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0:00
I want to show you anywhere
0:03
else, So you're ready right now now to
0:05
pop that. Yeah, you guess
0:07
the world's most dangerous want to show the camera
0:10
the mother agree?
0:12
What jo is this? Listen
0:15
city? So d j
0:17
Amry the captain on this, the
0:20
only one who keep these guys in check. Chalomigne,
0:22
the Godo. This is the preface
0:24
comic. Good
0:36
morning usc yo
0:38
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
0:41
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
0:43
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
0:45
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
0:47
yo. Good morning angela
0:49
ye damn money
0:51
j amby Cholo Migne the god piece
0:55
to the penny get the day it is? Guess
0:57
what day it is? Dan?
1:04
Good morning Toronto. Come
1:09
on, it's happening. We almost Dad, Baby, we
1:11
almost Dad. Meant a little work with me. Got y'all
1:13
feeling good? Were goodbody good?
1:15
Yeah, We're good. Were good.
1:18
It's okay to be. It's okay to be
1:20
somewhere between O and K. Okay,
1:23
That's why I've been a lot this much somewhere between
1:25
O and K. But through all of that, I'm still blessed.
1:27
Black and Holly favor though the ego.
1:31
Yeah, well, hopefully you guys are feeling okay
1:34
out there. Westmore will
1:36
be joining us today. Now Westmore
1:38
Westmore, it's the CEO of the Robin
1:41
Hood Foundation. He's an author, entrepreneur,
1:44
he has a lot of titles under his belt. So we'll
1:46
be kicking it with west a little bit later. Military
1:49
military veterans got a new book
1:51
out called UM five Days,
1:53
The Fiery Recording of America. So
1:57
fiery Recording of an American city,
1:59
that's what it is. So
2:01
we'll be kicking it with West. And now you got front page
2:04
news. See what we're talking about. Yeah,
2:06
you know, yesterday was elections. I actually went out
2:08
and voted yesterday, So shout out to everybody
2:10
who went and voted, and
2:12
UM in the states where they were offering that, And
2:15
I know we were talking about Kentucky. Everybody was watching
2:17
there because they were talking about how many poles
2:20
they were making the voting process more difficult
2:23
for people. So when you talk about sion,
2:27
yes, and what actually happened there. Okay,
2:30
all right, so UM, yes did you
2:32
yesterday? I was out hugging trees. I'm a tree
2:35
hugger now because my sacred purpose
2:37
coach salute the yati um.
2:39
She she she told me to, you know, go
2:41
out in the yard and put my hand, put both
2:44
my hands on some trees, and put my forehead to
2:46
the trees, and you know, download all the
2:48
information that the ancestors want to give me
2:50
from the roots. And I just want
2:52
to salute all the tree huggers out there. I
2:55
never judged y'all, never laughed
2:57
at y'all. I just hear, oh tree hugger, you
3:00
know, think a certain certain type of person. I guess
3:02
like a like a like a hippie type, right,
3:04
But now I totally understand why y'all hug
3:06
trees dropping the clues bombs full tree huggers.
3:10
Yeah, I
3:12
didn't. I didn't know people literally hugged trees.
3:14
I thought they just call it. I'll bet I'll
3:17
be out there hugging the trees. I mean, I'll be waiting for my neighbors
3:19
to call the police. So when you're out there, right
3:22
and you're grabbing that wood and you
3:24
pushing it, wood, pulling it wood close to your
3:26
body, what's what's what are you thinking? First
3:29
of all, you don't push your pullet tree trees have been
3:31
there for years. Okay, unless you're the incredible.
3:33
I don't think there's no pushing or pulling of trees
3:36
towards you when you hug that wood. What's on your
3:39
mind? You don't. It's very
3:41
grounding, you know. It brings you back
3:43
to center in a real, real way. You go out
3:45
there, you could do your breathing exercises and
3:47
you can say a prayer like it really
3:49
really does bring you back to center. So salute all
3:51
the tree huggers out there. I
3:53
have joined you. I'm probably be a tree hugger. How
3:55
long do you hold that wood full? However
3:59
long? I feel it's like meditation. It's like um,
4:01
it's like like I said, I got there. I pray and and
4:04
I meditate and I do breathing exercises for
4:06
however longer I choose to
4:09
be out there, and I feel myself coming back to center. Then
4:11
then I fall back off the tree. But don't be on
4:14
the wood too long, man. It's it's it's
4:16
it's a good it's a good thing. You should try it. Okay,
4:18
Well, just don't be holding the wood too long, you
4:20
know, let it be free. A little bit envy, envy,
4:23
you have to Remember, you're married. I know you
4:25
haven't seen me in much, but you're married. We're both
4:27
married. You can't be flirting with me. What are you talking
4:29
about? You said you were helping the wood. I'm asking
4:31
questions. What I'm just curious.
4:35
People think, okay, but what there's something el
4:39
and that's something that rhymes with six that you could scream
4:41
out right now. It's just up to you. I ain't slay
4:44
this video about Draking the home and seen you this video about
4:46
Drake. This is how you sign on this morning. I'm
4:48
gonna takes don't don't you? Don't
4:50
you do it? Don't you flirt with me this morning? I'm just asking about
4:52
your grading the wood. Is there human resources
4:54
when we work from home? I'm
4:57
not sure? All right, Well, we'll be
4:59
back. Front page News is next. DJB
5:02
that's Angela Gye. We got the wood Hugger,
5:06
Breakfast Luga is the breakfast
5:08
Clogal Morning Morning. Everybody
5:10
is DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
5:12
Charlomagne, the guy. We all the breakfast club. Let's
5:14
getting some front page news
5:18
where we're starting you. Well, let's
5:20
start with the elections yesterday. As you know, voters
5:22
have been facing long lines, fewer in person
5:24
polling locations because of safety protocols
5:27
due to the coronavirus pandemic.
5:30
One place people were keeping an eye on was Kentucky,
5:33
and there were some issues. They said.
5:35
Some voters were stuck in Louisville waiting to park
5:37
their cars outside the Kentucky Exposition
5:40
Center, causing them to miss a deadline and get in line
5:42
when the post closed at six pm. The
5:45
center was the only site opened in Louisville
5:47
and Jefferson County because of coronavirus,
5:50
so video showed voters locked outside. Some
5:52
of them were pounding on the glass windows
5:54
hoping to be let in. Shortly after
5:56
that, they did manage to secure a court order that opened
5:58
the doors and extended the poll hours to
6:00
six thirty pm so that people
6:03
could actually have access to go inside and
6:05
vote. So Kentucky is one
6:07
of several states had also expanded access to
6:09
abs and see voting. Officials expected
6:11
a record turnout of over one million
6:13
people voting in the primary, so they won't have full
6:15
results until June thirtieth.
6:18
Because of all of that, Alexandria
6:21
Casier Cortez Nagle
6:24
say, the fact that social media was speaking on what
6:26
was happening in Kentucky more than mainstream
6:29
media is next to me, like the blatant voter
6:31
suppression in a place that Mitch McConnell
6:33
represents, the same Mitch McConnell that is blocked
6:35
two election security bills. THEMS
6:37
need to be honest about how tough it's going to be
6:40
to win in November because of voter suppression,
6:42
because of voter depression, people not
6:44
being roughed by Biden, and possible Russian
6:47
interference, like like,
6:49
like John Stuart said yesterday when he was here, based
6:52
off that line in his movie Irresistible, you can't
6:54
win a battle if you're not honest about what you're up
6:56
against. Period. All
6:58
Right. And Alexandria Jacio Cortez,
7:00
they were three Democratic primary challenges
7:02
for her in New York and she did
7:05
blow everybody out. So she's still
7:07
in. So we'll see what happens. Drop
7:10
on a clues bomb for AOC, dammit, one
7:13
of the good ones. Goodwhile
7:16
Now, meanwhile, Donald Trump was talking about
7:19
voter suppression. Yes, well, he was talking
7:21
about what he thinks will be happening with the Democrats
7:23
he believes will be rigging the election.
7:26
Here's what he had to say yesterday, the
7:28
Democrats are also trying to rig
7:30
the election by sending out tens
7:33
of millions of mail in ballots,
7:35
using the China virus as
7:38
the excuse for allowing people not
7:41
to go to the poll. I
7:44
was watching the CNN last night and Don
7:46
Lemon was showing this a segment about how Donald
7:50
Trump has done absentee ballots before, Mike
7:52
Pence, his wife, Jared Cushing, like
7:55
so many people into the administration. William
7:57
Bardy all did mail in ballots before. So I don't
7:59
know what the problem him is now. Yeah,
8:01
ironically enough, he was in Arizona
8:04
where he was speaking yesterday, where, by the way, there's been
8:06
a huge spike in coronavirus cases, and
8:09
Arizona, the county that he was in, actually
8:11
has already voted by mail and has done that
8:13
for years. The vast majority of vote is there actually
8:16
have for years already voted by mail. So
8:18
this is nothing new, all
8:21
right. In addition to that, Donald Trump talked about
8:23
monuments coming down. But the
8:26
radical left, they hate our
8:28
history, they hate our values,
8:30
and they hate everything we prize
8:33
as Americas that we're right because
8:35
our country didn't grow great with
8:38
them. It grew great with
8:40
you and your thought process and
8:43
your ideology. The left
8:45
wing mob is trying to demolish our
8:47
heritage so they could replace it with
8:49
a new repressive regime that
8:51
they alone control. He's
8:55
yes, yes we hate racism, Yes we hate
8:57
slavery, Yes we hate aggregation. Your history
8:59
is sysm, It's biggertree is hate. And let's
9:01
be clear, we built this country black people.
9:04
If you had two hundred and sixty years of of of
9:06
of free labor, labor, okay,
9:09
if you had twenty sixty years of free label and you
9:12
and you didn't get get anything for it, you
9:14
gave twenty to sixty years of free label and you didn't get
9:16
anything for it, you would hate the history of this country
9:18
as well. And for him to say that we want to replace it
9:20
with another oppressive
9:23
regime, what's more opressive to white
9:25
supremacy? What's
9:28
that? So? Jesus? All right?
9:30
Well, love manze Layer and that is your front page
9:32
news. Goodness great hey, And that that
9:35
John C. Calhoun statue
9:37
is coming down in Charleston, South Carolina right now
9:39
at eight four three, drop on the clues bombs for the eight forty
9:41
three They voted on it yesterday
9:44
and they are taking it down or right now, and
9:46
white supremacist are losing their minds suited
9:48
to my guy, mad Tecklinburg. Get
9:50
it off your chest eight hundred five eight five
9:52
one oh five one. If you need to vent hit us up right now.
9:55
It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, the breakfast
9:57
Club. This
10:01
is your time to get it off your chest. Whether you're man
10:06
from you on the breakfast club, like you got something
10:08
on your mind? Hello,
10:11
who's this? Nicole? Hey,
10:13
Nicole, get it off your chess morning, Nicole
10:16
Hey, Hey, charlomn Hey and behavior
10:19
because I'm a college graduate
10:22
and I'm also a veteran, and I'm upset
10:24
because I can't secure a home because
10:27
I got outstanding and stood the loan balances
10:29
and they don't want to give me the money for the house that
10:31
I want. And um, I work,
10:34
I still work for the government, and I start time
10:36
in the military, and I still don't want to give any money. You
10:38
know. I hate that. I hate that. I
10:41
feel like and I feel like veteran ships like
10:43
y'all the first college gradul in my family. And
10:46
this is what you know. And I did the right thing.
10:49
I got a degree and I
10:51
started stood hair, and I still continual education
10:53
and I still can't get the loan that I needed. What's
10:56
what's your credit? What's your credit? My
10:58
credit for is a seven eighty five and
11:01
I worked hard to get it there, and that still
11:03
don't even matter. Okay, I
11:05
hate that. I hate. I hate. I hate how they treat our
11:07
veterans. Our veterans should get uh,
11:09
you know, free room and board. Our veterans
11:11
shouldn't have to pay any taxes, you know
11:13
what I mean. And y'all should get a stipend. And y'all should
11:15
get a stipend every month. Is this your
11:17
Is this your first time buying a home? Is this your first home?
11:20
Yeah? Oh yeah, now we
11:22
got you. Now how many? Well,
11:25
yeah, I'm gonna put your home. My guy, Matt does
11:27
mortgages all right. He's been able to make miracles
11:30
happen, especially if your first time home buy it and
11:32
you're a veteran. There's so many different programs
11:34
right now. They'll give you down payments for your home, and
11:36
they'll also give you clothes on calls. So there's a bunch
11:38
of different programs. You you hold on and
11:41
I'll give you his number. Matt the mortgage guys his name
11:43
all right, all right, thank you? All
11:45
right? Hello, who's this It's
11:47
live from California. How y'all door? Hey,
11:50
what's up? Broetr king?
11:54
How you doing? I was calling
11:56
because the interview that you had
11:58
yesterday yesterday would John Stewart, Honestly,
12:01
I think it was one of the best interviews
12:03
that you have like had at the Breakfast
12:05
Club period. From
12:07
the range of topics that you discussed, just
12:10
the discord between two people
12:13
is something that we need to see, right, that
12:15
was like one of the best interviews that you all
12:17
have ever had. Appreciate
12:20
that. Um, something Charlomagne
12:22
that you said during that interview was
12:24
that something that the Democrats have
12:27
a problem with doing is our message messaging
12:29
and getting that he had getting that across to the people.
12:31
And like defunded police, right, it's
12:34
a triggering it's a triggering triggering
12:36
word. What do y'all think about saying like
12:38
refund the people into
12:41
the defunded police because we're asking for
12:43
a reinvestment in our communities. Correct,
12:45
And maybe that helped get people
12:47
in the door a little bit safer, But
12:50
what do y'all think about that It
12:55
has to do with the police department so
12:57
I think, you know, that is really the focal
12:59
point of the financing for the police
13:01
departments. I was thinking that slogan
13:03
gets to people inside the door, and then when you when
13:06
you explain to them how you refunded
13:08
people. Now you talk about how we're guy
13:10
investing funds from police department
13:13
putting that into mental health services, so
13:15
on and so forth. Yeah. I read a good
13:17
article that Michael
13:19
Harriot wrote about Tim
13:22
Scott, and you know, he was saying that he likes
13:24
the Republican police reform bill
13:26
a little bit better than Democratic bill. But it's actually
13:28
the same bill, but tim
13:31
Scott just has tim Scott just has a
13:33
different messaging. You
13:35
know, he's still yeah,
13:38
yeah, so he's still talking about the funding the police,
13:40
he's just messaging it in a different way. Yeah.
13:43
So maybe y'all should have like the prison abolitionists
13:45
like come and like and a police abolitionist
13:48
come and explain what it is, like same
13:50
dialogue that you guys are having, and really
13:52
like let people know, like, hey, it's not gonna
13:55
be lawlessness. We'll have a system.
13:57
It's just a reimagining of public
13:59
safety and restorative justice
14:01
in our prison instead of you know, punishment
14:04
okay, oh, thank you for checking in. Brother,
14:06
Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight
14:09
five one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit us
14:11
up now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the
14:13
Breakfast Club. Wake
14:17
up, wake up, You're
14:20
time to get it off your chest
14:23
with your man. I'm black. We want to hear from you on the
14:25
Breakfast Club. Hello. Who's this? Hey?
14:28
Good morning? Hi dj
14:30
n V, Good morning. This is Cheryl
14:33
Collins from Columbus, Ohio. Hey,
14:35
Cheryl, get it off at chest by way of akron.
14:38
Okay, what's up? Get it off at chess?
14:41
Yeah, this is my first time calling and
14:43
I wanted to call and tell Charlotte
14:45
Magne he needs to go sit in the corner. I've been
14:47
wanting to call him ever since
14:50
I was working, but I knew I wasn't gonna be able
14:52
to get in and he needs
14:54
to go somewhere and set out. What are
14:56
you wanting to sit down? Well? I want to sit down.
14:59
He want to ask John Stewart, you
15:01
should have seen what my grandmother had
15:03
to wear as a T shirt. My
15:05
grandmother was Tommy Louis. He
15:07
should see what she had to wear. I don't give
15:10
up about what asked,
15:12
now, I ain't talking. I'm talking for real,
15:14
I ain't talking like my niece taught me how to talk.
15:17
My favorite niece, her name is TC.
15:21
What don't you talking? I still don't know what you're talking about? Baby?
15:23
What you're talking about? Who
15:26
is this solomn
15:29
somewhere? Go to time out? Why
15:32
you got I need to know what I did
15:35
wrong? You quote?
15:39
You got that right? Ok. You're
15:41
gonna ask John Stewart what his mother
15:43
had to wear. You should have seen what my grandmother's
15:46
shirt. What happened? But we had to wear too.
15:50
I didn't ask any John Stewart what his
15:52
mama was wearing? What did you talking about? He's sure
15:54
that mama. Go ahead, get on this butt ahead, Tom
15:56
to sit in the corner. So I
15:59
don't know what this woman, Angela, Angela,
16:01
yee. You know many years ago, Angela,
16:04
many years ago, Michelle okay,
16:07
tried to tell y'all what was going on out
16:09
there in the street, and Kevin Gates
16:12
then tried to tell you when he's talking about
16:14
people eating booty and okay,
16:17
okay, how you doing? I love you guys. I
16:19
want to talk about Glad a manager
16:21
Steals. I'm glad a manager. Steals is
16:23
gonna whatever she's gonna
16:26
do on TV. You know, she's hosting
16:28
the BT Awards this weekend. Step
16:30
I ain't talking to you, Charlotte Man, you
16:33
have time out. She's
16:35
talking about when John stud was talking about the shirt
16:37
his mom wore in regards to him being called sexist.
16:40
Is that what you're talking about, mama? Yeah? John
16:42
Study was not talking about wind no goddamn shirt.
16:44
He said, I think something about a fishing
16:46
a bicycle. That's what she's talking about. She
16:49
did. That's ryot you.
16:53
My mother had to wear, My grandmother had
16:55
to wear and act went Ohio during
16:57
the riot. I don't forget
17:00
wait a minute, trying to make shut up
17:03
all the time, all this stuff. I've
17:06
seen these kids crying in the
17:08
streets. All that brought
17:10
back my memory. I'm trying
17:12
to get a COVID nineteen tests and they
17:14
give me the fucking run around. And I
17:16
know the system. Where you from, mamma,
17:18
Where you live at, where you live at, from
17:21
Akron, Ohio, by where of Columbus. I'm
17:24
gonna call Lebron and I'm gonna have Lebron senor
17:26
I'm gonna have Lebron send you a COVID nineteen tests.
17:29
You can't curse. The
17:33
only thing you understand it's curt. You
17:35
gotta say rights.
17:39
Were you your old daughter? Right? We can
17:41
we get your numbers, so we get that way, we can see if we could
17:43
find a place that's doing the free COVID testing for you
17:46
in Akron. Can we do that? I
17:48
think Lebron James doing
17:50
them to day at four o'clock. I love you, though,
17:52
get it off. By the way, I don't remember John Stuart talking
17:55
about his damn shirt. I remember John Stuard and he was
17:57
from a single mother, and he had a bunch of men working for him.
17:59
How you remember I
18:01
need a man like a fish needs a bicycle. Yeah.
18:04
What that got to do with me though? Nothing,
18:06
I don't know. But he was saying that his mom more than that
18:08
T shirt. Yeah, and
18:10
that's the shirt she's talking about. Get it off
18:12
your chest. Eight hundred five eight five one oh
18:14
five one. We got rumors on the way, y, Yes,
18:17
let's talk about Bubba Wallace now. He is responding
18:20
to the FBI's findings
18:22
that that noose in his garage
18:24
was there since twenty nineteen. It
18:26
was it that long. He didn't see it. I'll
18:28
tell you what what's going on. Oh my goodness,
18:30
all right, we'll talk about that. Next is the Breakfast
18:33
Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club
18:38
Morning. Everybody is cej Envy
18:40
Angela yee, Charlo Migne the guy. We are
18:42
the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors.
18:45
Let's talk Dio Hugely split, Oh
18:49
Gosport, guys,
18:54
Breakfast Club. Well, we told you
18:56
about d L Hugely. He was performing in
18:58
Nashville and he laps on stage. Later
19:01
on he revealed that he did have coronavirus.
19:03
He got tested. Well, now his son Kyle
19:06
Hugely has revealed that he also has tested
19:08
positive for COVID nineteen. Listen to this. I
19:11
regret to inform everybody
19:13
that I have tested positive
19:15
for COVID. I'm asymptomatic so far,
19:18
which is good. Um, so as
19:20
my dad, you know, we're both asymptomatic. My
19:22
mother tested twice, both times
19:25
came back negative. So that's good. All
19:27
right, Well it makes sense. I mean, as you know, they
19:29
were together, so and he
19:31
does work with him, so that's the risk
19:34
that's associated with that. Salute to the Hugely
19:36
men. That sucks, but glad y'all brothers
19:38
are asymptomatic and wishing y'all a speedy
19:40
recovery. The yellow be back on his feet
19:42
soon. Yeah, and I wonder what you said,
19:44
how long did he have it? Did he have it for seven
19:47
days already or did he get it a day ago? Like
19:49
how long? You know? I'm always curious, That's what I
19:52
was saying. It's just like, what if you've had coronavirus
19:54
for twelve days already, do you still
19:57
have to quarantine for another fourteen? And you only
19:59
got a quarantine for too. I don't know. All
20:01
I know is DL Hugli will be back out there spreading
20:04
the last and the information soon, and
20:06
we much rather that than him out of here spreading coronavirus.
20:09
Yeah. And I don't think there's any way to know exactly
20:12
when you got it either, And for some people
20:14
that last longer than others. Some people have it for like a
20:16
couple of months, you know, so it's
20:18
hard to say. All right, now,
20:21
Eminem has brought Rice to
20:23
five nine on and he's going to be actually
20:26
the director of Community Engagement and Social
20:28
Justice Initiatives for the Marshall Mathers Foundation.
20:31
Eminem said, I'm super excited about not just donating
20:34
money but launching new initiatives. My goals
20:36
are simple providing privilege
20:38
for the underprivileged, and rose
20:41
to five nine said, I'm honored to team up with Eminem to do
20:43
so Marshall Mathers Foundation,
20:46
So that's dope. They're going to be reaching new goals
20:48
together. They actually donated to the
20:51
Change for Change initiative that we do in the first
20:53
year to the Justice League.
20:55
How much did he donate? Two hundred and fifty thousand
20:57
dollars? Right, yeah, two it
21:02
I thought no apate
21:10
sizable donation absolutely
21:13
all right. Bill Cosby has been granted
21:15
an appeal in his sex assault conviction,
21:18
and so what that means is the
21:20
court will look into cosby challenging
21:23
testimony from women who accused him of
21:25
applying them with quails before sexually
21:27
assaulting them. Judges will determine
21:29
whether the jury should have heard from the women, many of whom
21:32
Bill Cosby said it was more
21:34
than fifteen years ago and the women's testimony
21:36
wasn't the same as the sexual misconduct that he was
21:38
convicted of, and that he was never criminally
21:40
charged in those instances. So the court
21:43
has agreed that he can object
21:45
to the County district attorneys going
21:47
back on what he said, but which was a promise to Cosby
21:50
that he wouldn't be prosecuted if he spoke
21:52
truthfully in a deposition. If you remember there was a
21:54
deposition. It was supposed to be sealed.
21:56
He spoke truthfully, but they did reveal
21:59
some of that. Now, as he's serving
22:01
this three to ten years sentence, he'll
22:03
be able to have an appeal. I'm
22:06
shocked Bill Colby is still alive. I'm not gonna
22:08
lie to you. I didn't think. I
22:10
didn't think he would he would last in prison. I
22:13
really didn't. I mean, he's eighty something years
22:15
old, legally blind, like, I
22:17
didn't think he would last. Be honest with you, I'm
22:19
shocked. Well, Bill Cosby's spokesman
22:22
said, as we have all stated, the false conviction
22:24
of Bill Cosby is so much bigger than him. It's
22:27
about the destruction of all black people and people
22:29
of color in America. All
22:32
Right, I don't know about that. I
22:35
wouldn't go that far, but okay,
22:38
yeah, I don't know about that. Um Now, Bubba
22:40
Wallace, we've been talking about this whole situation
22:43
with the news that was found in the garage
22:45
at Nascar his garage. Well, according
22:48
to the FBI, they are saying
22:50
that that news was present since twenty
22:52
nineteen. They said no federal charges would
22:54
be pursued. Nobody could have known
22:56
mister Wallace would be assigned to garage number
22:58
four. Last week the FBI, I learned the garage
23:00
numberfore where it was found, where it was found
23:03
was assigned to Bubba Wallace last week. The news found
23:05
in that garage was in that garage as
23:07
early as October twenty nineteen.
23:10
So I saw a lot of people were calling him, uh,
23:13
but we're calling Bubba Wallace Bubba Smilette
23:15
as far as referring to him as Jesse
23:17
Smillette with the new situation. And
23:20
here is what Bubba Wallace has to say
23:22
about the FBI investigation. I've
23:24
been racing all my life. We've raced
23:27
out of hundreds of garages that
23:30
never had garage pools like that. So people
23:32
that want to call a garage pool and put out old
23:35
videos and photos of of of knots being
23:38
um in h and
23:40
there as their evidence go ahead. But from
23:42
the evidence that we have, it's a straight
23:45
up noose. My thing is how racist
23:47
is NASCAR that nobody noticed the noose.
23:50
Ain't that kind of weird? Yeah? The
23:53
normal is how normal
23:55
is the news that it was up there so long and
23:57
nobody noticed that, whether whether or not it was
24:00
targeted that bubble, But that a noose
24:02
is just decoration at NASCAR. I
24:04
guess like you just just like
24:07
what you supposed to do when you get under the news, supposed to kiss
24:11
Christmas, Christmas miste.
24:15
It's a new the NASCAR mistletoe. When
24:18
when two races get up under that news, they posed
24:20
to kiss the hell And people were trying to
24:22
say it was a garage pull, and like
24:24
Bubba Wilds just said, it's not a garage pull.
24:27
Everybody's been calling it a noose. The FBI called
24:29
it a noose. It is what it is. So
24:32
whether it was or whatever,
24:34
it was a noose. Even if
24:36
it was a garage pool, Why is the garage
24:38
pool tied in the form of a noose? And
24:41
why is that? Okay, that's how
24:43
you know it ain't no black people at NASCAR, because
24:45
you're talking about people having blind spots. People
24:48
walk by that thing over and
24:50
over and over again and never thought
24:52
nothing of it. It takes the black man to be like, hey,
24:55
that's the news. That's
24:57
crazy. That's why diversity matters.
25:00
All right, Well I'm Angela Yee and that is your
25:02
rumor report. All right, thank you, miss
25:04
Yee. Then when we come back, we got front page
25:06
news. What we're talking about easy, yes, and we
25:09
are going to be talking about Donald Trump. He gave
25:11
a speech and Arizona yesterday
25:13
will tell you some of the things that he had to say. All
25:15
right, we'll get into that next keeping lot. This to Breakfast
25:18
club. Good morning across the country. I want
25:20
to get everybody is dj enjy,
25:22
Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the car, that's
25:25
the car, Charlomagne, the guy all the breakfast
25:27
car? Hell are you calling
25:29
me a car? The hell are you thinking about this morning? You want to ride
25:31
me? The movie? Is that somebody
25:33
just test? Somebody just texted me about it.
25:35
If I was having the car show and when
25:38
I read it, it's at Charlemagne and I looked in to say car,
25:40
So I said to Charlomagne in the car, So why don't
25:42
you say Carlmagne? Yeah, the
25:45
way in the car, that's just the way it kind of call
25:47
what i'd be to you, sir, No, tell me you'll kind of call without be
25:49
to you. Let me think, let me think. I
25:52
think you would be a Cadillac
25:56
Black escalated. That's that's
25:58
what I think. Oh classics.
26:00
It was nice, okay, smooth
26:03
ride, like
26:06
how you feel about like how you feel about me? Envy
26:08
my cones. Anyway, let's get let's get in
26:10
some front page saved up for Valentine's
26:18
Kay, yeah, I know it's awkward. They're okay,
26:21
all right? Uh yeah. And Kentucky
26:23
voting did happen yesterday
26:25
in the primaries. A lot of people were looking
26:28
to see what would happen in Kentucky because they reduce
26:30
the number of polling places from thirty seven
26:33
hundred to fewer than two hundred, and
26:35
there were just one. There's just one polling
26:38
place in each of the state's two largest cities
26:40
because of a massive shortage of whole workers.
26:42
And by the way, I do want to thank all the people
26:44
who worked yesterday. I was. I
26:47
went and voted yesterday in Brooklyn, and
26:49
I did go in and I thanked everybody who was in there
26:51
working because I know everybody's there's
26:53
a lot going on with coronavirus, so it's nice to see
26:55
people putting in at work. And being pleasant to everyone
26:58
and making sure they direct people in the right way. So
27:01
that led to concerns of a suppressed
27:03
Black vote, and a lot of people were
27:05
talking about that. They said in Lexington the
27:07
lines were about an hour long during
27:10
midday and they actually had to end up extending
27:13
voting as well. In Kentucky because a lot of people
27:15
couldn't get in, a judge to extend voting by thirty
27:17
minutes, which allowed more than one hundred people who were
27:19
waiting outside the Expo Center
27:22
in Louisville to actually be able to get in and finish
27:24
the voting process. Some people said
27:27
that it was smooth, though some people said it only took them
27:29
ten to fifteen minutes. Other people ended up waiting over
27:31
an hour, so a lot of people were paying attention
27:34
to what would happened there. In
27:36
the meantime, Donald Trump was in Arizona
27:38
and he actually talked about
27:41
how he feels like the Democrats could be rigging
27:43
the election. The Democrats are also
27:45
trying to rig the election by sending
27:48
out tens of millions of mail
27:50
in ballots, using the China
27:52
virus as the excuse
27:55
for allowing people not to
27:57
go to the poll. You
28:00
know, I don't care what y'all think of Donald Trump. I
28:02
don't care what your polls say. Poll said the same
28:04
thing in twenty sixteen, and Trump still
28:06
won. And it's things like that. That's
28:08
the reason why voter suppression and what do
28:10
you think is going to happen in November. Voter suppression,
28:13
possible interference from other countries, voted
28:15
depression because people aren't entoos about the candidates,
28:17
and low voter turnout always favors
28:19
Republicans. I'm just trying to figure out why this wasn't
28:22
a bigger deal. Yesterday they cut the poll
28:24
insights in Kentucky, they locked the He's
28:26
trying to do. He's distracting you by telling you Democrats
28:29
are going to rig the election, and they are blatantly
28:31
doing it, like right under
28:34
your nose. Why wasn't this all over the
28:36
news yesterday? I saw more on social media than
28:38
anyway. Now, another thing that
28:40
Donald Trump talked about during his speech in
28:42
Phoenix was these monuments
28:45
coming down. You know, he has a problem with targeting
28:47
statues and monuments that have honored past
28:49
presidents and the Confederacy
28:52
across the country. Here's what he had to say. But
28:54
the radical left. They hate
28:56
our history, they hate her and
29:00
hate everything we prize as
29:02
Americans. That we're right, yes we do.
29:04
Our country didn't grow great with
29:07
them, it grew great and
29:10
your thought process and your yes,
29:13
the left wing mom is trying to demolish
29:15
our heritage so they can replace it
29:18
with a new repressive regime that
29:20
they alone control. I
29:23
don't consider myself left left
29:26
or any direction, but I do hate
29:28
racism, and yes I hate slavery, and yes I
29:30
hate segregation, and I hate your history of
29:32
racism and bigotry and your history
29:34
of hate. And let's be clear, Black people built
29:36
this country. Okay, twenty to sixty years of free
29:38
labor, all right, let's let's be clear
29:40
about that. As a matter of fact, White people, you should
29:42
hate the history also, because right
29:45
now, yeah, right now, you should
29:47
be the ones that should be ashamed of
29:50
what happened in the past and hate that history as well.
29:52
It shouldn't even be just us saying we hate
29:54
that history. Yeah, we do hate it, that's right. I'm
29:57
surprised, he just says. I'm surprised. He just
29:59
says what he wants to say, and he really
30:03
really, when a person
30:05
shows you who they all believed him. Nobody
30:08
else believes him. When you call him a racist,
30:12
that's a lie. You should see people in my comments. They
30:14
definitely believe everything. A lot of people on his side
30:17
and a lot of black people on his side, like, yeah, yeah,
30:20
I believe anything, all right, gracious.
30:23
Now, a police officer involved in in the fatal
30:26
shooting of Brianna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky
30:28
has been fired. This is more than
30:30
three months after Brianna Taylor was
30:33
killed. Detective Brett Hankinson
30:35
was informed in a letter that was signed by the police chief
30:37
that his employment with the department is terminated
30:40
and that is effective immediately. That letter
30:43
was dated on June twenty third, and they did post
30:45
the letter on Twitter. That's
30:50
that's hard that's hardly enough. A man needs
30:52
to be arrested and brought up on murder
30:54
charges. And which individuals this is this one
30:56
of the officers that kicked in the door? Is this the one that signed
30:58
off for the war? Which? Which one was this? Do we know that
31:02
he's one of the ones that actually shot. Yes,
31:04
some of the rounds that he fired was
31:07
the ones that hit Brianna
31:09
Taylor. You know, she was shot eight times. And
31:11
some of the rounds went into an apartment next door and
31:13
endangering the three lives in that apartment as
31:15
well. So, according to the
31:17
mayor, they did terminate
31:20
proceedings last week and they said that he violated
31:22
standard operating procedure when his actions
31:24
displayed an extreme indifference to the
31:27
value of human life when he fired ten
31:29
rounds into Brianna Taylor's apartment.
31:32
Yeah, we need definite. I
31:34
was gonna say, we need the person that that sign off
31:36
on the warrant that gave the wrong address, the person that
31:38
they had, the guy in custody that they were looking
31:40
for ready that still gave the okay to go into
31:43
that that that apartment. We need all of them.
31:45
All those people were really reckless. An
31:47
attorney for Brianna Taylor's family said that
31:49
this is just one step, though we're still
31:52
waiting for the other officers to be held accountable and
31:54
for additional charges to be filed, but it is a step
31:56
in the right direction. Yeah.
31:58
I think once after they buy these police officers
32:01
and they don't have that protection of the blue
32:04
wall anymore, you know, they should be
32:06
charged. They should be charged like anybody else would be charged
32:08
with the murder that's it. Yeah,
32:10
it's crazy. So they do the no knock warrant,
32:12
which was an issue right now, right, they do have the Brianna's
32:14
Law where they're outlawing the no knock warrants.
32:17
But it's crazy that this is
32:19
something that's still the police officer, one of them
32:21
finally just got fired. And
32:23
mind you, this is over three months ago that this happened,
32:25
so you know, but and
32:28
I shout out to Tamika Mallory because she's definitely
32:30
a person who's been working really closely
32:33
with Brianna Taylor's family and
32:35
with Brianna Taylor's attorneys to make sure that
32:37
there is justice. And that's what happens
32:39
when you lift your voices and you lift up
32:42
the people who have these instances that
32:44
they want to share and people may not have known all the details.
32:46
And you can see some movement. Now,
32:48
we just need more movement and we need to make sure we keep
32:50
on following up with these stories. All
32:53
right. Yeah, they're they're having a rally
32:55
tomorrow at the State Capitol building
32:57
a seven hundred Capital Avenue in Frankfort,
33:00
Kentucky at eleven eight m
33:02
until Freedom is having it. They got free
33:05
buses available for us, come for a serve and
33:07
you can join Brianna's family, attorney
33:09
Ben Crump, Lonita Baker, Tamika
33:12
Mallory, and other celebrities and concerned
33:15
citizens. They'll be there tomorrow at eleven am
33:17
at the State Capitol Building, seven hundred Capital Avenue
33:19
in Frankfort, Kentucky. Justice for Brianna Taylor.
33:22
All right, well that is your front page
33:24
news. Now when we come back, Westmore
33:27
will be joining us. Westmore is
33:29
the CEO of Robin Hood Foundation.
33:31
He's an author. He's also an army
33:33
vett and we're gonna kick it with him, all right, so don't move. It's
33:36
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast
33:38
Club. Ej
33:42
Envy Angela yee, Charlomagne,
33:44
the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got
33:46
a special guests on the zoom right
33:48
now on the line, the brother Westmore.
33:51
Welcome brother. What's going on y'all?
33:53
It's good deceive, good deceive the bust
33:55
be what you really is. Thank you. Man west
33:57
got a lot of hyphens. He's the CEO of the
34:00
Robin Hood Foundation. He's a
34:02
best selling author, he's a combat
34:05
veteran, he's a social entrepreneur. He's
34:07
an author, but we'll give what else? What
34:09
else? West, I'm a
34:11
fan of the Practice Club. That's who I am. All
34:14
right, That's what I am. That's
34:17
it now. Honestly,
34:20
it's uh, you know, I'm I
34:22
believe deeply in the fact that y'all are using your voices
34:24
and the way y'all using them, you know what I'm saying. So, so
34:26
it's it's uh, it means a lot to be
34:29
on it right now because I think right now we have
34:31
a situation where we are being hit
34:33
from so many sides and people don't even realize it.
34:36
And so our ability to be able to to to
34:38
speak out and speak up and and be true
34:41
to ourselves and be true to our history and our culture
34:43
and our DNA matters. So um so just
34:46
needs a lot. Now, break down the Robin Hood
34:48
Foundation if you can, because a
34:50
lot of people donate to the Robin Hood Foundation
34:52
and they want to make sure that their money's going to the place
34:55
that they expected to go. So break that down for a little
34:57
bit. Yeah. So, so Robin it is actually
34:59
it's a thirty two years old and it really started
35:02
with a focus on poverties and the
35:04
founders when they first started off they said, they
35:06
like, we think the markets are going to get hard. This is back
35:09
in nineteen eighty eight where they said, but you
35:11
know who this is really going to see? Who this is
35:13
going to really hit hard. It's people who are already
35:15
living in poverties. And so, how
35:17
exactly can we come up with a way of finding
35:20
and supporting good organizations that
35:22
are doing really good work to address poverty in every
35:24
way that it shows itself. Because you know, one thing you
35:26
know believe in is when people say, well, it's
35:29
poverty about education, or is it about housing,
35:31
or it's about health, the answers. Yet,
35:34
like you know, for those who experience the poverty,
35:36
it shows itself in every way. It
35:38
shows itself in the war you drink, It
35:41
shows itself in the air you breathe, in the schools
35:43
you attend, in the way you're police. It
35:45
shows itself in every single way. And
35:48
so the ability to be able to then focus
35:50
and say, okay, how then do we attack this issue
35:53
with every means that we have to us it
35:55
becomes real and I mean, and I think about you know the
35:57
fact that even prior even prior
36:00
to COVID nineteen and the impact of COVID nineteen
36:02
were crazy on our community. But even
36:04
prior to that, half of just
36:06
take New York as an example, half
36:09
of all New Yorkers we're in poverty
36:11
for at least a year over the past
36:13
four years. Half to see. And
36:16
so when people think this is some isolated
36:18
thing, or when people come up with this ridiculous
36:20
excuse of well, people in poverty should just work
36:22
harder or get a job, how about the fact
36:24
that twenty three percent of people who have lost their jobs
36:26
due to COVID nineteen, we're living in poverty
36:29
before COVID nineteen. So this is
36:31
a working poor people who are working
36:33
in some cases multiple jobs and
36:35
still and still not above the poverty
36:38
line. And so really the way we try
36:40
to attack it is, you know, not just through philanthropy.
36:43
And you know, we're one of the largest foundations in
36:45
the country, one of the largest poverty finding organizations
36:47
in the country. When it comes to after dollars
36:49
of giving out, we work with over three hundred organizations
36:51
in New York City alone or community
36:54
organizations. But at the same time and also
36:56
understanding that, you know, we're dealing with systems
36:59
that have to be completely upended.
37:02
Um, you know, there's actually a quote on my
37:04
desk from doctor King, and it says,
37:07
uh, philanthropy is commendable, but
37:09
the philanthropist can never forget the economic
37:11
of justice to make philanthrothy necessary. And
37:14
that's just how of course work we got. We
37:16
have to dismantle this mechanism of white supremacy
37:19
and systemic racism and
37:21
and and and and and it's that's why I
37:24
really appreciate what you're doing. Man Um. You know, I
37:26
got introduced to west somebody John
37:28
Stikes actually say you have to
37:30
meet Westmore. He could be president
37:33
of the United States of America, wanting John,
37:37
John's my god, John's my god. But but but I'm
37:39
telling you, but but for Charlot and You're right, people
37:42
like we have to understand that. And this is
37:44
what gets back to me about about even when we're
37:46
talking about every aspect but takes take policing
37:49
for example, I'm not interested in having
37:51
a good apple bad apple conversation about
37:53
police. I'm not because we're talking
37:55
about systems. And as
37:57
long as we understand that, as long as
38:00
we understand the fact that there are structural
38:02
elements that have to be taken out, then
38:04
I think then we're having a real conversation and
38:07
people look at and you know, you talk about
38:09
this element of race, and one of the frustrating things
38:11
I think people fall into this conversation about race,
38:13
Like race and racism is an individual
38:16
act, right if I
38:18
don't say the N words, or I don't
38:20
wear a hood, so therefore I'm not racist.
38:23
Racism is a system. It's
38:25
a system that allows It's a system
38:27
that allows for a black college
38:30
graduate to have the same earning
38:32
power and earning potential as a white high
38:34
school drop out. That's a fact, that data,
38:37
that is statistics. It's the fact that
38:39
allows for a black woman who
38:41
has breast cancer to have a forty two percent
38:44
higher likely higher probability
38:46
of dying from breast cancer than a white woman.
38:48
That is a fact, that's data. And
38:50
so racism isn't an individual
38:52
act. And I think when people just personalize
38:55
it like that, that's where we run into troubles.
38:57
It's a system that is when builds
39:00
and based in and the only way we're then
39:02
going to be too upended is to be as
39:04
deliberate about the deconstruction
39:06
of it as our country has been about
39:08
the construction of it. Right, Like
39:10
you talk about the police system in your new book. And it's
39:13
interesting because the police officer could go and
39:15
want to be a great police officer and have
39:18
all the right intentions for joining the police force,
39:20
but at the end of the day, you are working within a system
39:23
that is just not put
39:25
together right right now, that's
39:27
exactly right. And if
39:29
you if you take a look at just at just
39:31
Freddy Gray's life and so and
39:33
so. First thing I'll add a good context
39:36
where Freddy Gray furthers who might not remember,
39:39
um was it was a twenty five year
39:41
old African American man who
39:43
in Baltimore City h and by
39:45
the way, Charlemagne Baltimore does have the best
39:48
accents around you
39:52
are correct quests. But
39:56
but it was a twenty five year old African
39:58
American man in Baltimore who actually
40:01
he made eye contact with police and
40:04
who ran. Now let me be clear about
40:06
that. He made eye contact with police.
40:08
That's important because that's only something that's
40:11
probable caused in certain neighborhoods, in
40:13
so called high crime neighborhoods, if you
40:15
run from the police, that's all
40:17
you have to do to be in the law. And so they
40:20
chased him, and they can chase you entertain you
40:22
simply by making eye contact in a certain
40:24
neighborhood, right, And so he's a young
40:26
man who made eye contact the police. He ran, he
40:29
was arrested. An hour after he was arrested,
40:32
he was in a coma. A week after
40:34
he was placed in a coma, he died.
40:37
And so there's two weeks of protests from Baltimore
40:39
of people demanding a town of billion and actions
40:41
saying we need to know what's going on. And then
40:44
there are all peopul protests until
40:46
one night, it was actually the night of this funeral, the
40:48
night of his home going, that that
40:50
night wasn't as people. And then when
40:53
Baltimore was caused in the state of emergency,
40:56
National Guard was called in and
40:58
that was the upright that
41:01
took place around the death of Freddy
41:03
Gray. But it's important to you know, but you
41:05
bring up a really important point because
41:07
you know, when we're talking about policing in
41:10
in that scenario, policing in that person, stand
41:12
the fact that they had legal jurisdictions
41:15
to shade Freddie for making eye
41:17
contacts because he happened to live in
41:19
a quone unquote high crime area. That's
41:22
not a good apple bad apple conversation.
41:24
That's a system. That's a law.
41:27
The fact that even when everything happened, the fact
41:29
that that years after this all
41:31
happened, you know. And if you look at the two years
41:34
in Baltimore alone before Freddie Gray
41:37
for Baltimore, we also know the names Chris
41:39
Brown and Anthony Henderson and
41:41
Tyrone West, all people
41:43
who were in similar situations as Freddie Gray,
41:46
who just in the two years prior to Freddie Gray
41:48
all died at the hands and police or owned police
41:50
custody. And we also know this. If
41:53
you take all those names, Anthony Annison,
41:55
Chris Brown, Tyrone West, Freddie Gray, not
41:58
a single person has been convicted of
42:00
a crime. So we just have live
42:02
loss and no accountability
42:05
for it. That becomes that's not
42:07
about the individual player alone.
42:09
That's just system that we've got to address.
42:12
All Right, we got more with Westmore when we come back,
42:14
don't move. It's the breakfast Club, Go Morning. Nobody
42:17
is DJ Envy Angela
42:19
Yee. Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast
42:21
Club. We're still kicking it with CEO
42:24
of Robin Hood Foundation Westmore.
42:26
Now, Charlemagne, what do
42:28
we do to change the system of policing? Because I'm
42:30
watching them do all these symbolic things
42:33
like cancel cops and cancel
42:35
live PD and take police
42:37
officers out of video games. And I'm like, look,
42:39
I'm all for defunding the police. I'm
42:42
not for abolishing the police. No,
42:45
I'm in the same boat. I'm not for abolishing
42:49
the police either. But I do know what
42:51
I'm what I'm for abolishing is I'm for
42:53
abolishing police brutality. I'm
42:56
for abolishing racial profile. I'm for
42:58
abolishing the hyper military nation
43:00
of police. And why we have police that are basically
43:02
dressed up a stormtroopers and are using the same
43:04
equipment that I use an Afghanistan? And why
43:07
we have why we have police for using
43:09
the same gear that I was using at a
43:11
time of war, And that's not the
43:13
job of the police, right The job of the
43:15
military was actually to go out and
43:18
actively use offensive measures to fight
43:20
in win our nation's wars. The job of police
43:23
is to protect and to serve. It's a different
43:25
mission. So why we're using the same mechanics
43:27
in the same machinery for a different mission does
43:29
not make sense to me, you know, and I think
43:31
you know to your point, I think your absolutely right. Flom
43:34
where it's it's every budget
43:36
is a moral document. If any of you
43:38
right now you show me how you spend your
43:40
money every month, I could probably make
43:43
making a pretty educated guess as to what
43:45
you find to be important. So it's in about the fact
43:47
in New York City, you know, for for
43:49
every dollar that we spend on NYPD,
43:52
in New York City, use Development gets
43:55
eleven cents for every dollar that
43:57
the NYPD gets the help
43:59
and and mental hygiene gets
44:01
thirty one cents. In Baltimore City right
44:04
now, for our health department, they get about a forty
44:06
one about a
44:08
forty one million dollars budget in Baltimore
44:10
City right the Police Department
44:12
of Baltimore City it's five hundred
44:15
and nine millions. So you can't talk
44:17
to me about where prioritization lie. And
44:19
the fact that actually what's happening is we're having
44:22
the police department take on a collection
44:24
of other things that they should not be responsible
44:27
for, and then we end up putting a lot more money
44:29
into the back end because we're not putting
44:31
money into the friends end bumping in this country
44:34
right now, child poverty cost
44:36
this country over a trillion dollars
44:39
a year. But instead we think about
44:41
budgetary allocations, and we just continue
44:43
giving more assets in capital to Connecticut
44:46
military and police functions. It
44:48
doesn't make sense. It is shortsighted, and
44:50
it's something when we're talking about policing reform, we
44:53
have to deal to things like structures, like the elimination
44:55
of no knock warrants, the elimination
44:57
of chokeholds. All those things are real. All those things
44:59
are importance. What it is to your point
45:01
shown And it's also about how are we talking about budgeting
45:04
and how it's budgeting the reflecting our cartization
45:07
and what we're hoping for through the community. I mean,
45:09
ask your question, but how do we see that? Because you know,
45:11
my whole thing with the police department
45:14
and where all this money is going. We never see where
45:16
the money is going. That's right, and and
45:18
you know it's crazy about it. It's your money. I
45:21
mean like this right, this is like some
45:23
shadow shadow operations.
45:26
Yes, money,
45:28
absolutely so. So the idea
45:30
of being able to add transparency. And when I say
45:33
transparency, to your point, it's not just saying, Okay,
45:35
we're gonna give five hundred nine million dollars
45:37
to the Baltimore City Police Department. It's I
45:39
want to see the line items. Yes, exactly
45:42
where that money. I want to see the toilet paper
45:44
that you're buying for the precincts. I want to see all
45:47
that. I want to see where the money is going. You
45:49
can't just say you're spending dollars. Yes,
45:52
it's public dollars. And there is no reason
45:54
why there shouldn't be a public accountability for
45:56
public dollars. And aside
45:58
from the third
46:01
part of that is also accountability. Right when these
46:03
police officers commit crimes against civilians,
46:06
they should be held accountable for them and they haven't
46:08
been. In like to your point, in Baltimore, with
46:11
the numerous cases that you can bring up,
46:13
there's no firing there, there's
46:17
no accountability, there's no jail time,
46:19
there's no charges. So do
46:21
you feel like that's changing now as things
46:23
are being brought to light, do you feel at least if
46:26
finally, there will be some legislation. I'm
46:31
very hopeful because we are watching
46:33
things that are being proposed, not just on local levels
46:35
but also on the flederal level. We're looking at things
46:37
like the pushback of qualified immunity, and so qualified
46:40
immunity is the idea that there's a certain
46:42
level of immunity that that law enforcement
46:44
had that most other individuals don't
46:46
have. Right, there's this level of this introduction
46:49
of civilian review board and things that
46:51
are going to be really important because the fact is, right
46:53
now, the way the process works is it's
46:55
who who investigates police
46:58
is police interactions and potential police
47:00
actiality cases the police And
47:03
so how the hechnic can you have people who are
47:05
policing people who are then also a part
47:07
of units, and so how do we do things like introduced civilian
47:09
review boards? Not kind of thing? Can we talk about
47:11
your books five days? Also? Right,
47:14
you have this new book, let's discuss the eight
47:16
different people that you actually have in this book
47:18
and the eight different points of view that you're bringing into
47:20
play. Yeah, thank you and yeah,
47:22
I mean I'm you know. One of the things
47:25
I noticed when I was going through and this was really a process
47:27
that I was going through myself, where right
47:29
after everything happened with Freddy Gray, and I remember
47:31
attending his funeral and it was the first
47:34
funeral I've ever attended in my life where I
47:36
didn't know the person on they were a live and
47:39
it was one of these things because his funeral was
47:41
almost like it was a It was a thing
47:43
in Baltimore. Everybody was out, and
47:45
I remember looking around the chapel
47:48
and just thinking myself, are any of us, me
47:50
included, Are any of us prepared to do what it
47:52
actually takes to truly bring justice
47:54
to these young men? And when
47:56
we say justice, it's not even just the accountability
47:59
for or you know, for what happened
48:01
in his death, the fact that there's a twenty five year
48:04
old young Namement's eye contact with police and loses
48:06
his life a week later after being
48:08
in a coma for a week. But it's also the
48:10
fact that here was a young man who was
48:13
born underweight, premature,
48:16
addicted to heroin. His mother battled
48:18
addiction for much of her life. She never
48:21
made it to high school. She lived in poverty
48:23
her entire life. When he finally
48:26
was able to gain enough weight, him
48:28
and his twin sister, Quadrika, they
48:31
left the hospital and they moved into a housing
48:33
project over in West Baltimore in
48:35
North Perry Street. That housing
48:38
that house that they lived in, that
48:40
in four hundred other homes were named in
48:43
a civil lawsuit in two thousand and nine
48:45
because of the endemic levels of leading inside
48:48
of that house. So the CDC indicates
48:50
that if you have five microbes
48:52
of lead in every desoluter of blood,
48:54
you will be cognitively impaired for the rest of your
48:56
life. Freddy Gray had thirty six,
49:00
and so he was a young man who was born
49:03
underweight, addicted to heroin,
49:06
laed, poisoned, and by that time
49:08
in his life he's two years older.
49:10
Wow, what shocked did Freddie happen?
49:14
What shot did Freddie had this argument
49:16
about people just need to work harder, how hard
49:18
that Freddie had top and but but
49:20
honestly, like I found myself sitting
49:22
there with a sense of my own personal complicity
49:25
because I left Freddie Gray's funeral
49:27
and then I had to fly to Boston to go give
49:29
a speech on poverty. And I knew
49:32
that part of it was because the work I was doing, But
49:34
then part of it was because they were going to use my
49:36
story as like it's the celebration, it's
49:39
the look at what he did. And when you
49:41
look at a life like Freddie, it's just not
49:44
true. And it's a lie that we continue
49:46
to tell ourselves. And so
49:49
what I wanted to do with this story was first
49:51
ground us in the reality
49:53
of what we're talking about we're talking about the history
49:56
of systemic racism, where he's talking about
49:58
the history of tolerable poverty,
50:01
the fact that we accept levels
50:03
of poverty in our society where we are we
50:05
are making a devil deal, where we're asking
50:08
ourselves just how much pain are we willing to accepting
50:10
other people as long as it doesn't impact us.
50:13
Everybody, go out there and grab West's new book,
50:15
Five Days The Fiery Reckoning of an
50:17
American City by my Man Westmore
50:19
West. Don't be a stranger. We need your voice over
50:21
the next several months man, leading up to this election
50:24
for show. Absolutely a man Nie
50:26
y'all boys, Man, God bless y'all for real. Seriously, God
50:28
bless bless you too, BROTHERT. I appreciate you,
50:30
King. It's West Small, It's
50:32
the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody's
50:35
DJ Envy Angela Ye, Charlomagne,
50:38
the gad. We are the Breakfast Club. Good morning, Come
50:40
morning guys, y'all,
50:42
what's happening and listen sleuth to everybody
50:44
in the eight four three Man Charleston, South Carolina.
50:46
I'm so happy that the John C. Calhoun
50:49
statue is coming down. I'm about to post a video
50:51
of it coming down this morning
50:54
just to piss off the white supremacists that follow
50:56
me. Is that real quick?
50:59
Did you see the officers out in Ohio?
51:01
Neighbors called the police on these five black
51:04
boys for playing in the street, and the police pulled
51:07
up and it was like, I don't know why they
51:09
called the police. We played in the street as kids.
51:11
A matter of fact, let's play a game. And they played football with the
51:13
kids. Did
51:15
I see that video? I thought that was dope. And the reason I thought
51:17
that was I remember being a kid and playing
51:19
basketball in the park and and sometimes,
51:22
you know, the local police officers would pull up
51:24
and they shoot with us and they play basketball with us.
51:26
And that's what you need. You could tell those cops are from the community.
51:28
They understand what's going on. And instead of you
51:30
know, telling them telling the boys that yo, get out the street
51:33
or this any other, they was like, now, let's play. Let's play a game
51:35
in football, and they played with the kids. And that's what we need more of
51:37
posted making the street. I thought that
51:40
was I thought that was dope. Man. Yeah.
51:42
I keep saying when they talk about a community policing
51:44
initiatives, I think that they should have
51:47
people from the community, encourage
51:49
people from the community to go into law enforcement
51:52
and pay them an extra financial
51:54
insten or coming back to police in
51:56
their own neighborhoods. Yeah, I
51:58
think that's that's that would be a a dope idea.
52:01
But whatever, I'm a tree hugger.
52:05
You're really into that wood. I know,
52:08
I really, I really let me ask you this,
52:10
no joke, you don't. I don't want I don't want to talk. I don't want
52:12
to ask you. And you grabbed it, and you grabbed
52:15
the wood right, and you pull in the wood or you whatever you do?
52:17
What do you think about? You
52:19
know? When I first moved back to New Jersey,
52:22
right I was, I moved into this apartment complex
52:24
and um and uh tea neck was
52:26
that tea necker hacking sack woman
52:28
that was working the woman that was working at the front
52:30
desk. She said, Charlemagne, you need to watch
52:33
Envy, And I thought she's about to tell me, you know, Envy
52:35
a schisty dude. He's a snake. She
52:37
was like, you need to watch him because he'd
52:40
be over here with this guy that's about
52:42
your height and he's bald headed and
52:44
he funny sounds coming from the room okay,
52:48
and I was like really, and she said
52:50
yeah. Now the dude was my man, Sean. People do
52:52
show I'm trying to mistake, mistake me and Sean.
52:55
So basically, she was trying to tell me that you possibly
52:57
could be Envy's type. That's what she was trying to tell
52:59
me. I was two thousand and ten, now two
53:02
thousand and twenty, He's talking to me about hugging
53:04
wood. I don't know what to tell y'all. People. First
53:06
of all, was my brother had
53:10
clues. It was no strange noise. But
53:12
you just said you could you grab the wood. I'm just curious
53:14
to what you think about when that.
53:17
When I want to get grounded and come
53:19
back the center, I go out and I put my
53:21
hands on it, and I put my forehead
53:24
the trees and prey on the
53:26
trees, and I meditate to the trees. Okay,
53:29
all right, that's what my sacred Purpose coach told
53:31
me to do. Okay, that's what I do
53:33
to keep my mental health in check. Do you want
53:36
to do with Do you wear socks and shoes when you hugged
53:38
the tree? Grab the wood? Hell no, no,
53:40
I want my feet to be in the ground. I want to get backgrounded,
53:43
okay, and get back the center. I'm just kidding,
53:46
Hey, don't be knocking my healing process. I'm
53:48
not knocking your healer. I'm just want to I want to learn
53:51
you. You hug wood, and I want to know what it does for you,
53:53
what's the benefits, how it makes you feel? You're just talking about
53:55
you want to be in the center. I'm just asking every
53:57
everybody knows you know how to hug wood. How
54:00
you got all them cars? What
54:03
you got all them cars? Are you going on the cars?
54:05
And we know you like to holk board?
54:08
Yeah? You got rumors all the way. This guy's crazy.
54:11
Right now, we've been talking rumors for the past
54:13
three minute. Dude will be
54:16
talking about apologies. Jimmy Kimmel
54:18
and Ti. What do those two
54:20
guys have in common? They're apologizing? All
54:22
right, we'll get into that next keep it lock this to Breakfast
54:24
Club. Good morning, bj Envy,
54:26
Angela, Yee, Charlomne the guy we all
54:29
the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors. Let's talk
54:31
Jimmy Kimmel. This is
54:33
the rum of Report with angela
54:35
year Breakfast.
54:41
Well, Jimmy Kimmel, as you know, he's taken
54:44
a vacation, and he did come back
54:46
from his vacation to apologize for
54:48
wearing black face and man show sketches
54:51
that resurfaced. Now, if you guys remember,
54:53
this is the car Malone impersonation
54:55
that he did sometime at night called
54:57
the old look up and sky and say what
55:00
the hell going on up there? UFO
55:03
live on other planet? Bolden hole
55:05
like et Karmelo read
55:07
on TV about white people getting deducted
55:09
by alien sticking all kind of hell
55:11
up big and that's a damn thing.
55:14
Well he did do that in blackface, and now
55:16
he has put out a statement. He said, I have
55:19
long been reluctant to address this, as I knew
55:21
doing so would be celebrated as a victory
55:23
by those who would create apologies with weakness
55:25
and cheer for leaders who use prejudice to divide
55:28
us. That delay was a mistake. There
55:30
is nothing more important to me than your respect, and
55:32
I apologize to those who were genuinely hurt
55:34
or offended by the makeup I wore or the words that
55:37
I spoke. He then went on to explain
55:39
about his impression of kr Malone, how it started
55:41
when he was a personality on the radio in the late
55:43
nineties, and then he moved into television
55:46
with it with The Man Show. He said, we hired
55:48
makeup artists to make me look as much like
55:50
Carmelone as possible. I never considered that
55:52
this might be seen as anything other than an imitation
55:55
of a fellow human being, one that had no more
55:57
to do with carl skin color than it did his
55:59
bull jing muscles and bald head. So
56:02
he did also acknowledge he did
56:04
impersonate Snoop Dogg and Oprah, and he said
56:06
they were similarly performed without malice.
56:09
He said, looking back, many of those sketches are
56:11
embarrassing, and it is frustrating that
56:13
these thoughtless moments had become a weapon used
56:15
by some to diminish my criticisms of social
56:18
and other injustices. So
56:20
he did put out a full statement if
56:22
you want to read that, and he impersonated
56:24
Snoop by saying the N word too right. But I mean, that's that's
56:26
all he can do is apologize. I mean, I still
56:29
I still think we need to have a larger conversation
56:31
about cultural context and how things used
56:33
to be in regards to the risk people
56:35
used to take to entertain because that line about
56:37
what was acceptable and not acceptable was
56:40
non existent. Everybody went too far
56:42
back then, which is true, Which is true, everybody went
56:44
too far. But you know, as long as he understands
56:46
that, he apologized, and you know he's involved
56:48
as a person, hopefully that's and we're
56:50
talking about something that is that, We're talking about something,
56:53
something that has literally changed in the last
56:55
few years. And to not
56:57
acknowledge that shift is
57:00
responsible of all of us. And I'm sure he's grown
57:02
since then. What else can you do with apologize and learn
57:04
from Mr? Right? And there's nothing
57:06
wrong with saying, look, that was wrong and
57:09
it is what it is, all right. Lena Waite
57:11
has called out the Hollywood Reporter and Variety
57:13
for ignoring black shows. She
57:16
was on The Late Late Show with James Gordon
57:18
and she was specifically
57:21
calling them out. She said, people
57:23
that are hopeful as all the black shows are like on the long
57:26
shot list or a major threat as far
57:28
as TV Emmy nominee. She said, it's like, don't
57:31
act like black TV is invisible. And
57:33
so she's saying all those trade all
57:37
those trade reporters on Hollywood Reporter and Variety,
57:40
they ignore the insecures the black
57:43
afs dare white people's and for so
57:45
long, she said, they act like we don't even belong in the conversation.
57:48
So that has been her experience. All
57:52
right. Now TI has apologized
57:54
to his daughter, and I know people are gonna
57:57
feel like, oh, this is oh, this is all. But these episodes
57:59
are now airing TI and Tiny Friends
58:01
and family Hustle. And if you guys remember
58:03
the whole but Diana Hyman conversation
58:06
that he had publicly about his daughter and
58:08
taking her to the doctor, well, Deja's
58:11
mother actually appeared with
58:13
TI and they had a whole
58:15
conversation and the conversation
58:18
was about you know why deja
58:20
feelings were hurt, and you
58:23
know, it's a it's a learning curve. And he did finally
58:25
apologize. Here's what she had
58:27
to say at first to TI about
58:29
parenting their daughter. Whether she tells
58:31
you yes or no, believe her because
58:34
really, at the end of the day, whether
58:36
or not her hyman is intact, it
58:38
is not telling of whether or not she had sex.
58:40
So if you tell the doctor to check her
58:43
hymen and she's told you I've not done
58:45
anything and her hyman
58:47
was broken and she was telling the truth.
58:50
Now you're coming down on her. She's
58:53
lying. Understand,
58:55
Dad, I understand. Okay, I'm
58:58
beginning to realize that Damn,
59:00
I ain't know as much as I thought I did. And
59:03
then she did help him understand how inappropriate
59:05
that conversation was and how the
59:08
double standard exists. And you don't do that
59:10
with your sons. Why would you do that to your
59:12
daughter? Listen to this, she feels
59:14
though there is no trust in what she
59:17
says. It's a bit nosogluistic,
59:19
because the same for your son. Man,
59:21
Listen, you would never do that. I don't think
59:24
that. Would you ever do that, sir? Now, he
59:26
would not. I think all of these things
59:28
and double standards when it comes to me being
59:30
a dad, I was being educated.
59:33
And although I realized how
59:35
inappropriate the conversation by DJA
59:38
on the podcast may have been, you
59:40
know, I hold myself accountable. I
59:42
apologize to Dasha. You
59:45
know I love you. You know I've always gone
59:47
above and beyond to do any and everything
59:50
possible to make you heavy and
59:52
to keep you predicted. All right,
59:54
But you know, when you watched the episode, Dja's feelings
59:57
were still really hurting. She was having a hard time
59:59
not answering a phone for him and all of that because
1:00:01
it was something that was embarrassing
1:00:03
to her. It was hurtful for her for a many different
1:00:05
reasons. So you know, that
1:00:08
is something that should be a learning experience for everyone.
1:00:10
I remember we had this whole debate up here about well,
1:00:12
he's just being a good father, But I think
1:00:14
being a good parent is also, you
1:00:16
know, as far as for me being someone's
1:00:19
daughter, knowing that your daughter deserves her
1:00:21
privacy, respect, and also you should believe
1:00:23
her if she's telling you something, if you know she's
1:00:25
a good girl. In Das has always seemed like a
1:00:27
good girl, and if you trust her,
1:00:29
should you should be able to talk to her and ask her questions
1:00:32
instead of worrying about what's happening
1:00:34
with her body, because women's bodies are very complicated.
1:00:37
I mean, once again, all you can do is learn
1:00:40
from a situation and apologize.
1:00:42
Okay, I need to know who these folks saw that get
1:00:44
everything right. All the time, I was
1:00:46
going to say the same thing. He's a dad,
1:00:48
he's just trying to protect his daughter. He made some
1:00:51
bad mistakes. He made a bad mistake, and you
1:00:53
know, he apologized, and we have to learn from my lesson,
1:00:55
like you say this all the time. There is no
1:00:58
instruction manual when it comes to kids. There's
1:01:00
no instructure manual when it comes to daughters. We try
1:01:02
to do our best, and sometimes we make a wrong a
1:01:04
wrong decision in the wrong move, and we have to say, you know what, I'm
1:01:06
sorry. And just as human beings, perfect
1:01:08
people aren't real and real people aren't perfect.
1:01:11
You're not gonna always get it right. And I respect the
1:01:13
education that you know that that woman gave
1:01:15
tip. You can clearly see he got it. He admitted
1:01:17
he's wrong. You apologize and the best apologies
1:01:20
changed behavior. What do you want from What do you want from here? Blood?
1:01:23
Mind you an episode, he still didn't apologize
1:01:25
directly to his daughter. You
1:01:27
know, so got with something too, because yeah,
1:01:29
but she did. Look I mean, if you watch the episode, it's
1:01:32
really sad. She's like crying, breaking down,
1:01:34
you know, talking to other family members, and she
1:01:36
can't even really speak to her own father. And
1:01:39
he's still being a little bit stubborn about it. Because
1:01:41
ye is TV. They'll get to that in the next episode,
1:01:44
right, it's not real life. They got to scratch it out
1:01:46
for the storyline. That's the other bad thing about
1:01:49
a situation like this, your real life
1:01:51
becomes people's entertainment. So now which
1:01:53
a storyline that plays out? Yeah,
1:01:56
but maybe maybe she really felt
1:01:58
that. I mean, I'm sure she really felt that way. I
1:02:00
don't think she's, you know, over exaggerating.
1:02:02
But no, no, no,
1:02:04
no, I can't let you switch my words up. You said he
1:02:06
hadn't apologized yet, and I said, yeah, because it's
1:02:08
TV. I'm sure he'll get to that next episode. I'm sure
1:02:11
he's already apologized, but they're scratching it out
1:02:13
for TV. All right, Well, I'm Mantela Yee
1:02:15
and that is your rumor report. All right, thank
1:02:17
you, miss Yee. That's Charlomagne, who
1:02:19
are giving that? Donkey two? There are two pastors
1:02:22
in Arizona. There are the pastors of a
1:02:25
mega church called Dream City Church. We need them
1:02:27
to come to the front of the congregation. We like to have a word with him
1:02:29
police. All right, we'll get into that next keeping
1:02:31
lock this to breakfast club. Good morning, Charlemaine,
1:02:34
say that gang don't get the shape
1:02:36
man you are talky
1:02:42
today does not discriminate. I might not have
1:02:44
the song of today, but I got to donkey that. So
1:02:47
if you ever feel I need to be a donkey man pivot
1:02:49
with the practice
1:02:52
club. Bitches, they just don't give today Today,
1:02:54
Donkey Today for Wednesday, June twenty third
1:02:57
goes to the pastors of an Arizona mega church
1:02:59
called Dreams City Church. Okay, Dream
1:03:01
City Church Senior Pastor
1:03:03
Luke Barnett and Chief operations Officer
1:03:05
Brendan Zastro are their names.
1:03:08
And dream City is the perfect name for that congregation
1:03:11
because life is all about the buying and selling
1:03:13
of dreams. You either a hustler or
1:03:15
a customer in the dream business,
1:03:18
and churches are the best dream business. Okay.
1:03:20
And this church was holding an event featuring one
1:03:22
of the biggest dream sellers in America today,
1:03:25
Donald J. Trump. Now, it won't be the first time
1:03:27
a dream is sold in the church. Okay. The
1:03:30
whole concept of religion is dream selling.
1:03:32
And that's why these pastors were able to get this dream
1:03:35
off. Why should I say this lie off? Okay?
1:03:37
Now, circulating online this week was
1:03:39
a promo video that claims the church's air
1:03:41
filtration system can
1:03:44
kill ninety nine point nine percent of
1:03:46
COVID nineteen within ten minutes.
1:03:49
Now, I watched Bishop td Jake's Every Sunday
1:03:52
and Potter House in Dallas be fairly empty.
1:03:54
I also watched my Man Monkst Corner, South Carolina's
1:03:56
own Stephen Verdick and Elevation
1:03:58
Church in Charlotte, North Carolina be fairly
1:04:01
empty. Clearly in Arizona they are
1:04:03
father along in phases. Oh, they just don't
1:04:05
care. So they are trying to get people back in those
1:04:07
peas. Okay, I guess prayer and faith
1:04:09
in White Jesus isn't enough because in order
1:04:12
to get folks comfortable with coming too Dream
1:04:14
City, they have to sell a
1:04:16
dream to the city that they have installed
1:04:18
air filtration systems that kill
1:04:20
ninety nine point nine percent of COVID within
1:04:23
ten minutes. Let's go to Dream City Churches facebook
1:04:25
page to hear the promo. Police Here at Root
1:04:27
City Church, we're probably the first church in the nation.
1:04:29
Two. Yeah, we've we've installed clean
1:04:32
Air e XP. We have a local Arizona
1:04:34
company. It was technology developed by some
1:04:36
members of our church, and we've installed
1:04:38
these units and it kills ninety
1:04:40
nine point nine percent of COVID within
1:04:43
ten minutes. From the independent testing. It's
1:04:46
ionizations and IONSI it's
1:04:48
ionization of the error and it
1:04:50
takes particulars out and COVID cannot
1:04:52
live in that environment. So when you come into our oratorium,
1:04:55
ninety nine percent of COVID is gone
1:04:58
kill if it was there in the first place, So you
1:05:00
can know when you come here you'll be safe and
1:05:03
protected. Now, look, I'm
1:05:05
not here to tell you what to belief. If religion
1:05:08
helps you get through your day, if it gives
1:05:10
you a better life, great. Even though I am
1:05:12
more of a spiritual person than a religious person,
1:05:14
I don't knock religion. But you have to acknowledge
1:05:17
the fact that if you can get people to believe that
1:05:19
a white man turned water into wine with
1:05:22
no grapes, then you can make them believe
1:05:24
anything. All. Ain't that whole story of
1:05:26
white Jesus turning water into wine. There
1:05:29
was no mention of grapes. You need
1:05:31
lots and lots of grapes. There was no mention of sugar, no
1:05:33
wine yeese. And was the water filtered
1:05:36
because you need filtered water to make homemade
1:05:38
wine. But nevertheless, I am not here to be a
1:05:40
dream killer. If that's your bag, let me mind
1:05:42
my business. But I'm just saying I
1:05:45
can tell you my air filter kills corona
1:05:47
and you would believe me because well, I
1:05:49
told you white Jesus fed five thousand people
1:05:52
with five loaves of bread and two fishes,
1:05:54
and you believe that. I know, I know miracles,
1:05:57
Okay, but five thousand people got
1:05:59
fed with five low bread and two fishes. Come
1:06:01
on, now, caterers, chefs,
1:06:03
food and beverage workers, talk to me. Five
1:06:06
thousand people eight good are five loabes
1:06:08
of bread and two fishes. I am not knocking
1:06:10
you for what you just for what you believe. I
1:06:13
just noted if you call the catering
1:06:15
service and told them you had a party of five thousand,
1:06:18
and Jesus told you, not Jesus, Hayesus
1:06:20
told you that he could feed them with five
1:06:23
loabes bread and two fishes, you would hang
1:06:25
up on Hayesus. That's all I'm saying. But if
1:06:27
you believe that, then you would believe an air filter
1:06:30
can kill coronavirus. I mean, it's literally so
1:06:32
many miracles performed in the Bible, eighty
1:06:35
in the Old Testament, eighty three in the New
1:06:37
Testament, probably more than the Lebron James
1:06:39
version. So why wouldn't I believe my pastor
1:06:41
when he says the church has an air filter that kills
1:06:44
coronavirus. And if the church has that, why
1:06:46
are they not having them installed in every
1:06:49
member of the congregation's house. Okay,
1:06:51
that's what why Jesus would have done. He would have
1:06:53
hooked up five air filters and said two
1:06:55
prayers, and five thousand people would have been
1:06:58
cured of coronavirus. Okay, that
1:07:00
white man is something else, isn't. That white
1:07:02
man can make you believe in him more than you believe in yourself.
1:07:05
And that's exactly how he designed it. Okay,
1:07:07
all I'm saying is if you can make people
1:07:10
believe that Moses Rod turned
1:07:12
into a surfeit, if you can make people believe that
1:07:14
Lot's wife turned into a pillar of assault, if
1:07:16
you can make people believe a white man walked
1:07:18
on water, then you can make them
1:07:20
believe an air filter kills ninety nine point nine
1:07:22
percent of coronavirus. And for the record,
1:07:25
Jeffrey Siegel a professor
1:07:27
at the Department of Civil and Mineral Engineering
1:07:29
at the University of Toronto. He
1:07:32
said he's read the live reports that the clean
1:07:34
air exp results are based on
1:07:37
and basically, he said, the devil
1:07:39
in this case, the white devil. Those
1:07:42
two pastors are a liar okay,
1:07:44
He set, aside from the unrealistic
1:07:47
testing that was done for this filtration
1:07:49
system, there's no filter our air cleaner
1:07:51
in the world that could reduce risk in a
1:07:53
crowded indoor environment. He said, filtration
1:07:56
or air cleaning is not a good way of protecting
1:07:59
people who are close to each other because fundamentally,
1:08:01
you have to get the droplets that contain the virus
1:08:04
to the air cleaner and remove them
1:08:07
before they are inhaled our land on someone
1:08:09
else and eventually end up in their respiratory
1:08:11
system. Long story short, it's
1:08:14
some bs. But Jeffrey also
1:08:16
set, aside from the unrealistic testing,
1:08:18
Listen, you don't have to be realistic when
1:08:20
you in the church. The stories they make you believe
1:08:23
about the church from the Bible
1:08:26
are all unrealistic. And that's why when
1:08:28
you have pastors who prey on people's need
1:08:30
to believe, like these two pastors
1:08:32
did, religion goes from being something constructive
1:08:35
there is something destructive. In a statement
1:08:37
to CBS News, Dream City Church said
1:08:39
the post about the filtration system was meant to
1:08:41
inform the congregation. We are doing everything
1:08:44
we can to foster the cleanest, safest environment
1:08:46
as we resume church services. AKA
1:08:49
we're just trying to get people back in this church by
1:08:51
any means necessary. Aka. This
1:08:54
COVID doesn't messed up the church's money and
1:08:56
false profits only care about profit,
1:08:58
So we need this money to rain down like
1:09:01
manner from the sky. This is why
1:09:03
people don't trust religion. Guys
1:09:05
like these pastors give great pastors
1:09:07
a bad name. And with that, I say, be
1:09:10
careful who you trust. The devil
1:09:12
was wanting was once an angel. Please
1:09:15
let Chelsea Handler give pastor Luke Barnett
1:09:17
and Brendan Zastro the biggest he haw
1:09:19
hee haw hee haw. That is
1:09:21
way too much. Dan Mann is all
1:09:24
right, a man, thank you for that donkey today,
1:09:26
sir, yep up next ask
1:09:29
ye eight hundred five eight five one oh
1:09:31
five one. If you need relationship advice, any type
1:09:33
of advice, call ye right now. It's the
1:09:35
breakfast Club. Good morning, what what what?
1:09:37
What? What you wanna know? Baby
1:09:39
mama issues, sneak some words of wisdom? All
1:09:42
up now for asking eight hundred five
1:09:44
eight five one oh five one, The Breakfast
1:09:46
Club. Hello,
1:09:51
the relationship advice, need personal
1:09:54
advice, just the real advice?
1:09:56
Hall up now for ask ye morning
1:09:59
every body is DJ Envy
1:10:02
Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are
1:10:04
the breakfast club. It's time
1:10:06
to ask ye Hello, who's this? Hi?
1:10:09
Uh? It's Tito from Brooklyn.
1:10:12
How you doing? Ye? I just gotta say I'm
1:10:14
a big fan. I love you guys, to listen
1:10:17
to you guys every day. I just have
1:10:19
a question. I'm twenty five years old and
1:10:22
I've been dating a couple of women.
1:10:25
But it seems that the women I've been attracting
1:10:27
only one one night stands or
1:10:30
they already have a boyfriend. And I'm
1:10:32
looking for a long term investment. And
1:10:35
my friends tell me that I
1:10:37
should stick with because of my age,
1:10:40
I should stick with women who already have kids.
1:10:42
And I need to know. It's like any advice
1:10:44
you can give me on the dating game, Well,
1:10:47
never when where are you meeting these women? I
1:10:50
try everywhere? You know. I just
1:10:52
finished a college semester, so I was dating a woman
1:10:54
in college. I tried tender
1:10:57
social media, and I've been
1:11:00
striking out. You know, I get the date
1:11:02
right, but they're not looking for something. They're
1:11:04
not looking for that type of commitment. Well,
1:11:06
I'll tell you this, Maybe you shouldn't sleep with people
1:11:09
right away when you get the date. If
1:11:12
you're looking for something more long term
1:11:15
and you know you're upset about just having all
1:11:17
these one night stamps, maybe the best thing
1:11:20
to do is to go out and not try to go
1:11:22
home with someone and actually have those
1:11:24
phone conversations, FaceTime calls, real
1:11:26
dates. Go out and don't sleep with them right away. That way they're
1:11:28
getting a chance to know you as well. Yeah.
1:11:32
Another thing is I also been told
1:11:34
that I'm too cheesy on dates, Like sometimes
1:11:37
I show up with flowers and I still hold
1:11:39
doors for ladies because I keep it a little bit
1:11:41
old school. I'm very respectful forward one
1:11:43
man. I think that's great. I think that sounds
1:11:45
amazing. You
1:11:48
know what, don't date people who are already in relationships.
1:11:50
And no, you don't have to date people who have kids already.
1:11:53
You have to go out with people who you like. And
1:11:55
I think the best advice is, and
1:11:57
I really strongly believe in this, when you go on with
1:12:00
people, don't look at it as this is going to be my
1:12:02
potential wife. Look at it as this is
1:12:04
somebody that I could be friends with, that I could
1:12:06
see myself hanging out with. And then that's the person
1:12:09
that you should try to pursue. Okay,
1:12:11
okay, do you do you know any like signs
1:12:14
that shows like if a woman is not into
1:12:16
a long term relationship or like
1:12:19
anything like that, Like you know, any signals that
1:12:21
I should know on like a day or if I
1:12:23
if I do get to know somebody and they get to know me, should
1:12:25
I Is there any like warning signs or
1:12:28
singles that said, hey, she might not be you
1:12:30
know? Well, I think I think communication
1:12:33
is important. So if she's texting you throughout
1:12:35
the day and calling you and paying
1:12:37
attention and asking questions about what's going on
1:12:39
in your life, and if she has major decisions
1:12:42
to make or something happened she comes to you for
1:12:44
advice and vice versa, or if that's the person
1:12:46
you know you can go to if she's available.
1:12:48
If somebody's not responding to your messages
1:12:51
and not returning your calls, then that's
1:12:53
a sign that she's definitely not interested.
1:12:55
And I think planning in advance, like if it's
1:12:58
right now is Thursday, if you're like, hey, I wanted
1:13:00
to see if you know Sunday, I could
1:13:02
make you brunch and we could you know, do something
1:13:04
like that. So I just think things like that where you're
1:13:06
planning ahead. You guys are planning to spend
1:13:08
time together by the time your date is over. If
1:13:11
you guys are already thinking about, okay, where are we going
1:13:13
next or what are we doing next? I think that's
1:13:15
important. But if somebody just doesn't
1:13:17
open up to you, if somebody's not asking questions
1:13:20
and seeing how you're doing, and they're not communicating
1:13:22
with you throughout the day, then most
1:13:24
likely they're not that interested. Because we get
1:13:26
really excited when we like somebody when we first meet
1:13:28
them, and sometimes we also do hold
1:13:30
back because we don't want to seem too thirsty. But
1:13:33
if you hit her and she responds right away,
1:13:35
or you know, she responds quickly, I
1:13:37
think that's a good sign. Okay,
1:13:40
just to rephrase all from my other
1:13:42
question, Like I said,
1:13:45
twenty five years old, So am
1:13:47
I okay to look for women that don't have kids
1:13:50
or the wall that I shouldn't
1:13:52
or yeah, it's in preference, that
1:13:57
is your preference. If you prefer to be with somebody
1:13:59
you're still young, who doesn't have kids because
1:14:01
you don't want to have to deal with the father
1:14:04
of the children or child and you
1:14:06
don't know what the situation is and you
1:14:08
know, that's definitely your prerogative. But
1:14:11
you know, sometimes I think you have to be flexible
1:14:13
on that because the very thing that you say you
1:14:15
don't want is what you end up getting and if that's
1:14:18
who you end up with, and it is what it
1:14:20
is. But I definitely don't have a problem with you having a preference.
1:14:23
Okay, that actually helps.
1:14:25
Ye. You are awesome. Just once
1:14:27
again, I love you guys a lot, almain. I
1:14:30
think you're keep it real one
1:14:33
of the best dea things out here. And
1:14:35
ye are I listen to you guys everything.
1:14:38
I love y'all. Thank you so much. Thank you should
1:14:40
bring them some flowers, Okay,
1:14:42
I definitely will just give me an address, all
1:14:46
right, thank you. Teta ask
1:14:48
ye eight undred five five one oh
1:14:50
five one. If you need relationship advice and any type
1:14:52
of advice, you can call ye. Now it's the Breakfast
1:14:54
Club. Good morning. I'm keep
1:14:56
repet some real advice with
1:14:58
antheli ye ask ye droning.
1:15:01
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela
1:15:04
Yee, Charlomagne the guy we are the breakfast
1:15:06
Club with in the middle of ask ye, Hello,
1:15:08
who's this Hello? This is Kethwick.
1:15:11
Hey, what's your question? For you. So my question
1:15:14
is, um, I'm I'm
1:15:17
dating this good for the past, um
1:15:19
four months going on for five months. Um,
1:15:22
we have like a very strong
1:15:25
communication with each other where we are open with
1:15:27
each other and like if
1:15:29
we feel any type of way about each
1:15:31
other about anything, we are expressive
1:15:33
with it. So she's saying that, Um,
1:15:37
this is someone that I see myself with getting
1:15:40
red. I've been, I've been child with and
1:15:42
everything. She has met
1:15:44
the requirement that I required, as you
1:15:46
know when it comes to like married George, choosing
1:15:49
the mother for my child and stuff like that. She's
1:15:53
I wouldn't say I love her, but
1:15:56
it's getting there. She meets the requirements,
1:15:58
but you don't love her yet. Is happening
1:16:00
in the future. I'm not saying. I'm
1:16:02
not saying that I do not love her, but if
1:16:05
love is a very strong word, I know it
1:16:07
will get there. But I'm Jamaican
1:16:09
and I don't love that music. Okay.
1:16:12
No, just when you said you could see yourself marrying
1:16:14
someone and you can see them being a mother to your child,
1:16:16
I would figure that means that you love her. But
1:16:18
listen, I could say I love I see said
1:16:21
married her. What if things change
1:16:23
because you if you understand what I mean.
1:16:26
So anyway, she said before
1:16:29
before we like move in together, like
1:16:32
if we have a plan and I'm we are
1:16:34
plan and I'm moving together. She said, we have to get married
1:16:36
before we could move in together. So I was
1:16:39
thinking that that's like a recipe
1:16:41
for disaster, but not moving
1:16:43
in together until you get married. She
1:16:46
wants us to get married before we move
1:16:48
in together. Okay, what you
1:16:50
think about that. I mean, if that's what
1:16:52
her requirements are and what she's
1:16:54
saying, because you guys can still date and be at
1:16:56
each other's houses, that doesn't mean
1:16:58
that you have to move in so you
1:17:01
still have separate residences. I'm sure you spent a
1:17:03
lot of time together now. But if she's not comfortable
1:17:05
living with somebody unless they're
1:17:07
you guys are married, then that's her prerogative.
1:17:10
I mean that's yes, I accept that
1:17:13
that's her prerogative and all
1:17:15
that. But it's like, if
1:17:17
you there's some truish into this, like
1:17:20
when you live with someone, right, that's
1:17:23
that's the best way of that's
1:17:25
the best way of getting to know them because
1:17:28
I could see you, I could be good friends with
1:17:30
you, I could be a good family
1:17:32
member with you. I could have a good relationship
1:17:34
with you, but when we've lived together, it
1:17:36
could be so many different things that I didn't
1:17:39
know about you, which probably would
1:17:41
say that I wouldn't tolerate. If
1:17:44
you understand what I'm being told, living together is getting
1:17:46
to know the person better. I mean, there's
1:17:48
plenty of people who don't live together before
1:17:50
they get married, though for some people they want
1:17:53
to wait until marriage for that because just like
1:17:55
you find it hard to be in love or love
1:17:58
someone, she might find it hard to commit
1:18:00
to somebody on that level until they're committed
1:18:02
on the level that she wants. And if that's her standard
1:18:06
of what she wants to do, then either
1:18:08
you're with it or you're not. But I just you
1:18:11
know, you can't make somebody do something that is
1:18:13
against their own morals or what she wants
1:18:15
to do. I mean, do you all spend the night
1:18:17
at each other's houses? Yeah?
1:18:19
Yeah, we spend each other I always think
1:18:22
we you know, we go
1:18:24
to each other's house, We probably spend a two or three
1:18:26
days and stuff like that. But the thing is, I,
1:18:30
um, I'm kind of compromising
1:18:33
a request. I said, Okay, let's engage.
1:18:36
Then what do you think about it? I said,
1:18:39
Okay, so you're saying that you so
1:18:41
basically you just want y'all to live together and you will
1:18:44
get engaged in order to make that
1:18:46
happen. Yes, okay,
1:18:48
Well that's a that's a compromise. You can ask her that.
1:18:50
You can say, Okay, well, once we get engaged,
1:18:53
I would want us to live together and see if she's
1:18:55
open to that. I mean, I don't think there's anything
1:18:57
wrong with being excited about actually getting
1:18:59
mad married, and after you get married, y'all move in
1:19:01
together as part of that, because some people
1:19:04
feel like, I don't want to act like we're married
1:19:06
and live together until we really are, and
1:19:09
you know, some people don't feel that way. So it just
1:19:11
seems like you guys have a difference in opinion.
1:19:13
I don't think either one is right or wrong. Yes,
1:19:16
but I mean, it's like it's
1:19:19
like I'm trying to protect her at
1:19:21
the same time. But it's not like I'm planning
1:19:23
on doing her dirty or anything
1:19:25
of that sort. But it's like I'm trying to hope
1:19:27
in her mind to like certain stuff. Especially
1:19:29
when you're dealing with persons who are
1:19:32
not really hoping to like
1:19:34
society. Their soul close
1:19:37
into like their family dynamics
1:19:41
are their are their culture background.
1:19:43
So it's like most of the decisions they made
1:19:46
is based on like all hours raised.
1:19:48
But at the same time, you have to look
1:19:50
outside. You have to peeple upside and see
1:19:53
society for what it is, even though
1:19:55
that's what your family dynamic says,
1:19:58
or probably that's what your culture of backgrounds said.
1:20:00
If you go out there, you're going to meet someone who
1:20:03
probably do not have this thing. I'm not saying that you
1:20:05
should throw everything that you're
1:20:07
dying your family dynamics or your consort
1:20:09
or your moral background said. But I'm
1:20:12
just saying, like, be more hoping
1:20:14
to reality and what it we did.
1:20:17
Well, sir, as soon as you decide that you love her,
1:20:19
then y'all can have that real conversation, because
1:20:22
you shouldn't want to be living with somebody until
1:20:24
you can tell them that you love them and mean it. I
1:20:27
didn't say I didn't love her. You said
1:20:29
that you're getting there. You're not there yet. Why don't
1:20:32
you wait till you get there? Okay, then that's
1:20:34
that's that's okay, that's fine. I
1:20:38
mean, Joe, I'm just I'm just saying,
1:20:41
it feels like, you know, you said. You guys have only
1:20:43
been dating for four or five months. You can see
1:20:45
this happening, y'all. It doesn't even seem like you're at the
1:20:47
point where you can be comfortable saying I
1:20:49
love her, I want to be with her. I want to spend the rest of my
1:20:51
life with her. You're not even there yet. So maybe
1:20:54
she maybe, but you're not you.
1:20:56
You just told me, I said, do you love her? What was
1:20:58
your answer? I
1:21:01
said, it's it's getting
1:21:03
there. I like okay and
1:21:05
everything. I like her. But
1:21:09
if I say I love love love, all
1:21:11
right. For me to like entirely
1:21:14
love someone, I have to know you entirely.
1:21:16
I don't know her. I'm just saying, let me tell
1:21:19
you something. I wouldn't move in with somebody if they didn't
1:21:21
love love love me, So take
1:21:23
your time. I wouldn't put the pressure
1:21:25
on this right now. There's nothing wrong with that.
1:21:27
And I'm not saying that you're wrong for not feeling
1:21:30
like you love love love her and that it's difficult for you.
1:21:32
But why don't you work on getting to that point before
1:21:35
you jump to the next point. But
1:21:37
I mean when I when you're moving to I
1:21:40
previous dementia, when you're moving with someone, it's
1:21:43
it's it's kind of like intimately getting
1:21:46
to know them. I'd rather get to know
1:21:48
your first before we before
1:21:50
we move in together. And I don't think
1:21:52
there's anything wrong with her position on that. I
1:21:54
want to know that I love you first. Moving in together
1:21:56
is a big deal for some people. Look, I can
1:21:58
see getting engaged and then moving in together. I
1:22:00
kind of feel the same way. I don't want to live with somebody
1:22:02
if we're not getting married. So if
1:22:05
that's how she feels, that's how she feels. You feel
1:22:07
differently, So you should have that conversation and
1:22:09
when you're ready to propose, then maybe that's when
1:22:11
you're moving together. Now, if things go terribly wrong,
1:22:14
you could decide not to get married. But
1:22:16
you know, I just think that she probably wants that love
1:22:19
love love first. But you know, I do
1:22:21
wish you the best of luck and have that conversation with
1:22:23
her. I would say, get engaged first
1:22:26
and then start thinking about moving in together. Okay,
1:22:29
thank you so much. Okay, you're welcome.
1:22:32
I'm sorry, it's not what you wanted to hear, asking
1:22:36
ye eight undred five eight five one oh five
1:22:38
one. Now we got rumors on the way ye, yes,
1:22:40
And Stevie Wonder has spoken and he's talking
1:22:42
about systemic racism, police brutality,
1:22:45
voting Juneteenth, all of those things.
1:22:47
And we'll have that for you, all right. We'll get into
1:22:49
that next. Keeping lock this to Breakfast Club. Good morning,
1:22:52
the Breakfast Club. It's
1:22:57
about report
1:23:04
angela Ye's fund. The Breakfast Club.
1:23:15
Otosinko is giving away two hundred and forty
1:23:17
five thousand dollars in stimulus checks and he
1:23:19
says he's doing that since Trump won't do
1:23:21
it. So he posted a picture of the
1:23:24
two hundred and forty five thousand dollars that he
1:23:26
has ready and he said he's doing it July
1:23:28
first via cash app. And he's
1:23:30
taking a part in this charitable giving because
1:23:33
Trump wants to keep on playing games.
1:23:36
I love, loving, loving
1:23:38
private citizens take care of their own people,
1:23:40
especially if you got the means to do it. Why not. That's
1:23:42
what life is about. It's about being a service baby, all
1:23:46
right. And Stevie Wonder is speaking out and he's talking
1:23:48
about having an ending to police brutality,
1:23:50
systemic racism, and so much more. Here's
1:23:52
what he had to say. If life can have an ending,
1:23:55
all things can have an ending. Systemic
1:23:58
racism can have an ending. Least
1:24:00
brutality can have an ending. Economic
1:24:02
repression of black and brown people can
1:24:05
have an ending. A
1:24:08
movement without action is
1:24:11
a movement standing still. To those
1:24:13
who say they care, move more
1:24:16
than your mouth, Move
1:24:18
your feet to the polls and use
1:24:20
your hands to vote. Make your plan
1:24:23
now to vote, because right now
1:24:25
there are forces trying to take your vote away.
1:24:28
He's absolutely right. We gotta be intentional on
1:24:30
ending it, though, like we can't destroy your problem. We didn't
1:24:32
create, but we can push for the destruction of it and dismantling
1:24:35
a white supremacy, systemic racism. It's
1:24:38
inevitable that it will be abolished. God
1:24:41
is given America a chance to atone for its
1:24:43
stands. Play with God. If you want to watch what happens.
1:24:45
You think the thane'll snap? Was something? Okay,
1:24:48
okay, all right? Stevie
1:24:50
Wonder also said he can see better than us.
1:24:53
You know, it's a sad day when I
1:24:55
can see better than your twenty twenty
1:24:57
vision. The universe is
1:25:00
watching us. Let's
1:25:02
do something. Let's make a difference.
1:25:04
Steve, the jig been up on that. Okay,
1:25:08
we've been though. You could see, but we just don't be saying
1:25:10
that. You know what I'm saying, We ain't gonna blow your spot up. Salute
1:25:13
when Stevie. Remember when Stevie came and he played Happy
1:25:16
Birthday for Hillary Clinton. I remember how
1:25:19
Stevie was telling people where to go. Stevie
1:25:22
was telling his team he was come
1:25:24
this way, the doors right there, opening
1:25:27
the door for people. I'm like, what the hell like?
1:25:29
When I saw Stevie look both ways before he crossed the street,
1:25:31
I knew shot up. I saw
1:25:34
it. I saw it. He had pot Crow
1:25:36
Street. He looked both ways before he crossed the street.
1:25:38
Man m all right. Now,
1:25:40
Ron Jeremy has been charged with three counts
1:25:42
of rape and one count of sexual assault.
1:25:45
Now, the Los Angeles County District Attorney
1:25:47
did announce yesterday that Ron Jeremy
1:25:50
has been charged, and uh,
1:25:52
you know he's If he is convicted, he faces
1:25:55
a possible maximum sentence of ninety
1:25:57
years to life in state prison. He
1:25:59
could to be required to register as a sex
1:26:01
offender, and that arrayment is going to be
1:26:04
what scheduled for yesterday, so we'll
1:26:06
see what happens with that. But he
1:26:08
is of course denying these accusations of
1:26:10
sexual assault and rape in twenty seventeen, he
1:26:13
denied it, and he has responded
1:26:15
since then, and basically
1:26:18
he's saying that he did not do any
1:26:20
of these things and we'll
1:26:23
see you know again. Ron Jeremy,
1:26:25
Ron Jeremy, Ron Jeremy, the adult
1:26:27
film star. He said, I'm innocent of
1:26:29
all charges. I can't wait to prove my innocence
1:26:31
in court. All right, Black AF
1:26:34
has been renewed for a second
1:26:36
season. So congratulations
1:26:38
to Kenya Baris, Congratulations to Rashida
1:26:40
Jones. They did get some backlash
1:26:43
in that series because the cast is light skinned, but
1:26:45
Kenya Barris explain the family
1:26:47
resembles his own. It's based on his own life,
1:26:50
and a lot of the things in the show that people did
1:26:52
not like is basically and people
1:26:54
that know him have said, this is kind of what his
1:26:57
life is like. So it's a
1:26:59
take on that. Grass to Kenyon
1:27:01
Burst, I didn't I didn't like the first season,
1:27:04
Um a lot of people did. I hope the
1:27:06
second season is is better than the first.
1:27:08
And do you really think Netflix was
1:27:11
not going to renew or shoot a show called
1:27:13
Black AF at a time like this, I
1:27:15
would have I would have dared him to not renew
1:27:18
this show and see what would
1:27:20
have happened. You don't renew at
1:27:22
a time like this. I know you didn't
1:27:25
like it, but I enjoyed this show. And I do know people
1:27:27
who kind of act like that in real life. So
1:27:29
I just felt like it does I do? I
1:27:32
definitely do. I didn't mean I
1:27:37
didn't say I do know people. I know all
1:27:39
different kinds of people, and it's not necessary that you
1:27:41
hang around there, but I know people that do certain
1:27:43
things. And you might think it's like that was, uh,
1:27:46
you know, a little crazy, But we just
1:27:48
know all different kinds of people. I mean, it
1:27:50
is what it is. I would have enjoyed the
1:27:52
show if him and if they have showed
1:27:54
him and his wife going through a divorce and
1:27:57
um him prove back,
1:28:00
because that would explain his his curmudgeon,
1:28:02
curmudgeon his behavior, I
1:28:06
don't, yeah, and he's going through a divorce, so it would
1:28:08
explain why he's so angry, why
1:28:10
he's so mad, And then you know, the whole
1:28:13
chains and the young clothes. That would have been the
1:28:15
midlife crisis. I don't know. I just think it would It
1:28:17
was a better anger they could have took. Okay,
1:28:20
all right, well, I mean you know, it's his thing. I
1:28:22
guess would represent him. It would explain
1:28:24
why his kids are so mad at him, why his daughters cursing
1:28:27
him out because they mad that he leaving mommy. Like,
1:28:29
I just don't feel like they explained why
1:28:31
his character is what he is. Well,
1:28:34
well, you know that was season one, so maybe
1:28:36
we'll get more in depth in season two and see what's
1:28:38
going on. But it is also a comedy, so you
1:28:41
know, they had some fun with certain things and some things I
1:28:43
thought were really funny. All right, Well I'm
1:28:45
Mandela Yee and that is your rumor report.
1:28:47
All right, thank you, miss Ye. Now the
1:28:50
People's Choice mixes up next, get your request
1:28:52
and shout the revolt. We'll see you tomorrow. Everybody
1:28:55
else, let's go. It's the Breakfast Love Goal Morning
1:28:58
morning. Everybody is DJ v
1:29:00
Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy we are
1:29:02
the Breakfast Club. Good morning, Hi,
1:29:06
what's happening? And I want to salute the
1:29:08
eight four to three manum. Last night
1:29:10
Charleston City Council voted unanimously
1:29:13
to take down that pigeon toilet that is
1:29:15
the John C. Calhoun statue from Marion
1:29:17
Square, and they started the process this morning
1:29:20
I just posted a video on my Instagram page
1:29:22
see the god ctch g O D But
1:29:24
um, yeah, salute to the eight forty three. We
1:29:26
got a long way to go, but it's a start.
1:29:29
America has a long way to go, but it's
1:29:31
a start. You know, said
1:29:34
once that as long as there are those who
1:29:37
remember what was, there will always be those who
1:29:39
cannot accept what can be. And
1:29:41
I feel like those memorials and monuments
1:29:44
are a constant reminder of what was and
1:29:46
still is, and they have to go so
1:29:48
we can accept what America advertises
1:29:50
itself to be. So yeah,
1:29:53
salute to the eight and forty three and everybody else taking
1:29:55
down those memorials and monuments
1:29:57
and statues of those slave defenders
1:29:59
all around the country. All right, And
1:30:02
also shout to Westmore for joining us
1:30:04
this morning. Man Westmore,
1:30:06
that's my guy. Got a great new book out called
1:30:08
Five Days an
1:30:11
Americ What is it called the Five Days The
1:30:14
Fiery Reckoning of an American City. That's
1:30:17
it's cool, Okay, make
1:30:19
sure you pick that up. He's also the CEO of the Robin
1:30:21
Hood Foundation. So shout
1:30:23
to Westmore for checking in. Right when we
1:30:25
come back. We got the positive notes, don't move. It's to
1:30:27
Breakfast Club. Good morning morning.
1:30:30
Everybody is DJ Envy Angela
1:30:33
Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast
1:30:35
Club. Good morning, I I
1:30:39
hello, all right, Well,
1:30:42
learn something new today about my brother Charlomagne.
1:30:44
I didn't know that he enjoys
1:30:46
to hug the wood. He likes to
1:30:49
go outside and hug his trees outside.
1:30:51
I didn't know that he has to arrest and pull the
1:30:53
wood close to him, and he talks to the wood
1:30:56
and he hugs the wood. He puts his head
1:30:58
on the wood. I didn't know that. That's
1:31:00
pretty dope, man. I'm saying, I'm
1:31:02
saving all that for Valentine's Day. I'm gonna edit that up
1:31:04
nice. I'm gonna chop it up nice. Okay,
1:31:07
everything you just said, but um, I just want
1:31:09
to say that, uh yeah, my sacred
1:31:11
purpose coach, her name is Yadi. I have a sacred purpose
1:31:14
coach. That's that's that's in my circle. I
1:31:16
do that as well as therapy. And you know, she
1:31:19
told me to go put my hands on some
1:31:21
trees and you know, put put my forehead
1:31:23
against some trees and you know, prey on the prey,
1:31:25
prey to the trees, pray prey on the trees
1:31:28
and meditate under the tree. And I've
1:31:30
been doing that and it's really been getting me back the center
1:31:32
and grounding me in a real way. So
1:31:35
yes, salute all the tree huggers out there. I am
1:31:37
a proud tree hugger. All
1:31:40
right, Well you have a positive note tree hugger,
1:31:43
Yeah, I do. Um just kind
1:31:45
of ties into everything. And I'm talking about because I always
1:31:47
say investing you mental wealth. But just no
1:31:50
pain travels through family lines
1:31:52
until someone is ready to heal it in themselves.
1:31:55
Okay. By going through the agony of healing,
1:31:57
you no longer pass the poison on
1:32:00
to the generations that follow. It is
1:32:02
incredibly important in sacred
1:32:04
work, but you have to do the work. Breakface
1:32:06
club, y'all, finish your y'all. Ducker,
1:32:11
Yeah, I not only want to get
1:32:13
it
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