16-May-23
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[00:00:00.000 –> 00:00:10.120] Joe Rogan Forecast, Check it out! The Joe Rogan Experience, Train My Day, Joe Rogan Podcast, My Night, All Day!
[00:00:10.120 –> 00:00:12.560] [Music]
[00:00:12.560 –> 00:00:19.020] Alright, we’re up, and we are up. Good to see you, man. Great to see you.
[00:00:19.020 –> 00:00:24.700] How does it feel to have another one done? Oh, it feels great, but there’s another one in the work.
[00:00:24.700 –> 00:00:28.960] So it doesn’t really, it doesn’t really stop. I mean, I hear some guys like John Grysham talk about,
[00:00:28.960 –> 00:00:33.300] they do six months of work and six months off. And that’s kind of the routine that they’ve gotten on.
[00:00:33.300 –> 00:00:37.540] But for me, it’s go, go, go, this, the next one, scripts, although–
[00:00:37.540 –> 00:00:41.140] Do you ever anticipate doing like a six month on, six month off thing, or–
[00:00:41.140 –> 00:00:45.720] Maybe when the kids are out of the house, maybe someday, way later on, but right now, it’s still building.
[00:00:45.720 –> 00:00:49.540] It’s just like any entrepreneurial type of venture. You gotta just go and keep building,
[00:00:49.540 –> 00:00:54.800] and take advantage of momentum, and look for gaps in the enemy’s defenses, and adapt, and just go, go, go, go.
[00:00:54.800 –> 00:01:00.300] So it’s a constant thing from the second I wake up till everybody else isn’t bad, and I’m working for a few more hours.
[00:01:00.300 –> 00:01:02.900] Yeah, you gotta make hay while the sun’s shining.
[00:01:02.900 –> 00:01:07.800] Yeah, I think about that, too, with the podcast. I’m like, “One day would do,” you know, “I do so many things.”
[00:01:07.800 –> 00:01:10.300] Sometimes I’m like, “One day, maybe I’ll just do one thing.”
[00:01:10.300 –> 00:01:13.680] I don’t know, you be able to do that? I don’t know. I don’t think I’m ill.
[00:01:13.680 –> 00:01:16.300] Have you ever been bored? I don’t even know what that means.
[00:01:16.300 –> 00:01:19.600] You know why? No, I never– When people talk about being bored, I come to hear that from one of our kids.
[00:01:19.600 –> 00:01:22.900] I’m like, “That’s like the one thing that gets me.” Yeah.
[00:01:22.900 –> 00:01:24.900] But because I’ve never been bored in my life.
[00:01:24.900 –> 00:01:32.900] A bored, at things, if someone takes me to a gala and I have to dress like a monkey, sit there and wait.
[00:01:32.900 –> 00:01:34.900] How many of those, if you don’t do those anymore, do you?
[00:01:34.900 –> 00:01:36.900] I had to do one recently, over one.
[00:01:36.900 –> 00:01:42.900] Yeah, a friend. There’s an art thing that was going on here, so I had to dress up, and Jesus Christ.
[00:01:42.900 –> 00:01:44.900] Every now and again, it’s okay, maybe.
[00:01:44.900 –> 00:01:49.900] It was okay because I was next to my friend, his wife, and my wife, and it was fun.
[00:01:49.900 –> 00:01:52.900] But it’s for the most part, so that’s the only time I get bored.
[00:01:52.900 –> 00:01:54.900] Yeah. Then I get hostile.
[00:01:54.900 –> 00:01:56.900] Then I have a couple of drinks, so I get a little hostile.
[00:01:56.900 –> 00:01:58.900] Are people nervous when you’re there?
[00:01:58.900 –> 00:02:01.900] No, they get weird, pretty weird, man.
[00:02:01.900 –> 00:02:03.900] Just looking at you that you’re there?
[00:02:03.900 –> 00:02:04.900] People stare at me.
[00:02:04.900 –> 00:02:08.900] Really? Yeah, it’s gotten exponentially weird over the last three years.
[00:02:08.900 –> 00:02:12.900] I used to be able to blend in five years ago. I could blend in anywhere.
[00:02:12.900 –> 00:02:14.900] Yeah, just people say hi, but that would be it.
[00:02:14.900 –> 00:02:15.900] Okay.
[00:02:15.900 –> 00:02:18.900] So now it changes the dynamic of the room, type of thing.
[00:02:18.900 –> 00:02:19.900] Yeah, that’s weird.
[00:02:19.900 –> 00:02:21.900] I’m not changing the dynamic of any room, I don’t think.
[00:02:21.900 –> 00:02:30.900] But people definitely in the airport stop and say hi, and I feel so just fortunate that people are interested enough in the books, or the podcast, or the TV show, or whatever to actually recognize me and say hi.
[00:02:30.900 –> 00:02:32.900] One guy recognized me by my sick of backpack last night.
[00:02:32.900 –> 00:02:33.900] Oh, wow.
[00:02:33.900 –> 00:02:35.900] That’s flying out here, and he’s like, “The backpack gave you away!”
[00:02:35.900 –> 00:02:38.900] ‘Cause my back was in the corner calling my wife on Mother’s Day, and my mom on Mother’s Day.
[00:02:38.900 –> 00:02:39.900] Both, and a guy.
[00:02:39.900 –> 00:02:41.900] So a lot to fade.
[00:02:41.900 –> 00:02:46.900] Well, no, what was the grater one? It’s the drifter, so it just blends, but it has a little sick of symbol.
[00:02:46.900 –> 00:02:50.900] And he said, “The backpack gave you away!” I turned around, and so I said hi.
[00:02:50.900 –> 00:02:52.900] But I feel extremely fortunate.
[00:02:52.900 –> 00:02:53.900] Yeah, I do too.
[00:02:53.900 –> 00:02:56.900] We’re very lucky guys to be able to do what we love to do.
[00:02:56.900 –> 00:03:02.900] When someone meets you too, also it’s like your writing is so brutal.
[00:03:02.900 –> 00:03:04.900] It’s kind of particular.
[00:03:04.900 –> 00:03:06.900] He’s such a nice guy.
[00:03:06.900 –> 00:03:11.900] And it’s like when someone meets you, they’ll be like, “What the fuck is going on behind those eyes?”
[00:03:11.900 –> 00:03:12.900] Uh-huh.
[00:03:12.900 –> 00:03:13.900] I worry about that with…
[00:03:13.900 –> 00:03:17.900] Well, I don’t spend too much time worrying about it, but our kids are parents.
[00:03:17.900 –> 00:03:19.900] His friends’ parents, you know, that sort of thing.
[00:03:19.900 –> 00:03:21.900] Did you reach his book? It was a little disturbing.
[00:03:21.900 –> 00:03:22.900] Your kid shouldn’t play over there.
[00:03:22.900 –> 00:03:23.900] Type of a thing, so…
[00:03:23.900 –> 00:03:24.900] Oh, really?
[00:03:24.900 –> 00:03:26.900] Well, I don’t know, but that’s kind of what I think about.
[00:03:26.900 –> 00:03:29.900] If I was someone else’s parent who was to read this and not know me, never having met me.
[00:03:29.900 –> 00:03:34.900] And all of a sudden, you read this thing like, “Maybe our son or daughter should find another friend.”
[00:03:34.900 –> 00:03:36.900] I would worry about that more in California.
[00:03:36.900 –> 00:03:37.900] Yeah.
[00:03:37.900 –> 00:03:38.900] In California.
[00:03:38.900 –> 00:03:39.900] So what are we drinking here?
[00:03:39.900 –> 00:03:40.900] What is this?
[00:03:40.900 –> 00:03:41.900] Alright, so right here.
[00:03:41.900 –> 00:03:42.900] Cheers.
[00:03:42.900 –> 00:03:43.900] Thank you so much for everything.
[00:03:43.900 –> 00:03:44.900] My pleasure, brother.
[00:03:44.900 –> 00:03:45.900] Amazing.
[00:03:45.900 –> 00:03:46.900] Look at this.
[00:03:46.900 –> 00:03:48.900] The official jack car, leather colored whiskey glasses.
[00:03:48.900 –> 00:03:49.900] There it is.
[00:03:49.900 –> 00:03:50.900] There it is.
[00:03:50.900 –> 00:03:51.900] The whiskey glasses.
[00:03:51.900 –> 00:03:52.900] People are very fond of their whiskey.
[00:03:52.900 –> 00:03:53.900] And who made this whiskey?
[00:03:53.900 –> 00:03:54.900] This is not bad.
[00:03:54.900 –> 00:03:55.900] So it’s very good.
[00:03:55.900 –> 00:03:56.900] Here we go.
[00:03:56.900 –> 00:03:57.900] So this is Hooten Young, right there.
[00:03:57.900 –> 00:03:58.900] Okay.
[00:03:58.900 –> 00:03:59.900] So it’s a veterans car edition.
[00:03:59.900 –> 00:04:01.900] Yeah, jack car edition, right here.
[00:04:01.900 –> 00:04:07.900] And so there’s both veterans, but Norm Hooten was played by Eric Bannon and Black Hawk Down.
[00:04:07.900 –> 00:04:12.900] So he was a delta operator who’s now out, makes these cigars that show you here in a second.
[00:04:12.900 –> 00:04:13.900] Oh, he’s cigars too.
[00:04:13.900 –> 00:04:14.900] Yep, cigars.
[00:04:14.900 –> 00:04:16.900] And this whiskey, and I put them in the show, in the terminal list.
[00:04:16.900 –> 00:04:19.900] So on Chris Bratz, they’re drinking with Boozer in that first episode.
[00:04:19.900 –> 00:04:20.900] Mm-hmm.
[00:04:20.900 –> 00:04:21.900] Put a little Hooten Young on there.
[00:04:21.900 –> 00:04:24.900] And there’s no product placement in the show, in the books.
[00:04:24.900 –> 00:04:27.900] People think that that’s a huge thing, and in a lot of Hollywood, I think it is.
[00:04:27.900 –> 00:04:30.900] If someone’s like, “Let me open this tab,” you know, back in 1985 or whatever.
[00:04:30.900 –> 00:04:31.900] But there’s none of that.
[00:04:31.900 –> 00:04:33.900] It’s all just character development tools.
[00:04:33.900 –> 00:04:35.900] And so I want to try to hook up, so whoever I can.
[00:04:35.900 –> 00:04:39.900] And these guys put in so much time in service to this nation.
[00:04:39.900 –> 00:04:42.900] So it’s right on the counter there in that first episode.
[00:04:42.900 –> 00:04:44.900] That’s the best kind of product placement.
[00:04:44.900 –> 00:04:45.900] Yeah, and it helps develop the…
[00:04:45.900 –> 00:04:46.900] Yeah, exactly.
[00:04:46.900 –> 00:04:48.900] There’s no one pays to get in any of these.
[00:04:48.900 –> 00:04:49.900] Which is quite…
[00:04:49.900 –> 00:04:51.900] I didn’t know how it’s going to work with Hollywood, because it was my first time down that road.
[00:04:51.900 –> 00:04:52.900] Yeah.
[00:04:52.900 –> 00:04:54.900] And I didn’t think they were going to say, “Hey, you know what?
[00:04:54.900 –> 00:04:58.900] You have this, and I know it’s important, and I know who the guys are, but how about this
[00:04:58.900 –> 00:04:59.900] company, they’re paying us.”
[00:04:59.900 –> 00:05:00.900] So let’s put that in there instead.
[00:05:00.900 –> 00:05:02.620] And it wasn’t like that at all.
[00:05:02.620 –> 00:05:03.620] Which was pretty cool.
[00:05:03.620 –> 00:05:06.660] And I think it’s all because Chris Antoine Fuqua and the show runner just held the line
[00:05:06.660 –> 00:05:10.220] and said, “Hey, no, we’re just going to use these things to make it organic and authentic
[00:05:10.220 –> 00:05:13.640] and root this whole thing in this foundation of operator culture.”
[00:05:13.640 –> 00:05:18.980] It also probably helps that you guys are on Amazon, too, which is like a fairly new platform.
[00:05:18.980 –> 00:05:19.980] Yeah.
[00:05:19.980 –> 00:05:23.260] And in terms of streaming and things, it’s only like the last decade or so.
[00:05:23.260 –> 00:05:24.260] Right.
[00:05:24.260 –> 00:05:25.260] Netflix sent a little head start.
[00:05:25.260 –> 00:05:31.660] As opposed to something like NBC or CBS or ABC, which is like probably standard operational
[00:05:31.660 –> 00:05:32.660] procedure.
[00:05:32.660 –> 00:05:33.660] Right.
[00:05:33.660 –> 00:05:35.300] To like have people pay to put Coca-Cola on.
[00:05:35.300 –> 00:05:36.300] Right.
[00:05:36.300 –> 00:05:38.640] Because they’re going to need to make money however they can, because now they’re in competition
[00:05:38.640 –> 00:05:39.640] with Amazon and with Netflix.
[00:05:39.640 –> 00:05:41.640] They’re going to come to you with Bud Light.
[00:05:41.640 –> 00:05:43.620] You guys can fix Bud Light.
[00:05:43.620 –> 00:05:44.620] I saw a new one today.
[00:05:44.620 –> 00:05:45.900] Did you see the Miller Light one today?
[00:05:45.900 –> 00:05:46.900] Yeah.
[00:05:46.900 –> 00:05:47.980] Like, does no one learn?
[00:05:47.980 –> 00:05:48.820] Does no one learn?
[00:05:48.820 –> 00:05:52.500] I mean, and they were taking all those ads that we love from the ’80s, and they were pretty
[00:05:52.500 –> 00:05:59.020] mean shredders.
[00:05:59.020 –> 00:06:00.020] Like there’s something wrong.
[00:06:00.020 –> 00:06:03.540] Also it’s making, there’s something wrong with women wearing bikinis.
[00:06:03.540 –> 00:06:05.700] Those women wear bikinis because they look great.
[00:06:05.700 –> 00:06:07.060] They like to look great.
[00:06:07.060 –> 00:06:08.740] They take photos of them looking great.
[00:06:08.740 –> 00:06:10.680] The girls see those photos of them in bikinis.
[00:06:10.680 –> 00:06:11.680] They get excited.
[00:06:11.680 –> 00:06:13.200] Look, I look great.
[00:06:13.200 –> 00:06:14.200] People buy it.
[00:06:14.200 –> 00:06:15.700] Wow, she looks great.
[00:06:15.700 –> 00:06:16.860] It’s not bad to look great.
[00:06:16.860 –> 00:06:19.380] It’s just like it’s not bad for a guy to have a shirt off.
[00:06:19.380 –> 00:06:20.620] Chris Pratt has a shirt off.
[00:06:20.620 –> 00:06:22.100] He’s looking ripped.
[00:06:22.100 –> 00:06:23.100] It’s not objective.
[00:06:23.100 –> 00:06:25.340] I mean, I guess it is, but it’s not negative.
[00:06:25.340 –> 00:06:26.340] It’s not negative.
[00:06:26.340 –> 00:06:27.340] It’s selling movie tickets.
[00:06:27.340 –> 00:06:28.340] Right there.
[00:06:28.340 –> 00:06:30.020] That ad is so weird.
[00:06:30.020 –> 00:06:31.020] Isn’t it strange?
[00:06:31.020 –> 00:06:32.020] You want to watch it?
[00:06:32.020 –> 00:06:33.020] Let’s watch it.
[00:06:33.020 –> 00:06:34.020] Let’s watch this movie.
[00:06:34.020 –> 00:06:35.020] Oh boy.
[00:06:35.020 –> 00:06:36.020] Here we go.
[00:06:36.020 –> 00:06:37.020] I couldn’t believe it this morning.
[00:06:37.020 –> 00:06:38.020] They don’t learn.
[00:06:38.020 –> 00:06:39.020] No one learns.
[00:06:39.020 –> 00:06:40.020] Well, it’s just in general, I think.
[00:06:40.020 –> 00:06:43.060] It’s kind of those taking lessons from the past and applying them going forward as wisdom.
[00:06:43.060 –> 00:06:44.300] How about lessons from a week ago?
[00:06:44.300 –> 00:06:45.300] I know.
[00:06:45.300 –> 00:06:46.300] It’s not even the past.
[00:06:46.300 –> 00:06:47.300] It’s like a couple of days ago.
[00:06:47.300 –> 00:06:51.540] The only thing that saves is like maybe they spent a lot of money on it, and they filmed
[00:06:51.540 –> 00:06:52.540] it six months ago.
[00:06:52.540 –> 00:06:53.540] Is that possible?
[00:06:53.540 –> 00:06:54.540] I’ve already seen it yet.
[00:06:54.540 –> 00:06:56.540] There was an article from…
[00:06:56.540 –> 00:06:57.540] Two months ago?
[00:06:57.540 –> 00:06:59.340] But still, you could put a pause on that.
[00:06:59.340 –> 00:07:00.420] It came out two months ago?
[00:07:00.420 –> 00:07:01.540] At least two months ago.
[00:07:01.540 –> 00:07:02.540] Okay.
[00:07:02.540 –> 00:07:04.100] So it came out before the bullshit, right?
[00:07:04.100 –> 00:07:05.980] Was that about the same time as the bullshit?
[00:07:05.980 –> 00:07:07.460] No, it was not the same.
[00:07:07.460 –> 00:07:10.260] This says it was in honor of women’s history months as well.
[00:07:10.260 –> 00:07:11.260] I put it out.
[00:07:11.260 –> 00:07:12.260] I saw it today.
[00:07:12.260 –> 00:07:14.700] I was like, maybe there’s a reason they made this and we just started seeing that