The Breakfast Club - Kelly Price says black women are the most nastiest & disrespectful people
Episode Date: September 3, 2025Loren is back with a bonus today breaking down Kelly Price’s instagram live where she uses some particularly unsavory terms to describe her treatment by black women in the comments section. How ...do y’all feel about this? Let us know in the tweets!YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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It's Lauren LaRosa, and this is the latest with Lauren LaRosa.
This is your daily dig on all things, pop culture.
entertainment news and all of the conversations that shake the room baby now y'all know my favorite
episodes are the ones where we have a little bit of mixture of all the things it's pop culture it's
entertainment and i know this conversation is going to shake a room or two or three so getting right
on into the latest miss kelly price uh rn b singer armbi legend icon kelly price took to her
Instagram live to give us 45 minutes of things and it was not vocals, okay? Her mic was on,
but this time she has some words for the people. Let's take a listen. She says black women are
some of the most nasty, disrespectful people because they've trolled her appearance. Let's take a
listen. I'm letting you have it right now because there ain't nothing you can do about that.
And while you looking for a new job, I'm still going to be selling out theaters and venues
looking like a fat slob in clothes that you said that I look nasty in
and my feet are so damn big and who dressed me
I'm still going to be making my money I don't even do this
but I'm so sick of black people and they're bulls
I'm saying what I want to say if you got a problem what I'm saying
and you know Lord pray for me because I'm not there yet
black women you are some of the most nasty disrespectful people
on God's planet Earth, the things that you say about other black women,
but you're an activist and you are educated and you are this and you are that and you are the other.
All righty.
So the mic was on.
Kelly Price said what she said.
I told you guys this was about a 45 minute long IG live.
She did it late, you know, overnight in L.A.
Literally we woke up to these words.
And obviously it was something that was on her spirit, on her heart.
She performed Friday in Memphis at the Orphium, I believe I'm saying I'm right, the Orphium
theater.
And there is photos and videos of her posted on stage.
I went because I was trying to figure out what prompted this because, you know,
I went through some of her other pictures.
And, you know, it might have been, this might have been a long time coming.
Like I know Kelly Price has had conversations about, you know, how the industry dealt with her
when it came to her weight and her having to figure that out.
navigate that space. So I know that this is not a new area for her to hear people be critical
of things about her and relation to her and all of those things. But I did want to try and
understand a bit more of like what caused her to get on live because as she says, she doesn't
normally do this. I've never seen Kelly Price go live to read a bitch, okay? I've never seen
it. Now, do I agree with her? I hate to have to say it, but I do. I do agree with her. I do
believe that, and it's not all black women, it's not everybody, it's not all black men either,
but I do think that we unknowingly are some of the toughest people on each other, yo,
especially in public forums. Like, especially when it comes to, you know, people sitting on
platforms and everybody got mics now. And even if you don't have a microphone or a camera in
front of you, just, you know, being on your keyboard and, you know, it's on your phone and you
on Twitter and you're in the comments and it's all about whose comment can get the most likes
in the shade room comments no shade to the shade room love my people over there but y'all know what i'm
getting at i completely understand i completely feel her i think one of the things that i'm starting
to see from this um and when i said that i i saw her performance friday uh at that theater in
memphis i realized on that video that the comments on that video were turned off i did not see
the comments on that video before they were turned off so i don't know specifically if that
was it, but the other post, she collabed that post on her page. But the other post on her page,
the comments are not turned off. So I'm assuming that the person who posted that, which was
the person who had posted about, you know, seeing her and being excited to see her in Memphis,
turned the comments off and then she saw the comments and went live. That's how I'm assuming
this tracks, but I don't know that to be confirmed. Regardless of what went down, what comment
it was, whatever she saw, it pissed her off. And she wanted to address the girls. And that is exactly
what she did, okay, read them to a T. Here's my thing, though, and y'all let me know how
y'all feel about this. Again, get in the streets, get in the tweets. Y'all want to comment?
Let's have this conversation. Let's start with black women. So, in my own, and I'm going to only
speak here from my personal experience. I cannot speak for Kelly Price. In my personal experience,
I think, not even I think, from what I have felt just in the little bit of time that you guys have
gotten to know me on this platform. People are so critical of your looks. Everything.
Yo, I get comments about the way I pronounce words, the way I say words. I get comments about,
so it's like I get comments when I am, when I'm overpronunciating or I'm talking proper.
People are like, why is she talking like that? Or I've always gotten like the, you know,
she's talking white. Who does she think she is? Like that whole thing, right? But then when I'm not
talking that because I go in and out it depends like I don't know I go in and out of you know
being able to you know my dialect changes depending on what I'm talking about sometimes or you know
just what the surrounding is like if I'm talking about court if I'm talking about whatever but
I remember I walked out of the shade room the shade room I walked out of court during the ditty trial
and I used the words did big I think I said the prosecutors did their big one and y'all was all
over me and I don't even just mean in the shade room comments I mean it went from the
Shave Room comments to my Instagram.
I've seen threads about myself on Twitter, on threads.
There's always, yo, when I went to freaking Dominican Republic and I put on a bathing suit,
y'all would have thought that I committed murder.
I was everything.
I was uneducated.
I was the reason why black young women don't have careers and futures.
I was nothing to be looked up to.
It was crazy.
Like, it was honestly insane.
And I'm learning to, like, I've never been a person that let social media, like, ruin my whole life, ruin my whole day.
But you do see the comments.
I've had to learn to stay out of the comments because I'd be wanting to get right back at y'all.
Like, that's how I feel.
So I understand Kelly Price.
And again, the issue that she's experiencing, I'm not, you know, making this about me whatsoever.
But I think when I hear her talk and then I see people in the comments saying, why are you saying this?
Why would you get on a platform and speak against black women?
That's my issue, majority of the time, with us as black women.
If this is what she's experiencing, why does she got to talk about it in the shadows?
I think if we talked about it more openly and we shamed people or people had to deal with consequences when they did it, there wouldn't be as much of it.
I don't think that we understand the power of like group eponymous, group, group epith.
Look, y'all going to drag me for getting that word wrong.
Group economics and group think.
I really don't think that we understand that, especially because, like, when you're talking about a person like a Kelly Price, or even what we saw with Essence Festival, I was mad as hell at us about that.
And majority of the receipts and the videos and all the things I saw, it was black woman led.
And again, I'm going to talk about black women and black men, but I'm talking to black women first because as a black woman, I've experienced this myself.
So I can speak to it.
But when you talk about a Kelly Price, so you talk about the way that this woman looks, right?
So you talk about her weight, you're talking about how she's dressed.
You talk about all these things.
These are conversations that if put in the right echo chamber can echo to a point where they might affect money, brand business, whatever.
Not saying that that is why she got on live and decide to, you know, say all the things she said.
But I think about that and I think about Essence Festival.
when I think about the things that we choose to focus our time on and join in as a group
to, you know, shame. And I get it. Everybody has a little key key every now and then,
but it gets to a point where it's like, this is not even a joke. It's not even funny.
Are you okay? Like, are you okay? Because at the end of the day, that is a woman who,
you don't know what she's going through every single day. She is getting up. She is getting on a
stage. She is getting in front of people and she is doing her job every single day to be
able to pay her bills. Why be the person or why I want to be the people in a group, whether
it's in comments or whatever, that want to break her spirit enough to the point where she can't
do that? We've heard so many conversations about singers, you know, and them having to deal with
physical appearance and showing up and just all of these things. I don't understand why.
Like, I don't understand why people are so comfortable with doing and saying certain things.
And when it comes to black women, I think a lot of times, you know, from what I've experienced,
we think we're helping each other by doing this.
It's like, I remember we were having a conversation on a breakfast club.
It was me, Charlemagne, Envy, and a Carrie champion.
And we'll insert a bit of a conversation here.
I always felt like in the media space, though, like in what we do, I always felt like
when it came to black women, it's never a real genuine mentorship.
It's always like, I've never met a woman.
I don't have any mentors that are on camera
and do what I do because everybody feel like
I'm coming for what they got going on all the time.
I can't support that.
But I'm just, and if I do have a conversation, though.
Yeah, I can't support that.
I can't support that.
I can't support that.
I used to feel that way, but I used to feel that way.
But the reality is, is that when you let these people know
where you come from and what you want, like a narrow,
yes, people will hate on you.
That's just the nature of this business.
But you have to find a community of women who have your back.
And I'm sure there are some.
You saying that right now, there's somebody who's listening to you right now
who's going to be like, I'm going to take care of her.
Now, my point in bringing this piece up was as a younger black woman trying to figure out
and navigate the world every day.
And I don't mean, like, because I got, I have family.
Like, I'm, y'all hear me talking about my family all the time.
I'm really close to my family.
So I have family.
So I have black women that I can go to and that can nurture and I can have conversations.
But even there sometimes, like, and then you go out and.
to the world and it's the same thing. We are taught sometimes that being tough, being hard,
being negative, you know, pointing out the worst first is helping to build someone to be strong.
And it's like, no. And I think because we're taught that, and that's how we're raised in our
households, it's a generational thing that we then pass on to our daughters and, you know,
things of that nature. But then we take that out into the world. And I say we because I know I've been
guilty of it. Like, listen, I've been on the receiving side of it.
it so I understand where Kelly Price is coming from, but I've also been the person that's been
throwing it out there as well too. And a lot of times I'd be having to correct myself like,
bro, you don't know what you're contributing to right now by doing this, by saying this.
A little jokey joke, a little he he. Y'all know we're good for a little Kiki, okay?
One thing black people are going to be good for, you don't want to sit down at the space table
with us if you ain't, if you ain't tough enough and we're going to have a little Kiki.
But it does get to a point sometimes where I'm even having to check myself like, yo, bro,
my grandma used to say, is that your mind or your manners?
And I literally have to think about that to myself sometimes.
Like, okay, you're going too far.
Why?
Like, what in you makes you want to have a person feel that way?
And I don't know what it is about us, man.
Like, but we enjoy.
I don't even know if we enjoy it.
Maybe it's a subconscious thing.
I don't even want to solve it.
I don't even want to answer that question.
I want to ask you guys, black women, what is it that
causes you to be comfortable with getting online, getting on these platforms, and dragging
other black women. Because one of the things that I have, from the conversation I just showed
you guys at the breakfast club, you know, I've learned two things. I learned out of that
conversation and the conversations that came after because I had a lot of black women reach out
to me. And I had two things happen. I had a lot of black women telling me, you should not be
having those conversations publicly. And then I had a lot of black women come to me and being like,
I'm glad you said, especially women my age and younger, I'm glad you said something because
why do we got to be haste and put through hell to feel love from another black woman?
Like, why does that always have to be the thing? Like, why does it have to be like the,
you're fighting, it's almost like you blood and blood out into the mean girl club? Like, why does
that always have to be a thing? And then, you know, for the women who are reaching out to me saying
you shouldn't have had that conversation publicly, and that's what I'm seeing in a lot of
Kelly Price's comments, black women saying, yo, this ain't all black women.
Why would you even bring this online and make this a narrative?
It's not all black women.
Nothing is ever all, but if it's happening and it's happening in a way that it feels like
it's big to her, she decides to talk about it, let's talk about it.
Because it is a thing.
It does happen, and we always have to act like it doesn't.
I'm tired of acting like it doesn't.
I'm tired of having to act like, you know, everybody's just so loving and sister, I see you
and black girl magic, brown girl grinding.
No, yo, the point in me having brown girl grinding was I wanted people to realize, like,
we don't even have to all like each other, but we're going to be nice to each other,
especially publicly, because we should be able to be at a point where we are educated.
We are moving culture forward.
We are the tastemakers.
We all know that.
The black girls is where it's at.
Like, we all know this, right?
But we can't go somewhere and yell it from the mountaintops.
And then inside the house, where it's supposed to matter, right?
Like, when we're wrapping and saying it for each other, we throwing rocks at a glass house.
Like, it can't be like that.
I've had to come to realize that and, you know, my, you know, as I'm getting older.
And I try and put that out into the world because that's what I want to come my way.
But I'm going to tell y'all something, y'all rough as hell.
y'all be rough as hell so for everybody that is commenting you know and and you know because now
outlets are picking us up and are throwing conversation Kelly Price's way about what she should not
have done I think let's listen to what she's saying and get to the root of the conversation are
we mean to each other or what and why and if the answer to that is because of some things that
we're dealing with ourselves because I had to take a look at myself a long time ago and be like bro
what are you going through
that you have to project this to people around you?
Or like, what have you been taught
that you need to unlearn
that you got to project this to people around you?
Now every now and then,
and I'm not seeing,
because sometimes, you know,
people do need a little bit of stop playing with me sometimes.
So listen, we ain't going to love everybody.
You're not going to love everybody.
But y'all get the gist of what I'm saying
because when I had that conversation,
it was so many people calling me being,
And to be honest with you, I had conversations with people in my own life after that conversation I had that were like, yo, this is how you feel?
Was I our part of that?
Yeah, you were.
And I couldn't say anything because we're also taught that, especially if someone's older than you, you sit down, you shut up, and you take that order.
But all of that cycles down into generations and generations and generations.
No.
And I'm not saying go cuss your elders out.
I am not saying that, okay?
Because listen, baby, I ain't got nothing for you of Granny
go tell you get the switch.
But what I'm telling you is that we should take more like note of what we put out.
And because you never know how that's affecting someone.
Obviously this affected her.
So how dare somebody come on her platform and say,
why would you talk about this?
Because now this has become the narrative.
What about why are we doing this to each other in the first place?
I love being a black woman.
I love seeing other black women thrive.
You know, I think one of the things I've had to learn because I've always worked.
Like, I come from a real family.
And then you go out into the work that has raised me to be, ain't nobody going to break me down.
It's me versus the world.
If it is that, so be it.
I'm going to head up, chin high, makeup done, lip gloss on, pumps on.
That's what we're given every single day.
you will never know what I'm going through over here unless I decide to tell you.
But you go out into the world and the world begins to like break you down, like as a black,
especially if you're working in a world.
Like this is my first time in my life where I'm able to focus on black people and black things.
Before that, I've always been like the only or the minority.
Like, you know, outside of being at Dell State University.
So shout out to my HBCU.
And that's why I think I enjoyed that experience so much because work.
work-wise and like professionally, I've always been in spaces where I'm the only black girl
or I'm one of like few black people.
So I've always had to learn to kind of like tuck my tail a little bit and just be happy
to be somewhere when that is not how I was raised whatsoever at all.
So when I finally got to a space where I'm like, okay, I don't got to do that.
I can be happy.
I can be happy to see, you know, somebody like me doing well and sitting across from someone
like me or whatever and then you start feeling and seeing all of the like conniving and you know like just
all of the the the stuff Kelly Price is talking about the disgust is so sad sometimes and again this is
not all black people or black women but baby when you feel it it hits and I think because we're black
women we know a bit like you you know how to hit that like that soft spot you know exactly what you
you know how to read a bitch. You know exactly what to say to get someone to a point where it's like
they're going to react. I've had to tell myself multiple times in public spaces, we can't do that
to each other. Like, if we want to have a conversation about what we don't agree on, what we don't
like, you may not love me or you may not even like me or like what I'm wearing, what I got going
on. Boom, we can do that. And jokes is cool. The jokes can fly. But it gets to a point where
it goes beyond a respectful conversation.
It goes beyond a little jokey joke.
And now it's a personal attack.
And it's like, why are you attacking what you see when you look in the mirror?
And when it comes to black men, you know, again, I think the only thing wrong here with
Kelly Price's words to me was it was so generalized that you're going to hit people
who don't deserve it when you get on a platform and make things so general.
but I will say
in my life
and recently I've experienced black men
who like can't wait to be like
you stop playing with her
period
but you do have
you know the other
the opposite and all the things
and
Kelly Price said what she said
what she said again
about the black man
we don't even got to get there
we don't even got to get there
we don't
Because to me, I mean, I don't even think that I know too many men who play in this field of commenting on women and, you know, all the things too much.
I think the last time in a public forum, yeah, the last time in a public forum, you know, there was any serious thing where there was conversation about me and it was involved in another black men, people were quick to jump to, no, we're not going to do that.
And it wasn't because it was me.
it was more so this is a black woman and you're a black man that's supposed to be a protective
space for her and we ain't even joking or kicking right now because i know y'all be pissed at charlamine
too we ain't talking about him though we're talking about a whole other situation if y'all remember
some things y'all know what i'm talking about why i ain't even gonna yeah we ain't we ain't given the
grace of all that over here of calling the names or whatever but when i saw that you know
happened i was like number one i had to take accountability in a moment and say i need to be more
responsible about what I even lend my time, attention, thought, and word to because I don't even
want to put black men that I love in a space where they feel like they have to jump to protect
or jump in a line of fire. But again, a lot of this stuff comes and, you know, the black men that I
love that was ready to, you know what I mean? Nah, we're not doing that one with this one over here.
That's something that they normally do. They're, you know what I mean? They have black women around
them that they're building up and they're loving on every single day.
So even with black men, again, I think, and I'm not, you know, I'm not a black man, so I can't
speak for y'all. I can only speak in my experiences with black men.
I think it's just a thing of like how you were raised and who you were raised around because
again, it's that when you look in a mirror, when you're looking at me, you should see your
mom, your sister, your grandma, your auntie, your cousin.
Somebody, like, that's how, that's a stranger on the street.
If it's a black man, if I see someone in harm's way or whatever, I'm not superman,
But that's literally what I see.
I instantly go into, damn, that could be my brother.
Man, that could have been my dad.
Man, that could have been my uncle, my cousin, like, instantly.
And that's all we want for y'all to do as well.
And that's all she's saying.
I just think, anyway, in certain conversations when it come to women and their appearances,
men should not join in on.
Like a little, you have a little kiki, boom, have your kiki and move on.
But don't kiki too much because now I'm trying to figure out do me and you pee the same.
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podcast season two takes a deep look into one tribe foundation a non-profit fighting suicide in the
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There's a lot of love that flows through this place and it's sincere.
Now it's a personal mission. Don't have to go to any more funerals, you know.
I got blown up on a React mission. I ended up having amputation below the knee of my right leg and a traumatic brain injury because I landed on my head.
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What would you do if one bad decision forced you to choose between a maximum security prison or the most brutal boot camp designed to be hell on earth?
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Okay, y'all, so this has been a very interesting topic today.
And I know I'm probably going to get some heat for some of the things I said,
but listen, I'm inviting all of the heat that smoke
because I think conversations like this, they're good.
Like, it's a good, healthy conversation to have.
But anytime you point the finger, someone's going to be upset.
And there's always fingers being pointed back at you.
So I already know how this is about to go.
But I want to hear from you guys.
So make sure you get in the comments, get to the streets and the tweets.
We're outside, we outside, we outside in the tweets.
Every other page are going.
Y'all know we outside, we outside.
Let me know how you guys are feeling about this.
Is Kelly Price wrong for getting on her platform and having this conversation?
have you experienced anything like this whatsoever?
Were you the person, you know, drag in other, you know, black women or men dragging black
women or, you know, this could even go for men on men as well.
Men and how you deal with other black men as well, too.
I want to hear from you guys.
I'm Lauren LaRosa everywhere, L-O-R-E-N, L-O-R-S-A, please.
Let me know.
Join in on this conversation.
This is the one time I'm telling you all in my comments, okay?
At me.
I talk back.
And at the end of the day, there's always a lot to talk about.
And you guys can be anywhere with anybody talking about it.
But every single episode, you guys choose to be right here with me, my lowriders.
I appreciate you guys for that.
I will see you in my next episode.
I just normally do straight stand-up, but this is a bit different.
What do you get when a true crime producer walks into a comedy club?
Answer, a new podcast called Wisecrack.
where a comedian finds himself at the center of a chilling true crime story.
Does anyone know what show they've come to see?
It's a story.
It's about the scariest night of my life.
This is Wisecrack, available now.
Listen to Wisecrack on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Super Secret Festi Club Podcast Season 4 is here.
And we're locked in.
That means more juicy chisement.
Terrible love advice.
Evil spells to cast on your show.
X. No, no, no, no. We're not doing that this season. Oh. Well, this season, we're leveling up.
Each episode will feature a special bestie, and you're not going to want to miss it. My name is Curly.
And I'm Maya. Get in here.
Listen to the super secret bestie club on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, it's Honey German, and I'm back with season two of my podcast. Grasias. Come again.
We got you when it comes to the latest in music and entertainment with interviews with some of your favorite Latin artists and
celebrities. You didn't have to audition? No, I didn't audition. I haven't auditioned in like over 25
years. Oh, wow. That's a real G-talk right there. Oh, yeah. We'll talk about all that's viral and
trending with a little bit of chisement and a whole lot of laughs. And of course, the great
bevras you've come to expect. Listen to the new season of Dresses Come Again on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. Do we really need another podcast with a condescending
finance bro, trying to tell us how to spend our own money. No thank you. Instead, check out Brown
Ambition. Each week, I, your host, Mandy Money, gives you real talk, real advice with a heavy
dose of I feel uses, like on Fridays when I take your questions for the BAQA. Whether you're
trying to invest for your future, navigate a toxic workplace, I got you. Listen to Brown Ambition
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. This is an IHeart
podcast.
Thank you.
