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Tuesday, January 27, 2026

The World

January 27, 2026


Trey Knowles’ “The World” is a bold, satirical comedy short that challenges the popular mindset of “only seeing the good.” When people encourage Trey to focus solely on positivity, he responds with a powerful question: “Where are the prophets of old?” — the voices who courageously confronted wickedness in the name of truth.

In this performance, Trey tackles several important themes. He exposes spiritual blindness, calling out how many modern Christians overlook sin and injustice in order to stay comfortable and culturally accepted. He critiques false positivity, humorously revealing how ignoring evil is often mistaken for virtue and leads to moral compromise. By pointing to the prophetic vision found in Scripture, Trey calls for boldness, clarity, and truth rather than shallow optimism. Finally, he addresses money and compromise, highlighting how faith is frequently weakened by the pursuit of wealth and worldly success. Through sharp humor and honest reflection, The World delivers a message that challenges audiences to choose truth over comfort and conviction over convenience.





Comedy: Filthy People

January 27, 2026


Trey Knowles’ “Filthy People” is a humorous stand-up allegory that uses comedy to deliver a powerful message. In the routine, Trey jokingly tells adults to “take a bath,” but the deeper meaning goes far beyond physical cleanliness. He challenges people to examine their sinful behavior and make a change. Just as adults remind children to bathe, Trey points out that many fail to “clean” their own lives while continuing to consume and enjoy filthy content. With playful humor, he even jokes about being a “house maid for the day” because he wants everyone to get clean. At the heart of this comedy is a serious truth: God is not willing for anyone to perish, but desires all to come to repentance.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Comedy: I Am Running

January 25, 2026



In Trey Knowles’ “I Am Running,” this short comedy tells a fictional story about Trey being chased by the world for speaking out against sin. Businesses—and even Walt Disney—join the pursuit, determined to silence him. Trey runs so far that he ends up in a dangerous neighborhood known as 18th Street.

As the chase continues, strange and funny moments unfold. Trey encounters the Grim Reaper, then runs into a house where an elderly Latina woman is praying to the Virgin Mary. She asks Trey if Mary can help him, but Trey responds, “No, I need Jesus.” When he runs into the next room, he is shocked to see bones everywhere. Everywhere Trey goes, he is surrounded by death, reinforcing the deeper message behind the comedy.

Comedy: Who Gives You The Right To Say That

January 25, 2026

 


In Trey Knowles’ “Who Gives You The Right To Say That,” this funny short highlights how America reacts angrily when Trey speaks out against sin. Trey responds by challenging the culture, saying, “Stop coveting, and I’ll stop calling out your schizophrenia sin.” Both Democrats and Republicans fire back, admitting the people won’t give up coveting because their investments depend on it. They argue that taking away the “right” to covet is the same as taking away their right to make money. The allegory delivers a powerful message: Who do you love more—God or idols of money?


Saturday, January 24, 2026

Golden Dome

January 24, 2026



In this short, Trey Knowles jokes that only the wicked need a “Golden Dome” to protect themselves from the chaos they created. Trey hilariously breaks down how America is building shields for Armageddon like it’s a deluxe insurance plan for bad decisions. With nuclear weapons everywhere and fear in the air, Trey asks the real question: Can a golden dome save you from heavenly karma? Or is it just another expensive panic button?




European Love Your Enemy

January 24, 2026



In this funny but thought-provoking short, Trey Knowles calls out European Christians with sharp humor and truth. He reminds them that Jesus taught His followers to love their enemies, turn the other cheek, and overcome evil with good. Yet history shows many chose the sword instead of mercy, violence instead of humility. Trey points out the contradiction—claiming Christ while practicing conquest. With satire and boldness, he warns that the wicked will always reap what they sow, and that true followers of God don’t win battles with blades, but with righteousness, repentance, and love.




Mirror Reflection of The One

January 24, 2026




In this short message, Trey Knowles explains how the devil attempted to colonize God’s authority in heaven by exalting himself and trying to take God’s place. Because of this rebellion, he was cast out. Trey then challenges listeners with a powerful truth: if the enemy tried to colonize God in heaven, what do you think he is trying to do to you here on earth? The same spirit of domination and control is now directed toward humanity. This message highlights the ongoing spiritual conflict between the offspring of darkness and the offspring of God, reminding us that this battle is happening right now. Trey calls for spiritual awareness, discernment, and strength to resist being spiritually colonized and to remain rooted in God’s truth.



By Her Magic Spell Nations Were Deceived

January 24, 2026




In this short message, Trey Knowles exposes what he describes as Europe’s hidden power structures and the influence of royal authority that shaped global deception. Drawing from Revelation 18:24, Trey challenges listeners to examine the fruit of leadership, tradition, and institutions that claim moral authority yet operate in contradiction to the Spirit of God. He emphasizes that true discernment comes from observing actions, not titles—because character reveals the source of power. Trey urges viewers to test every system, tradition, and ruler against God’s truth, reminding us that deception often appears beautiful on the surface but carries destruction underneath. The message calls for spiritual awareness, repentance, and a return to righteousness so that believers are not misled by appearances, status, or worldly influence.

Revelation 18:24 In her was found the blood of prophets and of God’s holy people, of all who have been slaughtered on the earth.”




Friday, January 23, 2026

Comedy: Walt Disney

January 23, 2026



Trey Knowles delivers a hilarious stand-up bit about Walt Disney’s kids’ content, joking that Disney isn’t as “innocent” as it looks. Trey playfully claims that before you know it, your kid goes from watching cartoons to waving a magic wand and wishing on stars. He cracks jokes about how witches and wizards seem to pop up in every movie, teasing that Disney must have a secret spellbook somewhere in the studio. With exaggerated warnings and over-the-top reactions, Trey pretends to alert parents to “protect their kids” from magical influence — all in good fun, turning fantasy tropes into comedy gold.



Thursday, January 22, 2026

Comedy: How Do Psychics Stay In Business

January 22, 2026



In How Do Psychics Stay in Business, Trey Knowles humorously questions how psychics manage to keep their doors open while so many other businesses fail — especially when rent prices keep rising. Trey jokingly adds that if psychics truly knew their destiny with God, they probably wouldn’t be psychics at all.

In this laugh-out-loud stand-up set, Trey pokes fun at people who visit psychics in search of love and success, and even calls out how major industries supposedly hire psychics and sorcerers to influence and deceive audiences — including TV networks like CW and entertainment giants like Walt Disney. Trey wraps it all up with the punchline that while everyday workers are losing jobs, “the devil makes sure psychics stay in business.”


Song: I Come In My Fathers Name

January 22, 2026



 “I Come In My Father’s Name” by Trey Knowles is a powerful, prophetic-style song that blends spoken-word proclamation with spiritual lament. Drawing on biblical imagery and echoes of “Go Down Moses,” the song contrasts the mission of divine service, life, and liberation with forces portrayed as oppressive and destructive. Through repeated refrains and a call to “Let Yeshua people go,” it weaves themes of deliverance, identity, and resistance against spiritual bondage. The track channels the voice of a messenger sent to uplift, free, and restore, invoking the story of Moses to frame a modern cry for freedom and faithfulness.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Comedy: Scarface People

January 21, 2026


Trey Knowles’ “Scarface People” is a fast-paced stand-up comedy bit where Trey takes on the strange obsession gangsters and cartel fans have with the movie Scarface. He jokes about how they idolize crime bosses, glorify the dead, and slap “RIP” tattoos on their bodies while crying, teeth gnashing, and pretending they’re on a first-name basis with the Grim Reaper.

With sharp punchlines and bold commentary, Trey goes headfirst into the fantasy world of Scarface worship, ripping apart the over-the-top tough-guy image and exposing how ridiculous the lifestyle obsession really looks from the outside.

Comedy: Skeleton Heads Lovers

January 21, 2026


 

“Skeleton Heads Lovers” – A Comedy by Trey Knowles

Trey Knowles dives headfirst into the strange and hilarious world of skeleton-head super fans. From people who proudly collect skull decorations to those who tattoo skeletons on every available inch of their body, Trey asks the question nobody else is brave enough to ask: Why do these skeleton-head lovers love death so much? With sharp jokes and playful roasting, Trey explores pagan-style aesthetics, spooky fashion trends, and the over-the-top obsession with bones, candles, and “dark energy vibes.” Is it spiritual? Is it fashion? Or is it just people really committed to pagan practices year-round? Packed with absurd observations, wild comparisons, and laugh-out-loud commentary, “Skeleton Heads Lovers” is a fun, no-holds-barred comedy that pokes fun at spooky culture without taking itself too seriously.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Americans in Panic Stage - by Shahid Bolsen

January 20, 2026

There are Americans online in panic—angry, anxious, calling for help, calling for direction—after just one year of Trump-era intensity, as if the nightmare began yesterday. This talk is a hard reset: not comfort, not partisan therapy—perspective. You are not watching a “broken system.” You’re watching the system operate normally. The violence America has exported for generations is simply becoming harder to ignore at home. ICE, deportations, and camps aren’t deviations—this is what America does; the difference is aesthetics, not substance. And the real problem isn’t that you lack a charismatic savior. You don’t need a leader—you need a complete ideological reorientation. Until you abandon the comforting myths and rebuild your moral architecture, your resistance collapses the moment it becomes inconvenient. In this talk, Shahid Bolsen covers: Why “it’s worse now” is often denial, not analysis Why conventional fixes (electoral, protest-as-ritual) don’t touch power What you can do: refuse to be an instrument, build alternatives, prepare for what’s already unfolding

Monday, January 19, 2026

Prisoners of War

January 19, 2026


Trey Knowles — “Prisoners of War”

We were indigenous people, dependent on God, living among our tribes, rooted in the land, breathing freedom without chains, without bills, without debt, without masters. We worked the soil with our hands and fed our families with what the earth provided. We walked in balance. We carried spirit. We were a holy people. Then one day the enemy came, not with peace but with fire, with steel, with lies, with hunger for power.

 

They stole our land, they killed our elders, they destroyed our villages, and they turned human beings into property. They beat us until our backs were maps of suffering. They raped our women and shattered our families. They hung us on crosses and trees as warnings. They stripped away our names, our languages, our identities, and forced us to speak their words, worship their systems, live by their rules. 


They treated us like animals, branded us, sold us, caged us, and demanded that we call them “master” while they played God. They did not only steal our bodies — they attacked our minds, poisoned our culture, erased our history, and worked to rip the image of God out of us. Now our children grow up confused, disconnected, searching for themselves in broken systems that were never built for them. 


They learn to love chains they cannot see. They accept the ways of the beast: greed, violence, division, addiction, hatred, and emptiness. We are still bleeding from wounds that never healed. We are still fighting battles that never ended. We walk free in name but bound in spirit. This is not just history — this is warfare. This is generational. This is psychological. This is spiritual. We are survivors, but we are also captives. We are standing, but we are still under occupation. We are breathing, but we are not fully alive. We are a people stolen from ourselves. We are prisoners of war.