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Oliver Tree Talked ‘High Risk’ Lifestyle in One of His Final Interviews: ‘There’s No Day Promised’

Oliver Tree Talked ‘High Risk’ Lifestyle in One of His Final Interviews: ‘There’s No Day Promised’

adminkush

LA KW

junio 30, 2026 • 5 min lectura

Fans are getting to see one more conversation with Oliver Tree following his untimely death, with the singer/songwriter recording a guest appearance on Bobbi Althoff’s Really Good Podcast prior to the helicopter collision that killed him earlier this month.

In the episode posted Monday (June 29), Tree — dressed, as he often did, in a comedic costume, this time donning an Elmo suit and red face paint — discussed a wide range of topics, including his “high risk” lifestyle. Tree often turned interviews into extended bits with outlandish takes, but did make a prescient comment in one of his final interviews, when he explained why he preferred to live as adventurously as possible.

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“My parents, they’re like, ‘Oliver, it’s a lot to travel all the time,’” he said. “I’m like, ‘Guys, look. We don’t know if I’ll be alive next year, or if you’ll be alive.’”

“There’s no day promised,” he added. “You know how high risk I live my life, for real? The last two years I was living in poo huts in Africa, I stayed in mud houses in Iraq.”

Tree died at age 32 on June 14 along with the two pilots and three other passengers who were onboard the pair of helicopters that crashed into each other in Rio de Janeiro. The musician had been abroad while on his global tour in support of the April ablum Love You Madly Hate You Badly, playing what would become his final show on June 6 in São Paulo.

Shortly after Tree’s death, it was announced that his fortune will go toward launching Dr. Oliver Tree’s Extremely Epic Grant for Baby Geniuses, a grant supporting the creation of art that he’d publicly discussed setting up prior to his death. “I take no credit for anything I’ve ever done,” Tree said on the Zach Sang Show this past April. “I don’t believe that any of the wealth or things that get made from it is mine. My will is set up so that when I pass, my family, nobody is going to get a penny. All the money is going to go back to artists.”

Althoff said in a disclaimer at the beginning of her video interview with Tree that all profits from their conversation will go toward his grant. “I’m grateful to have had this conversation with Oliver,” it reads. “I’m sharing it with love and respect for his life, his art, and the unforgettable world he created.”

Watch her full interview with Tree below.


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