The Breakfast Club - Drake drops shots at Lebron - don’t forget to put your feet on the grass!
Episode Date: July 7, 2025Loren is back from a beautiful weekend off, up early, ready to work. Drake’s got new music, "What Did I Miss?" Is a direct response to the “Not Like Us” era. Feels kinda like a waste... of time… Diddy’s celebrated by fellow inmates in his return this week for beating the feds. But what did he get away with and what is his legacy?YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart podcast.
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Time to do it.
I'm the homegirl that knows a little bit about everything and everybody.
You know, she don't lie about that.
Right.
Lauren came in hot.
Hey y'all, it's Lauren LaRosa and this is the latest with Lauren LaRosa.
First episode back after the holiday weekend and y'all.
Okay.
Before we get on into the things, cause y'all know that this is where you come.
This is your daily dig on all things pop culture,
entertainment news, exclusives,
and all of the conversations that shake the room.
But guys, I had such an amazing 4th of July holiday
with my family.
If we're checking in behind the scenes of the grind.
Back, back, back on the grind.
Grinding.
Yes, my holiday was great.
It's always just a very, like, you know,
people tell you, like, you gotta go put your feet
on the ground, feet on, is it feet on the ground,
boots on the ground?
See, my family kept doing the boots on the ground line dance,
so now my mind is all, everything's boots on the ground,
and fans, and where the fans at but
the
The line that you hear often from people is every now and then you got to go put
Your feet on the grass and just you know
It's like a don't forget where you come from connect back with you know the the land the people the earth all the things
It's like a centering conversation that people have.
So I was really looking forward,
leading up to this break to,
number one, just had the vacation that we had.
I did take 4th of July off even here at the podcast,
and y'all know I don't do that,
but I really wanted to take the time to just,
whew, like breathe in, breathe out,
let it go after the close of Diddy's trial.
There is still more to come in that
and we'll get into that.
But I did need the mental digest,
like the mental release, you know,
and it's always different when you're around people
that love you, that you love, family,
who don't care anything about any of this stuff.
Yes, everybody had Diddy questions,
but they don't care about any of this stuff.
So yes, it's just like a centering thing.
So if I'm checking in on how I'm feeling today,
behind the scenes of the grind, I'm feeling very centered.
I'm ready to get back to work, get back into the action,
back into things, to the point where I actually got up
this morning and went to the breakfast club at 5.30 a.m.
thinking that we were back live on air
today and we do not return until tomorrow so that's how anxious I was and
it's the most amazing sleep that you get after you realize you woke up too early
or you didn't even have to wake up early at all and then you could go back to
sleep so it's been great chef's kiss chef, chef's kiss. But let's get on into the latest
because there has been things that have went down
since the last time I've been here,
breaking things down with you guys.
Over the holiday weekend, there was some new music
that dropped, Drake dropped a new song.
The song is called, What Did I Miss?
He also premiered a song, it wasn't like a full premiere though, it was just like a clip of
a song called Supermax where he's like talking to or talking about a conversation he had with a friend.
It later came out Taylor Rooks confirmed that the friend was her where he's talked where he's being
talked to about people around him not being able to handle pressure and fame and you know, that whole thing. But back to what did I miss?
Because what did I miss is a direct response or effect
or consequence or whatever of the not like us era.
I cannot believe that we are still here
when it comes to like, I know in conversation
we're still gonna be here,
but when it comes to Drake and Kendrick actually
making music, I can't believe that Drake is still
dropping songs referencing things that happened to him
around the Not Like Us time.
So, a few things that stood out during this song,
Drake talks a lot about just people switching sides,
and some of the things that we've heard him talk about leading up to this point
This is not his first time having this conversation
More specifically he talks about Lebron in this song. Here's the line
Now
Look, I have no issue with music artists talking through their real life in their music. I think that your real life is what inspires your art
I think that when you know artists whether you're a music artist or whatever you do when you're gifted enough to be able to take
Your real life and bring it into your talent and into your art and portray in a way
That then becomes something that people can you know debate about or have conversation about. I think that that is genius.
But the reason why I'm not a big fan of What Did I Miss and Drake rapping throughout, you
know, rapping through his problems on this song is because I feel like the substance
of the song is just, it's a waste of Drake's time, if I'm being honest with you.
I feel like Drake wasted his time with this song. I mean, it's Drake, so of course people are going to love it. Of course it's going to do what it does a waste of Drake's time, if I'm being honest with you. I feel like Drake wasted his time with this song.
I mean, it's Drake, so of course people are gonna love it.
Of course it's gonna do what it does because he's Drake.
He's one of the biggest artists in the world.
But I do think substance matters for him,
especially right now when everybody is still
having these back and forth conversations
about Drake and Kendrick Lamar.
I just think it's important.
Now, when I was thinking about this
as I was listening to this song and as I was trying to figure out why I really didn't care
for this song much, I was trying to figure out where does Drake even go from here, right? Because
what did I miss? Sonically, it's cool. The beat is cool, Drake's rapping, and I actually enjoy Drake, rapper Drake.
I like melody Drake as well,
and I know that that has been a conversation,
especially since the Not Like Us stuff,
of people feeling like Drake needs to stick
to being melodic and singing and, you know,
or I guess it's what Drake does, you call singing.
But y'all know what I mean.
When Drake get in his melody bag
is very different than rapper Drake.
But I'm one of the Drake fans and listeners
that I appreciate both.
I like Drake as a rapper,
but I also love Drake on the melodies
when he's talking to the girls,
or it's just like a party anthem, something like that.
But I just feel like here, right?
My issue isn't that Drake is rapping.
That has been a lot of the conversation around this song,
though people are just upset that he's rapping.
They don't want him to do that.
My issue though is I think at this point,
we have gotten to a point with this rap back and forth
between Kendrick Lamar and Drake,
where the artists themselves shouldn should be moved on.
Like we know clearly who won the battle.
We saw effort from both sides.
But at this point, there's nothing that Drake can say
about that situation or that time
that is gonna make people have the empathy for him
that I think that he's looking for.
And the only reason why I say I think that he's looking for
because every single time since not like us
in the conversation of Drake lost the battle
when people switched sides,
the only conversation we've heard from Drake
through his music and little subliminals on stage
and him popping up at the basketball games
and throwing side eyes at DeMar DeRozan
and things like that, right?
The only thing that we've heard from him directly
has been, it's very much been, woe is me.
And I don't feel that for him.
And it's not because he lost the battle,
Drake is still Drake, he's still great at what he does.
I still love the music, but it's like,
bro, you threw your ring in a hat and it didn't work out.
It didn't work out in your favor.
And I don't know why we are, like if I'm Drake,
I'm not spending more time on that.
I'm great as an artist, I'm great at what I do.
I'm figuring out what my new subject matter should be
and I'm going there.
And maybe that's the real conversation of like,
you know, cause there's always been the talk after
the not like us moment of,
did Kendrick Lamar pull back the curtain on the fact that
there is no real substance to Drake.
And have we as fans and as listeners
just been so okay with that because the music is great?
And there's nothing wrong with that either.
I don't agree with that rhetoric.
I think that Drake has substance of his own. I just don't know what that looks
like at where he is in life today as you know, as the father he is as a super rich, successful
artist he is as the demand he is right because when when when Drizzy Drake, you know what
I mean when when I'm talking like old like like mixtape era, Drake was rapping, it was hunger,
it was I'm trying to get on, it's y'all gotta hear me.
It's, you know, I'm representing Canada
and I want y'all to know about us and know who we are
and know what our style is like.
Now I don't know what his substance,
I don't know what his subject matter is.
And that's the issue here.
I think what did I miss was not a hit.
It was a miss because of the substance matter.
It was lack thereof.
It's like, what are we even talking about and why?
Like, why are you spending so much time telling LeBron
why your feelings are hurt?
We know your feelings were hurt.
We heard you say that already.
You got it out, let's move on.
And I know people are gonna argue well,
they've had the relationship that they've had.
And Drake was doing things with an uninterrupted
in Canada and Lebron was popping out and supporting him at his shows and all of
these things that they've been friends for a very long time people also talk
about that Drake tattoo that Drake Lebron tattoo and you know he was showing
them so much respect and you know all of that is fine and dandy and the fans and the conversations are entitled
to it. But at this point right now, if I'm Drake,
I really would be trying to figure out what is it that I'm saying and why.
If I'm just having a good time, take Nokia for instance, right?
The minute I heard some sexy songs for you,
which is him and Party Next Door's collab album,
I knew Nokia was a hit.
That was the first thing I said about this album
the very next day that it dropped,
and people thought I was crazy.
They were like, the song is not even like that.
He not really talking about much on this album.
It's like, because people want to hear Drake talk
about the whole Kendrick Lamar thing,
but then it's like, don't wanna hear it.
I wanted the people that I felt, I wanted to hear it at first.
We heard it.
I just want you to move on.
But Nokia was a bop.
And now Nokia is, it's such, what?
Drake is Drake again.
So his music is always gonna do well.
But Nokia everywhere, song of the summer, easily.
And he didn't talk about anything beef wise in that song.
He was having a good time.
So there's nothing wrong if Drake is at the point
in his career where he's like,
I just want to have a good time.
I don't want to make music where you got to decode,
you got to this and you got to that.
I think that it is a disservice to like his core fans
who know him as this witty,
you got to listen to it a few times, all of his songs
become the caption of all over it.
Y'all remember when Drake used to drop for real for real and his captions, literally
every lyric, every bar, every hook became Instagram captions and social media captions
for the next six months.
There was a point in time where Drake's lyrics ran social media, how
people posted, how they captioned, like everything, right? Now we're at this point where his music
is coming and going. And it's not because I don't think he's talented. I think a lot
of us are looking to rediscover his substance. And I think that one thing that the Kendrick
Lamar Drake beat did in his favor was make us want to do that.
Some people are looking at this as like,
oh my God, he lost the battle.
He's not Drake anymore.
This is such a hit to his career.
No, Drake is still crazy famous.
Music is still good.
This is a time for him to really figure out
what that direction is, whether it's partying
or whether it is the substance or it's both.
And take us there. Like we're waiting to see what is next. And then what did I miss drop?
And I'm like, first of all, you didn't miss nothing. You was right there along with all of us on the edge of your seat because you responded to everything.
Your feelings were hurt by things. You're still talking about LeBron and what you didn't like
about seeing LeBron at the Pop Out Show.
I just think it's a waste of Drake's time
and I think it's a waste of his talent.
And it's crazy because I actually had a conversation.
I did a sit down interview with Elliot Wilson.
And the interview was great.
Make sure you guys go and check it out.
It's on the Hip Hop DX YouTube channel.
If you go to YouTube and search
Elliot Wilson, Lauren LaRosa, you'll see it there.
But check out the full interview.
We talked about a lot of different things.
But Drake and Kendrick Lamar came up
and here's the conversation we had, take a listen.
So bad.
If you had to sit down with Drake and Kendrick,
what would be the first thing you would say to them?
Them two together?
Yeah, yeah.
Like sway with Jay and Oz.
Let's say you got your only Lauren LaRosa
get Drake and Kendrick in the room.
How do you start the conversation with these fools?
That's the first question is like,
I got y'all in the same room,
but can this ever really be resolved?
And we just go from there.
Because I don't think that it can.
I think what we're watching
and the reason why people are-
It's not even J and Nas,
that's not the sense of it.
It's because in real life,
you have one person that really just doesn't respect
the character of another person in real life you have one person that really just doesn't respect the character
Another person in real life and then you're he's telling us through the music, right?
Yeah, I think that with with and you know you you were outside during this time
I wasn't but from my perspective of what Jay-Z and Nas is like, yeah
Yeah, they had their differences, but like they they both were
Respect each other as MC.. That was mutual respect.
And yeah, what we're seeing right now is like there is a lack of respect.
And that's my thing.
Like when I tell you guys, people are so locked into the Drake and Kendrick Lamar because
in real life you can feel that there is a man I don't really like you.
And now in real life we're trying to decide, well, who is Drake? We love his
music, but who is he? What do we really know about him and what he stands on and what he
stands for and like all those things. And I think that's a natural thing to do as a fan
for any artist as they grow. I just think that this beef has put a spotlight on it of
of like now you really want to make sure you understand. So that when you go to defend Drake or defend his music, you know what you're
standing on. That's why substance matter. That's why substance matters.
But where does Drake go now? Because as I mentioned, right y'all, uh,
not like us happened. Then we fast forward.
Nokia drops some sexy songs for you drop some bangers on there They do well, but everybody is still talking about the beef everything Drake does
Even if he doesn't do it to act like this song
He's actually referencing things that were a direct effect of not like us
But even when he dropped songs that has nothing to do with it nothing, right?
The fans still take it back there.
The hip hop journalists still take it back there.
Can Drake ever escape the not like us effect?
Is that a real thing?
Like can, and I'm being so serious, I would love,
low riders, every time I tell y'all,
I would love to hear from y'all,
y'all blow me up with the conversations, and I love that.
I would really love to hear from you guys
on if you think Drake can escape the not like us error
where if he makes, is it a good song?
Cause Nokia was a good song.
Whether you wanna argue if substance was there or not,
did he take you on a journey or a story or not,
you can argue that.
But it was a great song for all the critics
and I'm one of them and I can't answer the question yet.
I've been trying to figure it out
Where does Drake go from here direction wise with his music and can that get him out of the not like us chokehold?
Cuz baby the chokehold is choking. Okay
Now also in the latest because y'all know
Now, also in the latest, because y'all know, people are still wondering, like the Diddy verdict dropped.
We found out that he was found not guilty on three of the five charges.
He's only looking to face the consequences for their prostitution charge.
But people want to know what's about to happen.
There was a report that came out.
It was AP News did a report.
They spoke to Diddy's attorneys about what it was like for him to return to prison after
the verdict dropped.
And Diddy's attorney, Mark Agnifilio, told the AP that Diddy was welcomed with cheers
and claps and celebration when he walked back into prison because the prisoners were saying
things to him like, we've never seen someone beat the feds and beat
the government like that.
And that, I'm not surprised by that response, especially not by, you know, other inmates
who are currently going through their own ins and outs with the government and, you
know, all those things.
But that is the feeling in the conversation, like over the holiday weekend, all of my family, whether they think that
Diddy is a horrible person now because of all these things they've heard or not, the
one thing you heard echoed was, yeah, but at the end of the day, he beat the government.
And I said this, I was a, I did NBC New York, NBC4 New York, shout out to them, we did a weekly breakdown
called The Case, where we talked about Diddy's case,
Sean Diddy Combs case, every week.
It lasted for several weeks, so there's a lot of content
there for you guys to go and watch if you choose to.
And the dead at the verdict dropped right after we heard
the decision of the judge not to give Diddy bond,
and I talked to you guys about this in my last episode before we took our
holiday break. Um,
we talked a little bit about what it would have been like if Diddy were to walk
out of the courthouse the day that his verdict had dropped.
Take a listen to what I said.
Joining us from outside court, Lauren LaRosa,
who's not only been joining us here on the case,
but she's been reporting on the Breakfast Club on Power 105 and Lauren, you've been at the intersection of social media, pop culture, and justice,
which is really what this is about.
We may have seen it before, but not quite like this.
So let me start with you.
Talk us through it.
Yeah, I think if he were able to walk out of court today, the image of Diddy, Sean Diddy
Combs walking out and a crowd full of people today, there were people out here like I've
never seen before screaming free puff.
And there was so much joy and excitement when he was found not guilty on three out of the
five charges.
And after his legal team says this was a black man who was very wealthy that was targeted
by the government, they would have leaned in on that image.
I think he would have been able to almost gain sympathy from the people who kind of
thrown him away, especially since that Cassie video,
but it's different now.
And that is what I know and knew
his team would lean into, right?
You have this image,
if he had walked out of the courtroom,
it would have been stronger.
But right now it's not the image of him,
like a physical photo or video
of Sean Cohn was walking out of the courtroom
after beating a Rico charge, right?
But you have the narrative in the conversation because when you think about it, he was looking
at life. What he's going to be looking at now is not nearly anything compared to what he was going
to be looking at before. So you do have the conversation of this black man whose attorneys
are alleging he was targeted by the government winning to
some extent.
Now whether that winning makes it where he can actually be able to come back into the
world after he does whatever time or whatever consequence he'll be looking at for that prostitution
conviction, right?
Whether he can come back into the world and be the superstar that he was, which I don't
think is fully possible. I do think that, you know, celebrity has, celebrity is
celebrity, right? And there were a lot of people who were upset about the way that people
were, you know, celebrating Sean Combs' Diddy's win on that verdict day that there was a lot of conversation around the fact that you know
Did he at the end of the day whether he did not was not found guilty of that racketeering
racketeering conspiracy and the sex trafficking
we had seen videos and photos of him brutally beating Cassie and
There are a lot of people who are upset that
Cassie. And there are a lot of people who are upset that he's being celebrated on one hand for beating that Rico charge when on the other hand there's the
domestic violence that we all saw even though he was not on trial for it we saw
it and it happened and people want to make sure that we remember that but what
is the the craziest underlying truth,
and this is not my personal opinion,
this is just the truth,
there is always something to celebrity
that will allow for anything, any wrongdoing of any person
to be somewhat ignored.
When you think about R. Kelly and all that,
R. Kelly, he didn't win
anything. R. Kelly is sitting in behind bars right now and will be probably for
the rest of his life. And there are still people out here arguing that he was set
up, that he was, you know, all of these things that literally were proven
not correct in court, right? But because of
his celebrity and because of the fact that people grew up listening to him and the fandom
of it all, there are people that will still argue for him and will turn their head completely
to everything that we've heard be done to other people because of this man's power.
Now, I don't want to compare the two because I do think that the Diddy conversation or R. Kelly conversation are different, which is why Diddy was not convicted on sex trafficking in
the Rico charge. And I don't even think, it's not even that I think, it's not about what I think.
If we're looking at what was actually, what Diddy was actually convicted of in a courtroom
versus what R. Kelly was convicted of in a courtroom, there are, there's difference there.
Based on, just solely based on tongue in cheek, just solely based on the charges and what was
actually convicted and won in court is what I'm talking about here, right? But you think about
other celebrities, right? Like you think about a Kanye West who
people have strong feeling about because of some of the political comments that he's made
and the racial comments he's made and just various things. But I was there at the courtroom
when Kanye West came to the courtroom. I saw the way people acted like they had never seen
a celebrity in their life.
Like literally running from floor to floors and buildings trying to find him, the mayhem
it caused outside of the courtroom.
There is always going to be something to celebrity.
So I don't know what that looks like for Diddy when he, you know, returns home from all this
when, at whatever time that is, is, after however amount of time,
but there is something to it.
And my question, and my thought is,
is what does that look like for him?
I know a lot of brands will not touch him.
It's too messy now, it's too tainted.
We've seen that Cassie video,
you cannot get that image out of your head,
but does he live off of that core base of people
who were so caught up
on the celebrity that they're willing to turn their head to the side on everything
else?
Now, there's a conversation that will happen this week on Diddy's sentencing and when that
will be.
As of right now, the sentencing is October 3rd, but his lawyers did ask in court and
the government did not object to this for the sentencing to be moved up to be
expedited because they wanted it to happen while everything was still fresh in the court's mind of
you know everything that happened in trial and everything that we've heard and you know all the
things and the government didn't object to this so they're going to have a conversation it'll be
virtual via zoom um i think i reminded you guys of this in my last episode but just to put a button
on this so they'll talk virtually via Zoom about what that
sentencing timeline looks like, when it will happen,
and then the sentencing will happen and we'll find out,
you know, how long Sean Combs will be, you know,
behind bars or whatever will happen following the verdict
that we watched go down about a week ago at this point.
So that has been the latest with Lauren LaRosa.
As always, I'm here to keep you guys updated.
That is what we are here for.
Lowriders, I appreciate y'all.
My aunts, they had a little funny little jokey joke.
If we taking y'all, I'm taking y'all outside
into the streets with me and the tweets with me.
You for the tweets.
We outside, we outside, we outside,
outside in the tweets.
Every other page our goal.
My aunts, we were talking about the podcast
and I was talking about the low riders
and they are telling me that the people want some merch.
I'll merch for my low riders so I can get my shirt
and be a low rider, because we the low riders.
So I appreciate you guys for tuning in
because y'all know at the end of the day
there's always a lot to talk about. So every single time that you guys are here to talk about it with me, I, you guys for tuning in, because y'all know at the end of the day, there's always a lot to talk about.
So every single time that you guys are here
to talk about it with me, I, you know,
I always tell y'all how much I appreciate you guys,
and I do.
I will see you guys in my next episode.
I'm out.
This is an iHeart Podcast.
