The Breakfast Club - Mind the Business that Pays You
Episode Date: September 8, 2020Today on the show The Breakfast Club discussed Dr Dre's estranged wife 2 million monthly support, which seemed excessive to the personalities so we opened up the phone lines to see what our listeners ...thought about her list. Also, we opened up the phone lines to see if our listeners may have changed their minds about either taking their kids back to school or remaining virtual schooling since schools are starting back up again. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to a woman pretending to be a black and latino woman for several years. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Had enough of this country?
Ever dreamt about starting your own?
I planted the flag. This is mine. I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of concrete.
Or maybe not.
No country willingly gives up their territory.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
We need help!
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Hey guys, I'm Kate Max. You might know me from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show, where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going. That's what my podcast
Post Run High is all about. It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into
their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, y'all. Niminy here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for kids and families called
Historical Records. Executive produced by Questlove, The Story Pirates, and John Glickman,
Historical Records brings history to life through hip-hop. Flash, slam, another one gone.
Bash, bam, another one gone.
The crack of the bat and another one gone.
The tip of the cap, there's another one gone.
Each episode is about
a different inspiring figure from history.
Like this one about Claudette Colvin,
a 15-year-old girl in Alabama
who refused to give up her seat
on the city bus nine whole
months before Rosa Parks did
the same thing. Check it. Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical
Records because in order to make history, you have to make some noise. Listen to Historical Records because in order to make history you have to make some noise.
Listen to Historical
Records on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
It's dangerous. It's dangerous.
Everybody come to the breakfast club. I call this the
hot seat.
Y'all are wild. Y'all are wild.
Can I live? You are out of control.
I can't even deal with you.
Y'all are so petty.
Why are y'all so petty?
The world's most dangerous morning show.
DJ Envy.
Captain of this bitch.
Angela Yee.
I stay in everybody's business, but in a good way.
Charlamagne Tha God.
The ruler of rubbing you the wrong way.
The Breakfast Club.
Made for everybody. Good morning, yo, yo.
In particular, I mean Toronto.
All right, so we are back.
It's a Tuesday that feels like a Monday.
Good morning, Charlamagne.
Good morning, Angela Yee.
Peace to the planet.
It's Tuesday!
And drama ain't hit the six yet.
What's wrong with you, girl?
Jesus Christ, you shouted out Canada twice.
Toronto in particular. My God. All right, DJ you, bro? Jesus Christ, you shouted out Canada twice. Toronto in particular.
My God.
All right,
DJ Emi,
we can see him on Revolt,
but we can't hear him.
All we hear is Spanish music for some reason,
so maybe he's trying
to make the switch
after a week off.
Maybe he's finally
gotten in touch
with his roots,
who he really is,
so maybe he's trying
to make the switch
to Spanish.
I don't know,
because all I hear
is Spanish music
for some reason.
We can't see you on
Revolt. Oh, that's because
my phone's been dead for a week.
So it's charging up right now.
We've been off for the whole week. We've been off for
nine days. Yeah, and guess what?
My iPad was dead and I charged it yesterday
knowing that we had to work this morning.
I forgot all about it. It's amazing how you can have a
whole week off, technically nine days
because of the weekend, and still wake up on the day it's time to go back and be tired and not prepared.
And that is who I am.
Now, I'm going to make a request for a vote.
They gave us these little stands to put the iPads on, but the stand is awful.
And I'm always, like, trying to fiddle with it.
It keeps on falling over because it's not sturdy enough to hold this iPad.
Oh, I thought it was just me.
They sent me, like, two or three tripod stands since we've been doing this. I thought it was just me. They sent me like two, they've sent me two or three
tripod stands
since we've been doing this.
I thought it was just me.
I'm over it.
I can't do Zoom no more.
I'm sick of it.
I'm sick of Zoom.
I'm sick of this.
I want to be in the studio.
I can't take it anymore.
Everybody else
seem like they're back to work
in their studios
and, you know,
living their life like it's golden.
I want to live my life
like it's golden too.
Damn it.
Really?
I didn't think most people were back in the studio.
It seems like it when I'm watching TV.
All right.
Well, we got a lot going on today.
It was Labor Day weekend.
Shout out to everybody.
You know, in Brooklyn, the West Indian Day Parade is usually a huge deal Labor Day weekend.
Obviously, that did not happen this year.
Juvé is the night before.
That's when you party all night into the West
Indian Day Parade. That didn't happen, but I did participate in a peace march instead on Sunday.
So I just want to shout out to the Bishop, Bishop Whitehead, to our Brooklyn Borough President,
Eric Adams. Fabio Foran was there as well. And he's got some initiatives that he's working on
too. So shout out to everybody who came out. Why Brooklyn back shooting like it's the 90s?
Yeah, that's one of the reasons why they had that march.
It's been really violent, not just in Brooklyn,
but Brooklyn's been bad, but all of New York City.
I don't know why there's been so many shootings,
so many killings.
It's been awful.
It's been really, really bad.
Just happening in the gentrified parts of Brooklyn?
The parts that aren know, that aren't
I can't
say that. Although I will say somebody just got
shot and killed in Bay Ridge and that's
and that's unusual. I think that was their
first and that's in Brooklyn.
I think that was their first one
so far during this pandemic.
I think I saw
a six-year-old get shot yesterday coming out
of a cab in Brooklyn with his mom or dad or something.
Man.
Yeah, I don't know.
All right, so I know everybody's stressed out, but remember that these are people who have families.
When you shoot somebody, it affects more than just that person that you have an issue with.
And sometimes you start shooting and you start shooting at people that don't, you know, just minding their business.
And just remember, these are real people with lives, with families that get affected by something
like that. You wouldn't want it to happen to you. I always say it takes a bigger man or a bigger
woman to be able to resolve whatever issues by saying, let's just discuss this. So yeah, yeah.
Let's keep that in mind, but let's get into front page news. Yeah. Sorry to start the show off so
dark, but life is what it is. Okay. Now what do you got in front page news. Yeah, sorry to start the show off so dark, but life is what it is, okay?
Now, what do you got in front page news, you?
Let's see, where are we going to start?
Where are we going to start?
Do you want to talk about the president?
Give us more darkness.
I was going to say more darkness.
It is pretty bad.
All right, I guess we'll do it.
We'll talk about it.
All right, all that and more.
It's The Breakfast Club.
We're back, baby.
Morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy, We're back, baby. Morning, everybody. It's
DJ Envy, Angela Yee,
Charlamagne Tha Guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, guys. Can you hear me now?
Yes, we can. Now we can hear you.
Speak the Spanish you were speaking before the
mic turned on. Si. That's all I got.
That is all I got.
Oh, say can you. No. Let's get into
front page news. I ain't messing with you.
Where we starting, Yee? Well, let's get into some front page news. I ain't messing with you. Where we starting, ye?
Well, let's start with Donald Trump and his news conference.
Now, one thing that he talked about is he feels like the vaccine will come on a very special date.
Biden and his very liberal running mate, not a competent person in my opinion,
would destroy this country and would destroy this economy.
Should immediately apologize for the reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric,
talking about endangering lives and it undermines science.
It's a political rhetoric, that's all it is, just for politics,
because now they see we've done an incredible job.
This could have taken two or three years,
and instead it's going to be done in a very short period of time.
Could even have it during the month of October.
Oh, God.
Let the record show,
Lenard McKelvey, a.k.a. Charlemagne Tha God,
said they would give a vaccine to you on November 2nd
and you won't be able to wake up on November 3rd.
These people are so obvious with what they are trying to do.
It's disgusting.
They don't care about getting the vaccine
and getting people actual help.
They just want to win an election.
Now, another thing Donald Trump wants people to do
when they're at these news briefings is to take off their masks.
The issue of what happened when you were in France...
You're going to have to take that off, guys.
How many feet are you away?
I'll speak a lot louder.
Well, if you don't take it off, you're very muffled.
So if you would take it off, it would be a lot easier.
I'll just speak a lot louder. Is better it's better yeah i would have to see how many people are around that person that
was talking though because even though trump may have been a certain feet away we don't know who's
around him in his area and he's pretty old he probably really couldn't hear he probably really
couldn't hear what the guy was saying he probably got a reason the guy was like look i just talk
louder makes sense i do hate when people try to talk to me with a mask on though it is like you in here with the guy was saying he probably got a reason. I just talk louder. Makes sense.
I do hate when people try to talk to me with a mask on though.
It is like, you know, I get it, but you know.
Now Donald Trump is telling agencies to
end trainings on white privilege
and critical race theory. The Trump
administration is instructing to
end those racial sensitivity trainings
that address topics like white privilege.
He says they are divisive and anti-American propaganda.
They sent a letter to federal agencies on Friday.
And according to the memo, it says all agencies are directed to begin to identify all contracts
or other agency spending related to any training on critical race theory, white privilege,
or any other training or propaganda effort that teaches or suggests either one,
that the United States is inherently racist or evil country, or two, that any race or
ethnicity is inherently racist or evil.
You know, I think those trainings are pretty stupid too, though.
I shouldn't have to teach you how not to be racist.
You know what I mean?
Like, if I got to sit you down and teach you how not to be racist i yeah it might be too late
at that point way too late it's possible i don't know i mean i think there are certain things that
people are insensitive to and that maybe it is if it's an issue at your job that you know some
there's some people who don't know any black people like seriously they have grown up in places
where they haven't have to teach people how not to be racist, though. Yeah, I think, okay, if we're just filling in cultural blind spots, yes.
I think that you can sit down and you can tell somebody about something that they may be doing that's insensitive they may not know is insensitive.
You can fill in cultural blind spots.
Correct.
But you can't teach nobody how not to be racist.
You can't.
I don't think it's saying that you're racist, but there's a lot of things that happen that it's racial sensitivity.
So to be sensitive to other people and their cultures that you may not know about.
And let's think about it.
Even in school, there's things that people are learning about now who are black that they didn't know about.
And holidays and things like that and history that we're not aware of because we're not made aware of that in school.
Right.
All right.
All right. All right, well,
and just lastly,
I want to say that he also says
that the Department of Education
will investigate the use
of the 1619 Project in schools.
So that goes along.
Oh, yeah, he's serious about that.
Mm-hmm.
He said he's going to defund the schools
if they teach that curriculum.
I don't understand.
That's American history, though.
Like, that is a part
of American history. So I don't understand why... August 1619, though. Like that is a part of American history.
So I don't understand why you're ashamed.
I mean, you should be ashamed of it.
But I guess, you know, the more that they acknowledge it and the more they teach people about it,
the more people will start to ask questions and want America to truly atone for it in the form of, guess what?
Reparations! And they don't want to have to cut that check.
All right. Well, that is for that's your front page.
All right. Get it off your chest.
Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
If you need to vent, hit us up right now. Shout to
everybody in Atlanta. I was in Atlanta
doing a couple of things, looking at some properties and
I had to spin. Now, this was the first
party I did. Now, New York, New Jersey,
if you don't have on a mask,
you look crazy. You look weird.
In Atlanta, if you have a mask on
You look crazy
I was the only one in the spot
I think me and June
And maybe Louis V
Were the only ones with masks on
Everybody
Mask off for real
For real
But
Is that Future's fault?
I don't know whose fault it is
But
Put a song mask off?
Did you play it?
I did play it
Did you play that song?
I did play that song
Excuse me?
You did what?
You're complicit
I did Yeah I sure did Wow Did you play that song? I did play that song. Excuse me? You did what? Yeah, yeah. You're complicit.
I did, yeah.
I sure did.
Wow.
Wow. But anyway, get it off your chest.
800-585-1051.
If you need to vent, hit us up now.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
Is your country falling apart?
Feeling tired?
Depressed?
A little bit revolutionary?
Consider this.
Start your own country. I planted the flag. I just kind of looked out of like, this little bit revolutionary? Consider this. Start your own country.
I planted the flag. I just kind of looked out of like, this is mine. I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
There's 55 gallons of water for 500 pounds of concrete.
Everybody's doing it.
I am King Ernest Emmanuel.
I am the Queen of Ladonia.
I'm Jackson I, King of Kaperburg.
I am the Supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Mentonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
The Waikana tribe owned country.
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a rocket with a black powder, you know, with explosive warhead.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Bullets.
We need help!
We still have the off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
And we're losing daylight fast.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max.
You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with
celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going.
That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all about.
It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into their stories, their
journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement
together. You know that rush of endorphins you feel after a great workout? Well, that's when
the real magic happens. So if you love hearing real, inspiring stories from the people you know,
follow, and admire, join me every week for Post Run High. It's where we take the conversation beyond the run and get into the heart
of it all. It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and very fun. Listen to Post Run High on the iHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So y'all, this is Questlove, and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been working on
with the Story Pirates and John Glickman called Historical Records.
It's a family-friendly podcast.
Yeah, you heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of Historical Records, Nimany, to tell you all about it.
Make sure you check it out.
Hey, y'all. Nimminy here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for kids and families called Historical Records. Historical Records brings history to life through hip hop.
Flash, slam, another one gone. Bash, bam, another one gone. The crack of the bat and another one
gone. The tip of the cap is another one gone. Each episode is about a different inspiring figure from history.
Like this one about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old girl in Alabama who refused to give up her seat on the city bus nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing.
Check it.
Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records.
Because in order to make history, you have to make some noise.
Listen to Historical Records on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or off your chest, bro. Peace, Tim. Hey, you know, I was definitely listening to you talk about the white privilege being taught.
And I honestly believe that is not really a mistake. Me being a dean in a high school, they do these trainings for these teachers because of the simple fact is I actually started it in my school because I watched these teachers belittle our black students and the way they treat them and
the way they teach them they don't fully understand our black children our black and brown children
um especially and once we started doing these trainings we started doing this training with
this lady who passed away that was um two years ago very intelligent black woman who had a Harvard
degree who was going around to all schools teaching this training to these white teachers
to better understand and work with staff and children of ethnic culture.
And I honestly believe, like, within them two years,
a lot of the white teachers actually started to behave differently.
Really?
Right.
What exactly is the training?
What exactly are they teaching these teachers?
The training was basically taught on, like, sensitivity
and knowing how to treat your staff member
and how to treat the children that you work with
because a lot of these teachers will come to school
and not speak to the black staff.
They will come to these schools that's in these black neighborhoods
and feel like, oh, I'm just coming here to get my degree done.
And then they move on to a white school that they want to work at.
But you're being in these black neighborhoods and you're teaching these kids and you're not giving them the 100 percent because you're not really here for it.
She was teaching them like you can't do that.
If you're going to be here, you're going to be here.
You're not going to be here just to give them the beginning of the alphabet and not finish the whole thing. Because a lot of our kids are failing because you have white teachers who feel like they're privileged
and they're only here to get their college degree paid off.
Because that's the system of you go to these low-privileged schools and you do this,
and then you can move on to a school that you want to work at.
And I honestly feel like these programs, they actually work for some.
I'm not going to say for all, but I do say, especially in the school system,
it will work because our kids are failing because of teachers like this.
You understand?
That sounds amazing.
They don't know how to do math.
That sounds amazing, but it doesn't sound like diversity training.
You know what I'm saying?
It just sounds like you're sitting these teachers down making them care.
It's not diversity training.
No, it's definitely diversity training because it had to be done,
especially when you have higher-ups like principals
who are not treating their black staff right.
We had a principal who was getting rid of, like,
90% of the black teachers to hire white teachers.
And what the training did for him was it had to make him realize that.
Yeah, it basically was.
But, I mean, the training basically had to show him that a lot of our black and brown kids don't identify with someone who is white telling them what to do
versus someone who looks like them, who's empowering them to do things. And it's because of this training, we was able to bring in, like, our brother's keeper
for these young men that are just in gangs,
but now they're learning how to tie a tie.
They know how to do things at job interviews.
You know, these programs enlightened our principle
on how to help better our black and brown youth,
better than, okay, well, we just here to work
and then that's it.
Thank you for calling in, brother.
That's a good point. And I just want to point out, y'all, just to add on to that,
if you guys watch The Office, there's an amazing
episode where they do diversity training
in The Office place.
And you have to see that episode.
Oh my gosh, that is one of the funniest
episodes. Listen, I would also
like to say, keeping a white person employed when they're racist is the epitome of a white of white privilege.
OK, I don't think a black person would get that same type of grace.
Get it off your chest. Eight hundred five eight five one oh five one.
If you need to vent, hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club. Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
Is your country falling apart, feeling tired, tired depressed a little bit revolutionary consider
this start your own country i planted the flag i just kind of looked out of like this is mine
i own this it's surprisingly easy there are 55 gallons of water 500 pounds of concrete
everybody's doing it i am king ernest emmanuel i am the queen of ladonia i'm jackson the first
king of caperburg i am the supreme Leader of the Grand Republic of Mentonia.
Be part of a great colonial tradition.
The Waikana tribe own country.
My forefathers did that themselves.
What could go wrong?
No country willingly gives up their territory.
I was making a rocket with a black powder,
you know, with explosive warhead.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets. Bullets.
We need help! We need help!
We need help!
We still have the off-road portion to go.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
And we're losing daylight fast.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max.
You might know me from my popular online series,
The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes,
entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going.
That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all about.
It's a chance to sit down with my guests
and dive even deeper into their stories their journeys and
the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together you know that rush of endorphins you feel
after a great workout well that's when the real magic happens so if you love hearing real inspiring
stories from the people you know follow and, join me every week for Post Run High. It's where we take the
conversation beyond the run and get into the heart of it all. It's lighthearted, pretty crazy, and
very fun. Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
So y'all, this is Questlove, and I'm here to tell you about a new podcast I've been
working on with the story pirates and John Glickman called historical
records.
It's a family friendly podcast.
Yeah.
You heard that right.
A podcast for all ages.
One you can listen to and enjoy with your kids starting on September 27th.
I'm going to toss it over to the host of historical records.
Never needs to tell you all about it. Make sure you check it out. Hey y'all. September 27th. I'm going to toss it over to the host of Historical Records, Nimany,
to tell you all about it. Make sure you check it out.
Hey, y'all. Nimany here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for kids and families called Historical Records. Historical Records brings history to life through hip hop. hip-hop. Each episode is about a different inspiring figure from history, like this one
about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old girl in Alabama who refused to give up her seat on the
city bus nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing. Check it.
Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records,
because in order to make history, you have to make some noise. Listen to Historical Records
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
This is your time to get it
off your chest, whether you're mad or blessed.
You better have the same energy.
We want to hear from you on The Breakfast Club.
Hello, who's this? What's up?
Unanimous. Unanimous. I? What's up? Unanimous.
Unanimous.
Unanimous.
I think it's anonymous, not unanimous.
We understand.
Unanimous, anonymous, tomatoes, tomatoes, same thing.
No, they're not the same thing.
You're right, you're right.
I need you to know that.
I need you to know this morning, unanimous and anonymous are not the same thing.
He says it's tomato, tomatoes.
We got you, brother.
Go ahead.
Maybe he meant unanimous.
Get it off your chest.
I like alcoholics unanimous.
When everybody's drinking,
everybody's drunk,
I love it.
Yeah, you're right.
Let me get this off my chest, bro.
And this is especially for Charlamagne
because I feel he's like
the most honest person there.
Damn.
He's lying.
Now, what I wanted to get off my chest
is I feel like everybody's
against Donald Trump, right?
They say this, they say that.
But let's be honest.
When has the media ever told us the truth?
Now, everybody's listening, paying attention, and going with it.
When has the media ever told us the truth?
I'm confused.
Well, I mean, if you look at it like that, who's in the media more than Donald Trump?
I don't get what you're saying.
What I'm saying is this, though.
So everybody's saying, oh, Donald Trump's
the bad guy. This is that and the third.
And Joe Biden's the good guy, right?
Everybody's not saying that. No, they didn't say that.
That's definitely not what they're saying. At all. Fox News isn't saying that.
All right, so I'm just saying, though, if we're
going to pick our poison, would you rather drink
a cup of Majorska or a cup of
cyanide? I want whatever's
unanimously being drunk by
anonymous people. That's what I want. is unanimously being drunk by anonymous people.
That's what I want.
So we're going to call Donald
Trump a majorka and we're going to call Biden
a cyanide, right?
No, we're not.
That's what I'm saying, but we don't know that
though. Am I right? I'm tired
of drinking poison. So I don't even like
when people say like the lesser of two evils,
the devil you know versus the devil
you don't. I'm voting for the person
who I think best aligns with my
current interest.
And my current interest better
align with the Harris
Biden campaign.
So anyway, what was your point
though? So what is your whole...
My whole point was
you see like everybody's saying
Donald Trump is a bad guy, he's a racist,
this, that, and the third, which he probably is.
But I feel like people shouldn't worry about
if he's a racist, if next door you live to a racist.
You should address that racist first
before you worry about the president, am I right?
So it doesn't matter if the president,
the person that is the president of the United States
is racist, if your neighbor's racist,
is what you're saying?
No, I'm saying if the president is racist,
you're so worried about racism.
You're going back and forth with a person who called up and said he wanted to
remain unanimous.
Why don't you want to hang up on this one?
What's your name?
I want to know why he didn't,
why he didn't want to say his name.
I don't know,
but just keep in mind,
you're going back and forth with a person at 6 in the morning who
called up here and wanted to remain unanimous and then told you that unanimous, unanimous,
tomato, tamada is the same thing.
No, he said tomato, tomato.
Yes, he did say tomato, tomato.
He said tomato, tomato.
All right.
Well, get it off your chest.
800-585-1051.
If you need to vent, you can hit us up at any time.
Now, we got rumors on the way, Yee?
Yes, and let's talk about a recreation of Golden Girls with an all-black cast.
All right.
We'll get into that next.
Keep it locked.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha God.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk the Golden Girls.
It's time.
She's spilling the tea.
This is the Rumor Report with Angela Yee on the
Breakfast Club. Yes, so
Tracee Ellis Ross, Sanaa
Lathan, Alfre Woodard, and Regina King
are going to perform their own take on the
Golden Girls. It'll happen on
Zoom, so they all posted a picture of an old
Golden Girls picture recreated
with them in it, so reimagine. Shout out to my girl Natina, who works at Def Jam. That's like her a picture of an old Golden Girls picture recreated with them in it. So re-imagine.
Shout out to my girl Natina who works at Def Jam.
That's like her favorite show of all time.
Yes it is. She loves it. I thought you were about to say
shout out to my girl Natina at Def Jam. She's a Golden Girl.
She's stupid. No, she loves
the Golden Girls. So I know she's
really excited about this.
So it'll be re-imagined and they said
the first episode is spotlighting and supporting
Color of Change, the nation's largest online racial justice organization. We'll let reimagined. And they said the first episode is spotlighting and supporting Color of Change,
the nation's largest online racial justice organization.
Let the record show, Lenard McKelvey, a.k.a. Charlemagne Tha God.
When Lunell was here, I said that it would be dope to see her recast in a new version of the Golden Girls. But I think I said some more.
Miss Patton, I forgot the other person.
I said, I think Adele.
Did you say Adele or Flame Monroe?
No, she said Flame. I said Adele. She forgot the other person. I said, I think Adele. Did you say Adele or Flame Monroe? No, she said Flame.
I said Adele.
She said Flame, yes.
Gina Prince-Bathwood will be directing
and Lena Waithe will be hosting.
Okay.
All right, Naomi Campbell's ex-boyfriend
is suing her for millions of dollars.
His name is Vladislav Doronin.
And he's saying, according to court documents,
that she's refusing to pay back the money that he loaned her
and that she also hasn't returned some valuable items of his. His property, he said, is valued at more than three million dollars.
And, you know, he's the president of a Russian real estate and construction company. His net
worth is a billion dollars. Yeah. When you're dating somebody, is that a loan when you're with
somebody? I think it has to be an agreement. Yeah, it has to be an agreement. Can you lend
me money for this? Then that's a loan.
If you're just giving me things, that's not a loan.
I bet you it's more than that story.
I bet you he reached out to her lately to try to, like, reconnect or rekindle that flame and got curved.
Now he want his money back.
To give my stuff back.
Well, he bought her all kinds of stuff during their relationship.
They were on the yacht.
Now it's seven years later since they broke up
and now he wants
that money back.
Naomi can't un-F him.
You know what I'm saying?
Naomi can't take
all that poom poom back
she gave him over the years.
Okay, all of that time,
all of that energy,
all of that aural, I'm sure.
She can't take that back.
That's got to count for something.
You speak, honey.
Go ahead, you.
All right, well,
Chris Rock also recently
was doing a live with Naomi Campbell,
and he recalls a time with Mike Tyson and Naomi that he was there
and things went a little left.
Yes, we did hang out, me, you, Mike.
I remember, I think Mike pushed you out of a moving car one night.
TD?
Oh, it sure wasn't me that pushed him.
That's if I even got in the car with him.
He wasn't our best driver.
I think you gave somebody a number.
He lost his head.
That's odd, right?
I see that same story told in a different context
with people calling to cancel Mike Tyson in this era.
But Mike is pretty non-cancelable, right?
Like once you bite a man's ear off
in front of millions of people,
I think you kind of set the tone
for how people people perceive you.
And Mike is probably the scariest
person or individual I know. I bumped into him one
time. Yes, he is.
I turned around and the way he looked
at me, I ran the other way.
He is. I think Mike is classic
cancer energy. You know what I'm saying? What you see on the outside
is definitely not what you see on the inside.
Every time, I've only met him once, but he was very
pleasant. I met him, I think, last year
at the iHeartRadio
podcast award. Maybe that was this year.
I was waiting for Envy to tell the
story about something that happened with him and Mike Tyson.
Oh, no, no. I just bumped into Mike Tyson.
And I turned around.
You know when you turn around, like...
We gotta animate these. I turned around and it was Mike.
And I just got out of Dodge.
You should have said, you should spice it up a little little bit and say Mike smacked you on the ass.
And Mike said, I want to F you until you love me.
But why you want to go there?
Like, why there?
What you mean?
Why not slap me in my face?
Like, why slap me in my ass?
Mike slapped you on the butt.
Mike slapped you on the butt and said, let me nibble on your ear.
Why is everything on the butt?
I would be so mad if Mike Tyson slapped you in the face.
Goodness gracious.
You're rather the face than the butt, Envy?
I don't want to see Mike Tyson slap anyone.
It's just weird.
This is my butt.
I already slapped someone.
Who's talking about your butt?
What is wrong with you?
You are.
I just said I was crazy.
All right, let's move on.
Now, Usher and his girlfriend, Jennifer, are having a baby,
and he did confirm this on Good Morning America.
Listen to this.
You and your girlfriend are expecting a baby?
Very excited about this.
Congratulations.
Thank you guys so much.
How excited are your sons to have a little brother or sister?
Oh, man, elated, excited.
You know, babies always bring such joy to a family. And really, really excited.
Congratulations to Usher.
Shout out to Usher.
Yeah, so, I mean, how many kids is that now for him?
That'll be three, right?
He has two sons, and then now that'll be his third child.
So congratulations.
And by the way, congratulations to Iman Shumpert and Tiana Taylor.
They had their baby.
Really?
They just had the baby shower like a couple days ago.
I know.
Congrats to them.
So Iman Shumpert posted at 3.28 a.m. on September 6, 2020,
Rue Rose decided the baby shower thrown for her and mommy was too lit.
She didn't make the party, but she managed to make the next day her birth date.
Now when we buy homes, we always find a bathroom with great energy,
but not in a million years would you be able to tell me
we deliver both of our daughters in the bathroom without the assistance of
a hospital. Our newest addition entered
the world in the water and came out looking
around and ready to explore. A healthy
child, a little sister, another
daughter. Black love wins again.
Welcome, baby girl. We love you.
Baby Rue Rose. Drop on the clues bombs. I love it.
What's her name? Rue.
Rue Rose. Drop on the clues bombs for Rue
Rose and the Shumpert, Tiana and Ahmaud.
Now, did Erykah Badu get there to be the doula is the question I would like to know.
Because remember, Tiana said Erykah was going to be the doula.
I saw that Erykah actually posted about it and posted about the birth.
I'm trying to see if that post said that she was actually there because she was saying it's a perfect little baby.
Hold on.
Let me pull up her post right now. She said, welcomero tiana tell it they did that thank you both for allowing
me to assist so yes okay beautiful first face you see our voices is erica badu that's good energy
i loved erica's uh outfit that she had on that she pulled out of the closet is her
old demasculinization suit. Did you guys see it?
Oh, the gray suit?
No.
What is the demasculation?
What is it called?
It's the second post on her page.
You got to see it.
I saw that this weekend.
I was like, that's amazing.
Can't even describe it.
You can.
How do you describe it?
Maybe something that-
Inquist?
... that people would think is tasty.
Shut up. Let me see what you have to think is tasty. Shut up.
Let me see what you have to say right now.
All right, well, Angela Yee, that is your...
Why is this demasculation?
It's a bunch of balls.
Anyway, all right, thank you, Missy.
Now, morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Shout out to everybody.
I know for a lot of, especially on the East Coast, schools start today.
So I know a lot of kids are heading to school for their first day.
So just wear your mask, kids.
Wear your mask.
It'll be okay.
My kids started on Friday.
They wore their mask the whole time.
They just please, as they said, please, parents, don't bring your kids with sneakers with laces.
Because it was like they don't want the teachers so close to the kids to tie the laces.
We need to talk about that next hour.
Because you know what sucks?
What sucks is not knowing if you made the right decision sending your kids back to school.
Because you won't know until you know.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Like, you won't know it's the right decision until something doesn't happen or until something does happen.
Correct.
Which sucks.
Oh, yeah.
Before we get into front page news, you heard what happened with NYU?
Don't tell me.
No, don't do that to me right now.
Don't tell me nothing about what?
No, no, no.
That was nothing crazy.
Nobody caught nothing.
But NYU, across the street from NYU, is like a park, Washington Park, where all the kids gather.
Washington Square Park?
Washington Square Park.
So what happened was NYU has this strict corona thing where if they catch you without a mask,
which they caught 20 students without a mask,
and they were suspended for three semesters.
So 20 kids were suspended for three semesters
for being out and about without wearing a mask
because they go back to classes, they go back to the dorms,
and they can potentially give other kids coronavirus.
I'm not mad at those strict rules and regulations.
Three semesters is a lot.
That does seem a little excessive, but I'm not.
You got to set the precedent somewhere.
Yeah, I guess you're right.
Well, let's get into some front page news.
Where we going, Yee?
Facebook is offering to pay users to log off before the 2020 election.
So to assess the impact of social media on voting, they're going to pay selected members up to $120.
All you have to do is deactivate your account starting at the end of September.
They said anybody who chooses to opt in, whether it's completing surveys or deactivating Facebook
or Instagram for a period of time, will be compensated.
Trust me, Facebook, that damage is already done.
Okay, the videos I get from YouTube and Facebook links, the misinformation that's already out
there is damaging enough.
Too little, too late.
Well, according to Mark Zuckerberg,
he announced last week
that he's banning new political ads
in the week before the election
to curb misinformation.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, too little, too late
a week before the election, Zuckerberg.
Come on.
All right.
Now, there is a lawsuit
that was filed this week in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
They are seeking reparations from the city and other government localities over one of the worst race massacres in U.S. history.
Now, according to the complaint, they feel like relatives of victims and other survivors.
There's one survivor who is a 105 years old, Leslie, Leslie Benningfield Randall. They said she still suffers from the emotional and physical distress
that continues to this day
from the attacks led by white mobs
that killed as many as 300 African Americans
in the city.
They said, yes, the 1921 massacre
was a public nuisance based on the state
statutes. It affected an entire
community or borough simultaneously
while damage inflicted upon individuals
may be unequal.
That's right. Yes, America, you owe.
Y'all need to atone for the sins
of your ancestors, okay?
Everybody celebrated Labor Day yesterday.
Let's not forget that this country was built
on the backs of free black
labor. And Tulsa in particular,
that's the black Wall Street area.
Think about all of those black people that were
thriving in that community, minding
their own black business, doing their
own thing, and still had to feel
the wrath of white supremacy. Why hasn't
another one ever been built? I was thinking about it a lot
recently. How come another Tesla has
I said Tesla, Tesla
hasn't been built?
There was other thriving black communities.
You had, I think I'm pronouncing
it right, Bronzeville in Chicago.
I can never remember the time in North Carolina that bothered me,
but you had other thriving black cities.
Well, according to statistics,
they said unemployment among black people in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
is more than double that of white people.
And the median household income for black residents on average
is $20,000 less than white residents.
All right.
Now, the U.S. Marshals have rescued 72 missing children across Indiana, Ohio, and Georgia in the past several weeks.
So they did announce the safe rescue of eight highly endangered missing children in Indiana over the weekend.
That's part of Operation Homecoming.
And they did have those similar operations in nearby states.
So that's how they've rescued 72 children since mid-August.
So, you know, that's something that does need to be in the news more.
What are the age groups of these kids?
Do we know?
Are they young, young kids?
Are they teens?
You know, do we know that?
I mean, it varies from ages 3 to 17.
And some of them have been missing from two weeks to two years.
Wow.
And some of them, they said, were reluctant to leave the homes where they were found.
And they said that often happens with children or teens who are repeatedly subjected to sexual abuse.
Yeah, I read something yesterday that said a lot of those teens are runaways and homeless.
Is that true?
Are they actually people being kidnapped and placed in humans?
Well, 91% are considered endangered runaways,
and about one-sixth, they said, are likely to become sex trafficking victims.
And that's of the more than 421,000 children who are missing in the country.
So obviously you're at risk if you run away when you're that young of an age,
and then you can be subjected to anything that can happen.
I hate those stories.
I really do. When you got small kids
and you hear those kind of stories, it
will make your anxiety go through the goddamn
roof. By the way, this is
another reason I'm dreading people
the kids going back to school because
I suffer from like
real bad parental
paranoia is what I call it.
So it's that anxiety of knowing like, you know,
your kids aren't somewhere where you can just get to them in a heartbeat.
You know, you send them off to school and you're thinking about them all day.
I was cool during this damn pandemic.
Me too.
Me too.
Now, I'm sitting here with my knees fidgeting.
Yo, I FaceTime my daughter.
I FaceTime my daughter at least three to four times a day
just so I can see her face and make sure she's okay.
She's in college.
She's only been there, I think, five days.
But three times a day, I have to FaceTime her.
Just, hey, how you doing?
Is everything good?
You all right?
You being safe?
Okay, love you.
Like, I don't know.
It is what it is.
And now you know exactly why your grandparents used to be so paranoid.
My grandma used to be so paranoid all the time.
And now when you're a parent, you totally understand.
You get it.
Yeah, absolutely.
All right.
Well, that is your front page news.
All right.
Thank you, Miss Yee.
So over the weekend, I guess documents came out about Dr. Dre's divorce and what his wife is seeking.
Do you have that information, Yee?
Well, his soon-to-be ex-wife has a list
of monthly expenses, and she's saying that she
basically needs temporary spousal
support in the amount of $2 million.
Okay, and how do you
break that, how does she break that $2 million down?
Do you have that? Alright, laundry and cleaning,
$10,000 a month. Clothes, $135,000
a month. Education, which is...
Buying clothes during a pandemic,
$135,000 a month? Wait, what do you mean? Buying clothes during a pandemic, $135,000 a month?
Okay, go ahead.
Education, which is tuition and living expenses, is $60,000 a month.
Entertainment, $900,000 a month.
Charitable contributions, $125,000 a month.
Mortgage, $100,000 a month.
And telephone, cell phone, email, $20,000 a month.
Now, listen, let me tell you something.
You're spending $10,000 a month on laundry, so clearly you've got plenty of clothes to wear.
So you don't need to buy no new ones.
So cut the expenses for the clothes out, all right?
And I'm not here to say what a woman should deserve in a relationship.
They've been together 20-something years, so she should definitely get something.
But $900,000 in entertainment?
What the hell is so goddamn entertaining that you've got to spend $900,000 in entertainment
and $150,000 in charity?
$150,000?
There's no way I'm giving you money to give away.
Whatever.
I'm not giving you money to give away.
And how do you ask someone for money to give to charity?
And do you get the blessing?
Who gets the blessing when you give somebody else's money to charity?
Huh?
That's a good question.
But did you say $900,000 a month or $90,000 a month in entertainment?
$900,000.
$900,000.
What the hell is so entertaining?
What are we watching?
Ain't nothing that entertaining.
You must have Beyonce come to the house every week.
Now, just to be clear, they do have a prenup, and she is challenging that prenup.
She's saying that she had to sign it under duress.
But right now, he does cover her expenses.
That includes chef's security
and maintenance for their home in Malibu, which is
where she primarily resides.
My goodness. Let's open up the phone
lines. 800-585-1051.
I just want to know what's on
entertainment. That it costs
$900,000 a month. Is this excessive?
Is this a little too much? What are your thoughts, huh?
800-585-1051.
I don't think I can spend $900,000 a month in entertainment.
What is so goddamn entertaining?
There's nothing that entertaining.
You can have every streaming service available on TV.
Broadway ain't even open.
Ain't no plays in L.A., is there?
What the hell is so entertaining?
And you ain't sitting courtside now.
What are you spending $900,000 in entertainment for?
I'm telling you,
Beyonce must have to come to the house and perform once a month.
It's got to be something.
But 800-585-1051.
Let's talk about it.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
Call 800-585-1051 to join into the discussion with the breakfast club talk about it
morning everybody it's dj envy angela yee charlamagne the guy we are the breakfast club
now if you just joined us we were talking about dr dre's divorce now over the weekend
uh there's some details that came out you want want to explain the details, Yeezy? Yeah, so basically she wants to get close to $2 million a month.
Correct.
And she feels that she's justified in getting that amount of money,
and she broke down, you know, $900,000 in charitable donations and $20,000.
No.
$900,000 in entertainment.
Why are you screaming out no?
I mean, oh, yeah, entertainment.
Sorry.
$150,000 in charitable donations, you know, things like that.
So I've been thinking about this, right?
Mm-hmm.
When you go to court, did her attorney really think it was cool to write $900,000 in entertainment?
Like, I've been trying to figure out how do you spend $900,000 in entertainment?
How?
You got to keep in mind who her ex-husband is, though.
This is a billion dollar.
Yeah, he's got that bankroll.
So it's not that crazy.
Especially in court in California.
Spend $900,000 in entertainment right now in your head.
How?
No, no, no, no.
Now, let me explain something to y'all.
So I was looking at what Ebony K. Williams had to say about all of this.
She did a whole post on it.
So you should look at it on her page.
As an attorney, she broke it down, not of what we think someone should get, but basically the lifestyle that she's living.
And she also compared it to, say, Jeff Bezos and Mackenzie Bezos and their divorce that happened last year and what she got from that.
But she's like, this is a billion dollar divorce.
And so basically it's whatever the couple is accustomed to.
She also talks about the fact that it's happening in California.
And anything that they made from the point that they got married moving on is their money because it's a community property thing.
So she discusses like, for instance, the cell phone.
She said, let's say they both have matching cell phones that has diamonds from the bears on it.
She said a court would look at that and say, well, that's what they're accustomed to.
So it's whatever she was accustomed to.
And the relationship, whether or not we think it's right or necessary is a different story.
But legally, what is she able to get is something different.
And what is it?
The good sister Ebony K.
Williams is absolutely right.
But I just have questions.
I need to know what the hell is $900,000 in entertainment.
I need to know where are you even when it's not COVID,
where are you spending $900,000 in entertainment? What's so goddamn entertaining? If it's not COVID, where are you spending $900,000 in entertainment?
What's so goddamn entertaining?
If it's not COVID, you could fly different places.
You got to fly private to different things.
You could spend $900,000.
That's easy a month if you got it.
Yeah, maybe she flies private.
And entertainment?
Yeah, you could fly to Broadway to go see a play and then fly your ass back.
That's all that counts.
Maybe she wants to hear some music on the beach and she wants to hire Earth, Wind & Fire to come perform.
Lord have mercy. What about $60,000? Maybe she wants to hear some music on the beach and she wants to hire Earth, Wind & Fire to come perform.
Lord have mercy.
What about $60,000? But if that's what they spend every month, like who knows what they spend.
And what about $60,000 in education?
I was confused.
She's an attorney, correct?
Yeah, but maybe for the kids, maybe for further education.
But they could still be going to school.
That doesn't mean you don't.
She might still be going to school.
That might be the entertainment part of it.
You know what I'm saying? She bored. I ain't got nothing else to do but go back to school to get doesn't mean you don't... She might still be going to school. That might be the entertainment part of it. You know what I'm saying? She bored.
I ain't got nothing else to do but go back to school to get another
degree. Okay? $150,000
in charity. Explain that.
I'm giving you all of this money. You're already getting
$2 million a month. Don't you got enough money
for charity? It's $125,000, Charlamagne. Not
$150,000. $125,000. Whatever.
Well, maybe what it is is
normally they give a certain amount to charity
and she still wants the part.
I mean, I'm just going from the legal aspect of it,
which Ebony broke down very nicely.
You can't take my money to give away. And maybe if they normally, say they both together,
because it is their money, right, once they got married.
Maybe every year he donates $2 million.
So that means she still wants half of that.
That is Andre Young's blessing.
But it's their money, right? Once they get married, it's their money. You taking the money to do it. That they my blessing. Half of that. That is Andre Young's blessing. But it's their money, right?
Once they get married, it's their money.
No, you taking the money too.
That they earn together.
Okay, what about 10 grand a month in laundry and then how much in new clothes?
Yeah, you kind of with that amount of money that you spend on clothes, you don't need to do laundry.
You know, if I'm spending 10K in laundry, I don't need to buy no new clothes.
You got plenty of clean clothes.
Another thing that Ebony pointed out is maybe
Dr. Dre's not even mad about this.
We're mad, right? Everybody
watching this is like, because
look at Jeff Bezos. They had a very amicable
divorce and they
still, you know, send each other love
and blessings and all of that and
work it out. He's moved on. She's moved on.
Y'all comparing Jeff Bezos to Dr.
Dre. Okay. If Dr Y'all comparing Jeff Bezos to Dr. Dre. Okay.
If Jeff Bezos broke up with Dr. Dre's money, he'd kill himself.
Okay.
No, he wouldn't.
That was a famous Chris.
That was a famous.
Were you crazy?
You worth a trillion dollars and you wake up and you only worth a billion?
S***.
All right.
Well, let's go to the phone lines.
Hello.
Who's this?
Oh, my name is Sandra.
Hey, you guys.
I've been listening since day one.
Don't believe you, Sandra.
That means you're old like us.
No, I'm 31.
Oh.
I've been listening since day one.
I remember when you guys were a little bit heavy on the ratchetness with the decision
and shoot your shot.
I miss those days. I miss the decision to shoot your shot, man. I miss those. We had fun until we got in trouble your shot. I miss those days.
I miss the decision to shoot your shot, man. I miss those.
We had fun until we got in trouble.
I miss those days. And I am
a Haitian therapist. Just want to give a
shout out to all my Haitians.
What kind of therapist? Physical or mental?
Mental health therapist.
I love it. Okay.
Yes, I'm from Brooklyn and I live live in Maryland, so she's a therapist.
Okay.
Shout me out.
So we're talking about Dr. Dre's divorce.
What do you think?
Is it excessive?
What's your comments?
What do you think?
What's your opinion?
I think that we're looking at it through regular people's eyes, and as a millionaire, I think
it's really easy to wrap up the private jets, the five-star hotels, the luxury villas, and everything.
And me and my regular income spend a lot on traveling.
So I'm sure Dr. Dre and his niece, Sandra.
Yes.
Sandra, I've never been called broke so sweetly.
She was just like, we're looking at it through regular people's eyes.
But that's exactly what Stephanie was saying.
This is a billion-dollar divorce we're talking about.
It's not million, billion dollars.
That may be right.
Absolutely, absolutely.
Like, they can just go through money like water.
I mean, it's possible.
So basically, Sandra, we need to act our wage and mind our goddamn business
and let rich people do what they do.
Absolutely.
We can talk about coach vacations and, you know, three-and-a-half-star vacations.
I hit us with coach vacations.
It's kind of like what Chris Rock said.
If you make it $30,000 and she want half, then that's a different story.
But if you work $30 million and she want half, well, you'll be all right.
Well, thank you, Sandra.
I think I quoted Chris Rock, too.
If Jeff Bezos woke up with a billion dollars, he'd kill himself.
I think that was a Chris Rock joke, too, if I'm not mistaken.
I think he said if Bill Gates woke up with Oprah money, he'd kill himself.
800-585-1051.
We're talking about Dr. Dre's divorce.
What's your opinion on it?
Call us now.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
I know it now.
I know it now.
I know it now.
I know it now.
I know it now.
That kid don't even deal with that.
Call me.
And your opinion to The Breakfast Club topic.
Come on.
800-585-1051.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha God.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Now, if you just joined us, good morning.
We're talking about Dr. Dre's divorce.
Now, we got some details over the weekend about the divorce and what his wife is asking for.
Do you have those details, Yee?
Yes.
Actually, you know what I'm doing right now?
Because I'm reading some of the things.
But, yes, $900,000 for
entertainment as part of this $2 million
in spousal support that she wants.
$125,000 for charitable
donations, but I'm reading another
divorce lawyer, Holly Davis, and
she's saying the fact that she's asking for
$2 million a month means that she
is actually wants financial
independence while the divorce is pending
and that request also suggests that $2 million per month is the carrying cost for the property that she wants to remain in while the divorce is pending, plus all of her expenses and perhaps even the children's expenses if they are with her, quarantining with her.
So she's saying that the kind of life that they've been living requires millions to cover expenses.
But I thought they said they took care of the mortgage.
I thought part of that was
In the meantime,
but I guess once this goes through,
she'll have to take care of it herself.
But right now, he's covering it.
I am not the highest grade
of weed in the dispensary.
I graduated from night school
in Moncks Corner, South Carolina,
two years behind my scheduled
1996 graduation date.
But I would like the record to show
there's nothing financially
independent about this.
What the hell? Is that the term that the attorney used? Financially independent?
Another thing that she said is if you break down the math, right, if Dre is worth $800 million, $2 million per month equals $24 million each year, which is only 0.03% of what he's worth.
See, we got to talk about this worth thing. Who determines
this whole worth thing?
Because online, my worth is
$10 million. That's true.
I don't have $10 million.
Yeah, I guess you say worth, but
it should be what you have, liquid,
right? But then it's also what you sell because I can
right now, if I sell my company,
it could be worth this, but if
another pandemic hits or the market drops, it could be worth this. But if another pandemic hits or the market drops, it could be worth this.
But let me ask you something.
If you're, and God forbid this shouldn't happen, but if you got divorced, wouldn't you want your wife to have half?
Yes, I would.
But guess what?
I would be in the courtroom with my hands on my hips saying, what the hell is $900,000 in entertainment?
You better take your hands off your hips right now.
You wouldn't have a...
Take your hands off your hips.
She's like, that's why I'm divorcing him right there.
That's the reason why.
He got his hands on his hip looking back at me.
But I'm saying, regardless,
you would want your wife to have half.
Absolutely.
But I still got questions.
And I'm not giving you $150,000 in charity.
No.
That's not how charity works.
Let's go to the phone lines.
Hello, who's this?
Hello.
Yeah, what's up, bro?
What's your name?
Steph.
Steph, you smoking or can you talk to us right now?
Nah.
That's that smoker laugh when somebody's smoking.
What's your opinion, bro?
Go ahead, give it to us.
Man, this is too real. Man, that's crazy.
My whole thing is...
That's a whole other bill.
That's a whole other bill for us.
What do you need this money for?
It's a lot.
I mean, I'm just saying...
I kind of feel like Sandra.
I don't think us regular people
should be having this conversation.
If you've never made two mil in your life, I can't even.
I don't think you're qualified to have this conversation.
Thank you, brother.
Let's not judge him.
Maybe he has.
Well, if Sandra thinks our eyes are regular, okay, then Mr.
I don't know what he has.
He definitely smoked a regular this morning.
Hello, who's this?
Hey, what's up, guys?
Good morning.
Hey, what's your name, mama?
Yvette.
Hey, Yvette.
So, I feel like Dr. Trace White definitely deserves the money.
She's been with him since day one.
24 years.
Not day one.
Maybe like day 30.
Okay.
But not day one.
Day number two.
Envy, come on now.
That was Charlamagne.
Oh, Charlamagne, I'm sorry.
I think in honor of this, we should play his original song.
I'm not going to curse, but it's called It Just Ain't Ish But Blank and Drift.
So he knew what it was, but on a serious note, she took care of him,
and she made him be the man that he is today, 24 years later.
And everybody wants to rush and be on the Forbes billionaire list,
but then they don't want to pay like a billionaire.
Michael Jordan paid his ex-wife.
There was no problem.
And even Robert Johnson, if you got the money and the woman made you who you are 25 years later,
the best years of our life. Pay like a boss.
Pay like a billionaire.
You say 25 years ago like Dr. Dre wasn't 40 25 years ago.
Dr. Dre about 60.
Dr. Dre ain't no damn 60, man.
Stop it, man.
He's not that old.
Dr. Dre over 50.
He over 50, but he ain't no 60.
He might be 51.
Wait, hold on, Charlamagne.
You know what it is to get with a 25-year-old?
I mean, let's be real.
He raised by their mother, but you're doing a lot of raising.
I'm sure Michelle Obama could tell some stories about when she met and married Barack.
You're grown to a certain extent, but most of your growing will happen in those other years after you're 20.
And don't leave out Michelle A.
Michelle A told y'all what
Dre used to do, so we don't even know
what she put up with behind the scenes.
Well, she is saying
some things, by the way,
and this is just to quote what she's saying.
She also is saying
that he was intoxicated, told her that he
wanted her to leave Brentwood residence.
He started yelling at me, F you, F you, get the F out.
Get the F out, go to Malibu.
She moved.
She said the next day he was still angry, sent text messages,
do not spend one more cent period.
You can't be mean and disrespectful and spend my hard-earned money.
F that.
And she said that he committed to improving our marriage.
He said he would attend couples therapy with me and stop drinking.
And she said it was not long before he showed he could not keep those promises.
And she said that he would threaten her via text messages and all of that.
Listen, Yee, she got to get back on the market before her best years are over.
He already has two now.
I'm sorry.
He's what it is.
He wanted to be on the billionaire's list.
Listen, they only do it to black women.
They only do it to black men.
The white man on the Forbes billionaire list,
that's how you can tell he's new to the billionaire list.
That's not true.
They don't take their wives through all of this.
They pay graciously to keep all the dirt hidden,
to keep all the dirt hidden.
They don't want all that stuff that they be doing out in public.
They just want a nice, amicable split,
and they still got plenty of money.
Dre is showing he's not used to his billions
because he's getting nervous.
Shoot them with him for over two.
We don't even know if he's getting nervous.
Why do you keep saying billions?
We never said Dr. Dre had billions.
Remember how everybody was celebrating that?
Yeah, but it wasn't billions.
It was a few billion
that he had to split with a few people.
It says right now he's worth $800 million
if we go by that.
Well, thank you.
We don't even know if Dre has a problem with it.
He didn't say anything.
We're just giving our opinion, mama.
That's us.
That's our broke-ass business.
That's our broke-ass.
That's us with our regular eyes.
And I said that.
I said he might not have a problem with paying for the money.
Maybe he's fine.
Can we play that song just in case the younger generation...
No.
We're not playing that song.
There wasn't a clean version of that song 30 years ago.
It's got one now.
What's wrong with you?
What's the moral of the story, guys?
The moral of the story is mind your broke-ass business, okay?
Mind the business that pays you.
And it ain't Beach by Dre or whatever the name of Dre's company is.
Goodness gracious.
All right. It's just us looking on the outside in.
We can't believe somebody would spend 900 grand in entertainment.
Right.
That just means you get your goddamn money up.
We outside the club looking in.
Yeah, you're right.
All right.
We got rumors on the way.
What are we talking about?
Let's talk about a new book that is out today.
And there's some shocking allegations in this book.
And we'll tell you who this person is.
And I mean, yeah, you're going to be interested.
I'm getting this book today.
All right, we'll get into that when we come back.
Keep it locked.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
Listen up.
It's just in.
All the gossip.
Gossip.
The Rumor Report.
Gossip.
Gossip.
With Angela Yee.
It's The Rumor Report.
The Breakfast Club.
All right, well, this is about a young girl named Trinity.
Now, there was an Instagram Live video that was circulating,
and it shows her being verbally and physically abused by her stepmother and her father.
I've seen it.
Yes, and Little Scrappy had posted about it.
And then Deb Antony, we know her.
You know, that's Waka Flocka's mother, who also managed a lot of notable artists,
and we've seen her on Love and Hip Hop.
She actually managed to get the young girl, Trinity, and take care of her.
Here's what happened.
She's good.
And if we can stop making all the fake pages, let them know you're good.
She's more than protected, honey.
She's good.
All state don't have nothing on me right now. Now Trinity's father has since posted, and here is his explanation of why he was throwing his daughter to the ground and sitting on her chest, restraining her.
Stop worrying about her. She ain't yours.
What you looking at is a concerned father.
What you looking at is somebody who will go beyond boundaries, whatever measures to make sure that my child gets it.
OK, before she get it from somebody else, she ain't ready for the streets.
She ain't ready for me. What was she going to do?
So you go to some random stranger's house because you want to smoke some weed.
You don't know who these people are. So what if it was them doing it in their garage and not me?
Now, I don't beat my daughters.
I don't know what kind of punishment that is.
I don't beat my daughters.
You know what I'm saying?
No hands will be put on my daughter.
I beat my oldest daughter.
I spanked her one time when she was like three, and I felt so stupid.
Okay?
Because one thing you realize when you get older is the way our parents raised us with all those beatings, that wasn't the move.
It was actually cruel and unusual punishment.
I wasn't supposed to get a beating with an extension cord back in the day and then my dad make me go take a bath.
That's torture.
Yeah, no, I'll pop my daughter.
I haven't had to pop my daughters in a long time.
But watching that abuse and the fact that you taped it
and thought it was okay and put it on live
and then have the stepmom slap her, like, that is abuse, bro.
And I understand you saying,
I want my daughter to walk the straight line, because we all
want our kids to walk the straight line, but doing it that
way, it's not going to accomplish anything.
When your parents say, this will hurt you,
this will hurt me more than it'll hurt you,
that's absolutely true if you've ever
put your hands on your daughter. And also, too, you know
what you realize? They're just kids.
So you can't really punish a person for what they don't know.
You know how stupid you look popping a 3-year-old, a 4-year-old
because they did something wrong?
They don't even know they're doing something wrong.
You can have a conversation with them.
How are you going to tell kids to use their words,
but you're not using yours?
No, sometimes they know what they're doing wrong.
They do it on purpose.
All right.
Now, Justin Bieber was in a reflective mood, and he posted on his Instagram account,
I came from a small town in Stratford, Ontario, Canada.
I didn't have material things and was never motivated by money or fame.
I just loved music.
But as I became a teenager, I let my insecurities and frustrations dictate what I put my value in.
My values slowly started to change.
I let ego and power take over, and my relationships suffered because of it. I truly my value in. My values slowly started to change. I let ego and power take over and my
relationship suffered because of it. I truly desire healthy relationships. I want to be
motivated by truth and love. I want to be aware of my blind spots and learn from them. I want to
walk in the plans God has for me and not try and do it on my own. I want to give up my selfish
desires daily so I can be a good husband and future dad. I'm grateful that I can walk with
Jesus as he leads the way. And then he posted a cover of Casey and Jojo's All My Life. Listen to
this. I'm going to tell you something, man.
I like Justin Bieber.
Dropping the clues bombs for Justin Bieber.
I think Justin Bieber is absolutely one of these white people who gets it.
He's a white person who uses his privilege to combat prejudice.
And I think he really, really, really, really, really just wants the best for everybody.
He's just a good human.
I salute Justin Bieber. All right. Now, Michael Cohen wants the best for everybody. He's just a good human. I salute Justin Bieber.
All right.
Now, Michael Cohen's book is out today, his memoir, Disloyal.
And some of the things that he talks about in this book is he says that Donald Trump
said some things about his then 15-year-old daughter.
This was back in 2012.
They were at Trump's New Jersey golf club, and he caught him staring at his daughter.
And he said, Donald Trump said, when did she get so hot?
When he learned that the girl that he was staring at was Michael Cohen's daughter.
And then in another part of the book, he said that Trump would leer at contestants at a Miss Universe pageant saying that he could have all of them.
We all have heard that story before.
How old was he?
He also said that Trump, 15.
15.
Oh, you owe me five minutes.
Forget it.
That's what I'm saying.
Michael Cohen wants me to be mad at Donald Trump for saying that to his daughter.
No, I'm mad at you for letting him say it.
Word.
Like, you owe me five minutes.
You know what I'm saying?
What's wrong with your hands, Michael Cohen?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Donald Trump wasn't the president then?
Or was he?
According, eight years ago, no.
According to Michael Cohen, he said Trump also cornered and forcibly kissed multiple women at his office.
Right now, they didn't say which office this took place in,
but, you know, of course, you know,
the White House press secretary gave a statement.
Michael Cohen is a disgraced felon and despised lawyer
who lied to Congress.
He has lost all credibility,
and it's unsurprising to see his latest attempt
to profit off of lies.
There is nothing wrong with him telling those stories now, credibility and it's unsurprising to see his latest attempt to profit off of lies.
There is nothing wrong with him telling those stories now, but he also has to hold himself accountable and say that he was complicit in a lot of those things. Because if you sat around
and you watched that behavior back in the day, you know what I mean? Now, according to Michael
Cohen, who is Donald Trump's ex-lawyer, he also said in this book that Donald Trump made disparaging remarks
about black world leaders,
including Nelson Mandela,
the former South African president,
and U.S. minorities in general.
According to Michael Cohen,
who, by the way, is serving a three-year sentence
for making false statements to Congress,
he said that following Mandela's death in 2013,
Donald Trump said,
Mandela effed the whole country up.
Now it's an ish-hole. Eff Mandela.
He was no leader.
But you went along with all of that, Michael Cohen.
He also allegedly said, tell me
one country run by a black person that isn't
an ish-hole. They are all complete
effing toilets. You went along
with all of that, Michael Cohen, and now
that things haven't worked out between
you and Donald
Trump, you airing them out.
It's hard for me to respect people like that.
I'm going to be honest with you.
Oh, boy.
All right.
Well, I'm Angela Yee, and that is your rumor report.
And we got to bring back the days when people just get effed up, just get beat bloody.
Like, we got to bring those days back.
Yeah, somebody said a grown-ass man tells you that your 15-year-old daughter hot,
and you don't tell him, watch his effing mouth?
Word.
Yeah, that's terrible.
Come on, man.
Knock it off.
He's forcibly kissing these women.
Like, this is where, you know, I don't care.
Like, my daughter, I don't care how old you are.
Call me, and I'm 80.
I get some old people that come with me, and we're going to whip some ass or something.
But come on now.
The visual of that was awful.
He was an accessory to all those crimes.
He was an accessory to all of that. He was an accessory to all of that.
My dad's 80-something right now.
If I call him right now, he's coming with the strap, and it is what it is at 80.
It don't matter.
That's what it is, but especially his granddaughter.
Now, define strap.
He doesn't allow that to happen.
His gun.
He has an illegal gun.
He can carry it in all the states legally.
Just making sure.
We know you got caught with a nine-and-a-half-inch dildo, so I just want to make sure.
I try to be serious with you.
Let's get turned into a party real quick with you.
All right.
Well, let's keep the party going.
Who are you giving your donkey to?
Well, we're giving it to a white woman who did not use her privilege to combat prejudice.
We'll talk about it.
All right.
We'll get into that next.
Keep it locked.
It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
It's time for Donkey of the Day.
Donkeys of the Day, ex-juggler man.
I'm a Democrat, so being Donkey of the Day is a little bit of a mixed one.
So like a donkey.
Donkey of the Day.
The Breakfast Club, bitches.
Now, I've been called a lot in my 23 years, but Donkey of the Day is a new one.
Donkey of the Day for Tuesday, September 8th,
goes to an author and professor from Kansas named Jessica Krug.
Who is Jessica Krug?
Well, the answer to that is, who the hell knows?
Okay, see, Jessica Krug was born and raised a white Jewish woman in Kansas,
but at various points in her life, she claimed to be from North Africa,
the U.S., and the Caribbean, and most fitting, the Bronx.
Why is the Bronx most fitting?
Well, what does your Uncle Sharla always tell you?
The craziest people in America come from the Bronx and all of Florida.
And what Jessica Krug has been doing is crazy, very Bronx-like.
So if the bubble goods fits, wear it.
Okay, see, Jessica Krug is the latest in a long line of people to prove the legend Paul
Mooney correct. Everybody
wants to be an N-word, but nobody
wants to be an N-word. What are you talking
about, Uncle Sharla? Well, let's go
to CNN for the report, please. College professor
in D.C. has revealed she's
been pretending to be black her
entire career. Jessica
Krug, she's an associate professor at George Washington
University and has written extensively about Africa and Latin America, all while claiming her own black
and Latina heritage. But in an article published on medium.com yesterday, she apologized. She
revealed she's white and Jewish. She grew up in a Kansas City suburb. Her story is not unlike
Rachel Dolezal. Remember her? She's another white woman who claimed that she was black while teaching studies, Africana studies at Eastern Washington University.
She even was the head of her local NAACP chapter.
One of Jessica Krug's students said that she used a lot of Spanish in her speech, always changed the exact place she said she was from, even said the N-word when it was in text that the class was reading.
A spokesperson for George Washington University said the university is aware of her article and
is looking into this situation. Oh, but wait, it gets worse. There's more to this story. Let's go
to People Magazine for more. She adds that she should absolutely be canceled and that she's not
a culture vulture. She's a culture leech. In the blog post, she explains how during her adult life,
she took on multiple assumed identities.
First, North African blackness, then US-rooted blackness,
then Caribbean-rooted Bronx blackness.
In the post, she writes, quote,
I've not only claimed these identities as my own
when I had absolutely no right to do so,
but I have formed intimate relationships
with loving, compassionate people
who have trusted and cared for me
when I have deserved neither trust nor caring. In her Medium post, Crew calls
her actions the very epitome of violence, thievery, and appropriation. She adds that she has been
battling some unaddressed mental health demons for her entire life, but says that does not justify
what she did. Well, I'm glad you know that, Jessica. Okay, that does not justify what you did,
mental health issues. You know I have sympathy for all folks with mental health issues. I deal with my own. Okay, I actually just
started going back to therapy physically last week, okay, but f*** her, please. All right, and in this
article she wrote for Medium, she said she's a culture vulture, a culture leech, whatever, and
that she should be canceled. That's exactly how you know she's not black. One, Jessica Krug claiming mental health issues for random acts of racism is so white.
And second, you can't cancel yourself.
All right?
That's not how cancel culture works.
It is the epitome of white privilege to stand in front of folks and say you're canceling yourself.
If you didn't get canceled personally by black Twitter, it didn't happen.
Trust me, I know.
I get canceled at least twice a year. Okay. You really tried to do some reverse psychology here. All right. Once
again, you proved how white you are because this is classic B-Rabbit. Okay. This is classic B-Rabbit
in eight mile. Now I'm a stern believer that if you live your truth, like Eminem did in eight
mile, no one can use your truth
against you. But this isn't living your truth. This is just explaining to everyone that you
have been living a lie, okay? And this is the problem I have with white folks like Jessica
Krug. If you really love black people, if you really love black culture, if you really want
to help, if you want to, you know, help this world, just stop
being a racist world, why not use your God-given privilege to combat prejudice? You're a white
woman from Kansas. You could literally just be yourself and do so much good in the hood, okay?
We need white women like you singing black people's praises, okay? Checking other white people when they are being racist bigots, okay?
See, those natural Karen superpowers white women have can be used to actually help,
but we see them so often hurt because power in the wrong hands has a disastrous effect.
But, Jessica, folks like you, folks like Rachel Dozal, y'all would have way more impact being white allies instead of causing black disunion.
OK, why would you want to waste all that good white skin?
I need you to be the kind of ally that lets me use your white privilege like Wi-Fi and Starbucks.
Why do so many white people want to white out their whiteness?
OK, look, white folks, listen to me.
There is nothing wrong with being white.
It's not your whiteness that's the problem.
It's white supremacy.
Okay, that's what we want to get rid of.
Not white people, just white supremacy.
We want to dismantle racism, okay?
Not your race.
Be white.
Be proud.
Okay, be proud and white.
But more importantly, be a good human. If you are a good human, you will look out for other humans.
You will show love to all humans. You will have empathy for all humans.
And you will use your privilege to combat prejudice. Period.
Please give Jessica Krug. Well, actually, let Kathy Griffin give Jessica Krug the biggest hee-haw.
Please give this giant jar of mayo the biggest hee-haw.
Hee-haw. Hee-haw.
All right. Well, thank you for that donkey today, sir.
Yes, indeed.
All right, when we come back, let's open up the phone lines.
800-585-1051.
I know on the East Coast, students start today.
Kids start school today.
So we're asking, how do you feel about bringing your kids back to school?
I know a couple of weeks ago, I said I wasn't going to do it.
But after talking to my kids, I decided to let them do it.
Now, the way they're doing it is they're breaking the school into two,
the classes into two.
So my school, my kids' school, they're doing, let's say it is, I don't know,
15 kids per class, let's say. So they're breaking it down into morning and afternoon. So it's only five to seven kids per class. And there's a morning class and I believe
a night class and afternoon class. So they're breaking it up. So there's not that many kids,
but also they're doing things like every kid has to wear a mask. Of course,
they're asking for parents to make sure that there are no shoelaces so that, you know, the parent, the teachers don't have to tie the kids shoes.
So I changed my mind because I wanted my kids to actually see kids, talk to kids, converse, you know, have conversations with each other.
That's what I wanted for my kids.
So I did change my mind.
What about you, Charlemagne?
I'll talk about it when we come back.
All right.
800-585-1051.
Are you allowing your kids to go to school?
Did you change your mind?
What are your thoughts?
Call us now.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
Pick up the phone, baby.
Call 800-585-1051 to join in to the discussion with The Breakfast Club.
Talk about it.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha God.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Now, if you just joined us, we're talking about our kids going back to school and our
thoughts on things.
So let's go to the phone line.
So, hello, who's this?
John.
Jonathan, what's up, brother?
What's going on, bro?
Hey, how many kids you got?
How many babies?
We got one, man.
One.
How old?
Five.
Five.
What are you doing with school?
You allowing them to go back, or you doing virtual?
What are your thoughts?
No, we're doing a virtual learning right now just because of the cases in the county that
we live in.
They said we're going up.
Like, some of the teachers, they're not wearing masks and stuff, so I'm just like, nah, I
don't want to do it at all.
What do you live?
Memphis, Tennessee.
Well, I stay in Memphis, but Memphis is like, you know where Memphis is, but Memphis is
on the outside of Memphis or whatever.
Okay.
Yeah, I think that makes sense, too.
I guess it's what area you live in and how the cases are.
I know in New York, New Jersey, in this area, I know the cases were, I think, like 1%, which
is pretty low.
Mm-hmm.
But I know in certain areas.
Really?
I think it was 1%, right?
We got the option of actually letting them go back to school
anytime we want to.
So, like, if the cases start to go down,
we'll probably let her go back to school or whatever.
But she enjoying the home,
learning I got everything that she needs
and everything at home.
And that's what sucks, man.
You won't know if you've made the right decision
until, God forbid, some BS happens.
You know what I mean?
So that's why we all as parents are on pins and needles.
That's why our parental paranoia,
that anxiety that comes
with being a parent
is through the roof right now.
Because we all don't know
if we've made the right decision
until, you know,
the outbreak happens.
God forbid.
Well, thank you for calling, man.
Oh, God.
And good luck with your baby.
Hey, Andy.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Hey, y'all stop beefing
with Joe Budden online or whatever. Y'all talk to that man that was over the phone and s***. You Yes, sir. Hey, y'all stop beefing with Joe Budden on, uh,
online or whatever.
Y'all talk to that man that was over the phone and s***.
You know what I'm saying?
Y'all was beefing online.
What have you seen me say online?
I ain't been on,
I ain't even been on social media in five days.
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no,
I'm just talking about as far as like on the radio is concerned.
Like y'all just having this stuff in house,
man.
Y'all too important to the culture to be beefing online or whatever.
Who's beefing?
I haven't said anything.
Hey,
that's, hey, that's what, that's what it looks like versus social media.
Because I see how y'all talk about the clips or whatever.
Like, I don't watch the whole episode.
So y'all don't understand exactly what he's hearing the whole time.
But this is my opinion.
But y'all doing y'all thing.
I focus on it. I ain't beefing with Joe.
I don't even know what he's talking about.
I wish him a happy birthday.
I texted him.
I really don't.
I don't even know what you're talking about.
He didn't respond to me, though.
But I did wish him a happy birthday.
But I ain't beefing with Joe.
I want to see all my people successful.
Shout out to Joe Button.
All right.
All right.
So what's the moral of the story, if there is a moral?
The moral of the story is, as a parent who suffers from parental paranoia,
we will not know if we've made the right decision sending our kids back to school
until, God forbids, an outbreak happens.
So let's all pray.
Even though we have collective parental paranoia,
let's all have collective parental prayer as well.
All right.
Now we got rumors on the way, Yee?
Well, since we're talking about kids,
let's talk about LeBron had to say about not bringing his kids into the NBA bubble.
All right.
We'll get into that next.
Keep it locked.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
The Breakfast Club.
Morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Shalameen the Guide.
We are The Breakfast Club. Now, if you just joined us, we're talking about our kids going back to
school and our thoughts on things. So let's go to the phone line. So hello, who's this?
Jonathan. Jonathan, what's up, brother? What's going on, boss? Hey, how many kids you got? How
many babies? We got one, man. One. How old?
Five.
Five.
What are you doing with school?
You allowing them to go back or you doing virtual?
What are your thoughts?
No, we're doing a virtual learning right now just because of the cases in the county that
we live in.
They said we're going up.
Like some of the teachers, they're not wearing masks and stuff.
So I'm just like, nah, I don't want to do it at all.
Memphis, Tennessee.
I stay in Memphis, but Memphis is like, you know where Memphis is, but
Memphis is on the
outside of Memphis
or whatever.
Okay.
Yeah, I think that
makes sense, too.
I guess it's what
area you live in and
how the cases are.
I know in New York,
New Jersey, in this
area, I know the
cases were, I think,
like 1%, which is
pretty low.
1%?
Really?
I think it was 1%,
right?
We got the option of
actually letting them
go back to school
anytime we want to.
So, like, if the cases start to go down, we'll probably let her go back to school or whatever.
But she enjoying the home, learning I got everything that she needs and everything at home.
And that's what sucks, man.
You won't know if you've made the right decision until, God forbid, some BS happens.
You know what I mean?
So that's why we all as parents are on pins and needles.
That's why our parental paranoia, that anxiety that comes with being a parent is through the roof right now because we all don't know if we've made the
right decision to tell you know the outbreak happens all right god forbid well thank you
for calling man and good luck with your baby hey hey hey yes sir yes sir y'all not beating with
your button on uh online or whatever y'all talked to that man that was over the phone and shit. You know what I'm saying?
Y'all was beefing online.
What have you seen me say online?
I ain't even been on social media in five days.
No, no, no.
I'm just talking about as far as on the radio is concerned.
Y'all just handling that stuff in-house, man.
Y'all too important to the culture to be beefing online or whatever.
Who's beefing?
I haven't said anything.
Hey, that's what it looks like versus social media.
I see how y'all talk about the clips or whatever.
Like, I don't watch the whole episode.
So y'all don't understand exactly what he's saying.
But it is my opinion.
But y'all doing y'all thing.
I focus on it.
I ain't beefing with Joe.
I don't even know what he's talking about.
I wish him a happy birthday.
I texted him.
I really don't.
I don't even know what you're talking about.
He didn't respond to me, though.
But I did wish him a happy birthday.
But I ain't beefing with Joe.
I want to see all my people successful.
Shout out to Joe Button.
All right. All right.
All right.
So what's the moral of the story, if there is a moral?
The moral of the story is, as a parent who suffers from parental paranoia,
we will not know if we've made the right decision sending our kids back to school
until, God forbids, an outbreak happens.
So let's all pray.
Even though we have collective parental paranoia,
let's all have collective parental prayer as well.
All right.
Now we got rumors on the way, Yee?
Well, since we're talking about kids,
let's talk about LeBron had to say about not bringing his kids into the NBA bubble.
All right.
We'll get into that next.
Keep it locked.
It's The Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha God.
We are The Breakfast Club.
Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk Big Sean.
This is The Rumor Report with Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy. We are The Breakfast Club. Let's get to the rumors. Let's talk Big Sean. This is
The Rumor Report with Angela
Yee.
On The Breakfast Club.
Well, first
of all, shout out to Big Sean for putting out an amazing
album. I know you guys have,
I'm sure, all listened to
Detroit, too. I have. Shout out to Big Sean.
I have. 21 songs, but still
it's a great album.
I know it's hard to put out that many songs
and have an album still be popping,
but I think he did a great job.
Congrats to him.
I absolutely love Big Sean's album.
I heard a lot of it last year,
but it's still very dope.
I love the joint Wolves with Post Malone.
I love ZTFO.
ZTFO is hard.
Zen, F out.
Guard your heart.
Big Sean got some joints.
I like Big Sean, though.
And, you know, Big Sean had posted, he said,
I thought doing what I loved would always make me happy and satisfied.
So when I got tired of it, I was confused and it drove me insane.
Later, I realized I was just growing and had to gain a new mentality
and foundation on many levels and rediscover my passion and try new things.
I don't feel like this currently, but I had never gone through wanting to kill myself, give up on my life until the past few years.
And I didn't realize how important it was to embrace the ups and downs of life and enjoy taking active steps to better it.
It's in the journey. It's the journey.
All right. In addition, Big Sean said that he is starting his own label after this album.
So he said it's time for that.
So, yes, I believe it is time.
Is this his last album with good music?
What does that mean?
You know what?
I think this might be his last album on good music.
And, I mean, it looks like he just wants to start his own label, too,
and put some other people on.
All right.
Well, congratulations to him for that.
I mean, I heard he wants to put a lot of Detroit on, which I think is dope.
He has a whole song on there with all Detroit artists.
Yeah, he does.
And I actually I would like to hear more artists do that kind of concept.
I like the Detroit, Detroit, what's it called?
A Detroit cypher record.
Mm hmm. All right.
Now, LeBron is saying that he doesn't have his kids in the bubble.
And there's a reason for that. And it seems like a very practical reason. Listen to this.
There's nothing for me to do. I mean, I got a 16 year old. I mean, he's going to sit in the bubble and do what?
I got a 13 year old. He's going to do what? And then my five year old girl. There's nothing for her to do here.
The park is not open. It makes no sense for me to be here.
LeBron sounded so disgusted by that question. I don't know what the exact question was, but he just sounded disgusted.
Like, what the hell is my child going to do in a bubble?
Why did you decide not to bring your kids was the question.
That, he looked so disgusted and sounded so disgusted answering that question.
But it's the truth, though.
That bubble is a work environment.
That's literally all it is.
It's literally the NBA said we have to get this work done.
No recreation, no family, no entertainment.
Work.
Yeah, he's right.
Are you allowed to bring your family, though, if you want to?
Yeah, they said you can bring your family, yeah.
But like you said, what are my kids going to do all day long in that bubble?
They're going to be bored out of their mind.
Yeah.
Play with the other kids?
I don't know.
Watch them.
Go to the pool.
But I feel them.
The kids will probably be like, Dad, I want to go home to my beautiful house.
All right.
And Rihanna, there's a documentary that's coming to Amazon next summer.
They've been talking about this documentary for such a long time.
But according to director Peter Berg, he said that Rihanna's endeavors is what actually
delayed the release of this movie.
She's got so many different things going on.
So they said the Rihanna doc is something they've been working on for almost four years.
Amazon's going to release it next summer and sometime hopefully around the 4th of July.
It's been a really epic journey the past four years with her.
I can't wait to see that.
Now Rihanna also posted a picture and apparently, well she didn't post it but there was a picture posted and it looks like she was bruised and battered.
And they said the reason is that she fell off of her electric scooter.
There was an accident, and that was what happened.
The scooter flipped over, smacked her in the face and forehead.
So they said it looks worse than it is, and she is healing from that.
I don't play around with them scooters, by the way.
I see people going off fast on those scooters all the time.
You fell off one of them scooters one time.
Yeah, I am not playing those games.
Landed on her. She was injured for
at least six months. She couldn't walk in heels.
Her ankle was swollen.
She don't play with them scooters either.
Yeah, I don't like nothing with two wheels.
What? Not even a bike?
I'm going to get you a bike.
Motorcycle, bikes. I mean, I used to ride bikes back
in the day. Like, you know, of course, when you was a kid.
I'm going to get you a bike. I'm going to get you one.
Nah, you just want me to ride.
Shut up. I'm only doing this story
because it was trending. What?
Odell Beckham Jr.
What happened with Odell? What happened with him?
Alright, well, on
the podcast Thoughts Next Door,
they talked about...
The podcast called Thoughts Next Door?
You know, Selena Powell know Selena Powell anyway they had
Chief Keef's baby mom
I don't know
they do their own podcast
called Thoughts Next Door
yeah
I never knew that
okay
amazing
he went on their podcast
no
oh
I was about to tell you
Chief Keef's baby mom
was on there
and she had this to say
about Odell Beckham Jr.
go baby
you can't
you gotta
you can keep it.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
We're avoiding lawsuits here.
Allegedly.
Yes, he loves to be sh***** on.
Okay.
Okay, that was my first time ever.
I never thought.
You did it?
You actually did it?
No, I actually couldn't sh*****.
Okay, he wanted me to come on a plane.
He was like, make sure you don't have any underwear.
Don't take a shower for 24 hours.
I'm like, damn, what the fuck you on?
But he was like, take a picture.
This is how I got flown out.
He was like, take a picture of me.
You shitheads.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So I only talked about it because I saw a lot of people discussing it online.
I don't know if that's true or not, but that's what people are talking about when they talk
about Odell Beckham Jr. and toilets and why that's trending.
Now, what if Odell sues them?
He could.
Well, that's what they said allegedly.
They did say allegedly, huh?
It's just weird, man.
People have podcasts.
People do these interviews.
And people say whatever they feel like they want to say or whatever they can say just to get attention.
A lot of this stuff is really just to get what happened just now,
which is a mention.
You know what I mean?
But, you know, I only did it because a lot of people were talking about it
online, and they're like, wow, Odell.
So I just wanted you all to know what it was.
Take from it what you will.
It might not be true.
What can I just say for all the people who have platforms,
all these people who have podcasts, you know, learn from us.
When you put these things out there,
you better have some proof
that can back these things up
because people will sue you.
Trust me.
Listen to somebody who's been sued
a few times.
Somebody who has sued a couple of times.
But if you say allegedly,
does that avoid...
I don't think allegedly always protects you.
Not always.
I'm not...
Not always. I think not, not always.
I think in most cases it can.
All right.
Well, I'm Angela Yee, and that is your alleged rumor report.
All right.
Thank you, Ms. Yee.
All right.
When we come back, let's get to the People's Choice Mix Revolt.
Shout out to Revolt.
We'll see you guys tomorrow.
Everybody else, the People's Choice Mix is up next.
It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
Good morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Good morning. Morning, everybody. It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy. We
are The Breakfast Club. Now, shout to everybody in Atlanta. Shout to DJ Louis V. Shout to June.
Shout to DJ Mona, my whole family at the 105.3 The Beat family. I had an amazing time out. I was in
Atlanta for a day. I had to take care of some business and I actually did a party, my first
party. It was kind of strange.
You know, coming from the New York, New Jersey area,
if you don't wear a mask, it's kind of like people look down on you,
like you should be wearing your mask.
But in Atlanta, when you wear your mask, they kind of look down on you.
Like, why you got that mask on, though?
Mask shaming.
So I think I was the only one in the club besides staff with masks on.
So you're in the studio in Atlanta doing a show.
Yeah, I'm in the studio in Atlanta, yep.
So you didn't bring your equipment and set it up yourself.
You went to the studio.
Yeah, I went to the studio, yeah.
Shout out to Louis V for having his personalities in the studio.
I'm ready to get back in the studio, my goddamn self.
Okay, I'm tired of this Zoom.
I'm tired of these laptops.
I need to be back in the studio.
I need that energy.
Well, if you go back to the studio, you still got to use your laptop, sir.
You know what I mean.
All right.
When we come back, we got the positive note.
It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning.
Morning, everybody.
It's DJ Envy, Angela Yee, Charlamagne Tha Guy.
We are the Breakfast Club.
All right.
Now, Charlamagne, you got a positive note for the people?
Yes, I do.
My positive note is simply this.
It's a Tuesday, start of another work week.
A lot of kids going back to school. I just want everybody out there to know you cannot break a person who gets their strength from God.
So a lot of us parents right now are leaning on our higher power in order to not let that parental paranoia, that anxiety of sending our kids back to school during this pandemic make us go crazy. So just know, all the parents out there, and for anybody in general,
you cannot break a person who gets their strength from God.
Breakfast club, bitches!
You all finished or you all done?
Had enough of this country?
Ever dreamt about starting your own?
I planted the flag.
This is mine.
I own this.
It's surprisingly easy.
55 gallons of water, 500 pounds of concrete.
Or maybe not.
No country willingly gives up their territory.
Oh my God.
What is that?
Bullets.
Listen to Escape from Zakistan.
That's Escape from Z-A-Q-istan
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kate Max.
You might know me from my popular online series, The Running Interview Show,
where I run with celebrities, athletes, entrepreneurs, and more.
After those runs, the conversations keep going.
That's what my podcast, Post Run High, is all about.
It's a chance to sit down with my guests and dive even deeper into
their stories, their journeys, and the thoughts that arise once we've hit the pavement together.
Listen to Post Run High on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey y'all, Nimany here. I'm the host of a brand new history podcast for kids and families called Historical Records.
Executive produced by Questlove, The Story Pirates, and John Glickman,
Historical Records brings history to life through hip-hop. Each episode is about a different inspiring figure from history.
Like this one about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old girl in Alabama who refused to give up her seat on the city bus nine whole months before Rosa Parks did the same thing.
Check it. Get the kids in your life excited about history by tuning in to Historical Records,
because in order to make history, you have to make some noise. Listen to Historical Records
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.