Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 292 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Roger Waters Et al.
Episode Date: October 13, 2022 Thanks to this weeks sponsors: First Personand use code JRERfor 15% off your first order Mintmobile Go to www.mintmoble.com/JRER to cut your bill to $15 a month and get your plan shipped to your ...door free. Visit Mighty.com and get 10% off Mighty Law’s fee when you mention the JRE Review podcast. www.JREreview.com For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com This week we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always. Review Guest list: Jann Wenner, Roger Waters and Sober October A portion of ALL our SPONSORSHIP proceeds goes to Justin Wren and his Fight for the Forgotten charity!! Go to Fight for the Forgotten to donate directly to this great cause. 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
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You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast. We find little nuggets treasures, valuable pieces of gold in the Joe Rogan Experience podcast and pass them on to you. Perhaps expand a little bit.
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You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
What a bizarre thing we've created. Now with your hosts, Adam Thorn.
He did the worst podcast with the best one.
One, go.
Draw the show.
Hey guys, and welcome to the JRER podcast.
What a great week.
What did you think about this week Adam?
I thought it was amazing.
Dude, come on.
I mean, Jan, Janie. Uh-huh. Mr. Jan Werner, I thought it was amazing. Dude, come on. I mean, Jan, Janie, Mr. Jan Werner, I thought it was Jan.
It's definitely not, it's Jan.
It's Jan.
Mr. Roger Waters, I mean, come on.
Pink Floyd is one of my top five favorite bands.
That was for sure.
That was very exciting.
And then just legendary sober October,
probably one of the best ones yet.
I mean, Bert was on fire, yeah.
So I thought it was a great week.
It was a fun, exciting, important week.
For sure.
For sure.
I was stoked to listen to all of them.
Let's open up with how Rogan talked about the FBI
made a statement.
I think he did this on two beds, one cave.
He was talking to Tom about it.
And he goes, the FBI made a statement about Zuckerberg's comments on Rogan.
And bear in mind, the FBI barely do, you know, statements like this.
So why are they getting involved?
Come on.
Because there's 12 million people listening
to his podcast and they don't want the perception
of what's happening with the FBI to be, you know, skewed.
I guess.
It's called they're scared of people knowing the truth.
Ooh, the truth comes out on Rogan.
Right.
Right, I mean, big.
I don't think Zuckerberg was lying about those things.
That's probably why they got involved.
Yeah. I don't know. I don't think so.
He took a lot of criticism for the, you know, anyway,
let's jump over to Jan. Sorry.
Jan, love it.
Jan, Werner, what a legend.
I had no idea.
Did you know he was such good friends with Hunter S?
I mean, if he ran Rolling Stone, he had to be.
Yeah, right.
I mean, it makes sense, I guess, now that I think about it,
I guess who else would put up with Hunter S's behavior?
I guess I didn't know, you know, there's one thing to be a friend
of someone's in an acquaintance, and like, they write for for you and they're the only ones that will publish your stuff, but
I mean, they were homies.
Like, they were, they were tight.
That's, that's, I mean, he lived with him, he lived with, y'all in his wife sounds like
for a while.
A legendary magazine, you know, it's changed a lot recently.
I think a lot of people are aware of this, almost like Vice, you know, it's changed a lot recently. I think a lot of people are aware of this almost like vice
You know, it started off really fringe and fun and then it just got a bit kind of I don't know watered down
Yeah, that'll happen, but still a huge
contribution to
the zeitgeist I
mean look it the the
beauty of Rolling Stone was they were talking about things that no one
else was talking about.
You don't see these things in Life Magazine.
I mean, what else was there in the 60s?
Life Magazine was probably the biggest life and time.
Time.
Yeah, that's it.
There was no talk of of music magazines and
If you think about the history of rock and roll that's when it began was was with Rolling Stone
I think it was like coinciding with that publication
Yeah, do you know the guy is worth like 700 million as well?
According to Johnny. Yeah, it makes sense the
What is that dumb website? that's like celebrity net worth?
I mean, it's probably not right, but he's worth big money and he clearly doesn't care if the if guys like him are getting tax
30 40 50% either so you got it you got to you got to appreciate that guy. He's not a greedy son of a bitch. Yeah
Yeah, he seemed pretty genuine for sure I didn't't, you know, the one thing that I just
have in my notes here that I want to bring up in 1972 was the first year 18 year
olds could vote. I did not know that. That's insane. Is that what was it before
a 21 must have been? I didn't mention that. They just he just he just mentioned
that in 1972 was the first year 18 year olds
could vote. And that was such a huge thing for Rolling Stone. I'm sure because they, it
is a pretty political magazine. It is much as they probably wanted to talk about music.
There was a lot of politics happening.
Sure. I probably the only reason they allowed it, the people that would push against that,
is because you know, younger people are often more liberal, but also they're young people. So they're too lazy to vote. Yeah, it's
an issue. Still, it's unfortunate really. But that's probably old enough to have an opinion,
I think. Makes sense. Yeah, man. I mean, look, it's old enough to not be caught up in
greed and have enough so much money that you're going to vote red every time no matter what because you're loaded.
No, down.
No, down.
It's the only thing keeping this world balanced is the young kids with no money.
I wish they had talked more about Hunter.
You know, there were some great stories, but I wanted some like behind the scenes stuff.
You know, they talk about the Ibergain story that he made up that was just hilarious every time.
And then most of it was kind of just sad, like the struggle, and being despondent, and not connecting,
and not being able to get his hands on coke and freaking out with the snow storm. And that was
a good one. There was a snow storm. And asked him, he couldn't, he couldn't leave.
Right. Kind of ironic, there's a snow storm, but he couldn't get any snow.
What did he want to change the name of the town to bot town? No, a pig. Was it?
It wasn't what it was. Bot town or like, something pigs or yeah. Anyways, he changed the name of the town.
Yeah, I mean, he was, he was close to winning that election
as for Sheriff.
That's crazy.
He was close.
Yeah.
He didn't want people moving there, I guess.
So it's kind of like the Boseman situation.
Yeah, well, yeah.
Asked we got a change.
Boseman's named the butt town.
Yeah, we should.
We should.
I liked, I think they went on and on about Hunter
for, you know, enough time and talked about the fear and
loathing and Elko story, which I did not know about.
Obviously, everybody knows about fear and loathing in Las Vegas and him being on the campaign
trail for McGovern.
If you know McGovern, he was a great man.
I wish he would have became president,
but of course we got Nixon's dumbass instead.
And I wasn't even alive then,
but you look back on Nixon's presidents.
He isn't, he won of two presidents that had to resign.
Yeah.
So yeah, properly impeached.
Dush, not to mention the war on drugs,
and we could go on and on how many water gate.
I mean, that he was a horrible president.
And my govern was a good guy.
And I think Hunter knew that I was surprised to hear, especially because Rogan is such a
Hunter fan that he didn't even know about him until that until fear and loathing came
out.
Rogan didn't?
That's what he said.
Really?
Yeah.
I mean, when the story came out in Rolling Stone, which was in the 90s, but still, that's
the 90s.
I feel like I knew.
When did they make fear and loathing the end of the 90s?
It wasn't too late.
It was like mid to late.
I think it was late 90s.
I remember being in high school and watching that film.
So it was definitely mid to late 90s,
but he wrote that story in Rolling Stone.
That's where it first came out.
It was an excerpt from that.
It was fear and loathing on the campaign trail.
Well, they turned it into fear and loathing in Las Vegas.
You know there was a Bill Murray movie they did?
That was the early one.
Yeah, Buffalo, something to do.
Where the Buffalo Rome. Oh, that's one. Yeah, Buffalo. Something where the Buffalo
Rome. Oh, that's right. Yeah. Sorry. I was thinking of Murray does a great job with impersonating
him too. But I truly think that I think that Johnny Depp did a played a better part.
Well it was a more interesting movie because that shit was wild. Yeah. It sounds like
Yon's book is coming out or maybe it's already out like a
Rolling Stone. Mm-hmm. Talked about that. I'd love to read that. Yeah. Yeah, I liked how,
you know, they brought up how nuclear is part of the solution. I mean, obviously Yon is extremely
scared about the situation of our planet and the environment
too much carbon.
He definitely went on one about that.
He talked a lot about billionaires
and kind of billionaires controlling the country.
The one thing that surprised me was how much
he kind of had Biden's back.
Did you notice that?
It's a little bit.
Yeah, it seemed pretty, I mean, he's,
it's definitely an example of someone
that's been, you know, drinking the cool aid
of a particular party.
And that's hard to listen to either side.
I don't care if you're a Republican or a Democrat
when it's just like one side is
all wrong and the, and you know, he's making a lot of excuses for what's happening now.
And that kind of frustrates me.
Yeah, it was frustrating for him to say that, you know, I don't trust unvetted sources.
Like the Hunter Biden thing wasn't true or something. That bugged me because it's like,
y'all, you should know better. You should know better.
Did you see the video about the laptop?
I mean,
but it might explain some of what's happening to the magazine now.
Maybe, maybe.
It's, I mean, does he even run the magazine anymore?
He didn't talk about the magazine now.
They pretty much just were, you know, talking about,
you know, Hunter and older issues of the magazine. I don't know if he still does actually probably should have looked that up
Needed Jamie. I think my the favorite thing
Well one of my favorite things and I've heard this quote before but I I started don't let perfect be the enemy of good
I don't know who did that quote. Was it a was that a Jefferson quote
or is that a Thomas Jefferson? I feel like it's one of our four fathers who said that,
but it doesn't matter who said it. It's a brilliant quote. And I appreciated Jan saying,
look, we're not going to get perfect, but we can do better. you know, pick the, it's kind of like pick the,
the out of the two evils, pick the better evil kind of thing, right?
Yeah, it's just difficult to hear when people start
saying things like, well, you know what we need to do?
We got to take the money out of politics
and we got to do this out of this and we got to,
it's almost like you're basically saying these impossible things
that are never going to happen need to happen before we can move forward. And that's not
a very good way of making a solution for anything. So I don't know, just me personally, I
start the discount on someone's idea when they just throw that out there.
True. But a little bit.
But you could tell he's a good-hearted person, right?
He means well.
And I think what he was trying to say is that we've all been taught this American dream.
And it's almost like we've forgotten what's important in America, which is helping your
neighbor. If you're only trying to enhance this ride for yourself and not for others, then it's
a problem.
That seems to be what's happening now.
It's like we have this wealth gap that's insane.
It's never been this way.
Maybe in the depression it was, but even the numbers are so skewed now to the very,
very u Uber wealthy. Mm-hmm.
And you know, you got people like Joe Rogan
who's making millions and millions,
hundreds of millions of dollars a year
who's still not even close in comparison
to the billionaires, you know.
Yeah.
It's like, Joe looks like a peasant
compared to these people running our country.
No doubt.
I'm sure Elon Musk can spend in a day, Joe's not worth any one even notice.
So there is that. It definitely is that. But it also along the lines of like at the end
he was talking about how he thinks the government should regulate the internet. Oh, really?
I do not have that in my notes. Oh, he was saying that. Yeah, and he was and Rogan was
like, well, wait a minute who know what absolutely but it but it
kind of lines up with some of the things that he was saying otherwise
what's like trust our government too much still assuming that it's
uh... democrat government elected which is it's dangerous on both ends
absolutely absolutely and if they control the internet like that's the freest space that exists for good or bad.
Well, they're already, I mean, let's bring Zuckerberg back into the conversation.
They're already trying to, and look where that's gotten us.
They're already trying to control it.
They're already trying to tell the biggest, you know, Facebook.com, the biggest social
network platform in the history of the world.
Yeah, if the FBI girl.
The FBI is already trying to talk to him out of posting things.
So they're already trying it.
And that's not good.
We all know that that's horrible.
Yeah.
I guess the government just likes to police everything
if they can.
As long as they're making that $90, baby.
Yeah.
They're not policing shit if they're not making money off of it. It's true
But you know those are wacky ideas because it doesn't make it doesn't even line up with how he believes
Imagine if back in the day when he started this magazine
I'm sure there was a lot of pressure for him not to write about certain things post certain things and he needed
Freedom of press. Absolutely.
Yeah, it goes against his ideals.
It doesn't make sense.
It's almost like he's moved so far away
from something now that I don't know.
He wants to spike everybody's water with LSD, so.
That was a crazy idea.
Joe was like, maybe not.
Maybe we should, they don't choose. maybe not maybe we should they don't choose
Yeah, maybe we should let the people decide if they want to take it exactly
You got to choose to drink the cool aid you see you back on us he backed out of it to oh yeah
Yeah, you're right. You're right. We don't want to involuntarily involuntarily give it to that
But that's what I mean
It's like it's a poorly thought idea I hate hate to say it, but it's like whoa easy tiger
Yeah, what did you think of the difference between the Michael Jackson and John Lantern interaction?
It's like John really opened up
I'm going to him him interviewing both of them. Yeah John really opened up and like explained about the frustrations of fame
And that he just was a normal guy and just wanted peace and had these
other ideas and he wasn't this just this beetle phenomenon that existed.
But also he was more.
But then there was Michael that he was kind of like sure you couldn't get more out of.
And Joe wasn't buying that.
Joe was like, you know what, if I go in front of this guy, I think I could make more happen.
I mean, he said that about Obama as well, which he kind of skirted the question,
because he also, Yann also interviewed Obama.
Multiple times.
And I, he had some good points.
It's hard to get, sometimes in interviews. It's hard to get the real questions out
without pissing people off. I mean, you know
Egotistical
Ego gets in the way of a lot of people who are famous, right?
Or it's Michael or John. I think John it's hard to compare the two because John Lennon is so different than Michael Jackson.
I don't care.
They're both uber famous.
I get that.
But Michael, I mean, come on, the guy dealt with so much trauma.
I mean, he is a messed up individual.
I mean, I, we don't even have to go into the pedophilia, but it's like, it's so much different
in my mind.
But it was so fucking, at least John got to live into kind of early adulthood
as, you know, a normal working class guy from Liverpool, whereas Michael, how young was he when
he stands? That's kind of what I'm saying. They're not tiny. You can't even compare the two.
Michael Jackson was famous by the time he even understood what fame was.
Right.
The kid was what, 10, eight years old, singing with his brothers, and he was the most
famous one in the band from the start.
Yeah, wild.
John Arty, like you said, he lived, came from a working class family in Liverpool.
He was already a grown-ass man really, before he got famous.
I guess it makes sense though, you know.
It's just like, and to be honest,
if he can't get an interview out of somebody,
maybe nobody could.
Because that really aren't that many.
I think Oprah probably got the most compelling Jackson.
Out of Michael. Yeah.
Yeah, Oprah's good.
Oprah's, Oprah's, yeah, she's good at interviews,
for sure, no doubt.
And I think that might have something to do with just her personality as a, you might
open up to a woman more than a man.
At least, I think you might, at least Michael might, I don't know.
Yeah.
Maybe they're both African-American as well, like they could relate in different ways.
And Oprah's just just whatever you think of
her, she was excellent at doing what she did. There's a reason she's.
I think Oprah's great. Yeah. Yeah. Who's saying anything bad about Oprah? I don't know.
I don't watch that shit. Maybe it's just me. I'm like, I never really watched anything
she did. But I know that she's good at what she does because she's a power. She had her own TV network, I think.
Like for sure. Yeah. All right, let's jump over to good old Roger Waters.
Oh, Raj. Have you ever seen Floyd or Roger Waters?
Not live. I saw who they are. Yeah, there's legends. I saw Roger, you know, he split up from
his band in the, I want to say 90s. I think was their last tour, maybe even late 80s, but
anyway, he came to Michigan when I was growing up when I was in high school and I went to
see him and they played, he played the entire wall album and I was absolutely blown away. I think that's
why they're in my top five favorite bands after seeing that live at a young age. I mean,
I was 16, maybe 17, you know. So I've always loved their music. I'm powerful stuff, dude.
Actually, it's so different than really anything else. Yeah, I mean, it's psychedelic for sure.
I mean, I think it's one of those bands
kind of like the dead where you don't really get to experience it
unless you're high on acid at a shell.
He didn't really talk about, but they didn't get into it.
No, he kind of went a different way.
It was very political.
I did not know that Roger was such a political dude.
I mean, I guess I should know better
because of who he is, right?
He's very, he's just a political guy
and he's a smart motherfucker.
Yeah, and, and, you know, being cold, you know,
anti-Jewish and...
Anti-Semitic, yeah.
And a bunch of other type of like maybe even slightly pro-russian.
He's just pro-peace.
If that's it, and I think that comes as at a cost or pro-no suppression of anyone.
Which is very ideological when you look into all these different
conflicts, it's obviously not as easy as that, but he's just basically saying, look, every
human is a person that has rights and shouldn't be suppressed and regardless of who they are,
and that's obviously going to make a lot of controversy.
It just will. Yeah. But he stands by it and takes a bunch of shit for it. I just love how
he has never gone against his ideals and his ideologies. I mean, like you just were mentioning. I mean, the guy is pro-piece. He always has been, he has always, he's written about it in his songs.
I mean, the final cut is one of my absolute favorite albums.
And it was his last album before he left Pink Floyd.
And I believe that was like I said, late 80s, early 90s.
I had a tape of it, but it's all about war.
I mean, that whole album is a story about World War I and bombs and...
Not a shit.
Oh yeah, it's an amazing...
That's the final cut.
And he wrote the whole thing.
I mean, he also wrote the entire album, the wall.
I mean, one of the most famous Pink Floyd albums.
Not to discredit Roger Gilmore, who is also incredible.
But they're two...
They write in completely different ways.
But they were saying he was the brains.
He was scary, I think, for Roger to take over
after that guy kind of lost it.
Yes, said, said Baron.
He kind of, I don't know,
was like airing on the side of it, wasn't drugs.
It wasn't the acid.
It was just like who he was or like how he was gonna be
when he just left the band and couldn't write anymore.
It seemed like he was not ready for fame
and maybe was a schizophrenic.
I think he was just going crazy.
I mean, like you said, Roger didn't blame it on the acid even though
They were doing plenty of that in the late 60s. He was like no, he was already he was already going somewhere else
Right, you know, it I mean maybe it pushed him over the edge right but if you're already struggling
Right, I think they you know, that's not like a thing that
you know, that's not like a thing that,
that's a thing that's known. With weed, it is.
With weed it is.
With weed it is.
Is it with that with LSD as well?
You're not a big, right?
If you're, I don't know.
If you're continuing on the edge of sanity
and you do some LSD, that's probably not gonna be
the safe move.
It's true.
I've seen it happen with friends.
And it's not like the other band members
were taken any less drugs than Sid. You know, it was just he was pre-destined to like have something
go the like a screw come loose. That's probably why Roger says it this way because he's
like bro, we did the same amount of drugs. You didn't mention that, but we should have
seen. Yeah. Yeah. He just like this is probably what's happening. If you and I are in the same amount of drugs. I didn't mention that, but we should assume. Yeah.
He's just like, this is probably what's happening.
If you and I are in the same room, and there's a barrel of whatever, we're all going to,
we're going to be doing the same amount.
I mean, come on.
Yeah.
And if you go completely nuts from it, I'll be like, yeah, I was already in Todd.
I was, I was, I was blown away by the fact that he talked about, he's only interested
in songwriters.
He was talking about Neil Young and Dylan.
He's like, oh, those are the only kind of bands that I was really, or the artist that I
was into.
That just blew me away.
Like how are those your only two, you know, inspirational figures in the music scene?
I mean, he said he doesn't really like rock and roll.
He didn't really follow along with that. He liked I mean, he said he doesn't really like rock and roll. He didn't really follow along with he like classical music. He said that makes sense. Yeah. Oh, and there was one song
he brought up and they played God bless the child Billy holiday. You are that's an incredible song.
It is a great to great song about. So it was about, you know, God bless the child that has his own or something,
right? Like made his own life, whether financial or just sorted it out without protection from parents
and the rest of it. And there is something cool and special about it. It's a real old style song,
though. Oh, I mean, Billy Harday's voice is so legendary. What about I have this
started. He was talking about some of the best lyrics from the song Echoes which is one of the
best Pink Floyd songs but it's strangers strange. It's very like monotone
and chill, but he said that those lyrics define him. He actually said that. Wow. And that explains
all of this equal, you know, we're all the same. We're all on this planet together. Yeah.
He's very anti-war. He's very pro-peace. He's very anti-nuclear. And he is adamant about nuclear war.
Nuclear war bombs. Right. Atomic bombs. I just, I didn't realize how, I mean,
plenty of people talk about pro-peace, but he is living it. I mean, he's writing letters to government
officials and still doing it. Fucking guy's 78 years old, still writing letters to government officials and still doing it.
Fucking guy's 78 years old, still writing letters to Putin.
Amazing.
I wonder if it's crazy.
If like, when you're that famous and you have been that long and also so iconic,
like he talked about his lyrics and he's like, well, to me, I meant this,
but other people listen to mean something else.
It's very personal and it's just powerful.
And there's like this hypnotic state kind kind of the big bands can create with audiences.
I wonder if to him he realizes that, you know, his voice, all the power of his lyrics
have so much impact on people that it, to him, it's not weird to like write a letter
to Putin.
He's like, yeah, people listen to what I say.
So I have to be very careful about how I say things.
And I have to, or I want to have an important message.
And he just boils it down to peace, love,
treat everyone good, you know.
And also, he is the opposite of anti-Semitic.
And that's the problem, right, with our government also he is the opposite of anti-Semitic.
And that's the problem, right, with our government and the way things are run.
Israel is this very small country,
yet it has so much power because the United States
backs them and they're killing Palestinians all day.
And Rodgers like, what the fuck?
Why is nobody talking about this?
Right.
It's a huge problem.
Yeah. And no one's talking about it. But they fight against each other, you know, and they just, you know, Israel has a lot more power than a lot of
the Palestinians. So it's, it's like oppressive in that direction. But since they war each other,
if it was the other way around, it would probably be as ugly the other way. Yeah, it's shit.
around it would probably be as ugly the other way. Yeah, it's just, I mean, the guy is, he's so passionate about not only his music, but
his writing, obviously his writing is his music.
But to hear him talk about how he was still changing up, he would watch, remember this
part where he would, he would do a show. And then he
goes back to the hotel and watches the show by himself and takes notes on how he can make it better.
I mean, that's cool. Holy shit. Yeah. Or that near the end there, he was talking about,
it was like some kids in Oakland that had like, that came from a bad home and they went out to one
of his shows. Right.
He started crying, dude.
Yeah.
Remember that?
Yeah.
He was talking about how, you know,
none of these children have two parents,
one's either a junkier in prison,
and they went out to one of his shows recently.
And when he talked about that,
he literally started crying to Joe about it,
about how much these kids,
it was like the first time that they,
the first thing that they had ever done
that they were proud of.
You don't wanna like them in their life.
It seemed like a really kind of
reflectively eye-opening moment
because all he thought about was the show at first.
And he's like, these kids are kind of annoying.
They're not really doing what
I need them to do. And they're barely showing up. And then afterwards he realizes, oh, it's because
they haven't had, you know, guidance and structure and good mentors. And they're not as lucky as a lot
of the other kids. Yet it meant the world to them. And I guarantee that changed the way that he moved forward
just probably in the world
when it came to interacting with people.
He's like, instead of just being like,
oh yeah, quick judgment that person's annoying.
He's like, wait a minute, what's this person's background?
And maybe getting to meet him is a big deal for them and is something that
they can be really proud of.
It was cool.
That was emotional.
That was the most emotional spot on all three of these podcasts.
All right, let's talk about the biggest bit of bullshit in this podcast.
For a show.
How's the one you're talking about?
No, dude.
I was about to keep saying that. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, It links up, we do it in the studio, sometimes this week it'll be fun. And maybe we have some pharmaceutical help with that one too.
Well see, it's kind of like the telephone game it reminds me because when I, when we
did this in seventh or eighth grade is when I got into Pink Floyd, we used Allison Wonderland.
Same fucking album, Allison Wonderland.
I never tried it with Wizard of Oz Oz so I'm excited to check it out
I will also do it with Alice in Wonderland with you see which one's better if it isn't even I bet you
$500 that it doesn't even link up at all I've never heard this and that is nonsense
Well, we're gonna have to find a a Reddit feed. We'll figure it out right.
Reddit.
It's always Reddit.
But, but here's the thing.
He played it off so quickly that it almost, it was, I mean, it was cute.
I don't think he's being deceptive at all.
No, no, no.
He's not a deceptive person.
No, he even knows something that he just thinks is fun and they all want to keep let the whole band just
Says look we agreed to never say anything, but we linked this up or it really is random
But it just was dismissed so fast. Yeah, because he wasn't even excited about it
It wasn't like you know, it was great that it lined up like that. That was so fun
He was just like nah, that's nonsense. It, he was almost pissed that it even got brought up.
Yeah, it's like, oh, glad we cleared that one up, Joe.
He's like, glad we got that out of the way, dude.
Dude, that, that thing links up so hard that it is nuts.
I think it's coincidence, but I'll have to figure it out.
Cause I thought it linked up really well with Alice
and Wonderland and apparently that wasn't even
the fucking thing you're supposed to do.
Two notes. Yeah, but what a ledge.
A legend. So glad he was on what a wedge. Yeah, what about us?
I can't believe he came on. I so I need to look at his tour dates because it sounds like these tours that he's doing are a little bit different than what they've been in the past.
It's more poetic. Yeah, do Joe Ari and Tony went to dinner with did Bert not go? No, but and Tom had to go out
of town, but they went to dinner with him after the consa, I think. So how dope is that?
Maybe before it's probably before. I wonder who I wonder if Joe probably sandbagged him in pool.
Oh, to like not thrash him.
Remember at the end, he's like, it's your break.
Let's go.
Who knows?
Who knows?
All right, let's jump over to Frickin's sober October.
Come on.
Good job, guys.
Bert.
Bert.
Dude, Bert was on one.
Took the frickin' thing.
He basically did the podcast.
He did the whole thing.
I don't think Ari and Tom said much of it.
And Tom basically said nothing, the whole podcast.
So, Giro was in the background the whole time.
You know what it was, and Bert brought it up at the end.
He was like, Tom needs to leave.
Like, I think Tom was late and like a bit worried about-
He was in, he was just checked out.
Yeah.
He was like, I gotta go.
He was chomping.
He was chomping to get out of there.
Mm-hmm.
Uh, it's, but it was just on one as always.
Oh man, ridiculous.
And the shit that they all give birth,
there is nobody I've ever seen
that humbly takes that as well as both does.
He seems like a really humble person.
Especially with some of the honesty that he talks about,
like being terrible at sex or like, right.
He just owns it.
He's like, yeah, this happened and this was this story.
I'm like, dude, he even prefaces the story with,
yeah, people have told me never to mention this ever, but I'm going to so he just does it on the biggest media platform ever created
Well, but then realizes that they've already mentioned it in the past so it's not even a big deal
Yeah, like not being able to swim is that we were talking about somebody not being able to swim. Oh, yeah, that's
Sebastian the comedian. Yeah, that was a hell of a call out for him.
I guarantee this guy's going to learn how to swim after that. I just, he's a maniac. I mean,
how they talked about his blood work being great and, you know, just somehow the guy can
drink like a fish all day every day and still just have amazing blood work and nothing
wrong.
Like he literally, the doctor thought he was lying to him.
It doesn't make sense.
The doctor's like, Bert, there's no way you drink every night.
What are you talking about?
No, I don't understand.
He has no clogs in his arteries.
He must have like some sort of super liver.
And they was saying if he so but up, he'd be great at sports.
You know, he's just like a natural athlete
and like good at these things.
I mean, when Joe brings up how delusional he is,
it's just because Joe has spent most of his life
trying to figure out the truth, right?
What is real?
And people blowing smoke and saying,
outland his bullshit, it's like it frustrates the fuck out of Joe.
For sure.
It's like, oh, I could do that.
I could be Bruce Lee in a fucking show
as like, fuck off, could you?
So I think, but is the anticipate of this?
Like, he's just that thing that Joe is like, no.
When you talk nonsense to me, I can't stand it yet. Sometimes he pulls it off
He loves it. I mean the guy just ran a marathon
Just ran a marathon off the couch. Yeah, my the favorite favorite thing that Bert said on the entire
Three and a half hour podcast they did or three three 20
the our podcast they did are 3, 3, 20, the, uh, when he went all of her stone was at a party
and Bert, Bert goes, he so did not feel my energy.
He's like, he's like going off, telling all of her stone that the Godfather was a fucking
brilliant movie.
Amazing.
Even though obviously that was, uh, Francis, Francis Ford Coppola did that movie.
Yeah, it wasn't, it wasn't, it wasn't Oliver. Yeah, that's Nicholas Cage's uncle.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that.
But either way, the wrong guy.
That's why Nicholas got so famous, eh?
Wasn't from his acting.
No, supposedly I think he changed his name
to not take that credit.
Oh, good for him.
But who knows, good for him.
Still dead.
But that's the thing, like,
but now is very famous.
So he can like leverage those interactions.
But he's kind of been around this world for a long time.
So when he wasn't known, he was still the same guy.
And this is why these guys love him because he's so genuine,
even though he's, you know, embarrasses the fuck out of himself.
He loves to.
He just like gets in there, says what he wants,
and I just think it's brilliant how here bring up
the most, you know, kind of self-deprecating stories
that you can even imagine.
And he doesn't care.
He's just like, oh, I did this, and then I did that and then I put my pants. Yeah, it's like I
I really appreciated him talking about is is it is
Does he have a teenager a girl?
Yeah, right. How is a few kids but a teenage girl?
This teenage girl came to one of their shows and this woke, you know supposedly woke these woke teenagers these days and Bert kept looking
over at her being like, is she laughing? Is she laughing? And then finally she starts smirking
me, like, sorry, Dan, he goes, honey, this is your supposed laugh.
Boy, you know who they were watching, right?
You're supposed to laugh. Was it Chappelle?
No, Shane Gillis. Oh, that's right. The Gillian special.
Yeah.
So the do the drinks all the b is the yeah save our park of course and yeah, I mean Shayna's
Pro Trump and a Republican and
But who know he's not like massively politically active. He just like is kind of into it
so
It's the type of comedy that
Somebody that is quote unquote woke could say, hey, I'm not going to like this.
The beautiful thing is though, Shane is so genuine and so funny.
And just brilliant. I mean, his skits are unbelievable.
That it just breaks right through there. And that's what comedy is. It doesn't matter who we are,
how different we are, whatever. If it's funny and really funny, it just lands, dude.
It lands.
Yeah, it's just nice to see all these guys,
and they talk about it a lot,
but all these guys in the room together,
they're still helping each other,
they're on each other's podcast.
It's just cool.
They're in their all-crushin'
and they're all helping each other out.
There's none of this
I'm better than you mentality at all. Joe talked about it, right? And he always does
It's none of this famine mentality stuff, but they all do it not just Joe
Like I feel like he's helping them figure like talk about it more. Yeah, I think he was a big influence in it realistically
I think that he was a big voice, but you know
He probably learned from somebody as well.
So it just goes down and he brought it
into the water comedy.
What I liked is when they talked about Shorts,
and when Shorts got to the comedy store,
I was like, you know what guys?
This is really fun, and everyone's supportive,
and he's kind of taking that energy back to New York,
that was
From what I've heard a traditionally more famine mentality. It's like I'm against you I get the show we're all working for like an SNL spot or a TV show. Hey guys
After 15 years of fine print contracts and getting to right that's that's a primarily East Coast thing
But a lot I think that that was comedy
Right. That's a primarily East Coast thing. But a whole lot, I think that that was comedy thing all over.
Back in the...
It just kind of after maybe like the 2010s of the comedy store, and especially when
Joe got back to the store, that's when it really started to be like a cooperative.
Everyone's coming on.
Everyone's podcast energy, and that just is starting to spread and you know the Rogan's
They're gonna do that in Austin. Yeah, absolutely absolutely and I hope they do the cave that cave theater in Tennessee
Remember they were pulling up pictures that looks sick. How good was that remember when
Joe was like who's that on stage and Ari's like I think at your mom. He's like oh god my mom
Those guys is great.
I can't believe they're giving shit for Ari having a bad suit game.
It's like, Ari's looking good.
He's always wearing nice suits.
Joe was giving him shit about their suit game.
Yeah, he said he had good suits.
It's he gets them from like Thailand or whatever.
They're such, they're such old rich white guys though.
I mean, come on, they're talking about their watches
for like 20 minutes and then the suit.
Yeah, but hold on.
It's just funny.
It's funny.
I know you're a watch guy, so you're gonna defend this.
No, no.
I'm not doing it.
Look, I think it is slightly unreasonable
to spend a lot of money on a watch.
10 G's, yeah.
Well, but also when it's like,
they have really worked through.
I mean, I already used to be on the door at the comedy store.
I know. They pay you like 10 bucks an hour to do that back then.
I get it. They did you hear them doing gigs for like $150?
Yeah, but then they did a gig for Tony Robbins and somebody was like, I need 1,500 and Tony
gave him 1,500.
Yeah, and they were making nothing.
It's like, dude, these guys have done probably the most painful and terrifying gigs for almost
nothing.
So many times that if they want to talk about buying like a $7,000 watch, I get it. I'm more for it.
Look, I get it.
Seven Jesus, nothing to these guys at this point in their lives,
so they can laugh about it.
If it, like, Burt gets all excited about treating himself
with cool aid and shit, if he wants to look at his watch.
Tito's.
He's like, can you believe they brought me Tito's?
I'm like, bro, that bottle is like 15 bucks, relax.
28.
All right. But yeah, it's cheap vodka, and it's good. It's good bro, that bottle is like 15 bucks, relax. 28. All right.
But yeah, it's cheap vodka and it's good.
It's good vodka.
If you're a vodka person, I don't like that.
I'm not a huge fan of vodka, but.
Well, Aure didn't even take Joe's watch.
He's like, you can have that.
That's right.
That Rolex.
He's like, don't want it.
He's not a watch guy.
Yeah, but Aure is like, I don't, I don't need shit either.
I think he still has a flip phone.
I'd like to know if he took it out after they were off air.
I doubt it.
No. Now he was pretty out of it.
He would rather pee in the hallway.
In the bottle.
Yeah. Then it like to him, he just wants stories that mean something.
That was, that was my favorite,
conglomeration of the homies that have been on the air for a while with Joe.
You know, they've been doing a lot of them with Gillis
and not each class, but yep, yep.
And this is my favorite one, probably because Bert took over.
Yeah, but this is like the original.
Like they've been doing so sober October for a long time.
And it's always been these four.
It's yeah.
Okay.
And they're just, it's so good.
And then when they compete against each other
and make a competition and get silly with it all,
I mean, obviously they need to calm down
because Joe will just go psychopathic on the wall
and crush him.
I guess what I should have said is I like sober October better
than national parks.
Ooh.
I do.
Throwing it out there.
I like them both.
I don't like it.
They're just, maybe it's because they're sober.
I get very excited for sober October.
I'm not gonna lie.
I love to see what they're up to.
Cheers to that.
Cheers to Silver October.
As we drink white clothes.
We don't have a beer sponsor.
No, don't say anything.
We don't have zero beer sponsors.
Oh, okay.
Well, white clothes, not beer.
It's just what we happen to have in this video.
It's malt liquor.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, I hope that they come back November 1st
and do a drunkunken version of this.
What about the tour that they talked about?
That's fucking huge.
It's gonna be amazing, dude.
That's huge.
When did they say that's gonna happen?
I think they got to like, may of next year because they're all really busy and Joe needs
to make a new hour.
But they're gonna do it at bigger stadiums though which big event use none of them are is
I mean I do red rocks because Joe hasn't been there
That would be dope the stadium
You know they talked a lot about how the stadium is so much different than the theater and they're all gonna have to come up with new bits
Because it's just totally different. Mm-hmm. It's totally different when you're speaking to a crowd of 10,000 people 20,000 people
But all these guys know how to do it.
I think we got to go.
I don't think Ari has done a stadium though.
Ari hasn't done the stadium.
No, but he could do it.
He could do it.
So Gerrass crushes.
He's such a professional right now and he has so much experience.
He wouldn't have a problem.
He did ask to do two.
And remember Joe was like, no, you do one, then you fight.
You get one go. Yeah. That would be an amazing tool to go two. Remember Joe was like, no, you do one, then you fight. You get one go. Yeah. That would be an amazing tour to go watch. Do you think birds really going to write a
self-help book or was he just messing with us? Because I'd love to read it. Oh god,
imagine the irony. Treats, he could just call it treats. Yeah, treats. Things I like to
treat myself with and delusions, I believe in. believe in Lastly, I want to finish with the video they played of
Chappelle coming on stage so they're in Ohio. I think of the OSU
place and
What was it where it's from? It was at OSU. Okay, no, well Chappelle's from somewhere in oh, he's in Akron
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, oh closeron. Yeah, that's yeah old close by yeah and
I guess Tony went up. I
Assume if it was if Tony
Introduced she pal that means that Rogan still went last so he pushed his spot back
But when he came out imagine going to that to that thinking, you're gonna see Tony and Rogan.
So already great time.
And then surprise.
I've seen it both live and they are incredible.
It's so fun to watch.
Then out of nowhere, Chappelle.
And that minute long like standing ovation.
I mean, that's like a rock star.
It was a roaring, roaring, standing ovation. I mean, that's like a rock style. It was a roaring, roaring standing ovation.
Yeah, it's pretty freaking cool.
So fun.
I'm so pissed we didn't make the show here,
that special show that he did with John Mayer.
Oh, yeah, but do those tickets sold out in like 14 seconds.
I know, I'm just throwing it out there.
We missed it.
He came to living in Stin Montana,
20 minutes from here and we didn't fucking go.
Well, I hope that comes out,
I hope that comes out in a special of some sort.
They had to have videotaped that.
I sure hope so.
Yeah, I can't wait to watch it.
It'd be cool to watch John Maye and then,
Chappell.
They were doing bits together from what I heard.
I had a big go.
John Maye is funny, too.
It was a very funny, funny, dude.
I mean, they were singing. They were singing songs together.
That's cool.
Yeah.
What a time.
Yeah.
Great kind.
They were a great fucking time for comedy, man.
And we need to get to some shows for sure.
January or whenever they open the club down there, we got to get down there.
Yeah.
You know, because you know he's going to have so many of these heavy hitters down there, we gotta get down there. Yeah. Because you know, he's gonna have so many of these heavy hitters down there.
And I think these his show, his comedy place
is gonna be sold out for.
Oh yeah.
Absolutely.
For Austin, it'll be sold out.
Every time they do a show there,
I mean, at least when the heavy hitters do.
Yeah.
Heavy hitters.
Heavy hitters.
All right, well, great fucking week.
Thanks to everyone that listened or at least listened to the end of this podcast, hitties do. Yeah. Heavy hitties. Heavy hitties. Alright, well great fucking week.
Thanks to everyone that listened or at least listened to the end of this podcast, we appreciate
it.
Yeah.
And, uh, yeah, stay tuned next week for a more delicious episodes of the Joe Rogan experience.
Nice sign off later.
Later. you