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Story & Lesson Highlights with Jaylin Brokemond

We’re looking forward to introducing you to Jaylin Brokemond . Check out our conversation below.

Hi Jaylin, thank you so much for taking time out of your busy day to share your story, experiences and insights with our readers. Let’s jump right in with an interesting one: What is a normal day like for you right now?
Handling business

Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
I’m Flight Boy an 18 year old artist, YouTuber, and all-around creative who’s building a unique lane in music and entertainment. I make high-energy tracks with catchy hooks with my own bold, fearless style. Outside the booth, I create fun, engaging content on YouTube, from hooping sessions to street interviews, always keeping my personality front and center.

What makes my brand stand out is that it’s real — everything I put out comes from my own life, humor, and hustle. I’m not just making songs; I’m crafting moments and memories people can connect with. Right now, I’m working on my an ep and album “The Flyest” , plus some wild, creative visuals . My single “Shark” which is a song for the younger generation is being worked on visual for that is coming soon as well. 20 v1 single I just dropped is a about a popular 20 v 1 trend that’s taking over YouTube right now visual coming soon for that as well

I’m here to inspire people to chase their dreams, have fun with it, and no matter how young you are you can do anything you work hard for and always stay “flyer than ever.”

Okay, so here’s a deep one: What was your earliest memory of feeling powerful?
The earliest memory of feeling powerful is when I went in the booth and I switched my style for making love songs to make drill , hard songs with more energy

Was there ever a time you almost gave up?
Yes earlier in my rap career around 15 and I stopped making music for a minute but then I came back making music at 17 and ever since then I been making hard music. For the young people don’t ever think about quitting what you love. My advice is keep motivating yourself to keep going

Next, maybe we can discuss some of your foundational philosophies and views? Is the public version of you the real you?
Yes I’m the same person , I just let my creative side shine more in public.

Before we go, we’d love to hear your thoughts on some longer-run, legacy type questions. Are you doing what you were born to do—or what you were told to do?
Yes I’m doing rap and YouTube which I feel god gave me the talent to be able and have the skill to that.

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