the Dungeon, I mean, to the studio that day
to see Big Boy and Killer Mike and some of
the family members and the Dungeon family. It really is
like a family. We may not always talk every day,

(01:43:37):
but we came up together. We were kids in this industry,
and I feel like we changed the world, you know, like,
look at Atlanta now, it's still you know, I know
New York is the birthplace, and I give New York
all the props and the mecha of hip hop, but
I feel like this generation, you know, Atlanta is still
setting the tone and the trends of hip hop. You know,
it's undeniable. And we have Rico aid and or Noice

(01:44:00):
say thanks for that.

Speaker 6 (01:44:01):
What tips would you give women who are coming to
work and they're pregnant, and you know, like say after
nine am, they don't feel like being bothered anymore, would
like the job, and you know.

Speaker 4 (01:44:11):
You get quiet and like don't want to talk. I'm
just I'm just saying, what would what tips would you
give to women?

Speaker 9 (01:44:21):
First of all, you got to give yourself grace because
every day is different. We have to give ourselves grace,
and our colleagues have to give you know, their employees
or whoever's experiencing that grace because every day is different.
And for women that are pregnant, you know, your hormones
are all over the place. And for somebody like me,
the auntie in the room, I'm fifty three, but I'm
dealing with menopause and there are some mornings where like

(01:44:43):
my mental health and my thoughts are racing and all
over the place, and so I just tell people, like
I think it's okay to say, hey, you know what,
it's one of those days, Like y'all know that, Like
I love y'all, but I'm not feeling my best self today,
So please give me that grace that I need. It's
not personal. I'm not trying to be a bee or anything.
I'm just having a moment and that's what I think

(01:45:04):
I do.

Speaker 2 (01:45:04):
I don't really vocalize it, you know, just because you know,
this is my job and I love the people I
work with, you know what I'm saying, So even me,
it's just some yeah, even you. So like I I'm
six months pregnant now in my third time master, and
I'm like, it gets thank you. It gets harder getting
up every morning gets harder and harder, you know, because

(01:45:24):
baby's growing. I can't sleep on my stomach of course,
and sometimes not most of the time, not even my side.
So don't get properized. But girls, just be a lot.

Speaker 9 (01:45:34):
You gotta be kind to yourself.

Speaker 4 (01:45:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:45:36):
We just had a for so May versus a Black
Children's Mental Health Day in the state of Georgia on Paphos.
I's a shame and we had an art contest with
kids and the thing was a kind mine. And so
you've got to be kind to yourself when you have
to realize, like every day our emotions are going to
be different. You don't know what's going to be triggering you.
You don't know how you're gonna be feeling. And so
if we just at least have that open dialogue and

(01:45:57):
tell each other what we're experiencing. We don't have to
share it all and say, hey, you know what, I
need a little grace today, give me some space, and
I'll be back to myself tomorrow. It's just about being
open and communicating. Communication is key.

Speaker 6 (01:46:09):
I agree with that because I don't feel like when
it comes to women being pregnant, we always look at
it as a physical thing, but we don't focus on
the mental and emotional toll it takes, especially women that
are getting up every day going to work.

Speaker 9 (01:46:19):
Yeah, and women in general, especially Black women, we have
so much to deal with, even from a medical perspective, right,
like showing up and making sure that we're getting in
the proper care.

Speaker 15 (01:46:28):
We talk about maternal health and that sort of thing.

Speaker 9 (01:46:30):
And so again, let's support our black women and even
just black women in the workplace in general. We have to.
We always show up and people think we're the superwomen, right.
And so my message this morning to all my sisters
out there, especially sisters of color, give yourself.

Speaker 15 (01:46:46):
Permission to take that cap off right and to be
who you need to be.

Speaker 9 (01:46:51):
I think it's a really dangerous narrative when they're always
talking about the strong black woman.

Speaker 15 (01:46:56):
Yes, we are strong.

Speaker 9 (01:46:56):
We've been resilient since the days of slavery, but we
don't allow ourselves to pour back in to have those
moments where we have to navigate through our tough feelings
and to give ourselves permission to see a therapist or
to give ourself permission to see I mean, to set
those boundaries in place, it could be really dangerous for
us in the workplace, within our families, with you know,
with spouses and loved ones and couples. You gotta take

(01:47:20):
time to just stop sure and quiet the noise and
and be okay with just being who we are. We
don't always have to be up and show up and
be strong every single day because life be lifing.

Speaker 4 (01:47:31):
That's right.

Speaker 8 (01:47:32):
How can we support Silence to Shame on Sunday May fifth?

Speaker 15 (01:47:36):
Yes, So a couple things.

Speaker 9 (01:47:38):
So, first of all, visit our website silencedtshame dot com
or follow us at Silence to Shame On Instagram. We're
having these virtual banners again so you can upload your
own photo or video so you can become a mental
health champion. You can text the words silence s I
L E n CE to donate you text the word
silence to seven O seven O seven O, and then

(01:47:59):
also check out our Instagram lies. Like I mentioned, so
many great people from Crystal Renee to Angela Rye to
King j Burnett, El Duncan and so many others. And
let's continue this conversation. You know, May fifth is really
the launch and kickoff, but you know we're in this
to win at twenty four to seven and we're trying
to do this work. And the last thing is download
our app.

Speaker 15 (01:48:16):
It's free. Don't judge us, y'all. It's the first iteration,
so you know how technology is.

Speaker 9 (01:48:21):
But let's celebrate the fact that there is another resource,
particularly for communities of color, that provides you know, free
content and wellness strategies. And I also just want to
shout out a lot of our hip hop friends, like
a Little John or one Unred three thousand that are
doing these albums right to me, that are from a
place of wellness and meditation. And shout out to Frank

(01:48:42):
Ski who just released an album called Climate Change. I
tell y'all, it's like different sounds from around the world,
the Great Brayrier reefing, different things, but it's so dope
and I've started my morning for the last week with it,
and it just puts me in such a great place
of comm It's like nine tracks. So I just love that,
like our black men are really leaning into mindfulness and meditation.

(01:49:03):
And again we have people like you Charlemagne to think
because you post about it, you talk about it, and
you really live, you know, in a place of wellness
and peace.

Speaker 4 (01:49:13):
And I love them for that.

Speaker 6 (01:49:14):
Thank you, Shanty. You love the work that you're doing too.
Make sure you support Shanty does. Silence to Shame Day
is this Sunday, and also important donate, yes, don't.

Speaker 9 (01:49:23):
And I also just want to mention I have my
own podcast called the Mebo Show am I for My
and Bo for Body, and the new episode launches on
May eighth with d Nice and we're talking about black
men and mental wellness.

Speaker 6 (01:49:34):
Make sure you subscribing download that Shanty thank you for
coming always. It's Shanty Dodes Natural. Silence to Shame Day
is this Sunday. It's the breakfast club. That's where you're
at this weekend.

Speaker 2 (01:49:42):
Though I'm in Louisville, Kentucky. My flight is about the
boyd Toe and doing any interviews. But yeah, I gotta
get out of here today, y'all. Y'all meet me tonight
at Louisville Comedy Club. We got two shows. I believe
one is that seven thirty. The second one is at nine.
Get your tickets if you haven't that. They are almost
sold out for tonight, and I believe they are sold

(01:50:04):
for tomorrow. But it's also Derby Weekend in Louisville. So
people's in the comments, like you you coming on Derby Weekend.
I'm like, oh my god, what's that?

Speaker 4 (01:50:12):
That's like the.

Speaker 2 (01:50:13):
Horses and all that, right, what is Derby Weekend? Derby
Weekend in Louisville. They bet on the horses like they
be serious down there. Oh got you got Baltimore d
one Pieblical, you know Peblical every year. But I had
no idea that y'all might see some horses run myself.

Speaker 6 (01:50:27):
But with the Kentucky Derby, Kentucky Derby, the Kentucky Dirty
Absolutely okay, let me look at your shows, all right,
Nine to forty five pm is sold out. Well, yeah,
the premium tickets are sold out. It's a huge tonight
for tonight. Fewe general admission left seven o'clock. Same thing,
but next for tomorrow premium is sold out. To be

(01:50:48):
honest with you, I don't know. If I don't know,
it just has sold out. Yeah for the show too, Yeah,
the seven thirty show, the seven o'clock show tonight, said,
premium sold out to Yeah, you'all going to the website,
A look, it's.

Speaker 2 (01:50:59):
Going away, say and look y'all. But I don't know,
I might want to see some more. So if that's
happening earlier in the day, I'll definitely check that out
with y'all. But I will be there landing today. Also,
I need somebody. I need a rever real good mua.
All right, oh makeup artist, and I'm somewhere to eat.

Speaker 4 (01:51:19):
A horse whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:51:22):
What's the positive note, shoe, because I'll have time.

Speaker 6 (01:51:25):
The positive note is simply this respecting. No, the positive
note simply this. Responsibility is accepting that you are the
cause and the solution of the matter. Okay, this weekend,
I want you to think about that. Responsibility is accepting
that you are the cause and the solution of the matter. Responsibility, accountability,
whatever you want to call it, you were the causing
solution of it.

Speaker 8 (01:51:46):
Have a great weekend, breakfast club bitches, you don't finish
for y'all done,

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