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Home » Transcript: Officer Tatum on TRIGGERnometry Podcast

Transcript: Officer Tatum on TRIGGERnometry Podcast

Read the full transcript of conservative commentator Brandon Tatum’s interview on TRIGGERnometry Podcast with hosts Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster on “Charlie Kirk, Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, George Floyd and Israel”, October 30, 2025.

Welcome to TRIGGERnometry

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Officer Tatum, Brandon Tatum, welcome to TRIGGERnometry.

BRANDON TATUM: Thanks for having me. I’ve been excited to come here.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Yeah, it’s great to have you. Listen, before we get into what you think and your opinions, and there’s a lot going on right now that’s going to be fun, tell us about you. Who are you? What’s your story? What’s your journey through life?

BRANDON TATUM: Yeah, it’s a long one. I hope you got enough time.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: We got loads of time.

Growing Up in Fort Worth, Texas

BRANDON TATUM: It’s very expansive. Growing up, I grew up in Fort Worth, Texas, which is about three and a half hours from where we are now. And I grew up in a very dynamic background. My mom and dad split up when I was really young. I never even saw them together really. And to be honest, they didn’t even like each other most of my life. They couldn’t even be in the same room together.

It was an interesting dynamic because it was me and my brother. We would travel, stay with mom, stay with dad. And one of the beautiful things that I had growing up was that I did have a dad. My dad was always there, firefighter, loyal guy.

But we had a very dynamic upbringing because on one side of my family, people were struggling with poverty. My grandmother had my mom when she was 12. And then also my dad came from the projects, which is an impoverished area. And he made something of himself. He’s a self-made man. So we had a dynamic of seeing both sides of it growing up.

And football in Texas is a big deal, right? You go to church and you play football. And so that’s what we did growing up. Me and my brother were both All-Americans. We went to Dunbar High School, which is a school in the inner city. A lot of violence, but a lot of talent comes from that school.

High School Football Success

My brother and I were US Army All-Americans. In the context of United States football, that means you’re the top player in the entire nation. So my brother led the way. He was a year ahead of me. He went and played for the University of Texas. I came out of college and played for the University of Arizona.

And the interesting thing is that going to Arizona, Arizona was a terrible team, right? My brother went to Texas. Texas in Austin won a national championship. My brother was there. Five or six guys go to the NFL almost every single year.

And for some reason, it’s not really some reason, I wanted to go to Texas. And as an All-American, I had a scholarship to go to just about every university. And Texas is the only school that did not offer me a scholarship because of my brother’s class. They offered all of the top defensive backs in his class. Six of them were All-Americans. So they didn’t have any space for me when I came out.

We ventured into me playing running back or another position to try to get me on the team, but it never manifested. And my high school defensive back coach one day told me, “Have you ever thought about University of Arizona?”

Choosing the University of Arizona

When you are an All-American athlete, you will have, the size of this table is deepest from the top to the floor, full of letters from universities coming after you, sending you letters, trying to get you to come to their university. So he had mentioned University of Arizona. He’s like, “You need to take a look at University of Arizona. It’s a hidden gem.”

One of the best college football coaches in the nation was Coach Mike Stoops. At the time he coached at Oklahoma and he had become the head coach there. One of my favorite athletes growing up was Sean Taylor. He played at University of Miami. And a defensive back coach at University of Miami who coached him was also a Stoops brother. He was Coach Stoops’ younger brother. He had gone to Arizona.

So my favorite player and the coach that coached my favorite player was at Arizona. And one of the best coaches had become the head coach. So it sparked my interest. I went back into my bin full of all these letters and I started pulling them out. And University of Arizona kind of stood out to me.

Their defense went from being the worst in the league to being one of the best in the league. And I said, “You know what? This is an opportunity for me to go to a university and play early and go to the NFL.” That was my dream.

College Struggles

And I get there. And of course, I came from a kind of a rough background, so my attitude was bad. You guys wouldn’t even recognize me, to be honest, from back then. I had gold teeth in my mouth, I got tattoos all over me, and I had a terrible attitude.

So as soon as I get there, I get in the doghouse pretty quickly because I didn’t like the coaches yelling at me and the things that they would say would spark me. I’m talking about throwing my helmet, wanting to fight people. And so I didn’t come to the situation prepared, and I was in the doghouse. I didn’t play much in college. It was very tumultuous.

And coming from being an All-American football player, being the guy, to going to a university and riding the bench and never really playing, being in the doghouse was just devastating for me. And it really brought me to my faith.

Finding Faith

Because growing up, believing in God, being a Christian my whole life, I wasn’t very serious about it when I was younger.