The American healthcare industry is a mess. When a life-saving pill can cost $750 a pop, or when a two-minute ambulance ride can cost thousands of dollars, you know something is seriously flawed with the system. This is an industry which actively encourages people to risk death in order to avoid going to the hospital and dealing with bankruptcy. It’s sick.

Of course, we all know patients get fucked by the system, but doctors are fed up with it as well, which is something you never really hear about. In fact, many doctors complain about spending more time dealing with insurance bureaucracy than actually treating their patients.

That’s where Zubin Damania, a Stanford-trained doctor, comes in. Damania did, well, the unthinkable. According to a recent Reddit AMA session that he held, Damnia quit his high-paying hospital job in Northern California and moved to Las Vegas to create parody rap videos that critique the healthcare system. His rap name? ZDoggMD.

It was in Vegas that ZDoggMD opened up his own healthcare clinic, Turntable Health, which doesn’t charge exorbitant rates for a doctor’s visit nor requires patients to have insurance. In fact, the monthly membership fee, which grants you access to a doctor at anytime, is only $80 dollars. Most Americans pay an average of about $328 dollars a month for health insurance.

He describes the decision to quit his job:

His goal? To revolutionize the healthcare system. And what better way to get the message out to a wider audience than by creating viral hits.

Take, for example, his hilarious parody of Taylor Swift’s “Blank Space,” which amassed over 300,000 views on YouTube.

Yup, that’s ZDoggMD, dressed in drag, wearing a blonde wig. He’s literally the cracked-out version of Swift.

In the video, he plays a patient who’s addicted to pain medications. With smeared lipstick all over his teeth, ZDoggMD sings, “Just gimme my pain meds, baby/Or I’ll screw you on Yelp!”

Yes. This is funny. But it’s also a very real problem: In the US, we advertise prescription medicine on television, which is illegal in many countries. And more Americans abuse prescription meds over heroin.

In fact, he made another rap video, from the perspective of big pharma, advertising on TV and profiting from the addiction of addicts. The song, titled “Big Pharma,” is a parody of Biggie’s “Big Poppa.”

He sings, “‘Cause I push drugs/So my crew be gettin’ paid/Sell you Viagra/Though you STILL ain’t gettin’ laid!”

He explains:

“Caregivers and patients are both sick in this broken non-system, and only these two groups working together can fix it. It may require a total reboot and rethink of how we do everything, but it can and will be done because the alternative isn’t really an option anymore.”

Of course, not all of his videos deal with such heavy-handed topics. In a parody of Sinead O’Connor’s “Nothing Compares to You,” he laments about doctors dealing with all sorts of gross bodily fluids. Nothing though, compares to poo:

ZDoggMD says doctors are being beaten down by the system just as patients are. He hopes that by getting the message out—loud and clear through his music—things can gradually start to change.

He says:

“People who go into medicine tend to be independent, autonomous (our training encourages this as well) and so organizing them is like herding cats. But without a voice we can’t get s**t done and the bureaucrats stomp on us. It’s a challenge, but times are changing and I think the next generation might be more inclined to work together for the cause.”

Check out the entire transcript of ZDoggMD’s “Ask Me Anything” session here.