Alicia Garza and Angela Rye Interview - podcast episode cover

Alicia Garza and Angela Rye Interview

Oct 23, 20201 hr 34 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Today on the show we had civil rights activist and co founder of the international Black Lives Matter movement Alicia Garza, who spoke about Black Lives Matter, creating the black agenda, dealing with trauma and grief and more. Also, we had our political pundit Angela Rye call in where she spoke about voting, the final debate and more. Also Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to another Floridian.

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FM

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

This is your week of call Breakfast Club to show you love to hate from the East to the West Coast, d J M vi Agela Ye Charlomagne, the really show on the planet. This is where I respect this show because this is a voice of society. James in the game. Guys are the coveted morning show. But y'all earning impacting the colt sure week up in the morning and the stay want to hear that breaks the world's most dangerous

morning show. Good morning Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo. Good morning Angela Yee, good money v Charlomagne the cot he stood up. Planet is Friday, yes since Friday we are here. He made it to the weekend. How y'all feeling out there? Everybody good? I'm blessed Black and Holly favorite. Yeah, crazy, crazy day yesterday. So let me shout out to my daughter.

She finally got welcome to New York City. I guess the right way. What do you mean? She called me up and was like dad, I said, what's up? She was like, I just left the restaurant and she was like, there was a guy on the court. I said, let me guess he was beating his meat and she was like, how'd you know? So I described him. She was like, yeah, said he's outside of every club, every night club, every restaurant. That's the same guy, the same guyans to be in

front of. Yes, he's still around. He's still around beating his meat. That is no way he needs. He should be in jail. He should be arrested, Like how do people not report him? People know his face, people might know his hands and his penis. He's been arrested several times. I said, my daughter pictures and I was like, this is the guy. And I said all of yes, you know what's crazy about that dude? Man? You know, and this has been going on for a long time, so

we still laugh at him. Clearly he needs some type of help. He's been up here, which you mean he's been up here? He has been, Yes, he's been to the breakfast club. Why had he been to the breakfast club? Because he manages an artist. And when the artist came up and he was here and I told him to y'all. Oh, yeah, he definitely got mental health issues. Yes, it's he needed to be committed. But he's been he's been locked up several times. He's been like he's from the Bronx. He's

been locked up in my in Florida. We know his name, I know, I got his pictures. Bug shot. Yeah, he got to go to jail. Let me see him. Say his name. Him in the dark, God, say his name. I've only seen him in the dark. And you got a shiny penis. It looks like a gun I've never seen. I don't know it's fair. He need to go to jail. Like I remember when NV told us that was him up at the studio. He told both of us, Oh my gosh, that this is just disgusting. He was like,

he was just beating his meat where people walking by him. Like, yeah, that's what he does. I said, he's been doing that for decades. He's lead the club. He's just that's the guy beating his meat. He said, just you know, he'd be going at it. He's got some mental health he's got he's clearly got some mental health issues. Yes, I don't know what that what that is, I don't know what you would call that. I'm not just like just a lot of therapist. I just gonna see one. But

I don't. I don't know what you call that. But something's wrong. Then there got to be no skin on his meat. The way he'd be going, he'd be going, I'm not I don't want to have this conversation to me. All right, but I haven't even had my oat meal yet, haven't had my protein shake. Nothing. You just I'm on the empty stomach. Can you want to talk about no skin be on the penises? Jesus Christ? All right? What what you wrote on that paper? Drum? He said, world

premiere of a record. I don't know even know what the record is. First of all, when a man talks about the person revealing that meet in the middle of the street, masturbate, don't you write on a piece of paper world for me? Okay, we don't know where this is going dramas. All right, guy, I'm just trying to

do my job over here. We got, we got, we got, we got guess today to that right, Elizia Garza will be joining Alicia garzas When I said Alicia, Alicia, she has an amazing book out right now that I just finished reading it. It's called The Purpose of Power, Okay, and um she's one of the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. She also founded UM Black Futures. Lap I always referred to a black agenda that she created it.

I think it's very dope, comprehensive black agenda. So the Lease is an amazing, amazing person to talk to man. And the Purpose of Power is a great book. I'm telling you. It humanizes the Black Lives Matter movement, the Black Lives Matter organization in a way that I've never even thought about. Right, Black Lives Matter was the topic of the debate last night too. All right, we'll get into debate up next. And also Angela Rai will be joining four. There about to be a R forty one

Angela Rai, all right, joining us? All right, so we'll kick it with all lem and front page news, so don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning. Let's get into this world from Ayre who isn't a sweetie? And Jinayico dj Envy and Angela Yeine Charlomagne the guy we are. The Breakfast Club was getting some front page news. The Giants played last night. It did I didn't know football is all. Last night we didn't play played the Philadelphia Eagles. Oh my god, that was a game that should not

have happened. Now, in this era of coronavirus and everybody trying to social distance and not be away from each other, we don't need old NFC's teams playing against each other. I lost that game. Should not have happened. I lost one hundred dollars betting on the Giant. But anyway, there was up. There was up to the fourth quarter. There was up two touchdowns to the fourth quarter. I woke up this morning, I see they lost. I thought I thought they had it. They lost twenty one, twenty two.

What else were talking about? You, Well, let's talk about the debate last night. Of course, this is the second debate from for Biden and Shrump. And you know they had the muting of the microphones for the first two minutes. I think that helped. Donald Trump was a lot calmer. His hands were going crazy, but he wasn't as what would I say, combative as he was in the first debate. Now, one thing that they did discussed was a black lives matter, which I just told you. Listen to this the first

time I ever heard of Black Lives Matter. They were chanting pigs in a blanket, talking about police pigs, pigs talking about our police pigs in a blanket. Fry Am like Bacon. I said, that's a horrible thing. And they were marching down on the street. And that was my first glimpse of Black Lives Matter. I thought it was a terrible thing, all right. I was watching after the debate, Joanne Reid said she was actually covering that march, and

no one was saying that that's not even true. And I mean, I don't know if it was that march, but it was definitely a march where um it was a it was a group of people who had infiltrated BLM, and they were definitely marching down the street saying that because that's that's I've heard that video of myself. But that don't necessarily I've always said that doesn't represent what Black Lives Matter is about and what Black Lives Matter

stands for. Just because you got some bad apples in that organization, and when you hear Alicia Garza talk about it, everybody can claim black Lives Matter, that doesn't mean they are part of that organization. Now, another thing that Donald Trump was talking about was coronavirus. Harris Biden and Trump on coronavirus. He says that we're, you know, we're learning to live with it. People were learning to die with it.

You folks who will have an empty chair to kitchen table this morning, that man or wife going to bed to night, to reaching over to try to touch their out of have where their wife or husband was. It's gone. We're dying with it because he has never said they said, you said it's dangerous. When's the last time is it really dangerous? Still? And you say I take no responsibility, Let me talk about your I take food responsibility. It's not my fault that they came here. It's China's fault.

I tell you what, man, If I didn't know what fascism looks like, and I didn't understand the severity of Trump having control, you know, of all the federal courts, the DJ if I didn't understand that the president can't really get anything done without having control of the Senate in the house, if Senator Harris wasn't on the ticket, I would probably write in this show of old third party because both those guys are trashed. Okay, they represent

what's wrong with America. An old white male politician and his boss, an old rich white man. I didn't like that that. I didn't like nothing I saw last night. To be totally honest with you. Now, when it comes to immigration, you know, there are five hundred and forty five children who have not been reunited with their said are still they can't figure out how to get there them back together with their family. And here's what Donald Trump had to say about the children at the border.

The United States can't locate the parents of more than five hundred children, So how will these families ever be reunited? Children are brought here by coyotes and lots of bad people cartels, and they're brought here and they used to use them to get into our country. We now have as strong a border as we've ever had, and we let people in, but they have to come in legally, and they come in through the family. They built cages tonite the kids. Yes, we're working on it very we're

trying very hard. Who built the cages though, That's what that was a question that didn't get answered last night. Trump said, the Obama administration built those cages. Did you get a bathroom Joe who built the cages. Joe couldn't answer them. I will say this, though, We'll stay with Obama. They were not separating young children from their parents and

their families and not being able to reunite them. Donald Trump said, these kids are being treated very well, and I'm sure they'd much rather be with their families than separated. I'm not making noise kisses for either one of them. I think all of them got dirt on their hands. And you see that last night, both of them trying to throw mud at each other when they both both both corrupt. I personally think so well, that is your

front page news. And you know what else too. The way Trump sounds trying to defend COVID is how Biden sounds trying to defend the ninety four crime bill. I don't know. I really don't anymore. All right, we'll get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit us up right now, full lines to open us to Breakfast club. Good morning the Breakfast Club. Did your time to get it off your chests? Whether you're man or blast soft up,

say we want to hear from you on the Breakfast club. Hello, who's this? The caller from the Carolina's Hunt well After? Don't call for horror. Okay, I seen the Carolina number, Papa, all right, but get it off your chest, Mamma, I'm sorry you're calling from Florida. Okay, y'all are talking about something that Biden did thirty years ago? Oh my god, stop it. We're gonna We're not gonna have this conversation. You know why because people are still in jail for crime.

Big man, y'all, Okay, prison something an idiot. I already know that very pass for taps to cover all the rich people, but it's gonna end all the poor people thirty years ago. I mean, come on, how was in the nineties the ninety four crime bill. People are still in prison for the ninety four crime bill. Now what are we talking about? They commit a crime, low level drug offenses, A dimebag of weed, a twenty year rock, get you thirty years. I would say that Joe Biden

has said that it is it was a mistake. No, he said that. He said that a mistake that black people asked him to do. Is a difference between saying something was a mistake and that you made a mistake. It's a big difference back in the nineties the Biden Crime Bill now now thirty years later, that people don't his ass about it. It's not the Biden Crime Bill anymore. It was something black people wanted them to do. Come on, they didn't but but didn't, but didn't anybody supported in

the nineties when crack was a problem. Yeah, it's true for the bill period. Okay. I mean a lot of people did support the ninety for a Crime bell. A lot of black black people do not support the ninety for a crime bill as well. A lot of black people pushed back against the ninety for a Crime bill and told people what was going to happen. But listen, I'm voting for Biden Harris is what I'm regardless. But I'm not gonna sit here and act like I like

either candidate. I don't like either one either. That's all I'm saying. Make a decision for an adult human being. Got everybody free will, So let's not let's not let's not that great, let's not all yes, let's not ague about white men that really don't give a damn about either one of us this morning. Okay, that's one or the other. I told you I'm picking. I'm voting for Senator Kamala. That's what I'm voting for. Thank you, Mama. Hello, who's this so? Man? Dude, DG, I'm from the seven

five seven? What brother? Get it off your chest? And man day, I was at working man and I started on myself. Man, congratulations, Man, we've all been there. Bro, that's good luck. Bro, I've been there. Everybody's following on Instagram, King d G K I n dot Dan. That's what he wanted to get off his chests. I respect ye, Man. I had to let everybody know. Man, I'm a starter. Why didn't you Why didn't you post it on the ground? I tried to, but they blocked me. Man, the didn't

want to see all that. What did you do? Did you go home after you shot it? No? When I was at work, I just wiped it off my butt for a little dad water. You got them dirty ass underwhere on na I took him off and just free ball. Your nickname from now on is Shotty Low. Okay, shady low. Yeah. I gotta tell me, well, get it off your chest? Eight hundred five eight five one on five one. If you need to vent or you need shark call us now is the Breakfast Club? Go morning, the Breakfast Club.

I'm telling what's doing yo? If this is your time to get it off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed. Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. T people to your point right there? Hello, who's this? Butterscotch? Funny big chocol to second? How are we doing kids? Hey? Chocolate? And I got us? Get off my chest and thank

Molly from White Plains, New York. Love your toes. I gotta thank Foxwood to see it no Morehican can see them made some money and Connecticut had a good time in Charlottagne. I'm gonna buy you lunch day. I'm buy you a little church sandwich with toe jam and I'll feel your belly. Okay, you can stop talking about the man's meat. All right, you're gonna meet Hello. Who's this? It's like Derek but with a tea Eric. What's up ter? Yes, sir,

what's up? Man? This dream comes truck y'all. Don't understand man, I'm from Kansas, Kansas City, Kansas. Did now want three shot at everybody in Wandot County. Man love someone sick off my chest? Man? I listened to YEA every morning. First of all, how y'all doing, good morning? God blessed Black and Holly favor. How are you, sir? I'm good man. I caught y'all. This is red. Y'all. Don't answer kans a sphone call. What's up with that? No, well, we're

not in Kansas anymore, sir. Anything else, sir? I got a lot. Uh. I got your first book, Charlotte Man. But let me get that check. Please? Can you get that? One said to me. You know what. I can send you that, and I can send you a copy of Reader Walker's book, The Unapologetic Guy to Black Mental Health. I had a bunch of copies I bought, like I bought like a hundred copies of doctor Reader's book, and I had them up here for a while. I need to start sending those out. I don't know why I

haven't done that. People need that, Dad, especially around this time. Yes, sir, yes, sir, I'm gonna get your address them produce it, Daniel, leave your address when you one more thing, one more thing, okay, Uh. I'm trying to get into modeling I look good. I look real good. By my Instagram is the numerical number one, and then my name Eric he is in tom E R R. Okay, tell us look at it up. We're

gonna tell you. We're gonna tell you if you're handsome in out how you look telling well that drama's how you look, you know for Kansas, boy, I'm decent. Damn. What you're saying is mad ugly people in Kansas. They all look like Dorfy's dog total all height. Man, Hey, hey, I gotta live here. I ain't gonna say nothing. I like Kansas, all right, brother, I do love you too, Like get it off your chest? Look like Taylor five Charne. You're interested? Let me see. He could definitely be an

extra in the Tyler Perry movie show. All right, show we got rumors all the way. Yes, And let's talk about the rock. Are you ready to see young Rock? We'll tell you about it, all right. We'll get into the next is the breakfast club. The morning the breakfast Club. Let'll be riding in the car and be like, I can't believe the songs on the radio. No, that's a lot. There's been a lot of worse with you I'm with you.

I'm just old now, so I'll be riding. I can't believe this on the radio, it has been some songs worse than the Watch songs. I don't remember those songs playing on the radio though. I couldn't be I don't know what you don't. I don't remember. I can nearly put it in your mouth. That was definitely I remember that. I wasn't about waiting, you see, Matt, Yeah, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, right, you're right. Where do you see my right? Right? All right, well,

let's get to the rumors. Let's talk the Rock. It's about version is the U report Angela? That's what it was. Club. The clean versions were just better back then. That's okay, that's all right. Well, yesterday The Rock made an announcement on Instagram. He said, my fellow Americans, Young Rock has

officially begun film. Our new, wildly funny and unbelievable show for NBC explores my true life events during my formative years, from growing up in the surreal and tough world of pro wrestling to being a broke kleptomaniac to hanging out in honky Tonks at fifteen years old in Nashville, and deciding I was going to be an outlaw country singer did come out to winning the national championship at the University of Miami the baddest boys college football has ever

seen period. What a fun and wild show and can't wait to deliver it to you guys in twenty twenty one the Rocalo Diesel Last Baby. I don't know what do you look like when he was that young? But they are going to be debuting this on NBC all right. Kodak Black in the meantime, has announced a new album and docuseries is coming and it is called Bill is Real.

So even though he is still in jail and he can't personally send out messages to his fans, he's been relaying statements to everybody through his friends and through his attorney. So they did announce Bill is Real, which is his upcoming project. They said details are scarce, but it looks like it'll be a documentaries there as well. Black Half, that's a good question. He seems been I know. They just moved him to a new facility. He's been having

all kinds of issues, don't you know. He said he was being tortured behind bars, he was being abused According to Kodak, blackguards gave him a gang beating after he arrived. They said that he says they've been violating his rights and that led to his mouth bleeding, vomiting, lacerations, all these things. So you know more Kodak Black All right, I Love New York is coming back. You guys like Tiffany Pollard. I think that's excited to see her come

back to TV. I think Tiffany New York Pollard is one of the most talented reality showed uh people ever is there? But well no, there's There will be a one hour reunion special. I Love New York Reunited for people Cattle. It seems like that on TV. People love New York still to this day. Man, New York is iconic to some people. My homegirl Courtney loves loves Tiffany Pollard and she has brunch with Tiffany already that show on VH one. She interviews people. Yeah I did that

shoulder ye back in the day. Yeah, So there you have it, so we can see that as well. All right, now, Bubba willas this new NASCAR team has Michael Jordan inspired team name, number, and logo. So then team was named twenty three eleven in reference to the jersey number that Jordan wore while playing in the NBA and the number eleven car that the other owner, actually Hamlin, has raced with for the past fourteen seasons. So that is the team twenty three eleven. But it's like Roman, it's twenty

three and then the Roman numerals eleven. Just FYI and yes, all right, well I'm Angela Yee and that is your rumor report. All right, thank you, miss ye. Now we got frontage news coming up. What were we talking about? Yes, we have to get more into the debate that went down last night. We'll give you some more info on what was said about other things like coronavirus and healthcare and all of that. All right, we'll get into that. NeXT's to Breakfast Club. Co morning. The Breakfast Club, Your

mornings will never be the same. It's DJ Envy And for fifty five years, the General Insurance has been giving people affordable auto insurance with excellent customer service. Get custom covers that's right for you. An immediate proof of insurance. Call them at eight hundred General or visit the General dot com. Some restrictions apply. All right, good morning, everybody is dj Envy and Jela Ye Charlomagne, the God we are the breakfast club they got is Friday too, man,

thank god it is Friday. I am really looking forward to doing nothing and nothing tonight. Nothing is my favorite thing to do. And you know what I like to do nothing with some wine and some edibles. Okay, wow, that's right, not right? Okay, all right, Well, don't drinking, do drugs. Let's get in some front page, only one right now. You want to talk football, We ain't got to talk football. Giants lost, That's all you need to know. I lost one hundred dollars. Why would you bet on

the job? Seriously, why would you bet on the Giants? Made? That's your team? But why I made the bet before the season started? Okay, So it was like one of those things. I was like, we might be I and then we just weren't I and I couldn't take the bet back. So NFL canceled all NFC East games. Is coming from a Dallas Cowboy fan. I think Cowboys fans, Redskins fans, Giants fans, Eagles fans can all agree cancel all NFC East games because of COVID. I'm with you,

all right, well, what else we talking about? You about the debate last night? What did you guys think about the moderator Kristin Welker. I thought she did a great job, phenomenal job. But you know why though, because the candidates microphone. Not only not only that, but both of the candidates, well at least Trump, Trump was even temperate. Trump wasn't in this trump bag last night. He was. He was more stable than we probably have ever seen him. Because

you can't really blame those moderators for the first two debates. Man, those guys out of control. All right, well, let's discuss what happened now. Of course, the ninety four Crime Bill comes up in here is what happened in the eighties. We've passed one. All one hundred Senators voted for it, a bill on drugs and how to deal with drugs. It was a mistake. I've been trying to change the sense,

and particularly the portion on cocaine. That's why I've been arguing that in fact, we should not send anyone to jail for a pure drug offense. They should be going into treatment. That's what we've been trying to do. That's what I'm going to get done because I think maybe the American people have now seen that, in fact, to us a mistake to pass those laws relating to the drug but they were not in the crime bill. He

had eight years to get it done. Now you're saying you're going to get it done because you're all talking no action. We got a lot of it done. We released thirty eight anything, got thirty eight thousand prisoners left from you got nothing done. You know, the way Trump sounds trying to defend his response to coronavirus is how Biden sounds trying to defend the ninety four crime bill. It was as stake, But was it your mistake? Because back in the day you called it the Biden Crime Bill,

you took full responsibility for it. Now you blame it on other people and say other people want wanted you to do it and it was just a mistake. Imagine you cheat on your girl and you say it was a mistake. My boys told me to do it. We think that you think that's gonna fly. But what can it? Can he say? Now you apologize and you you know, you show legislation and you make policy commitments to the directify the situation. This is what I'm going to do

moving forward, This, X, Y, and Z, these things. This is what I'm gonna do, right. I think that's what you did. Try to say, is that moving forward? That's why he you know, it was a mistake. These are the parts that were a mistaken Here's what we're trying to do moving forward. And Donald Trump's saying you didn't do those things that whole time that you were in office A good point. Now, another thing that Donald Trump

is always having to defend is his taxes. I have not taken a penny from any foreign source ever in my life. We learned that this president paid fifty times to tax in China as a secret bank account with China, does business in China, and in fact is talking about me taking money. Number two, This is a president. I have released all of my tax returns twenty two years. Go look at them. You have not released a single solitary year of your tax returns. What are you hiding?

Why are you unwilling? The foreign countries are paying you a lot, Rush is paying you a lot, Chinese paying a lot? All right. Now, Another thing that comes upo is Donald Trump was talking about Hunter Biden and the whole Ukraine investigation. Here is what he said. Very chris Son didn't have a job for a long time, was sadly no longer in the military service. I won't get into that. And he didn't have a job as soon as he became vice president. But Risman not the best

reputation in the world. I hear they paid him one hundred and eighty three thousand a month and they gave him a three million dollars upfront payment. All right, and he had no energy quickly, and then I need to get to a question to you, very old basis that everybody investigated that no one said anything he did was wrong in Ukraine. You know why those the texts don't work on Biden because Trump is trying to question somebody's character.

Because of Trump, nobody cares about character. Trump ripped up the plate book going character, you don't care well. Aubrio Day took to her page on social media and said, since Trump has now lowered this debate to trashing family, Don Junior hates his father Ivanka is a lesbian on the low Eric universe. On their Apprentice boardroom table while with his now wife, all right, he said, it's not about my family or your family. It's about your family

points to the American people. Talk to your country, mister President. And while we're at it, I have texts of Don Junior telling me what a little ish hoole Baron is. They were on the private jet and Baron didn't like his food, so he threw the plate across the plane at the attendant. None of these people are innocent of being eight holes and liars. That's that's the tas crazy. That's the t I was missing last night. That's what I'm really upset about. Last night was born as hell.

You know what I'm saying. I sat there, have my snacks, getting ready to see some action, and they both want to be stable. You know what I'm saying. Isn't that what you're going from your president? No? Not when it's reality show star on stage and one a reality show got damage. All right, you didn't. I did, exactly Where Where was the fly? I had to go back to the Giants game? Where was the fly? Nobody was? It wasn't entertaining last night? All right, all rights? Right? Now,

when we come back, Alicia Garza will be man. I love Alicia garzas. She's one of the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. She has a new book out called The Purpose of Power, Okay, and it really does humanize the Black Lives Matter movement in the Black Lives Matter organization in a in a real way. It's a great read. All right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Come Morning, the Breakfast Club. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are the

Breakfast Club. We got a special guest in the building, Alicia Garza, that's right, one of the founders of the Black Lives Matter move and she has a new book alcohol The Purpose of Power, How We Come Together when We Fall Apart. That is the very powerful title, Elsie, Yes, it is. And you know, our sister Angela helped inspire me around this title. She and I were going off about what's going on in the elections, Angela yes, Angela Raid,

didn't I say anymore any who. We were talking about really the need for our movements to better understand what it is that we're fighting for. We're not fighting for seats, cabinet positions, anything like that. We're fighting for power. And so the Purpose of Power became the title of this book. Can we go back to the Black Lives Matta movement, and you wanted the founders. Can we start how that

was founded? I mean, Black Lives Matter really comes out of the murder of Trayvon Martin and the subsequent acquittal of George Zimmerman in his murder, but it's much bigger than police violence. And I think so much of what people know about Black Lives Matter is policing, right, and the protests that people see on TV or that they

attend themselves. But I can say that one of the reasons I wrote this book, honestly, is because very few people know about the offline work that goes into social change, and so that's what I talk about in the book. And it's important to note that it's not all glamorous work. Right.

A lot of times we see these celebrities or people who are just using different platforms to speak on things, But there's a lot more that goes into starting a movement and organizing than just being on a platform where it was starting a hashtag. So that's something that you also address in your book, and how you were raised and how that plays a role in how you even started becoming this organizer. Right, So can you talk about how your background and your family, your mother in particular,

actually encouraged you. I sure will and thank you for saying that, because honestly, that is a big thing that people don't know, is that it's not glamorous work and that the work is hard. And you know, so many people, I think, see what's happening on social media and they think, you know, oh, I want to start a hashtag so I can start a movement, so that I can have a lot of followers. And I talk about in the book how that's actually not what we're fighting for and

that's not what is going to create change. Hashtags don't start movements. People do. And I say this in the book, And what I try to do in this book is talk about how it is that people start movements for me myself. The first kind of lesson that I ever got in politics was from my mom, who passed away a couple of years ago, and I really learned from her that dignity and survival is at the core of everything that we are fighting for and at the core

of everything that we do. She fundamentally believed that we are all each other's responsibility and that everybody should have the right to live with dignity. You did a great job of human I think BLM in the purpose of power, not just BLM, but in particular yourself, Patrese and Opal,

not just personally, you know, but the movement itself. In chapter eleven, voting can be a movement, very timely chapter for right now, you actually question BLM and admitted that y'all didn't have a cliss that it demands to take on the campaign trail, and y'all didn't hold Hillary Clinton accountable for her role in mass and contation. Do you think the movements have done a better job this time around this election cycle doing it? Yeah? I mean I

think we're learning a lot in twenty sixteen. Yes, I think our movements and this isn't just limited to BLM, as I say in the book, but our movements are relatively ambivalent about elections. And I understand why you and I have talked about this a ton, right. People don't feel like these processes actually deliver the things that we need. And in a lot of ways they're right. But some of the things that happens here is that we haven't figured out what our engagement looks like. That's on our

terms and not their terms. And so lots of people don't know that. For example, even though we decided not to endorse a candidate, and I think that was still the right decision, we were also engaging with candidates behind the scenes. We were calling for a Black Lives Matter debate from the DNC and got shut down promptly by Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who then ultimately got ousted because she looked like she was trying to rig the process for

Hillary Clinton. We had campaign conversations with their staff people, policy campaign discussions where you know, when they were starting to talk about trans rights and they were starting to talk about education. That's because they were getting pushed by BLM. But at the end of the day, when it became clear that this election was going to go in a certain direction and everybody's voice needed to be unified, and we couldn't show up for that. And that wasn't just

a question of our movement. It was a question of men movements who were engaging thousands and thousands and sometimes millions of people but not putting out a clear message about how we approach these stages and how we both hold the contradiction of nothing's going to change without us right but they're going to keep going without us even if we deliverticipate, so we might as well throw in

and get our influence in the mix. And you also created with some research, tons of research and black agenda, and I see a lot of people coming up with their black agendas. Now, can you talk about your black agenda? This agenda and you can find it at Black to the Future dot org. This agenda is not the radical agenda. It is the Black Unity agenda, and it's something that we've been pushing for the last year, trying to get this adopted by campaigns, trying to get it adopted by

political parties. But frankly, what we're doing is we're changing rules in cities and states using this agenda. We've already organized seventy thousand black voters around this agenda, and we know that seventy thousand black voters are using this agenda right now as they're making decisions up and down the ballot. So you know, for folks who are listening and you want to get involved, we are using this agenda as an organizing tool to change the rules that have been

rigged against us for generations. And we're also training our people how to write win and design the rules. So we're not just asking people to give us stuff right right here, actually trying to change the balance of power, and the Black Agenda twenty twenty is the first step. What's the three biggest things that you've seen that you would say that people wanted to You know, Charlemagne, you were so great yesterday on Don Lemon. I was listening

because I was in the segment after you. I'm inspired by people like you. You just made it clear. You said, look, we want to understand and we want to get better and stronger around our economics. And that was the number one issue that kept Blackfoot up at night in the Black census was wages that were too low to support a family, and then of course followed by other safety net issues that also have to do with wealth. And we didn't just look at problems in the agenda, we

looked at solutions. And the majority of people in our survey said that number one, they don't believe that politicians care about us or our families. Number two, that when it comes to policing and police violence, that we want police to be held accountable when they commit crimes in our communities. And number three, what people said was that they want government to take more of a role in

being responsible for everyone. So right now, the way that people see government is that it's only geared towards people who are wealthy and people who are white. And what our folks said was, you know that has to change. We need to start making people pay their fair share if you make over a certain amount of money. We have to make sure the government right is really establishing a floor in a baseline for everybody's human dignity. We have more with Elicia Garza when we come back. Is

the breakfast Club? Good Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Alicia Garza. Charlomagne, I want to ask a question. Thirteen days to the election. You know you got the Black Census, you got your Black agenda. Whose agenda is more in line with the Black census? In your agenda? Is it to lift Every Voice Plan

or the Platinum Plan by Donald Trump? Yeah? Okay, well, without question, it's the Lift Every Voice Plan plans in one page. He had to keep it simple because there's nothing in there. But I'm also going to say, just to be honest, that lift Every Voice plan needs a lot of work, and we have been fighting for the last eight months to get this campaign to really hone

in on the nuances of what black communities need. I think in some ways, and I'm going to be super honest here, I think they're used to engaging like a very established framework when it comes to dealing with black communities, and that doesn't match the times that we're in. And if the man who's in charge stays in charge, he plans to be in charge for a very long time. It ain't known for your cycles another cycles. So we got to handle this bird right now, and then we

keep pushing. And I will tell you you know, I say in the book as well that elections are not about personalities. It's not about who you would have over for dinner. I don't think I would want Joe Biden over at my house for dinner. We'll tell you this. It's about picking the terrain I want to fight on, and the terrain I want to fight on will allow me to fight for another day. And if this man stays president, we don't have that terrain and we may not be able to fight another day. So it's super

clear to me. I hope it's clear to everybody who's listening to What are your thoughts on engaging though to say? Because we've seen people say, look, you don't know who's going to be in power, you should engage with whoever that person is in order to create change. Instead of saying, Okay, I don't support that person, I'm won't engage. What are your thoughts on that? I think we're mixing up a

lot of things. So number one, absolutely it's important to engage with people who are in power, but we also have to do that with a clear set of eyes and engaging with Donald Trump, it's not an ideological thing, it's a practical thing. What he has shown over and over again is that he is not for black people and that when he does actually talk about black folks, it's really just to enrich himself. We could take the First Step Act for example, right, he did a lot.

There was a lot of hooplah around how he was the one who pushed the first you know, criminal justice reform plan from the you know, from the Republican side. But I can say this, he also talked to a bunch of crap about it, and he only uses it right when he wants to talk to black folks about why we should suspend our disbelief and actually suspend what we see right in front of our eyes and maybe

think about voting for him. I understand our desire for change, and I think that the way that we make change is through organizing. What are your thoughts on Joe Biden? I know you said you wouldn't invite him to your house for dinner, but what are your thoughts as as a person to him and as a president if he's elected. A lot of people don't seem to necessarily care for him and care more for Kamala Harris. So what are your thoughts on Biden? They don't look up like that.

How can I answer this without getting people not wanting to vote? I mean, look, I'm sure he's a nice guy. The way that I approach politicians, and whether it be people I really like or whether I don't like them, is about the policies that they move forward. And you know, I'm clear about what I need to be doing in this cycle, but it doesn't mean I can't be critical of this person. And at the same time, he has expected support from our community and frankly has gotten it

without very many demands. My congresswoman is actually it's a lot different. She got put into Congress on an anti war mandate. That's just the kind of flavor of where we're from. But I can tell you what if she's strayed from that, it would be a problem and she would be contested in her elections. And she understands that. She also has a deep sense of accountability to her community. And that's what I think politics needs to look like.

It doesn't look like that right now, but it won't look like that if we don't fight for it to look like that. So that's why we do the work we do at the Black to the Future Action Fund and the Black Future's Lab. Chapter thirteen in the Purpose of Powell, that was one that touched me to imposter syndrome in the patriarchy, and you describe of yourself as a surviral of imposter syndrome. I've never looked at it

like that. Break that down for me, m Well, imposter syndrome is really the notion that you don't belong here, that you're not good enough, right, and really successful people have imposter syndrome. Part of the fight that I engage in every single day among many is being seen as capable, intelligent, worthy, right, not just from myself but from others, and even in terms of this movement, you know, Patrese and Opal and I and so many other activists in this movement have

encountered things that are undescribable. And yet at the same time, it doesn't matter how much I do here, people are always going to look for the man who's leading. They're always going to be waiting for the next, the next of Martin Luther King. And that is something that I needed to point out here because we can't reach what we're trying to reach if we continue to try and

repeat eras that no longer exist for me. I really wanted people to better understand what is the consequence, right of the stories that we tell ourselves in each other, about what successful movements look like, what successful leaders look like, right, and the impact that we have on the change that we see. It's not a competition between men and women. It's really about equity and equality and how can we encourage all of us to step forward and to take

ownership of our accomplishments while also giving shine to other folk. Right, I think we can do all those things at the same time. The reason I love that chapter, though, is because I've never looked at it as surviving imposter syndrome. You know, for me, you know, I'm definitely suffer from apothysyndrome. But when I when I finally got to that place where I felt like I was over it, I felt like I was getting to a place so worthy, right was I felt worthy to be in a position that

I'm in. So I wonder what happens when you don't survive in pothy syndrome. Well, when you don't survive imposter syndrome, you stop striving, right, you stop striving, you stop glowing, you stopped shining, and frankly, you stop trying, you stop creating, you stop innovating. And the reason I put this chapter in the book is because I wanted to expose that. I wanted to show us that in a lot of ways,

we're cutting off our nose to spite our face. We need to build a movement in the millions, and that means we need all the talent, all the creativity, but we also have to break down these ways of relating to each other that are deeply, deeply unhealthy. And they lead to self hate, right, that is hard to recover from.

So if we're gonna build movements that last. One of the things I argue is that we have to learn how to engage our pain and our trauma in such a way where we don't tear each other up and we don't eat each other alive from the inside. We have We're in an intersection where we have to give care to the things that need to die away. Right, all the ways in which our society and our economy is organized that don't serve us. We need to give

care to it to wither away. But then we also need to give care to the things that we're trying to birth. And I think we're in an unprecedented moment where we get to do both at the same time. I well, old move we got more with Alicia Gas and when we come back is the breakfast club. Good morning. You can get the biggest you nab back in a store if you're gone. And I gave them a jewel. They said, if I got a morning, I bought a new better take a new jewls. I'm gonna be great

to call you to Alicia. Only if I'm in the club. I got if I want the fun in the back end, just came in and now behind the s fives to look you and y'all lones from Ala, y'all run. I know they't hating on me. Read, I don't read. Come Whenever I tell her to come, she come. Whenever he smoke. We ain't running chop two on stand Tue coote, you're gonna trown this way doing out his shows. I'm in on the road. Don't care why I go dongers. I get bad, bad little fife. Shement on my mind. Soon

as I get back. She can stay do this all the time. This ain't no surprice. Every other night enough the movie can man and joop to art, No stand tue coote, you're gonna trown off this way doing out his shows. I'm in the road. Don't cat why I go dongers. I get bad, bad little fife. She being on my mind. So as I get back, she can stay do this all the time. This ain't no surprice. Every other night, another movie, get mad every other another

another dollar getting made every other night. Though it was a good day, dumb like a child, I got vocals in the face. Semon isn't in the dollar is able way. I don't want the train gonna with another slave. I had a jot too men forget, so I took it by the flame. I get like a working on my Jopo hard turns to the car into the ground like a bell at better name, Joop too horse coushing on the floor. You're gonna go around and John trying to ride it away, jup to Art on Stattue Cote Trown

this way doing out his shows. I'm in on the road. Don't cat dong as I keep bag bad little if she made on my mind song as I get back, she getting standing. Do this all the time. This ain't no surpice. Every other night another movie came Man and Chop too, Art on stand Tue Code, You're on Trown this flame doing out his shows. I'm in on the road. Don't cat dong as I keep big bad little if she made on my mind song as I get back, she getting straight. And do this all the time. This

ain't no surpice. Every other night another movie came Man Morning, Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast club. We're still kicking it with Alicia

Garza Charlomagne Chapter seventeen was another was another one. Platforms, pedestals and profiles that text you last day to tell you that that chap to move me spiritually because you break down exactly what a person should be using their platform for and you ask a question which I think everyone with a platform should ask themselves for what info whom are you building a platform in profile? Could you

elaborate on that question? I mean, for me, my purpose is to make black communities powerful in every aspect of our lives, and I have chosen to focus on the realm of politics in order to do that. I have encountered a lot of people in this movement, not just like BLM right, but in the movement work that I have done, especially in the last decade, where I think the reason that people are in it is because they

want to be close to celebrities. They want to have a massive social media platform, They want millions of people to follow them. They want to be seen, and that's a very human desire. But it's not in the service of movement, right, that's in the service of yourself. And if you want to be a celebrity, there's nothing wrong with that. Necessarily, but that is not compatible with the

aims and goals of a movement. It doesn't matter if you have a million Twitter followers, you can have five and still still do the exactly And I find that I'll look on because right now it's so easy to spread false information, you know. And I see that you've worked with a lot of different organizations. You've worked with a Planned Parenthood, correct, that's correct. And I always hear people say really negative things about Planned Parenthood. So I

just wanted you to talk about plan Parenthood. I see you're doing something within Richards who used to be the president of Planned Parenthood, So if you could just talk about your experience there, and while you think planned Parenthood is beneficial for our community, sure, you know. I talk in the book about my history with Planned Parenthood. I in college learned about the role that Margaret Sanger played, not just in that organization, let's be clear, but in

the movement around reproductive rights. And what Margaret Sayger was fighting for was the ability of white women to determine when and where they wanted to start families, and when it came to women of color and poor women and immigrant women, she didn't believe that our families were fit to reproduce, and so she was at the same time a reproductive rights crusader. She was at the same time a member of the eugenics movement. And that's not about

planned parenthood. That's about a movement right that allows for that kind of bifurcation where white women can get access to things, right, black women and women of color and immigrant women and poor women right get the short end of the stick. With that being said by talk in the book about how all of our lives have been shaped by an incredibly powerful conservative movement that you know, part of what that has looked like is policy wars

and culture wars. And then what happens is, because we have a rightful distrust of the information that we hear, we buy into their narrative easily because it's anti establishment. And now over the last few years they've been testing on our communities how it is that they can make inroads.

It's not good for them for their movement to be seen as an all white movement, so they want to break off segments of our communities and some of the pore things that they use our conversations around healthcare, which is how planned parenthood gets involved in conversations about Black Lives matter, And the danger here right is that we have to figure out number one, how it is that we control and shape our own stories, and how we

have the apparatus to disseminate those stories. So shout out to use Charlemagne for building this huge plo form right around getting black voices out there into the world. But we also have to be able to call out and hold accountable those who try to manipulate us into doing things that don't actually benefit the majority of our communities. It's very distorted, Like even if we look at Black Lives Matter, I mean, I've heard it's anti law. I've

heard as aunti whites. I heard it's a terrorist ati I've heard all of that, you know, And what do you say to people that just really don't understand, because especially mostly white people, when they hear Black Lives Matter, it's like kryptonite. They all of a sudden, they start covering their face, they start running, they get so mad. Yeah, so what do you say that, Because a lot of

that information is distorted in all wrong. We've been pretty transparent and pretty clear about what we're for from the very beginning, you know, on days when I'm feeling okay, I try to put the attacks that we get from the President and Rudy Giuliani and you know, all the ways in which we get used as political footballs. I try to put that aside and put it into the bigger picture. Because they don't have a record to stand on. They attack us directly around our record, and I would

stand for our record any day. So our team, the Movement for Black Lives, black Lives Matter, and so many other entities introduced the Breath Act right, which is our generation's version of the Civil Rights Act. What has Donald Trump or any of these people done about racial justice and around police violence? Nothing. Black Lives Matter is fighting for the sanctity and dignity of black life. It should be something that everybody should be aligned with and in

adherence too, including the President. Chapter seventeen. I thought the way you explained Deray McKesson in that chapter was interesting. It was it was tasteful, but it was firm, you know what I mean, Deray, I'm sorry. Why was it important to explain to people that Deray, as you said, was taking credit? You know, I felt conflicted, But again, it does feel important to me to tell the truth, and part of the truth, right, is that we have

allowed people to overstate their roles. It's not really about him, it's I'm using him as an example to talk about a larger phenomenon because he's not the only one. And I want us to ask ourselves these questions, Why is it right that we can't see a leader of a movement as a black queer woman with two nose rings and tattoos? Right? But we can certainly and feel fine about seeing a leader of a movement being somebody who wears a blue vest and as a man. We have

to ask ourselves these questions you mentioned. Thats a lot in that chapter Patagonia. I think it's I also want us to better understand we have a lot more work to do on building unity amongst the diversity and complexity of our communities, and there also has to be a place where we all come together and hash out what is our common agenda. And that work takes both sides of things, right. It takes the unity work, but it also takes the what are our particular concerns work? Wow,

her name is Alicia Garza. The book is incredible, um and Alicia, you are loved. You are valued, You are appreciated, and you know, I'm just happy that you exist. I'm glad that you're here to do the work. Thank you for havank you, Queen, Thank you to appreciate you. Selicia Garza, tell them about the podcast real quick, tell them what subscribe? Oh yeah, oh yeah, okay, So check out Lady Don't Take No podcast, which is pop culture politics with the

side of beauty recommendations. And actually we're gonna have you, Charlotmagne on the show next week, so you're not talking about beauty recommendations. Yeah, thank you. What I'm saying everywhere you get your podcast, it's available and I'm stoked to have you on next week. Thanks for joining me. Thank you. Go get the purpose of power, everybody. So, Alicia Gauds, it's the Breakfast Club, Say morning, everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Ye, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast Clubs.

Let's get to the rumors. Let's talk Buster Rhymes, Abode infamous. This is the Rumor Report with Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Y'all gonna put some respect on Buster Rhymes his name. Now, let's talk about versus Here's what t I had to say about why he wouldn't do verses with Buster. Absolute and respect Buster a whole. I think the generation of gap it might be a little bit just a little too much, just a little too much, just a little too much on it, Twister and Buster

that go. I still want to see busting Missy. I agree busting Tia doesn't make sense. Oh man, I told y'all this all week long. Buster wants to battle anybody, though, and I'm not mad at than he feels. He has a catalog, which he does, and he'll spank a lot of people's asses. But I think Tia and jeez, I think that's a better matchup, is phenomenal versus Didn't Buster respond you, well, yes, we are going to get to that right now. Here's what Buster had to say, You

respectfully decline. I guess that's the fancy way to say that you turned down this versus battle. You want to talk about generational gap. That's a very respectful way of not saying that you don't really want to sit in a smoking section with me. It's cool, tip you can see it King the South, So let's not make no excuses. King, just tell the people he was really not ready to get this ass whip on the world stage. That's the truth. Not salute and respect Buster rhymes as well. He's one

of the greatest hip hop performers of all time. I love busters music. In fact, one of my favorite hip hop songs ever is why We Die featuring DMX and jay Z, produced by Swiss off Buses Anarchy album. But with that said, musically he would not win the verses against TI. It's a terrible matchup stylistically. TI would man handle Buster musically. What I want to see as well, it's Buster versus Missy. See when you start and all that, I don't like when you start talking. It's the truth

and you know well. Buster also does not think that he would hesitate to take on even more than one artist at the time. Listen to this now to the rest of the world again, I repeat, whoever, wherever, whatever. As a matter of fact, I don't mind going up against two different artists in the same versus. I'm a Naja versus WHOA come on? What's wrong with you? Three versus? I guess it would really be a versus ATOI All right now. Amber Rose was talking about how things went

downhill with her and twenty one Savage. You know, she had a lot to say on her pot on the podcast with U No Jumper, and here's what you had to say. It's really like that I'm a hoo too sign that kind of started their downward spiral. Are you the one who told him the whold as signus says I'm a hoe? No? Actually, he that's what he wanted to do, And I think that was ultimately the demise of our relationships. Really you think that's where Yeah, I

think so. I think that he was being very supportive and he was like, man, I should hold as signus as I'm a whole too, And I was like that would be really great for feminism, like sluptwalk, you know, your rapper, and like he held it up. And then after that, I think the internet just went in on him too much and it was just not it wasn't good. After that, We're keeping it real, goes wrong, big hole Okay twenty one on the phone, somebody asked if that

is really the reason. Man, Okay, He's like, man, I said, I'm a host too. I gotta get out here too, big hole, all right, Okay? He probably it sounded like a great idea execution. Yeah after that, just listen, women don't make you do strange things. I started aching my eyebrows back and the day because because the two women, yo, I'm a post admitted. Have y'all seen that picture? So I never said I never not admitted lend the Latin, but about the eyeliner, Wow, Latin. I had to be

Latin like this because Latinos usually do the eyebrows. Who says to shape the eyebrows? You know? I go to the barbershop and they'd be like, you know my eyebrows, Like, oh, because you're meitting you a Latine on that I don't people do and they think they said something. Racists all said, hey, I'm not. I'm just saying when I go to the barbershop, my Latin brothers they arched their eyebrows. Yeah, two women, uh Nina and Shanira. They gasked me to arch my

eyebrows back in. It's terrible. We seen it. Oh that's bad. That's what I get for trying to be Latino. I don't like this whole put right. Well, that is your rumor report. I'm angela year you've seen Islina here. No, it wasn't Nolin, Yes you did. I didn't. I had thick ass eyebrows. I need Arston, but they what are you talking about? Eliner? Yeah? A minute, next year. Okay, I've never used Alina. I'm not like y'all. Don't lie

about stuff. And you've been in here with a fake bid off for that since we've been back from the quarantine Beijing dout. But trying to convince us that's real. He got you there, Manning. Okay, all right, all right, stop using my mic too. Who were you talking to? Who are you giving it? Who are giving that dog to me? Um? Aaron Honeker, he needs to come to the front of the car gation. We like to have

a word with him. You don't know who Aaron Honker is, Well you'll find out for after the hour, right, we'll get into it. Next, it's to Breakfast Club. Come Morning,

the Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same. Tuesday, October twenty seventh, at nine eight Central on BT Comment Trio eighty five South, host of twenty twenty b ET Hip Hop Awards with two Chains, Big Sean Burner Boy, Gucci Man, Janee Echo, Little Baby City Girls, and Tolby Knew Whigway plus music Mogul Masterpeak gets the I Am hip Hop Award. For more information, search hashtag hip Hop Awards. It's time for Donkey other Day to being Dunky of

the Day. A little bit of a mixup for like a dope the other day. Now, I've been called a lot of my twenty three years, but Donkey of the Day is a new wife. Wow. Donkey today for Friday October twenty first, Today no mosterday, saying I believe Friday October twenty third, twenty first was a jazz flog born. It's with the jazz five Darky Today for Friday October twenty third goes to a Miami attorney named Aaron Honaker.

Good morning Miami, A slew to everybody who listens to us on one on three five to beat in Miami logic, DJ thirty three was happening. Good morning. My brothers are dropping on a clues bomps for one or through five to people. I love Miami, but Miami is absolutely a part of Florida. Okay, what did your uncle Shaula always say The craziest people in America come from the Bronx and all of Florida. You know what's so interesting. It was a brief moment, a very brief moment with people

from Florida would attempt to dispute me on that. Not anymore, Okay. I think people from Florida have finally taken a step back and started to see what we all see. Yeah, started to hear what we are here, and they cannot deny that something is simply not right with Florida. I don't know what it is. I don't know if it's the state, the water, the sun, the people. It's just something about you know, Florida. Okay. See in Charleston, South Carolina,

where I'm from, we say that, boy, that fool up. Now, but its levels the fool up and on the full scale of one to Florida. Every other state in America is about four or five. But Florida fool that's just a different levels. This is the softest scale. See, crazy things happened everywhere, but when you hear about it, you can understand it somewhat. You know, you get why certain

crazy things happen in places. When things happen in Florida, it makes all of us just say why it's out of the realm of our understanding, and this story of Aaron Honaker is no different. See, Aaron is forty one years old and he's an attorney, dropping a clues boons for all the attorneys out there. You are appreciated. I googled how much an attorney can make in Miami the yearly salary. I think it is ninety six thousand, nine hundred and fifty eight dollars per year, almost almost one

hundred thousand. Okay, that point is very important. I want you to remember that number. You know why because Aaron, this Miami attorney, is currently in federal custody after being charged with trying to rob five banks since September thirty. If you can't make this stuff up, let's go to WPLG Local ten for the report. Police. At one point in time, Aaron Patrick Honaker was a local attorney. Now

the FBI says he's a serial bank robber. FEDS announcing the forty one year olds arrest Wednesday in Coral Gables, saying he's the man in these surveillance photos linking Hanaker to at least four bank robberies in the Gables in

September thirtieth, and at least one in Aventura. Week Forrest University confirms Honaker earned his law degree there in two thousand and five, and this profile on Florida bar dot org shows him as a member in good standing, though the law firm listed as his place of employment tells us Honaker suddenly disappeared two years ago and they haven't

seen or heard from him since. Now, I didn't go to college, but last time I checked, to becoming an attorney, you had to get a bachelor's degree, right, then you gotta go to law school. Right. So that's like seven to eight years of your life that you spent committed to working towards this goal of becoming an attorney. Okay, Lawyers is something that a lot of people aspire to be. You know, Claire Hustable was a lawyer. Okay, we all Maxine Shaw attorney at law, Okay, Matt Locke, ally mcbill.

These people all made me think lawyers were like what you wanted to be in US society as kids. You know, you gotta you know, you have a degree, you know, a validation that allows you to make almost one hundred thousand dollars a year legally in Miami airon. But you instead of wanting to be Claire Huxtable. You want to be clear from set it off and rob banks. Now, would you like to know how much he got from two of the five banks? Because he was only successful

at robbing too. You know how much he got? How much? Wait for it, because this is one of the reasons he's getting donkey today. He robbed two banks bank penitentiary chance for one thousand, eight hundred and fifty dollars. He robbed two banks and received one thousand, eight hundred and fifty dollars. You took big penitentiary chances for one thousand, eight hundred and fifty dollars. This guy got caught in between bank robberies. The police saw him driving downtown the

Miracle Mile and arrested him. He had a hammer on him and a demand note and not a hammer hammer like a gun, a hammer, hammer like a tool. Okay, And he admitted that the TD bank at two fifty five. I think his al Hamber circle was next on his robbery Atten Bliss. Now, another reason Aaron is getting dunk here today. It's because you would think, since he's an attorney, he would be representing himself right. Wrong, He's got a public defender. Okay. He made his first appearance and caught

this week, and they keeping his ass. They want to detain him before trial, but he has a bond here in the day, so maybe he'll get out. Let me tell you something. You know that kid whose parents who are doing pretty well, and he or she didn't have to hang in the street and do hood ratchet with you and your friends. That's who this guy, Aaron is. Okay, And there's nothing left to do here except play a

game of jess, what rights? Stop googling, and let get your little yellow bags fingers off your laptop right now now. Aaron honakerf a Miami attorney forty one years old, dubbed the Cereal bank robber, successfully robbed two banks for one tho eight hundred and fifty dollars. Got caught with a hammer, not a gun, the actual tool. Okay, Angela, yee, jess, what right the ass? I'm gonna say? He is white? What what what leads used to that conclusion? Angelie? His

last name is Hanaker? No Honaker? Oh, I ain't go front. I thought the same thing I was thinking. Mut mute Angelie's mike while we talked for two minutes. I need to mute her mike while we're talking. Two minutes, please, b j Envy. Yes. Now. Aaron Honaker, a Miami attorney forty one years old, dubbed the Cereal Bank robbers, successfully robbed two banks for one thousand, eight hundred and fifty dollars, got caught with a hammer, not a gun, to actual tool.

Jess what right? All right? White y'all? I think I'm not saying he's white, but I think y'all might have googled why do y'all think this? Um? Well, I was on the same thing as G. I thought the last name was Hanaka. So I was like, I don't know any black people black and I didn't hanker her. I mean Honaker, he said. And then and then you said a hammer. I think it was black people. They had a real gun. He wouldn't have had no no hammer. Who walks around with a hammer? Workers? Oh? Yeah, I mean,

but not attorneys. First of all, I didn't say Honaker. You did say it's h O and a K E. Dramas. What did he say? It sound like honeck might be the list. But it's not your fault. You know what? You know what He's like, he's like, wow, No he's not. Actually, uh sadly, you too, are right? Aaron Honker is a white man. Yes, yeah, I don't know any black people last name Hanker. That's why his name is hannek Her. Please give Chelsea, please, let Chelsea Handler give Aaron Honaker

the biggest here he ha he ha. That is way too much. Dan Mann is, what's this new? Big donkey? Daniel say you got a big donkey? Let me was happening that donkey? I think that Bacon wasn't in Footloose? What of course he was? No? He wasn't you lose? Of course he was. He was the stump. No, you're wrong, look it up. I don't have to look it up. It's common knowledge. He was on the cover of No People magazine when no one knows n No, it was a huge movie. He was the lead. No, no, no, no,

all right. I think that we need a black producer. Just what it is to balance that poor What did that donkey? It's what the rates our producer is? What race? I'm gonna go with? White? Am I right? White? Turn out? Turning bright rein You're like wrap ups Eddie coming in and bring from goddamn balance. Oh my goodness, all right, thank you, Daniel Honaker. Oh my goodness, let's get out of here for me, get in trouble. Oh, I think it's over rights. I'm next. Angela Rode will be joining us.

She's doing something tomorrow at the Forum in Inglewood. Actually it's called um let's tell you about it, all right, we'll get into that next. Keep a lot. It's the Breakfast Club, Go Morning, the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got a special guest in the building, my sister. I have no hope right now, Miss Rode, we have Angela rod No, I have no hope. I have no hope right now. I got hope. I got hope.

But I will say this, Um, I would love for you Angela this morning, because we all start the debates last night, even though both candidates are trash. Tell people why they should still vote on November third. That's that's a good point. Well, first, I don't want to call human beings trash. Stop it to the one human being on the stage. I'm still gonna hold out a little bit of hope for their because you have confidence in Joe Biden. Do you like Joe? I'm gonna tell you.

I'm gonna tell you where I have confidence. I have confidence in Kamala Harris, and she wasn't on the debate stage. Now, let's move right along to the challenges and why it's most important to overcome those challenges to vote on November third. You know, I'm actually gonna steal a line from Andrew. I did a podcast last night with Andrew Gillen and

Baccari Sellers. And Andrew SAIDs, and then that's so important that I know you all will appreciate, and that is that it's time for us to stop dream selling and to start truth telling. Yeah, and then I'm not talking about us. I'm talking about candidates and the whole political process. And we tell everybody to put everything on the line from November third. And then we're surprised, right when people

are like, well, nothing change. When when I went to vote, nothing changed when I cast my vote for you, and and overnight my community wasn't changed. And overnight my city wasn't changed, or my state wasn't changed. My kids' school looks exactly the same, and Andrew said something that was so important. He said that that's the front door of democracy. I always say that that's the starting line, right when

you go to the voting booth. That's just the first thing you can do that that's not all we should be doing. And the biggest problem I think is we tell people vote like your life depends on it. You should, but also there are several other things you have to do to make sure you protect your livelihood, you protect your ability to survive, and you protect our ability when we weren't even considered able to get these things from the Declaration of Independence. But life, liberty in the pursuit

of happiness doesn't all come on election day. That's the hard thing. And so we have to make sure people understand if you don't participate, then those three things are less likely. But there's a lot we have to do to ensure those things become likely. I would also like for you to explain just like you know what Trump has right now, like you know, as far as the cultus are concerned, and you know, yeah, well, and I just have to point out that clearly my sales pitch

didn't work because here was the view when I was done. Yeah, you're not selling You're not selling us own Biden. But here's the thing. Here's the thing. I'm not selling Biden. Right, He's not for sale to me. Right. I think what I'm saying is, there's one side that I would prefer to engage. There's one side that I would prefer to fight to get to where we need to be. We can't fight. We can't fight Trump on where we need

to be. This dude stood on the debate stage and every time he opened his mouth he was lying at too though, And I don't That's what I don't like. It's like too old. You know what I saw last night? I saw an old white male politician and his boss, an old, rich white man, and I'm tired of that in America. I hate it. Yeah, that's what I think. And I understand why you hate it, because the reality of it is you don't feel seen or heard. I

get that. But at the same time, when we got to the racial justice portion of the conversation, and Joe Biden talked about the ability to just see things differently, meanwhile Donald Trump is talking about he's the least racist person in the room. The fact that you are on the spectrum of racism, rather sit down like we and then the debate before he said stand back and stand by. Now, I don't know why Joe Biden told the people he said stand around and sit down. Whatever he said, he said,

let me have that frieshrim sandwich from New Orleans. What's that thing? What are we talking about? And so I think that at the end of the day, what we have to remember is that voting is up at the top of the ballot, from the highest office in the land, the President, to the bottom. When you look at the fact that sixty plus percent of Americans know who they were voting for before did not took last night's debate,

That's what we have to remember. Folks already know you said, Lenard, You said it right, Like what if we started talking to people about the Supreme Court, about all of the federal judicial appointments that not only Donald Trump could make, but all of those that Barack Obama wasn't able to make. I've been so frustrated in this process because the Kamala and Joe Biden haven't talked about what is deserved by us on the course, and they should because we literally

were hamstrung by Mitch McConnell. When you start having those conversations with people, their position shift. I did an informal focus group the night before last and brought up Amy Coney Barris Record, who, of course they're about to shove through the Senate nominating process. They didn't know, or some of them didn't know that. She said that the inn word, saying the in word at work by your supervisor does

not constitute a hostile working environment. And I said, what if you have the opportunity, right like, what are you talking about? If you have the opportunity to get a judge on the Supreme Court or in a federal judicial appointment who thought like you, would that be enough for you to vote? If you think Joe Biden doesn't represent your interests, would you think that's enough? Everybody say yes, So we don't do a good job of telling people

how important the judiciary is. So if they had the opportunity to pick judges who think like them, who are going to enforce the laws that are passed in Congress, that's reason enough for them to vote. Progressives don't talk about that enough at all. Somebody like a Daniel Cameron Attorney general. If you don't like what's happening with that? Then those are people that you can vote for too, so it's not just the president. Yeah, I'm sorry, I

was talking about the federal judiciary. But you're absolutely right. State attorney general appointments, district attorneys, the people who are representing you in the state legislature. This is a census here, y'all. They're drawing legislative districts for the state and federal positions elected offices. Like we have to be telling people the truth about the process. And of course you can look at them and say, I'm just talking about everyday Americans state,

Well they should know better. Well they don't because they stop teaching civics at school if forever ago, Like, I'm blessed because I grew up around that. I don't know how many people had to learn civics from schoolhouse rocking. But that ain't on are either right, That's that's our truth. How did you How did you like Biden's reply to the ninety four crime bill last wait wait wait, we'll come back and we'll talk to Angela rossmore. Don't move.

Angela Ry's here. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we are the Breakfast Club were kicking it with Angela Rye. Now, Charlomagne, you just had a question for miss Ryan. Yeah, I was just asking, you know, how did she like Biden's reply to the ninety four crime? But only because I know that's the things that people you know, aren't feeling

this morning, that his answers and stuff like that. I'm tired of saying that this is uh, it's a big issue. It's the elephant in the room. It is the thing that's going to keep on coming up every time Race his address. It's the only thing that Joe Biden, I mean, Donald Trump confusing it too now Jesus, then Donald Trump has against Joe Biden, right, It's the only thing that

he has. And to hear him effectively talk about the number of people whose sentences were commuted under the Obama administration and who was granted clemency compared to the handful of people donald Trump gave clemency two is a palatable point, but it's not when you compare that to what happened in eighty two, eighty four, eighty six, eighty eight, and

ninety four it's all of those things. It's the collective, and you have to be clear about the fact that this doesn't align with where we are now until you can't defend it right. The other problem that we have is people were waiting a long time for Donald Trump to apologize to the central part five hasn't happened. He called for the death penalty against of them as well, and he also called for more police on the streets.

So he's able to speak out of both sides of his mouth in ways that Joe Biden couldn't and shouldn't. I'm not advocating for that, but I think the reality of it is is white supremacy or white toxicity exists on both sides of the AYO and it needs to be addressed as such. Stop defending that nonsense. People's lives were destroyed behind that, and I think that his campaign got to do him right and tell him that. Of course, again, we all know where we're voting, it doesn't make it right.

And so I'm saying, at this late date, this isn't about securing a vote. This is about saying and committing that you are ready to do the right thing. And I think that's when it boils down to at this point. Donald Trump asked a great question last night that hasn't been asked, and I would love for you to speak to this. He said, Biden, you've been in the Senate for forty seven years, you were a VP for eight years, and you did none of these things you said you

wanted to do. Well, how would you reply to that? Well, I think again, it demonstrates that Donald Trump doesn't have a real clear understanding of how government works. Right when you're in the United States Senate, you are one voting member of a hundred and so even when you sponsor legislation and you're pushing things through, you don't always get

your way. I think it's a misstatement of what he did under the Obama administration, everything from overseeing the government's recovery to an economic crisis brought to you by George W. Bush. He was responsible for helping to find a cure for cancer after his son Boe. Biden was diagnosed with cancer. There were a number of other initiatives he's led, including

the auto bailout. So there are things that he did, whether or not people like them while he was an elected office is something to be debated and has been hotly contested and debated throughout this cycle. But I think it's a misstatement to say he didn't do anything. I guess he was speaking specifically to the black community well. And then I think in that moment Joe Biden talked about clemency that was granted, but we all know enough wasn't done. Nobody has done enough in our four hundred

and one years of being here. And you cannot put all of that at the feet of Joe Biden. Not one of the past forty three white presidents has done this before the one black president that we had, and all of a sudden, I think all of us made the mistake optimistically assuming right that Barack Obama could undo all of America's racism when he had to fight against it himself in his eight years and and he didn't

have control of the Senate, which is very important. Yeah, have control of the Senate for part of his term. But when he did, they got them Affordable Care Act done, which they call Obamacare. And as we know, Donald Trump, since his first day in office, has tried to undo that like not even how can you stand on a debate stage in the midst of coronavirus and say that you don't support a federal minimum wage mandate, like people can barely pay their bills. And that's what Donald Trump

stood up there and said yesterday. We have a big problem with him. And again I'm just saying the person that I would rather fight to get further to where we need them to be more progressive, and I could probably hold them to it is an administration that's full of appointees that I know and I'm familiar with and happy to have the debate with versus Donald Trump that claims that he is the most or the best president

for black people, least racist president, the least racist. That's a load be racist, but at least I'm the least. You look at Donald Trump and he'll go on Rogan's podcast, he'll do his core. But if you look at Biden, you haven't seen Biden on Sway, you haven't seen him on Steve Harvey, you haven't seen him on Ricky Smihig League, you haven't seen him on none of the Black program No, not the Breakfast Club, not Big Boy Like. It seems like he's scared of the core. So you guys, I

think part of this is um Leonard's Leonard's fault. He scared him. The last time he was on with y'all. Donald Trump did get his basic line of attack against Joe Biden for the whole as selection, and that is on the crime. But I think that the most important thing is something that you guys are raising, and that is you cannot take your base for branded. You can't.

The two largest voting Black Democratic Party are black women and black men, and I think probably a real close second are Latina Latin X men and women, right, And that is you all's base. You have to come to the Breakfast Club to talk to that electorate. You have to know the post of the culture. By coming here, you cannot ignore your base and expected then also serve. It could be anyone, like I said, it could be Steve Harvey, it could be Big Boy, it could be

well I said, the Breakfast Club. But no shay to the other folks who are doing great things. But I think you all establish yourselves in twenty sixteen with the interview with Hillary, every single presidential candidate came on the Breakfast Club this term, and I think that that says a lot about who you all are to the culture. And so for that I definitely will tell you thank you, and I'll also tell the campaign they made a big mistake not sending the candidates here. It's a it's a

very important stop to make. There are questions that you all have that are valid, even if they're tough, those are questions that they have to be prepared to answer clearly on the debate stage and attack ads from other campaigns. It's just it's just a critical mission critical even terms. Folks came on this show. Yeah, yeah, I think so. That has is coming next week before before the election. Important, Yeah, super important. We appreciate you. Tell them what you're doing tomorrow, Angela,

Oh yes, somewhere in the shirt Elect Justice. We're doing these big events. I hope that will make y'all proud. You know, you guys are my family, um, and we're gonna be in fourteen cities all over the country. I'm the biggest one will be here in La where I am right now at the forum in Inglewood. Elect Justice is about ensuring that black and brown voters know that we're not there asking for something without making sure that

basic needs are met and return. You all know we're in the middle of a pandemic within a pandemic within a pandemic, at the crossroads of COVID UM, economic injustice, and of course all of the racial injustice that exist in this country. We're giving away ppe, we're giving away meals for the day, groceries UM, and also offering COVID testing. So we encourage you all to check it out, shout

out to our partners. When we all vote. Black Voters Matter and everybody else that's participating will be streaming on Title UM all day tomorrow, well for two and a half hours tomorrow, and we hope that people will come through if they need anything. You can also the most important thing, you can cast the Early Vote UM. Tomorrow's National Early Vote Day, So we're also making sure that people can cast the early vote and drop those ballots off. You don't have to put them in the mail if

you don't want to. So one to five pm tomorrow at the Forum. Yes, yes, thirty nine hundred West Manchester Boulevard and Inglewood, California. All right, well, fourteen cities, thank you for joining us. Angela, Rya. It's the breakfast club. We got rumors on the way the breakfast clubs up. It's just oh gosh, Report. Guys, it's the Rum Report Breakfast Club. So you know there's a new bart movie out.

Sasha Baron Cohen has put this out. They actually released it right before the debate, also, by the way, and then afterwards, Sasha Baron Cohen hosted a live Q and A with bor At as well to answer any questions that you might have. Now, everybody's been talking about this Giuliani part of the movie where he thinks he's talking to a woman that's a reporter that's posing as Sasha Baron Cohen's teenage daughter. And here's what happened in the actual movie. Thank you again for giving me the start.

Shall we have a drink in the Bedno what you can give me your phone number and your badage shout us, slip your chocolate. Fifteen ship too old for you? What do you want my daughter place? Take me instead? Taken Now. You can see if you watch it that Giuliani is like putting his hand down his pants. That's what it appears to be like. And that's when Borett burst into the room and says, she's fifteen, she's too old for you. Now, Giuliani has been defending himself, saying he was just fixing

his shirt, tucking it in. He was threatening to sue. Well, here is the character of Burrat actually defending his very good friend Giuliani. I here to defend America's Mayor, Rudolph Giuliani. What was an innocent, sexy time encounter between a consenting man and my fifteen year old daughter have been turned into something disgusting by fake news media. I warn you anyone else, try this, and Rudolph will not hesitate to reach into his legal briefs and whip out his subpoenas. Ever,

tell yourself. I think Burrett is hilarious. I loved watching that show when it was on Showtime, but I really don't understand how he gets away with the kind of stuff that he does. He neither how did he not know? I don't get it. But I also don't understand how Rudy Giuliani is getting away with this. It's like nobody cares. It's like dude got caught in the hotel with an underaged girl. If it hadn't, you know, have been a prank,

it would have definitely went down. But nobody is talking about it like we've can't people on social media for less like like, why is this normalized when it comes from like the Trump's in the Giuliani of the world. Well, he's trying to explain himself by saying that he was just trying to fix his shirt and tuck it back in, and you know that he hadn't done anything wrong. Yeah,

right before he busted in the room. Well, he hadn't been complicit then though, Well, she's really twenty four years old, she's an actor, and realized, oh okay, yeah, it's not really a teenager. She's playing a fifteen year old. How do we know? Scripted? And all of them not in on it yet. I just can't believe he gets these politicians and world leaders in these compromising positions all the time. I'm like, I don't see it. Where the camera's at when all of this is happening. What do they think

is going on? Like what did Rudy Giuliani think was happening when when he was being filmed, he thought he was getting Listen, you gotta watch it because it really literally just came out yesterday, So you know, we can't answer all of that yet, but looks like it's gonna be pretty funny. Right all right, Now, let's talk about

Lorenz Tate. His movie Business Ethics is out today on Amazon Prime and actually his production company with his brothers A Tateman, they produced this film and it's all about Lorenz Take plays the main character, and he is a really smart man. But he starts kind of I guess it's Ponzi scheme and starts getting money from some of these rich people. Here is the trailer. You can shoot people out of a lot of money. I'll shut you up with a million bucks, two million bucks, five nitti

in dullness. Things were good, there's a gentleman here to see him. So I thought, there's no sure sign of a great business and having people try to kill you. So that's on Amazon, Amazon Prime Video today, iTunes or a Google play. Hey man, salute to the good brother Lorenz Take. Absolutely I support Lorenz Tat and anything he does. I mean, Lorenz Tate is classic, legendary, you know, and

I'm definitely checking that up. Yeah, this is that role that he's playing was originally meant for a white man, but he loved that part so much and he ended up landing that role. All right, there's an Elton John Barbie doll. Now if you want to get that the Tiny Dancer Doll. It's being released to coincide with Elton John's forty five year anniversary of his concert. It was the largest single artist concert in history at the time at Dodger Stadium back in nineteen seventy five. So you

can order that Elton John Tiny Dancer. I'll think about canning at you for you for Christmas. The Tiny Dancer Doll. Yep, right, it's cute, twinkle well And I just want to shout out everybody who has albums out today. Ty Dolla Sign featuring ty Dolla Sign is out. Join the Lucas Evolution Day Both sell Soul Too is out today, King Crooked Flag, Black Zach eight h three Legend Davis put out the deluxe version of Karma three Tech nine Fair Exodus. That's

the EP and that's out to day. Also new music from Swedi and Jenee I Go Back to the Streets. Oh and Chanelle West Coast album America's Sweetheart is also out today. Cool all right, I'm angela ye and that's your remor report all right now. Shout out to one of the leaders of Light Skin. His birthday is tomorrow, Drake, So we're actually going to get a Drake mix on today. Let me know your favorite Drake joint, So don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Come on and revote. We'll see

you on Monday. The Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never be the same. It's dj Envy And for fifty five years, the General Insurance has been giving people affordable auto insurance with excellent customer service. Get custom covers that's right for you. An immediate proof of insurance. Call them at eight hundred General or visit the General dot com. Some restrictions apply. Morning. Everybody is dj Envy and Ngula Yee, Charlotte and the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Now shout out to everybody

that's attending my webinar. Over the weekend, we are actually taking a one new family home that we purchase and we're flipping it, but going from start to flip, so you get to see everything from purchasing the home, where we got the home from to demo, to framing, to electric and plumbing and insulation and then flooring and windows, and we go through the whole process. And the house wasn't that expensive. The house was one hundred and forty

thousand dollars. We put about forty to fifty thousand dollars into the house and we're selling it for four oh five, so it's about a two hundred thousand dollar profits. So we break that all down how we got the house and all that good stuff. So definitely click the link of my bio if you guys want more information. Man, I've been having so many issues trying to start working on this new house I got. But it's a little different. Well, the house that we that we purchased one hundred and

fifty thousand. Your house was about maybe thirty of those houses. But you know what though I didn't know this, but they have this law here where you have to get a sprinkler system installed in your house. The sprinkler system is so cheesy, but they got some nice one where they have like the sprinkler system and they have like a cage or that looks a little looks better. Well, you won't see it. It's gonna be underneath the ceiling.

But that means you gotta rip apart the ceiling. And then it's a lot of money to even just get the sprinkler system from the street. That you have to pay to get that part done, but it's like mandatory, damn it. Man. All right, well, when we come back, we got the positive note. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, c j Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We all the Breakfast Club now. Shout to Angela Roth for joining

us this morning. Salute to my sister A R. Forty and make sure y'all go check her out tomorrow at the Forum in Inglewood from one to five pm. They're doing this thing called elect Justice and it's like an early vote, early vote rally, food in ppe, giveaway, they got COVID testing all types of stuff from one to five pm tomorrow at the Forum in Inglewood, California. And also she said fourteen other states also right, fourteen, I mean fourteen other cities. Two yep. Also Alicia Garza for

joining us this morning as well. Yes, please go pick up Alicia garden book The Purpose of Power. It's a great read. I read it in like forty eight hours, like it's it's it's It really does humanize the BLM movement in the BLM organization in a real way, and not just the BLM organization, just this whole era of new leadership and these new movements we have it. It puts a lot of things to perspectives. So salut to Alicia Garza. All right, now you got a positive note.

I do, man, the positive notice more just like um, you know, a thank you. You know, I don't think we give God enough gratitude. And I want a lot of y'all this morning, man to really really really look in the mirror and smile and you know, say to yourself, God, thank you for not just throwing my teeth in my mouth like like like God was shooting dice. Okay, some of y'all really need to go see it dinner. Some of y'all really need braces. All right, you finish for y'all, Dune

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android