Today, Explained - Live from SXSW: Noel King interviews Charlamagne tha God and Angela Rye
Episode Date: March 17, 2024In this no-holds-barred interview from the SXSW stage, Vox's Noel King asks comedian and radio host Charlamagne tha God and political commentator Angela Rye whether Black voters are turning away from ...Joe Biden and toward Donald Trump. This episode was produced by Hady Mawajdeh, edited by Miranda Kennedy, engineered by Patrick Boyd, and hosted by Noel King. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained Support Today, Explained by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. Hey there, it's Sunday, and you know we normally only drop episodes on weekdays, but this week
we have a little something extra.
So last Sunday, I interviewed radio host Charlemagne Tha God and political commentator Angela Rye
live on stage at South by Southwest.
You heard an edited section of that interview on Monday's show, and then some of you asked,
can we hear the whole thing, though?
So here's an extended cut of the interview that includes some questions from the audience, even.
It sounds pretty raw. It's only very lightly edited.
Listen if you like.
And we'll be back with regular episodes tomorrow. Oh, there we go.
How's everyone?
All right. Hello and welcome to a special live taping of Today Explained from South by Southwest.
I'm your host, Noelle the King. I appreciate you all coming out today.
And I want you guys to know that we are going to be taking questions for the last 10 minutes of today's panel.
So when that moment hits us, I've got a clock here.
I'm just going to ask you guys to line up at the mics if you've got questions, okay? So today, Explained, for those of you who don't know, is Vox's daily news podcast
and radio show. And this is an election year, and so we are covering a lot of election-related news.
As we sit here, we're 239 days away from the vote, whether we like it or not. And my guests
today are both political commentators,
and I would also say observers. How about observer? The gentleman shaking his head is
Charlemagne the God. Like me, Charlemagne is a radio host, but he has a much bigger audience.
He's the co-host of iHeartRadio's The Breakfast Club. Millions of people hear him every week. He's the author of two very good books, Black Privilege and Shook
Ones. I've read both. They're excellent. And he's got a third book coming out in May called
Get Honest or Die Lying. Charlemagne is a frequent guest host, including on The Daily Show. You may
have seen his interview with Nikki Haley last fall before she dropped out of the race. Charlotte Main is also the founder of the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Also with us is Angela Rye.
Angela is a woman who has done it all.
She is.
Angela is a lawyer.
She's a commentator.
She's a political strategist.
She's a social justice advocate.
And she's host of the very good Native Land Pod.
Now, these guys are friends, and together
they founded the Reasoned Choice Network, which is a platform for diverse voices and perspectives
this election year. All right, so I want to get started with you, Charlemagne, if we could. So
you are a media mogul. It's an overused term, but you actually fit the bill. But you got your start
far away from here in rural South Carolina. Tell me a little bit about your journey to the bill. But you got your start far away from here in rural South Carolina. Tell me a
little bit about your journey to the stage. Oh, that's a broad question. That's why I wrote two
books. But yeah, I come from North Carolina, South Carolina. I started doing radio. I started off as
a radio intern in 1998 at Z93 Jams in Charleston, South Carolina. Then I did radio in Columbia,
South Carolina. I did radio in New York.
I was Wendy Williams' co-host,
and I did my own morning show in Philly.
And all of that ultimately led me to The Breakfast Club,
where I've been for the past 14 years.
You do a morning radio show, yeah.
The Breakfast Club, yeah.
What time do you get up?
Oh, at 6 a.m.
No, no, no, I'm lying.
I get up at 4 a.m.
You get up at 4, yeah.
Yeah, I get up at 4 a.m.
Yeah.
I used to work on a daily news radio show. Started at 5 a.m. Yeah, I get up at 4 a.m. Yeah. I used to work on a daily news radio show.
Started at 5 a.m.
I had to get up at 3.30.
Does it, like, put a wrench in your social life?
I had no life when I was doing this.
No, I'm married with four kids, so I don't have much of a social life.
My social life is spit socializing with those young girls I got at the house.
So, yeah.
I'm cool.
I've been off.
I'm 45.
I was born in 1978.
Like, social life. The last century. What is that? Yeah. I don't have time for that. That's, I'm cool. I've been off, I'm 45, I was born in 1978, like social life.
The last century. What is that? I don't have time for that.
And so tell me a little bit about your journey here. Well, that is also a very loaded question.
I was born to an activist and an educator, and I was always taught that I had an opinion,
and whatever I wanted to do in this life,
I could. I think I've tried my best to make my parents proud and the culture proud. The culture
to me are black folks, first and foremost, and the folks who are interested in our uplifting.
And yeah, I think I went through phases where I hated politics completely. I think I might be back
there, frankly, and worked on
Capitol Hill when I found someone who looked like me and thought like me in Congresswoman Maxine
Waters, where I interned. Ended up working on the Homeland Security Committee and then went to the
Congressional Black Caucus, started a firm, fell on TV somehow. I still don't really know how that
happened or why. It never was a goal of mine and um ended up adopting this lovely individual as a brother yeah how did that happen where does
this relationship start it all started with Tommy Lahren tell this story oh yeah that's not my
friend they remember you it's okay there was there was a, I forgot what year this was, like 2015, 2016?
Yeah, 2016 election time.
2015, 2016, and that's when Tommy Lauren was making her rounds, right?
And she was supposed to come on Breakfast Club the same day that she did,
I think she did the Daily Show the night before, and she did The View that morning.
But then they canceled her appearance.
And so, long story short you know they they there was this discussion
about her in Viacom for a moment and I was in the Viacom building at the time they wanted us to have
a conversation we had a conversation and I I was making a joke based off what Trevor Noah said when
Trevor Noah uh had Tommy Lauren on the show and she said she doesn't see color so he said what do
you what do you do when you're at a stoplight then?
And so I took a picture, me and her took a picture together,
and I put it in black and white, and I put, do you see color?
It was supposed to be a joke.
And then later on on Twitter, I just asked a question.
I said, yo, who are the,
and I was trying to use a politically correct language at the time.
So I said, who are
the woke women of color
that we could galvanize around
and amplify and
make them a voice the way that, you know, people
have done with Tommy Lauren?
I got my ass handed to me.
I mean, they went
crazy on Twitter because of that, but because of
that tweet, mad
people were telling me, Angela Rye, Angela Rye,
Angela Rye. And you know, Angela just
sent me a DM and she said, I understood what you was trying
to say. The story
of our lives now. Yes.
She said, I understood what you was trying
to say, but you didn't convey it
correctly. And then that's how
our relationship started. And that's
why I wouldn't change, you know,
anything that happened
the way it happened because I connected with Angela right no I have to tell you since it's
today explained um it's interesting to me that uh I honestly feel like people try hard to
misunderstand Lenard um like really hard because it, there's something in us now that treats, and maybe we
try really hard to misunderstand all of us who don't think the same as us, but there's something
in us now where we're so hyper skeptical that we don't believe in the innate goodness of a person.
So I remember seeing the post, I can't remember everything about it, but I'm like, they are
dragging out of him, you know? And I couldn't understand why, because if this is someone who doesn't occupy this space
and is asking in earnest, who are these people? It feels like somebody could just say, son,
come along and tell him what it is. Um, we have developed the type of siblingship where I can ask
him all the dumb questions. He can ask those of me too. And I actually encourage that type of siblingship where I can ask him all the dumb questions. He can ask those of me too.
And I actually encourage that type of dialogue. You have it in your family. Why can't you extend
that into your family or your friend circle or to the folks you work with? That is how we evolve.
If we can't have conversation, I don't know what it is. My co-host of Native Lampod, Tiffany Cross
is over here. That was the one solo with Native Lampot. And we do that all the time.
It carries on to the podcast. It absolutely is in our conversations every day. I find myself
trying to convince Tiffany. She lets me know regularly. I'm not going to convince her. We
can agree to disagree and there's no love lost. Yeah. I want to talk about one of those moments
when you were taken out of context in a way that I found really surprising because I just looked
this up in preparation for this interview. So it's 2020. Charlamagne Tha God is interviewing candidate Joe Biden. And you're
trying to get a couple more minutes with him. You're telling him, hang on, hang on, like don't
end the interview yet, which is something every interviewer does. The candidate tells you, you
know, you've got two minutes left. You say, no, give me 10. This is a very normal thing for an
interviewer to do. And at this point, candidate Biden makes the statement, if you don't know whether you're for me or for Trump, you ain't black.
I am very curious what went through your head as an interviewer when candidate then candidate Biden said that.
Exactly what I said to him in that moment.
Like, you know, it's not about I actually said to him, it's not about, you know, Trump.
It's about me wanting to, you know, make sure that the Democratic Party is going to show up and do things for our people.
And, you know, I didn't even disagree with his statement because I think what he was, I hate trying to say what white people are trying to say.
But what he was trying to say was like, if you're black and you vote for Donald Trump, you're voting against your interests.
That's how I took it. I didn't take it as an insult in any way, shape, or form.
Sure. No, I guess the question is in that moment, so this is before Biden is elected,
in that moment, did you believe that to be true?
What, that if you vote for Trump, you're voting against him?
Yeah.
Yeah. I believe that to be true now.
You believe that to be true now?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Okay.
Sometimes people aren't sure.
I mean, this is the thing.
People will say Charlemagne is critical of President Biden.
That means he is directing his audience toward Donald Trump.
Yeah, I think we really insult black people especially.
We insult our own intelligence when we make those
kind of statements when we say things like you can't be critical of whoever the elected official
is and still know uh what's in our best interest to do when we get into the the voting booth come
November I think that's I think you really insult the intelligence of us when you do that
Angela I um I want to say one thing. I might get in
trouble with you later for saying this, but I remember this interview because Lenard wrestled
a lot with whether or not he was going to leave that in the interview. Oh, we've all been there.
We had a conversation about it. I thought you were wrestling about it. No, they was wrestling
with me about taking it out. Oh, that's true. Okay. Sorry. So let me rephrase. Why did they want to take it out? Because they knew
that it didn't look right, that it was going to backfire. That is one of the things from talking
to a black interviewer that is still talked about to this day from Joe Biden. There are folks who
talk about it on social and it was a really foul moment. I think to me, what it illuminates,
even to this day, there are all types of special interests
in this country that have the right to criticize their government.
They are looked upon as deeply patriotic, but for the very people who came here by force,
who established this country, who have never been properly honored, recognized, seen, or
heard in this country, we can't mobilize around
our interests and push the government to do something just to be critical when it's not
serving us correctly. But if you are a part of the gun lobby, or if you are part of, you know,
a charter school movement, or if you are a part of APAC, or if you are, you know, a part of big
media, you can all represent your interest to elected officials
and candidates and make demands.
But when it comes time for us to do the same thing, now it's like, oh, no, you better not
do that.
You won't push people to the other candidate.
And it's like, no, I'm going to hold you accountable.
You have to earn my vote every time you run, whether you're on the local level, the state
level, or the federal level.
That is our requirement.
That is deeply patriotic to say, I have expectations of what it will take to keep me happy here, for me to finally
reach thriving, for me to finally reach liberty. This is what I require. I think there's also a
sense maybe, and I'm just, you know, I'm talking about what I've observed working in the media
myself, that like, you're a different
kind of radio show host.
You're not a political interviewer, and therefore, but here's the thing.
Here's where I disagree and why I'm so glad to be speaking to you today.
You do great political interviews.
Thank you.
Your political interviews, I've been doing this for 20 years.
I've been in journalism for 20 years.
Honestly, they're so, you just go right into what matters.
And it makes me wonder, because these kind of interviews are very stressful. You have to really prep for them because you don't
want to be, as an interviewer, you don't want to get something wrong. You don't want to be
embarrassed. What is your process for a Joe Biden, a Barack Obama, even a Pete Buttigieg?
He's been on the show a few times. That sounds good. Well, I approach it the same way I approach
interviews with anybody. Like, you know, I'm a very curious person. Like my mother was an English teacher.
She's still an English teacher in South Carolina.
And she always told me when I was young to read things that don't pertain to me.
And so being as she told me that I would read everything from the Source magazine, XXL magazine, the Mad Judy Bloom books.
Right. Because like I'm just a curious person.
And so it's the same thing when I'm sitting around,
you know, watching any of these elected officials.
I'm just always wondering, like,
why aren't they asking the most obvious question?
That's how I always used to feel
when I used to see people interviewing
different celebrities, like,
why aren't they asking that question?
So it's the same thing with politics.
So, you know, I take my natural curiosity,
and then I have a, you know,
great council of friends like Angela Rye, and, you know, friends on both sides of the aisle that I can reach out to and say, hey, what should I be talking to this person about?
What would you be asking this person?
Sometimes, yo, you know, what would you want to ask this person?
And so that's how I do my research for political interviews.
The thing that makes you unique is you dispense with the politeness.
I'm not saying you're rude, but you don't do a long buildup. You don't seem scared of anyone. I saw you challenge
Vivek Ramaswamy to a pushup contest. Like you just, you just don't seem like you're- That's
talking crazy. He was talking like he could just like get down and do a hundred pushups.
Like it was nothing. He did burpees. Yeah, he got up. Hey, he started doing burpees. I ain't asked you to do all that. But I mean, this would not happen on NPR, right?
We don't imagine like Stevens keep doing burpees would be vague, although maybe we should. But
I wonder who you watch. Like when you're in a system like I was at NPR, you see people,
you're like, oh, he's been doing it for 30 years. She's been doing it for 30 years. I'm going to
watch Michelle Martin. I'm going to figure out what she does. Who do you
watch? Oh, historically growing up? Yeah, yeah, who are your mentors in radio? Oh, I like everybody,
I mean, I'm not going to say I like everybody, but I'm influenced by like, you know, the Wendy
Williams's of the world, the Howard Sterns, the Angie Martinez's, the Petey Green's, Tom Joyner,
you know, I love Barbara Walters, I love I love Barbara Walters.
I used to love Barbara Walters interview and stuff.
I mean, it's a little bit in everybody. Larry King.
Larry King gave me some great advice one time. Larry King said, Joe, the most important question you can always ask in an interview is why?
And that one question alone is really good with politicians because you can ask a politician a question.
They're going to give you all their talking that they're talking point answers.
They're prepared answer for whatever that question is. They're going to give you that first.
So when you double down on the question again or just simply say why, that's when you really usually get to the to the to the meat of the matter.
You cause them and I don't be trying to do this, but you cause them to slip up and say something stupid because they don't
really have anything past the prepared answer
because nobody ever asked them anything past the prepared
answer. Sometimes it's just
say a why and watch
them fumble.
You feel like that's where it gets honest?
I don't. I feel like his, yes, sir,
his why questions, but there's something
disarming about Lenard.
He also is a troll. He's a professional
troll.
There's literally footage of this.
This is not debatable.
You can shake your head, but we've been
in an interview where he's trolling me
and I'm trying to be serious and I finally start laughing.
I'm like, I hate you so much.
Shut up.
There are definitely those moments,
but when you're an elected official
you can't say i hate you so much shut up you can though i mean you should be able to it's probably
not gonna get you votes you end up saying something like uh i don't know uh if you don't
vote if you vote for donald trump it's not me you ain't black you end up saying something like that
i just feel like the language of politics is dead i feel like that's one thing that Trump, you know, did that people
on the right seem to understand now, but people on the left don't. And it's always strange to me
when you're having conversations with people on the left. And if you're just like behind the scenes
or in private, they're like real people, but then they get in front of the camera and they turn into
these robots.
And I think that they would connect so much more with people if they just understood the language of politics was dead and they just was truly themselves. I don't think that you I don't even think you believe that about everybody on the left, because one of the people that you talk about interviewing the most and enjoying the fact that he never has rebuffed an interview is Secretary Pete.
Yeah, absolutely.
So he doesn't do that.
When you ask him why he does answer you, he does engage you on your trolling questions.
So I think that that's kind of an overgeneralization that you may not all do with me.
No.
Well, why do you think Secretary Pete is honest?
I mean, you could say, well, he's young, right?
That's one thing that springs to mind.
He's like, he's been in the politics game, but he's not for 60 years.
Part of a very marginalized group.
Yeah.
The gay community.
That's right.
He's part of the gay community.
What, or do you think that it's just a personality type?
Yeah, to that point, that's what I think frustrates me
the most sometimes, because when you are part of a marginalized community, you don't got time to BS
people. Like you shouldn't, especially when you see what this country is doing to so many
marginalized groups. Like you should be willing to speak truth to power all the time and you should
put people over politics. And I think that even at a time like this, man,
I don't see anybody speaking to the sense of urgency
that I feel is right around the corner.
I still think that we have so many people playing politics
when you have so many people's lives at stake.
Like if you're making statements like,
democracy is at stake
and democracy as we know it could be gone, why wouldn't you be speaking truth to power?
Why would you still be playing a political game at a time like this?
Is there anyone currently doing that?
Do you have someone in mind who's doing it right?
No.
I don't.
I personally don't.
Do you, Angela?
I do.
I think that everyone has their moments.
I talked about Congresswoman Waters earlier. I think that everyone has their moments. I talked about Congresswoman Waters
earlier. I think she always does. She's doing a panel on DEI and what the MAGA Republican strategy
is on that on Tuesday. I think Hakeem Jeffries does a good job. He was really clear on a Sunday
morning interview today. And honestly, what I hate to do is say, like, these people are doing it right,
these people are doing it wrong.
I think it depends on the topic.
Like, there are some places
where we can be super effective
and other places where we're not.
It could be from discomfort.
It could be, if I tell you my truth here,
I'm not going to secure votes.
You know, like, when I think about Hakeem Jeffries,
he could very well be our first black speaker
in the United States House of Representatives.
That means he's probably not at liberty to say as much. Why do I, we know this. he could very well be our first black speaker in the United States House of Representatives.
That means he's probably not at liberty to say as much.
Why do I, we know this, we could look at the path of President Barack Obama, right?
He couldn't say everything he felt.
When he knew that gay marriage was the right way to go,
when he was trying to get elected in 2008, he couldn't say that.
He was not honest.
And so I think it's hard because we have a certain level of expectation without realizing what the potential consequence could be.
If people really spoke truth to power all the time. I don't like that. It's very hard for me.
I would never run for office for that reason. Right. But I get it.
Yeah, I think if we knew people were doing this, but then once they got into the positions of power that they're trying to get into, they actually, you know, did for the people like they said they was going to do for the people.
We can understand.
We can see you on stage
finessing everybody and giving us
a little wink and a nod and knowing that when you get in there
you're going to do what you're supposed to do, but the fact
that that doesn't happen,
it's just, you're just
blowing smoke up everybody's ass, and for what
reason? Let's talk about
that exactly. Blowing smoke up people's ass and for what reason let's talk about that exactly so let's
polling same thing okay okay you saw it here first no you're not just asking so let's talk
about polling slash blowing smoke up people's asses all right so we have all been watching
the polling last couple months and one thing that we've all seen is that President Biden does appear to be losing some segment of black voters. This is a big deal, in part because
black voters historically go for the Democrat. In 2020, Biden got like 91, 92 percent of the black
vote. Four years earlier, Hillary Clinton ate somewhere between 89 and 91 percent. I was trying
to find the exact figures this morning, but it's a lot.
And now we have this New York Times Siena poll, this very influential poll that shows
if the election happened today, 23 percent of black voters say they would vote for Donald
Trump.
What do you think—leave Trump out of it just for a moment, we'll get to him—but
what do you think is happening here with President Biden and his support in the black community?
Has he done something wrong?
Has he failed to do enough right?
This is always, when I hear this, people say this nowadays, I'm like, why are they just focusing on the black voters?
Because for a long time it was a gimme.
That's why, for a long, it was a gimme. That's why for a long time, it was a gimme. I think, I mean, listen, I would say, if you ask me that question, in all honesty,
it's because I've been doing this for a long time and every year it was the same thing. Well,
the Democrats really can count on the black vote. And so when you see 23% is not an earthquake,
it's not a huge number, but it's a lot more than 4%. I think that's overstated.
I don't see 23% of black people voting for Donald Trump.
I could be wrong, but I think it might go up, but I don't see 23%. Yeah, I think, one, I agree with Lenard's point that we do we are not, we end up talking about this and then
black voters are to blame in November if that's what ends up happening. So I don't think that
that's fair. Again, we've carried this country long enough, right? But I would say that it's not
about what Joe Biden himself has done or not done for black people. I think this is about an institution,
an establishment that has regularly failed folks who look like me, folks who feel voiceless and
unseen. I think that when you look at the Supreme Court and you're like, we got our first black
woman Supreme Court justice, like change is coming now. And you realize she is in the minority of the
minority and Clarence is definitely not on her side.
You know, when you look at the Senate,
the margins of the majority for the Senate
that nothing can really get done
because there's still a filibuster.
When you look at the fact
that when we go to the polls in November,
there's still some old white guys
that are gonna be able to pull rank
vis-a-vis the electoral college and say,
actually, this is what we're saying is gonna happen.
Think about Hillary and Trump then, right? So there are all of these dynamics about a
democracy that feels like it has never served us. And so people are like, well, what is going to be
different? I don't hear you telling me what's going to be different. I know that I brought
your campaign back from the dead and you still haven't rewarded me for my labor. So more than it's, you know, this, this defect or this, this, you know,
this deciding to go to Donald Trump, it is, I am just apathetic. I'm apathetic because when I try
to go vote, there's a suppressive law on the books that tells me I need an ID when you don't
need that for a gun. I'm apathetic because I know that if I went to go volunteer at a polling precinct and handed out water in Georgia, I would be reprimanded for that.
I'm apathetic because there are people like me in my family who are incarcerated and also in Georgia,
if I try to get their bail paid through a nonprofit, that entity is now going to face
repercussions. I'm apathetic because as an attorney, there's a black woman
named Marilyn Mosby who took on Freddie Gray, the killers of Freddie Gray, who took on police
officers overall. And this Department of Justice didn't say under Donald Trump, this was a
prosecution that works, but under this administration, it must change. We're going to go ahead and
prosecute her to the fullest extent of the law. This black woman for nothing is facing more than 30 years in prison. That does
not serve me. If you can't serve me, who will? What do I do? So I understand, even if we can
call it apathy, it's real frustration. It's betrayal, right? What do we do to change that?
And it's not just a narrative. It's not just a messaging problem. It is the fact
that racism is a bipartisan and even I'd argue a nonpartisan issue in this country. And it's time
for us to face that. You get questions about this because, well said. You get questions about this,
I think in part, again, as a radio person myself, because you take calls on your show,
which means you have this intimate connection with people that it's the best. It's so cool. It's so, Oh God, I wish today explained
would you call in, but, but it means that people sort of ask you to be a representative of the
people that you're hearing from who call in. And I'm asking you now to do the same thing.
I want to know what you are hearing from people that is undeniable this year about this election?
What stands out to you? What do you hear repeatedly? Or what's something you've heard
once and you're like, oh, damn, that's a game changer? Oh, the biggest thing is, you know,
my guy Tim Ryan, he talks about the exhausted majority. And he says he feels like, you know,
most people in this country, they're not leaning to the left, they're not leaning to the right.
They're just tired. And I think what Angela just said about apathy is very true because, you know, I've been telling people for the last eight, nine months,
2024 is going to be all about the Republicans who are the crooks, the Democrats who are the cowards because they don't of people may vote for Trump, which I don't believe.
Just because you see people who may be off Biden from the Democratic Party that are black, that don't mean that they're going to be Republicans in any way, shape or form.
Some people are just tired. So I think it's up to, you know, both candidates right now, but especially, you know, Democrats.
How are you going to energize those people who don't want to get up off the couch in November?
So that's the biggest thing I'm hearing from people.
They're just tired.
Like, they're just fed up with the political process all across the board.
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I called the Biden campaign on Friday to ask them, what has Joe Biden done for black people?
And the reason I did this is Joe Biden had a platform, a program in 2020.
Remember Lift Every Voice?
He was going to close the black-white wealth gap.
He was going to expand access to education, expand voting, end incarceration for drug use alone.
There was a lot.
And what I wanted to know was what of that was accomplished.
What do you think?
I also asked if they were going to bring Biden on your show.
And I got a frantic phone call back, like, please don't make any promises.
I'm like, no, I'm just curious.
What do you think Joe Biden got done?
Do you ever hear people pointing specifically to these things that were promised?
Because they were promised as examples of something that Biden
and the Democrats did right over the past four years? You're looking at me? Okay.
I want to start with in 2020, I think putting Kamala on the ticket as his partner was the
right thing to do. It was a demand that we had. We wrote an op-ed that he have a black woman VP.
We demanded that he appoint a black woman Supreme Court justice,
thanks to folks like Congressman Clyburn in South Carolina
and South Carolinians that also helped to make that real.
The number of black women who have been appointed as judges
in this administration is historic,
and it's something that I am very happy
about as an attorney myself. And then I would say, other than that, they take a lot of credit for
black business growth, which is great. But I think that we have to start making some
distinctions. The things that you can take credit for have to be like, because of this policy,
this happened. So if they weren't knocking on your door, I say this often with legal zoom, that probably means they can't take credit for
that. Exactly. Like people are trying to find other ways to make a living because inflation,
because the stock market, because right. All of these other things. I love what he said in the
state of the union around solving for housing with the housing crisis credit credit, because
housing prices are so high. Um, I love the fact that he addressed George Floyd justice and policing
because that's something he wouldn't touch during the 2020 campaign.
So there are some things where I still feel like there's a lot of room for growth
and certainly a lot of things that are needed to mobilize our people.
He talked about the role that John Lewis played in securing voting rights for this country.
They've been rolled back by the Supreme Court in multiple ways, v. v. section 4, section 2, and section 5. We have to restore the
Voting Rights Act as we know it, and that is through the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement
Act. So there are things that he needs Congress to do to be able to take credit for those things,
but I also think that he could use the power of the pen in the executive order a little bit more.
The George Floyd Policing Act wasn't something he was pushing for in 2020?
Not in 2020. Kamala was the senator with Cory Booker who led that process on the Senate side,
Karen Bass on the House side. He would not sign on to George Floyd Justice and Policing at the
time because he was also trying to maneuver with police unions. Yeah. What do you think Biden has gotten done?
What do you hear Biden has gotten done?
Student loan forgiveness is a big one.
You know, student loan forgiveness is a big one.
I mean, honestly, that's the biggest thing I've heard people from our community talking about,
because people like to see tangible things. they like to see things that absolutely they can
touch and they can feel like you know when people wonder why folks keep
bringing up these stimulus checks it's because it's something that they could
actually touch and they could feel and they could see and I think it's the same
thing with um the student loan debt forgiveness but outside of that I I
personally haven't heard much do you think so Donald Trump
still from from what I hear Donald Trump still gets credit for the stimulus checks right he
continued on but that was I don't I guess I don't hear as much of Biden getting credit for student
loan relief maybe I'm too old maybe we've just I've just aged out of that but a thing I'm very
curious about is whether the stimulus checks if he doesn't get credit for his stimulus checks I think they're actually doing a very good job of owning the student loan um
forgiveness thing because from what I've been told you know people actually receive emails and
in the emails it says you president Biden gave you a student loan that and I was watching um
they learned from them stimulus checks they did they did and I was watching MSNBC the other day
and I forgot where he was at it was was actually yesterday. He was being introduced by a woman who had gotten her student loan forgiveness, you know, wiped away.
And you have to put a face to things in this era, in 2024.
If you just get on television and announce something, people will be like, OK.
But when you put a face to it and people can see somebody that's actually been impacted by what you did, I think that goes a long way.
You know, another big one, and it's big for me when Brittany Griner was held in Russia.
I think so many of us are mortified. She was certainly there for too long.
But this administration delivered on ensuring that Brittany Griner was returned.
That pissed a lot of people off, though, because the young lady, she was in Russia for
cannabis, but you got so many people here in America still getting locked up for cannabis,
and people still in prison for cannabis. So it seems very hypocritical for you to fight so hard
to get somebody out of prison all the way in another country, but you're not doing things
here in America. Well, he made the announcement now that they are going to be releasing folks
from federal prison for weed-related charges.
He talked about that in the State of the Union, too.
But he made an earlier announcement, and then you have some ideas.
Yeah, because they were pardoning people who were in federal prison for simple possession of marijuana.
There's nobody in federal prison for simple possession of marijuana.
So it's like, what was that?
Yeah, but he expanded it in the State of the Union.
Maybe he heard you complaining.
I mean, he should.
Good.
Because to Angela's point,
I think it's good.
To Angela's point,
that's something you can do with a stroke of a pen.
Like, if he wanted to right now,
he could pardon everybody that's in prison
on a federal level for a nonviolent marijuana offense,
if he wanted to.
I think it should be non-violent drug
related offense. I'm not mad at that either.
When you say tangible
things, I hear the economy.
That's it. That's literally all
it's ever about. When they
ask people, what do black people want? You want the same
thing everybody else wants in this country. Upward
mobility, money, people like
cash. Cash rules everything around me.
Cream, get the money.
That's right.
It's been like that since the beginning of time.
This is where we disagree too, though.
But it's true.
There's nothing we can talk about on this stage that money doesn't revolve around.
If you have all the money in the world, let's say that you're Robert Smith.
I'm not saying he has all the money in the world, but it's a friend of ours who's a billionaire.
You got enough of it.
Okay, yes.
Maybe he might disagree, but nonetheless, Robert is walking down the street with the hoodie on.
Robert is still subject to whatever police violence occurs to any other young black boy or a black man in this country.
So it's not just money that we need.
We need safety.
We need the same folks who are there to protect and serve other communities, to protect and serve us,
not shoot to kill. We need other safety nets. You would say housing is still money. You'd say student debt relief is still money, but even access to education, that's not all money. Some
of that is the dialing back of affirmative action. What are they going to do to put equity back on
the table? There are DE&I offices throughout the federal government. What are they doing?
What are their accomplishments?
Right?
I want a Department of Justice that serves us.
I want some folks that are really aggressive on the voting rights cases.
Like, this is a big deal.
He's not going to be able to get to the finish line in November if they don't really start taking these voting rights issues really seriously.
Yeah, that's the other thing.
At least I don't hear enough people factoring in. The voter suppression is going to be so real come November, and Democrats' only
defense against voter suppression historically has been, we've got to have the largest voter
turnout in the history of America this election. I don't know if you get that in 2024. So if you
don't get a large voter turnout, how are you going to stop the voter suppression?
Truthfully, I think one
of the criticisms is even
saying something like that
could lead to people sitting home and
staying on the couch. You're not advocating anyone to sit
home and stay on the couch. But I think one of the
criticisms is you have so much influence.
And like you say,
Angela's nodding her head, so I didn't make this up.
You have so much influence. You say it, and there's like head, so I didn't make this up. You have so much influence.
You say it, and there's like a genuine fear that that might make it real.
I disagree.
What are you basing your disagreement on?
Because I think that if these elected officials were doing what they were supposed to be doing for the people question I've ever asked, you know, that is considered critical is, are they still a winnable ticket come November?
I think that's a very valid question to ask if we have a threat to democracy on the other side.
Like, what's wrong with asking that question? Are they still a winnable ticket?
When you look at the polls, when you look at the approval rating, what's wrong with asking that question, are they still a winnable ticket? When you look at the polls, when you look at the approval rating, what's wrong with asking that question?
When David Axelrod said that, nobody
says anything. What's the guy who
wrote the article for the New York Times? Ezra Klein.
When Ezra Klein writes an article like that,
nobody says anything. But when the black guy
from the hip-hop station in a hoodie says something,
then everybody has a problem with it.
Because the assumption is
that you are influencing your listeners.
They know who Ezra Klein's listeners and readers are.
But you're something mysterious.
I really do think some of mainstream media has figured you as this person that they can't quite figure out.
And how do we talk to those young people and those young people of color?
And they're like, well, he's doing it, right?
And I think that gives you a lot of power.
Whether you want that influence
or believe you have that influence or not.
I think the president and his people
believing you have that influence
in some way gives you that influence.
Any power that I have is derived from the people.
I'm literally only asking the questions
that I hear everyday working class people ask of me when
they call into the radio station in the morning, when I'm walking the streets of New York, or when
I'm home in South Carolina, these are the things that I'm hearing people say. And what are you
hearing most? I mean, we talked about it a little bit, like, but put your finger on a couple of
things that, again, are undeniable this year. I'll give you an example. I remember back in January,
it was January 15th, and I was having a conversation
with Fox News, Fox Digital, actually. And the guy, Joseph, the guy said to me, hey, do you think the
border is going to be an issue come November? And I said, hell yeah. And the reason I said hell yeah
is because for the first time, I'm having people that I talk to on a regular basis come to me and
they're having these conversations. You have people in Chicago, you have people in New York
complaining about the resources that they feel
the migrants were getting that, you know,
people in the community that have been there forever
aren't receiving.
I had, you know, people come to me
and complain to me about the safety of the neighborhoods
that they were living in because of, you know,
different gang factions that were coming
from across the border.
And so I answered that question
just the way I answered it right now. And you literally had MSNBC run a headline that said,
Charlemagne Tha God is pushing MAGA messaging. Now, two months later, that's all everybody's
talking about is the border. So literally, my answer came from talking to people,
regular everyday people, like not listening to no politics, you know, what a campaign strategist said.
This came from the people.
So how is it MAGA messaging if it's coming from the people?
Do me a favor while we're here.
Predict something else.
What is something that we're ignoring?
I'm not, what is something that we're ignoring that you think we shouldn't be ignoring?
I don't even think it's about ignoring.
It's just about what's next.
I think this spring and summer is going to be, you know, ridiculous.
And you're going to see so many, like you think you're seeing a migrant crime headlines now.
Wait until spring and summer, because America doesn't even have the resources to take care of the people that they're letting into this country.
Right. So being that they don't have the resources to take care of people they let into this country.
What do you think those people are going to resort to?
They're going to resort to the same thing that most poor people in this country resort to, which is crime. And where are they going to be committing that crime at? In the hood.
So what are you going to have? You're going to have black and brown Americans fighting with,
you know, people from other countries over limited resources or no resources that this
country doesn't provide either one. So that's going to be something. You'll see it. You're
going to be seeing it. Here's the only thing. I hear you on this.
I don't think it's a resource challenge.
I think that the powers that be decide what is worthy of spending resources on.
There's money for Ukraine.
There's money for Israel, the Israel-Hamas war.
There's not money for the least of these in this country.
I think you're right about that, but I also think if we're talking about—
No, she's absolutely right about that.
You are absolutely right about that.
That's another thing people are pissed off about. Like Tupac said, you got money for war, but I also think if we're talking about- No, she's absolutely right about that. You are absolutely right about that. That's another thing people are pissed off about.
You know, like Tupac said,
you got money for war, but can't feed the poor.
Like, that's another thing.
People, and it's not like,
like nobody's sitting around saying,
oh, I'm pro this or I'm pro that.
You're just simply watching like,
damn, how they got all this money to send over there
and all this money to send over there
and all this money to take care of migrants.
But meanwhile, you got homeless people on the streets
all throughout America.
I can't even keep food on my table or a roof over my head. I don't know why
this is rocket science. But you can hear, you can hear if people think Donald Trump is stronger on
the border, if people remember getting stimulus checks for Donald Trump, if people think Donald
Trump and the Republicans take crime more seriously than Democrats, that 23 percent, that doesn't seem unrealistic to me.
Some of the things you're saying.
We've got to stop saying that in regards to black voters, though.
Like, when you look at Joe Biden's approval ratings, he's getting his ass kicked everywhere.
But I'm saying when you look at Joe Biden's approval ratings, when you look at the polls, he's like plenty of people down on President Biden.
It's not just black people.
It's fair so i think that you know
in order to really get that campaign on the on on the right track they got to start looking at
the totality of what's happening with that campaign and how different groups of people
feel about him angela disagrees with me on that though well i disagree with you on a lot sometimes
but i i just i think the main thing that I worry about is we're not learning from history
when we separate ourselves from migrant folks.
They're not getting overwhelmingly taken care of.
They're not getting put up in mansions.
These are folks who are also still struggling here.
I think the thing that we should work more diligently on communicating is the fact that when Governor
Abbott buses migrants from here to New York or to New Hampshire or to Maine or to Vermont,
that local government where they're bused and dropped off has an issue, is the liability issue
to take care of the people who are there. Without the migrant crisis, we have a homelessness crisis.
Where I spend time in L.A., there's a homelessness crisis.
There's a resource issue, and I think more than anything else,
what we have to get familiar with is what happens when the haves pit the have-nots against each other.
When we see, oh, this person is getting something, even if it's just a little crumb,
more than what I have,
we're still not looking at that huge tax break
that Donald Trump gave to the rich
that put this country,
or gave this country the largest national debt
that we've had in history, right?
We're distracted from that
because we're so busy fighting over them damn crumbs.
But people can eat crumbs too. And I think you know come on no listen i'm not encouraging nobody
in this room i'm from i'm from listen i'm from south carolina 50 of all people in south carolina
right now their basic necessities aren't being met of course but that's so so i know people aren't
living in mansions but joe you just want basic necessities can i get some food on my table
a roof over my head? Yes.
Like, those are just, we want the basics.
But people will vote for who they believe
is going to get them the basics, right?
Like, what it's going to come down to is who,
which of these two candidates do I believe
is going to get me that?
Yeah, I
agree with that.
Right now, I feel like neither one.
I don't see it. I don't think that's true.
I haven't seen it from either party.
Now, that part is not fair.
So even under this administration, SNAP benefits have increased.
For people who are struggling to raise their children, there's a child tax credit.
There are other things being put in place.
Kamala just talked about with the National Governors Association,
44 governors have signed on to her post,
I almost said post-mortem, maternal health care. Like after you've carried the child,
you're going through the postpartum is what I'm trying to say, not post-mortem. Thank you.
Somebody whispered that right here. That is the kind of thing that creates resource and relief.
We are going after the, as long as we're pit against each other, we're going after the wrong folks. The IRS recently through the, um, inflation reduction act, they now have all of this money to go after a billion or millionaires and some billionaires who haven't even filed a tax return
since 2017. And we're going to fight the person over, or you got more snap benefits than this
migrant got on a, on a debit card through Eric Adams program. That's insane.
We got to learn from like what Dr. King taught us.
That ain't it.
Operation Breadbasket wasn't about snatching a crumb from somebody else.
It was about baking bread, creating opportunity, going to the haves to ensure the have-nots needs are taken care of.
I agree with Angela to a certain extent, but I also understand people that are
currently in those positions right now.
We speak from a place of privilege
in a lot of ways, right?
But if you're literally sitting
around right now and you cannot keep food
on your table and you can't keep a
roof over your head, hell yeah
you're going to be pissed off if you see somebody
else getting those crumbs.
But why are we mad at the person with the tax breaks? They're paying less in taxes than middle class and you're going to be pissed off if you see somebody else getting those crumbs because you want those
person with the tax breaks they're paying less in taxes than middle class and low to middle class
folks are paying i think i think they are upset about that as well but i i just feel like some of
the uh some of us have the responsibility to ensure that we switch the narrative by using facts
like here's where the actual resources went. Like that is the thing
that I think we have a really urgent responsibility to do. I'm calling myself on it too, because I've
doubled down on this too. Like, I can see why this causes tension, but what do you do after you
expose the tension? Like you have to redirect to where people actually should be holding folks
accountable. Like this is a real issue. We are making the rich richer.
Now we are pitting the poor against each other. But I, yes. And we've always done that. I mean,
that is, that is the American way in a lot of ways. I want to speak to the person in the audience
who said neither of these candidates. And I want to talk about the, the concept of double haters,
people who are like, I don't, I don't want. Oh, I saw that term yesterday. Oh, my God.
What do you think?
That's what they're running with now, double haters?
This is what my editor is running with.
I saw that on some network yesterday. I was like, that was terrible.
Go ahead. Say more. Say more.
I just don't like the term double haters. Because here's the thing. Nobody is hating.
Hating is when you're jealous and you're envious of what a person has. These are concerned American citizens who feel like their needs have not been met by either party in this country for years.
That is not hating. I don't think that's hate.
But you also don't think don't let me put words in your mouth, but presumably you also don't think the solution is not voting.
No. OK. I don't think the solution is voting, but you can't tell people,
you can't, yeah,
I don't think the solution is not voting,
but you can't tell people how to vote either.
Right?
So you...
Yes, you can.
You can, but I can understand
when people aren't moved
when you tell them to vote this way.
Yeah.
And, you know, I'm over that.
Like, I want to tell people
what I believe the issues are, like the trouble that is coming in November, and let people make their own decisions.
Like, people are voting uncommitted in the primaries.
And you see people, somebody's clapping for that.
And some people are voting for third-party candidates.
Like, I'm not mad at any of that.
You're just telling people to exercise their right to vote.
I'm not telling folks who to vote for. But you are very skeptical, it sounds like, of the idea that Donald Trump
is getting more black support than we might have expected. I don't know how true that is.
I think that number, that 23% is very, very, very overstated. Like I said, I feel like I see more
people in the exhausted majority than I see people running, black people running to say they're going to vote for, vote for Trump. I think this is the part where
I get frustrated too, Noel, just respectfully. I feel like we have hit this point about this 23%,
four or five times. And I think he's been clear that it's like, no, there's a larger swath of
people who don't feel inspired is language that you've used. And I've actually heard a gazillion times since you said that
to me by either candidate.
And so how do we get people inspired
to preserve democracy,
which is the other thing you've been very clear about
on multiple interviews. Like,
I'm voting to preserve democracy.
That don't give you that many choices. There's two people
on the ballot in the fall, and we're very clear that
one is running to be a dictator. And when
he loses this election, hopefully, he's running to start a civil war. Let's be clear.
Do you hear those fears? I mean, I hear those fears. Do you hear those fears from your audience?
Does your audience have fears about Donald Trump being reelected? I mean, we've talked about the
critiques of Biden. What do you hear about Trump? I think I've heard the fear of definitely, you know, democracy as we know it being wiped away.
But honestly, that doesn't scare a lot of people either because, man, when you're already living in hell, you don't think it can get worse.
When you're already living in hell, you don't think it can get hotter.
It can.
Maybe.
It definitely can.
I want to take some questions from the audience, if anybody's got them.
We've got mics, I believe, on either side.
I'm sorry, you guys, the lights are a little bit in my eye.
She said, I'm running to the mic.
She said, come on down.
I love it.
Fabulous, fabulous.
The one thing that troubles me,
and you hit on it a lot, Angela,
is that, yes, these politicians say
they're going to do these things, but
they have to work with the Congress.
They have to work with the coalition of the willing.
And we don't have that many willing to do what politics is.
We have to compromise.
Everybody gets a little.
And right now, it's my way or the highway.
So you can't hold people accountable because they can't change
the coalition of the willing if they're not willing. This is more of the
exhaustion like but this is I do think this is where there's real concern
because if the sense is it doesn't matter who you vote for because nothing
will get done because we'll always everything will always have to go
through Congress.
I mean, she said it. There's literally nothing else we can say. I will tell you,
remember when Mitch McConnell came to the podium, not recently when he said he's not running anymore,
yes, but he said, you know, he wanted to make Barack Obama a one-term president. I feel like in that moment,
something shifted in the consciousness of Congress, where they decided that their role was to be obstructionists, right? They were very hell-bent on that, starting with Obamacare, the Affordable
Health Care Act. They decided that their role was to prevent, and they are active in doing that.
And so if you're not a Democratic president that wins a Democratic House and Senate,
your priorities and the things that you can't do vis-a-vis executive order and action,
you're screwed. And the same thing applies for a Republican, because now if Donald Trump comes
in office, there's a Democratic House and a Democratic Senate. They're going to try to
prevent everything because we can't afford another Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, or Amy Coney Barrett
on the Supreme Court. We'll really be extra screwed. Those are lifetime appointments until
the law changes, right? That is the issue. We are pit against each other and the divide is so deep
that there is no negotiating. You're negotiating with terrorists. And I don't think the terrorists in this instance are Democrats. Next question. Do you want to go? Okay. Yeah. I was really curious because I think
sort of at the crux of some of your conversation, especially earlier on, was related to like
integrity and being a person in media, being a figurehead, and representing an audience.
And I'm just thinking about Vox.
It's a media house that is a coastal located media house. A lot of big media companies are located in major cities,
but you're representing people across the country.
And I'm just thinking about that big middle.
I'm from Nashville, so I'm thinking about this big middle.
And I work for local media and news.
And I'm thinking about, what space
do you think local news or local media
has in this broader conversation about elections, about politics?
And you came up from South Carolina,
so I'm just really curious about
what do you think the relationship is now
between, you know, a place like Vox
or iHeartMedia or something like that
and, like, a small news organization?
I don't think there's any...
I don't think when you say small
and you put it in front of news,
I don't think there's anything small about news,
especially if you're in a place like Nashville,
Sleuthy, Nashville, I call it White Atlanta,
like Nashville.
But focus on being hyper-local in that area
and talk to those people from Nashville
and see what it is they're looking for come November.
You'd be surprised about how those, you know, so-called small stories can reflect on a national level because what you'll
start to see is, damn, what people in Nashville want is kind of like what the same people in,
it's kind of like what the same thing people in Austin want or what the people in Austin want
is the same thing people in Columbia, South Carolina want. So you'll kind of get like a real
good, you know, gauge of what people are looking for, you know, looking to vote for come
November. Next question. So some of the challenges that I think society is experiencing goes beyond
politics. I think there are global technological demographic shifts that are happening that are really at the underlying
foundation of challenges. That being said, politics plays a huge role in balancing it out.
My question really is around, do you think we live in a democracy in the sense that so much
of big money influences politics, so much of the politics have grind to a halt because
of it.
What can we do about it?
As a millennial struggling to maybe buy a home or raise a family, it's only going to
continue to become a tougher situation as home prices continue to go up, education prices
continue to go up, healthcare.
I want to add to your question.
This is a very good question, do we live in a democracy?
Because if what we're hearing about this election is
you're going to vote, and if you vote for candidate Trump,
you are putting an end to American democracy, right?
That is what we keep hearing.
What happens if we have people questioning actively
whether this is a democracy?
Does the threat actually mean anything?
I mean, I think I kinda said that earlier.
That's why you really aren't scaring some folks
with the whole, oh, this is gonna be the end of democracy
as we know it come November,
because a lot of people already feel like
we're not living in a democracy. And if it is a democracy, it's a very compromised, you know, democracy. Like
these politicians are very, very compromised. And as long as they're beholden to, you know,
these big corporate entities and these billionaires, how will they ever be truly of the
people? And if you're not of the people, you're not a democracy. You know, I agree with so much
of that, but I want to just speak to something you said earlier.
Lenard said, we're sitting here in a place of privilege.
And I would throw that back to you all in this moment.
South by Southwest, where you can have conversations
that stretch you, right?
The iron and sharpening iron.
In a place where a Donald Trump presidency becomes real,
those opportunities, those spaces are gone.
Women who need abortion to save their lives are because of rape and incest.
That's gone.
He appointed judges on the Supreme Court that would overrule Roe for a reason.
When we talk about workers getting paid livable wages, that's off the table.
This is someone who's never even paid contractors.
When we talk about a Muslim ban, I don't know if any of you all were all, I'm a little older than
y'all, were around when 9-11 happened. But remember what it was like when Arab Americans and Muslim
people were persecuted and profiled. Now we're talking about someone who said he's a law and
order president. This is a man that called for the death penalty of the Central Park Five, five young black men who were innocent.
Law and order and protecting and serving won't be for those of us in this room who are of color.
Guns and the ability to attain guns and all of that will run rampant.
It will be like war all the time.
And so if you don't know what it looks like to not just live in a democracy
where it's compromised, right, where there are some challenges and you want to know what it's
like to live in North Korea or in Russia, that's what I would invite you to look into and see if
that's where you'd rather live, because that's what's on the line. I think that we, to this
point, we don't do a good enough job. We just throw that talking point out there to Lenard's
point from earlier. We say democracy's on the line. What does that exactly mean? You
won't have a vote. He will not leave office. Congress won't matter. He will be issuing
executive orders left and right that do all kinds of crazy ass things. The Supreme Court will say,
thumbs up. They're going to hear a case, which may throw all of this out the window anyway, in April on presidential immunity. If he can say, remember when he said in the last election,
I can go, this was 2016, I can go on Fifth Avenue and shoot someone and it won't impact my support.
That case tests that. And if he wins that case, what we're talking about doesn't even matter.
So I think there's a lot on the line. He's at every turn tested this, whether he needs to ever pay people, whether he
can lie and say whatever he wants. That's what we're up against. And here's the part that I'm
going to just tell y'all this honest, and she said, we don't be honest enough. I am so pissed
off about the fact that there are things that my people need that may end up having to take a back seat to protect this raggedy ass country from itself again.
But my people have always been patriotic since Crispus Attucks and we always have done what
we need to do.
I'm tired of that.
But I also do not want to see this dude back in the White House to see how far he can go.
I just can't.
I just can't. I just can't. Given the relationship between you two, the very,
the evidently close relationship, I do have to ask you about something. In 2020, you endorsed
Joe Biden. It was a big deal. I endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris. You endorsed Vice
President Kamala Harris. Of course, Joe Biden got the shine as well. This year, you have not made an endorsement.
You hear how Angela speaks.
You hear what your friend, your very well-informed friend says is at stake.
Are you going to endorse anyone this year?
No, I'm endorsing democracy, though.
I think that you should go out there and, you know, you should vote to keep this democracy, democracy alive.
So, you know, it's clear as day.
All you got to do is,
you know,
and we're not even
talking hyperbole
when we have
these conversations.
Not only has he,
you know,
Trump said the things
that, you know,
Angela just said,
like he said he wants
to do these things.
We got some pretty
good examples,
you know,
of what he's capable of.
I don't know,
January 6th, 2021
was a pretty,
you know, pretty cut and dry situation.
That was an attempted coup of this country.
And then you also have a man
who doesn't believe in the Constitution.
When you say you should suspend the Constitution
to overthrow the results of an election,
you have his lawyer saying,
well, he didn't sign up to say
he was going to support the Constitution.
That kind of tells you where we're going in this country.
Why do people say that you are funneling your audience toward Trump?
Because people are stupid as ****.
It's really that simple.
Nobody's listening to the nuance of the conversation.
And left-wing media you know does a terrible job
of amplifying their narratives right-wing media does a great job of amplifying their narrative
so for example I could be on and this happened I was on this week ABC and you know I got asked
I was speaking about Trump and I was saying he's a threat to democracy and you know he's a fascist
he led an attempted coup of this country and then you, you know, I got asked, well, Joe Biden says a lot of these things.
You know, Joe Biden says a lot of these things. How come it doesn't resonate?
And I was like, because he's an uninspiring candidate. He don't have no main character energy.
Nobody's listening to things that come out of his mouth. So Fox will take that part of it and amplify it.
And then MSNBC and CNN will talk about that as opposed to talking about why I said he's a threat to democracy and he's a fascist.
So once again-
And he being Trump in this instance.
Trump is the fascist and the threat to democracy.
Yes.
So it's just like once again, right wing media does a great job of pushing the narrative
that they want amplified and left wing media does a terrible job of pushing the narrative
they want to push and does a great job of helping to amplify the right wing talking points.
So that's why people say those, I'm pushing for Trump, which is so silly to me, but whatever.
Next question.
I got two questions, one serious, one unserious.
My name is Darius and the first question is that if they asked you to be a president,
a moderator for the presidential debate, would you do that?
He's talking to you.
You're having a?
He wants to know if you would moderate.
Is that the unserious question?
No, no.
No, the unserious one
is you're a big mental health
advocate and... Oh, no, to answer
your first question,
I would do it if I
could have the proper people around me like Angela
Rye, you know?
Yeah.
I think having
moderators there that
can really call BS on some things would be good. It would be good for the country, I think having moderators there that can really call BS on some things
would be good.
It would be good for the country, I think.
Angela, would you do it too?
Would I what?
Be a presidential moderator?
Yeah, I would definitely moderate.
I think that's to the point, Noel,
that's why you can't endorse.
When you decide you're going to be serious
about journalism, you can't endorse.
You can't contribute to candidates' campaigns, but
Donald Trump don't want to see us.
Neither does our Biden.
Oh, Lord.
It's true.
And my answer is
for Charlamagne. You said you're a big
advocate for mental health.
And how much
mental health does Taylor's mama pie have an effect on you?
Man, I'm getting old.
My hearing is going.
What did you say?
I didn't hear what he said.
What was the last thing you said?
How much mental health does Taylor's Mama's Pie have on you?
Who?
Taylor's Mama's Pie.
Oh, okay.
Now he knows.
I still don't know what he said.
No, that's the inside joke.
That's brilliant idiots.
Answer the question.
Yeah.
He said, how much mental health does Taylor's mom a pie have?
Is it like good for your mental too?
Oh, absolutely.
No, Taylor is a young woman who works for me.
She works at Breakfast Club, man.
She works at Black Effect, and she works at the Brilliant Idiots podcast.
And her mom makes amazing pies around Thanksgiving time.
And her mom loves to give me her pie, and I love it.
And it's really good for me, my emotional and mental well-being.
Those pies feel like a hug.
Yes.
All right, we've got time for one or two more questions, guys.
Over here. Sure. What's up for one or two more questions, guys. Over here.
Sure.
What's up, Charlamagne?
Peace, King.
Do me a favor, man.
When you go back home to New York,
invite a third-party candidate named Claudia de la Cruz from the Bronx.
She's a good candidate.
She's third-party.
She's running for party of socialism and liberation.
She just won the California primary.
Everybody in the room, open your algorithm, because there are third-party options. She's running for party in socialism and liberation. She just won the California primary.
Everybody in the room, open your algorithm, because there are third-party options.
There's other party candidates, and we've got to get out this. Angela, I want to give you the last thought on third-party candidates and what you think about this as an option.
Yeah, I think it's really important when we say misinformation that even when we say with passion, we have to be factually accurate.
I'm not sure what the sister you just raised won,
but the presidential primary, that's not true. So I just, I think the main thing is I want to
make sure that we're very deliberate about creating space for us to reimagine. I keep
pointing the tip because there are all these bars that she drops on our podcast weekly,
reimagine something different and better for us.
And like, I thank God for you, brother, for having a bigger and better imagination for us.
But I still want to be careful with the terms that we use, even in our frustration, in our deserved, our righteous anger, our frustration.
We should have that. But I also think that we've got to be clear about where we are.
We're less than a year out from an election.
And I refuse to say that Joe Biden and Donald Trump are the same.
They're just not.
That doesn't mean that we don't deserve better.
Right.
And I think there are a gazillion ways for us to get to better.
We can have better representation on the gubernatorial level.
Do you know this country's never elected a black woman governor?
Ever. Yeah. It's 2024. Never. We have one black man governor right now. The other one that's running. Once more. Yes. In Maryland, we have a black man Republican who is running in
North Carolina and he sound like Donald Trump. So it's not, I'm not saying like all your skin
folk are your kin folk today. I still am going to stick to that. They it's not, I'm not saying like all your skin folk are your kin
folk today. I still am going to stick to that. They're not. But I think that we deserve to have
dialogue. I remember my dad, um, after Nelson Mandela was free, um, and he came home and he
had this poster that someone like a godfather to me, Tony Orange had given him. And it was this
representation of all of these parties in South Africa, even down to like a godfather to me, Tony Ornge, had given him. And it was this representation of
all of these parties in South Africa, even down to like a soccer party. And I've always seen in
my mind that we could have a democracy that was that diverse. People who only cared about soccer
got a party. People that only cared about labor. Folks that only cared about education. Like we do
deserve that, but we don't have that right now. So we
got some dreaming to do. We've got some creating to do. We got some coloring outside of the lines
to do, but let's do that when we could have a democracy still, you know, like, I mean, that's
the base. That's the basics right now. All right. Charlamagne, the God, Angela, right. Thank you
guys so much, guys. Let's give them a big hand. Thank you for coming out today.
Thank you. Thank you for having us. Thank you, Noel. Thank you so much, guys. Let's give him a big hand. Thank you for coming out today. Thank you for having us. Thank you.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you, Noel.
Thank you, Noel. I'm going to take a nap.
Let's try.