Most people who start their own podcast might not have the option of joining a network, but Rogan likely did. A network provides artists with support and infrastructure needed to grow listenership.
In some cases, the network may do some or all of the marketing legwork, meaning all the artist has to do is create. Not joining a network means that Rogan did a lot of the work himself. The recommended length is 22 minutes. All shows are basically sold out except for Saturday December 7th at 10pm. The Atlantic says that Joe has somehow become a "generational voice for men" and that could be exactly why he's gained the audience and following he has.
While his opinions may not be taken well liked by all, there's still an audience for his points of view. Joe has spoken on the state of the world and politics in a way that grates against the idea of political correctness.
It's possible that in his head, and probably in the minds of those who like his podcast, think he's calling a spade a spade. He's been called out for being anti-vaxx, for his comments on gender pronouns, and more.
Joe's podcast probably speaks well to those who may feel pressured by society to act in particular ways. So many of the skills and professions from which men have derived self-worth for centuries, and still do, are going obsolete in a hurry. Even Toy Story 4 is about an aging white man struggling to find purpose in a world that seems to have no use for him. A brighter and more virtuous future? Lots of these panicked men, as it happens, despise Trump every bit as much as they love Joe Rogan.
In , men feeling thwarted and besieged is a bipartisan experience. All kinds of men out there are pissed off and looking for someone to blame. And he does give them a platform with a massive audience, which is not just a programming choice but a moral one. I respond to that. The competitive energy, the drive to succeed, the search for purpose, for self-respect. Get better every day. Master your domain. Total human optimization. A goal so hazy and unreachable that you never stop trying, until you realize with a kind of enviable Zen clarity that the trying is the whole point.
The family moved around a lot, from Newark to San Francisco, then Gainesville, Florida, before finally settling down in suburban Boston. He was a pissed-off kid. Also, he was short. He is driven, inexhaustible, and an honest-to-goodness autodidact. I used to think of myself as pretty pan-curious—it comes with the job—but my Joe Rogan experience was humbling. His brain is wicked absorbent, like Neo in The Matrix , uploading knowledge through a hot spear jammed into the back of his skull. And a key thing Joe and his fans tend to have in common is a deficit of empathy.
Jones has since acknowledged that the Sandy Hook massacre occurred. So is Joe really nurturing a generation of smarter, healthier, more worldly men, or an army of conspiracy theorists and alt-right super soldiers? At the very least, he shows too much compassion for bad actors, and not enough for people on the receiving end of their attacks.
In early August, Bernie Sanders came on for a pithy hour-long episode. And if you cast a wide enough net, clear patterns emerge. Of all the things in the world for a comedian to joke about right now, why these?
People reveal their deepest selves in the subjects they keep revisiting, and the hills they choose to die on. Onstage, Rogan tends to wear the familiar uniform of chiseled men everywhere enjoying a night on the town: jeans, shiny button-down shirt, untucked, with a spread collar and unbuttoned cuffs, like his torso is a wine that needs to breathe. He stomps around as he performs, and his voice often rises to a shout, like Sam Kinison. And speaking of a lot: He uses the word lady a lot.
You make all the people. And, go figure, his approach has the virtue of putting his subjects at ease and letting the conversation go to poignant places In one of his podcast episodes in , Rogan talked about going to see one of the "Planet of the Apes" movies and described the neighborhood he saw the movie in itself as "Planet of the Apes.
We walked in the door, and there was no white people. There was no white people. He later said on his podcast that it was a "racist thing for me to say," but added, "It wasn't a negative experience," per The New York Times.
On his podcast in , Rogan referred to mixed martial artist Fallon Fox, a transgender woman, as a "a f--king man. Rogan has also gotten blowback for hosting his longtime friend Alex Jones — the right-wing conspiracy theorist and InfoWars host who called the Sandy Hook shooting that killed 20 first-graders a hoax — on his podcast twice, once in and again in While Rogan and Jones reportedly had a falling out about Jones' Sandy Hook claims, the pair later made up, culminating in Jones' second appearance on the podcast.
Jones later acknowledged that the killings occurred. A Spotify spokesperson declined to comment on Rogan's controversies but noted that all music and podcasts on Spotify are subject to their content guidelines. In early April, UFC president Dana White said he had secured a private island at an undisclosed location for the upcoming UFC event on April 18, which had originally been slated to be in New York City but had to move due to the pandemic.
On his podcast, Rogan distanced himself from the plan , per the Telegraph. White's private island plans didn't work out anyway. At the event, Rogan interviewed fighters face-to-face and shook their hands as usual , without maintaining social distancing or wearing a mask, The New York Times reported. Sunday afternoon iron worship with the most primal of tools. Apart from martial arts, Rogan trains mainly with kettlebells in routines adapted from the teachings of "kettlebell gurus" Mark Cheng and Steve Maxwell, he told Men's Journal.
He often spars with friends in the Octagon ring in his garage. Rogan has said he prefers doing fewer repetitions more often versus going to failure, or pushing your muscles until they temporarily give out.
And you'll get stronger quicker. Rogan's website describes him as a "psychedelic adventurer. Rogan starts his days with a Vitamix smoothie of kale, spinach, celery, ginger, garlic, apple, and coconut oil, he told Rolling Stone in In January , Rogan announced he would be starting a carnivore diet, eating nothing but meat and eggs for the month.
Less than halfway through the month, he wrote on Instagram that he noticed a boost in his energy levels, but the diet also gave him severe diarrhea. Rogan is a proponent of nootropic supplements, which are said to enhance cognitive function. But scientists say there's "no strong evidence" they work as intended, per WebMD. The podcaster is also a self-professed fan of DMT, an illegal hallucinogenic drug with effects similar to LSD and magic mushrooms.
I don't know what it is. A chemical gateway to another dimension? A portal of souls you can tap into? I don't see any negative to it.
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