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The Joe Rogan Experience Podcasts

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Comments

  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Where do you draw the line at outright bigotry? That doesn't sound like freedom to me!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,202 ✭✭✭✭The Nal


    Some religious halfwit on Niall Boylan earlier saying he believes in free speech and people should be able to joke about anything they want, but not the Catholic Church because hes very religious.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I admire the boss of Spotify for standing by Rogan and retaining a sense of perspective.


    Too many corporate bosses capitulate at the first whiff of trouble like this. It's refreshing to see someone in power with a spine. Of course he is doing it with financial objectives in mind, but very often people in those positions just fear the controversy and don't even bother looking at it objectively. They just want to make it go away asap and they throw their workers under the bus.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Ultimately it always filters down to the same thing - a number on a piece of paper.

    If Spotify was to cancel their contract with JR, not only would they have to eat their $100m but they would lose the largest, hardest-to-reach and most coveted demographic in the media - young men. They would also drive that audience directly into the hands of competitors like Rumble or Substack.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,367 ✭✭✭✭rob316


    I see another comedian Jimmy Carr is on the chopping block now too. It really requires a special idiot to get offended by something a comedian said.

    Carr would be one of my favorite and I've been to a number of his shows and each time he has a segment where he purposely says the edgiest joke to gauge the audience.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 596 ✭✭✭deholleboom


    It seems to me that we are still in this 2 way dichotomy way of thinking with the squeezed sensible middle having to pick their team. I do hope that in time that mid segment will have a voice and get louder. I actually think those people which includes myself are there in great numbers but largely ignored. It seems the old 'sensible' is now regarded as the reactionairy right. I think i still hold the same political views as i have but simply find myself more in agreement with moderate conservatives( if they still exist) who are in fact quite close to old school liberals like Bret Weinstein, Jordan Peterson and Sam Harris. You know, intelligent people who can hold a proper argument and conversation despite the individual differences. In short, people with a backbone.

    The JR issue is a bit of a side show but he has given these people space to display their intelligence and i think that is where the opposition is most afraid of, not anything JR has said or done. It is quilty by association. If they can silence JR (which they cant) they might be able to silence those affiliated (which they wont). It is a battle they cant win. Never mind, as long as they can feel good about themselves which is all that matters.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,202 ✭✭✭✭The Nal


    More importantly there are legal and liability issues to contend with for "free speech". It doesn't and can't exist without consequence. You're free to racially abuse someone for example, but there are consequences.

    Parler is as heavily moderated as anywhere else and regularly bans users they dont like, no reasons need to be given.

    may remove any content and terminate your access to the Services at any time and for any reason or no reason

    And if Parler get sued for something a user posted (and this is mental), that user is liable aswell.

    You agree to defend and indemnify Parler, as well as any of its officers, directors, employees, and agents, from and against any and all claims, actions, damages, obligations, losses, liabilities, costs or debt, and expenses (including but not limited to all attorneys fees) arising from or relating to your access to and use of the Services. Parler will have the right to conduct its own defense, at your expense, in any action or proceeding covered by this indemnity.


    Oh and its also full of the thickest people on the planet.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,198 ✭✭✭✭Rjd2


    We live in an era where we can guess everyone's politics very quickly these days and that 's incredibly boring and indictive of someone who is in an echo chamber , right, left, centre whatever.

    I think that's the appeal of Rogan for many is he like so many is generally curious about things and has debates, in most normal households that is exactly what is happening so its easy to relate.


    Covid is done for many and everyone has made their mind up one way or other about vaccines, these attacks on Rogan are purely for commercial reasons which makes it all the more annoying and yeah I think his covid opinions are dire.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Yes but it's refreshing that for once the decision involves standing up to woke social media pressure. It might be a cold financial decision but is still bold considering 2 billion was wiped off the company's value a few days ago. That would often cause a lot of CEO's to want to capitulate to minimise what they perceive to be a reputational risk to the company. However this CEO shows there is another way, to actually stand your ground and stand by your principles.



  • Registered Users Posts: 202 ✭✭Toeuptony


    Would it not be better to tell the funniest joke to entertain the audience?



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,198 ✭✭✭✭Rjd2


    I think the CEO knows this is not an organic witch hunt.

    A lot of normal people are right to be angry that Rogan has said some really stupid stuff on covid , but Joe Bloggs and the likes of Neil Young whose heart is in the right place are what are worrying him.

    Its obviously a rival to spotify aided by corporate media who are jealous of Rogan's success while their influence falters and from all accounts a super Democrat PAC who are raising a lot of money on the back of this. None of these people care about Rogan's opinion on Covid, they just want his scalp.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,246 ✭✭✭✭Dyr




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Ok. What do you think is the funniest joke? What makes you laugh?

    Michael McIntyre exists and sells tickets. Roy chubby brown exists and sells tickets. Brendan O'Carroll exists and sells tickets. Dave chapelle exists and sells tickets.

    Who is the funniest out of them?



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,994 ✭✭✭c.p.w.g.w


    At a push Chapelle, I prefer his earlier stuff to his more recent stuff, still not a huge fan



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I bet you'd be a fan if he was white.....


    Bigot



  • Registered Users Posts: 202 ✭✭Toeuptony


    Depends on context as to the funniest joke, but it definitely doesn't have to be the edgiest joke. Telling the edgiest joke is just an excuse to appeal to the lowest common denominator, which is similar to the racist comedy of the working man's clubs of the 70s and 80s.

    Out of the 4 comedians that you listed, Chapelle is obviously head and shoulders above the rest. His Comedy Central show is amazing, as is a lot of his older stand up. The newer Netflix shows are pale imitations in comparison.



  • Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 10,635 Mod ✭✭✭✭humberklog


    All back to normal.

    Randall Carlson on today talking about early civilisations. Atlantis in particular.

    Some of his work regarding Atlantis is based on Plato's writings.

    Plato, who essentially scribbled down what Socrates said and sometimes Aristotle (all about 5k years after Atlantis fell head long into the sea) and *only* 2.5k years to now. Their writings are held up by Carlson's thesis to be a pragmatic viewpoint regarding lost civilisations.

    And that's the fun.

    I didn't listen to the whole episode. I don't listen to many, but this made me laugh and confirm to me why I like the JRE.



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,856 ✭✭✭irishguitarlad


    I'm not even that big of a fan of the guy but the witch-hunt is getting tiresome, CNN and co want his head. Also, on a similar topic, thought it was ironic the last day when I saw a conservative minister complaining and hinting at cancelling Jimmy Carr for his jokes on gypsies and travellers when her government treats those groups like ****.



  • Registered Users Posts: 596 ✭✭✭deholleboom


    The fun for me is that i can both enjoy a JR episode without believing in any of it, even when they ganged up on skeptic Michael Shermer in an episode about ancient civilizations including Joe himself. It was unfair but somehow carried a kind of playfulness at the same time. It is a nice antidote to all the tedious stuff in the media. You dont have to swallow everything but the concept of the show is solid. A 2 hour conversation with Jordan Peterson instead of the bemusing faulty attack on him by channel 4s Cathy Newman which is now a classic example of how NOT to do an interview. The mainstream networks are **** in their pants as do politicians in fear of losing their platform importance.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Some short responses to Joe Rogan's latest "apology" video from his friends Sam Harris and Jocko Willink.

    samharris.org/podcasts/making-sense-episodes/273-joe-rogan-and-the-ethics-of-apology

    youtube.com/watch?v=6cIbpX_EulQ

    Generally a good video from Joe I think in response to the controversy. I disagree with some of it though. This idea that certain words can not be used in "any context" is not an idea I share with him. Especially by particular groups of people. That is just not how I view language and I have yet to see any good argument for viewing or treating language in that way. Shame I will never get the chance to debate him on that one :)

    "I can only imagine his kindergarten teachers trying to get him to shut up. He does talk a lot. And he keeps talking. And I will keep listening not because he is perfect, flawless, or right about everything - but actually because he is not. Not perfect, flawless or right about everything. He makes mistakes. He is a person, a human being like me, and like me he is trying to learn, grow and be better. And like me he is failing sometimes along the way." - Jokko

    I see spotify have now removed a total of 113 episodes - most of them quite early on. I have not looked for a source to listen to the removed episodes yet. But I will probably make a point of doing just that. Nothing is ever really deleted on the internet after all.



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I think the popularity of Rogan is because you never know what he is going to think or say about a topic. Even Rogan probably doesn't have much of a plan of what he will say. The conversation can be long and rambling and go off on tangents. There is a sense of unpredictability and novelty and a sense that he is trying to figure things out and learn.


    By contrast, with the likes of CNN you know exactly what they believe on major issues and you can fairly well predict their editorial stance. Everything is scripted and staged and nothing is approached with a fresh angle of trying to understand an issue from all sides. It's like sticking on a CD. You kind of switch off your brain while they feed you the same predictable message every day.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,331 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams


    Whatever about joe , if all his like are banned the alternative is very very bleak



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    Welcome to late stage capitalism. Spotifys decisions are purely based on what makes the most money. People love to say "go woke, go broke" but haven't realised why literally every company is doing it. The second spotifys team of accountants, legal team and have worked out he'll lose a dollar more than he'll earn them, he'll be gone.

    Personally I'd draw the line at bad medical advice, but a lot of his listeners seem to love it and he's just giving them what they want



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,331 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams


    He’s literally just a lad chatting away that became worth something, I’ve had more heated and nonsensical exchanges with local anti vaxers. Joe simply said I have Covid I have money and tried the more expensive treatment available, certainly didn’t inspire me to raid the vets medical cabinet



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,121 ✭✭✭The Raging Bile Duct


    He also simply said that he'd tell healthy, young people not to get the vaccine.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    One of the fallacies people commit is the idea that it's possible to coldly calculate the P&L implications of keeping versus binning Rogan. Any calculation like that requires a lot of subjective assumptions and projections and is extremely unscientific. The decision to keep Rogan is partly financial but a big part of the decision is human judgment.


    Secondly, anyone who is stupid enough to rely on Joe Rogan for medical advice deserves to get the consequences. It's called Darwinism. No adult gets to decide what's best for another adult. We don't close down all roads because some idiots blindly walked out into traffic and got run over. The vast majority of people who tune into Rogan would trust their own Doctor first and foremost.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Unless you have an MD or phd in your field then you're not in a position to say is good or bad medical advice either.



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    I think you're underestimated the stupidity of the general population, especially in America. A huge amount think the election was stolen from Trump. A huge amount think the covid vaccine was designed to kill people. Literally people crying when a family member gets it because they think they'll be dead in 2 years. People are idiots, and the internet can amplify that when they gather together in bubbles and reinforced their beliefs.

    Joe knew exactly what he was doing when he "threw the kitchen sink" at covid. Throw the idiots a bone who think ivermectin cured him. He knows there's money in courting these idiots so keeps them inside.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,994 ✭✭✭c.p.w.g.w




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    "People are idiots" is nothing new. Adults have a responsibility to look after themselves alone. Nobody should have the right to hijack the information they have access to, even under the guise of "knowing what's best" for them. The arrogance of the "cancel Rogan" people is staggering to me.



  • Registered Users Posts: 596 ✭✭✭deholleboom


    Yes. You are on to me. I love bad medical advice!😁



  • Registered Users Posts: 596 ✭✭✭deholleboom





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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    Again, you're missing the entire point about free speech. David Hogg said it nicely here and in the follow up




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,643 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    So we're agreed that I haven't called for censorship?

    Surely you'll see the irony of telling me my viewpoint is based in a fabrication and in the very next sentence fabricating and assigning a position on me. But, you're right, I'm fierce stupid all-together-so-I-am.

    Look, none of the Rogan-bros will call the conspiracy theory you linked to, a conspiracy theory. That's how how echo-chambers work. Fair enough, you posted a conspiracy theory in a safe space and some people are cross that its being called a conspiracy theory and not simply back slapping and complimenting the good "research". I'm sure you'd see what's wrong with it if this were a conspiracy theory about something else.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,390 ✭✭✭✭JRant


    Listened to the HR mcMaster episode. Was somewhat surprised by how good he was.

    "Well, yeah, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man"



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,643 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    There's Telegram and Gab.

    I browsed Gab before it went behind a wall. You wouldn't last 5 minutes in there, it was just so boring. Wall to wall "Muslims are paedos" threads and similarly basic threads. Really basic stuff. All route 1 chat and a competition to say the most outrageous things. It would leave you with a really poor Impression of how clever the free speech folk who posted, tended to be.

    I was curious about what you'd find in a free speech forum. But really and truly, it was grim and boring.

    These free speech platforms are out there if that's what you're Interested in. But I suspect the fact that there's nobody to argue with takes from the appeal. I suspect that the fact that its an audience who won't be offered by it, takes from the appeal. In my opinion, the free speech people really want to watch the fight between the free speech and the offended. If nobody is offended the it loses its appeal for most of the anti-woke warriors.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Isn't that unintentionally a good thing? All they want is to be left alone in their little cesspit. Grim and boring is all those people want and it's not harming anyone. But to hear the way some people portray it there will be concentration camps if such sites are allowed to exist for too long.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,643 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    Depends. They should be left alone in their safe spaces. But that's pretty much where that stuff should be left.

    If you listen to the anti-woke, you'd think here will be concentration camps if those grim creatures aren't allowed to say whatever they want, anywhere they want.

    Niche corners of the Internet are one thing. I wouldn't say they don't harm anyone. Listening to some podcasts about school shooters, and they get radicalised in these forums. But, its better than that guff being mainstream.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Doesn't that depend on what "Accountability" covers? If "Accountability" includes de-platforming, then that is not free speech.


    I think of Speakers Corner in Hyde Park in London as being the great symbol of free speech. Every nutter can stand on a box and spout off about any old nonsense they want to. It's mostly nonsense but there is something pure and beautiful about the way anyone can say anything, of course as long as they don't incite violence or break the law (can't believe I have to add that last but some people are disingenuous and pedantic).



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The thing is the vast majority of people have good intentions. I genuinely think people can be trusted to find the right course which involves rejection of extreme opinions. But some people don't trust the masses, they fear the masses and want to control the access to public discourse. They see Hitler under every rock.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,390 ✭✭✭UsBus


    Been listening to the JR podcast the last couple of weeks. Really enjoying listening to relaxed conversation which can ebb and flow in any direction. I've made the conscious decision to switch off from main stream media. In Irish terms, thats RTE, Virgin media, radio stations such as Newstalk,( which have become insufferable over the past few years), Today FM, and of course rte radio. I'm much more relaxed, don't feel the sense of frustration at the outrage being forced on me around every possible topic.

    The whole circus of government in Ireland and the neverending drive by the Media to enrage everyone for the sole purpose of generating revenue is pathetic. The issues in Ireland, housing, health, standard of living are beyond repair and they know it. The country has gone down a rabbit hole the last decade, and squeezing the last drops out of it seem to be the only game in town. Rant over, back to the podcast.!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    What is "deplatforming"? People saying they won't use a product as long as Rogan is there? People asking spotify to remove them? That is free speech too. Spotify can act how they like too. They're "free" to remove him if they like.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Speakers Corner is indeed amazing at times. I remember watching this 1+ hour documentation about one guy who speaks there. And as I recall I had my mouth hanging oven from only 60 seconds in and my eye brows raised to the back of my head for most of the rest of it:

    youtube.com/watch?v=oJclZes9hxA

    And yet despite this guy spouting some of the most hateful racism I have ever heard - as you say there is a strange beauty about that level of free speech all the same.

    Interestingly I think Rogan himself is quite triggered by free speech issues. In a good way. There are a couple of guests he has on - including the two that caused the Covid Controversies - that he probably would not have even heard of or had on were it not for the bigger social platforms banning them. Had Malone not been banned and silenced for example - I wonder would he have been invited on at all.

    But what Rogan appears to say before during and since that interview - is that it does not matter how right or wrong someone like Malone is in his claims. The fact that someone that qualified to speak on the issue could be silenced for doing so is obscene to him. Rogan often cites the same line Sam Harris does which is that the antidote to bad science or bad conversation - is more and better science and conversation. And right or wrong in what he says Malone has more than earned the right to have his position heard. But it is attacked under this new rubric of "dangerous to public health".

    Sam Harris has often done the same thing too. Perhaps having learned more about the guests thoughts and ideas he later regretted some of them. But at the time he has had guests on and platformed them for no other reason than he saw it as a free speech issue. Having Charles Murray on his podcast is the obvious example that jumps to mind. But Harris' reasoning behind inviting him on that podcast are very sensible and thought out.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]



    Nothing in life is without cost including freedom of speech, but the level of "accountability" in todays Metaverse comes down to whether someone has the "right" politics on is considered on the right team.

    People who are being honest with themselves know that what's happening to JR right now is not about his use of the n-word. We know this because those clips have been around for years, in some cases over a decade which predates his Spotify deal. The reason they are being used against him now is because they can be, JR is directly over the target right now. In having and a handful vaccine and Covid sceptics on his podcast, JR has driven the public health and the media establishment crazy, both of whom are fearful and furious. In the case of public health officials, they staked their political careers and medical reputations on vaccines that have provably failed to do what they were originally advertised, and in the case of the media establishment they are haemorrhaging audiences to JR and other independent outlets like Substack and Rumble.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Yes sure and criminals in prison are free to sleep or not sleep depending on when they want to. They are free to eat meals or not eat meals depending on their preferences. It's quite simple. Free speech means allowing people to say things you don't like, without trying to co-ordinate campaigns designed to ultimately silence them. If you are trying to get someone's opinions shut down even though they are not breaking a law, that is not free speech.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    Ok, you're wrong here, again, freedom of speech is not freedom of consequence. You don't know what free speech is.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano



    Have you checked the icu numbers? The vaccines seem to be doing a good job.



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