Professional wrestling During his teenage years, MacDonald worked as a
professional wrestler on the Canadian
independent circuit, most prominently for the
Edmonton-based promotion Monster Pro Wrestling (MPW). He made his debut in February 2003, in a
dark triple threat match, which went to a
no contest. Throughout the year, he would begin feuding with
Bobby Sharp, after another dark match also went to a no contest. The feud concluded in December, when MacDonald defeated Sharp in a triple threat match, which included Brady Roberts. By 2005, MacDonald was a member of the Custom Made Renegades stable, led by Sharp. In a tournament for the newly created MPW Tag Team Championship, MacDonald and Sharp defeated Kris Knight and Shane O'Ryan, but lost to eventual winners the Dead Ringers in the semi-final. MacDonald and Ozz defeated the New Stallions in a #1 contendership match for the tag team championship, but he and O'Ryan fell short to the Dead Ringers. Later that year, MacDonald unsuccessfully challenged Sharp for the MPW Junior Heavyweight Championship; the first match went to a no contest, and the second match saw him win by disqualification, but not the title, as it does not change hands in the event of a disqualification. In a
hardcore match with Sharp, MacDonald brought a
9 iron golf club which almost tore off his right earlobe by ricocheting off a
turnbuckle. After sustaining a number of injuries, and with his appearances in professional wrestling dwindling, MacDonald began to focus more on his music career. His final match was at an
Extreme Canadian Championship Wrestling (ECCW) show in November 2009, where he was defeated by the Divine Prophet.
Music MacDonald started rapping at age 18, but only rose to fame after releasing the single "Dear Rappers" in February 2018. His song "Straight White Male", which was written about straight white men being demonized, was criticized on social media for its subject matter. In September 2019, MacDonald released the single "Cloned Rappers", in which he rapped that the
Illuminati are cloning rappers and disposing of the originals. In late 2019, MacDonald was scheduled to be a supporting act for
Falling in Reverse's Episode IV Tour before it was cancelled. In 2020, he released 20 singles, including "White Trash", "Sellout", "Best Rapper Ever", "Cancer", and "Angels". In March 2020, MacDonald released the single "Coronavirus", which was written about the
COVID-19 pandemic. In January 2021, MacDonald released the single "
Fake Woke", which debuted at number 96 on the
Billboard Hot 100. After
Eminem released a series of
NFTs as part of his "Shady Con" event with
Nifty Gateway, MacDonald purchased one—an Eminem-produced instrumental called "Stan's Revenge"—for $100,000. MacDonald used the instrumental to create his song "Dear Slim", released in May 2021. The song's accompanying music video paid homage to the music video for Eminem's 2000 song "
Stan". In June 2021, he released "Snowflakes", which debuted on the
Billboard Hot 100 at number 71. The music video featured political commentator
Blaire White as a background dancer. His single "Brainwashed", released in August 2021, peaked at number 89 on the
Billboard Hot 100. In 2022, MacDonald collaborated with
Adam Calhoun to release an album,
The Brave. It was the best-selling album of the week in the U.S. upon its release in March 2022, having sold 16,000 copies in the U.S. that week. MacDonald collaborated with Calhoun again in 2023 to release the song "American Flags", which reached number two on the
Digital Songs chart in the US, and number eight in Canada. In September 2023, MacDonald and Calhoun released the album,
The Brave II. In January 2024, MacDonald collaborated with
conservative political commentator
Ben Shapiro to release the single "
Facts". On January 17, 2025, MacDonald released the single "Daddy's Home", featuring comedian
Roseanne Barr. The song's title references
Trump's second inauguration. On September 11, 2025, MacDonald released the single "
Charlie" in honor of
Charlie Kirk, an American
conservative political activist who
was assassinated the day prior while speaking at a TPUSA
public debate event. The music video for "Charlie" reached the number-one spot on
YouTube's trending music chart. By September 18, "Charlie" had reached 8.2 million views on YouTube. After its first week, the song reached the number one spot on
Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart. ==Influences==