The Breakfast Club - FULL SHOW: Stephen A. Smith Addresses Viral Exchange with Alexis Ohanian Over Serena Williams’ Super Bowl Dance + BIA, Nataanii Means & ANTOINEX Interview

Episode Date: October 13, 2025

Today on The Breakfast Club, BIA talks about her debut album BIANCA, working with Cardi B, evolving into a true artist, and signing with Pharrell. Nataanii Means and ANTOINEX also join us to discuss I...ndigenous Peoples' Day, misconceptions about Native culture, and the role of hip-hop in their activism. Plus, Charlamagne Tha God gives Donkey of the Day to a man who filmed himself contaminating restaurant food with his genitals. Listen for more!YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an I-Heart podcast. The murder of an 18-year-old girl in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved for years, until a local housewife, a journalist, and a handful of girls, came forward with a story. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight.
Starting point is 00:00:50 And so I pointed the gun at him and said this isn't a joke. A man who robbed a bank when he was 14 years old. And a centenarian rediscovers a love lost 80 years ago. How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again? Listen to heavyweight on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. I had the incredible opportunity to sit down with the one, the only, Cardi B. My marriage, I felt the love dying.
Starting point is 00:01:27 I was crying every day. I felt in the deepest depression that I had ever had. This shit was not given to me. I worked my ass off for me. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Introducing IVF disrupted, The Kind Body Story, a podcast about a company that promised to revolutionize fertility care. It grew like a tech start. up. While Kind Body did help women start families, it also left behind a stream of disillusioned
Starting point is 00:02:03 and angry patients. You think you're finally, like, in the right hands. You're just not. Listen to IvyF Disrupted, the Kind Body Story, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Good morning, USA. Yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, Shawlamee. Just hilarious. Good morning. Peace to the planet. It's Monday. How y'all feeling out there?
Starting point is 00:02:32 I feel blessed black and highly favored. Happy to be here another day to serve our beautiful listeners. Good morning. How was your weekend, Jess? Man, Syracuse and Albany, they had me stressed out. I love them. Shout out to Syracuse. Shout out to both of the funny bones.
Starting point is 00:02:45 I had a fight at the Syracuse show, the last show. You physically? You and Chris had the band? No, no, yo. Look, this girl came out. She thought out and said she got a little drunk. So she thought I said while I was on stage, the 315 was corny, that Syracuse was corny. So she in the back talking, but I'm like, yo, who are you talking about?
Starting point is 00:03:06 I thought she was talking about somebody else in the show. So I'm like, ooh, she said, that bitch corny talking about me. So I'm like, what's up then? You know what you're talking about? So everybody around her got upset like, girl, Shane ain't say that. You drunk his ass. You drunk his ass. All right, so we leave.
Starting point is 00:03:19 She was like, all right, my bed, Shane said, we leave out on the way out. She beating somebody up in the parking lot. Damn. Yeah, she stole my phone. And I'm like, come on, y'all rode on the window, driving past. Like, yo, look, come on, like, relax. Just going to house. I want to buy to go to jail.
Starting point is 00:03:31 So she's like, no, she got my phone. Her home girl, like, the girl who getting beat up, her home girl, like, she don't even have no phone. And the girl, like, well, yeah, that's why she stole mine. What? Yeah. So then when I get to Albany, man, I had a fan. A stud. Piss in the middle of the floor.
Starting point is 00:03:46 With a strap? Charlemagne, come on, man. Come on, man. No, yo, she didn't even have a strap on. No, she must have it. real quick. She had to pee, but she swung on the security. She's in jail. She's probably going to be in jail to tomorrow because
Starting point is 00:04:01 today's a holiday. The commission don't come in on Sunday or today. But yeah, it was wild. Needless, you know, overall, though, it was a great weekend. Sold out out shows. It was lit. Alvany. Shout out to Albany. Shout out to Syracuse. All I got from that is you need to focus on radio and acting. Man. You need to get out of them
Starting point is 00:04:17 close. That's all I got from all of that. The small is in the spots, yo, yeah, yo, they The thing is they don't go out like that. Ain't nothing else to do up there but see comedy. They got comedy club, but then they got a casino. They don't really do nothing. So when they come out, they have a little bit too much to drink, and they get rowdy.
Starting point is 00:04:36 So she peed on the floor, and they arrested her on the spot? Because she had to go to the bathroom, but they was blocking the traffic for me to leave to go back out into the green room. She was like, I got to pee. Oh, so she peed in protest, basically. Yeah, she was like, man, I'm going to pee right here. So they tried to get her, and then she swung on the security. Strong, but she was strong. Okay. Well, drop on the clues bombs for her.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Whatever she may be. She's in jail, yo. The nasty-assed police officers had to put handcuffs on her because she ain't washed her hands. No, not the police officer being nasty, but I feel sorry to the police officer had to get nasty because he put handcuffs on and now his hands dirty. Man, imagine when she sobered up and she woke up pissy in prison, in jail. Then what?
Starting point is 00:05:15 No strap, just straight pissy. Damn. How was your weekend? Thank you, Brandon, for bringing in the petition. show production. Bea is going to be joining us this morning. Okay, okay. Drop that album Friday.
Starting point is 00:05:29 Beah's going to be joining us this morning. She's got a new album out called Bianca. And today is Indigenous People's Day. So we have a couple of indigenous hip-hop artists. Natani Means and Antoine X. They are Native American hip-hop artists and activists. They'll be joining us this morning as well. Nice.
Starting point is 00:05:46 So, you know, we got the latest with Lauren and Donkey here today. I'll be talking to you about the Mental Wealth Expo. We had that this weekend. my fifth annual Mental Welfth Expo. So thank you for joining us this morning, man. We're just getting started. It's the breakfast club. Oh, Mimi.
Starting point is 00:05:59 Mimi Brown is coming up next with Front Page News as well. It's the Breakfast Club. Yes, it's the world's most dangerous morning to show the Breakfast Club. Charlemagne, the God, Jess, hilarious. DJ Envy is, he's still out of the country? No, he probably coming back today, but that's China. He probably been flying for two days. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:06:14 Yeah. Okay. Well, it's time for Front Page News. Mimi, good morning. Hey, girl. Good morning. Good morning. Just Shaldemand.
Starting point is 00:06:21 How y'allel doing this morning? Bless black and highly favored. I do want to say one thing. One sports scored. Drop on the clues bonds for the Las Vegas Acese. Okay, they beat the Phoenix Mercury on Friday to win their third championship in four years. Okay. Thank you, Asia Wilson.
Starting point is 00:06:37 All right. All right. Suit to Jackie Young and Chelsea Gray and the whole squad, though, man. Becky Hammond. I love watching the Aces play. Mimi. All right. All right.
Starting point is 00:06:47 Well, we start this morning with breaking news as all 20 hostages held by Hamas. Since the October 7, 2023 attacks have now been released. That's a great thing. A major step, yep, in U.S. brokered peace deal to end the war in Gaza. And the final group of 13 hostages were handed over to the Red Cross this morning, transferred to the Israeli military. They've now arrived at a military base where they've been, where they're reuniting with their family members for the first time in more than two,
Starting point is 00:07:13 excuse me, two years. Now, the seven hostages that were freed earlier have already undergone medical checks and have been reunited with their family. Now, as part of this deal, 1,700 Palestinian detainees that were held in Israel since the October 7th attacks. They will also be released along with 250 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences. Now, before landing in Israel, President Trump, he spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One about the moment and how he feels it marks a major turning point in the region. Let's listen to what he had to say. President Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, has not gone so far as to say the war is over.
Starting point is 00:07:51 is the war between this over the war is over the war is over okay you understand that okay well president trump says the war is over in the ceasefire that was brokered by the united states Egypt Qatar and Turkey it took effect on Friday morning as part of a 20 point peace plan designed to bring stability to over two years of bloodshed that since the war began 67,000 Palestinians have been killed including 18,000 children that's according to Gaza's health ministry. Now, in the coming hours, President Trump, he is expected to address Israel's parliament.
Starting point is 00:08:28 White House officials say he'll call for a new era of peace. He'll urge both sides to commit to rebuilding and reconciliation. And across Gaza, Palestinians who fled are cautiously returning home. Aid groups estimate that 1.5 million people remain displaced and rescue crews worn of unexpected bombs still buried underneath that rubble. So what, what is the reaction been, Mimi? What are the activists saying? What are pro-Palestine and pro-Israel people saying about this?
Starting point is 00:08:56 I saw videos of people in Palestine are celebrating. Yeah, I think, you know, I think people are happy the war is over, right? The Palestinians that were jailed since October 7th, they're still waiting to be let go. So people are still, you know, cautiously hopeful that that will happen. And so they had a deal where everybody from the 20 hostages had to, be released first before the Palestinians were released. And there's still 28 bodies, I believe, that 28 people
Starting point is 00:09:26 who didn't make it, they're still hoping that those bodies will be returned to as part of that piece still. On both sides, I think that, you know, people are still kind of, they're happy. They were gathered this morning in the Tel Aviv Square. They were happy and celebrating. But, you know, some families aren't coming home and
Starting point is 00:09:44 some Palestinians have been displaced. So we'll see, Charlemagne, you know, on both sides, I think there's a lot of angst still. Well, for the hostages that, you know, were returned home alive, I am happy for them, and I'm sure that their families are happy that they're returned to. Yeah, for sure. And just switching gears just a little bit in South Carolina, investigators are investigating a mass shooting that left four people dead and 20 others injured.
Starting point is 00:10:10 This happened early Sunday morning at a crowded bar on St. Helena Island. Now, the Beaufort County Sheriff's Office, as deputies were called to Willie's Bar and Grill just before, 1 a.m. this morning when they arrived or yesterday morning when they arrived they found a large crowd and several people suffering from a gunshot wound. Now four victims were pronounced dead at the scene while four others were taken to nearby hospitals. Several people drove themselves to the hospital for treatment. Now witnesses say chaos broke out as gunfire erupted outside that bar of victims and bystanders they ran for cover rushing into nearby homes and businesses to
Starting point is 00:10:46 escape the bullets. Now the owner of the bar says the shooting happened during an alumni event for a local high school. Right now, no arrests have been made, but investigators say they are interviewing multiple witnesses and are looking into multiple persons of interest. Lord of that, mercy. I mean, this type of stuff can happen at any time of day, but I definitely don't need to be in no ball after midnight, okay?
Starting point is 00:11:08 Absolutely. Yep. All right, well, coming up at 7, one major retailer accused of over-hyping its biggest sale of the year, why some shoppers say those deals aren't really deals. We'll tell you who it is and how it's. affects you. All right.
Starting point is 00:11:21 Well, thank you, Mimi. We'll talk to you next hour during front page news. But right now it's time for Get It Off Your Chest. Now, if you don't know what Get It Off Your Chest is, because I know we have some new people listening. Drop on Clues Bombs for Philadelphia, okay? Everybody listening to us on Philly's Power 99 right now. We do a segment right here called Get It Off Your Chest.
Starting point is 00:11:40 So you can call in right now and you can tell us why you're blessed. All you can call in right now and tell us why you're stressed. Okay? Yep. That's why it's called Get It Off Your Chest. So 1-800-585-105-1. It's the world's most dangerous morning. Show the Breakfast Club.
Starting point is 00:11:52 The Breakfast Club. It's a new day. This is your time to get it off your chest. Wait. Wake up. Whether you're mad or blast. It's time to get up and get something. Call up now.
Starting point is 00:12:05 800-585-105-1. We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club. Good morning. Get it off your chest. Who's this? Hi. Hi. Hi.
Starting point is 00:12:14 My name's Imani. Hi. Hi. I'm sorry. I'm nervous. I'm calling because I went to the mental wealth ex-po. That was my first time going. I'm from Jersey.
Starting point is 00:12:24 Oh, thank you for pulling up on Saturday. How'd you enjoy it? Yeah, it was, sorry, I'm nervous. It was a lot of fun. Salomon, you were one of my favorite idols. I was at the vendors. My favorite one was pasta and lazzards. Those chock girls were working hard.
Starting point is 00:12:39 They were with the condition and stuff like that. Sorry, I'm nervous. But it was a lot of fun. I saw you at the end. You were leaving and you were signing books. And I was like, I appreciate you when you said it back
Starting point is 00:12:50 So that was nice Yeah, it was really nice seeing you It was so much fun Thank you for Yeah, sorry Yeah, I really appreciate You, Amani, man
Starting point is 00:12:57 I don't know what you What called you to come But I hope that you know Whatever journey you're on You know, the Mental Wealthexpo Encourage you to stay on that journey Yeah, yeah
Starting point is 00:13:09 It definitely did It definitely did Yeah, thanks Can I shout out my mom? Of course, of course Shout out to Miss Renee Brooklyn was the first person I called after, yeah, Charlemagne, I listen to you guys
Starting point is 00:13:21 every day for the past couple of years. Yeah, it was great. Could I ask you a book? Is that okay? Yeah, you can get a book. We got books up here, Eddie? Yes, let me, and I'll sign it for you, Amani. I got you. All right, thank you for calling.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Thanks, bye, Dad, bye. Bye, babe. Get it off your chest, who's this? Hey, this is Vern. What's up, DJ, Evie? This ain't, this is Charlaman. This is Charlemagne. That's right.
Starting point is 00:13:44 Okay, Salamay. Hey, hey, hey, hey, how good, man. What's up? man. Hey man, I just want to make it home. I did make it to the, um, the mental health wealth, uh, as folks this past weekend. Yes, sir. Man, had a great time. Great experience. I had to enjoy, I was enjoying listening and learning. Man, I went into the breakout rooms. And man, it was just greatest experience. I did, uh, took your advice and push my initiatives, uh, about the new you. Um, I actually passed you a card,
Starting point is 00:14:11 uh, one of my flyers. I got it. I got it. Yeah, man. I'm glad you got it. Yeah, man. I'm glad you got it. it man yeah but hey i would like to know when is the next event or the next move you know man i um the mental opex boy is something we do once a year but i'm i'm i'm brainstorming ways on how to do smaller events like that you know all throughout the country actually me and me and jason was talking about that this weekend so i just got to get with the team and and figure that out because i just feel like it's something that's necessary you know yeah man uh me too man and it's man like the new you is so compatible
Starting point is 00:14:47 because I was speaking. I actually spoke with Debbie Brown and a couple other people are the name of few what's her name Corrin Minor. Carl and it's good out loud.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Yeah, man. And great people, great people. I like to follow things, especially Jason Wilson. Yes, sir. Man, listen, after the healing comes the growth and my brand represents growth.
Starting point is 00:15:12 The new you, man. What the driven stay motivated. Well, thank you, brother, man. We appreciate all the work you're doing it. Thank you for coming to the Expo this weekend, brother. All right, T.m. Yes, sir. All right, get it off your chest.
Starting point is 00:15:22 1-800-585-105-1. You can call up and tell us why you're blessed. You can call up and tell us why you stressed. It's the world's most dangerous morning to show The Breakfast Club. The Breakfast Club. This is your time to get it off your chest. 800-585-105-1. We want to hear from you on the Breakfast Club.
Starting point is 00:15:43 Good morning, Charlemaine. Tash. Tash, what's up, Tash? Hi, I'm calling from D.C. And I want to just say that I'm blessed. Ooh, I like to hear that. I got other reasons to be stressed, but I've heard about my son
Starting point is 00:15:57 before, but I wanted to call about my daughter public relations, specialists in D.C. And I'm so proud of her to go into Paris next month. And she really is amazing. What's her name? Her name is Tamia.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Can I give her IG candle? Yes, you can. It is Featuring Dot Tamia, T-A-M-I-A. Featuring dot. Tamia, like a period. Got you, got you, okay. Yeah, that's my baby. She's so good to me.
Starting point is 00:16:31 Absolutely. Well, thank you for calling. Thank you. I love you all. We love you more. I love you too, girl. Get it off your chest. Who's this?
Starting point is 00:16:39 Yo. Yo. Is it DJ Envi? No, this Charlemaine. Envy not here. Oh, my God, Salomey. I'm your biggest fan. What's happening?
Starting point is 00:16:47 How are you? Good. It's my 21st birthday, man. Hey, happy birthday. What's your name? Carly. Happy born day, Carly. Yep, happy big leaver season.
Starting point is 00:16:57 I'm from Columbia and South Carolina. I'm your biggest fan, man. I've been growing up loving you. Oh, I appreciate that. I'm going to be in the Met next weekend. I'm coming to the South Carolina, Alabama again. Oh, yeah? Oh, yes.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And I got something else, too. I'm announcing in the minutes. I can't announce it you. They might be announcing it today. But yes, are we doing something else in the Met on next Friday I'm coming for the game but then we're doing something
Starting point is 00:17:19 that Friday yes then we're announcing that the day I think yes sir I'm gonna be at the tailgate I hope I see you man absolutely I hope I see you too I'll be out there
Starting point is 00:17:27 happy birthday baby yes sir thank you you welcome what you're gonna do today you celebrating I gotta work I'm a daycare teacher
Starting point is 00:17:35 I gotta work a half day oh man well we appreciate you we appreciate your service to the kids yes sir thank you for calling no problem man
Starting point is 00:17:43 all right love you too Damn, y'all remember being 21? Yeah. God, damn. Yeah. I was out here popping it. And still out here popping it.
Starting point is 00:17:54 No, I'm not. Yes, you are. No, I'm not. We do that every morning. Get it off your chest. 1,800-585-105-1. We've got the latest with Lauren coming up next. What's up, L.L. Coolbeck, fresh off G-O.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Uh-huh. No, it's Delaware. I mean, we all the greatest homecoming or Earth, Delaware City University. What is it at Delaware? The best homecoming you've ever been to your life. Okay. Yes. Every one.
Starting point is 00:18:14 Huh? Then we won. I think it was like 70 to 23. Oh, I did see that crazy-ass score. Deshawn Jackson, and we're going to talk about that, too. The Sean Jackson really is doing amazing things with our team. I bet. But, yes, I'm speaking to sports, Stephen A. Smith and Serena Williams' husband,
Starting point is 00:18:30 Alexis, let me tell y'all, okay, the way he pulled up to first take, like, keep my wife's name, my chin mouth. I love it. It was not that. It was. It was. It was. It was professional, but he said what needed to be said, and we're going to talk about it.
Starting point is 00:18:42 He didn't say nothing. Who? Y'all are ridiculous. You'll gas up everything. We'll talk about when we come back. He said three words, and that was all he needed to say. We're going to get it to us. We'll talk about when we come back.
Starting point is 00:18:52 It's the world most dangerous morning show The Breakfast Club. Y'all are always propping up. Man, we'll talk about it. The Breakfast Club. Yes, it's the World Most Dangerous morning show the Breakfast Club. Salamane Nagarious. DJ Envy's not here today, but it's time for the latest with Lauren Larosa. Lauren becoming a straight fat.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Tell us, man. She gets them from somebody that knows somebody. She gets to detail. I'm the home girl that knows a little bit about everything. She'd be having the latest on this. Say out the beans. The latest with Lauren La Rosa. Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details.
Starting point is 00:19:25 Sometimes you have a little bit of everything. Well, it's the latest. On the breakfast club. Talk to me. L.L. Cool Bay, fresh off Delaware State University's homecoming. You don't smell like liquor, though. First of all, can we, why? Why would I come in here? Don't say usually I do, because no, I don't.
Starting point is 00:19:39 No, I don't. And, yeah, shout out. Why are you trying to be funny? I do not know. Shout out to us. Shout out to Del State University because we won this week. And it was pouring down raining, too. I couldn't sit out there in the rain.
Starting point is 00:19:50 No, it stopped raining about like 3.34 o'clock and they shut the like the plots, which is like the big tailgate down like 5, 5.30. So we had a couple hours out there. I know your leather was stink. First of all, I got out there after stop raining. Stop playing with me. But, yes, we won 70 to 23. We played Southern Connecticut their team.
Starting point is 00:20:10 I had never heard of this school prior to this game either. That's how they felt about Del State. No, baby, you heard of us, especially this year. Yeah, especially this year. I was your party. It was lit. My party was lit the night before that. And I really want to make sure I give a shout out to Deshawn Jackson because the way.
Starting point is 00:20:27 So this is probably my second football game with my whole Dell State career. I'll be honest with y'all. But I went to the game. And one of the things that I realized is the way did the students like, they just, I don't know, they love on him. I think maybe because he's like closer an age to him or they look up to him or whatever. Deshawn Jackson is an all-stars. Yeah, but you know, sometimes it's hard to get through to college kids. And he played in Philly, so.
Starting point is 00:20:50 Yes, and that's what I mean. Not only were their students excited, but I had never seen that many people in the stands. And it was pouring down raining. He was out on campus afterwards, just like enjoying. All I know is what I've been told, and that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town, in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story.
Starting point is 00:21:22 I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know. A story that law enforcement used to convict six people, and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica current. My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find.
Starting point is 00:21:51 I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her. They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up.
Starting point is 00:22:17 Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season ad-free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight, I help a centenarian mend a broken heart.
Starting point is 00:22:52 How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again? And I help a man atone for an armed robbery he committed at 14 years old. And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke. And he got down, and I remember feeling kind of absurd. of like, okay, this is power. Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother try to solve my problems. Through hypnotism.
Starting point is 00:23:20 We could give you a whole brand new thing where you're like super charming all the time. Being more able to look to people in the eye. Not always hide behind a microphone. Listen to Heavyweight on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. I had the incredible opportunity to sit down with the one, the only, Cardi B.
Starting point is 00:23:47 My marriage, I felt the love dying. I was crying every day. I felt in the deepest depression that I had ever had. How do you think you're misunderstood? I'm not this evil, mean person that people think that I am. I'm too compassionate. I have sympathy for that my man. You put so much heart and soul into your work?
Starting point is 00:24:11 What's the hardest? spark for you to take that criticism. This shit was not given to me. I worked my ass off for me. Even when I was a stripper, I'm going to be the best pole dancer in here. When was the moment you felt I did it? I still, to this day, don't feel comfortable.
Starting point is 00:24:26 I fight every day to keep this level of success because people want to take it from you so bad. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I started trying to get pregnant
Starting point is 00:24:42 about four years ago now. We're getting a little bit older and it just kind of felt like the window could be closing. Bloomberg and IHeard podcast present. IVF disrupted. The Kind Body Story. A podcast about a company
Starting point is 00:24:57 that promised to revolutionize fertility care. Introducing Kind Body, a new generation of women's health and fertility care. Backed by millions in venture capital and private equity, it grew like a tech startup. While Kind Body did help women start families, it also left behind a stream of disillusioned and angry patients.
Starting point is 00:25:19 You think you're finally, like, with the right people in the right hands, and then to find out again that you're just not. Don't be fooled. By what? All the bright and shiny. Listen to IVF disrupted, the Kind Body story, starting September 19 on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Homecoming, in-A-1. So shout out to him. He's doing amazing things with the team there.
Starting point is 00:25:43 He wanted to make sure I gave him some love here this morning. But yes. Now, to speak in the sports, Stephen A. Smith, Alexis O'Hanian, who is the husband of Serena Williams. So Alexis was on first take, and he was there to promote some things that he's doing with his company, Aethios, or Aalthios. And they were having a conversation about a ton of things. This came toward the end of the segment. They started talking about Serena Williams and her return to tennis and, you know, her not returning. and then Alexis had some choice words for Stephen A. Smith, let's take a listen.
Starting point is 00:26:15 Stephen A. Smith, you had some, I think you had some marriage advice for me. Oh. Well, you know what? Listen, I did it. People, you know, headlines are headlines. We could get into that another time, but I was hoping. I was hoping you were going to be here. But, but, oh, no, no, no, I am not qualified.
Starting point is 00:26:32 Married. No, not me. I ain't qualified, my brother. I'm not qualified. I was going to ask, because you hadn't been married before, right? I am married. No, no, I think she hasn't. Ah, okay, okay.
Starting point is 00:26:42 Okay. Yeah, because I give advice to plenty of founders who want to build billion-dollar companies, and the reason I do that is because I build billion-dollar companies. Yeah. So I generally try to stay in my lane and advice department. Then we'll talk married and advice later. All right. We got you.
Starting point is 00:26:55 Alexis, thank you so much. Man, she was trying to cut my man's off. He was trying to get into it a little bit, a little bit. She was like, no, no, no, no, we'll be right back after this. I'm married. You can talk later. You want to talk to you, girl. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:07 So, I mean, of course, this clip went. viral everywhere with people commenting on it and here i'm going to play stephen a smith's original comments on serena william so the day after the super bowl when serena williams came out and did the uh quip walk on stage to not like us oh that's what he was talking about but i mean a lot of people had some smoke for serena after she did that so he's going to let's have to address a lot of people but let's take a listen to stephen a smith in the gang's comments uh the day after the super bowl if i'm married and my wife is going to join trolling her ex go back to his ass because clearly you don't belong with me
Starting point is 00:27:40 what you worried about him for and you would be no I don't get that league back but Steve hey I see him stop it stop it what if you win Serena Williams
Starting point is 00:27:49 you're going to be a kept man anyway those don't start that that was a comment narrative after yeah and that's what I'm saying Ryan Clark's kept man comment would be more offensive
Starting point is 00:28:00 than the crib walk I divorce you whatever else and as I said Lexa's going to have a lot of people to address if this is how he's handling things because a lot of people had the same thing
Starting point is 00:28:08 to say that Stephen A said and a lot of people also were saying what Ryan Clark was saying as far as like you're with Serena you and he got it too much. He does very much so very much so but I mean people you know people like the joky joke they like to lean on into it but so yes. Niggas just be talking
Starting point is 00:28:23 yeah I don't think I don't see nothing wrong with what Alexis O'hanian did or whatever I don't see anything wrong with Stephen what he said you know what I mean I don't see nothing wrong with it but it wasn't a real pull-up a pull-up is when the person is there and you say what you need to to the person's face.
Starting point is 00:28:39 Like, I know Alex is a busy person, but when first take, I ask him to come on, he should have said, is Stephen A going to be there? And when they said he's going to be there remotely, he should have said, I'll wait until he's in studio. If he really wanted to say something to his face. Well, what if they, they was like, look,
Starting point is 00:28:51 this is the only chance. You don't get the call to play. I don't care. I'm rich. I'm Alex. Y'all want me here. Y'all need me more than I need your job. I feel.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Yes, but he's promoting something, too. I mean, he need to be there. If you've got to kill two birds and one stone, you can come promote your thing, but I need to say this to Stephen A's face. Well, Stephen A, of course, responded a few hours ago to all of the commentary around Alexis's comments to him. Let's take a listen to Stephen A's response to Alexis.
Starting point is 00:29:16 Serena Williams, she is married to billionaire Alexis O'Henian, and he came our first take today to promote some new event that he's got going on with Atheos and all of that. And people are talking about how he came at me, you know, because of what I said. And when Serena Williams was on stage performing at the Super Bowl, it would have been nice to meet him. I don't know the man.
Starting point is 00:29:38 I have nothing against him whatsoever. I don't recall saying a negative word about him. It's just that when Super Bowl Sunday took place when Kendrick Lamar was performing, Serena Williams came on stage, you know, dancing to all of that. Essentially, what I said was, why that energy for an X? If, you know, if that was my wife, I don't want to see that. I'm glad that it didn't escalate or anything like that. I have absolutely no issue with him whatsoever wanting to address that situation with me.
Starting point is 00:30:06 And I certainly meant no disrespect towards him at all. But that's all it was. But I wasn't going to get into it on national television. I'm a professional. Well, he didn't just say why all that energy for it X. He said I would divorce. I was divorced her. Yeah, he did.
Starting point is 00:30:19 That was my wife. Yeah. Yeah. Like, yo, yes, exactly. And I think that's the thing, too. It's like, I mean, I don't know if we would even get to pick and choose. whether or not you have that energy with a person because if you said it,
Starting point is 00:30:33 and then that person comes on your show and wants to confront you about it, y'all won't have to have that conversation. Exactly. Yep, 100%. And I don't know. I think the energy shift is Stephen A's Smith. Who's been doing it for a long time?
Starting point is 00:30:46 You know what I mean? So he knows what he's doing when he says things. But I think he understands where he's coming from. This is your show. Man, like I said, I don't think it was nothing wrong with Serena did, Alex did, or Stephen A. did. I don't see it different.
Starting point is 00:31:00 don't see nothing wrong with neither one of them. I just would respect. I respect pull-ups when it said to a person's face. I think y'all be doing backflips just because he said it while Steve and A was remote. No, I want to see you say it to a person's face. You know what Birdman wanted to say what he said to me? Birdman called a week in advance to say, I'm coming on this day and I want to make sure
Starting point is 00:31:20 he's in studio. So that's the type of energy I respect. He was in his sweat. Yeah, please, never. But you all, but see, that's your generation. You know, y'all get behind these computers and these microphones and say whatever y'all want to say about people, but never say it to a person. Often, y'all get, y'all, y'all don't want the confrontation. No, I like, me personally, I like confrontation.
Starting point is 00:31:40 Who don't want to talk about? I don't want to live in. This whole generation? Oh, just period. Yeah. Yeah. You're going to make just with that scarf about confrontation. That's our confrontation.
Starting point is 00:31:54 I'm waiting. I'm waiting to see y'all get confronted. I want to see how you want to see how y'all handle it when it happened. That's why. But I didn't be confronted. Remember sexy red confronted me? When she came up in here. That's true. You handled that well.
Starting point is 00:32:05 I don't think I've ever been confronted. You did do the whole thing where you brought Ebony K. Williams up here. And you tried to make that a whole thing. No, I didn't. She wanted to talk to you. Well, that was the only thing close to a confrontation. But I wouldn't even call that that. That was supposed to be like an OG conversation.
Starting point is 00:32:19 She wanted to talk to here. Yeah, because I said that I didn't agree with her take on, like, women having, it was something. It was something about women in fertility. Lauren folded, but I knew that was not happening. First of all, She is from Big Delaware, not the little one. But that wasn't even about,
Starting point is 00:32:34 but I just knew she was going to fold because Ebony was going to stand on. Ebony didn't go stand on business. I think I said how I felt, but I'm not looking to be confrontational on the radio. No, no, no, no, no, no. You ain't going to be up here doing your little latest and giving out all of these news reports
Starting point is 00:32:48 and reporting people gossip. And then when they come up here and want to say, confront you about what you said, you act like, I'm not here to be confrontational. No, because we can have a conversation. Real professional. Alexis, say, stay in your lane. Yes.
Starting point is 00:33:01 I'm staying in mine. Okay. And that was the latest. And when we come back, Mimi Brown is going to be here with front page news. And Bea, speaking to confrontation. Bea, Bia, oh. I know, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:11 We'll be here to talk about her new album, Bianca, right here on the breakfast club. Yes, it's the world's most dangerous morning to show the breakfast club. Charlemagne the God, Jess, Jailene the Gives, DJ Envy is off today. But it's time for Front Page News with Mimi Brown. Good morning, Mimi. Good morning, Michelle May, Jess. How y'all doing? Good morning, girl.
Starting point is 00:33:28 How are you? Good morning. All right. So if you have a child in special education, you should be pretty concerned this morning. The Department of Education has been hit hard by Friday's mass federal layoffs. An officials say it could have an immediate impact on children with disabilities. So sources inside the department say that the offices handling special education and rehabilitative services were gutted. Those teams are responsible for enforcing the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
Starting point is 00:33:56 And that's the law that guarantees a free and fair education for kids with disabilities. It also distributes nearly $15 billion in funding to states for special education programs. And now with all the cuts, insiders warned that that money could be delayed and families may lose access to critical support. Now, when asked about these sweeping cuts, President Trump said he had a particular group of federal workers in mind and hinted that more layoffs may be coming. Let's hear what he had to say. And it would be Democrat-oriented because we figured, you know, They started this thing, so they should be Democrat-oriented. It'll be a lot, and we'll announce the numbers over the next couple of days, but it'll be a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:34:34 Well, he announced the numbers, and it's a total of 4,100 federal workers that have been laid off. These cuts come as part of the ongoing government shutdown. They were ordered across, yes, several major agencies. I'm talking roughly 1,200 employees were let go from the Department of Health and Human Services, $1,400 from the Treasury Department, $450 from the housing and urban development, 170 from Homeland Security, including those working in cybersecurity. So also the CDC saw cuts about 1,000 jobs, but some of those workers have been called back the administration saying they made a mistake
Starting point is 00:35:13 and cutting some of the employees from the CDC, so we'll continue to watch that. But federal unions, they are challenging this in court, calling them, political and dangerous firings. But meanwhile, President Trump says the troops will get paid this week, even with the government still shut down in a post on true social. He said that he will use his authority as commander
Starting point is 00:35:34 in chief to make sure that service members are paid October 15th. He says the money will come from existing research and development funds from the Pentagon. I believe in when I see it, you know, but these people don't get their jobs back when the shutdown is over, right? No, they don't.
Starting point is 00:35:49 Damn. They don't. And the question still remains, will they get that back pay? So if you're fired, do you still get the back pay for when you were, you know, furloughed?
Starting point is 00:35:57 Like, all of that is still in flux. Well, salute to all the federal workers who are still showing up to work, you know, even though they're not getting paid, man. We appreciate your service. I know y'all don't, I know thoughts and prayers
Starting point is 00:36:07 don't pay the bills, though. Absolutely. Well, as the shutdown stretches into the third week, another national debate is taking center stage, this one about how we mark today's holiday. So is it Columbus Day
Starting point is 00:36:19 or Indigenous People Day? The debate is back in the spotlight because today is Monday, October 13th. And President Trump, he said that he's sticking with Columbus Day in a proclamation signed last week. He called the Italian Explorer. We're talking about Christopher Columbus, the original American hero, and accused critics of trying to erase history and quote, attack our heritage. Now, this is a sharp contrast from President Biden, who in 2021 became the first president to recognize both holidays, calling for an honest look at America's past while honoring Italian American
Starting point is 00:36:51 contributions. Now the debate has only grown in the past decade, Columbus Day has been a federal holiday since 1892, but more states now mark Indigenous People's Day. Instead, arguing Columbus Day overlooks the suffering caused by European colonization. So depending on where you live today, may be Columbus Day, Indigenous People Day, or both. But keep in mind, if you are running errands, post offices, and major banks are closed today due to the holiday, FedEx, UPS, and Amazon deliveries are still operating as usual. Yeah, why does it have to be one day, though? If you want to recognize it as Columbus Day, do that.
Starting point is 00:37:27 If you want to recognize it, recognize it as indigenous people, they do that. Today is also a national online bank day. There's also the International Day for disaster risk reduction. No, who are making up the days? So it's a breast cancer away in a day. No, but it's a certain kind of breast cancer. Metastatic, what is it called? Is that what it's called?
Starting point is 00:37:44 I'm not sure. I don't know. So it's a bunch of different days. You recognize what you want to recognize. Yeah. I didn't know. But I think this month is, It's Halloween.
Starting point is 00:37:52 Wow. Yeah, but it's also geared to breast cancer, right? It's breast cancer awareness month, right? Oh, okay, okay, yeah. So women need to be going to get their mammograms and going to, you know, get their checkups or whatever. But y'all, look, let me ask you this, Mimi. I haven't seen this everywhere.
Starting point is 00:38:07 I don't know if it's exactly true, right? But I heard that the American dollar depreciated like 10%. The American dollar has depreciated like 10%. Yeah. That's been happening for a while. as we, you know, with all the tariffs and the federal interest rates and all of that happening. So, you know, it doesn't
Starting point is 00:38:24 stand, you know, like it used to. So, yeah. Why are you hitting me with them goddamn random-ass pop quizzes? That's a tough answer. I was just asking, no, I was asking this she heard about it because I heard it, but I don't hear nothing. You're talking about it. Like, that's going to directly affect everybody,
Starting point is 00:38:38 like, especially working class. Like, people don't think it affect people. When I heard it, I'm like, damn, and it's expected to drop another 10% in 2026, you know? Well, until we can figure out the fact, Federal reserves and all of that, just, like, there's a lot happening, right? Right. The tariffs, you know, China's just been hit with another 100% terror.
Starting point is 00:38:56 I mean, there's just a lot, you know. Yeah, that wasn't, like, a pop quiz question for you. I just heard it. And I'm like, yo, I heard it, but I don't hear a lot of people talking about it. We're talking about a whole bunch of other stuff, but we didn't talk about that. I'm like, damn, is that true or not? So I just want to ask if you heard it, shut up, Sholaman. And when I don't be saying nothing about politics or nothing or money or whatever, then why?
Starting point is 00:39:17 Well, thank you, Mimi. Absolutely. Okay, y'all. Well, that is your front page news. I'm Mimi Brown. Follow me at Mimi Brown TV. For more stories, follow the Black Information Network. Download the free I-HeartRadio app or follow.
Starting point is 00:39:32 Go to B-I-N-News.com. That's right. And we come back. Beah will be here. She's got a new album out called Bianca. Okay? So we'll be talking to Beia about her new album, Bianca, and a whole bunch of other things.
Starting point is 00:39:44 It's the world's most dangerous morning show The Breakfast Club. The Breakfast Club. Good morning, everybody, is D.J. NV. Jess Hilarius. Shalomaine the guy. We are the breakfast club. La Rosa is here as well, and we got a special guest in the building. Bianca. What's going on? How are you feeling?
Starting point is 00:40:00 Bianca's out, Tintan. I love that none of the songs sound the same. Yeah. None of them. You got like a... You listen to it. Yeah. I love that.
Starting point is 00:40:09 And it's like pop, yo. It's like crossover time, like all of that. Some of the tracks, I'm like, all right, I can see me shopping and in Burgundy. and Northstrom all the way down to H.M. There's a heart you got. And then, you know, you got some good, some good music, car ride music, you got to do your makeup music.
Starting point is 00:40:25 Birthday, birthday song. Birthday song. Yeah. And then you got a little bit of biggie vibe going on. Yeah. Give me a lot of biggies. That's what she said. We was listening together.
Starting point is 00:40:35 She was like, it's heavy biggie vibes. Yeah, baby biggie going on the flow, everything that you had going on. On the bag. I'm a student of rap. Well, my favorite song with album is the bad guy. Okay. Yeah, I like the bad guy too.
Starting point is 00:40:47 Just the tone, that's how she coming, even the flow. Was Biggie inspiration at all? Yeah, Biggie, Sean, Fox, Little Kim, that we were listening mainly, like, Foxy and Biggie Records that day and just trying to, like, that's how I'm going to come on the song. Even the beginning, which one? Was it trifling when she was screaming like Biggs? Yeah, yeah, that was trifling.
Starting point is 00:41:08 Yeah, that was trifling. Yeah, pray for my downfall. Like, pray for my down, like, you screaming on the beginning of that. That was trifling, right? Yeah, yeah. You like that. How intentional are you about representing all sides of your identity through your music?
Starting point is 00:41:19 Super. I'm glad you asked that question. I'm very intentional. Like, when it comes to the music, I just feel like I'm a student of music. I love rap. I love just the whole process of making music. And I started with people that were really like, you know, I started with like,
Starting point is 00:41:34 Farrell and people, Family, that there's a really, there's like a really intense studio culture. So that's what I came up on and I really wanted this to be a reflection of my years in music, not just like one sound, and I didn't want you to be able to expect
Starting point is 00:41:49 what was going to come next on the track list whatever with Farrell and Fam because you were signed with them at one point I think in 2014 that's when I first heard of beer and you're not with them anymore what what no I think like that journey just like rent his course
Starting point is 00:42:03 and it was time for me to kind of like go and do my own thing and step into more of like a businesswoman entrepreneur mind of like my run my own program but I'm so grateful for them for life because that's where I think a lot of my like a collectiveness when it comes to music comes from. It's like just that whole artist development period, which a lot of artists don't really
Starting point is 00:42:22 have right now. I also want to know, but you being Puerto Rican and Italian, when we were listening to the album, it finally did come up. I was like, I wonder how come she didn't dive into the Latino side more, especially because it's one of the biggest right now when you talk about Spanish music. You see what
Starting point is 00:42:40 bad buddies doing, you're seeing what all the Spanish artists are doing. How can we didn't dive into that more? That's a good question. I feel like when I make music, I'm very like, I'm a feeling artist, so like, whatever is my feeling at that time or whatever I'm trying to get off is what I'm going to like intentionally get off. But I do want to work on like a Latin project on the side because there's like a lot of things I want to do with different sounds and like merging and fusion in them together. But I got a song with Becky G that I'm really excited about Harway and that's like to me like, you know, and with young Miko. And they're like two of my favorite girls like on the Latin side especially too. this is your official debut album
Starting point is 00:43:19 how do you approach this project different than other projects like how do you say this is my album this is my album they you know what they say you have your whole life to like work on your first album and I always didn't feel like I was ready up until I would say like maybe
Starting point is 00:43:34 a year or two ago I started to be a lot more intentional with the music that I'm putting out and they were like you know of course people call for you to have an album at different times and I'm like I'm not ready I'm not ready but that's because I don't think personally I was ready to like check my frequency and what I'm putting out into the world why didn't you think you was ready it was just a personal thing like you had to do some
Starting point is 00:43:54 inner work yeah okay okay like I think I didn't I didn't I didn't go through enough and I think like when you a new artist like people are like okay cool this is new this is cool but I think people have to see the growth and people have to see you like go through in order to be like okay let me take a listen and let me let me give this person a different a different eye. Didn't you almost forgive me didn't you almost die?
Starting point is 00:44:18 What the fuck? Motorcycle accident motorcycle crash, yeah. Oh, that's like, what? Wow. You said it was
Starting point is 00:44:28 10 or 20 of y'all on bikes you was a passenger, a drunk driver whipped a U-turn you flew 20 to 30 feet in the air you fell on the floor you hit the floor like oh my God am I alive
Starting point is 00:44:37 you looked down your leg was split open you didn't know if you was going to keep your leg or not it was bad I did surviving that motorcycle accident changed just the way you approached
Starting point is 00:44:45 your life and everything um i think at that time i was just living so fast and i was so excited to be doing music i just signed my deal with feral like maybe two weeks before that so i thought like my life was about to change like oh yeah we on yeah and then it was like no um but i was still in the studio at that time like on crutches just because i wanted people to see like oh i'm serious about this like it made me a lot more grateful and realize like don't play with your time here you know and don't play with with people like because you don't know when you're going to lose somebody it's very quick so what is it that you wanted to go through to be able to do that this album because I mean that's a life-changing
Starting point is 00:45:29 experience you are signed at that point I'm sure you've had life before that like is it like heartbreak or like what did you think you needed to experience I just don't think I had experienced enough and like in terms of just life experience love music, whatever the case may be, like I don't think I don't think I was ready and I don't think that I cared about the frequency that I was putting into the universe. Like even now, I'm a lot more
Starting point is 00:45:55 conscious of like what I'm saying online, what I'm doing online, what I'm doing like in general, just because it's like, it's all a universe, it comes back to you. A lot of that sounds like, that sounds like imposter syndrome a little bit. Like you, you had to deal with Farrell but you just weren't sure
Starting point is 00:46:11 who you were in that moment or maybe not sure of the position you were in. Yeah, I think I always knew who I was But I think at that time Like Farrell was trying to help me develop And Pham was trying to teach me how to be a real artist So for them they were like Okay, do this beat, do that beat, do this beat
Starting point is 00:46:28 And I didn't know what my sound was When I knew deep down inside Like oh I want to come like this But they're trying to like help me widen my palette And like be a better artist So I don't think I fully grasped that at that time And then you were just trusting them because these are successful creators that came before you.
Starting point is 00:46:47 So you're just putting it in their hands, just trusting it, right? Yeah, right? Because you had a trajectory to go through the roof at one point, right? A whole lot of money came out. You did remix with Nikki. You had records with Jay Cole. You had records with artists and you was all over the place. And then it just seemed like it just stopped or it just slowed down.
Starting point is 00:47:03 Was it business? Was it label? Was it personal? No, it was never business label personal. It was more so like trying to balance like touring. and creating because I'm a real creator like my favorite part about this is going to the studio
Starting point is 00:47:20 and making songs and then going and performing them but like I love being in the studio like they'll tell you you can lock me in the studio for for a week I will not leave like I'll sleep there like wake up there brush my teeth and record there like I love being there
Starting point is 00:47:36 that's my happy place yeah so like that's the whole reason why I got into this and so at that time it was so busy it was like show show show show show show and I was like I miss being in the studio like I really want to go back to the studio so it was like finding that balance at that time and also making new music and figuring out like okay what how do I want to come and what do I don't want to just make bops like I just I got to that point where I'm like I can make cool songs but like I want
Starting point is 00:48:04 intentional songs that's going to mean something that's going to be here after I'm gone that's going to reflect my legacy and what I'm putting out into the universe so did you like a whole lot of money? Because it popped off TikTok viral, right? I loved it. It was one of my favorites. When everybody else didn't get it, I got it. So they didn't get, people didn't get it before. At first, a whole lot of money was out for like
Starting point is 00:48:24 six months before people. And at the time, they were like, oh, it's a monotone those flow, like she's rapping in that low tone. They didn't really get it. Now there's so many people rapping in low tone, monotone voices like girls, everything. What moment in your career thus far has tested your confidence
Starting point is 00:48:40 the most? I would say getting out of my first deal because when you leave a situation that's so big and it's not what you envision it to be you think like oh my god what's next or like am i going to be over to top this but i feel like i've always have so like every everything that came next was always bigger and better than i could have predicted and like you know it's cliche but god's plan is literally like way better than our plan like we could show up and write it out but how it goes it's like it's never up to us who is the uh the person that was playing at the sophy stadium that was taking you through with y'all on the album you mentioned you said you had shows and he had something
Starting point is 00:49:26 at sofied and i'm like well that's the NFL team that played the sofa stadium who was taking her through it you know she knows you know she going to dig into it no no no don't do that The album is called Bianca. And you said this is your most personal and vulnerable album or project. Yeah, you could have said any other stadium. You could have said MetLife. Maybe that was very specific. That gave, okay?
Starting point is 00:49:48 I just, at that time, like, I had been to the sofa. So. You had went there and there was an NFL team playing. And then you had met a person? No, like, I had just been to the sofa, so it just stuck out to me. Like, oh, this is one of those places that I was at. On this album, on Bianca, I feel like it's very, very personal for me. It's the most vulnerable I've ever been on an album.
Starting point is 00:50:12 Yeah, because there's another song, too. Girl. I was along the ride with you. In the beginning of the album, right, it seems like whoever this person is or people, different experiences, you're going through it. And then you get to, I think it's like sad party or one of the songs, and you realize who you are. You like, don't give me nothing you can't take back.
Starting point is 00:50:31 I mean, I don't want nothing because you can't take it back from me. And I'm like, okay, so whoever he was, She realized, no, I'm the prize. Yeah. Who was that? Somebody had you going through it. But hold on. That's interesting as you say that, Lauren, because you went from, you're the prize.
Starting point is 00:50:46 So talk about that being in that moment. I'm so glad you said this. Lauren, you are T. Because when I talk about the track list, like, I literally take people through the track list. And it's like, I'm like, okay, don't turn me to the bad guy because I don't want to play for you. But, like, I want to like, it's like, it's taking you through, like, the day in the life almost of me. and kind of just like finding my way and like dealing with different people
Starting point is 00:51:08 whether that be relationships friendships, friendships and I'm just like finding my way and y'all are just coming with me on the journey throughout that project. So there is like love moments in there, heartbreak moments in there. Yeah, because you said you got laid.
Starting point is 00:51:21 There's a whole face in there? Sad party, girl, you like, you might take a couple shots and do some things. NWFA? Oh, NWFA is All I know is what I've been told. And that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved.
Starting point is 00:51:47 Until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know. A story that law enforcement used to convict six people and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran. My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find. I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her.
Starting point is 00:52:31 They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns. Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season at free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Starting point is 00:53:13 I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight, I help a centenarian mend a broken heart. How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again? And I help a man atone for an armed, robbery he committed at 14 years old. And so I pointed the gun at him and said this isn't a joke. And he got down. And I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power. Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother tried to solve my problems through hypnotism.
Starting point is 00:53:51 We could give you a whole brand new thing where you're like super charming all the time. Being more able to look people in the eye. Not always hide behind a microphone. Listen to Heavyweight on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. I had the incredible opportunity to sit down with the one, the only, Cardi B. My marriage, I felt the love dying. I was crying every day. I felt in the deepest depression that I had ever had.
Starting point is 00:54:27 How do you think you're misunderstood? I'm not this evil, mean person that people think that I am. I'm too compassionate. I have sympathy for that fuck my man. Put so much heart and soul into your work. What's the hardest part for you to take that criticism? This shit was not given to me. I worked my ass off for me.
Starting point is 00:54:48 Even when I was a stripper, I'm gonna be the best pole dancer in here. When was the moment you felt I did it? I still, to this day, don't feel comfortable. I fight every day. to keep this level of success because people want to take it from you so bad. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
Starting point is 00:55:08 or wherever you get your podcasts. I started trying to get pregnant about four years ago now. We're getting a little bit older and it just kind of felt like the window could be closing. Bloomberg and IHeart Podcasts present IVF disrupted, the kind body story. A podcast about a company. that promised to revolutionize fertility care.
Starting point is 00:55:30 Introducing Kind Body, a new generation of women's health and fertility care. Backed by millions in venture capital and private equity, it grew like a tech startup. While Kind Body did help women start families, it also left behind a stream of disillusioned and angry patients. You think you're finally like with the right people in the right hands, and then to find out again that you're just not. Don't be fooled. fold. By what? All the bright and shiny. Listen to IVF disrupted,
Starting point is 00:56:02 the kind body story, starting September 19 on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. You know what that's for, because they will do it. That's about the men's. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:56:16 The men's. Well, will the person know that you talk about them, the one that you're talking about? I don't know if he'll know, and I don't know if it if it's for him. I think it's just like, that's like therapeutic for me. I'm going to get off whatever I got to get off at the
Starting point is 00:56:32 studio. If you're offended by it, that's on you. But like, I'm here for me. You really feel like to f***ing anything? Yes, absolutely. What? They home boys. You ain't that fucking anything. They home girls. No, seriously, that's not, is that
Starting point is 00:56:46 anything at one point? I know you're doing anything else. You are, you are anything to somebody. Oh. Damn. Don't believe. Damn. I'm everything to the right person. Don't play my real bed.
Starting point is 00:56:58 Because this is playing real bad. But you think that, though? Yeah, I think a lot of them will. Not everyone, but I think a lot of them will. What experience made you feel like that? Who? And what did she look like? That you're like, God, damn.
Starting point is 00:57:11 You can't anything. It's so true. Mm-hmm, girl. Like, if you really, if you go through some of these phones, you'll see what's going on. Oh, my girl. I'm not saying do that, but I'm just saying, like, they will, they will do anything, anything.
Starting point is 00:57:25 Mm-hmm. Damn. Damn. Who hurt beer? Nobody hurt me. I trust me. I'm super healed. I'm happy.
Starting point is 00:57:35 Yeah, no, for sure. I'm happy. I know my worth. I'm not that girl. That's going to be up, like, crying over a man's, like, or, like, even begging him to, like, get it right. Like. What's the wildest thing you did, beer? You had to do something wilder, man.
Starting point is 00:57:50 Kid called. What's the wildest thing you did? When you did? She pulled out. She put it. for him, bro. At least pulled the knife. That's the Spanish side? Yeah. I can't remember, really, honestly, truly.
Starting point is 00:58:02 That would be, like, incriminating myself. She started smiling, so you remember something. Some of case you mind. Puerto Rican and Italian. Well, what does peace look like for you, Gia? In an industry that thrives on chaos and competition. Oh, you're asking such great questions today. I was a little worried about you, but I like how you coming.
Starting point is 00:58:23 Because. I like how you coming. Bia is not over yet. Stay low, keep firing, Bia. It's not over yet. Peace is a me thing. Like, the piece comes from me all across the board.
Starting point is 00:58:37 When it comes to, like, my career, my relationships, I seek balance and I just seek to be intentional with everything I do. In that way, I don't feel no type of way when anything happens because I'm coming how I need to come every time. If you get me, what I mean by that. A piece for me is like a,
Starting point is 00:58:55 I go to sleep every night I could look myself in the mirror with what I've done and I have integrity I have like I have who I still am when I came here like I'm not a different person
Starting point is 00:59:05 than when you met me five years ago other than success or different money I've made or like different experiences I've had I'm the same person like well what does peace look like in an industry that thrives off
Starting point is 00:59:17 comparison what does peace look like you gotta be a peaceful as peace with yourself no but in this industry that, you know, that thrives off comparison. They like to compare people to everybody. Like, oh, this person reminds me of this person,
Starting point is 00:59:30 that person reminds me of that person. True. Or you got to make a song like this person because this song is popping. Yeah, I don't really feed into that. I'm not really that, like, I'm not one of those people who are, like, shaken up by what people say.
Starting point is 00:59:44 Like, I have tough skin, maybe that's what it is. Like, I love competition. I'm a Leo, so. I'm barking. Like, bark like you want it. I'm coming. I will say I was expecting
Starting point is 00:59:57 because I know we saw Since I took my piece And you choose in peace There was some piece chose on this album Because I didn't get a straight Cardi disc On this album Why would it be a Cardi disc? I don't know like
Starting point is 01:00:06 I don't even know Why would you think that Because when Cardi dropped her song Pretty and Petty as F You posted in the studio And said well now I have 16 songs That you can name So the fans thought
Starting point is 01:00:16 We would get a response On the project It's not to say I don't have a response But I think like Where I'm at right now like that was a year ago like and what am I going to do like keep
Starting point is 01:00:28 keep beefing with partisan like over and over again like why would I I don't want to do that you guys I don't want to do that like I know what it started from she knows where it started from like only thing I'm here to do right now
Starting point is 01:00:41 is to like make people pay attention to my album and like if I decide to address it six months from now two weeks from now a year from now cool I can adjust it but I could adjust it on wax That's what I did the first time.
Starting point is 01:00:53 Yeah. I went to the, she said my name, I went to the studio, and addressed it in 24 hours, and then you made me wait a whole year. So what I'm supposed to do? Bring myself back to a lower frequency when I'm already up here. Where did the beef start? Did somebody help me? I don't know with you.
Starting point is 01:01:08 Okay, so there was like something about you supposed to have like a sex tape or something like that. Cardi said this when she was here, too, that there was like a sex tape that she had heard that it was circulating, and it was from you. And then there was, but before that, it was like, you. make the video that she made there was like subliminals online with you saying she's like stealing your style with the video and like that whole
Starting point is 01:01:30 thing then it led into y'all back and forth you're on the right path you're a master manifester in the exactly where you're going alignment at his finest you can choose where to go now that's so funny are you still? No I'm done so where it started
Starting point is 01:01:46 was there were fans that were like bringing up similarities between like a video a couple songs. I'm an artist. I write all my stuff. I don't have the resources like that maybe an artist with a bigger platform would have. So when something like that is brought
Starting point is 01:02:02 to my attention, it's disheartening for like an artist that do everything on their own. So when you see something like that, I'm like okay, I said my piece, I like the tweet, she called my phone screaming, like trying to like bully me or hold me out of how I feel. Like, you can't
Starting point is 01:02:18 hold me out of how I feel. Like, that's just what it is. So she that's where it all started it has nothing to do with a sex tape i don't even know what sex tape they i don't even know what that's about like there was a lot of people also too that at that time that when i was going to the studio to make my disc because she dissed me first so when i went to the studio to go okay i'm going to the studio rah-rah it was in Atlanta so there was a lot of different people that was in and out the studio hearing what i was saying on the records going back saying stuff to her offset whoever they were saying it to but that had that had like
Starting point is 01:02:51 stuff that she was saying that I was saying, I was not saying. Like, they even called, like, she even called me multiple times with, like, managers on the phone, my friends on the phone, like, trying to get me on three-way to record me, do all this weird stuff. And, like, I have real, when I get on the phone with somebody, I'm genuine. So my first intention is not like, when we record this, I can use it as a receipt. Like, when I get on the phone and I speak to you, it's genuine. I have no ill intentions.
Starting point is 01:03:15 I know everything I said on that phone call. I know everything I said to her about her. That's just not how I roll. so like we could have even had a conversation about it if you inspired by somebody or you think somebody is tight like it's nothing wrong to be like if the fans pull out that similarity you'd be like oh yeah I think she's fired but why you got a downplay and be like no I didn't do that
Starting point is 01:03:35 that's not I wouldn't I wouldn't with that like that's not true you know that's not true because it's receipts so that was my issue this isn't even about her this is really about real artists like the artists that get up and go to the studio and care about the creative and do their work and have limited resources. I'm speaking for them. This is not even about her anymore.
Starting point is 01:03:56 It's like I'm anti-machine. Like, you know, you talked about the machine and it seems like you've moved from being like just under major labels to carving out your own lane. Like what did the industry teach you about ownership and self-worth? Well, I own my master's. And like, so I care about like, you know, I have my publishing, my master's, all that stuff. I care about like the business side of things. I didn't know about that coming in
Starting point is 01:04:21 so when I did understand like what all this is about my goal is to like teach younger artists and kind of like mentor and fill that space of like what I didn't have when I came into this industry so that's really what's important to me like I just want to focus on that
Starting point is 01:04:38 be an example to that and just keep growing my business on an entrepreneurial side not just like an artist on the front side you started on sister hip hop right? Wow so that's Show, would you say that helped you? Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:04:52 I think that a lot of people can look back in my journey and be like, oh, wow, like, this is a real thing. I started with, like, 3,000 followers. I started with, like, people saw my grind, go to the studio. So I care about the music, for real. Like, I love music. I love doing it. It's not really about, I never care to be so famous.
Starting point is 01:05:10 I don't, like, date and put my business out in the world. Like, there's so much about me that's private because I want people to fuck with the music and I want people to pay attention to, like, what I'm doing in the, world philanthropy like community outreach like that and it wasn't a lot of one that show what show was a lot of ones was on the rap game or something like that yeah it's interesting that they actually made those shows for female rappers i guess to you know have a platform and get seen and you actually have people who came from those shows and had success yeah how hard was it to keep a response record off though i'm sure people on your team was like yo you should
Starting point is 01:05:45 respond for the fans i'm sure well especially because of how fast you responded when everything was happening. I got a studio in my house. So like I read just for me to go and get it off. I didn't want to have the same like mentality as I did the first time because I did learn like the energy you put out into the world is the energy you will receive. So I was like how do I want to go about this? I could say something nasty again. But it's like okay and then what? You know? So you did a record. You just didn't put it out. I'm just saying like I'm always doing records. I have a studio on my house. I record myself. So. So. How do we make peace, though? I mean, we got Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl in February. Like, we want to see. Bat Bonnie? Latinos together.
Starting point is 01:06:28 Bad Bonnie at this? Bad Bonnie? Yeah. What does I have to do with? I want to see Latinos together. He said, what's not? But she had Italian, so that's how I probably won't let her for me. Okay, well, 50% of her, let's do it.
Starting point is 01:06:42 Um, yeah, I honestly, I don't know, man. This is life. Like, you let it go how it goes. And they work yourself out. I just show. up with good energy and good vibes and everything will come back. Do you really do your own nails? Sometimes.
Starting point is 01:06:56 Oh, okay. I think that's dope. Yeah, they're JellX. Sometimes I have a nail studio like in my house. God damn. What don't you got now? Right. Yeah, I love my house.
Starting point is 01:07:07 That photo you took in front of the BSA when you put, posted that that was in your house. That's the studio in your house. Which one? When you talk about you got the 16 songs we can't name. No. No, no, no. In the studio, that wasn't in my house. That was in a different studio.
Starting point is 01:07:20 But yeah, I do. I got a nice house studio. Like, I love my house. Like, I'm on. I'm glad, too, you said something earlier about you said you made these songs a while ago. Like, you just focused on that because, you know, even though it's not a shot, but the mention of Stefan Diggs, that line. I don't know what yet. Girl, you're spilling a lot in this.
Starting point is 01:07:38 You have let people listen to this thing. Well, I'm just asking because when people see this interview and they start talking about it, they're going to make it seem like it was something that it's not. Yeah, no, I recorded that it was just a bar. Like I do bars and metaphors I can rap So it's bars and metaphors and bars And all through all my songs But what's the line?
Starting point is 01:07:58 The line is Not you wrote it down Bitch you can dig it Yeah Like Stefan I missed that one I didn't I don't
Starting point is 01:08:07 Yeah It was on plus four Four Yeah it was on plus He said Like she on a day You know that
Starting point is 01:08:11 You ain't write that I actually have A TikTok When I recorded that The day I recorded it It was long before this So I'll show you I'll show you
Starting point is 01:08:20 receipts for everything for real i'm i'm not a liar like yeah i want to ask who's decision was it not to go back in beef right and and because i'm thinking about it now the sad thing is is the album which is a dope album we listen to it will get overshadowed by the beef right and the fact that there's no beef there i'm hoping that people actually get to see who beer is and not just somebody on line beefers so whose idea was it's like you know what i'm not going to do this i want people to see me especially for my debut album i say it was my idea I'm sure it was a hard decision as a rapper
Starting point is 01:08:53 as a rapper yeah absolutely I've even been going back and forth for it up until yesterday like I've gone back and forth for it every day is like do I want to respond to this right now
Starting point is 01:09:01 because but at the same time I would be doing a disservice to myself with everything I put into this album making it about her you know like when I could just go
Starting point is 01:09:13 and I could drop something at any time like that came a year ago I dropped that record a year ago, like, it's, I would be doing a disservice to myself. I'll say that. Like, there's so much more importance to, like, my message and, like, what I'm here for than to rap beef.
Starting point is 01:09:32 I've been out for over 10 years. I've never gotten to a rap beef. That says a lot about me. Like, I have great relationships in this business because I carry myself a certain way. So why would I ruin that? Like, I can address it at any time, but I'm just here for a bigger mission right now. I like the fact that Cardi waited, though, only because I'm, I'm not. I just feel like this is still a business at the end of the day.
Starting point is 01:09:52 Yeah. Why not respond if you're going to respond on your album, you know? That's what we always said. You came from that school of Biggie and Hove. So you came from the school of, you're going to get my album and I'm having these balls. Maybe I'll do it works it. There we go. But I said she came to the school.
Starting point is 01:10:05 If you listen to the album, you could tell. Okay. Got you got you. Yeah. Yeah. I'm just like on a different vibe. I have like way, I don't know. Maybe I'm so happy and peaceful in life right now.
Starting point is 01:10:15 Yeah. Like, I'm so happy and so peaceful. So why you end the album saying, well, you, Because that song I did a couple of months ago. Oh, that was old. Now I'm like, Bianca is out today, ladies and gentlemen. It's the Breakfast Club.
Starting point is 01:10:29 It's Beat. Yes, it's the World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club. Charlemagne, the God, Jess, hilarious, DJ, NB. Thank you to Bea for pulling up, man. Her new album, Bianca, is out right now. But it's time for the latest with Lauren. What we got? Lauren becoming a straight fact.
Starting point is 01:10:43 She gets them from somebody that knows somebody. She gets to detail. I'm the home girl that knows a little bit about everything. She'd be having the latest on this. The latest with Lauren La Rosa. Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details, sometimes you have a little bit everything. Well, it's the latest. On the breakfast club.
Starting point is 01:11:01 Talk to me. What's up, Jess? You auditioning for a roll or something, yo? No, why? I don't know. You just look like you're in a little auditioning for a roll bowl today. Your head not done, you got your hat on back, but you got a blanket on like you're cold, and you just be talking to yourself all morning.
Starting point is 01:11:14 No, I've been reading from Jungle Feet, but no, you've been mumbling all morning. She's been reading. Anyway, yo, go ahead. Shut up, Lauren. My bad, I just look, I want the people to know. You're reading. All right. So, Diane Keaton, over the weekend, she passed away at age 79.
Starting point is 01:11:29 So I wanted to take a minute to send a rest in peace to her. Oscar-winning actress, director, producer. You know, she won an Oscar back in 1977 for Annie Hall. You know her from, something's got to give. But she was also nominated for an Oscar for. Father of the Bride. The Godfather? The Godfather.
Starting point is 01:11:49 That's the godfather as well, which is where she actually got her big break, was playing Al Pacino's girlfriend in Francis Ford, Coppela's, the godfather. But as of right now, there are no details as to, you know, what happened. But it was just reported over the weekend that she had been rushed to a hospital. And that is where she passed away. And there are reports out right now that, like, you know, whatever was happening with her health-wise was, like, all of a sudden. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:12:11 But, you know, yeah, it's just a, it's sad to. Definitely sad. Yeah. She also was 79. I mean, 79 is, people got mad at me. I'm mad, but they were like, how are you going to say 79 is young? 79 is relatively young nowadays. People are living a lot longer than that.
Starting point is 01:12:25 Yeah, I mean, and I think about, because when I thought 79 and then something happening suddenly, that's my worst fear for, like, the older people in my family. So I think, you know, even though she's 79 is still like, somebody leaves suddenly, it's just like, oh, like, yeah, like you still want them to be here. So, yeah, just wanted to send her rest in peace. Now, as we switch on over to other news, so Dr.
Starting point is 01:12:45 J. Barnett, I know he was at the Mental Wealth Expo this weekend, right? That's my guy, man, salute to Dr. J. Barnett, dropping on the clues bonds for Dr. Jay. Yes, he was at the Mental Wealthexpo. And he's got a podcast on the Black Effect Podcast Network called Just Heal. Yes, well, speaking of Just Healing, Kirk Franklin, Dr. J. Barnett, Ray J. and L.E. Chopper and Jonathan Majors had a really great conversation on Den of Kings,
Starting point is 01:13:08 which is Kirk Franklin's show that he does on his YouTube channel. I like that combo. Oh, my God, let me tell you, the dynamic that Kirk Franklin brings together on this show, it's amazing because it's people that are in the you know the spotlight for different reasons that you would never think to put their stories together but when they come together the conversation is so powerful so they had a conversation about you know vulnerability and being vulnerable you know in your relationship but also about you know hurting yourself and you know black men and suicide and getting through that you know dr j barnett has shared his story um so two times suicide survivor two times suicide survivor yes uh so let's take a listen to uh dr j barnett on um dinner kings He said he overdosed And nobody talked about time When I drove into a tree To a light pole channel
Starting point is 01:13:52 That was in Ali Chappas So we're gonna go to Dr. J. Barnett Okay, what do we can Well, Philly, if you're just joining us People never had That's that space outside of Doc.
Starting point is 01:14:05 That's not the right. I don't want you all to know Philly, I need y'all to know We need y'all to know we're the worst produced morning show In the country We can start Like don't play that to Philly
Starting point is 01:14:12 I just need Philly to know that They already on us They listen for the first time this morning So listen Don't have any expectations. Let's start with, okay, so the conversation they were having, I said, was about, you know, suicide. Dr. J. Burnett, it's a two-time suicide survivor. But him opening up about what he survived made Jonathan Majors open up about a suicide attempt.
Starting point is 01:14:31 Let's take a listen to Jonathan Majors, number one, on Den of Kings. Has everyone at the table ever had that space outside of Doc and NLE? Have you ever been to that space where you ever thought about suicide as black men? Yeah, absolutely. I was on suicide watch. I'm recently married, but there were times when me and my girlfriend, me and my fiance, and now me and my wife, there were times when we never spoke about it, but we never, she never left me alone, and I never let myself be alone,
Starting point is 01:15:03 because we had spoken about that, and I put it to her very straight. I just don't want it, I just don't want it. You talk about life, you know, I just don't want. What brought you to that place? Isolation, right, ostracism, humiliation. abandonment. I've learned that those things and having an event happened to you
Starting point is 01:15:22 and getting arrested or you know losing the job or you think that's the thing that gets you and drug overdose yep. Wow. Yeah, I mean, I was actually the first time that I ever heard Jonathan Mayer speak about that. But again, the space is like
Starting point is 01:15:40 is just, it's curated so well that they get very comfortable there. Right. So now do we? Well, you also don't know what people would be carrying because the reality is folks don't be caring. You know what I mean? All they care about is the T. You know, all they care about is the latest headline, but you don't know what's behind that.
Starting point is 01:15:56 Yeah, very much so. Especially because everything that he was dealing with publicly, I think at that time, he couldn't open up about what he was going through because people didn't want to hear it. Now, let's take a listen to Dr. Jay on his attempt, his suicide attempt and how he got through that. Every time something would happen,
Starting point is 01:16:12 I was always cut. And it was funny because I was not funny, but my sister, saying, I always wondered what was a marks on your arms when we would come see you in college because to understand self-harm is that I was allowing myself to cause physical pain to numb the pain that I was dealing with on the inside. And then my second suicide attempt was a drug overdose. That was several years later, which after surviving miraculously, which is how I got into going to therapy because I stood at the altar
Starting point is 01:16:45 a bunch of Sundays, Kurt. And I got prayer and sometimes deliverance works in an instant. But true healing takes place through the journey of understanding. Why was I cutting? What was the pain connected to? Understanding it.
Starting point is 01:17:03 Yeah, and the conversation that they had about just being, because, you know, Dr. Jay came up in the church. Cap on Stage was also there, came up in the church too. Oh, I love Cap on Stage. Yeah, so they were. having a very vulnerable conversation about that and just, you know, how you
Starting point is 01:17:15 question God sometimes. When people tell you you're not supposed to, there was also a moment too where Ray J and NL. L.E. Chapa kind of had like a back and forth because Ray J. felt like NL.E Chapa wasn't taking in everything that was being said there. Ray J. Yeah, Ray J was there as well too. Let's take a listen to Ray J. You manifested
Starting point is 01:17:31 where you are right here. So you understand that. The grace of God. Cool. That's what you feel. That's what I know. Got it. Do you feel like you're at that experience level to where you can tell these
Starting point is 01:17:46 and give these some advice do I feel like you can give Jonathan do I'm saying you feel like I'm at that level yeah no not not successful no that's a good question I'm talking about experience
Starting point is 01:18:00 yeah do you feel like that I can only give where man is willing to receive that doesn't make any sense but why that doesn't it doesn't make it down I don't feel like your experience Do you feel like your experience in the world that you can give Jonathan some advice? If he's willing to receive.
Starting point is 01:18:17 That's way, yeah. I just smoke a cigarette. So wait a minute. Okay, so Jonathan Majis. Yes. In L.E. Chappahper. Yes. J. Barnett.
Starting point is 01:18:26 Yes. Kirk Franklin. Yes. And Ray J. And Cap on stage. And Cabo on Stage. I'm sorry. Yes.
Starting point is 01:18:32 And Ray J. Yes. Then Ray J was there. And Kirk Franklin was trying to get Ray J to open up about, you know, because he also grew up in the church. And Reggie said he hates the church now. But Ray Jai was quiet for most at the time. Honestly, this was the most he spoke because, you know, I think.
Starting point is 01:18:47 Well, everyone at that table was qualified to speak because everybody's experiences are different. Yeah. And you can learn something from anyone if they're willing to share their experiences. The only expert at the table was Dr. J. Barnett. If you're talking about an expert in, you know, psychology or therapy, the only expert at the table is Dr. J. Barnett. Everybody else is just there to share their experiences. So why can't really each other have a shared experiences?
Starting point is 01:19:09 Well, when you watch the full interview, which I do have, everyone will go and watch it's on Kirk Franklin's YouTube channel. I think the issue came in because NLE CHAPA Chappel was sharing a lot and it was great to hear his aspect, especially because he was the youngest in the room, but there were certain points where you felt like he was responding just
Starting point is 01:19:25 to either defend a point or like it just, it didn't always seem like he was listening to take things in and at certain points. Yeah, listen, I watch it and I was like, I get what people be talking about now. Right, okay. I promise you. But you got to watch it, but you do encourage people to watch the whole thing. Yes, because
Starting point is 01:19:41 I also think NLEC choppa meant well by what he was saying And he comes from his own experiences He is a breadwinner and his family He's been through things So yeah, great conversation though So shout out to those men Got through the conversation Did Ray J. Share real quick? I know we gotta go
Starting point is 01:19:56 Did Ray J. share anything? A little bit. He said that he's happiest When everybody has hotel rooms And when he could get to his kids Meaning he likes to take care of people And that's when he's happiest. Okay, okay All right, Lord. Yep, that's it y'all
Starting point is 01:20:09 Nice, good. Happy birthday to John. Gina. Tina who? Martin, Gina Warder. Tisha Campbell? Tisha Campbell, yes.
Starting point is 01:20:16 You look like a little Roscoe this morning. You do. That's exactly how you dressed. While I'm my husband Rockers was like, damn, Raleigh. Right, right, from the boondogs.
Starting point is 01:20:26 I was like, okay, all right, all right. Just auditioning for a roll or something. I don't know what the hell going. A bad day is cold. And yeah, that's it. I get my head down the day as well. Don't worry about it.
Starting point is 01:20:35 I'll be back rocked up tomorrow. Don't worry about it. Listen, four after the hour, we got don't care today. and we need a man named Jace Christian Hansen to come to the front of the congregation because he's just nasty. We'll talk about it.
Starting point is 01:20:47 It's the breakfast club. The Donkey is the Donkey of the Devil. The Breakfast Club. Donkey of the Day for Monday, October 13th, goes to Jace Christian Hansen, okay? He got 11 years in prison, and I'm telling you he should have gotten more, but the judge gave him the maximum amount allowed
Starting point is 01:21:19 by law, okay? Let me tell you what this man was charged with. He had 33 of them things, okay, including food tampering, 22 counts of criminal threats, one count of criminal damage, and 10 counts of sexual exploitation of a child, okay? Two of those charges are the most
Starting point is 01:21:35 disgusting, despicable charges a person can have, and you know I mean that because I don't even like saying the word, despicable, because I spit all over my microphone. Okay, the word despicable makes all men who have a list sound like Daffy Duck. What are the two charges that are just disgusting and despicable? Well, let's go to News KCTV 5 for the report, please. Breaking news tonight.
Starting point is 01:21:54 The man who shot cell phone video of himself, contaminating food at the Hereford House, has been sentenced. Jace Hansen will spend the next 11 years in prison. It's after the FBI got a tip about Hansen, contaminating food at the Leewood restaurant last year. Police say more than 130 people reported they got sick. During the FBI's investigation, they found Hansen had disturbing child porn videos and images. He pleaded guilty to more than 30 charges against him, and the Herford House has since closed that location.
Starting point is 01:22:24 As it should, let me give you some details. First of all, first off, the 10 counts of sexual exploitation of a child, people who do things, you know, like that, the kids or have child pornography, whatever it is, they should be tortured. Okay. Medieval. Medieval. Medieval. Is it my dival? Medieval.
Starting point is 01:22:41 Medieval. Medieval. Medieval. Wutang torture tactics. Okay. Tie his anis closed and keep feeding them and feeding them and feeding them type tortured. Okay.
Starting point is 01:22:51 I read about this thing called the pair of anguish. Okay. And they would take this pear-shaped metal device and insert it into your mouth or rectum and they would expand it by turning a screw causing extreme internal tearing. I also read about this other medieval torture tactic where they would force the victim
Starting point is 01:23:07 to sit on a sharp pyramid-shaped cradle and their legs would be tied and weighted to intensify the pain of the spike slowly penetrating the body. That's what should happen to people who are sexually exploiting children. The other charge this man should be tortured for. And this other charge that is downright despicable
Starting point is 01:23:27 is the food tampering. Okay, how many times do I have to get on this radio and tell people that all we got is us? Okay, there is a shared trust amongst human, that for the most part, okay, we have to look out for each other. Okay, and minus a lot of the BS, we do a great job. And people who work at restaurants, people who handle our food, should be some of the most trusted among us.
Starting point is 01:23:50 Okay, let me explain this a little more for the people who are new here. Philly, you just joined us today. You're going to get on a bus today and trust that driver to get you to your location safely. You're going to get in the Uber and trust that driver to get you to your location safely. Same applies for pilots when you get on a plane. You dropping your kids off at school and daycare and you are trusting another human to do right, okay, to do right by your kids, okay? And you are in line right now at a fast food restaurant, maybe a crystal, an Orange Burger, Walterboro, South Carolina, maybe a Chick-fil-A in Philly, maybe the sole cuisine cafe in Baltimore, wherever you go to eat, you are trusting the people making and preparing your food, okay? And you are trusting those people to not be nasty.
Starting point is 01:24:35 you realize these people can poison us if they want to okay you about to drink some tea right now just that you got from a deli somebody could have put some fentanyl in there but they didn't you know why because they're a good human so when you got a guy like jace christian hanson violating the trust of people by urinating on food and then after urinating on the food rubbing that food on his genitals and then having the unmitigated gall to upload the videos online you got to make an example out of him to let others know they can't play with us like that they can't violate this circle of trust
Starting point is 01:25:09 we have established in humanity I'm not saying the circle of trust is perfect we know it's not but a lot of us are able to function throughout the day by simply not having to worry about somebody rubbing our food on their genitals see we might have to hit
Starting point is 01:25:25 Jace with some Medea torture tactics for real okay not medieval Medea like the head crusher where we have my dear crush a victim's skull slowly okay you put jace's head under a cap and then you have my dear sit on his face while you put a screw and whatever part of the head you can still see and you tighten that screw slowly until he dies hello or you let my dear do what we call hot grits torture where we pour hot grits on your genitals that's for sexual exploitation of the kids then we make him ingestine
Starting point is 01:26:03 large quantities of hot grits to the point of near drowning that will cause severe abdominal swelling, burnt tongue, and maybe maybe deaf please give Jace Christian Hanson the biggest he all
Starting point is 01:26:18 people be nasty no that is disgusting that is disgusting people don't realize the circle of trust that we have in our society we take things like that for granted you know what I'm saying and you'd be worried about the shooter. But what about that person sitting in that kitchen
Starting point is 01:26:36 cooking your food? You know what I'm saying? Are dipping his balls into your Starbucks. Exactly. Why you, what do you say? Like that, like you want to order that. If you dip your balls and scrawling out water, honey, that's on you. Some people are crazy like that.
Starting point is 01:26:50 They're going through pain, and they don't mind feeling a little bit of pain and administering some of them turning on to you. That's crazy. Yes, it is. Stay despicable? Stay despicable. Coming up. Because I know that mic stank over there.
Starting point is 01:27:04 You said that word eight times. Thank you, Charlemagne, for Donkie of the day. Despittable. That's not even what the word is. Discussing? No, that's what she was doing. Dispitting? Yes. Let me alone.
Starting point is 01:27:15 Today is Indigenous People's Day, y'all. Okay, so we have some indigenous hip-hop artists coming in, okay? Two Native American hip-hop artists, they go by the name of Natani Means and Antoine X, and they will be here to talk about all things Native American hip-hop, as well as the significance of Indigenous People's Day. Do they like to be called indigenous? I don't know why you call them people dingy just.
Starting point is 01:27:36 That's why people don't be liking you. That's exactly why, because you had no reason. You had no business saying that. No, do they like being called indigenous? Yes, they like being called indigenous. Okay, I don't know. It just, it's, oh my gosh, I don't know. It just don't sound like a term that people want to be called.
Starting point is 01:27:50 It's the Breakfast Club. The Breakfast Club. Yes, it's the World Most Dangerous Morning and Show the Breakfast Club. I go by the name of Shalaman, the God. And right now we are about to talk to, Antony Means and Antoine X. They are two Native American hip hop artists and activists and they are here because today is Indigenous People's Day and they are representing the folks that are recognizing today
Starting point is 01:28:12 as Indigenous People's Day. What's up? What's up, everybody? Good morning. Yeah, good to be here. How are y'all feeling, man, on this day? What does this day mean to y'all personally? Well, you know, it's a day of, it's funny because there's one side of it that's supposedly
Starting point is 01:28:29 Columbus Day, right? then there's the other half of it that's indigenous people's day which we've been fighting to have and then fighting to get rid of so right now with everything that's going on it feels good to be here and be recognized and to be on a platform like this is just like it means the world to us and to our people too a lot of our people don't get to get to be on platforms like this
Starting point is 01:28:52 we come from the reservations you know what I mean all I know is what I've been told And that's a half-truth is a whole lie. For almost a decade, the murder of an 18-year-old girl from a small town in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved. Until a local homemaker, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. I'm telling you, we know Quincy Kilder, we know. A story that law enforcement used to convict six people and that got the citizen investigator on national TV. Through sheer persistence and nerve, this Kentucky housewife helped give justice to Jessica Curran.
Starting point is 01:29:37 My name is Maggie Freeling. I'm a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, producer, and I wouldn't be here if the truth were that easy to find. I did not know her and I did not kill her, or rape or burn or any of that other stuff that y'all said. They literally made me say that I took a match and struck and threw it on her. They made me say that I poured gas on her. From Lava for Good, this is Graves County, a show about just how far our legal system will go in order to find someone to blame. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happens to good people in small towns.
Starting point is 01:30:19 Listen to Graves County in the Bone Valley feed on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season at free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight, I help a centenarian mend a broken heart. How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again?
Starting point is 01:30:55 And I help a man atone for an armed, robbery he committed at 14 years old. And so I pointed the gun at him and said, this isn't a joke. And he got down. And I remember feeling kind of a surge of like, okay, this is power. Plus, my old friend Gregor and his brother tried to solve my problems through hypnotism. We could give you a whole brand new thing where you're like super charming all the time. Being more able to look people in the eye. Not always hide behind a microphone. Listen to Heavyweight on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast.
Starting point is 01:31:38 I had the incredible opportunity to sit down with the one, the only, Cardi B. My marriage, I felt the love dying. I was crying every day. I felt in the deepest depression that I had ever had. How do you think you're misunderstood? I'm not this evil, mean person that people think that I am. I'm too compassionate. I have sympathy for that fuck my man.
Starting point is 01:32:04 You put so much heart and soul into your work? What's the hardest part for you to take that criticism? This shit was not given to me. I worked my ass off for me. Even when I was a stripper, I'm gonna be the best pole dancer in here. When was the moment you felt I did it? I still, to this day, don't feel comfortable. I fight every day.
Starting point is 01:32:23 to keep this level of success because people want to take it from you so bad. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I started trying to get pregnant about four years ago now. We're getting a little bit older and it just kind of felt like the window could be closing.
Starting point is 01:32:45 Bloomberg and IHeart Podcasts present IVF disrupted, the kind body story. A podcast about a company. that promised to revolutionize fertility care. Introducing Kind Body, a new generation of women's health and fertility care. Backed by millions in venture capital and private equity, it grew like a tech startup. While Kind Body did help women start families, it also left behind a stream of disillusioned and angry patients. You think you're finally like with the right people in the right hands, and then to find out again that you're just not.
Starting point is 01:33:21 Don't be fooled. fold by what all the bright and shiny listen to IVF disrupted the kind body story starting september 19 on the i heart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts so yeah it's a beautiful thing yeah i think uh a lot of times we come on the platforms and we're asked about the past about the traumas which are there um but today you know we want to celebrate you know we're here right now and we're thriving we're making it out of places that they didn't want us to make it out of and you know we're kicking it on the breakfast club
Starting point is 01:33:56 you know what I mean as artists this is you know this is historic I want to say that this is historic for native music so for native people just to be here and to be able to speak on what we are today who we are today and just you know represent you know it's a beautiful thing what is indigenous hip hop because the people
Starting point is 01:34:11 look ahead and be like indigenous hip hop is the Bronx it is it is absolutely so what I mean with native music it's just us being able to use hip hop, you know, respectfully to tell our stories, which is like, you know, there's people wonder, like, what is it like on the reservation? And it's like, yeah, there's overlapping struggles that are similar to like what it, because I live
Starting point is 01:34:37 in Omaha, Nebraska. And, you know, I know what the hood is like. And I know what the is like. And there's like so many differences that people don't even know of, you know, they're like, be shocked that there's third world countries an hour away from the city and all these luxuries. You know what I mean? That's what our people come from. And we get to talk about it. We get to talk about things, you know, being erased. You know, we're at least representation in media.
Starting point is 01:35:02 People think we're still living in TPs. It's to think that we have to wear certain things to be seen. And what we're trying to do right now through music is just, you know, like, this is our story and just hear our voices. We shouldn't have to, like, be cut, like, fit an image just to be seen. and in order for people to listen you know listen to us and hear our stories yeah like it's it's 2025 right now and and people are still like
Starting point is 01:35:28 stuck in the romanticized version of what natives are right like you have to be living in a tepee you got like or people let me know we exist and you say indigenous hip hop it's funny because on Saturday we just did uh indigenous hip hop festival in the Bronx in the south Bronx and on Friday
Starting point is 01:35:47 we met cool herk he came in Cindy Campbell came and did a talk at the Hosto Center and I got to perform with different indigenous people from all across the Western Hemisphere from the tips of Chile Peru all the way up to Canada and me representing here
Starting point is 01:36:03 so indigenous hip hop is more like you know we understand that where hip hop comes from is black culture it comes from here it comes from the roots of Africa which is tribal roots you know what I mean and the way we relate
Starting point is 01:36:20 to it is from a it's from an indigenous perspective like we relate to the sounds we relate to the storytelling and we're bringing we're not hijacking the culture is what is what i want to make clear it's we're just adding on to it to grow the culture and to be connected more because hip hop saved a lot of our lives rmb hip hop on the reservations because we heard it as a music of the struggle music that you could tell your story with and that's what we're doing you know we're relating it and now being able to do it with you guys with the black culture black community it's it means the world because we've connected in ways with american indian movement the black panthers the brown berets so doing this with music is just another form of connection what
Starting point is 01:37:07 stories are you telling in your music that like you think people haven't heard enough of like that you want people to like really get and understand oh man we want to tell them about who we are right now i thought so talk about that like what what what what what is the image that people should have of native people today um like people say oh native rapper you know oh you're a native rapper you're just a native rapper and i feel like for music just anything native it's never just one thing like to be a native person in general we always speak on it our elders speak on it our people is walk in two worlds and i think everyone can relate to that you know what i mean like we walk this world and we're we're deeply like tied to our culture you know what i mean like our ways
Starting point is 01:37:48 we go to ceremonies we do all of that you know like we sing our traditional songs that are they were they're trying to wipe those out you know they were they were murdering children for speaking the language and singing these songs these songs made it through and we currently sing those songs today in ceremony and so we have this world where we walk with our teachings our values you know compassion for each other for people for the land for everything and then there's this other world the mainstream world that's like a get the bag at all cause dog eat dog you know like boo-woo all that and we have to walk these worlds and i think to be a native artist for us personally is just to put our world at the forefront
Starting point is 01:38:29 and like you know kind of navigate this world rather than trying to emerge into this and just like slip in some of who we are it's being who we are and just representing that and the story would be um man there's so much it's but it is it all connects you know once you say When you listen to our elders talk, it's always like a kind of a joke where you go like, oh, what is this? What's this drink? And then the elder just start going off for like an hour and then come back at the end of the hour and be like, oh, it brings me back to that. You know what? That's kind of what it is as a native artist.
Starting point is 01:38:59 Because if you, you know, once we tell our story, you're hearing all these, you know, talking about the res, talking about just not being represented. I think the biggest thing is just to create our own, get inside the door, you know, and just be seen for who we are as a real representation, who are Native people. we're artists we can sing we can rap we have fashion there's so many clothing lines you know what I mean
Starting point is 01:39:23 there's brands there's businesses and right now it's booming within the native community we have our own little economy that we're trying to branch out into the mainstream you know world
Starting point is 01:39:32 and that's kind of where we're at we're just trying to like push these doors open and knock them down to be seen so people would just like see individual stories because I mean when people say natives you'd be like oh what about Native people
Starting point is 01:39:45 I can't tell you about all Native people really I could tell you the general like you know everything overlaps like our teachings you know same with the indigenous people across the world but all these you know like he's he's the neh yeah one thing is like I want to make clear is that we don't represent all nations right you know what I mean like right now there's 500
Starting point is 01:40:04 over 560 different nations in this country alone languages that ceremonies that's separate different traditions and we just represent our teachings and where we come from but at the same time we are out here trying to make people understand we're here
Starting point is 01:40:21 and then we live with y'all in the mainstream societies and we go through the same struggles right now we're going through the same things right now with what's happening in this country and what's happening to a lot of Americans is what happened to us on reservations rights being taken away
Starting point is 01:40:40 censorship your right to pray that all happened to us genocide that happened to us it happened to your ancestors that happened to a lot of people's ancestors happened to white people's ancestors
Starting point is 01:40:54 as well and at some point you know we got to learn from the past right to know our future and this is what it's about man like I said earlier connection it's about understanding each other
Starting point is 01:41:06 and being able to represent who we are in the contemporary culture right now is important you know even my own people last night a couple nights ago a post got shared about the indigenous hip hop festival and it's like oh we're appropriating
Starting point is 01:41:21 their culture now somebody from my community said that it's like no we're not appropriating you know hip hop culture we just live together you know why can't we just all just live together understand how offensive or
Starting point is 01:41:37 and I don't know if it's offensive how do you guys feel about the fact that like school still teach Columbus Day versus it's there's no real conversation around indigenous people day like that school's teaching everything so much i didn't learn about that so i got out of college you know they're not teaching you know they're not teaching nothing so even just what happened recently yesterday the guy in the white house signed a uh a proclamation or what is it what are they signing what's he signing those executive order executive orders to get rid of indigenous people's day on the calendar
Starting point is 01:42:06 as a federal holiday now it's always been Columbus day federally recognized as Columbus day And then in 2021, Biden made indigenous people today side by side with it, which is a step towards the right direction. But, you know, he undid that and he just totally just said, we're doing away with Indigenous People's Day. Yesterday, right? Yeah, yesterday. And that took years of people to make happen, you know what I mean, to get that recognition just on the calendar. Yeah. And what you're saying is true, man.
Starting point is 01:42:36 Like the history isn't taught because they want to forget the history. And it's happening right now, even with, with black history. they're getting rid of the history because they want to make they want to make it seem like genocide slavery didn't happen or they're okay with the genocide and slavery because it's happening right now all over the world
Starting point is 01:42:55 still we're just so desensitized to it so we definitely don't with like with how erased where we're coming and this is one reason we pushed pushed so hard to get into these platforms because people need to see us in the flesh 2025 2026 soon
Starting point is 01:43:12 and we're here. We're still here, man. Like, we're wearing long hair. My grandpa had his hair cut in boarding school. They had to forcefully cut their hair to disconnect them from our traditions and ways. Here we are. You know, and we're merging cultures together
Starting point is 01:43:27 to be able to speak our language and have a sense of pride in it for our young kids and our elders love it. You know? And it's wild with even the him signing the executive order to, you know, not acknowledge indigenous people there because the executive order of the Biden signed would to acknowledge both.
Starting point is 01:43:45 So it's not like you had to get rid of either or. You know what I'm saying? You didn't have to go out of your way to say there's no indigenous people that. I don't know, man. It's just everything's backwards now. You see what's happening, man. Everything's backwards.
Starting point is 01:43:59 We're used to it. Tell us with that piece. I mean, it's erasure, bro. That's what it's been. Oh, you said, ain't nothing new. I'm sorry. I thought you was that. I thought you were teaching him like something.
Starting point is 01:44:08 He didn't hear you. Oh, no. Yeah. that's on you know tell me about this song scout takers man oh scout takers um i released that a couple weeks ago and
Starting point is 01:44:20 do people do the natives still participate in scout taking she's about to with everything going she's about to revive that no no but uh
Starting point is 01:44:32 no but the history of scout taking it comes from the French actually the French did it first to Indians and then we took it and we kind of just did it back everything that happened to us we did it back um but we i mean we have stories we have societies we call them societies where they honor warriors
Starting point is 01:44:52 of the past who participated in that you know they honored the scalps that they took they carried them they wore them on their belt so that song is more or less just me like coming full circle back around and saying this is my mentality right now like fuck everything that's going on i'm scalp taking i'm gonna i'm gonna be i'm a warrior up you know and i want our people to be that and to feel that with the music so um yeah scalp takers it's out everywhere um dropping a video soon and then tone over here you know he just he just dropped a a song in video with shorty shorty and you know these these are making their rounds and and shout out to you guys man because it's my third time on here yeah my third time on here with y'all yeah third time
Starting point is 01:45:36 that's great queen yeah queen shout out queen man and um i just appreciate charlemagne i appreciate you for for always just being down man and having us on and creating the space it means a lot to not only us but our people and for our kids and our elders man and it's a beautiful thing to come together to be recognized here in the heart of in the heart of where hip hop started and looking forward to doing more and connecting more charlemagne for real absolutely uh we follow you anton x a n t o i n e x music on all platforms I want to share this is indigenous people's day That's right
Starting point is 01:46:12 Indigenous People's Day There's nothing else This is indigenous people's day If this is coming to the closing point I'll share prayer song with you guys To leave it with good energy I made it for my family To uplift
Starting point is 01:46:24 You know when you're sad and you play sad songs Yeah I remember this elder that I was listening to He said my song When I leave And it was his song for He was gonna move on And go home
Starting point is 01:46:35 And he said make it happy I want the people to be happy When they think of me So we went through hardships And I made the song for the family To uplift them So anyone listening Take this song
Starting point is 01:46:46 Think good things Think of your families And just send good energy Their way and love their way And then take it in for yourselves But yeah I'll stay that You know my pops told me
Starting point is 01:46:57 He said if we don't have the right words Then we have the right song Especially as Native people So right now The best prayer in the world Is through the song Let's do it let's go Yeah, way, I'm going to bea-oh-oh-he-ah-oh-he-ha-ho-he-ha-ho-he-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ho-he-h-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ho-way-way-o-a-ha-ha-ha-
Starting point is 01:47:37 Wee-oh-ha-ha-ho-he-a-oh. All right. Way o'er, way, oh, hey-oh-e-oh-e-oh-he-oh-he-oh-he-oh. Hey-e-e-e-ha-oh. Mm. Mm-hmm. All right. That was Antoine.
Starting point is 01:48:13 X and the tiny means. Thank you y'all for coming, man. Thank you guys for having us, man. Thank you, guys. The Breakfast Club. Lauren becoming a straight fact. Tell us, man. She gets into somebody that knows somebody. She gets the details. I'm a little bit about everything.
Starting point is 01:48:32 She'd be having the latest on this. The latest with Lauren LaRosa. Sometimes you have facts, sometimes you have details, sometimes you have a little bit everything. Well, it's the latest. On the breakfast club. I just want you all to know Delaware State Homecoming was this weekend
Starting point is 01:48:47 and Lauren LaRosa got a big ass bottle of Casamigos on her desk. I know. I mean a big bottle too. Big joint. That means that's how you know she didn't get drunk because she has a bottle still full. She's still hung over so she just bought that bottle and to keep the party going. Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 01:49:01 No, I actually didn't. It was a gift from a really close friend and I appreciate that friend for keeping me lifted and all those prayers and vibrations. Absolutely, Lauren. You got it. Yes. Now, to the latest. So I know we talked a bit about this. earlier and we had bea on the show today
Starting point is 01:49:15 but I did want to take some time to just shout her out she dropped her music video for a bad guy love it yeah fire music video as well y'all know bianca came out this Friday so she was here to talk to us about so I want to make sure we get rid of that time and and I did want to play this audio because I thought that this was pretty interesting so over the weekend there was a video
Starting point is 01:49:31 that surfaced of cardi B she was on Instagram live and Cardi talked about why she decided not to drop her video this week she says she doesn't want to bully Bia on her I haven't really said let's take a listen I know how stressful it is to put an album out and I know how f*** up you be in the mind when you put an album out and shit
Starting point is 01:49:50 so I feel like if I do a video to pretty and petty as fuck this week or like today because I'm because not yet today I feel like I'll be bullying and I don't want to feel like a bully because when I bully
Starting point is 01:50:05 then God takes from me if the bitch ain't messing with me she didn't sell me in her fucking dusty ass album I'm not going to do a video like reciting, like, you know, her disc track and shit like that on a day that I know she's stressed because then God will punish me. What makes the album Dusty, y'all? They go medieval right there.
Starting point is 01:50:27 That's medieval. That's mid-evil, yo. Because I really, I thought it was nice. I didn't think it was Dusty. Yeah. Yeah, I thought I really liked this album. It's different. It's dope.
Starting point is 01:50:37 And no, no song on there, sound like another one. Like, everything is different. I don't know what. armor, I would say it is. It's all over. At the end, but I think that's dope and she's very creative. And speaking of Dusty, I just want people to know that we did that interview with beer last week.
Starting point is 01:50:51 But sometimes the pictures and video go out a couple of days after, and people will be like, damn, she had on that fur, that whole week in New York City and even that cold. They started calling her musty and Dusty. Like, no. She recorded that last week. They was doing that with us because we had the same outfit on and multiple pictures. They're like, why they keep wearing them
Starting point is 01:51:07 outfits? I'm like, we recorded these. Pre-recorded. But somebody in here do would be musty, though. yeah you you'd be up here musty and them sweaters just stinking don't do that
Starting point is 01:51:16 feet all out but yes I thought that that was kind of nice-ish yeah for Cardi ish
Starting point is 01:51:23 definitely have you on an ish shout out Sabia though now in other news we talked about Mark Sanchez and everything that was happening
Starting point is 01:51:30 with him the former quarterback so over the weekend he was released from the hospital and actually booked into jail
Starting point is 01:51:38 there's a mugshot that is circulating but there's a local a Fox station, Fox 59, CBS 4. Is it a nice mugshot? He looks, I mean, he looks as good as you're going to look after being stabbed in the torso. Yeah, I want celebrities to start
Starting point is 01:51:50 thinking about that when y'all get locked up. Just know that your mugshot got to... Oh, my God. Be right. Okay, I'm going to play this audio of Mark Sanchez coming out out of the hospital and talking about, you know, where he is now with things, but I'm going to bring up a mugshot that I thought was nice over the weekend, too, because you said that. Let's take a listen to Mark. Mark, is there anything you want
Starting point is 01:52:07 to see the people of Indianapolis? Right now I'm just focused on my recovery. I just wanted to thank the first responders, Escanazi Hospital. I'm sorry, you're going to meet some. Marion County Sheriff and Indianapolis Police Department, Metro PD. But I'm focused on my recovery, and I just want to see my life. I want to see my son, my two-way-a-girls.
Starting point is 01:52:29 There'll be a day to answer all these questions, and unfortunately today is not that day. Anything you want to say to Mr. Toll? The real thing here is I just want to thank Dr. Mosler, The surgeon. I'm grateful for that. Sorry, I can't answer it. I feel, and you better?
Starting point is 01:52:44 Thank you guys. Recovering slowly, man. Why? He's whispering. People always want to get shy after they get stabbed. No, he probably still wounded out. And the people are coming for him because when they said anything you want to say Mr. Toll, who was the older man that was,
Starting point is 01:52:55 he got into an incident when he just skipped right on to the doctor. So we were like the least you could have did was said something to him. Oh, not really. He got stabbed. Yeah, exactly. Who are you talking about? I ain't got no kind words for this man that can stab me. I don't know the whole situation, but I know I got stabbed.
Starting point is 01:53:08 Right. And he saved him first. The old man saved him first, right? Yes. I remember. Mark, okay, he's not going to re- He's stepping. This is what happened.
Starting point is 01:53:19 This is according to what you said the other day. He pulled up. The guy stepped him first and then he took the night from the guy and then he stepped him back. It has not, yes, that part of it has not been confirmed. We're still trying to figure out
Starting point is 01:53:30 where the gashes came from on the older guy and how, but we do know that Mark approached the, Mark Sanchez allegedly approached the truck. The guy was trying to deliver the oil to the hotel. he beat him up pretty badly there's gashes there's a ton of things so both of them are hurt yes but they did that to each other so why
Starting point is 01:53:46 would they expect them to say anything nice about the guy that like kind of be his ass just let me keep them moving well okay so you guys mentioned I wanted to show you that's Eddie Derrisman Craig yeah Eddie from Family Matters Eddie was low yeah so he was arrested oh my God but isn't this a nice lunchtime about me
Starting point is 01:54:02 what role he about to go up for no he was so he was I think he just is looking like that now so I'm Pepper. He was arrested over the weekend near the U.S. Mexico border in California. He is currently sitting in a San Diego jail. He got picked up because he had a warrant
Starting point is 01:54:17 out of state that they picked him up on. And his rep came out and said that there's something tied to like a failed child support payment, but they picked him up, you know, over there. But I just when I saw the mugshot, I was like, oh my God, he is. It's Eddie. Yeah, but I just thought he looked. He's a good-looking man.
Starting point is 01:54:34 I thought he looked like in the munchshads. Normally people look so down in the He doesn't look defeated. His skin looks good. He's smiling. His eyes are smiling. He's got his teeth look white. Salt and pepper beer is speaking.
Starting point is 01:54:45 It's giving something. That's nice. Yeah. And in my final story, salt of salt and pepper. She's addressing rumors that I didn't even know we're out there that her ex-husband did not leave her for a man. Let's take a listen. Hey, y'all.
Starting point is 01:54:58 Just wanted to share a little something with you guys. There's some stuff on YouTube about my ex, basically saying that I, I have come out and said that he's bisexual or I caught him with a guy or something like that. Not true. Total lie. Whole face lie is no truth to it at all. My ex-husband, who I spoke to and let him know that I would be doing this video on his behalf is a straight man. And it's not fair that people can just say anything about anybody on the Internet.
Starting point is 01:55:36 I agree. And we have to be able to recognize clickbait and do real research. So nothing of the sort. And I just want to clear his name because that's not fair. And it's just about believing everything we hear. So I'm saying, my husband did not leave me for no sugar. Uh-uh. Don't do that.
Starting point is 01:55:57 Don't do that. But I understand what she's saying. People can't just get on the line saying anything. Like, and that breaks me to my point that I was making before we just went up live for your segment. People are trying to say that Ed Gine was gay And he was not gay You got to stop now You can't go from the chat to the radio
Starting point is 01:56:14 Tell him what you was talking about on the chat Because we were live on Twitch on Breakfast Club AM And I was watching Y'all I'm watching the monster series The Ed Gain story And people were trying to say that he gay Calling him Ed Gay Like no he's not gay
Starting point is 01:56:27 He was just obsessed with women To the point where he liked wearing their skin Being inside of them Like being inside their skin Like he was what He was digging up bodies, female women, and he was saving sex with him. Oh, it's, again, uh, gonophiliac.
Starting point is 01:56:43 But it was something else, too, though. He was schizepernic. She said he's schizepernic. I say it's schizepernic. You're the only one that struggles with asses. Schizepernic. I mean, not schizepernic, yo.
Starting point is 01:56:56 No, whatever, but he thought they had. You want to name to the next album so bad. No, shut up. He didn't know whether he was transsexual or what, so he did contact their transsexual. He was like, yo, I think I'm you. and the transsexual was like, no, you're not because what you're doing, what I do,
Starting point is 01:57:08 totally two different things. Not really sad. But yeah, but what makes you gay is you being attracted to the same sex. Really? He was still big smashing women, you know? So he wasn't gay. And his name is Ed Ginging, not egg gay.
Starting point is 01:57:21 So. I don't, Happy birthday to O'Shaunty. To do you? A shanty. Happy birthday at Shanty. It's not like you said, Happy birthday, Roxanne, Shanty.
Starting point is 01:57:32 No, happy birthday to Ashanti. And congratulations on everything. Okay. Justice is a frenic, y'all. Don't bear or no mind. Just bear with us, okay? We got the people's choice mix coming up next. Thank you, Lauren, for the latest for Lauren.
Starting point is 01:57:45 You're welcome. We have the people's choice mix coming up next. Envy hasn't been here all morning, so I just need y'all to do it dismisses pre-reported. I don't even know why he's going to be on here. He's going to be on there telling y'all to call in for requests and have Philly all confused. It's not happening. That's not what radio is about anymore, okay?
Starting point is 01:58:00 They don't take requests. We love you, Philly. It's the breakfast club. Yes. Yes, it's the world's most dangerous morning show, The Breakfast Club. Shalameen to God, Jess O'Larias, DJ Envy. Envy is not here, but he should be back tomorrow. He was out the country.
Starting point is 01:58:11 He was in China. For the NBA. Thank you to everybody who joined us at the Mental Wealth Expo this past weekend in Newark, New Jersey, man. It's Joelle and Diane Bloom Wellness and the Venture Center. It was a fantastic, fantastic event, man. And I just really appreciate that God has put me in a position to be able to make things like that happen, man. Salute to Eye Heart Radio, of course. Salute to the Mental Wealth in Line.
Starting point is 01:58:33 salute to Dr. Alfie Briland Noble, salute to, you know, everybody who comes and participates takes the time to come and participate in the Mental Welfth Expo every year. Sluo to my good sister, Debbie Brown. And yeah, we can't wait to do it again next year. But not just, you know, do it again.
Starting point is 01:58:47 I'm trying to just figure out a way to take the Mental Wealth Expo, you know, a few places throughout the year. You know, everything may not be as big as the one that we do, you know, here in, you know, New York or New Jersey, but just maybe just something that's just as intimate. You know, maybe something
Starting point is 01:59:03 a little more intimate, you know, I don't know. Yeah. We're trying to figure it out. Well, I think that's dope that you actually do that for the people. No, thank you very much. And shout out the upstate New York, y'all. Y'all, y'all act of the fool, but I love y'all. You all, that I only want to see once a year.
Starting point is 01:59:19 Y'all had studs fighting. My gosh, I never seen a stud so strong that peed on the floor. Like, she was strong. She moved, everybody around from her and was peeing, yo, and you know one thing about a female. We pee so hard sometimes. like you're frying chicken. Yeah, she had to really pay, and they was not moving fast enough for her, so she was like, look, I'm going to do it right here.
Starting point is 01:59:40 Why do people get so drunk? I've never been that type of drunk the one to, like, do stuff like that. I know, I understand, but they don't get to do anything. Ain't really nothing up there to do in Albany or Syracuse. They got the casino and they got comedy clubs, but that's it. And these people, I don't know. I don't want people to think that I attract that type of behavior or energy, but they were just really having fun.
Starting point is 01:59:59 It wasn't bad shows. Wasn't a bad vibe. It's just that people get impatient. You know, a lot of the comedy clubs these days are understaffed, so people will be waiting longer for their food and stuff, and people just get upset. But I can tell you, stressed out, though, because you pulled your hair up. Who?
Starting point is 02:00:13 No, I took my hair out. Don't play with me. Yo, shut up. Anyway, Charlotte, North Carolina. Hey! Halloween, October 31st, and November 1st, I will be there at the Comedy Zone. We got four shows, two on that Friday, two on that Saturday.
Starting point is 02:00:27 So if you have not yet, get your tickets at justlarious official.com. Also, it will be Halloween, so you can come dressed up. you want to. Salute to the fall, man. I love the 704. Love y'all. But that's it for us, man. And I want to give this positive note.
Starting point is 02:00:42 Alan Iverson was here last week, and Alan Iverson was just having a conversation about, you know, friends and, you know, the betrayal, you know, people experience from friends. The betrayal people can experience because of friends. And Deonti Wilde was at the Mental Welfth Expo this weekend, and he was sharing some of those same sentiments, man. So I just want to tell everybody out there,
Starting point is 02:01:00 the only people who get upset when you start setting back, boundaries, as in telling people know, are the ones who benefited from you not having them. Have a great day. It's the Breakfast Club. Breakfast Club, bitches! You don't finish or y'all's done? The murder of an 18-year-old girl in Graves County, Kentucky, went unsolved for years, until a local housewife, a journalist, and a handful of girls came forward with a story. America, y'all better work the hell up. Bad things happen. to good people in small towns.
Starting point is 02:01:41 Listen to Graves County on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to binge the entire season ad free, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and on the new season of heavyweight. And so I pointed the gun at him and said this isn't a joke. a man who robbed a bank when he was 14 years old, and a centenarian rediscovers a love lost 80 years ago.
Starting point is 02:02:12 How can a 101-year-old woman fall in love again? Listen to heavyweight on the I-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. I had the incredible opportunity to sit down with the one, the only, Cardi B. My marriage, I felt the love dying. I was crying every day.
Starting point is 02:02:38 I felt in the deepest depression that I had ever had. This shit was not given to me. I worked my ass off for me. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Introducing IVF disrupted, the kind body story. A podcast about a company that promised to revolution. It grew like a tech startup. While Kind Body did help women start families, it also left behind a stream of disillusioned and angry patients.
Starting point is 02:03:15 You think you're finally like in the right hands. You're just not. Listen to IVF Disrupted, the Kind Body Story, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast.

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