Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - A Review of 1226 Bari Weiss
Episode Date: January 27, 2019Bari is an opinion writer and editor at the New York Times. She’s a very smart and well informed individual with a lot of great points. Her conversation with Joe was very interesting and really got ...Joe thinking about some tough issue.. And her about a fake moon landing lol. This was a great podcast to review. Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews: Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
Transcript
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Hello there! In today's review of the Joe Rogan podcast, we have podcast 1228
Barry Weiss. Barry is a girl's name in this case. She is an editor and writer at
the New York Times. Very smart lady and she had a fascinating conversation with
Joe where they got into lots of interesting things
and I really enjoyed it. It was a cool conversation. If you haven't listened to Podcast 1228
definitely check it out and I'm about to review it. So here we go.
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?
So they start out their conversation talking about the picture that's surfaced of a young
boy wearing a MAGA hat.
And you know, he has one of those,
Make America Great Again hats on.
And in front of him is a Native American guy playing the bongos.
And the kid is young, he's 16,
and he has that kind of fraternity,
somewhat douchebaggy.
Well, more, more preppy look to him.
You know, the kind of kind of white guy kid that many minorities probably
would love to hate, like that sort of a look. Anyway, this has been in the news because
there was a big kickoff about this and how dare this kid do this and Kathy Griffin was
like, I need names and shame, shame, shame, and you know, this kid's this and Kathy Griffin was like I need names and shame shame shame and you know
this kid's taken a lot of abuse for this but the real story come it works out to be different
and I haven't seen all the evidence for it but what I'm hearing is that um you know it was
it was not as it appears and this all the native gentleman like walked very close to these
young kids and started playing loudly and really being quite confrontational in his own way
and you know it's just it's easy to have just one picture represent an entire event, right? And regardless of who's in the picture and what's
happening, it's just another example of this judging immediately destroy culture that we have.
Like, one tweet comes out from one celebrity and immediately they've got to be fired who want them hung that done and
In the sense of just seeing a picture. It's not like somebody even said anything. It just
Is perceived as looking bad again, you know, you just can't jump to those sorts of conclusions because people's lives
Are getting destroyed over this stuff and everybody just wants to kind of, you know, grand slam their opinion and their frustrations.
So Joe Rogan has talked about this a lot on his podcast recently.
I mean, you guys have fans you know that he's going over it and I mean, I think he's making
the point again and again and again because it's so important.
It's like, well, maybe this doesn't affect you today, but it will soon, if people are able to
just jump on you for anything, anything that you've said or done or even just perceived
to have done, it's going to be a big problem.
You know, this young boy was attacked online.
Somebody that looked like him was attacked online from what Bauru was saying, and you know,
she's a very liberal progressive person in her own right, but she's saying, this is a
major problem.
We need to pay attention to this attack culture and kind of back up a little bit from it
to mess.
You know, the question there is what's happening in this like left is a progressive world.
You know, what do you guys think?
People are saying that they can never be forgiven, you know, and how can you say that?
Especially about a 16 year old kid.
Joe makes the point that 16 year old kids don't know shit.
They don't know anything.
Remember being 16, if you are 16 now and listening,
I'm sure you feel like you know a lot of things
and you do to some degree,
but you'll learn a hell of a lot more.
And that's what makes you, when you're older,
realize wow, I didn't know a lot at that age.
And therefore, you know, this is
why you can't be tried like adults and children get different courts, you know. Sometimes
you can be tried as an adult, but mostly, you know, you're either juvenile in court or
an adult over 18. And it's because the way that you see the world and how you've developed is not fully formed at all.
So you shouldn't be in that sense completely responsible for the things you've done. You need to make mistakes to figure out what you're doing.
You're supposed to be a bit stupid when you're 16.
If you never made any mistakes, you're not going to learn anything, you know, that's kind of it's kind of where it's at.
But you know, as a person, Barry, and you're
and you can tell in this conversation, very educated, well thought. She's a very smart
lady, and she really presents herself very well. So keep an eye out for her, you know, just
in the media world. They get into something a little fun. Joe hits it with the moon landing conspiracy. She doesn't know much about that. And just kind of talking about some
of the fuckery that went into the photos and different things. And it's quite
funny to hear somebody like Barry who's clearly not a conspiracy theory type
person, but is never even like kind of wet her beak into it. You know, just
having no idea that it was even out there
and it's not even raised around questions.
I guess there's only so much time,
you can't just jump into every conspiracy.
But I thought it was quite interesting.
She's a Jewish woman and was talking about trying to get Joe to go to Israel
and set up a trip, which Joe was kind of into.
I mean, he said that he would take Ari Sh up a trip, which Joe was kind of into. I mean,
he said that he would take Ari Shafia, which would make a lot of sense. I already knows
that place one loves to travel. So that was quite interesting to see if Joe would get
out there. And, you know, it's a smart move in his position because in some way he has
to have opinions on this stuff when it's brought up
and no better way to really kind of understand a place than it is to visit it, obviously.
I think that would be very interesting to go there. She brings up why, or that Joe says why does
she think that the Jewish people have often been targeted throughout history and Barry brought up some interesting point and I wonder what you think about it.
She just kind of mentioned that a lot of way racism, bigotry, is like it's
punching down. You're in a stronger position and you're just kind of hitting
down but when it comes to the hate, anti-sumaticate it's not always seen that way it's almost like
punching up it's like they're the puppets pulling the strings there's like elite few of wealthy
bankers or however you see you know kind of like the Jewish people stereotypes and it's that they're punching up and it creates this frustration and hatred.
I thought that was an interesting take and I had never really thought too much about
that issue, but she put it in an interesting way.
And then she said, you know, it's not just a religion, it's a tribe.
So even people that aren't super religious that are Jewish, see themselves as Jews and they marry
other Jews and it's this that kind of tribe mentality. It's very old, religion and tribe.
So they often see things differently, which was quite interesting. And another part of
the narrative that makes for the continued kind of attacking of the Jewish people in different areas is that even
in the Bible, if you look at the dialogue, the story of who killed Jesus who's seen as
the Jewish people that even though it was the Romans did it, but it was, you know, the
story, like I say, that the Jewish people kind of said some things to the Romans and wanted them gone and do the da,
and it continues that narrative.
She talks a lot about Israel just as a place
and is, for what it is in the Middle East,
it's a really great democratic, Western style country,
which you don't get in the Middle East
with a lot of other countries. I mean, if you would have gone on vacation in the Middle East, I'm sure going to Israel would feel...
I don't know, necessarily, it feels the safest, but it would feel the most like what you'd be used to if you're from the West.
And that was a cool thing. I did not heard anybody describe that. Joe talks quite a lot in the positive about
Barry. I mean, he knew about her before coming on the podcast like he does with really
any of his guests. And he was really impressed with her. He said that he said that she represents
reason and well thought out opinions. And you'll notice that throughout the podcast,
like she's very clever. She's really paying attention to everything that she's saying and
you know I liked it a lot so it was more of a funny part towards the end of
the podcast it's definitely worth listening to where Joe breaks down Ace Venture
of Pet Detective and he says it's a movie watched it with his kid recently and
said it's a hugely transphobic movie, yet because when he explains it, listen to the podcast, but he explains why that is,
and if you don't remember, I'd kind of forgotten a lot of it, but it's just something you
don't think of. It was made in like 93, and for it to be hugely transphobic, man, in a
different time and a different kind of culture, I guess you could say, well, just
different time, same culture. But, you know, what do we do? Do we delete it now? Do we get
rid of it just because it is that? No, we keep, it's a point in time, you know, we can't
just erase history because we don't like how it sounds. We shouldn't change words in
old books. We can't edit all the movies. I mean it was just a time when sensitivity was different. You see it though, you look, you watch
like movies from like the 50s. The guys were always just slapping the women when
they felt like the women were out of control. That wasn't a salt. I mean it was a
salt, but I mean in the movie, the dialogue suddenly didn't change the salt and
battery. It was just like, oh, she needs to be quiet and continue.
Which today is shocking, but back then,
that was kind of how it is.
So anyway, to go back and change things
because we don't like how they sound today is silly.
You just change the day and you kind of kind of move from there.
And then towards the end of the conversation, they talk a little bit about traveling,
traveling to cool places, you know, and discuss what you learn about the culture and the
people and how people are different.
And then also, not traveling to dangerous places because they still exist.
You know, dangerous places do exist. You need to know a way you're traveling to. Recently,
they talked about how the two girls from, I believe, Norway were beheaded in Morocco and Joe
said he saw that. He saw, he watched the beheading. I don't know why he would. If you watched it,
do you watch those sorts of things? I don't know. that's not my capacity, I don't want to watch that. But yeah, I guess he did it just to remind himself
that it happens in the world and there are dangerous places. But then thank you all, there
are lots of beautiful places too. But anyway, check out that podcast, it was a great conversation.
That's my review today, thanks for joining in. I appreciate you guys. Peace.
you