OLIVER TREE’S FINAL WILL VIDEO NOW FEELS CHILLING AFTER HIS DEATH — WHY HE SAID HIS FAMILY WOULD “NOT GET A PENNY”

Just weeks before the helicopter crash in Brazil that killed Oliver Tree and five others, the singer sat down for an interview that now feels almost impossible for fans to watch the same way again.

At the time, it sounded like another strange Oliver Tree moment — part performance, part confession, part absurdist provocation.

But after his death, one answer from that interview has taken on a darker meaning.

Oliver Tree openly discussed what would happen to his fortune after he died.

And his answer stunned even longtime fans.

According to reports, Tree said his family would not “get a penny” from his estate. That included any future spouse or children, except for one specific exception: his children’s education would be covered. The rest of his posthumous earnings, including money generated from his music and intellectual property, would reportedly go into a foundation he created called “Dr. Oliver Tree’s Art Grants for Baby Geniuses.”

The idea was unusual, but not random.

Tree had spent his career building a strange, chaotic, and fiercely independent artistic identity. He was never simply a pop singer. He was a character creator, a visual satirist, a comedian, a stunt performer, and a musician who turned his own image into part of the art.

So when he spoke about his estate, the message appeared to be clear:

He did not want his legacy to become a private inheritance battle.

He wanted it to become fuel for future artists.

That detail is now being replayed by fans after reports said Tree was among six people killed when two helicopters collided in mid-air over Rio de Janeiro. The crash remains under investigation by Brazilian aviation authorities, and officials have been examining the wreckage, flight path, and circumstances behind the collision.

There is no verified public evidence that Tree’s family has formally challenged the will or released an outraged statement.

But the interview has already created a storm online because it sounds, in hindsight, like an eerie final instruction from an artist who knew exactly how he wanted to be remembered.

No family fortune drama has been confirmed.

No hidden prophecy has been proven.

But the timing is haunting.

A young artist speaks publicly about death, legacy, and cutting his family out of future earnings.

Weeks later, he is reported dead in a catastrophic helicopter collision.

Now, the same question is spreading across fan pages and entertainment sites:

Was Oliver Tree’s will just another shocking performance — or was it the most serious statement he ever made about his life’s work?

For now, the answer seems to be this:

Oliver Tree did not want his money to disappear into private hands.

He wanted his art to keep funding other artists after him.

And after the tragedy in Brazil, that strange decision may become one of the most unforgettable parts of his legacy.