I'm a completely evolved fighter.

I feel like I'm a very dominant fighter.

I dominate, and I break guys' wills. When they come to fight me, they know they're going to be in for a fight, and it's going to be a test of wills.

I'm the super villain of the whole entire UFC.

Everybody wants to watch me.

I don't think about the negative in my life. I just think about the positives.

It's going to be an easy fight when I finally get my hands on Tyron Woodley.

I live with no regrets.

GSP, that little syrup sucker, he can come get this. He thinks he's the greatest welterweight of all time. I have something else to say about that. I'll destroy him.

Nothing about Ben Askren impresses me. He's a one-dimensional fighter. He's never hurt a fly.

I'm at the top of the UFC mountain.

Sao Paulo is a dump. That's a known fact.

The difference between me and Tyron Woodley is that Tyron Woodley fights nervous; he fights scared. He doesn't wanna get tired, so the thing with Tyron Woodley is that he doesn't know how to push the pace. He doesn't have cardio. He doesn't have heart. He has a heart, but he doesn't have heart. There's a difference.

I'm not a liar; I'm a truth teller.

I'm all about Trump.

I'm the king troll: I troll everybody.

My schtick is trolling people. I love getting a rouse out of people and making them angry.

I know I'm going to lose friends, and I'm going to go on the road less traveled with less people. But at the end of the day, I'm not trying to make friends; I'm trying to make the most money possible.

I'm not a yes man. When the UFC says, 'Jump,' I'm not saying, 'How high,' because that's not fair to me.

The UFC thinks they run off their brand, but that's not true. The UFC runs off the fighters, so hopefully, these fighters take notice and how I'm going about my business.

I say what a lot of people want to say but can't say. I'm just a voice of the people.

I don't ever cross the line. I step right up to it. I put my toes on the line, but I don't ever cross that line. There are some barriers you just don't cross - you don't talk about religion; you don't talk about race. Those are lines I will never cross.

Sprinkle in a bit of pro wrestling in MMA is good. You get the fans talking. They want that drama.

I was a business major, but the more I played music and the more I got into songwriting, I realized this is what I loved, but I kept asking myself, 'Is this what I'm supposed to do - move to Nashville?'

I've always wanted to treat people the way I want to be treated.

When I left college, it broke my mom's heart, but I knew I had to be in Nashville. I knew that was the place you had to be in to become a better songwriter, and that's what I wanted to move there for and to ultimately get a record deal.

I try to live every day and realize that there are so many folks working hard to try to get to where I am and how fortunate that I am.

The older I get, the more special time with family gets.

The fans are always wanting new music, and with as much as I love to write, I might as well give them the music while I've got it.

I like my buddies to come out to shows on weekends, but they hardly ever get to any.

I wanna have the coolest merch.

I remember this song by Clay Walker that came out in the '90s called 'This Woman and This Man,' and it was about breaking up, loss, the pain of moving on, and my parents were just getting divorced at the time, so I listened to it over and over again.

Just being from where I'm from, a little small town, I feel like I'm a good judge of character.

When you find what you love, and you find people that will support you, you're living the dream whatever you do.

I'm blessed to have the platform I have, and I'm going to spread the word. There's a lot of great causes, but I don't know anything that hits you harder than a child being sick. It's not fair; they don't deserve it. I'm ready to know what I can do to help.

There's families all across the country that miss people, but there's nothing like military families.

I know that a lot of our troops like country music. I would love to do anything I could to just help them out.

I'm just glad to be singing songs that touch people.

That's why I fell in love with country music: it made me feel something.

I'm a Georgia Southern boy.

I started to sing after high school, and I may have dreamed about being Randy Travis a time or two.

Growing up, all I did was play sports. I always loved music, but I never even thought I'd be on stage one day.

After I went to college, I realized that no matter how much I loved sports, I was ready to have fun, and that was right when I started to sing.

For me, that first album, there was a lot of fun stuff.

'You Should Be Here' set the tone that, 'Alright everybody, I want you to listen to this album.

It matters if people believe you or not.

As an artist, as a person, I don't want to be here for just a little while.

I want to be somebody, a person, first that people remember, but also, I want music that I release to still be around. I don't want it to just be cool for a second and be gone.

I want to do this for a long time; I want people to be saying, 'What is he doing still playing in clubs?'

The fact that I have the chance to learn from the names I've been on tour with, I don't think you can ask for any more than that.