I'm wanting to sell you love this room anywhere. It's on your Frinda Yo Friday. That's the world's moll stagers want to shut the camera. Greeks show in this listen city. Solf Ri te J Harry, the captain of this we usually eat, the only one who can keep these guys in che Logne The Gods Breakfast Club. Good morning usc 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 Ye, good Morning's Amy Cholomagne, the guy pasted up playing it is Friday. Yes, it's Friday. Another big Friday at the Breakfast Club. The Big Breakfast Club home a big steppers squashed feet. Wendy Williams boots dropped on a clues bomb for us. Good morning, Well, good morning. It's also Chinese New Year today, so happy Chinese New Year to everybody who celebrates that. It's the year of the Ox this year. I saw saw Eddie hung posting about that last night
they did I think what do they call it? A lunar event? They did something last night on on Instagram. In the new year. Him in the Star of Boogie came up with a brother's name right now, But it'll come to me, all right, Well, shout to a little logan. Little Logan passes driving test yesterday, Big logan, big step, big step, Let me hold some of them. Foreign's dad. So he's out and about yesterday. Yesterday he drove four
hundred and forty two miles. Yes, he drove. I don't know if it was really found forty two miles in forty two miles. Damn you being not talking maybe DC maybe yeah, maybe give me three No, you're being in Virginia. But yeah, he drove everywhere. I looked on him because you know I can follow where he goes. He picked must have picked up everybody in town and took him for a ride. But he's excited, he's happy, So shout the little logan. He passed yesterday. Nice snow bunnies in
the passenger all through the town. All right, Logan, I see you. What's wrong with you? Man? Can went to the gym. That's what we went yesterday. All right, Okay, whatever he told you that, I ain't gonna blow logan spot up. Okay, all right? So he located the play of him hate is be talking about. All right, well today let's start the show. Daniel Kaluya will be joining us this morning. You know him from get Out and what else was he? And he was a bunch of movies.
He was in get Out like Black Panther. And he's in a phenomenal new film called Judas and the Black Messiah. Yes, yes, him, he's starting in that with Lakeith Stanfield. Judas in the Black Side is a really great movie. It's out now on HBO on Max. But you know, we watched it a couple of weeks ago. But phenomenal film. Yeah, and director will be joining us too. Shaka King went to school with ye yes and Brooklyn Yeah, so we'll be kicking with both of them today. And then we got
front page news. What we're talking about, Well, let's talk about this gorilla glue thing gone wrong. Another man has ended up in the er and tell you what this has to do with gorilla glue. He earned it. I mean, today's might as well just be a Judas in the Black Side. There. We're playing songs off the soundtrack too. Yes, we're gonna started off with this. This is a song everybody's been asking about. I think it was the track listing was leaked a couple of days ago. This is
jay Z Nipsey Hustle. What it feel like? What it feel like? Credible? We're gonna be playing this every hour on the hour. So feels like r I P to the Big krypt Nip Beautiful black Man taking from us too soon. Can't help but listen to that record and feel happy, sad. Also, Sean Carter the greatest c of all time? Right at this point, it's not debatable, right, I didn't never debate on that. Who did you debate
that with you? I mean, I mean we all have our favorite, right, I'm like, my favorite is ghost Face, right, it's my favorite rapper of all times. Whole is in my top five. Hole is my favorite. But if you're being objective, you would have to say he's the greatest of all time. My opinion hands there. But I wonder if we grade Whole want a curve because he's fifty one, and in hip hop we don't think someone should still be great at that age. I wonder, No, I think
he did his damn thing in his twenties. I think he did his damn thing in his thirties. I think he did his thing in his forties. Be still barn people up, still born people up. Yeah, all right, well, let's get in some front page news where we starting you? Well, you know today is the last day with House impeachment managers. Uh, first of all, they finalized presenting their case and they are they adjourned yesterday until noon today, and so right now the defense is going to be making their case
and then that should be it. Now let's talk about Jamie Raskin, the lead impeachment manager. He thanked the members of the Senate for the close attention and seriousness of purpose that they demonstrated during their presentations and said this, The question here is not whether President Trump committed a crime under the Federal Code or DC law or the law of any state. Impeachment does not result in criminal penalties. Impeachment was created for a purpose separate and distinct from
criminal punishment. It was created to prevent and deter elected officials who swear an oath to represent America but then commit dangerous offenses against our republic. That's a constitutional crime. I don't know what he's saying, because it sounds like a lot of legal jogging. I don't understand what it sounds like. He's saying Trump should be in jail. Well, he's saying, this is not criminal, This will not result
in him ending up in jail. This is an impeachment child that has to do with politics, So this has nothing to do well, yeah, a crime, but this is not a criminal case. So that's something that would have to be done federally, this says. So that's a whole other situation, all right. So right now, defense attorneys are arguing there's no direct link between actions of the rioters and Donald Trump, and so that's what they're trying to say.
But I think the best witnesses are the actual rioters themselves, because they use a lot of their video footage and a lot of them that got arrested what they had to say, and a lot of them were saying basically, they were doing what they thought the president wanted them to do. They thought they were acting on behalf of Donald Trump. So right, so some people feel like some Republicans feel like it's not legal to even be having this proceeding right now because Donald Trump's not in office.
So that's their easy way out of having to make a decision. They feel like this isn't even legal all right now. A man in Louisiana ended up visiting the er. He felt like he should disprove the claims about guerrilla glue, and he went ahead and put it on his lip. Is Len Martin recording himself unpaceful. I'm gonna gorilla glue right here. I'm gonna take it, thrill his cup, put in my mouth and don't be licked and get at all. It's easy. That's good for his ass. That's right. He
earned it. And if you didn't want to talk to your woman on Valentine's Day, just say that, bro, you ain't had to put gorilla glue on your goddamn lips. People so stupid because we're living in a stupid society. I don't know when we're gonna understand that. He ended up in the ear. He had to undergo what he described a painful peeling at the hands of doctors. He was informed that if his wound doesn't help properly, he'll need to have a surgical procedure with the tip of
his lip will be removed. To drop on a clues bombs for stupid. Ye, that's like saying well, I can't sleeps let me crazy glue my eyelids together so I can sleep a little longer. Man, Why are your lips? Why not? Why not do something that you know you don't have to use every day? Why I knew your big toe together until you're told next to it? You know what I'm saying. Look like you got a little webtoes or something that would have been easy. Why are you?
Why are your lips? Of all things? And why did he feel it need to get online and trying to prove that girl wrong? That's y'all problem. Y'all. See people do things, y'all hearing people say things, and y'all just so quick to want to prove people wrong. That's all social media is people going back and forth of all day trying to prove people wrong. You'll earn that show, definitely. You got what you deserve. What you say? I can't hear you? What do you say? Are you trying to
say something back? All? Right? Well, that is front page news. Get it off your chest eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you need to vet hit us uping now else to Breakfast Club, good morning, But it's the Breakfast Club wake up, wake up, wake up, your time to get it off your chest, your man or blas. We want to hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello, who's this Joe far As? I got through? What's up? Broke? Good morning? How are you going? Man?
Good morning, Charlotte, Man, Good morning after the game. So yeah, I've been having some rough times down here in Florida, and uh, right now I'm curly there's the bus, catching the bus, getting ready to good work. But man, I just wanted to just say it's rough. Yeah, it's at least you're going to work though a lot of people don't have a job. Yes, I do have a job, but the thing is a trouble trying to say a float, you know, with me and my fun and uh the boyling,
all that beginning, all down to the beginning. Man, I need somebody to cash at me one hundred dollars so I hat my damn that one. Yeah, man, I didn't know what nowhere else to turn. I asked people. Nobody would to help me, and that's all I needed. What's your cash? Help? What is Jiggie Smith? Which is a capital J everything else lower K I G G Y capital M M I C h one word. Did you combine Will Smith's name and his single getting Jiggie with It?
Jiggie Smith? Oh no, No, that's been my nickname forever. All right, Jakie Smith, you gotta upgrade your nickname Jiggy All right, le Jackie Smith, you need all you need? One hundred dollars, one hundred dollars. It's old. Jigie Smith needs one hundred dollars. Y'all send Jigie Smith some money. What's the next line? I thought the next ground was gonna I'm gonna send Jiggie twenty dollars. Man, y'all gonna help me. Y'all gonna pitch you in y'all everybody listening
out there. I'm gonna send Jigie twenty dollars. I got ten, y'all send twenty two, twenty two dollars, but twenty two. You know what I mean? Twenty dollars? Hello? Who's this is? Jack? Jack on High six Society, Go Morning practis Club Jack. Jackie's incredible. Get it off at your man, Yes, man, I forgot I didn't get to quire you yesterday. Black. Congratulations on your Mega man mixtape with all the foods you has on them the le brain and your love.
What is it nineteen years? It's eighteen years and you call it a mega man? Tell me what's going on on? Only fans? He got a tape full of mega man. He do? He do? And Ball had small? Hey you sign the real suspect this morning? Per usual? How you doing small? I kind of liked that. When Chicago, baby, when are the next next time you come to Chicago? I have an all girl skate party here? Okay? Are you doing it now? Though? Even during this pandemic or it's starting in I gee, you was a super spreader
like two weeks ago. Back. No from me. I'm just asking. I'm just asking. I haven't had coronavirus yet, so I'm still playing it safe. Like we see you are questioning skate party and don't you don't don't act like you won't do it. Just don't come bringing that runa because you know you'll be out in the streets. Let me ask, Let me ask. So I'm just asking an honest question. Is it still going on now? When it's a skate party? So we know what's the rules, all right? So it's
limited capacity. It's in Chicago. Um, everybody listening you can check high check societies in sagrama's h I G H H I C s O C I ec y Mark. I got my bag from you. I got my bag from you back wall. Finally, Yes, it's beautiful, nice, bright blue color. Have it right here. You check the inside of it. But you know you blessed in highly favorite. That's right, thank you. I want to know more about this mega Man mixtape's there's no man no I need
to know. I need really only fans shut up, get it off your chests eight hundred five eighty five one on five one. If you need to n hit this up. As to breakfast Club, good morning, this is your time to get it off your chests. Whether you're Man or blast so Peo better have the same in we want to hear from you on the breakfast club. Hello. Who's this hey? Good morning Heavy, Good morning, Charlotte Man, Good morning Angela, Happy Friday. What's happening on? Hey? So, I
want to talk about that jay Z verse. I know Charlomagne was talking about whether or not we judge day Z on the curb. I think back in the day we used to talk about hip hop being like a young man's sport, it's not no more man's hip hop. You American up hip hop is is is all American right now, and it's a popular culture. Though I don't think we should be looking at it as a young man's sport anymore, because back in the day when it was a young culture, we could say that. But it's
become American culture, right, so we can't. We gotta look at JAYZ in the same category like the Who and the Rolling Stones and all that. He's a legend and we can't compare him to the young boys, but we can't just say it's the young boys sport anymore. It's evolved into anybody could do it at any time, as long as you do it from the heart. Agree, you know, jay Z legend number one, MC got MC of all time and that verse. I don't know when jd Rapp, I feel like you's sucking to me all the time.
It's a scripture. It's a scripture. He puts my he puts my thoughts in perspective, like when he said, you let them cracking storm your capital, put their feet up on your desk, and yet you're talking tough to me. I lost all my little respect. That's how I'd be feeling when I'd be like, man, I feel like democrats are cowards. Republicans and cowards, you know what I mean. It's like, but they want to talk tough to us, but you let them for run up in your capital.
When to put their feet up, ball in your desk? Yep? Come on, man, Hello, who's this yo? Everybody was going on man, mellow, mellow? What up? Man getting off her chest? Mellow? All right? First things first, all the beautiful ladies out there. I don't care. He's got a Valentine and not happy Valentine's Day, you know what I mean. That's first things first. And second of all, I need everybody stopped hunting my god with Charlotte because he really looked like Morris Chestnuts
for rever listen, brother getting into heaven, I said, Morris Chestnut. Nah, I mean if he looked I mean, he looked like Morris Chestnut if he was too expensive on Amazon. So you trying to go to Wish and you that's that's what you're gonna get, yo. Yo, My heaven revoked. See you got into heaven and then you got your call. You got revoked, yo. But no, I got a proposition for you. Because I thought I looked like Trey Storm. Somebody said I looked like Trey Romes. So I'm thinking,
you know what I mean? You look like Morris Left. I looked like Trey Romes. We can start a singing group called boys to nick Man, we can really take boys. Boys didn't listen. I'm gonna be honest with you. I didn't say I looked like Marks chesting up the screech. Didn't know you did. Hello, this is the undisputed w
m DC. Good morning, enjoy Harry got snack Man. Now, people who don't know if you just joined the snack Man as a comedian's first comedian a god man, tell you joke now that the CDC has suggested that we wear two masks. Yo, I'm not mad. Ever since I've been of age, I have always double bagged it. Yo. King you got a social distance from comedy, bro like you gotta like like you should just you should just
social distance. I mean as far away from comedy as possible, not even six feet like twelve eighteen maybe twenty four. That was one of his better ones. It wasn't trash. It made sense, elease, I didn't make sense. There was like a beginning middle of that. Normally he just kind of leaves us side clu. It always leaves us like I don't want to hit the punchline. I just want him to get punched. Get it off your chest? Eight hundred five, eight five, one oh five, what we got
rumors on the way. Yes, And since we're doing comedy, let's talk about Dave Chappelle. He puts something out overnight and this Redemption song. Yes he did, and he started off talking about the cowards who had something to say about his him getting coronavirus. All right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Go more. Listen, just stand Oh gosh, got report got Breakfast Club? All right, Well, Young Blue had some issues with Tory Lane's remixing his
song Your Mind still featuring Drake. Listen to this, I always day weekend change listen, don't facing she got my heartbeat risten that same time, don't go me because you mist and I don't want to let you man me. Pretty face, pretty tiding. We heard a song on the pretty taught me all the lessons. He played a lot of it. Yeah, So Young Blue did not appreciate Tory Lane's and not reaching out to him, tagging him or nothing like that. Here's what he said. I hope he
ain't take you long to record that song. I hope he ain't spend a lot of money twil hours of studio recording that song, because soon you upload YouTube, come straight down. So go get your money back, Go get a refund, go get a receipt. Well, you didn't tag me, you didn't show the lord man. Don't get it by life. Hey, I agree with Young Blue because you should cite your source, especially with a young artist. Yeah, with a young artists, absolutely,
because it's I'm gonna tell you why. It's folks out there who who don't know who Young Blue is, you know what I mean? But they know Tory Lane. They might hear that song and be like, oh, that's Tory Lane's record. It's like, no, it's Young Blue record. Give the young man some credit. If he was an older, more established artist that people know, I would understand the jacket for beat. But just to take a young artist song and not at least say what up Young Blue
or something? Nah, he's a top ten artist and artist's been doing it since hip hop was created. Somebody puts out a record and somebody does a freestyle over it. You do it all the time. I've heard just Tory every artist. I've heard that record, but I don't know Young Blue. I had a record on the radio, but I don't know who that is. What does that mean? Jay Z has done a whole mixtape taking people's beats. Yes,
Gods has done it. You know change all right? Well, well Young Blie and his team had had that song taken down and he can do that. And then he tweeted tag me and I put it back. I'm a real and word at Tory Lanes and Tory Lanez had at Young Blue. Crazy thing is. I love your music and your song. That's why I remixed it. You're an incredible artist and I've been listening to you since. Unappreciated, but he felt some sort of way we can just talk like men over a phone and not social media.
Love bro, So Drake has done it many times a lot of people. The easiest thing to do is give somebody some credit. I mean all all a young man wanted was an add on Twitter. You know what I'm saying. At least cite your source and say tell me the original record is. Young Blue responded to that and said I can't call you if I don't have your number. G I don't want to beef. I like the record. Actually, I just felt disrespected. You just saw me at Rolling
Loud tonight and ain't say a word to me. And I even performed the song you said you like when I took a pick with your artist. I go get in my sprinter and see you remix my song and ain't show love either. So I'm a real person. I get offended. Send your jack let's talk like men. It's on you. I'm leaving it alone though, but let's not play victim gang. I don't never be on no cloud ish. Yeah, I agree artists been jacking for years. But I do agree with him. He's a young artist. He's on to
come up. People don't know him yet. Just to get him in some credit, get him a shout out. Ot Genesis did it. Mary J. Blige just done it, Like that's what the hip hop is about. Just I think it yourself out like I just saw you tonight and you ain't saying nothing rollout Loud. What's happening, I guess. So I don't think it's nothing wrong giving a young boy credit, all right, now, let's talk about Dave Chappelle. Overnight he put out a Redemption song and it's a
new ten minute clip. You know, he has this deal with Netflix and he's been putting out all kinds of content, and he's been performing in Austin, Texas. I think they just closed out all their shows in Austin. Dave Chappelle did end up getting coronavirus. You know, he's been doing these shows in Yellow Springs, Ohio, and then he moved it over to Austin with Joe Rogan, and he started it off talking about getting coronavirus. And I just tried
to find a way that I could work. You see what we've been doing, all of you who had didn't endure this invasive test on were these masks just so we could be out and hang out and be together. I tried and if all these months, after doing all all these shows, God David, my number was up, and then I had the rona all when I said I had the coronavirus, the overwhelming majority of people wished me, well, we hope you get better, take care of yourself. We
don't want anything bead to happen to you. But there was a faction of people who said, you see that day, Chappelle, that's why we stay inside where its safe. Well, enjoy yourselves, mother, because I'm better now, all right, And then he goes on to talk about actually like quarantine shaming a little bit, But well, I think like quarantine shaming just a little bit, you know what I mean, Just because people want to follow see see gudelines and stay in the house, that's fine, Yeah,
you know what I mean. I think I think he was talking about people that were like, ha ha, you see you see. But he's saying that he's from months done this. He's you know, gotten people tested to even attend his shows. They socially distanced at the shows. Anybody that participates and activities with him has to get tested before they come, get tested twice a day. And he dared what he could. Yeah, but he's proved that even if you take profitable cautions, you can still get it.
But even so, that don't mean that, you know, even if you still want to stay in the house, that's still fine, right, But yes, he had an issue with people who didn't just say hey, we wish you well. There were people that were like, good for you, ha ha, and well that's how we felt. And so anyway, he goes on to talk about his show, The Chappelle Show coming back to Netflix. Here's what he said. I never
asked Comedy Central for anything. If you remember, I said, I'm going to my real boss, and I came to you. I asked you to stop watching the show, and thank God Almighty for you you did. You made that show worthless because without your eyes, it's nothing. And when you stopped watching it, they called me and I got my name back, and I got my license back, and I got my show back and they paid me millions of dollars. Thank you very much. I mean, there was no doubt
that he wouldn't get a show back. I mean, he's Dave, mother f and Chappelle. And I'm also very happy that he saluted Chris McCarthy to drop on a clues bons for Chris McCarthy. If you watch the you know the whole thing he shouted like Chris McCarthy. Chris McCarthy as a guy who gave me my first ever overall deal in TV. And he's an executive who gets it. Not only does he have a great out for talent, more importantly, he always wants to do what's right by people. I
love that guy. We need more executives like him, and he's got seven women on his senior management team. Pluton, I think he and if you watch a Chappelle was also saying that people were telling him he was never gonna get his show back and there was nothing they
could do about it. For those people who don't know the business then, and they don't know the leverye Dave Chapelle has and they don't know the powers that be that are in position now at CBS Viacom, because if they actually knew Chris McCarthy, they would know, yes, they would get his show back, and Dave got the power at this point, he's in the power position position. Right. He tell people not to watch it, and like he said, financially, it didn't make sense for them. If nobody's gonna watch
the show, doesn't make sense to put it on. And more correctly, I'm telling you Chris McCarthy will always do what's right. If you know Chris McCarthy didn't, then you know that that's what that's the type of stuff he fights for. All right, Well that is your rumor report, all right. Now, when we come back, we got front page news. What we're talking about, Well, let's talk about Casey Goodson's junior. Now we've had his mom and his
attorney and his mom's attorney. I'm previously he was shot and killed by police and then back as he was entering his own home. They are gonna give us an update. And I want you guys to really pay attention to this because it's heartbreaking to hear. And the police officer who's shot and killed him is still working, still has his job, all right, So we'll talk to him next. And then every hour on an hour, we're playing this Nipsey jay Z joint. What it feels like to get
your ass up. It's the Breakfast Local Morner and this is what it feels like, all right. That was what it feels like. Nipsey Hustle and jay Z off the Jewish and the Black Messiah soundtrack. Tell me that's not a hard ball. When jay Z says you're letting cracking storm your capital, put their feet up on your desk, and yet you talking tough to me, I lost all my little respect. That's how I feel about in Cowards, Yes, And you know, jay Z never gets bad like like
you know, people say, yoh, when orders get old. No, no, And that's what I'm saying, not at all. It's like Tom Brady, right like you you know Tom Brady is great, but you appreciate him more because he's forty three. Correct. You don't expect him to still be doing what he's doing at forty three, just like you don't expect Hold to still be doing what he's doing at fifty one. That's only because the rappers we saw before him that
age were so whack. You know, they got bad, they got terrible without bad, Yes, they got bad for whatever reason he has it and not just spoiled. Look at he's he's not the oldest. Think about scarf face. Scarf face is still phenomenal. Scar Face still get business. No, plenty of rappers over forty still phenomenal. Nas rights to five nine, but you know, jee a lot of rappers before they still get busy. Yeah, all right, anyway, well let's get in some front page news. We're doing a
different this morning. Yeah, and I feel like this is an important story that we do really need to highlight because I haven't seen much activity around the killing of Casey Goodson Junior. So we are going to have his mother, Tamla Paine, and his attorney, Shaan Walton give us some
updates on what's happening. The officer who shot and killed Casey Goodson, who was only twenty three years old, still has his job, and they're going to talk about what they know about the killing of Casey Goodson Junior and where they are right now with the investigation. Yeah, quick update. He was coming home from the dentist, walking in into his house and the officers shot him five times. He had illegal gun on him, legally owned gun on him,
and now let's talk to the mom and attorney. Good morning. Thank you again for having us. You know, we respect and appreciate this platform so much. And Tamerla insisted that she wanted to talk to her friends as we released more information. So you know, we appreciate you guys uplifting Casey Gudson's name that we know now more than ever that Casey Gudson, Jr. Was an innocent black man who was murdered by Franklin County Sheriff's Deputy Jason me on
December four of twenty twenty. And we didn't know before. We thought that he was shot in in the back a few times. Casey's grandmother and saw three gunshots. But we've spoken with the county corner that performed the autopsy in case he was shot in his back six times, five times in his back and once in his butt with a high powered rifle. And he was shot through his screen door as he walked into his own home.
He was shot from behind. His keys were in the door, he had subway in his hand, and so it was a cold blooded execution and Casey was murdered and the world needs to know that. Yeah, and I see now
that there could potentially be some federal charges. Is that true? Yeah, So the Department of Justice and the FBI have been leading this investigation because the ball was dropped early on by the local police, and so the fairs have been investigating, and they may bring federal charges, they may bring state charges, but they had been in consistent communication with us, and so we understand that they're pursuing the truth, and the truth is going to lead to the understanding that Casey
was murdered. So, yeah, they are spaghetti and they could bring subtle charges. How are you doing, How are you holding up? How is everything with you? I mean, I'm doing as well as I can really. As I stated before, I don't really really allow myself to feel right now, I feel like if I allow myself to feel, and I can't fight. And my whole everyday purposes to fight for justice, because, as Sean said, Kathy wasn't murdered, he was executed. I've seen the picture of my son's back.
He blew a chunk out of my son's back. He had sermons where he talks about hunting people and uses his platform as a pastor to describe police brutality, so to speak. And he's bragged about how he hunts people and he throws the first punch. And unfortunately, on that day, he definitely hunted my son and he killed him in cold blood, you know, and I want justice. I mean, my son was a twenty three year old man. He's
never been in troubling the law. He was a family man, he didn't club, he's never I mean, he was a good kid. He didn't deserve this. He was coming home from the dentist. You know. When the case first started, we thought he was only shot three times in the back because there were three boot holes in the screen door. So the assumption was there were three shots to his back, but there's five shots. There's five shots to the back
and one to his button. I've seen every shot. I did sit down with the corner and a pathologist that performed the autop DNA twain every bullet one to me in great deep Still he hit basically every organ my son has. It's just, I mean, it's no way to explain how I feel other than in fact I want him in jail. The man still has a job. He's still employed. To this day is day sixty eight, and he still has a job. He shouldn't have been on the assignment he was on in the first place because
of his extensive rutger as a shirt deputy. He was involved in an altercation in two thousand and eighteen that left two men dead. He was involved in another shooting. He was on a no contact order with inmates where he worked. Where where your job is to work with the MMA, he couldn't even have contact with him, So he shouldn't have been on the apogement that he was on the day that he was on it that led to my son's murder in the first place, and then
he still has a job after sixty eight days. You know, he still has a job. He hasn't been arrested. You know, he doesn't deserve a job. And that's the officer, Jason Meade, who you're speaking on. I want to flash back to what you said. So I saw there was a video or something that he was posting where he was talking about using religion to justify brutality. Is that what you were referencing earlier. Yes, he made a signment. I actually listened to it for the first time the other day.
I've heard about altbred some of the things that he said, but the first time I actually listened to the video was Saturday. To be honest with you, and yes, in the video, he definitely says he hunts people. He stated that the people that I hit you wish you could hit too, and this congregation laugh. He bragged about his colleague and his supervisors being a part of the congregation. They were all asking and charing and clapping him all. He also said he throws the first punch. He doesn't
wait for the first puns to be thrown. He thrown was the first punch. So yeah, he used it to brag about police brutality and basically killing innocent black man. It's clear, no, no. As far as this case, what's the what's next now? One is the immediate termination of Jason meet you know, calling for that and also his
arrest and pushing for that, keeping that pressure on. You know, there's no video, but what we know is that the physical evidence shows that he was hunted and he was killed, and there's no justification for so calling for meats termination, holding his sheriff's office accountable, as well as holding the Department of Justice accountable for prosecuting him. Also, we're going to have a website, um Justice for Casey Goodson junior
dot com. It's going to aggregate all this information and keep and keep folks updated on calls to action and uh, you know, making sure that this and die down. As we know with George Floyd and Eric Garner and others, seeing video is something that has lifted those names up. But in cases like Brianna Taylor, it's to push from the people across the country that gets justice and those
officers still weren't in diets. We want to make sure that we have justice here, we have a conviction, and that we normalize the conversation around black people and guns. That's really important. It's perfectly normal for people like Katy to be lawful gun owners and even myself and anybody anybody else in this country, and that can't be a death sentence or Tama Lapaine, attorney Shaan L. Walton, thank you for checking in and just give us any updates
anytime something pops up. Please yeah, always welcome. We definitely want to make sure we keep everybody in form. Thank you, thank you, thank you all all right, well, thank you Tama La Paine, Thank you to Sean Walton. It brings tears in my eyes every time I have to think about a mother not being able to see her son anymore. He did nothing wrong. He was going into his home correct, holding a bag of subway sandwiches. And if you follow her on Instagram, is painful just to see all the
things that she's posting. You know, she has other children as well, and like she said, she didn't want to put out the picture of him because she doesn't want her kids to have to see that. But it's things like that I think that finally will motivate people to have the empathy they need to have for this woman. Absolutely all right, we lat is your front page news now. When we come back Daniel Kaluya will be joining us.
You know him from get Out, you know from Black Panther, and we're gonna be kicking it with him, all right, so don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got a special guest in the building on the line right now, Daniel Kaluya. Welcome, brother Yo, thanks for having mem Nice to see you guys. Have you ever I don't think you've ever been here in person? Have you? Have you? Daniel? Good to meet
you over zoom man. But to me, Tima have enjoyed you in several projects. You've been attached to some really great movies. I mean, of course Get Out, Black Panther and now Judith in The Black Messiah, which I you know, I don't want to put too much sauce on it. I just think it's a phenomenal film first and foremost so so what made you want to do this film? What? What? What?
What feature interest on this film? It was Ryan and Zinzi Kogler on a set of Black Panther on the reshoots pulled me to the side and they were just like, I were making a film about Chairman Fred. I was speaking about that, and then I was like, and then they were speaking that Lakeith was a part of it, mckith Stanfield and Shaky King was directing, and they told they told me about their intentions and their reasons for doing it. I just it just really spoke to me,
re resonating with me. And then a lot of things happened because I was in the middle of to get out press room at that time. So I sat down with Shaka in New York and I read the script literally the first script I read after the Oscars. First script I read was Judis in Black Missile, and I just said, yeah, I'm in What did they say were
the intentions behind doing it about UNI? It's about bringing people together, talking about how Chairman Fred was this beacon and he just broke people together and that's what we want people to do out there, you know. And I just read that really spoke to me. Did you know much about the character beforehand or did you have to study or Chairman Fred? I knew. I knew bits and pieces,
you know here and now hearing conversations and stuff. I remember one I was played somewhere and I was like, oh, saw the date that he was born in a date he was assassinated. And I was like, well, wait, hold on, that can't be right. I was like, what that can't be right? How old was held? What's going on? And then and I was googling, and I was like, he
can't have been twenty one. Not only that he was assassinating the twenty one, but he made it to be chairman of the Internet chapter of the Black Pipe of Party by twenty one. I was just like, that's that's incredible, you know, And I just on that day, I remember I went on it. I was like, yo, I need to do a real read on all that stuff when I got time. And then luckily I was blessed to have this opportunity. Yeah, he was assassinated on December four,
of jay Z's born day. You know, I'm listening to you talk man, and I will always be intrigued by British actors who can make their accents go away for certain roles. I'm from South Carolina and I can't get rid of this accent to save my life. Ever, how how is it, how are y'all able to do that? That's what Bro. It's like, it's like it's like you're gonna You're gonna get I mean, it's like if you're like being a vessel for Chairman Fred, you're just going.
You can't even approach it with your accident, you know what I'm saying, with your experience, you have to kind of surrender, let yourself go. You're understanding, and then it's kind of just come to it, you undersaying, and when you come to it, you have to adopt these not only speech ribbons, but foot rhythms. You're saying. It's like you have to think in a way in that space, think in that space, and then your speech changes. You can't think like a brother from London, you know what
I'm saying. You can't think like you're looking at it. So it's kind of like a it's a scenario surrendering, you know. You know the story of the Black Panthers has been so misconstrued, like people try to compare the Black Panthers to the KKK. Knowing this, did you feel
extra pressure to make sure that they were portrayed correctly. Yeah, you know that that comparison is just laced and based in white fear and white anxiet, you know, because it doesn't it doesn't make no sense to compare the Black Panther Party, an organization that was providing free healthcare and breakfast program kids and educating kids, to another group that
lynches black people. And I'm saying, it's like, that's not even you know, it's so it's h Like I said, we're just navigating white fear and white anxiety and we're kind of pushing it to the side and saying, Yo, this is from our perspective, this is the truth. You know, this is actually what they did, This is what they had to go through, and then that they still loved themselves, and then that they still loved the Black commu community
and poured love into the black community. Did they teach you a lot about the Black Panthers in the UK? Because even growing up in New York, they really didn't teach us much about the Black Panthers, Like, you know, they they would teach us about Martinlauke, the King, drips and drabs of Malcolm X, very little about the Panthers. So did you learn much about the Panthers growing up
in the UK? You know, it is at school we did the civil rights movement at school, and it was it was a lot of Montgomery bus Boycott, lot on Rosa Parts, a lot on Martin Luther King, and then mentioned of Malcolm X and then skipp to JFK and you know, and then it's just like John saying, it's kinda like and then I remember, I just see the other day, like a couple of weeks ago, I was looking at my old school papers, and I saw that there was like this printed like kind of typed up
or kind of sections, and I had written the Black Panther Party in the middle of something, in the middle of it. In my writing, I'm probably like a thirteen fourteen, so it was in passing, you know. But then when you're when you're a young black man navigating the Western construct, you're gonna attract those kind of ideas. If you love yourself, if if you wanted to empower yourself, the Black Panther
Party is going to arrive to you. And so it came to me in natural ways and conversations or in watching things or taking an art and like you're just taking a lot of stuff. That's how it kind of came to me. And I educated myself on it by myself, like I read a Starter's book like that was just me doing stuff in my spare time, you know, because
it was stuff that I would that cared about. How do you think a movie like Judea's in the Blackness Diet is relevant as far as what's going on in the world today, Like could you see Fred Hampton existing? Do you know anybody that's like that to try to bring together all different groups of people to fight against police brutality. There is the probably is Chairman Fred out there, you know, And that's what it is about Judas and Black Side. We're trying to show that this man is
a human being. You know that you have the capacity. Anyone out there has the capacity to go out there and support their community, you know, and and empower their own to free themselves. You know. But in terms of like how it's like today, I feel Chairman Fred and Black Panther Party and through this film just articulating how
a lot of people are feeling right now. You see it we largely with the murders of George Floyd and Brianna Taylor, And the response to that is that, like this film articulates how people are feeling and what to do about it, you know, because I have one of my favorite sayings is do something, start small, start local, keep going. You know what I'm saying. And I feel it's that it's like decentralized empowerment. You know, that's how phil It's about, Yo, Let's take the power for ourselves
and empower people around us. I mean, there's a lot of brothers and sisters out here doing the work right now, and we may have a Fred Hampton type figure in our miss now, but we just don't appreciate them, like the Tamica Mallory's, the Philip bag News. They bring people together, they fight against police brutality. But you know his history
always tells a different story after people are gone. Yeah, that's one I'm saying to say, Charloman, why don't we empower and put those people up in the platform now because they're out there. It's like they're just doing the work. They're on the front line. Sometimes like real change is quiet, and it's it's like like, yo, let's let's put our attention towards them. Let's empower them. Let's put all resources
towards those people. They are in Carolina, are in like New York, the are in in Oakland that aren't doing the work. You know, all we have more with Daniel Caluya when we come back, don't move. It's to 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 Daniel Caluya. So let me ask you a question. What's the racial climate in the UK? I mean it's
a similar, similar dynamic. I mean, and people need to be I think people need to be clear that the root of all ideas is usually in the language that people speak. So the fact that like we are all on this cool speaking English, because the construct that we are all navigating as like in terms of like racism in this towards black people is rooted in England. You know, they came over and they did what they did. So in England it's a climate is different because it's their land.
There's there is a conflict. There is there is a conflict, but it is subtle. You know, there isn't there isn't an insecurity that they stole it, but there is there is police brutality. I mean you can see it in Mark Duggan. You know, that's kicked off the twenty eleven
London riots and his murder. There's so many black figures and black people who have been killed by They've just been they've just been murdered by the police, and they've been risings and you know the Brixton riots in the eighties, there's been so there's the battle is still going on within England as well. What do you say the critics who say roles like Fred Hampton should go to Black
Americans only. I listened to them. I'm not trying to say anything to them because i feel like I'm in a position where I'm about union in the in the diasporal, you know. But if someone's feeling like what, I'm gonna listen saying I'm gonna find how can we come together? And if that's how they feel, it's been a history of people ignoring and dismissing what African American people with feeling and what they're expressing. I'm not gonna contribute to
that culture. I'm not in the business. It's the reality. So if they're feeling the way, they're gonna listen, I'm gonna say ya, I'm here to unite. And if they feel like yeah, I don't want to unite with you. That's been cool. You also got to reunite with the character William or Neill play with Diala Keith scan Field.
Obviously you guys worked on Get Out Together. And I want to ask you what you think about what he had to do because he's the one that infiltrated the Black Panther Party and Judas and the Black Messiah, and I just think like, we'll give it too much away. Now, you give it a lot of way, but it's called Judas and the Black Syre, and the whole movie is about how this guy infiltrated the Black Panther Party, So I don't think it's a secreted a true story. Yeah.
So I just wanted to ask you when you think about what he did right as that character, is there any redemption you can find for somebody like that, because the whole movie I just can't being like I can't stand him. Yeah, I mean the stuff I read that he did after that was just you know, he killed himself. Yeah, well not even that's how he carried on in the
area and what he did to that community. But for me, it's just to be clear that he is, uh who you know, you know, it's like it's like he's a it's the FBI, you know, like it's the it's that he is being used I people, And I think what you what you see in this film is the danger of not caring, the danger of apathy, how like, and the danger of self preservation. And you think you're preserving yourself taking carry yourself, taking, carry yourself, taking, carry yourself.
And it led to him destroy himself because and its whole community. He destroyed the whole movement. But the movement can't be destroyed, Andrew, it can't be destroyed. And Fred saying it can't be destroyed. That's why people out there last last year, right and not there's people out there out on the front line. We just it's just not the topic that we're talking about right now. But the movement cannot be destroyed. Ever, have you ever experienced the type of betrayal by one of your own that Fred
Hampton experienced in regard to the William O'Neil. No, probably, I don't know. I would have to think about that. I don't know that he's getting into therapy land. I'm sure you needed some therapy after this role, because that's an intense role because you had to take on the trauma of a whole generation, the trauma of a whole movement. I'm sure you had to do some therapy to get that out. You. Yeah, I had to look at myself. I had to really look at myself, and I was
blessed I have the pandemic. You know, I really just sit down. The first time I probably sat still since probably know it's like twenty fifteen. It was a lot to take and a can see that, like how I access characters, I abandoned myself and I don't advise anyone to do that. You know, I'm saying, it's um, there's a way that you can get what you want whilst taking care of yourself and loving yourself at the same time.
But you know, sometimes you kind of go, well, this is all I have, especially when you come from not a lot, not a lot of money, not a lot of anything, that you're gonna use yourself as raw materials you're saying, But you don't realize you're burning yourself like a raw material, you know what I'm saying, instead of enriching yourself and pouring into yourself whilst giving yourself. You know, I had to look at that, and I'm still looking
at that. I like that phrase. You you you abandoned yourself, like when during the role or after during during when I creatively, I like a kind of I just I do the habits of that person. So I'm waking up listening to Michael Mets and I'm like waking up listen to Martin Luther King's speeches. I am taking up smoking. I am I'm in the space. I'm doing the thing
you're saying. I'm not me. I'm not living as me. Yeah, I'm not doing like I'm living as how I feel Chairman Fred was living in order to be in that spiritual space, and then I would associate that to abandon me. You know, I'm saying, and that's just not that's not cool. I'm saying, that's not that method acting? Is that what they can't? Method acting? I want to call that method acting.
I don't know method acts when you're in character all the time, when I'm just hearing and I'm just like, Yo, Angela, you call me Fred, that's it, call me chairman, that's it. That's all I want to hear. Um. I don't really do that, but for me, it's just like I just want to It's like rituals, like triggers to consistently like, yeah, this is you're in the space. You're in the space.
You're in the space. But I didn't. I don't know if I took care of myself going into it, and I don't think I took care of myself going out. So I'm gonna look at my process. You know, how do you get out of that? How do you get out of it to get back to some type of norbusy. It takes a well, my guy, it takes a well, a lot of boss, a lot of taking care of yourself, a lot of just like kind of catching yourself. What I used to do is like I used to go away for a week by myself, take my phone off,
and thought that that would reset me. But you know what it is, I realized last year I'd carried everything since get out, every role I've taken, I'd carried and I hadn't said bye to it. I hadn't say bye to it. It was in my body, you know, And so I had to had to look at myself. When you say you take baths, you put some salt in that water man, nothing like a relaxing, salt bath, some epsence and you know I put somethen some of him
and laying yeah, right with it. I get right with it, making start up man bro right all we got more with Daniel Caluya when we come back, don't move. It's to breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is dj Envy Angela Yee. Charlomagne the guy we are the Breakfast Club. You know him from get Out Black Panther and now Judas in the Black Messiah were still kicking with Daniel Kaloya yee. Did you talk to I'm Fred Hampton Junior
about this role. Also, we met the family. So I went to Chicago before the shoot because I already wanted to meet the family and we couldn't do that, couldn't do it on that trip. And I went to Maywood and went to his chairman friends, old school or homes, everybody everywhere he went and where he used to speed cap, spoke to people in Chicago, understood what just understood how
he how he felt to the people in Chicago. And then later on we went to a trip and we went to meet cham and Junior and Mama Korem Chamman, Fred's partner and yeah, it was like a seven eight hour meeting and it was real, saying it was real. You know, he had views and saying I mean and he kind of just looked to us and say, yo, why are you doing this? And then why'd you do this? You know, like I remember Mama Quid said, why did you make up? You know what? What does it up
mean to you? You know, saying I found out stuff about myself in that situation. But I didn't really sit down with the families, go yo, you know, I don't even engage with people like that, saying I engaged with me on me this. I'm in a position I don't want to come here and respect and reverence, understanding and humility and I'm moved like that, saying I wouldn't want to go. I don't I don't move in a way that I want to take from black people from me.
You know, it's so interesting just this short conversation we've had, I can tell that this role really impacted you in a real way. And what have you realized about yourself after playing the role of Fred Hampton. The power of love, the power of loving yourself unapologetically in the face of people that want you to like w I call it. It's like in the face of fear dressed as hate. It's the power of that I'm saying. And what the fact that we're sitting here nearly fifty two years later
speaking back Chairman Fred is the power of self. Love is the power of love, and your own is the power of love, and your community. You know what I'm saying, and that stuff. Who cares if you're celebrated in that way, you know, as long as you're doing it, and that will reverberate. I'm a firm believer. I don't try and change the world. I try and change my world, and then change my world. Then it reverberates to the world I'm saying. So I kind of just see it like that.
I think it really, Yeah, it really. I had to really look at myself. I had to really look at my ideas. You have to look at it. I'm going into this room reading this stuff like twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen, I can't look at I'm a product of his assassination in that sense, I mean, in that fear of speaking up, in that fear of telling the truth. At that time in the late sixties, he didn't have that fit. They didn't have that shame, They didn't come with that they
come do you mean? It's like so it's like really looking at the fears that I had. You know what I'm saying, I'm buying what are they They're just they're just a way to empower them, empowered to with the concept of white supremacy. What it's white supremacy? What hate group is allowed to be called by their beliefs. That's white privilege within hate. What I'm saying, it's like they're white extremists. I don't call I don't believe white people
are supremo from me. That I'm saying, I need too easy to look over that while I'm empowering them with a belief that oppresses me. How can empower people that don't like me? And I'm sense you feel me? I need to really look at that. When you look at the words I say, When you look at because my body's listening, you feel me when you say stuff your
body listens to you. Did you find yourself looking at Lukkeith differently after the way he played this role, because he did it too well, he still got beef sharloming. Is that was it? Is that? What was happening. I never had an issue with him. I do feel like he was born to play this role. Though, Wow, we're
not having that. We're not having that, we're not having that way is yet in this film he makes the biggest sacrifice sacrifice And in this film he's serving Chairman Fred because in order to show you what Chairman Fred is, you have to show him what he isn't. You can't see the light without the dark, that's right, you know what I'm saying. And he served that and he put himself in a light that's not his politics at all. You know, he doesn't that's not how he feels at all.
And it was really tough on him on certain dates. I mean, he was really going through it as for him to to not be aligned politically to O'Neil and still give it his all and still humanize him in order to show who Chairman Fred was, to show who the Black Panther Party was. That's incredible and absolute, absolute the key for that. Now he's doing an incredible job. Yeah, I think all of yours special love answer to Dominique
true she wrote that poem. It's incredible. Director Gibson, Ashton, Sanders, alg Smith Dominique Thorn killed this film, saying, there's so many incredible people in this film, you know, Jesse Plemons, It's like it's like it's a dream to be standing amongst these kinds of people. Like it's like you're like, wow, you look around, You're like, well, I'm just I'm so proud to be here for me. Yeah, I don't think. I don't think there's any black piece of art needs
validation from any of these award shows. But I would love to see this film when all of the awards. I think you and Lakeith need to be up for Best Active, Best Supportant Act, or whatever it is. I think it should be Best Picture. Like I think it was that good. Yeah, you know what it isn't those recognizations, recognizing organizations are away for more people to see it, And that's the intention of film. You want this to
reach as many people as possible. I feel that this is an entertaining film at the same time, Yeah, it's got the politics complex ideas. This is entertaining. I watched this my friends. I make films for my friends that I grew up with, saying, so I really care about things being you know, I'm a firm believe of accessible excellence, you know, simple special Johnder saying, and it being accessible, still reaching for like excellence in terms of craft, and I feel like this is this is this is able
to reach the masses. Before this is the last question, how would you define Fred Hampton's legacy? How do you want this film to define Fred Hampton's legacy. It's about being in what people choose to learn from it, in what way people choose to move from it. It's how I feel I want this film to impact. It's that and also just being clear that this is a man that had incredible ideas and really implement He executed these
ideas in turbulent times. You know, I'm saying, with a breakfast program, with the health free healthcare, with the educating kids, with the Rainbow Coalition. This man like really did it, you know what I'm saying, and really tired about his own And it's people understanding that and taking it in and feeling that and wanting to read up on it and wanted to learn more about it, want to empower themselves, wanted to love themselves the way they see the Black
Pap Party loving themselves and loving their community. I want that all right, appreciate you for Jordas. And what about the soundtrack? And did you listen to the soundtrack and you ride out to the soundtrack at Yeah, I've had a couple of riddings, Bro, A couple of riddings are crazy, A couple sound tracks a bit crazy, Bro, the soundtracks a bit crazy, John saying that Nipsey jay Z that's
a that's A that's a that's a Newsy Bro. And when you get really rich, you should buy a black panther because it's something the universe is trying to tell you about black panthers. You've been in the movie Black Panther. Now you playing Fred Hampton. You should actually buy a black panther the way Mike Tyson out a white Tige as a pet. Buy a black panthers a pet. Yeah, my mom really grew up in Africa. I don't know what you feel about that. We have people people. Why
are you buying these people buying wild animals? My guy, I'm buying wild animals. I'm cool about my God, I supposed one for you. I could to shame a man. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, my big guys. Morning. Everybody is d J Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club on this Friday. What do you guys do for Valentis? I'm just curious watching Judas in The Black messire y'all should definitely go check that
movie out. All right. It's very triggering, very dark, but it's a good movie to watch for the weekend, good date night movie. What about your gear? I don't really have any plans on Sunday. I'll just be home. You know, my boyfriend doesn't live here. So all right, what what you're doing? Another angle swap for COVID? Maybe? Okay? Do that you need? You need your situation for the swap. No, I'm good, Okay, I'm one tested. All right, well, yeah, I got it. It is brown at the end. Let's
get to the rooms. Let's talk Morris's chestnuts. Okay. This is the Rumor Report with Angela Yee Breakfast Club. Mars Tessnat was talking to Timz about the new series The Best Man the final chapters, and he discusses his character Lance and what could be happening because remember his wife in the movie actually die from was yeah, dying from cancer.
So here's what you can expect. The last time we saw Lance, he was going through it emotionally and it kind of ended there, so we kind of never really, we never really saw how Lance really dealt with that loss. I think in the in the series, you're going to see how Lance deals with it emotionally, and sometimes he may go a little bit overboard, but we'll have to see that's him dealing with it. Does do we see him move on to another love interest at all in
this upcoming series? That's a possibility. I am very excited about the Best Man TV series. I'm happy they get in ten episodes on NBC. Peacock all right. In another series that's in the works is Ray has a new show with HBO Max called rap Is Shows right and to a half hour comedy. It's going to tell the story of two alienated high school friends from Miami who
get together and assemble a rap group. And guess who is going to be working on this the city's co executive producers that said should happen months ago, drop on a clues box with each Ray DAMMI Okay, Remember I said that people were like, why you give people that actually do TV chances and opportunities? No, that makes too much sense. You're doing a TV show about a rap group in Miami, a female rap group. Why wouldn't you
hilt to City Girls? Come on? All right? Also, the label coach K and P from Quality Control will also be involved as well. And she should cast Pretty V. She should cast pretty Views from Miami. And Pretty V would be a great on the show like that. I don't know what role she would play. She could be one of the main characters and not. I don't know, but I just think Pretty V should be on that show and show way shape or form shout out QC.
They do it a lot outside of just music. I know they got a bunch of sports players that play for the NFL. I know they're doing films. They're really expanding their brand. I love to all right. Twitter has confirmed and Donald Trump will never return now. The CFO Ned Segal was on CNBC squawk Box and here's what he said. So, the way our policies work, when you're removed from the platform, you're removed from the platform, whether you're a commentator or a CFO, or you are a
former or current public official. And so remember our policies. You're designed to make sure that people are not inciting violence, and if anybody does that, we have to remove him from the service and our policies to allow people to come back. That's a lie. Twitter, y'all don't get no props for that. The four years that man was in power, y'all did nothing. Yell should have had that same energy four years ago. It is easy to do that when he's not the president of the United States anymore, you
know what I mean. Should have did that when he was in power. No props for that. And there's plenty of people threatening death on on folks every single day on social media. What are you talking about all right now? A Krispy Kreme Donuts that was owned by Shack was in flames early Wednesday, and they said the structure was heavily damaged. Atlanta fire crews did respond to that Krispy Creme on ponstantly on they said it's just unsalvageable right now.
So it was one of the first locations established outside of the company's main base of operations in Winston Salem, North Carolina and Nashville, Tennessee. Now, Shaq said, I hope no one was hurt and we will bounced back better than ever, so was it was it operating like it? Was it open at the time? Was it after hours? I think it was after hours. I think it was nighttime, wasn't it? It was it was early Wednesday and they said firefighters did say most of the building and the
fire started in the back. There were no injuries and the cause of the fire was under investigation. You know they opening one on Route Fur. Did you see it? You know what I mean? That? In New Jersey? Yeah? In New Jersey. You know that McDonald's used to be on Route for right when you get over the George Washington Bridge on the right hand side. They building a whole big Krispy Creme over there, which is just gonna mess up. One on, It's one on, It's one on.
What that all right? I would have been me a dozen during the fire though if it wasn't too bad. I'm not gonna lie City Sun. Justin Comes has landed a late night show respectively, Justin on a Revolt of course, and he's gonna have social media personality Justin the Boy on to co host now did he has already made a comment about the show. He said, Justin the Boy is one of the biggest is the biggest social media starr in our culture. There is no better place for
his debut show. We are thrilled to welcome him to the Revolt family. And the show already has some huge guests like Chris Brown lined up, and they're also going to have a demon time segment complete with champagne and music, respectfully dropping the clue's bombs for Justin's Justin the Boy and Justin comes all right, Well that is your room and report. I'm Angela yee, all right, thank you, miss ye. Now, Charlomage, who're giving that? Donken Man, let's talk Gorilla song jelly
all right, four after the hour? Right, do you want your plans? Room for Valentine's Day? We'll talk about it, all right, we'll get into it next it's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning's time for Donkey of the Day. I'm a Democrat for being Donkey of the days, a little bit of a mixed so like a dog. Now. I've been called a lot of my twenty three years. But Donkey of the Bay is a new wife. Yes, Donkey of Today for Friday, February twelfth, goes to a Louisiana man
named Lynn Martin. Lynn is thirty seven years old. I have no idea what he does with his life, and I am quite intrigued to find out, because whatever it is he does, he needs to do more. Okay, he's clearly got too much time on his hands. Now we all know the legend of Tessica Brown by now right. Tessica Brown was the forty year old woman who ran out of her usual hairspray and decided to use gorilla glue spray adhesive, which caused their hair to become stuck
in place up and it stuck my ass. Okay, I hear you, Cardy, But Tessica Brown proves up isn't the only place things can get stuck because she was trying to lay her hair down. Listen to Tessica, my hair has been like this for about a month now. It's not much choice. My hell, it don't move, it burns. Then they got some people out there saying she did this for coke. I put it on social media to
get help. Now, Tessica was able to get the gorilla seeming removed after a procedure was done by Beverly Hills based plastic surgeon doctor Michael Obeying. Okay, dropping the clues bomb for Tessica. I'm glad you're back. You got that out your hair. Okay. Now, you would think that Tessica would be an example to us all. I don't know how you all operate, but I operate from the smart people learn from their own mistakes. Wise people learn from
the mistakes of others. Model Tessica did that, so hopefully you don't have to go through that. But yesterday I was reminded yet again as to why I've been here on the Breakfast Club for ten years, Monday through Friday, and every day at eight o four a m. L clockwork. I never have a shortage of people to give the credit they deserve for being stupid. Because Lynn Martin, thirty seven years old, decided that he had to see what that gorilla jids was hitting for himself. Why did he
want to rub this gorilla baby battle on his lips? Wow? Because Lynn clearly refuses to believe all women. Whatever story Tessica was selling, Lynn wasn't buying. Let's go to w k b U CBS twenty seven for the report. Please, I'm gonna sure y'all got some grilla glue right here. I'm gonna take it Parolea's cup put in my mouth, then it't gonna be the liquid and get at all. It's easy the rilla glue garbage. But that was actually Linna. Let me hear Lynde again. I can't really unerstand. I
don't speak nigga like I used to live. At what he's saying. Let me hear. I'm gonna sure y'all got some grilla glue right here. I'm gonna take it. Perarolea's cup put in my mouth, then it't gonna be the licking and get at all. It's easy the glue garbage. Okay, let me translate. So Lynna decided to take this gorilla banana nut milk and apply it to a Red Solo cup. First of all the levels of niggatry in this story, the Red Solo Cup. The Red Solo Cup is like
the Super Bowl Trophia kickbacks. I can only imagine that the way holding an Oscar fields for actors after winning is how I feel when I got that Red Solo Cup in my hand with a few cubes and I icing some Cassenger going to san jejo in it. I right, the Red Solo Cup does not get the respect it deserves for the joy it has bought so many of us, young and old, black and white, man a female. It don't matter drop on a Colos bombs for the Red
Solo Cup. If it's one thing all of us have in common in the Divided States of America is that whatever function we having from Bob Mitziph's the barbecues, gender showers, that I finally got this gorilla oyster droppings out my hair. That damn Red Solo Cup is dead. Now. That Red Solo Cup had a front row seat all right to a great moment, just like Red Solo cups have had a front row seat to a lot of great moments
and a lot of dumb ones. This is a dumb one because Lynn put the gorilla pearl jam on the Red Solo Cup and attached it to his lip because whatever is between his ears and under his dredge and under that dirty ass snapback, it told him he could just lick it off all right. Three hours later, Lynn showed up to the hospital with a Red Solo Cup stuck on his upper lip. I hate it here. Now, let's go to w KBU CBS twenty seven for the report. I was there for maybe about a little over an
hour or two hours or so. Basically I had my pressure was up. I mean, I have was going through a lot of distress also, and they did like a peeling, basically a marshman peeling, you know, to get it off from then from my upper skin on my lip. Basically all that has been torn off, you know. Okay, let me translate, because once again some of y'all don't speak nigga. All right, He took the gorilla glue, put it on
a red solo cup and attached it to his lip. Okay, because he wanted to prove that you could just lick the gorilla glue off his lip. Let me tell you something. Jealousy and envy are really the root of all evil, especially on social media. This dude, Lynn was just straight up envious of the attention Tessica was receiving. People would be so jealous an upset of the attention folks receive. It doesn't matter if a person who's going viral for all the wrong reasons, folks will still get upset that
it's not them. This young lady, Tessica started to go fund me, got thirteen thousand dollars, and Lynn said, oh hell, no, hold my beer in this red Solo cup I'm going in. That was absolutely paratively zero reason for Lynda to involve himself in this situation. But what also scares me about this is that a thirty seven year old man doesn't know the difference between real and fake. A lot of y'all don't when it comes to the Internet. This is a prime example of it. Lynn, and I'm sure plenty
of others thought Tessica was doing this for cloud. She just wanted attention, Okay, like all these other digital d heads. So even though something was actually real, you didn't believe it. But if something is fake, y'all do believe it. Virtual reality has ruined folks natural discernment. And now you got Lynn who probably won't be able to use his lips the same way he used to. Ever again, he might even lose some of his upper lip, and I must say,
if that happens, he earned it. See, when you don't appreciate what you have, God, the universe will take it from you. And do you know, Lynda's the same brother who was going in stores licking ice cream doing that nutass ice cream challenge. Listen, we saw that you're on Doctor Oz in regards of the ice cream challenge, and then from looking on your Facebook page, we do see that you're a rapper, and many insinuate that you're doing these challenges to seek attention, to boost a rap career,
or even just to go viral. So what are your thoughts on that. Well, I would never want to stick no gorilla glue to my lip and have it stuck there and have to go through all these situations I went through. Basically I was trying to start. Of course, everybody knows social media runs things right now, everybody's on social media. It gets a lot of attention, and that's
what's going on. I mean, we do there's a lot of different challenges, so I wouldn't say that I'm doing it to boost my career because people start a new challenge every day. I didn't think it was going to go this far. Boiling Cardy and all Set said they do anything for Claude ain't never lie. Now he's putting gorilla prick liquid on his lips to prove a point. Let me tell you something. You don't respect your mouth,
you don't respect your tongue, your lips. You want to disrespect that part of your face well, let me take something of it away from you. That's what the universe is saying, all right, so maybe you'll appreciate it more once it's gone. And this Sunday is Valentine's Day, Lena. If you got a girlfriend, a baby, mama, a wife,
I'm here to tell you that she deserves better. And by better I mean a man with functioning lips, A man who didn't have a red Solo cup stuck to his mouth this week, all right, because he wanted to take the lips on her face. Why'd you bleet me? I need to know you can't everything when you're going downstairs. Well it's not I'm sorry. I'm a good storyteller. Okay,
let me try to say that over there? You know, uh, your woman deserves better, And by better I mean a man with functioning lips, A man who didn't have a red Solo cup stuck to his mouth because he wanted to taste gorilla slung jelly. Can I say that? Yes? How you gonna perform oral sex on your woman? There you go? When your woman's lips down in there, when you don't have any lips up there? How you gonna even give you a woman? Sweet kisses on the lips on her face when you don't even even have any
lips on your face. There you go, Okay, listen to brother. The story you're saying, you niggas is dumb as a under statement. All right, this is really the world we live in. And what's sad? These are the people you all be catering to on social media when you get online and you wait for folks to tell you how to feel about things. These are the people you are listening to. Okay, And guess what, all of y'all gonna
get what you deserve, every single one of you. And right now, what Lynn Martin deserves is for remy Ma to give him the biggest he ha he ha he ha, you stupid mother? Fun? Are you dumb? What you're thinking about? Nothing? What do you I'm not talking to you? Who's who says I'm talking to you? Why you can see it? So triggering? Why you get trigger? What's wrong? Talk about some guys lips? And you start looking at me? What's wrong? Something wrong? The drawn tell me what's wrong? Nothing? What's
wrong with you? I feel fun? Sure? How are you? What's the climate in here? Hot? What's your Are you kinky? Man, I knew it right up next we have the director of Judas and the Black Messiah, Shaka King. He's the producer director. We're gonna talk to him next and don't move. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, Breakfast Club. We know that you ride black people right right morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, angela Ye, Charlomagne the guy. We are the
Breakfast Club. We got a special guest in the building the last hour. We spoke to Danielle Kalua. And now we have the producer and director of Judas and the Black Messiah. We have Shaka King. Good morning brother. Well, first of all, congratulations on this movie. This is they're already talking about oscars and all of that. Does that
matter to you? Um No, why not because we don't need white validation, but because when I first started, but I'd not even when I first started, honestly, for like my duration up until now, I've found Hollywood to be, you know, as racists, you know the rest of this country. Um, I would say that my experiences, you know, I went to school, I'm from Brooklyn and school and day Ridge as auel. You know you can attest that experience, you know, like I had cops making monkey sounds me when I
was in seventh grade, you know what I mean. Nothing compares, though the experience of racism, my experience in Hollywood, you know, as an adult, and so when you go through that, you know, as I have, I at least my my reaction to it was to kind of recognize that Hollywood wasn't a meritocracy and that I couldn't measure my success based upon you know, whether you know, a white male
dominant industry recognize me as talented. And so even though it's it's taken literally years of the programming for me to get to a place where I don't invest in that stuff. While I recognize that, you know, it's a gift, my prayer would make things easier to get made. And like you know, there's always going to be a part of you that wants to, you know, just be appreciated and have your work appreciated, especially by people you respect. At the same time, I can't sacrifice my power that
way anymore. You know, I agree with you, but I think this film is phenomenal. And even though I totally agree with you, what everything you're saying about, you know, receiving validation from these award shows, these white male dominated a war shows. I want y'all to win all the awards because I don't know what else quantifies success. I want y'all to make all the money, win all the awards, because I know if that happens, more of these films
will be made. I think this year in particular is one where I've had to sort of work through that, just because you know, normally you have the box office to prove whether it will be a success, and because everything is going to be streaming and did at the same time, you don't have the box office to determine whether a success. So this is an instance where you know, a lot of emphasis is going to be placed on
awards to determine whether a movie did well. And I recognize that, you know, this movie literally stands on the success the shoulders of a Black Panther. I mean literally, you know what I mean, Like, we don't even get a meeting if you know, Ryan wasn't coming off the success of that film. And my hope is that, you know, films like this lead to more films about more revolutionaries across the globe. So who doesn't want that, you know
what I'm saying? But at the same time, just on a personal level, I can't allow myself to get too invested in, you know what, what the industry says about the about the film, it just wouldn't be just the my psyche, you know. And this is a different kind of movie from you from things that you've done in the past too. You know, obviously we know you're from Brooklyn, so you've done, you know, works that actually revolve around Brooklyn,
Glyn and your experiences here. But I think one thing that people don't understand is they think this movie is mostly about Fred Hampton, like he hes the main character, but it's really the mformant William O'Neill who's the main character in this movie. Correct. I mean, I think it's really like talk about how the field came about before
you break it out, Like, how did you even do this? Sure? Sure, well it came to me from the Lucas Brothers um comedy duo friends of Mine and Brilliant brilliant cast, and they reached out to me and they were like, well, we want to make a movie about Wayne O'Neill and Fred Hampton that we see as the Departed, set inside the world of Corntell pro Corntel program um the FBI's kind of intelligence program that was designed by Jago Hoover to crush you know, anyone that he did dissident. And
so I just thought that was a brilliant concept. I thought it was really, quite frankly, the only way you'd ever have a movie made about Fred Hampton. And the truth of the matter is is that, you know, when you're talking about making a period film, a movie that takes place in nineteen sixty eight sixty nine, with that kind of scope, you can only make it at a studio just because it's going to cost a certain amount of money. It's gonna acquire. This is gonna acquire that,
you know. And so when they pitched it to me, I was just like, Yeah, this is brilliant. I can see it. I see this as an opportunity to put forth not just this history, but this great man's ideas and this great organization's ideas that I think are just
as applicable to the world we live in today. In a piece of pop culture that travels across the globe and that entertains people, and they could you know, as as Chairman Ford Hampton Jane says, you know, put the medicine and the apple sauce, you know what I mean. I was asking a question about just making this because I saw some critiques of it and people saying talking about Fred Hampton and how they didn't feel like his
character was developed enough and they didn't show this. But this really was more about William O'Neill, and obviously fred Hampton was a huge part in why William O'Neill were focused on him. But can you just break that down and why it was more told from that point of view? Well, I don't. I don't think it's actually told. Really. It to me that it's more of a two hander. It's like heat more than it is, you know, a movie where it's told through O'Neil's POV. I mean the truth
that matter is. It's like, I think that people think that because we use this interview that waym O'Neill gave to Eyes on the Prize too. We recreate the interview and then you know, I'm not going to spoil it, but the interview plays a role in the film, even though it's not in the film a ton But I think because of that structure, people think that the movie
is from O'Neill's perspective. But the truth that matter is that when you're looking at Fred, he's most of the time independent of O'Neill, and it's actually from Deborah Johnson's perspective that's when you really get a sense of who he is. And so the reason we chose to make it a two hander was because we literally the framing device that we first thought of, and it's changed as we've made the thing, was the departed in the world of Colan tempo. That was how we were going to
get the movie made. That was how we were going to get the movie out there. I think from a political perspective, the reason to kind of make it a two hander and lean into that is that you have an opportunity to present almost like two poles of nity. You know what I mean. You have in Fred Hampton one of the bravest, most courageous people of all time. You have WAYM. O'Neill, you know, one of the most coward like, biggest cowards we can think of in history.
You know, you have in Fred Hampton someone who is interested in building coalitions. You haven't William O'Neill, a pure individualist. You know, in Fred Hampton. You have a socialist in a Marxist and so to me, you have this opportunity to really like look at these two people who exist on kind of you know, two different Posy Vanny, and
kind of explore that. And I think in some ways, you know, if we did our job correctly, it you as a viewer can kind of watch it, watch this movie and even subconsciously question like where you are fit, you know, along along that like spectrum, Like everyone wants to believe that they would be Fred Hampton um, but the truth of the matter is is that there are a lot more William O'Neil's in this world than there
are Fred Hampton's. And you know, it's kind of a lost opportunity, just like make this guy just like a cartoon villain, um, when you know he's just he was an eighteen year old guy who made like really bad decisions and some really bad choices. Like, Yo, how many people do we know in prison right now? And they're in prisons because someone you know, told, told told of them. Yeah, right, so many more people would be like, I'm not going
to jail. I am telling it what y'all need need to do, So I don't got to go to jail. And that's just I mean, he seduced. He seduced. Like it's starting. It starts with the way that they do it is they go listen, you don't know this guy, Just go and tell me what you hear. You don't just just keep just see what you're here. If you know, if you hear something, tell me. And then they start paying them. Here's some money, here's a drink, here's a cigar,
have a good times. And they just started. Don't you win? We have more with the director of Judas in The Black Messiah when we come back Shaka Kings, don't move us to breakfast club. The more everybody is d j Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne, the guy we are the breakfast Club. We're kicking it with Shaka King, the director of Judas and The Black Messiah. Charlemagne. You think it's more important for white people to see this movie or black people. I think it's important for everyone to see it. I
made it for my first people. I made it for us, was for black people. You know, there's certain decisions, I mean every decision, but there's some specific, specific decisions and even like how we framed the assassination that it was like very clear, like, Okay, we're not going to show you know this, this man getting shot in the head.
I'm not gonna put us through that. You know, there were choice, there were decisions that you know, there was a desire at one point, not on my start the movie with the Jagger Hoover sequence that you see fairly early in the film, and I was like, yeah, we can't start the movie with Jagger Hoover talking about the Panthers. We have to let the panthers speak for themselves. You know. I would say that was who I made it for.
But I also did certain things. There's certain pieces in the movie that I made for white like the character of Roy Mitchell and how I shaped that character. I made that specifically for white people because I wanted them to understand the shortcomings of being a white centrist, you know what I mean, Like that that's not actually true ally ship and this whole idea of decency and all
that jazz, it's just performative. It's it's hollow, you know, like a centrist will shoot you in the head and two years later try to name a city block after you, you know what I mean, how long does it take to research a movie like this, Like just so people know the whole process, because it's not just writing a script and going into it. How much goes into research? I mean true though, like three years research, three to four years of research. You know, it's the four year
process to get it to the screen. And I was still doing I mean I was going to research up until we got when we were in Cleveland, So I say four years. I say four years probably aside from sharing the life and legacy of Fred Hampton. What method do you want this movie to sin? But one of the reasons for me to make O'Neill a private characters, I really wanted to show the dangers of being a political you know what I'm saying. And we made this
movie in two nineteen. You know, obviously twenty twenty happens, and I don't think many people came out of two thousand and twenty eight political right, But like, you know, I think it's still an important message to get across, just this idea of you know, it's it's the old phase. If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for anything, you know. William O'Neill's decision to really believe in nothing other and invest in nothing other than you know, essentially a capitalist
ideology and culture. It didn't just crush I hate to use the term crushing movement, but it really did. It really really was deeply detrimental. You know, the Panthers remained active in Illinois Kill nineteen seventy four for five years after the assassination, but it was incredibly detrimental not just to you know, the Illinois chapter, but to the national chapters a whole, and to Chicago as a whole. Chicago would have been a different place handing so his but
his actually then just hurt those people. It hurt him. You look at how his story ends, you know, talking about a dude who in the seventies walked away with almost two hundred thousand in his pocket. Damn there the equivalent of that had two phones in his car, you know what I mean in the seventies, and he still took his own life at forty years old. You know, he still didn't get a nice, a nice, a nice piece, you know what I mean. So so he couldn't live
with himself. So I think that there's there's value in putting that out there, um, you know, And I think there's just millions of things take. You know, there's obviously highlighting the legacy of the of the Panthers, but it's also I think showing this country's history of you know, repressing voices of dissent. You know. I think I think that, you know, like I said on a part of Roy Mitchell, there's there's, you know, an indictment of white central centrism.
I think there's a number of things you could take from this movie. It's a dense film. That's why I'm glad it's HBO. Maxallyople watch it two times and get something different out of it the second time. You know, well, I think y'all did a great job. Man. I think it's a phenomenal film. I think it's one of those ones for for a generation. You know, how when you was I mean I'm forty two, how old you about
we was younger? You know, you watched the autobiography of Malcolm X, You're like, wow, I gotta I gotta know. I want to know more about the nation. I want to know more about you know, Malcolm Nonibo, Elijah Muhammed. I think y'all definitely created one of those personally, That's
how I feel. Thank you, Thank you. Thank you. That was the goal I was to me, that's the blueprint in terms of biopics and in terms of I remember how I felt leaving the theater as a kid watching Malcolm X. I read the autobiography because my parents had me on that young you know, but I reread it a million times after that movie, and it's it's just it's the blueprint in my opinion. Yeah, I read it
once a year. I think we should start calling movies like that, and we should start calling movies like Judas in the Black Side. We should start calling these types of movies proper Ganda because the proper stories are being told. I love that. I love that. I love that. But thank you Shaka so much for making time for us. Judis and the Blacking Science is available now to make sure you guys stream that. However you have to watch it. It's on HBO Max, right, yep, HBO Max. And did
the same day, Shaka, Thank you, brother. I hope you get the opportunity to thank you. I'm already tell more of our stories, man, because you did a great job. Appreciate it, yes, so much. Thank you. The Breakfast Club Morning everybody is DJ Envy Angela ye, Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rooms. Let's talk charge. It's about this report, Angela Yee on
the Breakfast Club. Yes, so Charlemagne has launched a Mental Wealth Alliance foundation to establish fundamental and far reaching generational support system for black mental health. You want to tell us about it? Yeah, it's the Mental Health Alliance. Um, it's myself and Debbie Brown, my man, Tim Shriver and Marvett Brittle. And you know, my goal is to raise one hundred million dollars over the next five years. Uh, you know, in order to fund Black lad mental health
organizations and experts. You know, we want to provide scholarships with people that are you know, going into the mental health space as far as like you know, mental health work like clinical service providers, and we want to provide ten million Black people with free therapy over the next five years. And we're advocating for the implemmation of social and emotional learning and mental health literacy in schools across
the country. So it's purpose, it's purpose field work. Congratulations that because you know I've been, I've been, I've been an unofficial mental health advocate you know, for the past few years. So it's just like, you know, why not, why not why not do the work for real, for real? And now no, I don't even want to call it doing the work. Why not do do purpose field things for real for real? Okay, yes, all right? Where can people donate? Oh, you can go to the Mental Wealth
Alliance dot com. You can go to the Mental Wealth Alanes dot com. I actually made some donations yesterday Salute to Suit the Death Cham My Man, My Man, Jeff Harleston at death Cham. You know, they made a very generous donation as well as as well as finish Line. So um I made some donations to a few organizations yesterday. So it's gonna keep all right. Now, Another good news Tory Lanes, who remix Young Blues Your Mind still featuring Drake.
We told you earlier this morning about the back and forth they have because Tory Lanes did not give Young Blue any credit for his song. Well, it looks like the two of them are now in the studio after they're back back and forth last night online. If fich remix might niver Now officially, I'm gonna tag them on anything I ever do ever in life now we're here. We just made a hit. We're gonna keep making hit. That's what he should have done. Drop on a clues
box for Tory Lanes on the right thing. Getting young boys with credit, man, that's the least you can. Don't think it was malice though. That's everybody does that to everybody's soul. I never said it was malis, but I can understand why Young Blue would be upset. He's like, I'm a new artist, I'm on to come up. You remix my song? Damn at least tag a brother. And probably was also thinking that it's a well known song
and people know it's his. But you know, he wanted a little he probably and he said he liked it. I'm Blue said he liked it. But I guess you know. I'm glad they worked it out. They didn't know each other, so now they've spoken, now they know each other. That all worked out for the best. Sometimes credit is more important than anything else, because sometimes people just need to know who you are. Now now now a lot more people know who Young Blue is. After the day. Correct,
young Young Blue got a record with Drake. But I bet you people don't know that Young Blue. Yeah, I think they do. I mean, he's pretty popular amongst a certain demo, the casual person actually, and check out his latest episode of lip service. He's been on lip service also, just I mean, I think a couple of weeks ago, shout out to Young Blue. All right now, Erica Banks, her Busted remix features Travis Scott, so that's pretty amazing for her. Here is a preview of that bucket. Locke
it drop it. We're going. I'm like to stock it outside it inside the level with chocolate throwing watching cake it profit biscuit and big get my bus side of pocket. She keep it up without my bus on a locket. What did you come in with? Gaily? Your phone at the hotel? She know my body? She don't even think intel. Okay, I like it. I like it. I know I do. I like it. I don't hear Travis Scott or bust. Sorry, I thought it sounded good. All right now fifty cent.
According to reports after that Super Bowl party that he had the venue where he had it lost its lease. So, according to Tampa Bay Time, sky Attic Aviation has just six months to pack up and leave. It's a three thousand square foot hanger in office space day I wonder if that's directly because of him or it just was timing, Like, I don't know if they did that just because of him having that party there, or if it's because they were already going to do that. I don't know timing honestly.
All Right. Now, doctor Dre and April Jones, who were spotted together and now people are saying that they are dating. Doctor Dre was spotted entering Boa Steakhouse in La Wednesday night, and the woman that he's with is April Jones. You know April as the mother of a Marian's children. She's been on Love and hip hop. She also is a singer and songwriter. So I don't know what it means, but people think that it does mean that they're having a little date night during this time period. That's not
a bad one for her, all right. And halle Berry posted on Instagram women don't owe you ish and that's on. Mary had a little lamb Now. She also talked about paying child support. She said, I've been paying it for a decade now. I feel if a woman or a man is having to pay support, that is way more than the reasonable needs to help support the child. I
think that is wrong. She also clarified that while some parents may need help, she feels that in these modern times, both men and women have the responsibility to financially take care of their children and work hard and make every effort to do so. She blasted up parents who used children in order to be awarded money to live a lifestyle that not only did they not earn, but that
is way above and beyond the child's reasonable needs. And there's so many baby daddies out there saying, preach, Holly, preach, now you know how we finally feel. Yes, absolutely everything she said is one hundred percent correct. And she pays sixteen thousand a month in child support right now, come on, man,
come on, she said, it's extortion. Do you listen. You know how many baby daddy's been feeling like that forever, Not to mention baby daddy's getting locked up when they get behind on their child support, Like come on, Yes, she's absolutely right, but also remember it goes both ways. All right, Well that is your rumor report. All right, thank you, Miss Eye Nash out to revote. We'll see you all on Monday. Everybody else, we're gonna get to the mix. Before we get to the mix, we playing
the song nough. We ain't playing this out now, we'll play before the document place. Okay, m goggle something we can to goggle? Man? What's wrong with you? Man? I just told you need to google you so you got a little cold or something? Just making sure you got two masks on. You're making us nervous. Who guys are kinky this morning? Yes? And I also want to give a shout out to doctor Darius and to Bushman and
Detroit on JLB. They've been helping me out a lot with my store private label and Detroit that open private label extensions on eight Miles and de Quinder they've actually been doing these giveaways with gift cards for women before Valentine's Day to go ahead and get some hair. So today's the last day for that, so make sure y'all tune in for that. But thank y'all so much. You guys have been really helpful, so I appreciate you. Wanning. Everybody is Stee j Envy and Jula yee all. I
mean the guy we are the Breakfast Club. That's Black History Month. Charlemagne who we reppen today, Well listen, we know today Judas and the Black Messiah is out on HBO Max. It is the story of the assassination of Fred Hampton. And you know, one of our producers tailor tellors like twenty something. She said to me, I'm mad they didn't teach us about this in school. Well, that's why we all have to educate ourselves outside of these white folk schools. Okay, well, I'm about to play for you.
Is a quick two minute history lesson on Fred Hampton. Less listen. The Breakfast Club presents a new Black History Month legend. I am people, I'm not the pig. You got to make a descision and the people are going to have to attack the pig. The people are going to have to stand up aginst the Hampton graduated high school in nineteen sixty six with honors, then went on to pursue of law degree. He dropped out and became
a member at the Black Panther Party in Chicago. He and other Panthers follow police, watching out for police brutality and using his knowledge as the laws of means of presents, quickly becoming leader of the Chicago Black Panther Chapter. Young Hampton make many significant achievements, such as negotiating a peace treaty between some of Chicago's most powerful street games. While Hampton's intelligence and dominance made him a leader in the eyes of many, it also made him a threat to
the FBI. And while they want to get really need to call I'm saying something that wins the Mother's funny people as some other friends people and about these people ever get together, these things spun less, we'll be running into the league. That's why they want to get rid of it. He was later assassinated and a police raid led by the FBI. He was only twenty one years old, and that was another New Black History Month legend courtesy of the Breakfast Class. Right, make sure you watch Judas
in the Black Messiah, you know this weekend on HBO Max. Man, it's it's absolutely positively worn't fit if you don't have HBO Max downloaded watching the movie, canceled it. But I'm telling you it's a phenomenal film, all right. Well, and a lot of people do have HBO Max and don't know it. So if you do, if you are subscribed to the HBO package, you already have it. You just have to log into it, all right. I shout out to everybody that is trying to get a record deal?
How do I get on? Today is the last day to get your record deal. If you want to get a record deal, you might have a chance to get signed with Spart Distribution. Be mentored by me and Angela Yee. All you gotta do is go to our heart radio dot com slash How can I get on? And good luck to all the rappers and R and B singers out there. Also shout out to everybody that's going to
my seminars in two weeks in Atlanta. We're gonna be teaching people about how to get into I don't want to say in the real estate game, but yeah, to get in a real estate game. But I'm not being in Atlanta in two weeks too, I should come to the seminar. I don't know if I'll come for the whole thing, but yeah, come on in. Yeah, it's only thirty percent capacity, so we have it's gonna be safe.
People have to wear masks, and we're gonna teach people how to get into industry, whether it's buying their first home or buying an investment property. I speak to people all the time and they want more knowledge. So we're gonna be in Atlanta in two weeks. For more information, just click the link in my bio. Now, Charlemagne, you got a positive note, yes man. My positive note of the day is coming from Fred Hampton himself. Fred Hampton said, and I quote, if you walk through life and don't
help anybody, you haven't had much of a life. Breakfast clubs, y'all, finish it, y'all done.
