He dang yang dang, everybody, come to the breakfast club. I call this the hot seat. Your anna live. You don't control, I'm not even doing You'm so pet yo are you're so penny the world's most dangerous morning jo dj ca this bitch, ANGELI. I stay in everybody's business, but in a good way. To Charlemagne, the the ruler rubbing you the wrong way. The breakfast club ain't for everybody. Good morning, Usa yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo. Angela is running late. Come on to Charlemagne. Piece in the planet is Monday, Yes, it's Monday. Back to the work week, or it's born. I'm a little tired tonight this morning, this morning, I don't even know because I stayed up late last because I was watching my Unsensed on TV one. Actually, I started to watch the TV Afterday had seven, watching part two of the Aaron Nandez Special. Okay, then I watched my Unsensed on TV one. Then I stayed up to
watch the season finale of the Shot. So needless to say, I'm sleepy, right now, my goodness. But if you have not seen that Aaron and Nandez special, Lord, I ain't see part two. Yes, they don't say nothing about it yet. Man, I didn't finish shot. I fell asleep on the shot. Let me tell you Aaron and Nandez was a allegedly gay gang banging, correct serial killer, correct NFL player would cte yes, Jesus all, I checked off all the boxes,
all the boxes. I don't know how to feel about that, though, Like, I don't know what the point of that special was other than it being tragically entertaining. I don't know what they were trying to get off with that special, well as the family get money off the special somehow, some way. Maybe I have no idea, And it didn't make me feel any sympathy for him, I guess. Maybe I don't know.
I don't know what we were looking for special. Maybe he was just trying to le up his name a little bit, you know what I mean, because he got kids, and they don't wanted the kid to think that the daddy was just some psychopath, right, you know. So maybe that's where the whole ct and everything came into play. But I don't know what the point of that special was other than it was trying to clean entertaining. All right, Okay, all right, well, shout out to everybody again from Hampton University.
I spoke at Hampton University over the weekend, and then yesterday or Saturday, I should say, I was in Chicago. Now, I haven't been in Chicago in ten years. You go to Chicago yesterday and don't watch the season finale of the shot. I know. I tried. I hit Lena ways. I was trying. I was looking for the bow Digga that I could actually take the picture of it. But she didn't hit me back and let me know where
it was. I wanted to take picture somebody. I'm sure people in Chicago know, like why you yo way to Bowdigga? That little dude got killed that in the shot. But I wanted to speak to her because I wanted to make sure I could go in that area and take a picture. I didn't want to go in the area to be a war zone. Oh listen, how you know Lena got the pass for you? I was asking Lena might be getting the path to be a right, but I was just gonna ask her. I wanted to know,
all right, But shout. Everybody in Chicago had a great time. It was Saint Patrick's Day Saturday, so it was rampack. I ran into Safar. Safari came to my club over the weekend in Chicago celebrating Saint Patrick's. He was he had a show and see he's booked up. Yeah, y'all a couple at normal. Why wouldn't negroes get booked for Saint Patrick's dad events? Ain't no black people should be
getting a book for no Saint Patrick. My last name is Casey, so they booked me and my last mcke and I still ain't never got book those Saint Patrick's event. I had a day, I had a day party at a night party. Came through my day party. I came through his name party. I'm sure you didn't see. I'm sure you know what I been thinking about you night and day. You know what, I'll be sure, I'll be record. I was your original page guard. All right. When we
come back, we got front page news. He is not here, and I'm not prepared because I thought she would be here. Oh we gotta guess this one and too, Judge fay fright, that's not her name, Judge, that's not her name. You were so confident with that, faith, right, Judge, Faith Jenkins will be joining us Jenkins, Hello, good morning. And also we have a new family member joining us this morning from um killing Texas. That I say that right production
you didn't, well, what is it? I don't know what I ain't God know it ain't kill them all Texas. I say killing lor and I said killing. You said kill them all? Oh, Kylin Kyleeen, kyleeen. Yes, we're all over the place this morning. Thank you, Kyleen, Texas. Thank you for putting this little ghetto ass trash ass show on in the morning. We appreciate you. What we had now eighty five eighty five, ninety two three to Z the number one for hip hop and R and B.
Kyleeen Texas, shout to you guys. When we come back. Eighty five marketson growing. That's right, when we come back. We got front page News, Powerball tickets, somebody one hopefully as you will tell you about it. And also surtdays so late one of my favorite things to watch. Somebody fell to us death. I'll explain it when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning. More than everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we all the
breakfast club. Let's getting some front page news, all right now, Ncuba. I don't know if you guys are watching, but U tell you what's going on. On On the twenty second and twenty third. Twenty second, Kansas State takes on Kentucky, Chicago takes on Nevada, Florida State takes on Kazanga, Michigan takes on Texas an am all right. On the twenty third, which is Friday, Villanova versus West Virginia, Texas Tech versus for Due, Kansas vers Clemson and Syracuse verse Duke, what
you got? You got your money on this year? I don't know what's going on. I haven't paid attention at all. It sweet sixteen now or yes, okay, well, congratulations to everybody in Sweet sixteen. Clemson is a South Carolina team, but I don't root for Clemson because I'm a University of South Carolina type of guy. But you know whatever, Yeah,
I'm gonna go with Syricus. I mean, I'm a Hampton University guy, but they never go this far, So I mean I go with Syricus because they're from New York, all right, now powerball ticket one was so in Pennsylvania, and it was worth four hundred and fifty six million dollars. Not a cash value was two hundred and seventy three million dollars. Could you imagine winning that? I thought about it on Saturday, becaus soon as I left the gym, I wouldn't actually go went and played. Did you get
any numbers at all? I don't know what were the numbers? Twenty two, fifty seven, fifty nine, sixty sixty six and the power ball was number seven. I see all these numbers on my ticket, but they not in the order I need to win. I do have a powerball, I mean not in the order. I got a twenty two on here somewhere. I played five numbers, so I got a twenty two and one number fifty seven and another number it wasn't mother numbers name fifty nine sixty sixty six.
If you got any powerball sevens, I do have the powerball seven, all right? When the one with the powerball seven, you got any of those numbers seven, twenty seven, you know I got a twenty I got the power ball seven, and I got a twenty seven twenty seven. Oh, I said twenty two and fifty seven. Well I won three dollars. You get a round of a plause. No, all right, three dollars is good for something. Now, Thurthday so late. That's probably one of my favorite shows to take the
kids and watch. But it seems like an acrobat fell to his death over the week and he was performing in Tampa. He was doing one of the ring things they said, where he was holding onto the ring and he spins up in the air. He's been with the company for fifteen years and they don't know what happened. He just rutally fell to his death in front of everybody. Was a live show, so they rushed into the hospital, but they didn't. He didn't make it. That's gotta be
traumatizing for people that were there, uh and saw that happened. Absolutely, I always I've understood why they never had anything protective like a net under it or anything a harness. And I'm sure they got to sign something that says, uh, this is all on them because they got to know the risk that they're taking. Right. Absolutely, like I'm sure that Circus Ol they wouldn't be held responsible for the death of any of the people in the circus. Yeah,
all right, well gonn at your front page news. Get it off your chests eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you're upset, you need to vent. Hit us up right now. Maybe you had a bad weekend and you just want to vent. Or maybe you had a great weekend. You want to spread some positivity, whatever it may be. Eight five eight five one oh five one, Get it off your chests. It's the breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. I pick up the mother
mother phone and die. This is your time to get it off your chest. Noether you're mad, we want to get it from you on the Breakfast Club. Please better have the same energy. Hello, who's this Hey? Ask Sleeman to get you offit? Chess, Mama, I am very well. Are you mad at me? Mama? I was gonna get married in January and my sisters started emailing you and DJA at my wedding and we had a budget of I don't know if you would have done it though
we had a good of the five thousand dollars. It's okay you're spending on the DJ and you did not respond to her at all. Wow, you need to get new management and well you know what we fought grant on the table. Yeah, well we would have charged more than that. But we don't. We don't do weddings, Mama. I'm sorry. Just we usually don't do weddings. I think I did one in the last ten years. I just I just don't do weddings. It's it's always a lot into doing weddings and the time amounted for me to stay.
It is usually what I don't do. But I'm sorry he didn't get back to Definitely should have got back to you, Mama. What do you gotta play in a wedding? You gotta play one song in the West State at four hours, five hours, one song? We gotta well, now you gotta play. The reception is a bunch of different things you gotta do. I don't remember what is the wedding.
It was January twentieth, so we already got married. Oh well, congratulations, maybe our anniversary, O DJ anniversary for you guys or something. But I'm sorry, mama, I was get my way now. Did I think about him? My man d D Knights did DJ my waiting, but I don't remember what he did. What the hell do we pay the Knights for? Now? I mean, you gotta DJ the songs that come out, and you gotta DJ the song with the with the bride and the dad. I'm trying to tell you only
remember one or two something. You gotta play the reception. Now you did for four or five hours. That's a lot of time. So for me to be committed to that time, I gotta charge you. And I can't charge people like that, so I just don't do wellings true. Hello, who's this? Hey? This you Bard from Detroit? What's up? Broken it off her chests? Damn? I just want to say, it's just blessed. Man. We all walk. I'm a young black man, no kids, no no criminal record, y'all stay
up out there, get your money up. Okay, brother, Why you don't got no criminal record? Man, you ain't trying hard enough. Don't stop it. No, My parents I grew up in South Africa, were his missionaries, you know what I mean? My dad just still to me to help everybody every day. Bro. No congratulations sir? All right? Brother, Hey, y'all keep doing your thing? You too? Hello? Who's this good? It's good? VIDs? Right? John New Jersey? What's up? Broke it off her chests? Man? I'm just mad about a
couple of things working this morning. They're not working. We out here pushing his waterfall and spring water is heavy. It's bad out here. But the real reason that I'm madd is I hit a pot hole in my bm O. Two crack rams, oh, two flat rims. It was ugly. It was ugly. It could always be worse, sir, Yeah,
it could be worse. That's why I'm still blessed. I'm still out here to be honest with you, only like to say I don't know anything else to see in moments like that, like if when whenever things the badges like it could be worse when you got tiring, shurs bro Nah, I had changed the rough flat to put some regular times. No, I had no stair leading my joint in the hood. Come back the next day and get it. You know. He had a nineteen ninety six BMW. Then he said, he said, BMW can't tell you what? Yeah,
what year was ith seven six? Tired with my pockets? Yeah, somebody feeling that here eleven years old. But it's still run. That's all that matters. Yeah, still run, queen, And I keep a clan there you go, Yeah, I keep it clean. Hello, Who's this was good? This? Jeff? What's up? Jeff getting off at chests? Bro Oh yeah, I'm blessed this morning because it was a great night for TV last night. Can you drop one the clues? Pa for the shot
and Charlemagne's a sense at one time? Jeff, you don't tell us about it though, You just just say it's a good job. No, no, no, I ain't gonna tell y'all body. I saw the shot, brother, Oh yeah, I've seen both last night. Both of was good. When I know Anvy ain't seen it until I heard him it was morning talking about he ain't getting let's sleep on it. I'm gonna watching. I'm gonna talking about it. I'm mad at Revote man. I don't know what's going on. Revote man.
Call to y'all Monday. They ain't heard that. I talked to y'all Friday. They ain't heard that. Man. What's going on with didd and Revolte? The end? Now? What what it is when all of us aren't here? Because like Nvy an Angela aren't here. I was just here. So when all of us not here, we're gonna come on revolt, y'all. I was in Virginia Friday. I definitely feel like man, y'all have a good day to day, all right, man, get it off your chests. Eight hundred five eight five
one on five one. If you need to vent, hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Wake up, wake up, wake y'all. This is your time to get it off your chest. Whether you're mad or black, we want to hear from you on a breakfast block out. Who's this? Hey, Trap? What's up? Trap? Mus? Not much? What's up? How you? How was the weekend? Now? She late? She had an event in Puerto Rico last night, a benefit concert, and her flight got delayed so she
she'd be here late. I'm sure what's up? Donk okay, okay, I'm just calling to talk about I'm mad at I'm mad at my cousin. Man, who's your cousin? And I've been mad at her name is Tadisha, and I've been mad at her. She's from Camden. Actually she's just been u I've been mad at her for like a good little minute because we all, me and all my cousins went to go see Black Panther. I've ever been like
this about a month ago. Okay, so after black Panther, she went through like family Dollars and bought the T shirt and put this little quote on on with the little ugly letters and this little ugly iron on African thing. And she's been selling the T shirts right minded, The T shirts only like two bucks, and she's been telling the T shirts for like thirty dollars. What's wrong with that? Woke like a thirty dollars T shirts? Never wrong with that.
We're writing on them. But people are buying it. They see what they buying You to see man, because you won't meet them. But the family been buying them. Because she's been going on a tirade about people not supporting her black business. Well, first of all, you should be happy that she's trying to make away coming from camp to New Jersey. That's number one and number two, never claim your family from Camden, New Jersey. There's nothing wrong
with her. Like I'm just saying this, don't be trying let me get mad at me because I don't want to buy a T shirt that listen to. That's all I'm saying. Support her black business trap that's not really a black business, but support her black entrepreneurs, shakes traf, she got a little business. Hello, Yo, Envy, what up? Man? Lorenzo from Brooklyn? Lorenzo, Man, get it off at chess? Yo? What up? Y'alla? Man? What's up? My brother? Everything good
with you? Right? All right? Yeah? A little bit. You better not talk about the shot. I know you want to talk about the shot. I don't tell us about the shot. Na, Na, I'm not. I just want to say, man, you know that was a good season. You know what I'm saying. We blessed to have that season. And um, you know everything that's coming out now. You know I need all of the shows to be like that. I needed to be the things to be unexpected. I need
everything to be nice and fresh man and Charlomagne. Yo. Yes, I have a few ideas. Man. I'm trying to get next to you so I could show some of my dias with you at the wall. You know what I'm saying, your opinion on them. I'm always down to hear some new ideas, my brother, Yo. So how do I get in touch with you one on one? You know what I'm saying. Go to my Instagram and email the email to the email in the in the Instagram. Buy you all right? I got you all right, brother, I'm gonna
hit you up. Looking forward to speaking to me. Man, I'm Lorenzo, yes, sir. And the reason all those ideas like the shy is so freshed because they're letting young black creatives actually do that thing and the white people not getting in the way flew to lean a waif. Hey, Stephanie, get it off her chess. I just want to say that I went to the Soul Bay restaurand on side to day I was really bad. It's not where you
went to say restaurant went, din't you like? I didn't even like it because I older my stake meetum well and I gotta like blue. It was by yeah who each medium one? You shouldn't be eating medium one when you go to those types of restaurants that you're supposed to get the texture and taste of the steak. It should be medium the most. But with the salt, babe, throw some salt on your steak. Or he wasn't there, No, he wasn't mayor it was disappointing. I ain't gonna lie though, man,
I know disrespect the Salt Bay. I just can't go nowhere where his thing is salt like salt has been killing black people for years. All right, all right, I'm sorry you didn't like it. I mean the menus mad small too, right, Yeah, it was not worth it. And I love your traveling mane. I have your books. I'm waiting for you to sign it. One day. I will baby, we got we gotta figure that out. Yeah, I follow
you on Instagram. My Instagram is smallst Tephany. All right, I'm gonna follow you, but you know I'm gonna follow you for as long as I can until the salt kills you. Okay, Oh my goodness, get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five, one h five one. We'll find out who applied for m M A license. It might be going down. We'll tell you about it when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Body is DJ v Angela. Yee, Charlomagne. Guy.
We all the breakfast club. She's still working. Nah. She was in Puerto Rico for a fund raison. She was supposed to get back at five am, but the flight was delayed, so she should be landing in the next ten minutes and then bringing her ass to work. I doubt it alright, but let's get some the rumor report, little zad he's running. It's about report is the rumor report? Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club We Lozan pissed off for a lot of people last week when he said
Tupoc's music was boring born music. He said it was born music, and then he said that the press, the media, they kind of mixed up his words, the media twisting my words. I think Tuparc is a Tuparc is definitely a leg. They just use your words and they want you to hate me. I don't care if lo Zan thinks that tupacs music is born, because music is subjective. What I disagreed with and why he got dunkey today is because he gave Tupac a two on the cloud scale.
If I know what cloud is, that's power influence. There's nobody more influential than Tupacsi car Well, he was in California over the weekend and some high school students didn't like what he had to say. Chase his ass right up out of it, Like he had to run to the police, like please get me out of here. There's a bunch of little kids who was in the house and riding in the car with their parents while they was playing Tupac keep your head up in Tupac Dead,
Mama and Tupac. I ain't mad at you, and they know the importance of Tupac. There was no physical fight, but he ran fast. He ran to a ymca and this is why he said he ran. They're saying, I am a for the police escorting me away from a group of twenty people that wanted to jump me. You can call me about all you want. I am not a gangbanging rapper. Am I supposed to act hard? Am I supposed to not with the police because I'm a rapper?
Oh wait, I have to hump because that's what cool robbers do, right, trouping a clue bunce for little And I mean, he's absolutely right. You know you said, I'm not love, not about that life late now, I want to watch the emergency about the jump. It's not like he running around here. I can like heat to Kasti sixty nine. That's true, okay, acting like he can't get touched. Kasca sixty nine can not run from anybody. No, he can hear a police as called Losan can right, He
sure did. Now, let's talk Floyd Mayweather. Now, Um, it was rumors that he applied for MMA license and was ready to fight, and they caught up with him and they asked him about it. This is what he had to say. Did your team apply for an MMA license to fight? Not yet? Not yet, but everything takes time. Eventually we're gonna apply for the license and hopefully we can fight. Okay, they said it might take you about
three months training. I mean, I know you train hard to finding a little bit longer, a little bit longer, a little bit longer, even if it takes six to eight months, whatever it takes. We want to make sure that everything is done correctly and everything is done the right way. If Floyd Mayweather, don't say this forty one year old as done. If if you're worth over five hundred million dollars and you're forty one years old, why do you want to get into MMA ring? I don't
know either. Two things that happening here. One, Floyd needed the money. He's having some type of money problems and he needs the money to The fight will be rigged because if they was really doing MMA, McGregor would wash Floyd money man, maybe we'll see them. I thought about the money situation too, but he's been buying to it, like he just bought a jet. He just bought a new crib. If the money was crazy, he was stopped. You can't be that board at forty one years old.
I laid on the couch all day yesterday and my knee was hurting. I don't even know why. I didn't even I wasn't even doing that that. I was sitting there reading the book. I'm reading Michael Bennett's Things that Make White People Are Uncomfortable. I'm reading a book, and my knee was just hurting. I had to go take a nap because my knee was hurting. I had to take a nap because you knee exactly. You know, yeah, I know. Now. He also talks about his fighting skills.
You know, my wrestling game is not that bad. On the scale of from one to ten, I would say it's smartly at seven, and I think we could take it up to it like a nine. Of course, my hand game is on the scale for one of ten, it's a hundred, and the kicking game on a scale for one of ten, it's probably a four. So we have to tweak a few things, then take things to the next level. Same way McGregor looked like an amateur in the boxing ring, Floyd Mayweather will look like an
amateur in the MMA ring. I don't care if he trains for eight months to a year. It's just a different ball game. But you'll watch it. No, I won't. He's not gonna watch it. I mean maybe if I'm gonna watchick because I want to see floydman Whether to really get his ass kicked. That's about it. But they're not gonna let Floyman Whether get his ass kick. The fight gonna be rigged. It's like they didn't let McGregor
really get his ass kicked. Like if you watch that fight now watching in slow motion, a lot of pool punches from Floyd Mayweather Junior against bad a lot of pool punches against Floyd floydman Whether Junior and Connor Gregor. Let's go back and watch it, all right, And lastly, April seventh, April seventh, write that down on your calendar. That's what Charlemagne and god Da in Columbia, South Carolina. Well,
Cardi B is gonna be performing on Saturday Night Live. Okay, April seventh, also special guests Chadwick Bosman, South Carolina's own Chadwick Bowsman dropping the clues Bomp for Chadwick Bowsman and Cardy b So April seventh saluted Cardia somewhere right now eating the chop cheese. I think she eating Chick fil A, actually right now. I just saw her tweet that that offset brought us fro Chick fil But there's nothing like
chop cheese or something chop cheese on a bagel. What y'all New York is beating chop cream cheese, chop cheese, man, chop what's the thing called chop something? Chop meat? And she I don't know, man. All I know is it ain't nothing better than Chick fil A with a chicken egg and cheese biscuit from Chick fil A. Okay, all right, well that is your room of reporting. Now when we come back, we have a judge in the building. Judge Faith Jenkins will kick it with her next hour, right,
so don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Ye, Charlomane the guy. We are the Breakfast Club and we got a special guest in the building. Judge Faith Jenkins, good morning, good morning, Good morning for having me. I'm great now. The first thing when I saw you on the schedule, I said, this young lady gonna have She's gonna make so much money in the future because she's a nationally syndicated judge and they make a lot of money that Judy does.
She is the standard. So if I can get to like a fraction of what Judge Judy does, I'd be very happy. For how many years now, Judge Judy, Yeah, almost twenty years. Yeah, she Court left and then they found Judy. Judy was a judge here in New York,
and they found her and she brought Court back. So she was the only judge show on the air when she started, and she built an audience based on that, and when she started getting these great ratings, that's when they ran out and got Judge Mathis and Judge may Blame and put them on the air. I love all of That's the real lords fake, it's real. These are real cases. Yeah, reales, real cases. We find them. People have filed lawsuits across the country, so we go in.
We have runners that go into courts and read the case files and make copies and send them to our producers, and then we call people and say, hey, would you like instead of court in New York here in your case, why don't you come on the show. We'll pay for your air fare. You come on and let Judge Faith here your case, and they agree to be on there also like you get like a fee, there's a small appearance fee, but it's the decision is actually binding. So
they agreed to binding arbitration. If the plane off has to pay five hundred dollars, does the TV company take care of it or no? He's trying to give you. When I first saw the name Judge Faith, I thought you was like a religious judge, like you did like spiritual court or something like that. Oh you know that's interesting, but no, no, Yeah, it's just this regular small claims court, all kinds of cases. Now, walk me through it. Because you were a criminal attorney, yes, and I didn't go
to college. I don't know nothing about I'm a prosecutor. How do you go from criminal attorney to judge? Like? Walking me through the well? I started out I was a prosecutor here in Manhattan in the DA's office, and before that I worked for a really big law firm doing civil litigation. So I just had a range of experience.
And what happened is the George Zimmerman trial happened, and I covered that case for all the networks every day as a legal analyst analyzing the case because I just left the DA's office where I prosecuted crimes here in the city. So um and I always say, once you go to the DA's office and you learn what really happens in Manhattan, you never look at the city the
same again. And so they called me after I did that trial and said, you know, we saw you on with Al Sharpton one night and Bill O'Reilly the next night. If you can handle both of these audiences, we think you could probably have broad appeal to do a nationally syndicated course show. So I never thought about it. They came to you, they did. They called me. I never thought about it, but I said, well, you know, this seems like something interesting that I should look into. And
I watched all the shows. I love the shows. Did you have to go for more schooling to be a judge and you already had all the degrees you needed to be a judge. No, it's just experience. I had civil and criminal, and so it was just based on the experience. What are your thoughts on public defenders Having worked with a number of them in the city. They get a bad rap a lot of times. But here's the problem. They're often so overworked. They have so many cases,
such a high caseload. But every public defender I've worked with has been really dedicated to the cause. The problem is they are understaffed, they're underpaid, they are are overwhelmed, and they don't have the resources of the state behind them. So it's already set up initially giving the state an unfair advantage because we have all of these resources to prosecute cases and they just simply don't have the resources.
But when people say I don't want a public defender, I want a real lawyer, I've heard people say that. I mean, they are real attorneys and the hardworking, dedicated people, but they simply don't have the resources and they're so overwhelmed. What do you do when you have three hundred cases on your docket? Can you return all your phone calls?
Like you said, it's an unfair advantage built into the system, so it's meant for the person to lose because you said, the state has all the resources and not the public defenders, don't they just they simply don't have the time or the resources a lot of times to invest what they really need to invest in cases. Which is why I always say there's rich men's justice, impoor men's justice. If you can afford to have a dream team, your chances are would you My law school professor asked me this
when I was in school. You'd rather be rich and guilty or poor and innocent. Rich and guilty because you, you know, there's so much that you can do when you have money and you can go in with your dream team and you have a great advantage in our system. That's a great point. And I wanted to ask you, because you're a criminal attorney, how do people represent people they know are guilty? Like I think in a movie
Double's Advocate. You seen Devils Advocate? Yes, why do people like how do you represent somebody you know is guilty? And I thought about this watching the OJ case the other night too. Well, it goes back to a public defender. Don't you want everyone to have an opportunity to be represented? Everyone should have that opportunity right to have representation. So are we going to start deciding, well, this person is guilty. They shouldn't have a lawyer who gets to make that decision.
So everyone and so. But as an advocate, it's our job to simply put forth a case. Now, personally, I was never a criminal defense attorney. I was a prosecutor. Right when I started ANGELA, I thought I don't want to be a prosecuted because I don't want to lock people up. Right, this is but this is really important because everyone wants to be an activist. Now you have to understand prosecutors are the most powerful players in this system. If you really want to make a change, you want
to make a difference. They need people with different backgrounds, perspectives. So it is a job you have a duty to give people representation because you don't want to start drawing a line in the sand and say this person deserves it and that person doesn't. But also people need to understand that a prosecutor's job. That's something you really want to look into if you really want to make a difference. Is because a lot of times what happens with your
case depends on who gets your case. You remember plectical birth hearing or he got two years and he shot himself right in New York. We have cases I had a seventeen year old with a loaded gun. Whoever gets that case. You have a lot of power and discretion to make decisions about these cases. And that's why I say this is a really important job that people should consider. When you're trying to you have the power to offer them a deal. Yes, you have a power to recommend
a certain sensence. Yes, sometimes more than judgments with because let's say you have let's say a white prosecutor attorney that it's not from the same place that these individuals are from and don't know anything. You know, like you said, you were from Halem, so you see what was going around in Harlem, so you kind of understood a little bit. So it's kind of scary if you have somebody that doesn't know anything about me, doesn't know about my community,
and just says, Okay, he has a gun. He said, hoodlum, I'm gonna give him for years. That's why she says it's an important job for people to look into. If you want to be an activist or if you want to make a different if you want to make a change, then bring your perspective to the table, have a seat at the table. And of course, to answer your question,
yes it's scary, but that's what happens. That's how a seventeen year old in New Orleans gets forty years because someone doesn't have empathy, someone doesn't care, and so yes, it is scary. I had colleagues who would get that same seventeen year old girl who got a probation. In my case, some of my colleagues would have tried to give her the deal that Plectico got because that was our standard plea agreement if you got caught with a
gun two years. I agree everybody should have the right to a lawyer, But sometimes you see some of these crimes and you're like, why ways taxpayers money? Like the guy who to park lay in high school? Absolutely, what do you what does he get the right to a fair trial and a lawyer and all every more? I know, no, no, we thought that's a different those stream cases, Like yeah, if I take my lawyer had off for a second, I agree with you. I'm like, why or this he's
nineteen years old. Even if he gets the death penalty, he's going to be in prison for ten years waiting for that to happen maybe fifteen based on the way a pills are and taxpayers are going to pay for it. It It just seems patternly unfair. But the Central people, they thought they were guilty. The lady played them out and if there was no trial, but they deserve a lawyer, that's different. Let see, but the issue is right, that
was a whole you know. See, here's the problem. Like when you start drawing that line saying obviously this person is guilty, he doesn't deserve it. It's just that line just is going to keep getting moved. And that's why it's just better, you know, have your representation, have the due process, and go forward with You have to go across the board with everything you do, because if your theory happens, the people who will be impacted the most
will be our people. It will be people of color in the system, and they already have so many um issues stacked up against them already. So I just you know, you just have to stick with the due process as we have it. Seven with the Central part five, they did admit, they confessed to something, but they were forced to do it right, and so imagine you're like, okay, they said they did it, so they don't deserve right or anything exactly. A lot of the ones we see visibly,
we didn't. You know, it's five is a little sketchy, so that deserves nobody's seen it. There's no video what it go to sleep listen, But but what just make this thing is right. If you're going to do it too, you have to be across the board because then they'll say, well, we saw this, we saw that, and maybe you know you just have to. I guess when you set a standard, that standard everybody. We got all with Judge Faith Jenkins.
When we come back, we have to discuss this zimmim and trial and what's the craziest case you had on TV. We'll talk about it when we come back as the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We have Judge Faith Jenkins in the building. Charlemagne, listen. With the Zimmerman trial, you covered that. Is there a way to be black and be objective in that situation?
That's a that's a good question. I can't speak for all black lawyers who spoke out about the case on television. But I was asked to give an opinion on the case, and so every day when I watched it, I watched the trial. It didn't matter if I was on Fox News or CNN. I gave the same opinion. I didn't change for you know, the different network that I was on, And it was my legal opinion based on what I was seeing. And I said on TV, I think that George Zimmerman is guilty and he should be convicted of
this crime. But trials are not about the truth, especially jury trial, because there's what actually happened and then there's what you can present in court and trial. Those are two different things in a lot of cases because jurors won't know a lot of the background. They won't know a lot of information that we knew, for example, in the in the Zimmerman trial. So you have to keep
that in mind. And attorneys know when you're when you're doing a jury trial, a lot of times it's about the emotion and you you are putting it all out there. You are acting in front of these jurors, and it's it's you know, you're becoming angry and you're making these insinuations. They won't say it, but you know, this was a black kid and he was in a hoodie. What if
this was your neighborhood. So a lot of that was going on in the Zimmerman trial, and they were in a bubble, and so I think that my opinion was based on globally what I was hearing and reading about George Zimmerman in that case as the criminal attorney. Do you see how he got off? Yes? What were the
holes in the case. I think that it was more so about implicit bias and fear based on Treyvonne being this this this young kid walking in this neighborhood, and they were able to plant seeds in some of the juror's minds that you know, you could understand why Zimmerman was a friend when you have been to which is crazy, because he didn't see him afraid when he was pursuing him. Definitely, right, I told him not to and to leave him alone, let him. That doesn't indicate fair to me, Right, that
indicates that you are fair. That was the argument that was the state's case. The reason why the case went to trial was because he followed him and he shouldn't have. Did you happen to watch that old j confession last week. I did not watch it. What I've read about it was the apparently it was a hypothetical. People are saying, but but why would anyone ever think that that was a good idea, Like even to put it out there
as a hypothetical, that's crazy. It is crazy. You think they should have been the constitution for double jeopardy laws when it comes to cases like you think, oh J did it? I do? I do. Yeah, there's some people don't think some people some people don't still. But I mean everything that happened with his blood being at the scene, and the glove and the slow car chase in LA, the slow speed car chase, yes, I do. At the time, I it was you know, I was in Louisiana at
the time. I was in school, and I will tell you that was um, that was a case, a trial, and I wasn't really I wasn't a lawyer then or anything like that. Like I said, I was in school, so in middle school, right, No, I was in college. What yeah, yeah, I was my first year of college. Yes, yes, I'm looking at her age and I just remember being in Louisiana and it was it was the most racially divided time at my university. So they brought in TV
to our student union to watch the verdict. Yeah, to watch the verdict live, and all of the black students gathered around on one side and the white students on the other side, and it was like what you've seen across America when the when the verdict came in, all the black kids cheered, and I thought he was innocent at the time, so I was like, yeah, you know, and people had this. We won for once, yeah, for once, and then later on in life we realized though you
didn't give a damn black people. Wait a minute, and I hadn't really followed the case then, you know, I was in school. So yeah, that was pretty divisive at our at our university. Let's talking about you because I need to know what you die. It is how much water are you drinking? Me? Because you're fifty seven years old, clearly what's happening. I just drink a lot of Fiji water? And is that Fiji? There? You go, there, you go, just finish that. You'll be good in any way. No,
I'm from Louisiana. I eat everything, pork and everything. What is it? I mean, I've had her though, I yeah, just I just I try, I Triangela. I've always just been like a good student and I go to work and I sleep. Myth comes on. Shake that back in my day. I can't have a time or two or I you know, on TV, what's the craziest case you've seen so far? It was a case out of Atlanta. It was a real, like filed case in Atlanta, and a guy who walked into my court looking like a
deacon from church. He had on a suit and in a boudineer and all this stuff. He was suing a young lady. He was probably fifty years old, and he was suing a young lady who was twenty one year old college student because he paid for services sex. Yeah, and she didn't give it to him. And so he found a lawsuit. He got got he wanted his money, he wanted his money back. When I when I got the write up, I said, this can't be real. I mean I must be missing something to this story. This
was alone right, that he's suing for something like that. No, I went out there. No, he's like I paid her. I can't remember now, like two hundred and fifty dollars maybe, So that was the craziest case. Well, A, technically that's a prostitution case and that is illegal. But he did pay for services and he did not get them in trouble. However,
she could get in trouble too. However, there's a doctrine in court we called the doctrine of clean hands, which means when you come into court, you can't sue over an illegal transaction. You can't sue over a bad a drug deal that went bad. You didn't get all the stuff you wanted when you when you when you bought the stuff, So you kind of handle that in the streets like you can't bring it in the court. So
I had to throw it out. But I was just shocked at a not only is it court, but it's also on TV, and he had a daughter her age. It was just I just thought it was crazy. But yeah, that was our that was my first season. I've just never gotten over that, all right. We have more with Faith Jenkins when we come back. Keep a lock as to Breakfast Club, Go Morning Morning. Everybody is DJ n v Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy we all to Breakfast Club.
We have Judge Faith Jenkins in the building. Charlemagne, I'm always interested in how God moves people. Because you said that you weren't even interested in being a judge, I wasn't. So when that seed was planning to what made you be like hmm, Well, because you know, oftentimes I say God's plan for our lives is better than our own because I had my own plan. And when I got this call, I thought that it was a sign that I was supposed to do something bigger than what I
was doing. And you know, they called me and the show wasn't sold or anything like that. They just had this idea and when it happened, and it just goes to show you when you're doing your job and your work, you always want to be doing the best you can
do because you never know who's watching. Always. You never know, even if you hate your job exactly, have no idea who is paying attention that's right, and you have no idea where your colleagues are going to end up next, So you always want to do great work and treat people right. Absolutely. What's your passion overall? Um? At first, I love the law, so anything I do that's law related is great. And I love the show because we
help a lot of people. I mean, we if you watch we have fun, we laugh, we cry, but we also help a lot of people because they come on the show and eight hundred dollars may not be a significant amount to some people, but to some people come on the show, it's all the money they had and they were cheated out of it. So we have people who come on the show who've never been on an airplane before. We fly them out and it's inexperience. My
show is not just about the law. I'm passionate about the law, but we do so much more than that. We help a lot of people. And then beyond that, you know, my speaking engagements that I do now to go and talk to college students and kids like that is something I'm really passionate about because oh, okay, well that's nice. I did, Yeah, I did um the keynote for Women's History Month. A um, where was I I
was in? Was it Tennessee? Everybody? Some people talking about, Well, it's important because I don't remember when I was in school having someone like me come to speak, and so it's so important. I know you all do this all the time, but it's so important for people to see someone like you as a realistic role model black woman and that you can you can do this, and I tell them my story if I can do it. I had no connections. My parents did graduate from college, um,
so we didn't know anybody. I'm from Louisiana. And if I can do this and have this journey that I've had, then you can too. And that's just my message. So I tell people about my story and how I ended up with this show in LA and I feel like I'm just getting started. Now. You are Miss American runner up? Yes about that, Yes you can tell yeah, actually, just consistent and the ways I did It's true. I did not, it is and that hurt. That was so Miss Hawaii.
I said, I'd never say that name again. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. No, everything happens for a reason, right, Well, I had to say that at the time. At the time, it was sucked. I was like, I don't know, I
feel like I should have won. And you know what I said, I never want to have a moment like that in my life again, where I am on stage in front of millions of people and they decide my fate and I have to smile and hugged up in person hug and I was happy I mean, you know, I wasn't a bad sport at all, but I just you know, afterwards, when the cameras went off, tears were just streaming down my faces. I worked so hard and
it's what I wanted at the time. But always say, you know, my mom told me at the time, she said, God has something better for you than Miss America. I was like, well, what is that? You know, because at that time, I was like, well, this is pretty awesome. You know, I want to do this. But as I looked at my journey, because I went right after I was Miss Louisiana, so I went right back to school
and I got my law degree. And as I look at my journey and where I ended up, I couldn't do what I'm doing now without the experience, without going back to school getting my degree. And this is, as my mom said, better than that. In my opinion. Are you doing a trial case and you lose and in front of everybody in the courtroom that happens? No, No, because it happens. I mean, it's just a part of
a part of your job. You don't win every case you have, and and you know, just like in life, you know, you have things that happen and somebody gets the second chance. It must be it was a good day for them. Apparently this is why comes up again courtroom right, guilty of charge. I'll just did you ever want to be a singer? For real? Like sing my talent Miss America? There was my talent one for the singer thank you part as well? I don't see anymore.
I haven't, I haven't liked. I'm sure that's why you lost the whole part. I was good back then. You have to keep the vocal cards worked out. That's the problem. I've ben became a lawyer and I stopped singing. I thought I can't do both of these things. Uh No, I didn't. That was my talent, you know I was. I was pretty good back then. I did win the talent competition. Regina Bell's version of If I Could was
originally done by Nancy Wilson Um. But yeah, I saw you excited on Instagram about the Queens of Court prombo. Do you have a relationship with the other judges, Like did they embrace you or there like a fraternity? Like they keep you on the outside of him. I would love to meet them. I the only other judge I've met I've met Judge Matthis. I think he's so hilarious. He's so funny. He's so funny. I watched him all the time, and I met Judge Mathis and I met
Judge Mabeling Judie. No, but I've been invited over to meet her. I'm still scared of I don't know. He seems a little mean on TV, but I don't think. Yeah, she's probably gonna be really nice when I meet her. And you know, certainly she doesn't see me as any competition. She's like, oh okay, yeah, this means but when they do dumb stuff though, yeah, like when you're you know what times. But she just set the standard like she is, you know, she is the standard. You know, she's the
number one show in daytime TV by far. Absolutely so, as long as Judy's successful, Court will always be around and your name is on the show, that's kind of that's a big deal because it's like people's called the voice Court Judy. Yeah, yeah, that's a big deal. It's pretty good. No, I don't feel pressure who we move
forward to watching it some more. Thank you. It's syndicated, so just check your local listings and follow my my Instagram Judge faith Jenkins, and we post about the show clips of the show, so you can watch some clips on there and then check it out on TV syndicated. I don't know if we ever have a problem, can we come up there and like, you know, maybe we want to sue each other? Um, yeah, I guess you could. But our cap is five thousand dollars, so just tell
you we should take Joe Button on it. Joe I have a feeling. Remember that would be on the air, and he hasn't paid a thousand each, okay for five thousand, Okay, Just so you know, now that I've met all of you, I will still be fair and impartial and judge according to the lass. You will welcome to come on time. We have audio evidence. If somebody says something on the
air that is binding in court. Right, if he says, okay, I'll make this bet with you right now on the air, that's pretty compelling evidence, actually, right, yeah, because we get text messages. I get everything now from you know, as evidence, So that's that's pretty compelling. Well, thank you, Judge Jude faith Man. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club, and everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy we are the Breakfast Club slut, Judge Faith Jenkins for
coming through dropping a clue bomb for her. Fifty seven years old. Doesn't look like that. He might be forty forty one, he's not fifty seven. Well, let's get to the rooms. Let's talk Drake's This is the rumor report with Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Now you should be here in the second. Her flight landed, so she's on the way, So we'll see what happens. Dude's traffic right now. Over the weekend, it seems like a lot
of things were going on with Drake. Now. They shot the video to his record with the Meagles is actually Megos record walk It, Talk It. They had a cameo from Jamie Fox. They shot that over the weekend. Also, Drake released his version of nd rd's lemon a Right. It was a remix. He actually did this Ovo Sound Radio for Rell. Actually did a guest DJ mix and they premiered it. Let's play a snippet of it. I did it high, live it, I live it high. Get it,
y'all really get it. I pull up in a lemonops get the spinning money, three D printing, never had a limit, never been relgious. I just always had opinion. My daddy told me, listen, you better get some money, and I died go to prison. So you see, yeah, I got rich and stay free. We're gonna play the full version in the mix this morning. That's some sound device, you know what I'm saying, As father told him, get some
money instead of prison. Yep, some sound device. Now, last, it seems like Drake is in Wyoming right now and that is the same place Kanye is. And he said he's not just not doing a feature. They believe it's more than that. What's what possibly doing maybe an album together. By the way, why do people act like Kanye West didn't come on to Breakfast Club. What year was that? I don't even remember. Twenty fifteen, about fifteen up twenty fifteen.
And he said this the Wolves saw came from a conversation that me and Drake cad when we was gonna do an album together. And the album is called Wolves. So that's what we might be seeing now so far. The whole I thought that wasn't the whole clip. The whole clip was like this was this is an exclusive I'm giving y'all were doing this album. Jesus Christ played, all yeah, I gotta play the whole thing with the whole thing brief producers didn't put the whole clip, but nothing.
The moral of the story is, Kanye we told us how many years ago that were years, three years ago, three years ago that him and Drake were doing the album called Wolves. Now, also that the artists have been seen in Wyoming, Travis Scott, the Dream, Nah's little Oozy Kid Cutty. So we'll see what this album turns out to be usual ghostwriters Okay, which means he's gonna drop a phenomenal album. Collaborate, this is what they call it. Whatever All right? Now, be Et, in partnership with YouTube
is bringing back Freestyle Friday. You excited? I don't know. I don't know. I don't know how I feel about that. Well, well, this is what they're doing. They're getting a bunch of contendants from all over the country and it's gonna be like a rat battle and then the winner will perform as the opening act for the Beet Experience Annual hip
Hop show at the Staples. And I don't know if I like seeing the rookies freestyle Anum, I don't know if I like seeing the ad which is freestyle, like you gotta be really really really really really good because the ball has been set very high by like the professionals, right, you know what I mean. But they're gonna be picking I guess they're gonna pick somebody from New York, Toronto, London,
Los Angeles. I guess the big major cities. They're gonna pick one person that's dope and then they're gonna have a whoever wins that is gonna be performing in You think about like the roys to five nine freestyle and the my Son and the Black Thought freestyle, Like, you know, I don't. I don't know that that ball is set pretty high. They gotta be some dudes that's still that's spitting like that a close too. I guess, I don't know. They gotta be about balls though. It can't just be
about the song. I want to hear real, real balls. If it's gonna be Freestyle Friday and back they did have some real lyricists on Freestyle Friday. They did back in the day you had a gin and you had the post the post boy post a boy. Um. I's only trying to remember posted. Boy, I feel like I'm missing a I know I'm missing a lot of people, but that was such a long time ago. You know what effort bring it back? Who kis? All right? Nothing and that is your room a report now shout. I'm yes,
we giving that donkey too. We need O. J. Simpson to come to the front of the congregation. We like to have a world with him. Police. Oh boy, all right, we'll give it to OJ when we come back. Don't move. It's the Breakfast Club, go morning. It's don't be a dusty because right now you want some real It's time for Donkey of the day. So if we ever feel I need to be a donkey man with the heat, did she getting I had become donkey of the day
the breakfast Club, bitch, don't here today. From Monday, March nineteenth, goes to a rental. James Simpson, commonly known to the planet, is the negro who got away with double murder. O J. Simpson. I'm at the point in my life where I just want Old J to go away. I want OLDJ to disappear advantage. I want him to get so low that when he dies, we y'all say to ourselves. Damn, I thought O. J. Simpson been dead. I have no idea why America is so obsessed with old J. Simpson, especially
after what we saw last week with that. If I did it special, it's safe to say that JUDI system got it wrong. Happens all the time in America. Okay, as the family and Trayvon Martin. But the same way I don't want to hear from Georgie's mman, I don't want to hear from OJ. They are both two sides of the same sociopathic coin, and I can't believe either
one of them are still alive. Honestly, I thought some you know, white excrements would have taken OJ out by now, and I thought a gang banger who's really about that life would have taken out George SimMan by now. But alas knee has happened yet, and George Zimmerman and O. J. Simpson sadly are still on the planet with us. Now here's the thing I honestly thought, I really thought OJ Simpson was innocent. Back in the day I was in high school. I didn't really know all the intricate details
of the case. I just knew, you know, the Rodney King trial had just happened, and the cops who did Dad got off, and every rapper I enjoyed from LA was talking about how crooked the cops in LA were. So I thought they was just trying to frame OJ because he was black. Now this is before I found out later on in life that OJ Simpson didn't give a damn about being black. In fact, he said, I'm not black. I'm OJ, but I'm not black. I'm yeah.
So I wasn't one of those people who knew OJ was guilty but was still rooting for him to get off because he was black. I really thought he was innocent. And one thing we can all admit now is that those of us who rooted for OJ to get off for whatever reason were absolutely on the wrong side of history. Can you admit that, envy? Yes, yes, Okay, he told you himself last week hypothetically during that did I confess Special Art? If I did it Special Art? Did OJ
do it? Whatever hell it was? He you know, he hypothetically admitted that he did it. And if committing the double murders doesn't convince you that OJ is a psychopath, then him doing an interview detailing what happened when he hypothetically committed the murders should absolutely seal the deal on his psychopathic status. With that said, why do we care with OJ Simpson has to say about anything? Jason point.
The Buffalo News, the hometown paper of the NFL team OJ once played for, they did OJ's first interview since he's been home from prisoner and by the way, I'm glad print journalism is back. But nothing each video and audio nowadays, especially at a time like this. Okay, if if there's video and audio of this, my team couldn't find it. But The Buffalo News asked OJ Simpson about several topics in the story published last Friday, and one of the subjects was on the good brother Colin Kaepernick
dropped on a clue's bomp for Colin Kaepernick. The Buffalo News asked OJ Simpson about Colin Kaepernick kneeling during the national anthem, the protest police brutality. I repeat. The Buffalo News asked OJ Simpson about Colin Kaepernick kneeling during your national anthem, the protest police brutality, and OJ's answer was this, I think Colin made a mistake. I really appreciate what he was trying to say I thought he made a bad choice and attack him the flag. Let's unpacked that
for a second. First of all, a rental, Colin did not attack the flag. Colin peacefully protested the flag, which he has every constitutional right to do, and he was kneeling during the national anthem. The protest police brutalities he attacking the flag would be Colin taking a knife and just violently cutting the flag to stretch. Okay, that would be attacking the flag. That's not what Colin Kaepernick did. OJ. That's what you and Charlie did when y'all killed Nicole
Simpson and Ronald Goldman hypothetically. Okay, Peaceful protests and attacks are two different things. Colin didn't make a mistake. Colin knew exactly what his intentions were and he did exactly what he intended to do. And let's bring light to a situation that needed to have some light on it. Now, if you want to talk mistakes, let's talk about the mistakes the prosecution team made during your murder trial, OJ Simpson. Let's talk about the mistake the jurors made when they
found you not guilty. Hell, let's talk about the mistake the police made by not taking the Cole Simpson's cross for help about your crazy ass? Serious? Okay, how can you a man? How can you, all right, a man who committed a double murder and then wrote a book about it and then did a TV and of you hypothetically confess into it, Tell a man who was out
here protesting police brutality, they made a mistake, right. I don't want to hear O. J. Simpson say someone else has made a mistake when he won't admit to his own. For all the kids out there listening, I don't want to be the moral police. Let's just say, hypothetically, Colin Kaepernick did make a mistake by peacefully protesting the flag hypothetically, of course, right if I, if I had to wait, mistakes kneeling during the national anthem, the protest police brutality
are hypothetically murdering two people? Which mistake hypothetically? Of course? Would you choose? Who would you choose? An't me kneeling? Okay, let's making sure, all right, arentha, James Simpson, shut the f up? Ever, please let him me give O. J. Simpson the biggest hall he ha, he ha, You stupid mother? Are you dumb? Listen, kids, you can learn a lot from your mistakes when you aren't busy denying them. Absolutely, OJ will never learn from this situation, not at all.
It's too busy denying it. There you go. All right, well, thank you for that. Donkey to day. Now when we come back, shoot your shot, all right? If you want to shoot you shot with somebody, maybe a co worker, maybe a friend, maybe an accent doesn't matter. Eight hundred five eight five one. I want to tell us who you want to shoot your shot with? Will do when we come back? It's the breakfast Club. Co morning, the breakfast Club. It's time to shoot your shot. To shoot
your shot with the breakfast Club. You want chance? Don't mess it up? Mess it up, mess it up? Hello? Who's this? Nick? Nick? What's going on? Nick? How much you guys? Are you? Everything is good? Now? What's going on? Man? Who you want to shoot your shot with? Nick? All right? Well, so I'm an uber driver and I actually have this client passenger that I you know, happened to take around a lot and you know, I've taken her home from more a couple of times and it's been really like nice.
You know, we have friendly conversations every time, like we have a really good connection. How would you getting the same person all the time. Well, I guess you know, it's just isn't that it's in my like sort of neighborhood area. I've seen that before. Sometimes when I called it Uba, the same uber comes with it. You could be stalking as well. Sounds a little stalk irish. Are you purposely trying to make sure she's in your Uber?
That wasn't at first, But I mean, I'll admit since since I've met her, you know, it's been a couple of weeks, and I've been trying to stay like within range of her job, you know, hoping that you know, I could maybe like connect with her for a ride because I just enjoy her company. It's been a few weeks, and yeah, I haven't seen her, so I'm just wondering if I can. You probably haven't seen it because you've been weirding her out every time she getting to your Uba.
So she probably calls your number called uber and when you pop up, she switches to somebody else, or maybe she has a ride to wherever she's going or something. Mad negative man shut up, all right, But he has a point though, So do you know if she has a man or anything. Well, I don't know anything about that. I I don't think so. So what you got her address? Won't you just pull up their crib? That? Do? You guys have good conversation when she's in the car, Yeah,
we do. I mean there's no I mean, she seems to really like talking to me, and I mean it's it's just a good connection all around, you know, So I have no reason to believe that she's weirded out. What kind of rating does she give you? Um? She told me that she gives me a full rating every time, five stars. How do you rate her five stars? Of course? You know it? Okay, all right, well okay, wait wait is she always by herself or is there any indication
that she's dating someone? Does she talk on the phone? You could tell a lot about people's phone conversations when they're in the uber, are they Is she calling her man like I miss you, I love you? There's been no indication of that. Um, I haven't heard her talking to anyone. You know, it's just like her going home from home to work and you know she's talking to me the whole time. So okay, I don't I don't think so. So what you're saying is she's pretty easy
to kidnap. Wow, this guy, guy, if you watched too many movies. Man, All right, well we'll call her when we come back. Keep a lift. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning. Everybody is dj V Angela yee shalamagne. Guy. We all the Breakfast Club. But in the middle of shoots you shot, we have Nick on Aline. He's about to call Carly. Let's see how that goes. Hello, Hey Carly. Uh it's Nick nicko uber driver. Nick. Oh, hey Nick, how are you? I'm good? Um, sorry to call you
out of the blue. I just, um, I wanted to reach out to you, and because it's been like a few weeks since I've seen you, and uh, I know, like you know, I've driven you a few times here and there, and uh, I guess I just I wanted to say that I, you know, I really like enjoy your company, and um, you know, I thought maybe like we could hang out sometime. You know, he lived with someone. I do have a boyfriend. Wow, all right, well there
you have next. Sorry the boyfriend. Sorry, Kylie. This is Angela, m V and Charlemagne from the Breakfast Class and Nick was going to do a segment cost you just shot because he has a little crush on you bet, but he decided to call Uberpool instead of the regular Uber and bring us along with him, and uh, he got a shot. Rejected. Seems that in a relationship. Well it's not really rejected. I mean I like his company too.
We have a lot, you know, we joke around. We left and yes, I have a boyfriend, but it's just it's not working out. It's getting old. Don't be a whole. Don't be a whole. Don't do that. Don't do that. Listen to him. I don't mean to be disrespectful, but I mean what I mean, what has your boyfriend done for you lately? I mean I'm a wound driving you around everywhere and she's paying you. You You ain't like you giving her free rod. No, I mean you're You're right
in some way. It's like he's there for home. I'm always by myself. That's why Actually I'm always calling Uber because she's never around to pick me up or take me to where I gotta go. But but he won't do the next man. Will you know what I'm saying? This is like you deserve you deserve a man who's gonna drive you places, oh my god less, and he'll drive you for free from now on. I just I like hanging out with you, so you know you're You're very sweet. I enjoy your company. Also, I mean, man, now,
because I'm getting I would really like to. I mean I just like I said, I'm living with someone. I'm trying to end it now actually, but this maybe give me a reason to speed it up a little more. And I just want you to know that he's gonna have to charge you for this because you're past your weight time. All right, So now he's gonna have to charge you for this. Okay, you could have been just five minutes ago. All right, the leader's running. It is goodness. Well,
I guess we've made a love connection. Ladies. Well, good luck guys. All right, well it's the Breakfast Club to shoot your shot. Rumors of next
