I love rachet to sit down. Didn't become to the most prominent form for you. Wait your ass up early in the morning. But they told me it was y'all. I said, oh, hell yeah, I'm getting the smooth, stangous morning shot three people's choice. Actually, I've got your traumamade people. I can't believe you guys in the basket. Look did we know this breakfast club? Good morning, Usa? Hey fan, good morning. It's Tuesday. Good morning, everybody, Good morning, good morning,
good morning, come morning, good morning. What up you easy? Hey, what's going on? It's Tuesday morning? Now Wednesday? Damn it, man, it was Wednesday. I was like, wow, back, good day. Let me try to again. Guess what day it is. Guess what day it is? Nah, yesterday is Wednesday, hump day, middle of the week. Hopefully you enjoying your day. I'm out in Atlanta. You know, I'm doing my car show out here in Atlanta July third. So it's a lot
of planning. It's big. We're calling it Carchella because there's things for kids. There's rise, there's face painting, there's games, there's cars for everybody. Celebrity cars, exotic cars, cars from your favorite celebrity. There's so much to do, so it's a lot of planning. So I'm out in Atlanta right now and I called all my friends Atlanta. I'm like, hey, I'm in Atlanta, let's go get something to eat. And all my friends coming back it was like, sorry, can't
do it. I said, why. It was like, we don't have no gas. There was like there's a shortage of gas. And all my friends was like, I got like fifty miles left to empty and I can't use it on you. Huh, Well, we'll talk about that shortly. I was saying this morning in New York. The good thing is that with the subway system here, why don't y'all take the train out there in Atlanta? Is there a training a little yeah, I never knew that. I never seen no damn train.
And the people living when when they live in Atlanta, they usually live on an outskirts of the Atlanta and then they got to travel to the city, so nobody wants to drive thirty minutes when they came. I was just kidding, you don't even know how to take the train in New York. I wouldn't never, definitely don't know how to take the train in New York. But I didn't know the gas situation was so bad. But we'll talk about it more in front page News. Marta. That's
what it's called, the Marta Marta system. That's cool, I think. So okay, all right, well today, who's joining us this morning? Who is joining us this morning? Meet my angel? Oh, my angel, Cody's coming this morning. Okay, perfect, I love my angel. Know who's my angel? Code for people I don't know? Um, Well, we know her for working to get a lot of people who have been sentenced to life in prison for non violent offenses and drug offenses.
She's helped get them out of prison. So she's going to talk about the project that she's been working on. A lot of people know her because Kim Kardashian also came out and worked with her on a lot of different things. And some people were saying Kim Kardashian was taking the credit, but my angel Cody was a person who was really doing the work. Yeah, she's the one that's helping people get out of jail, out of prison. When you see all these people releases, usually she's the
one that's usually behind it. So we'll kick him with her in a little bit, and then we got front page news. What we're talking about, Well, let's talk about gasoline since you started and led with that this morning, and how there's been a lot of gasoline demand in several states. And we'll tell you why the price of gas is so high and why some gas stations are out of gas. All right, we'll get into all that when we come back. Don't move. It's to breakfast club.
Good morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy. We are to Breakfast Club. Let's getting some front page news now, so quick, sports size. I know everybody was waiting for Lebron to come back last night, but he decided to wait another game so he won't come back to Thursday against the Houston Rockets. All right, so what else were You're not gonna shout out our Brooklyn nets? You can shout him out. Good, Yeah, we'll shout out
to our Brooklyn nets. Hold on, they beat the bulls yesterday, I believe so one fifteen, one oh seven, okay, good yeah, shout out to our Brooklyn nets. All right. Now, growing number of gas stations on the East Coast are without fuel as drivers are filling up their tanks very aggressively right now because of an attack, a cyber attack that's shut down the Colonial pipeline that is a critical artery for gas, and the panic buying, they're saying, is what's
threatening to exacerbate the supply shock. So they said, as of nine pm yesterday, over twelve percent of gas stations in North Carolina and over eight percent of Virginia didn't have gasoline. And I have friends and you, said Durre in Atlanta, who are saying that some of the gas stations are out of gas. Yeah, there's definitely a gas shortage in the South. I know people are looking for gases and some people got to drive thirty miles to find a gas station, which is crazy. I know the
USA day. Hopefully by Friday they'll get things back to normal, but they expect the gas prices to shoot up a couple of cents. Last name. My daughter called me and she was in my car. I'm like, what are you doing? She was like, oh, Dad, I'm just filling up all the cars. I was like, great things, and listen, that's what they're saying is the problem right now, panic buying, people taking their entire family flee the vehicles to the gas station filling up and they don't even need to
right now. Everything should be resolved by the end of the week. But because people are panicking, that's what's causing the shortage of the supply of gasoline. They said, it's irrational behavior. Yeah, I mean, you can't blame people. They're saying is it's they're gonna fix it, but they're not sure. People want to be safe. They are there, Yeah, they're saying they substantially it will be operational by the end of the week. It was a hack. It was carried
out by a criminal group called dark Side. Yeah, and they said that they know who did it. They know the people actually, but they can't go get them because they're in Russia and Russia doesn't have the law where they send them here, so they can't do anything about it, which is crazy. All right. You know, I was looking at my car too while I was driving yesterday. I've had my car for like two and a half years.
I only has fourteen thousand miles on it. I'm sure you never got an oil change, rotated your ties and none of that. Well, I haven't had to get an oil change. My car alerts to me when those things happen. But I do put oil in my car, oh my goodness, and I get it serviced when it says, when it says to service the car, bring it in and get service.
And then every all the lights are gone. Okay, all right now, Colorado Springs, the shooter who fatally killed six people at a birthday party, according to reports, was upset because he was not invited to the party. According to the police chief to Yodora must say, Us twenty eight had been dating Sandra Ibarra, who was one of the six victims, for about a year. Now. Our bar and five other members of her extended family were shot in
quick succession. They said he just wasn't invited to a family gathering and his response was to open fire and kill six victims before taking his own life. That is so sad. I mean, we have to do something about the gun laws. And I know we keep talking about it, we keep saying it. We've been saying it for years and years and years. But something has to happen. I mean, there has to be some type of welfare check, has to be some type of well, they're those gun laws.
That makes no sense, Like shout out to my sister Mercedes she I was talking yesterday she went to go get a gun, and it was like, well, we can't give you a gun until you do some type of mental check. And I'm like, there's a lot of people that don't have to take that mental check. No sense. It has to be across the board, and it has to be something maybe yearly, like every year you go to the doctor. Every year you get a mental check.
Because people's mental change, and there's no way you can give somebody that power of having an AAR fifteen or a nine millimeter or forty caliboy or glock or a gun or desert eat. But those laws are state by state. So we were just talking about in Texas, how now you can just be twenty one years old to be able to buy a gun. That doesn't make sense because they're twenty one. I shouldn't have been able to have
a gun, all right. And Liz Cheney has vowed that she is not going to remain silent as former President Trump is spreading lies that the election was stolen from him and they're expecting to remove her from House Republican leadership today. Actually, here's what you had to say. This is not about policy. This is not about partisanship. This is about our duty as Americans. Remaining silent and ignoring the lie emboldens the liar. I will not participate in that.
I will not sit back and watch in silence while others lead our party on a path that abandons the rule of law and joins the former president's crusade to undermine our democracy. All right, even though she is a Republican, she's standing up against all these other Republicans that are
supporting Donald Trump no matter what. And she's been very vocal about the fact that she feels like this is a threat that America has never seen before, a former president who provoked a violent attack on this capitol and an effort to steal the election. Don't you think she's a little too late on that? Oh shoot oh yo, yeah yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeast. Don't you think she's a little bit too late on that. I think that she's been outspoken and as far as as she has, yeah,
she has. That's why all this is happening right now, That's why all the Republicans have turned their backs down over the past four years she's been talking about against Donald Trump. Well, now, I mean I think most recently with he's not even an office no more. It's like all that should have been said when he was actually in the White House, when he was in a position of peg. I would love to tell all the Republicans that who is speaking with Instagram? They ban him when
he leaves. He talks to all the schmack for four years, you do nothing today he leaves. Now now you all of a sudden got courage and you're playing them out. We see what happens as soon as you speak out right, they're removing her from power. So what that's all the more? Then you speak truth to power. That's what happens when you speak truth to power. There's never gonna be a time in this country, in any space where you speak
truth to power and it may not be consequences. I mean, I commend her for being the one Republican right now that it is actually being honest about that that you're from page News. Oh god right, get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five, one oh five one. If you need to vent hit us up right now. Maybe know somebody that's changed on you. They got they got you, decide you gotta say they got a little doctorate, and all of a sudden don't want to come to work
on time. First of all, whole wait a minute, you don't ever disrespect me like that. I haven't been coming to work on time in a while. Okay, don't happen to have nothing to do with as doctorate. Okay, all right. When I'm late, I'm just late, which is like a doctor. Now. You know when you have a doctor's appointment, it's never the doctor say nine o'clock. He always going nine fifteen. My doctor's appointments is six. You're supposed to be there six.
I'm not intentionally late. Okay, just what is it? Just some mornings, it just happened, just happened. This morning was one of those mornings. I was up last night, you know, I was. I was. I was invested in something I should have just let go. That's what I was doing. What's his name? Shut up? Get it off your chest? Eight hundred five eight five one five one is the breakfast club? Good morning, the breakfast Club. I'm telling what's doing?
If this is your time to get it off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed, eight hundred five eight five one five one. We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Hello, who's this? Hey man? What's up? It's Mike Man, Mike get chess bro, what's up? I just want to tell Charlotte mane oh, hey man, please stop being late. I needed to start being late because I literally hear that yo yo yo man. I literally
heid man and the hay fail from Angelie. Just ain't could Let's be good, all right, listen, let me tell you something. Why y'all focused on the negative? I mean, ain't three times this year? Literally three times this year, twice this week after you got to die. I don't know about that three times this year, and I don't
want to hear nothing from Angelie. She's never here, okay, I mean at my time twice this weird dynamic three oh in the pandemic knock it off said the wrong the wrong date, said listen, man, it's a lot going on right now. Usually he's the one that the humpday guy. So I wasn't he he was Tuesday might be hump day for Envy. I don't know what happened to I'm never here. I don't know what day it is. Last thing I want to do, man, I didn't want to
I do want to shout out to my black queen. Man, you know she she didn't reached the graduated, visited the state for broadcast meteorology. Man, be a weather girl. Yes, you don't be a weather girl. That's what's up, my brother? Congratulations man, Yes, sir, yes, sir, you got a good one. Man, Yes, sir, yes, sir, have a good one. Brother. Hello, who's this Yo? There's Coppo from the bax Verson step and what copo? What's up? Brother? Getting off your chests? Up up breakfast stuff? Yo, y'all
pushing n y'all by everybody. Everybody. Everybody's pushing that vaccine, like says fresh and they sell smacked everywhere. I turned to the TV everybody, but you don't hear the CDC talk about it. You still got a bunch of Baptist And you know what I'm saying, this being sensis that want to tell the truth and tell you you know what I'm saying about body or for me and things
like that. Then you got you're talking about Trump stealing, undermining the publican party boa that didn't try to teach you why that bagged them through the floor, trying to get them to tide things rushing closed all this bo bo bo? Why is he still relevant? If he's still relevant, because it has to be something, bro, Bro a hundred. Don't say it's peen nuts and it's not us it's peanuts. Do your research and see if any of those figs had the passwords to log into those machines so they
can be able to be you. They never got the uh, the passwords from them where they were supposed to get them. I don't know what you're talking about, but I do, um, I do, I do. I want to talk to your side for angel you. I'm a right. How's your week? How's your week going? Oh? Pretty good? I Brooklyn nets one last night, so I'm excited about that. That's right. I know that's right. I know that's right. I coppoo you, Joe, Joe, every every I need a course. I need a course.
Charlotte Mayne, that's somebody towards you, this bro. You dragged me through the floor. That is not true. You need to stop lying. I don't even know you. Coppo course puplishing, polish publishing. I need some information on that. My man got some books. I need I word okay, copple hold on Copple love every one. Hold on, why are you holding him home? For Copple? Coppo said he got some books for you, bro. The only book I got is Tomca Mallory State of Emergency, How to Win in the
Country we built. It's available right now everywhere. Coppo wants to be the second release. Man, Well, he's not to need a co Pax is the second release in August Shallow Waters August third. He was to be third. Uh No, I can't say who the third one is, but he's not thirty. He wasn't be fourth or fifth. Cop I'm booked up till about twenty twenty four. Copple week. Yeah, you know, if your chests eight hundred five ain't five one oh five one. If you need to vent, hit
this up now. It was the breakfast Club. Good morning, the breakfast club. This is your time to get it off your chest. Whether you're man than from you on the breakfast club, but you got something on your mind. Hello, who's this? Good morning? Good morning Xavier, Good morning to get it off your chests. Bro um I actually I just want to start up with some positivity. You want
on shout out my sister and brother in law. They're actually starting an all business called Teacher Love Box to actually called and got through to you guys about two weeks ago. I want to give it a shot again and let everybody know get on there and check it out. I want to just spread some love to the teachers, will do my brother, I always am a fan of spending love to teachers. Man, that is one of the most important jobs, that's the most underpaid. Yeah, my mother
is a teacher, English teacher, South Carolina man thirty plus years. Hey, so if you want to get out a box man, yeah, one, give me the website again that that actually would be a good idea. What's the website end, Teacher Love Box Official. And that's on Instagram that you can get right to the right to the website. I'm an order one today, my brother. Teacher Love Box Official. Yes sir, yes, sir. Hey, Charles, you might sending me one of your books if you
got any back in yet. Well I don't, but I'll send you a copy of Tamika Mallory's State of Emergency, how to Win in the Country we built. Oh yeah, and since it's mental health Away this month, I'll send you a doctory The Walker's book to the unapologetic guy in the black mental health, Yeah, some mental health health. Can't we all, my brother, can't we all? All? Right? Hold on so I can get your address? Yes, Hello, who's this? This cute? Cute what I'm getting off your chess? Bro?
Hey man, I want to speak on what you usually said about what d j r. Was talking about with gun legislation. Yes, yes, yeah, I think I think you're speaking from a place of privilege. Brother. I think you know you have enough, buddy, to be but a Ford any type of personal security that you need. You know what I'm saying for people out here, I think I think it's very irresponsible to vote agett your own gun. Right. Well, I think he was just saying that people should still
have to have background checks. I didn't see anything mental health checks to get a gun, not that you shouldn't be able to have a gun. You hear what you want to hear. I didn't say anything about that. I own numerous guns, And what I said was I said, I think that people need mental health checks before they're able to purchase a gun. I thought I thought they do have those. Really a state by state situation we were just talking about in Texas. How they're trying to
pass the lot that you don't have to do that. Yeah, all a bunch of viewers, though, is to black folks, don't vote to get your own gun rights. Man, these folks are working hard, just like they y'all didn't want them to take away your voting rights. Don't let them take away your I think people want you to own guns responsibly though, right, Like, do you think any anyone should be able to have a gun once they turn
a certain age? This Charloman, the guy talking, I think that owning the legal firearm in America is a black person is a form of self care. And I think you need to blow your and I think you need to blow your nose, sir. Select So even if you're threatening people online, even if you have a mental health issues, you should still be able to legally own a gun. You think, No way. I'm asking him because that's what
he's saying. I mean, you guys to speak. I mean if I told the same situation that to a car to cars, can't we say the same thing. You have to take a road test, right, don't you have to get your license? You have to actually take a driving test and be able to be fit to do you have to take an eye test, right, Well, don't they do these background checks everywhere? Though? You know, I'm confused, flood you. No, you could buy guns at trade shows. You can buy guns online and they just do a
background check to see if you've been arrested before. Not in every state you have to do a mental check. When I purchased my gun, I didn't have to do a mental check. I was twenty one years old. They did a background check. You was in Virginia. Yeah, two days later I was able to buy a forty calor at the age of twenty one. Training but you have to learn how to use the gun, right. I didn't know how to use it or nothing. They just gave me a game. And at that at that age, I
wasn't mentally ready, honestly to have that much power. Imagine you get in a car and you never have to take a road test, You never have to take driving lessons, you never have to take an eye test. Yeah, you're talking to somebody that owns numerous guns. But I'm glad that that I had that. You know that I wasn't stupid enough for twenty months because of twenty one my egos through fragile You don't know the power you have in that weapon. And I think God every day, I
didn't do anything stupid. So yeah, I stand by that. I believe we should have the right to own guns, but I think that there should be certain procedures we have to go through the oat be able to purchase those guns. Same thing with the driver's license. I just wanted his brother to blow his nose. Man, don't talk again until you've blown your nose. Bro, you sound so congested this morning, my brother. Thank you for calling. Though
we respect your opinion. But I thought I thought I thought federally licensed fire um dealers were required to request background checking, and I thought those background checks include the mental health check. I don't know the background checkers. They call and they make sure you haven't been arrested before, and then you're able to purchase a gun. M okay, all right, get it off your chest. Eight hundred five
eight five one o five one. We got rumors on the way, yes, and let's talk about the artists of the decade. Some people might have felt like it was over for him, but it looks like it's not. We'll tell you who it is, all right, we'll get into that. NeXT's the Breakfast Club. Good Morning, the Breakfast Club. It's about angela Ye, the Breakfast Club. So Drake is getting Artists of the Decade award at the Billboard Music Awards.
Think about all the accomplishments that he's had. It's based on the activity of the Billboard one hundred and Billboard two hundred charts, social media data, and touring revenue from December fifth, two thousand and nine through September twenty eight, twenty nineteen. So during that time, Drake has had nine number one albums, thirty three top ten songs, six number one songs on the Hot one hundred, the most of
any artists in the decade. He also has had the most number one and top ten songs and the hot R and B hip Hop songs and top R and B hip Hop albums charts. And even though Scary Hours two, which was released in March, is outside the scope of the tally, by the way, that three pack also broke all kinds of records too, with having the number one, number two, and number three songs simultaneously. No dropping the clues box with drink. I mean you know you can't deny, Yeah,
that's what he absolutely was the artist of the deck. Guys. I mean you you just can't. Can't still going still? That's the question, right like, you know, that's all that's been the question that I've presented. You know, can he sustain the run? Is he still the hottest doing it right now? But you know, yes, the past ten years, you can't dispute it. I mean, justin March he had the numbers one, two, and three songs. That's the only time that's ever happened that he's still one of the
hottest artists. Hands, I didn't say he's not one of the hottest. He's drink drinking, is gonna be always drink. I'm just saying he's still one of the hottest song Is he's still the hottest doing it though? But yes, the past decade, absolutely, it's not even close. All right. Well, the Billboard Music Awards are gonna air send May twenty third on NBC at eight pm. And speaking of awards, the twenty twenty one I Heeart Radio Music Awards will
be hosted by Usher. That's gonna air Thursday, May twenty seventh, Alive on Fox. The people who will be there the weekend with special guests Ariana Grande, Silk, Sonic Uh and Doja Cat. Also appearances from Taylor Swift, Roddy Ridge, twenty one Pilots, Megan the Stallion and more So. This is Usher's first time hosting and the show is in its eighth year. Previous host Jamie Fix, Jason Derulo, Ryan t Crest,
DJ Khaled, Haley Baldwin and T Paine. If I went to an event that Usher was hosting and I didn't leave with some Usher books, I would feel like I got I got shafted a little bit. So for him to throw some ushered some of the Usher bucks. You know how I got two dollars? Feel shaft? You know I got two dollars. Steve passes out to two dollar bill I want, I want Usher to do so you
don't feel shaft. I got you. Well. Chris Martin and Little nas X will give Elton John the twenty twenty one I Heeart Radio Icon of Watch seg all Right, and Tina Turner's musical Tenas coming back to Broadway. We already told you these Broadway plays are reopening, so you can see that starting on Friday, October eighth. I took my mom to see that because my mama loves some Tina Turner. So Tina Turner said, I am thrilled that
our musical will be reopening on Broadway. I remember with such warmth and appreciation the extraordinary welcome I received at our opening night. I think she's amazing when you just see her whole entire career and the setbacks that she had and how she managed to make a comeback later on. I mean, Tina Turners immortal. Even when I see stuff now from Tina, like the Docmmunity then on HBO, it's just like, I'm happy that she gets that, But what's
love got to do do with it? Immortalized Tina Turner forever. Well. The way that she came back after that, I think is also really what immortalized her. If that would have been it for her, you know, that would have been difficult, but she came back and was even bigger than she was when she was with Ike. All right. Now, Demi Levado is getting a TV show about UFOs. So it's called Unidentified with Demi Levado. It's a four part docuseries.
It's going to be on Peacock and on the show you'll see her her friend Matthew and her sister visit in UFO hotspots, also investigating eyewitness encounters and in covering secret government reports. DEMI believe though, That's what I would like to know. She believing extraterrestrials. Well, that's why they got her to do it, because I'll see how you couldn't. But all right, well that is your rumor reports. Wow,
that was fast. All right, well we got front page news. Next, what we're talking about, Yes, let's talk about Andrew Brown Junior and his shooting. Now we're going to talk about what was in that police body camera video. We haven't seen it, but according to attorneys and according to his family, will tell you the timeline of events and some things you may not know. All right, we'll get into that. Next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, So Breakfast Club, your
mornings will never be the same. Angela here and the General Insurance understands that stuff happens, including lapses in auto coverage. At the General, they make it easy to get reinstated and we'll work with you to keep you covered. Call eight hundred General or go to the General dot com to find out more. Some restrictions apply. Morning. Everybody is stj Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are to breakfast club.
Good morning. Let's get in some front page news. Where were starting you, Well, let's start with Andrew Brown Junior. If you guys recall, he was fatally shot in North Carolina while police were trying to execute a warrant. He was in his car, and we have not seen this body in dask camera footage yet, even though the family and the attorneys for Andrew Brown Junior's family are asking for that to be released. But the attorneys and family members had some of the family members have been able
to see what this footage looks like. So they're breaking down once on that footage. Now, Attorney Chase Lynch is talking about the first thing he saw with Andrew Brown Junior's hands being visible the whole time. We were able to see mister Brown sitting in his vehicle as he was ambushed. At all times, his hands were visible at all times. You can see that he was not a threat. There was a shot fire. When the shot was fired, he put the car in reverse, putting several feet of
not y'all away from the police who were there. At no point did we ever see any police officers behind his vehicle. At no point did we ever see mister Brown made contact with law enforcement. Now that's important because the district Attorney, A Jew Wombo, is saying that officers fired when Brown was driving the car moving toward them, and that the car made contact with officers at least two times before shots were fired. So that's why that's
super important to understand. Attorney Chase Lynch also talked about the number of shots that these cops fired. There was a group of law enforcement that were in front of him. He went the opposite direction. As he turned to the left to go across his yard, a second shot was fired, and as he began to accelerate, his car was clearly across the yard. At all times, what we saw were
police officers standing on the pavement unloading their weapons. There were so many shots that we found difficulty in counting the number of shots that his vehicle receive. Now, Bacary Sellers and other attorneys for the family wants the DA to recuse himself from this case because clearly these police officers. The Sheriff's office has been working very closely with the DA, and he feels like there's a conflict The only people in this matter who would be disadvantaged if he stays
on this case are our clients, this family. If Andrew Womble was to recuse himself, there would be no prejudice to the officers in this case. In fact, we would be sure that justice could be carried out without the taint of impropriety. The fact that he will not do that shows that he has some other interests. Slew to my good brother, myself, Kiana Bredren Baccari Sellers. And here's the thing. You know, attorneys are telling the truth in this case because if they weren't, you know, the police
department would have just released the whole video. It's the reason they aren't putting out the whole video because it would just be more evidence that this is the problem with police officers and their interactions with black people. This is how they treat us as always shoot first, ask questions later. Fatal force is the only force they know how to use against us, because this is the only force they've always used against us in order to control
us since the time we got here. Off them damned slaveship. I'm just curious what video the district Attorney, Angel Womble saw that his account of what happened is so different than what everybody else saw. He probably saw the same exact video, but you know, he very clear about what team he play for. They need to release the video.
They won't all right now. Republicans in the Texas House have passed a bill yesterday that bands public school teachers from talking about racism, white supremacy, or current news events.
The bill is being fast tracked for the Governor Greg Abbot to sign into law, so that means social studies and civics teachers aren't allowed to discuss that one race or sex is inherently superior to another race or sex, or the idea that an individual, by virtue of the individual's race or sex, bears responsibility for actions committed in the past by other members of the same race or sex.
How do we feel about that? And one way, I always feel like, you know, the biggest things that can always cause arguments are discussions about religion, discussions about politics. Are you know who's the greatest rapper of all time? Right? Those are the things that caused a lot of arguments. So how do we feel about that in school? Do we need those discussions in school? I think you got to talk about history, and racism is a big part of history. How do you discuss history in the United
States without discussing it? You got to be able to talk about history and everything that went all yeah, absolutely, yeah, I don't need ye Okay, it's controversial, but it happened. But you want them to discussion that. You want them to discuss real history, right, And the fact that we're even having a debate about what is real history nowadays is nuts to me. The fact that things like the sixteen nineteen project can exist in people would be like, well,
that's not how would happened? That wasn't accurate. We shouldn't discuss that, Like it's just it's just strange. So it's like if you're not I if nobody can come to h you know, get on one page about what the truth is. They discussed it at all? Is there are other things they could be talking about in school. They also said teachers don't have to take any professional training like cultural proficiency and equity training if it makes them feel any type of discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any type
of psychological distress. Okay, now what about this right envy? You always talk about how you know they don't teach things like um business in school, right, so what if? What if? What if all of the stuff about history in the past we taught our kids at home and they focused on the future in school, just discussing what they need to be productive citizens in the future. I think they need both. I think you need to know
where you came from to know where you're going. But I also think they need to teach those things that I always say, business economics, taxes, stocks and bonds, real estate. I think they're taking a math class when you take you know, accounting. Yeah, but I just think when you're a black kid, you can never rely on white teachers
to teach you real history. Not saying that there's not white teachers who do, because there are some who actually teach the real history of America, but majority, I really doubt it. Well, I think parents who teach their kids at home are going to continue to do that anyway, absolutely, whether or not. You know. Yeah, but it's so there's so much history. So I mean, that's that's one of
the benefits of going to Hampton University. You have to take African American studies for I think two semesters, and they they they teach you about your history like you have to. It's not like I don't want to take that class. Note, this is a requirement. So I think that's one of the best things about going to h NO. I agree. That's how it was for me at South Carolina State. You know, I got my doctorate. So when I was there, you know, shut up, man, what they
teach us about black history. I went to an HBCU two. You talking about my mom's an alumni South client State? So am I? Now are you talking about this guy here? Man, this guy, you're not making this up. I believe you. I believe you. I've seen it. I've seen it, right, doctor Leonard Leonard, You guys, that's your front page news. All right, Well, thank you, miss ye. Now when we come back, were kicking him. When we come back. Who's who's joining us this morning? My angel Cody is going
to be joining us. And she's actually helped a lot of people who had life sentences in prison get released in these her minor drug charges because of the three strike law. All right, and we're gonna talk to her when we come back, So don't move. It's the Breakfast Club Morning, The Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee, Charlemagne the guy we all the breakfast club. We got a special guest joining us this morning. She got to fly his name in the in the universe.
That's right, my angel, Cody, my angel. Why that's amazing, thank you? Yeah, my angel? What was it? What I mean? Yes, I know it's yes, but what was the meaning? Right? I was the first I was the first born. So my mother was like, it's either gonna be Alicia or my Angel, and so she picked my angel. So I kind of grew into it, you know, I think your name, uh is what you grow into. It's a declaration. Did you ever think it was too big for you? No, Okay I didn't. Actually, Uh, it's a mandate, you know
I think that. Yeah. It's sets expectations with my clients for sure. Now, when we looked you up, it says you pick locks to prison cages. Do you get people out? So explain what you do. So I'm a federal criminal defense lawyer. I only represent men and women who are serving life in prison for drugs. So you know, everybody who's been thrown away under the failed drug war, they're still there and they're still needing lawyers to help get them out. So my team our lead, a team of women.
We're one hundred percent woman powered, black woman led law firm that goes in. We're like the seal team that goes in and gets people out of prison who have been buried alive. Is it easy and now since they're legalizing marijuana at all, or is it more difficult? Is it? You know? Um? No, because I think they're legalizing marijuana but in a racially disparate way, right, and so some people's legal to grow sell marijuana and for some people still a basis to pull you over to OPU in
search your car. So I think what's real. The real question is is legalization full blown or is it for some people? Right? It? Is that also just another flag
of discrimination? Yeah, I think the biggest form of hypocrisy is legalizing marijuana recreationally and for medicinal purposes, but keeping people who got locked up for marijuana still in jail, right like, they record should be exposed, They should be released immediately, absolutely, because what's happening is people are locked up for marijuana, so the state is making money off
of having them locked up. Incarceration is a huge private prisons are huge business, and then the state is making money off of taxing marijuana dispensaries, right, And so it's like you want to have it both ways, My angel. I'm so happy you're here because I do want to start with the War on drugs, right, because you describe it so well, and you do have a documentary that there's strikes. So let's talk about the War on drugs and how that affected us, and then we can talk
about the three strikes. Yeah, So the war on drugs, we are in one of the third iterations of the War on drugs, right, that started in nineteen eighty six, and it was it was because of the drug overdose of Lym Bias. Right. So he was first round, second draft pick in nineteen eighty six. That night died of
a cocaine overdose. Congress then rushed and passed the nineteen eighty six Control Substances Act, right, that implemented all of these very very high mandatory minimum penalties, specifically about crack that targeted the black community and locked up people. And the way it was packaged and sold is we're doing this to help you all to stop this epidemic. And I think one thing we've learned since the pandemic is America is not the best at responding to a public
health crisis. And we've known that from the black community's perspective for decades at least, right, and so the War on drugs was packaged and sold to us as a solution to a public health academic epidemic. But what essentially happened is it created a whole other epidemic of mass incarcerating. Right. Then there was an ad A Crack Laws. Right then there was an ad A Crack Laws. Then there was
the abolition of federal parole. Right, so you have mandatory minimums that are put in place, and you abolish parole. So a lot of people don't know in the federal system, when a judge looks at you and says you are going to receive a life sentence, that means you're going to die in prison. There's no parole board in the federal system. And so that's why, you know, I represent people who literally have been thrown away because they have
no possibility of parole. How hard was it for you to vote for somebody like Joe Biden because he was the architect of all of those tough one crime Legislations, eighty six mandatory minimum sent eight crack laws, ninety four Crime Bill. You know, it's hard for me to vote for anyone, you know, in the current system, because I think until I hear someone truly talking about mass incarceration abolition, um,
then I'm not impressed. But I understand what I have to do in order to stop the you know, blushed in the community. But it's been it's difficult, you know, And I think, you know, one of the problems that I see is this this conversation about criminal justice reform, you know, And so as a lawyer, I'm like, that's that's fine, that's sort of the diluted solution. And I think we've all sort of rallied around this idea that we want criminal justice reform and we want prison reform um.
But you know, if this were one hundred and fifty years ago, will we'd be saying we want slavery reform or will we be saying we want segregation reform or Jim Crow reform? And so at what point did we start settling for reform? Like why would we why would we reform mass incarceration? Why not abolish it? That's the problem and so I think the difficulty for me is not only who I'm voting for, but the way in which the public consciousness about the solution is being diluted.
What do you think about the prison system? What would you do to change it to make it I guess fair. Part of the problem is the prison system is built
on a number of lies myths. Right. First myth is that only criminals are in prison, and we know that you can go to prison for you know, not getting your g D if you're on parole, or being on the porch with another felon, right, And so I think we have to first abolish the myth that people who are in prison committed some crime, because that's not necessarily the case. I think we also have to attack the myth that people being in prison makes us safer. None of my guys who got now and we've walked off
life sentences were danger to the community. And so I think part of the propaganda that the machine is spinning out is that you're safer with this black man in prison, and none of us who actually are in the culture would believe that, you know, And so I think attacking some of those myths are very very important. I want you to know, man, if I was locked up because I feel like I am, because I'm behind the wall.
If you came, I would think I'm getting up, Yes, yes, because yes, my angel and you come with a president. But I think I got a chance to come get out. All right. We have more with attorney, my angel Cody when we come back, So don't move. It's to breakfast club. Good morning morning. Everybody is DJ Envy Angela Yee. Charlemagne, the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it with my angel Cody, Charlemagne. How do you think things would change if non violent drug offenses treated with
rehabilitation rather than imprisonment. I think that we would stop defunding our community if that happened, you know, I think that part of what we've seen is just generations of defunding the community. And if we reinvested in mental health resources, drug treatment, re entry resources, then that would radically shift the way in which people are able to access their
healthy potential. Right. But you know, for most of the guys who I stand with, the federal prosecution of them is like the first time that the system ever really paid a lot of attention to them. It wasn't the education system, it wasn't the healthcare system. If they experienced trauma, there wasn't any mental health services. But you know, you get a drug case in the United States of America
shows up to prosecute you. Wow. Right, Can you talk about your own background and why this is important to you. My father struggle with addiction and probably still does. You know. I messaged him a couple of weeks ago and was like, are you sober and didn't get a response. Wow. So I think that, um, this work is my way of forgiving, forgiving myself, forgiving you know, my childhood, forgiving the person
who sold drugs to my father. And I think that that sort of restorative it's a very personal level of restorative justice that happens, and then we can talk about wider restorative justice, Like then we can talk about how do we create restorative justice in the community and envision that. So for me, it's that I'm also very competitive, and um, you know, I just wanted to be the greatest, Like I want the greatest numbers, I want to win the
most cases, I want to set the most precedent. I want the podium to shake, and so that like level of competition, Uh, also fuels me. And in the case of your father, why did why did you feel like you need to to forgive yourself for his addiction? Um?
I think it was more me feeling like I needed to forgive myself for believing for so long that he wasn't addicted, you know, and believing that there were other there was some other excuse, There's some other reason, there's got to be, you know, and just kind of being like, dangn it, Angel, you didn't see that, you didn't know, and like he had his own traumas that he was dealing with he self medicating, right, and just not me
not seeing it. Yeah, do you think we're getting I asked this question what I kind of know to answer. Do you think we're getting closer to recognizing addiction as an illness rather than the crime? Because I feel like they're definitely doing that in the white communities with Dobe or crisis, But as far as with Black people and our addictions. No, No, absolutely not um, And I'm reporting
life from the federal core podium. No, I don't think that judges are recognized addiction as an illness when it is expressed in black people. I think that mental illness in itself is a privilege that oftentimes we do not get to enjoy in court and as mitigating as an explanation, not an excuse, but as an explanation for why we're
standing in front of a judge. And repeatedly, I've seen where my clients who are white, I can present mental health, I can get my psychologist experts and present reports, and it's heard and it factors into the calculation of how the judge is going to punish them, if at all, or if the prosecutor is going to give him pre trial diversion and dismiss the case. Right, But to say that this young black man experienced trauma and didn't have any counseling for it and that's why he's standing before
for you, your honor, is it often doesn't. It's not heard in the same way. The potency somewhere between my lips and the judges ears something is lost. And it's amazing, right, because we are the community that's dealt with the most trauma exactly. We are the community that deals with so many different mental health issues that you know, don't get diagnosed. So when people say things like somebody told me a quote other day. They was like, stop being so forgiving
the people because people know what they're doing. I'm like, no, they don't. They don't because of the things that they've been through. They have no idea that they're reacting in this way, that they're projecting a lot of their own insecurities, their own pain. They have no idea. Right, No, they might not have any idea. And I think that oftentimes courts have no idea how to handle people. So we
turn people into numbers. Right you get the first thing that happens to you when you're arrested is there's a number assigned to you, and then there's a case number assigned, and then we look at how many helos or grams, and it just the whole apparatus is operating by numbers. How many cases were closed, what was the sentence, the number of years um. And so I think that sort
of dehumanization process. It makes people have to shed their story of who they are, right Like, you come into court with your whole history of who you are, but that you have to leave it at the doorstep. So who's helping you? How can how can people help you? I mean, because I'm just listening now, and if you do all this work pro bono. You're traveling, you have to get experts, you have to pay for court fees, you have to file, like there's a lot it deals
with court. So who helps you? And how can people out there that's listening like myself and so you know what we can donate something to to you know, to continue in your mission. Yeah, absolutely, and so UM you could definitely donate at the www. Dot Decarceration Collective dot org. I would love that because we do have scholarships for children of incarcerated parents and UM we offer re entry scholarships for people. So yeah, I've had We've done some
collaborations UM with some celebrities and influencers. Most recent Yeah, kim Ka supported us UM for sure. Definitely campaign she did she did. I mean we were doing the ninety Days of Freedom campaign, my co council Brittany Barnett and
I and and that was a dare. We were just like we're going to see how many people we get free, like we just it was totally a dare and it happened over text UM and so like halfway through it, you know, she had heard about it UM through her you know, work with Brittany, and she just was like, I want to help you all, you know, fund it because we were literally traveling all over the country going into courtrooms. Yeah. So ninety days we got seventeen people
sentenced to life in prison out. That's a lot. Yeah, that was like no sleep, seventeen people with life, seventeen with life, and ninety it was a dare all right, we have more with Attorney My Angel Cody when we I'm back, so don't move. It's to Breakfast Club. Good morning morning everybody. As DJ Envy Angela Yee Charlemagne, the guy we are the Breakfast Club was still kicking it with Federal Attorney My Angel Cody. Now she's been responsible
of getting so many brothers out of prison. Now, you said you reached out to Trump and you sent videos to Barack Obama. Was he helpful when he was president? Yeah, So I'll give you some numbers and let us know because I see Donald Trump let people out as well. So all the numbers, Okay, let's get I'm gonna give you some numbers. I was one of the first attorneys
to submit a clemency petition to President Obama. When I started writing, everybody was like it's never gonna have in clemencies are like you know, lightning striking and winning the lottery, And so I sent it in two thousand and twelve year later that one was granted and it was one of the first eighth that he ever did. Then he created this clemency Project and by the end of his
second term, seventeen hundred people had gotten commutations. Five hundred and ninety five of those people were sentenced to life in prison. Wi. Um, So that's Obama stats. President Trump. You know, I think he commuted maybe twenty or thirty people. Maybe I'm not sure in the exact numbers, ten or twelve of those sentenced to life in prison. So you know, and I don't I don't dispers The numbers speak for themselves, right, And there's a lot of missing there's a lot of
misinformation out there because Donald Temple. Have you believe that he did all this work and Obama did nothing? What about Kamala Harris and Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden? Have they been open? I know it's only been one hundred days, one hundred and some days. Have they been open to the things that you've been doing? I definitely think that there is an opportunity there to engage in some real bold action. I hope they will
take it. They will have to, especially Joe Biden for his legacy, that it's for a legacy, but also the morality of it. We are at the precipice. We cannot continue to pretend like where it's not serious business right now, Um, we're dying. And so it is not a racist country,
my angel, America's absolutely a racist country. America is absolutely a racist country because if it wasn't a racist country, then the Biden administration wouldn't be opening these pattern and practice investigation, civil rights investigations, and all these police departments around the country right right, so they're they're investigating. Bills wouldn't be named after black people, right who exactly? I mean?
But I do think, you know, um, what is required will have to be something more than reform, you know. And I think about this Justice and Policing Act and it's well, it'll pass probably, um and people will think that there was a solution, but it doesn't do what people think it does. So what what language needs to be in the build or where police officers are held
directly accountable? Me because I always say that if I'm a police officer when I'm interacting with people, the thing I should be thinking about is my pension in prisons. Either I'm going to prison, I'm gonna lose my pension, or they're gonna hit my pockets in some way shape before and they will take money on my bank account. Whatever is, I'm gonna be directly held. I'm gonna be
held directly responsible for this individual's murder. So what language needs to be in there for that to happen, right, Because taxpayers shouldn't be funding our own murder, that's right, right, So the language needs to say that a cause of action can be brought against an individual police officer who commits a violation against an individual, and regardless of whether they're acting undercolor of law, right, Because that's the problem. They always say, well, I was you know, they hide
behind the shield. I was acting undercolor of law. You know I was afraid for my life, or you know I thought he had a gun, and that creates qualified immunity. Right. It says, as long as you're acting under color of law, um, then you have a shield and you can't be personally sued. And that's the problem, right, like you could be personally sued in a car accident. That's the issue, and it has to be an absolute. It can't be a maybe. My Angel, Cody, we appreciate you for joy, thank you,
thank you for coming. I love to see you again. That's fun because I you know, I mean, you know what you said about Kim k earlier. It's just like, oh, this is what you're supposed to do when you have a platform, You're supposed to shine light on folks. That's that's all I ask anybody to do. Like, I hate seeing people on CNN or MSNBC talking about things like that. They shouldn't be talking about this brand. Bring the experts on, right, you know what I mean. Oh yeah, there's a lot
of people talking. I'm like, please, don't. You're not helping nobody's getting out of prison within talking. Absolutely, we appreciate you so much to my angel, and thank you so much. Thank you. Angela. Right, it's my angel. Cody is the breakfast Club. Good morning, everybody is Angela. Yee, Charlomagne the guy, we are the breakfast Club. Good murder. I forget all right, let's get to the room as let's talk. Chris Rock's this is the rumor rapport with Angela Yee on the
Breakfast Club. Well, Chris Rock was talking to Esquire magazine and he was talking about his turning down movie roles with The Rock. He said that is something that he did before. He said, years ago, when I was famous and The Rock wasn't and they would say, hey, you want to do a movie with The Rock. I'm like, are you effing crazy? That's the wackest ish I've ever heard, he said. But now the guy's like the biggest action star in the world, and I'm like, hey, can I
get two lines. Another thing that they did was they showed him pictures of certain moments in his career, and he described what was happening. So they showed him a picture of him in the Little nas X video. I had no idea who a Little Nasax was, right, So I get asked to do this video, and I asked my daughter Zara, should I do this video? Show? What? Of course you should do this video like I'm in the video for the biggest soul ever made. I don't know how that happened. And by the way, I'm allergic
to horses. Tried to ride a horse all day, I thought my was gonna close up, like I almost died for a little NASAs. I think I'm allergic to horses too. How would you know that? Because when it's like a animal dander thing, my eyes get itchy. Really if I'm around horses, and when you just randomly around horses. You grew up in New York, Yeah, they always have the horses and by Central Park, and I did the horse
ride once and I was like sneezing. My eyes were itching, I mean, never again, not like New York's air isn't trash though, yeah, but only that at that time when I was with the horses, and when I was gone, I was fine. And New York horses a little different though. They don't look like other other horses. They look sound, they look sad. They definitely look sad, like I got to walk through traffic and you know, you know all right now. In addition to that, they showed him a
picture of C before the movie C Before. I wrote C Before me and a good friend of mine, Nelson George, and that this is usual falls on that Snell or anything. It's actually what I really think about. I consider C Before my greatest accomplishment because I got a movie deal before I was on anything. By the way, it's weere. I talking to my agent a couple of days ago. I was debating, do I want to do C before tour dates. I don't think y'all know how much I
love C before. I actually have a new take for a C before a film. I love before, all right. And then he talks about one of the last times that he saw Chris Farley alive. I'm playing a Universal amphitheater and it was my first big tour. I don't know, this looks like one of the last times I saw Chris alive. I would see him one more time, and
I did a gig in Chicago. We tried to hang out afterwards, but you know, I don't know if you ever, like, really hung out with an attict towards the end, you know what I mean, Anything that isn't the drug is a chore. And I remember I was at his apartment and showed me his apartment and I leave and I see him out the window, and I was like, ah, that's probably the last time I see him. Yeah, does this generation even remember Chris Fawley. Yeah. He died in
nineteen ninety seven of a drug overdose. These people that weren't even born. He was thirty three years old at the time. All right, now, let's do a little recap of what's happened since we told you about Porsche and Simon from Real Housewives of Atlanta being engaged and Simon breaking up with Falin, who he was also on Real Housewives of Atlanta with they were married. So Falin has responded. She posted, I want to thank everyone for reaching out
to me and offering their love and support. At this time, I am focusing on finalizing my divorce and healing, sending positivity to all of you, sincerely, Fallon. Now, Porscha has since been posting, and she posted a meme that said if you if you don't give a damn, we don't give an f was a couple and a picture of Porsche and Simon together and she reposted that. And then apparently Porsche is saying that she just was not friends
with Fallon and it was a made up storyline. According to TMZ, multiple sources have confirmed that Fallon and Porsche were never friends because people were saying that Porsche took her friend's husband, and she said literally they met the day that they filmed together on Real Housewives of Atlanta. Producers simply told them to act as if they'd known each other. So that's why it shows on the screen. When you first see Fallon, it says friend of Porsche's
who didn't know that though I said that yesterday. Well, people don't know if you watched the show, and it says that's her friend. And then you've seen the interviews the Fallon did or she talks about how they met and she said they were cool with each other, and then Porsche's really sweet, but we know we've been watching years a reality TV. I mean, common sense would tell you. Because Porsche said, that's not my friend. Common sense would say, okay,
that was just something that was set up for reality TV. Now, Porsche, I know when she said it yesterday, but before I thought they was really friends. All right. Now, Porsche says her ex Dennis McKinley is cord of her new relationship because people were also saying that Dennis and Simon were friends, so they actually broke the bro code. But she also
is saying now that they were never friends either. So there you go, all right, And Porsche, by the way, has allegedly landed a three part Bravo special about her life, of course, and I know people would be tuning in to watch that. You know, they also did the Porsches Having a Baby spin off back in twenty nineteen. Yeah, I saw that yesterday. But what is it three parts special about her life? Isn't she on Housewives in Atlanta? Don't we see her life on it? Like? What is
this one on her? And then I've seen something yesterday that she's allegedly pregnant, so I guess it's on the whole marriage and all that. Well, they're saying that this special was greenlit months ago, so it has nothing to do with everything that's happening now. But it's going to focus on her, on her activism because you know, she comes from a family of activism and her family and I guess now this yeah, yeah, oh listen. One thing
you can't say about Porsche is she's entertaining. She's definitely entertaining. You can't say she's not all right. Well that is your room of report, All right, thank you, miss ye Charlema. Speaking of reality shows, This reality show that I'm about to do four after the hour, it is called The Flavor of Butt Cheeks we'll talk what Okay, let's bring your butt cheeks to the front of the congregation. We'd like to have a conversation with you. Four after the hour. Okay,
it's all right. Get the day's up next, it's the breakfast. It's so excited. Relax, all right, get dunkey at the dates. You get dunky at day or h I'm gonna fatten all that shit around your eye. This man to dog and blowers man. They waited for Charlomage the top judgment. Who was gonna be on the donkey of the day. They chose you, bitch, Who's donkey of the day to day? I'll tell you foods. I'll swallow my fish oil pill home all right, okay? Doc here today for Wednesday, May twelve,
goes to a Michigan man named Nathaniel Saxton. Now, someplace somewhere today there is someone getting ready for court. That court may be virtual. I'm sure it's some places who have resumed in person court hearings. But if you have ever, you know I had to be in a courtroom like I have. One of the first things a lawyer is going to tell you to do is look presentable. Hell, people who love you who have been through the court system before would tell you wear a suit, get a haircut.
I remember I was in court one time for appointing in presenting a firearm, and my attorney told the judge look at his shoes. Look at the shoes he's wearing, because they were nice. There were actually some rust colored leather timberland, so I don't know what was special about them, but I ended up getting probation. So it must have worked through to Stephen Davis from most corner of South Carolina dropping a Clowes Bob Stephen Davison, his son's an
attorney now too. They always tell you to dress conservative in court. Something you know you would wear the church work or a nice social social function. Anybody who tells you otherwise it's trying to get your tricked off the street. Google look presentable in court and see what comes up. Y'all don't believe humans anymore. You're not gonna believe your uncle Charlotte, so believe your laptops or your phones. Just google look presentable in court and it'll say be well
groomed in presentable. You want to style your hair or at least keep it tamed and in play shave or if you have facial head, make sure your beard or mustache is neatly pruned. What does that mean? What it pruned mean? Like? Oh, okay, okay, it also says brush your teeth, trim your fingernails, wear deodorant, Treat this like a job interview at first date. The moral of the
story is be presentable in court. Okay. I don't know how any of this works via zoom, but you know, we've all seen enough zoom interviews over the past yet to know that people still show up looking spiffy, at least from the waist up. Okay, we may have basketball shorts on the bottom, women might wear sweats at the bottom, but at least from the waist up. You know, we're presentable now in this virtual world. A lot of us
when we get on these zooms, we have nicknames. Is our names, Like you know, when I'm on a zoom, my name is Radio Face. So when I'm on zoom, it's Radio Face. When I'm doing something like I was doing yesterday because we had a virtual book event for Queen Timika Mallory because her new book State of Emergency, How to Win in the Country. We build it out, We had that for the scram bookstore. My name was presented as Lenard see the God mckelvy, or I might
have just been Charlemagne the God. Either way, that's presentable. But if I was in court, best believe my name would just be Leonard mckelfie. Right, that's just a presentable way to do things. Well. Nathaniel Saxton didn't get that memo. See On yesterday, Nathaniel was in court and Judge Jeffrey Middleton presided over the zoom coverage that included eight people
with matters before the court. I'm just gonna sit back and let this whole exchange play out, because this is what you call comedy gold, matter of fact, for the sense of the humor that I have, the type of things that I like, the laugh fact. This is comedy platinum, matter of fact, this is diamond. Listen to how Nathaniel Saxton presented himself in court. Listen, good morning, sir. What's your name? Nathaniel Saxon? Sir, your name is not, but for three thousand yo, lurden into my court with that
screen name. What kind of an idiot logs into court like that? What's your name again? Nathaniel Saxton sir, but I don't believe that I typed anything like that, And well, that's what it says you should. I'll put you in the waiting room. You can sit in limbo for a while think about what you call yourself online. I think Judge put him in the waiting room because he wants to talk to him. After the Courts of Judge, Jeffrey Middleton asked a very valid question, what kind of idiot
logs into court with a name like that? I'll tell you what kind of idiot, The kind of idiot who thinks he's out smartened to Judge, See, why would you ever say someone named butt f for three thousand in the jail? Sounds to me like jail would be a fun house for butt f for three thousand. Okay, I hate that he uses three thousand. Andre Benjamin didn't spit one of the greatest rap verses ever on y'all scared off the EQUIMENTI album for y'all to take his name and put a butt fa in front of it. But
you think he but Nathaniels Saxton thinks he's slicked. This is the equivalent of the guy in training. They remember the movie Training Day when the three wisemen are talking to Alonzo and they're talking to him about how one of the guys got off because the dude put peanut butter in the back of his pants and stuck his hands in his pants and pulled his hand out covered in peanut butter and licked his finger clean. And then the judge just sent him to a psych ward for
like six months or something. That's what Nathaniel Saxton was hoping happened in this situation. The judge would never send someone who loves the f butts the jail. What do he now? And now, in Nathaniel's defense, he didn't say what kind of butt? How many different flavor of butts are there? Envy? I mean there's male, there's female. What cheddar and sour cream? Sour cream and onion, chili, cheese cheeks? What's your favorite flavor? Envy? I don't have a favorite flavor.
You're a liar, Envy. Okay, you're using name used to be butt effort for the nine nines and two thousands? All right, true. I don't have anything else to say about this other than play it again. Your name is not but for three thousand yoh? What is a Yoho? What is a yoho? What is a is that somebody's using name? I think that they were like seeing eye to eye to judge was like, oh, you're a butt effort. I'm a yoho. I'm a what is a yoho? Some
donkey to days just sell themselves. Please give him Daniel Saxton the biggest here? No, nokay, Okay, let's do it. I guess we'll play a game of gas. Yes, what all right? Nathaniel Saxton of Michigan showed up in virtual court with the name the screen name but FF for three thousand. Angela yee, guess what, racy? Yes? Um, the only reason I'm gonna say African American is because of you guys. Excuse me, Oh but you guys are black and I could see that being your name too. Why
whoa racist? Okay, I don't know if it is that Nathaniel Saxton. Oh okay, Nathaniel Saxton from Michigan in virtual court with the screen name but FF for three thousand. DJ Dramos guess what, racy? Yes, this is this is white privilege that it's finest man. Yeah, I can see why you say that. Only somebody that has the level of privilege and entitlement would show up with that name. Uh, DJ envy, Yes, sir, Nathaniel Saxton from Michigan stole your
screen name but updated it by a thousand years. His stream name is but after three thousand guess what right years? I'm going white? Is that what flavor? But you ont envy is that your final answer? I'm going to white. Only white people play these type of games with judges like this. Well, DJ Drammas and DJ NV you are absolutely cord. I knew it, not doing your Saxton. You're absolutely right. Only a white man will play with the judge in this way. Only a white man. Are you
out of your damn mine? I need to know what charge you was facing. That The other reason I know he was whitecause they didn't tell you what charge was facing in the goddamn um, the New York Posts or whatever. I get that from daily News, one of them. I'm just gonna offended what you said, because you guys do this all the time. So I thought he was black. I just when he said, but after I was like, Charlomagne envy black. But we don't know what flavor but it was. We don't know if it was male female
chili cheese cheeks. We don't know. I guess I just affiliated it with y'all. Thanks. All right, well, I'm glad you think of a think of us in that way. All right? What you call but I think we call bonding. That's what we're calling them. Goodness gracious? All right? Asking? Ye is next? Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one h You got a question for you? You need relationship advice, any type of advice or maybe zoom names advice. Whatever you need from her, call her now.
She will help you out with your problems. It's the breakfast club. Good morning? What what? What? What? What you gonna know? Baby mama issues? Sneak some words of wisdom? All up now for asking eight hundred five eighty five one oh five one breakfast club relationship right, need personal advice, just need real advice? Call up now for asking. Morning. Everybody's stej Envy, Angela, Yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are to breakfast club. It is time for asking? Ye. Hello,
who's this? Hi? It's Gray? Good morning, y'all. What's up? Jay? How y'all doing okay? What's happen? Good? I'm doing good? Okay, Miss angel or good morning, Charlomagne, go morning. Okay. So look, miss Angela, okay, and so I have four kids with one man, and he gets our kids every other weekend okay, and sometimes he doesn't even get him on the weekend because he has to go out of town. So like that interrupts my word. Okay. So basically, am I wrong
for not giving him some of the stimulus check? No, that's the whole answer. I thought I was crazy. Okay, I'm so glad that you said that. Is he trying to make you feel like you're wrong that, yes, he is. He puts me down, like he throw dirt on my name, like he's just like so mean aim and even with the tax our taxes, my taxes, m like he's trying to count my pockets and like he's trying to be like, oh no, I'm I deserve this. I deserve that. Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Slow down. Now, y'all are not even together, right, No, man, we are not. He got other kids with other people. Yeah, well, listen, that is not your problem. You know what you're trying to do, make sure that you survive and take care of your kids. That's why that stimulus check has your name on it. Yes, exactly. So I'm just like, I know, I'm not crazy. And he feels like he's entitled and he had he has stold support with other kids, so like, if I want to let him sound a kid that
child support will take that. No, that's not on you. You have you have more control over that. I mean, you're with the kids more than he has. You're taking care of them more than he is. Does he pay you child support? No? Man, Well girl, you are a blessing. Okay, you are a blessing in that man's life. He better be glad you are not taking money from him for child support that you deserve to have. If anything, he owe you some money. Yeah, I'm know right, oh my god,
but he does not understand that. Like I really feel like you need to go. All right, let's break it down like this for him. This is what we're gonna do. Right, We're gonna count up the amount of hours that you spend with the kids taking care of them and the expenses that you have, and let's count up the hours that he spends with the kids and the amount of money that he spends on them, and then let's see what that comes out. To and then whoever owes the
other person money, they gotta pay it. Oh my god, I love that all we I do need to break that down. Th Oh my god. All right, well, Jay, you are absolutely right. You deserve even more. I appreciate you so much. Thank you, all right, take care? All right? No, that's right. Five eight five one five one. If you need relationship advice at any type of if advice, call ye. Now it's the breakfast Club. Good morning, I'm some real advice with Angela yet ask ye morning, everybody in stj
Envy Angela, yee, Charlomagne the guy. We are the breakfast club. We're in the middle of ask yee. Hello. Who's this Gilanni? Hey, Gilannie? What's your question for you? I'm married, I'm polyamorous, um in bisexual. I love Polynesian sauce too from Chick fil Age. So good. That is good? Right, yes, um, But I'm also dating another woman who's married. I'm polyamorous, and I was wondering because we both have husbands of a. Because I'm poly, I'm sort of dating another man as well.
And this lady is has been in a mix between he and I and I have been intimate with her husband with no real communication behind it, but any type of inpation or desire who wants to be intimate with her confuses the guy and myself that we both um hang out with, all three of us hang out with and see benefits from him financially. So I don't understand if I should pull away from her because she's more after the financial aspect, like on some sugar baby stuff
or keep tasting. Wait, I'm confused, So who's giving her money? So both of us, myself and the other guy that I'm dating, Okay, supposedly she doesn't really want to date him or something like that. Well do you care if she dates him? No, and it's not and it has him an egg, So no, I don't care. So what's what's the problem. The problem is that money is going out um without an explanation of what's up. For example,
like with Polly people, we communicate a whole lot. We call the process and because you have to with most because a lot of communications, so nobody gets it. Come everybody's consenting, right, So now I'm just getting tired. We're supposed to go to this event next next week in Atlanta, and a lot of money has been going out without much in return being given back. So that's why I'm like, so n move on to another woman that was more interested.
This is receiving reward, all right. So you feel like she's just doing it for the financials and she's not really invested for any other reason. Why. I'm not saying she's not. It just seems that way because I can't even be intimate with her, but she was easily intimate with me and her husband. Does that make that all right? So you think she's doing this to get money from her husband, and I'm from who I know, not from her husband, but from who I'm dealing with. This is confusing.
I'm not gonna lie to Jelannie, but i will say this. You know what you said that was a clue to me. You said, I'm tired, Okay, so yeah, and you just tired. And it feels like it's already a lot of communication, like you said that you have to do, it's already
a lot of confusion that could come about. And I do feel like if you're having some red flags that you should really pay attention to that because a lot of times, yeah, that was all very kind offul because I'm like, who's paying money for wed and she's not
giving back. I don't have time to explain it easily right now on the radio, but yeah, I just wanted to see if it was best for me to keep it moving, to keep you know, like mental fees, instead of trying to figure out somebody's intentions because you don't do you have feelings for her? Yeah? And I think she has feeling for me, but she just isn't as communicative, okay. And what happens when you tell her that, um, she
says that she'll do better. You know, sometimes you have to tell people like specifically, not just communicate more, but specifically, like when you did you know when this happened, This is how it made me feel when you didn't let me know this or a result of this is that you have to be very explicit and spell things out for people sometimes to give them examples of where it is that they're messing up when it comes to communicating, so that you can let her know specifically what the
issues are. Like you said, it is confusing. It is a lot going on. Yeah, and I appreciate you telling me that because I'm probably used to not having to do so much, you know, what I mean, But everybody's different, so I appreciate you telling me that you're right because some people are like for her, it's kind of like when you're in a relationship with somebody and they're not used to doing things the way that you're used to it,
so it's not as smooth. So that means that it requires a little bit more training on your part for that person. Yeah, because I'm just like, I'm tired with the fact of its seeming like you were open to me being infant with you and your husband, But basically I have two sentiment on my end, my husband and the other guy that I'm dating. But she can read all the benefits financially, right, but they can not explain why she can't involve herself with either of mine intimately, right.
So Yeah, that's y'all be all using condoms and stuff. Yeah, I'm just wondering, and you get tested on the regular, I mean, but that's normal or should be normal in this kind of love style. How did you get into it? Um, My husband and I just women were fretting together a long time ago, and the side is to start of dating together, but we ended up over time dating separately, which is Paul Solo poly Okay, he don't. Does he mess with with man? Also, we're both saying sexual so no,
he does not mess with men. But in the past he has ut with trans women and myself as well. And I'm not telling his business wrong way he wouldn't and on radio. All right now listen, we haven't had
this whole conversation before, so it's interesting. Yeah, man, I set myself out though I don't know what y'all follow me on Delanne's amused d E L A N. I underscored tad muf to get more of my business, okay, And I'm hosting an event in Houston in a Galvinton area next month of June seems weekend for Polynogamus and no Monogamus people for anybody interested. All right, thanks, Jelani. Maybe we'll have some more conversation. I hope y'all work it out. Thank you, good bye? All right, ask ye
eight hundred five eight five one oh five one. If you need relationship advice to any type of advice, you can hear it any time. Now. We got rumors on the way, yes, and let's talk about quest a love. He recently did an interview where he said that doctor Dre saved the roots. All right, we'll get into that next. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Oh go report it's Club Well. Michael Jordan has revealed his last text exchange with Kobe. He was talking to ESPN's
Jackie McMullen and here's what he said. This exchange took place December eight, twenty nineteen forty nine, days before Kobe Bryant passed, and first Kobe complimented him on his sin Coora tequila. He said this tequila is awesome, and Jordan responded, thank you, my brother, and then Kobe said, yes, their
family good. Jordan said, all good yours. He said all good, and then Jordan said he was really into coaching gig so I hit him up about that and he said, happy holidays and hope to catch up soon, coach Kobe, and he said, I added that little crying laughing emoji. You know, stuff like that is why um people that I love and I care for like I always try to say it like I love you at the end of a conversation because you just you know, you just
never know. And when people pass, you go back and you look at those things, and you always feel like man, I wish I would have just said I love you all, appreciate you something you know him? Go ahead now, speaking of Kobe Bryant getting inducted into a Hall of Fame alongside his friends and competitors Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett. Since obviously Kobe camp be there, Jordan is going to take his place, so let's say something to me, charlman, Man,
you're a man. You better get whatever about your throat out your throat. Okay, you though, you know I love you, bro, Come on now. Michael Jordan said it that. About six months ago, he sent a text to Vanessa to check on her. He said, I told the look, I know this is a tough time. I'm always here if you need me, and she answered, I would love it if you stood up for Kobe at the Hall of Fame. Salute to them, Say it back, say it back. You
know I love you, bro. All right? And since we're talking basketball, Jake Cole is going to be the first rapper to ever be on the cover of Slam magazine. They posted Jordan was like Jesus, Slam was like the Bible. Jake Cole is the first artist to be featured. Oh Master never been on the cover of Slam. I don't recall that, but they're saying he's the historic for them. Interesting, he's the first rapper or solo artist ever placed on
that cover and it's twenty seven year history. And I think Jay Cole playing for the Basketball African League is amazing. And I think that league, you know, I think merchandise is going to be through the roof for that league. I know, I know. I can't wait. By me a jersey from my native land. All right now, quest Love is recalling a story of how doctor j actually helped to save the Roots. He was having a conversation with
Mark Ronson on the Fader Uncovered. Annie talked about MCA records imploding and then the Roots career was in limbo. And here's what he said happened. Doctor Dre and Jimmy Iving had a breakfast meeting. Jimmy basically, let Dre control the MCA Guillantine. Okay, who do we save? Who don't we save? I remember eight of us got saved, Mary Common, I remember our name being last on that list. The way that the email came to us, it's sort of like that high school musical like you look to see
if you made the part of the thing you're looking down? Oh? Is that when MCA became part of Interscope with something like that? Are they dissolved INCA and took some of the artists over the Interscope There was no MCA anymore. Yeah, and that's why I think it was Geffen MCA. Then Geffen transferred to Interscope, so that's what happened, and they kept some of the artists. They kept eight acts. You know why I know that because I used to do an R for a record label called Never So Deep Records,
and they were a subsidiary of MCA. I remember when that happened. I used to manage the JAS and he was signed to MCA. Needless to say, we didn't make the cut when I scooted him. My man DJ Blessing doctor Robert Evans. Yes, all right. Now it looks like another thing they didn't make the cut is this Joe Button podcast. So I saw a lot of people talking about this on social media. I guess the track cast was posted and then taken down. And here is what we were able to recover thus far. Y'all go get
the advertiser and the integration. Hey, we talked about these deals all the time. You bring it, you eat different. I bring it. I eat different. You ain't got the nerve to have y'all representation. It ain't been around in six years, eating foe. We're gonna do this since Rory feels like he had so many options to you. Rory, you are in breach of your contract and from this point forward, you are fired and you're not welcome back. Ye, So I can't you treat your friends? What the hell
is going on? I thought they made amends. I don't know what happened. Well, well, then they say like five years ago that the breakfast Club would only be around three more months or something like that. They don't remember what him saying that. Listen, I don't know. I haven't heard a thing, but I just guess now, is there any coming back from this? They should have been coming back from the way he was talking to them last time. I'm not gonna talk to me disrespect. They did go back.
So is there a way to ever resolve this? No? He only five minutes. Matter of fact, Rony's been asking for five minutes for years. He should get his five minutes. I just want to say happy born Day to my friend Dolly Bishop. She's the president of the Black Effect podcast network. Today is our born day. Dropping a clues bomb for Dolly Bishop. I love you, I value you, and I appreciate you. And I also want to say Tomika d. Mallory State of Emergency, How to Win in
the Country we built my other friend. I love her and I value her and I appreciate her. Her book is out right now, available everywhere in all formats. I just wouldn't tell you if you ever talk to me like that. You only five minutes, bro, But I still love you. What what's going on? What is butt f for ninety nine and the two thousand talking about? What are you talking? You told me you love me, I said, I love you back, dude. What are you talking about? God is good man? I mean, you know, he seems
so upset. All right, Well that is your room of report. All right, thank you, miss Yeah, you know I want to shout out to our board up dramas Man Dramos purchases first home this year that he owns. He also has an investment property because it gets money. Don't tell him what can't tell you? Because according to a certain mayor or candidates. It's only about eighty to ninety thousand dollars if he lives in Jersey. He lives in Jersey, and he also has a real retail space that he
rents out. Is well. I just want to say, I'm proud of you. And that's what we're trying to do, to make sure that that we all own something. We teach each other how to do it. And I just want to sound proud of you Dramas for owning your own home. You I'm self proud of you. Yeah, a lot of people be having conversations about ownership and you know don't even own a house. So salute to my dude, Dramas. And you know, we all know how Dramas got there.
But don't feel like take your Dramas was living with another thirty year old man for a long time, you know, sharing one bathroom. But that's what you do. You stay down until you come up. You know what I'm saying, And that's what he did. Shame you up, but congratulate. I just want to say congratulations of the Dramas. He was telling me about it behind the scenes. That's exciting. COT will help all right now, revote, will see you tomorrow.
Everybody else to People's choice mixes up next, get your request. Then it's a breakfast Club Go Morning. So Breakfast Club, your mornings will never be the same. Our Audible pick of the day is start here. This new podcast series for Mel Robbins is a great collection of snack size inspiring mode Aniva. Your first thirty days of Audible plus are free. Sign up at audible dot com. Slash Breakfast Club Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy, Angelou Yee, Charlomagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. Now I'm out in Atlanta. Shout to Lincoln Tech and shout to the beat in Atlanta. I'm out here. We're playing in out things for the car show, so we'll be here for all day long, just getting things together. Of course, the car shows July third. If you haven't got your tickets, definitely get your tickets. It's it's gonna be a fun event. Man, They've got so many surprises. I can't wait for you guys to come on out and spend fourth July weekend with me
and my family. Now. Also a lot of people, a lot of my friends in Atlanta, they wouldn't pick me up yesterday from the airport because they said that the gas prices, they can't find gas. Yeah, gasoline demand. It was this whole cyber attack on the pipeline, and so now they're saying that people are going out. It was the Colonial pipeline. People are going out and stocking up on gas. But they are saying things should be back
to normal by the end of the week. The problem with the gases that everybody's like filling up all their cards with gas and it's causing some gas stations to run out. And Atlanta, Atlanta gonna be on the boosey. They're gonna be pulling up to the goddamn club VIP tain't ony guess what all drinks on me? But I tell you you can. We'll take the Marta what's the morning the train? Bus or train? He said, you don't remember Marta Girl, one of the greatest viral video clips
of all time. I do, but I don't. I don't know how to get around. I Billy know to get around in New York City on train. Well, I can tell you something. In Atlanta. D riding is a real form of transportation, So you know, find your ride. If you can get to where you need to go? Can you recommend the good one? I'm sure I hate y'all. Man, y'all play too much? All right? Positive note when we
come back is the Breakfast Club. Good morning morning everybody in DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlomagne the guy we all the Breakfast Club, good morning, Yes, and listen. I want to say thank you to everybody who has been purchasing Tamika Mallory State of Emergency. How We Win in the
Country We Built. That's That's actually one of the reasons I was late this morning because I was really invested, you know, watching you know, the Amazon book charts and the Bonds and Noble book charts, and you know, just seeing Tamika I think she was. She's number one in like three different categories, number like twenty five overalls, and that's millions and millions of books all across the country. So you know, she deserves it all. So yeah, man, if you haven't got it, check go out there and
get it. It's available in all formats. Tamika read her own audio book. The e book is available, and of course the hard copy State of Emergency, How We Win in the Country We Built. It's the first book off my book in print, Black Privilege Publishing. But you know, forget all that, it's Tamika and I'm happy that you know she's getting this moment because she deserves it all. And plus the book is just a great book. It's a how to guide on how to navigate your way
through this white supremacist system. So get yourself for copy, and thank y'all, and shout out to my angel Cody for joining us this morning as well. Absolutely, she came in here dropping all types of free jewldy. Yeah, she gave us a lot of information. I know there's a lot of misinformation out there. To make sure you guys check out her a Decarceration Collective and all the work that she does and her team of all women too. By the way, all right, well you got a positive note,
I do. The positive note is simply this man yesterday was the Honorable Minister Lewis Farracons born day he turned eighty eight. And I actually just posted this clip of Minister Farrakon because it's I love it and it's something that I try to apply to my life. When you see men fall, don't laugh, learn because you are on your way up. And the things that tempted people to fall. You know what, why am I saying this? I can
just let the minister say it. Listen, you see men fall, don't laugh, learn, Learn, because you're on your way up, and the things that tempt people to fall, you and I are not free from that temptation, nor from the
weakness that will cause us to stumble and fall. When you laugh at somebody else's fall, white or black, rich or poor, your enemy or your friend, you're laughing and opening away for your own demise when you do that, Because to laugh and not learn, to make mockery and not to understand, it's to make the same mistake yourself. Preface clubs you're finish or y'all dumber.
