Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 370 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Jeff Dye Et al.
Episode Date: February 17, 2024Thanks to this weeks sponsors: This is an advertisement from BetterHelp therapy online. BetterHelp online therapy. GO TO https://www.betterhelp.com/JRER for 10% off your first month www.JREreview.c...om For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com This week we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always. Review Guest list: Colion Noir, Jeff Dye, Josh Dubin & Sheldon Johnson 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
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You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast. We find little nuggets, treasures,
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What a bizarre thing we've created.
Now with your host, Adam Thorn.
Might either be the worst podcast or the best one of all time.
Two, one, go. Enjoy the show.
Hey guys, and welcome to another episode
of the JRE review,
joined by my main man, Pete.
What's happening, Pete?
Oh, not too much.
Happy Super Bowl day to you.
Oh yeah, that's right.
Super Bowl today.
Damn.
I better get some chips and dip in.
Seven layered bean dip? Yep. It's gotta be done
It's gotta be done. Who's playing? I don't even know who's playing
Travis wait no Taylor Swift's boyfriend and the other team. Okay
Perfect. That's all people know these days. It's gonna be a lot of young girls watching the Super Bowl this year. I think
bless them It's going to be a lot of young girls watching the Super Bowl this year, I think.
Bless them.
Bless them indeed. Wow, who do we got this week?
We've got Cologne Noir.
Is it Colin?
There's like an iron in there.
It should be Colin.
It's probably Colin.
Josh Dubin and Sheldon Johnson.
Josh often comes on with a different guy
that's been absolutely rare-roaded by a justice system.
Sometimes those are tough to listen to,
but they're important.
And then-
That one was a good one.
It was good.
Josh is always good, dude.
He's just a great guy.
And then finish up with comedian Jeff Dye. I'm glad Jeff got on there. He's a good dude. He's just a great guy and then finish up with comedian Jeff die
I'm glad Jeff got on there. He's he's a good dude. He's funny funny guy
alright
so mr. Noir
He's a second amendment gun
Advocate lawyer
He's got a big social media presence,
knows a lot about guns.
Yeah, he jumped in, border issue.
What's really happening down there?
It looks like a mess,
and there's still so many people I know
that just dismiss it like it's not even a big deal.
They say to me, oh, they're just showing the worst parts and it's not even a big deal. You know, they say to me, oh, they're just showing the worst parts
and it's not like this.
I'm like, I don't know why they'd be making it up.
It looks like trains full of people just coming over.
And it's not only our friendly neighbors to the South,
Mexican people who have always been coming across the border
for as long as we've been having us a border.
Free to go back and forth to work. And that was the thing that happened. Migrants come pick fruit and whatnot. But now we got all the extra males of China, all the extra males of Africa,
and they're just coming on over. You don't see too many families. You see a lot of military
aged men. Right. What is happening? Yeah, What is really happening? I mean, I don't, I don't
really know where to go. I'm seeing, I was seeing this
morning, somewhere in Texas, they're basically building a
wall with shipping containers. You see that?
Okay. Yeah, he didn't see that one.
They just stack it up. Good building material. I mean, oh,
yeah, the last fast and effective.
But what's the end goal here?
I don't know.
The left blames the right, the right blames the left.
You know, I don't know.
Can we guess?
It's hard to pinpoint who's at fault here.
Well, it seems like we need at least a
decentish wall. I don't think that that's saying that you're anti-immigration
just because you have a strong border. It's like, it's just good to have it. It's like,
we don't want any laws broken, right? Generally. And if you can, you get-
If you don't have a border, you don't't have a country I've heard some of the finest minds have been saying that for for years
So you don't have if you have a porous border your country will crumble. Mmm
Yeah, it might be true unless there's just not a lot of
Immigration back and forth, you know, it's like Canada, it's not really happening between the US and Canada.
It's not like people are flooding in up there.
So that's not where you focus your energy
on building a ginormous wall.
I mean, eventually you could get there.
Problems.
Exactly.
Canada has an influx of refugees and immigrants
as well for the past 10 years.
They've been welcoming China and that's okay, whatever,
have immigration, but they come through legal means
over there.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, we'll keep an eye on it, try and figure this out.
We'll fumble through it, we'll figure it out.
We will.
They jumped into a lot of car talk,
that was like at least 40 minutes talking about super dope cars.
If you massively into that, check it out for that reason.
I was keen on to kind of get onto just the rest of his kind of philosophy on things.
But, you know, he's been on Rogan a few times.
So that narrative has kind of been covered and repeat guests
often get into a habit of just like talking about shit they're into,
you know, which is, which is all right.
It gives you gives you insight into, into the person.
But yeah, it was it was a shitload of car talk.
And that's fine.
Yeah, I learned a new acronym ICE,
Internal Combustion Engine.
He used that one a little bit
and I was like, I had to look it up.
Right, it's thinking immigration again.
Supposed to electric cars.
What's the plaid get to the Tesla 1.2 to 0 to 16 1.2 seconds?
I don't think it's that fast.
It's like 1.9.
That is a flip at 1.9.
That's like that.
It's so fast.
Yeah.
That's like Mach 2. Right.. Yeah, that's like Mach 2.
Right, they're saying that the roadster though,
that hasn't come out yet,
we're as close at like 1.1.
G-Wiz.
That seems just absurd.
That's no time.
That's like now to now.
And you're already,
how do you're all like, wouldn't that make you dizzy? Well, the blood is... I think it's gonna be back you're already how do you're all like?
Wouldn't that make you dizzy? Well the blood you back that's for sure. You know knock your panties off. That's for sure
Not someone's panties off talking about that. They were
Discussing kind of marriages these days and how half of married women have their backup guy already
Dating world is It world is a slippery business.
You know?
You're lucky to be out of that.
Right.
But if half of married women have their backup guy,
maybe my wife has her backup guy.
I have been invited up more and more over there.
That is a good point.
You're the backup guy?
Oh man. No, just joking.
Only if you die.
Okay, you'll take care of my family?
Yeah.
Thanks, Pete.
I appreciate it.
I've got to think about that.
Just be a business.
Now I have a kid.
Just be a business.
Purely business.
You just want to-
Congratulations on that baby of yours, by the way.
Thank you very much.
Yep.
Just had a little baby Hazel.
Very exciting. Yep. Just had a little baby Hazel. Very exciting.
Yeah.
Still trying to get some sleep.
I think you're going to be saying that for the next 18 years.
But there we go.
There we go.
Hmm.
So half all women have the backup guy.
I guess I might be the backup guy for maybe like a few ladies then.
Probably the single dudes are. Like think about it. You would be. Kind of a cro- I think it just makes them feel safe to know that they're- it's like- it's like the old
days though. It's like being in the tribe. You got your main guy and then the rest of
the tribe guys are there. It's like you don't want all the men to die in war.
No you don't.
Be on your own.
Can't put up shells.
That's a scary place.
Yeah, definitely.
Get the higher rock in the cave,
if they're gonna need me.
Yeah, yeah.
They talk a little bit about like work
and the fantasy of not doing any work.
I think that the, you know, Colin is like
in a position now to where, because of like his YouTube
and other areas that he can make money,
like in a sense he wouldn't have to work, you know?
He just can like make a lot of money doing fun things.
But oftentimes you see the people that are in that position
got there because they have
really good work ethic.
They like working.
They like doing it.
This fantasy of just having money and doing nothing, I think gets old real fast.
It just seems like something you would want because so many people are working so hard
and have for so long and hate their jobs So it's like oh god, please just give me the opportunity to have money and do nothing
Yeah, it sounds good
might be for a minute, but I think very quickly you you'd get bored and
You know and kind of unsatisfied too
Only way we can enjoy our free time is if we have
Time that's taken up by something else so free time will no longer exist if you have nothing to do right
You know all you just start drinking by 10 a.m.
Cheers by the way. Cheers
No, we gotta do something, we gotta work. And that brings us his next point, the fantasy is
this podcast is brought to you by better help. I recently got married and days away from having
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Working with something you love. Right. Yeah. Better H-E-L-P dot com slash J-R-E-R.
Working with something you love. Right.
Yeah.
Which is a hard thing to find for people, you know,
and especially find a way to make money doing it.
But today, more so than ever,
there's a clearer route to that,
especially with things like social media and Instagram, right?
Because if you get really good at something that you love and you're interested in,
there often is a market for it depending on how good you are because other people will like it too.
And if you promote yourself well and people can see what you do, then you have a chance to sell it.
And I mean, there's more unusual jobs today
than ever before.
It's like the workforce is really changing.
High end word is far, like in my field,
high end woodworkers don't have to leave their shops anymore.
They don't have to go to craft fairs
to sell their intricately designed and made
couches or bookshelves. They can make a YouTube show and an Instagram sales model and then
start selling that stuff. Yeah. For what it's worth. Right. And you get to see the whole process
and more so you get to learn who the individual is making this stuff.
And, you know, if their personality is good
and you enjoy them, it kind of makes that purchase
that much more meaningful.
You're like, oh, I love this guy's work.
I can't wait to own a piece of this, you know?
It's like almost makes more art lovers.
I mean, I've never been that into art.
Like not, I like going to museums and stuff.
I like looking at the old, when I went to Paris
and you get to see some Monet's
and all these different things in the museums.
It's cool, right?
But you're not buying any, they're millions of dollars.
And you know, just other artists stuff
you just don't care about.
But as I follow different people on Instagram
and then you kind of get to know them and what they're doing and it like makes you want to have a piece of it. You're just like oh yeah I'm into this. Ultimately that was traditionally the job of
the docent, the curator was to tell you about the artist, why it's important to know about them.
You connect with them a little more, ultimately makes the art worth something.
And Instagram is taking that role of the curator, which is OK.
It leaves some curators out of the job, but ultimately more art is more better for everybody.
Right. I mean, my brother, my younger brother has
like a tattoo business.
He does tattoo.
He does like the tie tap styles.
They're very geometric and, you know,
kind of symmetrical patterns.
And his Instagram is like fairly big.
You know, it's not huge.
It's like 20 something thousand but
Because of it that following
People will write to him and say how'd love a tattoo and he just travels the country going to different
Studios where his setup for a week book all his appointments and
Then people in different areas can find him much easier. It's like
really effective marketing. And also he gets to put up a lot of cool stuff on his Instagram.
You know?
There's like zero overhead for him in that regard. He doesn't have to clean like have
his own studio at that point. I'm sure he does, but he goes and gets hosted by people
that it brings business to their business. And, he doesn't have to have all about the prices either.
It's like, this is I'm booked.
You pay this price and we're, and we'll go.
Yeah.
A hundred percent.
You're going to get a nice piece.
Yeah.
It's a really cool way of doing it.
And that should be inspiring to young people that are trying to find their path.
Like the opportunities are there.
And it's a cool thing because, you know, there are a lot of Instagram accounts out there where
people are trying this stuff and it's, and people don't want to follow on. It's just not interesting
enough. It's not biting. So the people that are the best at it, the practice the most,
the put the most work in are the ones that are going to get the business. So it's not free work.
Like it takes a lot of effort, but you can do it.
If you got your idea and you really wanna push for it,
you just gotta make it interesting.
It doesn't even have to be that interesting.
Like people, if you look on someone's Instagram,
they follow maybe 2,000 people.
It doesn't take a lot to get a follow. You don't have to be
that interesting. Just have a couple of good pieces up there of whatever it is.
It's nice. There's tons of options. Yeah. Talk a little bit about guns. So he met
his instructor. I don't know if it was a Jiu Jitsu instructor or an MMA instructor, but basically the same day he met him,
the guy, his alarm went off at his house.
So Colin was like, hey, let's go over there, let's clear the rooms.
After that, they were boys, because that's a pretty bro move.
And, yeah, like knowing how to do that is an interesting thing to think people should know.
And then again, all of the bits about which gun to have to you.
Do you own guns, right? Do you have like a 9mm?
I got a, yeah, I have some guns. I have a 45 ACP and
As a for a handgun that's a big round right? Yeah, it's like it's almost it's almost a subcompact as well
It's a small gun. Is it a hard to shoot?
It's a little bit small for my hand, but it's pretty accurate
Okay, a lot. Oh nice and a 45 is like that's a massive It'll stop them especially if you put the hollow points a lot. Oh, nice. And a 45 is like, that's a massive.
It'll stop them,
especially if you put the hollow points in there.
Oh, dang.
Yeah, I've been thinking about it.
I don't have to have a,
I do not have to have a permit to have it,
but I would have to have one to carry and conceal it.
If I had a concealed, I could get in trouble.
Okay.
Yeah, I think in Tennessee, here we don't,
you don't need a permit for a concealed.
You just have one.
But I think he goes into this,
isn't there like insurance that one might need to have
in case you do shoot somebody
and then you have the insurance of lawyers
instead of the back you up?
I know that that's important to have.
I'm sure he has his.
Yeah, that's probably not a bad move.
That's not a bad move.
I mean, it's interesting because the philosophy,
you know, growing up in England and moving here,
that we don't have guns there.
We hear a lot of people just have the,
like the philosophy over there that it's like,
no, we're not into guns.
We don't think you should have them.
You wouldn't have score shootings.
It took a long time for my opinions on that to change once I was here.
And really, that just comes down to like education and experience and using them and seeing how
people use them responsibly.
And also being fascinated that this is like a modern western culture
that still decides to have guns in society.
And that it's fairly rare.
Not many countries have done that.
And to me it's interesting.
Yeah, right.
They're all coming over here anyway.
Well, that's freedom, baby. They're all coming over here anyway. Mm-hmm. Well, that's freedom, baby.
Freedom.
What did you think about the girl that got stoned,
freaked out, stabbed her boyfriend
or the person she was on a date with like 108 times,
stabbed herself, and only got like two years of probation?
She killed that guy.
Yeah, that's not a I don't that's a Californian outcome to ask me. It's ridiculous
Yeah, I don't I don't like that one bit. Uh-uh
No, no, this is something else going on that. I mean
Waco Since when is being high on something been excuse to commit a crime?
That's like killing someone in a DWI, driving under the influence of alcohol and claiming
I was on alcohol so I should be let go.
Right.
It's like if you run someone over in your car sober, the sentence is less than if you're drunk. the the the
Sentences less than if you're drunk
So if you're high and you stab someone shouldn't the sentence be higher worse. I
Think they were able to establish that she had a psychosis
But I still don't I don't buy that. I don't like that outcome at all
Not yeah, I'm not I'm not feeling it. I don't know enough about the case, but it sounds squirrely. And it is weed too.
It generally isn't making, you know,
I've smoked some weed.
It hasn't made me very stabby.
I would say that.
No, I get a little bit like,
oh yeah, I'll go hide under a blanket.
Yeah, hungry for sure.
Hungry may be scared, but...
The world frightens and confuses me, but I'm not gonna kill anybody not killing anyone man
All right, let's jump over to Josh a doobin. Let's get into more ridiculous
Crimes and sentences Sheldon Johnson joined him this time
Sheldon's a smart guy
He liked what he said and how he said it, honestly. Yeah, yeah.
He had a tough upbringing, poor guy.
So, basically it started with a teacher that he had
that thought that he was misbehaving
and went to like whack him with a ruler
and then put, what was it, salt on it?
Put salt on it and whack him with a ruler?
Smack, put salt on his hand and then whack
to the salt pile with a ruler
The hoops to increase more pain. Oh lunatic
Yeah, he's like doing research on torture of children. Good job. So this is like the 80s and
Sheldon said well fuck out ran into the hallway got a fire extinguisher sprayed him and they
Basically put him in like a mental ward for years where he was
abused a lot.
Uh-huh.
And drugged up.
Just for that.
Heavy duty tranquilizers and mood stabilizers that literally ruin your body.
To think that that was happening in the 80s, like not that long ago.
Not long at all.
And, you know, how do those teachers live with themselves
knowing that happened?
Do they really think that they're doing good
for these kids?
Like, oh, this is what I'm out.
They buy into the philosophies
and they live and die by those philosophies.
It's kind of like a part of their political beliefs,
most likely.
It's sad that we've let all these kids down really.
Right.
And then of course, once the prisoners are in, you know, like you're a prisoner,
then they often get you working and a lot of products are basically made by prisoners,
which are basically being paid as slaves.
More products than we would think.
Kind of shocking.
Like many grocery stores carry products that have some component
that's put together by prisoners.
Don't they see the...
How corporations work, where they become a tool of the corporation and now there's this
School-to-prison pipeline don't they see the direct correlation by if we make money from these people then we'll never not try to fix the problem
But how they get in prison in the first place?
Mm-hmm
Like no wonder why Finland has like 20 people incarcerated because they make no money off their prisons
right
It's not a it just makes perfect sense to me to just stop these for-profit prisons
Yeah
Yeah, it's sad and there's so much of it happening.
I mean, I just don't know how much headway we're making.
Is this slowly improving or has it been getting worse?
Where are we on this?
It's not getting better.
It's definitely not getting better. It's definitely not getting better. And then you hear about those judges that have like basically
are like putting away people for a long time in certain areas.
You know, and some of them have got caught for like just putting all these kids
away to fill these prisons and they're getting like back in payouts.
But how easy is it to even catch
these people?
Well, I mean, take a look at the one in our public eye right now, Kamala Harris.
She was, she put away people collectively for hundreds and hundreds of years collectively
of all of her sentences as a DA, at least as a DA in California, if I remember correctly. And she was directly responsible for incarcerating black men for years for weed.
Unbelievable. Yeah.
Yeah, Kamala is a confusing one to me.
I don't, I don't get how she got in this position or why anyone thought that it was a good idea. Did they not listen to her speeches before she was potentially
the vice president? Was it just purely a woke kind of vote grab? Yep, she was an intersectional
diversity hire. Yep. Well, also also what about that half of inmates
are dyslexic that are going in?
There's like a learning issue that they have.
And, you know, that sounds like a bit of a correlation there.
It's, our prisons are thriving
and our school systems are dying.
And they are, and we're failing these kids
because we can't teach them how to read,
or keep them engaged in class.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think-
I blame sugary cereals.
It's gotta be that.
It's all connected.
With sugary cereals.
It's all connected.
Yeah, I would go to school with a full belly of sugar
What is it frosted flakes? Yeah every morning good choice
And I was a terrorist in school. That's bad couldn't sit still and then I have dyslexia
Then you have 50 cents and you go get Mount Dew just to perk you up
It's like how many classrooms were just full of kids
drinking Mount Dews and sodas.
And they were like sit still and don't speak
and everyone's like.
Gah!
Drinking Mount Dew through those sour straws?
Oh yeah.
Candy all day.
I know.
It's the whole system.
It's makes you think. It's it's so it's you're actually correlate
incarceration directly in core eight correlates to being in unable to read
And a lot of these guys learn how to read in prison. Mm-hmm. So they've become a little more smart and they also become
Better criminals they could for sure and that's what Sheldon was saying. He was just a kid
They could for sure and that's what Sheldon was saying. He was just a kid
That was rambunctious and he got institutionalized and became a criminal
Mm-hmm in prison. He got out and became a lookout then he worked his way up to
Lending people drugs to sell for him right got into a minor scuffle with one of the people owed in thousands that guy got hurt
And he was it went in jail for 50 years. He was put away for 50 years before Josh got ahold of his story.
Yeah.
Think of the amount of good that Josh has done
and the awareness that he has now
that he can come on Rogan as much as he can.
I mean, you give this a generation,
and enough people would have heard these stories
over and over again to where it'd just be a thing
that people are way more aware of,
and it'd be like anything, when it's talked about more,
that becomes the type of issues that people are running on,
and they're focused on changing.
It's only when this stuff is like swept under the rug
for a long time we didn't even know
that these for-profit prisons work like this
and the judges were getting kickbacks to fill them.
And, you know, we're basically picking on individuals
they knew couldn't afford to defend themselves.
So they were easy targets.
But as soon as that narrative is discussed and discussed often, it's hard to be comfortable with. People are going to want to see change.
We don't like to hear things like this happen.
What's he saying about the black cops and judges will often be times
more harsh to their people of their same demographic than white ones?
Yeah, so they don't want to be seen, you know, they're trying to fit in with their own peers,
so they don't want to be seen as too lenient in an area of their own bias. So they're often
harder on them to show, you know, that they're tough
and they won't tolerate that kind of behavior either. Bad. You know, it's just, it's just
probably hard to stay kind of really level with these things. You know, it's like treat everyone the same and do the crime,
you know, put them away at the same rate. It's being a cop is a tough job. And it wears
them out more about these stories. Oh, and it drags you down, you get for every thank
you you get 10, like fuck yous, no down, like, yeah, no down. It's just, I mean, they're doing,
I would say anyone that's like defund the police
and fuck the police and it's like, look, I get it.
Okay, especially if you feel you've been picked on
and singled out by them through your life.
But I think it would be a smart move for more people
to do like those drive-alongs or whatever they call it.
The way you can go out and see what a day or night
is like for police officers in your local area.
Again, educating yourself.
I think it would change people's perspective
on how difficult that job is.
And it's not like it's that paid all that well either.
And they make the bulk of their money on overtime.
And guess what they just cut funding to in New York?
Over time.
No government employee gets overtime.
Trash collectors, anybody who's employed by the government cops do not get overtime right now
because that money has to go to giving money to immigrants.
Damn.
Directly get its shelters and prepaid credit cards, phones are going to people from other
than here and they're taking it out of Americans pockets.
Like the services that we need.
And the services that protect people like those immigrants and like us and and each us from each other
Those immigrants he protection too, but guess what? There's no more cops on the streets after 10 p.m. Right?
Well, there's a new shift or something. What's up with that New York?
It seems like they're coming around actually well, I mean
ultimately what happens is
You know the proof is in the pudding.
Eventually, you're gonna see the spoils of your labor and you're gonna go, whoops,
it sounded good to get rid of all the cops for these hours.
And now everything's way out of control and crime has gone through the roof.
So let's switch it up.
But it's just short-sightedness.
And all these stories are anecdotal until somebody, like they're just stories from one
person passed on to the other for now until we have enough data to correlate actions.
Yeah, it does take a while though, you know.
Yeah, it does. It does take a while though, you know, and to like, you know, work
through the fog of misinformation and it takes, it just takes time to be able to see
it clearly and oftentimes all the damage has been done and individuals have paid the price
for that. Like they paid a lot for it. Guess what? Guess what? A country has just been declared the safest country in the western hemisphere.
Ooh.
I don't know.
Sweden.
El Salvador.
El Salvador?
This is now safer than most of, most big cities in the United States.
How have they managed that?
Through a strong arm attack on gang members.
Okay.
They've incarcerated like hundreds of thousands
of gang members.
That's how to do it.
Anybody with a face tattoo gets put in jail over there.
Oh, geez.
Not exactly that, but close enough.
I get it.
Tyson shouldn't go over there then.
Oh, he'd be treated like a god, I'm sure.
He would, yeah.
He could go anywhere he wants.
He can, he can.
Who doesn't know who he is?
He's gotta be one of the most recognizable,
famous people in the world now.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, I'd imagine.
And can still punch you through a wall, easy.
Yeah, I forget where he was,
but he was near a rowdy crowd in another country,
and he shushed people and just silence, just the whole place fell silent.
If, if quiet, quiet down over there.
If Mike Tyson shushed me, I wouldn't ask why.
Yes, sir.
I would just nod.
Stay quiet.
Just keep quiet.
Yeah.
And hope that, hope that we could be friends at the end of it.
Well, there we go.
Josh Dubin doing God's work, wonderful.
I'm glad that Rogan has him on.
Always a pleasure.
It's just wacky to hear the stories and what's happening.
And I don't know what to do about it,
what to think about it,
but it's good that the message is getting out there.
I think that there's a big impact that is happening
and real change, you know?
And it's just kind of highlighting
how ridiculous elements of our justice system is
and it needs to be fixed.
He said the vestiges of segregation
are apparent in our system.
They're, we're a young country, we're working at the kinks,
but it still needs some work.
Yep, it does. Keep on it, but we gotta keep working.
All right, let's jump over to Jeff Dyer, finish up with him.
Jeff's an interesting character. His comedy is good. I would say it's,
it's, he does have some like risk a plots in his comedy,
but he's mostly a clean comic really. Very funny dude. And he's done the circuit. He's
been on the late nights. Through COVID, he had some interesting observations that kind of went against a lot of Hollywood, you know, liberal types. And
he kind of got singled out for that. I mean, he was frustrated with like the closures and
he just wasn't feeling what was happening like many people. But that's a tough stance to take,
especially in that area and that industry.
And by being somewhat outspoken with it, which is a brave move,
he started popping up on like Fox News, Fox and Friends,
being funny on that and pointing out some of the absurdity
with what was happening, which was needed.
That helped us pull out of it, honestly.
Yeah. A lot of people just kept their mouth shut and went along with everything that they
were asked to do.
Yeah. While also, you know, talking mad shit about anyone that didn't, even though they
weren't even sure why they were doing it.
Followers be followers, you know.
Yeah.
Which I say actually is fine, be a follower.
Like if that's the route you want to take, do it.
But don't demonize other people for not following you.
It doesn't make you right just because you chose that path.
But that's what was happening.
And yeah, I mean, I think what has come out of the other end for him is a different perspective,
a different comedian, and it's, I think it's pretty interesting.
And his career certainly hasn't suffered because of it, which should give people some hope.
I mean, really, you see it with most of the comedians that have come out the other side.
Like a lot of them had this philosophy throughout.
And I think it's part of being a comedian too,
is like you're analyzing social behaviors and society
and like trying to observe ludicrous behavior.
And there was so much of that in what happened with COVID
that it was undeniable to them
Yeah
We didn't know where to be with it, but we know now it was some of us do
it seemed like a
It seemed very blatantly a social control feature mechanism for sure experimented on us. Yeah. Yeah, we're experimented on for sure with the vaccine and
How they can get us to do anything that they tell us to do. Mm-hmm. Yeah
The
Joe talks about hemp and hemp as a product for a while. And, you know, this kind of comes back to
just the government banning it
because they didn't want any marijuana anywhere.
But just talking about hemp as a material,
do you know much about that?
I mean, one, it's a protein, you can take it powder
and it has lots of aminos in, it's very healthy.
You can make clothing from it, rope.
I have a hemp gi, they were talking about hemp keys. It's by far the best key I have. By far the best.
Do what?
Is it rough in any way?
No, mine isn't. I'll tell you one thing it does is it doesn't have a tendency to smell as much as my other
geese.
You know, like if you have a ghee
and maybe it wasn't a super sweaty sash,
you might wear it again.
You got to be careful with that
cause you can get a bit, bit pongy.
The hemp one you can honestly wear a few times.
Like it just doesn't seem to hold the odor in the same way.
And the material is super strong
Like so far I don't have a rip on it
I have some other standard geese that I don't have rips on either that are newer
But eventually you do right they're gonna tear it somewhere tear
Below that knee panel my nose here. Yeah, and
around like
the
What's this bit?
The wrist sleeve.
The wrist sleeve, but yeah, it often tears that
cause people are yanking on it,
but the hemp seems very strong.
It's pretty incredible material.
And then you can build like houses out of this stuff.
Yeah, I've heard that.
How do we not want this material?
Seems very useful.
You can make it into diesel.
You can make hemp into biofuel.
You can...
Really?
You can...
Yeah, George Washington had a hemp factory.
Like he had a hemp field.
I hope I'm not just totally talking out of my ass right now,
but our founding fathers grew hemp.
They ran into it.
They were hip dudes.
Yeah, let's bring that back.
We want some good renewable resources.
I mean, it seems like you can do everything with it,
plus you get weed out of it too, right?
Or like somehow, CBD, tons of CBD.
Let's bring the price down on CBD.
Can we all agree on that?
It still seems too expensive for what it is.
I think it might be where the area of the world you're in.
Might be, yeah.
They're not huge fans of legalizing the weeds here
in Tennessee.
Come on, nerds, relax.
Literally relax. Chill out. Chill out. Come on nerds, relax. Literally relax.
Chill out. Chill out.
They're just like, no, we only drink.
Jack Daniels here.
Gallons of whiskey, that's all we need.
Gallons of whiskey, that's what they want.
Yeah.
I'll have to look into a hemp key.
I'll look into it.
Yeah, dude, they're a bit more money, but they're worth it.
Check them out. I'll send you the link to the one I have and you check that out
I think it was like 200 bucks wasn't cheap, but okay, but it was also an a3l like those long ones are
harder to come by and
Usually you got monkey you got monkey arms, bro. It's not my fault. I was born that way
Jeff really liked some older stories of Rogan, especially the fear factor
day where he got basically in a bit of a fight with one of the
contestants. Hearing that they didn't have any security on that show was kind of unusual.
You would think that shows just would have security, right? You've got a whole production team, at least have one guy.
One huge dude.
One huge dude.
Big old black dude is what I'd want.
Yeah.
Like 300 pounds, you know, real chill, but knows how to snap some bones.
But yeah, he used to work for a Snoop Dogg or something.
100%.
That's who that's what you want.
Yeah. Like a Shax size dude. But yeah used to work for a Snoop Dogg or something 100% that's who that's what you see yeah like a shacks
size dude
chilling
But yeah, no they didn't have it and Joe had to grab a hold of this guy and
It's it's a great clip if you guys haven't seen it. I mean it's it's og rogan at his best
I don't think they have a play edit, but you can see the clip on YouTube.
And what's that one where he was working with couples
and there was one lady who was like hitting her husband
and he's like, don't do that.
And the guy was like, don't tell my wife what to do.
That is the fight.
That was the one.
That's the one.
Yeah.
He's like, don't do that.
And Joe's like, no, you can't do that.
Like Joe kept it, like he raised the energy to match the guy,
but he didn't lose his cool.
And he stood strong with what, like he didn't look afraid.
He looked ready.
Yeah, I wouldn't fuck with Joe.
Dude, he would have fucked that guy up so bad.
And the fact that all he did was just kind of get him in a clench and dude, really nothing with him was actually super nice because Joe could have just wrecked him.
But he didn't have anything to prove. He was just like, you just can't do that. You can't assault people and you can't fucking yell at me and come at me either.
So no.
It went from protecting that guy to having to protect other people from that guy. Oh
Yeah, well what was great is they're like interviewing other contestants and they were just saying
Like yeah, you don't want to fuck with Joe Rogan. Like what were you thinking idiot?
So good dude or guys ego got bruised. Oh, no doubt. He's got to pay for that one forever
Supposedly that guy was a nut job though
All right, let's finish up with a bit of the
wacky Canadian
You know transgender stuff 50 year old man
identifies as a woman
Changing with teenage girls. He's in the on the swim team because he identifies as like a 15 year old girl
Is that what it is? It is that yep, Canada
Yeah, and California to the north and here's the thing just by saying this some people could say
They could listen to this and they could say oh, well, you're just not inclusive. Well
no, I say that you could identify as a woman and even a much
younger age if you want to. But I don't think it's unreasonable to not have access to whatever
you think you are identifying as because there are inherent safety issues. And even if there
aren't, there could be perceived ones.
And I don't think it's unreasonable for 15 year old girls
to not wanna change around somebody
that has male genitalia,
regardless of how they identify.
It's probably not a good feeling.
If it's not doing physical damage,
being a 15 year old girl is hard enough. I meant, and it being changing in front of other 15 year old girls is hard enough
They have a lot of body issues typically as a pop as a population
Imagine now you have to do it with this guy
Becky whatever is right. Well, you're changing in front of what looks like your dad
But it's not someone else.
I mean, it's not even appropriate to be have your dad changing in front of you
if you're a girl and you're 15.
And that's your dad.
I mean, that might be the only time, you know, if you it's horrifying to
walk in on your parents changing, like, you don't want that.
It's terrible.
It will scar us.
It scars these people. Can. Yeah. I'm scarred. It doesn't sound good. It's terrible. It will scar us. It scars these people.
Can.
I'm scarred.
It doesn't sound good.
It was an accident.
And then they finished up with Bigfoot.
And I love how Jeff was sure that Bigfoot exists
and there were hundreds of thousands of them.
That cracked me out.
He's like, they're everywhere.
There's loads of them.
But what a wacky thing that we still hold on to.
I mean, that definitely is more wacky than the UFO stuff.
Even when, like UFOs are more legit today than ever,
just because of all the sightings
and the things that have been happening recently.
But you know, there was a time
when it was people banging on about UFOs.
You're like, all right, this guy might be a bit of a wacko.
Right, but Bigfoot is always been that.
You know what?
I don't make fun of your religion.
Okay, buddy.
Why don't you just lay off Bigfoot?
He's out there scrounging around.
Scrounging around.
Well, then he's good.
It's good at scrounging.
It's good at staying hidden.
You know, we, I guess we found a few footprints, but not even like one bone, one skull, we would, dude.
I know. Well, let's just take it easy. Let's not throw it out just yet.
Let's wait.
All right, let's, let's give, let's give a scenario then of how they could exist.
And let's make sense of it. So they only die in caves.
Okay. Right.
What if they have intricate burial practices where they only die in caves. OK. Right? But if they have intergalbarial practices
where they eat their dead or burn them or something,
they could be an interdimensional creature,
just like potentially the UFOs are
interdimensionally traveling.
There's hundreds of thousands of reported sightings
by some pretty rapidal people as even on top of that.
There is not that many sightings. Hundreds of thousands.
That's a lot over the whole world.
Dude, I think there's like 50.
50 sightings.
I follow, I guess. Yeah.
I haven't been watching the Bigfoot shows. All I know is they haven't found him and it's many seasons
There's a you there's I like what do they think he eats?
Just put out giant piles of bananas in the woods and just sit around with some cameras. He's gonna find out that's that's racist
Gets bigfoot's dude
What? Oh, it gets bigfoot.
Dude.
I bet they love bananas.
They would eat them.
Man.
They'd be into it.
Yes, they would.
They would.
Well, okay, so you know Les Stroud, the survivor man, super reputable TV producer, makes documentaries.
Yeah, yeah.
Great guy.
Maybe.
Yep.
No, well.
He has a 10 part episode on Bigfoot.
And he's a skeptic, but I like what he's up to.
He didn't see one.
Of course he didn't see one, but he did not see one.
Wait, wait, he did not see one.
He did not see one.
No, he didn't see one.
He absolutely did not find anything.
But there was one.
He puts this apple on a tree with a motion-sensing camera on there
And he's sleeping nearby and in the morning the apples gone and he reviews his footage and there's nothing nothing takes it except for one
Blip of the frame. There's like a knobby top of a head that pokes up
And then it's gone. So, you know, that's, there's no evidence.
That's the conclusion.
It's like, hey, how about don't put the camera so close to the apple so we can see the whole thing here?
Are you telling me that Les Stroud doesn't know how to work his cameras?
Well, because you can fuck right off.
That's the case.
Well, there we go.
On that note, I don't believe in Bigfoot and P. Dust.
Hold on.
That's what we know.
Hold on.
Let's go for another hour.
We can do it.
If Mulder told us in the X files,
the truth is out there, and I want to believe.
Right.
I like the idea of it, but I'd like a bit more.
It is fun.
It is fun.
I think it would be cooler though, if like ghosts existed and there was like,
you know, a bit more like evidence in that direction.
I think that could be fun.
I'm going to send you some literature and I would like you to read it. I think that could be fun. I'm gonna send you some literature
and I would like you to read it.
Okay, okay.
Can't wait.
All right guys, well thank you so much for tuning in,
staying with us and enjoying this week of Rogan Reviews.
Morphe next week, we got some great guests,
Shane Gillis is on next week.
Can't wait for it. Thank you Pete and
enjoy the Super Bowl everybody. Later.