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Feb. 13, 2024 - The Adam King Show
01:23:31
Jesus and the Rap Game
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but basically they said you have to only observe this part of it if you're a Jew by blood And that's very unbiblical and it's not even stated in the Torah.
Do they call you a Jew also?
Because I know they call you a Jew?!
Also, I mean there's evidence of history to show that a lot of Jews that think they're Jews by blood were actually converted Jews.
Not actually Jews by blood.
So I got this theory about Nyssae that it was really about removing Jewish influence from Christianity.
Because the first Christians were all Jews.
Eusebius says that the first 15 popes were Jews.
You see it already in your brain.
You're just turning it into the physical realm.
I've written songs in my dreams.
Which songs of yours did you write in your dream?
It's like spoken word poetry, and you know it's me, Adam King, on the Adam King Show, Bryson Gray, this is spoken poetry.
Let's go! I like the triple-syllable rhyme.
Poetry knows me, okay?
He's just standing there.
Menacingly!
We did it again.
Look at that.
Yeah.
Every week now, I like this live format a lot better.
It's more interactive.
You guys can reach out to me over the rumble.
And then, like every episode, I take this episode, do my edits, add my funny comments and my overlays, throw it on band.video.
So I want you, my listener audience, who tunes in every week to The Adam King Show to know That Banda video is my main repository of film and that we are going live and we're gonna start doing lives because lives they add like this like I don't know what it is.
There's more pressure to perform.
It's more real. It's less scripted.
It's more on the spot.
People are held accountable to what they say.
It's out there. That's it.
The final version. No edits.
I kind of like that.
It brings me to my best game.
That's what I want to do here every week at the Adam King Show.
I want to come... With the fire, I want to come every week with my best face on to give to you guys.
I got the best guests.
I got the best of discussion.
I got so much going on over here.
Oh, my God. And we also got some trips scheduled.
I can't really get into them, but they involve Central America.
It's just they're not fully scheduled yet, but they they are being scheduled as we speak.
So the Adam King show is going to go international.
We got so much good stuff.
Springtime is going to be so fun over here.
But we got guests.
Every week we come with a new guest.
This time it's his second time being on the show.
I want to welcome Bryson Gray to the Adam King Show so that we can get with it.
How are you doing, man? I'm doing good.
How about you, man? Praise be to the one above.
Everything is so good.
This is the best day of my life.
Amazing, every day is good.
My motto was, every day is a good day.
Every day is a good day, man.
Every day is a good day.
Every day that we're alive is a gift from God.
Yes, sir. Without a doubt.
Bryson, this weekend was nuts.
Before we get into all the hot, juicy topics, you're an intellectual, I'm an intellectual, I want to talk about the most unintellectual thing possible, the Stupor Bowl.
I am absolutely convinced after this year that this is so rigged.
There's no doubt in my mind.
I've in the past, you know, like when New England, I'm not like a football fan, but like everyone around me gets consumed by football.
So I remember when New England deflated their footballs, I was like, how could they do that in a Super Bowl?
And then I was thinking to myself, did Pfizer just win the freaking Super Bowl with Taylor Swift?
Their spokesperson, Taylor Swift.
Oh, my God. What's your thoughts, dude?
Did you watch it? I watched a little bit of it because my sister was doing it.
I was actually sparring yesterday.
I had a guy come over to spar, so a lot of the Super Bowl I was sparring, but I did watch it.
I do not think the NFL is rigged because I think it would require too much for them to rig it.
I mean, you can pay off some refs to do some crazy calls, but you can't.
It's hard to rig an entire...
Actually, I got an argument that I think proves that it could be rigged.
Because even the things with the Patriots and the deflated football, for starters, it was investigated and it's not what people were thinking.
Secondly, both sides are playing with the football, even though sometimes they change things.
But deflated football is not going to help you.
Deflated football is terrible for a quarterback, really.
Like a quarterback, you know, it's just not good.
Think about it like this.
Every single move that they do is completely planned out, right?
They got a defensive playbook and offensive playbook, right?
So there has to be some sort of statistical probability that this type of offense will always dominate this type of defense.
Do you get what I'm saying?
Well, if I'm running an all-out blitz and you're doing a shotgun slant route, then clearly that will always be good.
But what if the all-out blitz reaches the quarterback first because some linebackers are fast, some defensive linemen are fast.
But sometimes they may reach the quarterback before he gets that pass off.
Okay, so think about it like this, right?
In the box office, there could easily be a guy or a team of people with both teams, defensive playbook and offensive playbook, calling the plays, and then they run the plays, and they're like, okay, we're going to give the ball to so-and-so here.
Now, there's always that outlier.
There could be a super athlete that breaks the mold in formation and stops something, right?
So it's a very technical position.
It's like, It's like trying to control free will.
But essentially it could be done, just like the play you suggested on the All Out Blitz, that...
The game could be manufactured, so it's so neck and neck.
Overtime. America needed an overtime game.
America needed some serious distraction.
Taylor Swift and her boyfriend.
There's a couple tweets I want to show you that really just tripped me out when I saw them.
Biden threw this up on his Twitter.
He said, just like we drew it up, Chiefs.
Yeah, I saw that. I don't read too much into it at all.
Don't get me wrong. I think Joe Biden is a demon.
But that tweet there, it was just a tweet just to claim to support the Chiefs.
I mean, there's a billion types of things where people got the eyes on the tweets.
They just like we drew it up. I doubt he's even played football before.
He's even drawn up something.
Another thing that tripped me out about it was you couldn't talk about the rigging of the game with the people who live for football.
They would get so offended by you, it was almost like you were talking about the rigged elections.
Oh, maybe because a lot of people like football is their thing.
Everybody is intelligent until it's something they're biased for.
So if you're like me, I don't really care about football that much, but I understand math and probability.
So the probability of rigging an entire football game, every single person would have to be included unless it's just the offensive coordinator or defensive coordinator calling a bad play.
I don't think they get Paid enough to call a bunch of bad players if they get paid by the success or they get fired.
So, you know, I don't know about that.
But a lot of people do get angry when you say anything bad about football.
I've watched people that are conservative that are obsessed about football angry that conservatives are not liking Kelsey, whatever his name is, which I find weird.
Some people do idolize football.
That's just reality. They idolize it.
It's like a part of their religion.
No, it is.
You got to think about it. A lot of people, the way a lot of people are brainwashing America is a lot of people have a day-to-day job and they get off work.
What do they do? They grab a beer, they watch football, and football is like their relief.
It zones them out. It brings them back to equilibrium.
I see you. Yeah, so if anybody criticizes it, then they're against it.
That's why all the conservatives say, I'm done watching football after BLM. No, you're not.
Like me, I wasn't, like, I watched football growing up, but I played it more so growing up.
But, like, after BLM stuff, I had to stop watching.
What position were you? I was running back.
I ran a 4-4-40. I was actually a great running back, but I quit because I was getting paid to perform.
You had to become a conservative rapper, dude.
You had a bigger destiny. I was a degenerate rapper at first, but yeah.
That's so funny. I want to share one more thing about the the the Super Bowl because it's like you know like wokeism is so heavy and like I thought that the the Hillary Clinton made this tweet and it like It was like I just see this is like reeks of like her like sentiment of feminism Congratulations to Taylor's boyfriend.
She can't even name him.
It's like no. No, you're just like the possession of this woman, you know Oh, I mean, pure feminism. Taylor Swift is pure feminism.
That's why when I find conservatives defend Taylor Swift, I find it very odd.
She's like a peak feminist.
And, of course, they had those feminist tweets not even naming his...
I mean, I don't know his name. I think his other name is Kelsey.
I don't know his first name.
I think it's Kels, but I'm not sure either.
Oh, it's Kels? Okay.
I didn't watch one second of the game.
Oh, I did because I went to my sister's house.
I watched the ending. I tried to, and they wanted me to subscribe on my root tube.
I was like, I'm not paying money And then they were like, we'll give you a seven-day free trial and you can cancel at any time.
And I was like, I don't want to have to go back and cancel later.
I'll just skip the game. Yeah, I watched the end.
I was like, man, you know, from a football perspective, because I do enjoy sports, I found it crazy how trash the defense was in that overtime for the 49ers.
I was like... Everything on the line, y'all running the wrong play every time?
That's crazy. That's because there's somebody in the box calling the wrong play every single time in order to draft the game.
It's possible, but at the same time, there's always a leader on the field.
So there's always a defensive leader on the field that if they see something different, they're allowed to call a different play.
And that's the real game going on upstairs.
The real game is how to manipulate the lower game.
You know what I'm saying? That's possible.
I wouldn't say it's probable, but it's possible that the defensive coordinator was getting paid to call bad plays, but I mean, like...
You know how Taylor Swift's little friend, the Spice Girl, I don't know what her deal was.
She did that sign. I don't want to make the sign.
I'll do it with my thumbs. They do one up, one down, and then they switch it one up, one down.
I don't want to make that sign.
But that's kind of like what I'm saying.
There's people in the box office calling the shots for people on the floor.
You know what I'm saying? I think football is one of the hardest things to actually attempt to rig.
I'm a boxing fan.
No, it is. I give you that.
Boxing is easier to rig.
And I'm a boxing fan.
I understand boxing would be easier to rig than a football game.
Yeah, because you only got one dude to pay off.
You may have a few judges, but let's say if I'm somebody fighting and I want to create a star and I'm fighting somebody who's a journeyman, who's like, they've been fighting for a year, they have a bad record, that person will take an extra couple thousand dollars to let me, you know what I'm saying? Knock them out.
If I say this, we'll pay you an extra $20,000.
You just gotta do a dive.
I think boxing is much harder to rig at high level, but it's very easy to rig at a lower level.
I think MMA is the hardest to rig.
Oh, no, definitely not.
That's easy to rig, too. Well, it's easy to rig, but there's fights that you've got that you know are not going to be rigged.
Their whole career can end on one fight.
You know what I mean? That's why I don't think you can rig combat sports at a high level unless somebody is just a total crap bag.
But at a lower level, all combat sports are the easiest to rig.
Let's say if I'm a star or I'm an up-and-coming star and I'm pretty good and you want me to get some more highlight reel knockouts.
You know what I'm saying? Take me to stardom.
I'll fight an average fighter who they do boxing for a living, but they know they're not a star.
They're like 34. They haven't had a big fight.
Their record is like 11 and 10.
You would actually get in the ring?
Who, me? Yeah, I box.
Bro, I could get you in the ring.
Do you want to get in the ring? Not right now, because my stamina's not good.
Okay, so I'll tell you.
When you're ready to get in the ring, I'm associated with this fight league.
It's called SoCal Fights.
And my buddy is the owner of the league.
It's called Engelbert Productions.
I think you're episode 58.
If you go down to episode 29...
I'm like ringside in the owner's box of this ring and they do it in a hanger.
I will get you in the ring.
I will get it so much.
Yes, it's like this hanger on this private airport and they fill it with people.
People are in suits and press and it's filmed.
It's on TV. They're great.
And it's the number one feeder league to the UFC in professional boxing.
So I will get you in a fight.
Actually, I got Joel Bauman, too, who is supposed to get in the ring there, who actually said he might even be around later if he wanted to hop on.
He might want to hop on with us live on this live feed.
I don't know if he's going to do that or not.
Do you know him, Joel Bauman?
I've heard of him, yeah. He's cool.
He's that guy who has the Jimmy Kimmel challenge.
You know, he challenges Jimmy Kimmel about the Epstein client list.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
I don't know if I've seen that part, though.
Yeah, you saw that guy in the UFC ring.
He, like, wins his fight, and he's like, Jimmy Kimmel!
Yeah, yeah. Joel Bowman.
No, yeah, I know him. I know him.
I know him. I know him. I know him.
Yeah, he's a good friend of the show, so he might pop on in a little bit.
Yeah, he's an MMA fighter.
He always says something cool at the end of his fights.
Yeah, I've actually DMed him before, I think.
Yeah, he said he's down to hop on for a minute, so we could get him on too.
How much time you got today?
Probably about... I probably got like 30-45 minutes because I have to go to...
That's short. That doesn't even give us a chance to get into any of the deep stuff that the Groypers want to hear about.
No, we can get into all of it.
Alright, forget Joel Bauman, man.
Let's get into the Juicy Juicy because we're live.
People want to know about God and the truth and everything.
You got some beef with the Groypers.
I am the beef of the Groypers.
Let's talk about it, man.
What's your beef with the Groypers?
Well, I have a beef with, like, half the grumpers.
Like, some grumpers love me, some grumpers hate me.
Some offshoots, like, you have, like, the guy, I don't even want to say his name, but the guy that used to be very close to Nick Fuentes, he has, like, his own fan base, but the grumpers don't like him.
The defector, yeah, because he defected.
He realized that Nick is full of shit.
I think he's a psychotic person, too.
I'm not saying his name but I've donated so much money to his live streams and he still has every use every chance he has to attack me and I can't stand ungrateful people.
Why do you feel that they need to make it such a prerogative to go around attacking people?
Do they call you a Jew also?
Because I know they call you a Jew?
That's because I keep Sabbath.
I know.
I saw that. I love it.
I want to invite you over for Shabbat, too, also.
Because I know you keep the real Sabbath.
You know what I'm saying? Why do you think Christians do Sunday instead of the Sabbath as the day rest?
Can you tell me? Yeah, I know exactly why.
They started practicing a little bit before Constantine, but the official decree came in by Constantine.
He actually called it the venerable day of the sun.
Not S-O-N. He called it the venerable day of the sun.
S-U-N. Right.
As he made the official decree to say the Sabbath is now Sunday.
Matter of fact, there's actually a church council, the Council of Laodicea, if anybody wants to look it up, where Catholics essentially decided that if you do rest on the Sabbath, then you are anathema, I'm sure I pronounced that wrong, from Christ, meaning you're separated from Christ, meaning you're You don't even belong to Christ if you rest on Shabbat.
Whoa, that's crazy.
This is a Catholic thing.
So church on Sunday and not on Sabbath is a Catholic thing.
Well, that's where it started.
But then, you know, Protestantism comes from Catholicism.
It's like an offshoot of Catholicism. It's like Catholics and Orthodox.
And Christians, of course, adopted the Sunday.
Protestants adopted the Sunday worship.
I like the Protestant-based Christians more than the Catholics.
I gotta say, I feel that Catholicism has this intrinsic guilt against the Jewish people, and I think Protestantism in general absolves those Christians from the crimes and the atrocities that were really committed against.
The really brutal, brutal atrocities that were committed by the Catholics.
I think Protestantism kind of like absolves those people from that guilt, from that collective guilt.
You know what I'm saying? I like both for different reasons.
I don't consider myself either.
I consider myself like a first Christian because Orthodox and Catholics think they were their original Christians, but clearly the first Christians were actually referred to more so as Jewish Christians because they kept the commandments, they kept the Jewish holidays, but they also believed in Jesus.
They were the first Christians, but So, I like Catholics and Orthodox from the standpoint that they understand that works are very important.
And Protestants think works don't mean anything, which is just thoroughly unbiblical.
And I like how pro-life Catholics are.
If you go to a pro-life event, Catholics are very pro-life.
Now, the reason why they're pro-life, if people knew that, that's kind of...
Alarming. A lot of people don't know this, but they're pro-life because they believe in infant baptism.
And they believe aborted babies, they don't go to heaven.
Let me just say it like that. So that's what makes them pro-life.
So it's kind of scary, but I do appreciate how pro-life they are.
But as far as the Jew stuff, it's in Catholic doctrine to be against something called Judaizing.
It's in all the councils.
As a matter of fact, in the Council of Laodicea that I mentioned, it literally says that resting on the Sabbath is Judaizing.
How far is the Council of Laodicea from the Council of Nicaea in terms of years?
The Council of Nacia?
Yeah. So the Council of Nacia was 325?
325. Yeah.
And the Council of Laodicea was...
I don't even know exactly when it was.
Was it 360? No, it wasn't 360.
Wow. So I got this theory about Nyssae that it was like really about like like removing Jewish influence from Christianity because the first Christians were very they were all Jews.
Eusebius says that the first 15 popes were Jews.
I mean, well, Catholics, they have to believe that.
They believe Peter was the first pope.
Yeah. So, but I find this stuff super interesting, especially the part where they separate.
So around like 360, like really, that further kind of elucidates my thought that Nicaea was like a mean, the council of Nicaea and the creating of the Apocrypha and all that stuff was like a way of de-Judifying Christianity.
It was before that, too.
It counts as even earlier than that.
Right. I'm sure there was a big movement.
It didn't start then. Yeah, but I mean, over the course of councils, because they, I mean, it's in their doctrine.
Even the word Judaizing is like a crazy word to even say.
They call me a Judaizer all the time, but they call me a Judaizer for doing the same exact things that Jesus did, that Paul did, that Peter did.
Matter of fact, there isn't an author in the Bible that didn't keep Sabbath.
Right, and let me ask you this.
I guarantee you Jesus didn't eat pork.
Of course he didn't.
So, like, why do they feel like it's okay to eat pork?
You know what I'm saying? Like, where does that come from?
Where do they feel like they need to...
And is that Laodicea?
Like, where they're just casting off Judaism from Christianity and saying, okay, these things don't matter at all anymore?
As long as you do this one thing, you could eat pork, you could hurt, maim, steal, kill, and repent before God at the moment before your death and you're going to heaven type of thing?
Like, where does that come about?
Well, they attempt to get it from...
Of course, I think it was created by the Romans that...
Because, you know, when they used to...
Try to force the Jews not to keep the law.
These are sacrificed pigs in Jewish temples.
And things of that nature.
In my opinion, these are the same people that created a lot of these.
Never mind. But what I will say is, they try to say it comes from Paul, and what Christians do is they take Paul out of context.
And I always say this, the For the majority of Christians, their Jesus is not Yeshua, born of Mary. Their Jesus is an out-of-context version of Paul.
In 2 Peter, he actually warns us that people would do this and actually calls the people that take Paul out of context lawless.
Because two things cannot be true, right?
If Paul said, well, first they think Jesus declared all fools clean in Matthew, but that wasn't, he didn't at all.
He was talking about washing your hands before you eat the bread, which was a tradition By the Pharisees versus actual commandment.
But two things can be true.
Isaiah was a prophet, right?
Right. Which means it's prophecy.
He talks about heaven and earth passing in Isaiah 65 and Isaiah 66.
In both chapters, we talk about heaven and earth passing.
We know heaven and earth doesn't pass until...
If you're a Christian, Revelation 21 talks about heaven and earth passing, and we know that's when Judgment Day comes.
The thing is, in Isaiah 65 and Isaiah 66, it talks about how people that eat pork and unclean meats will be judged.
So either Isaiah is a false prophet, because he's referring to Judgment Day, and Judgment Day hasn't happened yet.
So either Christians saying that's not how people are going to be judged, so Isaiah is a false prophet, or they're saying Isaiah...
It's not a false prophet, and they're wrong.
Both things can't be true.
It's a situation there, a little dilemma.
The way I see it, I think kosher is for everybody.
Judaism is really a non-proselytizing faith, but the only thing that I think we should proselytize is kashrut, kosher meat, because the kosher meat thing is a big deal.
When you learn about why the laws of kosher are the way that they are, you find that it's all about consciousness, higher thinking, health, because The way that the kosher slaughter happens, it's a surgical incision into the trachea.
And the concept is the animal's not supposed to feel pain.
The trachea is cut, and the windpipe connects the brain and the heart, and the animal just dies.
I've seen it before. A good slaughter, the animal's head just falls over and they die.
And then afterwards, they inspect the lungs.
They take the lungs out to check for mumim, which are blemishes on the lungs.
To see, you know, was the animal gasping for air as it died?
You could tell, like, the stress of the animal by the lungs.
And so, kashrut is very important.
You want, when you're eating meat, you want to, like, separate the soul from the animal As seamlessly as possible.
In fact, the opposite of kosher meat is called treith, which comes from the word litaref, which means to tear, because it implies that the soul was torn from the body, and then they're eating that.
So you are what you eat in this world.
You know, it's like higher consciousness.
You eat right, and your thoughts will be right.
Yeah, that's why I like it.
At Passover satyrs, they actually show you them cutting.
The lamb. Like, actually, everybody has to see the cut happening to teach people how to do a culture cut.
My only issue with how modern Judaism operates is this whole thing where...
Sabbath and some of the commandments are only for quote-unquote Jews by blood.
That's just unbiblical.
Even the strangers had to keep the commandments in the lands.
In the land. Also, I mean, there's evidence of history to show that a lot of Jews that think they're Jews by blood actually come from converted Jews, not actually Jews by blood.
Are you talking about the Kazari thing?
Yes, I mean, there's a few different sects of Jews where when they all get blood tests, it just doesn't say Jews.
It says they're from somewhere else.
You know, that's why I talk about, like, I actually talk about this a lot, about the Khuzari thing, because, like, everyone is just going to call me a Khuzari.
They're going to call every Jew gets called a Khuzari.
But the truth is the Kuzari thing is really an ultra-minority.
If there is such an actual bloodline like a Kuzari, there was these forced conversions that went down in the 9th century by the king of Kuzari.
But the fact remains is that in the Ashkenazi lineage, we could trace our families back all the way to the people in the Bible.
We have a book. In fact, I have it right here on my desk.
This book right here contains a lineage of really a lot of Jews, but mostly Ashkenazi Jews in the later chapters.
The later chapters are mostly focused on Hasidic families.
My point is actually that I don't believe that Jews...
I don't believe that being the only by blood thing is my point.
But to be fair, a lot of Ashkenazi Jews, not all, but a lot of Ashkenazi Jews, When they do get DNA tests, there's a whole thread about it on...
There's actually a whole thing about it on Reddit because a lot of them get blood tests and realize that they don't come from the Middle East at all.
I mean, you have a lot that do.
Like, Rabbi Atovia said...
Well, we have our own haptide.
We have, like, our own distinct racial lineage that is...
Not geographic, but it's exclusively...
And other Jewish communities don't have that.
They don't even have an indicator that genetically marks them as being Jewish.
So the only ones that they just, it'll show up, you know, like for like Moroccan Jews or Iraqi Jews, it'll show up that they're from the Middle East or the Levant or Iraqi, but it won't show up that they are actually Jewish.
There's two Jewish genes.
There's the Ashkenazi genome that's been mapped out, and then the Kohens gene, which has been mapped out.
And so, like, it's really important to understand that Ashkenazi really is the oldest Jewish community in the world.
Ashkenaz was founded by 400 families from the tribe of Benyamin during the times of King Solomon.
And that was the first colony in the kingdom of Ashkenaz which predated Germany by like a thousand years.
More than a thousand years even.
But it was in that land.
And so that's how we got the name Ashkenaz.
But I understand what you're saying, pivoting back to the stuff about non-Jewish people celebrating the holidays and whatnot.
I actually see that it is a good thing for non-Jews to be involved with Shabbat or people who aren't Jewish to be involved with those, because that truly is the revelation of God, which was...
What happened in the Torah and the five books of Moses?
Without that, there would be nothing else.
Biblically, you have to.
In the Bible, when people go read the first five books of the Bible or read after, even the strangers in the land had to keep savage.
People converted.
There was converted people in the Bible and everything.
I mean, even Israel- In the Bible, there's three types of non-Jewish people.
There's a ger, which is called a wanderer.
The word ger means a wanderer.
Then there's a ger toshav, which is a wanderer, toshav, but sits. Instead of wandering, he sits.
And then there's the ger tzedek.
And then the ger tzedek does practice the laws of the Bible.
Yeah, well, they had to.
Like I said, a stranger would have been killed on Sabbath if they didn't observe Sabbath.
So, I mean, that's what the Bible says.
I mean, Israel was a mixed multitude, period.
I mean, like, Abraham wasn't an Israelite, technically.
He was a Chaldean, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. So, you know, that's just one thing.
That's just one thing that a lot of Orthodox Jews say.
Even those I like.
Like, I like Rabbi Tovia Singer.
We talk sometimes, like, offline quite consistently.
And I watch some of his videos, and he says that, too.
And I completely reject that idea.
He says what? Huh?
What does he say? Well, a lot of Jews believe that you don't have to observe Sabbath.
Basically, the whole thing is, what people say without saying it, is when heaven and earth pass, or in the New Jerusalem, or whatever you want to call it, the Jews by blood are above here, and then everybody else is pretty much under.
And Jews, you hail a lot different than Christians, clearly.
But basically, they said you only observe this part of it if you're a Jew by blood.
And that's very unbiblical and it's not even stated in the Torah.
So, I'll tell you why Jewish people don't keep the Sabbath.
Why some Jewish people don't keep the Sabbath.
So, what Judaism truly is, is the religion of free will.
No, no, no. Before I get to you, I'm not talking about Jews that don't get the Sabbath.
I understand the difference between Jews by blood and Jews by religion.
You have secular Jews, you have liberal Jews, you have conservative Jews.
I'm talking about Jews that say if you're not a Jew, keep your Shabbat.
It's not necessary. That's what I'm talking about.
If you're not a Jew, keeping Shabbat generally is considered not necessary.
Because we're not proselytizing.
So we're not going to go out there and teach people how to keep the Sabbath.
You know what I'm saying? But people who wander, who are agar, and wander in the direction of our...
Our culture and our traditions, and they become a Gertoshav, and they sit, and they start learning about, you know, what took place in this book, the book, you know, before the New Testament.
I have the same stone edition.
Last time you were on the show, when we were on, I was guest hosting, I think, for Harrison Smith, or maybe it was Owen Troyer or something I had you on, and you're like, is that the stone edition?
And I was like, yeah. But the Stone Edition is really the most, it is the most legit because you got the Hebrew right there.
And so many times, like, I'll get into these debates and stuff, and they'll be like, this quote or that quote, and I'll read it in the Hebrew. It's like they don't even understand what they're talking about.
I was just talking about wool and leather.
I was talking about wool. People think Christians always bring up, well, you can't mix fabrics.
The Torah is not against mixing fabrics, it's against mixing wool and linen specifically.
And they know it says mixed fabrics, I say no.
And there's a reason for that too.
They did this scientific study.
There's this amazing book called The Coming Revolution where it goes through all the lines of the Torah, all the laws of the Torah, and it explains them scientifically.
And there is like specific, like when you mix fibers, it creates like an electromagnetic field around you that pulls you down.
You know, like God has, like reality is a vibration.
And how we choose to exist inside of that vibration is our free will.
And the 613 laws of the Torah, what they really are is, if God was going to do something, this is what he would do.
So he's saying, you do whatever you want.
You want to keep the Sabbath.
You don't want to keep the Sabbath. You do whatever you want.
But if I was presented with the seventh day, I would keep the Sabbath.
And here's how I would do it.
People got murdered from working on Sabbath.
Well, that's what God would say.
God would say, this is what I would do.
Don't mess with my Sabbath.
Yeah, be holy as I am holy.
That's really what he's said so many times in Leviticus and Deuteronomy, to be clear.
That's the goal. But the goal is that people choose that of their own free will and abolition.
It can't be, or else we would just be like the angels.
God commands us to be holy.
God commands us to do this.
God commands us to do that.
And it just happens.
The fact that we have the ability to reject is what gives us the ability to commit.
So when we truly are committed to God's will, that is from a place of free will.
So every time I see an atheist, I thank them.
I say, thank you. I don't have to become an atheist to prove that God gave us free will.
Thank you so much.
Oh yeah, that's definitely proof of free will.
There are some Christian sects that don't even believe in free will, but we can save that for another conversation.
Yeah, the Christians, there's a multitude of different opinions.
I've got to say, there's not so many Jews in this space that interact with as many Christians as I do.
I find a lot of things to be fascinating.
I find a lot of things to be...
Confusing. So confusing.
And also thought-provoking.
So I'm always learning.
I'm a biblical scholar myself.
I learn a lot of different things, especially Kabbalah.
I love Kabbalah. Do you ever read Kabbalah books or anything like that?
No, I'm strictly...
I know what it is.
I strictly use Bible.
For the Old Testament, I read a stone edition.
To knock on the New Testament, it's whichever translation I pick up.
But yeah, I'm strictly Bible.
I don't read outside of it.
So, yeah, so Stone Edition is really, I dig it.
You should come to my Bible.
We do a class every Monday night, a Kabbalah class, but I get a lot of interesting types that come through the class, but... Yeah.
Kabbalah is just really like the essence of what it is.
Like if you commit to the fullest that the Bible truly has you commit, you start to experience God actually and have an actual relationship, a one-on-one with God.
And Kabbalah is the language to describe that relationship.
It's a language.
And people don't understand this.
They think Kabbalah is mysticism or this or that.
It's just a language.
It's words that describe spiritual actions between man and God.
It's a bit mystic, though.
It's very mystical.
You can't have God come up in this without it being mystical.
You know what I'm saying? God himself is the essence of all things mystical.
So, of course, it's going to be mystical.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm just saying.
Yeah, because I know about the Kabbalah.
You know, I'm the type of person I just stick with the Bible.
That's what I do, just stick with the Bible as is.
You can't go wrong with the Bible, man.
You can't go wrong with the Bible.
Bryson, you're a rapper.
Tell me, when's your next show?
What do you got going on?
Do you ever freestyle? I used to be known for freestyling.
But when I stopped doing Sackley music and I stopped using profanity, I don't freestyle anymore because to freestyle, you have to make up words on the spot.
And a lot of times, curse words or the N-word, those used to be the best filler words if you wanted to get an extra thought in when you freestyle.
Because freestyling is an art of itself.
And I haven't tried really...
I've been freestyling for a long period of time like I used to because I don't even want to accidentally say a curse word.
A profanity. Yeah, but I just got done shooting a movie, which is also a visual album, but it's a movie.
It has a movie feel to it, but it is also a visual album.
I haven't seen anybody do this in a while.
All your stuff is kind of like that.
You got like this Gene Kelly kind of vibe.
Like this art, theater, acting.
What was it? The super...
That one where you became like...
Super bigot. Super bigot.
That storyline was great, dude.
That storyline was classic. So, I mean, I like...
I feel like God made me to make music.
I don't even feel like music is a love.
I feel like it's just like breathing. I feel like it's just something I have to make music.
I feel like God made me. I feel that too.
Cinematography, though, is like a love of mine.
I don't think I was born liking cinematography.
I feel like I just fell in love with it as I grew.
I like sometimes getting my cinematography ideas out, my acting ideas out, like in the Like Eminem video or in my Happy video.
But for this next album, I just did an entire movie for it.
Like, literally. An entire hour-long film.
You know what I'm saying? That's so dope.
So what's the film about? It's called Bryson the Demon Slayer.
It's a three-level film.
What you see on the film is the face value message.
Bryson the Demon Slayer is self-explanatory.
It's really a representation of two other things, which is killing your old self or killing your flesh so you can become a new creation, which means turning away from sin and repentance, essentially.
Then you have the level of exposing wickedness and going to war with wickedness.
It's like a three-layered film.
What you see on face value is what you see, but it's representing the words that you're hearing and the music as you're watching the film.
There's a storyline, I hired actors, there's action, there's everything.
That's dope. So you rap, it's like part music video, part theatrics?
Yes. That's so Gene Kelly, man.
That's so Gene Kelly.
The music video is telling us, like, when I rap, it's in line with what you're seeing also, though.
So it's like, yeah, there are music videos, but even the album alone is a story.
So it's, you know, it's pretty...
That's inspiring.
That's very inspiring. Thank you.
I'm taking the Adam King show in that direction too.
I want to eventually do theatrics myself.
I think that it conveys a way of getting into the heart of somebody differently.
If you can entertain them or make them laugh, their heart is wide open.
You can tell them anything.
They have no guards up at that moment.
Nope, facts. And I mean, you know, at first I was like, the only reason I haven't done this as much, like I did it with Like Eminem, I did it with Happy and some other videos, but the reason I haven't done it as much because as an artist, you have to Realize that a lot of people just won't get it.
Because, you know, you're doing it from the mind of an artist.
So sometimes I would water down my visuals.
You know what I'm saying? Because I know that.
But that just became boring to me.
So I just had to get my juices out.
And I feel like, you know, people that like creativity is going to love it.
Right. We grew up in the MTV era.
All that kind of stopped.
There was a whole storyline with the theatrics.
It's part of the wanting of killing culture.
The evil side wants to kill culture.
They don't want to see things like this that defy or incorporate multiple mediums of art into one Politically driven message, that's dangerous to them.
You know, that's very dangerous to them, especially when it's spiritual.
Yeah, everything. Videos used to mean something.
People used to pit effort into just one song videos.
You know what I'm saying? Like, I think the last time somebody released like an album movie, there was a band back in the day that did that.
Do you remember those Michael Jackson, Chris Tuckers?
Oh yeah, Michael Jackson did it too.
Was that a whole album or was it just a song?
They were per songs.
He would have the song and it would be in like a 11 minute video with like a fight scene.
And Chris Tucker would come out and like they'd fight in like some Chinese theater restaurant, you know, and he'd save the girl. And then he turned into a Jaguar and walked off.
Yep. But there was a band that did an entire album like that, which is what I'm doing.
And I forgot the band name.
They did an entire album.
But it was a movie that went with the album.
I forgot the band name, man.
It's going to irritate me now.
Like Smashing Pumpkins?
No. Man, I got to Google it.
So they did like Google it.
That's fine. We got time.
I love music.
I love art. I'm truly an artist.
You know, like I... I actually make my money as an inventor, but that is like a very high expression of art, but I'm constantly engaged in art and music creation.
I asked you the freestyle thing.
I was hoping you say that you do freestyle because I love freestyling actually.
I have the blood of King David and it just comes out of me.
This book of Psalms comes out of me.
I can't help it sometimes. Like I said, I used to be known for it, but there's old videos of me drunk freestyling back in the day when I used to be a heathen.
It just requires a lot of filler words.
Oh, so Prince did it with Pepper Rain, but the one I was talking about was Pink Floyd.
Oh, Pink Floyd. Yeah, they would do all sorts of stuff.
They did it with The Wall.
Matter of fact, they said Daft Punk did it.
Daft Punk did it in 2003, Interstellar.
I love that stuff, man.
I applaud you for taking the Gene Kelly approach.
Is it more music or is it more film?
What do you think? See, I love that you asked that question from a creative perspective.
It's equally both.
I promise you. That's why I say it's something like...
I feel like people haven't seen this.
Did you write it yourself?
Yes. Are you putting it in Cannes and Sundance and all that stuff?
I'm going to try to submit it for any festival I can find.
You should. I got some friends I can help you with getting into festivals.
Please. That is so crucial.
That's how we win the culture war, by getting into festivals like that.
Sundance is really important.
Sundance is like, in Hebrew, it's called kiruv.
You go out to pull people in.
You know what I'm saying? We got to go meet them on their field and win with culture, not without culture.
To be honest, I would even argue...
It's hard to argue this because of the nature of it, but I would argue that it's more movie...
Maybe not in time, but it's more movie...
Is there any fighting scenes?
Yes, sir. Bro, we're men.
We have to include a fighting scene.
Yes, there's multiple.
That's so sick.
So I always thought about making a spy film in L.A. Because in the city of Vernon, deep in the industry...
Where it's like you have beautiful graffitis and you can do rooftop scenes on train tracks.
It's like Terminator 2 level stuff.
I'm like, my mind can't help it.
Whenever I drive by some sort of picturesque scene, I start seeing things happening and I'm like, oh, I'm a natural producer-director.
Did you write everything yourself?
Yes. I wrote it.
Listen, I'm a freak, bro.
I wrote it all up here.
I wrote an hour-long movie up here, and I was able to make it exactly like it.
I just got done editing, and now I'm sending it to special effects and color grading.
That's dope. I wanted to do it.
Editing is my favorite part because that's what you could take anything even if it's shot bad and make it into something good.
So when are you planning on dropping it and how are you going to drop it?
Is there going to be a grand theatrical release?
Is it going to be in theaters? I can help you with theaters too.
I know some people who... I want to, but I didn't know how expensive shooting a film on your own would be.
So I don't have really a lot of...
Because I did this all myself.
But you probably came in so under budget from what everybody else is going to spend.
Well, of course. Of course, because I own the camera, but I've been paying actors.
I've been renting places. Right now, I'm paying for special effects, and I try to go the cheap route with special effects, but what I realize is you get what you pay for, so now I've pretty much wasted money, and I gotta pay the real guys, you know what I'm saying, to do special effects, and it's getting so more expensive than I can actually afford.
Give them some equity.
Huh? You say what? Find people who will take equity in the film.
I don't even know how to do that.
You just divide up percentage.
You say, I'll give you 10 % of the film to do all the special effects.
If you're listening right now to this show and you're good at special effects, you write theadamkingshow at gmail.com and I will plug you in.
Please! We will get you some equity to do Bryson's movie for free.
But how do you want to drop it? Do you want to do theater?
Or do you want to just one day on Twitter?
So how I plan to do it, I tried to ask Ravel to premiere.
They didn't email me back.
They said they were down, but they never emailed me back when I actually sent the email.
So I'm thinking about uploading it, you know, have it on Amazon Prime, have it on Tubi.
I may do a release, like, on Twitter, because people on Twitter, like, watch this stuff on Twitter, so I might upload the whole thing on Twitter.
And things like that.
Then I'm promoting myself. I'm finding people that I'm friends with that are popular to react to it.
I'm trying to do as much free marketing as I can because I didn't know going...
In my mind, I'm thinking I own the camera.
The videographer is my sister.
It's gonna be free. And then you start hiring actors.
These are written locations.
And then you find out special effects is thousands of dollars by itself.
And then you're like, wait a minute, wait!
But I was too deep in it, and now I'm all ready.
I'm going through with it.
Once you sow, you shall reap fourfold.
Yeah, so yeah, I'm just trusting God with it.
It's a very biblical, very biblical film, especially if people understand the layers that I explained to you that's in the film.
It's very, very biblical.
And the Christian market is huge, too.
Like, if you have, like, a real film, you could do really well with that.
People are going to want to see that.
If it's Christian, if it's modern, if it's political, that's a very trending demographic and a lot of people will support that.
You should go on the church tours too.
Yeah, I mean, it returns a sad thing, because I do talk about controversial topics in my songs that, of course, that are all in the movie.
Like what? What's the most controversial topic?
Well, you know, typical Bryson Gray stuff.
Like, pedophilia is controversial?
No. Everybody should unify against pedophilia.
That shouldn't be controversial to talk about.
LGBT is a controversial topic.
That is pretty controversial.
Yeah, you are one of the more foremost outspoken on that.
Yeah, and I talk about abortion.
I made mentions of other things that are controversial in many churches.
But, I mean, I can't, you know, I'm not, that's how I, that's how I, I mean, art is an expression of self.
So when I make music, I'm really saying my thoughts.
I could basically use all my tweets and make a song if I really wanted to.
Yo, I want to be in your next movie.
I'll be cast. Bro, literally, I'm down, bro.
I'll do it for free.
I'll do it for free. You don't have to pay me.
You're in, because now that I got my juices out, bro, this is like the most fun I've had doing something creative in so long that I'm doing it for every project now.
Every project is going to have- That's dope.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying? I'm good, too.
I can rap, man, and I can freestyle.
I grew up. Freestyle?
I had you on the show today.
You know this guy Adam Green? Yeah, I know Adam Green.
He's probably listening, but he was like, yeah, you should freestyle with Bryson today because he knows me pretty well.
I was like, I'll try, I'll try, but it doesn't seem like you're down.
He believes that white people are the true Israelites, right?
Him? Yeah, I think Adam Green is like a white, black Hebrew-Israelite.
He's like a black Hebrew-Israelite, but white.
No, I think he just wants to be as indigenous to his roots as possible.
He wants to cast the yoke of different religions off Christianity and Judaism.
I think he's more vehement against Christianity than he is against Judaism, but he wants to cast off the yoke of what he sees as Judeo-Christian culture.
But he's a really nice guy, you know, and we get along really well.
I'll tell you, he used to be, back in the day, you could completely disagree on topics but still, you know, be friends and have a...
Adam Green is like one of those classic people.
He's like, you could disagree about something on such a fundamental level that's supposed to be like you can't talk to people who don't agree with you on things and you can still be friends with him.
He's the type of guy who's like...
It's a higher level of being a man.
So I have a lot of respect for Adam Green and consider him a great friend.
But yeah, he wanted me to freestyle rap with you.
But I don't know.
I can't do it.
You can't. It's funny.
I'm telling you, you can actually find some of my old videos where I was drunk freestyling.
You'd be like, what the world? You should try to freestyle without being, you know, exploitive.
I will have to practice it.
I haven't even, bro, I haven't even practiced.
You just have to go slow.
Here, I'll do it. I'll freestyle.
I'm gonna freestyle, okay?
I'll do it. I'm not about to embarrass myself.
You just have to go slow, but you have to show the microphone that you're in control.
So your brain and your heart have to be one so you don't drop anything like an F-bomb.
You gotta just freestyle and flow with your words, making sure that you close your eyes so that you can monitor them first.
You don't want them to just come out and barf like it's dirt.
You want to be able to elevate and sing songs of praise and such worth.
I can keep going if you want to get to the Bible.
I know this story untold, Avraham, Yitzhak, and Jacob, no rivals.
It is the truth of the scripture that leads me away from sin.
I read this book cover to cover, and it's inside of me beneath my skin.
See, when you go slow with the rap, you can just freestyle, keep it intact.
You don't have to cuss or drop any bombs of Fs or any things that make you seem a little whack.
It's like spoken word poetry, and you know it's me, Adam King, on the Adam King Show, Bryson Gray. This is spoken poetry.
Let's go! I like the triple syllable rhyme.
Poetry knows me, okay?
Yo, King David flows with me.
Let's go. It's in my blood.
Wrote the book of Psalms.
Anyways, I have a lot of fun.
You know, I'll tell you, I used to, like, when I was younger, I used to be in bands and stuff, and I used to rap and freestyle, and I used to love that stuff.
And then I kind of, like, turned it inwards.
And there was a long period of my life where, like, I really, like, avoided, like...
Being seen in the public and I was really monastic and like I mean an insanely long period of my life and But in that period I turned that tool to God and I would pray in my freestyle and And I use it as a tool.
All these things are just tools for us to connect with things.
So hip-hop and poetry and art and music and culture, these are all tools so that we can connect to the divine.
And where you choose to send it is how it becomes.
So if you send it to the divine, it becomes the divine with anything, even alcohol.
The holiday of Purim is about reaching the divine mystery through wine.
Everything in the physical universe is a tool that can be uplifted so that it can be used for spiritual purposes.
I love music, bro.
I mean, clearly, that's my lesson.
But that was my audition for your movie.
I hope I get the part. Bro, listen, I am actually shooting another movie, but see, the issue with me is I like going more grand, so I have a few ideas for this next film, and I would love for you to be in it, but I need to try to downscale my...
My mindset on what I want done.
Yeah. Absolutely, I feel that.
I need to bring it to reality.
At least I'm glad I did this one, though, because now I know.
Yeah, absolutely. And you'll be better on the next one, you know?
Yeah, bet on the next one as far as keeping costs down, as far as like having the appropriate people, man, because, yeah, it gets, you know.
But my vision come into life, though!
Exactly how I envisioned it.
It's so amazing when it happens.
Like, everything falls into place, exactly.
And it's like, I learned that when I created, I'm in the middle of bringing a machine to market.
This is my third version of the machine.
And it's like, I saw it in my brain, and then I made it in the world.
And that is like, that's like ex nihilo.
That's like God. I think therefore I exist.
Bro, it's so crazy because like, and my wife, she thinks I'm psychotic for this.
But sometimes I was like, she'll see me staring just at nothing.
And I'm like, no, no, no, no.
I just watched a movie that I'm about to create in my head.
And it's like, it's hard for a lot of people to get that.
But like, if you're into like art, that's so real.
You see it already in your brain.
You just like turning it into like the physical, the physical realm.
And like, I've written songs in my dream before.
You know what I'm saying? Which songs of yours did you write in your dream?
Oh, a few. Is there any of your...
Burn Balenciaga made the beat in my dream.
That's crazy! That's insanity!
That was such a good song, too.
Bro, thank you. That came out of your dreams?
Bro, that beat...
That's next level, dude. That's so next level.
I can't believe nobody knows that.
That's so high. So with producing, I used to be known for producing, but I slowed down. And now it's like it's kind of hard for me to make a beat because I can't make the beats I let the rap on.
Anything I make, I'm going to want it to be grand and crazy.
And it's like... It's just too much.
So that violin and stuff, I made it in my dream.
I literally woke up and I came right here to where I'm sitting at right now.
I'm like, I gotta do this violin thing I did.
And then I paid somebody else to actually do the official violin.
But the whole beat, bro, I made it.
I made multiple songs of mine in my dreams.
I'm not gonna lie. That's crazy.
That's so cool. Yes, it's weird, bro.
And when I hear other artists say the same thing, I'm like, yo, yes!
Because people think I'll be crazy or I'm lying or something.
I'm like, no, we make music in our dreams for real.
That's so cool. Yeah, man, I love it.
That really is next-level production right there.
It's like you're making it in your dreams.
It's coming out really, truly.
If your dreams are your subconscious, then the music is like being born from something else.
It's like such a high level.
I wish I had a dream like that again because it's like...
I haven't made a beat.
God, please send this guy a dream like that again.
Please! Please, God, please.
I miss making all my beats, man.
Six years ago, I would have thought it was disrespectful for another producer to even act like he wanted to work with me.
Now, I talk to producers all the time.
I need a beat.
It's good because I have good beat selection when I use beats for people.
I'm good at doing it because I'm a producer.
But I miss making all my own beats, bro.
Yeah. What software do you use?
FL Studio. FL Studio.
Yeah, I use FL for everything.
So I'm actually just getting back into music, and I had, like, tons of equipment.
I had, like, the whole Ableton.
I had the M-Audios.
I had everything. And I was so pissed off because when I re-downloaded it onto my computer, all the tools that I had, the drivers don't work anymore because the companies force you to buy new stuff.
And I was like, this is so cheap.
This is horrible.
They don't allow you to have the drivers for the older things.
Or the drivers won't work on the newer software or the newest version of You know, iOS or whatever it is.
And it's so offensive to me.
It's like I bought that and then you stole it.
It's like I didn't lease it.
I bought it. Yep.
And then they literally make you buy the new version.
So now I don't have any music.
I have a bunch of useless equipment that I can't use for any of the softwares.
And I don't know what is a good entry level thing for me to get that I can make music with.
I'm going to always say FL Studio because I've been using it since I was like 12.
FL Studio? FL, FL Studio.
FL Studio, okay.
I've been using it since I was 12.
I believe it's simple to use, but of course if somebody has been using something else, they'll think that was easy to use.
But FL Studio is like so easy to use for me for recording, making the beats, doing really whatever you want to do.
You can do it on FL Studio, especially when it comes to music.
This should be like an advertisement for FL Studio.
They should pay you to drop this.
Bro, I've been using FL literally so long.
Bro, so long.
So all your albums were created on FL Studio?
Every one that's public?
Yeah, all of them was recorded on FL Studio.
How many albums are there total?
Everything's in my life? Yeah.
I got a friend.
I got a friend who's like a really prolific.
His name is Kosha Dills.
And he he makes we're very old friends and he's made like 20, 30 albums, something like that.
It's insanity. And there's just like something about and I and I see it with him.
There's something about it's like when you when you only care about the art, you just make it for the sake of the art being produced.
You find that in people who are prolific producers.
They don't even know how many albums they got.
You know what I'm saying? That's insane.
On each album, there's 15 songs.
When I used to make Degenerate Music, I made an album Called Genre No Genre under my old stage name.
And the album had 150 songs on it.
And I produced every single one.
That's crazy. And I made it in probably like four to six months or something like that.
Because I wanted to release the longest album ever.
It's still the longest album ever in Guinness World Records.
It isn't Guinness? No, they tried not to recognize it because they said somebody else had already submitted to work in it.
And it was a band where every song was like 35 seconds or something like that.
But nobody in history right now has an album with full songs that's 150 songs on it like I have.
That still hasn't been. That's crazy.
What was your old alias?
That music is so degenerate.
It was Be Serious.
Be Serious.
Actually, that's not degenerate.
That's a step in the process of where you're at now.
You'll probably have more incarnations of self.
I mean, you're young. You're in your 30s or something?
Yeah, I'm 32. Listen, I don't...
Listen, I'm not the same person that delete my old stuff.
My old stuff is still available because I like people to see my story.
So I want you to see, like...
Yeah. Sometimes people need to know that, like, oh, he really was like this?
And now he's like this? Maybe I can do it.
So I purposely leave my old stuff up.
But yeah, under my old Aliens beat series, there's an album called Genre No Genre, where I experiment with so many different sounds.
I have a song that I just use my mouth on, like I made the instruments with my mouth, and it's very odd stuff.
I have folk music on there, it's just interesting.
That's so cool. You know, like what you're saying about like you were into degenerate music.
Now you're into, you know, spiritual or elevated or whatever you want to call it.
Like it reminds me of a teaching that what does God love more than perfection is repentance.
Yes. In Judaism, in Hebrew, we call it tshuva.
And that the tzaddik, the one who has never sinned, doesn't stand in the place of the Baal tshuva, the one who has fully repented their ways.
The one who brings themselves close to God from being far away, from the farthest away, God holds that the most dear.
Those are the most dear people to God.
So you should never be ashamed of your past because we all have a way that we got here.
To how we are today, you know?
So, I love that.
You know, it's funny, like, I'm barely suggesting anybody go listen to that album, but if you listen to the album, many songs will talk about God.
Matter of fact, I made EDM Christian songs on there.
Like, you know what I'm saying? And I was talking about the struggle and things of that nature.
It's just like, it was basically me, you know, because I like multiple genres of music.
I made alternative music, EDM music, pop music, R &B music, rap music.
And I wanted to express all that because people only knew we should rap back then.
So I said, screw it. Yeah, that's a true artist, man.
A true artist is also one who can cross-pollinate with different mediums.
They are into different forms of art.
I love art so much, dude.
I've done episodes of the Adam King Show just on art where I go through galleries.
I have a whole segment.
It's about winning. I call it Winning the Culture War.
It's just all about art.
All the great revolutions came about through art.
Think about the French Revolution.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge writing books and culture.
It's all culture.
Every great revolution, every great movement of freedom starts with art.
Oh, yeah, bro. Art is so important.
Like, everything, you know what I'm saying?
Even if you talk about music alone, every movie has music.
You know what I'm saying? Every football game has music.
Exactly. Every podcast has music.
Every speech has music before and after and in the background.
I'm like, music is one of the most important languages known to man.
Absolutely. So I have this weird esoteric thought on it.
A music that like music kind of like exists in a higher dimension.
All the beats and all the all the beats and all the sounds and all the combinations of sounds.
It's like the harmonic convergence realm.
And in that realm, you hear all the different sounds and beats and stuff.
So the artist goes up to that realm through their spiritual capabilities, even if they're degenerates.
Every human has spiritual powers, just like a spider knows how to make a web as soon as it's born.
A human knows what spirituality is.
It's just a matter of what they choose to do with it.
So they go up there, and when we hear the beat or the song or the music behind the beat, That's something that existed in a higher realm.
It's the words that are put on them that are free.
And that's how the artist wants to carry the story with the words from the songs.
That's truly what the artist's contribution is.
But I kind of believe sometimes the beat.
And instead of saying, you made this because God says in the Bible, don't think that all this is because you did this.
This is because I did this.
So I like to think about it like whenever I hear a good beat or a good song, in Hebrew we call them nigunim.
If I hear a nigun in my head and it comes out, I'm trying to reveal the nigun to the world.
You know what I'm saying? Instead of Putting my authorship on it, it's more of a revelation.
Here world, here is something from heaven that fell to earth.
And that's why it's in everything.
Football, arts, movies, everything.
Because it's that point where you hear a good beat, even if the movie sucks, you're going to get through the song part.
It's a good part. Music is one of the highest forms of art.
I agree. Like, even me shooting this movie right now, right?
The parts that doesn't have the music playing from the album, the parts that's telling you the extra part of the story, guess what it needed behind it? And I had to figure this out.
It needed music behind it.
That's crazy. So I had to pay people who...
Who are experts at the background music to make you feel what the scene is trying to portray.
And they knew the perfect sounds to put in there.
The cinematic sounds to make you feel what I'm trying to tell you in my story.
And that's an entirely different...
It's art on its own, you know what I'm saying?
But it's still music. It's just crazy.
Like, shooting this movie just made me like, I've already appreciated music all my life, clearly, but it just made me appreciate it that more because it's the most important.
Then when you research it, music is like the most important aspect of trailers, the most important aspect of movies.
It's the sounds behind it.
TV shows, it's crazy, bro.
It sucks the audience in it.
It has so much power.
It's absolute power.
So when are you hoping to drop the movie?
When can the audience expect to watch this?
This is going to be so awesome.
I can't wait. My plan, because I want to release the film actually before the album is out on its own, because I don't want people skipping through my dang old album.
You should do the film in a theater and invite everyone from the movement to come watch the film.
That'd be so cool. Bro, where are you?
You're in Texas? I'm in Nashville.
There's so many venues that you could do a screening at.
You should have a movement screening.
You should call it as a meetup to everyone in the movement.
Whoever comes, comes. Whoever doesn't, doesn't.
You know, happy is the man who is happy with his lot.
But you should have a screening like that.
You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I'm thinking about it.
But I'm trying to release the film the 5th, the 8th or the 15th, mostly I'll make it 15th, and then release the actual album on its own the 22nd, so the Friday afterwards.
I'm surprised you can't. You should probably be able to get investment too, man.
Like, you're a main name.
You are a big name.
You should be able to get investors.
I don't even know how to contact people in that realm.
Like, literally, Rob Pate, every cent from this film has came out of my personality.
Okay, if there's an investor or a producer or someone that wants to contribute to the film who's listening to this podcast right now, where can they reach you at? My email.
Just email realbrysongray at gmail.com.
Okay, that's it.
So we just got to get funding.
This is really cool. I support this a lot, actually.
I'd fly out for the premiere.
Because you know what?
It takes supporting culture to cause cultural revolution.
So it's not just about making it.
It's about supporting it.
And we have so little on our side.
It's a deluge.
You should be able to do anything cultural and be successful in the conservative movement because there's just very little culture going on.
I implore all conservatives to support conservative culture.
Yeah, I would show up.
That sounds like a fun weekend also.
A good excuse to travel.
He what? Yes, sir. Because I needed...
I feel like the introduction to...
Because to me, the intro in the films are very...
Ellen Schroyer did your intro?
He did part of it.
So I asked a bunch of people with podcasts and stuff.
I just randomly was asking people.
Owen Troyer is the goat, man.
I can't believe that. This is going to be a huge film.
Yeah, he actually did it for me.
He did it for me.
Somebody from OAN did it for me.
A few people. Jack Posobie did it for me.
I'm like, yo, this is so cool.
Thank y'all. And I just asked them to do it, and they did it.
That's amazing. Yo, you got this movie so hyped up, I can't wait.
When are you gonna drop it?
Spring? Summer? Nah, I'm hoping the 15th of March, next month.
I'm hoping I can do it the 15th of March.
I'm gonna reach out privately.
I'll try to help you get a theater.
You gotta have a theater. This needs a theater, bro.
It needs a theater. For the sake of America, you know?
It can't be like some Twitter thing anymore.
I'm so sick of it. It's like, oh, you got some great culture.
Just put it on Twitter and get censored for it.
Yeah. Yeah, I can't wait, bro.
Anyways, man, I want to thank you for coming out.
We're at an hour and ten on this live feed, and I know you...
You're over time because you said you only had a few minutes.
Yeah, you did. This has been really dope.
Next time, I want you to freestyle with me, man.
We got to freestyle together.
I'll try to practice and see if I can freestyle without, you know...
I mean, I don't even curse now, even if I get a bit irritated, so I'm sure I wouldn't curse, but I might stop myself before I think about doing it.
I don't know. I'll practice. In prayer.
Yes, sir. In prayer, brother.
And you got to come out for Shabbat.
Anytime you and your wife want to come for Shabbat, you got a standing invitation.
Maybe I'll have Adam Green for Shabbat, too, and he'll come out.
We could have Bryce and Gray and Adam Green and myself for Shabbat.
That would be funny. Let's do it.
I'm down. There's no cameras.
You know what I'm saying? You can't have cameras on Shabbos.
So what's done in Shabbos stays in Shabbos.
I forgot you're practicing Jews.
How far do you take it?
Some people take it far. Do you only take a certain amount of steps?
As far as I can and then I push myself to take it further.
Seriously? Yeah, bro.
I love it. I just do it the basic biblical way.
No buying, no selling, no working.
Sabbath, I'm nuts.
I love observing.
I'll tell you what it is. Every time that I engage in not doing something, right? Like turning a light on or off.
Let's say something happens and I leave the light on in my bedroom, right?
And I'm like, I gotta go to bed.
And I can't turn it off.
That's the spiritual work right there.
You go that far!
You do the light switch thing!
I won't even turn...
Dude, if I ruin the food, Still, it's for God, man. That is my test for the week.
And it's about detaching oneself from the physical world.
So, there's 39 things that you can't do on the Sabbath.
The law goes like this.
Because God says you can't...
There's two types of Shabbos.
The first time God came with the Luchot HaBrit, the tablets, there's one form of Shabbos.
It says, On the second time it says, shamor v'zachor. The first time it says, observe and guard the Sabbath.
The second time it says, guard and observe the Sabbath.
Because in between we've created the golden calf and God's like, no, no, I've got to switch this.
Shabbos, you've got to... In order to observe it, you have to guard it.
In order to see what happens, the zakhor, in order to observe it and to bear witness to what's actually taking place on the Sabbath, you have to leave the dimensionality of physical space.
So immediately after the Torah gives the laws, it says don't break the Sabbath, don't light a fire on the Sabbath, it goes into expounding the It says, do not do any work on the Sabbath.
It says the 39 things that are done to build the tabernacle, the mishkan. And so there's cutting, there's sewing, there's smearing, there's dyeing.
So these are the 39.
So that's what the Torah goes as far as saying.
So when it's talked, because it uses the word avodah.
Lom ta se avodah.
So what is avodah?
It doesn't mean work.
Work, like a job, is such a low level of understanding Biblical Hebrew.
Avodah, immediately after the Torah lists avodah, 39 different avodah, malachas, different things that you could do that are physical, cutting, changing, lighting a fire.
So the light switch is actually completing, because you're not allowed to complete anything on the Sabbath day.
So you're completing a circuit.
But I love it, dude.
Once you detach, and listen, this might not be for you, and that's okay.
But once you detach...
That's when you float up.
I have spiritual elevation, so I love it.
The more I can go deep into it, the more laws I learn about what to do and what not to do.
For example, when you're cutting, let's say you have a carrot.
You've got the stem of the carrot and you've got the body.
You're mucking a salad.
You can't rip off the stem of the carrot.
Because on the Sabbath, you're not allowed to separate bad from good, but you can separate good from bad.
So if you hold the stem and then pull the carrot off of the stem, but you can't pull the stem off of the carrot.
So I actually respect how far a lot of Jews go.
But with me, I keep, because I view it as, I view it as like putting a fence around the Torah.
Like keeping yourself so far from breaking the Sabbath that you know you're not going to break it.
Because if you're not turning a light switch on and off, you're not about to break the Sabbath.
It's just common sense.
And I believe that's what Jesus does in his Sermon on the Mount when he makes the law more strict.
I think he's just pitting a fence around the Torah.
And of course, other Christians do it some other way, but whatever they're talking about.
But he's pitting the fence around the Torah, making it more strict to keep you so far from breaking it, breaking that commandment, you know you're not going to break it. Me, like I said, the furthest I go, there's no fire in your dwelling place, so I do not cook on Shabbat.
Even that's debated. But I definitely don't work or make nobody else work.
You make your food all before Shabbat for the whole Sabbath?
Yes, or we have bread and turkey.
You know what I'm saying? That's cold. That's what you're supposed to do.
That's such a beautiful thing.
Yeah, so that's what we do.
But sometimes we have to go on walks on Sabbath.
I don't even have the light bulb in my refrigerator.
So I can open the refrigerator and the light won't turn on?
Oh, well, some refrigerators got Sabbath mode on them.
You always got that on there? I know!
Is that not a revelation that we're almost at the times of the Messiah that major companies put Sabbath mode on their ovens and their refrigerators?
It blows my mind that these massive companies become so sensitive to these type of features.
Yeah, a lot of them got Sabbath mode.
They're not mine, though. I love the Sabbath, man.
I'll tell you. Me too.
I love it. In the observance of the Sabbath, you experience something called arechut hayamim, the expansion of time, where you will have 24 hours on the clock, but I'm telling you, those 24 hours could feel like 72 hours more.
It's like... Sabbath is about the expansiveness of time because it's about the detachment from the physical, which is nature and astrology and the stars and the seventh day and getting out of the realm of all that.
So I love it, man. Standing invitation.
You come for Shabbos, I'll have a real America first Shabbaton.
We'll do a... Bet!
Bet we can do it.
Yeah, for sure.
For sure. Well, I want to thank you for coming out today, man.
I had a lot of fun. We're going to have to do this again because you got so much wisdom.
And as an artist, you're truly, truly next level.
And I learned a lot more about you today that I didn't know before.
Like making art in your dreams.
That is just... Oh, yeah.
Lamala Manateva, Above the Realm of Nature.
That happened more than one time.
But I try not to harp on it because then I'll think about it and like, man, I need it to happen again.
So I just try not to ever...
One thing with music, I try not to ever force it.
If it comes, it comes.
If it doesn't, it doesn't.
You're like that guy, Ralph, from, you know, on the piano from.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's my favorite guy on the Muppets.
Yeah.
And he's like, oh, this is Kermit the Frog.
Hey, this is getting a little boring in here.
And then Rolf is like... He's the man.
He's got music coming through him.
But yeah, life is good and it's better with music.
So thank you for all the production that you do, especially for our movement, you know, because it makes this stuff cool.
You probably saved so many lives with the kids, you know, who would rather listen to you and have their parents listen to you.
You know, the kids are going to listen to rap no matter what.
And honestly, you're very talented.
Thank you. Talented music or talented degenerate music?
You could choose. Yeah, I mean...
Parents choose wisely.
I was popular where I'm from when I made degenerate music and I saw the influence I had over people then and kids then.
We used to perform degenerate music at middle school.
There's videos of me doing it in my rap group and they're going crazy.
They love it. And I know how music influences people.
So I'd just rather use my talents for...
Have you ever heard of Nassim Black?
Yeah. I've taught him before.
Oh, that would be a great mashup.
I think he's so talented.
Yeah, I think he's pretty good.
He made this new song called Africa Bounce, which is like pulling in all the different parts of him into one song.
And it's like a Jewish song, but it's like really tribal.
And really, it's just one of the most beautiful pieces of art I think I've ever seen.
You gotta hear that song.
He's a very talented artist, too.
Yes, sir. Well, God bless you, man.
God bless America and God bless the craft.
I thank you very much for coming out today.
This was live streamed.
We have comments, but I'm such a technical illiterate that I don't know how to pull them up right now and ask those questions.
And then this will be on Band.Video.
Also, following the interview, I'm going to edit it up, chop it up, put in some graphics, and it will be on Band.
And I want to thank Bryson for coming.
I want to thank our guests for showing up every single week.
And all the people who just joined the Adam King Show.
I am so grateful to all of you because this is a labor of love for me.
I do this out of my own pocket.
I don't make money from this. I just do it to do it because it's like you, Bryson.
It's like art is art.
It's in you. You got to get it out.
When people join the team and they are making the clips and pushing the art out, I really thank you all from the bottom of my heart.
I'm making art for you guys at this point.
Thank you, guys. I want to say God bless and God bless God because God deserves a blessing too.
And praise be...
Oh, I want to say one more thing, Bryson.
I want to say it to you, because I want to make this point with all Christians.
And, you know, like, the Jewish Messiah and the Christian Messiah, there's something very special about both cultures.
Because we're both Messianic cultures.
We believe a Messiah is coming.
And I just want to say, for the rest of the people out there, It doesn't matter who the Messiah is.
When the Messiah comes, every knee will bow and every tongue will profess.
The world is divided into two parts.
You either believe in the Messiah or you don't believe in the Messiah.
And Bryson, you clearly believe in the Messiah, which is so breathtaking.
So I'm going to close on that because we do this for the Messiah.
You want to say any last words to everybody before we go out?
You take the last words.
You take the last words. Listen, God bless everybody.
Everything I do is for God and for His Son, and that's just what I do.
A lot of people don't like that I do.
A lot of people get angry at me. I was arguing with somebody today, mad at how I handled a specific situation.
I got to tell everybody, I will burn any breeze there is to burn when it comes to God and His words.
That's just what I have to say.
Well, that's the truth.
Bryson, thank you.
America, thank you. Band.video, Infowars, thank you.
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