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Djay Brawner
Djay Brawner
from Wikipedia

Djay Brawner (born June 21, 1981) is an American director of music videos, film, and television.

Key Information

Career

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In 2000, after taking film classes at De Anza College, he moved Orange, California to begin his education at Chapman University's film school. While studying there, he produced and directed a number of films and soon after went on to become a director Generator, a music video production company started by Derek Dale.[1] During that time he filmed a number of upcoming bands, many of which have been featured on MTV, MTV2, and Fuse. His first commissioned music video was for Emery in 2004.

DJay Brawner has directed videos for Danny Ocean, 3Oh!3, Melanie Martinez, Halestorm, Panic! At The Disco, Beartooth, William Beckett.[2] among others.

From 2005 to 2006, Brawner created, directed, and produced 26 episodes of a magazine style television show called Noise Link. He later went on to found Anthem Films, a commercial and music video production company.

Films

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  • 72 Hours: A Love Story (2011)
  • The Beginners Guide to Snuff (2016) as producer
  • Driving While Black (2016) as producer
  • It's Still Nothing Personal by All Time Low (2019)
  • Lawtown (2019) as executive producer

Television

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  • Sunny Family Cult (2016) as executive producer & director

Music videos as director

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Djay Brawner is an American filmmaker, director, and entertainment executive known for his work directing music videos and commercials, as well as founding production companies that have produced hundreds of projects. He has directed more than fifty music videos for prominent artists including Foo Fighters, Ed Sheeran, Panic! at the Disco, Halestorm, Lindsey Stirling, and Melanie Martinez. Brawner founded Anthem Films in 2009, a music video production company that created over 300 music videos, commercials, and other content during its decade-long run, and in 2018 he co-founded Tuff (formerly Tuff Contender), a roster-based production company specializing in commercials and music videos for major brands and artists. Raised in California, Brawner developed an early passion for filmmaking through childhood photography, skate videos, and studying music videos on VHS. He attended Chapman University to study film and began his professional career assisting on sets before directing his first commissioned music video in 2004 for the band Emery. His career has spanned the evolution of music video production, navigating industry challenges like shrinking budgets and economic downturns while building a body of work that spans punk roots to mainstream acts and commercial clients including Home Depot, Adidas, and Google. He continues to direct and executive produce, emphasizing creative passion and cultural impact across his projects.

Early life and education

Childhood and early influences

Djay Brawner was born in 1981 in Menlo Park, California, where his family had lived since 1973. He grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area during the 1990s, a period when he developed an early fascination with cameras and video. From childhood, Brawner enjoyed taking photographs and filming with his parents' VHS camcorder, laying the foundation for his creative interests. As a teenager, he immersed himself in filming skate videos and amateur skits with friends around San Francisco, often in a raw, spontaneous style that predated shows like Jackass. He also began collecting VHS tapes of music videos, meticulously analyzing what made them visually compelling and discovering new bands through the medium. Brawner found a place within the punk music scene during his teens, an experience that profoundly shaped his hands-on approach to music culture and visual storytelling. These formative influences from the Bay Area's vibrant subcultures and DIY media experimentation guided his early passion for the moving image.

Film education

After high school, Djay Brawner attended Chapman University's film school in Orange, California, where he studied filmmaking as a film major. While at Chapman, he directed his own projects on the side, producing and directing several student films as part of his studies. To support himself during his time in film school, Brawner worked as an ice cream man for Archie's Ice Cream. Brawner graduated from Chapman University in 2004. Following his graduation, he transitioned into professional directing as an independent music video and commercial director.

Career

Entry into music video direction

Djay Brawner began his professional career in music video direction after graduating from Chapman University, where he met and was mentored by director Derek Dale, working as a production assistant on Dale's sets while building his own projects. In 2004, he directed his first commissioned music video for the band Emery on Tooth & Nail Records. This opportunity led him to pursue additional directing commissions in the music video industry. In 2007, Brawner founded Anthem Films, a production company focused on music videos and commercials, which he initially operated from his apartment living room with the dual goals of sustaining his own directing career and helping other directors develop their portfolios. The company produced a range of early projects, including music videos such as "Enough Is Enough" by Stick To Your Guns (2008). These early efforts established Brawner in the music video industry before his later work with more prominent artists.

Major music video works

Djay Brawner has directed numerous high-profile music videos since 2011, collaborating with artists across rock, punk, alternative, and pop genres and often serving as director through production companies like Anthem Films in his earlier works or Tuff in later projects. His credits reflect a consistent engagement with energetic, narrative-driven visuals suited to rock and alternative acts, alongside occasional forays into mainstream pop. Among his breakthrough works are the 2011 "This Video Sucks Contest" version of Foo Fighters' "Rope", Gym Class Heroes' "Stereo Hearts" and "Ass Back Home" (both 2011), Flo Rida's "Run" (2012), and Panic! at the Disco's "Girls / Girls / Boys" (2013), the latter premiering on October 8, 2013, and amassing over 101 million views on YouTube. In 2014, Brawner directed Ed Sheeran's "All of the Stars". The following year marked a particularly active period in rock, including Melanie Martinez's "Pity Party" (co-directed with Martinez) and multiple videos for Halestorm, such as "Apocalyptic", "Amen", and "I Am the Fire" (all 2015). He continued in the rock and punk space with Sum 41's "War" (2016), Danny Ocean's "Me Rehúso" (2017), Fever 333's "Burn It" (2019, co-directed with Jason Aalon Butler), Corey Taylor's "CMFT Can't Be Stopped" (2020), and All Time Low's "Tell Me I'm Alive" (2023, where he also served as executive producer). These projects highlight Brawner's recurring work with rock-oriented artists, including multiple collaborations with Halestorm, and his ability to adapt stylistic approaches to diverse acts while maintaining a focus on dynamic performance and conceptual storytelling.

Television directing and producing

Djay Brawner has directed and produced projects in television formats, focusing on web series and mini-series. His work in this area includes key roles on the horror web series Sunny Family Cult and the comedy mini-series The Horse's Mouth. Brawner contributed to Sunny Family Cult (2017–), a Crypt TV horror series set in the late 1980s that follows a teenage girl rising within a cult. He served as producer from 2017 to 2018, executive producer across seasons, and director for two episodes in 2018. The longest-running series in the Crypt Monster Universe, it features fourteen episodes across two seasons and holds an IMDb rating of 6.9. In 2019, Brawner directed all five episodes of the comedy mini-series The Horse's Mouth, while also serving as executive producer and producer on each. The series has an IMDb rating of 7.4.

Film directing and producing

Djay Brawner has directed short narrative films, including 72 Hours: A Love Story (2017), which he also wrote, depicting a relationship unraveling over 72 hours amid extreme circumstances resembling major hurricanes. He later directed the 2021 short Hula Hoop, written by Mike Postalakis and starring Sierra Collins and Postalakis himself. In producing roles, Brawner served as producer on the 2015 feature Driving While Black, a comedy directed by Paul Sapiano that examines racial profiling through the experiences of a young Black man in Los Angeles. He was executive producer on the 2018 documentary Lawtown, which investigates the opioid epidemic in Lawrence, Massachusetts, as a reflection of broader national issues, with editing by Anjoum Agrama and score by Mark Yaeger. Brawner is attached as director and producer to the Untitled Warped Tour Documentary, which remains in pre-production.

Production companies and executive roles

Djay Brawner has established and led production companies specializing in music videos, commercials, and related content creation. He founded Anthem Films in 2007, initially operating from his apartment living room with the goal of supporting his own directing career while helping other directors build their portfolios. The company focused on commercials and music videos, producing a diverse range of projects over its decade-long run, including over 300 music videos, commercials, and feature films. In 2018, Brawner shut down Anthem Films and co-founded Tuff Contender with business partner Max Rose, a roster-based production company that emphasized commercial and branded content while continuing to produce music videos. This venture later rebranded as Tuff, where he serves as Senior Executive Producer and Partner. He specializes in content creation, business development, and creative direction, with award-winning projects he has led gaining over six billion impressions on YouTube. In his executive roles, Brawner has served as executive producer or senior executive producer on numerous music videos and other content, including projects for artists such as All Time Low, Pierce the Veil, Fever 333, and Conan Gray. His overall production involvement includes 43 producer credits and 22 director credits across his career.

Recognition

Industry impact and viewership

Brawner's work as a creative director and producer has achieved substantial online reach through music videos and related content across various platforms. His projects have garnered significant viewership, particularly among rock, alternative, and punk audiences. He has exerted particular influence in the punk, rock, and alternative music video scenes through long-term collaborations with artists such as Taking Back Sunday, Halestorm, and Highly Suspect, among others in those genres. His direction has helped shape the aesthetic and promotional presence of these acts in the music industry.

Awards and nominations

As a producer on the documentary feature ''Driving While Black'' (2015), Brawner shared in a 2015 Award of Merit in the Feature Film category at the New Orleans Film Festival.

Critical reception

Djay Brawner's music videos have garnered attention in rock and metal media, with publications often highlighting their visual atmosphere, narrative structure, and thematic synergy with the songs. The video for Halestorm's "Darkness Always Wins" was described as a "fantastically sword-swinging" clip, featuring Lzzy Hale in chainmail wielding a medieval sword for a dramatic duel amid a foggy, swampy landscape reminiscent of fantasy settings. Other works have been noted for their immersive and evocative qualities. Thrice's "Scavengers" video was called "visually stunning," drawing viewers into a realm of mystery and disguises that instills uncertainty about character motives and loyalties. Coheed and Cambria's "You Got Spirit, Kid" paid homage to 1980s teen films in the style of John Hughes and Steven Spielberg, portraying the band executing pranks against bullies to convey a sense of youthful camaraderie. Staind's "Lowest In Me" placed the performance in a mental institution, where the setting's despair aligned closely with the song's heavy emotional tone. Earlier, Fake Figures' "Something Deadly" was characterized as a "creepy" clip exploring disturbing psychological themes. Such coverage in outlets like Revolver Magazine, Blabbermouth.net, and Noisecreep reflects consistent appreciation for Brawner's ability to produce conceptually fitting, atmospheric visuals that amplify the artists' messages across various projects.

References

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