The Breakfast Club - Flashback BC Interviews With Snoop Dogg & TD Jakes
Episode Date: November 26, 2020Best Of Episode From The Breakfast Club Featuring Past Moments Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going.
That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all about.
It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into their stories,
their journeys, and the thoughts that
arise once we've hit the pavement together. Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, my undeadly darlings. It's Teresa, your resident ghost host. And do I have a treat for you.
Haunting is crawling out from the shadows, and it's going to be devilishly good.
We've got chills, thrills, and stories that'll make you wish the lights stayed on.
So join me, won't you?
Let's dive into the eerie unknown together.
Sleep tight, if you can.
Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Sleep tight, if you can. but in a way that informs and empowers all people. We discuss everything from prejudice to politics to police violence,
and we try to give you the tools to create positive change in your home, workplace, and social circle.
We're going to learn how to become better allies to each other.
So join us each Saturday for Civic Cipher on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
50% righteousness.
Your annual year, I love you.
50% ratchetedness.
I don't ratchet, just sit down. I feel more like 50% ratchetedness. Who's the other ratcheted?
Just sit down.
I feel like 95% ratcheted.
This is becoming the most prominent forum for hip hop.
Wake your ass up.
Early in the morning, but they tell me it was y'all.
I say, oh, hell yeah, I'm getting up.
The world's most dangerous morning show.
DJ Envy.
Your people's choice.
Angela Yee.
I'm a sweetheart, but I'll cut you.
Charlamagne Tha God.
Principals and people.
I can't believe you guys are the best, kid.
Collectively known as
Breakfast Club bitches
wake up
wake up
wake your ass
this is your time
to get it off your chest
whether you're mad or blessed
we want to hear from you
on the Breakfast Club
hello who's this
hello
hello
this is Marato
oh shoot
Marato
damn delayed response.
That's a very original name.
I've never heard that before.
Where are you calling from?
I'm calling from Angola, Africa.
Africa. All right.
Africa.
Wow. All right.
The motherland.
What's happening?
Get it off your chest.
Good morning.
All right.
Good morning, DJ Andy.
Good morning, Salamander God.
What's up, King? Good morning, Angela. Good morning. Nice to. Good morning, Charlamagne Tha God. What's up, King?
How are you?
Good morning, Angela Yee.
Good morning.
Nice to meet you.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a very long distance call.
I might spend here $100 just to make this call.
I just want to say that this show is amazing.
You guys are doing an incredible job.
And I listen to you every day on my Apple podcast.
And I don't even know if the program was live.
I just called.
Okay.
For some positivity.
Yeah.
Seeing what you guys are doing, and it's inspiring, like, of all.
What time is it in Africa right now, in Angola?
What time is it?
It's 11.16.
11.16.
Okay.
P.M. or A.M.?
A.M.
Okay.
All right.
Good to talk to you, brother.
Hello, who's this?
We're comedians.
Shayna.
Hey, Shayna.
Get her off your chest.
I just want to thank God for this day.
That's right.
You know, I know.
Look, I thank God for this day, for this job.
I'm so blessed.
I'm highly favored.
I got my own business.
And I just want to just thank God.
That's all, guys.
Shayna, Shayna.
You're not just blessed and highly favored.
You're blessed, black and highly favored.
You're absolutely right. I am blessed, black and highly favored. You're blessed black and highly favored. You're absolutely right.
I am blessed black and highly favored, and I just want to thank God for it.
Thank you, mama.
Hello, who's this?
Hey, man, what's up?
This is Reckless TV.
How y'all doing?
What's up, Reckless TV?
Get it off your chest.
I wanted to speak about college.
I did trade school.
I did two years for HVAC and electricity, and I can work anywhere in the United States.
I'm 23 years old, and nobody's doing trade no more.
Everybody's trying to be doctors and lawyers.
So right now, trade school is the best thing you can do.
I agree.
After I graduated, my teacher came to me and said I should go for another four years,
and I'll be guaranteed to make six figures, and I can go anywhere in the United States.
So trade school
is popping right now because ain't nobody really
doing it and everybody needs help
with HVAC and
air conditioning. I met this guy
the other day, I think when I was in D.C., man, he ran
up on me and he was like, man, thank you for always talking about
trade school because I went to trade school
and I've been gainfully employed
for 40 plus years.
I forgot what he said he did.
Alex! What's up?
What's up?
Envy the Don.
Yes, sir. What's up, brother?
Envy the Don.
My man, what's up? Envy the Don got that bread.
Jay-Z got that billion, huh?
Yeah, Jay-Z got a billy.
Got a billy. How'd he get it? Do we learn from Jay
or do we learn from Nissey Hussle? Which one? You said what? Do we learn from Jay or do we learn from Nifty Hustle? Which one?
You said what?
Do we learn from Nifty Hustle or do we learn from Jay-Z?
You learned from both of them.
You had more than one teacher in school, didn't you?
Yeah, hopefully you learned from a lot of people every day.
What are you talking about?
Why y'all say such stupid things?
Seriously, why do you wake up in the morning and just say things that you give no thought to whatsoever?
So you only learn from one person throughout your whole life?
Nah, Charlamagne.
We ain't got to go like that, Charlamagne.
I'm just saying, you know, Nifty Hustle learned from his OGs. He learned from Elijah
Muhammad, Message to the Black Man. Elijah Muhammad
was always talking about doing for self
and owning your own. So what are we talking about here?
We learn from a lot of different people in life.
Don't forget that bag to get that mail.
Alright, man. Have a blessed day. Peace, bro.
Y'all just pissing me off this morning.
What's up with y'all this morning, man?
They're getting it off their chest, Charlamagne.
Let's just let them talk.
They do sound a little stupid this morning.
Michael!
Hey, how's it going, brother?
Good morning, everybody.
Good morning.
Good morning, neighbor!
Get it off your chest, Michael.
Yeah, I'm calling from Delaware Beach, but I love you guys.
I'm always listening to the show.
You guys are amazing.
Thank you, sir.
We appreciate you, man. You're welcome. Charlamagne the guy. I love you, brother. I appreciate you guys. I'm always listening to the show. You guys are amazing. Thank you, sir. We appreciate you, man.
You're welcome.
Shalom Adegai.
I love you, brother.
I appreciate the work and everything, man.
We love you, bro.
I love you, too, my brother.
Thank you.
Appreciate you, King.
All right.
Get it off your chest.
800-585-1051.
If you need to vent, hit us up right now.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
It's your time to get it off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed.
You better have the same energy.
We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.
Hello, who's this?
What's up?
This is Mr. Spark It Up.
I go by the name of J-Man.
Is it Mr.
Okay, whatever.
Get it off your chest, bro.
Oh, yeah.
I'd just like to let you know that after 15 long months, your boy has finally got his license cleared.
Yes, sir. No more dirty driving.
Okay. No more bad and dirty. Congratulations,
King. Yes, sir. Thank y'all.
Thank y'all very much. Alright. Well, be safe
out there. Don't lose it again, brother. Hey,
one more thing, though. Hey,
y'all got Call ID? Go ahead and save my
number. So when I call next time,
y'all already... Well, we don't got no damn Call ID.
Okay, store his number. We do have Call ID, but we're not storing his number. Store his number. So when I call next time, y'all already... But we don't got no damn call ID. Okay, store his number. We do have call ID,
but we not storing his number.
Store his number.
I got an ASD. I got someone
on the ask. Your number's the
904 number, right? Yes, sir.
Yeah, we not storing that, though. But have a good one, though, brother.
Little Duval.
What'd you say about Little Duval?
He's from Duval.
Hello, who's this?
Hey, this is Capers, man. What's up, who's this? It's just Capers, man.
What's up, bro?
Get it off your chest.
Hey, man, I'm just blessed.
You know, I woke up this morning, got a little workout in.
At work, you know, blessed to have a job.
Congratulations, bro, bro.
That's it?
Appreciate it, man.
That's how you feeling?
Can I get a shout out?
Go ahead.
Yeah, yeah.
You can go follow me on Instagram at CapeTheMan09.
Okay, brother. Hello, who's this? You can go follow me on Instagram at KateTheMan09. Okay, brother.
Hello, who's this?
Romeo.
Romeo, what's up, man?
Get off your chest.
What's up, Envy?
How you doing?
First things first, I'm going to say I'm blessed this morning.
I'm having my first child.
Ooh, congratulations.
Thank you, thank you.
But, yo, show them in the God, man.
I love you.
Ain't nothing wrong with telling a black brother you love him, as you say.
That's right.
I'm mad at you.
I'm mad at you because I can't believe you surprised that MV, light-skinned, booshy
self, can't change some tires, man.
Well, I don't want to stereotype people.
But it's easy to change some tires.
Like, how you can't just change some tires?
Well, you got to be taught.
Like, my father had to teach me.
I mean, I know the concept of changing the tires. I just never changed the tires. Don't switch it teach me. I mean, I know the concept of changing the tire.
I just never changed the tire.
Don't switch it up now.
I mean, I know the concept.
It's a very easy thing to do.
It's a very easy concept, but I just don't do it.
I'm not going to sit here and say it's easy now.
It is easy to tell somebody how to do it.
Where you from, brother?
I'm from Brooklyn, Canarsie.
How many fixing flat places by you?
It's a whole lot.
There you go.
That's why I ain't got to change the tire.
That's what I paid him to do.
Thank you, though, brother.
He might not have the money.
Hey.
People out here struggling, you know.
$9, $10.
Does it?
Some people don't even have an extra tire in their trunk.
That's true, too.
Now, that's expensive.
That's true, too.
To ride around with an extra tire.
Hello, who's this?
Hey, what's up?
This is John.
How y'all doing today?
John, what's up?
Get it off your chest.
Just wanted to spread some positivity, man,
tell you guys you're doing a great job over there as usual.
Charlemagne, we had a compromise last week.
I just want to make sure you stand true to the yo, yo, yo, yo, yo,
regardless of what time you show up, right?
Yes, sir.
Oh, he missed it this morning.
I didn't do it today.
Yeah.
I missed you this morning because I was kind of late tuning in.
Oh, man.
I don't know whether you did it or not.
But also, I'm headed to vacation in two days.
I'm on vacation for the next five days, headed to Miami for the first time.
So I'm happy about that.
You about to wild out.
I'm going to have a little fun.
There you go.
This is the last bit.
I'm going to have a little fun.
Black men don't cheat.
That's right.
Hold on.
Wilding out doesn't mean cheating.
I know.
Okay.
I'm just getting some clarity.
What does that have to do with anything?
I'm just telling y'all.
I'm just getting clarity in the situation.
That's all.
You guys have a great morning.
You too now, bro.
Thanks.
Lorenzo.
Yo, what's going on, CJMV?
What's going on?
What's up, bro?
Get off your chest.
Hey, listen, Charlamagne there.
I'm right here, sir.
Yo, what's going on, Charla?
I'm blessed black and highly favored.
What's happening?
Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Good morning, YouTube. Good morning. I want to know what's going on, Charlotte? I'm blessed black and highly favored. What's happening? Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Good morning, YouTube.
Good morning.
I want to know what's going on within the past few years, like 10 years.
Why everybody got so damn sensitive over everything, man?
You can't say nothing online.
You got to watch what you say.
I've been feeling like sometimes, you ever heard of that?
Like you be seeing in movies, like when people put in movies like that cryosleep
I just feel like doing something like that
and go on sleep for like 10 years and come back
and be like, yo, what's going on? Well, everybody's so
fake politically correct. You can say whatever you want.
You know what I'm saying? You just got to deal with the consequences
of what you said, you know? And I think that everybody's
so afraid of like these social media mobs
and being attacked that they be walking
tightropes and walking on thin ice
because they don't want to be attacked by the mob.
But there's so much access now, too.
Before social media, we weren't hearing what everyone had to say about everything.
Now everybody's voicing their opinions,
and sometimes they're saying things that maybe they regret saying
or maybe they're not saying it in the right way.
Sometimes they're putting it out there to get overanalyzed by people.
They only regret when they get attacked.
That's understandable. That's understandable.
That's cool.
But you know what I'm saying?
It's like, let's say it's Charlamagne.
He don't ever post his kids, but he posts his kids.
And he does something with his kids.
You know, right away.
Oh, my God.
He shouldn't be doing this.
This and this and that.
Like, come on.
Yo, mind your business.
Yeah, I agree with you.
Everybody's so sensitive.
Everybody's so soft nowadays
But it's just the way society is
Bro, say whatever you want, who gives a damn
Let the mob attack
Get it off your chest, 800-585-1051
If you need to vent, you can hit us up at any time
The Breakfast Club
Is your country falling apart?
Feeling tired? Depressed?
A little bit revolutionary?
Consider this.
Start your own country.
I planted the flag.
I just kind of looked out of like,
this is mine.
I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
There are 55 gallons of water
for 500 pounds of concrete.
Everybody's doing it.
I am King Ernest Emmanuel.
I am the Queen of Laudonia.
I'm Jackson I, King of Capraburg.
I am the Supreme Leader
of the Grand Republic of Mentonia. Be part of a great colonial of Kaperburg. I am the Supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Mentonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
The Waikana tribe owned country.
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a racket with a black powder, you know, with explosive warhead.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Bullets.
We need help!
We still have the off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
And we're losing daylight fast.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more. After those runs,
the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all about. It's a
chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into their stories, their journeys,
and the thoughts that arise once
we've hit the pavement together. You know that rush of endorphins you feel after a great workout?
Well, that's when the real magic happens. So if you love hearing real, inspiring stories from the
people you know, follow, and admire, join me every week for Post Run High. It's where we take the conversation beyond the run
and get into the heart of it all.
It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So y'all, this is Questlove,
and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast
I've been working on with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
It's a family-friendly podcast.
Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of Historical Records, Nimany, to tell you all about it.
Make sure you check it out. Hey, y'all. Nimany here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for
kids and families called Historical Records. Historical Records brings history to life
through hip hop. Each episode is about a different inspiring figure from history.
Like this one about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old girl in Alabama who refused to give up her seat on the city bus nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing.
Check it. And it began with me.
Did you know, did you know?
I wouldn't give up my seat.
Nine months before Rosa,
it was Claudette Goldman.
Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records.
Because in order to make
history, you have to make some
noise. Listen
to Historical Records on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're checking out the world's most dangerous morning show.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
We got a special guest on the line right now.
Yes, sir.
T.D. Jakes.
Welcome, sir. Good morning, Bishop. Thank you. It's a real pleasure. How's it going. T.D. Jakes. Welcome, sir.
Good morning, Bishop.
How's it going, Charlotte? Good morning.
Hi, everybody.
Me and my wife have been getting up on Sunday mornings
and turning you on
and just really
enjoying the words that you
are giving to people during this coronavirus
pandemic, man. Yesterday, the shock of
suffering. Incredible, my brother.
Incredible service.
Thank you so much.
That means a lot.
I'm really trying to say things that help to guide people
through the turbulence that we have never seen in our country before.
What do you say to people right now that this is really testing their faith?
I see a lot of people are losing faith.
They're saying if God actually exists, why would he put this on his people?
And, you know, should we still believe?
How do you believe when you see babies dying and elderly people dying?
What do you say to those people that are losing their faith right now?
He hates this question, by the way.
It's funny.
I mentioned that in my sermon.
It is the most common question that we always get.
First of all, I don't see, I live in a different world, but I don't see a lot of people losing their faith.
My numbers are higher than they've ever been in the history of our ministry.
I see a lot of people reaching out to something to hold on to, to comfort them, to ease them from their trauma and pain.
To those that do feel like they are losing their faith, I'm not sure they ever understood the Christian faith,
because the Christian faith is quite obvious and open about suffering.
It is not a success gospel.
The emblem of our faith is a cross, and God did not spare his own son from suffering.
So we have never really alluded in Scripture to the fact that having faith in god it causes us
to escape suffering but he has fellowship with us in the midst of the suffering and he joins us he's
the fourth one in the fire he's a very present help in the time of trouble when you pass through
the waters he said i'll be with you he never said you wouldn't pass through it he said when you go
through it i'll be with you.
And Bishop T.D. Jakes, you said this is a great time for people to get closer to each other also, right?
It's very important for us to get closer to each other, not close in the sense of physicalities.
We have to respect distance as it relates to physicalities, but we can be closer by phone,
by kindness, by thoughtful deeds,
by going to the grocery store for elderly people who are shut in, by serving those people who are
serving us on the front lines and the hospitals, trying to make things easier for them, maybe
babysitting their kids so that they can be at work. There's a whole lot of things that can be done
to make things better. Bishop, I've been
telling everybody that God is
trying to tell us something right now, and now is
the time for us to be still and
listen to God. So I wonder,
what has God told you that you haven't
shared yet?
You know, I don't know that I
haven't shared it, but I think that
our world has become increasingly
arrogant,
narcissistic, self-consumed, tribalistic, fighting about everything. I mean, race, politics, age, millennials against boomers.
We're caught up in it.
And then we get this common enemy that has no respect for any of those divisions.
And it's nothing like a common
enemy to make us unite. And I'm hopeful that we will have the good sense to come out of our tribes
and unite and fight this common, invisible enemy that threatens all of humanity, not just America,
all of humanity. Have you seen some of these churches that's not shutting down and still
opening up and putting people in danger?
What do you think about some of those places, those places of worship?
I've seen a few of them.
And with the exception of a few of them that live in rural areas where they're not dealing with the pandemic at this present moment,
there might be some room for controversy about their choice. But for the broader population, I think it's just foolish
to put your flock in that kind of danger
in the name of faith,
when in fact, even Jesus did not tempt God.
He didn't, Satan brought him up to the high mountain
and said, if you're the son of God,
throw yourself down, God will take care of you.
And Jesus resisted that.
And I think the church should resist the temptation to flaunt our faith
and say that we're proving our faith by tempting our faith.
So what do you tell your congregation?
If the pastor comes and the pastor says, look,
God will protect you from coronavirus.
You got to have faith.
Just come to church.
What would you tell a person who's a believer? A believer that you can believe at home. You can read at home. You
can scream at home and you can use common sense. Right. That your pastor is not a dictator. He
doesn't control you. We've got pastors dying. We know several people who have gone to services
and great most of them are now infected with the virus as a result of that idea.
This isn't something that we don't have data on.
This is happening right in our cities right now.
We've got dead bishops, pastors, elders who did that.
We've got people who came to open events and are suffering for it.
Why do we have to keep repeating the same thing to learn a lesson that we can take from someone else?
Sunday is Easter Sunday. What do you have planned for Easter? We have to keep repeating the same thing to learn a lesson that we can take from someone else.
Sunday is Easter Sunday.
What do you have planned for Easter?
We normally do a big pageantry thing, and we have a big play and a musical and a drama and all of that.
And we're going to have some aspects of it, but it's all going to be online.
I'm not doing anything in the main service. I don't want our members in harm's way.
I'm trying to distance ourselves. We can't do the parking lot thing. Our parking lot won't hold
the distance that's necessary to be able to do that. So we're going to enjoy it online like we
have everything else and keep it moving. And I want to say something else. The first Easter
service didn't have a crowd either. They didn't have a big service and they didn't have a choir.
They didn't have a praise team and they didn't have dancers.
When Jesus came out of the grave, there wasn't a bunch of people around.
So Easter doesn't lose its meaning because we have less crowds and we don't wear big hats.
All right, we got more with Bishop T.D. Jakes when we come back.
It's The Breakfast Club. Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
The Breakfast Club is back.
Where I want to be.
Morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy
Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. We're still kicking it with Bishop
T.D. Jakes. Charlamagne, who
pastors Bishop T.D. Jakes at a time like
this? Who keeps your anxiety from
going through the roof?
Well, I have a pastor, Bishop Sherman
Watkins in Columbus. He's been my pastor
almost all my life. He's 80
some years old and
he's a great, great person in
my life. But I also get
inspiration from everybody around
me. I draw inspiration
from little children on up.
I draw inspiration from people who keep on fighting. I draw inspiration from little children on up. I draw inspiration from people who keep on
fighting. I'm particularly inspired by the first responders who are putting their lives at risk,
fighting something that we don't have a lot of details about, putting their families at risk
to be on the job, willing to die to fight to keep us alive. Those kinds of stories inspire me.
They motivate me. They challenge me to try to be a better person.
All of that together collectively.
And then I have a Bible.
And as long as I have a Bible, I can find inspiration.
We've seen a lot of issues, like you said, with people being at home right now,
with couples going through it,
and the rise in people questioning about their marriages, their relationships. What advice do you have for couples who are at home right now and who are going through it and the rise in people questioning about their marriages, their relationships.
What advice do you have for couples who are at home right now and who are going through it?
Don't allow the issue to make you to make you attack the individual. Let's be mature enough
to understand it is the issue that's got us angry, that's got us angst, not the individual.
Avoid pushing each other's buttons.
Avoid talking about things that you know are going to lead to arguments.
Let's get on the same team.
Again, we need unity, and we don't have unity in our houses.
You have to fight this as a team. You have to be on the same page about it, not trying to prove which one is right.
It's not always important who's right or who's wrong.
What's more important is that we get together and fight a common enemy.
I want to talk about self-care for a second, Bishop.
You know, not just from the mental health aspect, but physically.
Who's keeping your ball defresh, my brother?
You shave your own head?
Because this is why I got a hoodie on now.
I can't see my barber right now.
Let me tell you something.
I decided to shave mine off.
I'm down to a goatee because I didn't even want anybody up shaving me,
not up that close.
I want to maintain my distance right now.
And they're still learning things about this,
and I don't want them breathing all over me right now.
So I shaved mine off.
And so for better or for worse, I did this to myself.
Now, Bishop.
This is the time that we're having
to go back to doing things for
ourselves. But Bishop, I let
my wife do mine. You see, I let my wife do mine.
She's the only one I can get in this vicinity. So she
I figured my wife could do makeup. She could
do my goatee. And it looks good, man.
You do your baldy too, Bishop?
I shave my head.
I shave my, I had a beard if you, Bishop? I shave my head.
I shave my... I had a beard, if you will remember.
I cut my beard to make this easier to manage.
I got in the mirror.
I did it myself.
This is one thing about coming from the generation that I came from.
We're used to doing things ourselves.
I came from the background.
I can solder. I can plumb. I can iron. doing things ourselves. I came from the background. I can solder.
I can plumb.
I can iron.
I can cook.
I can make cornbread without jiffy.
We're used to surviving.
And those skills are really, really helping us.
And the younger generation is having to learn how to do that.
The restaurants are closed.
You got to break down and get some skillets out right now.
Now, Bishop, I was talking to my dad. And I told my dad, I was like, you know, toilet paper's selling out.
He was like, well, you know, we used to use newspaper.
He said, you just wet a little newspaper, and if there's no toilet paper, that's what you use.
I said, well, what about water?
He said, you boil water.
I said, you're right, Dad.
You're right.
A lot of people got bidets now, too.
You can learn something from old folks.
You all can teach us how to run these computers,
and we can teach you how to make cornbread with water.
That's right.
Another question, Bishop, because I've been seeing you do all of these hits on television and stuff,
and you're always sitting at that desk.
Lord forgive me for answering this question.
Do you wear pants, or do you just throw the jacket on with the top,
or do you wear basketball shorts?
How comfortable are you?
What are you talking about?
Let me tell you something funny. I was going to have
my pajamas on, but for fear
that you were going to ask me that question,
I actually have on some black
jeans. I knew you were going to
ask me that. Some told me
you better put on some pants.
Charlamagne doesn't have on any pants
right now, as you can see. I got on basketball
shorts. So usually, let me see, Bishop.
What the hell is going on?
Goodness gracious.
So usually you wear pajama pants when you're doing these hits.
Sometimes, sometimes, because it's so early in the morning.
We're an hour earlier than you.
Yes, sir.
I can't believe you asked that.
I'm just dressed from the waist up.
Let me get myself together here.
My goodness.
Now, Bishop.
Yeah, I'm here.
I was going to ask, before you leave, can you leave us on a prayer, please?
Please, can you, Bishop?
That's a real stretch from pajamas to prayer, but I'll try to make it.
Hey, we move fast on this show, Bishop.
From wretched to righteous.
You know how we do.
I'm with you. I'm with you.
I'm with you.
Father, I recognize that right now that there are bodies locked up in 18 wheelers with no place to go.
I realize that there are people who have lost loved ones and can't attend the funeral.
I realize that there are people who are hooked up to respirators and the family can't even hold their hand.
I know that the pain and the pressure of this moment is overwhelming.
Jobs have been lost.
Income has been compromised.
Families are in distress.
Trouble is everywhere.
And I pray, God, that as only you can do, that you would comfort and guide and lead our people through the turbulence. I pray for those who seem
to be oblivious to what's going on, that you would mature them and wake them up before they have to
learn in the most horrific way that this is a serious problem. I pray for our government,
our leadership. I pray for our manufacturing companies. I pray for the countries around
the world that we would come together on one accord and fight this globally and cohesively without the spirit of division.
In Jesus' name, amen.
Amen.
Hey, Bishop, I just want to tell you, man, I sincerely mean this.
I really, really love you, man, and I love your sermons, and I love how you just are bringing people together at a time like this.
And I want to encourage all couples to watch.
What was the sermon you did with your wife?
I can't, it's slipping my mind right now, the name of it.
Model Home.
Model Home.
Yes.
Model Home.
Oh, man, I loved it, man.
Me and my wife watched that.
And if you're a couple and you're with your wife right now
and you're at the house and you quarantine together,
I promise you if you watch that,
you'll come out of this with a much stronger relationship, man. Model home.
Please watch that.
38 years. We've been at it 38 years.
Well, thank you, Bishop T.D. Jakes,
for joining us. Thank you so much.
We appreciate you. Stay out there.
Keep doing what you're doing. You're making a
difference. In many cases, you
are the preachers that your generation
hears. Understand that
responsibility. Thank you for
being on the wall, pumping positive
stuff to us right now. We
need each and every one of us to be with
one accord. Hang in there.
Thank you so much. Thank you, Bishop.
Thank you, Bishop. Blessings, brother. Have a great day.
The Breakfast Club. Your mornings will never
be the same.
It's topic time.
Pick up the phone, baby. Be the same. It's topic time. Call 800-585-1051 to join in to the discussion with The Breakfast Club.
Talk about it.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Now, if you just joined us, we're talking about Karens.
And we're asking, what's the craziest encounter you had with a Karen.
Now, this comes from a story I was reading on Ball Alert where a lady ran up on this other lady's house because she had a Black Lives Matter flag on her lawn.
Now, I've had situations, you know, I ride my bike a lot and sometimes we ride through all different neighborhoods.
And a couple of times, you know, white people have shouted out to me, get out my neighborhood, called us the N-word a couple of times, but I just, you know, call them words back. So we're asking, and now you had some
situations, right? Yeah, but it was never anything like when people film, you know, people coming at
them and doing, I've never had a situation that I definitely had people call me the N-word on a few
different occasions, but it's never been anything that escalated. Yeah, no, that never escalated.
That might be because of me, though,
because I'm definitely not the escalation type of person.
I'll just laugh and be like, all right.
All right, well, let's go to the phone lines.
Hello, who's this?
This is Ashley from St. Augustine.
So, Ashley, we're asking,
what's the craziest encounter you had with a Karen?
So, while I was at work,
one of our patients came up to me,
and she was like,
hey, what do you guys like to be called?
I know it's not. Whoa. And what did you say?
Oh, my God. I was just like, Ashley would do. I mean, that would be great.
Our name, you know, would be awesome. Thank you. Wow. Nice to come to you.
Yeah, that was nice and calm. I don't know if I could have went left.
I was like, listen, I'm not losing my job today.
Just, you know, got to run with it.
Wow.
That's crazy.
Sometimes people be doing, sometimes people try it like they do stuff on purpose.
And what do you do, Ashley?
I think that she wanted to use the word.
And I was like, oh, like, well, let me form it in a question and I'll get away with using the word.
So you could have said, well, what is your name, ma'am?
Because I know you don't like to be called crack ass cracker.
You should have said that back. But I You should have said that back I'm turning into
I'm turning into Charlamagne
I mean that just made me so upset
I'm sorry
You definitely are
We up here on this
When they go low
We go high vibe right
Yeah he would be proud
We vibe high
Hello who's this
Hey peace and blessings
How you guys doing today man
Hey Sean Stone.
I'm asking, what's the craziest encounter you had with a Karen, bro?
So, Andy, you know I'm living in Jersey, right?
So, I've been on the parkway.
So, you know, on the parkway, you're supposed to go fast or drive up your car.
So, I blow my horn as soon as I got on the parkway because there was a car in front of me.
So, for some reason, I try to go around the lady now.
She hop in the middle lane. So, I said, I tried to go around the lady now. She hopped in the middle lane. So I said, alright, let me
go to the left lane. Then she hopped
in the left lane and stepped on her brake, bro.
So then I said, you know what? Let me
slow down. I go around her
and I keep some rocks in my car.
I just threw rocks in her window, man
and it sped off, man.
You know Sean Stone don't mess with nobody.
Is that what they call you,
Sean Stone?
Now, Sean Stone,
you keep rocks in your car
just for the purpose
of throwing them at people?
Well,
not just the purpose
of throwing them at people.
Just the purpose
of throwing them at people
that's doing road rage
on the road.
Now, Sean,
you can't be acting stupid.
Yes, sir.
I want to applaud you
because I used to do
the same thing.
I used to keep pennies
or old McDonald cups in my car back in the day.
I used to do that all the time.
But I grew up.
I realized that if I throw something at somebody's car,
they could pull out a gun and shoot at me.
So I said, you know what?
Let me grow up, breathe, and let it go.
That's true.
But Envy, she's stepping on her brake.
She's trying to harm my life, my brother.
We're on the parkway speeding, and she's stepping on her brake. But if you threw a rock, let's say you harm my life, my brother. We're on the parkway speeding, and she's
stepping on her brake. But if you do a
rock, let's say you do a rock, right? It hit a
windshield and crashed. And it broke her windshield. Now you're
wrong. And died.
Well, now I see your point.
You know what I mean? I don't want nobody to die.
See that? You got to think about that. I thought about that too.
Sean, no stone.
You wanted me to die. You were stepping on the brake.
All right, Sean Stone.
Sean Stone, I don't think you should throw rocks out the window with people anymore.
Back in the day, I would do that.
I would do something stupid like that.
Sometimes I wish I had something in my car to throw in, and I thank God I didn't.
True.
Hello, who's this?
This is Elliot.
Elliot, good morning.
Hey, good morning, DJ Angelique.
Good morning.
We're asking, what's the craziest encounter you had with Karen?
I kind of had the same encounter you had.
I worked for Amazon, and I'm driving through the neighborhood,
and it was called N-Word, right?
And I was just thinking about what you said about how you rode the bike
through the neighborhood.
And one thing that was on my mind is,
I wish I could have went back to that neighborhood
and bought property there.
Yeah.
You had the money to do it.
So if you find something in that neighborhood,
I hope you go pay for it.
Well, you know what?
That happened one time, too.
I was looking at this property in a nice area in Jersey,
and it was crazy because I had my wife,
and I think I had Madison with me, my daughter.
And I was looking at this property, and a neighbor called the police and said that I was vandalizing the property.
And I tried to buy that property.
Somebody outbid me, but I was going to buy that property and I was just going to rent it out to everybody I know from the hood for free.
I was going to charge a dollar a month for rent just to piss the neighbors off.
But I didn't win that property.
But, Emmy, you live in a nice neighborhood now.
Mm-hmm.
I do.
They don't stop you.
I got a restaurant called 4th and 1.
I'm opening right now because I'm trying to build my wealth.
It's in Cincinnati, Ohio.
4th and 1 restaurant.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah, but I live in a nice neighborhood.
We got to check it out.
I live in a nice neighborhood now but they don't my neighbors
are cool they know who i am they don't bother me the police know who i am everybody's cool in my
name but every once in a while you gotta curse somebody out but that's that's that's life you
know but my neighbors are cool really cool no problem it sucks that that's life man it sucks
that life is every now and then if somebody doesn't know who you are and you're a black
person in a nice neighborhood you might gotta curse to curse somebody out. Yeah. One of one of my friends who got on my bike, borrowed my bike.
He rode his bike to Dunkin Donuts to get a coffee.
And on the way back, a little white kid was like called the police.
Now one of us like this is black guy stealing a bike in the neighborhood.
And, you know, we had to yell at that little kid and scare him.
But other than that, I haven't.
It's crazy because that don't happen To white people Like white people Never are told
Like what are you doing
In this neighborhood
Nobody's ever calling
The cops on them
Because they don't look
Like they belong
Speak for yourself
I definitely called a cop
On a white kid one time
He rang my doorbell
He looked crazy
I called
I said it looks like
There's a white guy out there
He looks like he's on meth
It looks like he's on crack
Well he rang your doorbell
I think that's different
It was four o'clock
In the morning
It was four in the morning
And I was scared That's different But I'm four o'clock in the morning. It was four in the morning and I was scared.
But I'm saying being somewhere, just
the act of walking down the street
or riding a bike.
No.
That doesn't happen. No, not at all.
Alright, we got more coming up next.
We're The Breakfast Club.
The Breakfast Club.
Is your country falling apart?
Feeling tired? Depressed?
A little bit revolutionary?
Consider this. Start your own country.
I planted the flag.
I just kind of looked out of like, this is mine.
I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
There's 55 gallons of water for 500 pounds of concrete.
Everybody's doing it.
I am King Ernest Emmanuel.
I am the Queen of Laudonia.
I'm Jackson I, King of Kaperburg.
I am the Supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Mentonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
The Waikana tried my country.
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a rocket with a black powder, you know, with explosive warheads.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Bullets. We need help!
We still have the off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
And we're losing daylight fast.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show, where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all
about. It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into their stories,
their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together.
You know that rush of endorphins you feel after a great workout?
Well, that's when the real magic happens.
So if you love hearing real, inspiring stories from the people you know,
follow, and admire, join me every week for Post Run High. It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all. It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So y'all, this is Questlove, and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been
working on with the Story Pirates
and John Glickman called Historical
Records. It's a family-friendly
podcast. Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy
with your kids starting on September
27th. I'm going to toss it
over to the host of Historical Records,
Nimany, to tell you all about
it. Make sure you check it out. Hey, y'all. Nimany here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast
for kids and families called Historical Records. Historical Records brings history to life through
hip-hop. Each episode is about a different inspiring figure from history
Like this one about Claudette Colvin
A 15 year old girl in Alabama
Who refused to give up her seat on the city bus
Nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing
Check it. Get the kids in your life
excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records. Because in order to make history,
you have to make some noise. Listen to Historical records on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
We have a special guest on the line.
And one of only two members that has ever smoked on The Breakfast Club,
and he's smoking right now.
Ladies and gentlemen, Snoop Dogg.
Hey, hey, hey, good morning.
Good morning.
Snoop, do you pray first or smoke first when you get up in the morning?
I pray.
I pray that I can see another day and uplift some more spirits and some more souls,
and I pray that the rest of my family is still alive when I'm alive, when I get up.
There you go.
We've seen a very interesting versus battle the other night.
Very entertaining.
Thank you, my brother.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Now, wasn't the battle supposed to be you and Busta at first?
What happened with that?
And was that ever supposed to happen?
Yeah, that was definitely supposed to happen.
But, you know, we had some things that was preventing it from happening.
It just was a lot going on, but
for the most part, I really, really, me
and Busta Rhymes, we really, really, really
wanted that. Like, bad.
Because we love each other. We got great history together.
We got stories of us being on the
road together. So it was going to be a real
positive celebration to
show our music and our skills.
But when that didn't happen, DMX
was on his way to California,
all ready to work with Swiss Beats.
So the idea came was, shoot, since X is coming his way, dog for dog.
And I was like, you know what?
That sounds like a real showdown,
because I always had a love and a respect for X.
And I remember when he was running a rap game for two years straight,
and I had to take the back seat to him.
So I felt like this would be a very interesting battle
because I had the rap game in the palm of my hands at one time,
and he did as well.
Do you remember the first time you met X?
Yeah, man.
It was at Javarga Square, man.
For the concert I did way back in the days.
And he reminded me.
He reminded me because he told the story of how he created the song
Get At Me, Dog.
Yeah, I heard you say it, yeah.
Exactly, and that kind of threw me off.
It blew my mind because it's like you don't realize how much you influence the hip-hop world
until somebody keeps it real and says that.
Now, when you're doing your verses and you look at all the lyrics, right?
Because we vibing, we watching you on TV, we singing the songs,
but it's a different feeling now when I got the kids running around.
I'm like, yo, get out the room, get out the room.
Because it almost felt like, damn, I didn't know Snoop said that back then.
I didn't know DMX said that back then, but it was so natural.
But now, growing up, it just seems a little, it's like, wow, I can't believe Snoop said that.
I can't believe DMX did a song about that.
But you know what?
That's the era that we come from.
We were so blunt, and all we knew was what we knew.
No, that's real. Cultural context
matters. That's why I said all the woke motherfuckers,
y'all stay over there while Snoop and
DMX doing they shit, alright?
Because when you let bitches ain't shit
fly, I said goddamn
Snoop the realest good life.
And I saw all the woke
people, especially the woke sisters
was vibing to it too.
They couldn't fake it because it's something about
if it feels good to you, it must be good for you.
It wasn't aimed at you, you, or you.
It was just an expression that we had.
And you caught it because you felt like that sometimes.
Like DMX said, man, I play this record every time my baby mama,
my fiance, every time she get on my nerves,
I play this record right here.
I'm like, man, because he knew all
the lyrics, and it threw me off.
Like, when you're a rapper, you don't expect
another rapper to know all your
lyrics from 27 years
ago. Right. Yeah, you look genuinely
shocked. I didn't know what that was for.
I didn't know if that was because it was DMX.
I don't know if it was an East Coast thing.
Like, damn. Because the East Coast, people didn't like
to give it up for the West Coast artists like that back then.
But now I guess it's cool.
I think that's probably what it was
because I know when we dropped the Chronic album,
we basically shook up the whole industry.
And my mission was to impress the East Coast.
So I wanted to make a stamp
to where they would respect me,
appreciate me, and love me
because every time I came to the Big Apple,
if I seen an EPMD, a KRS-One,
an LL Cool J, Kid Capri,
whoever the f*** I seen,
I made it a must to break through
security and go tell them,
I love y'all. I f*** with y'all.
I'm a fan, even if I was bigger than them
at the time. And that's why I felt like my
relationships with some of these rappers
on the East has always been solidified
by me being genuine and saying, I love you, cuz. You spoke in the battle, too, how you wrote for Dr. Dre, but then
you also let other people write for you. Which one do you prefer? I like them both. I'll give you a
great story. Me and the DOC, that's one of the greatest writers of hip-hop. We're in here writing
this song, struggling with this beat. We can't come up with shit. It's like the fourth day. Dr. Dre fly from New York into L.A.
We all in the studio.
30 minutes later, that shit is done.
He wrote Dre's shit and my shit, and it was flawless.
And me and D.O.C. was like,
well, looks like this shit outstruck us on this one,
so we're going to take the back seat, and I'm going to accept it.
And it was still Dre, and it was Jay-Z and he wrote the whole song.
How was that session? Because that is such a West Coast beat. That's such a West Coast feel. Like
when you think of West Coast music as a DJ, that's the first record, one of the first records you go
to besides G-Thing. So how was that session, him writing on feeling like that West Coast?
Well, Jay-Z is a great writer to begin with for himself.
So imagine him striking up for somebody that he truly loves and appreciates.
So he loves Dr. Dre.
That's what his pen showed you.
Yeah, people was wondering why you didn't play it.
Because it's not my record and Jay-Z wrote it.
I wouldn't have got a point if a New Yorker would have slid on that chair and been like,
nah, Jay-Z, you can play it.
F*** that. Because if I was to go up against Hov, I think he would play chat and been like, nah, Jay, you can't do that. F*** that.
Because if I was to go up against Hov,
I think he would play that on me like,
f*** you, dang it.
Please, please, please, please.
And I'd be like, oh, no, you cheating, girl.
You can't do that.
There was a rumor back in the day that Hov was a sneaky crip.
You know what?
He got sly lines, you know what I'm saying?
He be getting his little walk-on with his literature,
you know what I'm saying?
We read between the lines, like, we got
lingo that he really identifies
with us on some real slick grip, you know what I'm
talking about? I gotta add to this, even
though the versus battle is a celebration, right,
and you and DMX are cool, when you
were doing the battle, are there certain rounds you felt
like you didn't win? Yeah.
When I dropped deep cover,
I thought I was strong, right, off
the gate, and then a nigga hit me with a poem
going into his shit about a drive-by.
And the nigga said something about something,
all you do is talk about a drive-by.
And all you do is just drive-by.
Boom.
And the music came on.
And I was like, damn, I lost that.
With the setup and the overhand right and the whole nine.
You know what I'm saying?
I go with shit like that? I go with style points.
I go with how you set the song up,
how emotional the song is,
what's the feedback, what's the feel,
and did the song make me get up?
You may get that point,
or I may lose half a point for being so into your shit.
Yeah, I mean, the thing about you and X-Man,
we both love y'all's spirit.
So it's like X music is great, and you just love X and you root for X.
Same thing with you, but that music, man, that stuff y'all was making, man,
those are weapons of mass destruction.
It's just different levels to me.
You got to look at what Dr. Dre was always up against.
He was never, like, the greatest producer in the world when he was with NWA,
and he was making the greatest music in the world,
but they wasn't giving him that.
So when he finally got a chance to get with Death Row Records and have
a breath of fresh air, some new MCs,
and a new light,
he was definitely going to show his ass.
And from that point on, I feel like Dr. Dre put
his stake down as like, I'm the dopest producer
in hip-hop. I don't give a f*** where you from.
You can't f*** with me. Everything I put
out spent off, and spent off something
tremendous. And I started careers
that ain't never died. You ain't put out
a from the West, from the Midwest,
from the East, and all of them
successful? Yeah.
Eminem. White rappers
had zero respect in rap.
He has probably put Eminem
in a position where he could be labeled as one
of the top ten rappers ever.
I don't think so, but the game feels like
he's top ten
lyricist and all that that comes with it,
but that's just because he's what
Dr. Dre and Dr. Dre helped him find
the best Eminem that he could find.
I respect Eminem,
and I can see why people would have him in his top ten,
top five. I personally don't.
Me neither. You've been around
a long time. Why don't you have them in your top
10? Because there's some niggas in the 80s that he
can't f*** with. Like who?
Like Rakim. Like Big
Daddy Kane. Yes, sir. Like KRS-One.
Like LL Cool J.
Like Ice Cube.
Yeah, the 80s don't get the respect it deserves
and it's weird because the 80s
bred superstars like yourself.
Like Biggie. Like Wu-Tang Clan, like Nas.
Like, I wonder why that 80s class don't get that respect
when they talking about top tens and top fives and all that.
Well, when we came, we tried to take them out.
That's why.
But a lot of us gave them respect,
and then a lot of us really wanted their spot.
Just like now.
What the little niggas do now to us?
Y'all niggas ain't goats. We the OGs. We the
goats. We this. So it's like, that's
what the game is built about. Hip hop is a
young man's game. It's not an old man's game.
Alright, we got more with Snoop Dogg when we come
back. Don't move. It's The Breakfast Club. Good morning.
Good morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy
Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club. We're still kicking
it with Snoop Dogg.
Charlamagne?
Man, Snoop, I laughed so damn hard
when you posted that meme
about Queen Jada Pinkett Smith
bringing herself to the red table talk
when it said,
when Jada cheated on Willis
like she cheated on all of us.
Did you even hesitate to post that?
Like, let me not be petty.
F*** that.
F*** that.
Teddy Riley to the table.
Quit playing, Charlotte, man.
You know every moment we get to be motherf***ing petty.
F***, if you don't knock it off,
as much s*** you be doing on the petty s***,
I'm firing off every chance I get.
You dragged me to the table and made me
spill my heart out and pour my soul out to you.
Now I need to get my gift back.
They brought you to the principal's office, man.
Red Table Talk.
Man, they had me triple teamed in there with the little sis, grandma, and her.
I was like, man, this ain't going to end well.
I better fix my time.
I'm not going to leave here.
Now, Snoop, last time you were up here, I think it was last August,
you talked about the Kardashians
And you said, Travis Scott better get out
And Kanye West better get out
What did you know that the world didn't know at that time?
That that movie Get Out
Had some similarities to that house
And I don't like
Not nobody or whatever
How they get out, but I'm just looking at the statistics
Of the men that come in
And how they leave And, but I'm just looking at the statistics of the men that come in and how they lead.
And it just ain't right.
Like,
I'm not picking on nobody.
I'm just saying
there's just something
strange going on over there.
I've been invited over there
a couple of times.
I ain't never went.
That says a lot though, Snoop,
because you a person
that, you know,
you tend to kick it
with a little bit of everybody.
And I'm cool
with Khloe, my homegirl.
I love Kendall.
Kylie cool with me.
I don't know that Kourtney and Kim have like a, you knowgirl. I love Kendall. Kylie cool with me. I don't know that
Kourtney and Kim have like a
you know, because I keep it real,
so they kind of like this with me. You know what I'm saying?
And the
moms is cool as hell with me, so I ain't
got no issues with nobody in that house. I'm just
giving you my perspective of it.
It sure looks strange when a nigga leave that
motherfucker. He don't come out the same way.
Well, you know what, Snoop? You did get some backlash for being in the studio with Kanye, right?
After you had...
Let me say this.
Dr. Dre called me to the studio.
Because Dr. Dre was producing Kanye's album.
I don't know if y'all knew that or not.
I may be spilling the beans, but I'm going to clear this shit up.
Dr. Dre called me to come get on the project that he was doing with Kanye. So I said,
I'll do anything for you, Dr. Dre. When I get
there, cuz it's there,
he playing me a s***. It's sounding good.
The s*** of mine sound like he right.
He in the right spirit. He rapping this s***.
The s*** he saying is spiritual. It's dope.
And I'm telling him, s*** you back.
He like, I want to get you on something. No problem.
Put my thang down for the spirit.
I'm going to give you that because it said, Papa,
and I was f***ing with you before you went crazy.
And it looked like you're back to being normal again.
So I'm going to give you that.
Did that conversation ever come up with you and Kanye?
Did any of that come up?
Did you have to tell him how you feel about any of that s*** he was doing?
Man, one thing about me and Kanye,
we've been real since we've been real with each other.
Certain things don't even need to be discussed.
That wasn't the moment or the time or the mode.
He was happy to see me.
I was happy to see him.
And it was a brotherhood.
It wasn't about what we did in the past.
It was about let's move forward and try to get to what we had.
And when I sized him up and seen his mental
and what he was on and what he was spitting,
I was like, he got his shit together.
So I didn't get out with him because there's been times in the past
where I've been asked to fuck with him.
And I was like, I ain't with him.
Pac was a Gemini, Kanye's a Gemini.
Are there any similarities between them as artists and I guess people?
That work ethic, they both got that same kill instinct in the studio.
They're just killers.
Now that you say that, I feel a lot of Kanye is Tupac with his aggression and
his energy.
It's just Tupac knew his aggression and his energy. It's just Tupac
knew how to aim it differently.
It used to be a time where Kanye was a perfectionist
at telling stories and expressing
what he felt. And then it just feels like
now he's losing
the message behind what
is real and what's fake.
You gotta really push what you're speaking on.
And in the past, you really knew what you were speaking to.
And you could be asked questions about it,
and you could answer intelligently. Now,
when a nigga asks you questions, his answer
to this nigga given nowadays is
like, damn, what fucking history book
this nigga reading out of?
Have you been watching Corrupt on Marist
Boot Camp at all? Sad.
We try to get him help, you know
what I'm saying? But you got to want to help yourself.
So, with that being said, I watched the show, disappointed.
Don't like how they got my out there.
But he a grown-ass man, and I feel like this is going to help him see what we've been trying to tell him for the past three years.
Cud, go get you some help.
Get off that bottle.
Get in the gym.
Drink some water.
You know what I'm saying?
But when you're going through issues, you know, you lose your mother.
You get divorced.
It's like a lot of s*** that's going on in his head that we wasn't prepared for when we left there for a while.
Because we wasn't taught a lot of this s***.
A lot of us started families and just had to figure it out.
So, you know, we're praying for him.
I love him to death.
And I just want to see him get some help.
And hopefully this television show can help him get some help.
Right.
It sounds like Corrupt got a lot of unresolved trauma that he probably needs therapy for.
You know, I'm a praying man, too, but I believe in therapy as well.
Is therapy something you believe in, Snoop?
Definitely.
That's a lot of issues in the black communities that we don't admit that we have mental issues and we need therapy.
We need conversation.
We need expression.
We need to be able to get off what we hold on to. And I said that earlier.
We like to let s*** build up and then
we take it out on the wrong person.
And that goes with therapy. If you have therapy,
you may be able to express and scream and yell
at your therapist and get that s*** out
and go back home and have a basic conversation
as opposed to arguing s*** all the time at home.
Have you ever sat down with a therapist?
Couple of times. I went to
a marriage counselor before.
You got to do things to keep the s*** together.
Sometimes it don't work with y'all conversation
because you got your views, she got her views.
You know what I'm saying?
You need somebody to step in the middle and be like,
he was wrong as a mother.
Man, you've been a superstar for a long time, Snoop.
And people think you just naturally cool.
They think it's the weed.
They say, man, Snoop always happy.
I can look at Snoop and hear Snoop talk
and tell Snoop did the work on himself.
I can tell Snoop in the therapy.
I can see you got God in your life.
How did you get to that space? How did you not lose
yourself in the industry?
I had it all taken away from me.
I was the dopest in the world.
My record came out doggy style.
I'm in the Guinness Book of World Records
for the first debut artist,
the debut number one,
all kind of little bulls**t
to come with it.
You know what I'm saying?
So I had all of that riding high
and then that s**t was just taken away.
I'm fighting for my life,
a murder case.
Then when I beat the murder case,
my friend gets killed.
Label falls apart.
Label comes after me.
I'm getting death threats.
S**t is on my life. I have no money,
no label, no friends. Some of
the homies turned on me because they was paid off.
So it was stripped. So I had to find myself
then. Am I going to go stupid
gangster and kill up all of these s***?
Or am I going to find me
and get in tune with God and find my spirit
and my real reason to be here?
You got to tell me about the first time you went to therapy
and what made you go, man.
The first time I went to therapy,
I was having anger issues
and I just wanted some help.
And I'm going to be honest with you.
I don't want to talk to nobody black.
I want to get a different
perspective on me.
And I don't think that
that was racist by me saying it.
I think it was just
I needed a different opinion
and evaluation
because I've been getting the same.
Nobody gives a f***.
He's Snoop Dogg.
He's a star.
I did the same thing.
I wanted to talk to him.
They'll excuse everything.
You know, pay this off, buy this.
I wanted somebody to tell me the truth on where I'm f***ing up at,
where I need to tighten up at, where am I leaking at,
what is my spirit, what's my purpose,
and to tune in with somebody who didn't know me
and for me to just open myself up and say all the wrong and the s shit that I did, it helped me find a way to just be honest.
That's real.
Did you and Gayle King ever talk?
Never.
And I reached out numerous times, put the invitation out, and I still got it open.
So I don't want to put no pressure on her or stress her to do it.
But whenever she's ready, I'm ready.
It wasn't personal.
It just was a reaction to my friend.
Kobe Bryant was my friend, man.
At that time, I wasn't trying to hear nobody
say nothing bad about him, and that's just that.
Alright, when we come back, we got more with Snoop Dogg.
Let's get into a Snoop Dogg mini-mix.
It's The Breakfast Club. Good morning. Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy,
Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy. We are
The Breakfast Club. That was a Snoop Dogg
mini-mix. Snoop's still in the
building. Charlamagne? What happened to your store, Snoop? Wasn't you opening up a storefront a Snoop Dogg mini mix. Snoop's still in the building. Charlamagne? What happened to your store, Snoop?
Wasn't you opening up a storefront called Snoop Dogg?
Yes, it's coming.
I'm waiting.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't want to put that out there right now.
I think I want to wait until, you know, civilization,
get back to being civilized.
You know what I'm saying?
Right now, we're slinging it online right now.
You can buy products online on SnoopDogg.com
or, you know, the Snoopermarket.com.
You can get that.
Yeah, I mean, you're such a Los Angeles landmark, man.
I feel like you need to have a destination location when people come to L.A.
Nipsey used to always talk about, God bless the dead,
Nipsey used to always talk about they should have like a Snoopland,
like an amusement park.
Uh-huh.
He did.
He used to always tell me that, man.
Like, you need to put together a motherfucking doggy lane, cuz,
but they got 40-ounce roller coasters and all kind of hood shit in there.
They selling house shoes.
I'm like, cuz, I don't get it.
But when y'all come to L.A., y'all got to come to my facility,
the compound, where we did the versus battle.
I think I have my doggy lane.
Earlier we were talking about how you've done pretty much everything and done so much.
So what is there left for Snoop to do?
Like what is still on your bucket list?
Yeah, well, right now for the past three years,
I've been working with the special stars, special needs kids.
So we got the Snoop special stars.
Y'all know I got my football league, Snoop's youth football league.
We got kids in the NFL, college, high school doing their thing.
But we started the Snoop Special Stars about three years ago
to deal with special needs kids.
And I tell you, this is some of the most beautiful shit
you'd ever want to see in your life.
To see a special needs kid come out there and be very bashful.
Then all of a sudden we get to coaching them and playing with them
and talking to them and visiting them in time.
And then before you know it, that kid comes out their shell
and they dance and having a good time and celebrating.
They're doing things that normal kids do.
And it puts a smile on the parents' face.
We have older people in the league.
It's not just for kids.
It's Snoop's special stars.
So we had a banquet that we did where we made them all dress up
and we gave them all awards.
So we had a particular part of the show.
We brought a guy named Tommy the Clown, who's a dancer out here. He came in
dancing and it was one guy
a 77 year old man
and he got up and he was dancing and the
dancing was over and he still was dancing
and when the night was over his wife came to me
and she said, baby my husband
ain't got up and dancing over 30 years
you have touched his spirit
and I swear to God I started crying. It was so deep
and there's no cameras on it it's to put the spirit back into the community of the special needs Wow.
Have you ever had one of the special needs kids ask you to hit the weed?
No.
But one of the little niggas was like, hey, what's up with you and Shea Ignite?
That niggas still on your head?
I'm like, what the f*** is you talking about?
You f***ing special needs and you ask me some s*** like that.
Get your ass out of this class.
There ain't nothing wrong with you.
Hey, Snoop, I'm glad that you're going to be on that No Limit doc too, man,
because I feel like that's a part of your life that doesn't get told enough.
Man, do you realize that that saved my life?
Like, Masterpiece saved my life.
I was going to put an album out called F*** Death Row.
And Mac-10 was going to give me a million dollars to put it out.
It was going to be on
Who Banging Records.
No.
And Who Banging Records
and No Limit Records
was all up under Priority Records
and Ice Cube label.
So I would go up there
to see Mac-10.
And when I would go up there,
I would have to pass by
Masterpiece, No Limit s***
to get to MAC-10.
I passed by one day, Mystical in there.
He's like, what's up?
I'm like, what's up?
I got to f*** with you.
I got to f*** with you.
We're going to be at the studio tonight.
Come by.
All right, cool.
I come by the studio.
Get on the song.
Master P's like, how much you want for the song?
In my mind, I'm like, I'm broke right now.
I ain't getting no money.
Give me $1,500.
But I'm thinking like $1,500 because I just need something.
I come back the next day, Master P wrote me a check for $35,000.
So I'm like, oh, I like this style.
You know what I'm saying?
So now he called me to his office.
He said, what you working on?
I said, I got this album called F*** Death Row.
It's my f***ing heart.
He's like, hold on, bro.
He closed the door.
And I was like, man, you ain't going to live to see that album come out.
He said, don't do that, bro.
You can't make no record talking about Death Row and shit.
You got to let that s*** go, man.
He said, let me make an offer to you.
Let me make a proposal to you.
My homeboy Marvin Watkins, rest in peace, was the middleman to this.
And him and Marvin put together a play
that sounded good,
and it flew me to New Orleans.
And I took my father, my cousin, dad,
and I think I took one more person with me.
And this drove me around the neighborhood
and said, pick any house you want.
And at that time, I was living in a house
that was under Suge Knight's name.
All my cars, under Suge Knight's name. All my cars,
under Suge Knight's name. So,
for a nigga to show me, damn,
you can have your own sign on a dotted line.
I had to say, you know what? F*** that.
I'm going with this s***.
So, he was like, f***, if you sign with me, you gotta
come down to New Orleans. You can't be out here.
So, I came, picked the house out,
picked out a car for my wife, a car for me, got the house furnished, flew my wife and my kids to New Orleans. You can't be out here. So I came, picked the house out, picked out a car for my wife, a car
for me, got the house furnished,
flew my wife and my kids to New Orleans,
and three years later, I did that.
What happened to that album?
Like, the songs on it.
I don't know.
Some of them,
you know, I used to live in a house,
and when I moved out the house, I think some of that
was just left there. When I went to No Limit house. And when I moved out the house, I think some of that shit was just left there.
When I went to No Limit,
I bought a new studio, new everything,
new car, new furniture,
like all that shit in LA.
I didn't give a fuck about none of that shit.
So the whole project was a diss record?
The whole fuck that throw?
So it was aimed at, I'm assuming, Shug,
and who else would it be aimed at?
Whoever was over there, Woody.
Damn.
Now what made you comfortable to leave New Orleans
and say, nah, I can go back to L.A.?
What made you want to go back to L.A. and leave New Orleans?
My first album, everything was beautiful.
I shot a movie.
The record did double platinum.
We was on tours.
We was eating.
Second album, No Limit Top Dog.
I started double dutching back to L.A.,
calling on my L.A. producers more, and then going
sneaking back, getting a song from this
and a song from this, just testing my feet out.
The third record, The Last Meal,
that's why I call it The Last Meal, because it's the
last time motherfuckers gonna eat off of me.
So my mission was to go back
to L.A. on the last album,
and by the grace of God,
Dr. Dre was working on
The Chronic 2001.
Wow.
Dr. Dre had just found a white boy named Eminem.
I was on my last album.
Dre liked the shit I had on my album, and he normally don't like my shit when it ain't his shit.
And that nigga mixed the whole album.
He mixed the whole album, The Last Meal.
And me and him got our groove back, and I was like, man, No Limit got
my spirit back, but that's
the n***a I need to be in the car
with. And Master P, at the
third album, he was like, you can do what the
f*** you want to do. You can go start your own label,
do your... And I was like, f*** you, the realest
guy I ever met, cuz, cuz anybody else would have been
like, f*** you, you know I'm finna get 10%
override on everything you do from here on out
cuz I put you back in the game.
That n***a won't know nothing from me.
Let me get back with Dre.
We did the motherf***ing Chronic 2001.
Eminem album came out.
The Eastsiders album came out.
We went on the Up and Smoke tour.
Everything was back in pocket.
It was like, come on, man.
You know what that s*** felt like when that thing came out.
How did you, like, you said you was broke.
How'd you go broke after Doggystyle?
How about all the money was being given to me?
It wasn't like a nigga was going to his mailbox
getting checks. It was like shit was being
dispersed. I was a young artist.
So at that time, labels
would give you money. You know, independent labels
like Defro, you know, $50,000 a month.
Not knowing that these niggas getting
$300,000, $400,000 a month off of me.
But then I'm fighting a murder case.
So they got to take
those finances
to fight the case
and discoveries
and evidence
and this and that
and that and that
and this and that
that I don't know about.
You get what I'm saying?
So all of that from you.
Yeah.
And I can't dispute it.
Like you fighting for my life.
What I look like
telling my lawyer,
hey man,
they stealing money from me.
They trying to get my life back.
Wow. Well, Uncle Snoop, we appreciate you for joining us this morning. So. Hey, man, they stealing money from me. F*** are they trying to get my life back? Wow.
Well, Uncle Snoop, we appreciate you for joining us this morning.
So many gems, man.
You can sit here and talk to Snoop forever.
Y'all know I'm a big fan of The Breakfast Club.
I asked to be on this f***ing show.
Y'all wasn't looking for me.
I was looking for y'all.
So next time we see a person we'll smoke together.
I'll take two puffs.
One.
You got to get to two.
You right, one.
Hey, I just want to always salute you, Snoop, man,
because you are an icon in this game, man.
And, you know, I don't like celebrating people after they're gone.
I want to celebrate them while you're here because, you know,
just for you to still be walking amongst us, a living legend for real,
for real, it's like looking at Bigfoot, a Loch Ness monster.
It's like, damn, that's Snoop, though.
That's right.
Hey, man, I treasure those moments that I could
give people that add on to this
legacy, but I'm just doing God's work
and I'm here to do what I'm supposed to do.
I found out how to master
me, man. All right. Well, thank you,
Uncle Snoop. We love you. Snoop D-O-W-G.
Breakfast Club, Snoop Dogg.
In the morning, baby. The Breakfast Club. Your mornings
will never be the same. Is your country falling apart?
Feeling tired?
Depressed?
A little bit revolutionary?
Consider this.
Start your own country.
I planted the flag.
I just kind of looked out of like, this is mine.
I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of concrete.
Everybody's doing it.
I am King Ernest Emmanuel.
I am the Queen of Laudonia.
I'm Jackson I, King of Kaperburg.
I am the Supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Mentonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
The Waikana tribe owned country.
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a rocket with a black powder, you know, with explosive warhead.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Bullets.
We need help!
We need help!
We still have the
off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape
from Zakistan.
And we're losing
daylight fast.
That's Escape
from Z-A-Q-istan
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever
you get your podcasts. Hey guys, I'm Kate MaxA-Q-A-Stan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more. After those runs,
the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast, Post High is all about. It's a chance to sit down with my
guests and dive even deeper into their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once
we've hit the pavement together. You know that rush of endorphins you feel after a great workout?
Well, that's when the real magic happens. So if you love hearing real, inspiring stories from the people you know, follow, and admire,
join me every week for Post Run High.
It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all.
It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So y'all, this is Questlove, and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been working on
with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records. It's a family-friendly
podcast. Yeah, you heard that right. A podcast for all ages. One you can listen to and enjoy
with your kids starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of historical records.
Nemany to tell you all about it.
Make sure you check it out.
Hey y'all Nemany here.
I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for kids and families called
historical records.
Historical records brings history to life through hip hop.
Flash slam. another one gone.
Bash, bam, another one gone.
The crack of the bat and another one
gone. The tip of the cap is another one
gone. Each episode is about
a different inspiring figure from
history. Like this one about Claudette
Colvin, a 15-year-old girl in
Alabama who refused to give up her
seat on the city bus
nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing.
Check it.
Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records.
Because in order to make history, you have to make some noise.
Listen to Historical Records on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm ass. You get donkey of the day. You get donkey of the day. You are a donkey.
It's time for donkey of the day.
Donkey of the day, huh?
I'm going to fatten all that shit around your eyes.
They want this man to throw them blows, man.
They waiting for Charlamagne to tap them gloves.
Let's go.
They had to make a judgment of who was going to be on the donkey of the day.
They chose you.
The breakfast club, bitches.
Who's donkey of the day. They chose you. The Breakfast Club, bitchy. Who's donkey of the day today?
Yes, donkey of the day goes to a young man named Fontrell Antonio Bates.
Okay, he's 31 years old
and resides in Los Angeles via Memphis
and he's a rapper.
A rapper that I never heard of until this weekend.
And if the first time you are hearing about a person
is because they are receiving donkey of the day,
just know that probably is never a good thing.
Now, his rap name is Nuke Bizzle.
Ring any bells for you, Envy?
No.
Anybody out there bumping that new Nuke Bizzle drum
that's hot in your parts?
Never heard of him.
Okay, okay.
Well, Nuke Bizzle, ladies and gentlemen,
is just the latest in a long line of people
who are going to jail for unemployment fraud this year.
Now, I know we've been keeping track
of all the COVID-19 cases in America this year, but we also
need to be keeping track of all the unemployment fraud
cases that have been happening. Okay, see,
this is what I don't understand about the folks that are defrauding
people under the CARES Act.
Y'all do realize what y'all doing
is a crime, right? This is
not the blessing you've been praying for.
Alright? You know how we say everything
happens for a reason? Very true.
But sometimes that reason is simply because you made a poor choice and new Bizzle absolutely made a poor choice.
A couple poor choices. See, new Bizzle was arrested after applying for more than one point two million in jobless benefits and using stolen identities in a scheme to fraudulently obtain unemployment insurance benefits.
Now, I'm going to be honest with you.
I have to applaud this man for aiming high.
Give him a little round of applause, just a little bit.
I said stop, stop, stop, okay?
See, here's the thing.
All of you who have participated in unemployment fraud, you're going to jail, okay?
It doesn't matter if you got $1,000,000 or $10,000, they coming for you.
I'm telling you.
It doesn't matter if you got that money and bought a Bentley
or got that money and bought a single wide trailer.
You're going to jail.
They coming to lock your ass up at some point.
So if you're going to take a penitentiary chance,
you might as well shoot for the moon.
And that's what Nuke Bizzle did with this $1.2 million that he applied for.
Now, Nuke Bizzle couldn't just be content with getting this money.
No, not getting this money. No!
Not in this era.
Okay? In this era, the crime isn't official until you get on
social media and alert the
feds about it. Okay? FBI
stands for Facebook, Instagram.
And because of you fools,
y'all need for digital validation
because of you fools'
incessant desire for likes and retweets,
y'all make the feds' jobs so easy.
Okay, but it wasn't just social media and the internet that got Nuke Bizzle jammed up.
See, Nuke Bizzle, as I told y'all, is a rapper.
I repeat, Nuke Bizzle is a rapper.
Let's go to CBS LA for the report, please.
The Department of Justice says a rapper
who bragged in a music video about getting rich from an unemployment scam is now facing federal
charges. According to a criminal complaint, 31-year-old Fontrell Antonio Baines exploited
the pandemic unemployment assistance provision of the Federal Coronavirus Act. He applied for
more than $1.2 million in jobless benefits. Federal
officials say right now he lives in Hollywood
Hills, and in a video, he
bragged he's going to get stacks of
these while holding up envelopes
from EDD. A second man in
the video raps, quote, you gotta
sell cocaine, I just file a claim.
If convicted, Baines faces
up to 22 years in federal prison.
Those are some bars.
Yes, what?
God and Aaron Magruder have the same sense of humor.
This is why we need the boondocks back.
But I often wonder if the boondocks, well, when the boondocks comes back,
how would they compete with the most absurd things that usually are reserved for storylines on the boondocks are actually
happening in real life.
Okay, this guy, Nuke Bizzle, applied for $1.2 million in unemployment benefits, blatant
unemployment fraud, and then turned around and made a song about it.
Yes, a song called EDD.
Nuke Bizzle featuring Fat Wither.
Would you like to hear it? Here you go. I ain't got rich on my EDD. New Bizzle featuring Fat Wither. Would you like to hear it?
Here it go.
Yes. Shedding up bills with the CPA You gotta sell cocaine I can defile a claim
Rats coming straight to the bank
I'm doing shit that you can't
Buggin' no smarter you ain't
EDD scam that's all that you heard about
I be so happy to certify
Get on that laptop I'm working out
I be 25 clad in for a while
This chain my life and I gotta admit it
I swear I'd have had it in a minute
You didn't tell me I could just wait on the email
And get certified for a 20
Damn, this shit hurt better than dinner?
Turned me into a scam or click it
I was just talking to Sam
Now she better wait on urgent mail
Now I kinda like that song
I like that too
I like that song
Yeah
I kinda like that song
Yeah, that's the problem
Grown ass
Grown ass
Grown ass adults who know better
Saying that they like songs like this.
It's no longer erectile dysfunction.
What you say, Uncle Ruckus?
There is powerful n***a
at work here. One more time, Uncle Ruckus
for the people in the back. There is powerful
n***a at work here.
Kids, I'm so sorry. I am so
sorry, kids. I'm so sorry that we made
y'all believe you really had to be living
the things you rapped about. I wish more rappers told y'all that they was just performing and they was just trying to make some money.
All right.
There was a period in my life where I really wanted and loved when my rappers were doing the things they were talking about.
But that was ignorant of me.
OK, if rappers actually did just 30 percent, just 30 percent of what they rapped about doing, they would all be in prison today.
OK, this new generation didn't get the memo. 30%, just 30% of what they rapped about doing, they would all be in prison or dead, okay?
This new generation didn't get the memo that majority of these rappers was all cat.
Now they're busy trying to lead two lives,
trying to serve two masters.
They want to rap and live a life of crime.
And when you try to do both, you end up like Nuke Bizzle, okay?
Facing three federal charges.
And if convicted of all these charges, Baines, Nuke Bizzle, will face a statutory maximum sentence of 22 years in federal prison.
Y'all still like the song?
It's a good song.
The song is popping.
Okay.
That don't have nothing to do with it.
The song is good or not.
Nuke Bizzle.
We're not going to play Guess Who Racist?
Please let Remy Ma give Nuke Bizzle the biggest he not going to play Guess What Race This is? Please let Remy Ma
give Nuke Bizzle
the biggest hee-haw.
Hee-haw, hee-haw.
You stupid mother f***er.
You dumb.
Are they white?
I have one question.
Hmm?
Where is Fat Whizzer?
If Fat Whizzer
was featured on this song,
did Fat Whizzer
get locked up too?
Are you trying to get
someone else arrested?
Inquiring might as well.
Oh, I'm trying to get
them arrested?
Forget the song that's got
over a million views on YouTube.
And forget the $1.2 million in unemployment fraud that they tried to get.
I'm trying to get them arrested.
I think I'm rich off of E.D.D.
Hey.
Hey.
I'm rich off of E.D.D.
All right, n****s.
There is powerful n****dry at work here.
All right. All right, well, thank you for that donkey of the day. Mm-hmm. There is powerful at work here. Alright.
Alright, well, thank you for that donkey of the day.
How'd you get this song?
Can you sing it to me? Where is Fat Wizard?
I don't know where Fat Wizard is.
He's getting low right now.
Fat Wizard, you got anything you want to say?
My goodness. Alright.
Thank you for that. Fat Wizard on pop-up.
Now, they was talking about you on the Breakfast Club. Now, you get low.
Stay low.
Delete all your social media pages and everything.
That's right.
All right, we got more coming up next with The Breakfast Club.
The Breakfast Club.
Come on, Mark.
Need relationship advice?
Need personal advice?
Just need real advice.
Call up now for Ask Ye.
Keep it real.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Ye, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
It's time for Ask Ye.
Hello, who's this?
This is Stacey.
Hey, Stacey, what's your question for Ye?
So I was engaged to this guy, and, well, I'm still engaged to him.
And I went through his iPad and I
found naked pictures
of men.
Was that your iPad or something, Charlamagne?
That's Charlamagne getting excited.
He got discovered.
The jig is up.
Another one bites the dust
Man down
Okay so what were these naked
What were these naked man pictures of though
Like were they sexual
What was going on
Yeah it was up they private
I mean some of them were selfies
But most of them was
You know the private area
How do you take a penis selfie? That's easy. You know like
just take it.
Alright so go ahead. So what happened
when you asked him about these pictures of naked men?
He just said that it
was a phase. Like it was something that he was
doing because he was bored.
So like I'm guessing
he was catfishing the people
and then
you know like they would send him pictures,
you know, like that he's not bisexual or he's not gay.
And I just don't know what to do from there.
You know, it's been five or six years.
So he's never engaged in any sexual activity with a man is what he's saying?
Yes.
Okay. Do you believe him?
I mean, I don't know. Okay. This is what he's saying yes okay do you believe him i mean i don't know okay this is what i'm
saying when you started off this conversation you said you were engaged and now you're saying you
still you but you still are but it feels to me like you saying that shows me that in your head
you're already not engaged anymore i just don't know how to go about the situation. Like, you know, he's telling me that he's not gay or bisexual,
but the pictures are telling me otherwise.
And it's so many.
Like, it goes back.
Like, I could go back through the pictures,
and it dates back to maybe right to the beginning of our relationship
or even farther.
Right.
And, you know, listen,
it might be hard for him to have this discussion with you.
So, first of all,
you need to let him know that it's a safe space for him to talk and that you're willing to listen to whatever it is that he has to say and pass any judgment.
No, it is a safe space, though. Right. And if things don't work out, because, look, if you decide that, A, you're not sure right now.
So to me, if you're not sure, you just can't get married
because marriage has to at least feel like a sure thing.
Right.
But I also think you should let him know,
look, you can talk to me about anything.
This is between us.
It's confidential.
And I just want you to feel comfortable enough
to feel like you can do that.
And then we can decide, you know,
what's going to happen with us moving forward.
But it'll be us deciding together.
And I just want to stress, if you're not comfortable with us moving forward, but it'll be us deciding together. And I just want to stress,
if you're not comfortable with something, don't do it.
Why would I believe that she's going to keep it to herself
when she's on the radio with you right now?
She's anonymous.
Come on now.
What's your dude's Instagram?
Why are you trying to check him out?
The way that I was raised, you know,
like I'm not judgmental at all.
Like I feel like he's
bisexual and he would have came into the relationship and was like you know this is who i
am then i can i can accept you for that i can accept you for who you are but five years worth
of lies i don't know if i can accept and i just didn't know how to move forward like if you're
telling me that you're not bisexual or gay how do I know
that that's just not a cover-up you know like you're not trying to use that to make sure that
we still stay together and we get married and you're having these undercover relationships I
just don't I just didn't know what to do and he just might not be comfortable with it himself
because clearly he's not out if he is and so
that has to be something that he probably has to come to terms with you know himself and so I'm
sure it's a it's difficult for him all around but you can't be lying in your relationship and now
he's been discovered so I think you know the thing the only thing you can do is say look what bothers
me the most is dishonesty and that's why I'm asking you, let's have this conversation.
I mean, he might just be curious.
And what if, you know,
that's just his version of bird watching?
She said it's a lot of pictures.
People look at a lot of birds.
Shut up, man.
Goodness gracious.
That's the whole point.
You go to the park,
you want to see a bunch of birds.
Maybe he's just,
it's his version of bird watching.
I don't know.
Yeah, but if she's not comfortable and she doesn't believe that it's the, you know, he's being honest, that's an issue.
Hey, man, only one way to find out.
Lay him on his stomach and give him that knuckle test.
No way.
Borrow some of that gel NBB using when he bike rides and give him that knuckle test.
I feel like you know too much.
No, tell us about it. How'd it feel I feel like you know too much No tell us about it
How'd it feel
Tell us about this knuckle test brother
Anonymous know what the knuckle test is
Give him that knuckle test boo
I don't
I don't know nothing like that
Well you know what DM Charlamagne
And ask him about the knuckle test
He's at Doodoo Law he can come do it for you He's at Doodoo Law Well you know what DM Charlamagne And ask him about The knuckle testing Good luck
He's a doodoo la
He can come do it for you
He's a doodoo la
A doodoo la
A doodoo la
A doodoo la
Oh man
My goodness
Alright
Ask ye
800-585-1051
If you have questions
Or you need a doodoo la
Hit her up now It's The Breakfast Club. Good morning.
Get some real advice
with Angela Yee. It's Ask Yee.
Morning, everybody. It's DJ
Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlamagne Tha Guy. We are The Breakfast Club.
We're in the middle of Ask Yee.
Hello. Who's this?
Good morning, Giovanna. Uh-oh. What's the matter,
Giovanna? Why you sound like you're whispering?
I'm whispering because my college student is home.
Okay, okay.
And I don't want him to hear my question.
Oh, boy, mommy freaky.
All right, let's go.
Yeah, DJ and V, happy anniversary.
My husband and I will be celebrating 24 years of summer, too.
Wow.
In our 20s.
Congrats to that.
Yeah, same to you. Same to you.
My question is, I don't know how you deal with all those kids,
but what to do now that these kids are home when you're trying to get freaky with your husband?
Do you have any?
Do you have any?
Why you sustain these long-term marriages?
Because y'all do all kinds of crazy stuff, you know?
But we're trying to figure it out.
How many kids?
Just one, just one.
Okay, and he's home from college?
He's graduated last year, thank goodness,
but, you know, with everything going on,
his grad plans didn't work out,
he was supposed to relocate to California.
He's home with us.
We have a condo and can't get down the way we usually get down, you know?
Oh, so is he ever going outside?
Is there someplace like an outdoor space?
Not right now.
Not right now.
And we, you know, normally we'll go to parks, but parks have been closed.
We don't want to get arrested because he's essential.
I only cater to kind of, you know, in the public eye.
I don't want to be, you know, known for anything scandalous, but of course.
Y'all be going to the parks, getting freaky.
I like this.
No, no, no.
She said.
We have.
Hold on.
Yes, they do.
Not now.
Not now.
Not during this.
Not now, of course.
Everything is shut down.
We try to be safe.
As I said, my husband is essential.
I own a catering business.
Shout out to the small business owners.
I fed the front line.
Still doing my business.
What's the name of your catering business?
Let's plug that, too, while we're on here.
Oh, thank you.
Impa Mama Signature Recipes.
I'm in Cliffside Park, but I work out of a commercial kitchen in Englewood.
So Englewood Hospital, holy name.
T-Neck, feed the front line.
We're still doing more.
Now, Giovanna, let me ask you this. Doesn't your son have to go to sleep
at some point? Now that he's
home, not really. I mean, come on.
You know these older kids. They're on FaceTime
all hours of the night.
And we're
not quiet. You know what? You know what I think
is fun? You need to have sex quietly.
Quietly? Yes, and I think is fun? You need to have sex quietly. Quietly?
Yes, and that actually is really fun,
but it doesn't normally happen,
but it's actually very exciting.
You know people might...
My husband's louder than me, actually.
Wow, Mama, you're putting in that work.
You're going to have to cover his mouth
while you're doing it,
but it's actually something really fun
about trying to be quiet while you have sex,
and that might just be something y'all gonna have to do.
Just be careful, quiet.
It is exciting.
We're gonna try.
Mama, mama, mama.
Can I be honest with you?
I need an idea, especially from DJ.
What do you do with all those kids?
We live in a condo.
Well, first of all, first of all, the kids go to sleep.
The kids go to sleep.
And then the older kids.
The older one, exactly.
But the older, he knows what's going on.
You don't think he having sex?
She don't want him to hear that.
Nobody want to hear their parents having sex.
Thank you, Angela.
The kids don't want to hear that.
Put a lock on that door and you and your hubby go in.
He's not going to walk in.
He's not walking in.
Don't worry about it.
He'll put his headphones on and he'll be in this video game.
Savannah, let me tell you what else you can do.
Let me tell you what else you can do.
Because you said the headboard.
I'm glad you said that.
Put a sheet on the floor
and have sex quietly on the floor.
We have carpet under the floor,
under our bed, but...
All right, well, listen,
put a sheet on the floor.
You put on some music,
put the TV on,
whatever you got to do.
Mama, don't even worry about your son.
You know, my daughter came into me,
she came into my room the other morning
and was like,
guys, you know I don't go to sleep
at 12 o'clock, right? You know I hear everything
that was going on. And you know what
I said? I said, well, you know how you got here, right?
And then she just walked out. It is what it is.
My daughter's 18, your son is, he graduated
college, he gotta be in his 20s. He understands.
But listen, I just wanna
say,
you just need to make a fun game out of it.
Put that sheet on the floor, tell him, alright, we gotta be quiet, turn on some music kinda low, you just need to make a fun game out of it. Put that sheet on the floor.
Tell him, all right, we got to be quiet.
Turn on some music kind of low and just have sex slowly and quietly.
He's a grown-ass boy, mama.
He's in your house.
He's old enough now.
You and hubby get freaky.
He doesn't want to see his mother's face.
His father come out smiling, but he doesn't want to see me come down and make his avocado toast
after I didn't...
Avocado toast.
I hope you would wash your hands at least.
Yeah, all kinds of things.
Oh my God.
Washing my hands and everything, but okay.
We'll try the sheet on the floor.
No, Mama, get your freaky ass on.
Who cares?
This is Ask Yee. She wanted advice.
And my advice is have some fun with it. It's a different time.
It's a different era. She don't want her son to hear,
but that she's on the floor and have fun trying to be
quiet. Quarantine sex,
maintaining the long-term marriages.
You got to do what you got to do.
And every time
he makes a little noise with his mouth
and he starts getting too loud, just cover his mouth and be like,
hey, you got to be quiet. Mama, nah, and let me ask you a question. When you find out what to getting too loud, just cover his mouth and be like, hey, you gotta be quiet.
Mama, nah.
And let me ask you a question.
When you find out what to do with the bed,
help me out with the bed
because I haven't figured that out yet.
My bed be squeaking.
We haven't figured that out, man.
We haven't figured,
we've used WD-40.
We got the purple mattress
and everything
and it's still.
It's still mine too.
The mattress.
What the hell is the purple mattress?
It's loud.
It's a label.
It's a type of mattress.
Do you have an air mattress?
No, we don't have...
No, please.
We bought some air mattresses.
We tried that back in the 90s.
Okay, my God.
She's trying to play you.
Angelique just tried to play you, Mom.
She's going to tell you she's got an air mattress.
You're a grown-ass woman.
I'm trying to play you like you're some little young cop with an air mattress.
Wow.
I have a...
Wow.
Wow.
You're disrespectful.
No, no, no.
I have a... Wow. I actually have. No, no, no. I have a...
Wow.
I actually have an air mattress
as a spare mattress
in my house
in case I have company
and I'm like,
okay, here's an air mattress.
So sometimes people come
and then they go...
You know something?
You come blow up,
you can use the air mattress.
I don't know what it's been
in the 80s.
No.
I don't know.
That's not work.
And it's actually,
it's a pillow top air mattress
and it's very nice.
And my goddaughter... It's late automatically. Yeah, I have that for guests, but, and it's very nice. And my goddaughter.
It's late automatically.
Yeah, I have that for guests, but I don't think that's going to work for her.
Mama, go in.
Don't worry about him.
I'm going to go in.
Okay, I'm going to take your advice.
Go in.
He knows.
He understands.
I know you know, DJ and V.
Long-term marriage, you got to do what you got to do.
That's right.
Sometimes you got to stick.
That's right.
Or stick your face out the window.
Let her be hidden from the back.
That way if you yell, it's outside.
You go in.
You get freaky.
They're my neighbors.
I've already had notices under my door from my neighbors.
That's the last thing I need is for them to see my hanging out the window now, too.
Why are you so long And hanging out the window
Not long but
You know
To stick my face out the window
That's gonna come next
Oh my gosh
Well have fun with it
Get on that floor
And have some fun
Thank you
Good luck mama
And sustain these long
Long term marriages
We out here doing it too
There you go
Black love
Black love Black love. Black love.
Black love.
Don't do your catering
straight from doing
what you do with your husband.
Just make sure you wash your hands,
shower.
We don't want any extra DNA.
That food have more love in it, boy.
All right.
Thank you, mama.
All right.
800-585-
That ain't love.
That ain't cream either.
Ask E.
800-585-1051.
It's The Breakfast Club.
The Breakfast Club.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Now it's time for Ask Yee and Yee.
Angela Yee is out, so Charlamagne and I will be holding it down.
So let's go to the callers.
Hello, who's this?
Hi, I'm Veronica.
Hey, Veronica. Hey, Veronica. How are who's this? Hi, I'm Veronica. Hey, Veronica.
What's your question for CNE?
How are you, queen?
Hey, I'm good.
I'm real good.
I actually had a question for Charlamagne.
Well, both of y'all, but Charlamagne, I think,
could really get it more than DJ Envy
because he's like a loyal dude.
That's usually how it works.
He's a little what?
I like that last part.
What did you say?
He's a loyal dude. That's usually how it works. He's a little what? I like that last part. What'd you say? He's a loyal dude.
Oh.
To his woman.
To his woman.
All right, so go ahead.
I'm not.
That's what she said.
I'm not advocating for what you did in your past.
I'm just saying you got a little more experience
of not being a good guy.
Oh, that's true.
It comes to being loyal.
That's true.
I like that last part that you said.
You know, every man's trip, but anywho.
Go ahead, mama.
So I've been with my dude now for six years,
and at this point, it's like I'm getting on the tired verge.
Okay, so every once in a while, he may,
like I may catch him talking to a girl,
or I may look in his text messages and see that he was talking to his ex
or one night he didn't even come home so like I'm so tired now because it's like I give all my
loyalty to these guys and it's like never I never get a good a good return in my for my loyalty
it's like it's like every woman is so loyal they always run into these these dirt bags you know
and I'm tired.
You know, I just want to actually really know because this time in this relationship, I can't walk away.
I can't just get up and take off because I got kids now.
No matter.
Kids shouldn't make you stay.
If he's being disrespectful and out all night and not calling you, not telling you where he is, he's talking to other chicks,
don't let the kids be the reason you stay and keep getting hurt.
That's not even the issue because he called.
He called, well, babe, come out here with me or whatever the point.
My whole thing is when are you going to become a man to where you make your decisions
and make your decisions not reflect the people who are really here for you.
If he out, he partying too hard,
and he end up getting drunk and sleeping on his friend's couch.
No, you should be an adult and know where you're limited.
You know what I'm saying?
Stop, get a little sober, and bring your butt home.
How old is he?
He's 33.
So, man, you want to start?
He's 33.
All right, I've been with my woman for 22 years Married for 6
Completely faithful for 4
Actually the last time I
Did any dirt was October 2016
That is a fact
So y'all been together for 6
So you got about 12 more years before
He hangs his jersey up for good
No you ain't gotta wait that long
You ain't gotta wait that long You You ain't got to wait that long.
You are a true jerk.
You are a true jerk. You caught him.
He should know what it is.
This is like a real experience.
Nah, nah.
Don't listen to Charlamagne.
You got to give him an ultimatum.
Tell him you want a grown-ass man.
You don't want a boy.
All that being out in the club, not taking care of home is a problem.
Don't listen to Charlamagne.
He got 12 more years.
And furthermore.
You put your foot down and you tell him And furthermore, you put your foot down
and you tell him what it is
and you keep your foot on his neck.
I agree with Envy
because when my girl,
my woman,
no, I'm saying my woman
broke up with me for a whole year
when she had just graduated from college.
So that definitely, you know,
did put the fear of God in me.
So I agree with Envy on that.
But I'm going to tell you something else.
I'm not as much of a dirtbag as your man because I ain't never stayed out all night.
I always had good sense that God gave me to take my ass home after I did something.
Let me tell you something.
If he was out, well, him being out all night, if I didn't know who he was,
I probably would have went crazy.
But I got this man, like, we follow each other on our location, on our cell phone.
So I know where he at.
You know what I'm saying?
It's just I want to see if he makes a responsible decision to sober up and come home.
Like, I shouldn't have to keep going out there chasing and seeing if you're going to come home.
I shouldn't have to keep calling you, asking you when you're going to come home.
And I shouldn't have to sit up until 5 o'clock in the morning to make sure you're safe.
I shouldn't have to do that because you put more on my shoulders.
You know, I've never, the whole six years,
I've never actually left him
to where I need to make him realize what he
got. You know what I'm saying? I've never done that.
Well, sometimes you got to put that ultimatum
on. I think the problem is he knows that. He
knows you ain't leaving, so he knows he can disrespect.
So you put the fear of God in him,
and I'm sure he'll act right. And good luck, Mama.
Yeah, and I want to tell you too, man, the way people treat you is a statement about who they are
as a human being.
It's not a statement about you.
So I don't ever want you to think that you're not a good woman.
You're not a good mother.
It has nothing to do with you.
That man has a lot of insecurities.
That man has a fragile ego and he's searching for something in other women that he can only
find within himself, period.
Absolutely.
Well, good luck, mama.
All right, we got more coming up next.
We're The Breakfast Club.
The Breakfast Club.
Your mornings will never be the same.
Good morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha God.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Charlamagne.
Yes.
Leave us with some positivity.
Listen, the positive note is simply this, man.
Everybody needs to write a little note to they self today, man.
Write a little note to yourself.
Write this down.
I'm serious.
Remembering God is in control
is a way to bring peace to my heart.
I have no reason to fear
or be anxious.
Breakfast club, bitches.
Y'all finished or y'all done?
Hey, guys.
I'm Kate Max.
You might know me
from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities,
athletes, athletes,
entrepreneurs, and more. After those runs, the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast,
Post Run High, is all about. It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together. Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, my undeadly darlings.
It's Teresa, your resident ghost host.
And do I have a treat for you.
Haunting is crawling out from the shadows,
and it's going to be devilishly good.
We've got chills, thrills, and stories that'll make you wish the lights stayed on.
So join me, won't you?
Let's dive into the eerie unknown together.
Sleep tight, if you can.
Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. prejudice to politics to police violence and we try to give you the tools to create positive change in your home workplace and social circle we're going to learn how to become better allies
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