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WSJ Secrets of Wealthy Women

Angela Yee: Mastering the Side Hustle

WSJ Secrets of Wealthy Women

The Wall Street Journal

Careers, Business

4.6955 Ratings

🗓️ 2 September 2020

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Angela Yee, co-host of the nationally syndicated radio show The Breakfast Club, tells WSJ's Veronica Dagher how she manages multiple streams of income and what she's learned about investing.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Courage. I learned it from my adoptive mom.

0:03.0

Hold my hand?

0:04.0

You hold my hand.

0:06.0

Learn about adopting a team from foster care at Adopt US Kids.

0:10.0

You can't imagine the reward.

0:11.0

Brought to you by Adopt US Kids, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the Ad Council. Hey I'm Veronica Dagger and this is the Wall Street Journal Secrets of Wealthy Women,

0:25.0

where women share how they tackle career, money, and the world. Today we're speaking with Angela Yee, co-host of the nationally syndicated talk show, The Breakfast Club,

0:35.5

on I Heart Radio.

0:37.4

She's the only woman on the show, and she's known for her knowledge of celebrity gossip,

0:41.8

quick wit, and newsmaking interviews.

0:45.2

But she's not all talk.

0:47.0

In addition to her award-winning career as a radio host, she owns juice bars and an online

0:52.0

juice business and is a diversity ambassador for the company that runs the Barclays Center.

0:57.0

Plus, she's an advocate for financial literacy.

1:00.0

She's here today to tell us how she got her start in radio, how she gets her voice heard,

1:06.0

and how she stays focus while juggling a bunch of side hustles. Welcome Angela. Thanks for joining us today. Well, thank you, Veronica. I love that introduction.

1:23.0

Angela, you got your start in radio, not as a musician or a performer, but on the business side of the industry.

1:30.0

And one of those first gigs was a college internship with Wu-Tang management, a company connected to the Wu-Tang Clan hip-hop group.

1:37.0

How did that experience change the course of your life?

1:41.0

Well, I think early on learning from Wu-Teng management when I was there, I remember my business

1:46.0

card had 10 different businesses on the back of it, right? And they were invested in so many different

1:51.4

things. They had Wu-Teng Productions, Wu-Tang Management,

...

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