Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning Usa 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.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Yo yo yo Jess hilarry as some morning and currently
we are on vacation.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Man, totally disconnected. Yes, we're not even really here. You
think you're listening to us, but were not.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
Well, we are not. We're here in spirit.
Speaker 4 (00:19):
Yeah, yeah, we're on vacation.
Speaker 5 (00:21):
So we're playing the best Donkey's the best interviews you guys,
which is the best callers and some of the best
moments the Breakfast Club has had in the last couple
of months.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
So sit back, relax, enjoy, and have fun. Keep a lock.
Red's gonna be running the boards. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, Maddie. This is your time to get it
off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed.
Speaker 6 (00:40):
I hate the way that you walk, the way that
you talk, I hate the way that you dress.
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Everything when me is best call up next eight hundred
and five eighty five one O five one.
Speaker 7 (00:49):
Not just me.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
I'm with the coach of philing to me. Good, good
morning to Miko.
Speaker 8 (00:53):
Hey, what's good dj MV.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
I'm good. How you feeling I'm good.
Speaker 9 (00:57):
I'm at work my lunch break, Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
I was like, time is it when you at getting through?
What time is it where you at?
Speaker 2 (01:05):
I mean, CALLI it's three thirteen and it's lunchtime for you.
Speaker 9 (01:10):
Yeah, I work overnight.
Speaker 10 (01:12):
The best ships ship.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
You haven't lunch at three in the morning. You're a
big back. But never mind.
Speaker 9 (01:17):
Hell no, ain't no big bag.
Speaker 11 (01:19):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
She called, and she called because she wanted to talk
to you. Tell them what you want to talk?
Speaker 9 (01:23):
Yeah, Charlemagne, okay, yeah, Charwolte chawla. Why are you always
coming for the studs?
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Bro? I love studs.
Speaker 12 (01:31):
We love you too, but shoot, you'll be giving out
the wrong formation Like what I mean what I was like,
I got to get through because you don't know no real.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Studs, Like, tell me what wrong information I'll be giving
out all I do.
Speaker 4 (01:43):
I don't really give out no information other than what speed.
Speaker 9 (01:47):
First of all, first of all, you up here, somebody
when we put on the strap and the girls in
the strap, and that's meant to illness.
Speaker 13 (01:55):
No, it's not.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
You said, that's mental illness.
Speaker 9 (02:00):
That's what said.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
Did you hear what she said? She she just said,
she just said that the girls. Her scrap is the girls.
Speaker 9 (02:08):
I bought it with mine.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
But listen, it's not mental illness unless you start moaning.
If you start moaning, and that's then you just retalk.
Speaker 9 (02:17):
No, I mean good, So I can't moan from the visual.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
When she's when she's in the scrap on and you moaning.
Let's think about that for a second.
Speaker 10 (02:26):
Look good, it looks good.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
You mean like you look Yeah, but y'all be moaning
like you feel good?
Speaker 2 (02:34):
They getting off because they looking at it, taking.
Speaker 9 (02:37):
It off, definitely getting off.
Speaker 5 (02:39):
Okay, okay to me, I think there's only one thing
to do. You come up here with your strap.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Let the talk. You aren't less your problem. All I'm
saying that.
Speaker 9 (02:48):
All I'm saying is shout.
Speaker 10 (02:49):
Out to all the studs.
Speaker 9 (02:51):
Much respect to young young n A. But she ain't
the study more studs. We gotta stop saying that.
Speaker 4 (03:00):
Who's the king of studs?
Speaker 5 (03:01):
Queen studs, king queen people?
Speaker 11 (03:05):
What you know allude to the legend queen the t
She ain't exactly.
Speaker 6 (03:18):
Study, y'all identify as she's probably presenting.
Speaker 9 (03:24):
No, no, no, she's off.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
You call her stud y'all confusing me?
Speaker 9 (03:30):
All right, I take that back. I take that, set
it off up for life.
Speaker 10 (03:34):
That one se no, no, no no, I love queen people.
Speaker 9 (03:37):
I hit that so I'm not.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
Gonna look at disrespect the queen like that, not be feminine.
Speaker 9 (03:43):
I mean we've seen her be studied out.
Speaker 4 (03:45):
So that's we did.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Okay, I love you.
Speaker 9 (03:50):
I gotta go back to work. I'm not y'all, but
I love y'all.
Speaker 12 (03:54):
I'm so happy I got to good Je.
Speaker 10 (03:59):
How do you girl?
Speaker 12 (04:00):
I wanted to want Instagram. I'm so proud of you.
I'm proud of you, Charlotte DJ and you get that money.
Let's go what out?
Speaker 3 (04:07):
Be sure I know her vibrator waterproof complete period get.
Speaker 5 (04:13):
Chest eight hundred five eight five one oh five. Good
morning to all the studs. It's the breakfast the studs,
the breakfast club.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
I'm telling, I'm telling what's doing on calling yo. This
is your time to get it off your chest, whether
you're mad or blessed.
Speaker 14 (04:33):
Eight hundred five eight one five one.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast clubs.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
Hello, who's this?
Speaker 15 (04:40):
Oh my god, I can't believe I got it was
my first time. Color.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
Good morning, what's your name?
Speaker 4 (04:44):
Brother?
Speaker 15 (04:45):
Good morning, my name is Randy. I'm from SoCal.
Speaker 6 (04:49):
I.
Speaker 15 (04:49):
Actually I'm actually calling. I'm a a firing airline pilot
and I was wondering if anybody out there, you know,
can mentor me and leave me in the right direction
all how to become a pilot and just you know,
give me a worth of encouragement.
Speaker 4 (05:03):
You got to give your info. Anybody elf here know
how to fly?
Speaker 9 (05:08):
Hit me on my you can hit me on my
email at Randy Curry.
Speaker 15 (05:13):
See you r R I E nine two at gmail
dot com.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
And why not Google or something though, Like, why why
did you decide to call the breakfast club.
Speaker 5 (05:22):
I'm sure there's all types of pilot schools and flying
schools that can help you out.
Speaker 4 (05:26):
Brother.
Speaker 15 (05:26):
Well, yeah, there's school schools and stuff. But I'm just
looking for, you know, a mentor, you know, African American
that's already in the industry that can you know, just
give me worth of encouragement and keep me on the
right path. You know, trying to fly will.
Speaker 4 (05:40):
Spread you, my brother.
Speaker 5 (05:41):
You know what, there's a birthday out of Atlanta that
flies a black brother.
Speaker 4 (05:45):
If you just get it, just a black brother really
narrows it down.
Speaker 5 (05:49):
No, no, no, no, I'm looking for his Instagram. He's pretty
popular on social media.
Speaker 10 (05:53):
Hey MV.
Speaker 15 (05:54):
Before I hanged up, I actually wanted to talk to
you about your car collection.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
What's that brother?
Speaker 15 (06:00):
I think a while ago you mentioned that you had
an MC twenty Manserati.
Speaker 10 (06:04):
I did what come a little hood of bad?
Speaker 5 (06:06):
The MC twenty actually dropper was a Maserati I don't have,
but I was the one with the doors opened up.
I don't actually own it anymore. I didn't love that car.
But Mail the Traveler mel M E. L. The Traveler,
he's a brother who flies. He's somebody that you should
follow and always talks about flying and you know, getting
his license and why it's important for minorities to fly.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
Mail the Traveler M. E. L.
Speaker 14 (06:28):
T h E.
Speaker 4 (06:29):
Traveler.
Speaker 15 (06:30):
Awesome, Thank you, Good morning you guys.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
Good morning, a good one.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Brother. Hello. Who's this?
Speaker 10 (06:34):
This is Jay Jones?
Speaker 3 (06:36):
What's up?
Speaker 4 (06:36):
Brother?
Speaker 3 (06:37):
Get off your chest? How you doing?
Speaker 10 (06:38):
Dj Ay? Good morning? Good morning, Charlie man, God, good morning,
good morning.
Speaker 3 (06:43):
Just justin Hilarry, good morning the baby.
Speaker 10 (06:45):
How you doing. I just wanted to get off my chest.
Speaker 14 (06:48):
Uh.
Speaker 10 (06:49):
I'm a man at the end of the day, and
I don't have no problem.
Speaker 5 (06:52):
Then that means he cheated a man. At the end
of the day, that means he cheated bad.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
Bro.
Speaker 10 (06:57):
I didn't. I didn't tea, but I did. I was
inderpendent other women, and I know I'm wrong for that.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
Was you entertaining another woman at sir? Text?
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Oh wow, that's cheating. Black men don't cheat, Bro, You're
still a little black boy. You're still a little immature
young man.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
How'd you get caught?
Speaker 10 (07:18):
She went through my phone, you know, and she found it,
and I know it's gonna take some time, and she
do take me back, and I'm doing all do whatever
it takes to get her back. You know what I'm saying, What.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Were you saying?
Speaker 1 (07:31):
What she found?
Speaker 4 (07:32):
What were you saying? What were you saying to the.
Speaker 10 (07:35):
Person I was I was talking. I was saying that
I did miss her. You know what I'm saying. She's
my friend. But I didn't have no place saying that.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
It was.
Speaker 10 (07:47):
Uh no, it wouldn't.
Speaker 14 (07:49):
It was.
Speaker 10 (07:49):
It's just a friend that I used to deal with
in the past. I haven't been with no other one.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
No, it wasn't my y'all.
Speaker 6 (07:57):
Just yeah, that was the friend that she was that
you were smashing y'all was smashing at one point, and
so that that makes her not that makes him more
than a friend. But she wasn't quite a girlfriend. Yeah,
and you had your girl around this girl saying that
she was your friend.
Speaker 10 (08:09):
Huh, I can't hear you start.
Speaker 6 (08:14):
You had around this girl like y'all just always been friends.
Speaker 3 (08:17):
With y'all smash.
Speaker 6 (08:19):
I'm not that damn dis Okay, okay, just a little
bit disrespectful.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
Okay, I got you. But if you learn from this.
Speaker 10 (08:28):
I'm definitely learned. My listen and I'm going from it
and I'm just trying to write my lams.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
How long did it happen? It happened Friday, grow fast,
just happened. Friday realized what.
Speaker 10 (08:43):
You realized, something something that something so good that is
going for you.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
Man.
Speaker 10 (08:48):
You get you get along with you, man.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
Yeah, you got a long way to go. Brother, just
having Friday.
Speaker 10 (08:54):
I'm working progress, but I'm working.
Speaker 3 (08:56):
But you gotta start somewhere. You're right, that's right. Good
luck brother.
Speaker 4 (08:59):
If you think you're if you think your woman gonna
start trusting you after three days, you bugging.
Speaker 5 (09:04):
Get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five
one oh five.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
If you need to vent.
Speaker 5 (09:08):
Hit us up now with the Breakfast Club. Good Morning,
The Breakfast Club, Good Morning. Everybody is DJ n Vy, Jess,
Larry's Charlamagne the Guy.
Speaker 3 (09:18):
We are the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (09:19):
Jess is out today, Lauren's holding it down.
Speaker 3 (09:21):
And of course we got our niece.
Speaker 5 (09:23):
Nola him and we got a special guest in the building,
Rubber Teddy Swims.
Speaker 14 (09:26):
Hey, man, I'm so honored in here.
Speaker 7 (09:29):
Man.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
I'm fine man, happy to have you.
Speaker 14 (09:31):
I'm really really excited.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Dude.
Speaker 8 (09:34):
We we did our album lease party last night though,
so uh, you know again, excuse my drinking for you.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
Don't you drinking early in the morning? You see that
one over less here?
Speaker 6 (09:44):
All of you on the way from my baby all
the way?
Speaker 8 (09:48):
Yeah, yeah, I have one other way. Absolutely, yeah, you're
drinking with a pregnant man.
Speaker 4 (09:52):
It's early. Tell us about yourself, Teddy, man, that's so loaded.
Speaker 8 (09:57):
I'm from Georgia, from from about thirty minutes east of
Atlanta and Conyers, Georgiadale County, and you know, like singing
songs and I'm a good.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Good good boy. It was a very soulful, soulful voice.
Did you grow up in the church.
Speaker 8 (10:11):
Yeah, so my granddad was a Pentecostal pastor. I didn't
grow up singing in the church a lot, but I
you know, I definitely grew up with a fire and
brimstone for sure. Man with the with the fear of God.
Yeah you know what I mean.
Speaker 14 (10:23):
You're afraid to sind Oh no, no, not not these days.
Speaker 16 (10:25):
I mean, but I'm just talking about like back in
the day was like a very yeah, yeah, you know,
like girls don't get haircuts, you know, girls wear skirts,
men wear jeans like that kind of thing.
Speaker 14 (10:36):
It was really real kind of tight, and I was.
I mean, I'm very fortunate. I guess.
Speaker 8 (10:41):
I feel like I still subscribed to so many of
the principles of you know, even the beliefs art there.
Speaker 14 (10:46):
I do love that my my granddad was.
Speaker 8 (10:48):
As I was growing up with my granddad, he was
he was like, we wouldn't even go to restaurants that
would have a bar in the restaurant, you know. And
not that he ever had a problem drinking, but it
was just he stood on his belief so much. The
thing that I was always with him is that I
didn't subscribe to the idea that like telling people that
they're wrong and this is the only way to believe something.
I remember he looked at other churches and be like,
think that the only way he believed it was right.
Speaker 14 (11:08):
I remember, I remember the first time I sang at
his church.
Speaker 8 (11:11):
I might have been seventeen or sixteen or something, and
I remember him saying like, you know, I want you
to staying at the church, Bud, But man, all these
kids are like break dancing and carry it on for
the Lord. And I was like, you know, pop, like
nobody's broke dance since like my mom was the child,
and if they want to break dance for the Lord, father,
like let him break dance for the Lord.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
You know he was.
Speaker 14 (11:31):
He was very you know, stern, like just by the book.
Speaker 8 (11:34):
If it wasn't in the Bible, then it was a sin,
you know what I means?
Speaker 14 (11:38):
Yeah, hell yeah.
Speaker 8 (11:39):
My mom was worse than I was. I remember, I
remember getting in trouble for all sorts of to be
like I'm not doing any of that because she was
thought I was doing all sorts of message.
Speaker 14 (11:48):
I mean, but she was a passers skip.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
My mother was the but I.
Speaker 5 (11:51):
Wanted to you know, when you took about rebellious, you
started to playing football, all right, So yes, sir, he was.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
Her family was a big football family.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (11:58):
So what got you from football to singing?
Speaker 8 (12:01):
My different Jens Old Yeah yeah, yeah yeah, and an
offensive offensive guard as well.
Speaker 7 (12:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (12:09):
And but I mean, I just five foot seven. Wasn't
really happening, you know.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
I just in high school middle school at the time.
Speaker 8 (12:17):
Yeah, but I've been five foot seven since I was
in eighth grade, and so I thought they thought I
was gonna be big, you.
Speaker 14 (12:22):
Know, and then it just it didn't happen.
Speaker 8 (12:24):
I started shooting up six foot two and three and
whooped my ass off the line.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
We got you into arts.
Speaker 14 (12:30):
Like to my differend, Jesse, who still plays with me,
I've known him since I was little kid. Uh. His
dad was.
Speaker 8 (12:35):
Always in bands and stuff. So we started trying to
experiment and play music and stuff. And his older sister
was a musical theater and got us in the musical theater.
And I just kind of fell in love with singing,
and I was so I was hooked. I was hooked
that singing has changed my life. I wasn't good always,
but I fell in love with it, you know. And
I remember telling my mom that I was I was
gonna not do football anymore, and I was gonna sing
(12:57):
and she was so so hurt. I brought out all
my memorabilia, like, I.
Speaker 14 (13:00):
Can't believe you do this to us. We would playing football,
you know.
Speaker 8 (13:03):
And I remember my first little we did this show
called Damn Yankees. I did like two lines in it,
I think, and uh, after I got done, I come
off stage and she was like, I'm so sorry, baby,
this is where you belong.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
Really are a star, you know.
Speaker 14 (13:15):
After I did like two lines, you know, but it
was what.
Speaker 17 (13:18):
Do you mean by you weren't always good at it?
Like how do you you sound?
Speaker 14 (13:21):
So we were so bad at it, you know in
a group?
Speaker 8 (13:25):
Well no, just me and my buddy Jesse he still
plays guitar rights and he plays guitar in my band still.
And we as we were learning and trying to build
bands together and do it as kids, you know, we
just were really bad, you know. We suck like we're
just not good like you can's still fine. Actually on YouTube.
I was a senior in high school. My first band,
Heroic Bear, is still on YouTube, our first little EP.
(13:48):
And I was in like a metalcore band at the time,
and so you can still hear me like screaming away
and like singing and if you want to if you
hear it, dude, you're gonna be like, Okay, yeah you
got good or did you practice or how did you
just so good?
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Well?
Speaker 14 (14:02):
I think I was so lucky.
Speaker 8 (14:03):
I mean I was in theater, you know, and I
had a lot of good friends and they were singing.
But I think I think the biggest thing was growing
up in the like when the YouTube era was first
kind of starting, you know, and if I had questions
or if I wanted to know how to sing, there
was always a live version of singer singing, you know,
so like I could I could watch like live videos
of how how is how are they moving they throw
(14:24):
how they moving their jaws?
Speaker 3 (14:25):
How are they yez second?
Speaker 14 (14:28):
You know, I could I could just sit there and
watch YouTube videos and.
Speaker 8 (14:31):
See people singing live, you know, like singing Craig David
singing like and Credit Recovery. I would pull up like
YouTube proxy and just have it behind the video and
just like listen to Craig David just.
Speaker 14 (14:41):
I'm walking away.
Speaker 8 (14:43):
And I could listen to buy videos and watch their
them play, you know and singing.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
It was like do you think you like saw somebody
like Craig David and like mimic him, and that's how.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
You found your voice.
Speaker 14 (14:52):
Oh, totally. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (14:54):
Some of the best, man, some of the best that
ever did it. Marvin Gaye watching I was just reading
Man listening to al Go, you know, yeah, I mean
I just fell in love with the instrument and I
was like, I want to know how to access that.
Speaker 5 (15:04):
And then you started doing these covers, right, and you
started covering songs, and then you did one cover that
started shooting up crazy.
Speaker 4 (15:10):
So talk about that a little bit.
Speaker 8 (15:12):
Oh, I think Shania Twain, I'm still the one was
alight Like, that was the one that really kind of
went crazy for us. You know, I love my mama,
and my mama loved Shannaia Twain when I was coming up.
I loved Shania Twain too. That was that was a
real life changing one for us. Our first one we
started out with was because June twenty fifth of twenty
nineteen was the first time I never even expected doing covers,
(15:33):
you know, online, and we had found like the stems
of rock with you online and Michael Jackson. Yeah, and
so it was it was ten years right after he passed.
It was just ten year anniversary, and so I was like, well,
we should just do Rock with You by Michael Jackson
used to pay homage to him and for the you know,
And then we uploaded it and it started doing well,
and was like, man, we should just keep this. I
guess this cover train is kind of going. So we
(15:55):
kept on for you know, the next few months, and
I think the beautiful thing about starting with Rock with
You it started getting you know, like this said. The
first day we woke up, we had like ten thousand views,
and it was so life changing for us. We like
the boys, We're getting hammered.
Speaker 4 (16:07):
This is sick.
Speaker 8 (16:08):
And it was such a weird thing because once it
hit like this, this critical mass of like maybe five
hundred thousand views, I think people were looking at it
and seeing the way I look and then seeing the
Rock with You, you know, and saying rock with You
by Michael Jackson and me and and I'm looking like
an absolute redneck and saying like, either this is hilarious
or this is actually really good. And I think for
(16:29):
our benefit it was it was kind of both, you know,
because just the fact that I was singing that song
but doing it well was kind of funny and surprisingly good.
Speaker 4 (16:36):
Yeah, tell you, why have you tried everything with therapy?
Speaker 8 (16:38):
Well, I've tried therapy now, so there's a you know,
even as we're getting ready of a kid, me and
my girls have been doing even a couples therapy too,
which has been so wonderful and making sure we're coming
in and having this child and the most healed, safest
environment possible. But I think I think naming the album
that was kind of to have that conversation and with
myself to get myself to go.
Speaker 14 (16:57):
I think there's just like.
Speaker 8 (16:58):
Been in generation passed and even still there's this like
connotation on therapy that we were like we're not allowed
to go to that or we're not allowed to share
our feelings or emotions. Yeah, you know, And I just
it's been life changing for me. And I did have
even this in my brain that I was like, I'm
not crazy. I don't need that, you know. I had
this for so long that I was like, I know myself,
I don't need nobody to tell me what's wrong with me,
(17:20):
you know. And I feel like once I got it
to it, it was so much different than I thought it
would be too, And I feel like there was something
beautiful about having that first album and not trying it
and being in a place of turmoil on heartbreak with
somebody that was made me feel like my feelings were
invalid or not allowed to have and having this part
two coming out and being this thing of I've tried therapy,
I'm back in love, I'm having a child. I've got
(17:42):
some level of success in this and you know, on
the back of heartbreak, it does get better on the
other side.
Speaker 3 (17:47):
You know, we got more with Teddy Swims when we
come back, don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning,
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (17:57):
Morning everybody. We all the Breakfast Club. Teddy Swims is here, Charlamagne.
Speaker 4 (18:01):
You can I can we talk about some of the
music on this new album?
Speaker 15 (18:03):
Sure?
Speaker 4 (18:03):
I Love You Not Your Man is a very vulnerable record.
Speaker 14 (18:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Have you ever really felt like you gave everything to
a woman and it wasn't enough?
Speaker 14 (18:10):
Yeah? Hell yeah, man.
Speaker 8 (18:12):
I think it was important to start this one out
like that because I was i'ld have wrote this forever
I was. I was in a place with somebody where
my I know it's hard. I don't want to talk
about her in a way that because I now as
I've grown and healed and moved on. It's I I
thank her for for what we went through, you know,
and I'm grateful for that time and space that we
had together. I was at a place here where I
(18:32):
felt like I was given everything and my feelings in
my I was was not validated, or it was not enough,
or I was crazy to feeling this way, or I
was abusive situation.
Speaker 14 (18:42):
I don't I don't want to. I don't want to
say it both man.
Speaker 8 (18:46):
Physically she was. She was just not good. She was
not a good person, and I won the best for her.
But yeah, it was a very tough thing to try
to try to heal somebody, Try to make space for
someone to heal, try to give somebody everything you.
Speaker 14 (18:58):
Would think, you would think if you had, if you
had a passion. I'll just make it like this.
Speaker 8 (19:02):
You had a passion in your life, and you had
somebody in your life that says you could quit your
job and just focus on your passion.
Speaker 14 (19:07):
I'll take care of the rest.
Speaker 8 (19:08):
You got it, and you don't do anything with your life,
but you just eat zat eggs all day and lay
around and blame somebody for your shortcomings. When you you
had the opportunity to follow your dream and somebody that
would support you in your dreams, and you'd be like
so surprised to see if somebody had the opportunity to
follow their dreams and they had everything taken care of.
How many people would be like, if everything's taken care of, I'm.
Speaker 4 (19:29):
Gonna do it anymore.
Speaker 14 (19:30):
And you can't. You can't put ambition and drive into somebody.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
You can't healal.
Speaker 14 (19:34):
Nobody, you can't save nobody. And I'm started to go
on that tangent.
Speaker 18 (19:37):
But from that situation, do you feel like you no
longer inable because it's like, though you want to do
something out of love to better somebody, sometimes it's to
their own detriment.
Speaker 8 (19:47):
Yeah, I think, I think I Yeah, I think it's
a It was an enabling at the end of the day,
you know, I was doing something to help someone become
But I think at the end of the day, I
was enabling somebody to do nothing and if that was
inside of them, I was enabling that. And I think
it's a pattern, you know. But yes, I'm trying to
heal and learn to see somebody for who they are
and not who I want them to be.
Speaker 14 (20:07):
Or think they should be.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
I can tell you got a big heart, but people
will take advantage of hell.
Speaker 8 (20:10):
Yeah, and I also grateful to be I don't want
to say I'm grateful be taking avantage of that.
Speaker 14 (20:16):
I'm grateful to be available.
Speaker 4 (20:18):
Everybody's gonna use you, but don't let people miss you
A man.
Speaker 17 (20:21):
Yeah, I have a last question for you.
Speaker 18 (20:23):
I was reading this interview you talked about because your
girlfriend's black, and you talked about like when you guys
are in the South, you get like looks from people,
and like it bothers you because love should be love.
You're about to bring a baby into the world. You're
so positive, she seems so amazing, but the world is
not always like that. Like how do you defeat that
because you're really a really nice person, Like it breaks
my heart.
Speaker 8 (20:42):
I mean, you know, I hate how much she's go through.
So her dad's black and her mom's white. So she
tells me about stuff all the time about like, you know,
how she felt not wide enough or not blacking up,
and how much her like world in her life has
been such a I guess like a juxtaposition in both sides,
you know, feeling like she wasn't quite accepted by either side,
(21:02):
you know. And so this is not a story. I
won't I won't tell you her story because she's better
at saying it than I will. I'll never tell you
her story. But I see how like how beautiful she is,
and how I guess, how like elegant she navigates being
who she is. She's the most incredible human being I've
ever met.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
All to talk to. I love that Johnson and White,
the Song of Money Loan. Yes, that title is a
little on the nose, don't you think.
Speaker 14 (21:37):
Yeah, yeah, I think.
Speaker 8 (21:39):
I think that the point of it was kind of
to the core of love. It itself is black and white,
like it's a it's a black and white issue. Love
is love and not love is not love and loving,
whether if it's a person of a different color, shape, size, sexuality,
same sex, whatever it is. I think that the thing
was trying to say that we, no matter what, we
(22:01):
could come from different worlds.
Speaker 14 (22:03):
It's it's a true, I guess.
Speaker 8 (22:04):
Romeo and Juliette story, you know, kind of is the
basis of it is that, like you know, we we
come from different places, we come from different cultures, we
have different things.
Speaker 14 (22:13):
But when you're in love.
Speaker 15 (22:14):
Man.
Speaker 14 (22:14):
Love is love and and that should be enough.
Speaker 8 (22:17):
And that's really they ain't nothing great about that, man,
It's just love.
Speaker 14 (22:20):
You know.
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Love is love.
Speaker 8 (22:22):
You you know.
Speaker 4 (22:22):
I love that record and it's a good stamp because
you know.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Money Long recently went viral for saying she's not writing
soulful songs for white artists.
Speaker 4 (22:30):
Did you see that?
Speaker 14 (22:31):
I did not? Oh I'm glad I got that one before.
Speaker 3 (22:34):
She said exactly when did she do that song? Was
that long? Did you do that a while ago?
Speaker 4 (22:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 14 (22:39):
We did it. It's had to be a few months
ago now.
Speaker 8 (22:43):
But diff friend Jeff Kitty and Mickey Echo is a
part of it with us too, and we we like
started working on it. And I remember Jeff Kitty as
has been working with Money for long years and years,
and he's like, man, should we see if Mornie wants
to do this song with us? And I was like,
I mean, yeah, that's like that's we'd kind of like
to do a record like this.
Speaker 14 (23:02):
We would kind of need that.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
You know.
Speaker 8 (23:04):
I would be so stoked that she'd be willing to
because I knew what I kind of wanted to say.
But also I can't say that, you know, without having
money helped me say that, you know, but also without
like relying too much, you know, I think I needed
to we.
Speaker 14 (23:17):
Needed to say that together.
Speaker 8 (23:18):
And so I'm just grateful she took that opportunity to say,
I see what you're trying to say. I have you
say that you know, and and said it with me,
And I think I'm so grateful for her because money
is just allegend.
Speaker 14 (23:29):
Man, what a bad, bad ass man.
Speaker 5 (23:31):
Now, you also said you wanted to meet one of
your musical idols, were Stevie Wonda?
Speaker 3 (23:35):
Yes, you ever get a opportunity?
Speaker 8 (23:36):
Yeah, you know, we haven't met in person, but yeah, yeah,
and I got I've got a chance to do a
record with him too.
Speaker 14 (23:43):
So uh, I think he's gonna put out on his
next record. I hope.
Speaker 8 (23:47):
So, I hope it's gonna come out. I'm really excited.
It's it's a good record. It's called Politics Player and
uh yeah it which is such an honor to be
on our Steve Under record. But yeah, he did FaceTime.
I'll tell you about It's so funny, man, he had FaceTime.
Speaker 4 (24:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (24:02):
And here's the thing. His thing, he is actually blind, y'all.
This is true life. He was blind. I think I'm
saying people saying people there's a conspiracy that he's not he.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Look, I'm telling you, I'm telling you.
Speaker 14 (24:17):
I was on the phone with this.
Speaker 8 (24:17):
I was facetiming this man and he said, he turned this,
he had put the camera around. He said, this is
my son over here. And then he said, I'm over here, Dave.
He's pulled it up here and he said, and this
is my niece. And then he had he had a
phone facing her. And for the next ten minutes of
the conversation, I'll look as far as you are.
Speaker 14 (24:35):
I looked at his niece.
Speaker 8 (24:36):
And and he was holding up he was holding the camera.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
He was holding me like he's not all seeing. I
did not have the heart.
Speaker 12 (24:48):
Was the.
Speaker 3 (24:50):
Blind she was sitting there and takes on her phone.
Speaker 8 (24:53):
I didn't have the heart to say, hey, I can't
see you. But you know, my dumb ass man, my
dumb that's the reason he called me because I was
in Tokyo. I was in Tokyo and I had found
I had found my favorite album, all time, best album
ever Songs in the Key Live. I found a CD
of it. It was a Tokyo version of it, like
the Japanese version of it, and my dumb ass you
(25:14):
was texting him a picture of it. Oh my goodness,
an idiot, like like he was gonna see it right right,
Like I just checked him. That's what I found, bro.
So I found bro what this FaceTime me? So I
was like, my dumb ass too, was like, you give
a JUX. He's definitely he didn't see it, Bro, I
don't think so.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
I just just.
Speaker 14 (25:34):
Just to put all those things to rest and not
shut down.
Speaker 17 (25:38):
It's crazy.
Speaker 18 (25:39):
All these years black people have been trying to figure
this out and you are the one that solved the problem.
Speaker 14 (25:43):
I just I just know. I was looking at his
knees for about fifteen minutes.
Speaker 7 (25:47):
Again.
Speaker 5 (25:48):
Well, there you have it, Swim. I appreciate you for
joining us. It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
Good morning. You're checking out the Breakfast Club. Good morning.
Speaker 5 (25:55):
Everybody is TJ n V, Jesse My Charlamane the guy.
We are the Fist Club, and Jess is going to
try to help Laura la Rossa with her love life
a little bit.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (26:05):
Now, you had some recommendations of some guys that she
could possibly be dating.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
I did, I did.
Speaker 6 (26:10):
I'm just gonna run, you know, run through them quickly again.
Fifty three year old gentleman, a millionaire. He loves to
just shower you. He travels a lot, he wants more kids,
he wants to remarry, deep lover kind of guy.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
But he wants you to be a housewife.
Speaker 6 (26:22):
And I know you say d be outs high, you know,
but what would make you stay in a millionaire man
who ain't never really home anyway?
Speaker 17 (26:30):
You know? Oh, he never home.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
He travels to work, he travels a lot. He going
on traveling.
Speaker 17 (26:35):
He's not a millionaire for nothing. But I can't travel
with him.
Speaker 6 (26:37):
You can, but he wants you to be a housewife,
and he's a bit control And those were the disadvantages.
Now you got this other thirty five year old man.
He's an overseas athlete. He wants commitment. He's a Christian,
god fearing guy, understands values. He goes out of his
way to make sure that you are that you know,
you're safe, and you're loved by him. But he don't
believe in marriage and he don't want kids, and you
want both of those things.
Speaker 17 (26:58):
So I can't travel with you.
Speaker 6 (27:02):
You may be able to in the beginning, but he
if he wants you to be a housewife. He wants
you at home. He wants somebody that's going to make
his home a home. He wants to re marry you,
he wants to keep you on tuck. I'm just not
a keep on tuck person. You can do your show
from the house.
Speaker 17 (27:16):
Yeah, but like then what after that? Like like I'm
just having I'm sitting at home.
Speaker 6 (27:20):
Like you said, you ain't never got to ever come
back in the studio. You can do this from home.
He don't work something out, he get me home. It's
work something my wife needs to be home, like she
needs to work, be able to work from that, and
it's it's it's but I'm there by myself.
Speaker 17 (27:38):
It's no dinner party nothing.
Speaker 18 (27:41):
That's what thirty five year old on want kids or marriage?
Speaker 17 (27:44):
And is he like set on that?
Speaker 5 (27:45):
Or We'll give you a chance to think about it,
because we've got a lot of people on the phone line.
Now I'm gonna step back. I'm gonna let just figure
out who's good for you.
Speaker 17 (27:53):
Yeah, because you Didne told them I don't want somebody
don't need to have a job.
Speaker 3 (27:56):
They can be in jail.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
Like, hello, who's this you're Sadrianna oh.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
Hey, Trehanna, how are you feeling this morning?
Speaker 3 (28:04):
I'm good? What are you calling for?
Speaker 12 (28:06):
Man, I'm trying to my side in Lauren?
Speaker 3 (28:10):
Lauren?
Speaker 5 (28:10):
Okay, Lauren said, come one, come on now, are you
a stud?
Speaker 10 (28:16):
Hey?
Speaker 17 (28:16):
What's up?
Speaker 10 (28:17):
How are you you like girls?
Speaker 17 (28:19):
No, no mind.
Speaker 9 (28:22):
I can change, no mind just one day.
Speaker 17 (28:24):
WHOA what you doing that one day? I'm curious.
Speaker 12 (28:28):
I'm gonna take you on the day.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
I'm gonna give you a free huge drinks.
Speaker 9 (28:33):
Okay, we're gonna stop and then we're gonna go.
Speaker 10 (28:35):
To my house.
Speaker 3 (28:36):
Now are you a stud? Sound like?
Speaker 9 (28:42):
I'm ok.
Speaker 15 (28:44):
I'm a woman.
Speaker 9 (28:45):
I like boys and girls. I just got out of
probably like a year ago.
Speaker 17 (28:49):
What's your Instagram? Let me see what you look like?
Speaker 3 (28:52):
Why does he.
Speaker 9 (28:55):
T r A A P P hold let me make ship.
Speaker 17 (28:59):
Don't try to make your private don't try to leave
photos a P.
Speaker 9 (29:02):
I'm not leading nothing.
Speaker 12 (29:04):
That's a new Instagram.
Speaker 10 (29:05):
So he r A c uh huh d O d
O g r g S.
Speaker 3 (29:14):
Just spell it?
Speaker 4 (29:14):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (29:15):
I mean? I spell it?
Speaker 6 (29:16):
Just God?
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Oh you be trappings?
Speaker 12 (29:21):
So c r I A.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
N A A okay, so trap God Trianna t r
A P G O D t r Trianna does not
look anything like what I thought she would look like.
Speaker 17 (29:31):
Trianna is giving her best.
Speaker 6 (29:36):
No girl, I felt like if Lauren would do a woman,
it would have to be a stud.
Speaker 12 (29:41):
No, no, no, damn dam but.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
You hold on. I'm voting for you. Holding around, I'm
voting for you. That's my vote. The body is giving vote.
Speaker 18 (29:55):
Many girls got Trianna and I'm like, yes, bestie, like, yeah,
let's let's go.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
Maybe that's what you need to sit your ways down? Hello?
Who's hello?
Speaker 7 (30:03):
This is there?
Speaker 3 (30:04):
Oh? Okay, all right, but we call.
Speaker 5 (30:06):
Them American Houston Texas, Houston, Texas. Okay, brother, go ahead, man?
Shoot you shot at Lauren?
Speaker 17 (30:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (30:12):
What's going on? How you doing? I've been hearing a
lot about you as don't know too much. But you
know I'm at work one now, so you got a
fair with her. I wouldn't expect you to get through.
Speaker 4 (30:21):
What do you do, sir?
Speaker 14 (30:22):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (30:23):
Oh I'm the CDL driver.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
Oh okay?
Speaker 17 (30:27):
Do you have kids?
Speaker 14 (30:28):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (30:28):
I do?
Speaker 17 (30:28):
How old is I may not looked much.
Speaker 7 (30:30):
I'm fifty two. When he looked at me. You wouldn't
even think that a lot of people believe I'm in
my thirties.
Speaker 3 (30:35):
But yeah, I d okay, have you ever have you
ever been married before?
Speaker 4 (30:41):
Right? Right?
Speaker 7 (30:42):
I've been divorced just one time. It's kind of funny
that story too. I've been with her for over like
twenty years, and then when we got married, like a
year later, she divorced me. It's crazy. It's another story though.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
Hmm, Okay, have you have a dealt with a woman
with different wigs?
Speaker 7 (30:59):
I've ever dealt with a woman with but.
Speaker 3 (31:02):
With different wigs. Wigs, wiggs, yeah, wigs.
Speaker 7 (31:07):
Yeah, I ain't gotta be teasing her about that man as.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
Long as you know.
Speaker 7 (31:11):
Yeah, yeah, that's funny. Man that that keeps me going.
But yeah, Charlie Mane gives you a hard time with that.
But yeah, it doesn't long as it looks good. Longs
it ain't looking like a rat on top of your
head or something like that.
Speaker 3 (31:22):
It's all good so far.
Speaker 5 (31:25):
He has a good job as a child, he's been divorced,
you know. He knows how to treat a woman very soothing.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
Yes, the last, Yeah, this is the last.
Speaker 7 (31:34):
Very close to my mom too, you know, you know
sometimes we bumped he but that's my mom though. That's
like my first girlfriend so it.
Speaker 3 (31:41):
Is what it is, Okay, all right?
Speaker 6 (31:43):
How would you deal with an argument if you and
Lauren were, you know, disagreeing on something and and she
got a little rowdy, you know, because she younger. She's younger,
she not in her fifties, you know, and she got
a little spice to her.
Speaker 3 (31:54):
How would you handle that?
Speaker 4 (31:56):
Well, you know, when.
Speaker 7 (31:57):
You have a disagreement and he's always a concluded sometimes
if you don't come and one. Sometimes you've got to
agree to disagree, but at least you move forward. Learn
from that. You know, you get into what everybody people
at work, people at you know, home, even your own kids.
But you just got to learn how to, like, you know,
just work it out. That's the best thing I can say.
(32:19):
You can't just everything not gonna go to where you
wanted to go, but you know, try to work it
out for the best. As long as you see what's
her head?
Speaker 4 (32:25):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (32:26):
Do you have all your teeth?
Speaker 10 (32:29):
Of course, and it's on mine.
Speaker 4 (32:31):
It's not all right?
Speaker 3 (32:32):
Perfect this last question? Pause, pauls how's the d game?
Speaker 7 (32:36):
Levi?
Speaker 3 (32:36):
Chelsea?
Speaker 7 (32:36):
Alice, Man, you shouldn't be asking the ladies asking that
because you're kind of old.
Speaker 12 (32:45):
Man.
Speaker 3 (32:45):
Bro I'm not old. When you look at that's my
sl I want to make sure my sister's happy. We're
gonna put you on whole. I'm voting for the girl. Still,
I'm voting for the guy.
Speaker 17 (32:55):
Okay, d a s. That's We're gonna call.
Speaker 5 (32:57):
It five one oh five WS The Breakfast Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. Warning everybody, it's dj n V Jess,
Hilaria Charlamagne, the Guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We
got a special guest in the building. Yes, indeed, Cheryl Underwoo.
Speaker 13 (33:12):
Ladies, joleny David, Listen, Okay, how where we start?
Speaker 12 (33:18):
Ask me?
Speaker 13 (33:19):
Well, listen, because I got to, you know, because of
my old school I got to sell these tickets, mix
and mingles, you know, were out there street walking the
seletly Joe. I gotta ask y'all question, black female comedians,
are we hitting?
Speaker 3 (33:31):
Do we gotta struggle for it?
Speaker 6 (33:33):
Now?
Speaker 3 (33:33):
Jess, what's what you're thinking? We ain't got a struggle
for it?
Speaker 13 (33:36):
Well, then, why we ain't got no radio shows that
we do ourselves, sitcoms that we do ourselves, podcasts that
we do ourselves, and movies that we do ourselves. Back
in the old days, you know, simply marvelous. Everybody was
doing Lord hay everybody. It seemed like now something has
taken the place of what we used to get.
Speaker 3 (33:53):
It used to be we was the martl agear.
Speaker 13 (33:55):
We walk in, throw that joke up here, Sherman Hemsley
and walk out.
Speaker 3 (33:59):
Now we don't even get that right.
Speaker 1 (34:01):
I gotta I got a reason. I think because I
saw you on close talking about the radio porsches. I
think for whatever reason, radio didn't look sexy to a generation,
but there wasn't a lot of people who went and
pursued it. So you know, you got your D. D
Maguire's But D has been around. D been around, But
she's a radio person. That's right, that's right.
Speaker 13 (34:18):
But but if D l okay, d L Steve Ricky,
then why is it not me just not saying we
don't want to work here because I've been trying to
get a job here.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Let me talk to y'all about y'all. I've been trying
to get a job here. You know, I keep coming
up here and y'all keep moving the location on me,
like like we.
Speaker 5 (34:36):
Used to.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Up trying to get a job.
Speaker 13 (34:43):
When you got a job, I was like, maybe I
should lose a couple of pounds or something, put some
nails on something. I had to take my nails off
because they was killing me. Oh and funkus ain't for punks. Okay,
Liz said, okay, yo, what that means? Quit walking across
my stuff because that's what makes the battery run out?
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Go to bay it and then they ain't even us.
Speaker 13 (35:04):
You know, if it was us and you could be
up all night long, but when it's other races of people,
take your ass to pay it and stop messing my
battery up.
Speaker 3 (35:11):
Okay, what was I talking about? You talking about people
doing radio, women women not being in the vision. I
want to do radio.
Speaker 13 (35:16):
You know, I called Doc all the time, Doc, Doc,
look out for me. I'm not on CBS no more.
We gotta keep work there. I would I would do it?
What would I What would I want to talk about?
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Well? I know what I want to talk about. What
would you recommend?
Speaker 6 (35:29):
Because you know you been making that money too, You
be man, Listen, I need to write a book. I need,
matter of fact, I need to just do the Charlamagne
of God story. Okay, so wait a minute, now, hold
on what we're gonna talk about, because you know.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
And then this is the thing.
Speaker 6 (35:42):
It is when you do a podcast, you gotta really
think about what is it that people want to hear
from Shiryl?
Speaker 3 (35:47):
What you think? Just what do you think when you
see me? As soon as you came in, you looked
at me and it was like, what's going on? Because you
place that?
Speaker 2 (35:57):
I was like, girl, right, yeah, no, you lie to down.
Speaker 13 (36:03):
That's how you come to work in the morning. I'm company,
but ready to you know, if I need to sleep
on their money, right, Breakfast Club, don't let the success
for you. We will squad ready on the show.
Speaker 3 (36:21):
It smoke.
Speaker 13 (36:22):
You're gonna get smoked back club. That's right, because we're
gonna hit.
Speaker 3 (36:26):
You in the morning.
Speaker 4 (36:27):
That that is a question you asked.
Speaker 1 (36:28):
When Jess first started her podcast Carefully Reckless, she was
talking about pop coaching and stuff, and then it turned into.
Speaker 6 (36:33):
Talking about yourself because what I went into it with
thinking I'm gonna talk about what I want to talk about.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
But no podcast, they don't really see you.
Speaker 6 (36:41):
We got a lot of people that that shoot their
podcast when I was just doing audio, yes, because I'm
already video visually everywhere else.
Speaker 3 (36:47):
So I'm like, now I'm gonna just lead us to audio.
Speaker 6 (36:49):
But I with the mistake I made was like, all right,
they want to hear with their head online, No, we
want to hear something different. We can go on line
if you want to hear what you talking about online,
that's right. Give us advice on stuff. Jess, your storytelling
is amazing, all your experiences, you're you've always been an
open book. Just so we're going through the same things.
How did you get through it? Can you help us
get through it? That's when it changed from me being
just with the mess on my podcast to me just
(37:10):
fix my mess?
Speaker 3 (37:11):
Now?
Speaker 6 (37:12):
You know people call up, Yeah, fix people's mess here
every Thursday.
Speaker 3 (37:16):
You know, they call up.
Speaker 6 (37:17):
They having situations at work, they having you know, turmoil
in they release a friendships, family's right like that.
Speaker 13 (37:23):
Now, since you're fixing things, I need you to find
me a man and this is where we're going. You
go to every bread, lobster and the history of mankind
because it's a brother that runs red.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Really okay, so what hand?
Speaker 14 (37:33):
What's up?
Speaker 3 (37:34):
Contact? And he asked me, I believe he's in the thirties.
I do that.
Speaker 13 (37:39):
Y'all saw thirty five you're trying to do Listen to
a ninety five year old man. I'm a young tenni
to a ninety five year little not that, but to
(38:00):
a thirty five year old man, I can teach him things. Plus,
I need my privacy, you know. I want somebody live
right next door or in another state.
Speaker 3 (38:07):
You know, it's called me a night check on me.
See if I'm stilling to live with nobody.
Speaker 13 (38:11):
No, I don't think that's a good idea in the beginning. Well,
I don't believe in shack and I never believed in that.
I'm not living no man, because you don't know the
day at an hour of the Master return, you know.
But and I don't like I don't like sex. You
don't be with them, No, you just don't know when
Jesus coming back.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
Right.
Speaker 13 (38:30):
So I'm living with a dude, and I think the
Lord be looking down in my life, you know, and
be like, man, I'm just about to give her all
these blessings, you know what I'm saying, to give her
all this money and everything. She ain't ready, but she's
living on the No, that's when I get caught slipping.
I listen, sometimes I get caught slipping.
Speaker 6 (38:47):
You know.
Speaker 3 (38:47):
Fact, stage ain't no robbery.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
You take me out to eat. I need to do
something for it. You know what I'm saying. I need
some times or something. You know, because a lot of women, Yeah,
I did what I did.
Speaker 3 (38:57):
Shut up? You need to do something. This man to
take you out.
Speaker 13 (38:59):
You I ate well and everything you don't just like you.
Speaker 4 (39:04):
No a little bit.
Speaker 13 (39:05):
No, I would stay I trigger a little bit. I
just say fans changing, no robbery.
Speaker 3 (39:08):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 13 (39:08):
I'm talking to you and I'm telling you what I
can do, what I can't do. I tell you if
you if you want something that I don't know how
to do, I called just just you wanna jump in this?
Speaker 4 (39:19):
Yeh?
Speaker 13 (39:19):
Tagged in because the things I can't do, I'm over
here making sandwiches.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
You know I'm engaged, so I can't. I would have
done this.
Speaker 13 (39:25):
Okay, you get gag. See I need to do your
joint so you can tell me how did you get
in gags? Because getting gaged, she.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
Got to Mexican. Listen, yes he is Mexican and black,
but he's black first. But but you said Mexican first,
so you know what that mean. Say the Mexican. She said, Mexican?
Speaker 1 (39:49):
Are you what Jess identifies what I need to identify
as in the moment you in the.
Speaker 13 (39:55):
Pronounce yes I got this way we lost.
Speaker 3 (39:58):
You can't be in everything I got doing all of that.
Speaker 13 (40:06):
We get frustrated that when we call you straight your
ninth against your rights and everything. But we can't be
thinking about all this stuff and that time because people
got to stop walking on the back of our movement
and then go to get their thing and then they
pulling it from everybody. See that's what I want to
talk about. I got questions. I want to ask questions,
but also I want to do relationships. I want to
when you get called in something. Me and Shannon used
(40:27):
to kick it, you.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Know, we just kick it out, man, and you know
I was trying to get it.
Speaker 3 (40:33):
Then they used to call them shape back then. No,
I didn't know who that was.
Speaker 13 (40:36):
When I heard shash, I was like, bro, you know,
because I was trying to Yeah, I'm.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
Trying to put that for them that way back. Just
take it, take it, take it, you can take it.
Take it. Slip sleep.
Speaker 6 (40:52):
When when I used to say okay, so when you
saw that line or whatever, right that took you down.
Speaker 13 (40:58):
In all kinds of sports, baseball soccer, Olympics, football, hockey.
I was running up in all kinds of sports because
I'm the different girl.
Speaker 3 (41:06):
I'm the girl that the dude get with. And you know,
I never thought I would like.
Speaker 13 (41:09):
To shut it up, shut up, go to sleep. So
you got you got the Mexicans and black messing black
to guy because I messed with that too, Gateway to
Lee immigration right through Hell. I mess with all that
Columbian Cuban Mexican l Savaderia.
Speaker 3 (41:27):
You know lad is.
Speaker 13 (41:28):
Really black, you know, because they be you know, they
be trying to say who ain't coming? And now he
done picked up everybody. But you voted, you all, and
you singing you voted, but.
Speaker 3 (41:37):
You don't flip the script over you.
Speaker 13 (41:39):
Anybody hustle hard like Donald Trump was hustling hard and
did what he did.
Speaker 3 (41:43):
But we knew it.
Speaker 2 (41:44):
We knew it. So I would want to talk about.
Speaker 3 (41:46):
Everything with the podcast. That's right, and I love the Lord.
Speaker 5 (41:55):
We have more with show Underwood when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club, Good Morning, only everybody is e
j n V. Just Hilarrys show them and the guy.
We all the Breakfast Club was still kicking it with
Cheryl Underwood and you look good to you.
Speaker 3 (42:09):
And ten I was like to fifty. I was widling,
you know. But we had a because we had a table, and.
Speaker 13 (42:18):
You know that I was coming out last, and I
was widling to the table, right, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
I was across between Biggie and Tracy Morgan.
Speaker 11 (42:26):
Right, So no, for real.
Speaker 13 (42:31):
Wait a minute, wait what's here? What's what's the ones show?
I said I looked like Little Yachty.
Speaker 7 (42:37):
And the.
Speaker 3 (42:39):
Yes, I thought it, but I never said it.
Speaker 13 (42:44):
I think I said, I said, I said, because I said,
because I see it, man, Because remember Little Yachty did
this thing in the video, and I said, oh and
then there's a picture and somebody put him side by
side and I took it.
Speaker 3 (42:59):
I claim it.
Speaker 13 (42:59):
If you got a good line on me, I'll take
the line. But if it ain't a good line, you
might get tapped. You might get tapped these little bit
these little sharp knuckles, and not I of loss one
hundred and ten pounds. I got a good black doctor too,
doctor Zuri Morell. You got to check him out.
Speaker 3 (43:14):
So you had surgery to lose the week.
Speaker 13 (43:15):
No, no, I was going to have it, because that
is what was recommended. And then when I went to
get the I did the psychological test because you got
to go through a lot of testing before you get
the surgery. And then I went to get the I
was getting my colonoscopy, so I said, well, you might
as well do the endoscopy because the equipment goes down
your throat like m okay, never mind.
Speaker 2 (43:36):
I did about to go in a whole nother tangent.
Speaker 13 (43:38):
But when I went to do that, my colo rector,
doctor doctor Zori Morell brother oversee the sign I more
house man said why are you doing this? And so
he started to read my record and he said, try
this first. So then he put me on sack send
the first. And then I went to we GOV and
everything changed and we monitored all of my vitals and
my blood work and everything. And that's what you gotta do.
(43:59):
But this can be done. The other thing that can
be done. We need to be buying up property that
people don't want and changing neighborhoods and putting healthy stuff
next to stuff we love. And then we need to
put small clinics in every neighborhood. You don't have to
go to the hospital far away just to come down
(44:20):
and get your blood pressure check. You need to be
able to walk. In the old days, we used to
walk places. We need to bring that back. We who
have money, access and power need to use that money,
access some power. Because now they'll give us something, somebody
else will start using it and then they'll take it away.
Speaker 4 (44:35):
And you ain't hurting me get canceled.
Speaker 13 (44:39):
You want my personal opinion, I don't know, because you
know that's above my pay grade. In my opinion, well,
I think we had the dream Team five. The dream
Team five was Julie chan Moonvez, Aisha Tyler, Sharon Osbourne
and Sarah Gilbert created the show, brought us to CBS
and then here I come, that's the dream Team, Eve King,
(45:01):
just as good you know. So to me, once you
get away from your dream Team combination, do people really care?
And are we really talking about something? You don't have
to argue politics. I think the View does an amazing
job with what they do right, but we can't be that.
Some people don't want to pick a side right. Sometimes
(45:22):
you don't want to argue out of time. But also
I think we gotta understand it is no longer visionary
in entertainment. It is now corporation in entertainment, if you
are not cost efficient, you will not stay on, and
if you're not generating revenue, you will not stay on.
And I think once we lost the components that made
us great, then we had to understand that it ain't
(45:44):
your season no more.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
And beyond the gates. I believe it was something that I.
Speaker 13 (45:49):
Was told from other sources, Christophe Saint John when he
was alive. He was trying to put this together years ago.
It's been in development for years. It's their time, it's
their opportunity. People should support it, people should watch it
and keep it on the air because at the end
of the day, we all need the jobs.
Speaker 3 (46:07):
Now. Would I like to do another talk.
Speaker 13 (46:09):
Show app subsolutely absolutely. I found that I have the
skill and I like doing it, but I'd like to
do something a little bit different where I can talk
about everything with everybody.
Speaker 3 (46:21):
You know, And I just got a couple of questions.
Speaker 6 (46:23):
You know, So what you joked earlier, you joked right
on by Sharon.
Speaker 3 (46:26):
I was boring and I clocked it, but I'm gonna
bring it on back.
Speaker 13 (46:29):
That's what I told you when I walked in. What
I say you ask me what you did ask me anything?
Speaker 3 (46:33):
Did I tell you ask me anything? Because you ask
me anything? It is how I answered, okay, okay, right man?
Where all at now?
Speaker 8 (46:39):
Like?
Speaker 3 (46:39):
How is your relationship?
Speaker 8 (46:40):
Now?
Speaker 3 (46:40):
How is it? Listen?
Speaker 13 (46:41):
I wasn't mad. I'll tell y'all because anybody asked me.
I'll tell y'all, and I trust y'all. Remember this family,
Get your tickets. Hit me up on Instagram. I need
to sell out everything to come to Washington.
Speaker 5 (46:59):
Got to sell that to its in California, Looney Ben
in Arkansas, a Multimore comedy factory in I've be in
detroited at least three times.
Speaker 13 (47:08):
I need to sell everything to finance everything. But back
to your questions. So remember they was Pierce Insuran. They
was talking about making markam and I pulled them to
the side when he came on the show. I said,
you cannot mess with her. Why her mama and them
is Windsor Hills. She fell in love with a dude
and now she living in Windsor Palace. You can't talk
(47:29):
about her. We have to ride on You don't do
this right. You can state your point, but you ain't
riding on her life.
Speaker 3 (47:36):
That well.
Speaker 13 (47:36):
They he was riding then there was a coach sign.
The co sign caught black Twitter, black social media undefeated
to this day. Right, So they was dragged and a
lot of people don't like that heat. Right when I
got in trouble, I had to go to the black community.
I'm sorry I was wrong, But then I found out
I got caught up in something that I think God
(47:58):
was telling me something bigger is coming. You better prepare
yourself for what's coming. So on that day, in that
time period, being dragged, then you want to come back
in and say I got something I want to say, Well,
there was discussion about we're gonna ask you some questions
back when people go ride right cool, cool, ask me anything.
And then when it get heated and then you want
(48:19):
to jump funky on somebody. Well, this day I believe
that God said, did I not tell you, servant that
something is coming?
Speaker 3 (48:27):
Sit down? Why?
Speaker 13 (48:28):
Because if I had come out of a bag on her,
if I had been the Sheryl Underwood from the past
that you know me, you talking my last name, is
what I would have been a reflection on you. So
just don't get the opportunity because black females don't know
how to control themselves.
Speaker 3 (48:47):
But sometimes you got to check them, but you.
Speaker 13 (48:49):
Got to know how and when to check somebody. And
on that day, the blessing from God was for me
to sit there and when somebody say, well, we gonna
do shir because remember I was moderating, which is the
leadership position. I liked being the anchor. Right, Julie chan
moon Vast was the moderator. I like being the anchor.
Speaker 14 (49:08):
Right.
Speaker 13 (49:08):
She tee it up for me. I take it down
and we go to break. I slam dunk it and
we go to break. If I ain't got nothing, well, now,
if I got to give her the signal I ain't got.
Speaker 3 (49:17):
Nothing, that's a relationship.
Speaker 6 (49:19):
But if somebody's jumping on you, sometime you got to
let them flame out. I love her, I love every
woman and man that I've worked with, But when something
like that happened, I think the blessing from God.
Speaker 13 (49:33):
Was, look how Cheryl has matured. Look what Cheryl did
not do on CBS. When a black man is running it,
we've got to understand we represent each other. Yeah, I
could have lit her up, and for that moment, everybody
would have been happy until they're not. So I think
I did what I should have done, which would sit
there and let you keep talking.
Speaker 3 (49:53):
Let you keep talking?
Speaker 10 (49:54):
Now?
Speaker 3 (49:54):
Was I hurt?
Speaker 13 (49:55):
Come out and just you know me, Oh you're talking
to I want to go to break.
Speaker 3 (50:00):
I did what you talking to?
Speaker 13 (50:02):
But then I was like, shut it up, Cheryl, shut
it up, go home, make a vocotonic, ask God to
take this heat off your bad.
Speaker 1 (50:07):
Then she apologized, but then she went on stage stay
still show and said she regretted apologize and actually.
Speaker 13 (50:12):
Said absolutely and see to me, I would say this.
Everybody wants to know my feeling. I want to know
what was your reaction to One minute you apologize, The
next minute you're not. One minute you puddled, you fuzz us.
At the next minute you're not. One minute you making
little comments about somebody in leadership, but you not. Or
(50:33):
people are coming out with their information that they've witnessed.
So wait a minute, Cheryl might not be the villain.
See what happens is when you get power, even power
on the level that we got it now, you become
a threat. Right, But we don't want to wield our
power where you can't work.
Speaker 3 (50:51):
We need you to survive. So when people look back
and go, Cheryl, do you regret it now?
Speaker 6 (50:56):
Who what about Cheryl underwod from Death Company, Jambt coming view.
We'll be on the number one network, the Red State,
the Square business network that do all the police procedurals,
would be on a talk show.
Speaker 3 (51:07):
That's why sometimes you got to know to play your position.
We have more with Cheryl Underwood when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (51:13):
Good morning, warning everybody, it's EJ N V Jess Hilarryous
Charlamage the guy we are the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (51:19):
He's still kicking it with Cheryl Underwood, Charlamagne. You having Yeah,
And I.
Speaker 13 (51:23):
Have a strident personality as well. You know I walk
in a boss. Yeah, because when you're a female comic,
you are the boss.
Speaker 3 (51:32):
You are everything. So I walk in Sure, can you
do it?
Speaker 6 (51:34):
No?
Speaker 13 (51:35):
I cannot read this right here, just like when I
did what was the movie that Lisa Ray Jamie Players Club? Okay,
so they called me because in my past I was
doing a little sexual interpretive dance stripper Cheryl. No, the
part that Adele said, you know, I'm.
Speaker 3 (51:49):
Too short to be doing.
Speaker 13 (51:51):
That wouldn't have been a good movie at all that
y'all would y'all would have walked out on the bootleg.
Speaker 3 (51:58):
What was just stripper name? I have Scriber Night. This
is what it was.
Speaker 13 (52:01):
You know I'm from Chicago, right right it is, But
you know I grew up in Chicago.
Speaker 3 (52:09):
So I was going to U.
Speaker 13 (52:10):
I see they had an added the paper where you
was gonna it was loingerie modeling. It was lingerie modeling,
and it was where you come out with the lingerie
was in a tavern, family den. It was in a
tavern on Stony Island and you come out with.
Speaker 3 (52:32):
No but I know it's old.
Speaker 13 (52:34):
It's a tavern, right, and I'm not a great hill walking.
So I came out and everything I got it on,
but got everything against you, everything, everything, everything is in
the Let you know what you that's right with the
gun smoke. Listen fastest, James, listen, you better come up
rifle man before roots. When we start hating, damn trying
(53:03):
to get the money, right because I'm trying to go
to college. So I come out, but God, let you
know what you ain't supposed to do?
Speaker 16 (53:08):
Right?
Speaker 3 (53:08):
So I come out and I know I'm not good
at this.
Speaker 13 (53:10):
But them other girls they doing it, they stripping because
they boy the lines, right, they're supposed to rip it
off right.
Speaker 2 (53:15):
But I'm not good. I'm garbage at this right.
Speaker 13 (53:18):
So I started telling jokes and acting crazy and falling out.
Speaker 2 (53:22):
No, you have to walk around the tavern and a
buyer do the buy it?
Speaker 3 (53:25):
So them them hood do you know? Hood dude?
Speaker 4 (53:29):
You crazy?
Speaker 3 (53:29):
You need to go home. You need to go home.
So they start paying me for.
Speaker 13 (53:34):
That, and that's and that's how they were like, listen,
you funny and you smart. And then that's when I
started to have an affinity for the street dude, and
I talked for the street dude. I hang out with
the street dudes, you know, and street dudes have backed
me up in life. So, like you say, I didn't
have to fight for myself because the street dude was
always willing to step up. I creep on the lot,
(53:54):
you know. I go through three hotels at one time.
Listen to me and the lobby of this one, we're
gonna get in the cab. We're gonna go down to
this one, but we're not gonna stay. We're gonna go
at the back. They don't want you to go around
the corner. Now you got to drive another car. I
don't want everybody knowing my business. So people were trying
to say, but they were saying that I was, and
I even.
Speaker 3 (54:11):
Work for all that. It's all right. I mean, I know.
I tell the truth.
Speaker 13 (54:16):
Now before we before you let me take you out
to dinner. First, I tell you it's garbage. Be load
a way for garbage.
Speaker 3 (54:21):
I ain't got to move above the neck fire. You're
late for work. You'll be mad. You'll be mad. What
day is it? And my kidney is gone? My wisdom,
you took my wisdom tooth. I put you down. I
put I put you down. I make you call me.
I make you call me. And I don't need a
(54:42):
more face to make up.
Speaker 13 (54:43):
I know when I did a good job, but they
don't care what. I got a wig and makeup on it.
I said, need to see you.
Speaker 3 (54:48):
I bet you. I bet you too. I know I
know what, I know what I'm doing.
Speaker 2 (54:51):
But ain't ain't no robbery. Now, I tell you the truth.
You want this, it's not good. You have to find
somebody good. I'm at the top.
Speaker 13 (54:58):
I'm not at them, not about and see I would
hang out with Gather because she says she looking for somebody,
but she's gonna have.
Speaker 3 (55:04):
A hard time. Why successful women.
Speaker 13 (55:10):
Are gonna have a hard time because some men think
we don't need you.
Speaker 3 (55:14):
I need you.
Speaker 2 (55:15):
I need you.
Speaker 13 (55:16):
You can work at the gas station, and I need
you why because I know I'm get honey buns. I'm
gonna get barbecue chips and a full tank of gas,
and then I'm gonna motivate you to buy the gas
station you work in, and then I'm gonna motivate you
to buy more gas stations if that's what you want
to do. Now, if you cool working at the gas station,
and make sure your shirt is fresh and iron Nate because.
Speaker 3 (55:36):
Your real name is Nathanian, I'm gonna make sure.
Speaker 13 (55:39):
I'm sure, I make sure your shirt is ready. Give
me some sugar. Now, go work at the gas station.
I'm gonna scooper around, get me a tank of gas.
I need that ninety one octane, and I see you later.
Speaker 3 (55:51):
No oh boy, oh boy. What's his name? What's his name?
Speaker 13 (55:54):
He's in all the commercials now big dude, big dude. Yeah,
everybody was blowing up found Juicy trying to hit I
was like, where at.
Speaker 3 (56:07):
Because he always looking for love? That's come on mention
up here.
Speaker 13 (56:11):
Yeah, everybody would call me go juicy, said he want
to hit. I said, bad, call him, what's up? I'm
in this city.
Speaker 1 (56:18):
No, I don't know how to do all That man
who the hell dming me from your page all the day.
Speaker 2 (56:23):
For a while, that white manute but you look at
him white but white. A minute, let me tell you.
I remember I said, is this still you secret?
Speaker 10 (56:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (56:36):
I'm not saying it nothing. I need to come on
your shower.
Speaker 2 (56:40):
Listen.
Speaker 3 (56:41):
Damn yo, think y're not a different number. Still, it's
still like you said.
Speaker 13 (56:51):
Yes, I'm gonna I'm gonna connect you and Juicy. Okay,
but this is no y'all need to what y'all need
to do. We need to meet up somewhere. Y'all need
to film it. It's not this not minute, and they
all need to get that kiss good night because I
like the kiss.
Speaker 3 (57:03):
I don't realize do nothing now.
Speaker 13 (57:05):
You know me and Flight He escorted me to the
bet comedy fa Yeah, exclored me and he was like,
you know, he thought he was just doing it, you know,
being dashing and everything. But then when I did my set,
the one that La who J performed on way back
in the day, when I had my love make up,
my outside make up and one of the way Brothers
had me in the corner that he was rapping to
(57:25):
the beat, and I said, you know, this is Cheryl Underwood, right.
Speaker 3 (57:27):
And he was like Cheryl.
Speaker 13 (57:28):
I was like, yeah, man, you still trying to you
know what I'm saying, because you know, usually I don't
look you know, but I got the best Dale McDonald's
best glad Man three Emmies to my one.
Speaker 2 (57:38):
So anyway, you know, I was trying to get my
get myself together.
Speaker 13 (57:42):
And you know, I'll be texting people and I don't
know if people really like me, right, you gotta figure
out do you really like me? Because I'm not gonna
throw it out there if you don't like me. And
if you like me, then let's go out now if
you want to film it famous.
Speaker 3 (57:54):
So me and Flay get together, I do my set.
Then he's like, well, come to the afterbot.
Speaker 13 (57:58):
I said, now I'm going home, go to bit now
come to this dude was getting drinks, everything, shivers everything.
Speaker 6 (58:04):
So I was like, okay, it's time for me to go,
you know it said good night and he was like
good night, and so he moved in for the movie
and I said, all right, you buying them drinks? Bought
a lot of drinks and I'm still standing there, okay,
And we kissed good night, and I was like.
Speaker 4 (58:16):
What amn favorite trade? Exchange?
Speaker 3 (58:19):
What you say fake change? Ain't a robbery? Robbery you're
trying to hollert me.
Speaker 13 (58:23):
But he was dashing for me. You get me on
dashing handsome a man? Right, I like a baby at
the bars. But people think, why would you mess with flight?
Speaker 4 (58:33):
Right?
Speaker 6 (58:34):
He was dashing, he was handsome, and I felt it
was an appropriate good night kiss.
Speaker 3 (58:38):
It don't mean we gonna be there, gallon. And you
may not like me.
Speaker 13 (58:41):
You might just have a feeling, you know what I'm saying.
And if you got the feeling, what you want to
do after that?
Speaker 7 (58:45):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (58:46):
Don't you get scared.
Speaker 3 (58:48):
I'm putting the pressure on.
Speaker 4 (58:49):
Don't get scared.
Speaker 13 (58:50):
But we gonna have to come back here, and y'all
gonna have to let the cameraman follow us, you know,
because we hit the Red Lobster tomes ground and tell him.
Speaker 3 (58:59):
Apart, gonna be no more crab legs. You better do
some other than Red Lobster brother We're trying to help
the brothers Red Lobster.
Speaker 13 (59:09):
If you go to my Instagram page, I've been going
to Red Lobsters with people all over the country with
do if you one date me. If I'm in the
city and there's a red Lobster, I'd like to go
on Thursday night because I need to get to sleep.
Speaker 3 (59:18):
Do the promotion on Friday.
Speaker 13 (59:20):
But I want to go into the Red Locks because
we got to bring that back as the popping spot.
We got to help this brother. We got to talk
to the brother Loans. We got the brother that's running Lows.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
We talk to you.
Speaker 13 (59:29):
If you are on the list, we need to talk
to you. Sure, not wrong, that's right, That's right. Okay,
So when I'm coming back. When I come back, you
want to listen. I ain't trying to take a position.
I just try to get in because I.
Speaker 3 (59:41):
Need the necessariz do that.
Speaker 13 (59:42):
No, I don't get down like that. I don't get down,
and you don't train your replacement. I got jokes about
that too. Somebody to teach me how to run a
copy Say that's a copy machine. M I thought that
was a machine.
Speaker 19 (59:58):
Tickets.
Speaker 3 (59:59):
Your take, it's the breakfast club. You're checking out the
breakfast club. Your execution on the donkey of the day
is something to go is.
Speaker 6 (01:00:09):
It a reason he gave me Donkey other Day?
Speaker 3 (01:00:12):
And I deserve that.
Speaker 6 (01:00:12):
You need to know.
Speaker 3 (01:00:14):
You need to tell them. I am you have the boy.
Tell them.
Speaker 4 (01:00:19):
It's time for donkey other Day.
Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
It's a read, but you're so good at Charlamagne wants Charlamagne.
Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
Damn solo man who he's a dusky other day to
Now Donkey to day goes to Monjay.
Speaker 4 (01:00:33):
I think that's his name, Monjay, Monjay d James Wooden.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Okay, here's twenty five years old and helps from the
great state of Kentucky dropping the clues bombs for everyone
who listening to us on Real ninety three one in Louisville, Kentucky.
Speaker 4 (01:00:45):
Thank you for your support.
Speaker 1 (01:00:47):
Now, we all love fast food. We eat it for
different reasons. The number one reason is we're hungry. Okay,
It's convenient, it provides comfort full disclosure. You know, I'm
a fast food franchise on this lute the Crystal dropping
the clues bombs for Crystal, but another fast food restaurant.
Speaker 4 (01:01:01):
I grew up on his Windy's.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
And that's why this story made me laugh because I
understood both parties involved. Okay, when I was a kid,
I would drive my grandmother Rosalie into town.
Speaker 4 (01:01:11):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
She would run her errands in most corner South Carolina,
and when Aarons was done, she would always want to
go to Wendy's. And when we got the Wendy's, she
would scress to me when we was going through the
drive through that she wanted her fries hot.
Speaker 4 (01:01:23):
Okay. I can literally hear her right now telling me
not tell them.
Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
You want the fries hot. She would stress hot. And
that's a common sentiment amongst anyone who orders French fries.
You want them fresh, you want them hot. But those
Windy's hot fries hit different, even though I think in
twenty twenty five crystal fries is better, But those Wendy's
hot fries slap. And Manjay was angry over the temperature
his fry, temperature of his fries. Now, when you're angry
(01:01:47):
over the temperature of your fries, you simply say, hey,
these fries are cold, I would like them hot.
Speaker 4 (01:01:51):
Most fast food restaurants will oblige.
Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
But when it's ten forty one pm at night in Kentucky, apparently,
handling things civilly is not an option. See min Jay
and a group of people he was with allegedly started
arguing in the drive through over the cold fries, and
then the suspect in his squad went into Wendy's because
they wanted action.
Speaker 4 (01:02:08):
What happened next, Let's go to ABC eleven on your
side for the report. Please.
Speaker 19 (01:02:12):
A man was arrested today in connection to a shooting
at a Wendy's restaurant when police police started over cold
French fries. LMPD says Manja James Wooton turned himself in
for the January sixth shooting. According to his recitation, he
was with two other people and that Wendy's drive through
on Dixie Highway. James Wooten and the other suspects allegedly
(01:02:33):
got into a fight with the worker over cold French fries.
Louisville Police released these photos from the scene. Three suspects
got out of the drive through and then came inside
the restaurant, where James Wooton allegedly fired at the Wendy's worker.
She was hit and taken to the hospital where she
is expected to survive. James Wooten is right now being
held on a boond of fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:02:56):
Round of applause to that Wendy's employee.
Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Okay, all the words of Ray Corner Chef, you got guns,
we got guns too it okay And in the words
of the almighty Bullhagen, if that you buck, we bucked back.
Speaker 4 (01:03:07):
Seemnjay.
Speaker 1 (01:03:08):
You learned the valuable lesson, and that lesson is simply
never judge a book by its cover. You thought Homie
was sweet because you know they weren't in there thuging.
Speaker 4 (01:03:17):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:03:17):
You thought that you was gonna go in that Wendy's
and bully that person because they worked at Wendy's. You
saw them black pants, that red shirt, that black apron
with the Wendy's logo on it, and you thought this
was gonna be a breeze. And then that Wendy's employee
showed you that the beef really is fresh, never frozen.
Speaker 4 (01:03:32):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
You went for hot fries and ended up getting a
hot fire. This is why I be telling folks go
to therapy, though. Okay, you have to go do the
work on yourself, because this is simply not proper conflict resolution. Okay,
if your fries are not hot, there's absolutely zero reason
to argue with the fast food employee and your damn sure,
don't need to go in the Wendy's and lick a shot.
Speaker 4 (01:03:50):
Okay, what is the point?
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
How many times do I have to get on this
radio and tell folks before they react? Do some jail
math in your head, all right, simple calculations. Can I
afford to do what it is I'm about to do?
Because the cost can sometimes be too high. You might
lose your life, you might lose your freedom. And who
wants to die or go to jail forever over that
(01:04:12):
new mushroom bacon cheeseburger at Wendy's. Okay, Minja is being
held right now with a bell said at fifty thousand
dollars and he's being charged with a salt.
Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
I'm sure it's gonna end up being assault with a
deadly weapon.
Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
That's twenty years, okay in Kentucky, Sir, twenty years in
prison because you wanted your fries hot and didn't know
how to properly communicate that to a Wendy's employee.
Speaker 4 (01:04:34):
Now you're about to go to prison. Let me tell
you something. You're about to go to prison, and.
Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
When they find out what you're in there for, they
gonna give that fresh meeting nickname. Okay, I promise you
they gonna call you young Baconnada in prison.
Speaker 4 (01:04:50):
All right, that's right.
Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
You're gonna go into prison single. But after a few months,
somebody gonna order a double. And when the word gets
out that you like it hot, somebody gonna order a triple.
That's a lot of meat. And I don't even want
to tell you what that vanilla frosty is like in prison,
but it's hot just the way you like it. Please
give mon j D. James Wooden the biggest he hull
(01:05:17):
crazy world. This a very crazy world.
Speaker 18 (01:05:20):
The frosty was crazy workvan frost gonna be next.
Speaker 4 (01:05:25):
It's gonna be warm.
Speaker 17 (01:05:27):
That was crazy word.
Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
It's gonna be warm. Oh that's right.
Speaker 5 (01:05:31):
And they come with a straw too. All right, thank
you for that. Donkey of today the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
Morning.
Speaker 5 (01:05:42):
Everybody is DJ Envy, Jesse, Hilary Charlamage the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club Long the roaster is here as well,
and we got a special guest in.
Speaker 3 (01:05:50):
The building, the hood Whisper Family. I'm my special guest.
Breakfast Club Family was here. Good morning to morning. How
you feeling I'm feeling good.
Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
Congratulations I saw that you officially got accepted in the
FAMI you Law School.
Speaker 6 (01:06:07):
Yes absolute, saying that, Yes, I'm very excited fam you
HBCU very very important.
Speaker 3 (01:06:18):
My daughter.
Speaker 6 (01:06:18):
Shout out to my daughter Jada, she actually got into
pray View, Sir. She'll be going on scholarship and mom
will be taking advantage of my empty nest situation and.
Speaker 3 (01:06:27):
Going to law school.
Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
Look decided because you already got two degrees, right, yes.
Speaker 3 (01:06:31):
You want to go get a thirs.
Speaker 6 (01:06:32):
I've always wanted to get my law degree. Even though
I've worked with Attorney Crump as a senior public policy
advisor as you know for the last ten years, just
wasn't able to do it. You know, having a daughter
running a business three hundred employees in Atlanta, hustling working
your first year of law school is really like a
hazing like you really have to be able to you know, focus.
(01:06:53):
I've always had to worry about getting money. So I
want to say thank you to you for the Black
e Fai podcast network because without that, knowing that I
can at least have some type of income coming in,
That's really a lot of why it's made possible so
that your critics could never period. I mean, that's really
really important.
Speaker 7 (01:07:13):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:07:13):
It's it's not like I'm wealthy or you know, anything
like that. But one of the things of law school
it took me over a decade to finish my bachelor's.
I had to stop start stop, start stop start because
of money.
Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
You know, need Do I got to work full time?
Speaker 6 (01:07:25):
Do I have to be a teacher, substitute?
Speaker 3 (01:07:27):
All those different things?
Speaker 6 (01:07:28):
So to really finish the law school program, you need
a job, and how do you do that and still study?
So I am part time because I'm still cheap local corresponding.
They revolte news and managing editor over there. But now
I can kind of breathe, and you know, I got
some income coming in.
Speaker 3 (01:07:45):
So shout out to where you actually go to class
and school there or what you do? I know you
always asked some about online.
Speaker 6 (01:07:53):
Yes, no, I will be in class in Orlando, Florida,
going back to Orlando, finishing up some which is a
full circle for me to leave when due to healthcare
reform and I lost my business. So no, it's actually
Monday through Thursday, and then I'll be going to Atlanta
to record on Friday.
Speaker 17 (01:08:10):
Law degree.
Speaker 18 (01:08:10):
So when you finish all of that, you're just gonna
apply to what you're already doing. Do you have a
new area you want to venture into.
Speaker 6 (01:08:15):
Know I will still always be in civil rights, no
doubt about that. But criminal defense it's very very important
to me. My main thing that I advocate for is
a criminalization of black men in particularly and black folks.
And we need more criminal defense lawyers. What Attorney Crump
does is important. We need more civil rights attorneys. But
I think I can be a beast at that defense table.
Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
I think so too.
Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
But we got a lot to talk about it, a
lot to discuss.
Speaker 4 (01:08:39):
You want to go. You got your laptop, you know, well, No, I.
Speaker 6 (01:08:45):
Came to talk to you guys about push the Line.
I've talked to you about it many many times. My
training program politics until something happens. It's a non partisan
of political training. We did it in twenty twenty two.
You remember at three hundred people that came them all
over the country. I was overwhelmed to see how many.
Speaker 3 (01:09:03):
People came in.
Speaker 6 (01:09:03):
They sat with me for twelve hours in the rain,
waiting in the rain at seven am. And so people
have asked Haslam bring the program online, and so I
finally got it online. It's a five course program. I'm
the trainer, I save masters and education. Not to stunt
because you know, I'm the hood whisper, but it's important
that you know that because I actually built the curriculum.
(01:09:25):
And so there's a lot of folks that build courses
but may not know, you know, the technicalities of building
a curriculum, having objectives, and meeting those. So of course
one is called we are soldiers, and what that is
is is talking about the rows and responsibilities for candidates,
campaign workers, organizers, and activists. A lot of people don't
understand roads and responsibilities and the difference between those two.
(01:09:47):
And I'll just kind of give an example. You and
I talk about it all the time, the difference between
candidates and activists. An elected official actually serves the constituents.
So you'll hear a lot of people online, why such
and such black candidate talking about immigration, Why are they
talking about this? Why they're not talking about black folks. Well,
they are, but you got to understand that candidate in
(01:10:07):
Congress is representing two hundred thousand people, one hundred and
fifty thousand people, and that job literally says to advocate
for your constituents. So they have to take care of everybody.
So that's why people's pissed when they said, oh, vpare said,
I'm not gonna only do stuff with black people.
Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
I feel it. I understand what they meant.
Speaker 6 (01:10:25):
But what she was basically trying to say is you
have to represent everybody, which is why would not be
a good candidate. It's really important that you know where
you fit. I wouldn't be a good candidate unless I'm
in South Fulton, which is Atlanta. Outside of Atlanta, Georgia
ninety eight percent black city commissioner. So I can talk
about black issues. But if you're in Congress, I'm a president.
You're talking about everybody. That's literally a part of their
(01:10:47):
job an activist, and this is where people get confused,
and activists is the one that is pushing the candidate,
that is saying, hey, what about me?
Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
What about me?
Speaker 6 (01:10:56):
So, if that's reparations activists, immigration activists, health a healthcare activist,
your job is to literally put pressure on the elected official.
The elected official has to sit around and say, okay,
I got to take care a little bit of this.
This is this squeaky oil what they say squeaky or
what's up squeak?
Speaker 3 (01:11:16):
So your job is to push.
Speaker 6 (01:11:19):
However, because candidates, and this is where I criticize them,
candidates elected officials don't work with activists the way that
they should because you want to be at all, you
want to be the candidate, you want to be the activist,
you want to be the organizer.
Speaker 4 (01:11:30):
Are they scared to work with the activists and they
think they'll get backlash?
Speaker 6 (01:11:33):
Right? Or they want to be on this microphone. You
have over four hundred people in Congress. How many do
you see on the microphone?
Speaker 3 (01:11:40):
A handful? So you have your Jasmine Crockets, you have like, yeah,
so you have.
Speaker 6 (01:11:47):
But technically they're the elected official. Technically they shouldn't have
to be on the microphone being the activists. Because what
happens is if Jasmine Crockett is talking about all the
different things immigration, I tell people lay off on being
upset with her talking about immigration. She's in Texas, she
must talk about immigration. So you have black people lying, oh,
(01:12:08):
why is she talking about immigration? Because she represents people
you know in Texas. So when you have her having
to be the activists because there's not leadership in the
Democrat Party that's loud, or there's not activists on the
ground that are loud enough, or they're not coordinating with
those activists. And when I say coordinate, I mean give
them money so that they can crash out on your behalf.
(01:12:28):
Then now you have a candidate's trying to do it all.
So what happens when she runs for office. When I
looked at her Ballipedia, I think it was one hundred
something thousand that voted in a general election. So when
I look at that and I see fifty thousand people
in the primary, that can move you out your seat.
That's what happened to Representative Bowman Jamal Bowman.
Speaker 3 (01:12:48):
When you are being the activist and.
Speaker 6 (01:12:50):
He's talking about gods of gods and gods of Gaza Gaza,
and damn near half of your district is Orthodox Jews,
they actually have the power to put you in and
put you out.
Speaker 3 (01:13:00):
Not the podcast, not the national media.
Speaker 6 (01:13:03):
So when you're not coordinating with your activists, say hey,
go run this play, run this offense, and let me
do this.
Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
And you do that.
Speaker 6 (01:13:10):
That's how you see a lot of the issues and
you set up false expectations for the elected official, and
then the organizer is very different than the activists. A
lot of people think that's the same it's not the
same organizing. It's actually getting people in the room, like
we did at the town hall a couple of weeks ago.
I had in Atlanta one hundred and fifty people standing
outside in the ring. That's organizing. Screaming and yelling is
(01:13:31):
one thing. But getting one hundred thousand people to go
to the polls to say we are voting no commitment,
that is actually organizing, which is why Tamika always says,
I'm an organizer first. So when you understand these roles
and responsibilities, now you can know your role, which is
pushed the line. My logo has a person pushing the P,
the U, the S, the H. Everybody at this table
(01:13:52):
has a role. If you know your role and then
we know how to work together. Now we can move
forward on an agenda.
Speaker 3 (01:13:58):
All right, we got more with Teslin. Figure out when
we come back, don't move.
Speaker 4 (01:14:01):
It's the breakfast club.
Speaker 5 (01:14:02):
Good Morning, j Envy, Jesse, Larious, Charlamagne, the gud We
are the breakfast club. Lauren Laaros's head as well. We're
still kicking it with Teslain. Figure out Lauren.
Speaker 18 (01:14:12):
With politics today though, like when I look at like Trump,
I feel like he you know, he doesn't stay within
any lines or anything things that you just said. Do
you feel like there's is changed now because he's changed
the way that politicians move and what they say and
what they stand for. Like he he pushes whatever he
wants to set and he's successful at it. So how
do you kind of counter what he's doing and kind
(01:14:32):
of make it whether the people that you're raising up
on either side are just as strong voice wise is
what we see him do.
Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
Yeah, it's not about really countering it.
Speaker 7 (01:14:39):
See.
Speaker 6 (01:14:39):
One of the one of the modules that I have
is it's called it's not about we, It's about me.
If you are already strategizing to be against somebody and
not doing your role like you always say, just stay consistent,
don't compete with anybody, do your role. Push the line
is not about trying to focus on Trump. Our focus
on what Republican parties are doing because Trump never focused
(01:15:00):
on you.
Speaker 3 (01:15:01):
He never focused on the Democrat party.
Speaker 6 (01:15:02):
So when people set that up to say, I know,
it felt good when they say, oh, Rock Obama, he's
everybody's president. Actually you're really the president of the people
that vote you in. I know people don't want to
hear that, but it's really catering to who votes you,
who puts you in. That's just like my household. I'm
catering to my man, not catering to what your man say.
Who is somebody else man say? So? Trump has done
(01:15:23):
And they hate it when I say this because they
say he don't. He don't, He didn't do a good job.
He's a liar. No, I'm not saying I like it.
I'm telling you how it is. It's a difference between
how it is and how you want it to be.
He is only talking to his base, even though you know,
good damn well, he cannot dismantle the Department of Education
because Congress is going to have to do it.
Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
He don't give them about that. He signed an.
Speaker 6 (01:15:44):
Executive order saying, let's dismantle it. We beg for those things,
you remember, Charlotte Mae, Like, why don't y'all just do
an executive order for the George Floyd Justice and Police
and Act.
Speaker 3 (01:15:52):
But everybody's so smart in the Democrat Party. That's not
how it worked. You got to go through Congress. You
got to go.
Speaker 6 (01:15:56):
People want to know you, at least fighting you, at
least in the ring. You willing to sock somebody in
the eye. You willing to take you willing to fight
for my love? You know what they say every night,
I gotta fight for my love.
Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
I think it's a combination of both though, because Donald Trump,
did you know, he did call him the woke last
and he did say that the Democrats are the enemy
from within. But he didn't just run a campaign of
Democrats are bad, Democrats are bad, Democrats are bad. He
actually said these are the things I want to do
for my constituents as well. I think Democrats just run
(01:16:27):
a whole Trump is Bad campaign, but they don't ever
tell the constituents exactly what it is they want to
do for right.
Speaker 6 (01:16:33):
And they also don't teach constituents how to do it.
They're terrible with training, which is why I started this
training program. Also, Trump is an organizer and an activist
and a candidate and a marketer and an entertainer. He
makes everything a spectacle. He makes everything a big deal.
He always knows how to play to the camera, all
of the things that the Democrats feel good to do. Yeah,
(01:16:57):
and so I'm just gonna tell you, like straight up,
oh no, don't do that. That's not president. He doesn't
give a damn. And so when you he's been campaigning
for the last eight years. Yeah, he's campaigning out we
say that he's literally campaigning. When you have a rally
every month, every other month, that's actually organizing, getting people
(01:17:18):
in the room.
Speaker 17 (01:17:18):
They pop out crazy.
Speaker 6 (01:17:20):
So he's been doing that the whole time. It's hard
to catch up with that. It's hard to catch up
when you've been talking. It's not a matter of how
many people you have. Conservatives are the majority minority of
this country, So it's not about who's the biggest, it's
about who's the strongest. That's why I'd like to use
la gang banging for those who grew up in the nineties.
Bloods were always the smallest, but they also were the
(01:17:41):
most powerful.
Speaker 3 (01:17:42):
How did Inglewood survive with crips all around it?
Speaker 6 (01:17:46):
Why because they knew how to push the line, which,
by the way, that's what blood say, push the line.
Speaker 3 (01:17:50):
Crips say press the line.
Speaker 6 (01:17:51):
So when you're able to take a small group, organized
consistent message, message message, conservatives have the best.
Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
And again, don't come for me in a coma. I
don't give that. Y'all come be in comments or not.
They have the digital discipline that you do not have
on the left. You do not have that on the left.
Conservatives listen to podcasts or or they listen to am
talk radio.
Speaker 6 (01:18:12):
We talked about this before, all the way in the
work and our commute, messaging, messaging, messaging. They go in
their job, they listen to a podcast. Seventy percent of
podcast listeners are white, which is why we're doing that
black effect. It's so important.
Speaker 3 (01:18:25):
So then they ad work messaging, messaging, messing.
Speaker 6 (01:18:27):
Bad, bad, bad, enemy, enemy, enemy and enemy.
Speaker 3 (01:18:30):
Then they go home and they watch Fox News. Then
they get in the comments.
Speaker 6 (01:18:34):
I try to teach people how to be the comment caucus.
I talk about that too. They stay on it like
we stay on it with Shade Room. They stay on
it NonStop. Look at the interview that I did here
with Vivid Ramasami is a perfect example. Then people still
commenting on that. They know how to message over and
over and over even if it's wrong. And so you
don't see that on the left, and so I don't
(01:18:57):
give them as left, all right, I want to see
it more in our communities. Know how to miss the
same way, y'all followed gossip the same way, y'all followed it.
If we have that same type of organizing, which by
the way, it is course to called the ambition of
a rider. It's talking about community coalition building, how to
be the common caucus, how to make sure you clicking, like,
how to get the engagement.
Speaker 3 (01:19:14):
You have to be very.
Speaker 6 (01:19:15):
Strategic in this and if you're not, we don't get anywhere.
Speaker 4 (01:19:18):
So I agree with that, I say, I agree with that.
Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
I also think that that's why with somebody, when you
see somebody scoring points, you just got to keep feeding
them the ball. Republicans did that with Trump once they
saw that Trump is the guy that the media gravitates.
Speaker 4 (01:19:30):
Towards, and this is who people are listening to.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
That's the guy. And I think Democrats don't do enough
of that. If it's AOC, give it the ball, it's
Javin Crockett, give it the ball. If it's Bernie Sanders,
give them the ball. Those are the people that folks
are gravitating towards. Right now, you just had a rally
in LA I think for.
Speaker 4 (01:19:47):
Thirty people.
Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
That's what I'm saying, Like, if that's the people folks
are gravitating towards, that's who needs to be getting the ball.
Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
Right my criticism, well not criticism, I push you back
with that.
Speaker 6 (01:19:55):
What Bernie Sanders is because working on his campaign in
twenty fifteen, they did great getting people to the rallies,
but you couldn't get them to the polls.
Speaker 3 (01:20:02):
So it's great to stand.
Speaker 6 (01:20:03):
Up there and say, hey, y'all, this is but if
you're not giving people the tools, which again this is
why this training is so important. If you're just saying
get involved in your community, a lot of people literally
don't know how. They literally need they step by step guide.
Democrats should be running a play. You should see commercials
just as much as they ran y'all commercials every fifteen years.
It should be who want to run, who want to run,
who want to run, who want to work on a campaign?
(01:20:25):
Who want to work on a campaign? Constant y'all raised
one hundred million dollars in ninety days. Where's one hundred
million dollars to actually train people? Just so we clear,
nothing is back. People pay for the course, but nothing
is back in me. It's not a Republican, it's not
a Democrat, it's not any of that. Why are they
not using that money to train you how to run
for local office? You have mid terms next year. Then
(01:20:45):
you need to train people how to actually work on
the campaign. There's a lack of infrastructure. One of the
reasons Rashida to leave was seven four or five six
black people that ran against Rashida's leaving Detroit. They had
to hire a friend of mine from Kansas City to
run the campaign because of the lack of infrastructure of
knowing how to run a campaign, how to be a
volunteer coordinator, how to be a campaign manager, how to
(01:21:05):
be a comms director, So they don't build up the infrastructure,
which means you don't have a bench. It's not just
getting a good candidate. You also need your organizers, you
need your campaign workers. And that's what my criticism is
of Bernie Sanders and anybody that's doing a rally.
Speaker 3 (01:21:19):
You're not training these people. You're getting them upset.
Speaker 10 (01:21:21):
But for what?
Speaker 3 (01:21:23):
All Right, we got more with Teslian figure out when
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the
Breakfast Club.
Speaker 5 (01:21:31):
Everybody inj ANDV Jesse, Larry Charlamage, the guy we are
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (01:21:36):
Laura Rose's head as well. We're still kicking it with Teslin'
figure out.
Speaker 4 (01:21:40):
I was gonna ask you.
Speaker 5 (01:21:41):
You know a lot of times democrats get but hurt
a lot when you ask them, when you push back
on a lot of the things that they say, why
do you think that is? It almost feels like they
are upset when we question the things that we should
be able to question.
Speaker 6 (01:21:55):
There's a lot of ego in politics, which is one
of the things again that we teach that. I teach
you the thing to remove your ego out the way,
meaning not about me, not about way.
Speaker 3 (01:22:05):
It's about me. They know it all. I'm just gonna
be straight up honest with you. They know it all.
Speaker 6 (01:22:10):
They know it all, but seem to not know how
to win consistently. You have people who are highly educated
in what they do. Again, I'm not anti education. I
love degrees, the more the better, but they just refuse
many of them, not all, but refuse to really connect
to the concrete. I go by concrete roots, not mud,
because mud is too soft for me. I got this
(01:22:31):
hit after concrete. Not a manager, not an agent. Now
my family was in this. Now somebody put me on.
So they can't have those conversations, and they don't know
how to give the play, give a ball to the people.
They can have a conversation. But you know why, because
they want to be on microphone envy. It's just like
a rapper, like they have to be the one on
the microphone instead of saying, you know what such and
(01:22:51):
such know how to talk to this group, Let me
give them the play.
Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
Yeah, I don't want to see Hakeem Jefferys. Yeah, I
want to see Alc. I want to see Jasmine. I
want to see those people. That's really the problem.
Speaker 6 (01:23:00):
But then there's also people that they can't connect to
as well. Why are you are you not connecting to
the street in California? Well, Governor Newson, who to me
don't have a shot in hell on the national level,
but still very good pushing this message. I know with
some homies right now and there later that would organize
right now who's never voted? Who's never because of what
(01:23:20):
he did with the gang enhancement and what he's done
with healthcare. You hear a lot of bad about California,
But healthcare.
Speaker 4 (01:23:25):
What do you call the street store? Because I mean
Bernie and Elsy did just have thirty six thousand people.
Speaker 6 (01:23:29):
In the well, there's still a demographic people that are
not involved at all, people that don't give a.
Speaker 3 (01:23:33):
Damn about none of this Bernie Sanders demographic.
Speaker 6 (01:23:37):
And I'm just gonna be honest, the progressive demographic, the
Rainbow Coalition is white levels, pretty much white progresses.
Speaker 3 (01:23:43):
There's still a lack of.
Speaker 6 (01:23:46):
Talking to those that are completely giving up, completely disenfranchised obviously.
And also a Coachella the average ticket was seven eight
hundred dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:23:54):
Well, no, that wasn't Coachella. Bernie came out of Coachella,
but they had a whole other.
Speaker 3 (01:23:57):
Event Coachella Little too.
Speaker 6 (01:23:58):
Yeah, he came out to Coachella, but they had a
whole working on that campaign. I'm just gonna be straight
up with you. You know, I'm very clear about my
position with Bernie Sanders. He is talking to a very
progressive white ran movement. To me, now, even if your
hispanic is still white adjacent, it's still that's just as
long as everybody, as long as we get everybody who
make money out the way, as long as everybody make
(01:24:20):
fifteen dollars an hour, all will be well. He struggles
with dealing with race. I'm saying that as his former
racial justice director. Also, everybody ain't mad at rich people. Charlote,
Maine like some people really trying to get the bag.
So those conversation, I know what they mean with the
elite the top.
Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
Yeah, I think I think the fighting oligarchy towards a
good message. But I think it's a hippo. Well it's
not a hypocritical message from Bernie Sanders and AOC, but
from the majority of the Democratic Party is a hypocritical
message because they are all taking money from the billionaires
in the corporate life.
Speaker 6 (01:24:48):
Well, hood don't know who the oligary is. How do
you say it? O, Look, I don't know what the
hell you're talking about. I mean they don't you know,
when the people are talking about neoliberal they don't know
what you're talking about. So there's different messages that people
need to have to engage. And I think the Democrat
Party ten is too big.
Speaker 3 (01:25:04):
It's too big. It needs to be broken down.
Speaker 6 (01:25:06):
Everybody's not gonna relate to Bernie Sanders, Everybody not gonna
relate to AOC, Everybody not gonna relate to Jazzmon Crockett,
Everybody not gonna relate to me.
Speaker 4 (01:25:12):
So that's why everybody should be doing it. Like like
if everybody doesn't little nobody.
Speaker 6 (01:25:16):
That's right. And again, local state, we gotta stop this
fascination with federal We really really do all of your powers.
Is your city commissioner, your mayor. They are managing billion dollars,
you know, budgets. Look at Atlanta, the Black Mecca. The
mayor get to decide who gonna get this grant, who's
gonna get this funding. How do we keep this program going,
(01:25:37):
how do we keep the after school program going? Okay,
if y'all don't want to do it, we're gonna figure
it out.
Speaker 18 (01:25:43):
It's the local I think it's because the local government,
even though when you when you get old enough to
understand that the local government is not like the glistening glamor,
isn't there right?
Speaker 3 (01:25:52):
They want the sex.
Speaker 18 (01:25:53):
I feel like when Keisha Lan's Bottoms was mayor in Atlanta,
the bottom was mayor in Atlanta. She did a good
job of like you knew who she was, even if
you didn't live in Atlanta, like you you cared about
what she was doing, even if you didn't live there,
like she was a talking point. But a lot of
local government people don't do that, like you don't.
Speaker 3 (01:26:08):
They don't need to do it. It's called actually serving
your constituents see.
Speaker 6 (01:26:11):
So again, this is where I go back to these politicians.
I appreciate what they're doing. Don't get me wrong, because
we need the voices because you don't see it. Damn
shure not coming from the Democrat party. But Keisha need
to be worrying about Keisha's constituents.
Speaker 3 (01:26:25):
All of this.
Speaker 6 (01:26:25):
I'm trying to be a national spokesperson and all of that.
That's how you end up crashing out. That's how you
get out of office. That's how you get your constituents
seeing you at the grocery store, that's seeing you at church.
Speaker 3 (01:26:36):
They don't care.
Speaker 6 (01:26:36):
About you trying to be no voice for everybody else.
They're concerned with are you taking care of these one
hundred thousand people in your district or two hundred thousand
people in your district. It's not about you can't get
Keisha in and you can't get her out.
Speaker 3 (01:26:48):
You have zero power.
Speaker 6 (01:26:50):
So she can get on these podcasts mikes if they
want to. At the end of the day, they not vote.
They don't vote for you. So either you want to
be an elected official or do you want to be
a podcaster.
Speaker 1 (01:26:59):
I agree, but I think sometimes it's not your fault.
Like in Keisha's case, I don't think it was her fault.
She just happened to be a black woman who was
the mayor of Atlanta. So like all the raffers were
talking about, but what was the slogan on Atlanta got
a man named Keisha?
Speaker 3 (01:27:11):
Like it was your thing? Yeah, you're her.
Speaker 6 (01:27:13):
Yeah, I'm definitely not blaming her. I'm just I'm using
that name for.
Speaker 17 (01:27:16):
You, just calling to her because she's the only person.
Speaker 18 (01:27:18):
I just think about it, like locally in Delaware, like
you would know, because like you said, you see them,
you hear them. But outside of the Brother's, Delaware, Philly, wherever,
you don't just know of these people. And I think
a lot of it is because even they're not at
the microphones. I don't know, it's just local level is
not glamorized.
Speaker 4 (01:27:33):
But sometimes like Marion Barry, like you didn't know, but guess.
Speaker 6 (01:27:37):
What, they could never get them out. I encourage people
to go watch The Ten Lives the Nine Lives of
Marion Barry. Scandal or not, they could not get them out.
You know why they couldn't because he was doing the work.
Speaker 3 (01:27:47):
He was doing the work.
Speaker 6 (01:27:49):
When you do the work, like Shout out to Eric Maids,
my friend, rest in peace. Shout out to every y'all
seen Eric Mays. I be CUsing people. When you're doing
the work, people will know about you. But you couldnot
get Eric Mays out of office for nothing because he
took care of his district. This is a district conversation.
Even Congress, it's still a district. It's still a local conversation.
(01:28:09):
So when you get out on these microphones and you're
because I've seen it happen real time, and you're trying
to please all of these different different constituents that can't
vote for you, because I want to say what this
what they want me to say.
Speaker 3 (01:28:20):
I want to say what they want me to say.
Speaker 6 (01:28:21):
Okay, the people that's actually voting for you are the
ones that make that make the decision. So you don't
hear about it, Lauren, because they're doing their job.
Speaker 3 (01:28:28):
But they should.
Speaker 6 (01:28:29):
Those candidates should also stop trying to be seen all
the time, which I think is important. I'm not dising
not because they don't have a choice. Jasmines and all
that don't have a choices. Ain't nobody else stepping up?
Speaker 3 (01:28:39):
So this is nothing on earth.
Speaker 6 (01:28:40):
I'm saying that I wish they would work more with
activists and fund those activists because they're crashing out. Literally,
they can't get jobs, they can't go transition anywhere. Fund
those activists to run that play for you so that
you can actually be in office to vote Corey Bush.
Speaker 3 (01:28:58):
Jamal Bowman. They're no longer in common.
Speaker 6 (01:29:00):
They can't vote for nothing because when they were pushing
those issues, which is important.
Speaker 3 (01:29:05):
But the district said otherwise.
Speaker 6 (01:29:08):
So you got the money to say, yeah, push push, push,
push push, but your district said no, we're gonna do
something different. So now you don't even have an ally
that can actually vote, you know, to make a difference.
Speaker 3 (01:29:18):
And so that's what I mean. Well, we appreciate you that.
How can they get information on the course of.
Speaker 6 (01:29:24):
Teslnfigureo dot com t e z l y n f
I g A r O Soon as you go to
the website, of course, pops up southwest to catch I said,
if you're gonna stop talk about.
Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
At three o'clock, we got new plugs yesterday.
Speaker 5 (01:29:44):
Okay, shout out to one of your biggest followers, Lovey.
I'm sure love is my God.
Speaker 3 (01:29:52):
Yes, he is so supportive. Oh, he'll love that you shoutow.
But he's so supportive. He really really is. Subscribe to
the Straight Shot, the podcast.
Speaker 6 (01:30:00):
Congratulations your podcasts, and congratulations on everything you guys are doing.
They call me Judy Winslow because I left and I
never said goodbye to the people in the audience that's supportive.
Speaker 4 (01:30:10):
It wasn't a goodbye.
Speaker 6 (01:30:12):
Yeah, but they was used to seeing me. It wasn't
a goodbye. But I do want to I do want
to say that. Shout out to everybody that supported me
on Front page News.
Speaker 3 (01:30:19):
We're still family, We're still here.
Speaker 6 (01:30:21):
Wasn't no drama and people waiting on tea wasn't no tea,
wasn't no drama. Wouln't know anything. I'm doing great things,
but I love you guys, and I just wanted to say,
give everybody here.
Speaker 3 (01:30:30):
It's Tesling's figure out. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
you're checking out the Breakfast Club. Good morning, everybody.
Speaker 5 (01:30:36):
It's dej NV, just Hilarius, Charlamagne, the gud We are
the Breakfast Club.
Speaker 3 (01:30:40):
Now you've got a positive note, I do, But.
Speaker 4 (01:30:42):
I want to tell people.
Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
First of all, man, make sure you go get your
tickets for the third Annual Black Effect Podcast Festival happening Saturday,
April twenty sixth at Pullman Yards in Atlanta, Georgia. Yes,
it is year three of an unforgettable day of live podcast,
inspiring conversations and cultural celebration podcast Coaches Celebration Okay. It's
hosted by Mandy and Weezy of Decisions Decisions. We got
(01:31:03):
the Trap Nerds podcast there for the gamers. Good Mom's
Bad Choices is gonna be there. Carrie Champions gonna be
there with her NEXD Sports podcast, Tank and Jay Valentine
will be there doing the R and B Money Podcast live,
and Sarah Jakes Roberts will be there doing the Woman
of Alved podcast live. So go get your tickets right
now at Black Effect dot Com. Slash Podcast Festival Okay,
(01:31:24):
Saturday April twenty six third annual Black Effect Podcast Festival Atlanta.
Can't wait to see you there and the positive notice
simply this, stop reacting to everything, Okay. Becoming less reactive
is a huge part of growth and a huge part
of decreasing your scretch. Okay, if you let everything get
you worked up, you're damaging your mind, body and spirit.
Speaker 4 (01:31:46):
So stop reacting to everything. Have a Blessed Day, breakfast
club bitches you don't finish for y'all. Dump