Alright, This Zach Bryan Parody of Brantley Gilbert Is Pretty Hilarious


You almost hate to broach the subject of the ding dong Super Bowl Halftime Show(s) again because it’s such a culture war dog whistle. But something most all self-respecting country fans should be able to universally agree upon is the terribleness of Brantley Gilbert, and specifically the song “Dirt Road Anthem” that Brantley co-wrote with country rapper Colt Ford, and that became a massive hit for Jason Aldean in 2011.

How big was “Dirt Road Anthem” in 2011? It wasn’t just a #1 hit, it helped define country music in the era. It remains the most downloaded song in country music history by a solo male. It crossed over to pop, and was a Top 10 hit there too (#7). Aldean’s album My Kinda Party won the CMA Album of the Year in large part to the commercial strength of the song, and “Dirt Road Anthem” was even nominated for a Grammy.

All of this commercial success for “Dirt Road Anthem” is very much what seeded country music’s Bro-Country era. It created the avenue for the rise of Florida Georgia Line and others that synthesized country/rap/EDM/pop into the Bro-Country hybrid. In truth, most country fans didn’t like this crap. It was pop and hip-hop fans whose activity was logged on country charts that made it appear country was going hip-hop.

Brantley Gilbert performed the song on TPUSA’s alternative Super Bowl Halftime program, because it’s one of the few if any songs he can be tangentially tied to that a wide audience would in any way be able to recognize. Gilbert did record a version of the song himself as well. If you think the TPUSA lineup was weak, appreciate why they booked Brantley Gilbert as the opener for it. And of course, witnessing “Dirt Road Anthem” live was pretty nauseating.

Zach Bryan, who called the TPUSA presentation “the most cringe sh-t on the planet” recently took to social media to post a parody of “Dirt Road Anthe.” We’ll call “Chili on a Hot Dog,” and it’s pretty damn hilarious.


Brantley Gilbert has since responded in kind, getting his private chef to hit up the local Sonic and supply a couple of chili dogs for a response video. It shows Gilbert can take some criticism in stride, and can show a humerous side himself. The caption is pretty spot on too, with Gilbert saying, “Zach Bryan, you can climb all the fences you want, you’re not getting my chili dog,” making reference to another Zach Bryan country music fracas with Gavin Adcock.


Now this is how a country music “beef” should go down, frankly.

And damn, all of a sudden I’m hankering for a chili dog.

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