Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 295 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Dr. Phil Et al.
Episode Date: November 3, 2022 Thanks to this weeks sponsors: American Giant: Go to www.american-giant.com Promo Code JRER for 20% off! www.JREreview.com For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com Th...is week we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always. Review Guest list: Dr. Phil, Maynard James Keenan and Michael Shermer 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're listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
What a bizarre thing we've created.
Now with your hosts, Adam Thorn.
Might either be the worst podcast with the best one.
Two, one, go.
Enjoy the show.
Hey guys and welcome to another episode of the Joe Rogan Experience Review,
where we review Joe Rogan episodes for those that don't know.
where we review Joe Rogan episodes for those that don't know. This week, we have Maynard James Keenan from Tool Legend,
Michael Schoamer, Skeptic, and Dr. Phil Todd.
Hey, first off real quick, and we're probably start with Dr. Phil I think.
What, what, when, before this pod, if somebody's like, Dr. Phil, what do you think about
him?
He's been around forever.
I don't know how many of his episodes you've ever watched.
What's kind of, what you feel about that guy before this pod?
So, so clearly I like him.
I love the guy after the pod.
I'll just throw that out there, but I always kind of like Dr.
Phil. I never had any bad feelings about him.
I always just thought he was a nice dude.
He just felt like he's got to talk to.
He felt like he had a good heart.
I've never had an issue with him.
Do people have an issue with Dr. Phil?
Uh, I don't, I don't know. He's just one of. Do people have an issue with Dr. Phil?
I don't know. He's just one of those TV guys, right?
Like Dr. Oz.
Yeah.
It's like, okay, yeah, he's a medical doctor.
Dr. Oz is.
And you know, sometimes he says some wacky stuff
and it's kind of goofy and I didn't watch his show
enough to know.
Right.
It's not like me personally was ever like,
oh, you gotta start listening to Dr. Oz.
In kind of the same way as Dr. Phil,
because mostly the clips I saw
were the wacky eclipse,
where they have like really trashy guests on
and he's trying to talk to them.
It's maybe like a mother daughter situation
and the daughter's kind of just way out there. It just had this like Jerry Springer-esque thing
with somebody who's a doctor of it turns out psychology.
So I know which clip you're talking about. It was some, you know, 15, 16 year old girl
who didn't want to get a job.
And basically her mommy spoiled her whole life.
And then mommy had to call Dr. Phil for help.
That one.
I think so.
Yeah, like that was just some spoiled brat.
But I, you know, I think that's the type of people
that old Dr. Philly boy, you know, deals with.
It's like parents who have lost their ability to parent.
That's, he deals with a lot of that.
He deals with obviously a lot of, well recently, you know, in this podcast, he's talking a lot
about the people, families he deals with are people who have had overdoses, which I didn't
know that that was kind of, it looks like he's kind of turned that direction because it
seems to me that he gets a lot of his show ideas from emails,
right, and people calling him in.
So it seems to me like after, you know, listening to this pod with him and Joe that he has kind
of switched direction a little bit since COVID.
But I think in the past, man, it's kind of just, it's kind of just Oprah style stuff.
It's not super Jerry Springer.
It's more family oriented. It's, you know,
obviously they're talking about real issues, but I think it's mostly like a family dynamic.
The kids are either fucked up or who knows? There's just issues with families that are
on his show and he deals with them. Is he a psychologist? I don't even know. What is his
PhD? Psychology. Doctor of psychology. Okay. I think it may even be forensics psychology. Oh, he's a what so he's a like a like a detective. I guess I don't know. I have to look it up profession. He just did this, I guess, forensic side of psychology and then somehow got connected
to Oprah, started to bring some value to the table.
And Oprah was like, hey, you should do your own show.
A little bit like Rogan is constantly back in the day saying, you should start your own
podcast straight up.
And now he's been around 20 years.
He's worth, you know, it was 300 million, like a ton.
Gee. And, um, yeah, I just asked that question because I wonder how he's
perceived amongst other psychologists and, or maybe therapists. And, and I would like to know, obviously he's been very popular. the monks of the psychologist and all maybe pharipus.
And I would like to know,
obviously he's been very popular.
How much has he helped people?
I feel like he's helped a ton of people,
but that's just me as an outsider
who hasn't seen his show since I was in high school.
I haven't watched a show in 20 some years.
Yeah.
So I don't know, but excuse me, I think
his attitude in general was spot on.
I mean, he's just, he's the type of guy who you just want.
He seems to want to help people.
Obviously, he's in the profession of helping people and he seems good at it.
Dude, after hearing him on Rogan, I think the second time he's been on Rogan's actually
close friends who, one of his kids, That's how they kind of know each other.
Oh nice.
Yeah.
And after hearing him on there, I mean, let's say we took away the fact that he is Dr.
Phil and had this show which I don't know a lot about.
It's the kind of guess that I would be like, yeah, if I had a friend that was struggling
with something, I'd like this person to talk to him.
He seemed pretty fair and quite, you know, empathetic or...
Is that a word?
Empathetic.
Love it.
Yeah, man.
Look, I love, I threw out some of his one liners because they were just great.
Just some of his quotes and different, you know, ideals that he has and just the way
he thinks about things, you know.
He obviously got way into the school stuff,
which is super depressing,
the amount of students that are just fucked
and the math scores and the test scores and all that,
but he's still a very positive.
He has a huge positive outlook on all of this stuff.
And straight up, I loved when he just said,
I'm not here to win an argument,
I'm here to solve a problem.
I'm not trying to fight with the,
the problem is that we're fighting.
He kept, he was like talking about analogies
of like being on one side of the street
and trying to cross and bear feet
in the middle of the fucking summer.
And then you can't even cross.
And so you go back to the other side.
And he just had some really creative ways
of just kind of explaining the problems
that we're having in this country,
which is mainly we can't talk to each other anymore without getting pissed off
Yeah, well lots of groups of us. Yeah, and even look at it within some of your own friendships as well
99% of all the conversations you can have with certain friends are wonderful
They're great. They remind you why you've known them 20 years, right?
But then you bring up one thing that it's one of the things that's happened over the last
two and a half years, and all of a sudden it's like you can't even look at each other
in eye to eye.
Yeah, it's scary how much of that we're seeing these days.
Yeah, with people we've known forever. It's like a trick. Like we would trick the inter getting that up.
I thought it was really interesting when he said he had these two groups of people from
the university, from the debate club.
It was like the Republican debate club and the Democratic debate club.
And they just were arguing back and forth constantly and it was a mess.
And then he said, okay, okay.
How about you guys stand in front of each other and look at each other in the eye for
an uncomfortable amount of time.
Yeah.
Now, I don't know if you guys and gals have ever tried doing something like this.
Not easy.
It's very strange.
I went to this retreat with a company called Every Manants and we did something like that and it's
Very unusual. You're not used to doing it. You don't realize what it has like an emotional impact
And it definitely for whatever reason gives you a lot of empathy for the other person like you're really seeing man
You know, you're not just looking at them like you see him. Yeah, and the fact that when they were done
They were like why I've never thought of people
that had the opinions that this other person does, the differing opinion as a human being.
Yeah.
They all said it.
That was intense.
Hmm.
Yeah, crazy.
And having Phil be on the other end of that, asking these questions, right?
They weren't just staring at each other in silence.
Dr. Phil is saying, now think about if this person
had a dying family member.
Think about if this person has kids.
Think about if this person grew up in a good community
or a shitty community.
I mean, he had some solid questions to make you think
about that other person while you're fucking staring
at a total stranger.
Of course, you're going to feel empathy.
Of course, you're just going to feel human.
That's what it is.
He's just humanized the situation instead of barking at each other.
Yeah.
And it really is that simple.
And I think that's his whole philosophy of like, we're all so much alike.
I think about this all the time because of, you know, Montana is a very polarizing
or polarized state. There's a lot of, there's a lot of Republicans and there's also a lot of
Democrats, but they're in small pockets. And there's a huge amount of differing views, but not
really when you sit down and think about it, it's really only a few things. It's like abortion and gay rights or gay marriage
and like, you know, what else?
There's like, the ideals are a little bit different,
you know, whether you're Christian
or maybe you believe in something else,
but at the end of the day, man, we're all human.
And I think Dr. Phil's got a really great philosophy
on that and he just seems like this guy who really cares.
And that was cool, man.
It was really good to hear the guy talk.
And I will say that it's a fucking bummer
when you get two old dudes.
And, you know, Dr. Phil's quite a bit older than,
I don't know how old,
but he's probably in his late 60s, maybe even 70s.
And Rogan's kind of old too.
They're both old school in a lot more old school than millennials, who the people they're
bitching about basically insane are screwed.
I don't particularly believe in that.
It's not like I'm following the statistics.
When somebody, I just felt like there was a lot of blame on the kids.
It's the parents fault.
It's the school's fault.
And they did mention some of that shit too.
Yeah.
But I guess it kind of bugged me because I do have a son,
and yeah, he's only two years old,
but I'm not worried about my son not being able to read.
Why?
Because I'm gonna fucking teach him,
if his, if his fucking, you know, teachers aren't doing it,
I'm gonna do it.
That was crazy though.
You know what I mean though?
The 19% of high school graduates can't read.
Or can't read past the fourth grade level or was it?
Yeah, it was like they don't have like an ex, you know.
Wait, hold on, I got the stats, dude.
I think it was 19% of adults in America are illiterate.
It seemed like a lot.
That's fucked.
How do you, how can you even graduate a high school?
I mean, I graduated back in 2000.
Yeah, 10,000.
We went back to England,
so I didn't graduate,
but like I was getting close.
Smoke free class, 2000.
Yeah, and I,
yet I just can't imagine.
Like how would you pass your classes?
If they really made it, that's the way.
They made it to your way.. They made it too easy.
They have made it too easy.
I know this because I have friends who have kids
in high school and, you know, luckily,
their kids are smart, but their kids come home
and say, I don't understand how Billy or Bobby
like passes school.
He fucking skips every day, smokes weed.
He doesn't come to class and they just let it pass, man.
They are so much more lenient than they were when we were in high school, so much more.
But that is, that's messed up.
That's a problem.
That's a problem.
It's a huge problem.
What a doctor feel.
You can't fall off the floor.
He's like, he's talking about statistics, you know, like how they skew everything.
They were talking about, you know, Rogan was saying how, well, what the fuck? I heard, I heard that, you know, LA was, what did he say? LA
was having all these stats where they're doing really good in math and, and, you know,
the statistics were saying, oh, yeah, the math scores are way up in COVID. They were comparing
them to other states during COVID.
Oh, okay.
So it's like we're already starting at a shit level, right?
And that's Dr. Phil goes, well, you can't fall off the floor.
Yeah, I'm genius.
So I knew something was messed.
The California would do that though.
They, they have been struggling so hard during COVID
to show that they did anything right.
No wonder.
It's all scared.
They pulled that pole, it's so skewed. And. And the whole thing about pills, I had no idea.
I mean, I mean, it makes sense now that they're talking about kids being able to buy
shit on TikTok and Instagram and whatnot and all the emojis for buying pills.
But that, that's just scary. The amount of, of fentanyl that's going around and all
those pills. But I didn't realize it was that rampant in young kids.
What did you see that list?
It was like a better menu than you get at most restaurants.
Yeah, I mean, it's like everything is on there.
Imagine what that would be great if it was real.
It is real.
Yeah, but a real thing.
Lots of fentanyl, though, is what I'm saying.
They don't know if the pills are real, but they're buying or whatever they buy. I mean,
the drugs can be messed up for sure. I mean, obviously, it's not exactly like FDA approved,
but the fact that menus like that exist and it's that accessible. I mean, talk about
the potential for going down a rabbit hole. And how many drug dealers could you,
would you imagine that running something like that
would be all that ball of it if like young kid showed up?
It's not like that check an ID.
I mean, I would like to believe they wouldn't sell it
to like a 12 year old that got a hold of that list
and contacted them.
Did, I don't think they care.
I mean, who knows who's selling this stuff,
but it's scary to think that a kid of any age in high school
could just go order that stuff.
I mean, we had to do some work to get drugs
back in high school.
Yeah, and it was really shitty weed.
Yeah, and it was mostly shitty weed.
Maybe some, never some e here.
You got to go to like some
sketchy dudes house, and wait outside. But I in a amount you can't even figure out what it is,
and it's just this dry dank CD. Just the mass of, and it was easier to get that than it was to get
somebody to buy a beer in high school. For sure. And this is, this is a whole, I mean, it's a
different subject kind of,
but what I think is they just need to legalize all that shit for 19 and over. And you just
have to have a prescription and you can go in and get pharmaceutical grade drugs, not
off the black market. And then doesn't that solve the fentanyl problem? They're going to
do it anyways. That's what I've always thought. If kids are going to do drugs, they're going
to do them. They're going to it out if right if Rogan's right
With that stat that the biggest killer of drugs, but I mean kids between 18 whatever it is 25 is fentanyl
Yeah, how long does that go on for before everyone steps in and says hey, they're gonna get a hold of this stuff
Yeah, we need to get ahead of it I, we've done nothing useful with a drug war since
it started. Right. Really? I mean, I read a vice piece the other day that said the purest
cocaine that existed was between 1987 and 1988. The public, Pablo asked about years.
Great years, great years.
So think about what that means.
The drug war in the Nixon, it'd been going on for over a decade.
Yeah, more than that started in 72, I think.
It started.
It was the purest over a decade later.
Purist meaning it had the least other potential damaging chemicals in.
Yeah, uncut.
Unless they put like sugar and caffeine in,
which is obviously less bad for you,
but we're seeing now fentanyl is getting in there.
And we are, what is this?
50 years later.
And now people are dying from fentanyl.
They're not even dying of cocaine over those
as they're dying of fentanyl poisoning.
Well, it doesn't make sense to me.
Why can't they just, I mean, just put,
just put, you know, anything else
that doesn't kill you in there.
If you're gonna cut a drug, why put fentanyl in it?
That kills the person buying drugs from you.
Why?
It just does not make sense to me.
Why is this a problem?
Why would drug dealers want the people buying drugs for them to die?
I don't get it. You could go down a conspiracy. I don't get it. Who's doing this man?
You could go down a conspiracy rabbit. What I'm throwing that up there. Who doesn't want you to have drugs?
DA
Okay, well, right and they don't seem to be wanting to stop this.
The cartels want to sell it and keep selling it and have people buy it.
Yeah.
Do they want a lot of press that says these drugs could kill you at any minute randomly?
Who would want that more than anyone?
I know for a fact, it is stopped a lot of people from even pursuing to buy stuff.
I've heard it, you know, you hear it in college campuses.
I don't recommend it.
I don't recommend it.
I don't recommend it.
I don't recommend it.
Stay away or test it, right?
That's the other thing.
It's like, okay, test the drugs.
You can buy drug testing kits online for pretty damn cheap on Amazon, right?
Not saying that every kid's gonna do that, but I don't know what the solution is other than that right now
because it doesn't seem to be stopping.
Well, there are real concerns.
Test your shit boys and girls.
If you're gonna put something up your nose, test it.
If you're gonna pop something down your throat, test it.
It takes two seconds.
It's like a little strip of paper
that you dip, mix in the little drug with water,
dip it, and if it turns blue, it's something like that.
I've never tried it, but yeah, it and if it turns blue it's something like that. I've never tried it but
Yeah, it's a simple kit and it's inexpensive and almost no one's gonna do that to be honest. I don't know might see what it
You know drug users all of a sudden super organized and they have their own lab testing kits not all drug dealers are
Drug users are idiots at them. I'm sure there's plenty of real smart drug users out there. I would say it's a small percentage.
Maybe.
Maybe, you know.
I mean, look, as a reason, Rogan,
and a lot of his top guests have never
you've been tried, the ones you would even need
to be worried about testing.
Well, moving on, you know, this whole like behind the scenes,
we kind of skimmed over this before
about people not being able to talk to each other
because they're just fighting.
Doesn't this have a lot to do with your hiding
behind a computer screen?
Nobody's looking at each other when they're talking.
It's like, I could sit here and bitch all day
about someone because I'm in a bad mood
or maybe I was a little hangry. You know, I got pissed off on the phone about something silly would I be bitching about it straight to their face? No
Absolutely not with it. It's almost like behind closed doors. It's extrapolated out from that staring in the eyes thing
That's what I mean. Yeah, it's like that and not as intense if I never saw you right let's say you lived in another country
That would suck, but we still did the
podcast. Be sad.
But we still did the podcast, right? Like I've done in the past where people remotely.
Yeah. So all I have, well, now usually I know them, they're my friends beforehand. So
we developed a relationship. But let's say I didn't. And we're just doing the pod every
week. You just tune in you bring your information
I have mine. Yeah, we do it
But we don't talk in between everything else is online
It's probably way easier for me to get frustrated all you over
scheduling issues
We you know how the pod went
Which episodes we review.
And if we're only communicating back and forth
on Twitter or online, it could probably heat up real fast.
Whereas in the office, in the studio, when we come in here,
it's just doesn't go like that.
Any frustrate, it's like, I'm not gonna say that to him
in person.
And then I just get over it and realize, yeah, I was just hungry and needed a barito or some coffee.
Yeah, no, it's true. Or mostly for me, just I just need to have some nicotine and then I'm good.
Mm-hmm.
And I'm good, but yeah, can we just remind everyone not to be keyboard bullies, Adam?
Let's just not be keyboard bullies. That was another good one-liner from Dr. Phil.
Yeah. He had so many of them, dude.
He's like, well, I've never done that.
When he was bitching about Biden, like, you know,
if I, I'm trying to like imitate Dr. Phil's voice,
but I can't do it.
So I'm not gonna stop trying to do it.
I'm not doing it.
Come on.
He's good to have an impression on him.
But when he was talking about Biden,
like, if I could just,
if I was Biden's age, I would just be wanting to fucking fit,
I would just be wanting to fish.
Mm-hmm.
Terrible impression.
I told you it was bad, but you gave it a shot.
Let's hear you do it.
Let's hear you do it.
Let's hear you do it.
If I was Biden's age, I would just be wanting to fish.
Okay.
Equally, as bad as that.
That wasn't as bad. Equally,ally as bad. That wasn't as bad.
Equally as no.
That wasn't as bad.
All right.
All right.
Props to Dr. Phil.
You guys, Judge.
Props to Dr. Phil.
I feel like he, what he's doing now with those like focus group things, he's got everyone
in the audience involved.
He talked about the words you couldn't use, etc.
These days.
Oh, yeah.
That was ridiculous. Which obviously is coming up and, you know, all the generations are trying to make sense
of it because they've used those words forever.
And in saying how sensitive we're being, but really just coming back to the fact that
like, what did he say?
He said, when you're talking to somebody, you want to first figure out what you have in common.
Yeah.
And then talk about your differences so that you have common ground to go from.
Yeah.
And I think that was such an important point, especially with Americans, right?
Because there's a lot of common ground.
Everyone agrees.
We want good schools.
Yeah.
We want our kids to do well.
We want the economy to run. We want gas to be cheap. We want to be strong. want good schools. Yeah. We want our kids to do well. We want the economy to run.
We want gas to be cheap.
We want to be strong.
It goes on and on.
We want enough food.
We want to, and then it comes to these little points.
That, that are ruining us.
They're dividing us over these silly things.
That's, yeah, it's good to hear that stuff.
And cancel culture is bullshit too.
I'm just throwing that out there.
And I liked how he called it.
He needs to be counsel culture
That was like the noti shit
But yeah, I mean come on just stop caring in my mind stop caring so much about this little
These little things like I'm not allowed to use the word peanut gallery anymore. What the fuck? It's like
Seats for people who couldn't afford better seats back in the
day. They're still the damn baseball game. How is that racist? I don't get that. People again,
sensitive. Two sensitive. And look, we sound pretty preaching on this one. I'm gonna say.
Well, they did with holia the net. Not saying we're holier. But also, I know you, and you don't do
these things. I hope I don't either.
Like the stuff he's saying resonates with me and I try not to do any of that.
Yeah, and well, dude, I've always been on Dr. Phil Scy when it comes to trying to find
common ground always.
I've always thought that.
Almost to a point, a fault, I would say sometimes, you know, yeah, so I need to be more
mean. No, I just mean why I did say you should be more of an asshole earlier, but that was a different conversation.
Yeah, but no, it's like a weight that you're carry because most of the time it looks great,
and sometimes people will take advantage of that and it's painful. And I don't know, you set a new
type of boundary or just know when it's happening.
But generally, that's not the worst way to be.
To be like, okay, I'm going to walk away from this. You know, I don't need to turn this
up to a 10 just because you have, it's not worth it. I got to take this home with me today.
And I'm, you know, going to watch the rest of Jeffrey Dahmer. So I don't have time for
this.
Not doing it. All right. Well, Dr. Phil, that's my dog. I would say that was my personal fave. Who's next?
That was good. All right, we've got Mained James Keenan.
My wife's wild card who after watching this, probably not her wild card anymore. She was very upset.
Very upset that he was so bald that upset her. Oh, the bold thing was the issue. Well,
dude, because so she showed me,
she was like, oh, shit, when did Kenan get bald?
When did Maynard get bald?
I was like, I don't know.
I've only listened to his music.
I'd never ever seen the guy talk ever in my life.
I like the band tool, but my wife is obsessed
with the band tool and perfect circle.
And was like way into him in high school.
And she showed me one of his old, you know,
music videos and he's got this long black hair.
I was like, there's no fucking way.
He went from having that hair to how he looks now.
So I looked it up.
I was like, does Keenan wear a wig?
And there it was.
He was always worn a wig.
Does he still?
Yeah, on stage, yeah.
Yeah.
Super long, I don't know. Jody asked him. Should
I ask him? Yeah. I want to know. But yeah, interesting guy. I mean, his music is incredible.
I would, me personally, what I would have liked to hear more about his musical talents because
he's a talented motherfucker. I mean, he is, it it tool is an incredible band. I don't care if you like them or not
They were such a different cool new sound at the time
I mean it was a whole completely different genre that he kind of created in my mind, right
That's just a different sound and it's in his voice man his voices
So good really interesting and then knowing that he made that song
based on the Fibonacci sequence,
then was a good song, but like spent the time
to figure that out.
I mean, obviously in his own right, a nerd,
but a cool nerd.
But a cool nerd.
But a cool nerd.
Yeah, right?
Most, I mean, I like nerds are great
because they're smart and they're interesting to talk to.
Yeah. And they can do all some things too. Like own
winery and be a black balance jiu-jitsu
Legitimately and then also be in tool
Can happen. Yeah, it's unfortunate tools not
Turing anymore. I the other band that he's in it's not even perfect circle anymore either
It's something else, but his newer band is touring,
which I don't think I've heard.
What is it called?
Don't know.
I knew a tool in perfect circle, and they're both incredible.
But yeah, I had no idea.
I knew about his wine thing.
So like I said, my wife is way into Maynard and one of her good friends here in town bought
her a bottle of wine from his vineyard as a birthday present, great birthday present.
So that's how I knew of Maynard owning this wine winery, but I didn't know he was like
the wine maker.
I mean, he's not fucking around.
He didn't just buy a winery and have somebody else do it.
He's like growing all of his own food and, you know, it sounded
exhausting. He's way into it though, man.
If he loves it, great. But I mean, he's out there,
peeing in bottles and pouring it on his fence.
Hey, man, good for him. He doesn't know.
He's like, I don't hire those people. I do it myself.
Give it a half. You know, it seems like a very hard worker.
You know, like look how busy he is that he's watching UFC fights on an iPad
on stage while playing how he does that. I have no idea.
I thought he was saying he did that in between sets to calm down.
He's doing it on stage. Yeah. Well, he's performing.
Is that calling down? No, it's just that's when the fights are on oh my goodness. Yeah crazy, but I get it
If you're a huge fan of the UFC like you don't get to pick when those fights okay, okay
They do it's rich enough to fucking buy a T-Vo and get those things
Recorded for him is he not yeah, but people will tell him oh then he's gonna know one got it
Got it and there's something about it being live that the uh, Rogan, you know, doesn't get to do when
he has to perform. So he I'm sure Rogan says right, everyone in
the green room, nobody tell me who won anything. And when I get
off stage, you've got to watch the fight. Yeah, I mean, they're
that into it. I, you know, respect that. That's cool. I off stage, I gotta watch the fights. I mean, they're that into it. I respect that.
That's cool.
Yeah, I don't...
I like all those things.
I think watching MFA is great, but yeah, I can't...
I've never been a huge, huge, huge sports fan.
Really, in any regard, I used to play sports, loved them,
but it was never...
I always felt like I had things that I would rather do.
It's not like I didn't understand it.
Fuck that.
Fuck that.
Fuck that.
I will say when I watched a fight here in Bozeman, like 10 years ago, my old boss took us
to a fight and thought it was going to be fun.
And this poor fat kid, he was like, sorry buddy, but he was like 18 and the other guy,
they were in the same weight class.
It was like this 18 year old chubby kid
who clearly looked like he was still 12,
but was huge because he was a fat kid, sorry.
And then this 30 some year old ripped fucking
goes to the gym every day and man,
this kid's lights were out within three seconds of the fight.
He just got knocked the fuck out.
And it was, I was like, man, that didn't seem fair.
I didn't like that.
Well, that was my first experience with MFA.
Obviously, if there's a, if there's a, you know,
two people who are of similar, you saying MFA.
No, this wasn't MFA.
MMA.
No, did I say MFA?
I don't know.
I do have a master of fine arts.
Thank you very much.
Throw you in the ring.
No, this was a local fight.
It wasn't MMA.
It was like a boxing thing.
Oh, yeah.
But no, dude, MMA is fun as hell to watch.
But hold on, that's the problem.
That's different.
When you go to amateur fight nights, they're often are really unfortunate matchups.
Right.
And it's kind, it's pretty rare that you see that in the UFC.
I mean, they're all elite professionals.
So, sometimes they're throw a really strong wrestler against an elite striker that doesn't
have strong wrestling and it's super one-sided and it just smashed fast.
But mostly it's better to watch.
Some of those amateur ones are a little,
they're a little tough.
So, you know, be careful.
I get that.
I get that.
So I'm back to main or man, he's clearly,
he's got a good soul.
Like the guy's just got a good heart.
He's kind of just like a little puppy dog, really.
He just wants to help people grow food.
He wants to cook food for people.
He wants to make wine.
He wants to show his friends how to grow food
and have fresh water.
I mean, he's just, he's kind of just like this old soul
who is so creative with his music and still does that,
obviously, but he seems more at peace on his farm than he does on stage
Yeah, from from how he was talking
Well, it sounded like being on the tall bus is pretty fucking tiring. Yeah, and not good sleep
Yeah, and he's probably done this so long now that
There's elements of it. I'm sure that he's over.
Totally.
I wonder why he doesn't just fly to every venue.
Is it too expensive or is flying actually more tiring than going on those buses?
Or is it scheduling issues, maybe unless you have a private jet, you can't guarantee that the flight goes.
Yeah, I feel like if you have one of those, you of those sick tour buses, you can just kind of hang out
and sleep, you got a bed, you got a couch, you got food.
I mean, that seems more comfy to me.
I would think so, but he said it like hits a bump and turns a shop corner and he's awake.
So he has to add like three, four hours to the whole sleeping process to be rested.
Like you said, obviously a pretty sensitive dude. He's pretty sensitive dude, you know?
Well, maybe he just doesn't sleep.
I don't know.
Okay, well, I bumped him.
I'm stuck with me.
I will say that he has still done that.
He kept saying, talk about Subaru Bratz,
which if you know, do you know that car?
I'm a Subaru fan.
I've had like six in my life.
I'll old Subaru's, because they're four-wheel drive
and they're cheap, they're great for the mountains.
Yeah.
He must have had one when he was younger
because he said it twice when they were talking about cars
because he said he's got the FJ cruiser.
Right.
Anyway, just throwing that out there,
I was stoked on that because I've dreamed
of having a Subaru brat.
It's a fucking Subaru with the back cut off.
It's basically a mini El Camino, but Subaru and the seats go backwards in the back.
You can sit there fucking dope.
Really?
Yeah, well, that sounds so steeper.
They're ridiculous and that's why they're cool.
All right.
And they have four wheel drive or two wheel.
You can change it with the stick shift.
So it's like not always all four wheel drive.
Anyway, yeah, you've lived in the mountains too long. So I guess
nobody. Alright, let's jump over to good old Michael
Sharma. We over to Mikey already, huh? Okay, okay. Get your
water rights, though. Let's just throw that out there. Get your
water rights. If you're going to learn anything from
Maynard. Oh, yeah, that out there. Get your water rights. If you're going to learn anything from Maynard.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
You know, think about water. I mean, you know, he's going to be prepared if you're staying down.
I'm going to run out of it. That's what I'm saying.
I hope I'm not around anymore when we have to tackle that.
Well, just get your water rights, baby. Okay.
Get on that river. Get a well.
Well, no people that have him. Yeah. There you go.
So Michael Schoen, it's been on plenty of times.
What is he? Some he's the publisher director.
He's the publisher of skeptic mag.
That's right magazine, which I have never seen, but love the title.
I think in a way, even though it sounds anti-conspiracy, which pretty much is an anti-like UFO, I think it's just as important to have a magazine like that, as it is to have, you know, these UFO videos that pop up because you know you're either wanting to believe or you're
trying to knock it down but it's it's it's kind of not the anti propaganda to conspiracies.
I think in a way it fills it in because when he comes on they end up discussing so many
conspiracies and UFOs, it's almost like another one of those shows,
which whether you believe or not, it's kind of pro that sort of thinking.
True.
And even though at times it gets difficult to listen to, because you just want him to kind
of believe, succeed a little bit of space to Rogan just be like, okay, all right.
I guess that could be true.
When he does know, you got to understand he's like the guy that's supposed to not believe
in this.
Yeah.
So it's like he's trying to not.
It was a little strange.
It was like he didn't, yeah, you're right.
He didn't have much.
There was no leeway back or forth until, I mean I mean dude Rogan was drilling him for the first half
hour of the show about you know his beliefs or non-belief I guess in the JFK thing. Well Rogan
doesn't tolerate that. That's what I'm saying. I mean when it comes to the JFK conspiracy that's
Rogan's big one. Yeah. And and he will will hammer somebody about that for a long time.
Yeah, it's, but it was, he, Sherman wasn't convincing to me.
Not at all.
When he talked about that bullet, he's like,
well, it could be like that.
No.
And he was like, come on, dude.
I was surprised.
I was saying bullets.
Like, let's not be ridiculous about it.
Yeah.
Yeah, dude, I was, I was very surprised at how unconvincing he was on that one.
I mean, there was a plenty of, in my mind,
there's plenty of evidence that goes the other route
and reasons why JFK would have been an inside job.
I don't know enough about it,
but from the points that I've heard,
from the Oliver Stone movie, from Rogan talking, I mean, there's, look, there's so much, there's
so much skepticism there that it, there has to be some sort of conspiracy. That's in my
mind. Now, what I did appreciate, Shermer talking about was, well, they're probably just not
letting the files out because the fucking CIA and the FBI were up to all this other stuff
that is then gonna get leaked
if we let those become declassified, right?
That to me makes a lot of sense as well.
Because you know, especially when you look at MK Ultra
and all the other things they were talking about
the Guantanamo Bay thing,
which I didn't know about,
Operation Paperclip, I mean,
they were talking about all sorts of conspiracy theories
that are actually true. all sorts of conspiracy theories that are actually
true.
Yeah.
They've been conspiracy theories until we actually figured out, oh, wait, that's true.
Yeah, but I don't even know that much about ballistics.
You can't show me one bullet and say, yeah, this bounce around all over the place, shot
like two people.
We found it.
And it looks mostly like a bullet.
Yeah. That doesn't make sense. No, that's what I'm saying. There's there's a lot of skepticism
there. And for Mr. Skeptic magazine, you would think he'd be on the side of the skeptics.
And the skeptics are the people thinking that it was a that was a inside job, right?
Because in a sense, if you're like the professional skeptic, could you not then say, I'm skeptical
about the government's conclusion of this thing based on evidence, in a sense, you're being
a bad skeptic of that point.
Kind of what it seemed like.
It didn't start off well, but by the end of it, I liked the guy.
At first, I didn't. A lot of his other points are reasonable, even when he's starting
to talk about the UFOs. Again, it's not unreasonable to say, hey, we don't have any physical evidence.
There's not a museum where we have this chunk of metal that's been analyzed and we don't know how it could be made.
Right. When you don't have physical evidence in that sense, now sure, the Navy made a new,
what is it? Kind of radar system that highlighted all these crafts everywhere, all the time, and they can't figure them out.
That's something that certainly is evidence,
but if you're thinking of looking for,
if you think of any other type of fact that we created,
you know, when we're like,
why do we know the moon exists?
Well, we can go there.
We can get rocks.
Yeah, right?
We've been to Mars, we know that. We know the moon exist? Well, we can go there. We can get rocks. Yeah, right?
We've been to Mars.
We know that we know other planets exist
and we accept that they're there.
But we can scan them and do other things.
We can measure them.
We know their gravity pulls on stuff.
There's a lot of elements to it that make it a fact.
Whereas, I think there's a 10th planet theory
in our solar system
But we haven't seen it. We don't know it's there
There's some sort of gravity pool that happens to where we're thinking it might be
But it also could be clusters of asteroids out there
That isn't a fact yet and the reason being is because we don't have enough of the pieces to make it a fact,
you could pretty much say the same thing about UFOs.
So I'm inclined to understand his skepticism in this area.
It's reasonable.
Now people have added major legitimacy to it,
just like, you know, like serious fighter pilots that have all the
technology that scan things all the time, you know, they're not just some quack on the
side of the road that has a camera that's all flashing light. I mean, these guys study
things, fly around, and it's really not in their best interest to come out and talk about it because they get pushback and people kind of make fun of them. But is that enough to make it
a fact or to make it something that you can be skeptical about? So I appreciate his analysis
of that. I'm like, yeah, people should be skeptical about that stuff. Because so many
people want to believe you got to be careful. I will say, look, I looked up Schirmers
last law, and you do have to be careful. There's a lot of skepticism, but skepticism can go
on either direction, like we're talking about. He, to me, he seemed like he, he's almost
like a cop. In my mind, he's a cop.
He just wants to believe everything
that the government tells us in a little bit.
That's how I felt right off the bat.
Yeah.
And that kind of pissed me off, right?
Because I'm like, dude, you know better.
You, he kept contradicting himself.
He'd be like, yeah, well, this and that, but, you know,
yeah, I guess you are right, Joe, because yeah,
that they're probably not, you know, letting these papers out, because they did do a bunch of illegal shit that they don't want us to know about.
So it was weird.
It was like he believed the government, but then he's telling himself that the government's
corrupt.
That to me was frustrating.
There's some of that.
There was a lot of that.
Well, that's why Rogan brought up the MK Ultra and the ST trials.
Yep.
Then they went into a whole thing about,
you know, they moved on to like false memories,
suggested memories, the hypnosis,
and in implanting thinking and how that's a problem.
Yeah, being at a mall and they would bring subjects in
and say, hey, your mom told me that one time
when you were at the mall and you got lost, do you remember that? And they say, oh, yeah, I do remember that. It's like that was a
fucking fictitious story. We just made that up. But this is, this comes back to their agreement that
eyewitness testimony is bullshit. Yeah, it can be completely worthless most of the time.
So again, you've got to have like a physical fact, right? Yeah, absolutely.
A physical fact?
Yeah.
Well, yeah, or just evidence, real evidence, instead of eyewitness.
But, you know, that only has come about since DNA, and even that can get skewed, and they
can bring in these experts, like blood splatter experts, that can be skewed.
Anyone could get paid off, dude.
That's the problem.
But what they already said, what is it?
Polygraphs of bullshit.
Yep.
Bite marks.
Bullshit.
Exactly.
Parsh or fingerprints.
Probably.
Bullshit, bullshit, bullshit.
What are we left with?
And if you don't have eyewitness testimony on top of that,
I wonder how people can even make a case.
It's dude, because that's the other thing that somebody has been on Rogan talking about this,
as soon as the cops go one direction, you, they get it in their head that that's the right
direction and they cannot go any other direction. It's just like they're stuck in that direction.
This is correct. This is legit. Or they make themselves think, sure, I'ma brought this up.
This person's bad and this would happen a lot in the 50s. We know he maybe didn't do this crime,
but we know he's a bad person,
and he's done other crimes, so let's just put him away,
so he doesn't do any more crimes.
And that was like a way to justify their decision-making.
Which is scary.
Yeah, dude.
Dude, so not to knock on Shermer.
This is a good thing that I really do appreciate about shirmer
and I look this up. The shirmer, oh sorry, what did he call it? He was talking about aliens and they were talking about God.
And I have always felt this way about God, or not always. When I was 12, I was scared of God because
my mother put the fear of God in me and made me go to church. But, you know, in recent years,
I have always thought that God was just an alien.
I'm throwing it out there for all the world to hear.
And Shermer's with me, dude.
He says, is God nothing more than a sufficiently advanced
extraterrestrial intelligence?
Yeah.
So, if you think about,
these aliens coming back.
What's that saying with it?
It's, shit. If you have advanced enough technology,
it would be you are in this distinguishable from magic. Right. Well, something like that. No,
it would be indistinguishable from any God. We could do things that we've talked about for millennia
about what God's can do. They can create free power. They can create light.
They can create, I mean, look, dude,
if we went back to fucking cave man,
they would think we're gods right now.
Doing what we're doing on the fucking internet,
they would think we were gods.
It'd be like, who are these people?
How do they do this?
Yeah, we're just a couple of idiots.
Basically aliens, talking on the mic.
Disappointing.
Disappointing for them.
I'm like, what?
But it's, dude, I mean, I just really liked the fact that he talked about,
yeah, this, this, this, Shermer, what did he call it?
Sorry, let me look at my notes here.
Oh, la, la, la, la, la.
It was the Shermer theory, what the frick was it, man?
I need to get a hold of this magazine, I think.
I guess I've never once looked at it.
And he has legitimate conversations
where he has access to a lot of people
to do his own research.
Obviously has a bit of an agenda
to be the guy that is skeptical.
But he has the chance to interview these people.
I'd like to hear him talk to one of these fight-of-pilots
and see what his conclusion would be in breakdown.
So I found that he calls it Sherbers Last Law.
And it's in Scientific American.
He was an article that he wrote,
but then I found this Clark,
I don't know who Clark is,
but what you were just saying,
Clark's third law,
any sufficiently advanced technology
is indistinguishable from magic.
Oh, there we go.
Yeah.
That's tight.
That's tight.
And it is so true.
Like, yeah.
Especially if you think about cavemen us,
seeing what we see today,
even a fucking plane, you'd be like, that's got.
Dude.
Right?
All you'd have to do.
Would you not?
If you went back in time with like 60 drones that ran off an app, that flowed around
in unison and knew where each other were and could make patterns, you could just walk
into a town, have it do, and you'd be in charge.
And all you have is drones.
And that's my stupid idea.
Yeah, great idea.
Could be done.
Yeah.
Well, it's important to have guys like this on,
because some of my favorite Rogans recently
have been the pro UFO ones.
And it's nice.
Sometimes they have someone on that's like just trying to ground
the perspective even if some of it you don't agree with or you don't want to. I know I have my
own bias. I'm just waiting for the day that they're like, yeah, we found a ship, a crash, there it
is. There's the guy. I hope so. I hope so. I don't know if it'll change anything. I think we'll
get over it in a few days and just be like, well, I guess we kind of knew
they were there because they've been flying around and we just move on.
So I don't know what we do with that information.
Well, they kind of got into that where it's like people are so pissed off that their Amazon
package doesn't come in two days that, you know, they just want it now.
It's like people have so forgotten where we came from when it comes to technology these days,
they just want more and more and Rogan's talked about this
a lot in the past couple of weeks.
And I think even longer than that,
but he's been bringing it up about how,
can't we just stop tomorrow?
Like we got the iPhone 14, we got everything we need,
we're good, but we could never do that.
It's not in our human brain to do that. Fast, the bigger, cheaper, quicker, more options.
I was talking about it the other day with Netflix.
I couldn't even figure out something to watch.
And there's like a billion shows that I get to start
whenever I want to.
Right.
Back in the day, I remember being real young
and watching TV back in England when we had four channels.
And one night it was like a Thursday ghostbusters two was on.
Was that the sh-
Did they-
Did they-
Yeah, we did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that.
We did that. We did that. We did that. We did that. We did that. I wouldn't have cared at all. I would have chosen something I wanted or been confused by the massive choice I had.
But since it was the only thing on and I had to watch the commercials with it and I'd seen it a bunch of times,
I couldn't have been more excited.
Yeah.
I was like, wow.
In a sense, we need the choice made for us.
We're like, sometimes we got too much choice these days.
That's a good point, buddy.
That's a good point.
Well, how? There we go. That's a good point buddy. That's a good point. Well, how?
There we go.
That was this week's Rogans.
I hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.
I like these ones.
These, yeah.
Me too, though.
These are interesting.
Me too.
God bless, Dr. Phil.
Yeah.
A to the motherfucking K.
Oh boy.
Thank you so much, Todd.
And thank you all for listening.
We will talk to you next time.