The Breakfast Club - The Good Bad and Ugly ( Michelle Obama Speaks On Her Kids Earning Their Stripes and Diddy Update Trials)
Episode Date: June 5, 2025YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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This is an iHeart podcast.
I'm the homegirl that knows a little bit about everything and everybody.
You hear that exclusive?
You know if you don't lie about that, right?
Lauren came in hot.
Hey, guys, it's Lauren LaRosa, and this is the latest with Lauren LaRosa.
Now, I'm your host, Lauren LaRosa, and we are here for another episode.
Lowriders, I appreciate you guys for joining me.
Welcome on back, welcome on back.
If you cannot tell already, I am energized today.
Y'all know we do the behind the scenes of the grind,
behind the scenes of the grind little check-in
that we do here, not little,
because everything is big this season.
Back, back, back on the grind.
Grinding.
I am feeling rejuvenated.
I am excited to be here with you guys for another episode.
I'm just excited for the place that I'm in in my life.
Good, bad, ugly, and indifferent.
And the reason why I say this is because I
think this week and these last couple weeks for me
have been I've been learning in real time
how to balance schedule.
And I think when people talk about that and the skill real time how to balance like schedule.
And I think when people talk about that
and the skill to be able to plan and schedule,
they don't give it up for the girls
who know how to do it enough, okay?
Because I religiously am not the planner
of the friend group in the family,
even though, you know, oldest daughters in the family
somehow become the family manager.
The long-term planning and things of that nature
are not my specialty.
I'm really well at executing almost kind of in crisis. Like last minute on the spot, making decisions,
boom, boom, boom, let's get it. Finding a solution. But what I'm learning so much more
about when juggling so many different things now is the beauty and the necessity of long-term
planning and scheduling and just organization and having a time and place
for preparation and your thoughts and a time for work
where you're all the way locked in, a time for play,
a time to say no to play, a time to say no to work,
those type of things.
So grateful to be experiencing that
at this point in my journey because I feel like
it's, y'all know I'm really, really spiritual. And I've been telling myself as I've been praying about some
of the different, you know, walls and different things I've been coming up against, I've been
asking God to guide me through them. But I've also been saying to God, okay, God, I hear you.
Okay, God, I hear you. Okay, God, I hear you because this is not my first time having like an
inner conversation with myself about proper planning, preparation, taking the time, not
burning yourself out, prioritizing what's important versus what's not. But I think in real
time, I'm having to make those decisions or else. And yesterday, I literally said that prayer to God like, God, I hear you, I understand
what you're saying to me, and I'm gonna do it. And I did a lot of things yesterday. I
prepped for my segment the day before for the Breakfast Club, which I normally had done,
but I've been so exhausted just doing this trial thing and now we have the podcast and
no excuses, more So just a growth thing
Growing into places and spaces where I can't operate like the woman I was before I got to those places has been my
testimony lately
So, you know today as I arrived here on the podcast
That's where I'm at and that's how I'm feeling and I know a lot of you guys can probably
You know everybody goes through different changes in their life in different elements and different elevation points of your life require a different version
Of you so that is where I'm at today
currently, but let's get on into the latest because if we're talking about elevation and you know
Growth we got to talk about one of the most historically famous families in our nation's history the Obama family
Because Michelle Obama has recently come out and made her comments for the first time
About her daughter Malia Malia Obama dropping her last name
So there have been reports that came out that Malia Obama used her middle name in so Malia in
As her last name for credits of a short film that she wrote and directed.
The short film was called The Heart.
This short film aired at the Sundance Festival in 2024.
And when the news broke, people were like, oh, wait, hold on.
But I instantly understood what that was.
I knew, I'm like, okay, these are girls who've been under this microscope because,
you know, their dad was the first black president of the United States
and their mother as the first lady of the United States
is some amazing things for a nation.
But she was highly criticized as a black woman in the White House.
So, of course, their lives have been not without scrutiny as well.
And these are young girls growing into women
in front of our eyes, finding their own way
and I'm sure wanting to make their own way.
So I had already kind of put two and two together
and knew that that's probably what it was.
But Michelle Obama came and cleared it up for us.
And here is what she said on an episode
of a podcast called, Civiling Rivalry.
Let's take a listen.
Our daughters are 25 and 23.
They are young adult women,
but they definitely went through a period
in their teen years where it was the push away.
We wanna, I mean, they're still doing that.
And you guys know this is the children of parents
who are known.
You're trying to distinguish yourself.
I mean, it is very important for my kids
to feel like they've earned what they are getting
in the world.
And they don't want people to assume
that they don't work hard,
that they're just naturally just handed things.
They're very sensitive to that.
They wanna be sensitive to that.
They wanna be their own people. You know, Malia who started in film,
I mean her first project, she took off her last name
and we were like, they're still gonna know it's you, Malia.
But we respected the fact that, you know,
she's trying to make her way.
But now as they're older,
that, you know, she's trying to make her way. But now as they're older, I think they are embracing our parenting principles.
They have a clear understanding of why we did a lot of what we did.
Now, I love that because number one, I think that there's always this conversation amongst black families and about
black families on nepotism.
And I love the black nepotism conversation because I feel like whenever we get to have
that black nepotism conversation, we get to argue about why if we worked hard and we earn the money,
our kids get to get the silver spoon too.
But I also think that for me, playing devil's advocate, I think that it would
have been a beautiful thing to see Malia Obama put Malia Obama in the credits.
I think it would have been a beautiful thing, you know, for her to say,
hey, my dad is Barack Obama.
My mom is Michelle Obama.
I want to get in the film.
Dad, mom, who can you call? Because I think that that is what the generational wealth of, you know, being people, not even, you
know, black people, and I'm speaking to that because I'm a black woman, but people in general,
red, white, or blue, the whole point in, you know, breaking down these barriers and breaking glass
ceilings and walking through these doors and sitting at these tables
or building your own table is so that a person behind you
doesn't have to fight or break through or build
or carry the weight of doing so many of these different
things in the way that you have to.
For me, when it comes to black children,
especially in like creative spaces and artsy spaces,
it's always about like, I wanna claim my own right
because your art is your art
and that's what you're trying to protect.
But I love when I see what LeBron and, you know,
Bronnie Jr. are doing.
It's like, I'm here, I'm talented, I deserve to be here
and I could have worked to be here.
And I did work to be here, but at the same time,
my dad is LeBron James.
But I love that Michelle Obama and Barack Obama
give their daughters, from what it seems like
on the outside looking in,
that space to be their own people,
to wedge their own sword in society.
But they're honest with them.
They're like, look, no matter what you call yourself,
Malia, they're gonna know it's you, baby.
We are who we are at this point,
but they still allow her to go through life and understand that and experience
that on their own. Something about that Obama family that just makes me,
you know, like I want to strive to have that, that regalness and that love.
And it's still that in my children with my husband. I look at the Obamas as that.
And Michelle Obama just announced her book that will go on sale
November 4th, 2025 is called The Look.
She says, during our family's time in the White House, the way I looked was
constantly being discussed and dissected.
What I wore, how my hair was styled.
For a while now, I've been wanting to reclaim more of that story, to
share it in my own way.
I'm thankful to be at a stage in life
where I feel comfortable expressing myself freely.
Wearing what I love and doing what I love feels true to me
and I'm excited to share some of what I've learned
along the way.
My new book, The Look, comes out on November 4th.
It's a reflection on my lifelong journey
with fashion, hair, and beauty.
I am really excited about that as a woman, a black woman in a very public space that,
you know, I've been criticized for my outfits, whether they're too seductive or not in my
personal time.
Or, you know, my hair on camera, my makeup on camera, you know, it's the small things.
I think all women get it, but I do think, you know, speaking from the perspective of
a black woman, just like a lot of other know, speaking from the perspective of a black woman,
just like a lot of other things,
there is the feeling of, I can't not get that right.
Hair has to be laid. Beauty has to be on point.
Outfits have to be very aware and cognizant
of the room that I'm walking into,
because I might not get another chance
to show up in this way.
So excited to hear what, you know,
what she's teaching through this book,
because Michelle Obama got, man, what I deal with a little bit on social media in this way. So excited to hear what you know what she's teaching through this book because
Michelle Obama got men. What I what I did with a little bit on social media ain't nothing
compared with to our first lady Michelle Obama and what she experienced while being in the
White House. So definitely will be on a lookout for that. But I want to also then pivot in
the latest because you guys know that we've been keeping you up to date on the trial here in New York where Sean Combs, Diddy is on trial for a plethora of things.
There's counts of trafficking, you know, all of these things.
And I've been going to the courthouse daily and now I've decided that I will go, of course,
and keep up with what is going on in the court, whether I'm there or not through transcripts
and court reporters.
But I do wanna make sure that the days when you guys
see me there, because I do have dual, triple roles,
like I'm here on the podcast with y'all,
the low riders, we, you know, at the breakfast club,
we in court, it's a lot to figure out.
Prioritizing, I told y'all in the beginning of this,
has been a thing that I've had to learn
because of the voice
and the different areas that all this coverage
has been able to place me and I'm so grateful for that.
But I wanna make sure it's effective.
So not every day am I at the actual court,
but y'all gonna still hear me.
Y'all gonna hear me though.
So yesterday in court, there was a woman who testified.
Her name is Brianna Bana Bungalon.
Now this woman, Cassie had spoke a lot about her
in her testimony and talked about, you know,
they were really close friends.
She was actually a designer as well, a fashion designer,
friends with Cassie, and she experienced a very,
allegedly a very violent and physical interaction with Diddy,
you know, while Cassie was present that Cassie spoke to.
And now she is on the stand telling her story herself this week.
So she alleged that Diddy held her on a 17 story balcony back in September of 2016.
And she testified that Diddy threw her on the balcony furniture.
She alleged that she was left with a bruise on the back of her leg as well
as neck and back pain.
And that Diddy said to her allegedly in the midst of all of this and the
midst of all this rage that he's a devil and he could kill her.
And that was on a whole different occasion.
So you have the balcony incident,
then you have the whole, I'm the devil,
I could kill you, that whole incident.
And what she is speaking to is an incident
where Diddy basically came into Cassie's home
and the way that the prosecutors or the government
set it up when talking about this woman
and that experience was that Diddy was at a point allegedly
where he was trying to keep Cassie from drug abuse
and different friend groups and you know,
she was just, she was spiraling.
The government alleges that they were both using drugs
and they were both doing these different things,
but that actually Cassie had began to utilize drugs
and do different things a bit too much
and he was trying to almost like safeguard her.
Cassie and Ms. Brianna tell a whole different story.
They talk about this, and this was day 16 of the trial.
They talk about this and this was day 16 of the trial. They talk about this as, you know, him coming in,
you know, an alleged drunken rage and just being upset about things
that were not in Brianna's control whatsoever.
And she also talked about not even wanting to meet Diddy at one point
when Cassie was trying to introduce them, because she didn't like
some of the things that she had been, you know, just seeing from kind of like a third eye view.
But she did.
Bona is what they call her Cassie's friend that took the stand.
She did talk about them, you know, being on drugs that,
you know, within that incident, her and Cassie, she alleged.
And the Dittie's defense team came in and tried to, you know, poke holes in her story
because she can't remember a lot of things.
She can't remember a lot of things.
She couldn't remember where she told the government that the incident took place at.
She couldn't remember what drugs she told them that she was on.
But if you're the government, it's like, okay, of course, she's telling you that they were
on drugs.
She just can't remember all of the drugs and it wasn't maybe as much as you guys are depicting, right?
Cassie came prior to this and had a very in-depth conversation about how extensive
her drug use was having to go to rehab, doing drugs with her friend, Bona, who we
are now hearing from.
Cassie herself said there's a whole year she talked about it.
She said, you know, 2017 is basically a blur because of the drugs that she was doing.
So I don't know how effective this is on a jury
to, you know, for the prosecutors
to present this information that way,
where it's like, okay, he's in this rage,
he comes in, a person is physically harmed,
they're scared, there's a whole knife fight
that breaks out allegedly at some point
between Diddy and Cassie as well.
And this was like a normal thing that they, you know, allegedly used to just do
because this is, you know, allegedly Cassie fighting back against the rage
and just how Diddy would handle things.
But there's all these things, right?
Like I'm saying all that briefly.
And if you guys can't tell by now, I feel like yesterday's testimony,
testimony, it was there, but it's not something I spent a lot of time on.
There are all these big, salacious things, right?
There's knives, there's I'm the devil.
There's allegedly threats to kill someone.
And then you also have to enter the fact that,
all parties involved, there was conversation prior to this
woman taking a stand up, all of this drug use, which was confirmed by Mal this woman taking a stand of all of this drug
use, which was confirmed by multiple, including Cassie herself, which was confirmed by multiple
people.
So it's like, how do you as Diddy's team effectively make a juror think that this witness is not
credible?
How?
When you've heard over and over and over prior to her getting on the stand, that a lot of
people don't remember some things because of the drugs that they were doing
or the trauma that they experienced.
That's been my biggest question here.
And I think that's why the government hasn't rested their case yet is because
I think they want, I mean, they beyond a shadow of a doubt, right?
It is their goal, but they're trying to fill in color and every little
blank inch that they can
Because that is what they have to do or
This might not be a win for them because if I'm a juror I'm thinking about it like okay
Yeah, that happened right like
Did he seem as alleging this woman that he came into this rage and came at you know This bottom woman the way he did because he was protecting
Cassie from drug use and these things.
But at the same time, everything else that we've seen physically from Diddy that has
been alleged and just the power, the influence, the anger, all of these things has been so
big and we've heard it from so many different angles.
How do you fight against that?
I keep saying it.
I really keep saying it because I think that that's when, you know,
we'll kind of get answers to a lot of these questions or not.
And really know where the, you know, the verdict in this case is going to go.
But I'm really interested to see what Diddy's defense is going to be
to all these things.
And we've seen some of it, right, like
the angling of, you know, how they
position their questioning when they cross-examine the witnesses and things of that nature.