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	<title>Breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s &#8211; Urban City Podcast Group</title>
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		<title>Ep. 3 Wild N Out Secrets: Spanky Hayes, Nick Cannon, Comedy, MTV &#038; Detroit</title>
		<link>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/ep-3-wild-n-out-secrets-spanky-hayes-nick-cannon-comedy-mtv-detroit/</link>
					<comments>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/ep-3-wild-n-out-secrets-spanky-hayes-nick-cannon-comedy-mtv-detroit/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gerold Girbeau]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2026 00:13:15 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Breakfast at Girbeau's]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[behind the scenes comedy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Black entertainment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Breakfast at Girbeau’s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity interview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[comedy business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[comedy industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[comedy interview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[comedy legends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comedy Store]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Detroit comedians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Detroit entertainment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entertainment podcast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gerald Girbeau]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hollywood comedy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MTV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MTV comedy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nick Cannon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nick Cannon interview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pauly Shore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[podcast interview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanky Hayes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanky Hayes podcast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stand up comedy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban culture podcast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wild N Out]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wild N Out history]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/2B02368F-7BD2-477B-AC8F-F13E73B00120-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Illustrated logo reading “Breakfast at Girbeau’s” inside a colorful café scene with hip-hop graffiti walls, a boombox on a table, breakfast food, coffee, and a vibrant urban vibe." decoding="async" />Spanky Hayes sits down with Gerald Girbeau for a raw conversation about Wild ’N Out, Nick Cannon, comedy politics, money, loyalty, Detroit roots, and surviving the highs and lows of the entertainment industry.]]></description>
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            data-albumTitle="Ep. 3 Wild N Out Secrets: Spanky Hayes, Nick Cannon, Comedy, MTV &amp; Detroit"
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            data-track-lyric="" data-icecast_json="" data-icecast_mount="" data-optional_poster="true"><div class="sr-playlist-item-flex"><span class="store-list"><div class="song-store-list-menu"><i class="fas fa-ellipsis-v"></i><div class="song-store-list-container"><a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/ep-3-wild-n-out-secrets-spanky-hayes-nick-cannon-comedy-mtv-detroit/" class="song-store sr_store_force_pl_bt sr_store_wc_round_bt" target="_self" title="View Details" aria-label="View Details" data-source-post-id="8390" data-store-id="0-0"  tabindex="1"><i class="sricon-info"></i><span class="srp_cta_label">View Details</span></a><a href="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/ep-3-wild-n-out-secrets-spanky-hayes-nick-cannon-comedy-mtv-detroit/" class="song-store sr_store_force_share_bt" target="_self" title="Share" aria-label="Share" data-source-post-id="8390" data-store-id="0-1" data-barba-prevent="all"  tabindex="1"><i class="sricon-share"></i></a></div></div></span><div class="srp_noteButton"><i class="sricon-info"  data-source-post-id="8390" data-track-position="0" data-track-title="Breakfast-At-Girbeaus-Ep.-3-1&lt;span class=&quot;srp_trackartist&quot;&gt;&lt;/span&gt;" data-track-use-postcontent=""></i></div></div><div class="srp_track_description">In this unforgettable episode of Breakfast at Girbeau’s, Gerald Girbeau sits down with comedian Spanky Hayes for a raw, hilarious, and brutally honest conversation about his journey through comedy, Hollywood, and the entertainment business. Spanky opens up about how he first got connected to Pauly Shore, the legendary Comedy Store, and how his relationship with[...]</div></li></ul></div></div><div class="album-store"></div></div><script id="srp_js_params_6a2e7b675752a">
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									<p data-section-id="9kg2uj" data-start="605" data-end="629"><span role="text"><strong data-start="608" data-end="629">Major Takeaways</strong></span></p><ul data-start="630" data-end="1125"><li data-section-id="nldbv8" data-start="630" data-end="820"><strong data-start="632" data-end="693">Spanky Hayes reveals the Detroit roots behind Wild ’N Out</strong>, explaining how the show’s original spirit was built from real relationships, raw comedy, and a street-tested creative circle.</li><li data-section-id="jb5lm0" data-start="821" data-end="976"><strong data-start="823" data-end="876">The interview digs into the business side of fame</strong>, including money, contracts, missed opportunities, and how success can get messy behind the scenes.</li><li data-section-id="mzoif3" data-start="977" data-end="1125"><strong data-start="979" data-end="1059">Beyond television, Spanky reflects on hardship, loyalty, faith, and survival</strong>, offering a blunt look at what happens after the spotlight fades.</li></ul>								</div>
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									<div> </div><h2>Spanky Hayes opens up about Wild ’N Out, Nick Cannon, comedy politics, money, loyalty, and the Detroit roots behind one of TV’s biggest comedy brands.</h2><div> </div><div class="inline"><span id="L-SUfmGzfpSfa5N-rIKwR1MA161206f" tabindex="-1" aria-describedby="L-SUfmGzfpSfa5N-rIKwR1MA1612070"><span class="cursor-pointer group" title="Play starting at 29:58"><span class="group-hover:bg-base-200 rounded p-0.5 -m-0.5" data-start="1797810" data-end="1798810">Breakfast at Jabou&#8217;s with your man Gerald Jabou. Yeah. Yeah.<br />It&#8217;s another episode. We in here. We got my man Spanky today.<br />Yes, sir. Spanky Hayes, baby. Spanky Hayes, he is back.<br />You said you&#8217;re retired. Yeah. And I don&#8217;t know why, you know, but we&#8217;re going to get into that.<br />You ready for that, bro? Can I say anything? You can say whatever you want to say, my brother.<br />OK, yeah, all right. Yeah, we can go through that.<br />Let&#8217;s do that. All right. I mean, you ain&#8217;t going to hurt nobody&#8217;s feelings or nothing, are you? Oh,<br />I don&#8217;t care about that.<br />I just want you to be able to use it. Oh, we can use whatever. Yeah, I&#8217;m Gerald Jabou in case you<br />ain&#8217;t know.<br />I know. I know. Yeah.<br />So we can get into it. So let me give you a little back story on how I met Spanky. It was 2011,<br />2010, 2011 or something like that.<br />And I don&#8217;t even remember. Straight rock star. Yeah, we was on some rock star shit.<br />Straight rock star. And we were out in LA on Sunset Boulevard. Shouts out to my man Cliff Love.<br />We was hanging out at the college. Cliff Love, wherever you at in this world, I love you, man.<br />You know what I&#8217;m saying, Cliff Love.<br />I don&#8217;t know where you at, but Cliff Love. Yeah, so we were hanging out with Cliff Love Comedy<br />Store. And we were there, and Pauly Shore was in there.<br />We was like, oh shit, Pauly Shore is in there. And he was like, y&#8217;all want to meet him? And we<br />was like, yeah. So we ended up meeting Pauly Shore, but this motherfucker right here was with<br />Pauly Shore.<br />That&#8217;s my brother. Yeah, so that&#8217;s your brother from another mother. That&#8217;s my brother, man.<br />How&#8217;d y&#8217;all meet, man? Through the world famous Missy Shore, his mother. Man, this is a crazy<br />story. So shout out to Keith Washington.<br />That&#8217;s my big brother, big cousin, big uncle, whatever. He done been my uncle, my brother, and<br />my cousin. You know what I&#8217;m saying? Yeah, so he helped me out a lot in my career, especially<br />in the beginning.<br />But so we come to LA. We just did a play with Keith Washington. So we come to LA to come visit<br />where we come to live, and he lives out here.<br />So he&#8217;s showing me around, me and Joe Blunt. Shout out Joe Blunt, me and him, and Howie<br />Bell. And he&#8217;s showing us Melrose.<br />He&#8217;s showing us all the Hollywood shit for the first time. So this is September 4, 1996. This is like<br />before Tupac.<br />Yeah, this is before Tupac died. So we go to the Comedy Store, and it&#8217;s Fat Tuesday. And<br />everybody, Tupac, and Snoop Dogg, and man, it&#8217;s Suge Knight, and Usher, and man, it was<br />Vivica Fox.<br />And man, it was so many people in this audience, man. But I still, I wanted to go up, though.<br />Shit, I want to go up.<br />And then I remember Keith Washington paying God Torrey, shout out to God Torrey. Shout out<br />to Joe Torrey, too. Paying God Torrey for me to get on because, rest in peace, Ricky Harris was<br />on stage annihilating.<br />And he was to do, I&#8217;m Tadow, and this is Tadow. He used to be in front of all the Snoop Dogg<br />stuff. So he&#8217;s no longer with us, OK.<br />No, no, that was a dear friend of mine. I used to call him Yoda. So yeah, that was my man.<br />Ricky Harris was a beast. But anyway, so Ricky Harris on stage annihilating them. This is his<br />crowd.<br />Like I said, Snoop Dogg, Dogg Pound, Kobe, Brian is in the audience. Everybody, Brand D,<br />everybody&#8217;s in the audience. And I go on stage after him and get a standing ovation.<br />And it was only probably because they never heard my jokes before. You know how LA is, it&#8217;s<br />kind of repetitive. They know who it is.<br />They&#8217;re looking forward for it. It&#8217;s almost like a hit record. Jokes turning to hit records because<br />it&#8217;s jokes that they want to hear you say.<br />So to me, you don&#8217;t get to grow that way. But anyway, so I went and told their ass a new one.<br />And Missy Shore came out the audience.<br />And she was like, I want you to be a regular here. And I didn&#8217;t know what even what she was<br />saying. Right.<br />Right. I was like, OK. And then she was like, I need you to come back tomorrow at eight o&#8217;clock<br />tomorrow.<br />It sounds like she looks like she sounds like that. Yeah. And then and then I came back the next<br />day and told their ass up again and again and again and again and again.<br />I was so physical and nobody was physical at this time. So I came out with all this physical<br />comedy. And man, it was so man.<br />I took L.A. by storm. So but to answer your question for meeting Missy, you know, Paulie came<br />in a comedy store one day and said, I&#8217;m shooting a show and I want the first the newest regular<br />to be on it. Oh, wow.<br />It was me. Wow. Three days in.<br />So it was just coming like that. Meanwhile, being being being like ping pong, it was crazy. And<br />that&#8217;s how me and Paulie sure he gave me my first super bad white bitch.<br />He said, you think she&#8217;s hot? And I was like, yeah, he was like, hey, come go suck his cock. He&#8217;s<br />black. You love black guys.<br />I was like, thank you. It really happened. Yeah.<br />Oh, yeah. Oh, man. Oh, that&#8217;s that&#8217;s like, wow, that&#8217;s that&#8217;s that&#8217;s a sandwich without cheese on<br />it.<br />Damn. Damn. Yeah, that&#8217;s that&#8217;s crazy.<br />Yeah. But that night when we met, when we were hanging out with you, we met you and it was<br />just kind of like on the fly. And you had a bad chick with you.<br />You had Nick Cannon&#8217;s brother with you. Oh, Gabe Cannon. I don&#8217;t know the chick.<br />But Gabe Cannon, what up? Shout out to my brother. He got a radio show him in a Rubin and in<br />Rubin and Caleb. So the Cannon brothers, all three of them are Nick Cannon&#8217;s brother.<br />OK. Yeah, they had like a morning show. OK, so you keep up with Gabe Cannon.<br />Yeah, that&#8217;s my brother. OK, do you talk every day? But right now, do you still talk to Nick? I<br />have not talked to Nick, but. Nick will call me if you need me.<br />OK, I&#8217;m pretty sure. And that&#8217;s the relationship I had to learn because here&#8217;s the thing I<br />thought, OK, so when I was coming up growing up, I would call a person, my brother, because I<br />was trying to make them like a brother. Right.<br />Right. Because I never had a brother. I&#8217;m the only child.<br />OK. So it took me a long time in life to learn in life to live, to understand that brothers don&#8217;t<br />really fuck with each other. Right.<br />So unless it&#8217;s. I mean, I&#8217;ll just think I&#8217;ll just I&#8217;ll just keep it because we got to go to the story,<br />though, right? Right. So so brothers don&#8217;t.<br />I thought the relationship of a brother was different than what I learned it to be. Right. Or and<br />seen it to be so.<br />Wow. So that&#8217;s my brother. But Gabe, out of all of Nick, all the Cannon brothers are like Ruben.<br />I love Ruben. I love Kate. I love all of them.<br />But Ruben. Well, Ruben was there a lot, too. So so Gabe, but Gabe is like he&#8217;s a cement.<br />He&#8217;s probably the reason and Ruben is probably the reason why I don&#8217;t just say flat out, say,<br />man, fuck Nick Cannon, man, a bitch at Nick. That&#8217;s wrong. But but we brothers and we and me<br />and Nick Cannon can&#8217;t handle that.<br />Right. So but the reason why I just don&#8217;t fly off the hinges is because I respect Gabe and Ruben<br />and Caleb and King and the brothers. And so on and so forth.<br />And and Nick, I love Nick, too, but we just did a lot of business and I was young and the<br />business didn&#8217;t turn out right. So, of course, I&#8217;m bitter about, of course, the business. But I still<br />love the person.<br />Now, I&#8217;m pretty sure on previous podcasts you you&#8217;ve told the story. But could you revisit the<br />story about how you and Nick got together and created the Wildin&#8217; Out? Because was it was it<br />your baby or was it Nick&#8217;s baby or was it both of y&#8217;all&#8217;s baby? Well. I would say whose idea was it<br />was, it was my idea, along with three other guys from Detroit, which I will name Howie Bell, Joe<br />Blunt, and I said both of their names already.<br />And Thomas Ward. Then we had additional people like like Andre McCoy. And then sometimes<br />we would have Tony Roberts.<br />Now, the reason why I named these guys is because we all are from Detroit. Right. All of us.<br />Yeah, because y&#8217;all was ganged up on the on the on Wildin&#8217; Out. Yeah. Y&#8217;all was squad.<br />Yeah. So we couldn&#8217;t you couldn&#8217;t join the other level if you weren&#8217;t in from Detroit. OK, gotcha.<br />So we all developed this show. And Nick Cannon would come around because he&#8217;s my<br />homeboy. And his manager, his first manager, Sam was from Detroit, a guy from Detroit, a<br />mechanic.<br />He did a lot more shit, but that&#8217;s what always come to my mind. So so that&#8217;s how I even met<br />Nick through Detroit. OK, so you feel me? So if it wasn&#8217;t I&#8217;m in San Diego doing a show and the<br />guy comes up to me after the show and I&#8217;m from Detroit, too.<br />Right. OK, that&#8217;s what&#8217;s up. So he&#8217;s Arabic guy.<br />Hey, listen, I managed these guys because when I first met Nick Cannon, he was a rapper. Yeah,<br />yeah, I remember that. So it was him.<br />Did he already have like the TV series on Nickelodeon? No, he was just a rapper, right? Rapper.<br />Yeah. He was nowhere near that when I first met him.<br />OK, so. But he got there fast. OK, got there fast.<br />But but he wasn&#8217;t there then. So Nick Cannon got to be. And I know this ain&#8217;t what you asked<br />me, but Nick Cannon has to be in my timeline of life in show business.<br />The fastest emerging star that I&#8217;ve probably ever seen. OK, it&#8217;s safe to say. OK, OK, OK.<br />He did. The nigga came out on fire. He was hot.<br />He was. He couldn&#8217;t rap or fuck. Well, but that&#8217;s the toy.<br />That&#8217;s what brought him in. You know, listen, that&#8217;s what brought him in. When you start<br />winning, you start trying.<br />I&#8217;m not mad. Yeah, I&#8217;m not. Definitely not mad.<br />He started from rapping. Yeah. So that&#8217;s why I thought he.<br />But yeah, like Kanye West writing for him. Yeah. So like that or helping him write or whatever<br />the case may be.<br />OK, so I&#8217;m not mad. You tell me just to get it. Yeah, we all started this.<br />Nick Cannon is our friend, you know, saying he came up under us. He really came up under me<br />because I was the closest to him. But it was three of us.<br />It was three other of us. It was all teaching them how to fight and do this and do that. Man, I&#8217;m<br />just like that.<br />Don&#8217;t do that, man. Or do this, man. You could be this dog.<br />If you start doing this, you know, just giving them advice. And then we got on and he got on<br />with Will Smith company Overbrook. That&#8217;s that orange.<br />Oh, yeah. See, and any, you know, Will Smith production has that Overbrook thing at the end.<br />So we both had deals with them and ours fell out and his fell out.<br />Of course, Nick probably had a stronger relationship with because it was just one of him, right?<br />It was four of us, five of us. So. So I think later, either Will Smith or somebody advised them,<br />man, that deal, that idea that they had, you should just do it.<br />And you probably should go get them. Probably somebody advised them. OK, which was I<br />mean, that makes a lot.<br />Yeah. Is this when you on the other end of the stick, you&#8217;ll never really understand it. Time got<br />to heal you.<br />OK, time got to show you why it happened. So when it was happening, I hated it. But now I<br />understand it was just business.<br />And then he didn&#8217;t even own Wildin out. So once he got it a couple of seasons later, he didn&#8217;t<br />even own it no more. I know I keep jumping.<br />But yeah, yeah, yeah. It&#8217;s just so much shit in this. So basically.<br />So he got advised to do the show. He did it. It worked.<br />He came and got me first. All right. Now, that&#8217;s what I will commit him for.<br />He knew that to do that, he would have to come get me, which wasn&#8217;t a problem because I&#8217;m<br />his boy. Right, right. And especially out of all of the group, I&#8217;m the one that he talks to the most.<br />OK. Makes sense. OK, so I&#8217;m on the show.<br />Other people were mad. The other four were kind of upset. But I did it.<br />We are starving artists. Yeah, I got it. Here&#8217;s a check.<br />The first check. To be honest, the first big check. Right.<br />So. Yeah. So what was that like for you when you when you got the first big check? Wow.<br />Yeah. I threw a party. I threw I gave all the drug dealers that I knew back their money that I<br />owed them because I was trying to.<br />Oh, OK. Yeah. So, you know, sending stuff back, you know, trying to get my issue.<br />OK. OK. Yeah.<br />The hustle. That&#8217;s what you do. You either grow it or you sell it.<br />Yeah. Some type of way. Yeah.<br />Yeah. Yeah. So that&#8217;s marijuana, guys.<br />Oh, it was hard. So what we are is legal. Yeah.<br />Fuck you. So, you know, so I would try to, you know, do my one, two with that. Right.<br />And then. So I bought like a car, like my first Benz. And then they kind of saw it and was like,<br />you want a car? I was like, yeah.<br />All right. They kind of got a fucking big ass warehouse full of cars. Now, I ain&#8217;t even<br />exaggerating.<br />All kind of shit. And he was like this. On the floor, third floor, go pick something just like that.<br />So the keys are in your car. Damn. Damn.<br />Ashton Martin. Here we go. Wow.<br />So yeah. And I was cutting down from Nick. Yeah.<br />And that&#8217;s why I was rapping about it. Right. I just got it because it was foreign.<br />I never heard about it. I had to Google and this is good. That&#8217;s ironic that Google kind of just<br />came out there.<br />Right. And that&#8217;s when they forced everybody to use Google&#8217;s on your phone. Yeah.<br />No matter what kind of phone you got. Yeah. Google.<br />Yeah. So Google, what kind of car is this? I was like, damn. Ashton Martin.<br />Yeah. So again, they can is always giving me stuff. So I&#8217;m not mad at him.<br />I just hated how business went. So where do you think? Because I got to get to to the other<br />questions. How at what point did the business just start getting shaky or flimsy in your point of<br />view? At from the beginning.<br />But you still rock with. I was blinded by the money. I&#8217;m poor.<br />Hmm. So I see it. Fuck that.<br />Twenty thousand dollars. Twenty seven thousand. Forty four thousand.<br />Fifty six thousand dollars. That&#8217;s my for one episode. Oh, shit.<br />Let&#8217;s rock. Let&#8217;s go. It wasn&#8217;t always like that the whole time.<br />But we had a we had a few changes in the show where they had changed it to be like right after<br />school. So they wanted to clean it up. So they had to pay us more because we&#8217;re fucking grown<br />men.<br />Yeah, we&#8217;re comedians. So then that didn&#8217;t work. So then they tried another scheme that we<br />had to change.<br />And then it was another part. If you remember, it was more white people than ever. So they<br />were trying to put white people on it.<br />And then that kind of didn&#8217;t work. But the best one stayed. Well, the best ones never left.<br />So, you know, said they kept trying to put girls on their girls, different girls, different girls. But<br />Naima Funk was is the illest, funniest motherfucker ever, dog. I don&#8217;t give a fuck when nobody<br />say whoever you think is funny as a girl.<br />You need to look at Naima Funk. She&#8217;s the illest one ever. She was on Wild N Out with all men.<br />And she was the only girl. She was killing it. Killed it.<br />That&#8217;s all. That&#8217;s all I got to say. Well, what did it look like? Like, take us to what it looked like<br />filming Wild N Out.<br />Like, what were the takes like in the back and forth? Like, how many times did they cut in? You<br />know, because the way they had it put together, it was just like y&#8217;all look like y&#8217;all were going<br />nonstop. It kind of was like that. Oh, yeah.<br />Yeah. We didn&#8217;t have a lot of cuts. The cuts were uh, the tape running out or the light, you<br />know, blowing out or really.<br />And it was nonstop. Like half of this stuff, the best stuff wasn&#8217;t even shown. Hmm.<br />Hmm. The best stuff. It might have been more raunchier.<br />You know, you know what I mean? Yeah. Because because we on TV and we&#8217;re on MTV. Right,<br />right.<br />We&#8217;re the only black show on this. MTV was the was the network that was pushing the envelope<br />with a lot of stuff. And y&#8217;all got a chance to do that.<br />Yeah. And we were the only black. So we were the third black show in history, MTV history.<br />And that was your MTV raps. Then it was a show called Lyricist&#8217;s Lounge where they were<br />rapping. Yeah, I remember everything.<br />Shout out to Beretta. My cousin Beretta was on that show. And then and then Wild N Out.<br />OK, yeah. So that would they were the third black show ever. So you did was that six seasons of<br />Wild N Out? Twelve.<br />Twelve seasons of Wild N Out. Yeah, really, really. 18 with all the other ones.<br />How many times I went on there and guest starred for four episode five on this episode this<br />season, I did eight this year. But so I stopped being on the roster. So I kind of was coming off<br />the bench after like season 13, 14, 15.<br />But then I was still be on there a lot. And that was my own choice because I didn&#8217;t like. And then<br />I want to go back to the question you asked me when it started.<br />OK, so so we get we get money. We get money this season. And it&#8217;s then we stop when Nick<br />gets married to Mariah stops.<br />Everything gets stops. We just kind of stop. And then when we come back, we&#8217;re in New York,<br />which is MTV two, which is a lesser budget.<br />Nick don&#8217;t own it at this point. You know, so it was different. We was getting paid way less.<br />We had to negotiate like hell. Like what? I got to negotiate this shit. But it&#8217;s crazy.<br />It just everything was different. And then we had to teach the people that was like filming. Oh,<br />don&#8217;t film it like that.<br />We got film like this. So now we&#8217;re the directors. Right.<br />But we ain&#8217;t getting paid to get a check for that. No, we get out of that. So it&#8217;s like I was doing<br />more work for less money.<br />At that point of MTV two, I&#8217;m saying so. And then it got off MTV two and then went back to MTV<br />with the invite. Come start like using a vehicle jumpstart because around that time, that&#8217;s when<br />Viacom was buying up everything.<br />Right. But it started with Viacom. But everything MTV, VH1, all of those are all Viacom.<br />Yeah, I know. Yeah, I know. You know.<br />Yeah. But yeah, I&#8217;m just telling you, I definitely know. Yeah, I&#8217;m just telling you.<br />I always tell people Viacom is the devil. But yeah, hey. OK, so when everything completely.<br />Ends with Wylan out for you. What happens at that point? Like what does Spanky go and do?<br />Like, is it just dead? Is it dormant? Are you writing for people? You ghost writing for people?<br />What? What? Tell us about that. All of that.<br />I&#8217;ve got I&#8217;ve written for everybody that you see as. Yeah, I&#8217;ve touched everybody. And that&#8217;s I<br />mean, and it&#8217;s great because I learned something very valuable after I left the show.<br />Is that relationships go a long way? How many people did I didn&#8217;t piss off while I&#8217;m up flashing<br />money and driving Ferraris and driving shit and going to MMA class? I learned I did that for 12<br />years so I can beat your ass, too. So it&#8217;s like, yeah, like, you know, whatever. And I&#8217;m still fat and<br />all that because I don&#8217;t want to lose weight.<br />I want to look like you want to look like Sonny Chiba. Yeah. You know, I&#8217;m a fat nigga that can<br />beat your ass.<br />Yeah, that&#8217;s one of my favorites. Yeah. So so, you know, so it&#8217;s like, you know, so my<br />relationships kicked in strong, but I started growing weed.<br />Man, I kind of got off the whole thing. And the funny thing is, while I&#8217;m out, never left me, even<br />when I didn&#8217;t want it. I didn&#8217;t want that shit at all.<br />But it just never left me. If we go outside right now, if it&#8217;s six people, one of them goes point.<br />And if they ain&#8217;t pointing, they&#8217;re going to be.<br />Yeah, because it happened last night when we were riding to the every note to the situation.<br />Everywhere I go, I can&#8217;t escape it. Yeah.<br />Never been something. Yeah. The security guard in the neighborhood.<br />He was like pulled up in the back into the neighborhood. He was just like, hey, you, you know,<br />like, yeah, he was just gassed up. He say nothing else.<br />He get nothing else. He just let us in. Yeah, he knew it.<br />Yeah. So you but what was it like? I mean, did you ever have a dormant spell like where where<br />the money wasn&#8217;t coming in this and that and the other way? Was it like that for you? OK, of<br />course. Get expound on it.<br />Man, I&#8217;ll tell you what, that was like one of the deepest parts of my life, man, because that&#8217;s<br />when I got closer to God. But I knew God. I already knew him.<br />Right. I knew that&#8217;s how I was doing what I was doing. But it was a deeper level, man.<br />And I could have went one way or I could have went the other way. Right. And I decided to go<br />to God, you know, and I it&#8217;s been times where I didn&#8217;t have nothing, but I&#8217;ve never been worried<br />about it.<br />Right. Because I&#8217;ll just be like, I pray every day and every night. And I mean, God, please, I just<br />just give it to me.<br />You know what I need. I don&#8217;t want to ask for that. I got to ask God.<br />So but he know what I want. So. OK.<br />So so yeah. So it&#8217;s been a lot of hardship. Yeah.<br />Crazy hardship. And then it&#8217;s a lot of it is because I retired. So it wasn&#8217;t because I wasn&#8217;t<br />working.<br />It was because I didn&#8217;t want to work. Right. That way anymore.<br />But I didn&#8217;t know what else what I wanted to do. I didn&#8217;t know what to do. So you never like<br />took like a like a nine to five or anything like that? I tried, man.<br />But people would be like, you swanky ass, man. I can&#8217;t hire you, man. Right.<br />It was like, well, I will hire you. But I can&#8217;t hire you, Spanky. Yeah, Spanky.<br />I noticed like wherever we go and when we hanging out, it&#8217;s just like it&#8217;s always a everybody&#8217;s<br />like rocking with you. And it&#8217;s almost like a vibe like where a two pockets in the building. You<br />know what I&#8217;m saying? Like because I&#8217;ve been you know, we kicked it sometimes and like every<br />time people see you, it&#8217;s like, hey, that&#8217;s Spanky.<br />Let him through. And I&#8217;m just blessed to be a part of it. You know what I&#8217;m saying? It&#8217;s all love.<br />Yeah. But yeah, I structure a lot of my thing. I study Tupac.<br />My wife is pregnant right now. We have a baby in three months and I&#8217;m going to name him<br />Tupac. Word.<br />Oh, that&#8217;s good, man. Congratulations on that. Nobody&#8217;s named Tupac.<br />I googled it. I looked it up. Nobody.<br />Everybody love him, but nobody ever named the kid Tupac. Right. So that&#8217;s that&#8217;s my job.<br />If you see Nick Cannon, if you have you have you seen him in the last three to five years? Yeah.<br />OK. Yeah.<br />What&#8217;s the what&#8217;s the what&#8217;s the energy like when you when you guys are next to each other?<br />Like, are you as close as we are or as close as where the producer is right now? And do you talk<br />to him? Or is it just when we see each other? We are brothers. Right. So we are going to hug<br />each other.<br />He might squeeze my hand hard. Yeah. You know, he&#8217;s going to show me love.<br />Right. And he also go walk away fast as he can to talk. It&#8217;s like, all right, you got me right here.<br />Say what you&#8217;re going to say. All right, I miss you, man. Come on, let&#8217;s go back to work.<br />Every all conversations are fast until people are relaxed. Right. You know what I&#8217;m saying? I<br />make people uneasy with my words and how I feel and how I&#8217;m expressing myself like a Tupac,<br />I guess you would say.<br />Yeah. Uh, so even as Takachi 69, I think he told me, Nigga, if you fuck my baby mama and raped<br />her and kidnapped me, I&#8217;m telling on your ass. I&#8217;m telling.<br />Right. So I fuck with Takachi. Now, I can&#8217;t say I&#8217;m a fan of his music.<br />Right. Or none of that. But what he&#8217;s mostly famous for is for being a rat in his situation.<br />I don&#8217;t think he was really a rat. He definitely told. But I don&#8217;t think that was like no rat.<br />You know, I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s a rat. I think he got he got tormented. Yeah, he did.<br />He did. I would have told to me. Yeah, I don&#8217;t give a fuck.<br />I got you. Call me. I got you up.<br />Heroes in the comedy world from from that&#8217;s not here to that&#8217;s here right now. Give me your<br />top, your top five. Like who is on Mount Rushmore for you? Dead or alive? Yeah, because I only<br />realize there is there a dead and alive Mount Rushmore in comedy for you.<br />Not really, because I only really watch and pay attention to dead comedians. Hmm. Anybody<br />alive? I rather not hear what they say if I&#8217;m doing comedy.<br />But I listen to De Chappelle, but De Chappelle, well, he might be in my top five. I&#8217;m going to say<br />my top five. But let&#8217;s see if this fails there.<br />But I definitely love De Chappelle and I definitely respect De Chappelle. And whenever we see<br />each other, it&#8217;s always love. So I watch him because I look at him as like a friend.<br />Now, we&#8217;re not best of friends. I&#8217;m not like that. What I&#8217;m saying is we friends enough for me to<br />consider because I don&#8217;t watch comedians.<br />Maybe I should have said that. OK. I don&#8217;t watch any comedians.<br />I don&#8217;t want to hear nothing you&#8217;re saying. Nothing. I don&#8217;t watch comedy.<br />I don&#8217;t go to comedy shows. None of that, unless I&#8217;m on it. I don&#8217;t want to hear what I&#8217;m not<br />interested in what they say, because I don&#8217;t want to hear what they say.<br />And they say, man, that&#8217;s better than what I thought. Right. And I take your shit.<br />Right. Because I&#8217;m so freestyle. It don&#8217;t seem like I took your shit.<br />But I know I took your shit. So I don&#8217;t. That&#8217;s why I avoid that.<br />I don&#8217;t want to see no comedians because I don&#8217;t want to hear what you&#8217;re saying. Because if I<br />like it, I am going to steal your shit. That&#8217;s what this is about.<br />This is what comedy is about. Right. Ain&#8217;t nothing you ever heard.<br />Original. So. So.<br />Cat Williams was really telling the truth in that interview. Did you get a chance to watch the<br />interview with him and Shannon Sharpe? Of course. Yeah.<br />What did you think about that? I think Cat said what he felt. And child to Cat. Cat is my brother.<br />OK. Cat has saved my life in many ways. And 98 percent of it is financially.<br />Wow. I mean. I said this before.<br />Cat Williams, if he is a real cat, he definitely have nine personalities to along with his nine lives.<br />He got nine personalities. That&#8217;s real language.<br />And six of those personalities. Are a motherfucker, who? Three of them are very pleasant and<br />loving and darling. And however else you want to word it.<br />But I&#8217;m his brother, so I don&#8217;t get a lot of it. But I see it. Right.<br />But I don&#8217;t get it. Right. But yeah.<br />So Cat is a genius, man. Is he a Mount Rushmore? Is he on your Mount Rushmore? Is Cat on my<br />Mount? No, Cat is a fan. OK, let me see.<br />Let me see. I&#8217;m going to start with Eddie Murphy. OK.<br />What I really should have</span></span></span></div>								</div>
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		<title>Coach Otis Riddley Talks Jackson State Football, Recruiting, and HBCU Legacy on Breakfast at Girbeau’s</title>
		<link>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/coach-otis-riddley-talks-jackson-state-football-recruiting-nil-and-hbcu-legacy-on-breakfast-at-girbeaus-a-must-hear-for-sports-fans-and-culture-builders/</link>
					<comments>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/coach-otis-riddley-talks-jackson-state-football-recruiting-nil-and-hbcu-legacy-on-breakfast-at-girbeaus-a-must-hear-for-sports-fans-and-culture-builders/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gerold Girbeau]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Sep 2025 23:06:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Breakfast at Girbeau's]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Breakfast at Girbeau’s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Callaway High coaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Coach Otis Riddley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[college football 2025]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deion Sanders JSU]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[football and NIL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[football mentorship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gerold Girbeau]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HBCU culture]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/?p=4481</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/hqdefault-3-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" />Assistant Head Coach Otis Riddley joins Breakfast at Girbeau’s to discuss Jackson State football, recruiting, NIL, and the cultural impact of HBCUs. A conversation about mentorship, legacy, and building champions on and off the field.]]></description>
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									<h2> </h2><h3 data-start="844" data-end="869"><strong data-start="848" data-end="869">Major Takeaways</strong></h3><ul data-start="870" data-end="1151"><li data-start="870" data-end="968"><p data-start="872" data-end="968">Coach Riddley emphasizes the importance of mentorship and building character beyond the field.</p></li><li data-start="969" data-end="1057"><p data-start="971" data-end="1057">Recruiting and NIL opportunities are reshaping the future of Jackson State football.</p></li><li data-start="1058" data-end="1151"><p data-start="1060" data-end="1151">HBCUs play a crucial role in preserving culture while producing top-tier athletic talent.</p></li></ul><h2>Coach Otis Riddley Talks Jackson State Football, Recruiting, and HBCU Legacy on Breakfast at Girbeau’s</h2><p>Urban City Fire Urban City Podcast. It&#8217;s Breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s with Gerold Girbeau&#8217;s right here on the Urban City Podcast Network. And of course, today, man, we got Coach O, the assistant head coach for JSU, Jackson State University&#8217;s football team. Uh, how you feeling, man? Man, Gerald, I&#8217;m good, man. I&#8217;m good. blessed, brother. Man, I&#8217;m I&#8217;m I I&#8217;m I&#8217;m appreciative that you&#8217;ve come over to Urban City with us. Glad you&#8217;re having me. Yeah, man. Uh you y&#8217;all been busy a little bit, huh? Hey, it&#8217;s a good thing though when you&#8217;re busy and you&#8217;re winning. That&#8217;s a beautiful thing, man. Oh my gosh, man. Did we We got to we got to start from it all cuz people don&#8217;t know that you and I have like a you know, we got a little pass, you know. No doubt. And and you you started in uh high school. Absolutely. my my alma mater program. Yeah. My high school. And you got uh you you went over to Jackson State. Yep. How did that happen? Well, we well start from the beginning like like where you you know but how did you become the football coach over at Jack uh high school pro? Okay. Provine. Uh man. So um started my coaching career at Callaway actually man. And it&#8217;s kind of funny man. You know Coach Collins is a he&#8217;s a pioneer in this area. Yeah. So, I um when I graduated from college, uh I was working as a process serv server and a courier uh guy for a local law firm. And I knew I wanted to get into coaching, but it was going to take some, you know, some time. I was a student assistant before I left Mississippi State. And so, I went to Coach Collins said, &#8220;Look, man, I&#8217;m trying to get in the coaching profession. Uh you got anything available?&#8221; He said, &#8220;No, unfortunately, right now, I don&#8217;t have anything available.&#8221; And you know, I took that as a I took that as a shot. You know what I mean? like a coach, you I ain&#8217;t good enough. You know what I mean? But um you know, he was he had his guys already. So I went over to Callaway, man. Another Provine guy, uh Daryl Jones. Yeah, I know. Yeah, man. DJ, man, he was at at Callaway at the time. He had just gotten a job. And um not to be too long with this answer, man. Just show you how crazy the world is. Well, how small the world is, I should say. I was at Mississippi State. Um, you know, I guess this is around 2007 and DJ ends up getting a job at Columbus High School, which is about 30 minutes away from Starkville. And so, um, I was in a mall in Columbus one day and happened to bump into, uh, DJ uh, Coach Jones uh, just walking through the mall. Two Jackson boys from Provine, we up in the country, you know, just walking through the mall, bumping to each other. And he said, &#8220;Look, man, I&#8217;m the head coach over in Columbus now. you know, when you graduate, call me, man. If I got something open, I&#8217;d love to have you on my staff. Okay. And, uh, to kind of tie all that in together. DJ knew me from coaching at Jim Hill when I was playing in Jackson. So, um, man, speed it back up. Came back to Jackson. He ended up getting a job over at Callaway and we made a lot of noise, man. We made a lot of noise. Really good. Uh, had one of the best teams in, uh, JPS history over there. You know, sent a lot of kids to college, a lot of kids to power four, power five schools at the time. And so, uh, fast forward from there, go to, uh, I get a I get a call one day said, uh, you know, Provine had an opening. Coach Collins was ready to retire. Um, and I didn&#8217;t necessarily want the job, man. I didn&#8217;t I You were your feelings about it. No, I ain&#8217;t going to say. Well, yeah, a little bit. Little bit. Little bit. Still a little tainted, brother. Yeah. You know, but also, man, you know, I thought about uh Coach Young who was who who had been at Provine for years, and I wanted to make sure the people that wanted that job had a fair shot to get it, right? And so, uh, you know, once I finally got coach blessings on it, you know, we moved forward with it, uh, and I went over to Provine and I didn&#8217;t necessarily do a lot of big things at Provine. My job at Provine really was to kind of reestablish the order, reestablish the structure, uh, get it back to how Coach Collins would want it to be, right? You know what I mean? So, that that was my my call to duty over there. So, when I left Provine, man, it was uh I was going into my fourth year at Provine. Had the best team I had since I&#8217;ve been there. We have been doing some things in the community with you, Gerald. U we did the the the men&#8217;s talk, right? I still got those pictures. I still got all the photos. Like we were doing some good things at the school with the young men and uh and so uh I got a call that summer, man. I was not expecting it. I wasn&#8217;t fishing. Uh Kapa Lincoln Community College gave me a call and said they wanted me to be their offensive line coach. Uh I&#8217;ve always had a dream of coaching on the collegiate level. Uh it was a means to an end for me, you know what I mean? So, I knew it was a part of my journey. So, I took the job. Man, left a lot of disappointed brothers over there at Provine, but I knew I had to do this. And I told him it was a life lesson. Uh, as much as we might get comfortable and like our surroundings, we have to make sure we understand that upper mobility is what this life is about. We&#8217;re always trying to win and this is an opportunity for me to win for my family and to grow. And so, once we left, I think they understood that. I was at Coen for two years, man. Had a great time at CON. Had uh two of the best offensive lines in their history. uh was the O line um uh had two O line MVPs in the league uh both years I was there um was an assistant coach of the year and so um man the Jackson State job ends up coming over and I know I&#8217;m longwinded with this answer man but you asked me to start no it&#8217;s okay so so um man I get I get over there to u you know I get that call from Jackson State uh coach John Hendrick at the time 2019 uh and crazy small world again my my coach that hired me at Kapal link was the running back coach at Mississippi State when I was there. Relation, relationships, right? All right. So, fast forward, Coach John Hendrick, who was the head coach at the time at Jackson State. He was the defensive line coach at uh Mississippi State when I came through there. So, I&#8217;ve been knowing these two dudes for years. They recruited me out of high school. I played for him, so they knew my character. And so, Coach Hendendrick called me and said, &#8220;Man, listen. I need a O line coach, man. Uh, everybody around here thinks highly of you. I know your character. What do you think about taking this job?&#8221; It was a no-brainer for me. I came home and so the rest is history, man. So you fast forward six years, we still here rock and roll. There you go. There you go. All right. So you got to the fast forward part. Dion came 2020. Yeah. Right. Yeah. You were there then, right? No doubt. Okay. What was what was that experience like for you working with uh Dion Sanders? I mean, coming, you know, from from beginning to the end, what was what was what was that experience like for you? Yeah, man. Uh it was a great experience. Uh it was a great experience. Don&#8217;t don&#8217;t get me wrong. It had it had its valleys, you know what I mean? But uh as a man, uh it helped shape me to what I am today. Uh man, the dude is uh he he&#8217;s a he&#8217;s a wise brother. You know what I&#8217;m saying? What you what you see is what you get. Uh he&#8217;s um he&#8217;s I mean, I don&#8217;t even know have the right adjectives to describe him from that standpoint. He&#8217;s just a good dude when it comes to knowing how to put people in the right places to succeed. Uh but uh man, he opened doors for me that man I can&#8217;t I can&#8217;t say would have gotten open if it wasn&#8217;t for him. I end up going to work uh do some consulting work with the uh Minnesota Vikings uh because of Prime. Okay. Um you know, he he opened a door for me that I walked through, but uh I end up doing some more work for the uh San Francisco 49ers. Um, we invited we invited the GM to practice uh when when um I want to say we were playing uh maybe Grahamlin or somebody that weekend. Um the 4 and Niners were doing a East Coast trip and they had uh I think Charlotte, the Panthers to play that Sunday. And in between they had Charlotte one week and then I think they had to play the the Saints the next week. So in between games they didn&#8217;t go back west, they stayed um in West Virginia. And so man, John Lynch and uh Adam Peters come to practice and uh they got the chance to meet me, sit down and talk with me, but they came, you know, to visit with Prime. But in that process, they of meeting me, they invited me up to San Francisco uh for a few weeks to do some consulting works with them uh through Bill the Bill Wash and um Nun Wooten Scouting Fellowship. So boom, another door that Prime opened for me, man. So I can&#8217;t I can&#8217;t sit here and lie to you and act like man the man ain&#8217;t blessed me uh in more ways than one brother. Right. So some of them rough days cuz it seemed to you know the outside looking in it was a non-stop winning streak when when he was there you know the first year I think we lost what two or three games. Then that last year he was in it was like nonstop. It was just incredible unstoppable. like everybody was recognizing Jackson State. It was like I felt good cuz you know that&#8217;s my alma mada that&#8217;s where I&#8217;m I&#8217;m from. We was on the map you know it was like I felt like we had been we never we finally got the recognition that we deserve on a national level cuz Mississippi knows what Jackson State is and here we are on the national level now. Right. Um those days when it was rough, like was it like a teachable moment or was it like uh my chest bigger than yours, you know? Or did you What was that like? It was everything was teachable. You know what I&#8217;m saying? I never allowed my ego to not allow a moment to be teachable. When you&#8217;re around greatness, you got to soak it up. Good or bad. You know what I mean? Cuz even the bad, I learned how to handle situations that looked bad. I learned how to in the future I&#8217;m going to handle that a little bit differently than what coach did at that point. So even the bad moments, man, I&#8217;m telling you, he uh and Prime was very aware of what was going on around the program. That&#8217;s one thing I liked about him. He had his hand on everything. So it wasn&#8217;t that u I don&#8217;t care if he&#8217;s the equipment person, you know what I mean? Or it was the person that cut the grass. Everybody was getting held to a standard. And that&#8217;s one of the biggest things I I I gleaned from him, you know what I mean? We talk about a standard and that&#8217;s that&#8217;s what&#8217;s kind of kept us relevant even now with Jackson State football. We got a standard that we play and live by. And uh I give Prime a lot of credit every day we came into the facility that we knew it was a standard we had to kind of uphold. No doubt. No doubt. You uh with all of that um do you still talk to private? Uh yeah, we&#8217;ve had um you know, Instagram, text messages, you know, you know, things of that nature. I don&#8217;t really call them. Um I mean, I ain&#8217;t got no need to call nobody in Colorado, you know what I mean? He got business up there. He tended to. Uh when that time come, we need to have a conversation. We left on good terms. So we good stuff. Yeah. Yeah. I think that&#8217;ll be easy for me to pick up the phone and call him. He and he told me that, you know, if I ever needed him to give him a call. Now him and TC on the other hand, I think they talk a little bit more cuz they they do a lot of more off the- field stuff. I&#8217;m not a fisherman. I&#8217;m not an outdoorsman. I don&#8217;t care nothing about that, J. I&#8217;m a city boy, you know what I mean? So they hit it they hit it off the field more than I did. I&#8217;m more I was in the office working, you know what I mean? But no, we uh definitely if we need to reach out to them, we can get them. What&#8217;s the team looking like for this 2025 football season? Cuz you know, look, I I&#8217;m hearing the team&#8217;s going back to Vegas for Gramling. Let&#8217;s talk about that a little bit. What we looking like? Oh, man. Uh it&#8217;s it&#8217;s going to be fun, man. Uh Jackson State is entering and I really feel this in the from the bottom of my heart, we&#8217;re entering a space of dominance. Uh we enter into a a stretch where we have a chance to really be dominant and create a dynasty. Um, now granted we have to do some gatekeeping. Uh, we got to make sure we we still uphold the standard that we were just talking about, but man, as far as the team, man, we got some dudes. We got some flatout dudes. And, uh, we just released the schedule. Um, and and to be honest with you, um, that schedule looks good to me. Uh, you know, you got you got Southern Miss on the schedule uh this year. Oh, yeah. I&#8217;m looking forward to going to Hattisburg. We do number doubles when we go to Hattisburg. You know what I mean? Everybody&#8217;s coming. Everybody&#8217;s coming. Right. And uh later on the year, like you just mentioned, we go to Vegas. Uh I love taking this show on the road, man. The West Coast needs to see what Jackson State University is about. It&#8217;s very capable of Yeah. Yeah, man. Like they they hear about us all the time and I think the West Coast is really excited about welcome welcoming us out there. No doubt. No doubt. Now, who are some of the standout players and uh give us some insight on the uh leadership within the team? Yeah, man. So, uh, man, two of our our top guys we talk about Jeremiah Williams, uh, defensive tackle from, uh, Lexon, Holmes County. I say Lexington, but really Holmes County. He&#8217;s from that countryside of Holmes County. Uh, went to Holmes County Central. Uh, he&#8217;s been at Jackson State, uh, since 2021. So, he came with Prime and he stuck around, man. He&#8217;s a he&#8217;s a bonafide baller. He was the MVP of the Celebration Bowl uh, defensively. And then you got Jacobian Morgan. He was the MVP of the Celebration Bowl on offense uh, from Canton, Mississippi. uh another local product, man. Just he went off to play quarterback at Syracuse and then ended up coming back to play quarterback for us and led us to a national championship, man. So, those two dudes right there, they lead the locker room. Uh good, wholesome brothers. Um they want the best for this school, for this city. They love Mississippi. And so, uh when other dudes come in our program and they see that type of that type of character at the front of the program, they don&#8217;t mind falling in line and doing what the right things. No doubt. What are some of the biggest challenges you feel? I mean, cuz pretty much we undefeated, right? What are some of the biggest challenges do you think uh JSU faces this season? And uh how y&#8217;all think y&#8217;all going to overcome that? Yeah, man. Hey, when you win, complacency starts to set in. Comfortable. Comfortable. And we&#8217;re not going to allow that to happen. Uh want everybody to understand that this is a this is a program built on uh toughness, bluecollar grit, and it&#8217;s going to continue to be that way. and uh the players in the in the fieldhouse. there certain stuff that we have uh you know even from tucking your shirts in uh making sure you&#8217;re wearing the right length socks uh making sure uh you got the right stuff on in general just all those things man just um attention to details don&#8217;t allow small things to fester and become bigger things you know bigger problems right so um you know that and our team is becoming playerled when you have a team that becomes playerled you have a team that is have opportunity for success so man we we&#8217;re looking forward to it man we think we think We uh the sky&#8217;s is the limit with this group. Bet. Now, I know you said y&#8217;all going to gatekeep a little bit, you know, but uh can you break down a key strategy and form information that JSU is known for? Oh, man. Known for. Uh I tell you what, man. Um I wish I had the play to show you, but we we um during the season we put in an unbalanced set. And if you don&#8217;t really know football, you going like, what is coach talking about? But on offense, uh, normally typically you had a center in the middle of the offense and he has a guard on each side, he has a tackle on each side, right? So an unbalanced set, you can have that center and you may put the whole offensive line to the right or the left, creating an unbalanced look for the defense and you&#8217;re trying to create numbers, right? Right. And so, uh, we did this originally against Texas Southern. Cool thing about this J, the reason I brought this play up, uh, Manny Ramirez as our offensive line coach came from Texas Southern. Well, while he was at Texas Southern, he tried to implement this play and the coaches kept shooting it down. So, we implemented the week we go play Texas Southern, end up getting like a 60 yard run off of it. And we ran it maybe four or five different times this season and each time was successful. Yeah. What? What? Now I know this is everybody like and it&#8217;s it&#8217;s gaining national attention. Homecoming. Oh yeah. Homecoming 2025. Yeah. What&#8217;s that? What what are you expecting that energy to be like? Because we had we had the parade. Uh you know, we had the we we took on the championship, all of that stuff. What do you expect from home gum in 2025? Unbelievable, man. Uh October 11th, 2025. uh Alabama State University. We&#8217;ll be in Jackson, Mississippi to take on the Jackson State Tigers for homecoming. It&#8217;s going to be a beautiful experience. It&#8217;s going to be crazy. It&#8217;s going to be dope. J, how uh how does JSU approach recruiting and uh what qualities and quantities do you look for uh in a player beyond talent? Oh man, great question. Uh so our approach to recruiting right now, man, we we are getting back to more of a high school uh type recruiting class. We want to develop guys. We fill them we fill our holes in our roster with with portal with the transfer portal but we think uh for us to continue to be successful uh developing young high school players is key. So that&#8217;s kind of the big uh I guess philosophy behind our recruit rec recruiting success right now. Now on the flip side of that um you talk about going forward when we when we go and play teams there we want to make sure we the biggest team and the most physical team. So even looking at um our roster right now, we&#8217;ve kind of set a standard to what we want each position to look like, right? So going forward, I I just don&#8217;t see where we&#8217;re going to get away from just how we operate. I think we&#8217;re going it&#8217;s successful and so if it&#8217;s not broke, don&#8217;t fix it, man. Don&#8217;t fix it. Don&#8217;t fix it. So there&#8217;s no changes or none of you consistency, right? Um, I think this year, you know, where we beat teams maybe by one touchdown, 10 points last year, this year we got a chance to start beating them by two, three touchdowns. But that&#8217;s because the program has become consistent. These guys have been here. Uh, we had three guys getting the portal that played last year. Uh, two of them left, one came back. So, the consistency in the roster is there to be successful. So, man, we looking forward to it, brother. Has the NIL had any effect on the recruiting at JSU? Uh absolutely absolutely man positive and negatives to it. You know what I mean? Uh because I was gonna say what&#8217;s what&#8217;s the retention rate? Yeah. Uh the retention rate is high you know and we are just in introducing some NIL things to our roster. Now uh we&#8217;ve had players with um you know we had a $10,000 deal with a Cheeit uh with Cheeit brand. You know what I mean? One of our players was on a $10,000 deal. So we&#8217;ve had some things in place in the past. uh but across the board where you talking about 20 to 30 players uh being able to secure deals that those are new things to Jackson State but we have that we got one of the best NIL collective setups in the conference in the in the conference by far and really uh really all of FCS um and that&#8217;s you know we talk about it KC uh 1400 collective is a really big part of our success and how we are able to recruit and retain right you know our guys don&#8217;t they don&#8217;t expect to be rich but they want to be able to you get a few dollars in your pocket while you date your girlfriend, you know what I mean? Be able to go home to eat and all that stuff. Yeah, that&#8217;s it, man. Do you do you give uh Coach Prime uh credit for that? Uh I I it depends. You know what I mean? So, I don&#8217;t want to say I don&#8217;t give him credit because a lot of the doors he he did open by just his presence, right? Uh but the actual uh foundational piece of it and really setting it up, it kind of started after he left. A lot of the deals that were put in place when Prime was here was kind of done between his people kind of on that side of it, his business team. Right now it&#8217;s it&#8217;s kind of more me and TC going to secure a lot of these deals. a building relationships uh even with the collective, the KC1400 collective didn&#8217;t start until after Prime left, but opening our ideas and our minds to the potential of those things. Yeah, he definitely deserves credit. No doubt. No doubt. No doubt. Now, uh what role do you think uh JSU football plays uh in the HBCU um sports landscape? Uh we the creme desert crim. We the mecca of HB.CU football. That&#8217;s all I wanted to say. the creme de la creme. I tell people that all the time, J. Like, it don&#8217;t get no better than J JSU football, bro. Man, I mean, yeah, cuz right now it&#8217;s it&#8217;s it&#8217;s up. It&#8217;s up, man. It&#8217;s all the way up, man. And you guys are doing amazing with it. Um, what&#8217;s the mis the biggest misconception about H.B.CU football and um like how do you think JSU is changing that narrative? Uh I think the biggest misconception about JSU football is that uh we couldn&#8217;t be successful postprime. Uh I think that was a big misconception. Yeah. I think I think people were like it&#8217;s it&#8217;s going to go down and you guys you and uh uh Coach TC I mean man, y&#8217;all been working y&#8217;all ass off. No, we appreciate that. This thing, man. Proud of y&#8217;all. No, I appreciate you, Gerald, man. I I tell you this uh uh we we were both built for this moment. He&#8217;s from South Pike. uh from down there and I&#8217;m from Jackson, Mississippi, right in President Hills, right? And I think our love for the university allows us to really sell and and for the city of Jackson allows us to sell this area to people who may have doubts, you know what I mean? Uh it allows us to show the beauty in this city, the beauty of these people, and uh and when recruits and their families come to town and they get a feel and a vibe for Jackson uh and a feel and a vibe for our fans, they&#8217;re blown away. Uh because we we are about excellence. Everything when you come into our facility, when you come on to our campus, you come to a JSU football game, it&#8217;s about excellence and that&#8217;s our standard. And so families come in, they start realizing that, man, like, man, I can see uh I can see my my son playing here. And real quick before you go to your next question, man, man, we had a parent on campus just yesterday, um, a white male, uh, him and his son, and he pulled the dad pulled me to the side and said, &#8220;Coach, I could honestly see my son coming here after coming to see you guys today. I didn&#8217;t know prior to coming to this campus, but after watching you guys practice, after watching your operation, coming into your staff meeting and meeting you guys, this is by far one of the best facilities and programs we&#8217;ve been to. So, when you hear things like that, even from, you know, uh, from, you know, white white families, you know what I mean? That&#8217;s important to us. But what we&#8217;re trying to do is create a just a bonafide blue collar, uh, blue blood program. There you go. And that&#8217;s what we Yeah. What&#8217;s uh one of the most memorable moments from 2020 until now that you&#8217;ve had as an assistant head coach? Man, I&#8217;mma tell you because it&#8217;s new. Uh man, it&#8217;s a viral photo going around uh where after the celebration bowl this year, I went and it was even it was maybe 10 seconds left on the clock, man. Maybe maybe a little bit more than that. I went and sat on the bench, Gerald. Um man, it was a heavy moment for me, you know, a lot of reflection. And I went and sat on the bench. My emotion kind of came over me. I just put my head in my hands and uh a couple of players come and patting on me, patting me on my back and next thing I know I got dumped with the water. Dump the Gatorade. That could have That&#8217;s That&#8217;s great. That&#8217;s a good feeling. I bet it is. That&#8217;s a good I never I never uh were you like was it was it surreal to you? Like I&#8217;ve come I&#8217;ve come this far. That moment right there. Man, it was Yeah, you&#8217;re exactly right. Surreal. That&#8217;s the exact word to use. And uh it was um it was surreal and I told somebody went to it was unreal at the same time. right? Like you know you I&#8217;m from Jackson, Mississippi. I&#8217;m living the dream. You know what I mean? And to lead, you know, I&#8217;m not the necessarily the head coach, but I&#8217;m one of the leaders of this program. But to lead this program to a national title as a boy that grew up in in Jackson, went to John Hopkins, went to Northwest Middle School, went to Provine High School. There you go. You know what I mean? Man, it was freaking surreal. brother, what would you tell a high school student that&#8217;s a junior in high school looking to go to an H.B.CU to play football and preferably looking at JSU. Yeah. June 1st, 2025, we have a camp. Um, yeah, cuz this is going all over the the internet. I know you big time. I already know what time I&#8217;m not that big. No, man. You&#8217;ve been doing this for a long time. I know you. But listen, man. I um June 1st we do have a mega camp and it&#8217;s the largest mega camp in the HB.CU landscape. It&#8217;s going to be at the event. Uh and you can visit go JSU Tigers uh football I mean go JSU Tigers football Instagram or what&#8217;s that Facebook page or Twitter page. I guess they call it X now. But uh you can visit those for more information. But if if a junior wants to get on the radar of a lot of HB.CU, that&#8217;s a great opportunity. But also man, make sure you go to camps. Um, you know, you got the rivals camps, you got the scout camp, you got the, uh, underclassman camp, the UC report camp. So, you got those type of deals going on. Even the Under Armour, uh, the Nike camp. It&#8217;s a lot of stuff going on that you can get in where you can get seen and where we get the data, right? So, you just need to put data out there and we going to get it and we going to find you. Right. when you what what would you want the uh TC coach O legacy to be from your point of view? Uh championships, brother. Championships. Them dudes uh loved us. I want this is why I want JSU folks to say they loved us. They they uh they served us. They made us proud and we won a lot of championships. And I think that&#8217;s exactly what&#8217;s going to happen. M what what&#8217;s your grand finale in all of this? That&#8217;s a good question, man. Uh you know, not to you know, I have aspirations of being a head coach, you know what I mean? But uh I&#8217;m also a person that allows God to move me, brother. There you go. Uh so I&#8217;m I&#8217;m in my moment right now. I&#8217;m enjoying what we&#8217;re doing. And so I don&#8217;t want to rush this moment. I think so often coaches and not just coaches, professionals, we rush moments not and thinking that the next moment is going to be just as good and we find out when we go into that next moment is a lot harder and you&#8217;re not as happy. So why rush the moment that you&#8217;re in? So that&#8217;s kind of the space I&#8217;m in right now. But I do have aspirations to be a head coach at some point and uh and it&#8217;s got to be the right school and I can&#8217;t wait to come back if it&#8217;s not Jackson State, you know, when TC retires. Uh, I can&#8217;t wait to come back to Jackson and beat Jackson State if that has to happen. I&#8217;ll just play. But we gota talk about that. That&#8217;s another episode. Yeah, that&#8217;s another episode. Do you have any aspirations to be in the pro? Yeah. Uh, you know, it&#8217;s one of those things where if it happens, it happens. Um, I&#8217;m I&#8217;m blessed, man. I feel like that&#8217;s a political answer on the real, but I&#8217;m just I&#8217;m just serious, man. I uh you know, I I love N I love the NFL, right? But man, college football is a it&#8217;s just the pageantry of it and I love developing you. You like to play as a hungrier. Exactly. Right. And then you know, you kind you&#8217;ve been knowing me for a while, Jerry. U man, raising young men to, you know, young boys to be young men. That&#8217;s that&#8217;s a calling for me. And uh I think I have, you know, my my stepfather was a pastor. Um and I know, you know, my godfather, Pastor Jesse Sutton, a lot of folks know him from over Blackburn. And then over in the sub, too. Uh but these men um you know they&#8217;re pastors but they showed me how to lead right and so you know people say you know oh you get to talk and you sound like a preacher yada yada I was raised around preachers but I tell people quickly my church is that football field house and that&#8217;s the foundation for you. Yeah man. Yeah. So that&#8217;s how I handle my players man. That&#8217;s my that&#8217;s my sanctuary. That&#8217;s my football that&#8217;s my family. Who are some of your inspirational uh heroes in in in football whether it be college high school pros? Yeah, I I guess uh and that&#8217;s a good another good question, brother. Uh I guess inspirational. Oh boy, that&#8217;s a good one. I never even really thought about that, man. I like man, like in my in my older days now, uh I say older days, man. Getting a chance to sit down and talk to Robert Brazil, okay, as a NFL Hall of Famer, that gold jacket. Getting a chance to sit down and talk to him. Uh and you know, I was no fanboy prime. Uh but like being able to glean from him like oh this is like them heroes them them you grew up like I wore this man shoes and now and now I can pick up the phone and call him and say coach I need or coach can I or coach do you need and uh man that was pretty cool. So I would say prime and and Dr. Doom man uh Robert Brazil just being able to have conversations pick up the phone and call either one of them and get fatherly type advice if I needed it. That&#8217;s That&#8217;s I mean that&#8217;s amazing to just be able to Yeah, man. I&#8217;m telling you it&#8217;s cool, man. Like them Listen, people don&#8217;t realize them dudes with those gold jackets are a rare breed. Like if you are NFL Hall of Famer, it&#8217;s only so many of them. And even for the rest of our days, it would only be a select small cohort of the amount of players that actually play in the NFL. So to be able to have those type of guys in your phone on speed dial and they actually pick up the phone, uh, that&#8217;s pretty freaking cool for me, man. Oh, man. With, uh, Coach Prime&#8217;s track record, do you think he&#8217;ll go to the Dallas Cowboys or go to a professional team? I can&#8217;t I listen, I I with Coach Prime&#8217;s track record, as you said, I I predict he&#8217;s going to go where the money resides. knowing what he is and knowing how he moves, you&#8217;re absolutely right. Um, you got any shout outs or anybody you want to thank uh before you get out of here, bro? Yeah, man. Uh, man, first of all, man, thank you. Uh, you&#8217;ve been a supporter of my career for a long time, man. So, I I really appreciate you, man. But also, man, the citizens of Jackson, Mississippi, man, the fans of Jackson State, uh, man, it&#8217;s it&#8217;s been a beautiful year in 2024. Uh, this year is going to be even better. It&#8217;s going to be even more special, more life, more wins, man. And I uh I look forward to going to all these cities and taking over their stadiums and coming out of there to victor. That&#8217;s that&#8217;s our main goal this year, man. So, as long as we can keep making those people happy, uh keep making Mississippians and Jacksonians proud. Uh me and TC know that uh we&#8217;re doing the right thing and we stepping in the right space. Absolutely, man. Well, we definitely appreciate you coming to Breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s right here on the Urban City Podcasting Network, man. And of course, you invited to come back. You going to come back if we call you, right? Man, I got you, man. Man. All right, man. It&#8217;s your man Joe Jabau with Breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s right here on the Urban City Podcasting Network.</p>								</div>
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		<title>Breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s: Interview with Michael Colyar</title>
		<link>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/interview-with-michael-colyar/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Gerold Girbeau]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2025 20:29:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Breakfast at Girbeau's]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/?p=3093</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/2B02368F-7BD2-477B-AC8F-F13E73B00120-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Illustrated logo reading “Breakfast at Girbeau’s” inside a colorful café scene with hip-hop graffiti walls, a boombox on a table, breakfast food, coffee, and a vibrant urban vibe." decoding="async" />Listen To This Article 00:00 Urban City Podcast Group Audio  The Revolution Is Personal: Michael Colyar Breaks Bread and Drops Bombs at “Breakfast at Girbeau’s”  An Intimate Morning of Laughter, Love, and Black Truth “Breakfast at Girbeau’s” is not just a podcast episode—it’s a moment. A powerful one. When veteran comedian and cultural commentator Michael [&#8230;]]]></description>
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									<h2> The Revolution Is Personal: Michael Colyar Breaks Bread and Drops Bombs at “Breakfast at Girbeau’s”</h2><h3> An Intimate Morning of Laughter, Love, and Black Truth</h3><p>“Breakfast at Girbeau’s” is not just a podcast episode—it’s a moment. A powerful one. When veteran comedian and cultural commentator Michael Colyar pulls up to the mic, he doesn’t hold back. He shares stories from the South Side of Chicago to Venice Beach, California—from $100,000 Star Search dreams to real-life critiques on politics, community, and manhood. This isn’t your average celebrity sit-down. It’s a no-holds-barred sermon on self-responsibility, Black excellence, and keeping it all the way real.</p><h3><em>&#8220;We pulled the catapult all the way down&#8230; we about to let it go.&#8221;</em></h3><p>This is how Colyar describes his journey—decades of brilliance, with the explosion still loading. His voice rings with the kind of truth you can’t fake. It’s the type of truth we need more of in a world still wrestling with white supremacy, economic inequity, and a system rigged to break the Black spirit.</p><h3> Comedy Is Survival, and Every Punchline Is a Protest</h3><h4><em>&#8220;I was standing in my mama’s basement, telling Red Fox jokes to the mirror&#8230;&#8221;</em></h4><p>Michael didn’t come up in comedy clubs with million-dollar managers. He came up on the cold streets of Chicago, turning sidewalks into stages and jokes into lifelines. From performing for free at Free Street Theater to watching Eddie Murphy dominate in leather on national TV, Colyar transformed admiration into ambition.</p><p>He makes it clear: the hustle is sacred. The art is rooted in struggle. And Black comedy? That’s cultural resistance.</p><h3><em>&#8220;If you support Trump, you stand for misogyny, racism, and white supremacy.&#8221;</em></h3><p>Colyar doesn’t mince words. He doesn’t dance around discomfort. He calls out the cultural confusion in our community when it comes to politics and values. Whether it’s Black men criticizing Kamala Harris or folks playing footsie with white nationalist ideologies, Michael challenges all of it.</p><p>He reminds us that loving ourselves means protecting ourselves—<em>politically, socially, spiritually.</em> You can’t claim the culture but ignore the fight.</p><h3> Love, Loyalty, and Legacy Over Breakfast</h3><h4><em>&#8220;Been married 335 days to the most incredible human being God ever created next to my mama.&#8221;</em></h4><p>Through laughter and wisdom, Colyar brings us into his home and heart. His love for his wife, Sonia, and the legacy they’re building together reminds us that stability, support, and Black love are acts of radical power. And yes, her soul food restaurant Simply Sonia’s in Winston-Salem sounds like a place where recipes heal trauma.</p><p>There’s laughter in this episode, no doubt. But there’s also something deeper—a soulful call to wake up, rise up, and build something lasting.</p><h3>🎧 This Ain’t Just Talk—It’s a Blueprint</h3><p>Colyar’s conversation is a love letter to Black creators, voters, workers, parents, and dreamers. He speaks on laziness, on discipline, on our collective addiction to struggle stories when the truth is—we’ve always had the power. But only if we choose it.</p><h3><em>&#8220;If God is not the answer, you&#8217;re not asking the right question.&#8221;</em></h3><p>From accountability to activism, Colyar gives it to us straight: practice doesn’t make perfect—it makes better. And the only way forward for our community is through intention, truth, and faith.</p><h3> Black Voices Are Not Optional—They’re Vital</h3><p>Urban City Podcast Group doesn’t exist to just entertain—it exists to <em>empower</em>. “Breakfast at Girbeau’s” proves that when we gather to speak truth, break bread, and hold each other accountable, we shift culture.</p><p>This isn’t just an interview.</p><p>It’s a movement.</p><h3> Final Thoughts: Keep Building, Keep Speaking, Keep Rising</h3><p>Michael Colyar is still climbing—and so are we. The grind, the grief, the glory—it’s all connected. From Venice Beach to Jackson, Mississippi, from BET to your podcast stream, we’re building a new world on the bones of the old one. And we’re doing it with joy, with purpose, and with a mic in hand.</p><p><em>Tap in. Speak loud. Stand firm.</em></p><p>Urban City Podcast Group is here. And we’re not going anywhere.</p>								</div>
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									<div class="urban-sidebar-injection urban-entity-placement" id="urban-1323090493"><div id="urban-2126079066"><a href="https://www.chasitymcmillan.com" target="_blank" aria-label="Chasity McMillan delivering a spiritual message about restored joy, divine restoration, and biblical completeness for the Deepest Within You Podcast."><img src="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Beige-Green-Minimalist-Modern-Interior-Design-Zoom-Virtual-Background-1.jpg" alt="Chasity McMillan delivering a spiritual message about restored joy, divine restoration, and biblical completeness for the Deepest Within You Podcast."  srcset="https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Beige-Green-Minimalist-Modern-Interior-Design-Zoom-Virtual-Background-1.jpg 1280w, https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Beige-Green-Minimalist-Modern-Interior-Design-Zoom-Virtual-Background-1-300x169.jpg 300w, https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Beige-Green-Minimalist-Modern-Interior-Design-Zoom-Virtual-Background-1-1024x576.jpg 1024w, https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Beige-Green-Minimalist-Modern-Interior-Design-Zoom-Virtual-Background-1-768x432.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1280px) 100vw, 1280px" width="1280" height="720"   /></a></div></div><h2>Transcript</h2><p>Urban Urban City City Podcast Breakfast with Girbeau&#8217;s Urban Urban City City Podcast Podcasting Network today in the studios One of my dear friends Breakfast with Girbeau&#8217;s You heard it, you heard it right here, yeah And if you don&#8217;t know who he is because you&#8217;re blind Because we don&#8217;t have our cameras today No cameras Yeah the man said he ain&#8217;t wanting no cameras in So we&#8217;re not going to do the cameras He ain&#8217;t told me nothing about no cameras Until he walked up in my house 10 minutes ago Anybody told me they&#8217;re going to be using cameras He said interview, he brought in radio and stuff We in Hollywood baby, we in Hollywood I can&#8217;t do this butt naked Now you know, you&#8217;re the one that told me It&#8217;s the first time you&#8217;re ever doing a butt naked interview And you said, well you said no diddy No diddy, I did say no diddy So as long as I stay on this couch and you stay over there We&#8217;re going to be alright But we&#8217;re not putting these things on camera Where the girls is at though Yeah, they coming, they on they way They on they way Yeah man, it&#8217;s breakfast at Girbeau&#8217;s We got special guests in the building If you don&#8217;t know who that voice is Then I&#8217;m going to tell you who it is It&#8217;s Michael Colyar, y&#8217;all make some noise for him Woo woo, I make some for myself For your damn self, yeah Now, now that we finally got you We officially hung out And I&#8217;m going to say this I had to babysit him Because his ride didn&#8217;t bring him where they needed to bring him We ended up, we bonded We did this show in Jackson, Mississippi And you know from there We just kept in contact And you got married Now we&#8217;re here I&#8217;s married now y&#8217;all You off the market Been married 335 days To the most incredible human being God ever created next to my mama I love you Sonia Yeah, bless her, bless you man Congratulations on that too by the way Oh man, thank you brother I saw your pictures this morning I show him the pictures of my wife every day I talk about it every day I think about it every day, every moment That&#8217;s real love right there Hey man, either that or I&#8217;m whipped Okay, now let&#8217;s get right into it man Now, you know Before I personally knew you I knew who you were And we&#8217;ll start from the beginning You got started in comedy And helped me out You won $100,000 on Star Search Mmhmm Yes And you catapulted it I haven&#8217;t catapulted yet brother Well it seems that way to us though But not to me To me, no brother I haven&#8217;t catapulted I&#8217;ve accomplished some things But the catapultion is about to happen We have been propped and primed For the catapultion We pulled the catapult all the way down And latched a big rubber band on it We about to let it go But that hasn&#8217;t happened yet But I&#8217;ve had a lot of beautiful blessings From people today When they finally said that The actions of Donald Trump Was criminal When he was trying to turn around The results of the election It became official today They just opened up the documents Yeah, because we&#8217;re looking at it on the TV As we speak right now And we ain&#8217;t paying no attention to y&#8217;all We watching TV He said, man, look, I gotta do this thing Let&#8217;s just go on and talk through it But keep the TV on I feel like in the celebrity world You&#8217;re voting for Kamala? I don&#8217;t know That&#8217;s an acceptable answer I don&#8217;t know So here&#8217;s the thing In politics, I got a political science degree Oh, then you&#8217;re definitely voting for Kamala I ain&#8217;t worried now Go ahead Well, they always told us If you stand behind somebody, you support them And if you start talking about politics specifically And the way you angle your conversations Then you support that person And all these people who support Trump Support the stuff he stands for So if you support Trump, you stand for misogyny You stand for racism You stand for white supremacy You stand for those fools who call themselves Christian They&#8217;re not Christian, the people he&#8217;s working with What they call themselves Christian nationalists They&#8217;re not Christian And y&#8217;all can do all the stuff you want You can grab coochies and lie And make up stories about eating dogs And do whatever you want But please do not frame it as patriotism It is not patriotism And it was so on the money They had to stand up and salute It ain&#8217;t patriotism, it&#8217;s occultism Great White Hope just showed up That&#8217;s what it is, Great White Hope These folks who feel scared This population of white men Who terrified Now the minorities are now the majorities And the blacks are coming And the Hispanics And women have backbones now They stand up straight And look you in the eye and speak So these guys are panicked And they scream out their anxieties And their aspirations And they got the perfect one What about black people who follow Trump Or who are those people That&#8217;s what I think about when you said You haven&#8217;t made up your mind yet But listen, black people who don&#8217;t vote for Trump Something&#8217;s very wrong with you I have a morning show Who don&#8217;t vote for Trump or for Kamala Oh you know I&#8217;d say crazy if I said Trump I said if you vote for Trump You have an issue, you have a problem If you do that and you&#8217;re black I mean you know that You know if you see him with his arms Around a black woman He holding up for the police And then I had a brother Asked me, he said man He asked me, he told me He said brother you just voting for her Because she black You got the right to do that Not just the right It&#8217;s your responsibility It&#8217;s your responsibility to love yourself first So we&#8217;re out here in California Hanging out right We could be We could be Yeah we could be What do you think about the black men Who despise Kamala Harris From the state of California The ones that have been convicted I don&#8217;t care what state you&#8217;re from If you despise Kamala Harris You&#8217;re an asshole And I will tell you to your face And I know how to box So yeah if you&#8217;re black and you despise her You&#8217;re really despising yourself Because look at this There&#8217;s two options It&#8217;s Kamala Harris Or it&#8217;s this pussy grabbing Backstabbing, lying, double talking Racist, hateful, son of a bitch Or the black woman who&#8217;s intelligent Who&#8217;s cordial Who cares about people Who&#8217;s trying to bring people together Instead of divide them Who look like your mama And you got them two choices And you gotta go uh I don&#8217;t know which one, kiss my ass You ain&#8217;t shit You can&#8217;t come on my show with that And we on five days a week On YouTube, Mike Cotter&#8217;s Morning Show Come on my show with that anti-Kamala stuff I&#8217;ll cut your ass out And throw you off the show Just like that Don&#8217;t come on my show telling people not to vote Now I&#8217;m not telling you who to vote for Kamala Harris That&#8217;s up to you Everybody has a right to vote for who they want to vote for Kamala Harris But don&#8217;t come on my show saying anti-Kamala stuff Be graceful with how you say it Even with grace I mean I get friends that they mad at me Well Jaguar&#8217;s not But I told Jaguar Wright Because Jaguar Wright came out and said She&#8217;s Donald Trump And they said really And they said yeah well if you had right now to vote for her Who you gonna vote for She said Jaguar She said I&#8217;m gonna vote for Donald Trump And so I said I love Jaguar Wright She&#8217;s been on my show twice But she can&#8217;t come on my show no more Because that&#8217;s off the table And once I said it I called her And told her I said it Because you know how people do They listen to you say something And they twist it and send it over By the time you get to her And said something bad about her mama I ain&#8217;t did that Matter of fact we just spent this weekend Hanging out together Jaguar But I just tried to ignore the fact That she&#8217;s a Trumpite Okay I like it Well at least you told her Of where people love to beef In this climate If you said something And you want to make sure you get it to the people right Well you better get this yourself To call and say hey look this is what went down So when they called and said I said this is some bullshit I&#8217;m telling you now this is what happened I&#8217;m telling you she was my first call When I got off the air You know as a result of that She drove up to meet me Her and her man Odell Came and hung out with me and my wife Her name is Sonia y&#8217;all Sonia Collier She has the number one soul food restaurant In Winston-Salem called Simply Sonia&#8217;s And I apologize to my mama when I say this But this woman makes a better salmon croquette Than my mama And my mama held that title For 34 years man Oh she ice cold man She makes a soul roll That&#8217;s an egg roll with collard greens Candied yams And what&#8217;s the third thing I think it&#8217;s either corn bread She cooks very carefully And with great desire And the day is off the chain She can cook the place is wonderful She&#8217;s got a brand new spot too And so when I called Jaguar to tell her That I said some stuff about her And I told her what I really said She said well I&#8217;m in Atlanta I&#8217;m going to swing through So she came back and we fed her And we talked and we laughed And she filmed us to do some stuff She has something she does called My Point of Views about stuff It was pretty cool Now let&#8217;s go back to the story man Yours I want to hear it I think the world wants to hear it So what way would you like me to start Let&#8217;s start with the $100,000 win At Star Search That&#8217;s very interesting in fact I did win Star Search And it&#8217;s funny because When I first saw Star Search I remember sitting on the kitchen floor Of Aunt Vera&#8217;s house And it was my wife&#8217;s mama What was her name? Hattie Hattie Mae Kelly I&#8217;m talking about a real southerner This is the one who cooked everything From scratch Down in Mississippi They had to pump sunlight down there And she was a great mother-in-law But I remember sitting on the floor In her kitchen Watching this little TV And watching Star Search I remember Sam Harris was singing And I was like I could beat any of them That&#8217;s all you got to do To be funny two and a half minutes One day I&#8217;m going to win it Now I&#8217;ll show you how things work Your word is your wand So whatever you say is going to happen eventually So be careful So I said one day I&#8217;m going to win Star Search But I never really took it serious myself I never said thought really Because if I had thought about it I would have won it 10 years earlier But I didn&#8217;t drive and think about it When I saw it I thought the idea Of what I was doing And I wanted to do Venice Beach, California So I started by doing comedy in Chicago I was an actor I went to Morgan Park High School But I grew up on the south side of Chicago South side? Projects, Robert Taylor Home 4352 You still know the address And the apartment brother I will always be from there Because that was one of the two places That defined my life I was defined originally by what happened When I grew up in Projects And when I got out of high school I started doing comedy Well I was acting I was in all the plays in the high school And I wanted to be an actor But really I was working hard But you came out of Chicago In a house of seven people Am I right? Well back then we&#8217;d all grown But we grew up, I had four big brothers And mom and dad In a one bedroom It was like rooming with a roomer Oh you must know the story She was not going to let us Spend our lives in Projects And she went and got her first job From Spiegel&#8217;s I remember Spiegel&#8217;s The magazine They had all the puppies And the toys I&#8217;m telling my age That&#8217;s my momma&#8217;s first job She took that job And she bought our first car She went to Sears Driving School Learned how to drive And she got what they called a Woody It was like a station wagon Yeah it had the wood paneling All over it And she bought that car And she was determined to move us And she got us out to Morgan Park It was a very nice neighborhood And we ended up going to great schools When I got out of school I&#8217;d already been an actor I was trying to be an actor But I was starving So I just went to school Chicago State University I was raising my son In a really excellent restaurant And I was a member of a theater company Called Free Street Theater And they called it Free Street Theater Because people could walk up And watch it for free In different cities around the country But that city would pay us to do it So we&#8217;d rehearse all week And then we&#8217;d fly to a city And we&#8217;d do a full-fledged show Right out of the city center Or civic center or something And people would walk up for free And they&#8217;d break us off a check So I&#8217;m acting, I&#8217;m doing pretty good And then my friends Talked me into trying comedy And I tried it And it was easier than I thought So I started doing comedy As a street performer in Chicago And I was the best on the street So you never were the class clown Or anything like that No, we were always funny in school Me and my partners pulled the pranks And did the jokes That I was the lead in every play In my school So I was doing what I really wanted to do Which was to be an actor But then the comedy came along When I didn&#8217;t realize I could do comedy Because I&#8217;ll tell you what happened It was 1984 And this little black kid Had done already three movies Beverly Hills Cops 48 Hours Trading Places He was 23 years old He had the number one comedy album Called Raw Number one comedy concert Nationally called Raw And he had single handedly Saved Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live was about to close their doors They got him as the star They haven&#8217;t closed their doors since And he could wear the fuck Out of a red leather suit I&#8217;m talking about Mr. Eddie Murphy 23, 24 years old And he did all that And got all that money telling jokes And I was like shit I&#8217;ve been funny my whole life I better get out the mustard And catch up So I went and got some comedy albums By Red Fox And I went down to my mama&#8217;s basement Where I was living anyway And I was standing in that mirror And I tell these jokes over and over I played the album telling jokes Until I could tell them like they was mad To this day I&#8217;m still telling Red Fox jokes Because I don&#8217;t think An old joke should die Just because the motherfucker That wrote it did That&#8217;s a Red Fox photo And I asked you did you know him I didn&#8217;t know him but behind me Is a cold photo of Red Fox It&#8217;s on my wall It&#8217;s a huge photo He got on a three piece suit With an overcoat He got a smoking cigar He rolling It&#8217;s flat but what was important to me Is I got that from Tasha Smith Y&#8217;all been seeing her in a lot of Tyler Perry films She&#8217;s in all kinds of films And what they call Is a big old show And they like these gangsters in Detroit It was father and son And actually the son is one of the actors in it I&#8217;m drawing a blank right now But Tasha Smith directs that She directs all types of major shows And acts and she&#8217;s one of the greatest Acting teachers So whenever I would have a real important part An audition for a big part I would call Tasha Smith And pay her to give me an hour of her time And walk me through it So I went to the audition And I went to her gate To get an hour session And she pulled that picture Of Red Fox out of her closet It was rolled up And she unrolled it and said I was looking for somebody to give this to And you see I took that sucker And put it in a frame with glass It&#8217;s one of the biggest pictures in my house Because it&#8217;s amazing Because I was influenced by four people It was Red Fox, Richard Pryor, Lenny Bruce And Eddie Murphy And Eddie, have you ever worked with any of them? Well you know I worked with Eddie Because I did Norbit I&#8217;ve known Eddie, I&#8217;ve seen Eddie places But I&#8217;ve never been anywhere with him I never sat down and had tea and crumpets I did the movie with him And he was just the coolest One of the coolest people I ever worked with On a film was him and Martin Lawrence When I did Martin&#8217;s show Martin Lawrence was like the coolest cat I ever met before Snoop I&#8217;m sorry everybody But I haven&#8217;t met a human cooler than Snoop Dogg And I done met some cool ass people I&#8217;m talking about the actor Leon I&#8217;m talking about Denzel as my friend I ain&#8217;t never seen nothing like this though Snoop is the coolest human I&#8217;ve ever seen And Snoop don&#8217;t care who you are He talks to you with respect and dignity You could be homeless and junky and trashy He looks in your eyes And he talks to you like you&#8217;re a human being I remember I had an episode with Snoop This was long ago This was like early 2000&#8217;s He came to Jackson And one of my homeboys was trying to take a picture But he was so excited And he was shaking Because he was right as close as I am to you As he was to Snoop And we were all standing there And Snoop said He looked him up and down and said Take the motherfucking picture nigga And we laughed our asses off at him He was mad about it He wanted to fight Snoop He was like dude you weren&#8217;t ready That&#8217;s the whole point of it all Snoop was playing with him anyway I bet everybody bust up laughing Yeah we did, we laughed He was mad at us and he was mad at Snoop That nigga should have been mad He got that photo He should have been happy as fuck Snoop is just cool It&#8217;s good to work with anybody under any circumstances And that was just some fly shit So I went to Venice So I did State Street Doing comedy in Chicago And then winter came And wasn&#8217;t nobody trying to hit no jokes On State Street But I made so much money On the street I quit doing everything else I quit the college, the acting class The waiting tables All I did was raise my son And work four days a week Telling jokes on State Street And making money on Rush Street I mean Oprah Winfrey used to come to my show On Rush Street I&#8217;d be doing my stuff past And making my money Then winter came And I did a 1967 Everything else I sold And I took that money And I drove to California Where it&#8217;s supposed to be warm All year round, every day Cause it&#8217;s hot as hell right now We in Palmdale, California right now It&#8217;s probably like 102 or some shit Man it&#8217;s so hot I saw a dog chasing a cat They were both walking One day we was out here And we saw a cat walking It was like 116 So it&#8217;s hot It is hot I remember being a younger guy And seeing you at a house party I do believe Was that a house party I think we did that about 114 years ago 114 years ago What was that experience like for you? It was a magnificent experience I was not then And still am not in anybody&#8217;s cliques or clans So I wasn&#8217;t with a bunch of folks Who would help me do better I was pretty much a loner But that part was so excellent And with them allowing me To just be me in it and do me It shines to this day People come to me with stuff about Hey man you got two Jim Crackers Every single day in every city I go to And that film was like 25 years ago And I didn&#8217;t have that big of a part So I will forever be grateful I remember you from that And then after that I started seeing you on BET You were hosting something on BET What was that? You didn&#8217;t have no beard then But I would never do Coming For You I would only do specials of Coming For You I had to host and stuff Because I don&#8217;t want to do a set On the show I created It&#8217;s like a demotion or some shit But I loved the show I remember once I was hosting a show And Lil&#8217; Richard was on there And he said some wise, smart Alex shit to me And then he went You know that thing you do And I said calm down Because you know we go way back And he fell out But it was such a fun time On BET And then they let me have my own show On that BET Live from LA And it&#8217;s funny because I ran a piece of tape from my show On my morning show This Wednesday show And folks My Michael Colyar morning show Which is on YouTube I&#8217;ve already done 957 shows So I do it Monday through Friday If you go back three days You&#8217;ll see Michael Johnson was on there And he did good for a while But then when he started shouting and stuff And talking over people I had to hit that button man You know I&#8217;ve had a couple of interviews With Umar And he will try to over talk you We don&#8217;t want to do that on our show But he&#8217;s our guy He&#8217;s a great guy It takes nothing from him But on my show I want to have spirited conversations But respectful You can&#8217;t know stuff By just shouting at all your stuff And when other people try to give their part You shout over them So you can&#8217;t even hear what they&#8217;re saying And I even in my show Stop to point out Argument is not the same as a fight A lot of people think argument Is when people fussing with each other That&#8217;s not argument Argument is when the conversations Are back and forth Until you keep lifting what the ideal is Until you come to an agreement Yes I did, no you didn&#8217;t Yes I did, no I didn&#8217;t Yes I did But that&#8217;s not what an argument is Yes it is, no it&#8217;s not Yes it is, no it&#8217;s not That&#8217;s not an argument In fact there&#8217;s a great comedy troupe Out there called Monty Python Yeah I know the Monty Python Go and look at Monty Python&#8217;s thing Called Argument Clinic And this guy goes for an argument You know And they sell this down in the room B-A-A-18 He goes to the B-18 And the guy says You ugly piss string fart face The guy said wait a minute I didn&#8217;t come in here To be talked like that I came in here for an argument He said oh, oh argument I thought you wanted to abuse No argument is down in B-6 B-6 It&#8217;s a brilliant, brilliant piece But no, I want the arguments I had a guy on my show Named Charlie I keep calling him Charlie Charleston White Yeah I&#8217;ve been with Charleston White too Same thing Come on my show Want to scream, want to holler Want to cuss people out Want to say bad shit about black women I don&#8217;t have that on my show I&#8217;m just saying You can do that at other places But with a Charleston White Do you think he&#8217;s wrong In some of the things that he says You know I don&#8217;t know if judgment is mine I think that he teaches some lessons That are really good for our community But he teaches them in a way Where they can&#8217;t be heard You know I mean if you cussing me out Calling me MFs And screaming at the top of your lungs I can&#8217;t hear the message of kindness I can&#8217;t hear the message Of we brothers and we should get along I can&#8217;t hear the message About raising your community right While I&#8217;m calling black women bitches And telling them they can suck my dick That is not the same thing for me So I&#8217;m not going to judge him I don&#8217;t know that dude Well enough to judge him So I&#8217;m not going to say Whether he&#8217;s wrong or right You ain&#8217;t never going to have me In that crossfire He can be mad at me Because I mentioned What he did on my show But that&#8217;s just the truth I&#8217;ll tell you what you do on my show But I&#8217;m not out here I don&#8217;t do what&#8217;s names I don&#8217;t do beefs People say bad shit about me too But I don&#8217;t do that Because I&#8217;m not going to give you that I&#8217;m not going to stoop to that level I&#8217;m a black man I&#8217;m a fucking king Exactly You talk to me You talk to me with that Dignity and that respect And if you can&#8217;t Then you forfeit Your ability to speak with me And go on about your business I&#8217;m going to go on about mine And the good thing is It&#8217;s 7 billion motherfuckers On the planet So if I lose a friend I&#8217;m alright I got plenty of friends Them motherfuckers Everywhere Everywhere Yeah, yeah, yeah I ain&#8217;t worried about that I think I&#8217;m going to be alright Plus I&#8217;m in love With a goddess and a queen I love it And if she&#8217;s the only friend I ever have for the rest of my life I&#8217;m still going to be fine and dandy Yeah Yeah Yeah That&#8217;s it I love it So man With your stint in comedy And in Hollywood You said You said you felt like That you haven&#8217;t catapulted yet Oh no Have you ever seen me I don&#8217;t know You know I mean because Because like me talking to you I&#8217;m looking at you right now And I&#8217;m like I can call Michael Call you And just have a conversation Well I&#8217;m the majority Of the fault Okay You know Here&#8217;s the thing A lot of people Don&#8217;t want to face Everything that&#8217;s ever Happened to you It was because of you And people can&#8217;t Face that reality Once you accept That terror Then your life can get Back on track But it was all your fault You bring the things To you that happened Now you say Well somebody killed a child It wasn&#8217;t the child&#8217;s fault And maybe not And maybe not in this lifetime And maybe not on this Spiritual plane But all things that Happen to us We generally generate it You know And our ideals Our thoughts Where we put ourselves Like for instance We&#8217;re always talking about How people always get Mugged and stabbed But if you&#8217;re in The neighborhood that Mugging and stabbing Don&#8217;t go on Then your ass Don&#8217;t get mugged Or stabbed You know what I&#8217;m saying It makes sense I mean if you Go and rob somebody To get your crack robbed And you get killed Then that&#8217;s because You made the choice To do the wrong thing You know You made that choice If you just want to Live a life That&#8217;s correct First of all Everything is about Follow God If God is not the answer You&#8217;re not asking The right question So no matter what it is You want to do Whether you want to Build a mountain Or float a boat Whatever it is If you keep God first And then you make a plan And then you follow the plan And you keep God first And you&#8217;ll be Obedient to the Lord And God ain&#8217;t never Asked nobody to be perfect Ain&#8217;t nobody perfect If you find somebody That&#8217;s perfect Stab him in the throat With a fucking plastic fork And run as fast as you can Because that&#8217;s not Even a human being You don&#8217;t get perfect No matter what the fuck you do Practice don&#8217;t make perfect Practice makes better So the thing is If you start with God first And you have a plan And you follow the plan Your life is going to be great It&#8217;s going to be that way But if you&#8217;re one of those people Who just bounce around Or bump into walls And wait for life to happen You have to settle for Whatever the universe drops On your ass But that&#8217;s on you You know You can&#8217;t You know I have people stay at home And they sit in their basement Smoking joints Watching cartoons Eating Captain Crunch And waiting for an opportunity You&#8217;re talking about grown people To knock on the Grown ass folks But not just grown Teenagers Ain&#8217;t nothing lazier today Than teenagers Teenagers do not Young people just Don&#8217;t want to work no more I heard somebody say this And I&#8217;m repeating it I didn&#8217;t make this up But it&#8217;s funny You can give a teenager A job Sleeping And that motherfucker Will wake up and quit I&#8217;m tired of this shit I&#8217;m out of here You know It&#8217;s difficult to get people To come to work Who really want to work And then when our government Fucked up And just gave people Money like that Just gave money To try to win our favor But it hurt more people Than it helped us It really did I agree They didn&#8217;t even want People to sit and Plan that money out To work it Or whatever But now it also gave The attitude to people That we don&#8217;t have to work You know Government Some type of program Is out there That&#8217;ll pay me If I don&#8217;t work If I play sick If I do this And you create An attitude Of victimization You want to be The victim now Now you can spend Your whole life Saying woe is me Well please y&#8217;all Please do me a favor Don&#8217;t say woe Is me To me Cause I&#8217;ma say Fuck you Okay You have the ability To do anything You want to do I can change my life At any moment I choose But what moment Shall I choose You know I got people I&#8217;m training I&#8217;m trying to show them How to do the right shit They do part of it They don&#8217;t do all of it Then they don&#8217;t understand How come they&#8217;re not Getting where they want to go You tell me you want To go from A to B I give you the map And point the way But you take your time And make a left Instead of a right And then you ask me How come I&#8217;m not Getting my shit Cause you gotta do your work Everyone who&#8217;s ever Succeeded in anything Did the work A lot of basic things This is basic shit God made life so simple That people run around Thinking it&#8217;s too good To be true So life can&#8217;t be easy It&#8217;s gotta be hard But no it was designed To be easy It was designed To be easy</p><p> </p>								</div>
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