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March 25, 2024 101 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You guys, this is history.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
What you've done, what you guys should do.

Speaker 3 (00:04):
A platform that includes.

Speaker 4 (00:08):
The world's most This Morning, Shoe Burke's good DJ injuries
every playing by Recket.

Speaker 5 (00:13):
I made it just hilarious.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
She'll stand about it.

Speaker 6 (00:17):
God made you think they'd liking the controversial questions. We're
taking his part.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
I like thanks breakfast club, Good morning.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
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 yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
Yo jess hilarious.

Speaker 7 (00:33):
Good morning, CHARLAMAGNEA God is a little late, and it's Monday.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Back to the work week.

Speaker 8 (00:40):
Good morning, that's good morning. Are you feeling I'm feeling good.
I had a good weekend. I went home spend it
with my family. Any weekend that I don't like work
or don't feel like stand up pay, I'll be going home.
And then my son's spring break started this week. So
that's why he's here with me all week.

Speaker 4 (00:55):
Okay? Is that a good thing?

Speaker 2 (00:56):
On bad thing?

Speaker 4 (00:57):
Because spring break he wants to like.

Speaker 8 (00:58):
I know it's a good because it's like I love him,
I'm missing so much. But you're gonna want to do
something fun every day every day. So I gotta figure
out something every day to day.

Speaker 4 (01:07):
Every day every day.

Speaker 7 (01:08):
I know, Well, shout everybody out in Tampa. I was
in Tampa over the weekend. Well, Friday, I was at
Hampton University talking to the students, and then I went
to Tampa. Shouted Tyler Lepli. You know Tyler Lepli to actor.
He opened up a restaurant in Tampa.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
Nice.

Speaker 4 (01:21):
So he has a restaurant in Tampa.

Speaker 7 (01:23):
And it was his birthday party, so it was the
grand opening slash birthday. I DJ, and it was It
was packs. It was totally sold out, so many people,
so salute to him. I had a great time Tampa.
Food was good, everything was. The restaurant was really really dope.
It wasn't one of those restaurants where you know, sometimes
you just see people just put their name on it
and just open up.

Speaker 9 (01:40):
No.

Speaker 4 (01:40):
He they totally redid the whole restaurant over. It was nice.
Uh so it was pretty dope. I don't know why
Tampa though.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Yeah, he's from Philly.

Speaker 7 (01:47):
From Philly, Yeah, so I don't know if he moved
to Tampa, if he lives in Tampa.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
But it was in Tampa, but it was dope. Though
it was really dope.

Speaker 7 (01:55):
I had a good time out there and the weather
was beautiful, so it's always a good thing.

Speaker 4 (01:59):
So let's get the show cracking. Joining Lucas will be
joining us this morning.

Speaker 7 (02:04):
His album Not Now I'm Busy is out now, so
we're gonna be kicking it with him about that. And
also Nina Turner will be joining us. Yeah, what do
y'all discuss? Because I know that happened Friday.

Speaker 8 (02:14):
I wasn't here politics, and you know that's not my thing,
but it became my thing for a minute.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
I was like, okay, let me, let me budge in here. Okay,
I sure did.

Speaker 8 (02:20):
I was like okay, and she broke things down for
me so I can understand. And I was like, okay, cool,
because I was asking her, how can we get the
youth like my generation and younger to want to be
more into it because it matters.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
I ain't thinking mad at times. Start us sitting up
here with y'all.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
Are you into it now?

Speaker 8 (02:34):
I'm into it now. I'm getting into it, you know,
diving deeper and deeper every week. So yeah, and she
she has a really good point, So I.

Speaker 7 (02:40):
Like her A lot of it is in my opinion,
I feel like, in no disrespect to call salespeople, but
it sounds like a bad car salesperson, like they're selling
you everything, like oh, yes, we're gonna do this when
we get in office, and then we're gonna do that.
Then we're gonna do this, and then we're gonna do that,
and then when they're getting office, we never see any
of that.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
It's a lemon. Yeah, it's a lemon. Yeah, that's what
it feels like.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Right.

Speaker 7 (03:00):
All right, when we come back, we got front page news.
Teslin figure will be joining us, and I think Charlomage
would be on.

Speaker 4 (03:04):
He should be here by then. Get Breakfast Club the
Morning joining everybody. It's j n V.

Speaker 7 (03:09):
Jess Hilaria is Charlamagne the guy. We are to breakfast Club.
Let's get in some front page news.

Speaker 4 (03:16):
All right, let's jump right into it. Let's talk about
Donald Trump.

Speaker 7 (03:18):
There's something that he needs to do today or he's
in some big ish, let's discuss.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Oh yes, absolutely.

Speaker 10 (03:23):
Today is the deadline for Donald Trump to post a
four hundred and fifty four million dollar bond or New
York Attorney General Latisa James could seize his bank accounts
and properties. Now Trump is saying he has the money,
but he was planning on using it for the campaign.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Take a listen.

Speaker 11 (03:38):
Donald Trump is running out of time tonight to protect
his properties from potential seizure by the State of New York.
He has until Monday to secure nearly half a billion
dollar bond to satisfy the court's civil fraud judgment against him,
which is lawyers say cannot be done.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
This is manifest injustice. It is impossible. It's an impossibility.

Speaker 11 (03:57):
But the former president today claiming on Social Bia he
has quote almost five hundred million dollars in cash which
he had intended to spend on his campaign, despite having
neither spent nor loaned any of his own money to
his campaign since twenty sixteen.

Speaker 12 (04:12):
They'd like to take the cash away so I can't
use it on the campaign.

Speaker 4 (04:16):
And this is just a corrupt group of people.

Speaker 6 (04:18):
It's election interference.

Speaker 11 (04:20):
Mister Trump's attorneys have argued he should not be liable
for the bond while his case is being appealed. The
Attorney General is poised to move quickly to seize his
assets if she decides to.

Speaker 13 (04:32):
So.

Speaker 10 (04:32):
Bottom line to recap. People are calling cap on that.
They're saying, you know, he didn't plan on spending it
on the campaign, because he hasn't did it since twenty sixteen.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
But you know that's what he's saying. He's saying, I
need the money.

Speaker 10 (04:42):
So this is clearly another call for his supporters to
donate to that new pack you know that was set
up to help with these fees.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
So we'll see.

Speaker 10 (04:51):
I've been looking to try to see if they've released
any numbers to see we report on the last week
to see how many people have donated to it.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
I'm sure they did, so we will see. Today is
the I.

Speaker 7 (05:00):
Don't think they're gonna take anything. I think it's it's
gonna be a process. They just can't walk in this
house and say it's mine right, It's gonna be a
process thing. I have to do some filing and locking yours.
But they're saying that truth social they're about to go public.
They just got to prove to go public. And once
that goes public, it'd be worth like three billion dollars
and he'll have more than enough cash to solve that issue.

Speaker 6 (05:20):
Right.

Speaker 10 (05:21):
Well, they also said it's gonna take I think they
said about six months. I don't want to quote the time,
but it's not just like an instant where you're instantly
gonna get their cash. That's gonna take That's gonna take
some time too. But yes, if it goes publical truth
social that's gonna you know, they can bring more money,
but not right away, but there has the Attorney General
has already filed. I guess basically that some paperwork already

(05:42):
in play to be able to try to see some
of those properties. I forgot which one it was Envy,
But they're ready to go, so that it won't take
as long as as one would think. But no, it's
not an overnight it's not like you going tomorrow and
take the property.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
But well, all his properties are not worth four hundred
and fifty million dollars. He has the golf course, he
has the main property with I think it's two hundred
and thirty four eight is in Westchester. He has his
triplex in the city, and it was Trump twis. I
don't think any of all those properties were four hundred
and fifty million.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Well, when you.

Speaker 10 (06:09):
Can you can combine properties, maybe there could be a
difference on I guess when you can get the buond
for the rest.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
I really have no idea what well we will find
out today.

Speaker 4 (06:18):
Yeah, we'll find out today.

Speaker 10 (06:19):
We will definitely find out today. I also wanted to
cover the power Ball.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
I's what he needs to play.

Speaker 10 (06:23):
That's exactly he could always play that. So speaking of cash,
I know you guys follow the Powerball. I've never played.
I need to play, but I saw the story and
thought about you. So it is the largest jackpot that
ever with one point nine billion. With the Mega millions
and power ball can buy and take a.

Speaker 14 (06:41):
Listen, nobody matched all the numbers and last night strong.
So now the huge jackpot is up to eight hundred
million dollars for Monday. Couple that with the Mega Million's
jackpot now at one point one billion, that's nearly two
billion dollars up for grabs for one or maybe a
few lucky folks.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
I wasn't last week you did how much? Eight dollars?
Eight dollars last week? Forget about myself.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I said, we wouldn't know if you if you want
a big one, we.

Speaker 4 (07:10):
Definitely wouldn't know.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
What I'm charlotte, Yo, what's the word?

Speaker 6 (07:14):
Good morning?

Speaker 1 (07:14):
Charlote? Ain't to God?

Speaker 7 (07:15):
Good morning, and that is front page news. Now what
are we talking next hour?

Speaker 10 (07:20):
Well, next hour, ten percent of US workers jobs may
be exposed to artificial intelligence. We've talked about that before,
but I want to give you a new update from
the White House. They even said that it could possibly
allow school bus drivers school buses to drive themselves with
no drivers. So I want to see what you guys
think about that. And some updates on tattoos. If you
have a tattoo, I want to give you some update.

(07:40):
I have six of them, so I thought this one
was interesting.

Speaker 8 (07:42):
Yeah, what means are you just saying, like Jesus, I
want to do what you're about to tell us about tattoos?

Speaker 2 (07:48):
I'm like, what about?

Speaker 4 (07:49):
Oh yeah, how many do you have?

Speaker 8 (07:51):
Jess girl, I'm still counting. I have a sleeve, so
I don't. I stopped counting. But my little sister get
one like every weekend. So I'm just treading what you're
about the South.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Okay, it's it's some good news. Do you have tattoos in?

Speaker 4 (08:03):
But I don't think Yeah, I gotta sleeve. Oh you
got sleeve, I gotta sleeve.

Speaker 7 (08:06):
Yeah, I'm supposed to get them finished, but I feel
like at this big age, I don't want to sit
back down and go to the painting.

Speaker 8 (08:13):
Like at first I was like them, Now I'm like nah, yeah,
the older you get, they hurt more.

Speaker 4 (08:16):
I got all my kids' names.

Speaker 7 (08:17):
I'm missing three, so the first three but like you
got my name and then other three is like nah, I'm.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
Like it hurt though, so we'll see you can do it.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
You can do it. I guess you on that, So
I'll get that to you at seven o'clock hour.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
All right, everybody else, get it off your chest. Eight
hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you
need to vent, phone lines wide open again. Eight hundred
five eight five one oh five one. Get it off
your chest. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club.
This is your time to get it off your chest.
Eight hundred and five eight five one five one. We

(08:51):
want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (08:54):
Hello.

Speaker 4 (08:54):
Who's this?

Speaker 6 (08:55):
Alright? This is Fred Rad?

Speaker 2 (08:58):
Good morning Fred.

Speaker 13 (09:00):
Alright, I just got a fight.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Damn did you win?

Speaker 6 (09:03):
You lost?

Speaker 4 (09:04):
Sound like we should say, are you okay?

Speaker 15 (09:07):
You no?

Speaker 13 (09:07):
See, like when he got he was hitting me in
the face and then randomly he just kissed me. Man
he kicked on my.

Speaker 4 (09:12):
Lips the fighting, he kissed, kicked him in his.

Speaker 13 (09:17):
He kissed me.

Speaker 8 (09:18):
Oh my god, you got kissed by a dude after
the fight.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
Well, you know who lost the fight?

Speaker 5 (09:24):
Fight man?

Speaker 9 (09:25):
What would you do that?

Speaker 1 (09:26):
Who was you fighting?

Speaker 2 (09:27):
His boyfriend? Yeah, it's a lovers quarrel. I know a
love was quarrel.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
When I hear it, why would you kiss me while
we fighting, you'd be all right? Yeah, it's okay.

Speaker 4 (09:37):
Whin some you lose something.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
It could have been worse. You could have been in
jail and lost the fight. You in jail and you lose.

Speaker 7 (09:42):
The He might like it, but thank you, Fred, you
win some you lose something.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
But what was it? What he said in the.

Speaker 1 (09:54):
Other day to fight another day? Oh my god?

Speaker 4 (09:58):
Hello, who's this from Jersey's going on?

Speaker 13 (10:01):
You think he's going on?

Speaker 16 (10:03):
Is going on?

Speaker 13 (10:04):
Ok?

Speaker 9 (10:04):
Sharp morning, good morning. I'm in the goofy mood.

Speaker 13 (10:08):
I just kind of want you to rate my instro
to y'all in the morning.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Good morning, you will.

Speaker 9 (10:15):
Yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo your.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
Do Jeff Paria, good morning, ya right that let's come
trash kind of you kind of boy.

Speaker 7 (10:25):
You kind of boys Monday morning lap off like nine yos.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
Yes, you just say charlamagnea guy.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
Yeah, I appreciate it. I'm sorry, I appreciate the effort.

Speaker 4 (10:38):
I have a good one, brother.

Speaker 7 (10:42):
Get it off your chest eight hundredk five eight five
one oh five one. If you need to vent hit
us up now. It's the breakfast slugg the morning, the Breakfast.

Speaker 5 (10:50):
Club from today. Is it your time to get it
off your chest?

Speaker 4 (10:57):
Way up, whether you're mad or.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
Blessed telling get up and get something.

Speaker 4 (11:02):
Call up now eight hundred five eighty five one oh
five one.

Speaker 5 (11:04):
We want to hear from you on the breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (11:07):
Hello, who's this?

Speaker 5 (11:08):
It's your boy?

Speaker 9 (11:09):
Love me from the braw Love good morning. I just
want to piggyback off. My wife says and say, we
need more political awareness when it comes to voting, and
we don't realize the significant road of breakfast cause plays
and how we move the meter when it comes.

Speaker 13 (11:26):
To this voting.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
We need what when it comes to voting.

Speaker 9 (11:28):
More organization as far as what political party we're gonna follow,
because we move the meta when it comes to voting.
We don't realize what we do.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
I don't think black people should be beholden to any
political party, not Democrat already built.

Speaker 9 (11:44):
I respect that that we either, but what what are
we gonna do about it?

Speaker 2 (11:48):
And I think y'all need to understand that black people
aren't monolithic either, So to try to get all black
people on one page to do one thing is never
ever ever gonna happen.

Speaker 7 (11:56):
Yeah, And I think when people always talk about vote
your interests, I think everybody's interest is different when it
comes to each and everybody's family.

Speaker 2 (12:02):
So and that's fine, by the way, yep, Okay.

Speaker 4 (12:05):
That's love, love, Hello, who's this this tej? And what's up? Brother?
Get off your chest?

Speaker 6 (12:10):
Okay, so he is? What's on my chest?

Speaker 13 (12:12):
First of all? Get this out the way. That was
real dumb with Fannie Willis did as far as happening relationship, right,
everybody know that, But that has nothing to do with,
uh the legalities of the case. In my opinion, I
think she should follow a season desist order against Congress

(12:33):
because do you want I'm talking about finding.

Speaker 4 (12:40):
It was the same way he just started. He's right
in this is gad Yeah, I.

Speaker 13 (12:44):
Am right in it because I mean I didn't want
to think I just I'm just not getting around the calling.
But you know, Congress is trying to interfere with uh
that situation at every turn. Right, they're not they're not
chiming in on any other criminal cases, but they're trying
to run interference for Trump and attacking her every turn.

(13:05):
So she should follow this season desist order. And I'm
not a lawyer. I don't even know anything about law,
but I know that that that it's wrong what they're doing,
and I know that she should try to defend herself.
They called her a racist because of what she said
at the church, but Trump is the first one that
that that's you know, stated any think about race. When

(13:27):
she first indicted him, she said the race, he said,
the racist Fannie willis right. So you know, I just
feel like, you know, they shouldn't just sit back and
let him attack, attack, attack. If you always be an attack,
you're on defense, there's no offense. That's that's my two cents.
You maybe she'll hear and maybe she'll you know, make

(13:48):
some grounds and start defending herself and get on offense. Okay,
all right, thank you, brother, Absolutely.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
Get it off your chest.

Speaker 7 (13:55):
Eight hundred and five and eighty five one five one
If you need to vent phone lines of wide open.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
Now we got that's what the mess coming up? What
we're talking about.

Speaker 8 (14:02):
Princess Kate announce us that she is undergoing treatment for
cancer Friday. So that's the first thing I have to report.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Okay, did they call you from the UK?

Speaker 4 (14:10):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (14:10):
They did. They called me when I was here, but
we were already off air, and she you know, she
made an announcement. Yeah, all right, Well they got the
exclusive and I didn't get it because we.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
Were already off air.

Speaker 4 (14:22):
So but you didn't know.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
I didn't know. I already knew. I was about to
make a video on Instagram. That's not how I do
think anymore.

Speaker 7 (14:28):
We'll get to that. NeXT's the Breakfast Club. Good morning,
the Breakfast Club. Warning everybody, it's DJ n V, Jesse
Larry Charlamage the God.

Speaker 4 (14:38):
We are the Breakfast Club. Now let's get to Jess
with the mess. Just Rober Moore, just gonna do? Is
gonna bring numbers.

Speaker 5 (14:50):
On the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Where's my other intro?

Speaker 8 (14:55):
Come on?

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Now, it's just with the worldwide right, just with the
world my mess, all right.

Speaker 8 (14:59):
Princess Kate announces that she is undergoing treatment for cancer.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
So this is the latest update that I have on
my UK News.

Speaker 8 (15:06):
On Friday, Princess Kate announced on the video message that
she's been battling cancer. The Princess of Wales is forty
two for those who didn't know, and she is going
through preventative chemotherapy after her abdominal surgery showed cancer had
been present. Kate did not make it clear exactly what
type of cancer that she has, but her doctor was

(15:27):
basically saying, like.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Colon k it could it could be.

Speaker 8 (15:31):
It looks like early colon cancer that was removed and
carried surgically, or early ovarian uterine cervical cancer that was
found incidentally, So basically they don't know. King Charles the
Third put out a statement saying he is so proud
of Catherine for her courage. And that's her real name, Catherine,

(15:51):
because he called her Catherine. Her name is Kate, that's
all right, Kate is short for Catherine.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Okay, but Kate is Kay and Catherine is c over here.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Her name fully. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (16:02):
Well, he said he's so proud of Catherine for her
courage and speaking as she did. King Charles is receiving
cancer treatment in the same hospital as Princess Kate, because
I did report to you guys that he also has
cancer as well. Princess Harry and Megan also show their
support for Kate, speaking out in a statement shared with
people on Friday, and they said, we wish well and

(16:25):
healing for Kate and the family and hope they are
able to do so privately and in peace. Harry and
Meghan said in the statement, it is it was just
it was just given, like, all right, come on call
her Kate.

Speaker 3 (16:39):
This Kate.

Speaker 8 (16:41):
What I noticed, uh, and I want to shout out
is her husband was not by her side, and that
in that video where she had told us that she
had cancer, and I find I think that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
She did speak on him.

Speaker 8 (16:53):
She said, me and me and Prince and I mean
me and me and Princeville, you know, but Will wasn't
right there, and so I find a problem with that.
But we have more to report, so we'll see. But
I do send her healing energy, don't Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
You know, the human in me says, I'm sending her
healing energy, and that's what I'm gonna. I'm gonna send
her healing energy. But it does make me feel terrible
when I feel like I just don't be believing nobody,
because me in this era where you know, everything feels
like a damn conspiracy. Yes, what you think it is,
I'm just I don't know if it's probably because of
all the news reports just was doing and the stuff
you couldn't find her since you have cancer. But it

(17:30):
makes perfect sense.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
It makes perfect sense, you know.

Speaker 8 (17:32):
And we're not saying that she does not, but we're
this is this would be like the big whammy to
make everybody shut up about everything else, you know, like
the impersonator and you know her and Will are going
through things in him.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
You know, we got a couple of honeys running around
the UK.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
All of those stories make us everything. But we shouldn't
be that way.

Speaker 8 (17:50):
We should not, but they shouldn't make us that way either. However, however,
I am praying for her. The Daily Wires servers ties
with Candice Owens, the right wing media out let co
founded by Ben Shapiro, said Friday that it had severed
tized with candas Owens, and Owens took to her own
posts saying, the rumors are true. I am finally free, Okay,

(18:11):
spoken like a true black woman. If you would like
to support my work. You can head to Candace Owens
dot com, where you will be directed to my locals page,
or you can give a gift at go Kandas dot com.
I don't know how many gifts you going, kid, but
there will be many announcements and weeks to come, all right.
So basically, when she was up here, she had spoke
a little bit about that. Before they severed tized with her.

Speaker 17 (18:33):
There was a video circulating of him calling me a
disgrace when a faux professional or whatever it was. I
decided to choose peace, and then when I chose peace,
he responded to the peace with not peace. Well, as
I explained on Tucker Carlson Show, like that doesn't have
the power to fire me.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
Well, I mean there was rumors for a while at
Candas in the Daily while I was gonna part waste,
hence why I asked her that question to begin with.
But Candas is gonna be more than fun because we
folks don't understand Scandas has a huge, huge audience already.
So keep you to keep doing what she's doing, which
is her podcast and YouTube. She'll do that independently, or
she'll partner with somebody like Tucker.

Speaker 8 (19:10):
Calls yeah, so this is this in her saying she's free,
This seems like a win for her. And I don't
understand somebody can be like so so hated but have
millions and millions of viewers and followers and stuff.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Right, because should be fine. That's just like anybody. I'll
tell you all about the rule of ten all the time,
the rule of ten. Three people gonna like it, three
people are not gonna like it. Four people don't even
know what the hell's going on. And that's for everybody
on this planet. Okay, anybody that does anything, I'll give
you the radio podcasts sing whatever it is, drugs, you're
gonna have, not drugs, but you're gonna have in the

(19:45):
rule of ten, you're gonna have three people who like it,
three people who don't, four don't even know what the
hell's going on.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
That's put that make that the positive note.

Speaker 8 (19:51):
Listen, moving on, Meghan Fox defends drinking a few drops
of mgk's blood. So she sat down on a podcast
called Her Daddy Podcast, and she was talking about the
backlash that she got after the blood oath with MGK.
During the engagement, Megan Fox insisted that swapping blood and
drinking blood with her soulmate.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
MGK isn't as gross as other things that couples do
back in like.

Speaker 18 (20:16):
The fifties, even how many times did you see like
probably never but like I'll leave it to beaver, or
like movies from back then or even the eighties, how
many times did you see like little boys would go
out with like their little pop guns and they would
cut their fingers and like be blood brothers, right, and
they're like, we're best friends forever now, and they would
like smush the blood together on their fingers.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Uh huh.

Speaker 18 (20:37):
That's not satanic, right, that's normal, and that's cute, that's sweet.
That's like an innocent, like little bond. Yeah, it's a
little bond between kids who love each other. They have
a pure friendship. It's like that, except instead of rubbing
your fingers together, the drop of blood.

Speaker 5 (20:55):
Goes in your mouth.

Speaker 7 (20:58):
Oh that was before diseases. Many diseases were so known.
But she did say something else, do you have the
other clip? But she said yeah, she did say something else.
I didn't know that one was going to play.

Speaker 19 (21:07):
No.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
She basically said, well do we have it? Okay, how
long you play it?

Speaker 18 (21:14):
But guess what I think is weird. I think it's
weird that girls are out here letting guys in their
mouth and they don't know these guys. You're letting somebody
put their in your mouth.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
And you don't know what he did.

Speaker 18 (21:26):
He doesn't even have a job.

Speaker 20 (21:27):
You met him on.

Speaker 18 (21:30):
Or whatever reason, a startup, and.

Speaker 4 (21:32):
You just let him.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
You're in your mouth.

Speaker 18 (21:35):
That's disgusting. That makes my back hurt, that makes me sweaty.
So you you're so offended that I got a drop
of machine on Kelly's blood in my mouth.

Speaker 8 (21:45):
Well, some people were saying it was a cup. Some
people were saying it was a drop. Listen, let them
people do what they want. I think the problem is
that we know, you know what I'm saying, stop putting
your business out there, you know.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
And what she said is kind of insensitivity.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Well, if you're letting random strangers a jackulating in your mouth,
you shouldn't judge.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Is what you say.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
Wow, I still think she brought all this up, and
this is why the backlash is coming. It's like, like,
whatever you, this is what comes with it.

Speaker 8 (22:13):
You drink coats and blood if you want you that's fine,
whether it's a drop or a cup and don't throw
some ice in it to sugar whatever you want to do.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
So but the fact that everybody know now and everybody.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
Call noway, that's what it is. The only reason that
there's even an opinion about this is because I guess
we saw it's like so like people running around here
and talk like, hey, I let strangers ejaculating my.

Speaker 4 (22:34):
Mouth, right, I mean it's something that we know. But
nobody have a take that clip, just just that clip.
Nobody saying that, yeah, take that clip.

Speaker 8 (22:44):
Yeah, Okay, that's just what a master. For the first hour,
everybody grow up, all right.

Speaker 7 (22:49):
When we come back, we got front page news telling figure, oh,
be joining us and then join the Lucas to be here,
so don't move.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
It's to breakfast club. Good morning.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
You're checking out the breakfast club, everybody.

Speaker 4 (23:00):
J n V Jess hilarious, Charlamage the guy.

Speaker 7 (23:02):
We are the breakfast club now, CHARLOA man, let's get
in some front page news.

Speaker 4 (23:07):
You've been doing the brackets and you don't do mark now.

Speaker 6 (23:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
I mean my favorite right now is women's basketball. You
know what I'm saying because I got into women's basketball,
like when Don Staley came to the South Carolina game cops.
That's my wife's alma mata. So I'll be watching the
women's basketball. Okay, So the lady Gamecock advanced to the
sweet sixteenth, Yes they did. Yes, that's all that matters.
What about you? You're actually gonna go check them out
of Friday? Aby, I wanted to go to Columbia this weekend,

(23:30):
but I couldn't get down there.

Speaker 7 (23:31):
But I'm gonna go to Albany Friday. Okay, all right,
what about you? Yes, you're doing your brackets. Yeah, she
had no idea what we're talking about, not at all.
All right, what our girl lost last night?

Speaker 5 (23:43):
Though?

Speaker 2 (23:43):
Man, it's luth Ohio State. Man, I can't remember the
young lady named the big center stop. I was gonna
say the stout one. You know what, I know? She's
no joke. What's her nt me? Pull up the show?
What's her name? She's dropped forty the other night you did?
I'll get it in a minute, right, what up? Test?

Speaker 4 (24:04):
What's going on?

Speaker 1 (24:05):
DJ ANDV CHARLEMAGNEA God jests hilarious.

Speaker 4 (24:07):
Let's talk about this workforce.

Speaker 10 (24:09):
Okay, So, according to the White House analysis, about ten
percent of you as workers are in jobs that face
the greatest risks of disruption from AI, and we've talked
about this many times. We're going to keep reporting on
this because as AI continues to develop, we have to
continue to study how is this going to affect jobs? Now,
this report finds that workers with less education and lower
income are especially exposed to AI, raising the risks that

(24:31):
technology could amplify in equality. So the report is showing
the white supports are saying they are thinking deeply about
how AI can't affect these jobs and wood ways they
can make sure you know that they keep people working,
they say, as a kind, as with any kind of
new technology, experts believe AI will compliment the work of

(24:52):
some people by making them more productive, but some jobs
can be wiped out.

Speaker 6 (24:56):
What I found was.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
Interested in this report.

Speaker 10 (24:58):
Guys. They talked about how possibly AI could eliminate school
bus drivers and that the school bus could drive itself,
but they did say they would need still a human
being on board to watch for behavior and you know,
make sure that everything is safe.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
But I thought that was pretty interesting because I don't
know if I'm really okay with AI driving the kids.
What do you guys think? No, I mean, I'm not
okay with anything other than human driving kids.

Speaker 4 (25:23):
No, yeah, no, that's not gonna make sense.

Speaker 7 (25:26):
But I've been seeing AI Like even if you go
to a hotel now sometimes they don't even have room service.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
It's actually the robots that's delivering the food. It's not
an actual person.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
But I've been noticing that.

Speaker 7 (25:38):
Even Amazon, they've been doing this for the last I know,
last year it was a trial where the Amazon packages
are actually delivered from a drone. So so yeah, so
they are definitely cutting out a lot of jobs.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
So what they call us robot forward. How so before
those of us who are who don't want artificial intelligence,
who don't want artificial intelligence delivering anything to us, who
don't want anything to do with it, get laid with
uh robot robot phoebus is something crazy like that.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (26:03):
But where do m v B like he's seeing drones
deliver his Amazon packages? He getting robots to clean up
at time? Like what you win on something that will
know But.

Speaker 7 (26:11):
Even when you go to the if you go to
the you know coscore bjs, they have robots shopping for you.

Speaker 4 (26:17):
No, no, the robots is cleaning up the mess and
all that. You know, you never see nothing.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
I't with you because I don't know you stuff, I've
never seen them.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
You don't realize robot. You got an idea of what
a robot look like. So like when you see those
self cleaning things and grocery stores, they're just moving by themselves. Dude,
it's like robot.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Okay, No, they now they're trying to say, I only
like I see robots a different way, like.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
Because in that.

Speaker 6 (26:46):
You don't know anyway.

Speaker 10 (26:51):
I say, you don't know how to identify robot. Again,
robot by the way, they're.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Gonna say that's offensive. Soon they're gonna be like, you're
making fun of the robot.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Well, let's coming. Well, I thought this was important.

Speaker 10 (27:04):
Fourteen percent of high school graduates lacking a four year
college degree have jobs that are high risks for AI
exposure with low performance requirements. By comparison, six percent of
workers or a bachelor degree volunteer a higher risk. Now, basically,
something that I have to make that simple is even
if you don't have a high school degree and you
work in a job that is you know, that requires

(27:25):
some type of physical demand, of the jobs that require
a higher skill will be safer than those that don't.
So for the example you guys just gave, if it's
just delivering something or something, but you know, that's where
AI can possibly replace your job. But if it's something
like a plumber for example, you know, I guess they
probably could make a robot to do that, come in
the house and fix the toilet. But those are still

(27:47):
jobs that you know, we're required that are a higher
skill but may not require a higher education, if that
makes sense.

Speaker 4 (27:56):
Now, let's talk about these tattoos.

Speaker 10 (27:58):
Yeah, so just a date, we want to give you
update on some tattoos. Did you know it could possibly
help your immune system?

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Take a listen.

Speaker 15 (28:05):
Our skin is our biggest organ. So doctors doing this
research say when we get a tattoo, our body reacts
as if our skin is getting attacked, and that perceived
invasion of our largest organ, our skin, results in a
reaction that could boost our immune system. Doctor Christopher Lynn
from the University of Alabama told Parade online. Our skin
is where the immune response starts, calling it the main defense.

(28:28):
Adding anything that stimulates dress or injury anywhere on the
skin turns on or stimulates a global immune response, much
like an effective vaccine.

Speaker 19 (28:38):
It's a challenge to our immune system with the goal
of making it stronger. People with more tattoos appear to
have higher levels of immune molecules, including antibodies, but researchers
point out more antibodies doesn't always translate into a better
immune system, and no one knows exactly how long the
effects really last.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
And this is really good guys.

Speaker 10 (28:58):
Now they say that, of course, you know, it doesn't
cure the common cold, but what they've also found with
through support is it may allow them to look at
opportunities to have vaccine shots and not go as deep
into the bodies because they're using how tattoos work. They're
saying that possibly vaccine shots could be on the surface
more like a tattoo, opposed to going to you know,
deep into into the tissue. So I thought that was interesting,

(29:19):
But I also wanted to bring up another point that
tattoo incy that was a very positive But I do
want you to know that there's also another story that
I connected to this about tattoo inc And how it's
not as regulated as you think. So about ninety percent
of the tattoo inc Is mislabeled. There was a study
that said fifty four incs were analyzed and only twenty
nine reported the correct pigment. So a lot of those pigments,

(29:39):
for example, one called proper lean a guidelog caused the
allergic reaction skin rash itching, which is, you know, some
of the things that you can expect some people not
reacting to a tattoo. But I thought that was portant important.
And then you know, you talked about you guys were
talking about politics at the beginning, and Sender the turner
and how you know we all were always wondering how
does politics matter? These are the small things the politics

(30:00):
can make a difference. The FDA is beginning to monitor
more regulations. So in twenty twenty two, Congress passed an
act called the Modelization of Cosmetics Regulation Act, and that
gave the FDA the authority to regulate tattoo incs. So again,
politics can be in the smallest are The largest matters
are not always the drama that we talk about on

(30:21):
a data basis, but things that you know, just affect us,
like this like making sure we have good tattoo ink
for those of us who my tattoos.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
Ok okay, well thank you. And Audie Crooks's the young
lady's name. Autie Crooks and the Freshman Center from Ohio State.
She is she be balling. They lost last night to
Stanford though.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
Yep, yes, all right, well again, thank you Tis.

Speaker 6 (30:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Make sure you follow our teslid Figure on all social
media platforms. Subscribe the teslian figureos podcasts is great shot
and on chacks of podcasts on the Black Beck iHeart
Radio podcast network.

Speaker 7 (30:48):
All right, now when we come back, Joining Lucas will
be joining us is album. Not now I'm busy. It's
out right now We're gonna kick with Joining Lucas when
we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the
Breakfast Club.

Speaker 4 (31:01):
All everybody's cj MV.

Speaker 1 (31:04):
Justin Lory showing me the guy.

Speaker 4 (31:05):
We are to Breakfast Club. We got special guests.

Speaker 7 (31:07):
And building right now, not now I'm busy, Ladies and gentlemen,
joined the Lucas.

Speaker 4 (31:14):
How you feeling I'm good man, it's good.

Speaker 6 (31:17):
Yeah, I'm good. How y'all feeling good?

Speaker 2 (31:19):
Had products going on?

Speaker 6 (31:25):
That's so good.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
Not now I'm busy, man, tell me about that album title.

Speaker 6 (31:30):
So yeah, it's just not now I'm busy.

Speaker 16 (31:32):
It's really you know the space that you know I've
been in my life for the last couple of years,
you know, just really not having time for a lot
of things that are even important, you know what I mean,
So just trying to balance everything. And there's also a
double message if you listen to the album as well,
about you know, me chilling my old self to become
a new, you know, version of myself that I am today.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
That title when a lot of people say staying busy
as a response to unresolved trauma? Yeah, so are you
really busy? Are you trying to avoid something?

Speaker 16 (32:01):
I think that's I think I think that sounds pretty accurate,
to be honest with you. I think it's a little
bit of both as far as like really being busy
for sure, and then a response to unresolved trauma for sure.

Speaker 7 (32:12):
Now, your albums, your videos and the stuff that you
put out, you think about it before you put it out, right,
you're just not doing a record. It's like the music
you're putting out is intentional to help. Where does that
come from? Because you know, watching your videos, it's like
it's the movies. They're self movies, but they always have
a message, like it's meaningful.

Speaker 16 (32:30):
I think, honestly, I think it's beyond me you know,
when I create these records, I think that maybe when
I'm writing it, I feel like I'm channeling something greater
than me, a higher power, something that's like helping me
write these records for me to be able to tap into,
you know, to talk about some of these things that
I talk about, you know, like with the record I
just released Best for Me, you know, shout out to

(32:51):
my brother Jelly Row. I've never been addicted to drugs,
but somehow I was able to write from a perspective
of that as if I was, you know what I'm saying.
And same thing with you know, I'm not racist, you know,
same thing with I'm Sorry or any of the other
records that touch on suicide or you know, touching on
other things that I'm channeling something greater than me that's
helping me create these records. I don't know where, how, what,

(33:13):
but I know that I'm getting some type of help
from the higher power that's helping me create these records
and to channel those actual emotions on the concepts of
some of those records.

Speaker 8 (33:23):
And you're also helping other people too, like, because if
you're able to speak to something that you've never even
experienced and you feel like you're kind of being used
as a you know, a messenger for things, like you
actually are healing people as well. And it's been like
a four year gap since ADHD. You know you dropped
that twenty twenty. Is that why it was such a gap,
because you were going through certain things?

Speaker 3 (33:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (33:43):
I think in between that, you know, really finding myself
because this is the first time that I've ever been
able to kind of relax and not be put in
survival mode, you know what I'm saying. So it's like,
this is the first time I've ever not you know,
had the first time I haven't been in survival mode,
you know, financially be a financial you know, survival mode
where I'm actually, you know, able to try to find myself,

(34:05):
you know, because up until then, I didn't really know
who I was as a person, because it's like I
was always sidetracked by survival mode, you know what I'm saying.
And it's like once I had the financial stresses taking
off me and I was able to take a step
back and get to kind of, you know, know myself,
you know, I started really going through stuff, you know
what I'm saying, and I started to learn more about me,

(34:25):
you know, just as a person, you know what I'm saying,
and a lot of those things kind of shape me
into who I am today.

Speaker 5 (34:31):
Paul, was that a pause?

Speaker 2 (34:34):
Cat the fall to that? And I got gay to
go back and go back and.

Speaker 1 (34:41):
Shape them.

Speaker 6 (34:42):
There you go shaping, but you go back deeper.

Speaker 13 (34:50):
You know.

Speaker 2 (34:50):
You talked about, you know, killing yourself on the album.
What is the significance of you killing the old version
of yourself at the end of the album.

Speaker 6 (34:56):
Well, the significance of it is.

Speaker 16 (34:58):
I like to say that a lot of people that
have a revelation, you know, and they tend to grow false,
you know. I would say that they're enlightened, you know,
by their experiences of life, and that causes them to
become a different person in a positive way, right. And
I would say that through my experiences and the traumas
and things that I've been through, actually created the reverse

(35:20):
effect and made it so that I'm growing in more
of a negative way, right, not even by choice. It's like,
because of the traumas and things that I've been through,
I'm no longer you know, susceptible to being a nice guy,
you know, I'm no longer bubbly I'm no longer as
positive as I used to be, you know what I'm saying.
So it's like, you know, due to my traumas, I've

(35:43):
grown into, you know, a different version of myself that
I feel like maybe a trauma response and which Charlemagne said,
you feel me. So I had to kill off, you know,
in order for me to grow in my own way.

Speaker 6 (35:55):
Pause.

Speaker 16 (35:56):
I had to kill off that version of myself because
that version of myself got you, you know, that version
of myself people took advantage of, you feel me. So
it's like the new person that I am today is
no longer susceptible to those things, you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
Did you have to write that figuratively so you didn't
do that literally? Like did you have to write about
feeling yourself all so you didn't actually do it?

Speaker 13 (36:19):
Oh?

Speaker 16 (36:19):
No, I ain't never you feel me. I ain't never
really ever been suicidal, you know what I mean. I've
never been suicidal. But I just knew when I had
took the time between albums, and you know, I'm just
going through real life as you heard in records like Broski,
you know, records like cut You Off, you know, with
NBA as I'm going through real life, really starting to
learn who I am.

Speaker 6 (36:37):
You know, I knew that I had to get rid
of the old me.

Speaker 1 (36:42):
Why didn't we get the experimental album?

Speaker 16 (36:45):
So we didn't get the experimental album because it wasn't
something that I felt like I wanted to stand behind paused, Right,
it was.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
Like, yeah, if your pauses have been a little off
that one, now this poses make you think, like, man,
what do you say? But you know that excuse me.

Speaker 16 (37:04):
I think the Experimental album for me, I felt like
was a little bit too left field, even for me. Right,
it was like I found myself like going back into
like creating records that I felt like didn't really represent
to where I wanted to be and who I am now.

Speaker 6 (37:19):
You know, I dropped the record Blackout with Future.

Speaker 16 (37:22):
You know what I'm saying in that record, You know,
I'm talking about that I used to talk about before
I got on, which is like, if I didn't make it,
then I would be selling the you know, keylovers. You know,
but these are things that I was rapping about before
I even got on. You know what I'm saying, Like,
if I didn't break into the music industry, then I
was gonna move from selling eight balls to kilos. You
know what I'm saying, Like, I'm in a place now

(37:42):
where it's like, why you even talking about that? You
already where you need to be, you feel me, So
it's like, why are you going back to that? And
it's like, you know, and it's like, I think I
did it on some like cultures you feel me, And
it's like, I'm not about to jump on a record
with future and flex get all my lyricals and you
know what I mean, It is that kind of way
I could do.

Speaker 6 (37:58):
So it's like, let me just dumb my down.

Speaker 16 (38:00):
And it's like and I decided to do that, But
I also knew that before I released the record, or
when I was doing the video and I'm sitting there
and I got all this bread and I'm YadA YadA, YadA.
You know, I'm just like, damn, I feel like, just
don't feel like the type of shit I want to
be on right now. But I'm like, I'm gonna do it,
you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (38:15):
For the culture.

Speaker 16 (38:16):
And I did it, And when I put it out,
it was the response that I got from it was
exactly how I was feeling.

Speaker 6 (38:21):
You know what, I'm saying, but at the.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
Same like people telling me like why are you on?

Speaker 16 (38:24):
Yeah, but at the same time, right, But a lot
of people don't know me though, you feel me, Like
they look at the storytelling and they just assume like, oh,
he's not about that, or he did Like I don't
know where I come from, you know what I'm saying.
They don't know joining before Jordan got on, you know
what I mean. So a lot of people don't know that.
But these are records that I've done, records like that before,

(38:44):
you know what I'm saying. And it's like I'm in
a different place on my life now. So it's like,
you know, when I had dropped it and I got
that response, you know what I'm saying, I'm just like, damn,
like I already know, like almost the whole album was
like that, and I got all these features from all
these artists that you know, I felt like was like
of like, what's saying now, But it really wasn't really
you know what I'm saying exactly, you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (39:04):
So it just didn't make sense. So it's like scrapping it,
got it.

Speaker 4 (39:08):
We got more with Joining Lucas when we come back
don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning Mourning everybody.

Speaker 7 (39:12):
It's DJ MV Jesse, Larry Charlamage, the guy we are
the Breakfast Club but still kicking it with joining Lucas Charlamagne.

Speaker 2 (39:19):
You talked about Broski earlier and cut you off. And
I always wonder like when you've had people do you dirty?
And those type of situations had it made a challenge
in the form like deep connections with people, being that
everybody might have their own yet agendas.

Speaker 6 (39:32):
Yeah, one dred.

Speaker 16 (39:33):
It started made me realize like why like Marshall moved
a certain way you feel me because like getting on
the phone with him, it is like you could probably
hop on the phone with Barack quicker than you can
hop on the phone with Marshall. He's calling you from
a line with his manager's assistant's calling you from a
one hundred number. And then it's just like elevated music
and it's like, please hold Marshall's coming to the phone.

(39:54):
You can't have his number, that nobody has his number.
He's not accessible, you can't talk to him. It's like
hopping on the phone with the president, right, And it's
like I always wondered like why this move like that.
I had a conversation with him on the shoot of
The Lucky Youth and I was in his trailer and
I'm like, yeah, man, like anytime you want to talk,
anytime you want to build, and like you can hit me,
you know what I'm saying, Like we could talk and

(40:15):
we could build on his music, you know what I'm saying.
He was like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And it's just
like I could tell he was really like real stand office,
you know what I'm saying. And I would ask Royce, like, Yo,
why's he like that? He's like, man, I just been
through a lot, you know. He's he's very closed off
from people, right, And I'm just like damn, and I
never understood it, right. And it's just like when I started,
you know, experiencing that Alex was experiencing, I got it,

(40:37):
you feel me, And it's like I get it one
hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (40:40):
He was the biggest star in the world at one point,
so imagine.

Speaker 16 (40:44):
He's still he can't just be outside like you got
you you know what I'm saying, Like it's the whole thing.
He's as a big deal like to this day, you
know what I mean. And it's like he moves like
that for a reason.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
You gotta have boundaries.

Speaker 7 (40:58):
I was gonna ask you with your video right art
a lot of art, how long does it take to
prepare those videos?

Speaker 15 (41:05):
Right?

Speaker 7 (41:05):
Because I'm watching your videos and even the one with
Jelly Roll or wrote Timmy and the fact that it's
high budget. I mean one after you got a tank
in one video, but not only that, you got the
actors in the video knowing the lyrics before the song
came out. So that takes time, and it takes preparation.
It's it's almost like it's like a real movie. So
what is the preparation for a joint of Lucas video?

Speaker 16 (41:28):
So I'm creating a visuals before I'm creating a song. Really,
I already had the videos and the visuals in my
head right before.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
I that was a pause, so I was like videos
in your head. I'm like, no, it was a heavy breath.

Speaker 16 (41:50):
So I'm creating the visuals like mentally that the script
is already written. Now I just got to write the song.
I already see it. I see the house, I see
the guy. I know this is about da da da ya,
And I'm like, I just got to create the record,
I gotta find the beat. Now that I've found a beat,
and then I'm writing in meticulously trying to find a
character in my head of who's gonna play this role.

(42:11):
And once I lock in on that character, from the
moment the song is done, I'm now contacting a rapper.
And the reason why I'm choosing a rapper is because
I know a rapper is gonna memorize it really quick.
I know that it's not gonna look weird when their
lip syncing it right. So I'm choosing rappers specifically, or
if you have any type of you can be a singer,
an R and B singer, but do you know how

(42:33):
to memorize?

Speaker 6 (42:33):
You know, it makes sense.

Speaker 16 (42:34):
But I'm not gonna choose somebody that doesn't do music,
you know what I mean. So I send it out.
I tell that person they have a certain amount of
time to learn it. You know, nine times out of
ten they're excited to do it, so they learning it quick.
Bro Teemi was excited to do it. What's interesting about
Broski is I never seen to this day, I never
seen one episode of Power Really wow, to this day,
I've never seen it, and I stayed away from watching

(42:56):
it on purpose because I don't want to be influenced, yeah,
by a lot of these shows, and then you start
bleeding in through my videos and it now like, oh
this this looked like that.

Speaker 6 (43:05):
You feel me.

Speaker 16 (43:06):
Because I'm a creative I try not to watch certain
things because I don't want to be influenced by it.
I actually seen Rotee Me in this movie called for
the Love of Money. It was an independent film with
him and Kerry Hilson. It's the first time I ever
seen roe Tee Me act. I was like, I like
his character. I love his character, you know what I'm saying.
And at the same time, I was writing bros Key

(43:26):
and it was just like I started to have his
faith in my mind.

Speaker 6 (43:30):
Paul Very, I can't say.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
That, y'all can't get him, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 16 (43:42):
Date, I knew that I wanted him to play the role,
and I sent him the record. You know, he memorized it.
We shot a video in like two weeks. I edited
direct everything myself. I was holding onto that for a
little bit, wow, because it was a part of the
album and I was still creating the album in real time,
and I wanted to drop it you know, while I
was dropping some of the other records.

Speaker 7 (44:02):
That one hit so hard because I think everybody has
been through that, like a friend there, You've helped and
you felt like the friend looked at you differently.

Speaker 4 (44:09):
So it's it hit hit because it was like, damn.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
You might be the only person in history who can
put out a song in a video that overshadows a
whole project.

Speaker 6 (44:17):
Yes, I appreciate that.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
Like the strangest thing like ro Ski will come out
and it's like that's what people want from joining, you know,
best best for me will come out and they're like, oh,
that's what I want. But you know, you got a
whole album coming up, you know what I'm saying. Do
you ever think yourself I might have to do a
whole album of visuals?

Speaker 17 (44:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 16 (44:33):
Yeah, I was gonna make it turn bro Ski into
like a series, you know with Rotiney, and like really
create a story out of it and like go crazy
with it. So I was entertaining that for a little bit.
But yeah, I thought about it. I'm about doing the
whole album series thing or whatever. I just haven't done
it yet. I think that these these music videos are
very inspired by movies, not from specific movies. I mean

(44:54):
just the feel of it. Pauls right, It's like it's
very cinematic and it's like I'm create my own movie
with in the visual, within the music. I think that's
subconsciously me. I really wanted to get into movies, being
doing movies, you know what I mean, acting in movies.
So that was really subconsciously me trying to bring that
into fruition so these actors can see this. So you know,

(45:15):
these directors can see these movies or these videos and
be like, yo, I gotta get him in a movie.
I gotta make a movie with him, and YadA, YadA, YadA, right,
And that was what I was trying to do, and
it work right because then I was able to get
Mark Wahlberg in the joint, and I was able to
get these other actors and roll teem me and YadA,
YadA YadA, and then I ended up actually right then,
I ended up actually getting in movies with them, right.

(45:38):
But they called me to be Mark Wahlberg put me
in a movie my first movie ever, shout out to
my brother Mark Wilbert. And then Will Smith had me
in Bad Boys for you know what I'm saying, which
is Fire that's about to drop.

Speaker 2 (45:48):
That's an exclusive.

Speaker 16 (45:51):
Yeah, I supposed to reveal that. I think I revealed it,
I posted it or whatever. You just wasn't paying attention.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
Got a big role.

Speaker 16 (45:57):
Nobody in that movie has a big role except Martin.
It will got you, you know what I mean, because
of the because of the direction they went in with
the movie. Everybody that comes in the movie is it's
a section and then they're out and then it's just
like onto the next person that comes.

Speaker 6 (46:10):
In the movie.

Speaker 2 (46:10):
I don't know if I want to see you act
as much as I want to see you create. Yeah,
all right, you know what I mean that. Yeah, so
I'm sure you got something in the works, like your
own personal.

Speaker 16 (46:19):
I think that when you say create talking about music, movie,
oh TV show on video, TV show like how.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Like fifty power Child's getting you know, Atlanta? What's Dave
the Dicky Little Dicky Dave Ben Staples?

Speaker 6 (46:33):
Yeah, stay, just seen Ben Stable fire too.

Speaker 5 (46:36):
I like.

Speaker 9 (46:36):
I like that.

Speaker 16 (46:37):
But they got going on. But even that, right, even
the opportunity like that to do things like that, I
feel like I'm setting myself up for that when I
kind of create my own visuals.

Speaker 2 (46:46):
You know what I mean, what's your thoughts on Bobby's murder?
Speaking of people giving you prophers, he said that you
were the master pier of this generation, and he questioned
why more people don't talk about you making a quarter
million dollars a month independently.

Speaker 6 (46:57):
I thought that was fire.

Speaker 16 (46:58):
First of all, call me a massive The generation is
fire because master p was that's pee. That dude is
like the he's like the first one of the first
cats to really do this for real, like independently and
like really do it. So like him calling me that,
it was just like wow. You know, I didn't know
he never he never displayed that to me before. So
with him going on, you know, saying that, it was like, wow,
I didn't know he felt that way.

Speaker 21 (47:19):
You know.

Speaker 16 (47:19):
I think that that's dope that he aspires to, you know,
become independent, that you know, make his money. You know,
the music industry has changed a lot, So I thought
it was dope.

Speaker 1 (47:28):
Got it.

Speaker 7 (47:28):
I joined Lucas is here, so don't go anywhere. It's
the Breakfast Club Good morning. Yeah, with all the Breakfast
Club NV. Just so Larry Charlamage, the guy we're still
kicking it with. Joining Lucas, I got a question DM
Mex's on the album. Yeah, Now, how did you get diverse?
X X break that down?

Speaker 4 (47:44):
You an exit the studio?

Speaker 6 (47:45):
How was that so?

Speaker 2 (47:46):
So I didn't go for it to symbols on it too.

Speaker 6 (47:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 16 (47:50):
I spent some time with X. We played pool a
few times. I got to pick his brain. He gave
me a lot of advice. I had real conversations with
Axious about like his life is upbringing. I was able
to ask him a lot of personal questions just so
I can understand him because I kind of had a
feeling at some point that he was going to go
before the time, you know, yeah, a million percent. So
I made it a point to ask him as many

(48:10):
questions as as I wanted to ask him. And yeah,
he's a home boy. He'll hit me up at like that.
Dude hit me up at like text me a like
one in the morning, like Yo, let's go out. You
know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (48:20):
All right, let's roll and we go hit the you know,
the Billard or something. We just go play pool. But
he was a very interesting guy, and he was a
real one.

Speaker 2 (48:27):
You know, I think he's from another dimension. Yes, yeah,
he's never met somebody like DMX. Nothing about him was
like a human. He's different, like nothing, He's different. And
one thing I loved about X was that he was
had a very tough sterea. Right, he was very You
never questioned his sexuality. He was a very tough exteria

(48:48):
but on the inside, like he will pray for you,
you know what I'm saying. Like, hell, he was very
He was a very emotional guy too, yet he's been
through a lot, you know what I mean. When I
had a conversation with him, you know one day, you
know he had he was pretty much I was explaining
to him how me being signed to a label at
this time, I was just like felt defeated because I
wasn't getting what I needed to out of the situation.

(49:09):
And we had a real conversation in which he gave
me some advice, And right after we had that conversation,
I wrote, I'm not racist. Wow, changed my entire life.

Speaker 16 (49:18):
Right after we had that one conversation, and he said,
start from the jarm board, come up with something groundbreaking.
Force the hand of the label, make them believe. Wow,
I've been at a relationship or something.

Speaker 6 (49:30):
Yeah, when did you do the years ago?

Speaker 2 (49:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (49:32):
Wow, So you have more than one x Verse.

Speaker 6 (49:34):
Soon I got another, Like, yeah, I got another ex
Verse too. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:38):
You know you talked about collabing with Future and you
got a young Boy on this album. But then you
said you feel like sometimes you gotta dumb your lyric
dow when you get on records the Future, so like
when you collab with somebody like a young Boy, like
like why if you got to turn your volume down?

Speaker 6 (49:50):
It's not that I think that. I'm such a fan
of a lot of different types of music. I love this.

Speaker 16 (49:55):
There's Future records that I love. He got some, he
got some bops like young Boy, he got a box.
Maybe not all of them, you don't. We don't love
all the Futures music. We don't love all the Joiner's music.
We don't love all of anybody, right, But the point
is I'm a fan of a lot of people. Wouldn't
be surprised to know that I listen to a lot
of different types. And it's like if I jump on
the record with certain people, you know, I'm not trying

(50:18):
to go off like that. I want to go into
their world sometimes and I want to like have fun
with it and play with it a little bit.

Speaker 5 (50:23):
Pause that.

Speaker 6 (50:32):
Pause.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
I was with your family.

Speaker 7 (50:35):
You know, you have two kids, and of course you
have your sister here today. How are you with your
family and breaking down the business and teaching them.

Speaker 6 (50:41):
I don't. I keep that separate, that's man, I keep
the music.

Speaker 2 (50:48):
I don't.

Speaker 16 (50:49):
I don't know, just saying when I'm with family and
family time as family time. I don't even like mixing
business with family and you know, explaining business. It's like
I just separate time. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (50:59):
What if I'm a cousin who wants to work in
the Frozen Yoga spot, I can ask you about that.

Speaker 6 (51:04):
Yeah, I got my niece that she worked there and
that city that's like on the outskirts.

Speaker 2 (51:11):
Yeah yeah, yeah something you want a franchise?

Speaker 6 (51:14):
I feel like I could. Yeah, yeah, you need that.
I feel like I could.

Speaker 2 (51:19):
Yeah, what made you want to do frozen Yoga?

Speaker 6 (51:21):
Because I was in the morning.

Speaker 16 (51:22):
I stopped eating breakfast, I started drinking like protein shapes.
So I was always spending my time at like this
one spot.

Speaker 6 (51:27):
And I was like, you know what, I'm.

Speaker 16 (51:28):
About to just do my own my first brick and mortar.
You know what I'm saying, Like my first business outside
of the telly, you know, the music outside of that.

Speaker 2 (51:36):
So I want to ask you about a line from
that Jelly Roll said, and Best for Me said, how
can you love someone and learn to let them go?
You think that's achievable from your experience?

Speaker 6 (51:44):
That's my middle name.

Speaker 16 (51:45):
That's one of the things about myself that I recognize
as a part of myself that I hate but I
love at the same time that I'm able to do
shut that switch off?

Speaker 1 (51:54):
You know, were you ever unable to do that? What
it's like?

Speaker 16 (51:58):
I just thought that I became decent ties to paint
to hurt, you know. So it's like, in order to
not really feel it paused, I learned how to create
my own light switch to where I could just shut
the light off and nobody safe from that light switch,
you know what I mean. And it's a it's a
pretty thing to have, because it's real difficult sometimes to

(52:22):
you know, build real relationships. When you can do that,
you know what I'm saying. You could just shut off
a switch and then just be like and nobody's safe
from that.

Speaker 6 (52:30):
I've had to do it to family, friends, girls, you know,
and it's like.

Speaker 16 (52:35):
If you experienced it at the level that I've experienced
it with some of the closest people to you.

Speaker 6 (52:40):
Nobody's safe. Nobody safe.

Speaker 2 (52:43):
I think some people think unconditional love requires the acceptance
of harmful behavior, and I agree with you. I don't
even agree with that though.

Speaker 16 (52:50):
A lot of people think that just because you love
them means that you got to keep them around, but
you got to deal with both that you don't want
to deal with. I feel like my mental health and
peace of mind is the most important thing to me,
or above anything else, right, Like my sanity is the
most important thing to me. If we clashing, there's an
incompatibility there, right, And it's like that has to be

(53:11):
addressed or else we're just gonna be incompatible.

Speaker 5 (53:13):
Right.

Speaker 16 (53:13):
And it's like a lot of people think incompatibility just
is within relationships, but it's really within friendships, it is
within workspaces, just within a lot of different things.

Speaker 9 (53:21):
Right.

Speaker 6 (53:22):
It's like, how compatible are you to me?

Speaker 5 (53:24):
You know?

Speaker 16 (53:24):
And it's like once I realize and once I see
that we're not compatible, that's when I gotta go ahead
and flip that light switch off. And then you take
that like I never cared about you at all, But
that's not the truth. The truth is I still love you,
We're just not compatible. You gotta go your way and
I gotta go my way. It's a tough thing for
me to even do because it's like, damn, like I
gotta I have to do that again. It's hard to

(53:44):
have real genuine relationships when that happens, you know.

Speaker 6 (53:47):
What I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
But you're still protecting you at all.

Speaker 6 (53:49):
One hundred percent. One hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
Got a couple more questions. There was a go for
me of a woman who was killed. You donated ten grand,
but then she ended up being in your music video.
Did you know that she was in your video before
you're doing it?

Speaker 6 (54:02):
Yeah? I knew her. I know her personally. Oh okay, okay, yeah,
I know it personally.

Speaker 16 (54:06):
And it was just a sad situation, you know, very sad,
very sad situation for the city.

Speaker 2 (54:12):
You know.

Speaker 16 (54:12):
It's another reminder that you know, you be here one
day and tomorrow you be gone, you know. And it's
like what happened to that young woman and her daughter
was was horrific, you know. And it's like I felt
guilty because she was in the video, and she in
the video, she was rapping in the car that she
died in the car, you know, so it's like it
was just haunting and you go back and watch it.

(54:33):
I'm still thinking about taking a video down just because
I just just you know what i mean, Like it's
just it's just so.

Speaker 2 (54:39):
You know, it's just one of them spooky coincidence. I mean,
like you can't hold yourself accountable.

Speaker 6 (54:44):
Nah, I'm not.

Speaker 16 (54:44):
Holding myself accountable. It's really just like it's just I
don't know, it's a freaky.

Speaker 1 (54:48):
Thing, you know, but still to see it in it
actually yeah, yeah.

Speaker 16 (54:53):
It's one of those things. Disgusting man. And it's like,
you know, her daughter had passed away to both of
them in the car. Somebody had ran up and spray
the car up with her daughter. And her daughter was
supposed to be on the first verse in that song,
but I chose another little girl instead, you know what
I'm saying. But I didn't know her daughter as well.
Her the mom and a daughter was really good people's

(55:14):
you know what I'm saying. So that really was tragic.
And she was in the military, she served the country,
you know what I'm saying. So resting piece to absolutely
resting Pieza Shorty.

Speaker 2 (55:24):
Last question, are you working on a joint album with
Will Smith. That was That was a rumor too.

Speaker 16 (55:29):
I want to say some one called a joint album.
You helped do his album though, Yeah, yeah I was.
I'm you know, you're working on some music together. You know,
I got wheeling his bag, so I can't wait for
the music to actually drop.

Speaker 2 (55:41):
Yeah, what's the first offer? Some of the Bad Boys
four Time Track.

Speaker 16 (55:44):
Were actually about to go create something for the Bad
Boys for contract when I when I go to his
criblin a couple of.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
Days, okay, yeah, joining you working my brother, brother, you
are working new.

Speaker 4 (55:56):
Album is out right now? Not now, I'm busy and
appreciate you for joining us.

Speaker 16 (56:01):
Brother going on this tour, you know what I'm saying,
May eleventh, the June fifteenth, not now, I'm busy tour
featuring my man Millie. You know he's from the city.
To shout out to my brother Millie and Daks. Daks
out there doing this. Put him on the on the
joint too, So Dax is cool. So he's going on there.

Speaker 3 (56:20):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (56:21):
Lucas.

Speaker 4 (56:21):
Yeah, we'll say joy and Lucas. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning. Let's get right to jest with the world Wide.

Speaker 1 (56:27):
Miss you is real, but hilarus Jess Robber Moore just
don't do.

Speaker 22 (56:31):
No lines, don't do that talk.

Speaker 1 (56:35):
Nobody talks world why jets worldwide mess.

Speaker 5 (56:41):
On the Breakfast Club. He's the coaches ship.

Speaker 2 (56:43):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that nobody.

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Could get you to see this time. To set it off,
let's go just yes.

Speaker 8 (56:52):
Now that is an intro, all right, So in my opinion,
which I hope can be sweet because I don't see it.

Speaker 1 (56:57):
How old the US season.

Speaker 8 (56:58):
But they are doing Apple and Landmark iPhone monopoly lawsuits.
So they're accusing Apple of having monopoly over the smartphone market.

Speaker 1 (57:08):
We have audio for it.

Speaker 12 (57:10):
We allege that Apple has employed a strategy that relies
on exclusionary, anti competitive conduct that hurts both consumers and developers.
For consumers, that has meant fewer choices, higher prices and fees,
lower quality smartphones, apps and accessories, and less innovation from
Apple and its competitors.

Speaker 8 (57:32):
So you know, basically, they also claimed like the messages
between iPhone and Android have different features than iPhone to
I phone messages. The changing changing the quality of videos
and pictures, So it's like if, for instance, our oldest
person here, Eddie, Yeah, he has an Android disgusting anahum, yeah,
oh my god, I wanted a military ones too, from

(57:54):
beg in to day.

Speaker 1 (57:54):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 8 (57:55):
But we are trying to get him to get an iPhone,
but he loves Android and emodicons, you know what I'm saying.
And then if we send him pitches, it'd be blurry,
be pixelated, looks like legos and stuff, and he'd be like,
what are y'all sending me? But you know, but Apple
has disrupted the development of apps that can make it
easier to switch between competing companies too, And they also
said Apple has prevented the development of apps that would

(58:18):
allow high quality videos and other no high quality video
games and other apps without buying extra accessories. Apple has
also prevented third party apps from offerings have to pay use,
which everybody got used to only if you have an
iPhone though, sorry, And then Apple has made it hard
to use non Apple smart watches with Apple phones.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
I don't see the problem. If I don't see the
problem Apple, I.

Speaker 7 (58:42):
Make devices for my people, my company, my phones, my laptops,
my smartphones, my smart watches. I make it it's it's
this is what I'm doing it for. Now you're saying
I have to make it for other designers.

Speaker 1 (58:55):
Hey, that makes that's the whole point of me having
the best product in the market.

Speaker 12 (59:00):
Right.

Speaker 8 (59:00):
Stock Market shares of Apple dropped by four percent after
the announcement.

Speaker 1 (59:04):
Analyst says a resolution is not expected soon.

Speaker 2 (59:09):
Well, well, to me, this is all about power and control. Like,
we live in a free market, capitalist society. But I
don't think America expected companies like that to get this big.
And they cannot have Apple making all the money. You gotta.
Apple can't make all the money. They want other people
to make money. That's all.

Speaker 20 (59:25):
Really.

Speaker 7 (59:25):
They make people buy their phones. The device was that
good that people, and then people started buying my phones.

Speaker 4 (59:32):
There were other.

Speaker 7 (59:32):
Developers out there. There was BlackBerry, there was all these
other companies, but they phone with them.

Speaker 2 (59:37):
Apples was popping up the fruits, berries and all that
come out.

Speaker 8 (59:42):
And now and now they got Apple TV's Apple laptops, desktops, they.

Speaker 4 (59:50):
Doculous type glasses.

Speaker 2 (59:51):
It's just their way of you know, making making them
cut the pie up. They have to cut up the pie.
That's basically what they're trying to say. Y'all have to
cut up this pie and share with others.

Speaker 1 (59:59):
That is yes, that is like hating on this company anyway. Whatever.

Speaker 8 (01:00:03):
Chick fil A facing backlash for changing it's chicken. Oh
my gosh, sorry Ashton my son, he loved Chick fil A,
but he won't be eating it no more. The company
recently announced that it would be no longer it would
no longer use antibiotic antibiotic free chicken and instead use
chicken raised nai hm. So all right, I'm about to

(01:00:24):
tell you no antibiotics important to human medicine. No antibiotics
important to human medicine. The company had switched to antibiotic
free chicken in twenty nineteen, after vowing to do so
five years earlier. Chick fil A says it's making the
switch to maintain supply of high quality chicken you expect
from us, But many customers are criticizing the chain for

(01:00:45):
going back on its promise because Chick fil A was
like the only fast food place that had.

Speaker 1 (01:00:50):
Real chicken, but chicken.

Speaker 8 (01:00:53):
So they like, we're gonna start pumping them up with staboids,
making them in the lab.

Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
Whatever, that's what it's gonna be.

Speaker 2 (01:00:58):
That's what's it anyway, y'all gonna eat it anyway, who's
y'all we don't even really know what's in there now
with everything you just described, it was in there now,
nobody knew that.

Speaker 4 (01:01:07):
But I thought that was the whole point of chick
fil A.

Speaker 7 (01:01:08):
While people love Chick fil A because I thought it
was non GMO nine all that other stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
And not justovy. Don't let him change of mind. That's
what it is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
That's what it is. I just like it because it's good.

Speaker 4 (01:01:17):
But it was good and it was healthier than the
other choices.

Speaker 2 (01:01:21):
That's what everybody thought.

Speaker 4 (01:01:22):
Yeah, that's the reason. That's the reason why people wait
on lines all the time for a Chicken fil A.

Speaker 8 (01:01:26):
It was good, right, but now when you eat it, yeah, okay,
So don't say, y'all say we we we ain't gonna
keep eating it because I don't want to get done
of that. Oh yeah, but now, thanks suggest for the
world I mess. A lot of people probably won't. They'll
probably uh raise their own chickens and cook them and
stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (01:01:45):
That was what the day is.

Speaker 5 (01:01:46):
Y'all.

Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
Ain't never had to grow up like that. Y'all ain't
never had to chase no chicken around the yard with
your grandma, and then you catch that chicken, and then
your grandma whipped that chicken around like Pettie Pablo swinging
his T shirt and pop that chicken's neck, and then
you throw it down and then cut the chicken's head off.
Then you pluck the feathers off. Y'all ain't grow up
like I did. I didn't. I did, and I thank
God for it. Okam for South Carolina.

Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
That's why I got it.

Speaker 8 (01:02:09):
That's why I got a lot of land. I'm gonna
have me a farm. I'm serious, because of all this stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:02:13):
Man, Like, are you gonna you're gonna chase the chicken
like his grandma?

Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
No, no, no, no, I'm not gonna do that.

Speaker 8 (01:02:18):
I know you got some little cousins down South Carolina
who want to come up, and I paid them to
do that. I got you, so I had them do
that because they seemed like pros at that. All right,
But you know that's crazy. You said that is growing up,
and I'm actually doing that too. I'm putting the chicken
coop in my yard. But that's how we all grew up.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
There was always some type of livestock in someone's yard,
whether whether it was chickens, but I mean, like I said,
South Carolina, that's how it.

Speaker 4 (01:02:39):
Yeah, you're gonna put some chickens in Jersey, you damn right.

Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
Anyway, y'all listen, I gotta get to my last story.

Speaker 8 (01:02:46):
I just said the Devil is a lie after people
made claims around his na A c P acceptance speech.

Speaker 1 (01:02:53):
I'm very honored to be able to receive this amazing
award from the.

Speaker 6 (01:02:58):
From from the.

Speaker 8 (01:03:03):
So he had got mad at this social media influencer
right because he made the video. He cut that clip
and was like doing commentary, like, oh Usha, he almost
forgot that he couldn't thank the devil publicly.

Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
But he was about you, but he forgot where he
was at or whatever.

Speaker 8 (01:03:18):
So yeah, people online also other people online were saying
that as well.

Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
Usher said, get the hell out of here. God is
my Lord and Savior. The Devil is a lie. You
got me fed up.

Speaker 8 (01:03:28):
Now today, sir, I have time for this type s,
but today you're gonna hear he said. Oh I never
have time for this type of bs, but today you're
gonna hear this. So I was a bit nervous and
jumbled my words when speaking from my heart. I hate teleprompter,
and they started rushing me because I was getting a
bit long winded. Everybody gets nervous whatever whatever. He said,

(01:03:49):
You're terrible for even trying to share me. I mean, yeah,
I do all the time. I do it every day,
but usher not pregnant. Look, you terrible for even trying
to share this. I just felt like, yeah, he definitely
meant to say depths of my soul.

Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
Like that's just again, I'm very honored to be able.

Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
To receive this amazing award from the from from the
depths of my soul.

Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
Yes, yeah, likely from death. He just messed up on
the telegraunt from the depths of my soul.

Speaker 6 (01:04:22):
That's it.

Speaker 8 (01:04:23):
Like you know how people uh and over analyzing dissect
stuff and has on the internet.

Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
Oh that actually wasn't even a nigga that was.

Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
What that ain't about racist, about a mindset and behavior.

Speaker 4 (01:04:47):
But that is just with the world. Where I mess Charlamage,
who giving you a donkey?

Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Two man Detroit was happening three one three. But I
don't I need tailor Preparatory High school to come to front,
come to the front of the congregation. We would like
to have a world which you was happening to Dominique
Brown is an injustice we will discuss, all right.

Speaker 4 (01:05:03):
We'll get to that next. It's the breakfast club. Good morning,
you're checking out the breakfast Club.

Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
Your execution on the Donkey of the Day is something
to go for.

Speaker 13 (01:05:12):
You to read.

Speaker 1 (01:05:14):
They gave me donkey other day and I deserve that
you need to know what you need to tell them.
I am you have the boy. Tell them.

Speaker 5 (01:05:22):
It's time for Donkey of Day.

Speaker 22 (01:05:24):
It's a read.

Speaker 4 (01:05:25):
But you're so good at Charlamage.

Speaker 13 (01:05:27):
He wants Charlomagne to.

Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
Yeah, Charlomaine, who do you give it dusky the other day?

Speaker 20 (01:05:33):
Soon?

Speaker 5 (01:05:33):
Then?

Speaker 2 (01:05:34):
Yes, donkey today for Monday, March twenty fifth, goes the
tail Of Preparatory High School in Detroit. S LU to
everyone who listens to us on w j LB in Detroit,
drop one the clothes bombs for the day. Detroit. We
have a small problem this morning. See there's a history
teacher named Dominique Brown. And if you ask me, there
is an injustice that happened to Dominique because Dominique Brown
was let go from her job at Tailor Preparatory High School. Yes,

(01:05:57):
let go, fire terminated discharge, all because they didn't like
her side hustle, all because teachers are so underpaid in
this country that a lot of them have to try
to find other sources of incomes, our other careers. Okay,
trust me, if my mother was an English teacher in
South Carolina, and I've said on this radio, public school
teachers are disgustingly underpaid, all right. The humans that we

(01:06:20):
entrust with our most prized possessions, our children, are barely
getting by. There was a survey done by Anya dot
org that found teachers work more hours per week than
other working adults. Yes, an estimated fifty three hours per week,
seven more hours than the average working adult. And teachers,
no surprise here, report much less satisfaction with their base

(01:06:41):
pay than other working adults, and twenty five percent of
their work is uncompensated. Did you hear what I just said?
Twenty five percent of all the work teachers do is uncompensated,
and sixty six percent say their base salary is inadequate
compared with thirty nine percent of working adults. Okay, it's terrible, horrible,
for what teachers mean to us in our communities is

(01:07:02):
actually kind of criminals. When you have teachers like Dominique
who clearly love what they do because there really, you know,
there really is no other reason to be a teacher
other than the love, because you know you're gonna be overworked,
underpaid to If Dominique wants to have a side hustle,
God bless them. I know what you're thinking, Uncleshalla, what
you're saying sounds good. But before I agree, what is
her side hustle? Well, let's go to WTA Detroit for

(01:07:23):
the report. Police.

Speaker 22 (01:07:24):
Dominique Brum, whose rap name is Dripping Honey, has been
an educator for seven years and started teaching history at
Taylor Preparatory High School in August, but all that came
to an abrupt end months later after she says a
parent came across one of her rap videos.

Speaker 20 (01:07:38):
The first meeting that I had was like the principal
dund and they had told me that the parent wished
to stay anonymous, and she felt as if she didn't
like my rap career and that I was a bad
influence on the kids because I rap.

Speaker 22 (01:07:50):
She says she was fired in February because she's a rapper.
Before the firing, around Thanksgiving, she says there were meetings
and an ultimatum.

Speaker 20 (01:07:57):
My mind, in my heart was telling me two things.
I'm just I couldn't see myself like giving up my
other passion just because somebody didn't like it. They say,
erase all your content that was automating, erase all your content.

Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
I'm just like, respectfully, I can't do that.

Speaker 22 (01:08:11):
Brown acknowledges the profanity in her lyrics, but she says
that has nothing to do with Taylor Prepp and the
positive impact she's had on her students and the community.
In February, on her last day, she created a music
video with her students that has since gone viral. Christina
Lenz says her son in eleventh grader started a petition
in support of miss Brown, gathering over two hundred student signatures.

Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
Dropping the clues bombs for Dominique Brownie can't dripping honey
Dripping honey fired because of an anonymous hating as parent
complaining saying she's a bad influence on her students because
she's a rapper. How you feel like that? In Detroit,
home with some of the most influential people ever to
pick up a microphone, there is nothing but a bunch
of rapidy rap ass Negroes and Caucasians in Detroit. Okay,

(01:08:54):
people in Detroit started rapping soon as they come out
the womb, soon as they get smacked on the ass
by the doctor. They don't cry. They start spitting. Boss,
I don't even know what it's thought. Trick trick, ice wear, vessel,
side of Baby, baby Face, Ray forty two, Doug cast
Dog Royce five nine days, Low D twelve, Danny Brown.
Oh he tries Big Sean. Oh, they got this one
guy who's considered by many one of the greatest of
all time. He's not on my personal list, but objectively speaking,

(01:09:17):
you can't deny his place in hip hop culture. Marsha
Matters is that name ring a bell? What I'm telling
you is rapping in Detroit is like breathing. Okay, and
being from Detroit. There's a lot of other side hustles
she could be doing that could be considered a bad influence,
but raping ain't one of them. Yo. Now she got
a record. Okay, you heard them talk about it in
the news report. I saw. I watched it on YouTube.

(01:09:38):
It's called Dripping one on one And in the video
she has some of her students. You know, actually in
the video. In the description of the video, it says,
dripping one on one featuring the best students in the world.
All I hear is a positive anthem, okay, a positive
anthem okay, encouraging young ladies not to be ho east. Okay.
I don't know how old Dominique Brown is, but she

(01:10:00):
doesn't look old. And this is the first time, probably
ever in the history of life, that the age demographics
between adults and kids is really nonexistent. And what I
mean by that is the stuff we was raised on
in the nineteen hundreds and early two thousands really ain't
no different from you know what these kids is on now.
It's the same type of content. Okay, argue amongst yourselves.
We try to act like our generation was so much better.
They might have been talent wise, but the content is

(01:10:21):
the same. Okay. How was the generation raised off? Nwa
Uncle Luke lil Kim three six, Mathia and Eminem. Gonna
judge anybody, Okay, as long as that woman is doing
what she's supposed to be doing in that classroom and
her kids are learning and passing. If she wants to
rap in her spare time, let up. And I bet
you all of those kids trust her more than they
trust any other teacher in the school because she speaks

(01:10:42):
their language. Okay, how about this, Instead of stopping teachers
side hustles, how about improving pay because a lot of
teachers are getting out of the teaching business and a
lot of teachers aren't looking to a lot of people
aren't even looking to get into the teaching business. So
if you want to recruit and retain educators, get their
money up. But not only that, improved the number of
hours worked in their overall working conditions. That's how you're

(01:11:05):
gonna keep teachers wanting to be teachers. And in the meantime,
you shouldn't try to stop them from rapping to potentially
find a career to make ends meat. You should be
ashamed that they have to attempt to rap to find
a career that make ends meat because you not paying
them enough as a teacher. Please give Preparatory High School
in Detroit the biggest e hull. What y'all giggling at

(01:11:32):
looking at her? It's going through videos, but she got
a bunch of them, only one what else you got?
I saw drive driven one on one. It was there
was then there was the about getting it is that her.
I don't think that's hurt drive honey, driven honey, that's
miss honey.

Speaker 1 (01:11:52):
No, yes it is, yes, yes, it is how you
spell driven d R I P P I N his honey,
that is dripping.

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
No, she got it. But you know, as a person
who used to be a student, okay, we like the
teachers that got that back down. I want to take
that class. I mean, youin't got no choice in public school.
But I can't remember a teacher right now who had
adult at Berkeley Middle School and.

Speaker 4 (01:12:19):
He was all in that class. It was there every
day on time.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
She was also a very nice person though, right. I
don't want to say yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:12:27):
I mean he wasn't saying that about We were just
saying while he was preaching, throwing it.

Speaker 4 (01:12:32):
In the circle, climbing up the walls.

Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
Okay, what what what this middle high?

Speaker 5 (01:12:40):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:12:40):
The name of the song is called Nigga.

Speaker 1 (01:12:42):
No hold up, but that's another song.

Speaker 2 (01:12:46):
I gotta say that.

Speaker 1 (01:12:47):
Wait, so this is elementary school he's at?

Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
It just said the preparatory school more than his high school.

Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
It might be high school.

Speaker 2 (01:12:54):
Yeah, the kids looked older.

Speaker 1 (01:12:55):
You know what, I sau I went to a college
preparatory school.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
That was high school. If I'm being honest, some of
the kids in the video look older than her.

Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
Yeah, okay, it's more than likely a high school.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
Okay, rough out there, they grew up rough, They grow
up rough, all right. Well, Dripping honey, dripping honey, three
one three, go follow her on YouTube. She only got
three thousand subscribers, like a little over there, a little
over three thousand subscribers. Go follow her on YouTube because
she won't have a job right now. Okay, yes, you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
Have plenty offers by the end of the show, so
that's amazing.

Speaker 4 (01:13:29):
Yeah, Dripping one Drip one on one got ninety four
thousand views, that's.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
The biggest one.

Speaker 5 (01:13:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:13:33):
And then Nigga No got ten Thus we had Nigga
got ten thousands. And then the't call no cheat cold
you know, cheat code. Then the dripping Honey, the rumors freestyle,
that's the one that you're talking about, and just go
down this dripping honey rabbit hole real quick. Then there's
the the Let's go to the Beach Swimsuit edition luth

(01:13:54):
you dripping honey, dripping honey. It's disgusting what they do.
The public public school teachers out here in the street,
over worked and underpaid.

Speaker 4 (01:14:02):
Yeah, all right, well that is the donkey of the day.
And yes, Detroit, what up doubt?

Speaker 3 (01:14:07):
All right?

Speaker 4 (01:14:08):
When we come back, Nina Turner and Derek Dowdell will
be joining us.

Speaker 7 (01:14:12):
That says last name, right, I don't think so? Yes,
all right, so we're gonna kicking with Nina Turning Derek
Dowdell when we come back. It's the Breakfast Logomark.

Speaker 5 (01:14:21):
The Breakfast Club.

Speaker 15 (01:14:25):
Morning.

Speaker 7 (01:14:25):
Everybody's j Envy, Jess Hilarious, Charlamagne, thea God. We are
the Breakfast Club. We got a special guests in the building,
Miss sending Anina Turner his head. Good morning morning, and
you know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Last time Senator Turner was his she did to swirl.

Speaker 4 (01:14:39):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
We were talking about how good you and you know
you said you wanted to bring your trainer, Derek Dowdell.
Derek Dadell, Good morning, Derek.

Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
Alright, how you doing?

Speaker 2 (01:14:48):
Blessed Black?

Speaker 8 (01:14:48):
And Holly played with brother's black and how did y'all?

Speaker 23 (01:14:53):
That was a while ago, about ten years ago, I
was training up the title boxing teaching class for boxing.

Speaker 3 (01:15:00):
She came in not knowing what she was doing.

Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
Awful and awful. Damn what he doing this morning?

Speaker 23 (01:15:08):
You know, we just formed the formed the boy and
start talking and she needed some training. So I looked
out talk to the Oh yeah, yeah, my fuck. So
I looked out for for the training.

Speaker 8 (01:15:19):
And it's been ever since, ever since, we consider ourselves
sisters and brothers. He's been in my life through thick
and thin, And that's really a big deal because working
out is a mental it's for your mentals, and I know,
for you the mental health thing or just kind of
self awareness, it's not even mental health is about self
awareness of what you need and physical activity is very

(01:15:39):
much a part of that.

Speaker 21 (01:15:40):
And one of the things I love about him. You
can come into the gym and if you he knows
when you're not right. And so I'm kind of I'm
an introvert. A lot of people don't know that, but
I go in and if my mind ain't right, he'll
ask what's wrong with you?

Speaker 1 (01:15:53):
And I said, no, he's I'm asking you.

Speaker 21 (01:15:54):
A question, what's wrong with you? And he'll he'll probe
until you kind of tell him you know what's wrong.
And not every kind of trainer does that. Some of
them are just really concerned about physical and it's a
mental exercise too. And he's seen me up and down,
he's seen me really small from stress. And again a
trainer might say, oh, I got you know, she lost
a whole lot of weight.

Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
That's good. He was like, oh no, this ain't good.
This ain't good because it's the way you lost the
weight and you look sick, unhealthy, and you.

Speaker 21 (01:16:20):
Know, lost everything. And I couldn't need to go eat
some French fries, some sweep tape pots, some I don't want,
no hummus sal.

Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
That was only in that situation.

Speaker 21 (01:16:33):
But the moral of the story is it's not just
about how much weight you lose, it's how you lose it.
And it's about your mentals too, And he combines the
two very well. How did you get into fitness?

Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
So I was I was I was a truck driver
and I was a truck driver.

Speaker 23 (01:16:56):
So you know what's happening chess issues. So I went
to the doctor. I was two seventy five.

Speaker 3 (01:17:02):
I was a big boy.

Speaker 23 (01:17:03):
So the doctor was like, yeah, man, you you on
the verge of having a heart attack at twenty eight something.

Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
I said, oh no, we can't. Yeah right, it was serious.

Speaker 2 (01:17:11):
Your widow Maker was clothed with the widow maker had
a blocked out.

Speaker 23 (01:17:14):
No, no, it was no, it was just doing too much,
you know, eating, crazy, drinking, just doing too much, out
of shape. So uh, you know, I started working out,
got in good shape and then I've always been passionate
about working out.

Speaker 3 (01:17:29):
Yeah, and then it just went from there and took off. Yeah,
it took off.

Speaker 6 (01:17:33):
It just clicked.

Speaker 21 (01:17:34):
And while we're on that shar and just I want
to shout out a young lady. Her name is Moriel
McCain and she I know you do the women's history
soon put black history and women's history together. She just
made Team USA and boxing. She's from Cleveland. She's the
first woman and the first black woman to make Team
usay in the boxing category from Ohio. Her name is

(01:17:56):
Morel McCain and she's raising money to try to get
her family to be able to go to Paris with her.

Speaker 1 (01:18:02):
And so I just want to shout her out. Her
instagram is a millionaire moll.

Speaker 21 (01:18:07):
So for anybody out there that wants to help a
young African American woman who is on the rise and
doing the thing and just representing and I know you
like your little boxing too.

Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
You got in the ring with somebody from Cleveland. I'm
blinking on his name.

Speaker 21 (01:18:22):
Yeah, shout out the Sean just yeah, oh yeah, I
watched the video. Yeah he was talking all kinds, you know.

Speaker 6 (01:18:32):
But he did that right up.

Speaker 2 (01:18:34):
He did that a little bit. Yeah he did.

Speaker 21 (01:18:42):
But since we own fitness and I'm just really so
proud of her. And one of the things you guys
were talking to the actress Marsha and talking about being
there for each other and lifting each other up. And
that's why I want to shout that young lady out.
And one of the reasons why, you know, I brought
my trainer. One of the things just in my relationship
with Charlemagne over the years, and we met when he
moderated when Sanator Sanders was running at twenty sixteen, he

(01:19:04):
moderated a panel at Apollo And thanks.

Speaker 1 (01:19:07):
To FIGUREO, that's how I call teslaing. That's my girl.

Speaker 21 (01:19:10):
She advises me on politics, you know, really press the
campaign to do a lot of black outreach. And that's
how shar and I became friends and we just clicked
and we've been together ever since. But he really lifts
up and he especially lifts up black women and That's
what I love is something particularly spectacular delicious when it's
our men lifting us up and shout out to Michael

(01:19:31):
render too killer Mike, the same thing, and when people
like defend you in public because for me, I'm a
lightning rod. So doctor russad Ritchie of TYT, which I
hope you guys will have on, is another one of
those when our men defend.

Speaker 8 (01:19:44):
Us in public when people come it ain't nothing like it.
You know, God's love is strong, but black love is
right under that. And so I just you know, wow,
I just got a shout at out.

Speaker 6 (01:19:57):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:19:58):
Yeah, you know a fitness guy. Yes, sir, what's your
thoughts on this whole Olympic era? Everybody's in an Ozimpic
gold medalist.

Speaker 6 (01:20:08):
Medal.

Speaker 23 (01:20:10):
I mean, if it works for you, it works for
you me personally. I mean, I mean I don't know,
you know, because I know a lot of people use it.
But all I can say, if it works for you,
it works for you. I mean it started with a
diabetes thing, but hey, they found another way to work
it and it works well because I know people personally
that's on it and they shrink up to you still

(01:20:34):
need to Yeah, So you never knowed the long term
side effects. But I know with the ose zempic you
it'll have you flabby too, So you gotta get that
work in too. It's just not you can it'll it'll
stop you from eating.

Speaker 13 (01:20:46):
You know.

Speaker 23 (01:20:47):
It's all kinds of side effects. How you constipate it,
it's different things, but it will have you lose the weight,
but you know you also get flabby, so you gotta
get that work in. Come see me, anybody, how do
they come to uh?

Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
Get it?

Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
Get DDT dot com and you can look me up
on Instagram. Derek Dowdell training.

Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
Me all over the world.

Speaker 3 (01:21:07):
Right, absolutely, no question.

Speaker 4 (01:21:09):
No question.

Speaker 7 (01:21:10):
All right, we got more with Nina Turner and Derek
dal Dell. When we come back, it's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning morning everybody.

Speaker 4 (01:21:16):
It's DJ Envy.

Speaker 7 (01:21:17):
Jesselaris Charlamage, the guy we are the Breakfast Club. Were
still kicking it with Nina Turner and Derek dal Dell Charlamage.

Speaker 2 (01:21:23):
You know when it comes to the training you're doing, uh,
I mean, is it preparing you for this fight that
we're gonna be in for the next few months or
are you even fighting?

Speaker 1 (01:21:31):
I'm fighting? Okay, you know I'm always fighting. One of
my dear counselors said, you live in opposition, said you
let me decorating that, mother.

Speaker 2 (01:21:39):
I mean, let me decorate them like that. You might
put that in here, let me, let.

Speaker 1 (01:21:45):
Me, let me move the furniture, let me put some
photos up on the wall.

Speaker 21 (01:21:49):
No, I am sure, because I'm very concerned about what's
happening right now.

Speaker 1 (01:21:52):
You know what's happening all over the world.

Speaker 21 (01:21:54):
You know, whether it's Haiti, the Congo, Sudan, and I
talked about a whole lot, and I know I need
to be, especially the type of work that I do,
and I'm a lightning ride all the time. People try
to come for me. Yeah, I gotta be mentally and physical.
Oh yeah, I'm training, y'all. I'm training for this batter.
Oh yeah, I care very much.

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
It's it's the Biden Trump remaster to rematch. Nobody wants,
that's right. And you've been saying preaching that gospel from
the beginning, man, what should they be doing to energize
people to come out of No.

Speaker 21 (01:22:22):
Well, Trump's people energize right already. Biden's people are not
so much. Because this president has to really deliver material
changes and so you can't come out for bipartisanship when
it comes to increasing the military budget, right, but you
can't be bipartisan for universal health care. You know, you
got Republican led states in this country who won't pay
for who won't use tax dollars to pay for free

(01:22:44):
lunch and free breakfast. Students are you know, going to
bed HomeGrid, come to school? That all of that kind
of stuff is wrong. So to energize, do the thing
that will energize people to come. Cancel all students, that
not just some. I mean, I think it's an absolute lie.
If you can cancel some, he can cancel all. And
in particularly what's happening in the Gaza. You know, over

(01:23:05):
like sixty percent of Democrats, like his voters, believe that
there is genocide going on in the Gaza. But yet
this president won't move on that. He won't say that
enough is enough. Almost forty thousand people have died. Will
you talk about the people who are still alive and
living in famine hospitals being blown up, They can't get food.
Younger people especially are saying, not on our watch, are

(01:23:28):
we gonna continue to allow this? So I think if
this president pivots stronger, more strongly, not just words, indeed,
to say that you know, this genocide stuff got an end.
People will be more energized. Cancel all students that make
it a universal that those.

Speaker 2 (01:23:42):
Are the kind of things increase minimal the pivot on
Gaza and the reason I say that because thirty thousand
people are dead.

Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
Yeah, no, I'm not saying.

Speaker 21 (01:23:50):
I have met some people. I was in Dearborn, Michigan.
I was with Congresswoman Rashida Telee. We was on a
program together, well a panel, not a panel, but a
Riley kind of thing together.

Speaker 1 (01:24:00):
And I've talked to some people, and not just Arab.

Speaker 21 (01:24:03):
Americans, not just Palestinians, but I've talked to people from
all walks of life who are united in what justice
looks like, who say that they're not voting for Biden
under any circumstance. So because of the people who are
already dead and because of the suffering that is going on.
But there may be a certain segment of people. So
we're never gonna forget that those people are dead. But

(01:24:23):
there may be a certain segment of people who if
he strongly says no more money, then they may say
we'll go ahead and give you another chance. Because Trump
is a neo fascist. He is dangerous. And I often
say neo fascism kills you quick, and neoliberalism kills you slow.
Like we might have twenty four hours of oxygen left,
we can collaborate and try to figure out how to live.

(01:24:44):
But ultimately, if neoliberals don't switch course, we still are
going to die. And that is the problem with America
right now. If we can afford to send billions of
dollars to the Ukraine, billions of dollars over to Israel,
being wars and disrupting other people's lives all around the world, why.

Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
Can't we have universal health care?

Speaker 6 (01:25:02):
I agree?

Speaker 21 (01:25:03):
Why can't we have free college or debt free college,
especially for public schools. Why can't we pass the pro Act?
Why can't we pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act?
What happened the George Floyd Justice Act? What happened to
all of those things? So they are so fixated on
war and they are denying what we need domestically, such

(01:25:23):
if he doesn't do those things, I predict this, and
I'm not the only one. If President Biden does not
switch course, he is going to.

Speaker 2 (01:25:31):
Lose, you know, Senator to turn that like you know,
I've said numerous times I don't know what to tell
people when people tell me they don't care about either candidate,
when people tell me they're not even energized by the
political process. I get it for all of the things
that we're talking about right now, But what would you
say to people that don't plan on voting this year
because they don't like either candidate.

Speaker 1 (01:25:50):
Look, you might not do politics, but politics gonna do you.
You're gonna get done. You're gonna get done. The system
gonna do you. So you still got to go out
to the vote.

Speaker 21 (01:25:58):
I would say, go vote mad as He if you
want to skip that part of the ballot, because there
are other people on the ballot, Like all the energy
goes to the presidential But for example, in Ohio, we
had a health and Human services levee on the ballot.
So I went in the primary to vote, not so
much for what's happening in the presidential race, but there
were judges on the ballot, people running for other offices

(01:26:19):
on the ballot, and then the Health and Human services levee.
That is the case for every community in this country.
So the charge they need to go vote and vote.

Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Mad as hell.

Speaker 21 (01:26:28):
Now, I can't tell this president needs to change course,
and not just in words, but indeed when they're up
there hedging about forty thousand people dead, see now get
dead wrong, I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:26:39):
I mean that that's it.

Speaker 1 (01:26:40):
At a certain point, you got to say, this is.

Speaker 21 (01:26:42):
The math and math and here to quote Andrew Yang,
people are have died and you can't cover it up.
What you can say to any allies that not on
our watch that we got laws in this country, the
lay He Law, the Foreign the Foreign Assistance Act, all
of that that says that when a president has made
aware that another nation is denying humanitarian aid to others,

(01:27:06):
that we must stop supplying them. So you can't drop
bombs and bread at the same time. Those two things
don't go together. So char I would say to those
people they gotta go vote anyway. Now, I ain't gonna
tell them how to vote. They got to vote their conscience.
But they need to go and vote because there are
other issues that impact their community on that ballot other
than who's running for president.

Speaker 2 (01:27:25):
Nina, I'm sure that you'll be up here quite a
few more times before.

Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
Oh, I love you so much. It's so good to
be here. Can I shout at a book?

Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
I'm an essay.

Speaker 21 (01:27:33):
It's called Wake Up America. Black Women on the Future
of Democracy. Doctor Keisha Baines edited that book in twenty two.
Spectacular black women have written essays in that book. I
am one of those spectacular black women, and so I
want people to get that book Wake Up.

Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
It is a blue print for action.

Speaker 21 (01:27:51):
Wake Up America, Black Women on the Future of Democracy,
because you know, we feel the pain first and deepest,
because we cross all kinds of intersections. And Baby, when
black women tell you it's wrong, is wrong for the
most part. But I love my black men, though we
ain't gonna play them games.

Speaker 8 (01:28:07):
I hate when the Democratic Party try to separate black
women from black men.

Speaker 2 (01:28:11):
Trying to set it up to where if Trump wins,
is black men fault.

Speaker 4 (01:28:14):
Oh hell no, let me give you you know.

Speaker 9 (01:28:17):
I'm glad.

Speaker 4 (01:28:17):
One more thing.

Speaker 21 (01:28:18):
Seriously, if Trump wins, God forbid, it is going to
be because this president and the Democratic Party did not
deliver material changes for the people of this nation. It
is going to be because this president and the Democratic
Party led over genocide, are complicit in genocide in Gaza.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
That is going to be the reason why this man loses.
So he needs to choose.

Speaker 21 (01:28:43):
Is he gonna choose his coalition or is he gonna
choose to allow the person who is clearly a neo
fascist to win.

Speaker 6 (01:28:50):
It will be his fault.

Speaker 21 (01:28:51):
We ain't blaming no voters, and black people definitely ain't
taken the blame. They don't call out white women. Hell,
white women vote for Trump and very high margins. And
don't forget when when Obama, when President Obama was running,
they were so mad that President Obama won the promise.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
I'm just speaking truth. So just say amen and say ouch.

Speaker 2 (01:29:08):
When President Obama beat then Senator Clinton, some of them
white women were so mad they voted for McCain.

Speaker 21 (01:29:16):
So don't don't don't come, don't bring it here, don't
bring it to the feet of black people. We always
saving this country. Now it's time for this country to
join us and save itself. Amen and amen, letter say.

Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
Amen, Amen, ouch. Senator Nina Turner, her training Derek. If
you see a little bit more fire and Nita, it's
because of Derek, and they're not like that fire any
more flame to it. But then.

Speaker 5 (01:29:44):
Club the breakfast club, warning everybody.

Speaker 4 (01:29:50):
It's the j n V.

Speaker 7 (01:29:51):
Jess hilarious Cholamine to God. We are the Breakfast Club.
Let's get to Jess with the world.

Speaker 1 (01:29:56):
I mess Us is real bhether it's her lions just
the robber lord.

Speaker 10 (01:29:59):
Just don't do no lines, don't talk, she.

Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
Don't spend Nobody talk the world.

Speaker 2 (01:30:06):
Why Jeff World.

Speaker 5 (01:30:10):
On the Breakfast Club. She's the coach of ship.

Speaker 1 (01:30:12):
She was able to get y'all to see something and
understand something that.

Speaker 2 (01:30:16):
Nobody could get you to see.

Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
This's time to set it off.

Speaker 8 (01:30:21):
When they williams Son faces eviction over unpaid rent in
Miami luxury apartment.

Speaker 1 (01:30:26):
His rent is thirty seven hundred dollars. Dang, you have
no job.

Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
Clearly not Jesus Christ.

Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
I know that's right, all right.

Speaker 8 (01:30:36):
Kim Kardashian splits from Odell Beckham Junior following year long romance.

Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
Ah Duh.

Speaker 8 (01:30:42):
Metro Booman responds to speculation that Drake and Future are
beefing over a woman, a woman named Diana Duh Metro
woman said, y'all, nigga start making stuff up for enjoyment.

Speaker 1 (01:30:55):
For engagement and enjoy the music. I mean they better
not be beefing over female.

Speaker 2 (01:31:00):
Well, I mean people they're beefing over something. So untill
they letting people know what they're beefing over, they can speculate.

Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
It can't be one.

Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
All the take is one.

Speaker 8 (01:31:07):
I can see Drake beefing over female, but our future
by Drake because he likes I'm sorry and b I'm
just saying.

Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
Drake's just so passionate about just that kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:31:17):
It seems like it's a pillow talking.

Speaker 8 (01:31:19):
Proud he would be over somebody unfollowing him instead of
beefing with Kendrick.

Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
For saying something.

Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
By the way, most of the time it is a
woman most of the time.

Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Yeah, I think the time is no mean, but she
looked like everybody else.

Speaker 7 (01:31:32):
I don't know if that's the individual, but oh god,
she's like some pillow talking happened somewhere somehow, some way.

Speaker 1 (01:31:38):
Well, yeah, anything, Yeah, it could be a range of things.

Speaker 8 (01:31:41):
Nicki Minaj and Kenneth Petty ordered to pay five hundred
thousand dollars for assaulting a security guard in twenty nineteen.

Speaker 7 (01:31:48):
Yeah, they said that the lawyer didn't actually I guess
the case. He was supposed to quarda or supposed to
respond and didn't respond, and that's the reason she lost
because there was no response.

Speaker 2 (01:31:57):
Which just suit a lawyer when that stuff like that,
if they didn't know, what if what if you didn't
for your lawyer would know.

Speaker 7 (01:32:03):
I mean she shouldn't know, she nimi, so I'm sure
her lawyer should have known. And if he didn't respond,
she goes to the lawyer.

Speaker 4 (01:32:09):
That's a layer.

Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
He's as long as he's being paid. But I'm sure
he is. While she on to it now so she
can throw it.

Speaker 8 (01:32:14):
Yeah, ice Cep stands on working with Elon Musk after
fans call him out.

Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
Wow, why why why you can't work with Elon?

Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
You know, I don't understand about all you idiots who
say stuff like that. Yeah, y'all will complain about Elon
Musk and call Elon Musk white supremacist and all of
this type of stuff. But you're complaining on X on
his platform. If you don't, yeah, while you're in a test.
If you don't like X so much, you don't like
Elon so much, I think you need to get off X.

(01:32:44):
You sound like you look like a complete fool complaining
about Elon Musk on X in a tesla. I agree
with that, and gonna get mad at Ice Cube because
ice Cb're gonna put the Big Three on X, but
all y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:32:55):
On X and they still gonna watch.

Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
It's like we do you even think tweet?

Speaker 4 (01:33:00):
No talk no?

Speaker 8 (01:33:02):
The phrase no didty is trending after people using to
replace the word pause.

Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
I'm unpassible.

Speaker 5 (01:33:09):
Do you understand what I'm saying? I'm unpausible?

Speaker 6 (01:33:12):
Do you think that I care?

Speaker 1 (01:33:15):
So he won't be caring about that?

Speaker 8 (01:33:17):
Jesus, how which I would be in a conversation with somebody,
they'd be like, no, Diddy, like, come on, now, don't
do that.

Speaker 2 (01:33:23):
The crazy part of Diddy has had gay roomors since
the nineteen hundreds. You can thinky Williams for that, Okay,
since the nineteen hundreds. Literally, that can't bother him any
early nineteen hundred, that can't bother him anymore. I know
before it was, but now I'm sure he laughs it off.

Speaker 5 (01:33:39):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:33:41):
I don't have this, have what.

Speaker 2 (01:33:42):
I don't have those type of gay roomors, sir, you
don't have gallations. I'm gay, not gay gay gay gay gay.
It is different.

Speaker 6 (01:33:50):
I got gay.

Speaker 2 (01:33:50):
I got I might have a gay roomor like they
might think I'm a little sassy. It's a different Yeah,
there's a difference between you know, a little sassine and
a little zest.

Speaker 4 (01:33:57):
Okay, you gave the level.

Speaker 2 (01:34:01):
Difference. Come on, now, don't do me like that. Okay, Okay,
I got a little I mean, you can do me,
but don't do it like that. I'm just saying, lock up, flock.

Speaker 1 (01:34:14):
I got tattooed of Tammy's name, covering up. Okay, so
did she the other day. So that's so funny. Who cares?

Speaker 8 (01:34:21):
Chris Brown says dating me is fun You get a
comedian mental patient and what a poor star all in one.

Speaker 4 (01:34:29):
What mental patience?

Speaker 1 (01:34:31):
That's what That's what it says.

Speaker 8 (01:34:32):
Allegedly, that's what's saying. Though I don't think Chris. This
ain't the way Chris be telling, not the Chris I know.
This ain't the way you talk. Not a mental patient.
Jesus call him Charlomagne.

Speaker 6 (01:34:42):
I don't know Chris. Okay.

Speaker 8 (01:34:44):
Zeus ce oh ze Zeu's CEO Lamel announced that season
five of Johnson's Cabaret it's coming sound.

Speaker 4 (01:34:53):
And they're doing Houston. They said, y'all don't care, yes, Houston.

Speaker 8 (01:34:56):
So my girl, if she asked me to it you
do she had now, Yes, she has the best, the
best of the best hosting up there.

Speaker 2 (01:35:06):
That's my girl.

Speaker 8 (01:35:07):
Shout out to Joscelyn Tiffany had his reveals that she's
been so over two months following her recent d U
I R S.

Speaker 1 (01:35:13):
That's great and he's going going, that's what's up.

Speaker 8 (01:35:17):
Virgina King and Jimmy Kimmel have terry moment and first
interview together since her son's death.

Speaker 1 (01:35:23):
I'm very good to see you. It's good to see you.

Speaker 5 (01:35:26):
How are you doing right now?

Speaker 3 (01:35:28):
Right now?

Speaker 6 (01:35:29):
I'm good, good, I'm glad to hear that. I know
you've been through a lot the last year.

Speaker 1 (01:35:33):
Yeah, yeah, hey, uh, good to see you.

Speaker 6 (01:35:37):
Jimmy, good to see you too. Did you see Williams
shot at her backstage?

Speaker 2 (01:35:45):
Hard not to empathize with that. If you have children,
you know, you know you can't feel her pain, but
damn you wouldn't wish that on your worst.

Speaker 6 (01:35:53):
Child.

Speaker 8 (01:35:54):
Yeah, and it was said that they're actually friends, so
that's actually like, that's hard. That was hard for the
first time since that's happened. But yeah, that's just with
the mess. There was a lot of stories that they
should have never given me. And basically like little articles time.
But how there's a couple of good ones in there,

(01:36:14):
so y'all be the judge yet.

Speaker 4 (01:36:16):
All right, well, thank you Jess with the world wide mess.

Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
Yes, and I want to tell y'all to make sure
to go get your tickets for the second annual Black
Effect Podcast Festival, happening April twenty seventh in Atlanta, Georgia,
Pull Minyards. Okay, all of you IP tickets are sold out.
I'm sorry, but this general admission ticket is still left,
So make sure you go get your tickets to the
second annual Black Effect Podcast Festival, happening Saturday, April twenty
seven fat Pull Minyards in Atlanta. You can go to

(01:36:39):
event bright dot com or Black Effect dot com Slash
Podcast Festival.

Speaker 4 (01:36:43):
All right, now, when we come back, forgot the People's
Choice mix, it's the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (01:36:46):
Come morning, you're checking out the Breakfast Club. It's women's
history monk, and we're celebrating the most influential women in history.
Check out this phenomenal woman.

Speaker 4 (01:36:57):
Morning.

Speaker 7 (01:36:57):
Everybody is stej Envy, just a Raychelamine, a guy. We
are to Breakfast Club. Now it's time.

Speaker 4 (01:37:04):
It's course as Women's History monfe we repping, we are.

Speaker 8 (01:37:06):
Repping my girl, Tianna Taylor. That's my girl, my girl
from Harlem or whatever. Many people are introduced to the
singer actress Tianna Taylor from the MTV show My Super
Sweet Sixteen. That's where I first saw her. She won
my heart over with her big hair. I love her,
and from there Tiana's career took off. She has acted
in several movies, put out three studio albums, and has

(01:37:27):
been credited for dancing simultaneously with other people. In fact,
she was credited as a choreographer for Beyonce's music video
Ring the Alarm at fifteen years old, and nobody knew that. Today,
Tiana continues to be the talented artist as we know,
but has been doing a lot more behind scenes work
with videos and scenes that her daughter JUNI will be
following in her mother's footsteps in no time.

Speaker 6 (01:37:49):
I love her.

Speaker 8 (01:37:50):
That is one person that I will actually run away
and be gay with if it ever.

Speaker 2 (01:37:55):
Yeah, really single?

Speaker 1 (01:37:57):
I literally okay, and I'm.

Speaker 4 (01:37:58):
Not she's not and what if she?

Speaker 2 (01:38:01):
And what?

Speaker 6 (01:38:02):
I don't care?

Speaker 1 (01:38:02):
And oh no and what if she's not single?

Speaker 8 (01:38:07):
Well no, but yeah, either way, Yeah, that's the that's
the only person that I would you know, run off
with in the sunset.

Speaker 2 (01:38:13):
Okay, you said that already. You didn't put it out
there two times. Sounds like you're trying to manifest that.
No manifestation.

Speaker 8 (01:38:21):
No, no, no, the ship is sailed because I'm happy now.
But yeah, it's crazy. After I get happy. Did she
want to be divorced? I was like, oh, come on, girl,
could have happened a year earlier.

Speaker 7 (01:38:32):
No, boy, I love you T T all right. We'll
salute to t T all right when we come back.
We got the positive notice the Breakfast Club.

Speaker 5 (01:38:39):
Good morning morning.

Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
Everybody is seen j n V.

Speaker 7 (01:38:41):
Jes Celariy Charlamage the guy. We are the Breakfast Club Again.
I want to salute to everybody that was out in Tampa.
Shout to Tyler leplie uh the grand opening up his
restaurant and his birthday. We had an amazing time. I
love everybody out in Tampa. We had a We had
a good time. So shout to Tyler Leplee, shout to
Miracle Watts and everybody I seen out there.

Speaker 1 (01:39:00):
Slew to you guys, you got you got invited to
that DJ.

Speaker 2 (01:39:07):
DJ DJ the guy the best okay, true, all right,
because I'm like, why you didn't invite me and Charlamagne.

Speaker 4 (01:39:18):
No, I was DJ, I was, I was working, but
Chuck man'll go out. Probably wouldn't go.

Speaker 6 (01:39:21):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (01:39:21):
I don't never feel offend when I don't get invited.

Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:39:25):
Nobody was of you. You know what I'm saying. Oh
damn word up, I'll be there.

Speaker 1 (01:39:29):
Well, I like, I like to be invited.

Speaker 4 (01:39:31):
You're pregnant using the fly to Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:39:33):
No, it's then't count like to be the old damn
come through?

Speaker 2 (01:39:38):
Okay, well positive, yes, And I just want to remind
people go get your tickets for the second annual Black
Effects podcast. I did, but I didn't tell people who
was on the lineup. That's why I'm doing it again. Man.
We got Wallowing Gilly on that stage. We got uh
just hilarious. We carefully reckless on that stage. Horrible Decisions
is on that stage. Poor Mind's podcast is on that stage.

(01:39:59):
Ball Alert shows on that stage. We got some great
panels about the business of podcasting. Debbie Brown deeply well
is gonna be on that stage. So Saturday, April twenty seventh, Atlanta, Georgia, pullmanyards.
Go to Benbright dot com right now to get your tickets.
To go to Black Effect dot com Slash Podcast Festival
to get you tickets. Okay, it sold out last year
on pace to sell out again this year, so go

(01:40:20):
get your tickets. We'll see you April twenty seventh and
at al Sharlton.

Speaker 8 (01:40:24):
And in about fifteen days, y'all can see me at
the Barclay Center with some of the legends. I'm gonna
be there a with d L Hugh Glee, Bruce Bruce, Me, DJNB, Yes,
and Tracy Morgan.

Speaker 1 (01:40:38):
Michael's put this swore together. He's done it again. He's
done it again.

Speaker 8 (01:40:41):
Last year he had me at the Madison Square Garden
and this year I'll be at the Buckley Center, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:40:46):
So y'all get y'all tickets for that.

Speaker 6 (01:40:47):
That's right.

Speaker 7 (01:40:48):
And now he just added GZ and Glorella. They'll be
performing as well, okay, and that's nice.

Speaker 2 (01:40:53):
Jess is gonna be at Discretch Factory the end of
the month, So thank you everybody who bought those takes
to the sold out.

Speaker 1 (01:40:58):
The end of this week.

Speaker 8 (01:40:58):
Yeah, oh, this week, yes, gonna be this week. This Friday, say,
today is this week yes.

Speaker 2 (01:41:04):
Yes, okay, were in the streets. Yeah, it is this weekend.

Speaker 4 (01:41:09):
Don't say we you donna go out.

Speaker 2 (01:41:10):
I'm going down. I'll yes, all right, I don't know
what showed, but I'll be the one.

Speaker 4 (01:41:15):
Of them, now, you know how you know he lying?
He didn't. He just say he's gonna see the game
cocks and all back.

Speaker 2 (01:41:18):
From going to that Friday though, okay, that's Friday.

Speaker 4 (01:41:21):
She said, Oh, we can not gonna make both.

Speaker 2 (01:41:23):
You who're not gonna make both?

Speaker 8 (01:41:25):
You know not how long I've been coming to your
shows for years now exactly. I bet you'll be there,
and I'm here with you every day else, so you're
probably like girl, right, but I'll be there.

Speaker 2 (01:41:37):
Positive notice, simply this, let it go, okay, change the channel,
turn it off, unsubscribed, unfriend, unfollow, mute, block, walk away, breathe.
Cutting people off is a form of self care. I
have a blessed day, breakfast club finish for y'all, dumb

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