Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - A JRE Classic Review of podcast 1 with Brian Redban
Episode Date: February 16, 2019This is a review of Joe Rogan’s first ever JRE podcast where he streamed live on Dec. 24th 2009. Joe and Brian take questions from Twitter and over 300 people join in on the experience. It’s reall...y cool to listen back to the very first 1 and see how far the podcast has grown. Joe get’s in to everything from Marijuana, conspiracy theories and basically all the usual shit he talks about all the time. It was great. Check it out if you haven’t heard it for a while or ever! Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews: Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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Soy Laura y quiero ser una profesional 360.
El doble grado en comunicación y comunicación digital me ayudará a conseguirlo.
Doble grado en derecho ya de fisioterapia, de porte, más de 30 años formando profesionales de éxito.
Centro Universitario San Isidoro, al escrito la Universidad Pablo Dio la Vide de Sevilla.
Entran Centro San Isidoro.es y prepárate para el futuro hoy. Hello and welcome to a very special edition of the JRE Review. Today I will be reviewing a JRE Classic Podcast number one with Brian over 10 years old. Well, because I want to
occasionally go back and find some of the best and classic and most enjoyable and my favorite
podcasts from all the years and do a bit of review on them. Maybe encourage you guys to
go back and listen to them or maybe you guys will have some suggestions of your
favorite podcasts from back in the day that I could go back and review and check out
just because it's cool to listen to the progression of this podcast, how things have changed
and the very first one is really the best example of that.
So let's start!
Welcome to the Joe Rogan Experience Room View!
Where each week I review every single episode of the Joe Rogan Experience.
What more do you want?
Okay, so the first podcast that they ever did was streaming on some sort of service called like you stream or something
like this, something that I was unaware of and I didn't really know. And I think what they did
to set it up and if you go back and listen to this very first podcast, which again, when you look
at Joe Rogan's podcast, he has every single one that he ever did on there, which I think is fantastic. And I just think
it's another testament to how great this guy is when it comes to putting his media out
there and standing behind it. He hasn't gone back, removed any that he thought maybe
were controversial. He hasn't gone back and changed any from things that he said that
he thinks could be bad. He's just left all of the data out there and you can just check them out and listen to them in any order that you want.
And that is really cool.
And it allows for things like this, which is awesome.
But he started off and it's just like, it just sounds like two guys, Brian Redband, Joe Rogan,
just like working on their computer, going through websites
and just talking to each other.
It's almost like they don't even know that the device is recording, right?
And then Joe and Redbant start taking some questions from, I think, Twitter.
So that he's getting like Twitter questions.
And I think he kept calling it, oh, I tweeted that or something.
He wasn't saying tweet.
So I don't know if the word tweet came in later in 2009,
but they kept saying that somebody had just tweeted it.
I don't know, it was funny. It just didn't sound right.
And then they were talking about internet speeds
and kind of getting it up and running.
And this was definitely like a new forum of kind of asking questions and interacting with Joe Rogan's fan base.
So he's he's talking away a couple of like maybe a hundred people that tuned in.
I guess he put a link in like a Twitter feed and people were just coming online and they they were asking so they were working through all of that then Joe says
Hi everybody after like 15 minutes or something have just kind of chatting with Red Band about which website does what and
Then waits a little bit and then he and then he was like I don't think we're quite high enough for this
Which is great and then you know they smoke a little bit of weed
But it's it's nice to know that like this is is their very first ever podcast. And that's how they
get started with it. Not to say that they're not, you know, Joe's not smoking for everything.
But I mean, he made it clear right away that even back in 2009, huge supporter of it,
he's not ashamed of marijuana and all the rest of it. And, you know, and also just what this podcast,
what Joe Rogan's podcast is,
like a kind of a learning as he goes environment
that's pretty much unedited.
And I love that, you know, the production value
is just to make it more usable
rather than, you know, this concern of like professionalism
and all the rest of it.
Not saying he's not professional, but you know what I mean?
It's it's a raw type of thing.
And he started to take some questions.
He also had like snowflakes on the video that they were streaming
because they were streaming a video with this too.
And I think you can still watch that on YouTube.
They look pretty bad.
And then it has it has like special effects of like snowfall
because it was Christ Christmas Eve back in 2009
So Joe's really excited that about 113 people had tuned in
That's a me hilarious just because now he gets tens of millions of downloads
But he was like wow 113 that's crazy. Okay, let's start answering some good questions
Which I thought was great
One thing that really set the time is that he talks
about how you can now go to a doctor in California and get a prescription for weed, obviously
in 2019, it's legal, recreationally, you know, and those weed shops everywhere and were
very used to it. But back then, it wasn't that way. And it was exciting for them. They
were pumped to be like, dude, can you believe all you have to do is go to your doctor and say you get migraines?
I just thought that was great.
You know, thank God things have changed. And no doubt, you know, Joe Rogan's played a
factor in that in the last 10 years. Not to give him too much credit, but I mean, he definitely
has been a very loud and positive
voice for the legalization of marijuana. And that's really undeniable, you know. They kind of
talk about current events of the time. He talks about his time on the man show with Doug Stanhope
and how that didn't go all that well because he kind of equates it to like the Janet Jackson
because he kind of equates it to like the Janet Jackson nudity incident with Justin Timberlake at the Super Bowl where TIT popped out and just kind of how everybody reeled back on nudity
and then they took, they really promised Doug and Joe a lot on the man show, said they
could do whatever they want, but it turned out that wasn't the case.
They were real strict on things and it was just kind of bullshit. So I think in a lot of ways that was when Joe really
stepped away from television and just kind of felt like dealing with producers and people
that would fuck with shows was just no good. So it happened with this shippel show and I think
this is why this avenue of just, you know, doing fear factor to make good money and then eventually after that doing this podcast was just an idea to
I think he set out to be creatively free rather than just chase the money right away and look the money followed so there's definitely some merit behind what he tried.
He sounds pretty similar, you know, 10 years you learn a lot but remember he was like 40 then I think it was just turning 40 so
He you know, he'd been obviously still famous a while a good probably 15 years or close to it
I don't know when he started to get really famous, but he sounds pretty similar
The the podcast itself like the audio is slightly better now and there's no dead air, there's no
time where they're just kind of talking to each other and not responding to questions.
But otherwise, the way that he tells stories is as concise and is clear and in a way
maybe he's a little bit faster.
He almost sounds slightly more aggressive with his opinions in a sense, you know, he's a bit
calm and now, but you know, he's got a bit of older, but generally the clarity is
there, the honesty, he's like really clearly separating things about being an
honest person and you know giving people the benefit of the doubt and he kind of
has that thought process of forgiveness, it's just kind of like, you know, to see where he was even then,
even before the thousands of hours of podcasting practice
he's had, you know, it was still Joe Rogan,
that's why he was so perfect for this format,
I mean, exactly.
And, you know, again, really gives good breakdowns.
He was doing some conspiracy theory breakdowns, why some of them bullshit, why some of them
were worth listening to, you know, what kind of wraps him in.
Like, he definitely has that clear perspective behind what he's saying.
Then he gets really excited about something like 364 people are online listening the reason I'm like
Putting these numbers down to is because they're so astronomically small for what Rogan's podcast is now that he's like
It was just funny to me that that was even a thing and he even equated it to it being a packed comedy club
So he was like, oh shit. We need to be more interesting. Let's answer some questions. And it was cool.
He talks a bit about his addictions too,
how he gets pretty addicted to things,
like video games and pool in the past.
And now, or at least then, 2009,
he's more conscious about trying to get addicted to things
that are very positive for his life.
You know, like Jiu Jitsu or doing more comedy or you know
though it's just working out those sorts of things, right? So if you have that
addictive type of personality like Joe, it's probably a smart move to make
sure that your addictions are as positive as they can be. Because you're
enjoying them just the same, it's not to say that you wouldn't enjoy Jiu Jitsu as
much as playing video games, you probably enjoy it more.
He gets into float tanks.
I love that, you know, he's always been an advocate for float tanks and using them and even in the very first podcast, he's talking about float tanks, describing
how they work and what they do for you, he even does it in really quite a, a trippy way.
And then he does something as raw as you can imagine.
He tests his mic out.
trippy way. And then he does something as raw as you can imagine. He tests his mic out.
Excuse me. So because it's a brand new
podcast and and streaming idea, he has three settings on his microphone and he'd like runs through a more and asks people on Twitter which setting is the best. It's like how raw is that? How
how like think of the types of media and television that were around then, and
he took it to, like, as basic a thing as you can go, just like two guys on the fly, fucking
around, figuring it out in their basement, and then turning it into something amazing.
And the reason I'm, like, into that idea is because I think that, you know, it inspires
me, and it should inspire you
too to be like I can start a project that doesn't have to be perfect on day one.
It can be clumsy and shitty and I shouldn't lose any momentum. I can just
continue and every day I'll get better. You know and you will, you'll get better.
You don't have to go out and buy all the best equipment on day one to have a
good podcast or to have a good YouTube channel
Just get something and start doing it and be consistent like that's kind of a message that Joe says a lot and I I really do
Think that it makes a lot of sense
Towards the end of this podcast because he does get a phone call from his wife being that it's Christmas Eve saying hurry up and get done
So he's like, okay, he got to finish up. He ends up with close to 380 people tuning in, which
he's pretty pumped about. And then this is the important part. He and Redban said that
they're going to commit two hours a week to making this podcast, which eventually becomes
the JRE experience, one of the biggest downloaded podcasts in the world. And there's one point that I really like right at the end that red bands like,
can you imagine looking back at this over 50 years, 50 years from now and saying,
how stupid was this idea? Well, I say this, we can look back from just 10 years
and see that this is one of the most important platforms of information and media that maybe
has ever been created from these two stoners on day one.
So yeah, I say if you haven't heard this one ever and you're a Joe Rogan fan, go back
and listen to it.
It's really cool to go back and listen to just certain ones randomly if you have time
and yeah, I got a lot out of it.
I really liked it.
And, you know, who knows?
We'll look back in another 10 and see where it is.
But anyway, thanks for tuning in guys.
I appreciate it, peace. En el Centro Universitario Sanisidoro, has criado la Universidad Pablo de la Video de Sevilla,
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