Charlamagne & Andrew Schulz CALLED OUT By Ryan Clark Over DISRESPECTFUL JOKES Towards Black Women

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
He keeps having a black dude beside him without a spine which gives him some sort of credibility while saying it.

Plus at the time he was engaged to some hippie mixed chick who later accused him of mental abuse.

That's why I'm wondering about any black person who follows or listens to him. That Netflix special got zero traction amongst us.

He's a corny Joe Rogan white boy. He used Charlamagne to get hot and popping and now his career is bigger than his.

Okay you went a little too far with that 9ne but I can't dispute anything else you said

But if it's Lenard fault... what WE gonna do?
 

Complex

Internet Superstar
BGOL Investor
Okay you went a little too far with that 9ne but I can't dispute anything else you said

But if it's Lenard fault... what WE gonna do?

He is

Schulz went from putting stuff up on YouTube to getting Netflix specials

Much less him touring the country for his comedy. His popularity has increased a lot after Joe Rogan started having him on. He's crossed over with white people. Charlamagne is just popular with us.

Flagrant is probably more popular than Brilliant Idiots and it's under his own shit.

Now include his movie and tv credits.
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
He is

Schulz went from putting stuff up on YouTube to getting Netflix specials

Much less him touring the country for his comedy. His popularity has increased a lot after Joe Rogan started having him on. He's crossed over with white people. Charlamagne is just popular with us.

Flagrant is probably more popular than Brilliant Idiots and it's under his own shit.

Now include his movie and tv credits.

Lenard has a nationally syndicated classic morning show

Lenard is now a power broker in media period.

The black effect network with includes podcasts, publishing, festivals, tv and soon movies

He is a producer

Numerous Ny times best selling books

had 2 shows

A new youtube interview series

but I don't follow Shultz like that so maybe you right?
 

Complex

Internet Superstar
BGOL Investor
Lenard has a nationally syndicated classic morning show

Lenard is now a power broker in media period.

The black effect network with includes podcasts, publishing, festivals, tv and soon movies

He is a producer

Numerous Ny times best selling books

had 2 shows

A new interview series

Now a podcast

but I don't follow Shultz like that so maybe you right?

It's syndicated with 12% of the population, and most people don't even listen to the radio anymore

Joe Rogan has the most popular podcast in the country and Andrew goes up there every couple of months. Charlamagne going up with Andrew, but not without says everything. Now he's filling up 2-5,000 event spots across the country.

Nothing on Black Effect is more popular than Flagrant 2. Rogan has gone on Flagrant, Rogan hasn't gone on Brilliant Idiots.

That New York Times best seller shit is bullshit, everyone is a New York Times best seller, because it's a marketing ploy to get people to buy the book
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
It's syndicated with 12% of the population, and most people don't even listen to the radio anymore

Joe Rogan has the most popular podcast in the country and Andrew goes up there every couple of months. Charlamagne going up with Andrew, but not without says everything. Now he's filling up 2-5,000 event spots.

Nothing on Black Effect is more popular than Flagrant 2. Rogan has gone on Flagrant, he hasn't gone on Brilliant Idiots.

That New York Times best seller shit is bullshit, everyone is a New York Times best seller, because it's a marketing ploy to get people to buy the book

You know way more about Shultz than I do.

I had no idea he went on Rogan show like that. I don't listen to his show. Those are crazy touring numbers. I only know flagrant from clips posted really.

Yeah trust I know how that list works. But Lenard and his team have been able to use that to position himself very nicely.

And like I said Lenard got a LOT of influence. If Schulz is MORE POWERFUL then him?

Then we ALL screwed.

And that is the most important part to take out of all this. That cac is in a secure position and using it to sh*t on us and is enabled by another black man.

I hope that young lady doesn't go with Van on his show to debate him.

Cause Van even sounded and looked afraid to check Schultz
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
nah you good bro, forget all his bullsh*t

We talking influence, recognition, network and power...

who got more right now?
CthaGod.


All the things he does outside of the Breakfast Club puts him in a powerful position.

Charlamagne Tha God: The Moncks Corner Native Talks Radio, Reclaiming Yourself, And Repaying South Carolina For All Its Given Him
February 2023
WRITER:
DeMarco Williams
PHOTOGRAPHER:
Image credits below
Learn about his involvement with the International African American Museum, his focus on mental health, and the six Krystal burger joints he’s bringing in the Lowcountry
lg.php

lg.php

GoHomeAgain-1.23.23-Ma5.jpg


Charlamagne Tha God isn’t the most obvious subject for a Black History Month project, but he’s certainly an intriguing one. The provocative radio and TV personality, born Lenard Larry McKelvey, is witty and bold. He can recite the latest J. Cole verses; regularly texts with Stephen Colbert, executive producer of his Comedy Central show, Hell of A Week with Charlamagne Tha God; and confers with Tonya Matthews, the president of Charleston’s International African American Museum (IAAM), where he serves on the board. He’s a hardworking businessman who loves his family, speaks his mind, and understands the importance of daily meditation. He could be seen as the American dream—if said dream was Black, bald, and wore a pair of broken-in Pumas.
The student’s report could start with his rocky beginnings. Back in the early ’90s, the law and a truant McKelvey weren’t the best of friends. During that time, the Moncks Corner native was arrested on charges of assault and battery with a deadly weapon. He’d spend 45 days locked up. “My father [Larry Thomas McKelvey] always told me, ‘If you don’t change your lifestyle, you will end up in jail, dead, or broke sitting under a tree,’” recalls Charlamagne, now 44. “I tell kids all the time, ‘Those things that happen to you when you’re young and in high school, if you don’t change your lifestyle, it’s a direct pipeline to jail.’”
That first stint behind bars didn’t exactly scare McKelvey straight. After a few jobs—one at a factory, another at a plant nursery—had run their course, he took up another profession: selling drugs. But that career choice didn’t go so well, either. McKelvey was arrested on charges of possessing marijuana and cocaine with intent to distribute. “After that weekend in jail,” he says, “that made me be like, ‘Aiiight, I gotta get it together.’ I gotta figure this out in a real way.”
GoHome-1.23.23-inset11.0.jpg

On The Late Show with fellow Lowcountry native Stephen Colbert, who also serves as an executive producer of the Comedy Central Show, Hell of a Week with Charlamagne Tha God.
McKelvey began hanging around a Summerville recording studio. That’s where he met Willie Will, a then-personality on Z93 Jamz, who told him about an internship at the station. I don’t need to be in high school? Nah. I don’t have to have a diploma? Nope. (Hey, times were much simpler in 1998.) McKelvey filled out the paperwork and got the gig.
His now-famous moniker came somewhere in the midst of all that. “Charles” was the name he used when he sold crack. He remembered studying Charlemagne the Great in night school. Put two and two together—“Tha God” just sounded cool at the end—and the rest is FM history.
Charlamagne’s on-air poise and personality caught the ear of controversial radio figure Wendy Williams, who asked him to be a co-host in 2006. He jumped at the chance to move to New Jersey, and the situation was promising until he was laid off two years later.
By then, Charlamagne and then-girlfriend, now-wife Jessica Gadsden had their first child. “Too proud to collect unemployment,” he admits, as they struggled to make ends meet until spring 2009, when he got his own morning show with Philadelphia’s 100.3 The Beat. He recalls driving from his North Jersey home to the Philadelphia studio and back every day, and then was fired out of the blue that fall.
“That situation was so messed up because me and [Jessica] were moving to Philly,” explains Charlamagne, who says great ratings and viral online moments (like the time he got in the middle of an ugly Beanie Sigel/Jay-Z verbal spat) weren’t enough to sway a program director who simply wanted to try something different on the air. “I’ve worked at six different stations in my life and got fired from four of them.” That November, he swallowed his pride and moved back in with his mother, Julie, in Moncks Corner.
Things wouldn’t really look up again until late 2010, when he happened to be in New York and connected with Power 105.1, a popular urban station that was searching for a replacement for longtime morning host Ed Lover. Charlamagne made another move to the big city. This time, once he started clicking in the studio with The Breakfast Club co-hosts DJ Envy and Angela Yee, there was no turning back.
In the decade-plus since the show’s inception, the crew has been an essential part of millions of listeners’ mornings, giving their straight-shooting takes on everyone from Summer Walker and Herschel Walker to Luke Skywalker. The beloved trio was nationally syndicated in 2013 and inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 2020.
GoHome-1.23.23-inset3.jpg

(From left to right) Receiving an honorary doctorate from South Carolina State University in 2021; with wife Jessica Gadsden-McKelvey at the Tyler Perry Studios grand opening gala in 2019: & A young Lenard with his father, Larry.
The bright lights had their dark side, though. With all the drinking and unhealthy habits that came with kickin’ it with the biggest names in music and movies, Charlamagne’s physical and mental health both suffered. “When I started doing The Breakfast Club, I definitely got caught up in the radio-star lifestyle,” he admits, proving that the same candor he uses while interviewing figures such as Kanye West and Joe Biden applies to himself. “I had got real fat—like 200 pounds, which don’t look good on my five-six frame. I was drinking 100 miles per hour and doing drugs. It was really bad.”
Making matters worse, he was going nonstop. The man Rolling Stone coined “Hip-hop’s Howard Stern” was doing the radio show in the early morning, taping TV programs like Guy Code and Uncommon Sense with Charlamagne after that, and partying into the wee hours of the morning. “I was living that lifestyle,” says Charlamagne. “Running around with all these different women. The drugs. The alcohol. I had never been that version of myself. I never had that type of success. I never had that type of money. I never had that type of fame. In my mind, I’m really, really doing it. But on the inside, I’m realizing all of this was escapism, and I’m trying to run from myself.”
It’s right then, somewhere in a quiet moment in 2015, when Charlamagne had an epiphany: He knew that if he wanted to remain a positive presence in his family, he’d have to make some conscious changes.
It began with self-reflection. He also cleaned up his diet and started working out more. And then came psychotherapy sessions and the metaphoric spilling of his heart in the form of two New York Times best sellers (Atria Books), 2017’s Black Privilege: Opportunity Comes To Those Who Create It and Shook One: Anxiety Playing Tricks on Me the following year. “Healing is not a destination—it’s a journey,” says Charlamagne. “For me, when I started going to therapy, I was just trying to figure some things out inside myself. It was the best thing that ever happened to me, honestly. That healing journey led me to meditation and other things like that.”



He wasn’t struggling alone. Charlamagne’s dad wrangled with his own mental health issues that were waved off with “crazy checks” (disability checks associated with bipolar issues, PTSD, and other psychiatric conditions). He also had a cousin and two friends who committed suicide. To change the narrative, Charlamagne knew he’d have to say more. “I started getting invited to speak on all these panels,” he says. “Somebody introduced me as a ‘mental health advocate.’ I went, ‘Whoa, whoa. I’m not no mental health advocate.’ I remember [Peace of Mind with Taraji co-host] Tracie Jade said, ‘Brother, whether you want to be or not, you are.’”
Once COVID-19 hit and everyone from actors to acquaintances contacted Charlamagne for advice in dealing with pandemic-related anxiety and stress, a friend suggested he start an organization centered on mental health. The Mental Wealth Alliance (MWA), founded in early 2021, was the end result. “We want to get 10 million Black people free therapy over the next five years,” explains Charlamagne, who acknowledges that his celebrity helped get the MWA train moving quickly. “We want to raise the number of Black mental health professionals to reflect the population of Black people in America. We want to get mental health and social-emotional learning in schools.”
“I love South Carolina, so anything I can do to continue to provide things that I know will give inspiration to our people, like this museum, I’m all in.” -Charlamagne Tha God
Back home, a more-present Charlamagne could not be happier. “I got four daughters,” says the man who married his high school sweetheart at downtown’s South Carolina Society Hall in 2014. “Being at home is the most important thing for me. I like being with my wife, and I like being with my daughters. I like picking my kids up from school.”
And although he’s largely lived in New Jersey for 18 years, Charlamagne’s feelings for his other home are just as strong. “I am South Carolina,” he says. “I don’t know anything else. So much that I learned there has helped me be able to navigate my way through this business that we’re in. That’s why I embrace so many of the young’uns coming from South Carolina because I know it’s more me’s in that state.”
Those heartfelt words aren’t said just to appease the folks he grew up with; Charlamagne genuinely cares about his city and the people in it. Take Charleston’s IAAM, for instance. When the museum’s visionaries realized their 150,000-square-foot dream was going to become a reality on the waterfront, they knew they would need recognizable locals like Charlamagne as allies for the roughly $100-million project.
“Mayor Riley called me personally and asked me to be on the board,” says Charlamagne, who essentially serves as an IAAM South Carolina ambassador, connecting the museum to those in hip-hop culture. “I jumped at the opportunity. [IAAM president] Tonya Matthews always says, ‘This isn’t a museum telling a story about slavery; it’s a museum that’s telling a story about survival.’” After a minute of self-reflection, he adds, “The story needs to be told in a real way. I love South Carolina, so anything I can do to continue to provide things that I know will give inspiration to our people, like this museum, I’m all in.”
GoHome-1.23.23-inset1.jpg

Experiencing a “Passage” room at IAAM, featuring the names of enslaved Africans boarding ships to cross the Atlantic.
Charlamagne is looking forward to attending the IAAM opening events later this year. In the meantime, new episodes of Hell of a Week are taping. The audience for Brilliant Idiots, his podcast with Andrew Schultz, is growing. On top of all that, he and DJ Envy are still working out new-format kinks on The Breakfast Club after Yee left in December to pursue her own show. To say the man is busy would be disrespectful to his Google Calendar interface.
But here Charlamagne is, adding even more to his plate, this time in the form of restaurant ownership. Always looking to expand his brand in the right spaces, he decided to bring Krystal, the much-loved, Georgia-based fast-food chain, even closer to home. “Franchising is something me and my wife always wanted to get into,” he says. The couple plans to open six of the slider-slingin’ joints around the Lowcountry, starting with one in Moncks Corner later this year. “I’m the type of person who wants to go where everybody isn’t yet. If everyone wants to go to the club that’s hot, I’d rather go to the club that’s not as poppin’ right now and make it that [popular] spot.”
Even more inspiring than the potential financial gains from the new venture, however, is his hope for what it’ll do for fellow South Carolinians. “I love that whole sense of community,” says Charlamagne, who worked at Taco Bell as a teenager. “These young individuals will want to have a nice lil’ job after school. Or somebody who wants to have a managerial position. I think it’s a great opportunity, and I just love doing it with my favorite business partner, my wife.”
It always comes back to family with Charlamagne. So, when he says that, after the radio shows and TV appearances end, he’s going to pack things up and come back down South, you believe him. “Honestly, I feel like I never left,” he says. “I own a lot of property in South Carolina. I was on vacation at Kiawah Island this summer. I love being home and seeing my people. When it’s all said and done, I do see myself back living in South Carolina.”
Somewhere about now would be a great time for the Black History Month report to wind down. By this point, the class and teacher will have learned more than enough about the local boy who went “from the trap to the cul-de-sac,” as he writes in Shook One. The next student, probably with a project on LeBron James or Kamala Harris, will stand up to present. And sure, they’ll do a good job, too. But the way the kid covering Charlamagne Tha God bravely stepped outside the box to tell a story about a nontraditional media icon should earn him applause in the classroom and an A on the assignment.
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
CthaGod.


All the things he does outside of the Breakfast Club puts him in a powerful position.

Charlamagne Tha God: The Moncks Corner Native Talks Radio, Reclaiming Yourself, And Repaying South Carolina For All Its Given Him
February 2023
WRITER:
DeMarco Williams
PHOTOGRAPHER:
Image credits below
Learn about his involvement with the International African American Museum, his focus on mental health, and the six Krystal burger joints he’s bringing in the Lowcountry
lg.php

lg.php

GoHomeAgain-1.23.23-Ma5.jpg


Charlamagne Tha God isn’t the most obvious subject for a Black History Month project, but he’s certainly an intriguing one. The provocative radio and TV personality, born Lenard Larry McKelvey, is witty and bold. He can recite the latest J. Cole verses; regularly texts with Stephen Colbert, executive producer of his Comedy Central show, Hell of A Week with Charlamagne Tha God; and confers with Tonya Matthews, the president of Charleston’s International African American Museum (IAAM), where he serves on the board. He’s a hardworking businessman who loves his family, speaks his mind, and understands the importance of daily meditation. He could be seen as the American dream—if said dream was Black, bald, and wore a pair of broken-in Pumas.
The student’s report could start with his rocky beginnings. Back in the early ’90s, the law and a truant McKelvey weren’t the best of friends. During that time, the Moncks Corner native was arrested on charges of assault and battery with a deadly weapon. He’d spend 45 days locked up. “My father [Larry Thomas McKelvey] always told me, ‘If you don’t change your lifestyle, you will end up in jail, dead, or broke sitting under a tree,’” recalls Charlamagne, now 44. “I tell kids all the time, ‘Those things that happen to you when you’re young and in high school, if you don’t change your lifestyle, it’s a direct pipeline to jail.’”
That first stint behind bars didn’t exactly scare McKelvey straight. After a few jobs—one at a factory, another at a plant nursery—had run their course, he took up another profession: selling drugs. But that career choice didn’t go so well, either. McKelvey was arrested on charges of possessing marijuana and cocaine with intent to distribute. “After that weekend in jail,” he says, “that made me be like, ‘Aiiight, I gotta get it together.’ I gotta figure this out in a real way.”
GoHome-1.23.23-inset11.0.jpg

On The Late Show with fellow Lowcountry native Stephen Colbert, who also serves as an executive producer of the Comedy Central Show, Hell of a Week with Charlamagne Tha God.
McKelvey began hanging around a Summerville recording studio. That’s where he met Willie Will, a then-personality on Z93 Jamz, who told him about an internship at the station. I don’t need to be in high school? Nah. I don’t have to have a diploma? Nope. (Hey, times were much simpler in 1998.) McKelvey filled out the paperwork and got the gig.
His now-famous moniker came somewhere in the midst of all that. “Charles” was the name he used when he sold crack. He remembered studying Charlemagne the Great in night school. Put two and two together—“Tha God” just sounded cool at the end—and the rest is FM history.
Charlamagne’s on-air poise and personality caught the ear of controversial radio figure Wendy Williams, who asked him to be a co-host in 2006. He jumped at the chance to move to New Jersey, and the situation was promising until he was laid off two years later.
By then, Charlamagne and then-girlfriend, now-wife Jessica Gadsden had their first child. “Too proud to collect unemployment,” he admits, as they struggled to make ends meet until spring 2009, when he got his own morning show with Philadelphia’s 100.3 The Beat. He recalls driving from his North Jersey home to the Philadelphia studio and back every day, and then was fired out of the blue that fall.
“That situation was so messed up because me and [Jessica] were moving to Philly,” explains Charlamagne, who says great ratings and viral online moments (like the time he got in the middle of an ugly Beanie Sigel/Jay-Z verbal spat) weren’t enough to sway a program director who simply wanted to try something different on the air. “I’ve worked at six different stations in my life and got fired from four of them.” That November, he swallowed his pride and moved back in with his mother, Julie, in Moncks Corner.
Things wouldn’t really look up again until late 2010, when he happened to be in New York and connected with Power 105.1, a popular urban station that was searching for a replacement for longtime morning host Ed Lover. Charlamagne made another move to the big city. This time, once he started clicking in the studio with The Breakfast Club co-hosts DJ Envy and Angela Yee, there was no turning back.
In the decade-plus since the show’s inception, the crew has been an essential part of millions of listeners’ mornings, giving their straight-shooting takes on everyone from Summer Walker and Herschel Walker to Luke Skywalker. The beloved trio was nationally syndicated in 2013 and inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 2020.
GoHome-1.23.23-inset3.jpg

(From left to right) Receiving an honorary doctorate from South Carolina State University in 2021; with wife Jessica Gadsden-McKelvey at the Tyler Perry Studios grand opening gala in 2019: & A young Lenard with his father, Larry.
The bright lights had their dark side, though. With all the drinking and unhealthy habits that came with kickin’ it with the biggest names in music and movies, Charlamagne’s physical and mental health both suffered. “When I started doing The Breakfast Club, I definitely got caught up in the radio-star lifestyle,” he admits, proving that the same candor he uses while interviewing figures such as Kanye West and Joe Biden applies to himself. “I had got real fat—like 200 pounds, which don’t look good on my five-six frame. I was drinking 100 miles per hour and doing drugs. It was really bad.”
Making matters worse, he was going nonstop. The man Rolling Stone coined “Hip-hop’s Howard Stern” was doing the radio show in the early morning, taping TV programs like Guy Code and Uncommon Sense with Charlamagne after that, and partying into the wee hours of the morning. “I was living that lifestyle,” says Charlamagne. “Running around with all these different women. The drugs. The alcohol. I had never been that version of myself. I never had that type of success. I never had that type of money. I never had that type of fame. In my mind, I’m really, really doing it. But on the inside, I’m realizing all of this was escapism, and I’m trying to run from myself.”
It’s right then, somewhere in a quiet moment in 2015, when Charlamagne had an epiphany: He knew that if he wanted to remain a positive presence in his family, he’d have to make some conscious changes.
It began with self-reflection. He also cleaned up his diet and started working out more. And then came psychotherapy sessions and the metaphoric spilling of his heart in the form of two New York Times best sellers (Atria Books), 2017’s Black Privilege: Opportunity Comes To Those Who Create It and Shook One: Anxiety Playing Tricks on Me the following year. “Healing is not a destination—it’s a journey,” says Charlamagne. “For me, when I started going to therapy, I was just trying to figure some things out inside myself. It was the best thing that ever happened to me, honestly. That healing journey led me to meditation and other things like that.”



He wasn’t struggling alone. Charlamagne’s dad wrangled with his own mental health issues that were waved off with “crazy checks” (disability checks associated with bipolar issues, PTSD, and other psychiatric conditions). He also had a cousin and two friends who committed suicide. To change the narrative, Charlamagne knew he’d have to say more. “I started getting invited to speak on all these panels,” he says. “Somebody introduced me as a ‘mental health advocate.’ I went, ‘Whoa, whoa. I’m not no mental health advocate.’ I remember [Peace of Mind with Taraji co-host] Tracie Jade said, ‘Brother, whether you want to be or not, you are.’”
Once COVID-19 hit and everyone from actors to acquaintances contacted Charlamagne for advice in dealing with pandemic-related anxiety and stress, a friend suggested he start an organization centered on mental health. The Mental Wealth Alliance (MWA), founded in early 2021, was the end result. “We want to get 10 million Black people free therapy over the next five years,” explains Charlamagne, who acknowledges that his celebrity helped get the MWA train moving quickly. “We want to raise the number of Black mental health professionals to reflect the population of Black people in America. We want to get mental health and social-emotional learning in schools.”

Back home, a more-present Charlamagne could not be happier. “I got four daughters,” says the man who married his high school sweetheart at downtown’s South Carolina Society Hall in 2014. “Being at home is the most important thing for me. I like being with my wife, and I like being with my daughters. I like picking my kids up from school.”
And although he’s largely lived in New Jersey for 18 years, Charlamagne’s feelings for his other home are just as strong. “I am South Carolina,” he says. “I don’t know anything else. So much that I learned there has helped me be able to navigate my way through this business that we’re in. That’s why I embrace so many of the young’uns coming from South Carolina because I know it’s more me’s in that state.”
Those heartfelt words aren’t said just to appease the folks he grew up with; Charlamagne genuinely cares about his city and the people in it. Take Charleston’s IAAM, for instance. When the museum’s visionaries realized their 150,000-square-foot dream was going to become a reality on the waterfront, they knew they would need recognizable locals like Charlamagne as allies for the roughly $100-million project.
“Mayor Riley called me personally and asked me to be on the board,” says Charlamagne, who essentially serves as an IAAM South Carolina ambassador, connecting the museum to those in hip-hop culture. “I jumped at the opportunity. [IAAM president] Tonya Matthews always says, ‘This isn’t a museum telling a story about slavery; it’s a museum that’s telling a story about survival.’” After a minute of self-reflection, he adds, “The story needs to be told in a real way. I love South Carolina, so anything I can do to continue to provide things that I know will give inspiration to our people, like this museum, I’m all in.”
GoHome-1.23.23-inset1.jpg

Experiencing a “Passage” room at IAAM, featuring the names of enslaved Africans boarding ships to cross the Atlantic.
Charlamagne is looking forward to attending the IAAM opening events later this year. In the meantime, new episodes of Hell of a Week are taping. The audience for Brilliant Idiots, his podcast with Andrew Schultz, is growing. On top of all that, he and DJ Envy are still working out new-format kinks on The Breakfast Club after Yee left in December to pursue her own show. To say the man is busy would be disrespectful to his Google Calendar interface.
But here Charlamagne is, adding even more to his plate, this time in the form of restaurant ownership. Always looking to expand his brand in the right spaces, he decided to bring Krystal, the much-loved, Georgia-based fast-food chain, even closer to home. “Franchising is something me and my wife always wanted to get into,” he says. The couple plans to open six of the slider-slingin’ joints around the Lowcountry, starting with one in Moncks Corner later this year. “I’m the type of person who wants to go where everybody isn’t yet. If everyone wants to go to the club that’s hot, I’d rather go to the club that’s not as poppin’ right now and make it that [popular] spot.”
Even more inspiring than the potential financial gains from the new venture, however, is his hope for what it’ll do for fellow South Carolinians. “I love that whole sense of community,” says Charlamagne, who worked at Taco Bell as a teenager. “These young individuals will want to have a nice lil’ job after school. Or somebody who wants to have a managerial position. I think it’s a great opportunity, and I just love doing it with my favorite business partner, my wife.”
It always comes back to family with Charlamagne. So, when he says that, after the radio shows and TV appearances end, he’s going to pack things up and come back down South, you believe him. “Honestly, I feel like I never left,” he says. “I own a lot of property in South Carolina. I was on vacation at Kiawah Island this summer. I love being home and seeing my people. When it’s all said and done, I do see myself back living in South Carolina.”
Somewhere about now would be a great time for the Black History Month report to wind down. By this point, the class and teacher will have learned more than enough about the local boy who went “from the trap to the cul-de-sac,” as he writes in Shook One. The next student, probably with a project on LeBron James or Kamala Harris, will stand up to present. And sure, they’ll do a good job, too. But the way the kid covering Charlamagne Tha God bravely stepped outside the box to tell a story about a nontraditional media icon should earn him applause in the classroom and an A on the assignment.

That is exactly how I felt, I Know who that man KNOWS and got ties with.

He getting stuff greenlit with a phone call. I do not know if Schultz is doing THAT.

However @Complex is making an interesting argument... which I kinda make all the time and he flipped it on me

In OUR world maybe Schultz aint sh*t

but in THEIR WORLD? Maybe he is?

I am not qualified to comment on that stuff.
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
That is exactly how I felt, I Know who that man KNOWS and got ties with.

He getting stuff greenlit with a phone call. I do not know if Schultz is doing THAT.

However @Complex is making an interesting argument... which I kinda make all the time and he flipped it on me

In OUR world maybe Schultz aint sh*t

but in THEIR WORLD? Maybe he is?

I am not qualified to comment on that stuff.
Very true. In their world Andrew maybe the man, but that’s the thing with CthaGod, i believe he has ties in both worlds.

You can make the argument Cthagod was instrumental in getting Andrew to the power players in that world.

Like you said, he can make a phone call and get things done.
 

305

Rising Star
Registered
Corny white boy...are you going to keep watching him?
You his biggest fan. I see you know His nicknames, the stats of his show, all his past conflicts. knowing way more than anyone on the board by far. And all the years you spent collecting info on this crackas fuck ups to not do shit about it but be sassy and police the comments? Stop acting like you give a fuck about black people
 
Last edited:

Last Dayz

Soul Thief
Certified Pussy Poster
Good. Glad Ryan called that BS out

Right, Schulz has always had Black People in his mouth but what else is new with these honkies being obsessed with us?

Never took CTG serious knowing that's been his buddy for years plus on TBC I've noticed the last few years one day he's Malcom X and the next he's this clueless dope that can't read between the lines and apparently doesn't know what exactly Racism is and how it works.
 

keone

WORLD WAR K aka Sensei ALMONDZ
International Member
Right, Schulz has always had Black People in his mouth but what else is new with these honkies being obsessed with us?

Never took CTG serious knowing that's been his buddy for years plus on TBC I've noticed the last few years one day he's Malcom X and the next he's this clueless dope that can't read between the lines and apparently doesn't know what exactly Racism is and how it works.
never forgot he went to far with the cooning
he got called out by boyce
then he started inviting boyce and dr umar on the show
 
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