Culture Joe Rogan debuts on Spotify with his most controversial episodes missing - Joe Rogan made his debut on Spotify on Tuesday, but apparently not all of his podcast episodes made the cut.

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Several past episodes with controversial guests are notably absent from the new Joe Rogan Experience channel, including interviews with conspiracy theorists Alex Jones and David Seaman, right-wing figures such as Owen Benjamin, Milo Yiannopoulos, Gavin McInnes, Charles C. Johnson and Sargon of Akkad, and comedian Chris D'Elia, who has recently been accused of sexual impropriety. A few of the vanished guests were more perplexing, such as pot activist Tommy Chong.

Rogan's fans wondered online whether Spotify refused to allow certain episodes, or if Rogan himself decided to trim the archive of his most frequently criticized content, or if this was some sort of oddly specific temporary oversight. A representative for Spotify and Rogan did not return a request for comment, and Rogan's Twitter feed was silent on the matter.

Mikhaila Peterson, daughter of the controversial professor and public speaker Jordan Peterson, slammed the move:
Spotify reportedly paid more than $100 million to lure the country's most popular podcaster exclusively to the streaming service. The Spotify-based shows launched with a marathon five-hour interview with comedian Duncan Trussell, but the missing episodes were not addressed. Rogan's shows are still currently available on YouTube and podcasting platforms like iTunes, but the plan is for JRE to move exclusively to Spotify by the end of the year. The partnership was considered a massive win for Spotify, which has seen its stock nearly double since the deal was announced in May.

Rogan's podcast includes more than 1,500 episodes of long-form interviews with comedians, actors, sports figures, authors, intellectuals, and political commentators. The comedian and MMA commentator has long prided himself on talking to people from across the political spectrum and has frequently railed against "de-platforming" – tech companies that remove controversial voices.

“They want me to just continue doing it the way I’m doing it right now,” Rogan has previously said of the Spotify deal. “It’s just a licensing deal, so Spotify won’t have any creative control over the show. It will be the exact same show. We’re going to be working with the same crew doing the exact same show."

In a profile of Rogan in The Atlantic last August, writer Devin Gordon broke down Rogan's many strengths as a podcaster, yet also cited some of his guest choices as a serious blindspot: "Joe likes [Jack Dorsey]. He likes Milo Yiannopoulos. He likes Alex Jones. He wants you to know that he doesn’t agree with much of what they say, but he also wants you to know that off camera they’re the nicest guys. If we all have fatal flaws, this is Joe’s: his insistence on seeing value in people even when he shouldn’t, even when they’ve forfeited any right to it, even when the harm outweighs the good. It comes from a generous place, but it amounts to careless cruelty. He just won’t write people off, and then he compounds the sin by throwing them a lifeline at the moment when they least deserve it."

Now it seems in Rogan's move to Spotify that a handful of his most radioactive guests may have at last been written off – or, at least, off his new platform.

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Personally I'm just shocked that the Colion Noir episode wasn't cut. The left fears nothing more than a proud black man (not ADOS) being paid megabucks to shill for the NRA.
 
Oh well the only two podcasts worth listening to are Last Podcast on the left and Something to Wrestle anyway.

> not listening to No Agenda assassinate the media twice a week

It was a bunch of bullshit when he said that Spotify wouldn't be involved at all other than having the rights to the show. No way would a big tech company continue to let him have controversial right wing people on.

That's the thing, though. Peterson doesn't really say anything that should be "controversial." You would have to be a 100% woketard to believe he does.
 
Considering the money bag they probably gave him, I don't blame him for kowtowing.
At least be honest about selling out instead of being a baby-back little bitch by lying and then ducking calls. How many people wouldn't sell out this way for $100M? Call everyone who denies it a liar if they try to call you out.
 
Assuming he cucked himself because of money, just how much more money does one person need?

Maybe I'm just to simple of a man to want just enough to be comfortable unlike these greedy assholes who sell out their principles for a few more filthy lucre
Well, when Notch said 2 billion Microsoft just said "Will you take a check?" Kinda hard to say no to selling out when you can just take that money and retire a life of shitposting.
 
Well, when Notch said 2 billion Microsoft just said "Will you take a check?" Kinda hard to say no to selling out when you can just take that money and retire a life of shitposting.

Rogan must have been loaded already. Yeah the spirit deal was alot but you would hope they would have integrity and principles not to mangle their life work for even more money.
 
Is someone going to find out ways on how to torrent JRE podcast if they’re not going to download Spotify to get it? I think this will still be a continuing trend in the future.

Wouldn't it be fairly easy for someone to write a script that downloads the episodes from Spotify, then uploads it in a way that regular podcast apps could use?
 
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Rogan must have been loaded already. Yeah the spirit deal was alot but you would hope they would have integrity and principles not to mangle their life work for even more money.
I mean, there's loaded and then there's you know, loaded. I doubt Rogan is worth Notch's billions.
 
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I always suspected that something dumb would happen that would fuck up the transition and would likely cost him viewers. Honestly, I'm starting to think YouTube has DSP-levels of good luck since all of their competitors are either retarded or purposely sabotage themselves.
 
Guess we aren't seeing that Sam Hyde interview.
To be fair, that ship sailed a long time ago. Sam Hyde has been persona non grata with virtually everyone but the most fringe since World Peace got cancelled. Even at his most controversial, Joe Rogan never got much worse than the alt-lite, at least at the time he interviewed the guests. People like Owen Benjamin have gone way down the rabbit hole since then (seriously check out his thread if you haven't), but his podcast never featured anyone more controversial at the time than say, Milo Yiannopolis.
 
So he moved from California to Texas to avoid the censorship of Silicon Valley, and then a Silicon Valley paid him to censor all of his episodes that don't share Silicon Valley's political ideology? OK cuck. I guess all the DMT, ayahuasca, saunas, and isolation tanks broke his brain.
Whaaaat? Someone moved from California and immediately starting spreading Californian influences such as selective memory holes? Say it isn't so!
 
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