The Breakfast Club - A Mother’s Fight (PART 2): Searching Every Day for Her Missing Daughter
Episode Date: April 10, 2026In part 2 of the interview with Lovette Bryce a mother who has been searching for her missing daughter, August, for over a month. From being ignored by police to building her own search effort from th...e ground up, this is a raw and unfiltered look at what families go through when their loved ones disappear. This isn’t just one story—this is a bigger issue. Missing children, lack of media coverage, and a system many say is failing Black and brown communities. If you see something, say something. Let’s bring Aisha August home.YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm a homegirl that knows a little bit about everything and everybody.
You know if you're going to lie about that, right?
Lauren came in hot.
Hey, y'all, what's up?
It's Lauren La Rosa, and this is another episode of the latest with Lauren La Rosa.
This is a daily dig on all things, pop culture, entertainment news, and all of the conversations
that shake the room, baby.
You are going to hear from a mother who is distraught, who has not seen her baby girl
in over 38 days, a black mother who, you know, is a fighter and has the will and determination
to not give up, who is up every day, literally kicking indoors after,
She receives tips about where young women and young black women may be being held as they're being trafficked.
You're going to hear from her throughout this episode.
But I want you guys to understand what we are up against because one thing that LeVette echoes a lot in our interview is that it's not just her daughter that she wants to help bring home.
There are so many young black girls in the city of Wilmington alone in the last several weeks.
I've come across at least, like, oh my God, four to five Facebook groups who are posting daily,
sometimes every 20 minutes, a new young woman, young man, baby, grown adult, elderly person that is going missing in the city.
But one of the big conversations that we are having right now are about our young black girls,
our young black kids in these inner cities.
according to black and missing
according to black and missing ink.com
which is an organization that helps to bring platform and voice
to children black children who are missing
and who are going overlooked in 2020
there were over 563,000 persons reported missing
in the United States.
Now of that over 563,000 people
57% of those people
were white, including Hispanic people,
40% of those people were minority.
40% of missing persons or persons of color,
yet black people make up only 13% of the population,
and that's via census.gov.
Thousands of people are reported missing every year in the U.S.
and not every case gets media-wide spread attention,
but the coverage of white and minority victims
are far from proportionate.
Now, black and missing,
Inc.com goes on to talk about why there's a disparity in media coverage around black and brown
children, black and brown people as we go missing. The number one reason is runaways. A lot of
minority children are initially classified as runaways and are as runaways and as a result,
they do not receive an amber alert. You will hear from Ms. LeVett in my interview talk about
her daughter and how she had to fight to get an amber alert. The second reason,
Being listed as criminals.
Missing minority adults are labeled as associated with criminal involvement, gangs, and drugs.
Desensitization is the third reason.
It is believed that missing minorities live in impoverished conditions and crime is a regular part of our lives.
And I say, I were because I'm from the same city that, you know, Ms. Levett's daughter went missing at,
literally blocks away from where this young girl was last seen by her mother and by her family.
I grew up.
My family's there.
My niece is there.
This is our problem.
This is not just her and her family's problem.
This is our problem.
And when I say our, I don't just mean me because I'm from the neighborhood.
I mean that to say, this could be your daughter.
This could be your niece.
This could be your cousin.
This could be you.
This could be.
I mean, I saw Savannah Guthrie, you know,
go back to work today on the Today Show, you know, and national news coverage around that.
The FBI, the president involved in that.
There's a celebrity element there.
We get it.
She's a white woman.
They're a white family.
We get it.
And we want everybody to return home safe.
But we have to look at what's happening here and lack thereof.
So this is everybody's problem, not just, you know, those who choose to care about news coverage,
not just, you know, now your baby's missing and you're trying to find.
figure out how to go about it.
White, black, brown, green, purple, this is everybody's issue.
Now, this video from Kay Lynn's shows exactly what Ms. Levett, you know, is talking about
as she searches for her daughter, August, or Aisha.
This video was shot early March outside of Ms. Levet's home.
Here you hear Ms. Levette and her family going back and forth with police who showed up
to her home to search her home after she reported her daughter.
Because, happen these, I'm going to all this.
They gave me footage.
I've been down here.
Everybody else saying, y'all got to get the footage.
Y'all got it.
They're not giving it to me.
I've been doing to do or do her.
I'm outside every day, all day.
I'm spending every time I got giving out flyers.
And today, y'all want to come and do a fucking search in my house.
And I know my goddamn daughter, and I'm not in my motherfucking house.
Right.
She's not in my house.
You're not doing a motherfucker.
Like, literally.
It's not up to us for the footers to come right away.
It is up to y'all.
No, listen, I'm talking to you with time.
Don't yell at me.
No, because you put my information in wrong.
No, I didn't.
You put my daughter in his ball.
No, I didn't.
You did.
You put my daughter in as bullhead with brown eyes.
Girl, listen.
What I'm saying, you're talking about video.
I had to.
Listen, girl, you can go in.
You can go in.
Listen, you can't.
Listen, you ain't been helping.
I don't give a fuck about that.
Okay, well, you need to.
I don't, I do.
You asked for help, right?
I've been asking you for help.
That's what we're trying to do.
I said, been asking you for help since March 13th.
Baby, listen.
That's not how it works.
Maybe it's been 20 days.
What are you talking about?
That's how it works.
But if it was yours, you're going to use the entire police.
That's how it works.
That is how it works.
Man, listen, get the fuck from me in front of my house.
I do it by myself because I've been doing it by myself, me heart.
Listen, go here.
Listen, go ahead.
We are a little girl, go here.
Just back up.
Just back up.
You're not with all this.
Go here.
Get from in front of my house.
Are we got?
I'm doing your job.
I'm doing your job.
I've been doing your job for the last month.
Have a nice day.
You as well.
You as well, Peterson, whatever your name is.
Y'all don't do your job.
Y'all going to wait a month later to come search my house for my daughter that I know.
Canadian women are looking for more.
More to themselves, their businesses,
their elected leaders and the world around them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
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And I'm Catherine Clark.
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all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
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Five, city, all building.
A silver 40 caliber.
handgun was recovered at the scene.
From I-Heart podcasts and Best Case Studios,
this is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
July 2003,
Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Now, everybody in the chamber is docked.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
Those are shots.
Get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent the rules all the time.
I still have a weapon.
And I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a secret.
He alleged he was a victim of flat down.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Rorschach, murder at City Hall,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast.
My latest episode is with Noah Kahn, the singer-songwriter behind the multi-platinum global hit
stick season and one of the biggest voices in music today.
Noah opens up about the pressure that followed his rapid success, his struggles with mental
health and body image, and the fear of starting again after such a defining moment in his career.
It's easy to look at somebody and be like, your life must be so sick.
Man, you have no clue.
talking about the mental illness stuff.
It used to be this thing that I was ashamed of.
I'm just now trying to unwind this idea
that I have to be unhealthy physically
or in pain in some emotional way in my life
to create good music.
If someone says that I did a good job,
I'm like, yeah, I'm good.
Someone says that I suck.
I'm like, I suck.
Getting to talk about this is not common for me.
Right now I need it more than ever.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty
on the IHart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones,
and I love playing music with people so much
that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles
to play songs together in an intimate setting.
Every episode's a little different,
but it all involves music and conversation
with some of my favorite musicians.
Over the past two seasons,
I've had special guests like Dave Grohl,
Leveh, Mavis Staples, Remy Wolf, Jeff Tweedy,
really too many to name.
And this season, I've sat down with Alessia Kara,
Markleckland, John Legend, and more.
Check out my new episode with Josh Grobin.
You related to the Phantom at that point.
Yeah, I was definitely the Phantom in that.
That's so funny.
Share each day with me each night, each morning.
Say you love me.
You know I...
So come hang out with us in the studio and listen to playing along
on the IHeart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts.
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And at this point, you hear in this video from Kailin's media,
Ms. LeVette, she's upset.
It's like at this point, she feels like she's doing their job for them,
as she mentions in the interview.
Again, this video was shot prior to our interview.
She has been documenting her process herself.
You guys may have not have heard or seen this video,
as disappointing as it is to hear,
because media hasn't, they're not covering it.
It's not, Instagram and social media have been her biggest voices.
We put it into that today.
If August is watching this, what is your message to her right now and wherever she is,
as she's able to hear or potentially see you?
My message to you, does I love you.
You know you love.
You know I am coming for you.
You just got to give me a sign and be strong and hold on and fight.
Please fight.
got a lot of family coming for you.
We love you. Do not give up.
I love you.
What is it that you need right now?
Like if, you know, if the police department is doing what they're supposed to do,
if the community is doing what they're supposed to do, the media,
what does a legit setup to help you, you know, amplify this to get to your daughter?
What does that look like?
What's the call to action for everybody watching and listening?
Like, how can it help you?
I feel like the call of action is, like I said, this is just not one singular
incident. This is multiple
incidents. You know, I feel
like if the women's and police
are involved, they are actually
no. They should.
No. Majority
of who, what,
where,
because they're taking places in certain areas.
You're what I mean? I feel like
it should be some kind
of task force
that you, I mean, task force set up
to handle just this
because it's literally people
coming in our neighborhoods and they're snatching
our kids and they're doing whatever they want to them
and they're killing them. I'm getting them drugs and they're making
them disappear and they're making them do all kinds of things
and I'm a mom and I can think of
a hundred different things that you can be doing to my
child right now and I'm not
accepting it. I just feel like they need to be on the ball
and paying attention. They made it so easy
for people to get on and off the highway
from our kids like around
the school. Like you made it so easy.
Y'all made it so easy. But y'all are
not, they're not
patrol in these areas. Y'all and like, you never know you could be riding past a person screaming in
a car right next to you, right next to you and nobody's paying attention. I feel like they need to have
some kind of, they need to have training on it, first of all, what to look for besides drug dealers.
But it's no right, if y'all can do all this investigation and find the people that's bringing drugs
from Miami all the way out, or you can find the people who's trafficking these kids. You can find,
find the people that's that you're right in the neighborhood. They're blending in with us.
There's some, I mean, if you can find all that out of a person in 30 days, you can find where
these kids are and who's taking them and how they're taking them. I believe that.
And I know you talked a bit about the neighborhood that you're in. I'm from Wominenton, Delaware,
and I talk a lot about being from Delaware, but, you know, we have listeners and viewers from all
over the world, all over the U.S. So Wominton, Delaware is an inner city for those of you guys who don't
predominantly black, you know.
And it's one of the things where, like, we deal with what the inner cities deal with.
So the drugs, the, you know, the underfunding of the schools, the redlining, you know, the lack of support for the houses and the gentrification that comes in.
So when she's talking about the neighborhoods, she's talking about the fact that, like, the kids there are black and brown.
So the care level is just a lot different.
It's not there.
You know, so our kids feel like, hey, they don't have nothing to look forward to because this is it.
Like, but when I was growing up, we had things to do.
You know, we were everywhere.
Like, we had things to do.
We had east side stepers.
Like, parents were involved now, you know, parents don't want to get involved to anything now.
Like, something got, something has to change.
And I know it starts with us.
If the government isn't even helping us try to do, what are we supposed to do?
Like, what am I supposed to do?
Like, I wasn't supposed to, you know, snap on the police.
like that. I'm supposed to just let it stay
face and hope that they're out
there looking for my kids. Nobody going to look for my
like me. Absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
Yeah.
You know, however and whatever
it is that I can do,
I don't, all I got is a platform, so you know
you're always welcome to come
to spread information, to post
information. We'll make sure we put all of the flyers
of August throughout this interview as well, too,
so people can see her, you know.
And is there anything,
people see her walking on the street or see her somewhere or wherever. I know you mentioned that
she deals with different like mental issues before. So is there a certain way to approach her
or not approach her? Like how do if a common person just happens to run into her or see her,
what are their instructions? My first instruction is to, you know, let August know she has to
feel safe with you first. She has to feel safe. And right now, I don't think she's going to feel
safe with anybody. So my, I would say contact the police. If you can follow on contact the police,
that would be better because, you know, we don't know what she's going through. You know,
she can be a threat to herself and others. Like I said, it, it can go either way. August is,
like, she has to know that you are taking her to me. She's going to her mother or she's going to
her aunt. If you say, Aunt Crystal is coming for you,
Call her Aunt Crystal.
She's going to go with you.
Otherwise, I say call the police because they might have a better shot.
They can actually come with the mental counselors with her and help get her together.
And then we can go from there.
But I know, you know, my daughter isn't on drugs.
Like she's not running around here, popping perks.
You know, everybody smoke a little weed here and there.
But she don't do that.
She doesn't drink.
Like she's a picky eater.
She's picky with everything.
She reads books.
You know, she's a different child.
She's a quiet child.
So this right here, this is different.
This is like, it's breaking me.
So I can imagine what it's doing my daughter right now.
Yeah.
Well, praying for August's safe return home and for your strength, you know, throughout the days.
And I only said you were strong earlier because every day that I've been talking to you,
it's just been like you're getting up.
You're like you're continuing to do what you need to do to try and bring your baby girl home.
But, you know, I'm not a parent yet.
but I can only imagine that that's just what comes with being a mom, you know?
Absolutely.
It's unconditional love.
Like I said, nobody's going to do it like you.
And, you know, if I stop, then everybody stops, you know?
And I'm not going to stop because I don't want nobody stop.
I want everybody, I want everybody to remember all these girls' faces.
Because like I say, if we find one, we might find all of them.
And it's too many of them missing.
It's too many of them.
Are there certain...
Canadian women are looking for more.
More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders,
and the world are at them.
And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast.
I'm Jennifer Stewart.
And I'm Catherine Clark.
And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women.
Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers,
all at different stages of their journey.
So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us.
Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
A silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered.
covered at the scene.
From I-Heart podcasts and Best Case Studios,
this is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
Jeffrey, who did it?
July 2003,
Councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Now, everybody in the chamber's docked.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
Those are shots.
Get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent the rules all the time.
I still have a weapon.
And I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a secret.
He alleged he was a victim of flat down.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Rorschach, murder at City Hall,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast.
My latest episode is with Noah Kahn, the singer-songwriter behind the multi-platinum global hit
stick season and one of the biggest voices in music today.
Noah opens up about the pressure that followed his rapid success, his struggles with mental
health and body image, and the fear of starting again after such a defining moment in his career.
It's easy to look at somebody and be like, your life must be so sick.
Man, you have no clue.
talking about the mental illness stuff.
It used to be this thing that I was ashamed of.
I'm just now trying to unwind this idea
that I have to be unhealthy physically
or in pain in some emotional way in my life
to create good music.
If someone says that I did a good job, I'm like,
yeah, I'm good.
Someone says that I suck.
I'm like, I suck.
Getting to talk about this is not common for me.
Right now I need it more than ever.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Nora Jones,
and I love playing music with people so much
that my podcast called Playing Along is back.
I sit down with musicians from all musical styles
to play songs together in an intimate setting.
Every episode's a little different,
but it all involves music and conversation
with some of my favorite musicians.
Over the past two seasons,
I've had special guests like Dave Grohl,
Leveh, Mavis Staples, Remy Wolf, Jeff Tweedy,
really too many to name.
And this season, I've sat down with Alessia Kara,
Sarah McLaughlin, John Legend, and more.
Check out my new episode with Josh Grobin.
You related to the Phantom at that point.
Yeah, I was definitely the Phantom in that.
That's so funny.
Share each day with me each night, each morning.
Say you love me.
You know I...
So come hang out with us in the studio and listen to playing along on the IHeart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts.
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And websites, because I was saying, like, once I started following the, you know, your daughter
and the other girls that I saw that were missing from Wormington, Delaware, I began seeing,
like, Facebook groups and websites.
Like, are there certain sites that you're following that also provide information on other
missing young men and women in the inner cities?
Yes, it's an unsolved group on Facebook.
He keeps us loaded.
Jackie Canard, she, she, the people send her all kinds of stuff.
Not all the time it's on groups.
A lot of people are sending us stuff directly from them.
Like some of the moms, like Mississippi, you know, all over.
Some people are just sending it to us.
And we're actually, you know, forwarding some of them over to the groups
because they get out a little faster with the groups.
Yeah.
They just be coming.
Like, and I just, you know, since then, I just, you know, been following all of them
because, again, you never know.
People missing from over in California, they might have brought them here.
we might see them, you know, like we all can try to pay attention and no, we might not find them all.
But we can probably get most of these girls home if we start paying attention.
Stuff don't look right.
If it don't look right, it's not right.
You need to take a picture.
I got you.
Like, it's bad out here.
You didn't know it was this bad until it got this bad.
No.
Well, again, let me know whatever you need.
If there's like new flyers or anything to post, you know.
I try and post as much as I can't remember throughout the week or like, you know, week,
weekends, whatever, the post of flyers that you sent me. So, yeah. Yep, I have new flyers.
I'll actually send those over to you. We're going to print up a couple more, but I do it small
with a whole bunch of different of the girls on there, just so we can try to get as many.
I want to try to do that at least once a week with a different flyer with about five or six
different girls on there, just so everybody can just keep looking because it's like, listen,
I'm in Philly. It's bad there as far as, you know, the trafficking and the girls.
girls jersey is horrible and I'm on I'm listening I'm going everywhere I'm going everywhere I wanted
to ask you about something too I know you told me I just thought about this when you were talking about
the flyers you were you were telling me that originally when you reported August missing
first of all the information like there was never an official report filed and then when they
did file it all of her information like that would have described her to someone was completely wrong
absolutely so like I said when I when I first started this
me and my friend, like I said, we were just out in the city.
We started handing the flyers to, you know, the police officers.
They were the ones who let us know that it wasn't right.
Like, it wasn't in the system.
So I went down to WPD, asked them for a copy of my, you know, they give you the little blue card,
with your number on it.
So I asked them for a piece of a copy of it.
And I said, as soon as I looked at it and I said, sir, this is all wrong.
Like, who fixes this?
That's that number again.
You're going to have to dial 654-5-5-1 and speak to somebody on this.
there and whoever put it in has to fix it.
That's another 11 hours.
I've got to wait for somebody to call me back to fix everything that's wrong in here.
Like you put my daughter in here as bald, baby, bald, black eyes.
You put her in here as a prior runaway, which is probably why y'all never looked for in
the first place because she has never ran away.
She's never been a prior runaway.
And then she put on there that she's depressed.
Not that she's suicidal ideation, not that she has.
has severe bipolar, not that she's on medicine every single day. She hasn't had her medicine.
You didn't put her, she took pictures of my daughter's hair because she had just got her hair,
her hair is in locks, just a little thicker than mine about this lamp. She took pictures
of them. You didn't even input any of the pictures of my daughter. Not, like, you didn't do nothing.
Black female in her name and her proximate height. That was the only part that was right.
How long was it like that?
When did I see it?
Probably like that for about a week and a half.
I can get the exact date for you when I do the video because the day I did that video,
I went and seen the mayor earlier that day and that's when I got the copy of the,
that's when I got the updated copy because I had stopped the guy.
It was three police on the beat in front of my house.
And I had stopped him.
And when he went on, he went and pulled it up.
And he was like, this shit's all fucked up.
Excuse me.
That's exact words.
And I was like, well, what do you mean?
So he turned his screen to me.
so I can see and I can see like every they have a lot of steps that they have to do to input all the
information down to the tattoos like it's not just like hey you just put everything on this one
screen no you got to go this screen you got to do this when you get to this screen and ask for a picture
of like what the tattoo looks like when you get to this screen over here to input the photos you got to
input the photos one by one upload them to like if I sat there with that man for 45 minutes while he
while he fixed the whole report, then submitted it.
As soon as he submitted it, the NCIC number popped up.
That's how I knew it was submitted correctly.
Because before then, it wasn't even an NCIC number,
which means it never hit the national database anyway.
And normally something like that,
if you had not been doing what you were doing,
it would have just been overlooked.
And was there any repercussions for the, you know,
the sergeant or detective or whoever that input that information that way?
No.
And if it was, well, obviously, no, because she's still on the beat.
I just seen her the other day by my house.
She's still on the beat.
So obviously not.
But, you know, that's something I'm going to deal with on another day, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know, I deal with all that on another day.
You know, the mayor on the other day, the state senate on the city council.
Because it's a line.
It's a chain of all this.
Like, and all chains have been broken in all the whole aspect of it.
The whole chain of everything is broken.
Got you.
All right.
Well, I mean, I'm hoping once we put this package together and put this out there, this can get you some eyes and, you know, just get you a little shake up.
And yeah, like, I don't know.
I'm just trying to help out as much as I can.
Yeah.
Like I said, until it happens to you, we do not know what's going on.
And it won't affect, it doesn't affect other people as much as it will affect you.
Yeah.
But it should affect this community because I shouldn't have had to scream like that.
And now I understand with a lot of parents, even, you know, the parents where, you know, their loved ones have been murdered or what I understand the pain that they're going through because obviously the entire structure is broken and nobody's here to fix it.
I'm going to fix it down.
Got you.
All right. Well, stay in contact with me.
I'll stay in contact with you and let you know when this is posting and how we're going to do the whole thing.
But I'll make sure that it gets the platform that you needed to.
Absolutely.
Thank you so much and I appreciate you.
Of course.
Thank you.
And if there are any other moms of, you know, kids that are missing or, you know, whatever that, you know, need the platform, let me know.
I definitely will.
Okay.
Thank you.
You have a good evening.
You too.
My name is Levitt Bryce.
I'm looking for my daughter, August, Ben-Hyddaifa.
Her name is Aisha.
She went missing.
I live right here on South Franklin.
And she was last seen down here on Franklin and Elm.
We've been out here every day since the 22nd looking for her.
To Wilmington Police, Newcastle County Police, nobody's helping me.
I'm out here every day, adequately, looking for my daughter.
If you see her, if you see anything, I'm telling you, look for anything, any signs.
You can contact me.
I'm going to do better.
302-367-0365.
It's my Uncle Kelly.
He's out here looking as well.
Give me a call at 215-25-25-2-24-25.
I'm out here.
I'm about my family.
I don't play about my daughter.
I'm not playing about any of these kids.
We need to bring these kids home.
We've got to come together.
We need to get these kids.
We need to get somebody out here to help us look for these kids.
Please, if you need anything, contact me.
I'm Levet. Everybody loves Lovy on every social media aspect. I'm out here. I'm going everywhere.
If you find my daughter, you call me. I don't care if it's 2 o'clock in the morning. I'm coming behind my arm.
Please help me bring my baby on. Please help me bring all the babies. All of them.
All of them. Every last one of me. Please, I appreciate you guys. I love you guys. Please share it.
Before you go, is the cops are helping you out at all?
Cops are not helping me at all.
They just came.
It's almost a month later.
They just came and executed a search for it on my house.
Like my daughter is in my house.
And yes, I did snap.
This is a month later?
It's a month later.
A month later.
You want to execute.
You couldn't come in my house at any time.
I don't have nothing to hide.
And then the cop said, I'm not helping you from,
I don't need your help.
The city, the world is helping me.
But I'm coming for the city.
I'm coming for WG.
The cop told you that that,
They're going to help you?
They're not helping.
They're not helping.
I appreciate everybody.
Please get it out there.
Look for my baby.
Look for August.
I promise you mine.
Coming home.
She's trying to get home.
Somebody took mom.
She don't do this.
She's coming home.
And I'm coming for a mom.
She know I'm coming.
I'm Lauren La Rosa.
This has been another episode of the latest with Lauren La Rosa.
This is your daily dig on all things pop culture,
entertainment news,
and all of the conversations that shape the room.
My low riders, I appreciate you guys
every single time you're here to talk with me
about all of the things.
I'll see you in my next episode.
I'm Daniel Alarcon,
and this is my friend.
He's much more famous than I am.
I wouldn't go that far,
but I'm John Green,
co-hosted the podcast The Away End
with my old friend Daniel.
On our podcast, The Away End,
we'll share with you the magic of international football,
all leading up to the 2026 World Cup.
Together, we'll find out why,
of all the unimportant things, football, soccer, is the most important.
Listen to the away end with Daniel Auerkone and John Green on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Iris Palmer, host of the Against All Odds podcast.
Every week, I'm sitting down with exceptional people who have broken barriers, even when the odds were stacked against them.
Like chef Victor Villa of Villas Tacos.
You know the taquero from the Bad Bunny halftime show?
It was great.
It was a big moment.
it was special and I felt like I was really representing my family, you know, my brand, my city.
I was representing all taqueros, not only of like, you know, the U.S., but of Mexico and beyond.
All the taqueros of the world.
Listen to Against All Odds on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hello, gorgeous, it's Lala Kent.
Host of Untraditionally Lala.
My days of filling up cups at Sir may be over, but I'm still loving life in the valley.
Live on the other side of the hill is giving grown-up vibes,
but over here on my podcast, Untraditionally Lala,
I'm still that Lala you either love or love to hate.
It's unruly, it's unafraid, it's untraditionally Lala.
Listen to Untraditionally Lala on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
I actually drop better when I'm high.
It heightens my senses, calms me down.
If anything, I'm more careful.
Honestly, it just helps me focus.
That's probably what the driver who killed a four-year-old told himself.
And now he's in prison.
You see, no matter what you tell yourself, if you feel different, you drive different.
So if you're high, just don't drive.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council.
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Guaranteed Human.
