Country music star Zach Bryan was in a fighting mood Saturday night at the Born & Raised Festival in Pryor, Oklahoma.
Social media videos show Bryan, an Oologah, Oklahoma native, confronting fellow country star Gavin Adcock through a wire fence. Bryan, 29, and Adcock, 26, have been feuding for some time now, and this incident was the latest escalation in their beef.
“If they open this f—–g gate, I’ll f—–g kill you,” Bryan says in one clip.
“Come on over here and meet me with a world of hell buddy,” Adcock can be heard responding as Bryan continues to yell and gesture in his direction.
“If they open this f*cking gate I’ll f*cking kill you”
– Zach Bryan to Gavin Adcock before climbing a barbed wire fence pic.twitter.com/JGVpEpoNPV
— Country Central (@CountryCentral) September 14, 2025
‘Eat a Snickers bro’
Eventually, Bryan scales the fence, but he was immediately stopped by security personnel. Adcock backed away from the angry “I Remember Everything” singer while pointing and shouting at Bryan.
Adcock later got some trash talk in on Instagram, sharing video of the altercation.
“When you get death threats from Sack Cryin before you headline in his hometown,” Adcock wrote over the clip, adding “Eat a Snickers bro” in the caption.
Saturday’s incident was just the latest in an ongoing feud between the two musicians.
The boys are beefin’
Bryan and Adcock’s battle dates back to a couple of months ago. It started when Adcock took exception to how Bryan handled criticism from a teenage fan who was disappointed he didn’t meet with supporters following a show at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.
“If you can’t handle the criticism of a 14 year old why do people idolize you?” Adcock wrote on X/Twitter July 22. “That kid was head over heels to meet you and spent/ parents spent a ton of money to see you. He’s got feeling too and a you’re a ‘grown man’ nearly 30 They’re the only reason you are around.”
Adcock doubled down on his take during an appearance on Rolling Stone’s “Nashville Now” podcast in August.
“It wasn’t about not wanting to sign autographs after a show, it’s like letting a 14-year-old kid rant, without saying, ‘Get off my d—.’ You’re bigger than that,” he said.