The Morning Hustle

Billy Sorrells wants to uplift the people this morning with a quarantine prayer and special guest Willy Sims remembers Jackie Robinson.

If you could pick one business or industry and deem it essential right now, what would it be and why? The Morning Hustle gives their choices.

Even though they're homies, Big Sean had to keep it 100 when he says he wasn't feeling what 2 Chainz had to say on Twitter!

Mya checked in by video conference to The Morning Hustle to discuss a variety of topics ranging from veganism, marriage, children, and running her career independently.

On Wednesday, April 15th, Rotimi will be joining us for our IG Live series at 7pm ET hosted by Lore'l. He joined us on video conference to promote our IG Live series, and said he may premiere some brand new music so you have to tune in to hear that first!

Fans were quick to call out Diddy over stopping Lizzo from twerking, but he has responded and said it had nothing to do with that! Catch up with everything you missed over the weekend in The Lo Down!

Things got awkward when Nicole Ari Parker said she wished Boris acted like her boyfriend again on Instagram Live. Billy Sorrell's wife joins us to give her thoughts!

https://youtu.be/AToOTwYWPsI Dr. Ian Smith checks in with The Morning Hustle to help with those much needed health and fitness tips for you while the majority of the world is stuck in home quarantine during the coronavirus pandemic. He discusses his latest book, and the multiple ways it will help with your health during these stressful […]

This is the part Lore'l took issue with, and is why The Weeknd gets this week's "Who's Cappin" award! Usher has since issued a challenge by having fans sing “Climax” and he even got in on the action by singing the song acapella on Instagram. Listen to the full conversation above and let us know on social media what your thoughts are!

YBN checks in with The Morning Hustle to talk new music, what's keeping him occupied during the quarantine, and when we may get another YBN project.

Of the 512 coronavirus deaths so far, more than 70 percent were African American patients, who make up just 32 percent of the Louisiana's  population.