All About Change - Tyler Merritt - Before You Call the Cops, Storytelling and Empathy Driven Social Justice
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Tyler Merritt is a Nashville-based actor, comedian, vocalist, and creator of The Tyler Merritt Project. He believes empathy is a powerful tool to fight injustice and encourages people to step out of t...he anonymity of social media and engage in face-to-face conversations. Using his creativity, Tyler Merritt challenges racism and promotes empathy. In 2018, Tyler's viral video "Before You Call The Cops" (released by The Tyler Merritt Project) was viewed by over 18 million people worldwide and voted one of the Top 20 videos of the year by NowThisPolitics. In 2020, “Before You Call the Cops” recirculated and has since been viewed by over 60 million people and has appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live, MSNBC Live, and Access Hollywood. Jay and Tyler discuss the idea of activism through storytelling, the way cancer impacted Tyler’s activist journey, and much more. Learn more about the Tyler Merritt Project here. Episode Chapters (00:00) Intro (02:05) Tyler’s new book, “This Changes Everything” (08:50) How does religion influence Tyler’s activism? (12:14) Tyler’s “Strong Black Man Mode” (14:37) Navigating criticism (18:01) Growing into activism (21:05 ) Pathways to leadership for future generations (24:26) The state of communication in America (26:02) What should we focus on now? (28:13 ) Goodbye and outro For video episodes, watch on www.youtube.com/@therudermanfamilyfoundation Stay in touch: X: @JayRuderman | @RudermanFdn LinkedIn: Jay Ruderman | Ruderman Family Foundation Instagram: All About Change Podcast | Ruderman Family Foundation To learn more about the podcast, visit https://allaboutchangepodcast.com/
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[♪ music playing, fades out.
Welcome to All About Change.
Today, my guest is Tyler Merritt.
Tyler is a Nashville-based actor, comedian, vocalist,
and is the creator of the Tyler Merritt Project,
an activist.
As he says on his website,
as a 6'2", dreadlocked black man living in the South,
Merritt is well aware of the stereotypes
and their potentially dangerous consequences.
To combat this, Tyler began the Tyler Merritt is well aware of the stereotypes and their potentially dangerous consequences.
To combat this, Tyler began the Tyler Merritt Project, which brings his ethos of love, learn,
create to life through his words and videos.
Tyler's 2018 video, Before You Call the Cops, went viral two years after it was released
during the summer of protests following George Floyd's murder.
Since then, his reach has grown wide, and he has shared his message of coexistence on the podcast
and book circuits and on national and local TV nationwide. Recently, Tyler's third book,
This Changes Everything, hit bookstores across the country. When Tyler was diagnosed with cancer, everything
he thought he knew about what mattered in life changed. This Changes Everything is a
humorous and optimistic love letter to this beautiful life. Tyler, welcome to All About
Change.
So, Tyler, I want to tell you that, you know, we've never met, but listening to your words, listening to your videos,
reading your words, your idea of proximity
and getting to know you and after I get to know you,
I'll love you and I feel like I love you.
Your message really resonated with me.
I appreciate that, bro.
Also, I know it's not easy, especially nowadays
where proximity can oftentimes not even really feel safe.
Right. You know what I mean?
Like it can literally not feel safe nowadays.
It doesn't feel like when I was in elementary school,
you just kind of were like,
I'm gonna get to know the kid next door and their family.
You know, nowadays it can be tricky.
Right. So I appreciate that, man.
It means a lot for real.
I want to talk about your new book.
This changes everything.
And there's so much brave vulnerability in the book.
Um, I was really impressed about what you were able to share.
Now the book focuses on your cancer diagnosis and recovery.
And it could seem like a departure from the other work
that you've done over your career.
But African-Americans have the highest rate of mortality
of any racial or ethnic group for all cancers combined.
So can you talk a little bit about how you see this book
as part of your activist project
that you've been working on for the past decade?
To be clear, I did not want to write a book about cancer.
I don't ever want anybody to have to write a book
about cancer again.
It just so happens, people ask me all the time,
and I take my coffee black,
I never talked about cancer in my first book.
And I said, well, it's because I didn't know I had it
until I turned, I take my coffee black in,
almost a week after I turned it in,
suddenly I found out that I had a 28 pound cancerous tumor
in my abdomen.
I do okay financially.
I am single with no kids,
so I've had insurance for quite some time.
I have a doctor who I see regularly,
but that percentage of black people in America
is not really that high.
People who are continually checking in on their health,
people who are continually checking in on their health, people who are invested in making
sure that all parts of their body are taken care of. And it's not because there's not a desire to
want to make sure that we are well, but it's all tied into systematic racism and not trusting
and the systematic racism and not trusting doctors,
feeling as if you have to go to somebody, it can be a sign of weakness,
being looked at like, okay, well, your health isn't okay,
we really don't care.
There's a lot of things that are associated with that.
Of course, on top of financial costs,
the same way that the entirety of America is affected,
when I really dug into talking about cancer,
it was almost impossible for me not to be able to look at kind of the causes of death,
especially amongst people that look like me and why. And I talk about this in my new book.
I'm a black man in America. Everything is not fine. I walk through a million different
things every single day. And I don't have the privilege to not have hope
as a black man in America.
If I wake up and decide I'm just gonna leave hope behind,
I would never get out of bed.
And for me, that funnels into things having to do
with my health, where I find myself saying,
it might be a bad day today,
but if it's a bad day where I'm getting to spend
it with my nieces and my nephews, or I'm getting to spend it with someone that I love, or hell,
if I'm just getting to sit and watch a television show that I think is wildly amusing or touching
me, that to me, the still being here, man, it's that thing that is beyond just good.
It's a miracle.
And not just if you're sick, if you're healthy.
It's a miracle that we are still here
and there's a joy in that.
That's a beautiful message.
Is that the same like when you wear a mask,
for health reasons, you're compromised
and you're wearing a mask and people are turning to you
and saying, hey buddy, what do you get the mask on for?
I mean, is that part of it also?
100%.
And I mean this in a literal sense,
not in the like trying to be a punk sense.
People that still question anybody
for still wearing a mask to me are just ignorant.
And again, I don't mean that in like this negative sense.
I mean it literally.
I feel like they need to educate themselves.
I think they need to think about science.
I think that there needs to be a little bit
of empathy involved and know that I don't like
wearing a mask.
I don't, but I just came back from like a six city tour
back to back to back to back to back
to back and in every airport, in every, um, signing I had a mask on. And because a lot
of these people were my people, they didn't question me, but I found myself going, you
don't know what my story is.
And when I see somebody else who has a mask on, I don't know what their story is either.
And honestly, how much does my wearing a mask affect you?
Which also, bro, goes into the entirety of the concept
of empathy and proximity to anyone.
Us not being able to understand what other people are doing
unless we allow ourselves to take the time
to get to know those things.
I would argue to say 99.9% of people,
if they were to come to me like,
bro, come on, man, why you still got a mascot?
If I were to say, thanks for asking,
I actually have cancer.
Right after the word cancer,
the whole mood would probably shift.
But I think we don't understand each other.
I mean, I think that's the point
that you're trying to get at.
We make these assumptions in America and maybe other parts of the world, that you're trying to get at. We make these assumptions in America
and maybe other parts of the world,
that you're in this camp, I'm in this camp,
this is who you are, this is who I am,
I don't like this thing about you,
you don't like this thing about me.
And what I get from your message is like,
hey, just back up and try to understand who I am.
I might look different, I might be acting different,
or whatever, but you don't really know me.
For me, it goes even deeper.
I wish that we had the natural born empathy
to not only want to be curious about another person,
but to actually care.
Like if I see somebody who's wearing a mask,
my initial thought doesn't go into,
why are they wearing a mask?
And maybe my initial thought goes into,
okay, I don't know who this person is,
but I care about them.
I care about their wellbeing.
And look, I know that that sounds like a whole thing.
I know that sounds like make believe of me just going,
so what you're saying, Tyler, is you want just the world
to be better as humans.
And kind of in some way, I'm saying, no, man,
I just want you to see me and I wanna be able to see you
the way I do about any singular person that I care about.
And I know you're a religious person, and I also consider myself a religious person.
How much does that come into it? Like, your teachings, what you've learned,
your life experience, there's God in here, and it changes your appreciation, it changes your
God in here and it changes your appreciation, it changes your perspective. And I know you've talked about different experiences that you've had over your life, you know, at a Christian
camp and other times when you're like, my perspective has changed. You know, this is
a show about activism, not about religion, but I think religion shapes who we are and shapes our activism.
At a very, very young age, when I was in middle school, high school age, I went to a church
camp and I won't get all into that story.
It's highly documented in my first book, I take my copy black.
But in that church camp experience, I ended up becoming a Christian and having a spiritual
experience with Jesus.
Now as a grown person, as an adult, in a time period where Christian nationalism is rampant
throughout the United States, I'll tell you, and I talk about this in my new book, I don't
even like saying I'm a Christian. I don't like using that word. And to be really honest
with you, I'm not really comfortable really saying the name of Jesus anymore, because I feel like that Jesus that I fell in love
with at this quiet summer camp as a young, young child has been wildly vandalized.
Really?
Wildly vandalized.
This thing that I care about, this thing to me that is the default of everything having to do with it is love.
The idea of this Christianity, which is grace and understanding and accepting all people
and loving those who need help and compassion, all of those things has become wildly vandalized
into something that it is hard for me to recognize so much
that it's hard for me to even say that I am that thing. Now, why that matters in activism,
and I know that there are millions of people who feel the same way. When I'm on tour and I talk
about this, it's when the audience probably comes the most alive, whether they are Christian or not,
they understand what I'm trying to say, that my Jesus isn't an American flag.
Now, the reason why that affects activism is there are white churches all across America
that on Sunday morning, you know, especially after George Floyd, they came together and
they were like, you know what, we now put together this social justice team on Wednesday
night and if you want to join, go on the computer and come to this class or we're going to
have a small group over here that's this. In the black church, the black church Sunday morning has always been
the social justice class. In the black church, that's where individuals come to fight to
survive in the United States of America. That is where Martin Luther King, who most people
would argue they know something that he said. He was a preacher.
He was a man of faith.
And so many individuals that do activism
are individuals of faith.
What makes it so hard now for me
is I don't even want to bring my faith into the stories
when I begin to talk to people about me caring about them.
Because the faith that I have,
like so many other things, has been colonized, man. I totally get what you're saying.
I wanna ask you, in your book,
you write about the strong black man mode.
What does that mean to you?
And why do you feel that you had to curb
your instinct to engage in it?
Because of history.
I talk a lot about my mom, but I also talk about my father.
But I talk about my father in different ways.
And I was on tour this last week.
My mom was the Q&A person at one of the things,
and she simply asked me, she said,
you talk about me all the time in the audience of Plot It.
And she was like, well, why don't you tell stories
about your dad more?
I didn't know she was gonna ask that.
And bro, I found myself going,
can I be honest with you, Mom?
Because dad's stories aren't fun for me.
Like most of my dad's stories are the things
that he's went through and I've learned from
and I pulled from.
They aren't really about this attaboy compassion
that my dad has because that wasn't how he was raised.
He was raised a sharecropper,
then he went into the military.
There is something inherent as a black man in America
that you have to be tough.
I'm not gonna say that it's a poisoned masculinity.
I'm saying that there's a masculinity
that comes along with a black man in America
that not only do you have to be tough,
but you have to put on a shield almost every single morning
to realize that there are gonna be things
that come towards you and come at you
that you maybe had never imagined
and didn't come at you yesterday.
And then with that shield on,
you have to begin to figure out in this black man mode
that you are in, how are you going to react to the world based on that?
Is it going to be through anger?
Is it going to be through compassion?
Is it going to be through hope?
Is it going to be through absolute madness?
Is it going to be through rage?
And this is just on a Monday, bro. Black people are not monolithic, right?
So I can't speak on behalf of every actual person.
You got a black person that works with you on your podcast.
Right.
And I'm not even gonna lie, even though I know he's just listening, there's a part of
me that feels like as I talk through this, I can feel little head nods every once in
a while when I say some things.
Not because we are all the same, but there are some things that echo with us as black
men that we don't have to put into words.
Your viral video, before you call the cops, which was a major turning point in your breakthrough
and impact as an activist and what you've been able to achieve.
And it was praised by Jimmy Kimmel and LeBron James.
Before you call the cops, I just want you to know,
the first thing that I did when I woke up this morning
was yell at my alarm clock.
My parents were raised in the South.
I have to roll tide or they'll disown me.
They raised me in Las Vegas.
That city still has my heart.
I hate spiders.
I'm a vegetarian.
I'm not proud about it.
I've done goat yoga.
I'm really not proud about that.
I can tell you every single word off the NWA Straight Out
of Compton album.
I can also sing you every single word from Oklahoma.
Bananas are disgusting.
I am a Christian.
I spend almost every Sunday morning
teaching kids in Sunday school.
I am often asked if I am Muslim.
I'm okay with that.
But you got some critique from the New York Times.
And when you get that critique, whether it be like in a newspaper or on social media,
do you find that critique constructive or does it just pull you down?
Oh man, I haven't talked about this New York Times article in a while, but a real quick summation is,
in this article, this very specific individual who wrote it
felt as if the things that I liked leaned more towards
a white personality in a white world.
And how difficult was it for people to really relate to me
if they were seeing things in me
that they were already familiar with?
Which he felt kind of what it gets the concept of James Baldwin, which I'll just say this, the article
was asked not only to me because my whole point is that we as black people are not monolithic.
And my specific story does not mean that it is suddenly a white story.
I'm a black man in America.
I can only tell a black story.
That's all I can tell.
Every single day I walk out of the room, I'm black.
I think the reason why it echoed and people felt it so much
is because there were black Americans all over the world
that watched that and went, I see me in this.
I love NWA, but I also like Wicked, you know?
And that's okay.
And I don't necessarily feel like that's something
that I can say out loud without being judged,
but you chose to say it and I appreciate it.
And I think there were black people
all over the world that did that.
And I know this because they began to do similar videos
with the same cadence and pace to express how they feel.
And then as far as white folks went,
or people that weren't, you know, people of color,
I think there was this relational internet,
empathy and proximity that was able to happen
because of the video.
You know, you talked about Las Vegas Academy,
and you know, you graduated in 1994,
and then 2018, you went viral with your, uh,
before you called the cops.
But it sort of flattens you out.
And you did a lot of hard work, you know,
as a public figure, as an activist,
between those years.
So can you talk about the impact between
as an activist between those years. So can you talk about the impact between 94 and 2018
and who you are as a person
and what those years made you be?
I think there are some people,
like my great friend, Pastor Michael McBride,
he lives up in the Bay Area,
who he's like a modern day John Lewis pretty much.
I remember in college being like,
that dude is an activist and he's gonna go on to blah,
blah, blah, like I remember feeling that in college.
If you were to say that to ask him about me,
that is not how he felt.
He was like, he would probably be like,
Tyler was a womanizer, he was a lead singer in a rock band,
he was doing all of these things
that were kind of self-serving and performative.
Because I was an actor.
I just have been this way all of my life, right?
But what I didn't realize in the midst of kind of graduating from high school,
from the academy, and living in Nashville, Tennessee,
after doing music and TV and all these things,
I don't think it occurred to me that my main thread
through all those things was storytelling.
I always was in a place that I wanted to tell a story.
Be if it was through music,
be if it was on stage acting using someone else's words,
the story part of things to me
always connected me to people.
And as an acting exercise, as a young person,
you're taught how to watch people
so that you can learn their mannerisms.
You can learn all of those things
and use them later in your acting.
I found that my watching people
was making me more empathetic towards them.
My watching people was allowing me to learn about people
that were different than I was.
And even though I didn't set out 94 to go,
I'm going to be an activist in this world,
I think this, if you have a heart
and you pay attention to the world
that is going on around you,
and then you allow yourself to have empathy
towards the people that you see,
activism is just a natural step
into the next part of who you're gonna be as a person.
And you've had so many people on this podcast
and talked about activism in different ways.
Activism can show up in the absolute smallest way possible
or it can show up through a huge, huge voice.
And in my story, I couldn't help but to switch
from seeing people to loving people
to fighting for people. And I love the idea of stories because I think stories resonate with
people. They see themselves in the stories, they see similarities, it hits home, they understand
the point rather than just being shouted at. That's your strength. We talked about this a little bit about you having to face mortality.
What do you see pathways to leadership
that you can build so that your work continues
into the future?
The late great prophetess Whitney Houston once said,
I believe the children are our future.
And I do not take that lightly, man.
When I start to really that lightly, man.
When I start to really look at, you know,
my niece and nephew here in Nashville are 13 and 11.
And when I start to see how they live in the world right now,
when I start to look at the things
that are important to them,
I'll ask my niece Zoe, like, who are you dating?
And she, you know, she prefers boys,
but she appreciates me asking who are you dating
because she understands that not everybody
sees love the same way.
When I see that, it's a little glimpse of hope
into the future as to what we can be.
I was writing a doormaid for me, my nephew Declan.
I asked him to read, he's a white kid. I asked him to read, he's a little white kid,
I asked him to read a version of A Door Made for Me,
my kid's book.
And in that book, I'm walking along with a little white kid
as a young kid and I have an experience where this white kid
has to make a choice.
And Declan, when he was younger, when I wrote this book,
he read the book and he came to me, he goes,
"'Tyler,' Uncle Ty Ty,' is what he calls me, he goes, Tyler, Uncle Ty Ty is what he calls me.
He said, Uncle Ty Ty, listen,
you get to the point in the book
where this woman says something mean to you,
but Jack, who's a little white kid in the book,
he says, he goes, never said anything back to her.
It's like, if I was in that,
I wouldn't let her talk back to you.
Why did Jack, and he goes off.
But then he says this thing, bro, that is so funny.
He goes, Tyler, and he was young at the time,
he goes, Tyler, listen, you know this Uncle Ty Ty?
At my school, I'm friends with all of the blacks.
Ha ha ha!
I hear my little nephew say this,
and I'm like, whoa, Declan, hold on,
why don't you call blacks, right?
But there was a part of him that's just like,
I don't understand why we aren't fighting for each other
when people talk about our differences.
And as I'm listening to him say those things,
I find myself welling up thinking,
you're not gonna get everything right all the time, Declan.
You're not gonna walk this world
always saying the right thing. but I will tell you,
as long as your heart is right, we have hope. And I know that part of the reason why Declan's heart
is right is because I'm allowed to pour into his life every day, and I actively attempt to do that. So that long answer is all to say, man, I really do believe if we are continually guiding,
speaking life into and encouraging our children, our kids, if we're doing that, if we see that
responsibility and we're not just looking like how can we be okay and into
the future, but we're taking this moment to look at our present with these kids, once
I'm gone, I don't need to have my name on a building.
But I do want to know that Declan remembers my words when I'm gone and that makes him
make a better choice
in his everyday life.
Do you have any reflections on the state of communication
in the country right now,
after you're out there touring and you're meeting people,
and what do you think things are like right now?
I'm gonna say something that is not gonna make
a lot of people happy,
because it doesn't make me happy when I say this.
I have been to San Jose, California, Las Vegas, Nevada,
New Orleans, Dallas, Austin, Nashville,
all in probably about a six to seven day period.
Everywhere you go, everybody is so different
and you can feel this, that and the other.
And I'm sure in some places you can feel,
well, I'll say this, I live in the South.
The historic racial pressure that I feel here
is different than I feel in California.
But the people, the people are the same.
Their hearts are the same.
There are good people all over this United States.
And this is hard for people to swallow, and I understand why.
Because I don't even like saying this out of my mouth.
Just because someone has a political difference in you does not mean that they are a bad person.
And that is hard to hear currently.
But it occurs to me every time I go to say something,
I don't know what these people believe.
I don't know what their backgrounds are,
but I know that in this moment,
we're all in a room together and we are okay.
And I have an opportunity to make them feel loved,
accepted and better about who they are.
And I feel that all over the United States.
What's the work that we need to be focusing on right now?
What do you think would make the most difference?
I know that that's a really broad question, you know, to end with, but...
What's the takeaway?
I found myself on tour saying to the audience,
hey, the world needs you.
And then I found myself saying, I need you,
which is a very true thing.
I do need everybody to be the best person they are
because it affects me and the people that are around me.
And then my girlfriend said to me,
I love that you're saying that the world needs you
and you need them, but can you add on the fact
that their community needs them?
And to answer your question, the thing that we can do,
and I think that we should all focus on, is simple for me.
Start with the people that are the closest to you.
We are all more than one thing,
but there is a mom who is at home right now,
who is raising a child, listening to this podcast,
thinking to themselves, this is all handy dandy, Tyler,
that you have time to make videos
and to go on tour and to write books,
but I'm just trying to make sure
that this kid that sits there in front of me
doesn't eat glue, right?
Right.
I would say, beyond a shadow of a doubt,
you are the activist of a doubt,
you are the activist of the future.
You are.
Because you have the ability,
somebody who is right there,
right next to you,
to influence their empathy,
to influence the way that they see the world,
to teach them to love people in massive, massive groups
and not just one type of person.
And if we continue to do that,
when we run across some absolutely idiotic
political decision that is made,
that may have a lifelong effect on us
because we have people in office we feel a certain way of,
it might seem huge and major.
And how do I fight against that?
How you fight against it is by making sure
that the people in your circle feel loved now.
Because we are here now and we are resilient, bro.
Thank you so much for that.
Tyler Merritt, I really appreciate you
spending time with us.
Thank you for being my guest on All About Change.
And I hope you go from strength to strength.
Thanks for, I appreciate that.
Thank you for creating a community, man, where we're building a world that we can change.
Today's episode was produced by Tani Levitt and Mijan Zulu.
To check out more episodes or to learn more about the show, you can visit our
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All About Change is produced by the Ruderman Family Foundation.
That's it for now. I'm Jay Ruderman and we'll see you next time on All About Change. But not goodbye