Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - Joe Rogan Experience Review for August 1st
Episode Date: August 6, 2019This weeks episodes are scarce due to Joe's absence. We have episodes 1328 with Whitney Cummings and her creepy ass sex doll followed by 1329 with Brian Moses of the Roast Battle. Two great comedy gue...sts for a solid week of comedy talk. Lets get into it! Enjoy my review folks! Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6ilK4Zrqk2ZeowbOo7pXgw? Please email me here with any suggestions and questions for future shows..
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Alright, welcome to this episode of the JRE Review.
Podcasts have been scarce. A lot of this is because Joe Rogan is now touring with Dave Shapale, or at least he was a lot last week, and I know they have more dates to go.
So, you know, podcasts are on the backbone, but that's okay. We've got a couple to end the week with. Whitney Cummings, the legend of comedy that she is, and then Brian Moses.
I'm joined, as always, by my good friend Mark who what's up?
Mark what up?
Dude Joe Rogan and De Chappelle. Are they coming to LA? Can we get on that?
I don't think that they are I'm not sure what they're well they hit Seattle they hit Oregon
They're kind of like in different places. They went to Utah. It's kind of weird they're not doing in LA one
unless I'm just being ridiculous and I haven't seen it,
but I don't remember seeing anything for that.
How immense is that show?
Like to see those two perform
and then Ian Edwards is opening up for them as well.
Oh man.
I mean, I would watch, I would go to a Dave Chappelle concert
if I candle opened up for him
Like it just be just a well watermelon on stage just in front of a micro for microphone for an hour doing nothing
I'd be like this is you have to watch it completely burn out completely before they've come on
I would do it. I pay a lot of money to do a
Candle then some paint drawing and then Chappelle still the best show you've ever ever ever. Yeah, still the best show
I would love to see what is new material as I assume he's
He's building up to another one of those Netflix specials which are brilliant
I mean he's raising the bar in what those specials are for sure
He is I mean did I went and had lunch with what those specials are for sure. Oh, he is.
I mean, dude, I went and had lunch with my brother
and I was quoting some of his bits.
And my brother was just dying.
Like, dying.
I was like, dude, you have to watch his Netflix specials.
They're so good.
He's like, I'm going to, I'm going to.
I'm like, you don't even realize.
And we were talking about how we really grew up
with stand-up comedy.
Like, our parents watched standup crazy.
It was a very big thing in our house.
Sunday nights, Fox always had Sunday night comedy on.
Hosted usually by an old comic named Wayne Cotter who's still a favorite of mine.
He doesn't even tour anymore.
He just does corporate gigs.
I looked him up like a month ago.
And I was like, this dude was so damn funny. He always cracked me up. I miss him. I really do, but he would
host this show on Fox Sunday nights. And it was great. There's a bunch of up and coming
comics, you know, back then, this was 20 years ago. This was when this, the 30 years ago,
it was like around this time of the Simps premiered and things like that. Mary, but children were still on the air, stuff like that.
So, and like, stand up specials, like everything.
Our parents just a nun dated up with us, and they loved comedy.
That and then like Mel Brooks movies, airplane comedies like that.
That was our house, just nonstop laughter because of comedy.
So, but yeah, that's all I have.
Do you think that that was a big reason?
Huge.
Why you got into stand-up?
Huge.
I also think it's one of the reasons I probably had a better handle on stand-up when I first
started out than a lot of comics.
First of all, I started when I was much older.
So I think, you know, it's hard to, there are funny comics in their 20s, no doubts, but
a lot of comics will tell you they didn't really feel like they became a true stand-up comic
until they were much older because you've done some shit, you've lived through some shit,
you've experienced things, you have age and wisdom combined to inform your perspective on the world, your views on life, and space at comedy is just an extension
of those things.
So, but I feel like people aren't taking,
well people aren't taking people in their 20s,
all that seriously.
Unless you're that age as well,
when it comes to stand up,
you're reflecting on things that you've seen and experienced, and you're trying to do it with a little bit of authority. Right. You're you're reflecting on things that you've seen and experienced and you're trying
to do it with a little bit of authority. Exactly. In a sense, even if you're a silly comedian,
you've got to be like, I've been there, I've done that. That's why you get that streak of comedians
that are like 40 to 50 slightly onwards and they're talking about family, they're talking about
jobs, you know, they
can just talk about everything, but they look like dads.
Right, they do.
No, where else does that work?
That doesn't work.
I'm like in the movies or on TV or, you know, I mean, SNL, SNL is made up of 40 year olds.
Yeah, it feels like it doesn't.
It feels like it.
Sometimes.
But, I mean, obviously obviously there just needs that there are going to be exceptions
Funny young comic you and I have worked with named Dave
Black kid and I think he comes from Missouri and I think he's he's a he's funny
He's got funny jokes, but he also comes from a unique perspective of being an African-American growing up and emotionally
You know white, and he's
had different experiences with that.
I think he brings those experiences to his comedy, and he has something to say on it because
he lived his entire life.
So even though he's still young and ridiculously more handsome than either of us combined,
he's got something to say because of the circumstances of his life. And I think that informs a lot of comedy, but you know, things weren't, I mean, I had a
normal childhood, some parts shitty, some parts great, so it took some age for me to get
a real perspective on things, I think.
But my parents showing comedy to us so often, I think really helped me understand what funny is,
how to tell a joke, just the rhyme and the meter and the rhythm of joke
telling. I learned that from watching stand-up and from Mel Brooks movies,
because that is the funniest dude on the planet.
Yeah, for sure. You are right about Dave mean it does help to have had a lot of crazy experience
It does and you can squeeze them in earlier for sure because you just find a voice for it
Absolutely
That allows you to kind of kind of get through it
But it but even even that being said I mean you what what is the peak because it's a combination of how good your comedy is but also
Where your reputation is like exactly who you are who's following you and it's kind of a beautiful journey to know
Unlike being an actor where is you know a lot of times you got to be good looking to be an actor
You've got to have a look the world. That shit's gonna fade. So you got to get in
It look that shit's gonna fade so you got to get in
With comedy it's like just look like something and continue to improve and these guys are peaking like
shappelle and and Rogan in their fifties. Yeah, I'm pretty sure it maybe
Shappelle is laid back for these but amaze yeah, you might be right because he's a couple of years older than me
I think let's see I was shappelle show came out when I just graduated college, I believe
So he's probably about 10 years older than me maybe so
Okay, you maybe let's he's close right? Maybe let's over the next 10 years. Yeah, he's gonna be able to really bank on
That's so it's it's purely the experience portion of
So it's purely the experience portion of this skill set that we go from. Yeah, I mean, it's important. It's important.
It still gives us a chance, is what I'm saying.
I mean, I did a show.
Yeah, we got it.
We got it.
We've gone from no chance to slim chance.
Slim, yes, slim to none, but.
But I was doing a show.
I was doing a show with a bunch of young comics a couple weeks ago and
Funny guys. I mean they they can tell a joke
But a lot of it was about hand jobs
And I was like, you know
hand jobs and not that funny anymore like
I mean, it's just like how many different ways can you go about hand jobs?
Yeah, this guy was like, how did he, how'd,
yeah, there's one guy was talking about, he's like,
all right, so I'm gonna give you the top three hand jobs
I've ever had in my life.
And I was like, oh boy, here we go.
Okay, that's gonna be interesting,
because this is like, I don't know,
what, what, what, what, what, what,
and he didn't really have a perspective on it.
He didn't really, he just kind of like listed them.
I was like, well, that's, that's,
it's like one of those food, both like was like, well, that's, that's, it's like
one of those food, like recipe recipes. You want to find a recipe online. It's just like
a food blog and they just tell you about the time that, you know, their mother made this
for them. You know, just give me the fucking recipe. That's kind of how I felt about that
set. I was like, oh, just don't, don't list your favorite hand jobs. Just get to, get
to the nitty-gritty.
Yeah.
Sure. Yeah. Well, but I mean, that's the nitty-gritty. Sure.
Well, but I mean, that's the thing with the different audiences.
Sure.
There'd just be certain ones that will want more, will want that unique perspective.
And when the comic doesn't deliver it, you're just stood there with people not really laughing
as hard as you want.
Yeah.
With the energy that you want.
So you'll go, oh, oh, there's something missing here.
I need to really find out it's not just the top superficial
a little bit of laughter.
Where's the, where's the depth?
Where's the, in this part of the, where's the nitty-gritty?
Where's the meat? Yeah, as it were.
Yeah, and it's very difficult to find that.
And that's, that's the part.
And it's like, how do you say it? How is it to you in your voice? That's the shit that always catches me out.
I'm like, hold on. How do I say it? Right. I think all comics struggle with that because a lot of
times you're like, I'm going to kind of speak what how I feel and what I feel like. The truth is
about this sort of thing, but you're like, well, this ruffle feathers, will people agree with me?
You know, the class comedians find the truth and everything. but you're like, oh, well, this ruffle feathers. Will people agree with me? You know, with the classic comedians find the truth
and everything and you can't, and you laugh
because you can't help but agree, even though sometimes
it's horrible.
You're like, oh my God, but that's so funny
because he's right or she's right.
And it's true.
It's true.
That's why, you're like, I shouldn't be laughing.
I shouldn't be laughing.
Well, that's why parenthood is such a popular topic for comics
because it's universal.
When comic comes out, it says,
don't you sometimes just want to murder your children?
And all the parents laugh because they're like,
hell yeah, I want to murder my children.
And then people in the audience like me
that don't have children, I'm like,
well, I sometimes want to murder other people.
Exactly.
Yeah, I do.
I guess I feel it.
It's true.
It's true.
Often and always.
If you had a chance yet to watch Whitney Cummings
new special.
No, our buddy J was asking me that the other day.
I haven't.
Yeah.
I haven't had a chance to either.
Do you love her?
I want to feel that.
I want to feel that.
I want to feel that.
I want to feel that. I want to feel that. I want to feel that. I want to feel that. I want to feel that. Obviously before this, I really, I do like a lot of her comedy. I
really do. I think she, she, um, she likes to pick on herself for her insecurities. I think
she's like quite neurotic about stuff she's talked before about. I think she takes beta blockers for her.
That makes sense.
Like in Randland.
So she's like a little anxious there.
She's, she even talked about having some plastic surgery
on this podcast and you can kind of tell.
Like she's had definitely some Botox.
Yeah, I think so.
That's a little work.
You know, so she, she's working through these kind of anxieties and it makes sense because
she's on a show.
She's famous, people are looking at her.
She's pretty, so they're judging her.
The judge around that immediately.
Yeah, she's getting into an age where, look, she's not 25 anymore.
Right, so wrinkles are starting to show and things are.
So there's a ton of pressure.
And she uses her comedy to kind of work through it
instead of being a female comic that is just talking
about vaginas all the time or just trying to like
gross you out to get some attention.
Right.
I don't know.
Sometimes that pops up and it gets tiring. You're like, look,
I know you're better than this. So stop saying those things. Exactly. I'm not feeling this.
But yeah, she's very clever. She is incredibly clever for sure. You can hear that on this podcast. And then, you know, she brings this sex doll
to kind of sit with, which was creepy as hell.
I mean, you could see it on,
two ways to watch this podcast,
or listen to it, obviously just the audio,
but even Joe says at the beginning, like watch it,
watch the YouTube.
It was horrifying to be honest.
That thing is really creepy.
For one, it looks exactly like her right exactly
It's eyes move around on on Joe's Instagram. He has like a real close-up of it like responding
It the talking's old jinky like it's a mess. It's not sexy
But I mean how long until they get those shits
Perth oh man not long enough not long at all. I don't. Well, that'd be better for the world or worse for the world
I don't know
I mean, or is it gonna be neither does it have to have such an impact do things even have this much of an impact
I mean to say
Look how big you point is. Over the last 10 years it's like the most
downloaded looked at thing that ever existed. Right. Right. And and there was all this concern
for many many years before this through religious pressure and whatever state to state. There
was all this, you know, porn magazines can't be legal and you can't have strip clubs and
you can't there was all this concern that the world went in right we're now a fucking 10 year old
can look at the most the pro shit ever ever imagine ever instantly just as
soon as he thinks of it he can google it and probably find it and the world's
not getting fucked up right it's just existing and continue like we don't
hear stories of all this deprived sexual witness.
No, I do think you do have, I mean, at least I've heard it talked about.
There's definitely concerns that exposure to porn and things like that at such an early age has.
A lot of disadvantages for someone's sexuality, like in terms of like expectations for sex
and in future relationships,
thing, you know, the idea that porn is not real sex,
it's for entertainment and stuff.
So I feel like, but sometimes I feel like, you know,
some of these nerds out there
that are just so fucking hostile towards women,
I don't know, this might be kind of a better relief
so they can take their aggression out
and I got the M. Secks all and leave the real people alone.
You know what I mean?
It's like here, it's like a pun, you know, it's like their own version of a punching bag.
But then at the same time, as I say that, I'm like, yeah, well then they get a taste
for it and they want to, they want to, what's the word, uh, step and step.
Yeah, type of thing.
They escalate.
They escalate. They escalate.
It's a gateway drug to actually,
two actual Whitney Cummings.
That's fine.
It's all come out in the wash.
We're fine.
Everything's fine.
Yeah, will it be that outlaw?
Yeah, I mean, look, like you said,
it's only really 10 years that we've had
this instant access on the phone.
Yeah, so they're like, you know, masturbation is out of control.
But it's not long enough.
It's not a long disfudent or enough study to see how people's relationships are developing.
Right.
So that's entirely possible.
It could make some, you know, oddly deprived kind of weird sexual abuse.
Right. But it's, look, man, it's the kind of weird sexual abuse.
But it's, look man, it's the driving force
of all existence.
If it's not built into our DNA
to find a comfortable equilibrium with this,
then we don't have a chance.
And we've been here a long time.
I'm sure this is not, it's definitely better
to have more access than less.
I think less doesn't make people better. It doesn't make people treat
people better, or understand
sex and relationships better. I think it just makes us repress and do fucked up things. It's true. repressions bad.
I mean repressions just old coach of mine, old acting coach, always used to say
repression leads to deviancy and i think that i think there's something to
that
so i feel like you act in coach that yes
well it was it was an interesting thing because there was um
there was a young lady on stage who uh... had aspirations of being an actress
but she wanted to uh... but she was um... she was very religious very christian
and there were certain lines she would not
cross, and that is completely her prerogative and more power to her.
But it was ancient blood stuff entirely, so I won't do it in the butt.
I was like, well, you're never going to have a career.
Now, and he was like, you know, we as artists and we as actors and we as performers and
we as human beings and then specifically you as women have to define your boundaries
and that's incredibly important to define your boundaries.
I will say though that this is an expressive art form and when, and it's somehow he brought
it, moved into the whole situation, he was like, but repression breeds deviancy.
Consider that just for your life, not just for your profession,
but for your life.
What could possibly happen?
If you're repressing some of these things,
how will that show up in your life and other places?
It was just food for thought.
But I thought it was a really interesting thing.
And you see it in the world a lot.
How many stories do we hear about Catholic priests? I thought it was a really interesting thing and you see it in the world a lot.
How many stories do we hear about Catholic priests?
Yeah, exactly.
That's obviously an issue and Joe brings that shit up a lot too.
Sometimes I'm like, damn Joe.
He's just like really hammering the church, but fuck it.
They did it awful things and to just let them...
So much of that is gone
under the rug. And it's almost like it gets talked about a lot now to where you do it
around anyone that's Catholic. They're like, okay, we know the problems. I'm like, hold
on. No, that should be in place. You can sit there and tell me how proud you are to go
to church. I think someone else could, it should be allowed to sit there and be like, oh,
they're also fucked up. you know this, right?
Do you think about this much?
You know, I think it's again easy for them
just to not pay attention.
What's a non-sexual deviant example that you can think of?
Is it like when you say,
I'm not gonna eat any ice cream this month,
and then you just keep thinking about that
and you repress it and then you're like
fucking eaten all the ice cream. Could be. I mean, yeah, I mean, well, just repression in terms of
like, I mean, it's a damn good question. I wish I had a better answer prepared for it.
You know what I mean, but this isn't a prepared answer.
This is not a first.
We're reflecting on a podcast conversation that was also not scripted.
That was a lot of work.
If we don't have anything for it, then sorry.
Our bad.
Yeah, our bad.
What did you think when they were talking about the Dooling Nazi scars, right?
So on the podcast and they talk about how these got,
what was the Operation Paperclip where we took all the
or the German Nazi rocket engineers and that's how we built our space.
Right, right, right, right, right, right, and all those guys came over.
Well some of them had these big scars on their face, and they were officers, and they went
to military officer schools, and it was a sign of strength and pride and all the rest of
it that they would duel with these fucking little swords, you know, like fence.
Right, right, right.
And if you had like nasty slices on your face, you were seen as being a man, as a badass.
And it was like hot for women.
I'm like, those fucking Nazis are crazy.
They're out of their goddamn mind.
I mean, I think, I think that's a universal truth, right?
Nazis are fucking insane.
Um, yeah, it was this, I mean, they had such weird ideas with machismo and, um, I think that's a universal truth, right? Nazis are fucking insane.
Yeah, it has such weird ideas of what machismo and strength,
I mean, the fact that blonde hair, blue eyed people
were the master race and things like that.
I think you have to have these extreme events
and things going on to even build that kind of army, you
know, to think that it was just Hitler came along did like Ryodam all up with his math
field speeches and all of a sudden everyone's on board to do tons of fucked up shit.
Right, no exactly.
Well, it's a lot like what people will
say about um you know politics is state of politics in our country that the
man in the white house is not the cause but the symptom i feel like truck
uh... man i feel like Hitler is kind of the same way he was he was a symptom of a
mindset that was already in place
he just he gave people permission to feel the way they felt already
as opposed to you know opposed to how they should
feel fucking bad about things like that.
Like, master race and that Germans should only be in Germany and things like that.
So I feel like they were primed.
They were in a mindset, especially after World War One, where their country just absolutely devastated financially,
economically, they were in a state of mind
to allow this crazy shit, because they were like,
well, we're rock bottom, so what are we gonna do?
Yeah, they were desperate.
They were desperate.
And they wanted their pride back,
because they've been a pride for people
and now this energy came and they were angry.
And maybe that's how they get into it.
I think it's fascinating often,
like how much this shit does come up on Robyn's podcast.
I think it is just one of those things in history
that's like, wasn't that long ago,
and was really fucking bizarre.
And people need to understand it is
best they can in case it ever popped up again and I think I think so much of us
just assumes it will never happen like we've seen it we know it but it
happened then and that was like a civilized heart yeah we had cars they had
electricity they had similar things it wasn't the fucking stone age
You know they had governments in place we had
submarines and tanks and bombs and I mean it wasn't it wasn't a
Primited time and boom there it was and there are countries now less developed that are developing
Yeah, they're not even in the place the Germans were in the forties,
and they get guys that come along,
and this shit can creep in.
It does, well.
Having these conversations, I think,
keeps it in your mind of like,
oh, this is shit to watch out for.
This behavior is not good.
Well, and you go back to a good point of pride.
That's a fair point. Like. That's what nationalist speed on, the idea of
exceptionalism, wherever you are, German exceptionalism, American, blah, blah, blah, blah,
you know, and how do we express it, express it in different ways, economically, in sports.
Sometimes you express it in war, Americans love to express their exceptionalism with war because
damn it all, I know you're a naturalized citizen, I've lived your my life.
Yeah.
Woo, you love to, anytime France criticizes us once, they go to answer as well. If we
hadn't come save your ass in World War II, is it like that's, that's like
for the end of time, they can never say anything bad about us because we like save their life
once.
It's like well, even when we're acting like assholes, but it's um, well it is, it is good
to remind the French though.
I mean, yes, that was a poor, that was a poor example.
They should be reminded.
That was a poor example.
We can remind them for a while.
We'll keep them working out.
Absolutely.
Maybe, maybe, what was their sense of humor like?
I feel like the Nazis didn't have a great sense of humor.
I don't think so.
I feel like that, when you're a sense of humor
is bad, when you can't do, okay, for example,
the roast battle, right?
So the next guest that was on Rogan's podcast for the week
is Brian Moses.
It's episode 1329. Now the same thing Whitney
used to do roasts and she roasts the...
To shit.
Joan Rivers.
And that was hilarious. It's so funny. Like, I can't remember what she said. God, I wish
you remember the joke. They said it on the podcast though Almost like her vagina had two entrances
One for white people one for black like that's how old she is like that's a fucking that crazy joke hilarious
Brilliant and it's funny too because Whitney is a sweetheart like she doesn't she's not like the roast the type person right right
But in the in the same way Brian Moses
He's done the roast
battles now the comedy store for long time when how long have you been performing at the
comedy store you're in a half year and a half okay so he was there before Joe came back
so and Joe's been back now like five six years right and he has this thing where he always
makes everyone hug afterwards because it's so brutal. It's so different. Yeah. Right. And Joe even talks about how squeamish it is for him,
even though he's the fucking commentator of the UFC. Exactly. But he can't watch the
row sometimes because it's so brutal. They're so brutal. They are. Oh, man. It's like the
Jeff Ross thing I sent you the other day. Oh yeah.
He didn't get me shit.
He has never felt bad about a joke, I don't think.
No, he's not encouraged to, he makes a living.
It's true.
And people expect it, but it's that beautiful thing about a society.
Like, it couldn't be more important to have the roast stuff.
Right, I can't imagine myself ever doing that.
I don't know if I would ever go down that road.
I think it's very specialized and very hard to do. And shit, I don't know if I would take it too
personally. I think you got to be... I don't know what it takes to be very roasted, but they're always
brilliant. So I wrote like a year ago, remember when there's the whole big hub of Ballue about the
White House correspondent's dinner? And it was, it was what's your face, Michelle?
She had her own show on Netflix, Red Hair.
Tanks kind of like this.
And of course she leveled Trump
and the rest of the administration, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And of course she got, oh yeah, she's on the daily show.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
God forgive me, I can't remember her.
Yeah, she's very funny.
Very funny, a lot of damage. And I was, I should know these things. I know I can't remember. Yeah, she's very funny. I like funny love. Damn it.
And I was supposed to know these things.
I know, I really should. My brain is not working today.
But I ended up, I started writing my own roast jokes
because I was like, I could do this shit. This would be a blast.
And some of them I was pretty pleased with.
I feel like I could. And I feel like a lot of that comes from being,
I was just as a kid, picked on so much that I've learned
to take a joke and I've learned to take a joke
and I've learned to take, you know, the proverbial punches and whatnot.
But I, and I can sure it should give them out too.
So I think I'd enjoy it actually, because I'm like, you know, you know that they're up
there to be mean, that's the whole purpose.
Yeah.
So, well, you know what's cool about it you they do this thing where you actually work in teams
I believe at least when you get to TV so like for example, let's say you are performing and then we take me
Dave and
You know some other comics that we know right and they tell you who you're up against and you get time the right a few jokes
That's cool. So you yeah, you get like, I think, jokes to kind of put together and memorize.
And then you'll use them maybe in different orders depending on what they throw at you.
So there's definitely a practice portion that goes with it in some strategy.
And those are the things about it I like because there's not often a great deal of amount of structure in stand-up and to have it kind of thrown at you that way could be
kind of it could be a lot of fun but I also feel like you can get thrown off so
bad that you your head would just be spitting it would be like fuck I just got
raped you could you absolutely could you get destroyed oh
Unbelievable unbelievable. I mean there's nothing quite like get in on the stage and everyone looking at you And you either being the butt of the joke or feeling like you don't have a joke and you are just that is just
Disappointment that is like disappointing in a woman in bed times a thousand
Right that is terrible. That's a terrifying prospect. You don't see many veterans doing it.
Even Jimmy Carl likes to do it.
That English comedian that has a laugh like a donkey.
He loves to do those.
He really is into them.
But you know, it's not like you get
shepowl just wandering in and crushing
or like the Wayne's brothers after all this time.
We kind of like why would they?
You know why a little they wanna do it?
I think that, but if it's one of those things where,
look, I've done this for so long, I can stay very calm.
I'm already good at picking on people.
Right.
It just does seem like there's kind of another level of fear
that comes along.
Absolutely.
Oh, we're, this is like next level comedy. We've neglected to mention the greatest roast
Roaster comic of all time has done Rickles got rest of soul. Oh, he was the greatest go watch some of those old
Dean Martin roast find some clips on YouTube find Rickles. Oh my some of the ship is so far over your head
You're like, I don't even know. I'm sure he just obliterated this dude, but I don't know what he said by it, but God he was so funny
But that's what he did he was an insult comic always like he picked on the audience. That's what he did. He was amazing
Yeah, he was absolutely fine and really brute or even now you hear some and you'll be like fuck knowing how sensitive
They were back then. I mean it just makes it that much more power. Oh, man. I think it's
Incredibly important. Yeah, that
That this kind of crazy shit happens. I mean they even compare it a little bit to
to like
those Japanese game shows
Mm-hmm in the sense of like it's a really fucked up thing that we like to watch like the roast battles are funny
Right, but we know someone's getting their feelings are hurt
And then we could imagine someone saying it to someone else and us watching it and being able to get joy
out of
Someone else's pain horrible discount
I know
And then you take those shows like those weird Japanese shows where they've like, you know, they trick someone into thinking their house exploded or their family died and they've just found out and then they've got a react and then everyone laughs at them.
Like those shows are fucked up.
They really are crazy.
The whole Japanese show is fucked up.
So much pleasure.
And that really is like the beginning of fear factor which is you know Joe show
I mean it has to be because I remember when that first came on and we know and ever seen anything like no
I was pretty young and I was like this is fucking great and crazy. Oh, I watched and I was like oh I'm out
I was like oh that dude from news radio. Yeah, I'm doing that shit
Dude when they there's some of the stuff they would eat and I'm just like,
oh Jesus, this is horrific. Wasn't so horrific. Joe is actually, on the
Pelstor show when they did the fear factor sketch, right? When that Joe and
she put him on as the correct death date. Yeah, it's a tie round or tie round.
I think yeah, yeah, the cracked out dude.
Because we were like, okay, Joe Rogan.
Scratchin' his neck.
And didn't he have to jump to the bottom of something
to get some crap?
And he's like, I'm in.
It just goes and does it.
I mean, that's fucking hilarious.
Joe showed up a few times on.
Should've probably.
That's right.
I think second season was when he showed up being Joe Rogan on
fear factor. Right. The first season they were just walking around New York. Dave had
like a fake mustache on and they were handing out stickers for great boobies. That was it.
That's right. That's right. He was just him and Joe Joe was like a holding the box and the story behind that I heard is that
He just like wandered in he just was wandering around and bumped into Joe
I was like, hey, we're about to film this you want to come Joe's like fuck yeah. Oh, that's amazing, dude
What a great story
Do what a time they would have lived in New York and
Known all those types of comics that would have been out there right and
and known all those types of comics that would have been out there. Right.
And just had that opportunity to like build those relationships, work those clubs.
And that's pretty unbelievably cool.
There have been able to be like a life amongst it all.
I know.
And you know, so many people drop out, so many people disappear.
But we're the ones that can hold on, hold on.
And you get to know them all and and keep performing with them and
I think that's one of the bits about comedy that
You know if you and I continue to stand up and keep pushing it
Sure, we get 10 15 years that we get to develop a little bit of that relationship was
But being able to be there like she pal has been in it since he was 17. I know it's insane. You watch him on this first appearance on letterman
he looks like he's 19. He might have been. I'm believe it. He probably was. And he was doing
a lot of the jokes that he started doing and he didn't kill him softly or killing me softly.
Really? But you could it was interesting because they were clumsy. They were a little
over the place. You could see how he really home that just for
his special, like the jokes weren't as tight, they're a little rambly, little stumbling,
and then by the time he gets to his special, that shit is legit.
Yeah, well he's brave.
He is.
I mean, he's worked the toughest areas, the hardest clubs. He used to do the street forming.
That's right. I used to do the microphone and go. I mean, that it builds such a thick skin and
you get to play in so many angles. I mean, I couldn't have more respect for how he's done his
comedy. And when people like, yeah, he's a genius, right? He's obviously one of those guys that
was probably always going to be very, very funny. It obviously one of those guys that was probably always
gonna be very, very funny.
It's true.
But he also was incredibly brave,
and those two things aren't related a lot of times.
He just fucking went for it and starting that young.
I mean, now he's so bulletproof.
Completely.
And he thinks it would be like having four PhDs
or like a fifth degree black belt in Brazilian Egypt.
Exactly.
I don't know what it's like when you've done something
for 35 years at pretty much the highest level.
Top of your game, damn near from the beginning.
That's just, he was in, that's insane.
Man in Tights, the Mel Brooks.
It's the first time I ever saw him.
I thought he was hysterical.
He was a teenager.
Teenager.
You combine Mel Brooks and Dave Chappelle.
Oh my God.
I remember I remember a little laugh and so hard.
I cried at that movie.
That movie is fucking ridiculous.
Oh, it's so good.
So good.
And I think the big talk is, when is Rogan on...
I mean, when is... when shepelle on Rogan?
It's gotta be soon.
I can't wait.
Everyone that is a fan is talking about it.
That'll be, it's gotta be close.
That'll be fantastic because Joe, Joe isn't like some guy on CNN asking bullshit questions.
They'll get into the nitty gritty of a lot of shit and that'll be a really interesting
conversation.
Did you watch comedies and cars getting coffee with Shepel?
I don't think I ever see that one.
I haven't seen many of those.
I need to watch it.
It was okay.
It was okay.
Joe will be right.
But that was more like,
it was two colleagues that respect each other,
but they're not close.
And they're having a little bit of a conversation
about their industry.
But I feel like he and Joe, they're, I feel like they're not close and they're having a little bit of a conversation about their industry, but I feel like he and Joe they're I feel like their boys that's that's gonna be really interesting
That one I cannot wait for yeah, well you know
They're definitely close to have gone on this tour recently and that is a bit of what I do think about that show
Note this respect to it because it's a great show and I love be I love cars and I love comedy and I love seeing a lot of those guests on that.
But you do notice the ones that Jerry's close to. He's close to Rick and your voice.
Right? Or at least he knows him because-
Because you're based worse than him.
Often in New York. Yeah.
And then you've got Louis CK who is worked with Seinfeld Quite a bit, Seinfeld showed up on his show.
Right.
So, you know, and Jimmy Fallon.
So those episodes were closer, more joking, and more friendly.
Right.
But then you have that episode that he did with the Barack Obama.
Yeah.
There was really quite awkward as...
It was very awkward.
And it's kind of the same way with the other comedians that... You must assume Jerry's not that close. Yeah, so we think it's kind of the same way with the other comedians that you must assume Jerry's not that close.
Yeah, so we think it's kind of makes it. Well, Jerry's an awkward dude anyway. I mean, I think even
in many of these, he's on the spectrum, we're very close to being on the spectrum, or something
of that sort. He's kind of an awkward dude. He's an awkward dude. He has awkward encounters, and
awkward dude he you know he has awkward encounters and I feel like he and he's it's also he's so incredibly intelligent so smart so I think he has trouble
relating sometimes to people that aren't quite on that level too I mean because
I don't think he finds other people all that interesting you know what I mean
does that make sense I believe I believe Yeah, he kind of has not that he comes across as smug.
No, but he definitely is paying a lot of attention
and he's not very interested.
Exactly.
With what a lot of people say.
A lot of times it reminds me of like Letterman
when the Kardashians would come on
and you knew Letterman was just,
you hated this, just fucking hated every moment of it.
And so, I mean, he's generally respectful,
but there are always these subtle hints of like,
I don't like you.
I find you worthless, you know what I mean?
I don't think Jerry does that,
but I think there's definitely a bit of like,
this isn't gonna be my favorite guest, you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Did you watch the recent one with Eddie Murphy?
No, I need to.
Was that good? That's the big one. And then, No, I need to. Was that good?
That's the big one.
And then, well, no, I haven't seen it.
I just seen clips.
And then they talk about, but I mean,
it's getting a lot of press because I think
that was the first time that he was like,
I'm gonna get back into it.
That's what he said.
He's not getting back into it.
I think maybe it was Ed, it was Seinfeld
that got him in touch with the Netflix people.
I think Seinfeld somehow was involved in kind with the Netflix people. I think Seinfeld somehow was involved
in kind of setting this up as a matter of fact.
That's where that huge $70 million deal came along.
Yeah, that's phenomenal, but I'd like to see it.
I'd like to see that one just to kind of see where his head's at.
What it takes to bring it back,
it's kind of aggressive.
Yeah.
What do you think about, do you think that Joe is pissed, that he hasn't been invited
on that show? Because a lot of his friends have. That's a good question. A lot of the New
York guys have. That's a really good question. I bet there's a hint of, I don't want to
say, maybe not respect to him my not respected maybe type thing and
Give me honest maybe that is the reason maybe Jerry doesn't think as much of him as a comic
I mean you never know. He's did he didn't do it the traditional way that a lot of guys did especially when Jerry was coming up
He's comedy is incredibly
Different from Jerry's he's much more to abrasive comic Very blue collar Jerry's. He's much more of a bris of comic. Very blue collar. Jerry's not.
I'm wondering if there's just a little culture clash there maybe. But he should be on there because
he's got them in fluent influential comic. Influential human being. Yeah. But again, Jerry is the one that
gets on the channel with him. It's Jerry show. So Jerry
She's a true. I mean probably the same for Rogan absolutely. Rogan doesn't want guests on that he's not interested in talking. Yeah, why would you?
That would be interesting though because you know then that Jerry would go on
Joe's podcast and three hours of Jerry. I think we really would find
We'd it would be interesting because you only get snippets.
I think the longest interview I ever saw with him is,
who was that old fucking guy that used to do the interviews?
Like, all this shit and he's super boring.
Lary King?
Lary King.
Yeah.
No, sorry.
I guess I've insulted.
Yeah, definitely.
Is he alive?
No, he's still alive.
He's still kicking. They still kicking all right
On his on his nice wife. So son Phil was on that yeah, and he was just like well
Where you know what about this when your show was canceled and Jerry was like are you fucking kidding?
I show wasn't canceled
Yeah, I know it was tough. Yeah, that was on Larry. That wasn't a comedies and cars getting coffee. That was a
No, no, no, no, okay. That was on Larry show. It was long enough for coffee that was a... No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Type of show entirely Graham Norton show. I love that because the guests stay on the entire time
So it's not just five minutes and they're out and then a musical guest and a bunch of stupid bits
It's like you talk to these guys and you get you get to hear interesting stories and you get to see them do things that they don't normally do I really appreciate that I like
Yeah, and there's no better platform than Joe's
Damn podcast sat there like if you want to know who someone is
Yeah, I mean it's you're gonna be hard press the hide who you are that whole 100% Joe
Joe gets people talk sometimes people are pretty defensive
But I think we get a lot out of Seinfeld to be on that but um
Regardless regardless Seinfeld being on we got to get shepal on oh
That's gonna be epic.
Oh.
I just cannot wait.
I would.
I cannot wait.
And this is kind of the buildup too.
This is too good comedic guess.
It was nice to get to know both of them.
I think of the two.
I enjoyed.
I think I enjoyed Whitney Cummings.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Just because she's so smart and she takes things in different directions and she has this really interesting way of kind of breaking stuff down
But she's a bit more comfortable on the podcast. I think Brian hadn't been on before so sure it was a little bit of like star-struck it
Nus and when that happens Joe ends up talking most of the time. I think just to ease him in does but yeah
We're gonna have a good couple of weeks. I want to give a shout out to everyone listening
Thank you so much as always for downloading we're gonna keep bringing you these and keep making them
You know it was best as we can
Follow us on Instagram
Joe Rogan experience review. There's like another review
One on there for some guys out of Canada with the American version of the original version.
The original, the original review. I think we've done 170 episodes.
Don't a fuck time.
I've done about eight.
So we can keep it coming. Good job, good job, Marguerite.
It add up. I know well, I know. That's it. So thank you, buddy. You got it, baby. All right, cheers. Bye.
you