Zay Dante listens to a lot of music. Like080p Archives a lotof music.
And you can tell when you watch his content. It's why his TikTok videos about the Drake and Kendrick beef went over so well, and why his skits about popular songs hit so hard: He has the context to make the content sing (pun intended). It's that kind of dedication to the craft that has led to him amassing an audience of over 2.5 million followers across YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram.
And Dante doesn't just talk about music — he's creating it, too. He released his debut EP, TBTV, on March 27 to mostly positive reviews. At VidCon 2025, we sat down with Dante, who was a featured creator, to talk about making his own music, where he gets the inspiration for his videos, and how he amassed nearly two million followers on TikTok.
It is a direct one-to-one. One day, I decided I wanted to do a parody song. I had been doing parody songs since about 2020, but never seriously. [After recording my first parody song], it did really well. And I was like, "Oh, there's no reason why I shouldn't keep doing this."
After I dropped the EP, I was really interested in people's thoughts, and I was so pleasantly surprised by how much people enjoyed it. I was really happy because I definitely know that parody music has a stigma to it, that it's not supposed to be taken seriously. And there were songs on my EP where I was like, "Nah, there's not really a joke to this. I just wanted to rap. I just wanted to make a song." But I understood that people who were coming from the videos would come into it with the same mindset that they were watching the videos, which was, "This is a joke." But I was pretty happy that people got something from it at all. It really made me very excited about releasing something else, too. I was honestly just hype that anyone cared at all.
Last year, I had 50,000 or 60,000 minutes listened to on Spotify, but I split my time between Spotify and Apple Music. I really did like it. I did go back to Spotify, but I did really like [Apple Music]. I missed having the Wrapped. Everybody was posting their Wrapped, and I wanted to see how left out I felt. Can I stand it? Am I going to be able to stick with Apple Music? And I could not stand [feeling left out].
Definitely. I was so scared. I tried to be so fair. I was making videos about what was happening. I never wanted Kendrick to do what he ended up doing. And I never wanted Drake to lose that badly. But he did. So, what else am I supposed to do?
Pusha T's new album rollout has been amazing. I always expected to listen to it, but I never expected it to get to a point where I would be able to make content about it. It's been pretty cool. I'm really excited for that album.
Obviously, Kendrick. If Drake was a better sport about stuff, then him. Tyler, The Creator. SZA. The Weeknd. All of them.
I'm doing what everybody else is doing—scrolling through and seeing what people are talking about. But a lot of the things that I'm doing are retroactive, looking back to the 2010s.
I use the Notes app for writing all the songs, and I use CapCut for editing all the songs. And I also use CapCut for all my original music as well — not building the beats because I have producers making the beats — but in the reference tracks that I'm making, I make all of that in CapCut.
My producer, Demko, produces in Ableton, but I don't know how to use Ableton.
I do a crazy setup in my garage where I write the notes in my Notes app, and then I get my MacBook, and I get my headphones, and I get my phone. I bring that downstairs and get the file of the beat, send that to myself on the computer, send that file back to myself, play that in my headphones, and then I do the song over that. Send that back to myself, play that version on my laptop, and then I will respond to the thing that I just recorded.
I use over-the-ear Sony headphones.
I'm running CapCut to the bone. CapCut will literally shut off numerous times while I'm working, and I'll get frustrated and then remind myself, "Wait, I am not doing things that are normal."
No.
I save my YouTube videos and long-form stuff on my drive. But for all the short-form videos, what I really love about TikTok, and just in general, is the fact that you can pop out a video at any point in time.
I started doing content in 2020 and realized I could turn it into a job probably a year in, when I had around a million followers. Back then, if you had a million followers, you had to move to LA, so that's what I did.
Yeah, it's in the privacy policy on TikTok. One million followers? You gotta move to LA.
Yeah, I was making money through the Creator Fund and brand deals.
What Do You Meme? They were my first major deal. I had done some smaller stuff where I got sent some free things, which was nice. But that was my first brand deal. They paid based on viewership, which made me enough money to move to LA.
None. I do not get involved.
I don't like it. I'm just not an AI guy. It makes me uncomfortable. As AI continues to grow and becomes more part of society, I'm realizing I'm going to be like one of the old men who's just like, "I can't turn this into a PDF."
Be yourself and do the things that you find funny, not the stuff you find funny because you think it's gonna make you go viral.
Be yourself. I know that is the cliche. There's never been a better example of being yourself than being online, because everybody that I know, and everybody that you know as well, is trying to feed into an algorithm to a point where it is not natural anymore. Be yourself and do the things that you find funny, not the stuff you find funny because you think it's gonna make you go viral.
Just keep going because sometimes videos aren't going to do well. The way that you scroll when you're online is that you're not checking like, "Oh, this video has only five likes. It must be bad." You don't care, you just scroll anyway. It doesn't matter. The most important thing to remember on the internet is that you're not the main character. If it doesn't do well, then who cares? Nobody saw it anyway. And if it does well, then great. Do more of that.
Topics Music TikTok Creators VidCon
Best Black Friday PS5 controller deal: Save $20 on DualSense wireless controllerRuggable Holiday Steals Sale: Get 20% off washable festive rugsBluesky is on the verge of overtaking Threads in all the ways that matterBest Black Friday headphones deal: Save over $100 on Sony WHVikings vs. Bears 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineBest Black Friday PS5 deal: Save $75 on PS5 Slim Digital EditionBest DoorDash promo codes in November 2024JonBenét Ramsey: What happened and why Netflix is releasing another doc about herDecompose for less: Lomi home composters now up to 40% off for Black FridayNYT Connections hints and answers for November 23: Tips to solve 'Connections' #531.The Office Lego Black Friday deal: Save $50 at WalmartBest Black Friday PS5 controller deal: Save $20 on DualSense wireless controllerBest Black Friday Apple Watch SE deal: Get $50 off at TargetBest DoorDash promo codes in November 2024Patriots vs. Dolphins 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL onlineBest Black Friday Beats deal: Get $100 off Studio Pro headphonesColorado vs. Kansas football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and moreBest DoorDash promo codes in November 2024NYT Connections hints and answers for November 25: Tips to solve 'Connections' #533.Best Black Friday Nintendo Switch deal: Get $75 off Mario Kart 8 Deluxe bundle Writer runs back into burning home to rescue his laptop Singapore gets third Paralympic gold in its history thanks to swimming champ Yip Pin Xiu World's biggest brands join forces to improve online ads Instagram accidentally rolls out horizontal scrolling timeline update in botched test Kim Kardashian snapped some nudes, because that's what Snapchat is for Sweet little princess is terrified of Donald Trump 12 of the most anticipated TV shows of 2019 Bill Murray will be tending bar in Brooklyn this weekend iOS 12.1.2 reportedly causing cellular data connectivity problems Kanye West sees himself as the Will Ferrell in 'Elf' of fashion Cozy up with 'Hilda,' the best holiday hidden gem Netflix binge These new devices could help diagnose pneumonia on the spot Slack apologizes for, reinstates accounts it banned for U.S. sanctions The best part of 'Marvel's Runaways' is supernatural teen romance Trump proves Apple's iPhone XR is winning over Android users: report In some ways, it got better for ride 11 speeches that got the internet fired up in 2018 Do not pass by this crocheted Monopoly blanket. Do not collect $200. Here's how Airbnb is trying to convince its hosts to join its fight against New York state
3.4911s , 10162.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1080p Archives】,Openness Information Network