Justice for Mike Brown/  Kamau Bell Interview and more - podcast episode cover

Justice for Mike Brown/ Kamau Bell Interview and more

Apr 27, 20181 hr 25 minEp. 607
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Episode description

Friday 4/27 - Today on the show we had film maker Jason Polluck and mother of Mike Brown Lezley McSpadden stopped by and spoke on the documentary "Stranger Fruit" which revealed newer evidence about the Killing of her son Mike Brown. Also, we were visited by comedian and tv personality Kamau Bell where he spoke about an incident he had at Starbucks, HBCU's, Kanye West and more. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to a guy that sued an instagram model for sexually assaulting his dog. 

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Transcript

Speaker 1

And this is your week of Hallcome Breakfast Club to show you love to hate from the East to the West Coast, DJ Envy, angela Ye, Charlomagne, the ruler show on the planet. This is where I respect this show because this is a voice of society. James in the game. Guys are the coveted morning show. What y'all earned it? Impacting the coach Sure week up in the morning and they stay. Want to hear that Breakfast the world's most

dangerous morning show. Good morning Usa, Joya yo yo yo yo yo yo yo ya ya ya ya 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 Ye's getting her face beat. Charlomagne, the kat pasted up, playing it is Friday, Yes, It's Friday. The weekend is healed, that's righting. Avengeance is out, God damn it. Avengeance, Infinity dropping the clues bombs Avengers Infinity War. And you think it's gonna be bigger than Big pant

Black Panther asking me stupid questions. I don't see. That's because you're not a Marvel Comics fan. In what you what you don't realize there's Avengers Infinity War is the culmination to twelve to thirteen years of Marvel movies. Black Panther was just another movie in a long line of Marvel movies that lot to this story. There's no but there's a lot of people that don't care about Marvel movies that just went to go support Black Panther because

they were black or minority, Like did you see Black Panther? Yeah, I've seen Black Panther. You want to see Avengers? No? Me, neither are you gonna you're Puerto Ricano? But right, did you see Black Panther? Let me we need a Puerto Rican superhero. The problem with the problem what you need girls will always be that y'all think nothing exists or nothing's popping until y'all get involved. This movie is going too gross, well over two billion dollars. I know enough

to know that's gonna be a huge movie. You think it would be bigger than Black Panthers, yea, every other Avenges has already been bigger than Black Panther. White guy in the room, you know he didn't. Did you see Black Panther? No? Oh my goodness. Marvel. Marvel has like four to five movies that have done over a billion dollars. Two of them are the other Avengers movies, and one his Iron Man three and then as Black Panther and oh and Captain America went the Soldier. So yes, shut up,

let us Marvel fans have this. Enjoy, have fun. Enjoy? Are you gonna wear a constantly? Go see it today? No, I'm not going to see it the day because I have to having an event at a school this afternoon. But I will be going to see it tomorrow. Okay, yes, all right? Will you enjoy? Absolutely? All right now, to be honest with you, being the work on time is mad over rated. Be you know what, it's kind of funny. I got here. I was like Charlomann head. He was like, yeah,

he was actually here early, which was surprising. Mad overrated, Like, you know, we need to rely. We should just start to show at six. So five so far is a nice time to start to show. You know what the worst is if you are actually staying somewhere that's closer

to work. Like when there's been situations where the weather was about to be bad, it's snowstorm and they put us in a hotel, right across the street, so we don't miss work and then you really end up being late because you think you have extra time and then you push it to the limit. Let's just start off with a gospel song and start the show in the morning. You know what I'm saying. Get everybody's spirits righting the six or five we start the ratchingness. That's what I

think we should know. We got to be here on time. And this morning U Mike Brown's mom will be joining us. Leslie should be joining us. Also Jason Pollock. They have a new is it a documentary? The documentary about Ranger Fruit what happens? And Ferguson with Mike Brown and also comedian Come Out Bell will be joining w Camal bells a new show. We're not his new show, but season three of his show United Shades of America starts this Sunday,

Wkamal Bell. That's right, but your dead man's name this morning should come out Bell, He added to w great show. That's his name, be great show, great book. He has I read his book about a year ago. All right, all right, you skip the show, crack the front page news what siksby? The verdict is in and we'll tell you all about it. Bill, y'all just die on y'all right now, you just can't die offside. You just can't doctor if the after grin reap of check? Please, hey Green,

can you bring your check? All right? Front Page News is next to the Breakfast Club. Com on it morning. Everybody is dj N v Angela E. Charlemagne the guy. We all the breakfast club. Let's get in some front Page News. Start off with sports. The Bucks beat the Celtics last night ninety seven eighty six, forcing a game seven. The Raptors play the Wizards, Cats play the Paces, and Utah play the Thunder. Now I can't believe that the series is three three with the Milwaukee and the Celtics

in the books, Mica. Celtics have so many players out, yeah dah, now they still hold it on. And our last night was the NFL Draft. The Browns had the first pick. They picked up a quarterback, and the Giants had a second pick. We picked up a running back. Yeah Barkley, yo, got yeah. Now let's talk about Bill Cosby. Well, Bill Cosby has been found guilty on all three counts of aggravated indecent assault. That was for drugging and molesting

Area Constant two thousand and four at his home. He is facing a maximum of ten years in prison for each one of those charges, aka life for Bill Cosby. Now Here is Lelie Bernard one of the victims. It became evident to me that the justice system is light years behind modern culture. But today this jury has shown what the mean Too movement has saying is that women are worthy of being believed. It is not just a victory for the sixty two of us publicly known Cosby

survivors whom Gloria Allred has helped give a voice. It is also a victory for womanhood and it is a victory for all sexual assault survivors. I've been saying for three years that Bill Cosby should just die. I mean yo, just to ask the grim rifle for the check please all right. Another one of his accuser has made this statement.

Janice Baker Kenney is her name, and she said, I'm overwhelmed with joy, relief and gratitude, joy that finally us just has been served, relief that the years of this toxic chain of silence has been broken and we can now move forward with our heads health high as survivors and not victim. What is Bill Cosby sticking around for man? This is when this this is when sometimes you got to die just in the Nicoti. I mean, you're right, But I got a couple of questions, like one, is

there an appeal because the first one was deadlocked? So this is the second one. Can he appeal at or is it just it's over as a wrap in the second? I have no idea. Do you still support the Cosby Show? Still still watch the Cosby Show because we don't. We don't mess with all Kelly because all Kelly's a pedophile, but the Cosby because Kelly is Bill Cosby. Is the story of Heathcliff Huxtable should have been called the show by the way, all right. The story is about Heathcliff

Hustable in his fictional family. Yes, I will still watch The Heathcliff Show, positive black families. Yes, I will still watch Different World. Yes, I will still watch Fat Albert in the game. Absolutely only yellow putting pops because they're too high in sugar and I don't think he have a tip does in the one anymore anyway, But it doesn't matter. Yes, I was still watching The Cobby Show. Okay, all right, And there was heartbreaking video making the rounds

yesterday of former NFL defensive back Desmond Marrow. He was grabbed by the police and slam to the ground. I know you guys had to have seen it. No, I didn't because people were sending it to me. I'm like, you'll stop sending me stuff like this, Okay, I'm already triggered by all the other police brutality that I see in this country. I don't he posted it. He posted it himself as well, with the whole description of what happened, and here's some of what went down. I'm not even

fighting guy, I'm not even doing us. Unbelievable. I don't even it's unbelievable. Threw him on his face, and it looked like he went well. Clearly he posted the video for it to go viral so that people could see him. No, No, I didn't. I'm not knocking him for that. I'm just saying what I'm not watching. Okay, I'm not doing it.

I'm not doing that to myself. He said that the officers tried to say he had a gun, and they don't show what happened before they attacked him and had him on the ground where you couldn't breathe it and it looks like he passed out at one point, he said. Officer said he had a gun in his pocket, but it was only a cell phone. He said the police knocked his teeth out, slammed him on his head, and

choked him until he was unconscious. He also suffered a shoulder strain and a shoulder strain and a concussion, and he said it was terrifyingly cooperating for the officers, zero resistance. He said he thought he was going to die. I'm just not a glutton for punishment. Man. I can't just continue to put stuff like that in my spirit, and they can't do it, Like something has to happen like this.

This can't continue to go on. Man. The way they threw him on his face like they said it was, it was two three officers there at the time, and one of them is choking him. I'm looking at it like this is so disrespectful. I just can't imagine that's my son, or my dad or me. You won five minutes with every cop alone, like like ah, and you know, and exactly, and that feeling you have right there is exactly why I don't watch videos because I don't have

the answers. Well, it's important too, in order to be able to discuss the story, to see what the story is. Because, by the way, how would you even know what happened if you didn't watch it. But see, this is what you don't realize the angel LEI or maybe you do, but you're not acknowledging it. This is the same story over and over all the time. Well, because he posited himself and wanted people to see it, I watched it, robbing everybody that that this happens to that doesn't take it,

you know, happing to stuff and clark whatever. When you talk to people like Leslie and we talk to people like Leslie mc spatting Mike Brown mom and she talks about how people move on too fast. They just hashtag and j others for Mike Brown. Now they move on to something else, like it happens all the time, over and over. I can't be a glutton for point of it's important to not getting numb to those things and to still continue to speak out about it. All right, guys,

that's front page news. Get it off your chests. Eight on drip five eight five one oh five one. If you're upset, you need to vent hit us up right now, or maybe you want to spread some positivity on this Friday. You can tell us why you blessed as well as the Breakfast Club. Come morning, the Breakfast Club, pick up the mother mother phone and down this is you're trying to get it off your chat. Noether you're mad or black, we want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club,

but you better have the same energy. Allow who's this yo? Just branding from the Metro run What's up? Broke? What's happening? ATO three? All day? And now look man, it's I'm mad because it's like I'm tired of constantly to the black people you get abused by the cops. What bothers me about it? To me as a black person, I just feel like not to say that some of the rallies and the marches and protests and stuff are fake.

When some of the stuff happens, I just feel like the same fervor that are people attacked it with in nineteen sixty five, I don't think that same fervor is out on some of these streets that people are protesting and marching on. In twenty fifteen people too quick to make things a hashtag. This stuff can't keep happening. People can't be getting shot. And then we move on two weeks later, and then, like Angela said, become kind of become numb to it. We can't. I mean, we gotta,

we gotta keep attacking it. But it just has to be real to me, has to be considered and asked to be forever. Nothing that can ever stopped us. I'm gonna be honest with you, man, there's nothing that makes me feel more helpless than when I see it encounters with the police. Because you damned if you do damned if you don't, like a regular civilian runs up on me like that. You can defend yourself anyway you see fit. You can't do that with police. Not at what the

hell we supposed to do? I don't know. Hello, who's this queen? God d n B. This friend from Milwaukee, Wisconsin checking in, what's your what's happening? It looks like it was cracking in Milwaukee last night. Morning, Good morning, my breakfast. Definitely he heard Greek freaky think you're talking about a point? Looking at Reggie Brown from Milwaukee, and he's he's got a lot of pictures that everybody was out there last night. What's up, bro, get it off

her chests. Man, Well I got three points maybe fold to hit on real quick. I want to say, welcome back easy. The fellow state did all right, but the Queen always got to come back home to get everybody back and formation. That's one number two. What I want to say is it is very expensive being a single person out here. I run through a lot of dopeying single and brother envy. I would like you to congratulate me, brother, because I did get some poom poom last weekend. I

was it a real person or what was it a doll? Definitely, definitely a doll. Yeah, it was a young lady. I had to pay for it, young lady only young? What age? It was? Twenty seven? Oh? You paid for it? What's the price of poom forum in Milwaukee nowadays? I had to pay a hundred dollars, Sir, I didn't want he ain't here. Well, you get what you paid. You get what you paid for, man, So call me when you

start getting that herpes medication. Well you know at this stage of the game, and see, yeah, you gotta make it happen. Somehow. My great grandma Clyde always tell me, baby, sometimes you gotta pay the play. I didn't understand what she talked about back then. I thought she had all times. Let me tell you some I can guarantee your grandma charge more than a hundred dollars. Okay, I'll stop it. Well, you had that red light on back in the day. Health to shollar, and my next thing. I want her

to have a blessed weekend. But I want to also safe never forget all these cracker ass crackers forever. Don't never right my crack ass crackers he means racist biggots. Okay, Hello, who's this? My name is Real, Hey, far Real, get it off at. I just want to speak about how Browdley Beach Police out here. You know that most of the team is all white, and I went through a situation like that before, and about three of them actually

try to go in real bad on me. Because I'm a big brother, I was able to stand up and hold my own, but they turned their dogs loose and actually beat me up pretty bad. So you know, I actually hold on to it. As one of you guys are staying, I let it go because I couldn't harbor too much of that. I had to just move on with my life. You know. After the incident, I had to go to the emergency room and get a lot of stitches, and there's no one to speak up for us.

I didn't videotape that. Nobody videotaped it. Nobody was around. I took the all and kept it moving. Wow, there's nothing ever happened. They're just still out here being cops. Sorry for you, bro, brutalizing our people exactly, but educate people. You know, you just follow along, take their orders. But still, you know, you take the orders because of who they are. They still want to go along and push the issue that still do what they want to do. That's what

I'm saying. Man, it makes you fit. It makes you feel so helpless because our natural instincts and self preservation. But when you're in those situations with the police officers, you don't know what to do. Like, you can't fight back, you can't defend yourself with it. Damn if you do, Damn if you don't, get it off your chests. Eight hundred five eight five one h five one Hit us up Now It's the Breakfast Club, Go morning, the Breakfast club. Wake up, wake up, wake y'all. Your time to get

it off your chest with your man or blass. We want to hear from you on a breakfast club. Hello, who's this so from Miami? What's up? Broke it off your chest? I want to feel blessed this morning. I want to give a shout out to my beautiful wife. She started to have business about a year ago and she bol Bowman Businesses cool Man. Congratulations to her. What's her name? You can check out the page next time you're going over vacations underscore. Here a boy rich all right? Brother? Hello?

Who's that? Just Rick from Brooklyn? Yeah. I want to talk about the situation just now about the NFL, the ground um and Charloman comments and sit uh Charloman when a couple of days I'm actually getting through to you guys. And I wanted to really post to Charloman about the

influence that he has a person on the radio. You got that number one simply for a radio show in the morning, and people listen to you and when you and you're not a punishment and I mean it's kind of moving out of you because it makes you feel like you're sticking ahead and understand your your your agility, and you're detecting what's going on. Every stud you got that feeling in his chest, like because he wanted to

shoot the field one with the every cop. That's just feeling that you need to make a pain because you're saying that, shut up, man, already feel I already feel that way. Brother. I don't need to see another video. I feel that way already. That's my point. You need to rewind ma man, I need to see every one so we continue to have to feel it. It's what makes you think that feeling is gonna go away. I'm a black man in America, Serve I go to therapy

for that kind of anxiety. Everybody could afford der I was like you said that everybody could afford dirf like to be going to every Friday to the surface, the talk about that we're feeling with it every three. When you say stuff like that, you sound like you're a frestated Kanye who was checking up because it's over somewhere. Oh God, everything is Kanye. And now at the time you got this lay in the test, it's not happening you every day, and you can I can ask you

can ask you a question. Let me ask your question, sir, head man, if you know it stove is hot, how many times you gotta put your hand on that stove to know it's hot? Every time? All right, man, have a blessed day, Have a good morning, Have a good morning, sir. Alright, have a good morning. Hello. Who's this? What's good? Brothers? Just JV from Charles? All right, j A four to three? What's happening? What's good? Brother? Hey? I got a question

many a situation man. Like what he said though, Like he had a point though, like why can't somebody had it on the FID and that and that be it? And on you? Why you gotta like down grade somebody and talk down on him man for what he think. Well, you know, freedom is peace, freedom of thought, freedom of expression, works of ways. You can have your opinion, but I can also tell you that your opinion is stupid. Yeah, yeah, I'll feel you on that. But like I just feel

like so many people talking down on them. Man. If the man think like that, little thing like that, I mean, we can't stop him from thinking however he wants to think, but you can also express that you are opposed to how he thinks. We can have opinions exactly. Whynot? You know, we don't have to agree. We could agree that people who have been so affected by things that Donald Trump have done in policies that he's put into place, they feel strongly about it. They want to express how much

they disagree. Yeah, I feel that, but you know, like some people, they just don't to breathe like, what do you say? I don't reree one hundred percent what everybody say. I'm the same way. I don't know nobody agree too. But if your family got deported, or your father or your child, and it's all because of the policies Donald Trump has put into place, you probably more strongly disagree. And that's why. That is why a lot of people don't like to express their opinion because they're afraid of

people disagree with him. That's why I don't trust people who tell me everything I want to hear. Those politically correct people a trash man, you know what. I feel like it's more black people that says scared to express they being you know what I mean. That's why I like, I'm not saying on the Trump I would say, well, that's definitely not my opinion. I don't know if there's a I don't know about that one. I'm thinking a lot of black people without the Port Trump. But it

is some black people out the Port Trump. But nah, I wouldn't say a lot. All right, get it off your chests eight ondred five A five one oh five one Ye. We got rumors on the way. Yes, and Callice has said some things about Nas, her ex husband, that we've never heard before. So I'll give you the details of what she says happened in her relationship. All right, we'll get into all that when we come back. Keep it locked. As to Breakfast Club, Come morning, the Breakfast Club. Morning.

Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Y'all. Happy Friday, Happy Friday. Let's get to the room. As let's talk Calice. It's about is the rumor report. Angela Yee found the Breakfast Club. So Calice did an interview with Hollywood Unlocked, and he had she had a lot of things to say about her ex has been Nas. Now. They got married in two thousand and three and their divorce was finalized in

two ten. And she said in their relationship because when they got together, she was only twenty two years old. There were a lot of highs and lows. Here's what she said. We had like really intense highs and really intense lows, and intense high would be like money was rolling in. We were like we were young too, Like I was twenty two when I met him, I was

a baby. So like we were drinking too much, smoking too much, we were spending too much, I mean, and like we were we lived hard, you know, and so because of that, like when that comes down, it goes really low, Like so it's hard, you know, because there's no balance, there's no like normalcy, all right. She goes on to say that she put up with a lot of behavior that was unacceptable. What was that unacceptable behavior? Well, listen here, I didn't file for divorce because he cheated.

He'd been cheating for two years and I knew that it was because on top of all the other stuff, then you're going to cheat. It was really toxic. And I was pregnant, you know, seven months pregnant. I was terrified. I was like, I cannot bring a person into this. This is a freaking mess, Like this is a mess, and I can't control this. I gotta get out while you're pregnant. Yeah, I followed for divorce in April and

Night was born in July. So what's the mess? We made a toxic well, as she goes on to talk about when they were drinking, how they would physically fight. Did he hit me? Did I hit him back? It was because there he would block out. He would drink too much. He drank way too much. He will never admit it, and so a lot of the stuff he may not remember. You know. There have been times when like literally we would have the worst night ever, like and we would wake up the next day it's like

it never happened. Was he ever remorseful? He bought gifts. So I guess what she's saying is on top of the cheating, it was all of these things as well. And she also discusses how she didn't say anything about it, and when she saw the pictures of Rihanna, how it's struck a chord in her. Something reminded me of Rihanna. The only way I can describe it was like double jeps, Like I felt like do I chump in? Like do I say it? Because I had bruises all over my

body at that time. Seeing her the way she looked and then looking at myself. I was embarrassed for me. It was kind of like, you're gonna just let this go. You're not gonna say anything. We were married, we weren't dating. I didn't say anything because I wanted things to work, and because I was delusional, and because I thought that like I could like love past this. Yikes. Well I was Calissa and Hollywood unlocked. So check out the whole

interview if you want to hear everything. So she had to say, as radio personalities, you don't have to have an opinion on that, right, No, Yeah, I mean, because

there's three sides every story, absolutely all right. Now, Sierra is discussing Future and saying that he just is a no show for visits about thirty seven percent of the time with young Future, and she also says that when he does spend time, usually Future ends up being with the grandmother or great grandmother instead of with his dad, and that she really gets to face time with her

son when he's gone. And he also has health issues that are even worse because he's been traveling across country, So she doesn't think that it's a good idea the way they have their travel schedule right now, and that he's constantly exhausted due to the travel and has had emotional breakdowns while at school. So what Sierra wants to do is go to mediation and hammer out a better schedule because her son is having all these health issues and he's traveling too much. So I don't get the

point of the story. What was that about. Well, she's these documents and from her going to court and saying that she's taking Future to court and these are the issues that she's having with Future raising their son's Future, is not spending enough time with the son. I remember at one point she was keeping the sun from Future once in the landing. He's in Seattle, So the flying back and forth. He's saying that her son can't take it, and she's saying it's not future anyway. He's coming to

see the grandma, so let's do another schedule. You know, he's thinking that my son's going to spend time with his dad, but he's actually not there and the grandmother's taking care of her. Got you, okay? All right, I'm Angela Yee And that is your rumor report, right, thank you, miss ye. Now, when we come back, we have Leslie mcspadden joining us. That's Mike Brown's mom and Jason Pollock. Now they have a new documentary and it's all about what happened that night and that day and leading up

to it and leading up after it and happened. Just listen, and it gives you more of a viewpoint of who Mike Brown was because I know they tried to paint him as some bad hid that was a quote unquote thug. I could only watch like fifteen minutes at that documentary. Stuff gives you trauma. It's a good article on Huffington Post about how watching those police videos and stuff gives you trauma. I can't I can't watch that. I had to stop it in fifteen minutes, Like I can't take

this anyways. Breakfast Clubal Morning Morning, everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne, the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got some special guests in the building, Leslie mcspadden, which is Mike Brown's mom, and director Jason Pollock. Now, this documentary made me tear. I couldn't watch the whole thing last night. Wow, it was it was that that strongest.

I don't even think I got twenty minutes in. Now you know, Eavy express how difficult it is for a to even watch this story, how difficult it is to keep telling this story. It's very difficult. It's difficult to relive this story every day that Ferguson will not hold these people accountable for what they what they've done, and what they continue to do. So it's very difficult. I think you have to though, and I know it's hard because there's so many facts and so many things that

we didn't know. You know, all we heard was, you know, Mike Brown charged the police and the police shot. But just seeing the detailed and so many witnesses, and I still can't understand how how they want to say got off because it was so many people that said, I seen this, I've seen his hands up, the cop ran past me, the cop shot him. It kept like, you know, making the statement right and never having even submitted a yeah.

And they didn't write a police report until they were forced to, and then they produced a document that was basically blank. It's a blank is incident report. However, during the fake alleged robbery, and Mike didn't even rob the store, now we know that, but during that the least report is a full page, so they were able to think of all these words right for the the fake robbery to frame that, but then when they kill him in the middle of the street, it's a blank page. They

kept right, they did. They change the evidence a lot. And I'm going to break some news right now. So you talk about the charge. What has been totally unreported is that there is physical evidence at the scene that Michael didn't charge. What Bob McCullough Mayonnaise is trying to do is use fake witness testimony that isn't really reliable to prove that. But the physical evidence defeats witness testimony in the court of law. I thought, so here it is.

There's an audio tape of the shooting. It's six point three seconds from the first bullet to the last bullet, so we know that the whole event was six point three seconds. There's blood behind Michael's body on the street in the report. This is all like New York Times. You can look all this upright, twenty one feet and seven inches, So for the first time, we're gonna do this math together. Twenty one feet and seven inches six point three seconds means he moved forward at one mile

per hour approximately. That's it. He didn't charge him. That's Darren's entire argument that he had to kill him because he was being charged at Michael didn't charge Darren. He moved approximately one mile an hour, and the physical evidence

showed it, and it was completely covered up. Even if you're being charged at twenty one ft away, that's a long way away, like you know what I mean, Like I don't seem like you're an immediate danger, right, But he only moved forward that in six point three seconds. If you charged twenty one feet you could get there and probably about a half a second. That's after being shot. One think about it. Yeah, he was stumbling forward, dying, and he was falling forward and he got shot in

the top. He wasn't standing, He was on his knees at that point and he was falling forward with a broken clavical bone and he shot my son in the happen and he came out that he was never scared for his life, Darren Wilson. He ran after my son. He pursued him. He was shooting like a cowboy between two apartment buildings that hold over a hundred people, including children, ride their bikes. They didn't even count all the bullets. They did a very poor job of this the game.

But why you know, because I'm watching it and you know it was too young boys. There was two young men out there that day. Why your son over the other kid? You know what? What was his Why why my son at all? All this training that they're claiming to have and that he said kicked in, we saw none of it. It always pissed me off because they put out that corner store video to surveilance from the store and acted like he robbed the store, as if that warranted him being gunned down in the middle of

the street. Yes, but in addition to all of that, what was important about watching this documentary is seeing all the great things that he was doing, and seeing what he was doing in school, and hearing from his family. Because sometimes they try to make somebody just seem like a monster. And the way the press did that in the media and the police officers but they put out made it seem like he was a scared kid, he

was a bad kid, he was doing bad things. But then you get to see what he was really doing in real life, and that's important. That's what I'm saying. How did that make y'all feel like when he was trying to paint him like that, I knew the truth

and I still know the truth to this day. And that's where my book came into play, to share who my son was over those eighteen years and not to give you all a different perspective from this eighteen second clip that they showed, which had another video attached to it that no one had ever seen until Jason put the video out. I had a meeting with the governor and he told me he tried to stop them from showing the video. This is the governor. These were his

words to me. He said that if there was video when he was eighteen, he wouldn't be governor, meaning and say that at eighteen years of age, still a kid, your mind thinks in a different way, and that people do things and they make mistakes that later on in life you regret or you feel story of your bounty and say, when I was younger, dumb, I did X y Z. So that was his purpose for saying it, because him himself did not feel that what happened on

can't feel should have happened, what happened to all the witnesses because it was I mean it was three witnesses that y'all talked about. Then it was a construction. Five

witnesses in the film. So what happened Like, Yeah, So basically Bob Mayo uh covered up all those witnesses, and the prosecutor of Saint Louis County very carefully took all the witnesses that were in line with Michael and he picked them apart and figured out a way to use the physical evidence at the scene to say, your version of events doesn't match up with the physical evidence, so we can't use it. Thirteen witnesses agreed with Dorian in the street. He threw them all out. Anyone that agreed

with Darren's. He cherry picked pieces of theirs, even though parts of theirs also were against the physical evidence. Three people, three people right on being a witness who completely lie.

It's it's just a huge, massive cover up that they needed to perpetrate on America in twenty fourteen because they need to keep Mike Brown's name down, because they don't want to say that everything that happened after Mike Brown is a valuable They want to say, oh, it started because of a thug, It started because of a rob or all this stuff. Look at them all on the street.

They're so silly. No, Mike Brown was an angel, and he was a great guy, and he had just graduated high school and all of that was a lie, and it's still a lie to this day. That's why it's so important that we uncover Justice from Michael Brown because that was the first hashtag in twenty fourteen, before Ferguson,

before all the other hashtags. But we lost Justice from Michael Brown, and the Ferguson report came out, and the Justice from Michael Brown before came out, and everyone talks about the Ferguson Report and no one talks about Mike anymore. And that's when we started making this movie because I realized down there that there were all these films going on, but nobody was working on the Mike Brown case anymore. We have more with Leslie mcspadden and Jason Pollock when

we come back, Don't Move. It's the Breakfast Club, Go Morning, The Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy angela Yee shallown guy. We all the Breakfast Club. We have Jason Pollock, director of Strange Food, and also Mike Brown's mom, Leslie mcspadden in the building. Ye. So, Jason, what's your personnel connection that made you want to get involved in telling the story. I had been working in schools that the education community calls dropout factories prior to Ferguson for three years.

Dropout factories are school with a fifty to sixty percent dropout rate. There are tons of these in America. And so I was working with all these kids in these credit catch up rooms, which is in the film, and they were the best kids. If you're in a dropout factory and you drop out, but then you go back to try to graduate high school, you're a rock star. You have so much thick skin because some complex stuff happened to you. So I found out Mike was in

that room, and he was he had just graduated. And then I saw the picture that they were painting of him, and I just knew it was a lie because I had been working for years with all these students. Like, if you're in that room, there's no way you're robbin stores at night, There's no way you're doing any of that. There's no way you would charge a cop after you are shots. We would go for a cops gun. None of it made any sense. And all of it is a lie. Like to go back to the convenience store tape.

They didn't show us the full tape. There was a whole tape the night before of Mike making what seemed to be a trade with the store and then going back the next day to get cigarella, And we put that out last year for the first time. They covered that tape up for three years. They willingly gave us the CD from the store, the people in the store. It was never put of any of the evidence. They never turned it over to Saint Louis County fergus seeing

any of the lawyers. They just gave us personally the CD. Say here, here you go what the owner of the store saying about that day. The stores never called. The store never called nine on one. The nine on one call was made from a woman in the store who didn't know what she was seeing. To this day, the store is never called nine to one on Michael Brown because they know, in my opinion, they know what it was, and to this day they still don't want to just

admit what it was. It's interesting how you said everybody kind of like moved on. But I wonder about that because other other things happen like other police shootings than it's like every day it's a new hashtag. Yeah, Freddy Gray,

Walter Scott. I mean it's intense. But if we don't what I want to do with this is showed that if we don't actually unravel these cases, if we just keep going to the streets and then losing, and then go into the streets and losing, like it takes it took me four years to unravel this case, that's what it takes to do these cases. But we need someone assigned to each of these hashtags now so that we turn justice, because cops need to know that if they shoot and kill us that they're gonna go to jail.

And right now they know they're not going to go to jail. As soon as you said that, I was like, they don't know, they don't know at all. In fact, they know that the system is going to protect them at all costs. How did that change though? Because we get justice for one, we get justice for Mike, we show that Darren is a criminal, and the America starts realizing, oh, these guys are criminals. So what can happen now? If anything? Legally, there is a lot of new evidences. Never charge first,

we need to get him charged. I thought they like they wrote it off his like they declined to indict. Yeah, correct, that's that was the first thing from Barba Color. The second was they wouldn't bring him up on any charges because he said the whole thing about the physical evidence. We hired so many people to come out in that

were specialists and professionals. And this is what the film is showing you that they did a lousy, lazy job of investigating because they were never going to indict him, persecute, prosecute him at all. It wasn't even the thought of them, you know, in their minds. So hopefully we can get a real he's still the officer thom No, No, what happened? What happens to people like that? They're going he's living. He's living twenty five minutes away right now, Yes, having barbecues.

And imagine what that's like to be the mother of your son knowing that the killer of your child is having barbecues twenty five minutes away from you every day and she has to walk drive by that store and drive down Canfield. I mean, the pain that she is going through. I cannot imagine and she bears this for all of us. She doesn't have to be here today, this is this is hard for her to discuss this. She's here for us so that we can try to

help the world understand what happened. How do you? How do you feel about I don't even want to say his name, but Darren Wilson. Oh. I know people tell me all the time I have to forgive so that I can move forward. But this isn't someone ever supported my life that I love and cared about, you know, talk about it. I don't have to forgive him. Forgiveness is overrated. I say that all the time. I'm perfectly fine. Fan, somebody, thank you, And as wee how hard is it for

you to live there still? And even for the witnesses that came forward, because I'm sure the police department gives I know they're known to give people a hard time. You know, I've never lived in Ferguson, where I was saying was about three minutes away from the scene of what happened. I recently moved, and when I recently moved, I found out that he was twenty five minutes away from me. I've been very disturbed since finding that out. I will rise above this and I'm going to look

them in the face every day. If I'm elected to city council and I'm going to run, and when I get back home, that's the first thing on my agenda. And that's the only way. I'm dealing with it in a spiritual way, and I'm letting God be my God. I lean into him more every day. I've been giving so many false promises, a boy, men, you know, people here and there and saying I'm going to get justice, and we see what has happened a lot of those

people have walked away from their position since then. I ended up with an old, white, seventy two year old judge because two black judges in Saint Louis refused themself from the case. I'm really really hard, giving a really hard time, you know, and but God brought me to it and he's going to bring me through it. I've been strong up until this point. I've been a strong person my whole life. The recused itself from the case.

They scared away. Man. Why I did think, you know, they asked me to be on a pan with these very same women in May of last year, and I think they were a little nervous about what I may say to them because they wanted my remarks before I entered the panel. Wow, so I relined it. I declined it. I'm sorry, and I don't know why they did that, because we speak education and black households very strongly for reasons like this, for when times like this happened, that

we can be there for one another. I mean, that's the whole point I thought. I thought the whole point was that I looked like us. I have been sent us in those courtrooms and the fact that when we have that opportunity, they don't, They don't want to stand up like scared. They scared the set day matter. So they left you, what are your plan for Ferguson if

you do make city council. I just want to show them how it looks to be completely affected and you nothing happens afterwards and their mental illness is it's real when something like this happens to you. And why does he get all the protection and we get absolutely nothing.

My lawyers walked in out with the best presentation and they came back and they offered us money and at that point, being down to our third strike and not winning anything in the beginning, knowing that we would walk into this court room and look at the same jurors that decided not to indic they wanted to take the settlement.

So with that settlement, I'm going back and fighting again, and I just want to show them what change should look like for a community who has been shook into the court and you all didn't come back and try to even put a band aid on it. And you might as well get the money, I mean the money like you said it and enables you to continue to fight legal stuff. Course, yes, and some of the best lawyers.

Let me just say something about the money though. These settlement fees, I think I call them lynching fees because that's all it is. There's no price you can put on these lives that doesn't change a damn thing. And this is just the state paying off families for state sanctioned murder because there's no justice their lynching fees. All right. We have more with Mike Brown's mom, Leslie mcspatten and Jason Pollock. The directors don't move is the Breakfast Ule

Morning Toning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne, the guy. We are the Breakfast Club we have Jason Pollock directed in the building. Also Leslie mcspadden, which is Mike Brown's mom. Chute. Jason, what's your background? So? I started my career working for Michael Moore. I made Fahrenheit nine eleven. I founded the Traverse City Film Festival with him. Also, just shout out

to Zilla Valentine for hooking this up. I really and I've been in the industry since two thousand and three, so you know, it's like there's no such thing as overnight success, right, I've been doing this for sixteen years. I left Michael in two thousand and six. I directed a first My first feature documentary is called The Youngest Candidate.

It's about teenagers that run for office in America. I profiled non white men running for office in the age of Obama and used that as a tool to get the youth vote out with Rock the Vote in two thousand and seven two thousand and eight in the Rise

of Obama. And then throughout his career, I was working in schools like I was saying, and I run a creative agency, helped celebrities with their digital media strategies and all that stuff, and was developing my next documentaries When Ferguson happened and I basically had all these clients, I was so mad, and I felt very alone as a white man being mad. Nobody around me even got it, and I was like, are you kidding me? This is like the defining moment of our generation right now? What

did they say when you bring it up? I've lost a lot of friends from this, from from well, yeah, not friends like a white acquaintances Like I make them all feel very uncomfortable now. They don't want to hear me talk the way I talked now, but like, I don't have any time for that, and we have a lot of work to do over here. So basically I put my stuff in storage. I moved to Ferguson. I didn't know what I was going to do as a

white man. I was not going there with a Christopher Columbus type attitude on the white Horse to save the day. I was quiet, I was an ally. I was part of the community. I was helping and listening, And about eight months in I realized, you know what, no one's doing anything about the Mike Brown case, and I can take that lane and and people won't feel like I'm taking up space or competing with something else, basically, So I put together this proposal for the family, and I

pitched it to Leslie and she signed on. In May of twenty fifteen, she gave me the rights to produce the movie seem VeryE Was it hard for you to accept Jason Leslie at first when he came to you, because I'm sure it's hard to trust people, especially you had a lot of people coming at you with different things.

Who was this colonizer? Yeah, hell yeah, I get it. Um, you know, Jason was one of the only persons to actually come to me with paperwork in a full layout of what he wanted to do and how he wanted to help. There's a lot of people out here who have done things and they do not have my permission. They didn't and they don't. So I appreciate Jason for what he was doing. I was meeting Beyonce, Um, it was wonderful. I couldn't take it all in at the moment because I was still very vulnerable and kind of

broken all over the place. But um, she's a great person. She comes to you just like a sister, like you've been knowing her for a long time. And so was jay Z swissby Celicia Keys and all the other people who have come to show me some love and share some light and let me know that I can do this, and you know they're there to support me. We look forward to supporting you know, anything you need when when it's time to run, you come back up in absolutely help you as much. We got to get Stranger Fruit

to number one on iTunes for Mike Brown. I donated. I donated most of the profits to the family already, so if the film goes super viral, it will help the family and bring justice to Michael Brown. That is the vehicle of Stranger Fruit. But more people, as many people as possible to see it. Ye want to watch. I ain't get so mad when I watch them first. It's the whole thing is bad. But we need to know what happened because it need to know because it's

not isolated incidents no more. You know, you see Stephan Clark, it's always something, always the same model too. This film shows you the whole model of how they do it, and it's the same thing every single time. Oh, I do want to ask you, Jason, like, how can more white people use their privilege to combat prejudice? Yeah, don't just say, oh, I know white privileges. Oh oh, I'm

so woke. You're not woke. You're woke if you go out and you work hard in the community with your hands and your brain and your mind, and you shut up and you listen and you assist the people that know what they're doing, and you're not woke just because you know what the word white privilege is. You have to use your white privilege to break down white supremacy in an aggressive way. And I'm trying to do that

every second of the day right now. And I'm trying to lead by example because you know what, I'm like, point oh oh oh, one percent of the society right now. And that's why I'm so upset about what Kanye West is doing. Because Kanye West is allowing little white teenagers who don't know who are calling each other the N word in high school, to think that's okay because Kanye likes Donald Trump. And we're out here trying to say, no,

that's not right. And I see Michael Brown, and just from Michael Rown directly connected to the ignorance that's happening right now because all those little white kids with their yeazy's on. They think that Michael robbed the store and he charged Darren right now, and they're running around saying that, So we have a lot of work to do. White people need to wake up. I think the biggest problem in this country is not Republican racism. It's democratic racism.

It's a white progressive racism that's hurting us the most. I respect Republicans being like I'm racist. I have a problem with Democrats looking at me in the eye and saying I'm not racist, and then going and living their lives in an incredibly racist way. And if we don't fix that, Donald Trump is gonna win again in twenty twenty. That's the conundrum because some people are looking at what conservatives are doing and they're like, well, at least they're

being honest. But that doesn't mean you should go side with them. That's right what I'm saying, you shouldn't go sid Could there be any racist, No, But I respect honesty. I wish the Democrats were more honest. If Democrats were more honest and said, you know what, we have a racism problem black community. We're sorry about that. We have a racism we want to figure this out. That's honesty. We could build with that. That's not happening right now. We got the DNC running around like they think they

know what they're doing. They have no idea what they're doing. Like I don't consider myself a Democrat after two thousands, many of them. But I'll tell you I'm gonna. I'm gonna. I'll vote for a piece of grass over Donald Trump right now. And we need to make sure that that happens. So anyone saying, listen, listen, listen, this guy is so dangerous to our culture. I work with a lot of undocumented students. He announced no DACA on Easter and all

of my Hispanic students were crying in church. And then Kanye West, where's the Trump had? So don't tell me that like we're okay right now, because when you look at the pain that he is inflicting in the human way on our society, No, no, there's no accepting that. And I would I would vote for a cloud over Donald Trump right now. And Leslie, and part of what

you're doing will be the solution. Running for city council and being a representative for people that have gone through maybe things you've gone through or have family members that have or friends that have because we need that type of representation, somebody who really cares about their own community that wants to make changes. There'll be me. We appeciate you guys were joining us. You've got out supports. When the running happened, you call you, call you, come by.

We will support you and you as well. Jason. Also, we're out on Stars June eighteenth, Yeah, or documentary television premiere, so we'd love to come back give you an update. We're running the movement from them, And uh, it's always interesting to hear stuff like that because I alway think about that monet King Junior Code and injustice anywhere as the threat of justice everywhere. I don't but I don't feel I don't feel like people really embrace that, at

least white American correct, correct, they don't feel it. But you know what, A cops could kill me too and get away with it. Cops don't kill white people, but they could. The laws are the same. Until white people feel freended by it, they're not gonna wake up. They don't even realize what cops are doing in the black community right now. So we need to understand, like, you know why, if you're white, they could kill you too. Guess what. We live in a police state right now.

Don't be so far removed that you feel like it doesn't affect you. And that's right, that's right. And don't wait, don't wait until it knocks on your door. Absolutely lay having Jason Pollock, Miss Leslie mcspadden. We appreciate you guys for joining us. Thank you so much, and check out Stranger Fruit. When does it come out one more time? It's out right now on iTunes, Amazon, vod nationwide. Please download rent it right now. Profits go to the Brown family if we go super viral, and then we have

our television premiere on Stars June eighteen. All right, well, thank you guys for joining us. We appreciate you, Thank you. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumas. Let's talk Cardi By. This is the rumor report with Angela Yee on the Breakfast Club. Well, Cardi Bi's former manager is suing her. That's shaft and that's because he says that

basically he got shafted. He says that his contacts and personal team of writers are and producers are responsible for a Bodak Yellow and that's how she got that hit song that allowed her to get her major record deal and her publishing deal that's worth millions of dollars. Annie also says that she's been defaming him by telling her

fiance Offset and others that he robbed her blind. He said, Offset send him a text message in December that said, you better stop playing, acting like you don't know you'd taken her issue from her. You a snake. You can't hide from me, and you're not about to play my wife. Alsotle dog got shaft man, all kinds of jamas. So

he's suing her now for ten million dollars now. In response, she's saying that she had every right to drop him because he was taking all kinds of cash from her behind her back, and she first confronted him on Super Bowl weekend, and she said that he would basically cook the books to make it look like she was getting less money than she was actually making, and then he would keep the difference. So, for instance, if she got paid one hundred thousand dollars, he would tell her she

was making fifty thousand and then take the balance. In addition, he got twenty percent of her manager's fee, which is way more than is what than what's normal? I mean, I hate to see that happen between all people. You know, people call up together, ye and didn't things change right? Clearly? So I mean, I guess we'll see how this whole

thing plays out. I'm not sure what their contract with each other is like or what the legalities of the situation is, but it is a sad situation because he has been with her for so long and then for her a trust situation is difficult to have to deal with. Well, I want to sleuth chaft for all the time that we book Cardy be and he gave us reasonable numbers. Okay, let's see our parties and Charlotte and whatnot. All right, it wasn't. Cardy did two of them for us, but

we didn't book her. She wasn't what she promoted on Oh she did, Okay, she did? Oh no, I was playing alright, alright, alright, John Legend versus Kanye West. Now, Kanye West ran ahead and posted some text messages between himself and John Legend, and we discussed how John Legend was just tweeting and seemed like he was about Kanye and his tweets. Well, he went ahead and hit up Kanye and said, Hey, it's John Legend. I hope you'll

reconsider aligning yourself with Trump. You're way too powerful and influential to endorse who he is and what he stands for. As you know, what you say really means something to your fans. They are loyal to you and respect your opinion. So many people who love you feel so betrayed right now because they know the harm that Trump's policies caused, especially to people of color. Don't let this be part of your legacy. You're the greatest artist of our generation.

John Legend is absolutely right, and Kanye responded, I love you, John, and I appreciate your thoughts. You bringing up my fans and my legacy as a tactic based on fair used to manipulate my free thought. John ja to reply back whether you read the text that I sent you, though, and Kanye said, I twitted the John text to show that there are people around me that disagree with me and voice their opinion. I respect everyone's opinion, but I

stand my ground. If you feel something, don't let pair pressure, manipulate you, and you know he responded and well, John Legend basically said, since you're posting text messages, let me add that I have a new single out and there you have it. Do you think that Kanye is just rebelling for the sake of rebelling, Like he's the type of person. He's the type of person if you tell him not to do something, he goes haser at it. It's almost like his superpower is his weakness. All right, Well,

John Legend, actually I saw him yesterday. He did lip service in that podcast is coming out today, and since it was happening right then, I spoke to him about it. And here's what he has to say about Kanye and his impact. Yeah, and it's not it wasn't about like trying to make him feel bad. I just wanted him to think about what he's saying and what it means to people and like words you. I mean, he's talking about free thought and free thinking a lot. That's fine

for him to think whatever he wants to think. But every time he makes an utterance and he publishes it, it has impact. And politicians, when they do things, it has impact. And when you align yourself with them. That doesn't mean you're endorsing every single thing they stand for, but you're endorsing their agenda essentially, all right. He also talks more about Kanye just basically having to realize an

impact on the average person. Sometimes we have the luxury to be insulated from that from the consequences of what politicians do. When politicians do bad things that affect a lot of ordinary people, they don't affect us. Well, they don't affect us in the same way. We don't feel that pain, and so we have more luxury to just kind of align ourselves with whoever. But other people they feel the consequences of that. And it's not a game.

And let's just skip to the last one on whether or not he thinks the whole thing with Kanye is a gimmick. He's always also sold himself as authentic to everybody, and like that when he said things that you might have disagreed with, you always believed he was saying it because he really felt it, right, And if this is a gimmick, which based on this text, I don't know if it is a gimmick, Like he seems like like he just feels this way right now. But if it

is a gimmick. It's not good for him because, like part of what he's always said to us, he was being real. If he really believes this, and I just hope he'll think about it and more consider but if he doesn't believe it, then it's not a good luck. John is absolutely right. But I don't think it's a gimmick because why would Kanye need a gimmick to sell record? Doesn't he doesn't think it's a gimmick. Yeah, I don't. I don't. I see people saying that though, like this

is just a giving Preya to sell record gick. You gotta ask, you gotta ask the question. So he doesn't think it's a gimmick. He thinks he really believes it. Yea. And he was saying he would have voted for Trump since late twenty sixteen, right before he had his uh just mental breakdown. Whatever. All right, well let me an you a yeah, and that is your room of report, And I'm gonna do a Kanye mix this morning at nine am, a pre Sunken Place Kanye mix. Why don't

you wait until the interview drop? We can. He still wants to do it. What interview? Nothing? But when's your interview job. I don't know you just said, why don't you wait when you tell me what day to wait? I sunk place, Leave me alone. I don't hear anything ever here right we are giving that donkey too sunken place, Charlemagne. He can't hear you a second place. Why you got your mouth bow, when you got your mautbowpen your eyes closed?

Now you can hear me Donkey today it is going to a young man named Tony to Tuny, I think it is that how you pronounce his name. Listen. I've heard some some very frivolous lawsuits in my day, but this one, uh, this one takes the cake. He needs to come to the front of congregation. We'd like to have a world with him. All right, we'll get into that when we come back. Keep a lock this to breakfast club. Come on in this. Don't be a dusty because right now you want some real It's time for

Donkey of the day. So if we ever threw, I need to be a donkey man, keep it with the hero. Did she getting the name? Please? I had become Donkey of the day the breakfast club bitches. Yes, Donke here today for Friday. Aprol twenty seven goes to Tony to Tony. Did I pronounce that right? Tony? No, Tony to TUNI there you go, Tony to Tuny. Now. According to t m Z, Tony is someone who proclaims himself Instagram famous.

I never heard of him, have y'all? No, he has one point five million follow us on INSTAGRAMM Now, I don't know what that translates to translates two in terms of dollars. But Tony clearly has money for frivolous lawsuits because Tony has a dog named Helf. When I say dog, I don't need a homeboy, I mean an actual domesticated, carnivorous mammal. Okay, a dog all right, with four legs and a cut sinse to smell in a barking, howling or whining voice. Okay, man's best friend. You know what

I'm talking about? Right? A dog? Quick, daddy dog joke for the room? What kind of dog is Dracula? Half? Anybody want to yes? I have no idea. I don't know you got blood anyway? Now. Heth was doing a photo shoot with a bikini model named Diana Munira. Let the record show from what I can see, Diana is a very attractive young lady with a banging body. Now she is five six. This is very important to note because hef the dog when he stands up on two legs,

is five feet tall. The reason height is a factor in this story is because Tony is suing Diana. Now. The reason he's suing Dianna is because Tony says Deanna sexually assaulted his dog. Half. You heard me right, Tony isssuing Diana because he claims Dianna sexually assaulted his dog. Before we continue, let me break up just disturbing news with another quick daddy dog joke for the room. What breed of dog loves to take a bath? Anybody want to guess a bath dog? No, I don't know a shampoodle.

Shut up, dad now. According to the lawsuit that's available to see on TMZ, Tony filed a lawsuit against Dianna, and Tony says Deanna began sensually playing with health with Helf, arousing half by playing with his genitals. Masturbating my dog's disgusting. Let's keep in mind, Helf is a dog. Okay. Word on the street is that he keeps the best time too, So you know what that makes helf what a watch dog.

That was kind of funny. I like that. That was funny. Now, if you watched the video, half the dog is told you with it. Okay. He even mounts her and thrust her and even appears to place his front legs on Diana's ass. Now, the problem is Tony told Diana and the photographer he did not want the footage on the internet, and they agreed, but the video and photos showed up

on Instagram a couple of days later. This is crazy to see because she's five six, like I told y'all, and the dog when it stands upon his legs, is five feet tall, so they damned the eye to eye. And this story is really making me ask the question, what kind of dog can jump as high as a tall building? Oh? My god, any kind because buildings can't jump.

Shut up, dad, Now. Tony also reposted the video, which makes no sense because you're suing someone for posting a video you don't want out there, and the caption he posted is I can't believe this thirsty girl used my dog to gain followers. Tony is suing Diana for fraud and infliction of emotional distress, and he's suing her for over one point five million dollars in damages. He wants the money to match his followers. Clearly, we just need to throw American rice. Okay, America just has too much

privilege and too much freedom. Who has the time, the money, the energy to sue a woman for sexually harassing their dog? And what happens when helf the dog has to take the stand in a court of law? Huh will hef swear to tell the whole wolf and nothing but the wolf? Huh? Some don't you to days just sell themselves? Please give Tony too, Teeny the biggest hea hall. Oh, no matter if I give him some sweet sounds in the hamletones. Oh no, you are the dogge the dad dog gee?

Oh the day ye to dad? Get one more off. Let me get a woman now this is his only gonna take a few seconds. Okay. A father and his six year old son of walking down the street and they come across two dogs having sex. A right. The boy is shocked by what he sees, and he asked his father daddy when he The father, not wanting to lie to his son, says, they're just making a puppy. Okay, says the son. The father is relieved that he doesn't prove further. The next day, the son burst into his

parents room and sees them having sex. The father jumps up and quickly covers himself. No, he's in for an interesting talk. He walks downstairs with his little boy, and as they sit at the dinner room table, his son asked him, Danny, what were you and mommy doing? Again. Wanting to be honest with his son, Daddy says, me and mommy were making a baby. His son pauses for a moment, then he replies, flip mommy over, I want

a puppy. Shut up, Dad, That one wasn't good. A little too long and so long to get a plan. It's kind of funny, but you could have justo it down a little more. Slow it down there, all right, all right, thank you, my dog. All right. We have a Camal Bell joining us. W M. Bell. No, that was a good one. That was a good one. Oh my goodness. It's a Friday. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. One of everybody is DJ Envy angela ye,

Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We have Comal Bell in the building. W camal Bell. Let me say, Walter Walmal, I'm glad. I'm glad we did this part on the radio just to let people know I'm not that famous. How do you pronounce your name? Bell? Well, thank you, Emmy, thank you very much. That was big because it was one of those it wasn't like televised.

But then I saw you like the tele it was like it was on Fax, so you know, it's like that's kind of television, but it's not the prime time. It's not the prime time Emmy's with the real famous people, like you know, I saw you. I saw that. I was like, oh that's dope. Yeah, now it was I never expected to win an Emmy, so you know, I'm ready to quit. It was good. Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, it was big. I didn't I had never thought in

my career the weird path my career is taken. I didn't think it ended up with me accepting an Emmy award from LLL cool J. That's not something I put my dream journal first one. It's my first one. Yeah, you know, one is fine, but I'll take more off the hand him to me. It's very interesting because the show you nined, Shades of America. Is not a comedy show at all. I mean, it's humor in it when you're watching. Some people say, I'm not a comedian at all,

so that's how it goes. But yeah, I'm just you know, it's it's I like things that educate you are interesting or compelling and funny at the same time. I think the reason why people like it is because it's on a CNN, as a journalist, is a news network, but it's you're getting You're getting information without the same tone that news bring. I find it interesting that you hit your Starbucks cup before you walked in here this morning. I didn't have a Star Wars cup. Look at this,

I'm ringing red bull. I can't go to Starbucks. My three old calls it the bad place. She's like she her So, my my wife was white, my three yearlds mixed, and her grandmother, who my wife's mom, got super mad at her for calling it the bad place. Really. Yeah, we had a discussion at the dinner table with my white mother in law, my mixed kid, my black mom, me and my wife about Starbucks being the bad place. How does she know? What did she see? She's she's smart.

We talk about this stuff. All the time in our house, so it's not we don't realize how much we're talking about it, but she just picked up on it. So we passed the Starbucks. She goes, that's the bad place for her. No, yeah, no more coffee for her. Yes. How does she deal with, you know, dad being black, a mom being white and seeing the I guess injustice of her dad being black? Yeah? Black, Yeah, I got fro. Yeah, I'm talking. I'm two sixty, I'm real. Yeah. If I

get killed, I'm a gentle giant. And he was a gentle giant. Yeah. I know how it works well because I have a seven year old too, and she's the one who understands that. Like we you know, we talked about the things that you know, I bought a book because you know, it's great books out there for kids. So I about a book about Hary Tubman and read it to her and we talk and it says black

people used to be slaves. They could be sold like sacks of potatoes, and so she they understand that that happened, and at the end of the day, they go, that doesn't make sense, which is the same thing we all feel about that stuff. It doesn't make sense. Yeah, it's the weirdest thing in the world. Because my daughter is nine and she has so many questions now, and it's like, you really can't explain racist, No, you can't. Just want to see that experience, like you can't explain. I don't

want her to experience it, and as you will. Yeah, yeah, because you know. And and plus my daughter, my seven year old is clearly mixed, my three and a half year old. For white people, who's gonna pass. She's gonna be able to get the state secrets. So it's like they're gonna be living separate lives. And I have a third daughter on the way, so we'll see what happens there. Yeah. Thank you. Didn't you get kicked out of a coffee shop yourself before? Thanks for bringing that up. Yes I did. Yeah, No,

I got it in Berkeley, California. I got kicked out of the books. No no, no, no, no. It was the independent kicking out of a coffee shop. It was you were trying to sell something to your wife. Yeah, they thought, I mean, the story is so ridiculous, Like it doesn't if it was a scream play, you'd be like that guy just came in and yeah, I started talking to this white lady and this baby that looked like him. Yeah yeah, so, uh, it was the story

from the screenplay. You'd pull something out because it doesn't make sense. So it was my birthday. We had eaten at that coffee shop earlier that day. I went back to meet my wife with our baby and her all her friends who were white women with babies because it was a mom's group. And I went and I had bought at the bookstore right next to this place called the Alma Cafe. I bought a book about the Loving Couple who was the couple who struck down the interracial

marriage law. It's a children's book. So I buy this book about interracial marriage is legal, and it's good and it's okay. I go to the coffee shop show it to one of my wife's friends, and somebody knocks in the window and says, get out of here. Yeah. Yeah, Like it was nineteen fifties Alabama. Yeah yeah. And so admittedly I was wearing a hoodie Charlottage, so you know, it's kind of on me. It's kind of on me. I'm sorry. It was an old glandish hoodie, so it's

an expensive hoodie, but it was a hoodie walk. Did you leave? I mean we left, but in like not in like a running way, like in a you know, this is racist for you. This is both My wife, to her credit, we were getting in the car with the baby. She's like, now I got to go back. And she went back and read the woman for filth on the sidewalk the way the way my mom would have liked her tite privilege. Yeah, yeah, she used her

white skin privilege. I mean that's I think that's why the cops weren't called, because my white wife was like, I'm with this negro. I represent him, you know, so you know so. And then I'm not saying everybody should marry a white woman. I know that's not a popular thing to say, but I am saying that in my case, she was able to stand up right there and and and I sort of like make people back down. Does that happen a lot? Which one she stands up for me?

I take her everywhere everywhere? Well, no, she uses my male privilege, I use her white privilege. We'd go back and forth trading privilege too. Odds still to this day, like you know, because we see in racial couples, But I guess it's still ball those people. I mean, you know, we we have sort of blocked it out, but yeah, there are times when things will happen and my wife would be like, is that kay? Yeah, you know, like it just it because we're in the Bear. But as

we learned in Berkeley, racism all over this country. You know, it probably happens more in the Bear, and then it doesn't like Alabama because in Alabama they're really used to us mixing it up down there, you know. So yeah, now I see why you drink a red bull. Yes, right, you hate coffee? Coffee. Coffee hasn't been good to me in the last five years, so three years. Yeah, yeah. Now do you get flat from your own people from reaching across enemy lines? Don't even let me. Do you

get flat from own people? Yes? I do. Charlotte Maine, thanks for asking. What is the two part questions? Yeah? Okay, good, I get I mean, you know, I did this episode of the Ku Klux Klan. Black people were like even you tweeted like what does this negro do? And you know, like, because why are you talking to the clan? We already know the clan exists. I get flat from people when I talk to Richard Spencer the first episode of last season. Why is he talking to this guy? Why is he

punching him in the face. So, but then I also get in the same twitter feed, I get people going on white people, I didn't know the clan existed, Oh my god, I can't believe who were sort of like waking up to the idea that kind of raised himself exists. I get. I get people going, oh my god, I know that who this Richard Spencer guy was. I can't believe that. So I do get flack. I accept the

flat It's part of the job. But also I think that there are there are sometimes more people on the side going I didn't know this existed than the people who are like, why would you do this? But also that's why do episodes like Chicago. We didn't episode about gang violence in Chicago, which is the one we won the Ammy four U. This season, it's our black season ever because we have three black episodes out of eight, so it's the thirty sel. We have an episode about

historically black colleges and universities. We have an episode about the Gulagchy of South Carolina. That's right, that's right. Uh So then uh and then we do one in Mobile, Alabama, where my dad is featured in the episode talking about living in the South. Let's talk about the HBCU. What is that episode about? And I mean, I'm gonna get a lot of flack over this one too, because I didn't feature all the HBCUs. I didn't go to all

one hundred of them. I went to Moorehouse, I went to spellman Morris Brown in Atlanta and talked to a student from Howard And then we also did one we did h Lincoln University in Pennsylvani. No, No, we just don't have a budget. We don't have that anti boor Dane budget, so we have to sort of figure out how to do it. And we only get four or five days for each shoots, so we have to pack school. But we let you live. I see, That's what I'm saying.

That's what anyway. Yeah, wrapping and trying to wrap it up. Yeah, thanks for coming by, coming by. What did you what did you discover? What did you see? Well? I did not go to an HBCU. I went to the same university that Trump graduated from, Univerited Pennsylvania. Yeah, Wow, that's different. I was one of those needs like a supported you like, well she didn't finish though, neither to die. So so we have that in common, and that's all we have in common. But the big thing is like people I

always heard people go, why do we sell HBCUs? Why you know, why are they still relevant? And we talk a lot about the relevance of HBCUs And we also learned also are a lot that a lot of black people go to HBCUs go there because they went to predominantly white schools in high school and need to sort of reconnect with their blackness. That's why n might want to send his daughter to him. Yeah, that's what I want to say that I was gonna ask, would you

send your daughter to HBCU. I mean, I'm gonna after going a Spellman, I'm gonna make sure they go visit Spellman because Spellman was the most impressive of all of them. Bellman feels like a black woman think Tank. It doesn't feel like a college. See, I know my black Twitter is gonna be like all over that night. I got it. Yeah, that's good. I think that's I think it's Doe. But

I think you're right. I think a lot of students go to Catholic schools or private schools, high school because their parents want to take them out the hood, and then they kind of missed that. I want to go back there because I want my daughter to go to an HBC. Hopefully she does, because I think she misses that. Now she wants to go to Howard. Whatever HBC you wants, she wants to, Okay, But if you go to Howard,

she gotta paid for herself. And I think that's what's important about the episode is that we a lot of the themes of the seasons that black is not a monolith. The point of going to HBCUs a lot of the black people go to the schools are saying, like I found so much diversity here. Black people are not all one thing. And so there's black people who are listening to hip hop, the black people listening to Rage against

the Machine. There's black people do it all across the spectrum of blackness, and you can reconnect, you can find your people at HBC. If I had known that when I went to college, I probably would have applied to an HBCU all right, we have more with w Kamal Bell Comedian when we come back, don't move. It's to Breakfast Club the morning more than everybody is DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlemagne, the guy we all the Breakfast Club.

We have w Kamal Bell in the building, Charlemagne. Do you think it's possible to be Kanye West support Trump and for us to be like Okay, yeah, I guess we're cool with that. And I mean, this is I feel way this is gonna put so much pressure on

the album. The music has to be so good. But it's like, I feel like it's got to be like classic Kanye to the in degree for this to be Okay, love Trump, but I mean, but you're not the most banging fire song in the history of hip hop with like I mean Tupac's on, Oh where the Tupac Verse come from? Like, it just puts so much pressure on the music because now everyone because there's all this side eye. Now, you know, he's the greatest social experiment I think I've

seen in a long time. You know, I'm not saying I don't know if it's a social experiment or not, but it feels like a social experiment. I mean, I think Kanye is a social experiment. I think he I think he, like you said, he lives his life that way. He's trying to provoke. But I think we live in dangerous times where I'm not saying like people can't be Republicans. My dad worked in the Republican administration of Alabama. I know black, We all know black Republicans. Like people shouldn't

support racist bad Yeah, Trump is a racist. That's why I brought the shirt. Yes he's a racist, you know what I mean? So like he that supporting Trump is supporting legacy of racism and a current practice of racism. So you can say, I think there's all these Republicans like Tara set Mayer who's on CNN, is a reasonable black Republican. There's we can talk about financial stuff, we can talk about the military, but Trump's Trump's not a Republican. No, No.

You think sometimes people get so removed from the average every day person problems that they just really are just connected. Once you marry Kardashian, you're so far away from the streets of Chicago. Even if you go visit the streets of Chicago as Kanye, you're surrounded by people. Right, He's

not going there by himself, you know, he's not. So it's there's a challenge of being a rich black person that even if you came from the hood or you came from from from poverty, it's hard to reconnect once you once you become a rich black person. I think it's a and we see it time and time again that once black people we get rich, they start to get talk. Well, we lift ourselves. So I lifted myself up in my bootstraps. Why can't you do the same. So I think it's a real you know, and I

think about that as I start. I'm not a rich black person, but I'm certainly a black person who is doing well. And so I'm always reminding myself and trying to connect with people to sorry, I don't go. I don't know why everybody doesn't have a house with a cul de sac, you know what I mean. Like it's like this is I'm benefiting from what I have, the work I've put in, but I still got to connect with the community and still got to connect with the

activists who will call me out. That's why I don't mind getting called on Twitter, because who will call me out? When I got that was too much just to play white devil's advocate, you know, people would talk about that put them up by the bootstrap's mentality. I don't look at it, and then I look at it as an outcast and goody mob mentality. When they said you need to get up, get out and get something, don't let

the days of your life pass by. You need to get up, get out and get something because you and I got to do for you, and I like you do have to put in the work regardless. You have to put in the work. But everybody who puts in the work doesn't get doesn't lift themselves up. Everybody doesn't have the same level of opportunities. There's lots of you

know what I'm saying. What I'm saying, but we can't we if somebody, if you lift yourself up by your bootstraps, and somebody else is putting in work and doesn't get lifted up, it may be because the system they were in at the time did not allow them to lift themselves up. I'm not saying everybody I worked hard. I'm not saying you got lucky. You gotta put the hard work in. But we can't act like just putting the hard work in is going to guarantee some level success.

You the hard work that a black person puts in, and the hard work that a white person put in is not on hist you look at statistically, doesn't add up to the same level of success. Yeah, absolutely right. But success is subjective too, because I think that you know, we live in a country where success to us means super rich, super wealthy, celebrity. That's not always success. You might make fifty thousand dollars a year, you got a nice little place to stay, a call, your family, good,

you're happy. Yeah, but I think we also success. The problem with black success is that it doesn't transfer across generations, right, you want to you're taking care of the next generation, the next generation, you have things to hand down. No,

it's not, but are fifty is. But I think the problem is is that we're not going to catch up to white people like you know, and so like the New York Times did the whole thing with like all these infographics about like if a black person achieves what it's born rich, they're not likely to stay in that level of richness. They're gonna fall out of it. They're

likely to fall out of it. If a white person is born rich, they're much basisplicularly, black men are not an If you're born like a like a kid of a rich black person like Michael Jordan's son. There's I'm not saying they're gonna happen, but it's likely that you will fall out of that to a lower level, not all the way down, and some fall all the way down. White people don't generally fall out of the level that

they're born into. What the hell here we go? Geichi? Man, don't you disrespect don't don't disrespect my coach, your boy, that's right everything he said. Uh, it's so, it's the areas of it's along the coast a lot of South Carolina. It's basically the black people from West Africa who were enslave there. But and they lived on the sea. The

spartum lived on the sea islands. Now, the thing was is that it was once slavery was ended, white people fled those islands because they were too hard to get to. And once slave was over, so black people in that part of the country were allowed to hold on to a lot of their West African culture. Talk that talk like he was just talking about, they have their own dialect, Gichi. Yeah.

And so it's a very and this again black is on monolith there you think black people sort of speak the same vernacular, not in that part of the country. Don't know. It's just so interesting. I did an ancestry test. I did twenty three and me and I found out I was ninety seven percent West African. Yo. Wow, I'm sure most people in Charleston are. Yeah. I just did African ancestry, so I'm waiting to see exactly where in West Africa. I'm hoping for Nigeria. I do. I love Nigeria.

It's like Nigeria, but I'm hoping for stools. My homie DJ Coupy. But I it's when I when I heard that, I was like wow, and then you realize like damn, we really are like right there, and it's funny. I just did the ancestry test and I found out most black people are twenty five percent white European. I was twenty seven percent, and I was like, man, I'm literally not black enough. I got to listen people getting I'm

like two percent. I'm black. I'm so happy. I know, I know it makes you feel like, it makes you feel better. Yeah, And I was like, everybody in high school is right, Yeah, I'm not black enough. Don't you think that America has an unhealthy obsession with celebrity. Yes, I mean I think America we a lot of this. This country is founded on Europeans British principles, and we still want kings and queens. Oh so I think we I think we still have this our celebrity our celebrity

session is chase too. We want to believe that there's some people who are a higher class of people than us. Yeah, you think that's just an American thing, though, Well, I think we've exported that to the world. I think we know we export pop culture to the world. You know, we don't. We don't import a lot of pop culture. Even the ones who come here from other countries have

to then do it through our system, you know. So yeah, I think that we I think it's it's certainly an unhealthy obsession, and I think it's gotten worse because of social media. Like I don't really need to know, like what knowing what Kanye thinks about Trump effect is going to affect how people approaches music. I was watching Twitter yesterday. He had two million tweets. I'm like, really, like two million people care about who he says he likes, and that's the problem I find myself in two like I

gotta care because too many people care people. That's the problem I find, like I don't want to talk about this, and you do the rounds like this, and you go and I go on a lot CNNs and they ask me questions like I actually don't care. I really don't care, like I'm not interested in But we have to we have to wear in media. You have to have an opinion, talk about it. Yeah, even if your opinion is I don't care, that was my opinion. There you go said, I sat down and chopped it up with him, so

I know you listen to that. I'll be getting invited to the car and well, no, we did interviews so you get to hear him. Well cool how he feels. And you definitely didn't fly me up. Definitely did you. You didn't pay for your own ticket though somebody paid. Okay you, I said, somebody paid for that ticket. There's no way I'm not flying with just you know, goddamn, that's I don't flame you, I don't save you. You

can finally talk about the Chris Rock Dock. Yeah, Chris Rock Doc is a special about It's an hour long special. I don't half on special and Bring the Pain. Yeah, he you're in it. Chris is in it. Wanda Psykes is amazing in it, Able to do, Verney is in it. Uh, you a lot of it's a lot of great people. And his brother, Tony Rock is amazing in it. I think I feel like Tony Rock is a hidden star of this thing and people are gonna think, like, why are we seeing him more? Yeah? No, well, I mean

he's super close to it as well. Yeah, well that's the thing he talks about. He's got a quote at the end He's like, I'm not I've never been. I was never close to my brother growing up. I'm not close to my brother now. We've were never closer than during the making it Bring the Pain. Really, Yeah, it's really I mean I think it's actually again, it's not funny all the way through. It's got some emotional stuff too.

It's Chris talking about his career when he was not doing anything, and Tony's very honest about he was not funny, you know, like Chris is like I was okay, Tony He's like he was he was just an average black comedian not doing well. Oh oh, I can't I forgot Oprah's in it. We got open. We got Oprah right here, Kanye said on the New Oprah would let you know he's suffering from Interla sort Yeah. Yeah, so we got I mean we got we got a twenty five minute

interview with Oprah and so she's throughout it too. I mean yeah, so we didn't get your pee. We've got Oprah. Okay, yeah, thank you United Shades of America. This is twenty nine this Sunday, April twenty nine to ten fifteen pm after ANTHI boardin only on CNN. And what's the first episode. The first episode is the US Mexico border. That was a great drop you just did. Thank you. I've been, I've been, I've been doing that a little bit. Yeah, thank you. What You're going to help some Mexican start

building the wall on him? Yeah, it's all about It's all about me going. You know, this one is a good idea. I think we need to do this. Yeah, And I just want to say that guarantee this will not be your highest viewed episode that I just want to I want to put out that guarantee that this will not be your highest viewt in episode on the internet. Out boom boom, boom all right, more boom boom boom. Okay, it's camal bell w camaral Bell is the breakfast Club.

The More the breakfast Club, and everybody is DJ Envy Angela Ye, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors. Let's talk Janelle Money. Oh my gosh, um report, it's the report, the Breakfast Club. Well, first of all, Janelle Money's album is in stores today, so make sure you stream that in stores online, you know, I guess we don't really say in stores as much, but dirty computers out as well as her emotion picture,

so check all of that out. Some music and they do, yeah, absolutely, yeah they do. But I think that's not how people consume their music as much anymore. Definitely not. I love screaming, Thank God for it. And some people don't even bother putting it in store, some people do digital only releases. It just depends, all right. But she has opened up on the cover of Rolling Stone. They did a story on her and she discusses her sexuality now. She said,

she's still learning about her sexuality. She said, but then later I read about pan sexuality and I was like, oh, these are things that I identify with. Two. I'm open to learning more about myself. She said. I just live my life and people can feel free to discuss whatever it is they think and use whatever adjectives they feel.

I definitely googled their laugh is right, and she said she wants young girls, young boys, non binary, gay, strait queer, people who are having a hard time dealing with their sexuality, dealing with feeling ostracized or bullied for just being their unique self to know that I see you. This album is for you. Be proud. What is pan sexual I mean,

I know what it is. But for the people who don't know what is pan sexuality, pan sexuality is like just basically loving anything everyone, everyone does, everyone, whether you're women, man, trans, you know, don't call that stir fry. You just put everything in the pain. You just nothing, so there's no limitations to your sexual choice, with biological sex, with gender or gender identity. That's their definition. I think you call it stir fry. That's file. We'll do it. We'll call

it pan sexuality, all right now. Ja Cole did a Twitter Q and A and he answered some questions. I'll give you some of the highlights that Vibe magazine put up. His favorite track on the album is window Pane, he said, and then actually and then the cutoff. He also talked about the hardest song to finish. He said it was nineteen eighty five and atm addicted to money. He suggested to get the drums perfect was stressful. He said. The first version of the album was done in two weeks.

The final version that got released took six months total. Now let me see one more thing. Oh, if he produced anything on the album, he said, he produced everything except for Kevin's Heart. I am all I stand by the fact that j Cole makes ted talk music and this album is very good as long as you listen to it before six am. I listen to it when I'm riding to work at five am in the morning.

Sounds amazing at that time. All right. Now, They asked him if you could collab with anyone dead or alive, who would it be, and he said, pack no question. And then he said in on j three thousand, I mean we didn't never getting that chemical album. That ain't happening. Well, I think it will. You didn't put him on the list. Maybe he's already He's already collabed with him though, right,

oh right, yeah, so that doesn't count now, Kalie. She went on Hollywood Unlocked and talked about her relationship with Nas and detailed how violent it was. According to Kalie, she was saying they got married at such a young age. She met him when she was only twenty two years old, and she said they were really intense highs and really intense lows. And she said, his infidelity isn't what really caused her to leave. It wasn't the straw that broke

the camel's back. It was also because not only was he cheating, but he also was fighting with her and she was fighting back. Check it out, did he hit me? Did I hit him back? It was because there he would block out. He would drink too much. He drank way too much. He will never admit it, and so a lot of the stuff he may not remember. You know. There have been times when like literally we would have the worst night ever, like and we would wake up the next day it's like it never happened. Was he

ever remorseful? He bought gifts a man o man. Between Colise's allegations and yeay and that Maga hat y'all really gonna be morally conflicted when that NAS album produced by Kanye drops all Right. In addition to that, she talked about how seeing and why she didn't say anything about what happened with her and NAS. Something reminded me of Rihanna. The only way I can describe it was like double jeps, Like I felt like do I chump in? Like do

I say it? Because I had bruises all over my body at that time, seeing her the way she looked and then looking at myself, I was embarrassed. For me. It was kind of like, you're gonna just let let go. You're not gonna say anything. We were married, we weren't dating. I didn't say anything because I wanted things to work, and because I was delusional, and because I thought that like I could like love past us. I don't know what's true and what's not true. I just want to

know what y'all gonna do. In that NAS album produced by Kanye West drops, what y'all gonna do? Right, It'll be interesting to see how NAS responds to what Calis has to say. That's true, but y'all want to avoid that question. What y'all gonna do in that NAS and Kanye. I mean, I don't we don't know what we don't know. I don't know what her story. So when the Knas album Kan produced by Kanye drops, y'all all in. I don't know. We can't in today, are you all? I'm listening.

I'm sorry, definitely listening. All right, I'm Angela Yee And that is your rumor report. All right, thank you, missie. Speaking of Kanye, Let's do a Kanye mix, right, this is pre Sunken Place Kanye right, eight hundred five eight five one on five one. Let us know what you want to hear those callers to make America Great Again mix? You know, good on? We ain't nobody catching no pre Sunken Place mix. This is this is oh, this is original. Yeah,

this is Shytown broke Kanye. Nobody gonna hear that. All they're gonna see is that red Magahattan named mine. This is prior to all that. All right, every vote will see you Monday. It's the Breakfast Local Morning

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