Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 264 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Mr. Beast Et al.
Episode Date: March 16, 2022Thanks to this weeks sponsors: Blue Chew: bluechew.com get blue chew FREE just use promo JRER MEL Science . COM. Fun science boxes for kids. Get 60% your first order promo code JRER This week ...we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always. JRERmarketing@gmail.com Review Guest list: MrBeast aka Jimmy Donaldson, Tom Papa and Nims Purja. Head to our website for more updates and Rogan stuff www.JREreview.com 5% of ALL SPONSORSHIP proceeds goes to Justin Wren and his Fight for the Forgotten charity!! This commitment is for now and forever. They will ALWAYS get money as long as we run ads so we appreciate your support too as you listeners are the reason we can do this. Thanks! Stay safe.. Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Please email us here with any suggestions, comments and questions for future shows.. Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com Follow Garrett on Instagram here: www.instagram.com/gloveone
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Verano, verano, reciclar es tan humano
Esa lata de aceitunas que te tomas a la una
La crema que se termina cuando estás en la piscina
El enbase de ese polo que no se reficla
Solo hay una lata de caballa que te coves en la playa
La voy a usar en las patatas y del refresco la lata
Un enbase de paella y del agua
La botella, como ves es muy sencillo
Los enbases del verano Siempre van a la amarillo Welcome to the Joe Rogan Universe Park.
What a bizarre thing we've created.
Now with your host, Adam Thorn and Garrett Hats.
This might be the worst podcast with the best one of all time
Hey guys and welcome to another episode of the J.R.E. Review
Big week of super motivated individuals a lot of positivity in this week's
Rogan's joined as always by my sidekick co-host Garin. What's up guys beast of a week beast of a week?
My sidekick co-host garrison. What's up guys beast of a week beast of a week
Really really the beast so he I was first turned on to him by my friend Eli's youngest daughter He's nine Sloan and she had me watch
a video he did and I had no idea who he was, but she's like you you gotta see this guy. Where he rented out like a fast food joint
that was empty, I guess,
and then just gave away burgers and money.
And it was actually quite interesting,
but again, I had no idea who this person was
learning that he's, what is it, the biggest YouTuber ever?
I've never was last year.
I mean, that's what he was saying to us
and how do you outdo that, but yeah, he was.
Yeah, what do you know about this? Well, up until today, I've just heard about him via
word of mouth, to be honest, I never really saw it out. But after I listened to him, I went
and did some research and I will personally watch that squid game video that they made reference to.
That was pretty amazing to see that dude put that much thought and that much like production into a video it's
pretty amazing to see what he's done you know dude that shit was dope I didn't
even watch the original you know I've never seen it but I knew I knew the idea
but it was still good it was pretty entertaining stuff It's like he's taken YouTube to that point
where you just make your own Hollywood.
I guess that's how it's how it's like,
I don't need anybody else, I can do it myself.
So what does he have?
He has 200 million subscribers.
I think that's what he was saying, yeah,
but as far as something close to that.
It's crazy.
Joe's like what? It's looking up, right? Joe's like, what if you had every single person or whatever. Joe's like what? Let's look him up. Joe's like, what if you
had every single person or whatever and he's like, that's kind of the goal but at
the same time you after listening to this interview, you know how like
genuine this guy is and he's a nice character that he has at such a young age
too, you know. Oh yeah, for sure. For sure. And the fact that he said what do you say he dumps all his
Oh I was playing Mr. Beast there sorry. So 91 million subscribers on this one channel. I guess
he's got multiple. It's probably how it was. Okay. All and tables. All right, but still, I mean, that is, you know, getting close to the population of the
United States.
That's very...
And he was saying it's all over all kinds of different countries and different languages
and stuff.
Yeah, it would have to be.
It would have to be what that...
Well, I see.
Yeah.
Mmm.
Yeah, it's very fun.
The stuff he does is fun.
I like
You know when I first heard about them and I'm watching him you know give away all this money and all these kids are Loving this and watching it. I'm thinking is that
Is that like good? Is it useful for kids? I mean fun is fun, right? So I don't expect kids to
necessarily be
Learning and improving their lives by like cartoon and YouTube videos, but it is nice to know that he
Helps those charities feeds people gets all those turkeys. That's really cool
Also puts all his money back into his videos not not that that's necessarily like
also puts all his money back into his videos. Not that that's necessarily like
so much an admirable thing, but like he's not
balling at control.
Like Joe was saying.
He's not just going out there with Lamborghinis
and whatever else.
He bought some expensive shirts.
But you know, you gotta spend,
you gotta spend a little bit.
I know, yeah, those shirts are nice.
But yeah, it's, he doesn't desire money.
That's what makes it the easiest thing for him, too, obviously,
because he said that when you're chasing it, Joe
is like, when you're not chasing money,
I think that endeavor becomes a lot easier, yeah.
I mean, he's been completely obsessed with this
since he was 11.
Like, I think back to being 11, there was very little that I was completely obsessed with.
I mean, imagine what you can build if you do that.
And even his breakdown,
I've never thought about YouTube
or like making YouTube videos,
like what it takes to make something go viral.
But listening to his process.
Yeah, and to his... process. Yeah, and he's pretty in like fascinated.
All the ins and outs of YouTube, it's, he even asked him about certain subjects.
I can't remember what it was. Certain movies or something. And he's like,
was it on YouTube? Because it's like only.
A frame of reference is YouTube at all.
Wow. He has no idea.
He's I've never seen that.
He's like YouTube.
I mean, you got to get good at something.
He said he's obviously put in over 100,000 hours to this.
So he knows what works and what doesn't.
He was even saying how he has those videos out that he's laid out.
And he's like, all the information is out there for anybody that wants to go make this
happen.
He goes, I've laid it out pretty nicely.
And he's not saying it like cocky or anything. He's just saying if you want to do it, it's there.
Yeah. Well, he did say a hundred thousand hours. That seems like too many hours.
10,000 I believe, but a hundred thousand. So 100,000 hours divided by 40 which is a week is
2500 weeks. Yes a lot of weeks. Well yeah I mean divide that by... 52. Yeah so that
would be 48 years. I don't think that he did. He's 23. So maybe probably not.
But either way, he's put a lot of time in.
Let's give him 10,000 hours.
I'm sorry about that.
It's given 10,000.
That's reasonable.
But yeah, that whole thing about obsession, I mean,
and even brought reference to it.
Like thank God he was obsessed about YouTube and not, I don't know, basket weaving.
I don't know what the highest end of basket weaving is,
but I don't know if it's gonna pay off the same walling balls.
Yeah, this like, you get that laser focus on stuff,
and I think that's what made Joe so successful
away when he did when he become obsessed with something.
You can get real good at it, I think. But when you become obsessed with something, you can, you get real good at it, I think.
But when you have your mind scattered, I think that's kind of where you have to away the
pros and cons of what you spend your time on.
And you got to kind of really make that the laser focus, obviously.
No doubt.
And, you know, what's really interesting too is how he went about it. Like he's analyzing
all these videos, paying attention to what is viral, what's not the thumbnails that he
was talking about. But then he got a group of like-minded people doing similar things. And
it was almost like exponential. So it's not just him learning from his mistakes,
but he has a whole team of people
that are all doing similar things,
increasing their videos, they're like, okay, that one worked.
Let's all follow that path.
So, so smart.
And he was talking about how he was mentoring
one of those kids that, I don't wanna say kid,
but another YouTuber that was doing really good
with the thumbnails,
and he like increases revenue from something like 24,000 a month
to like 400,000 a month in a matter of like six to seven months.
And he was like the way I learned
and developed these strategies is I test out the,
he's, I mean, people come to him for information
and he's like, okay, this is how you do it,
but he's like a lot of it's just in theory. And then I tell them what to do and they go do it and it pans out or doesn't,
but a lot of the time it pans out for the positive, so he learns from that situation.
While at the same time mentoring somebody and making them richer is more or less a win-win, yeah.
Yeah, and I like that. I like how he's doing it too. It's like
Even though he wants to be the best he wants to have the best like the most subscribers, which I appreciate
He's also willing to make people
Really good at this so then he gets to learn more through them like oh, I didn't have to try that. They did it I can focus on my videos and
try that, they did it. I can focus on my videos and get success. There's a, if young YouTubers are out there and got a chance to listen to this, I mean,
what better thing to learn from than that?
He just gets more and more good ideas to it. Seems like he's constantly coming up. He's
always getting pitched. I'm sure too with the outreach he has at this point, but he was talking about that.
The burger shop that he started that you could like get the audience and then I don't
know, he was talking some crazy numbers right out the gate and he always talks about
scaling things up and I think that's such a smart thing to do, you know, you always have
to think it's scale.
Yeah, he definitely has a shit load of ambition to where he's going
with this and like what direction. So all of the restaurants were what did he call it
virtual. Yeah. So they're just burger joints that get the ingredients know how to make
them and people just order it online. So he doesn't even have to have locations. Yeah,
so they're starting to just now start to do brick and mortar locations, but yeah, that was accurate.
Yeah, you could just order the ingredients
in order the menu and they teach you how to cook it
and prepare it, and then you sell it.
And you keep the vast majority of the profits
is what he was saying.
Yeah, I don't think there's any in both for sure.
But I bet there's one close to you.
You should try it.
Let us know
what you think oh that in it yeah in the event as of course the house about him having Crohn's
disease and he just said it so nonchalantly and then he just kind of came back I was like dude that's
character moment right there to just bring it then he brought it up and then it wasn't like not
that you should stand back and be like oh my my God, you know what I'm saying?
He just said it in passing and he's like,
I didn't play baseball because I had cron
so I kind of focused on YouTube.
Yeah.
And he did mention a lot that like, that's life.
And which kind of comes back to the overarching energy of the whole
episode, which is just this hard work, dedication, massive passion, and also kind
of like, you know, helping.
That seemed to be that modality.
It seemed to be the underlying thing.
I mean, he talked about that turkey situation too.
That was a pretty cool little drive. He put together raised up those 10,000 turkeys to hand him out
During Thanksgiving. He's like we don't always do that
But those are cool little events to do for a dude that with his age and what's going on
I think it comes down to him really wanted to do good things for his community and the people
You know that didn't he say you had that guy work for him?
That could be making its own money.
But works for free.
That was pretty awesome.
I will say another character movie
said about another fellow YouTuber was,
I can't remember what they were talking about specifically,
but I just remember the behavior.
He goes, Joe was like, what's his name?
And he was like, I don't want to talk about it.
He's like, I don't want him to be famous
because Mr. B said he's got his own path. And Joe's like, oh's his name? And he was like, I don't want to talk about it. He's like, I don't want him to be famous because Mr. B said he's got his own path.
And Joe's like, oh, I can appreciate that
because like, he just recognized the platform that they're on.
You know what I mean?
I think a lot of those younger kids
want to make it themselves in some way.
I don't know if that's, make sense.
I mean, everybody wants to get put on,
but at the same time, the way he said it,
he's just like, I don't want him to say it because I said it, you know.
Do you think that part of that was also
other people getting mad at him for not then saying their name?
I think of that.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
You know, he's just like, well, I can't come on
and say my top 10 favorite YouTube is just a play. Yeah, right?
It gets a bit cheesy if you do that. That makes a lot more sense, but either way he did he did do that.
So I know that's a good point to look at that whenever you look at that platform and that reach that
Rogan has now you kind of got to pick and choose what you want to say and so we're
Spot to be in. I'm sure everybody's coming at you whole time.
Right.
Yeah.
I like that he said he didn't even mind
if people kind of take his ideas and run with it.
Because in a sense, that's what he was doing
to figure this out as well.
And then when he's speaking about haters,
it's the same thing as Joe always talks away.
He's like, just doesn't matter.
Just keep moving forward.
Like, you know, people are gonna be jealous,
people are gonna hate what you do.
I'm sure on YouTube it's like that
because everybody wants to have a viral video.
He didn't say too.
I think that's proven itself time and time again.
Haters are normally the failures.
If you're succeeding, you have no time to hate.
You're too busy worried're succeeding, you have no time to hate. You're too busy worried
about succeeding, you know? That's very true. That's very true. I would be curious to know
who the most successful haters. Who's the guy that like is a hater that also did well?
He somehow like, Monat's a good question. I mean, I couldn't, none top pop off the top
of my head. I mean, I bet somebody in Hollywood a lawyer or something.
That's it.
That's it.
I hate it.
I hate it, though.
Much loved all the Hollywood lawyers.
That's it.
We need him.
We need him for something.
I, I definitely wouldn't want that position.
I don't want to be like the most successful HATER.
No, I would suck.
Nobody wants to be known for that. Atater. No, I would so you nobody wants to be known for that at all like
I don't know
Can you believe that he has to take out loans often for videos like because he just spends so much of his own money
And even makes a loss on some of them. That's a bulls-y move
He doesn't look at money the way we look at money. He looks at it
From a completely he's like if I just lose 500 K here or make two million here
Like that kind of energy. I think you got to want to know that energy in order to have it, but he definitely has it
Well, he knows that it's coming in right? So it's not like this is his life savings and he's putting out one video like he knows that if he just hangs out for a bit
He's gonna make more
But still still a brave move. He definitely has that
Abundance mindset for sure that was a big part of what fires him forward like he's not sitting there
If it because even Joe was like well what happens if they cancel your your account
blah blah blah and
And miss the beast is like why yeah
But like why he's like no, I don't have time to think that way man. It's like
You know, I did like that. I wonder how hands-on the people at YouTube are I wonder what the process is to I mean
She kind of wondered about the demonetization. It's like, who specifically is pulling that rug out from underneath?
I think it starts with like algorithms, you know, and they're, I just watching for maybe
certain words that are said and titles and implications of things. And then because there's
so many videos, they just have to pull it and
Figure it out later and if they messed up they're like, okay, well, you know, we check this guy show out
He said five videos banned it turns out that it's not as bad as we thought so we're just you know
Maybe loosen up the grip on this one, but I think all these social media companies are being overly cautious
Because it doesn't hurt them to ban anyone
But it potentially is bad for them if they leave people on that they should have got rid of
Right
Yeah, I don't know I'd be interested in see how quickly we get back. I think it comes back to like off Facebook
How'd you let these people on or all Instagram? How'd you let these people on they said these mean things?
It's trying to navigate what's mean and what's not and who's making those decisions?
Yeah, I don't think it's a person. Yeah, I think that maybe somebody can see a bunch of them
But had to type in the algorithm right and what is not like a
Everybody sit down at the table and they're like all right. Here's all the words the trigger words
What's typed this into the algorithm and then we'll all review these videos one by one or it's just like nah
I just seems a bit sketch how they're deciphering what's
It's not you just pinpoint, but I mean that
They're trying to do it on scale. So you've got massive amounts of videos, right?
Let's say they have a thousand employees,
but people are uploading 20,000 videos a day.
Well, those employees have other shit to do.
So you've got to set up a system that's like,
all right, we're watching for this word that word this one this one this one
Plus these pictures and these images and then also copyright shit from music and movies and the AI just has to go in and clean it up
It's a good point
I don't like it either. I wish it wasn't that way, but it's probably that it's just so massive. They don't have a choice. What do you think about, I don't know what you know about TikTok?
I don't know a whole lot about it, but I like to have talked about the difference between,
they've made reference to this prior to, but the different content that China has versus the
United States as far as their TikTok content. China has these scientific achievements and like athletic
achievements and it's supposed to be very informational whereas obviously the
United States is more based on videos of kids singing songs and whatnot but at
least yeah pushing each other over and know, I think that it will be interesting to see how it plays out, right?
So let's say that it's more like a research test, and after five years of doing this with
the kids in China, they see great improvement in their behaviors, school grades, interest in sciences and complex things,
well then other countries could adopt that kind of thinking as well.
Well, that there's probably something seems like a no brainer,
but it seems like that was a lot.
If you have that and then kids watching, singing songs,
the kids are going to pick that every day.
That's what he's like, yeah, they wouldn't, that app just wouldn't work in the United States.
Well, you, you know, you also have to wait to make sure it works as well.
So you could do that and it all sounds good, but maybe the kids are fucking
just the same as every other kid at the end of the day, but they didn't get to watch more hilarious videos.
So it could be a downside to it.
I mean, at the end of the day,
things like TikTok and cartoons and fun stuff for kids
is like, that's a break for them.
It's not, it doesn't necessarily have to be
like the time for learning.
Like they're allowed to play as well.
So, you know, I guess the problem is just people
are getting addicted to anything.
And that's always going to be a problem.
They talked a bit about the Oculus and the VR systems
and like where that's going.
They, what was it?
Beat Saber.
Have you played that?
They played.
Now this, dude, the same person the Sloan who got me on to
Miss the beast so she's nine she can beat a
Level called expert plus on that I am like
Maybe easy or normal at best and it's and I just get lost that I'm like shit
She Normal at best and it's and I just get lost that I'm like shit She the you can watch right what's cool is so you have your Oculus on
Beats a was going play the music and if you have a phone on the same Wi-Fi you can watch what they're seeing on the phone
So you're just seeing like a billion blocks flight this person and remember she's nice. She's tiny
She's barely move
her hands.
He's like the tiny, I'm swinging like, I think I'm loose, I walk her.
It's missing most of everything.
She's just like, just tiny, yeah, just tiny movements.
It's a fun game, but it's not easy.
It's one of the better games I played on that.
You still stand by that meditation app. I still have yet to do that.
I've talked about it multiple times, but I just have yet to buy it.
Pull the trigger on it because I feel like it could take up a lot of my time.
Do you have the? No, I don't.
We've talked about multiple times getting it, but I just wish I could test drive it
just so you get a feel for it. What I knew I was getting myself into.
I just wish I could test drive it to so you get a feel for it when I know I was getting myself into
Yeah, I mean I used it almost every day for the first six months that meditation app. It's called trip
TRIP And it's you know, it's good if you struggle to meditate. It's really good like it keeps you
engaged
Paying attention. There's kind of a lot of stimulus in there
Which I guess is like the
opposite of really what meditation should be but at least it at least it's calming and keeps you in
there. But I really haven't used it for maybe yeah. Yeah, I just kind of start. I got out of the habit
of it and I think with meditation it's like one of those things it kind of start, I got out of the habit of it. And I think with meditation, it's like one of those things,
it kind of comes and goes, you know when you need it, right?
And it's nice to fall back into, but yeah, it's, I don't know,
about all the time.
I want to finish up with that island.
So they bought an island, put a beach on it, gave it to some guy, and he just sold it right away.
That's a pretty massive...
800K, I think is what he said it was.
I mean, find island for it.
I'm surprised. I felt like islands would be more money.
But I guess if there's nothing on it, it's just like a pile of sand.
No, that's actually important. Like 500 grand with the sand I think he said to make an actual beach on the island because I
don't think I don't think it was an actual island or I mean with oh they didn't
have a beach so he's like so I would have assumed that's what I thought to
island seven but he said it but either way he said that that was like a
$600 $600 thousand000 $600,000 L
But he's like most of it but most of those make money so it's he has a pretty big window for situations like that to occur and still be able to bounce back pretty easily I don't think he's ever worried about money
Still worth it. I would have sold that island to what are you gonna do?
It's gonna be hard as hell to get out there. You're like what am I doing?
It's gonna be hard as hell to get out there you're like what am I doing? It's gonna be covered in plastic
Beech drinks and then you're like our
Be cool for about a day
Let's jump over to the next most inspiring thing I've ever heard of my life.
Nims, Purja.
I think that's it.
Purja.
Now, have you watched 14p?
I've seen it a few times actually.
Great documentary.
Wow.
Some specialists, okay.
A guy is a savage.
You don't even look at it like that either.
I think those Sherpas, we've done a hike through the Grand Canyon when Chavis
doesn't have a whole lot to like comparison to this.
And I will say people in Guadalmala helped us up with our bags like some Sherpas.
Those dudes don't even miss a beat.
I mean, he's obviously an elite level guy, but man,
that's just part of their daily life in Nepal. I think that's
they're so they're just used to that as part of their culture and he just took it to a whole new level.
Yeah, some of the guys on his team were incredibly exceptional. The one guy that talked about him
like how he could even climb those peaks, wall hung over and just went, you have no idea like how
in sailing your armpits to wake your ass up. Oh my goodness. Would you rather do that in
the heat or the cold? I don't know what would be worse. I've done a very extreme hikes in
the heat. I do not really have any desire to do them in the cold, to be honest.
Well, I think that you don't want to sweat much when you're doing those types of
trips, like obviously they're very, very cold, but like certain palliative body might sweat. And I'm pretty sure that's super dangerous dangerous when you in those kind of temperatures
Your armpits, but I also think that he's moving at a highs And I don't even know he was saying at some point in time you're only taking one step every so often. I'm sure he's cruising but
The clients that he takes up and takes on guides
How crazy is it if you ever wanted to climb mountains?
I was giving a lot of thought. I don't think I...
The thought that goes through my head, I appreciate the accomplishment and I get like how in touch
you get with your soul and a lot of these things. But at some point when he's climbing
the mountain, I'm just looking at him. Is there like any time we just like, man, why am I here?
Like, I shouldn't have done, I shouldn't have done those.
There's like no churning back.
You're just like in the middle of these freezing cold winds.
And you're just like, I did this to myself, but.
I per, and it's so dangerous.
If you ended up being one of those guys
that ran out of oxygen and you were up there,
you must be thinking, what the fuck was going to be variables?
Like why?
That's kind of the thought that I was having.
It's like, well, you did this to yourself.
But I mean, I guess the idea that you can accomplish anything is a feat.
I appreciate that though.
I mean, that's what he kept saying that he was doing it was to prove that people that anything that anything was possible.
You know? Right. that he was doing it was to prove that people that anything that anything was possible, you know.
Right. Well, but think about the type of person he is. So he applies for the gerkers,
which the gerkers is something I don't know a ton about, but I'd heard about them when I lived
in England. I knew they were like a foreign special forces team that that kind of supports,
you know, the SAS and their bad ass guys.
But knowing that 30,000 people apply for 200 spots,
I mean, imagine the caliber of the people that make it through that.
Yeah, absolutely.
Stud savage.
I'm sure that has everything they do with white,
so good at what he does.
But I think he didn't seem to have any like
Negative toll he said he said he said he was waking up at 1 a.m.
To like we know how dedicated you are he was waking up at 1 a.m.
And doing these 30 mile rock runs when he was like I think it's in high school or something like a young
young teenager and he's doing these runs with these rocks on his
Back so we can prepare himself for what's coming and he was like I did it every day
Tell us X Y Z I think he said he had his first drink when he was 25
He's like I decided to let loose and then he started having a little bit more fun
But he said he was so so dedicated. I think he was saying like seven days a week for like years. It's crazy
So dedicated, I think you're saying like seven days a week for like years.
It's crazy.
Yeah, that's, that's a powerful individual right there.
I mean, so Gogans do like a whole different level.
I mean, I always say a whole different level. I just always think about the cold being a whole different level for me.
I'm used to this on chat.
And then he went on to the SIS.
He joined the British Special Forces and almost I think he was the first guy that did that
From the Gurkhas or maybe I can't remember like basically nobody ever did that impressive. So yeah
For normal
For normal stuff. He did talk about something interesting that I think Joe at first
Didn't really understand. I know I didn't but he talked about the difference between discipline and self-discipline and that's an interesting thing to think about because
I take just me I go to
Jiu Jitsu because a lot of those guys over that you know expect me to show up
Like it's kind of like a team thing.
It's like you go because you know everyone else is going,
it's a bit of accountability, right?
So that's discipline.
And then I go to the gym,
but I have someone to work out with.
On days when he doesn't go to the gym
and I'm still gonna go,
I'm almost always half an hour later
than I expected to be there. And my intensity
is 60% of what it would have been. It's just way easier to motivate yourself when you've
got other people. But that self-disciplined bit that he was talking about when nobody required
him to get up and he still did it. It's something very powerful in that training. I mean, I love that.
That's, I think the idea that you're doing stuff
when people are watching is gotta be the biggest motivating
factor, like I'm working when you're not working.
That kind of drives me so much when I'm working out
and I know how hard I'm going and I know
the consistency and the accountability factor is's that go into getting up and
going to the gym every single day and finding something to do and finding a way to
work. It just puts you, it allows you to choose your heart. I know that's a
thing that David Goggins has said and people have said but it's like you choose
your difficulty and the rest of your day just becomes that much easier. And since it's pretty evident.
Yeah, I mean, when you get say five or six
of those types of mindsets together,
which is probably the team that he had
because that's who he's been looking for.
I mean, it's just unstoppable what you're gonna achieve.
Like, even if one person's tired,
who usually can keep moving,
you got four other people that are like,
let's go, we got this.
Doesn't matter how you feel.
I think it has everything to do a strong mind, you know what I mean?
Because what you're saying too,
if you have a community and you have people to go to,
that's always like something that you're accountable for.
But when you start becoming accountable for your own self
all the time, in the extreme ownership for you,
like this shit's not going
to get done by itself. There's a certain enlightenment or just freedom that allows you in life.
It just allows that battery to be charged and also use its energy in a good way.
There's definitely something to learn from hearing people like that.
Absolutely.
For sure.
Like even if you listen to this and you're not necessarily going out there and taking
on a new challenge or whatever, but just having those thoughts when you're struggling
through something or planning to do something a little bit more difficult than you've ever
done before, it's nice to know that people out there have achieved that kind of thing.
You know, they've pushed beyond it.
Like, obviously, he was born with some exceptional capabilities.
But he pushed hard as well.
So no matter what shape you're in, what a position or what hand you've been dealt,
you can always do another what 20% plus
Right that's crazy
Human mind is
Capable of two because it seems like we put so many of ourselves in these
Categories about what we can and can accomplish
But we don't we set ourselves up before with failure before we even try to make the accomplishment
reality set herself up with failure before we even try to make the accomplishment. Reality.
Yeah. And on the downside, your mind will also talk you out of everything too.
So it's, it's your ally and it's also you worst enemy.
You got to be real careful with how those thoughts are coming together in your head.
And that's a daily fact.
That's it.
And in that situation, climbing those mountains, when he was talking about, when he takes people
up, he goes, you have to get your red blood cells, more of them, and that's what happens
when the oxygenated blood and whatnot when you're getting to those, those altitudes.
And he was saying how he brings people to the summit and then brings them to base camp,
and then depending on how they feel, they'll either stay there for a day, they go to the summit and then brings him to base camp and then depending on how they feel to either stay there for a day they go to the next spot and he's like you kind of dictate their behavior but
I was wondering how probably got a lot of bull headed like people up there that are just like I
just want to keep rolling like if you're up there with your buddies or something and you're like
all right the other three are ready to go you're gonna be like no I'm feeling a little short
of breath I don't know.
Seems like a slippery slope when he was talking about that because it can get you in trouble real quick.
Right. I mean, again, you got to be smart. You can't be stubborn in those environments. You don't want to push through something in such a crazy way that you end up killing your own
nature. I mean, Mother Nature does not give a damn about what you think.
Imagine what that does though, just to your bonding for those guys.
When they got to K2 and all five of them kind of took a moment before they
reached the summit, walked up together, like holding each other and sang.
What a incredible moment.
That was pretty awesome. You could see the bond that those guys had together too. It was
interesting that feat that he accomplished was set. I believe it was 14 peaks. He did
it in seven months. I think it was six months and six days actually, but they just said
seven months. And then prior to that, it had been like seven years. I think was the soonest time that somebody had done that
Like
Talk about smashing the rack won't do this. I mean, that's insane. Like good for him man. That's cool
I don't know. You're just like the you're the baddest ass of the baddest asses of the sherps for sure
That's that's crazy bad ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass ass You know nims wanted to kind of discuss his reach and all the rest of it Joe said something that he never said before he said that the podcast had been an education and communication with extraordinary people
And I like that a lot like how perfect
Is that way of describing Joe's podcast and then the fact that it's number one in
93 countries. I'm pretty sure that's half the fucking world
Not a bit not a small reach at this point
How many countries are in the world? I?
Feel like that's something I should know
People should know this all on let's see countries in the world a lot
Dude Let's see, countries in the world. A lot. Dude, dude, dude, dude.
700 countries in the world.
Hold on, hold on.
No, no.
Not that many.
Let's see, how, oh, I should write how many.
How many?
195.
So yeah, basically that's half.
Little under under but massive
What I mean it look we're reviewing the top three
most downloaded
Podcasts on Spotify last week
That's that's Joe's reach with I mean I mean this, this is the place to get your voice out
that. It's interesting too. He said in accordance with that, he took the Netflix deal, even though
it was last money, but he thought that the and if you put the document here on Netflix, it would
get a bigger reach as opposed to Disney plus or one of these other ones. I think that's true.
I think that's true because what did he say there's like a hundred and sixty five million um
Netflix subscribers. That's a lot. Yeah, and I mean I'm pretty sure this documentary was
like the top show for a while for sure.
So yeah, my mom was watching in England when I left actually. She just put it on. I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I can barely get myself to go snowboarding. Oh, like that is gonna blow my knees
I will say I'm a little bit more. I don't even think it's old age. I'm just more mindful of like I
Don't want to hurt my knee this time. So is this worth it?
Dude, do you want to die on a mountain like honestly that you're gonna start to feel like a real
Just go what why why could have been on a beach good
because I think
that's it all right let's finish up with good old Tom Papa and his
bread have you made some bread lately Tom Papa well he took
some to Joe he even flew home to do it. It's a good friend
you've never made me any bread bro. I'd break you off some bread. All right we
should we should do the bread bread making ceremony. I don't know they were talking
about you think everybody's gluten intolerant to some extent? Is that real? Bread can't be good for your can it. I don't know. I love it, but
I love it. I don't think it's that very good for some people say they feel terrible after doing it
I like Joe was saying if you like he was like I have a huge workout and then he to pizza and I
Feel fine. I don't feel like sick to my stomach as long as I've worked hard enough
It doesn't matter what I eat to be honest. It just feels like my body is like I'll take anything.
You probably would feel like you have more energy if you ate something with less carbs.
But it depends. I think it's like a timing issue. You've got to have a good amount of carbs in you
before a very strenuous workout.
As far as I can tell, I've heard that.
But yeah, maybe afterwards you don't need that. Well, I usually work out on fast.
Did you always work out with food in your stomach?
I think this is two different.
Yeah, I know.
No, I never did.
I don't work out with any food in my stomach ever.
I can't go to GJ to
after I've used like, it's such a mess.
Oh my God.
I'm just burping a lot and everybody
and nobody wants that.
Nobody.
Nobody.
They open up with Christian bail and his acting
accolades and how fucking good that guy is. And not to say that that's, he's
like underrated or you don't think about it, but when you do go back and look at his movies
and how he jumps from different ways, um, different sizes, I mean, a body of ours Sam
was in the pit crew for Ford vs Ferrari and said that Christian stays in character the
whole time, that like method acting thing.
Which always sounds so strange to me, but like maybe that's the best way to like really
make an impactful scene.
That's a true art form that they are embodying.
So in order to do that, it must be some value to it. But that's why they pay the
big bucks. I don't know if you got to be think about what you're sacrificing. You literally
have to be somebody else all the time. Like in every, in every way, in a manner, you have
to, yeah, it's a, you like get into somebody else's body. What would they do?
I wonder if you like forget a bit of who you are as well.
Like when you snap out of it and you're just like, whoa, okay, yeah, that's
a, that's an interesting thing.
Yeah, when you go home and go home from shooting all day and you go back to your
wife and kids or whatever, how does that work?
Right.
If you've seen the new bad man, yeah, what are your thoughts?
I've heard it's good, bro. I've heard it's good. I haven't seen it. What who is it? Rubber Patterson I've heard mix mix bag on that one
It's I always say it's gonna be hard to be Heath Ledger. I mean, I know I wasn't Batman
But the Joker was a good second for me, but I still think Heath Ledger was the best
Good second for me, but I still think Heath Ledger was the best
Yeah, that character was unbelievable. It weirdly enough though. I watched those three Batman a while ago kind of back to back And I would say the second one the plot was probably the least
But the character of the Joker was the best right seriously I I really thought the Joker one was like the best of the three,
but when I went back and watched it, like the Bane one,
the whole story is really.
That's like V for Vindetta.
Yeah. Similar kind of storyline, I think.
Yeah.
I mean, those were some big shoes to fill, like as the new guy and Tom Hardie came in. That's a good point. Yeah, oh
So good so good dude. Oh
Tom Papa's pretty upset about baseball. I don't know anything about this. What's going on?
Negotiating stuff was supposed to be a lot worse than it was they came to an agreement a lot quicker than I think people anticipated and baseball's back baby
So I mean it could it was there was a players union and the owners were having a discrepancy
I that's how it always works and they want to do a holdout and they went back and forth and they came to a I don't know all the details
But I know they came to a resolution so the season seasons back
Is this unusual?
It's happened before with holdouts and whatnot,
but I think both sides eventually see
how much money they're losing by not playing the game.
And so that's probably a good motivating factor
rather than sitting out any more time
because each time they miss another game,
that's that much money that's coming in for the stadium
and the team and the jobs and everybody,
you know. But how does that mess like surely that messes like the leagues and the points you can't
just miss the. Are they adjusted accordingly? I mean there's a it's a big it's a long season so
they can make adjustments as needed. Oh I getcha. All right. Well, I didn't understand. I mean, I'm acting like I know how you can
restructure a baseball season. I couldn't really speak on it, but I know they have people
in place that can do that. Yeah, I figured your brother would know. He's a big baseball
guy. He's probably upset about it. Yeah. Lastly, they finish up with some survey that says that women prefer
dad. Oh, on the comments on that. Yeah, that's what? Let's let's let's talk about it.
Uh, I'm I was trying to think who would have voted for the dadbot. Um, even women with
dadbot husbands do not want their husbands to have dadpods or you're insecure and you're like
Oh, I don't want my husband to have any other eyes on him
So I prefer him be a few pounds overweight is that the theory?
I don't know I maybe the theory is that you know you're
That's what I was referring to right there. It's like the same idea, but yeah
Like you're in good you're in a good place
Because you don't have to worry about any other girls liking him because he's got the dad pot
Yeah, like no other chicks are gonna be checking him out. He's less like this is all mine, but this is all mine
That well, I don't know I guess it depends on on the shape of that dad bar, but you know those women
I'm still gonna be fantasizing about guys in really good shape. Even if they feel safer, they they've got their dad
But yeah, I don't recommend that book. I'm sure that game guys
Stay Lee stay Lee. All right guys. Well, well, that's it for this week.
Good week of podcasts.
Who do we have coming up?
We have the yogi.
I haven't gotten into him already.
That guy's awesome, dude.
Oh, yeah, the yogi.
He's great on Instagram.
He's got good stuff to say.
He's all about the soil.
So we're going to check in with him next week.
I heard Kanye is going back on.
Oh, that's easy. That'll. I hope Kanye is going to be
going to be interested. Yeah, it's gonna be interesting to see what he says. He's probably gonna be pretty upset with
P. Davis.
He's a comedian. He's a comedian. He's a Phil Roastu.
All right guys, well again, thank you. As a comedian about his field roast you.
All right guys, well again, thank you. As always for listening, we appreciate you.
As always, we keep you up to date
on all the latest Rogan happenings.
And yeah, follow Garrett here on Instagram,
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Please help!
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