Joe Rogan Have You Tried Dmg
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Tyson was trying so hard to get out of that conversation and he kept being dragged back in. But that's Joe Rogan's style: invite a fucking astrophysicist on, lead in with kettlebells, move onto some retarded supplement you think prevents third-eye cancer, and then push some shit you heard from a dude who watches too much Infowars. Sep 01, 2014 Directed by Mitch Schultz. With Joe Rogan, Ralph Abraham, Joel Bakst, Steven Barker. An investigation into the long-obscured mystery of dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a molecule found in nearly every living organism and considered the most potent psychedelic on Earth.
The Joe Rogan Experience | |
---|---|
Presentation | |
Hosted by | Joe Rogan |
Genre | Talk |
Format | |
Language | English |
Length | 1–5+ hours[1] |
Production | |
Production | Joe Rogan (occasional) Brian Redban (2009–2013) Jamie Vernon (2013–present) |
Video format | YouTube, Vimeo |
Audio format | MP3 |
No. of episodes | 1,431 (as of February 25, 2020) |
Publication | |
Original release | December 24, 2009 – present |
Website | podcasts.joerogan.net |
The Joe Rogan Experience is a free audio and video podcast hosted by American comedian, actor, sports commentator, martial artist, and television host, Joe Rogan. It was launched on December 24, 2009, by Rogan and comedian Brian Redban, who also produced and co-hosted. It has grown to become one of the world's most popular podcasts, regularly receiving millions of views per episode,[2] and includes a wide array of guests.
History[edit]
The podcast originates to around 2003 when Rogan hired Brian Redban, a self-taught video editor and an employee at a Gateway 2000 computer store in Ohio, to work for him full time to film, produce, and edit videos for his website.[3][4] Rogan had noticed video work that Redban did for comedian Doug Stanhope and invited him to film him and his group on stand-up comedy tours.[3] Redban accepted and relocated to California in the process, following Rogan with a camera and 'recording everything'.[3] After several years, Redban noticed that fans were demanding more content from Rogan and for it to be delivered faster. This prompted the two to seek new ways of quickening what was a lengthy editing process to make their website and content more interactive.[5] Coupled with his interest in popular live video streaming services of the time, Redban wanted 'to do the same thing I was filming, but live', and set up live streams on Justin.tv from the green room at Rogan's comedy gigs.[4][5] Redban had no prior experience with audio engineering, so he taught himself how to operate the mixing board and microphone setups.[5]
After some time on Justin.tv, Rogan suggested the idea of hosting a live video stream with Redban from his home and interact with fans in a chatroom and on Twitter, with the audio portion released as a downloadable podcast.[4][5][6] Rogan was influenced by the open discussion style from appearing on Opie and Anthony and the live Ustream show that co-host Anthony Cumia did from his basement studio, Live from the Compound.[6] The first episode aired live on December 24, 2009,[7] which initially took the form of a weekly broadcast on Ustream,[8] with the pair 'sitting in front of laptops bullshitting'.[9] Much of the episode was dead air with the hosts figuring out the equipment.[10] Early episodes featured an animated snowflake effect that was reintroduced on episode No. 674 in 2015 and episode No. 1,000 in 2017.[11][12] The show developed with Rogan having friends as guests and having lengthy conversations; comedian Ari Shaffir was the first guest, who appeared on episode No. 3 on January 6, 2010.[6][13]
Rogan recalled that maintaining a consistent schedule early on was important in the podcast's growth, and it soon grew to two episodes a week.[6] In May 2010, the podcast acquired its first sponsor in a partnership with the sex-toy production company, Fleshlight. The company withdrew in mid-2012, when it claimed it had saturated its market.[14][15] By August 2010, the podcast was formally named, The Joe Rogan Experience, in an homage to The Jimi Hendrix Experience and aired live several times a week.[16] In May 2011, Rogan secured a deal with SiriusXM, a subscription-based satellite radio service, to have the podcast air on its uncensored talk channel The Virus.[9] That year, Rogan said that the podcast was helping his stand-up comedy as he would take ideas that arose during conversations and develop them into routines.[17]
In January 2013, video episodes of the podcast started to be uploaded onto YouTube under the account PowerfulJRE and episodes were surpassing almost two million views.[18] Later in 2013, Redban started to reduce his time as the podcast's sole producer as Rogan had increased the number of podcasts each week, 'and it got to the point where [Rogan] wanted to keep on going, six, seven hours' which became too much for him to handle alone. As a result Jamie Vernon was hired as a second producer, initially as Redban's assistant, to fill in, leaving Redban to produce roughly half of subsequent episodes.[19] Vernon soon took over full time and Redban subsequently appeared on the podcast as a guest.[11][20][21]
Originally, the podcast was recorded at Rogan's home in California.[7] From November 24, 2011, some episodes were recorded at the Ice House Comedy Club in Pasadena, California, also known as the Deathsquad Studios.[22] Since November 27, 2012, the majority of episodes have been recorded in a private studio that Rogan acquired in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles.[23] The 1,000th episode aired on August 18, 2017 and featured comedians Joey Diaz and Tom Segura as guests.[12]
Joe Rogan Have You Tried Dmg Youtube
Guests[edit]
In 2019, Rogan hosted podcasts with three 2020 Democratic presidential candidates: Andrew Yang, Tulsi Gabbard, and Bernie Sanders.[24] At least four other candidates asked to appear but were not accepted.[25]
Other guests have included Robert Downey Jr., Edward Snowden, Ben Shapiro, Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson, Jamie Foxx, Roseanne Barr, Bill Burr, Reggie Watts, Russell Brand, Kevin Smith, Eric Weinstein, Alex Jones, Dennis McKenna, Duncan Trussell, Edward Norton, John Carmack, and Stefan Molyneux. Some notable guests from previous years include Mel Gibson, Steven Tyler, Jesse Ventura, and Lance Armstrong. In connection with Rogan's role commentating for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), many fighters and mixed martial arts-related guests have appeared, such as boxer Mike Tyson, UFC president Dana White, and comedian/fighter Eddie Bravo. A number of scientists have been featured as well, including Richard Dawkins, Sean Carroll, Brian Greene, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Brian Cox, Lawrence Krauss, Roger Penrose, Matthew Walker, Robert Schoch, Elon Musk, Nick Bostrom and Adam Frank.
Impact[edit]
In January 2015, the podcast was listened to by more than 11 million people.[26] By October 2015, it had grown to acquire 16 million downloads a month.[2][27][28] By April 2019, the podcast had 190 million downloads a month.[29]
An annual Joe Rogan-inspired 'Sober October' tradition started in 2017[30] has influenced some listeners to curb their addictions by partaking in the challenge.[31]
Elon Musk's appearance on episode No. 1,169 on September 6, 2018 saw Musk smoke cannabis, which attracted worldwide press attention and caused a 9% fall in Tesla stock.[10][32] The podcast helped Andrew Yang's campaign for the 2020 U.S. presidential election gain momentum following his appearance in February 2019.[33][34] On June 20, 2019, Area 51 conspiracy theorist, Bob Lazar, made an appearance on the show where Rogan frequently discusses the possibility of aliens and extraterrestrial life. This episode was cited as the inspiration for the planned Facebook event and Internet meme known as 'Storm Area 51, They Can't Stop All of Us', created one week later.[35]
A study conducted by Coleman Insights in 2019 with 1,000 monthly podcast listeners aged 18 to 64 revealed that The Joe Rogan Experience ranked the highest in the 'unaided awareness' category, double that of any other podcast.[36]
According to The New York Times, Rogan and The Joe Rogan Experience became an 'unlikely political influencer' in the 2020 presidential election after presidential candidates Andrew Yang and Tulsi Gabbard both saw measurable surges in popularity and fundraising after making guest appearances on the program in 2019, and in 2020, when presidential candidate Bernie Sanders saw a surge of press coverage in national news and global media outlets as a result of his campaign using a clip from The Joe Rogan Experience showing Rogan speaking favorably about the candidate and saying on air, 'I think I'll probably vote for Bernie.'[37]
Reception[edit]
Joe Rogan Have You Tried Dmg In Mac
The podcast has been described as 'an important node of the intellectual dark web',[10] and he has featured a diverse ideological mixture of political guests including Democratic presidential candidates and conservative figures. In a more critical article for National Review, writer Theodore Kupfer wrote that the podcast, hosted by 'a weed-smoking DMT-obsessive whose most cherished political cause is the quest to end male circumcision', has become 'one of the last bastions for civil discussion in contemporary America'.[38]
As of February 2020, the most popular episodes have been:[39]
- 1. Elon Musk (Sep 2018)
- 2. Eddie Bravo and Alex Jones (Feb 2019)
- 3. Ben Shapiro (Aug 2017)
- 4. Dan Bilzerian (Oct 2016)
- 5. Edward Snowden (Oct 2019)
- 6. Neil deGrasse Tyson (Feb 2017)
- 7. Bernie Sanders (Aug 2019)
- 8. Neil deGrasse Tyson (Aug 2018)
- 9. Joey Diaz and Tom Segura (Aug 2017)
- 10. Eddie Bravo and Alex Jones (Feb 2017)
- 11. Mike Tyson (Jan 2019)
- 12. Jeremy Corbell and Bob Lazar (Jun 2019)
- 13. Kevin Hart (Apr 2019)
- 14. Robert Downey Jr. (Jan 2020)
- 15. Steve-O (Nov 2015)
- 16. Jordan Peterson (Jul 2018)
- 17. Jordan Peterson and Bret Weinstein (Sep 2017)
- 18. Jordan Peterson (Nov 2018)
- 19. Jordan Peterson (Nov 2016)
- 20. Joey Diaz (Jul 2018)
Accolades[edit]
In August 2010, nine months after its launch, the Joe Rogan Experience entered the list of Top 100 podcasts on iTunes.[16] The podcast was voted Best Comedy Podcast of 2012 by users of iTunes.[40] In February 2014, the podcast won a Stitcher Award for Best Overall Show of 2013.[41] In 2017 and 2018, the podcast was Apple's second most downloaded podcast.[10] In January 2019, the podcast won Best Comedy Podcast at the iHeartRadio Podcast Awards.[42]
References[edit]
- ^'The Joe Rogan Experience'. Podchaser. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
- ^ abEadicicco, Lisa (December 9, 2015). 'The 10 Most Popular Podcasts of 2015'. Time. Retrieved December 24, 2018.
- ^ abcWolf, Josh; Redban, Brian (March 3, 2016). 'Episode #28: Brian Redban, comedian and podcast pioneer, joins Josh'. Fairly Normal with Josh Wolf (Podcast). Event occurs at 5:40–8:12.
- ^ abcSantamaria, Cara; Redban, Brian (November 23, 2014). 'Episode 39 – Brian Redban'. Talk Nerdy (Podcast). Event occurs at 17:00–19:12.
- ^ abcdWolf, Josh; Redban, Brian (March 3, 2016). 'Episode #28: Brian Redban, comedian and podcast pioneer, joins Josh'. Fairly Normal with Josh Wolf (Podcast). Event occurs at 34:12–39:32.
- ^ abcdErnst, Erik (12 August 2011). 'Joe Rogan talks about creating his top-rated podcast'. JSOnline. Archived from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^ abRogan, Joe; Redban, Brian (December 24, 2009). 'Joe Rogan Experience #1 – Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^'Joe Rogan Live - IBM Cloud Video'. Ustream. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
- ^ abCarnell, Thom (January 24, 2016). 'Interview: Joe Rogan (January 2011)'. Thom Carnell. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
- ^ abcdPeters, Justin (21 March 2019). 'How Joe Rogan's Hugely Popular Podcast Became an Essential Platform for 'Freethinkers' Who Hate the Left'. Slate. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^ abRogan, Joe; Redban, Brian (July 27, 2015). 'Joe Rogan Experience #674 – Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^ abRogan, Joe; Diaz, Joey; Segura, Tom (August 18, 2017). 'Joe Rogan Experience #1000 - Joey Diaz & Tom Segura'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Rogan, Joe; Redban, Brian; Shaffir, Ari (January 6, 2010). 'Joe Rogan Experience #3 – Ari Shaffir, Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Rogan, Joe [@JoeRogan] (May 5, 2010). 'My tweeples voted unanimously to accept the sponsorship from the fleshlight despite the concerns of my management. I agree, so it's on!' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^Rogan, Joe [@JoeRogan] (July 30, 2012). 'They dropped us. They said they saturated our market. Me might still do some stuff with them periodically in the future' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ ab'The Joe Rogan Experience Podcast Selects Wizzard Media's LibsynPro'. Business Wire. August 5, 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
- ^Ernst, Erik (13 August 2011). 'Joe Rogan talks about good and bad morning radio, praises Kramp & Adler and Opie & Anthony'. JSOnline. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^Mountjoy, Anthony (7 March 2018). 'This Is How Much Joe Rogan Experience Made In A Year'. Medium. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^Santamaria, Cara; Redban, Brian (November 23, 2014). 'Episode 39 – Brian Redban'. Talk Nerdy (Podcast). Event occurs at 20:06–20:50.
- ^Rogan, Joe; Redban, Brian (August 17, 2015). 'Joe Rogan Experience #684 – Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Rogan, Joe; Redban, Brian (August 26, 2015). 'Joe Rogan Experience #688 – Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Rogan, Joe; Redban, Brian; Bravo, Eddie (November 24, 2011). 'Joe Rogan Experience #160 – Eddie Bravo, Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Rogan, Joe; Redban, Brian; Smith, Shane (November 27, 2012). 'Joe Rogan Experience #289 – Shane Smith, Brian Redban'. The Joe Rogan Experience (Podcast).
- ^Hayley Prokos (July 8, 2019). 'Joe Rogan Praised by Twitter After Bernie Sanders Appears On Podcast to Debate Health Care, Gun Laws and Aliens'. Newsweek.
- ^MacDonald, Tyler (19 January 2020). 'Joe Rogan says Biden, Warren and Buttigieg have requested appearances on his podcast'. Inquisitr. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
- ^'Joe Rogan Podcast'. Inquisitor. January 4, 2015. Retrieved November 13, 2015.
- ^Hedegaard, Erik (October 22, 2015). 'How Joe Rogan Went From UFC Announcer to 21st-Century Timothy Leary'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
- ^Ham, Robert (October 28, 2016). 'Joe Rogan's Powerful Life'. Paste. Retrieved April 16, 2017.
- ^'How To Use Challenge To Grow Stronger with Joe Rogan' – via www.youtube.com.
- ^Joe Rogan's Sober October Experience by JREfacts.org, retrieved January 25, 2020.
- ^Kussin, Zachary (October 7, 2019). 'How Joe Rogan-inspired Sober October is getting people to be healthier'. New York Post. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
- ^Weinberg, Eric (7 May 2019). 'Joe Rogan Is the Supreme Cannabis Brand Advocate'. Green Entrepreneur. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^Goldmacher, Shane; Lai, K. K. Rebecca; Shorey, Rachel (2019-08-17). 'The 5 Days That Defined the 2020 Primary'. The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-08-17.
- ^Sanchez, Omar (July 25, 2019). 'Inside the Democrats' Podcast Presidential Primary'. TheWrap. Retrieved August 8, 2019.
- ^Prior, Ryan. 'Meet the guy behind the 'Area 51' page. He's terrified of what he's created'. CNN. Retrieved 2019-07-21.
- ^'Coleman Insights Study Shows Joe Rogan Topping Podcast Listener Awareness'. All Access. 5 August 2019. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
- ^Joe Rogan Endorses Bernie Sanders by Matt Stevens, New York Times, January 24, 2020.
- ^Kupfer, Theodore (13 April 2018). 'Joe Rogan's Boundary-Free Arena'. National Review. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
- ^https://www.youtube.com/user/PowerfulJRE/videos?view=0&sort=p&flow=grid
- ^Baum, Erica (September 15, 2015). 'Newsmax's Top 50 Conservative Podcasts'. Newsmax. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
- ^Rogan, Joe [@JoeRogan] (February 27, 2014). 'The Joe Rogan Experience won best overall podcast at the Stitcher Awards, and I am eternally grateful..' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^'2019 iHeartRadio Podcast Awards: Full List of Winners'. iHeartRadio. iHeartMedia. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
External links[edit]
- The Joe Rogan Experience on IMDb