Bryson Gray Talks Roe v Wade, Confronting LGBTQ Evil, & Upcoming New Music! | JustInformed Talk #005
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to another episode of Just Informed Talk.
My name is Craig and I'm blessed to be here with a good friend of mine.
He's an amazing artist, a great Christian man who's been standing for the faith for quite some time now and doing some inspirational work that everybody should be following if you're not already.
But I'm blessed to be here with a good friend of mine, Bryson Gray.
Why don't you say hi to the audience, Bryson?
How are you doing?
Thanks for having me on.
Absolutely, sir.
It's a pleasure to have you here with us.
Now, if you guys don't know Bryson's work, I'll let him kind of explain it, but I'll give you my brief take on it, why I want him to come on the show and how I kind of found him a while ago.
A few years back, I was looking for good music.
I've always had it in my mind that there would be a day where an artist would be able to do not only good Christian music, and there are great Christian artists, don't get me wrong, but good conservative political music as well.
In a rap form.
And he does more than rap too because his music is really diverse and it's getting more diverse with every song it seems like.
His range is getting wider and wider.
His music's been an inspiration to me.
It's something that you guys may know I've lost a lot of weight lately.
Bumping his music in the gym while I'm working out, it gets you pumped up.
It's powerful.
But he's an amazing Christian, conservative rap artist, musical talent, whatever you want to call it.
The kid...
I should say he's probably a little younger than me, but he is amazing.
He hasn't even reached his potential near it yet.
He has so much more to go, I believe.
So let me just introduce you, Bryson, with that.
I mean, that's the best I can do as far as an introduction goes because I'm a big fan, as you can tell.
But let me let you tell the audience about your music, how you started, and what you try to do as an artist.
Well, I've been making music since I've been alive or since I've been aware that I was alive.
I've been rapping.
I started actually producing music at 9, even though I've been slacking and sort of lazy on producing lately.
Um, but yeah, man, I used to make degenerate music, worldly music.
I mean, I never read about gangbanging and stuff like that, but, um, I just read about getting drunk, um, uh, promiscuous activities.
Um, a lot of that, man.
And then, um, what's funny is I always had God in my music, though.
Like, my, on the way, I just got back to Tennessee last night and my dad was driving.
He was playing some of my old music.
And I would talk about God a lot.
It was just, you know, lukewarm talking about it.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, lukewarm type stuff, man.
Cursing and all that.
But, of course, I grew my faith.
And then...
I woke up politically because in the black community, we know nothing about politics.
All we know is if you're black, you have to be a Democrat.
If you're white and rich, then you have to be a Republican.
And that's how we was raised.
That's how most people I grew up around was raised.
And then I started doing research for myself and realized something very simple.
My faith guides me everywhere.
I was arguing with the LGBT community on Twitter in 2013 because You know, it's just about realizing where your beliefs actually align.
That's with conservatism.
Two and a half years ago, I would have said Republican, but I've changed my party affiliation from Republican in 2020.
But it aligns with conservatism.
Then I started making music that represents both, and I started making solely that because my life turned into that.
So I left, I stopped going to clubs, I stopped getting drunk, so I It was weird to rap about that, so, you know.
Yeah, absolutely.
You know what's amazing about your story and how you've presented it through your music is that you get that sense.
Now, when you said something earlier, it struck a chord with me.
One of the first songs I heard you do that I thought was one of the best still is to this day.
I mean, your music's amazing across the board, but one of your best, in my opinion, is Black Knot Democrat.
That's the first one.
And it spoke to my heart, you know, just because, you know, I felt your passion for, you know, wanting to stand up for your beliefs.
Tell us what that was like to make that song.
That was, like you said, one of your first kind of songs as you transitioned.
That was the first.
Okay, so the first that you transitioned from where you were to where you wanted to be at that point.
Well, so what's funny is, when I started saying my beliefs on...
On Facebook, I was still making the music I was making.
So like in 2017, I had a song on the radio called Slow Down.
I saw on the radio where I'm from.
It was real popular.
Oh, it was in 2016.
Honestly, I forgot.
It was one of them.
During this time, I was talking about my political beliefs on Facebook and all the radio station people followed me.
I started calling drama with that.
I started losing friends.
I kept doing it.
I just kept talking about political beliefs.
I've never been a quiet person that don't say what I believe anyway.
When I started researching, I started saying what I believed in.
And it started sort of affecting my music career in a negative way.
Because during this time, I mean, I was popular making EDM music and I had a song called Slow Down under my rap moniker on the radio.
But I had just turned down doing an EDM gig in Paris because it was a pride gig.
It was like an LGBT thing.
So I had turned it down.
My management had sort of stopped working with me there.
And then the radio station in North Carolina started getting irritated with me because of the politics.
And it just wasn't okay.
So my parents, being my parents, they thought I was throwing away my music career for nothing.
They said, this is politics.
It doesn't mean anything.
So why are you...
Losing relationships over this.
But me, I'm not the fake until I make a type of person.
I've never been that type of person.
So I said, I'm going to do whatever.
And then my mother, not in the tone I'm saying, it wasn't soft.
It was very angrily.
But my mother said, you can't be...
I say this story every time.
I always remember this phone call, though.
She said, you cannot be a political pundit and a musician at the same time.
And I got so irritated.
I went home, made Black Knight Democrat.
And here we are.
Wow.
And you know, it's a powerful song.
And it's one of those things where you listen to the words and you kind of go with it.
And you're like, man, this is really deep because you can tell you were struggling at that time to kind of feel yourself out and be like, all right, I don't want to do what they say I need to do.
And I love the animation in that video.
video.
I think it's really kind of cool how that you're walking and you're seeing these different things happening as you're going through this evolution almost of thought.
And so that's powerful.
So let me ask you this, and we will get in and touch on the abortion ruling today.
I do want to get to that, but I kind of want to get to know you, kind of your history and who you are as a person.
So when I listen to your songs, I hear a lot of scripture, and that's really one of the things that I think is like sorely missing in all music is that people don't look chapter and verses.
There's even a song you wrote called Chapter and Verse, which is great.
And it's awesome because it's literally just you going through chapter and verse, scripture, scripture, scripture.
Were you raised very Christian?
It seems like your parents are really good.
Your parents are even in some of your videos.
They seem like they raised you with a really strong Christian upbringing.
How did that come to be for you as far as like, how did you get into the Bible?
When did you start really taking it seriously and diving deep into it?
Was it a young age?
Were you a little older?
Because I'm always curious to find that out about people.
So how did that work for you?
So I grew up early years going to church consistently with my grandmother, but I My parents pretty much said, whatever, and we had stopped going to church.
So I didn't necessarily grow up.
And a lot of people assume, because when they hear me talk about stuff, that I grew up in a super-biblical Christian household.
But I really didn't.
I mean, my parents were Christians.
Everybody said they were Christians, but it's not like I was in the Bible all the time or any of that.
I started getting into the Bible.
I want to say...
18, 19, 20.
One of those three ages is when I started getting into it heavy.
And when I started getting into the Bible heavy, I started just changing my life.
And then I actually got into an argument with the pastor at the church I went to at a banquet.
Because he said something, and I corrected him.
And I said, that isn't in the Bible.
And I was doing this When I was young, like 19, 20, you know what I'm saying?
But it's hilarious because I was so, I was such a hypocrite during that time.
You know, say something to him about something not being in the Bible, then I'll leave the church and then go take 10 shots of vodka.
You know what I'm saying?
So it was kind of a, it was hypocritical, but I've been a Bible thumper for like 11 years.
You know, it was just more lukewarm at first, and you could easily call me out for something.
Well, it's funny, because I know how old you are, because I just watched your Happy video, and it looked like that was filmed on your, what, 31st birthday, I'm assuming?
Yeah, it was filmed like a few days before, but yeah.
That's pretty cool.
And we're going to talk about that one too.
There's so many.
I mean, like, I really have all your songs kind of lined up here so that we can talk about each one because I really want to hear the inspiration behind them.
The ones that at least, you know, as a fan, I'm like, I kind of cherry pick some of the ones I really like.
But they're also important to our fans and topics that are going on in the world today.
So let me, let's kind of, so it seems like you were, you were in your 19, 20, 21 age history.
18, 19, 20 age when you got really strong in your faith.
But then, like you said, you were kind of living still outside the faith.
And so how long after that moment, like you said, when you were going out still clubbing and partying, how old would you say when you kind of got the whole record, the deal thing with the radio and turned down the deal in Paris?
When was that?
And then was that around 2016, right?
Yeah, that was around 2016 because I had a song.
What's funny is I used to drink so much vodka.
My name was officially King Vodka.
I still have about 20,000 monthly listeners on Spotify under that name.
I haven't released anything since like 2017.
So I had a song under that name that went crazy viral.
On Vine and Musical.ly.
Well, viral for that time, now viral means something different.
Like, right now, Spotify has like 7 million streams.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, to this date, this is still like, outside of Trump as the president, this is still my most streamed song ever that I've ever made in my life.
You know what I'm saying?
And, um...
So, yeah.
That's when I was making that movie.
That was 2016.
Then I had a song on the radio.
Let me actually look real quick.
It's called Slow Down.
I'm pretty sure it was...
I think it was 2017.
Because I had felt like I was the...
I thought I was high stuff, man.
Yeah, 2017.
I thought I was high stuff because I had just went into a – I had basically quit rap for like three years.
Not three, like two years.
And strictly did EDM because I was so obsessed with doing EDM music.
And then I was like, ah, I feel like rapping again.
And then a song I made ended up on radio.
I thought I was just like the best thing ever.
But you were at that age too where it's like when you're younger still, it's always easy to fill yourself up, right, a little.
Yeah, but what's funny is, so here's the thing.
The first thing I did when I started reading the Bible, because I didn't, like, start reading it from beginning to end.
I was just like...
Stuff that caught my eye.
And the first thing I did was become celibate.
I didn't stop drinking first.
I didn't let go of rap music first.
The first thing I did was stop having sex.
Because I feel like I'm a very strong-minded guy.
So I picked the hardest thing for most people and say, I'm done with that.
And the day I said I was done with it, I just never had sex again.
Wow.
Yeah.
And it's been like, I said like, 10, 11 years.
Something like that.
I lost count.
It's been a very long time.
And I became celibate.
And I kept reading the Bible.
When I became celibate, mind you, I was still getting drunk.
But I got so cocky.
When it comes to being a Bible-believing person, I used to Bible-thump.
I used to overdo it.
If I saw anybody doing anything, I had Bible-thumping.
Now, mind you, I was cursing as I was Bible-thumping.
I said, you better read this mother-effing verse and this and this and this.
I'll tell you, I was so cocky in it as I was being a hypocrite because I thought because I'm doing one thing better than most, that meant I was, you know...
Hot stuff when it comes to the Bible, but in reality, it's more than just one thing.
It's growth.
You start with baby food, and then you work your way up to the hard food.
What do you think was the catalyst that spurred that change forward?
Was it your success in your career?
Do you think that made you kind of...
Start looking at yourself more introspectively and changing things little by little, piece by piece?
Or was it a combination of that with, obviously, a combination of that with your belief and the reading the Bible, the scripture that you were finding?
What do you think, really, was it all that?
What do you think?
It was actually me questioning God.
So, I had started watching Alex Jones.
And I started getting deep into this Illuminati stuff.
And by the way, this was while I was still a Democrat.
You know what I'm saying?
I became an independent right after this.
But...
You know, I was still a Democrat, and I was into all this stuff, and I was like, everything is to control everybody.
And I started, you know, adopting this belief so that religion was to control you.
And I never became a full-out atheist.
I was asking questions.
And what's funny is we had a family reunion to where our family, like, originated, like, literally, where they were slaves at.
And there was, like, fruit trees.
And I'm like, bruh, Fruit grow from trees without no human intervention.
Of course that sounds normal because we see it every day and something we're just used to.
But literally think about that for a minute.
Things you can eat grow from a tree.
The tree isn't a big apple.
It's a tree like I can go outside and see a regular tree.
But it grows this specific fruit.
That is weird as crap.
And then, I don't know if you know this, but if you do research on trees, trees talk to each other.
Trees can talk to each other.
Trees are living things.
They are alive.
And when I thought about that, I said...
There has to be a designer.
Nothing else makes sense.
This is what I think about basics, how our systems work.
I mean, you have two different totally colors, two different heights, everything, but our systems work the same.
We need food to survive.
We need water to survive.
We have to use the bathroom.
You know what I'm saying?
These things is in every human period, and our body works that way.
Our body literally heals itself.
That's why if you cut your hand or something like that, I probably got cut right there before.
You can't tell, though, because The skin grew back and it healed itself.
These simple things, in my mind at this moment, I was already, there's a desire.
Nobody can convince me otherwise.
So then, of course, naturally, I started reading the Bible.
I said, let's see.
Let's see.
In the Bible...
It was just so rich with stuff that's like, even, you know, a lot of Christians don't like this, but even when the Bible tells you not to eat pork, right?
There wasn't no scientists and stuff back then.
I mean, there were probably scientists that were called scientists during the time, but there wasn't no, like, we didn't have, they didn't have everything we have now.
How did they know pork wasn't good for you?
Because did you know, if you look it up right now, pork is terrible for you.
Pigs are literally trash cans.
They are literal animal trash cans.
I agree.
I don't eat pork.
I'm a tree.
Yeah, their digestive system, they don't have a real digestive system at all.
They eat anything.
Pork is atrocious for our bodies.
How did they know that?
Thousands of years ago!
That's insane!
I mean, there's example after example in the Bible, like you said, where there are just things that shock you, I think, and for me especially.
You know, when I started going back, I was raised Christian, and I learned, I was in, you know, Lutheran school when I was a young child, then I kind of left the faith through high school and college, but then I came back as an older adult, you know, when I was in my mid-20s, I had kind of a crisis of faith where I was like, Man, I'm not living the life I need to live for you, God.
Show me the way.
I was wandering through the desert, bro, praying.
I was literally going on these long 10-mile hikes, and I was praying the whole time in the middle of the desert in New Mexico.
And it was something that was powerful where God kind of woke me up.
He spoke to me basically in a way that was like, just devote your life to me and don't expect anything.
And as soon as I did that, it was like...
I got all of the things that I thought I never would have in my life.
You know, I was able to start a family, have all this powerful success that came with me, basically humbling myself before God and being like, alright, I don't have any control over this.
You have all control.
And I think that That actually is what speaks to the precious nature of life in and of itself, and the Bible talks about that as well.
I just did Psalm 139 today for the abortion ruling on Roe v.
Wade.
But that's powerful, man.
To hear your story in that you had these realizations over time that kind of built little by little, I feel like I'm in the same boat.
That's how it went for me.
Where it wasn't all at once, it was like, I made one realization, then another realization, and then they've just compounded to the point where now I'm so...
I've been shown so many times that He does miracles, that He can change your life, that I just want to share that with other people.
It's like a gift that once you're given, you're like...
Well, wait, I'm not supposed to just hold on to this.
My whole point in life is to put this into the world and help others with it.
So I appreciate your story in that sense.
So when you were growing up and you were, like, getting this, you know, maturing spiritually in that sense, how did you go from that to being, you know, an incredibly successful musical artist?
I mean, obviously, I'd say, I don't want to put words in your mouth, you probably attribute that all to God, right?
Period, because...
Like I said, I thought I was doing something.
You know, getting these paid shows locally.
You know, I wasn't content with being like a local star.
But I felt like, you know what I'm saying, I did feel like sort of a big shot a little bit.
You know what I'm saying?
And it's crazy because right on the brink of me about to lose all of that.
Well, I mean, I did lose it.
I lost all my connections.
I got kicked out the radio station.
There's a lot of crazy stuff happening in between.
Me going against...
The popular thing, just to follow God and my belief systems, now I'm more popular than I have ever been.
I may only have one song that did better than one of my old ones, but my name, my people know, appreciate me, and it's for me.
Me and my cousin had a bad relationship because he had sort of blackballed me.
Because he introduced me to somebody and he wanted me to fake it until I make it, answer the questions how, you know, the guy wanted me to answer them.
And I said, I can't do that.
Like, you're either going to rock with me for me or don't rock with me at all.
And I've always been that type of person.
And, you know, he literally said I wasn't going to make it like that.
He literally told me that.
And my mama didn't say that, but she was very upset that I was, like, throwing away my secular music career, you know, for politics, what she called it.
But it's like, look, I'm literally...
I've never had 250,000 followers.
I mean, I used...
Or whatever I got.
I used to be hype...
Because I got a few Worldstar Vine compilations.
So I was sort of popular on Vine.
But never, like, have this many people that appreciate me for the fullness of me.
Like, a lot of people are still confused.
Like, not a lot, but some are still confused.
They just like me for a song here and there.
They don't really know me.
But a lot of people that support me, they know what I believe.
They know what I'm about.
They watch my livestream.
They listen to the lyrics in my albums.
And even if it's just a couple thousand of those people, this is, like, this is just a pure blessing.
It is amazing because one of the things I admire the most about your work and how you present yourself into the world and how I see you when you're not in front of a camera, because we've hung out a few times before, is that you're the same person That I see in the music video that I see on the live stream is the same person I see in real life when I have a conversation where you're not afraid to speak your mind at any time, but you're not just speaking your mind to glorify yourself.
You're not just doing it to say, oh, I'm this, I'm that, I'm so cool.
It's to God be the glory.
You're like, I'm not going to sacrifice who I am to please the crowd or to please even just a one-on-one conversation.
For instance...
Funny story.
I'll tell my audience this story real quick.
You want to know the kind of man of conviction that Bryson Gray is?
Here's a great story.
We're at the ball for this event over in AmFest West, and Chadwick Moore is a very prominent gay conservative whatever.
I don't even know what he really does.
He's like a talk show or podcast or something.
And he was up there basically...
The craziest part of all this was I had to watch it on YouTube afterward, bro, because at that exact moment that you did that whole exchange, I had actually went out to pray with my wife because she was going to bed, and I was at the thing still, and she was in a different...
She was still at home, and I was there.
So I went on the phone.
I'm in the hallway praying with her, and I came back, and I missed the whole thing.
I had no idea what happened until...
Days afterward when somebody showed me the clip on YouTube, I was like, I missed that!
For some reason, God didn't want me in the room at that moment.
That's fine.
But I literally watched it, and it was basically, you stood up and confronted him without fear, without hesitation, without shame, because you were unashamed in that moment of your faith, and you weren't going to allow somebody to desecrate the word in a way that I think...
We both could maybe have seen that being what he was trying to do.
Could you tell us what happened?
Why you stood up?
Why you said what you said to Chadwick?
Because I think this is a very important point for a lot of people out there to know.
Stand up for your faith always.
Make sure that you don't back down and shy away from it.
Take example from others who do this.
In the post-edit, right now I'll throw in the clip so you can watch it, but I'm not- I'm not- We're going to have a conversation right now.
What's up, babe?
I got my camera ready.
Sure!
Do you want to take over?
Let me take over.
Not now.
Everybody in Christ, you can see the Bible.
We are all sinners.
We are all sinners.
We have all sinned.
We have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
We all see it.
We all see it.
That first time, that's the first time.
I love you.
We love you.
We love you.
I respect you right now.
I can't right now.
I respect you.
I'm not in the least father of my life.
In fact, I respect this way.
The reason why I respect and love and appreciate that sort of reaction and commentary and perspective makes me more aligned with the right Republican Party.
I respect your opinion and your beliefs.
It's not an opinion.
It's not the idea.
It's the way I fucking do.
So what are you going to do about it?
- Is he saying something like abomination?
- According to who?
- According to the Bible.
- Well, I've been abominated many times.
- That's not what I actually-- - Let me play fucking work on this.
- This name is actually, and it's really nice.
- Go to the Bible, bro.
- Help! - Anyway, anyway, I'm gonna cut this short.
I'm not in the mood to be on stage, really, at the moment, I've been dressing all day at the pool.
But I absolutely respect and appreciate that man's opinion.
Absolutely, and you know what, I love him.
- Why don't you call him an opinion where it's written in the scripture.
And I quote a lot about this.
They are demonic and evil.
That man, I think, probably has a very good heart and soul.
I don't hate him.
I don't think he hates me.
I mean, if he's a Christian, he absolutely, you know, shouldn't hate me.
Well, good for you.
I do say that.
Bryson, please tell the audience, you know, what that moment was like for you as a Christian, because I know it's one of many moments, and I think that is kind of, though, indicative of the Bryson I know, a man who's not afraid to share his faith openly and to call out sin where he sees it.
So, in that situation...
Before that, you know, the owners of EpFest, which I like them, they probably hate me now, but, you know, they had tried to get me to perform at an event that was a specific event hosted by the law cap Republicans, and I literally just said no, so I'm not.
If anybody don't know what a law cap Republicans is listening, they're just gay people that identify as Republicans.
And they create a group for themselves.
You know, they always have to have their own clique.
And they call themselves the Law Cabin Republicans.
I mean, it's a gay name, just outright.
I never looked in the research list, but is the idea of the Law Cabin Republicans that Abraham Lincoln was gay or something?
Is that the whole premise?
I have no idea.
I don't even know the history on them.
I think I heard that theory before.
So, fun fact, when we're at this ball, I don't know who's on the list about to speak.
I don't know anything.
I thought I was performing because my name was a performance thing.
But then they said I wasn't performing.
I'm like, okay, I'm confused.
So we were just, you know, sitting there.
And, you know, a gay guy came out and they introduced him as a law cab Republican guy.
And I was like, oh lord.
But I had zero plans of saying something.
Actually, to be honest, the dude, you could tell he cut on his gay voice extra when he started talking.
So me and my whole table, we were actually just cracking jokes and laughing the whole time, if I'm being very honest.
So I had no intentions of actually saying anything.
Matter of fact, Anomaly was joking about me going on stage, and I'm like, I'm not even that type of guy.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm not like...
To me, that just don't make no sense.
Unless he does something crazy, I'm not going to even say anything.
I'm just going to sit here and laugh at him.
So he bragged about being gay, about two minutes, super gay voice, and we're just over there dying laughing.
I'm not offended, we're literally laughing.
And then after all of that bragging about being gay, the LGBT Trump supporters, my man literally said he was a Christian on stage.
And within a split second, I didn't overly think about it.
It was just...
No, you're not.
That's all I said.
I said, no, you're not.
Because what you're not going to do is literally, you've already stood up there and pictured yourself a part of the LGBT community.
Which means, as soon as you picture yourself a part of that, not only are you gay, you're not even saying you're struggling.
You're saying, this is just it for me.
And I don't know about everybody else, but in my Bible, in Romans 1, that's called a reprobate.
At the end of Romans 1, not only does it say...
Romans 1, 26-28.
Not only does it say that these people are worthy of death in Romans 1, but at the end, the last two verses of Romans 1 also tells you that if you even support this behavior, you're also worthy of death.
So...
And him just pinning that on Christ didn't sit right with me.
So I just said something.
All I was going to say was, no, you're not.
He could have ignored me and nothing else would have happened.
There would have been no video and everybody would have been chilling.
A few people might have talked about it afterwards.
But he decided to invite me on stage.
And when he invited me on stage, that was his decision.
The owners of AmpFest, his decision to invite me on stage.
Yeah, dude.
It was crazy.
Then the rest happened.
You saw it.
No, I mean, and look, the funny thing was I had to watch it post, you know, after it all happened and everybody kind of told me about it.
And I do know very close with the people who run AmFest.
And they were a little shook, but I think they'll get over it.
I think that, you know, the fact of the matter is that you cannot expect us as Christians to be silent when we see that happening, especially if we have a chance to call it out, we will.
I've found a lot of confidence, thanks be to God, through your work a lot, to me actually, to be more open about, you know, talking to people in a way that's not, I wouldn't say confrontational, because I'm not looking for a fight, but that is unashamed.
So I'm not ashamed of my faith.
I believe it.
I'm going to tell you how I feel, and if you don't like it, I'm sorry.
That's where we're at.
And that's one of the things that your music, I think, is so good at doing as far as giving confidence to other Christians out there to be strong in their faith, but more overly, to be well-versed in the Scripture and to have...
Confidence in your own ability to understand the scripture and then bring it to the world at large.
I think that's amazing, dude.
And let's start going through a few of your songs.
But before we do that, I want to tell everybody out there that today is a big day.
If you don't know, we're recording this interview on the same day that the Roe v.
Wade decision has come out and the Supreme Court has overturned it.
It seems like there's going to be riots and there's going to be violence and the leftists are crying and losing their minds.
A couple questions for you, Bryson.
The first is this.
I'll give you two questions and then I'll let you answer.
The first question is, what's your take on the Roe v.
Wade overturn?
What's your feeling on how that came about and what you think that's going to lead to and how that's going to affect society at large?
And second, when can we expect the next Bryson Gray song to come out about the Roe v.
Wade getting overturned?
Although I know you've done other songs about Roe v.
Wade and I'm not saying, but when are we going to expect that song or is that already in the works?
So, as far as the actual decision, I'm so happy it's not just a draft number, it is real, and that was up to the states.
Now, honestly, it should be banned outright as murder is, but there was like, I think, at least 10 states with a trigger clause in their abortion laws, meaning if Robeau got overturned, they would automatically make abortion illegal in their state, which is awesome.
But I want that in all 50 states.
It probably won't be all 50, but I think we can get A good 30 to 35 states to make it illegal, and that'd be just such a blessing.
So I love it, obviously.
This is an actual step in the right direction.
This is an actual win, not a fake Republican win.
Oh, some writers won an election.
That's a win for us.
No, it isn't.
This is actually a win.
As far as music, I was working on one earlier.
I didn't know if I liked it, so I stopped working on it.
And, you know, I had to redo it.
When I do stuff like that, I had to just redo a whole thought process in my head.
So we may get a song, we may not, but I do have multiple songs about abortion and about Roe v.
Wade.
Yeah, exactly.
So I kind of wanted to preface that by saying, well, it would be funny to have a song about that because it's current event type stuff.
And you're always so spot on with the current event songs.
You're always hitting topics as they're hitting the news, which I think is so incredible because that speaks to your ability to think on your feet in a way that...
It shows that it's not just all a bunch of pre-written stuff that you're drawing off of, even though you write your own stuff, but it's like you can have these ideas come just when the stuff happens in the world, and I think that's a powerful tool for you to have.
That's one of the reasons why I think your work's so successful and so good.
But let's talk about a few of your songs, right?
I guess we'll talk about, since we're in, you know, previously we were talking about LGBTQ and all that stuff, which I've told you before, I call it the suicide cult.
You know, I think it's a metastasizing cancer in our society.
I think it's an abomination against God, and I think that the transgender stuff where they mutilate children and the chemical castration and the double mastectomy, I think that stuff's just awful.
But you had a song that you just did.
Now it's still up over on YouTube.
It's an amazing song.
Really powerful.
Scripture, verses, everything.
Called Pride Month.
But it seems as though you've hit a hiccup with your friends over at Spotify.
Tell us what they've done to that song and What you've heard up to this point about that decision to basically censor you on that platform.
Why do you think they did it?
And has anybody reached out to you?
Have you gotten any answers?
What do you think?
What's going on with that?
Um, I haven't received the message back for them yet, but I already know what it is.
It's the same thing for Safe Space.
It's hate speech or violence against particular groups, whatever it is, which is disgusting.
And, you know, what's more disgusting is not only that that song got banned on Spotify, There's a fact that not many mainstream conservative news outlets has covered it because getting a song banned on Spotify for hate speech literally doesn't happen.
Listen to me closely, and I'm not exaggerating.
I'm not trying to play the victim.
I'm not trying to hype myself up.
This is just a literal fact.
Look it up.
Show me one artist in this country that has had music banned on Spotify without it getting picked back on.
Never happened.
Our Kelly Music is still on Spotify.
Everybody's music is still on Spotify.
This does not happen.
This is the largest music streaming outlet in the world.
And they are banning songs because of hate speech.
That's like...
Unheard of.
Just to say this, though, think about this.
Imagine, if you were Eminem and you made a song about killing gay people, like he has in the past, right?
He said these things openly.
That's still up.
So it's amazing how he can say that, but then you can't say what you say.
I mean, does that make sense at all?
So, I did a video about this.
I saw it, yeah.
Eminem's most popular song, one of his most popular songs, Rap Guy, he literally said he will break a chair over the head of British cigarettes.
You can say it here, man.
You can say it here.
Oh, okay, awesome.
He said he will break a chair over the head of some faggots.
That's what Eminem said in his song.
There you go.
I mean, those are his words.
We're just quoting them.
His words.
That's actual violence against people.
I didn't even say the word faggot, and I say it in songs, but I didn't say it in that song, and that song got banned.
So...
Is it an orchestrated attack?
Because during that same week, my Facebook got hacked and I got suspended on YouTube.
During the same week.
And it's not the first time I've been hacked.
My merch site got hacked.
Then we had to literally create an entirely new different name for my website.
So...
Most band rapper in the country for a reason.
I'm telling you, man.
This guy, he's doing what we all should be doing, which is standing up to this psychosis and standing firmly against it.
The funny thing is when we say the faggot, we're not saying that as a hate speech to our name.
We're just quoting what Eminem said to be like, hey, we don't understand why he says these awful things.
We say things that He says things that aren't even close to it, and he's being banned and persecuted.
But we all know why.
It's because we're Christian, and we represent a movement in this country that's growing exponentially and getting larger every day, and they're terrified of it, which is why they have all these smears against Christian nationalism, and they say it's the worst thing to ever happen.
Funny, so there's so many songs here.
So we did Pride Month.
That was one of my favorites recently.
Thank you.
One of my absolute, a banger, and I don't know if it's a sleeper or not, but it is so amazing, is this new song you just did called Happy.
It is stuck in my head.
I cannot stop singing it to myself when I'm walking around the house.
It's because there's something about that song that really truly embodies how they see...
How I think we need to reaffirm ourselves in that we are happy and they're trying to hate us for that happiness.
And so tell me about that song, how it came to be.
Where did the inspiration come from?
And I also want to talk to you after that about the music video because it's a great music video if you haven't seen it.
I'll leave links to everything.
You guys are going to go check out his music.
But tell us about the song Happy, the inspiration, and where that came from for you.
It's similar to Pride Month in the fact that I'm trying to reclaim things.
So if you watch the Pride Month video, for one, I view it as fight battle.
The reason I named it Pride Month, because if you know that the LGBT, they like to take things and claim it as theirs.
So I said, okay.
I'm going to make a Pride Month diss track.
Call it Pride Month.
So now you Google Pride Month.
This is what I was hoping.
When you think about Pride Month, you're thinking about my song, talking about the Bible.
And with happy, it's very similar.
Happy, if you don't know, is the definition of gay.
Gay is supposed to mean happy.
And they have totally taken that word, but they can have it.
But it's just crazy how we let them just attach themselves to words.
And, you know, the reason the song was so important, because I'm explaining to you, first of all, the song's called Happy, which is the definition of the game, but the song is pretty much telling you, like, explaining to you, like, these people are not really happy.
They're actually angry people that are upset that you are happy.
The song may seem simple on surface, but the actual point of the song is to get that point across.
I haven't done a pop song.
I have I Am At The Press on the album, but I wanted to do another pop song You know what I'm saying?
Some humor to it.
That's sort of like...
That got that vibe to it.
I like making pop music too, so...
Can you share some of the lyrics?
I can read your mind.
I can...
You know what I mean?
I can read your mind.
I should be banned on everything.
I'm a hateful bigot and everything I say is so mean.
You should believe in all women cause any girl is a queen.
Tell me something I don't know.
So I also was funny about the video.
Yeah, let's talk about the video cause that's so crazy.
Let me ask you something.
Am I crazy or did I see Nick Fuentes in there?
It was definitely in the video.
I love it.
Yeah, so the video was shot by Grace Cinema, which is me and my little sister.
She shoots it.
I pretty much direct it.
The point of the video is everything I said about the song.
The point of the video was to show you how what they do find joy, though, is ruining the lives of other people.
And so my friend Rachel, who played the leftist, her jacking up the house and everything was pretty much a representation of how they enjoy ruining other people's lives, though.
And it's because, once again, the point of the song, it's because They don't like seeing other people genuinely happy.
That's why they have to try to claim words, steal things, attack everybody else, because they know themselves are not happy, statistically.
This song is also based on statistics.
Statistically, LGBT community has some of the most depressed people on planet Earth.
And They claim they just want to be happy.
No, you don't.
You want to attack other people that disagree with you.
If you just wanted to be happy, you should let me say the word faggot.
I should be able to drop all these songs.
I shouldn't get reported by anybody.
Because if you don't like what I'm saying in my song, you can literally turn it off.
Why do you care?
Why do you care?
So if you look at that music video, she was mad because we was having like a party, cooking now.
She saw the Let's Go Brandon flag.
She was literally upset.
And this most important part of the video, if you realize this, I didn't do anything to her.
I didn't know this person was.
I never, I purposely did this, never met this person in my life.
During the video, obviously.
I know the person who played it.
But in the video, I never had contact with the person, never did anything to them personally, and they were just so upset at what I believe that they broke into my house and trashed it.
Yeah, so that's the whole thing.
So if you guys don't know the video, I don't want to play it because I don't want to bootleg your stuff, but go watch it.
And I'll tell you what happens basically is that this is kind of a leftist person who sees his home, sees him having a birthday party with friends, and he has the Let's Go Brandon flag on the front.
He's got the Trump floor mat or whatever it was.
I don't remember what the floor mat was exactly, but So, like, she's watching all this stuff, and you can tell that everything's turning in her head, and she eventually comes back the next day to trash his front yard and realizes that he left the key to his front door under the mat that she's trying to destroy.
So she uses the key to go into his house, which, was that actually your house?
Yeah.
I'm in the room.
The room she trashed, I'm literally in it right now.
Bro, I was like, man, he's going to have to clean all that stuff up off the wall.
Yeah, we truly did.
Matter of fact, I'm looking at steal some silly string right here.
It's on my fan.
I haven't got it all.
Oh my gosh, dude.
So yeah, you guys got to watch this, all right?
So she goes into his house and she just starts tearing everything up.
You know, she's throwing cake on the wall.
She's smashing pictures.
Was that an actual Billboard album that she smashed up in there?
So funny fact about the Billboard thing.
I wanted to bust the real billboard.
I was going to bust my billboard for MAGA season that I got in 2020.
My dad was in town for my birthday, obviously.
And he said, oh, no, you ain't about to, you know, he fussed me out.
You ain't about to do no billboard, boy, no you that.
And then so he actually came up with a good idea to get a replica made.
And we actually made a replica.
I wanted to break the real thing to get the glass lined up.
I mean, it's just a billboard.
But my dad said, heck no.
Well, dude, like, and so this is like the inside baseball.
I'm glad I can learn it because it's, you know, when you're a fan, you watch and you're like, oh, I'm wondering, I wonder, I wonder.
No, so that's awesome.
So then she goes in there, she destroys the whole house and, you know, she even writes bigot in the bathroom and, you know, she just destroys the place.
And then you can tell the one of those last scenes that I thought was so good.
There was like this moment of self-satisfaction that she has when she's standing there at the end after she realizes what she's done and she's standing out in front of your house and there's this moment of self-satisfaction and then it kind of cuts from her to you guys coming home, right?
And you guys go in your house and you're looking around and you're like...
What in the world just happened?
And it's like in the song is exactly what I think it embodies so clearly to me how the leftists, you know, they're so unhappy that they have to transfer that pain and distress onto others because it's like it's almost too much for them to bear.
And I think a lot of that has to do, or I know it does, with this separation from God that they have.
And I think that definitely is one of the points that you highlight in the music with all of your music.
But even in that song, even if you're not directly saying that, it's almost inferred and implied, and you can almost understand and feel it.
I'm so glad...
I love this type of stuff.
When I do things, like, creatively, I know a lot of times, a lot of people, like, some people might not get it, especially because, like, it's cultural references I make sometimes with things of that nature, but you just hit everything that I was thinking when I was directing it.
And I have to shout out Rachel.
Rachel Toll, she's like kind of popular on TikTok too, who played the leftist.
She did.
I couldn't have done this without her actually getting it across on screen.
But that's why I did it.
That little snowsy at the end when she rolled big in the left, that satisfaction, it was a sigh of relief.
Like she was happy that she was able to transfer her unhappiness to somebody else.
And then the ending showed that.
I am so glad you got that.
I love when people get stuff, so.
Yeah, well, shout out to Rachel because I was going to ask that question.
You answered it before I had a chance to ask it.
I was going to ask if you literally cast some leftist and be like, go at it.
You know what I mean?
But no, it seems like that's even better that she's that good at acting that she could convey that because it's visceral, it's raw, it's emotive, but then it hits you like a brick wall.
That's why I think that song's been stuck in my head for like days now, like weeks almost.
And since it came out, man, I was saying...
I'm not going to lie, when I was shooting it, I was like, yo, she is actually doing a great job.
And just another backstory of that video, she got too much in character.
No, I was going to say...
I have to ask, because if that was your place, when she was doing the cake on the walls and throwing it at her, I was like, if I was Bryce and that's my part, I would be like, okay, we can take it down.
No, I love it because I felt that I thought she was actually angry when we was filming it.
But during that part, see, this is so interesting.
When you really watch the video, If you look at her hands when you pick up the knife, you'll see like red stuff and look like it's just part of the cake batter.
No.
During the scene, she slit her finger.
Now, by the way, Bryson said don't have the knife in it at all.
Bryson said that, but they wanted the knife in it.
They forgot that they pipped the knife at the bottom of the cake.
So when she grabbed, when she just threw her hands in the cake, she slit her finger and it was deep.
Oh.
We had to pause the video for like 20 minutes and she continuously bled.
She bled.
She's had like a whole day.
So when you see that part of her like doing the stuff with the cake and you see the red stuff, it's not cake batter.
That is literal blood.
Oh, bro.
I just cringed, man.
She kept acting, too.
She kept acting.
I loved it.
She did an amazing job.
That was like, I mean, just, I mean, it's why I know your potential is like continually expanding.
Like you haven't reached near it yet because it's like every time I'm like impressed by one thing you do and then like the next thing comes out and the next thing comes out, I'm like, man, boom, boom, boom.
So let's talk about a few more songs because that's, I had to talk, that was like one of my, it is one of my favorite songs.
I love that song.
I love Happy.
Let me talk about, let's see, we talked about Rising Angel briefly, but you can tell people about that song, especially since Roe v.
Wade came out.
What was the inspiration behind that?
It's a beautiful song about babies going to heaven who never have a chance at life.
And I just want to get your quick take on that for the audience.
I'm telling you guys all these songs with the intention being that I want you guys to go listen to each one of these songs that we talk about here.
And leave a comment, like, subscribe.
But also make sure that you listen to them.
Listen to the words.
But tell us about that, Rising Angel.
That's an amazing song.
So, I had a song called Save the Babies that a lot of people would know.
And I feel like...
Hold on.
Save the baby, save the baby, save the kids.
Save the baby, save the kids.
Yes, sir.
I love it, yeah.
Sometimes I think...
Because I choose, like, knocking beats because that's what I like, putting deep lyrics on knocking beats.
You know what I'm saying?
But I feel like a lot of people sometimes get lost in a beat where they sort of, like, ignore what I'm saying.
So I wanted to make a song speaking from the perspective of the baby...
And on a beat that you can't really ignore, on the beat, it pretty much amplifies what I'm saying.
So, Rising Angels is one of the rare songs that I produced myself.
I produced that song, and the background guitar is by my homie Don.
But outside of that, I produced the entire beat.
And I wrote the hook, and then I got Jimmy Levy to sing it, and he said he was down.
I try to sing it myself, and I can sing, but some notes I just simply can't hit, and I don't try to.
I know my limits, so if I can't sing it, I can cause somebody to do better.
And Jimmy Levy knocked it out of the park.
And my verse was from the perspective of the baby talking to the mother that just took my life.
Because I wanted it to hit people.
Because I'm blunt all the time, but in this song, I wanted my bluntness to actually hit your soul instead of you being able to ignore it because of the beat.
I can tell you right now, the first time I heard that song, and I'm a man, I don't tear up easily, let's be honest.
I was teared up.
I was like, you know, because I could feel this passion, but also, you know, I felt that The verses that talk about, you know, I could have been a doctor, I could have done great things, I could have gone out in the world, but you had to take my life because you weren't ready.
But what about me?
Why wasn't I ready?
And so on.
It's just such an amazing song, and I think today, thanks be to God, we did a right step in the right direction with the Roe v.
Wade overturned.
So hopefully that will lead to a full-out ban on abortion, I think, like you said, because it is murder.
So there's another song recommendation for all you guys out there.
I'm just going to go through all these amazing songs.
Elon Musk, that song.
Now...
Love it because it is so incredibly profound in the...
You took apart this whole conservative idea that he's the savior, which I think is amazing.
And then you called him on the embracing of this technology, the Neuralink, the Mark of the Beast.
You tied it to Revelation 13.
You did some things in that song.
But one of the things I appreciate the most that you did was that there's just this little verse in the beginning that most people may have just glanced over.
But you said, what about the – are you going to restore all the accounts of the people who believed in Q?
And I'm one of those people who's been zapped out of existence.
I had almost 300,000 subs on YouTube, lost that channel, almost 100,000 on Twitter, lost that.
And I just am one of those people who – And I like the way you framed it, because we're not going to sit around and go, oh yeah, queuing on this, queuing on that.
It was just a movement.
The information's what matters.
I'm not a trust-the-plan guy.
I'm not waiting for some magical horse to come in at the last second and save us all.
I do believe that only God can save us, and I don't trust in man.
I trust in God.
But the point is that I love that little shout-out there that you were basically saying, if you really are about free speech, do that.
But then you went even further into the Neuralink.
And the Mark of the Beast and Revelation 13.
So talk about the thought behind that song.
And just calling Elon out is like, everybody, the conservatives turned him into this, you know, folk hero overnight.
And you're like, you're basically poking holes and all, but you're also giving Elon an opportunity to rebut.
You're not closing the door.
You're saying, I'll listen to your response if you can tell me how it's not the way I perceive it.
How'd that song come to me?
So, because honestly, I think Elon Musk is struggling.
I think part of him wants to believe in God, but then I think what he's used to and what he has seen and everything around him is of Satan, to put it bluntly.
I think he's struggling with that.
So with the song, I'm like, bro, I'm really trying to convict him.
I mean, of course he probably didn't hear it, it's Elon Musk, but Oh, you never know.
You never know.
But I'm trying to convict him.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, tell him these things.
I try to get him to read the Bible.
And then, another thing I'm doing is trying to get conservatives because what I've realized in this movement has been so disappointed.
This movement has been such a disappointment overall for me.
But What I realize is we don't really have a heel that we stand on.
We claim we do, we'll throw it away over good press.
And we're just as gullible and just as ignorant and just as stupid as the left.
And what I mean by that is Elon Musk I've always been a liberal.
The reason I know that?
Because I was the biggest fan of Elon Musk.
I even watched the last interview with Joe Rogan.
I keep up with everything he do.
Still to the back, kept up with everything he do.
I'm just not a fan no more because when you get deeper into the Bible, people like that, it's a danger.
But outside of that, I like his personality.
I like a lot of things he did.
I hate it near a length though.
And he's always been a liberal.
He was going to raise his child genderless.
You know what I'm saying?
Liberal.
That's why he had that dumb take on Twitter about guns, because he's a freaking liberal.
That's why he posted about his LGBT record in June, because he's a freaking liberal.
And the conservatives are hyping him up.
I've watched conservatives say this man should run for president.
Yeah, I know.
And now, I've been in this movement since, like, 2019.
And conservatives used to say liberalism is a mental disorder.
Conservatives were against liberals.
That's what it was.
And now, not only are we not against liberals, we embrace them.
And it didn't start with him.
It started with Tulsi Gabbard.
Who's, I mean, that's literally Bernie Sanders in a woman's body, but she just doesn't yell.
She knows how gullible conservatives are, so she just rips them alive.
And nobody actually does any research on her voting record, what she actually believes.
And they get tricked.
And then it was Joe Rogan.
I watch Joe Rogan.
Not because I like him because he'll talk to anybody and he'll talk about anything.
That's why I watch his podcast.
This man is a freaking liberal.
That's what he is.
The liberal kind.
And they hyped him up.
And then this Elon Musk was just a lash off of me.
I remember they did it with Nicki Minaj.
You remember Rihanna?
All she did was she wore a shirt that said Free Your Mind or something like that.
No, that's my song.
She wore a shirt that said something like that because I was hyping up Rihanna.
Like, what is wrong with y'all?
And then Nicki Minaj?
Y'all was just clowning Cardi B! Nicki Minaj may be more talented than Cardi B, but she has about the same freaking bangs!
Y'all's got to hype her up, send her songs to the top of the charts.
Because she questioned vaccines.
And I was talking on Twitter, hey, all black people, most black people were against the vaccine.
They still hated Trump, though.
So it's like, they still are not concerned.
And conservatives get duped.
And Elon Musk has been the biggest one.
Because people are like, borderline praising Elon Musk.
And it's like, scary.
So that was the song.
Well, that's amazing.
That song is on so many levels.
There's so much truth in it.
Talking about another controversial song that's directed at an individual that I don't think is controversial, but I'm sure some do.
Kanye was right.
Another great song.
Now, when you said Kanye was right, explain what you meant, because I know a lot of people out there misunderstood what you were saying in that song, but if you watch it and you really get what you're saying, you're saying that Kanye was right about, as far as I've read it, one particular thing.
And that thing being, you know, his perception of a certain issue.
So why don't you explain in your words?
I don't want to put words in your mouth.
I've liked That Song of Runs.
It's one of my most underrated songs.
And I think Kanye was right.
It has to be by far my most underrated video.
I don't know if people are just slow, but the video literally told a story As it zoomed out, and I've never seen a music video like that before, and I thought it was pretty cool.
I think it was underrated, but a lot of people got it confused.
I would say Kanye was right.
The song literally has nothing to do with Kanye West.
Even when I say Kanye is right about saying slavery is a choice, Kanye was talking about literal slavery.
He was talking about slavery was a choice.
Back in the day, I'm taking what he said to tell you slavery is a choice right now because you're choosing to be brainwashed.
You're giving your consent to get brainwashed by the media and all of it does, everything you're a slave to ends up making you a slave to sin.
So the whole point of that song and the music video was about how Satan works in eventually defeating Satan.
That's why at the end of the video, it's Satan laying under my foot in a puddle of blood, and you see the Bible and the gun beside me because I obviously just, pow, shot Satan in the head.
The video didn't show that specific part, but it should be implied as it zooms out.
You know, it's powerful, yeah.
And that reminds me, because it was like, slavery is a choice, and you're a slave to sin.
And these are themes in the Bible, by the way, guys.
We're not pulling this out of our own minds.
We're pulling it out of the Bible.
But that is cool when it pulls out.
And to me, that final scene when you realize what you're looking at, because at first you're like, what is he doing?
He's standing there with his foot up, and he's like...
And then you kind of see the table and the gun and the Bible, and you're like, okay, well, what's going on?
And then he sees him.
I've read that as conquering sin.
You've conquered sin.
And that's what we're trying to do every day.
And that's like, it's not going to end because that devil's going to get up and do it again tomorrow, and you've got to conquer it all over again.
So it's like there were so many levels to that song.
I thought that was great.
Well, we're getting close, but I have a couple more.
So just a couple more.
Just a couple more.
Also, though, real quick, it's literally it is about conquering sin.
But not only that, in the beginning, I wanted people to question it, which is why my lip was busted.
It's hard to see unless you have a big TV, but there's a mark on my face, too.
But it's hard.
That too.
I forgot about that part because I re-watched all these.
That was maybe the only one I didn't watch fully over this morning as I was getting ready for it because I had to do a show before this.
But yeah, that's right.
You had a cut on your lip and it's like at first you're like, what's he doing?
He's sitting there.
His leaves bleeding.
I was like...
This doesn't make any...
And then it makes total sense at the end.
I struggle.
Like, it wasn't just easy.
Man, the whole point is to let you know it wasn't easy.
I got beat up a little bit.
You know what I'm saying?
I got my face busted, my lip busted, but I ended up just having to pop them.
Yeah, dude.
Yeah, no, I mean, you conquer sin.
That's like totally exactly what...
What I think is powerful about that song.
I kind of rapid-fire these things, because I'll try to wrap it up.
I know your time's valuable, and I don't want to keep you too long.
Deprogram, probably one of my favorite songs by far.
It's almost like an episode of Alex Jones' Info Wars in a song.
But it is like, if you guys have not heard Deprogram, For us, a lot of us watching probably, if you're watching this channel, you probably know a lot of things.
But even I was like, oh man, I'm going to go look that up.
I didn't know that particular part of it.
Because it goes through things that maybe we cover a while ago and we forget.
But if you want to read Pill Normies and you want to tell your friends who like hip-hop music, yo, I got a song for you.
Let them listen to that song.
Because what was the inspiration for that?
Because that's one of my favorites.
Um...
I wanted to do something with that real rugged feel.
I just like doing different stuff.
And then when I heard the beat, in my mind, what I envisioned...
And I'm still doing a video like this.
It's me rapping in front of just a screen behind me.
And the screen is explaining everything in the music video.
I'm going to do that.
It's going to be a one-scene video, actually.
That'd be cool.
A one-shot video with everything that's playing behind me?
Bro, I'm already looking forward to it, but go on.
Yeah, but that's cool.
I wanted to explain it.
The program specifically, before I even wrote down them lyrics, that night...
I was doing hours of research, double-checking.
Because, you know, sometimes you know something, but then you can forget specific details.
I want it to be so on point with that song to where you can't ban it for anything, even though they still can.
But it's 100% factual.
Every single thing I say in that song is 100% verifiable.
I have all the articles in my notes when I wrote the song.
So that's what I wanted to do.
I wanted to, like, period.
There's nothing I can say about that song besides go listen to it and prepare to kind of have your jaw drop.
But I remember the first time I heard it, just a little anecdotal story.
I'm on the treadmill in the gym.
I'm running, jogging.
Not running.
I'm a big guy.
We jog.
We don't run.
But I'm jogging on the treadmill, and I start shadowboxing on the treadmill.
I'm like, it's the program.
I don't even know the words yet.
I'm trying to sing along.
That's how cool that song is.
It's just a banger.
You've got to do a video of that.
It's such a good song.
One of my favorite lines that you've done lately...
You have so many.
I don't want to go through them all.
I could, but one of my favorite lines is from the song, I Do Not Comply.
You said in a verse, you're being interrogated by the FBI, and it's my favorite verse of all time.
You literally look him straight in the face.
You go, January 6th was lit.
I do not condemn.
Yes, sir.
And I stopped the beat right there on purpose.
By the way, that girl that's in that video is the one unhappy.
Yeah, I know.
I noticed that.
I noticed that.
So what was that like?
Where did I do not comply come from?
I made that song and actually released as a single last year?
And I made it because...
My phone was being tapped.
A lot of stuff was happening.
And a lot of conservatives were like cucking about it.
So a lot of people got scared.
Oh my goodness, the FBI come to my house.
You know, everybody's scared, switching up what they say.
And everybody's condemning January 6th.
Even Trump condemned January 6th a few times.
People let him slide, but he did.
I watched him on Two Eyes.
So I wanted to make a song.
And then, of course, they were forcing a mask.
And you know, I was driving everywhere.
Which is why I said, and as long as I said, ask Caitlyn Bennett, if they require masks, then I don't buy.
This is when masks are required everywhere.
And me and Caitlyn Bennett, we went on a double date.
It was me and my girlfriend, Caitlyn Bennett, and her husband went on a double date.
And we had to walk the whole street full of, not a whole street, it was a whole section full of restaurants because as soon as the place said they required masks, I just walked away.
And everybody was like, okay, this boy Bryson is crazy.
He's for real.
He's really not going in.
And, you know, so all of that frustration, you know, how did I comply?
That is so sick, dude.
Yeah, my wife thought I was crazy when I started doing that.
I was like, oh, they want a mask?
Well, they're not getting my business.
Turn around, walk back out.
Oh, man.
That's what I did everywhere, man.
Sick.
Now I realize that I should play that song.
I should have it on like a boombox when it's like, oh, do you want a mask?
Because I'm not here in California.
It's still crazy.
Oh, y'all still got to play some required masks out there?
Oh, dude, are you kidding?
Yeah.
Oh, that's crazy.
Yeah, it's crazy, man.
You can come out here sometime and visit.
I'll show you around, and we can shock the normies, you know?
Yes, sir.
But Like Kyle, finally.
That's the final song.
Like Kyle.
Yes, sir.
I Feel Like Kyle.
And it is a song about Kyle Rittenhouse, who I know.
Have you met him?
Has he ever talked to you?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I actually have not met him.
He just has FaceTimed me so many times.
Mm-mm.
So does he like your music?
Yeah, he was a fan of my music before the situation.
I didn't know that.
Wow.
Dude, that's sick, dude.
I haven't seen that.
I have to find those videos wherever they exist.
I'll go look at those after this.
Alright, so Like Kyle, that's a great song.
I'm not even going to go through it because it's fairly obvious.
It's about Kyle Rittenhouse and it's about after he was, you know, and then there's a few other songs that are Uh, close to that, that I think you've appeared on, but aren't like under your name or under other artists and all that stuff.
Uh, you did some songs with bright Tyson, James and others.
And, uh, so finally, um, how many, are you guys, are you and Tyson working on anything new?
Oh yeah.
I was working on stuff.
Tyson James is like one of my best friends.
Like he probably is my best friend to me.
I taught Tyson almost every day.
Him and Forge out of the blue.
Yeah, you guys together are pretty formidable.
I mean, you all on your own are very formidable, but when you get you guys together on a song, it's just like bang.
You know it's going to be a bang.
You know it's going to be good.
So anytime I see either his channel or your channel with his name or your name and they're in the same thing, I'm like, I'm going to be listening to that song.
So today, oh yeah, also today, I just listened to Drag Queen with Alex Stein.
What in the world, man?
I think you're going to make people's heads explode, dude.
Tell us the story behind that and then we'll wrap it up.
So, uh, he was trying to get me on a song, but we never, like, did it.
Like, I guess he couldn't find obesity or something.
So, when I had made the Drag Queen song, I said, this song, like, kind of got, like, a funny vibe to it.
Like, I'm talking about scripture and stuff, but it sort of got that, like, kind of, like, comedy vibe.
And I said, bro, if Alex Todd is willing to get on this, this song would be hilarious.
So, I hit him up, and at first I didn't think he was going to get on it, because, you know, the only person I know that doesn't mind getting on any song on me is Tyson James.
When I say it to other people, sometimes I'll be like, they may not get on it because of what I'm saying, which is fine.
And he said, oh heck yeah, I'll do it, dude.
Listen, he sent the song back to me the same night.
And when I heard the verse, I was literally crying.
I was literally laughing, listening to his verse.
I was like, he is funny.
It was funny.
And then...
I just shot his scene when I was in Houston last Saturday.
I shot his scene last Friday night.
I got to see him win him, and that was the first time I met him.
He's like a naturally funny person.
And like the way he was acting in the video, like if you could tell in the video, I tried to keep a straight face, and I literally just, I tried.
And you could tell I'm trying in the video, but Remember, this is my first time meeting him.
So why is he so funny just shooting the video?
He had his eyes closed with the phone doing like this, bro.
And I'm like, why can't he keep a freaking straight face with this dude shooting the video?
Because I wanted to look serious and him to be like looking crazy.
But I couldn't.
I couldn't.
Keep a straight face.
Bro, all I know is that I watched it today for the first time this morning because that's when it just was released.
And I was like, I was crying laughing.
And one person over in the chat wants me to let you know Ultramaga is amazing, is hot too.
That's an amazing song with you, Tyson.
Who is it?
Foggiato, I think.
Foggiato and Tyson.
And Topher.
And Topher, yeah, Topher.
And there's some, I could go, like, we could literally do this for hours, man, because I'm just, I'm a super fan, I think you would say, especially for you and those guys and the music you guys put out, because I think it's, I don't know, I think it's the best music we got going out these days.
You guys should be on every radio station.
You guys should be topping every chart.
It's a shame that our society is gamed against Christian conservative values, but your music is so good.
If it was allowed to stand on its own, it would be number one, I think.
But, you know, we live in a fallen world, and you're willing to fight the battle, and that's why we appreciate you, and that's why we respect your hustle and your continual ability to go day in, day out, and keep this stuff coming.
So I know you've got to...
Busy man, probably have a lot to do.
Let me just say, thank you for coming on the show, Bryce and Gray.
This has been amazing.
Let's take a second, we'll wrap it up with a little bit of prayer, but let's take a second to let you tell everybody Tell them what projects you have coming up, if you can share any of that, besides the deprogram music video, which I'm going to be waiting for that.
Let the people know.
I have songs dropping every Friday on YouTube, obviously.
You talked about a song with Tyson.
I have a song with James McCoy and Tyson James dropping July 1st.
It's like a country type vibe song, but it's called God Save America.
It's like About this country, you know, everybody getting ready for 4th of July, but the song was like telling people in this country, like, if you want God to save America and God to bless America, then we have to make an effort to turn to God.
So that's the point of that song that's dropping next week.
Outside of that, man, I could give y'all a lot of stuff.
Parler, follow my Parler.
If anybody's still on Parler, Parler, Real Bryce and Gray.
Same on Truth.
But what I want to promote is just two things because I'm liable to get banned off any of these other platforms as I've learned over the last two weeks.
So I don't take any of these platforms for granted anymore because sometimes they let me get away with stuff and I don't know, lately they just haven't.
So What I have to bypass that is, first off, if you want to support me, you can get my merchandise from BrysonCreates2.com.
But if you text the word CULTURE The word culture.
Text culture to 855-909-1389.
I send out texts once a week, only on Fridays when I release new music.
That's it.
You will only get a text from me on Fridays.
I'm not the Trump campaign.
I don't text you 10 times a day for no exact reason.
Like some ex-girlfriend stalking you.
Yeah.
Literally, I only text on Fridays.
If I get banned from something, I might let people know.
But I only text on Fridays when I listen to music.
And that's because I can't take the social media platforms for granted, bro.
I can be going on YouTube in an instant.
If YouTube banned me for something for no reason, they can go back to my other videos and just say, screw Bryce and Gray.
You know what I'm saying?
Text that.
My goal is to get 50,000 people signed up to the text one day.
Dude, go do it.
Everything he just said, guys, not only am I going to do, but I want you guys to go do out there.
And take it from me, Bryson.
Be ready for when it comes, because not if, but when.
These people will eventually try to get rid of you once you become big enough, and you become a big enough influence in the world.
It's just the way our world works, and the devil's always out to silence the people who uplift Christ.
You're one of the people doing it.
I'm praying for you.
And I know you have a good head on your shoulders.
You're going to keep doing great things, and you're going to take care of yourself.
And you're already doing what you have to do to prepare yourself for all that.
So I'm proud of you for all your stuff you've done.
And I say that as a fan, and I say that as a friend, I hope since we've known each other for a while now, you're an amazing individual.
I'm thankful and blessed for the work that you've put out into the world.
I know our audience is blessed to have it.
Go out.
Subscribe to this guy's work.
I don't care about my channel.
My channel's, you know, it's whatever.
His work is really cool and fun.
Go check it out because that's like, if you don't know like what I, if you saw like what I'm doing on, you know, when I'm not doing what I do on my channel, I'm listening to his stuff.
I'm working out.
I'm in the yard.
I'm like, he puts out a new song.
I'm like telling my wife, come on, you got to listen to it.
You got to listen to it.
It's really good.
So yeah, you guys will like it too.
But that's it.
Thank you so much, Bryce.
Let's wrap it up with a little bit of prayer.
Thank you so much, bro.
Thank you for having me on your platform, man.
Let's do it.
My hair, I'm black, y'all, so y'all know how that go.
What?
What's up?
I'm black, so my hair look crazy.
Bro, you think thy hair looks normal right now?
You got curly hair, so it's different.
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
Dear Lord and Heavenly Father, thank you so much for bringing me and Bryson together with everybody watching here today.
Lord, I pray a special prayer of protection over Bryson and his work, that you may bless it, that he may reach the world in a way that helps change people's hearts to come to you even closer, to recognize the evil that is in this world, but also to recognize the good that you bring, Lord, with all that you are and how powerful you are Thank you,
Lord I pray it speaks to their heart And that we uplift them And we uplift you Lord first and foremost In honoring you and your amazing Amazing gifts that you've given us Lord And for all those out there Who look at this And see it with a scope That is skewed against you Lord We pray we can change hearts and change minds And bring them back to you In any way we can And we give thanks most of all Lord For our eternal salvation Which was bought and paid for by the blood of Jesus Christ
In Jesus' powerful name we pray, amen.
Amen.
So, alright, I'm going to wrap it up, but I've got to get my headphones on so I can hear you.
But, dude, what an amazing interview.
Bryson Gray, ladies and gentlemen, one of the best.
He is, I'll say it, he's the best musician alive.
Oh, snap!
That's crazy!
Thank you for that!
Alright, well, you got muted, but that's fine.
I don't know.
Oh, there I go.
Yeah, I hear you.
Oh, I'm about to hit my keyboard by accident.
I said thank you.
That's one of the greatest compliments ever.
I truly mean it, man.
I could not mean it anymore.
So, remember, like I said, guys, go find his work.