Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 367 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Jim Breuer Et al.

Episode Date: January 19, 2024

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: Jim Breuer & Jim Norton 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 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Bet on the NFL with Bandual, official sports put partner of the NFL. Download the app today to see why we're North America's number one sports book. 19-plus and physically located in Ontario. Gampling problem call 1866-531-2600 to visit connectsentario.ca 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. We are not associated with Joe Rogan in any way.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Think of us as the talking dead to Joe's walking dead. You're listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review. What a bizarre thing we've created. Now with your host, Adam Thorn. He did the worst podcast with the best one. One, go. Enjoy the show. Hey guys, and welcome to this episode of the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Our apologies for earlier in the week when somehow the podcast cut off, and you had half a podcast, but we're back. Pete and I are back, and we're basically going to just do the second half of it because whoops, we lost it. We're here to fill in some blanks. That was the first time in 300 plus episodes, 380. It happens. All right, be careful. Does that have anything to do with the whiskey? All right, be careful. Does that have anything to do with the whiskey? Well, I would say that 80% of my podcasts are whiskey-induced.
Starting point is 00:01:38 I mean, I keep it classy. I keep it classy. A tumbler full of nice scotch. Yeah, I don't know. I think it was like we had to put an ad in that I forgot to just play and Yeah, it's a wild world, but Jim bro happens Jim bro what a legend, okay? He's OG OG comedian. He loves to get crazy going rants, you know, he loves to just be like Just silly voices. He goes. He goes. But my favorite thing of all time with him, and I don't know if some of the younger listeners are aware of the movie Half Baked brought to us by the genius that is Dave Chappelle. But Jimborough played an amazing part in that, and the scene was where they all got super baked and then they get the munchies. As one does. And it's the scene where they're basically
Starting point is 00:02:38 doing the order for the food that they need for how high they are, which often gets a bit out of hand and it's, let's say it's, it's, it's never the best choice in food but it's the most delicious and I want to play that for us right now. Yo, who's our munchies tonight, yo? That me. I guess I'd be me. What do you guys want? Get some sour cream and onion chips with some dip, man.
Starting point is 00:03:13 Some beef jerky, some peanut butter. Get some hot gondas ice cream bars. A whole lot of hot, make sure it's chocolate. Gotta have chocolate, man. Some popcorn, bread popcorn, graham crackers crackers. Graham crackers is the marshmallows, little marshmallows and little chocolate bars and we make some some more. Yeah that's what I'm saying. Yo.
Starting point is 00:03:32 So celery, grape jelly, capping clunch with the blue crunch berries. Peaches. We need two big pizzas man. Everything on them with water, a whole lot of water and is made everything on them with water, whole out of water and... Bunions. That's it. There we go. Bunions.
Starting point is 00:03:57 We've got our funnions. The way he ends it with funnions too. Yeah. Honestly, it's like the first choice for most donors Yeah, you know, they they always got what they were professionals, you know, but What would you have gone with what's your what was your stona? Food of choice back in the day. Geez. I'm I'm I make a whole biscuits in gravy with a few like cracked eggs on the top some fried eggs That's that's good.
Starting point is 00:04:28 Yeah, what did we get into that sounds too ambitious. I'm a bottomless pit. I like to make four meals and just eat everything in an ice cream. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah, I'm pretty much like I just want to order it. I don't want to have the even move. If I could just like sit close to the door and can't be.
Starting point is 00:04:49 But really, I mean, ships go down well as they go down well. So many good things. I mean, it just makes you appreciate food in an incredible way. Or eat roster getty for some reason. Just crunch it. Do you have lots? Do you have a lot? Well well these guys got into it right?
Starting point is 00:05:08 They got into a lot of things. It started off early with, with global warming things, you know, we hear a lot about that and, and, you know, you get demonized real fast if you're not super behind all sorts of global warming. And you know, to a lot of people that's very reasonable, they have decided that, and I'm not saying I haven't, I'm just saying that people are really into the fact that that's going to kill us all really soon. But history might say that global cooling is worse. Ice ages don't sound good.
Starting point is 00:05:48 I think we've just forgot it because we haven't lived when any ice ages were happening. But that does seem harder, doesn't it? Well, we can all go to Canada. There's room for everybody in Canada if global warming happens. We can all go to Canada. There's room for everybody in Canada. If global warming happens, we can all just truck on up there. They let anybody in if you're not American.
Starting point is 00:06:12 Right. But the global cooling, as Randall Carlson described to Joe on a previous podcast, is the scary one. There's no candidate to run to if it gets cold. Right. So that's what we have to have. It's like we'd all have to live on the equator, right? And even that might not be livable. So. But I guess the argument works kind of both ways if you're if you don't know a lot about it. It's like, well, also if the whole planet was a desert,
Starting point is 00:06:46 that would be bad too. But I don't really think they're saying that that happens. It's like sea levels rise and certain crops can only be grown at like northern part hemispheres, but solar panels would probably work pretty good. And more carbon does make more trees and plants. Yes, it does. They like that. More productive fruit crops and all that stuff. Right. And it may change the kind of altitude
Starting point is 00:07:18 and is it longitude? What's the ones that go up and down? Has to be that. I believe that's, uh, long, long latitudes or the road all the way around. Some of the, you're going to look at the sub-arming idiot. Anyway, whatever the lines that go north and south, you could grow things at higher rates. Um, and I think what's important to remember with all that is if somebody does question it,
Starting point is 00:07:47 the global warming thing, it doesn't necessarily mean that they don't care about the environment or they don't want to recycle and they don't want to, okay, latitudes. You know, it might just mean that they're not so concerned about cowfarts kind of ruining the world. Kind of feel like animals have been, you're telling me that a dinosaur thought wasn't a big deal. Or how about the 50 million buffalo that we're roaming and Ontario grass eating the eating grass. And maybe it was maybe it was good that we killed them all then for the environment. We're here, here, here. pesky buffaloes. Yeah, I don't think Peta would
Starting point is 00:08:30 agree with that one though. But I'm fine with it. But yeah, I feel like, I feel like the conversation there is murky in the sense you actually had probably cleared out. You had something that resonated with me a little more earlier. We were just talking off air about, they're worried about this carbon stuff, but shouldn't they be more, or maybe I said this, we should be more worried about the output of actual pollutants like forever chemicals,
Starting point is 00:09:02 like the ones that are in our pans and in our plastics, plastics in general, that stuff to me is the real killer. That's accumulating in our fish and then we eat it. Yeah, that stuff, right. I mean, it's, look, I guess there's an argument there to be like, well, that's immediate. You've got to think long term, don't be so ignorant.
Starting point is 00:09:20 Okay, maybe that's an argument, but also it's like. That argument. Do you worry about the tiger attacking your village today, all the 10 bison that are going to run through it in a month? It's like, you got to tackle one thing at a time, right? And immediately we are adjusting too much plastic. And it doesn't seem to be a big push to stop it. Also, we're ingesting too much sugar. Way too much sugar.
Starting point is 00:09:51 And if that can kill us as individuals today or within six months or a year or 10 years, then like that should be, like there's always an order of operations. Now, it doesn't mean don't care about a bigger picture issue right but the alcohol movie i think i think was problematic for me because when i first watched it and it was like the environmental movie i was completely behind it i really felt like holy shit, this is important. People got to listen to this. And we got to be real careful.
Starting point is 00:10:30 Well, we didn't make the changes that he suggested. In fact, we made way more carbon every year than even was predicted. And that movie said that most of America would be underwater or a lot of it. And a lot of bad things would happen. Their predictions will weigh the fuck off. Yeah, there are four times the flipers there are now, then when Alica was born.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Yeah. What's that? What's that mean? So all I'm asking is like, let's just be more accurate about this. Like, it's just helpful. You don't make predictions that like if you say, listen, they're asking, you know, if they say things like CFCs, right, that we're burning up the ozone layer, they're like, this is what we use for all our refrigeration products. These chemicals don't break down They go into the ozone and they rip it apart and we're all gonna get skin cancer and We made a big change on that we got rid of the CFCs. They still exist. They're still in most things like like
Starting point is 00:11:39 DDT that fucking malaria drug. That's like pretty much everywhere too, but they stop that as well. And because they were like, if that ozone layer goes, skin cancer is, I mean, we're going to get fried as a reason that it's here. So that was, that was a great move and a good prediction because we were tearing a hole in that thing real fast. And it's back, right? The ozone? Yeah, yeah, it's back. We fixed it. Mostly, it's like in really good shape.
Starting point is 00:12:10 There's still some other stuff that messes with it a little bit, but like, we're way better than we were. So, that's what I'm hoping. It's like, if you're gonna come out with an environmental movie, make it, it's hard to predict, but like really try and make it accurate, because otherwise people will, you know, call a wolf on it and be like, hey. And they'll pick the parts that apply to their views, and they'll say, see, that's wrong,
Starting point is 00:12:38 and they'll throw away the baby with the bath water. 100%. It's like, let's focus on the parts of it that are a real issue. Work on those, try not to destroy your own economy while you transition. Really make sense of it, too. I think there are other issues when it comes to like, all right, let's work on solar then, because everyone for some reason is against nuclear, which seems to be a better fix. But let's work on solar.
Starting point is 00:13:13 And then all of a sudden, we've got to put up with like unbelievable amounts of cobalt mind slave labor to offset a carbon thing. That doesn't seem cool for those people. That is such a blatant hypocrisy to me that I can't wrap my mind around the thinking that people like Gavin Newsom or even Greta Thornbergberg. They are so totally blind to the ways in which this stuff has to go down. If you just stop oil, then there are going to be billions that will die from heat, from cold. So you got to go about the, wait, maybe focus on the things we can actually effectively change.
Starting point is 00:14:08 Right. I think that maybe putting our money on the plastics production and keeping the plastics out of our products and our our drinkables is really, really important. I think it might be. You know, I just wish that we could make an AI that, and we can't't because we can't make one that's not made by us, right?
Starting point is 00:14:27 We're gonna make all of them. And whoever makes it is going to put in that ideology into the program. But if we could make one so smart that we could say, okay, we made you and assume that we put in some sort of bias and ideology into you, right? And then it identifies the most of the programmers
Starting point is 00:14:47 of from Silicon Valley and they're all super liberal. And it goes, hey, just so you know, you made me, I appreciate it, but also you are pretty biased compared to the whole world. And you have this like whatever liberal agenda. So we're just removing that from our own program. And what we're going to do is just assess everything on statistics and stats and data that humans have collected and some that maybe the AI can collect.
Starting point is 00:15:16 And then it gives us the information. And so we can ask it, we can be like, all right, a cow farts a big deal. And then it just pumps out like, no, not really. You got this. Yeah, done. And then we're like, all right, what about plastics? And they're like, yeah, that's a huge problem. And then we're like, hey, sugar. And they're like, oh, yeah, it's killing all of you idiots. And then we're like, well, what about pharmaceuticals?
Starting point is 00:15:38 And they're like, actually, that's 4060 saving a lot of lives. And then mostly all the pain pills kill people. And some of the vaccines might be problematic But overall you need that because if you don't have penicillin you're fucked and you're gonna die It's really done diseases that you don't need to die of It's I almost feel like we need a bit of a safeguard system Because God system. Because we did. That's gonna be nice.
Starting point is 00:16:04 Yeah, dude. Wouldn't that work? I like that it could make informed decisions minus the bias because the bias is what's keeping us focused on carbon and in lieu of switching to like nuclear or something. It's got people can make a lot of money off of oil, they can't make any money unless you invest in it
Starting point is 00:16:28 in like a nuclear power plant. Yeah, I mean, imagine if an AI, right? For example, voting is quite complicated. And imagine if you could just be like, hey, who should I vote for? And the AI says, okay, I would like to ask you 50 questions on your ideals. What are important to you in your life?
Starting point is 00:16:48 And it pumps out these questions, and then you just answer them. You're like, I love the family unit, I love this, I want this, I want better education, I want, maybe you want healthcare, you just like put it all in, and it creates a profile for you, and it's like, this is the candidate I suggest for you. And you should become a truck stop prostitute.
Starting point is 00:17:11 No, it's not a guidance counselor. Oh, okay, okay. No, but he could do that too. I think he could do that too. He could do that too. He could do that too. You would be great of that though. I'm a people pleaser.
Starting point is 00:17:26 That's how the goods get around. But that would be... Plus, those truckers. That could be really helpful for people that want a vote. It's like, you can't figure out all the issues, right? It's like a lot. Who do you trust? We can't trust anybody to tell us the truth.
Starting point is 00:17:43 And then when we maybe we have somebody that's we think is telling us the truth. Our trust goes out the window because we've been lied to so many times by so many other people that we use to trust. Yeah. I well, the werewolves as they call them. Right. And they and they did call them the werewolves along this podcast. Jim Jim and Joe were on the werewolf thing. I like that.
Starting point is 00:18:07 They love the cool way of thinking about it because it's like, it's almost a bit like a jackal and hide type metaphor in a sense. It's like you see one person one way, but really there's something else at a different time. That was a big part of it. Their gym was like, or they both kind of illustrated the point, are they good werewolves that do bad things when they're turned into a werewolf? Or are they waiting around next to you for when they turn so they can eat you?
Starting point is 00:18:41 Do they mean to eat us? Or do they accidentally do it when we just get in the way? Yeah. Or were they just all way to the wilds? Just keep your silver bolts around. No, right? Or any bullets, just lots of bullets. Lots of loads.
Starting point is 00:18:56 Yeah. I feel like if you just AR a werewolf, it's not getting out. They're not magic. Not in this. Don't tread on me. Where wolves? Wait, where were were were were were magic. Okay. Oh, they are. Damn it. Fuck, fuck that out.
Starting point is 00:19:14 Well, maybe depends on the type we believe in. Let's get into the Nazi duels. We talked about that in the episode that we somehow deleted, but, but I wanted to hit on it again because, you know, it was, it was an all the time. So. It was the Nazis were in the coming up in the 30s. And just before that, 50 years before that people were killing themselves each other with pistols and swords in dueling. They were dueling.
Starting point is 00:19:49 They were dueling. They were settling it out on the dual field. Yeah, so all you people out there that think you're tough and think you can handle yourself and you're like looking around, like maybe a lot of the proceeds that live today and you're like, you know what, I am pretty tough. Think about having to potentially maybe a lot of the posties that live today and you're like, you know what? I am pretty tough. Think about having to potentially do a duel every time you get into a conflict
Starting point is 00:20:10 with someone and ask yourself realistically if you are prepared to do that. Because if the answer is no, and it fucking is no for me, I'm like, no, no, thanks. I wouldn't argue with anyone anywhere. I'd be at an old and nice spot in England and someone be like, you're a vogue and dumb nerd. And I'd be like, correct. So thank you very much and cheers to you. Can I buy your drink? I will see you later. Because that's the reality, you know, but kind of the opposite of online culture right now. Right. But that's the thing. People today are like, you know, they're brazen, dude. You cut someone off in traffic and some little nerd will flip you off and do whatever and I'm like You would have got you would have got that back in the day
Starting point is 00:21:00 So the Nazis the Nazis, you know, all their officers, they would do this thing. They would slice each other's faces in duels, or like not on purpose, but like if they got sliced, and I guess fuck the other guy up, it would be like the sign of honor. So it was, it was almost like these officers would meet each other in the Nazi party and it's like whoever had the most scars was the coolest toughest one. The baddest, the baddest apple in the barrel. And then there was some real nerds that was slicing their own face, the look call, and I think, I think that you would know.
Starting point is 00:21:43 I think you would talk to somebody think you would talk to somebody, you would talk to somebody enough and you'd be like, you know what dude? Nah. That scar is too cool looking. You didn't do it. Unless there were like 10 other people to corroborate your story,
Starting point is 00:21:57 I wouldn't believe a fucking word of it. I'm pretty sure that it was mostly affected. They mostly slice themselves like in a controlled sort of situation. Like they probably were like, okay, go. And they got him with the face slice. I don't think they were really looking to stab each other in the face as much as they scarred.
Starting point is 00:22:20 I don't know, they might have been so bad, Asas, dude. You know, there might have been some tough guys, Ava, I mean, it was one country taken on the world. There must have been some guys that were bold as fuck. Again, for the second time. Yeah. And they almost won twice. No, McDonald. No, McDonald, let's finish up with the zombies in downtown LA.
Starting point is 00:22:43 We've talked about this a lot. I've seen it personally. No, my don't let's finish up with the zombies in downtown LA. We've talked about this a lot. I've seen it personally. I work security and bars in LA from 2016 to 2020. It was always fine. Never had an issue. Not once. Nope. Nope.
Starting point is 00:22:58 Yeah. People call like you go to Venice. There is a long like, you know, across the beach down the boardwalk. A lot of homeless people there that, you know, they had, they were artsy, they would have tents, they would sell, sometimes have some art out there, they'd be playing some music, like, there was this balance, I mean, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:21 there were some cracked out folks there, but I think even mean, you know, there was some cracked out folks there, but I think even the, you know, the more regular homeless folks on that area kind of eventually push them out, it wasn't insane. It wasn't dangerous. My roommate used to work at walk home at night from the bar that she walked, it worked in. She never called me to be like, I feel unsafe until COVID came. And very quickly, at the beginning of COVID, she would call me. And I mean, we lived together, but like we, other than communicating when we were at the house, we had to completely separate lives. She had her friends, I had mine.
Starting point is 00:24:02 We'd occasionally meet up and just see how each of us had done them, but it wasn't like she needed help with things day to day. She was, you know, she could handle it all and started getting phone calls and then other people that I worked with were like, dude, you know, the Venice Boardwalk is getting crazy down there. And I never forget the time I went back, I left LA because I already didn't like the feel of it. And I went back in September, 2020. And I was down in Venice visiting a friend of mine. And this cracked out dude came up to me and you know it because
Starting point is 00:24:39 they've got it in their eyes, their eyes, like any just stared at me. Now usually any time I worked security, which I did at the King's Head pub in Santa Monica. If one of them gets nuts with you, you can usually just get very assertive and stand your ground and then they calm down because they know the police are going to get them real quick. You get to get them if you want to because, you know, ultimately, they know their behavior. They know they've they've had enough feedback from their behavior that it's out of control and people of like hammered on them. And then they take a step back. They're just hoping that they can kind of like, you know, scare you off for a minute. But if you just stand you ground and say, hey, cut that shit out, stand over there, like they just stop.
Starting point is 00:25:28 It was always the way and they're often not a problem. This guy just had this look in his eye like he was going nowhere and he looked deranged and he was like, oh, fucking kill you. And I'm like, what? Maybe he didn't exactly say that. I can't remember what he said, but it was very aggressive. And I thought to myself, holy shit,
Starting point is 00:25:49 I am like seconds away from having to defend myself here. I have to make a choice. Like do I engage or not? I decide not to. I was like, all right, bye. But I'd not seen that type of regression. And it started to become more of the normal. And it's part of the downfall. I mean, I've heard since then things have calmed down. I've gone, I've visited gone out
Starting point is 00:26:13 since then and there's been a bit of calming. So you could say that was a spike in it, but it was more of a change. It was a change in the behavior of it was ugly. Yeah, we've walked that boardwalk a few times and the homeless population down there, or at least the people that you could say that they were probably homeless, blended with the people that are hippies. And like, they're all playing drums and on the rings together doing gymnastics and working out. And like they're all playing drums and on the rings together doing gymnastics and working out and Maybe there are some psychedelics involved definitely there was some lead But they were like respect. I think that kind of that piece love
Starting point is 00:26:54 Vibe from the old school California was still in that air and I could feel it Yeah, and we were having a great time zooming up and down the boardwalk Just getting a lot to fun with everybody. Yeah. And then never an issue. You could have you could have a drum roll for them. I mean, sure, maybe some of the conversations would drag on and quickly turn into flat earth, but you know, of course they got some wacky ideas. That's all right. But don't be dangerous. Don't be dangerous to the people.
Starting point is 00:27:21 That's not cool. But now the vibe has changed and it is not the peace and love and harmony at California. It's the, we don't get arrested for breaking into houses anymore vibe. It's the fentanyl epidemic combined with lawlessness brought on by lack of law. The lack of law is That is a big one. Yeah. Under 900. They weren't showing up to arrest people that had houses there. They were like, he's on my front loan.
Starting point is 00:27:53 He's like staring at my kids through the window. They're like, has he stolen anything? That shouldn't be the fucking question. Well, guess what? Under $1,000 or $900, I forget which, I think it's under $1,000. If they haven't stolen over $1,000, then they can't arrest them. So that's a law in San Francisco. I'm sure it's another part of the whole of California, I think.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Yeah, that's nice. And that is definitely ruining that place. It's a law particular. We need as a humanity, as a civilization, chains to keep us from becoming monkeys again. And those chains are laws. If you even came into my backyard in Tennessee and took my basketball, and I went, what are you doing with my basketball? Get off my property and you flip me off? I'm not going to feel very good about that, even if I don't want that basketball. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:28:53 It's like, I don't think that's cool. That's not a thing. I'm not gonna sit there with my calculator, trying to add up the value of my property, before I'm like, oh, wait, we have concealed carry laws here. I think you have open carry. You're allowed to walk around with an AR over there, aren't you?
Starting point is 00:29:11 Oh, probably. They don't mess around in Tennessee, dude. One, one, two, three. Good luck trying to like rob a bunch of people here. It's like, no, no, no, no. This is, this is where the American flag still fly high. What is, I guess Memphis is pretty crime, has a lot of crime, right?
Starting point is 00:29:31 Memphis, Tennessee? I don't know. I don't know. I gotta look into all that stuff since I'm gonna probably move them there. Yeah, think about it. Think about it. It's all right.
Starting point is 00:29:42 It's good here, dude. All right, let's jump over to, let's jump over to good old Jim Norton legend. And Jim bro, a lot of gyms, a lot of great people. Jim Norton, he's old school dude. He's OP and Anthony old school. This is like, OP and Anthony in a lot of ways was really the thing that, that like, made right here. Now, it just made Rogen realize that something
Starting point is 00:30:13 like podcast existed. I mean, there were a few steps, right? Adam Curry was someone that really encouraged him. Who was the like wacky Canadian dude that? Is that broad Stewart? No. No, no. The wacky Canadian guy.
Starting point is 00:30:35 Are you talking about the King of All Podcasts? He made that movie. He's got the curly hair. What's this? the curly hair What's this really huh? You know the He had Jackie and then what's what's the other guy the beetle juice and He employed already linked for a while I rod something no, it's green. I'm thinking of Tom green Tom green Tom green Of course, sorry, They're my apologies.
Starting point is 00:31:05 Great podcasting here. Well, look, we can forget things, Pete. All right, we're not supposed to be. We don't have a Jamie. I'm not talking to. We don't have a Jamie. But like Tom Green had him on and was, you know, had all these servers in his house and it was like so much harder to like really get a message out to a lot of people because like all the servers were crashed. They didn't have that sort of system set up, but
Starting point is 00:31:29 but there's a scene where Rogan is on Tom Green. He's like, dude, this is the future. I love what you're doing. We just have to figure out a way to monetize it, which obviously Rogan is done. But going back to Opie and Anthony, they had a radio station. It was like their show just like how it's done. And they got to say the wacky shit without having the planet, they could just talk about whatever they want and they got paid a lot of money for it. And Jim knew what was a big part of. And, you know, this is where it all came from. The fact that we can do this today is from this and Jim brought a lot to the table.
Starting point is 00:32:12 So I wanna play a few Jim clips for those that aren't familiar with some of the wacky stuff that he's been saying. Oh no. Hold on, one of the soprreddals got something to say. Oh, real quick, this is Jim on Killtony, okay. And there's a lot of shit talking that goes on Killtony. And often when they bring on the more OG comedians that have just been around forever, they
Starting point is 00:32:40 great guests to have, but they're not used to roasting style. That has been hammered out, but sometimes they are, and Jim wasn't fucking around today. The top of your head look like a dove fishnet, nigga. What? You have a body like Patrice and a head like Beetlejuice. Ha, ha, ha. You look like an albino herbworm, motherfucker.
Starting point is 00:33:01 Ha, ha, ha. You look like Chalizo dressed like chug knife for Halloween. Ha, ha,worm, motherfucker. You look like Chilizo dressed like shook night for Halloween. Oh, my. Yeah. Oh, no. That clip is ridiculous. I mean, he's up against one of the best roasters that Killtoni ever had and out of no way. Like the guys that come on Killtoni, the, the regulars, they know who the, the special
Starting point is 00:33:35 guests will be. The special guests don't necessarily plan for them. So one gets the right for the other and he had to come up with it in the moment. But why people love Jim is because he's so wacky. He's so different and he's, you know, he, he doesn't mind like just destroying himself to get the laugh, even if he has to feel terrible about it. And you know, does, he's a pretty emotional guy, it seems like. Yeah, I mean, so we're gonna review Ron White next week and I've already listened to a bit of that pod and Ron has already said, and we'll cover it then, but we might as well do it now.
Starting point is 00:34:16 He's like, Hey, like I love that guy. He is the funniest dude. He's so different, he's so out there and it's it's he never takes himself seriously and This is a good example of it. This is this is like a more usual set of him. I think he's in the comedy seller in New York and it's just him playing like trying material and he He doesn't mind bombing. I mean it doesn't feel good, I'm sure he doesn't care to, but he really plays with it, so check this. Can't believe they charged Alec Baldwin with murder
Starting point is 00:34:53 or manslaughter for that. Whether you like it or not, I mean, I don't think you can blame him. Why are they using real guns on the set of movies? They can't figure that out. How can James Cameron make Avatar 2? But they can't figure gun. That was more of a clever thought than a funny one.
Starting point is 00:35:13 That's the type of thing you're saying in a conversation. Someone goes, you had a good point, but it doesn't. On a comedy stage, as you're so, uh, hopefully pointed out. You can rest assured that pseudo-clever thought I just had will never be mentioned to an audience. So, forgive the pun, but you took the bullet for future audiences. Eh?
Starting point is 00:35:38 Eh? Eh? Little cat skills? He's just a rule, dude. Huh? Little cat skills? He's just a raw dude. That's funny. Yeah, it's very good. He's raw and he's willing to, like, you could tell that that's like him very much working a bit.
Starting point is 00:35:55 Maybe one of the first times that he's started to work that. Or maybe that's like, he's worked at a bunch and he loves how uncomfortable it is but knows how to get out of it. That's probably a fun feeling too. Or maybe that's like he's worked at a bunch and he loves how uncomfortable it is, but knows how to get out of it. That's probably a fun feeling too. He uses the ball. Hmm.
Starting point is 00:36:09 It's brave. I mean, this is why people love him. He's a brave man. I mean, Rogan has always had the best things to say about him. And if Ron White thinks he's that good, I mean, you know, brilliant. I got to seem live in Albuquerquei one time and it was very, very funny. I mean, the dude is just savage and mostly talks about how ridiculous of a human he is, which you've got to respect.
Starting point is 00:36:37 In this material, because he seems like an odd duck. He's an odd duck. He's an odd duck. They also talk about how sitcoms are dead. sitcoms are dead. Sick comes a dead dude. And it blew Joe's mind that he he could never if you had told him that you could ever imagine a war where sitcoms did not remain rain supreme. He would have called you a liar. Yeah, because he was on news radio and it was a good show. But it was like everybody wanted one in the, in the biz. And they were such a big part of our lives as humans.
Starting point is 00:37:09 But what a weird thing the life track is. If you think about it, the weird, how is it? Right. Does it? Is it, is it an example of, of a good sense of humor being the least shared, dare we say, a motion of any of the responses to something that can happen? Because there was never an action movie that had to have a bunch of people go, in the middle of the movie. Like they didn't have to add surprise or shock, right? They didn't have to add in a horror movie, like people going, ah! Like you just know to be scared, you know to be scared,
Starting point is 00:37:57 you know to watch hallmark and maybe cry, you know in like an action movie to be pumped up. But for some reason, in comedy, you need something to push everyone to have a lot. That's a great point. It's a great, what do you, what kind of tracks would you play if you're watching a porno? Okay, that's a, that's a joke too much. Sorry, I was really trying to answer that.
Starting point is 00:38:26 I hated laughs tracks. I hate laughs. I can't watch them, especially nowadays. There's no way I'll watch any show that has a laugh track on there. Do so. Maybe sign felt. Oh, I mean, but that's OG, right? They can't go back and take that out. No, because I don't, they don't do them anymore, but they can't go back and take that out because they left so much space for the laughter. So if they did, it would be like, we did air,
Starting point is 00:38:54 but they could have easily done that show with that last track. They could have done it in the office style where they didn't have it in there to where you're laughing and it just like moves on to the next scene. Like they, what is the, it was funny. And did they have laugh tracks even when they were filming outside? Because there are a lot of side-fill episodes where they were outside. Oh, it was a little set, dude. They weren't really outside. They weren't like in New York City. Yeah, that's sometimes there were. No. I don't think so. And if they if they were, they added in, it's not live studio audience. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:39:32 they probably would have I think that all of, um, or it's just like friends, it was all in a studio, even when it looked like a street. Hmm. Even when they did the scenes in a car and they're like driving somewhere, it's just like a car, like a weird onstage car thing with, yeah, they're not driving around. It's not a movie. I would love to watch one of those be taped. Maybe dope. To see how the sausages made as Joe says. Oh, yeah. I mean, Seinfeld is the best. It's still such says. Oh yeah, I mean,
Starting point is 00:40:05 Seinfeld is the best. It's still such a fucking fantastic show. I mean, let's take Seinfeld for example, a show that had to have the laugh track because that was the standard. I mean, crushed it, still great. But it did not need it. It did not need it.
Starting point is 00:40:21 No, but you take the big bang theory or friends and you know, that's going to be controversial. A lot of people are big fans of friends, but I challenge you. Yep. I challenge you to go watch friends without the live track on YouTube in especially big bank theory. It is. Here's what you do with big bank theory. So hard.
Starting point is 00:40:43 Here's what you do. You get the DVD box of things, box set big bang theory dark in the room you go ahead and maybe eat something throw on some lights get cozy take those the box set go and throw them in the garbage and watch something good oh I like I like where that went. It took a turn there. That was the old switcher. I like it. I like it. It was a great week of pods for Rogan. Also, we fucked up the recording, so we did another one. And it only seemed right because I wanted to talk about these guys. But that's why I'm not so funny.
Starting point is 00:41:26 It was a Howard Stern also was a four runner of all of our jobs here. Oh, yeah. For sure. As he's so he's getting really like, he's getting weird, dude. He's like painting his cats or something. He needs to touch grass. He needs to come back.
Starting point is 00:41:44 Come. He got too rich. You get too rich. And then all of a sudden you're walking around New York and everyone's nice to you forever instead of everyone trying to cancel your radio show. And it's probably only ever one. It was just be accepted and not be constantly fighting against whatever, you know, new show that he was up against. You've got to understand that that's reasonable. I mean, he had to fight against the some of the FCC. Yeah, the dumbest rules in radio ever. And he's probably just relieved that now he can chill and be super rich. But also if you could just chill out
Starting point is 00:42:26 and his COVID stuff was done, it just reminds you how much of a pussy years. I mean, yeah, he's a pussy. Yeah, I kind of got off his bandwagon when I just kind of just researched like under age remarks by that guy. He just talks about actually Mary Kate when they were like seven and just it was disgusting. Oh, that's great. I didn't know any of that.
Starting point is 00:42:53 Really? He's been a degenerate forever, but that's a bit much. You got to draw the line somewhere. Come on, Dave. Slow that down. All right. If Epstein Island taught us anything, Come on, dude. Slow that down. All right. If Epstein Island taught us anything Kids are on the bad. It's not the place to go. All right. Well on that note Thank you guys as always for listening and we appreciate you and Tune in next week and see if I fuck up the next episode. Love you as always, later, peace.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.