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Chris Williamson
You are listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review Podcast. We find little nuggets, treasures, valuable pieces of gold in the Joe Rogan Experience Podcast and pass them on to you. Perhaps expand a little bit. We are not associated with Joe Rogan in any way. Think of us as the talking dead to Joe's Walking Dead.
Adam Thorne
You're listening to the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
Chris Williamson
What a bizarre thing we've created now.
Adam Thorne
With your host, Adam Thorne.
Sean
This might either be the worst podcast.
Chris Williamson
Or the best one.
Sean
One go.
Chris Williamson
Enjoy the show. What's up, Rogan? Reviewers, welcome back. This episode is the review of Chris Williamson. That was on March 20th of this year. It's about then. I did write it down, but I think that's right. Joined today with me is Sean.
Sean
Hello again. Oh, boy, that was really aggressive.
Chris Williamson
That's not a good start. It's not a good start. Come on, get into it.
Sean
Forgive me, viewers, Chris, listeners, they're not viewing anything. They're just listening.
Chris Williamson
They're just listening. Yeah, it's more of an ear thing.
Sean
I'm all up in your brain right now.
Chris Williamson
Can't afford a video. Yeah, Chris Williamson is very interesting dude. Great podcast, a great interviewer, curious individual, reads a lot of books, solid sense of humor. And it's great to see him coming on Rogan as much as he does.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
You know when it, when these top podcasters come together and it's like, yeah.
Sean
This little network where they influence each other and stuff, whether it's like a.
Chris Williamson
Lex and Rogan or, you know, even Theo now Just coming up. It's like, change the dynamic of, you know. You know, they interview a lot of people each, then they get together and just kind of discuss like, hey, what are you learning? What's going on out there?
Sean
Yeah, I think it's cool. Chris is one of my favorites in the podcasting verse, too. Like him and Lex, I always, always enjoy if there's, like, a guest that they have on their show, I always listen to it because they ask such good questions. Like, they get to the meat of the stuff and they ask good questions, and they're like. Actually not to say that a lot of podcaster. Well, I will say a lot of podcasters are not smart and don't ask good questions, but I feel like they are always, like, actually adding something to the conversation. Like, regardless of what kind of expert it is or what field they're talking about, whether the person is, like, way smarter than them or, you know, just a normal dude, they always are asking really good questions. They always seem, like, very interested in the conversation, and it's always a good place to kind of let the mind kind of just roam and hear new ideas and new perspectives and stuff like that. I really enjoy Chris's podcast, and it's cool, too, to see, like, you know, before it was just kind of like them. They had their own little small shows, and they would go on Rogan and promote them and. But now everyone's promoting each other. Like, they like him. Lex, like Theo. You mentioned him. They're. All of their podcasts are, like, well respected and very well listened to in their own sphere, you know?
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
So it's cool to see everybody else just kind of, you know, get in on a lot of the attention that's going to the podcasting world.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. And a lot of the big guys, I mean, just like you would expect with. With a lot of practice, you get better at it.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
I mean, Theo has become a really good interviewer, but it's still very much his style.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
Still very silly, but he also can go deep. He can go into all different areas. He's a very unique interviewer. Lex has improved a great deal. He's not quite as awkward as he used to be.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
And many of the intellectual ones. Bert Kreischer. About the same. Just about the same. He was pretty good before and still pretty good. So it's not a knock on Bert, but I'm still waiting for a really profound question from Bert. And Tom Segura is very good, too.
Sean
Yeah, well, I think everyone is just kind of Grown into their. Grown into themselves a lot more. So, like, they've just kind of honed down on what they're good at and gotten better at it. So people just kind of know what they want to listen to. You know, if you're like, I'm not much of a Bert Kreischer fan, it's like, you're not a Bert Kreischer fan. That's fine.
Chris Williamson
Get it?
Sean
It's all good.
Chris Williamson
That's why there's so many podcasts.
Sean
Tune in for, like, a Kool Aid clip every now and then.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, I mean, that's the great thing. You just don't have to listen to something you don't want to. I'll tell you, where I liked this conversation with Chris going is, like, immediately, did they start out with conspiracy theories and even some good ones? Antarctica, Flat Earth. That's one thing in the podcasting space I'm glad they haven't lost, because the podcasting space was labeled early on, like, a conspiracy theory. You know, kind of, dare I say, I don't know, Sanctuary, or just a place where they all are. And I felt like, in time, as podcasts were trying to, like, legitimize themselves as media, people would step away from that. I don't think so. They've, like, doubled down. Yeah, that's great news. So let's go over some of the.
Sean
Antarctic conspiracy just beforehand. I hate how the word conspiracy theory has been, like, weaponized nowadays. You know, it's like, at the end of the day, we're just, like, sharing ideas and, like, well, you know, you.
Chris Williamson
Know where it came from. Right?
Sean
What's that?
Chris Williamson
The CIA created the term oh, really? Push back against people that questioned the JFK assassination.
Sean
Oh, really? Yeah. I'm not surprised.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. Guilty.
Sean
Yeah. No, but it's just so annoying. Like, even. Even at work the other day, someone was talking about, like, oh, what are you, a conspiracy theorist? And I'm like, maybe. Maybe a little bit. Maybe a little bit.
Chris Williamson
What does that even mean? But do I occasionally question things that turn out to be true, even though I was told that I wasn't even allowed to think about it or question it?
Sean
Yeah. And at what point do some of these conspiracy theories not become conspiracy theories? Like, when they're actually true and there's evidence to back them up? It's like, that's not really a conspiracy theory anymore that just actually happened?
Chris Williamson
Yeah. No. Then it's just called a fact. And the other people that were wrong about it just look a bit dumb. And if you do That a bunch of times then, you know, you are allowed to label those other people dumb.
Sean
I think so. Well, you gotta. You just gotta. I don't know. There's a scale to it, you know, dude, it was.
Chris Williamson
It was a conspiracy theory for a long time that the Wuhan coronavirus came from the lab.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
That studied. Coronavirus.
Sean
It's the name of the lab.
Chris Williamson
Like, no, it came quarter of a mile away in that village where they have a market. And you were crazy to ask the question. You could get banned from Twitter for saying no. I think it came from here because I like to use logic. And they're like, how dare you?
Sean
How dare you?
Chris Williamson
What are you out of your mind? What are you, a Flat Earther?
Sean
What? Do you not believe the cdc.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. And the other thing about conspiracy, it's like they lump you in with all of it.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
You can't. You're not allowed to just believe. Think one could be true. It's like, no, no, you're just in that category now. And, yeah, as soon as they stop making you a Flat Earther, you know, you just want to step away, be like, okay, okay.
Sean
I thought it was really funny when they were talking about Antarctica. They brought those group of Flat Earthers out there. They, like, proved to them. And the one dude was like, all right, I guess you guys are right. And then it, like, completely dismantled the whole Flat Earth community. Like, he was like their hero. And then he's like, listen, guys, I'm sorry.
Chris Williamson
They're like, they've got to him.
Sean
Yeah. They started denying him. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Ridiculous. But the fact that two didn't. It's like, even in the face of overwhelming evidence, it. You can't be persuaded. Yeah, then maybe you're just too dumb to learn anything.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
You know, it would be like. I mean, most people accept the one plus one is two. The little kids, whatever. It's like, but what the units, the. The actual values, like, that's not all important. They're not doing, like, the background math. They're just young people learning a thing. And it's like, yeah, one plus one is two. If you have to, like, really break that down and you're still doing it with an adult, and you have to take them to a special location and show them two physical things, move them together, and they're still like, I don't think it's two. Be like, bro, we cannot help you at all.
Sean
You imagine what the rest of that guy's family thinks. They're like, come on, he's a Flat Earther. And they're like, they tell him like, oh, guys, I'm going out to Antarctica. We're gonna see the. They're gonna prove it to us. Like, we're gonna see that the earth is flat or the earth is round or whatever. And then everyone's like, yes. Hell yeah. He'll finally get it this time. Finally they're gonna break through with him. Then he comes back and he's like, I don't know, guys. I think it's still flat. The family just must be devastated. We really had hope. We really thought that you were going to change your ways. It's like when you come back from fat camp and you're still fat. You know, even fat is like, sorry, we tried.
Chris Williamson
It's like, how. Yeah, we didn't. We didn't give you any food. He met. He. He had it.
Sean
I love the Antarctica conspiracy theories, though.
Chris Williamson
Some of those. Wild.
Sean
Yes, those are wild.
Chris Williamson
What's that weapon?
Sean
The directed energy weapons.
Chris Williamson
There we go.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Did you hear the podcast? The guy on Sean Ryan show?
Sean
I saw that one. Yeah. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
I mean it. I don't want to say it's like credible. It's not like that. It's the way that he told the.
Sean
Story, the way he explains it. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Seem like just a straight up liar. But what's. What's difficult about it is he just had. Just happened to have access.
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Chris Williamson
To those places. It's not like he worked on it or he just could like Move around the locations and for some reason is in a position now to talk about it.
Sean
That guy still alive?
Chris Williamson
I don't know. And also like, where do you go from there? You know, he doesn't have any actual physical evidence.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
And it's like just overall, like, what is the point of even setting up a base like that there? I mean, that's so difficult to even build anything there.
Sean
It is. But I mean, if you want absolute complete secrecy, there's no better place. I mean, there really is no better place.
Chris Williamson
Well, do you know that you can't fly over it too?
Sean
Oh yeah, yeah. There's a lot of restricted. Not only that, but Antarctica is just fucking massive. Like, it's massive. And the amount of like infrastructure and equipment you need to even just reach certain points are insane. And I mean, think about all the crazy infrastructure things that humans have done when we really are like, hey, let's do this. Like, let's. We're going to put our money in our mouth behind this. Like, you know, I mean, we went to the moon. That's pretty impressive because we all were behind it. And we're like, hell yeah, we're going to do this. And so, yeah, I bet. Behind closed doors. I mean, we talked about this the last time. No one knows where the money in the Pentagon goes. No one knows that.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
So I'm not saying there's a lab in Antarctica. All I'm saying is that if you were to hypothetically create a super secret lab where you wanted absolutely no one to ever have any idea what's going on, Antarctica will be the place to do that. Shit. That'd be the best place to do that. Yeah, that or like the bottom of the ocean. But that seems a lot harder. That's tough. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Pressures. Yeah, I think that's harder to deal with than going to space pressure the other way instead of it like pulling you apart like space. Well, the pressure just to squash you.
Sean
That's another weird one. When. I don't remember when this happened, but they were doing like really a lot of deep sea research in the ocean and then they just straight up stopped. They're like, yeah, we don't, we don't want to know what's going on down here anymore. This is not worth our time. Like that's kind of, you kind of weird.
Chris Williamson
Something.
Sean
Well, maybe, I don't know. I mean, I could see it being like not worth it to investigate and stuff, but I mean, we have like nuclear powered submarines now, you know, like.
Chris Williamson
Whenever they can't go super super deep.
Sean
No, they can't go super deep. But I'm just saying, like the amount of technology that they're able to create for. Again, when you want to have something that works extremely effectively and you have unlimited amounts of money, like the US military does, essentially, you can do whatever you want.
Chris Williamson
Right.
Sean
But anyways, yeah, the. There's some weird shit that goes on in the deep of the ocean that we're just like, yeah, we're gonna go to Mars instead.
Chris Williamson
Well, I mean they've been seeing all those UAPs flying in the water and then supposedly there's footage like high def, of an object going past these oil rigs, like big oil rigs and it's bigger than them, moving very quickly.
Sean
That's crazy.
Chris Williamson
That has been seen. And it's like, yeah, if we start coming into contact with things like that, it probably is a good move just to back off a little bit. Yeah, they don't want us fucking with them. I'm sure they're gonna get pissed off. Yeah, well, Antarctica. Turns out it can't persuade people that the Earth is not flat, or at least some sad. Do they have direct energy weapons? After what you said, I'm starting to believe yes. So I've jumped on board there.
Sean
It could be possible.
Chris Williamson
What was that weapon supposed to do? It made earthquakes. Right.
Sean
Earthquakes and fires. A lot of people were saying that and there's, there's not a lot of evidence to support this, but a lot of people were suggesting that some of the fires in Maui and in California were started by a direct energy weapon. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
So what is the idea? It goes from Antarctic. It must bounce off a satellite.
Sean
It's probably some sort of satellite if it had to be, because that would be the way you would control it. You know, you can aim it anywhere and use it instantly. I don't know. Again, there's not a lot of evidence to support that one. But you think you would see it.
Chris Williamson
If you look at like a beam go.
Sean
Yeah, I don't know. But if you look at what they're doing like in Maui, all of those places, those people lost insurance coverage. They have no money. And then massive real estate corporations and big conglomerates combined just buy all the land and then they're going to turn it into like super high rise stuff.
Chris Williamson
It looks sneaky. It sounds like that's what's going to happen in the Pacific Palisades in LA after those fires because Newsom went on the news and Rogan's, you know, mocked him for it because he did that little Dance like. Yeah. We're bringing in all these people to, you know, kind of do corporate stuff and buy all this land. And it's like, wait a second. What? Yeah, what about the people that lost their homes?
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Like, hold the phone here. So, you know, time will tell. I mean, give it a decade and we see what's built there. And that can lean into its own, like, conspiracy. Sure. It could just be the result of what happens after there's fires.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Maybe they're the only people that can rebuild in that way, realistically. And this is just kind of the evolution of things. But it doesn't look good.
Sean
No.
Chris Williamson
Looks like there's possibly an incentive for some people to start fires.
Sean
Yeah. Yeah. I just don't like it. And then a lot of these areas, like the insurance companies getting rid of coverage, like months in advance or years in advance sometimes being like, yeah, we straight up don't cover against fire protection. It's like, I live in a fiery area. Why would you not cover for that? You know, it's like living in Florida and not having hurricane insurance. That's crucial.
Chris Williamson
Or alligator insurance.
Sean
Yeah, yeah. That's just your cousin Billy.
Chris Williamson
There we go.
Sean
He just comes over with a shotgun and a case of beer. Wait, by the end of the afternoon, they'll be out of the pool. Yeah. Guarantee it.
Chris Williamson
The irony of that, though is it's really sad. It's almost like living in a cold area and they're like, no, we only have air conditioning here. Yeah, it's like, no, no, we need heat. It's cold.
Sean
Yeah. Like there's, there's laws in place. I. I don't know what the specific laws are in Montana, but I believe it's something because they have the same thing in Florida, just the inverse. Where, like, if it's in the summer and your air conditioning unit breaks, there's like a 24 hour or 48 hour period where the people have to go fix it by law, because, like, you'll just overheat and die or like in the cold you'll just freeze to death. But there's like certain laws, like, no, you have to come fix it within 48 hours. I think it's under, like normal circumstances, not like national emergency or stuff like that, but under normal circumstances, by law, you have to come fix it.
Chris Williamson
Because if like hundreds of them went out, they wouldn't have.
Sean
That would be a different scenario. But yeah, like just you yourself, it's.
Chris Williamson
It's important. I mean, elderly people can't live long.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
And if it Gets way too hot or too cold very quickly.
Sean
Yeah. Or like small animals and you know, children and stuff like that. It's not good. But yeah, there's like certain laws in place to protect people from things like that. But not if your house burns down. They. You're fucked.
Chris Williamson
Not with energy weapons.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
You're in big trouble.
Sean
That's in the fine print.
Chris Williamson
Gotta paint your roof blue.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Turns out talking about other wild. Well, this is more of a discovery in a sense. So they've used some sort of lidar. And you guys have probably heard about this everywhere, even before it came on Rogan. But I was, I was waiting for this to be broken down. Yeah. They looked under the pyramids and they found these huge columns, like eight columns that have coils around them all the way down. That could be walkways that seem hollow. I guess this lidar is like pretty good at measuring things out. So, you know, they're fairly certain these things exist. And they go down like 600 meters.
Sean
That's pretty far.
Chris Williamson
Stop. On top of these two kind of hollowed out, definitely constructed carved granite blocks that are ginormous. We're talking like football field size. Mind boggling. Like at that point it's like, well now what do you say? It already is fairly clear that the pyramids were basically impossible to build.
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Chris Williamson
It work harder for you.
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Chris Williamson
TNCs at least in the time frame that they're saying that they were built because it was placing a two ton, perfectly cut, you know rectangle stone every two and a half minutes.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
To equal the whatever 29 years it would have taken. It's just.
Sean
Yeah, it's like the massive scale of the rocks is one problem. Like how do you move them? Some of them are cut from quarries like hundreds of miles away. Like that's a big problem. How do you move them? But also how do you cut them? I mean they're cut perfectly. And according to what modern archaeologists say, it would have been during like the Bronze Age, which you can't cut. I mean you can. It takes extremely long to cut rocks like that. So it's like how are they cutting them too? That's, that's another issue. It was like how do you move them and how do you cut them?
Chris Williamson
And how many people would you need without machinery to place anything every two and a half minutes? I mean that assembly line is, is rapid.
Sean
Yeah, well a lot of people, a lot of people say, well, oh, they had just a massive amount of slaves back then, which I could see. You know, when you have like millions and millions of people to just do free labor for you, you could get a lot done in a couple hundred years. But some of the stuff just doesn't add up, you know. And then still the big question of like what was the purpose of all of this? We still don't understand that.
Chris Williamson
No.
Sean
Like some people say it was a shrine for the grave. Other people say it's like some sort of a energy creation device, power station.
Chris Williamson
After these coils and, and a little bit more probable.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Picture now it's starting to look like it's more of a giant machine in a sense.
Sean
It had some purpose. It had to have done something for them.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. Because it just takes too much.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Too much to put that together.
Sean
Yeah. It's crazy. There's also like the ones in Egypt are pretty mind blowing. There a lot of the pyramids in Mexico and in Central America, Central and South America are also really cool. Like have you heard Graham Hancock talk about there's certain. Some of the pyramids in I believe in Mexico somewhere in South America or South or Central America. I can't remember which ones it is, but the really massive ones. There's a thing that the stairs do on the side of them where, when the, when they're in I think an equinox or where the sun is in a specific part of the sky during the year, there's a shadow that gets casted on the steps that basically makes the serpent head on the bottom of the steps look like it has like, the shadows form this, like, wave that go up the top of the steps. So it makes it look like the whole serpent on the side of the building. It's really, really cool thing to see. And it only happens at this specific time of the year. So, like, they engineered this entire pyramid to be in an exact spot so that during this exact time of the year, during sunset, it creates this formation.
Chris Williamson
That's incredible.
Sean
Incredible. Yes. Insane. And you watch it and it looks like a serpent. It looks so cool.
Chris Williamson
Have you ever seen the map where they, like, draw the line between the Mexican pyramids where the Egyptian ones are, and then there's like some in China and they say that it basically across the globe, like, draws out the Orion's belt.
Sean
Oh, really?
Chris Williamson
There's a connection to the Orion belt with like each set of pyramids too.
Sean
Oh, I did see that. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Chris Williamson
I don't know how true those things, you know, it's like.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
If you draw enough lines, you can make grass look kind of however you want. Yeah. But I don't know, it's fun.
Sean
Yeah. And there are like most of the pyramids, they're orientated in an exact way that aligns with the sun and the stars in some way. There's some sort of a astrological significance to them.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. I think they're aligned off.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Like, perfectly aligned.
Sean
Yeah. Which is insane to perfectly align a structure Right. That big.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
At that time.
Chris Williamson
And then there's a weird thing about the base of one of the pyramids or the Great Pyramid, that it's like a perfect ratio sizing of the entire globe. So you multiply it by times and it's like perfectly fit. I guess you could say that's a coincidence, but I think they're tough ones. I think it gets to a point where you get too many coincidences and you're like, these are no longer a coincidence.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
This is kind of just a bit too perfect.
Sean
One of my favorite facts about the pyramids is, and this was a Neil DeGrasse Tyson one that he mentioned on the podcast a while ago. But after the Great Pyramids, the next largest structure that was built. So, like, in timescale, the next time we built something taller than the Great Pyramids was the Eiffel tower in like 18. Whatever it was.
Chris Williamson
Right.
Sean
Early 1800s. But that was the next structure that we've managed to build, a stable structure that was taller than the pyramids. So it took us that long to build something that tall.
Chris Williamson
That.
Sean
Taller than this ancient fucking.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
Structure. It's Crazy.
Chris Williamson
And the Eiffel Tower would not last 100 years if we didn't keep repairing.
Sean
No. No way.
Chris Williamson
And no, you don't need to do anything. The pyramids go nowhere.
Sean
No, they're not going anywhere.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. Could be a couple of, like, another 10,000 years, they'd still be hanging around and we'd all be done.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
It's wild. It's so wild. What did you think of that John Cleese video that they played? So John Cleese was one of the Monty Python characters, old comedy group in England, and they did that video that just basically described each side of politics.
Sean
Oh, yeah. I love that video.
Chris Williamson
Isn't it clever?
Sean
So ahead of its time. Yeah. I mean, it's so true, even. Yeah. Like, that's a great example. But I love the way he was talking about how, like, the great part about it is if you have enemies, you can just blame all of your problems on your enemies, and all of the good things in the world are attributed to you and your qualities.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
And so you just demonize people. And then it's an easy, convenient thing to be. Like, something in my life is not working out. I must have these people to blame because they're the problem of everything.
Chris Williamson
Well, it's a way to be. To justify being really angry all the time, but then also still believing you're the righteous person.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
When really you're just an angry person.
Sean
Yeah. I think social media has made that so apparent and clear to us.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
I mean, it's just like all the. Everyone just picks a side and you get these echo chambers and no one is willing to hear what anyone else says on the other side. It's just like, make fun of the other side, Gain approval from your side.
Chris Williamson
No, I mean, it's.
Sean
It's no more help anything.
Chris Williamson
It's no more clear right now than what's happening with Elon and Tesla. It's like you can say, oh, I just don't like what he's up to and what he's. They are vowing for his destruction.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
You know, there are people on the left praying for his assassination. I wouldn't be surprised. I mean, the hatred for this person that made all the electric cars, you know, has been a Democrat his whole life. Instead of just having people question, well, why would he have just changed now? It's all just for, oh, he just wants money. He just wants this and that. You know, they talked about a great Elon quote. He said, what I care about is the reality of goodness, not the perception of it. And what I see all over the place is people who care about looking good while doing evil. I mean, that hits hard.
Sean
Yeah, that was also, I think during that interview was when he like, he like called out Disney. Like he like by name mentioned, I think it was the CEO or whoever was the head at Disney. Yeah, because that was the one where he was, they were asking him about advertisers and, and they were like, well, what if, what if they stop advertising? What if, what if they stop giving you money for the platform? And he's like, I don't give a fuck.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, fuck it.
Sean
If the money doesn't come, the money doesn't come. I don't give a fuck. And then he said that. But yeah, I think that's.
Chris Williamson
That was badass.
Sean
It was badass. And I think it's true. You know, like so many companies you get, whether it's like human rights or, you know, energy and the planet and the environment and stuff, it's like it doesn't matter whether you're actually doing anything good. It matters if you can perceive people to think that you're doing good.
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Sean
You know, it's like I hate all these companies that try to make themselves seem like they're for the environment, for sustainability, and then what they're actually doing is terrible for the environment, terrible for sustainability, terrible for human rights. Like, for sure. It's just completely backwards of what they're trying to sell.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. It's all just perception.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
It's like, how can we make ourselves look while getting the most money?
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
And it doesn't matter. It's a. It's like they could just wait for society to kind of lean towards something and then they would be. They double down. It's like all of a sudden, you know, if. If all of a sudden the D. I. Thing and the wokeness and the equity inclusion changed into just, you know, masculine this and that. If it just went the other way, all of a sudden all the Disney characters would be jacked. Just suddenly that.
Sean
Did you hear. Have you been paying attention to what's going on with the new snow white movie at all?
Chris Williamson
Oh, I have a bit Disney. Yeah.
Sean
Yeah. Oh, it's terrible. It completely backfired on them. Completely backfired. Because that's what they try to do. They tried to make it like a new woke thing and like not go away from the original story and they're like, he's not gonna be saved by a man this time and like rewrote everything and everyone's just like, this is a dog movie. Like, it's terrible movie people hate.
Chris Williamson
I read an article just now because it's so undeniable how badly this is flopped, that the article said, don't blame wokeness. It's not even the woke stuff in the movie. It's just that it was just a bad movie not delivered well by the actresses. And it's almost like protecting wokeism.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
You know what I mean? It's like you write it that way to be like, oh no, it's not really all because of this. It's actually just that parts of it are a terrible film. It's like, I don't know if that's true.
Sean
It's just the basis of the idea is wrong. It's like whenever. Whenever they try to make like a. A spin off of some already established movie to make it like more progressive. Like, you know, they did the female ghostbusters and then they did the. What was the other one? They did oceans. Eleven oceans. Yeah, the new oceans one. And it's. It's like just create something new. There's nothing wrong with making a female empowered movie. It's just don't try and, like, take an already good story and reconstruct it for your own narrative. Like, make your own story. Well, yeah, you know, there's nothing wrong with that. Yeah, there's nothing wrong with that. But don't just try and, like, destroy something that already has value to repurpose it for your own message, you know, that's not helpful at all. It's crazy.
Chris Williamson
They didn't have to redo groomsmen in order to make brides. They just wrote an original piece that was absolutely hilarious. They used a bunch of female comedians that were brilliant a lot of snl, and it was phenomenal. But when they did that with Ghostbusters, they used a great cast, a lot of very, very funny women, and it was just mostly dog shit. Yeah, they completely wasted those characters. I mean, it was like a bad SNL skit through the whole thing. And it really surprised me because they had so many talented, hilarious female actresses in there. I was like, they could probably pull this off. Didn't even get close.
Sean
Yeah, well, I think. I think a lot of it, not a lot of it, but I think some of it goes back to one of the things that they talked about in the podcast, which is like, you can't just build. Like nowadays, you don't just build people up. It's like you destroy the other side to build yourself up. And so it's like, we're gonna make a female empowering movie to get back at the men. And, like, I will admit, men do this as well. Like, both sides are just like, you can't just be happy for ourselves. It's like, we have to get back at them. It's like, they're wrong, we're better. And it's like it goes on both sides. Men do it to women, women do it to men all the time. And it's like, that's not productive. If we're really trying to maximize happiness and, you know, get everyone on the same page and communicate more and actually have a better quality of life for ourselves, we can't just tear down each other to be. Build ourselves up. You know, that's not how you do things. You can build each other up at the same time, but it's always like, I'm doing this. This is better than what they're doing. Or, like, they're doing this. Look at what I'm doing. I'm so much better, or whatever it is. It's not just, hey, I'm Doing this good thing. That's awesome. It's like I'm doing this better than them or I'm doing this in spite of them or whatever it is, you know, it's not helpful at all.
Chris Williamson
Well, what's the end game? You either got to run out of people to demonize or you just fight everybody to nothing.
Sean
Yeah, you just. Yeah, just keep making this.
Chris Williamson
It's okay to disagree with people. It's okay to not like their politics, their ideas. Unless, you know someone is breaking the law in a way to attack you or invading you, then give people space to have different opinions. Yeah, and I, I don't like the idea of everybody thinking the same way and agreeing with the same thing.
Sean
No, that's a bad.
Chris Williamson
I don't know what that. What is that? Communist China, you know?
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
It's like, at what point are you just like, oh, we're all exactly the same. It's nice to have a chat with somebody that thinks completely different to you and then also realize they're also a good person.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Like, hey, that's cool.
Sean
Yeah, you can disagree with somebody without demonizing them.
Chris Williamson
What do you think about the NGOs and USAID potentially funding Tesla attacks? It's going to be interesting to see how they lay out those findings.
Sean
But what tax are they going to be paying for Tesla? Sorry, you said a Tesla tax attacks?
Chris Williamson
No, attacking.
Sean
Oh, attacking. Oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
Like funding the protests that are leading to, you know, some of these vehicles being damaged and possibly the money is coming from these NGOs. I mean, you would imagine there's a paper trail. You would imagine it could be provable. But holy shit, what does that mean? And how many government funded protests and violent things does this go back to Black Lives Matter, like, and the rioting that led from that? I mean, at what point is it like, how long have we been paying for this stuff?
Sean
Yeah, I don't know. I definitely think that the government is in the business of incentivizing violence and upset in that way. Like, it's not uncommon for them to do stuff like that. It's just they're, they're pretty good at it. So it's hard to find, it's hard to. It's hard to catch them on.
Chris Williamson
They got lots of shredders.
Sean
Yeah. It's also hard too, because it's like if there are. If it is true that USAID is funding this and they're backing protesters and stuff like that, if that is true, there's also people who just genuinely are doing that. Because that's what they feel is right. They just want to do that. That's true. So you get both sides of it, and it's hard to kind of draw the lines of who's motivated by what.
Chris Williamson
But I think that's what makes it difficult to kind of prove is, like, once there's momentum to start a protest somewhere, you know, like, hey, we're going to pick it outside of this Tesla dealership, then NGOs with money could jump on the back of that, knowing that other people that are there for genuine protesting and, you know, reasons are already going to be there, or they organize it themselves, and these other people just jump on board and it's like, well, who started?
Sean
Yeah, yeah, it gets hard. It gets hard to do that. Do you remember during. During COVID I think it was during a lot of the Black Lives Matter protests, there would just be, like, random pallets of bricks at protests. Like, people were just finding them. Yeah. Just like random pallets just sitting on the street. What is that coming from? What's the. Like, obviously you want to incite violence, like, but who's doing that?
Chris Williamson
Yeah. I mean, some of them were in downtown Chicago.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
And they're not using bricks to build a lot of things, you would think. Kind of. But that's not how they build those giant buildings.
Sean
No.
Chris Williamson
And not with just a big pallet that they leave there overnight.
Sean
Yeah. And it wasn't, like, near construction sites. It was like, on street corners.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. There was in the middle of downtown, nothing around being built.
Sean
And it's just, like, weird, you know, because, I mean, it's not easy to move a pallet of bricks. You know, if you and a couple buddies were just like, hey, let's go put it. Take you all day. It would be hard work, though, saying.
Chris Williamson
That if you drove up in a white truck and just put them on the side, nobody would question anything.
Sean
Yeah. That's.
Chris Williamson
They'd be like, oh, they're building something.
Sean
Put some high, high vis vests on.
Chris Williamson
No one would ask a question, drop them off, leave. And it's like, I guess they're there.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
I mean, that one is. Is pretty creepy because it's known that they were throwing a lot of bricks around.
Sean
Oh, yeah, It's.
Chris Williamson
It's a very real thing.
Sean
But it's scary. Like, regardless of what side it is, like, it's scary that, like, someone would even do that, you know, like, someone would be so motivated and pushed to literally put pallets of bricks near already violent protests. That's. That's wild.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, I think people just get given missions and you can start out real slow with like the nefarious tasks and then before you know it, it's like, yeah, yeah, we're just leaving, you know, glass in this playground. And that's just the mission today. Yeah, just go do it. That's what you do. This is your secret job.
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Chris Williamson
Don't tell anyone. Yeah, and yeah, I think people can go get, get pretty ugly. What did you think about the video? They played a Baron Trump going up to Biden at the inauguration.
Sean
Oh, I didn't.
Chris Williamson
And the videos, like ever since it happened, I mean the video was, was shown a lot and it's like Biden's smiling, Baron goes over giant guy leans in, says something and then Biden just looks terrified.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
And supposedly some lip reader is like, tried to analyze it. You know, someone that they, a professional that they bring into, you know, lip read for lots of different things. And yeah, he said it's on now.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Wow.
Sean
Like, I don't know.
Chris Williamson
Holy shit.
Sean
I will say I feel like how.
Chris Williamson
Pissed he is though. They tried to look his dad up.
Sean
Yeah, I feel like honestly though, I don't know what he said. It seems pretty accurate when you watch the video. It seems like that's what he said. But I feel like you could go up to Biden, say any sentence and he would probably have the same reaction. Just be like, yeah, you hand him a sandwich and he'd be like, I have no idea what.
Chris Williamson
He saw. Yeah, I mean it's, it's hard to know.
Sean
How old is Baron now? He's got to be. Is he 18 yet? He's an adult.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, I think he's in college now.
Sean
I think I remember, like, the last election cycle, he was, like, 15 or 16 or so. He was pretty young.
Chris Williamson
He was real young. And holy hell, did he get tall fast.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
Dude is giant. What they say is six, eight. I mean, he just looks huge. You wait till he fills out. Geez, that guy's gonna have a good chance of being a president in the future.
Sean
Yeah. What's he gonna do?
Chris Williamson
I don't know. We'll see if he. If he, you know, gets in some trouble and fucks up his chances or if he stays tight.
Sean
Well, they've already established that, you know, they can't find cocaine in the White House. They won't trace it back to you. So if he wants to go down that path.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
Door's already open.
Chris Williamson
Oh, dear. Good old Hunter Biden. All right, so Baron is 19 years old.
Sean
19.
Chris Williamson
Yep. He was born on March 20th.
Sean
Oh.
Chris Williamson
So it was just his birthday. Look at that.
Sean
Wow.
Chris Williamson
In college. 1968.
Sean
19 years old. And your dad is a president. That's got to be a mind.
Chris Williamson
That's. Yeah, that's why. Well, how old was 2016? So that's like nine years ago. Yeah.
Sean
Yeah. He would have been even younger.
Chris Williamson
His whole life is just.
Sean
But I feel like when you're 10 years old, you don't really know what's going on. Like, at 19, you have not a great idea of how the world works, but you at least know what the president is a little bit more. Like, you understand a little bit more.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
Enough to know, like, oh, shit, this is crazy. You know?
Chris Williamson
Yeah. But what an upbringing to be, like, thrust in the middle of that world, and especially with what was happening with his dad and the courts and.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Trying to send him to jail and just all of the politics around, everything.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
Intense, dude.
Sean
He better buckle down for the next one.
Chris Williamson
100%. Joe kind of listed a little bit towards the end of this podcast, just about, you know, obviously, people now, really. So many people label Joe as, like, right wing. You know, he had Trump on. He's kind of been leaning that way. He's frustrated with COVID He couldn't stand Gavin Newsom's approach to things in California. He moved to Texas. You know, you would say that the compass is pointing a little bit more that direction, but also, you know, you don't throw the baby out with the bathwater with that. It's like he was a Democrat, always. He has a lot of social, you know, income and health care and, and like left wing values. Still believes in gay marriage, you know, abortion, things big on income for the poor, like having something because his family use that. He believes that should exist. He thinks not having social health care is, is nuts. You know, I'm British, so I think the same thing. I mean, it is strange.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
To, to not have. And I think that there's a place for it. America can figure it out with that. Good.
Sean
Yeah, we can believe in us.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. We can make it work. And you know, I mean that, that's a lot of what he really believes in. So even though there's a few pieces that are out, it doesn't, it's almost like the left is kicking him out. And the left likes to kind of do that, it seems.
Sean
Well, I think nowadays it's so much like it's gone so divisive that like if you're in the middle, like say you're like a middle road or, you know, it's like you're going to be pushed from either side. Like the righties are going to call you a lefty, the lefties are going to call you a righty. You know, like, you can't just be a moderate anymore. You got to, you got to get down on your knees and suck the party dick a little bit nowadays.
Chris Williamson
Right.
Sean
You know, you got to kind of play that game, which sucks. I will say I feel like Joe Rogan's still pretty Middle Earth dude, you know, whenever you talk to him, pretty, pretty center dude. But I do feel like a lot of people do kind of feel like he pushed a little bit towards the right just with the whole Trump thing and Elon thing and then like him being at the inauguration and all that stuff. I don't think that he's like a far rightist, but I do feel like he's kind of nudged a little bit more to the right, at least for sure before. Because I remember like a couple years ago when people would ask him about like, oh, would you ever have Trump on the podcast? Would you ever have politicians and stuff like that? He was a lot more against it than before before than he is now. And so I think in general, him as well as Elon, they've just gotten more involved in politics and so people feel like he's a little bit more on the right because of that. Yeah, and I feel that way a little bit, but I still feel like he's, he's, he's not outrageous. You Know, like, he's not a. He's not a radical rightist. He's not fucking racist or anything like that.
Chris Williamson
Last election, he was far more likely to vote for Trump than Kamala. I don't know who he voted for, but saying that in the future, when there's other candidates and the left actually gets someone good that, you know, represents the values that are things Joe also believes in. When you're more centrist, like, there's equal chance that you can go back the other side.
Sean
Yeah. And I mean, he still did have. He had a lot of more middle of the road leftist people on the podcast. Like, he had Bernie on a while ago. He had a couple other people on the.
Chris Williamson
Senator Fetterman.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
His name. Yeah. He wears like the hoodies and looks like he works at a gas station. Yeah, that guy was pretty good, actually. I liked. I liked him. He seemed pretty genuine.
Sean
But I feel like it's just more people's. Them just getting more involved in politics. Like they used to be like, talk about it, give, like somewhat what they feel, but not actually get involved in it. Whereas I feel like now they play more of an active role in that.
Chris Williamson
Mm.
Sean
Which some people don't like. Some people, like, I'm kind of indifferent to it. I feel like as long as they're moving in a good direction, you know, it's. It's all right to get involved, but we just got to keep things reasonable, you know, just don't get crazy.
Chris Williamson
And I also think we need to start prioritizing the right things. We're arguing about a lot of stuff that is kind of nonsense.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
It's like, you know, with Elon focusing on trying to slow down the national debt, that might be a good thing. Like, I wish more people were just like, yeah, this is kind of like non partisan. Let's work together to do this.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
This seems like a really good move for the country and for everybody. Another big one that Chris and Joe brought up on this podcast is the obesity problem in the world.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
And it's like, we think. I don't know what people think. Do we think that we're getting healthier? No. This is the fattest time ever.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
There's a billion obese people in the world.
Sean
That's nuts.
Chris Williamson
More obese people than starving people. That's wild. The average American, Chris said, is like, is fatter than pigs. That's a wild stat.
Sean
Yeah. Isn't it? Like, almost 50% of people are, like, obese by some metric. It's a lot.
Chris Williamson
I Mean, he said something about by 2030, like half the kids or more than half will be.
Sean
Oh yeah, that's always the saddest, you know, whenever you just see some. I used to work at a grocery store when I was in high school and I realized like super soon into it, like you can easily tell what people are looking like just based on their grocery cart. 100 like someone pull their grocery cart forward, you see like a bunch of frozen food and snacks and candies and cookies and shit. And you're like, this person can be £500. And sure enough, they were. And then their kids, they're like five year old kid is also obese. You're like, how does that even happen? That's terrible.
Chris Williamson
Well, the sodas they buy, dude.
Sean
Oh my God. I used to, there was this guy who would come in every Sunday and buy 4 packs, 412 packs, 4 to 612 packs of diet Coke every Sunday.
Chris Williamson
Wow.
Sean
And he had, he had one of the electric carts. He wasn't actually overweight, which was the crazy part. He was just kind of an older man who was diet slow to move around. Yeah, it was diet. It was a little better. But yeah, I would always help him move it to his car. And it was like every week, four of them at least. And I was like, damn, dude, that's, that's terrible.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, I mean when I was in England growing up, I just thought like sodas were for kids. I didn't know many adults that would have sodas like Cokes and whatever. And then I, when I did move to America in the mid-90s, I mean, it was just a whole different thing. It was just like everyone's just unlike.
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Sean
Now it's like, don't drink water anymore. Have a soda.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, everyone. I mean, it's delicious. I get it.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
But also there was something missing. There was something different. And it was like allowed and okay and socially fine. And when you make room like that, it's. It's a bad, bad setup. I mean, look, people. People give Whole Foods some shit because it's so expensive and not everyone can afford to get food there and etc. And I totally get that is expensive. But when I was there the other day here in Bozeman, everyone in the store was skinny.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Chris Williamson
Skinnier in shape. There were no. There wasn't one person that I would say was a fat person in there.
Sean
Usually go to Walmart.
Chris Williamson
That's not a coincidence.
Sean
The opposite.
Chris Williamson
The opposite.
Sean
But I will say I feel like in Bozeman, because we're so much of an outdoorsy, active town, it is a little bit skewed. Like, I feel like we have a lot less fat people in Bozeman. It's probably normal because whenever I go down to Florida or Tennessee to see my family, it's like the opposite. It's like a big switch flips. Probably a lot of overweight people.
Chris Williamson
Even at their Whole Foods, you'd see more of it. But it still told me something. I mean, you know, I go to the other grocery stores here. That's not the case. You know, they're just different sizes of people. And it does go back to what you're saying. Like the people spending a long time in the fruits and vegetable section don't look like the people that are going up and down the cereal aisle.
Sean
I've never seen a. Well, I don't want to say I never, but it's more likely that you'll see like a really skinny person looking at the ingredients than you will a fat person. Like, I never see a fat person being like, let me check what ingredients are in this.
Chris Williamson
You know, they don't want to give a. There. They're looking at the bright picture on the front.
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
And they're like, look how happy that leprechaun is.
Sean
Like, how many servings can I eat before I feel ashamed of myself?
Chris Williamson
I know. It's sad though. It really is. It's like one thing that I wish we would focus on. I hope RFK can do it and make a bit of a shift and just highlight what is bad. You know, I'm sure as soon as Trump is out, it's going to go back to the way it was before, where they've just got that crappy food pyramid and no one's making a big fuss about it and everyone's just like, well, yeah, just kind of cut out sugar if you can. But there's like, no, this is terrible for you class, you know?
Sean
Yeah.
Chris Williamson
They, like, really show kids. This is what happens if you keep eating like this.
Sean
Yeah. And it's sad too, because a lot of it is. A lot of it is like, you know, you see overweight parents and then their kids are overweight and then they grow up overweight, and then they've really never spent any of their life skinny, you know, just because of the way that they were raised. Like, the parents have a terrible diet, they get born, they also accrue a terrible diet, gain a bunch of weight, and the cycle continues.
Chris Williamson
Yeah.
Sean
And it's. It's really hard to break out of that when you've been doing that your whole life as well.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, for sure.
Sean
It's not impossible. It's just hard.
Chris Williamson
Mm. Let's finish up with the unkillable soldiers.
Sean
The math. The math guy.
Chris Williamson
Yeah. So World War II and meth. Yeah, Meth powered war.
Sean
Oh, yeah. Well, I think they were talking about World War I, but I'm sure as well. Yeah.
Chris Williamson
So it. But if they didn't invent that drug, do you think maybe those two wars wouldn't have happened?
Sean
They wouldn't have been as successful. Would not have been. Would not have been the same without it.
Chris Williamson
Right.
Sean
But yeah.
Chris Williamson
No, I mean, so this guy basically was fighting against the Russians. They.
Sean
He had a Finnish soldier. Yep.
Chris Williamson
Right. He had a ton of meth, which they gave to all the soldiers.
Sean
30. 30 person supply. Yeah. In his pocket that somehow melted or got into a system somehow.
Chris Williamson
How does that even work?
Sean
I don't know.
Chris Williamson
It just melts into his leg.
Sean
Well, I'm sure you've heard stories of people who go through. They'll like put drugs up their butt for security and then the bag breaks or something and then it like goes into their system through their butt and they just get like, they overdose on whatever it is because their little baggie broke in their butthole and now they have a bunch of drugs.
Chris Williamson
Right.
Sean
Going through their system. Maybe. I don't know. If it was up as butt, hopefully not 30. 30 people's supply of drugs is probably too much to go up the butt. But he somehow got into his system.
Chris Williamson
He basically lost his mind, took off skiing, skied like 60 miles, kind of blacked out, didn't know where he was. Woke up, burnt a cabin down, hallucinated a bunch. Kept thinking he was getting attacked by Russians and wolverines and the rest of it. Got blown up by a landmine and then blown up another time with a door.
Sean
Blown up twice.
Chris Williamson
He lost, but he traveled like hundreds of miles. He weighed 90 pounds by the time.
Sean
They got 14 days. Yeah, he went from whatever his starting weight was. It didn't say, but he lost all of it in 14 days.
Chris Williamson
Well, think of the calories. He would have been burned.
Sean
I know. Fuck Ozempic people ought to do that. 14 day meth binge, Russian wilderness and landmines.
Chris Williamson
Landmines. Turns out incredible. And he still lived to like 80. Yeah, those stories are fascinating. I do like that Chris brings those on. And weirdly inspired by that. While I was listening to it and I said it to you while we were listening, I was like, I would have given up. I would have given up immediately. Yeah, as soon as I was 10 miles into the skiing bit, I'd be like, I don't know what I'm doing.
Sean
I'm fucked.
Chris Williamson
Yeah, I have no ability to survive this.
Sean
That's that meth though, son, gets it going.
Chris Williamson
It's a hell of a drug.
Sean
You're like, I don't fucking know where I'm going, but I'm gonna keep going.
Chris Williamson
That's crazy. Loved it. Well, thanks, Sean, for today.
Sean
Thanks, yeah, thanks for having me.
Chris Williamson
Check out the Chris podcast, the guy's a legend. And we'll talk to you guys next.
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Joe Rogan Experience Review Podcast
Episode 435: Review of Chris Williamson
Release Date: March 27, 2025
In Episode 435 of the Joe Rogan Experience Review Podcast, hosts Chris Williamson and Sean delve into a comprehensive analysis of Chris Williamson's appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience. This episode, recorded on March 20th, explores a wide array of topics discussed during the original podcast, offering listeners insightful breakdowns and thoughtful critiques.
Chris Williamson begins by highlighting his admiration for fellow podcasters like Lex Fridman, Theo, Bert Kreischer, and Tom Segura, emphasizing the collaborative nature of the podcasting community. He states:
“Chris Williamson is a very interesting dude. Great podcast, a great interviewer, curious individual, reads a lot of books, solid sense of humor.”
[02:05]
Sean echoes this sentiment, praising the ability of these podcasters to ask deep, meaningful questions that enrich conversations:
“They ask such good questions… they always seem, like, very interested in the conversation, and it's always a good place to kind of let the mind roam and hear new ideas and new perspectives.”
[03:57]
This mutual respect underscores the interconnectedness and mutual support within the podcasting sphere, where top podcasters frequently promote and appear on each other's shows.
A significant portion of the discussion centers around conspiracy theories, particularly those explored on the Joe Rogan Experience. Sean expresses frustration with the term "conspiracy theory," noting its weaponization:
“I hate how the word conspiracy theory has been, like, weaponized nowadays.”
[06:07]
Chris adds historical context, mentioning that the CIA coined the term to discredit those questioning events like the JFK assassination:
“The CIA created the term… Push back against people that questioned the JFK assassination.”
[06:21]
They delve into specific conspiracies discussed on the podcast, such as the Antarctica Flat Earth theory and the use of directed energy weapons. Sean remarks on the persistence of these theories despite overwhelming evidence against them:
“Even in the face of overwhelming evidence, it… you can't be persuaded.”
[08:28]
Chris further critiques the credibility of sources spreading these theories:
“He seemed like a straight-up liar.”
[10:37]
This segment underscores the challenges podcasts face in balancing open discussion with factual accuracy.
Transitioning to ancient mysteries, Chris and Sean discuss recent lidar discoveries beneath the pyramids, revealing massive, precisely cut structures that baffle modern archaeologists:
“They found these huge columns, like eight columns that have coils around them… go down like 600 meters.”
[20:38]
Sean highlights the technological marvel of the pyramids' construction:
“How do you move them? And how do you cut them?”
[23:16]
Chris points out the perfect alignment and mathematical precision of the pyramids, questioning the plausibility of their construction during the Bronze Age:
“It was the next largest structure... took us that long to build something that tall.”
[27:24]
The hosts marvel at the architectural genius and speculate on the pyramids' true purpose, suggesting they might have served as ancient machines rather than mere tombs.
A pivotal discussion revolves around Joe Rogan's political stance and the broader issue of political polarization. Chris notes Rogan's shift towards more right-leaning topics, mentioning his support for figures like Elon Musk and his frustration with policies like those of Gavin Newsom:
“Joe Rogan's still pretty middle Earth dude… he was a Democrat, always… he has a lot of social, you know, income and health care and… left-wing values.”
[46:30]
Sean reflects on the difficulty of maintaining a moderate position in today's divisive climate:
“If you're in the middle, like say you're like a middle road or, you know, you're going to be pushed from either side.”
[48:06]
They discuss the challenges of being labeled by both sides and the importance of maintaining reasoned discourse without demonization:
“It's okay to disagree with people. It's okay to not like their politics, their ideas.”
[37:22]
This segment emphasizes the need for balanced conversations and the pitfalls of extreme partisanship.
Chris and Sean critique how corporations, particularly Disney, project progressive values while often engaging in questionable practices. They discuss the backlash against Disney's new Snow White movie, which attempted to modernize the classic tale with a "woke" narrative:
“They tried to make a female empowering movie to get back at the men… it's just trying to destroy something that already has value.”
[35:09]
Sean and Chris lament the trend of altering beloved stories to fit contemporary agendas, arguing that it often leads to poor execution and audience discontent:
“They used a bunch of female comedians that were brilliant…but it was mostly dog shit.”
[35:53]
This critique extends to other industries where perception is prioritized over genuine positive impact, highlighting hypocrisy in corporate messaging.
Addressing a pressing global issue, the hosts discuss the alarming rise in obesity rates worldwide. Chris cites statistics from the podcast, noting:
“There's a billion obese people in the world. More obese people than starving people.”
[51:31]
Sean shares personal anecdotes to illustrate the pervasiveness of unhealthy eating habits, such as the ubiquitous availability of sugary beverages and processed foods:
“It was like one thing that I wish we would focus on… they really show kids, this is what happens if you keep eating like this.”
[56:36]
They emphasize the cyclical nature of obesity, where poor dietary habits are passed down through generations, making it difficult to break free from unhealthy lifestyles.
In a surprising twist, Chris and Sean recount a historical tale of methamphetamine use in warfare. They describe how a soldier, exposed to a significant dose of meth, survived extreme conditions by continuing to fight despite severe physical and mental deterioration:
“He lost his mind, took off skiing, skied like 60 miles… got blown up by a landmine and then blown up another time with a door.”
[57:43]
Sean humorously compares this to modern drug abuse scenarios, highlighting the resilience and chaos induced by such substances:
“If you looked up, say, 30 people's supply of drugs, probably too much to go up the butt.”
[58:07]
This story serves as a stark example of the lengths to which soldiers were pushed and the unintended consequences of drug use in military contexts.
Episode 435 of the Joe Rogan Experience Review Podcast offers a multifaceted exploration of topics ranging from the intricacies of podcasting and ancient mysteries to contemporary political dynamics and health crises. Through engaging dialogue and critical analysis, Chris Williamson and Sean provide listeners with a nuanced understanding of the subjects discussed, enriched by insightful quotes and thoughtful reflections.
Whether dissecting the engineering marvels of the pyramids, navigating the treacherous waters of political polarization, or confronting the global obesity epidemic, this episode stands out as a compelling deep dive into the issues shaping our world today. For Rogan fans and curious minds alike, this review podcast serves as an invaluable companion to the original Joe Rogan Experience, extracting and expanding upon its most thought-provoking moments.
Notable Quotes with Timestamps:
Chris Williamson: “Chris Williamson is a very interesting dude. Great podcast, a great interviewer, curious individual, reads a lot of books, solid sense of humor.”
[02:05]
Sean: “They ask such good questions… they always seem, like, very interested in the conversation, and it's always a good place to kind of let the mind roam and hear new ideas and new perspectives.”
[03:57]
Chris Williamson: “The CIA created the term… Push back against people that questioned the JFK assassination.”
[06:21]
Sean: “Even in the face of overwhelming evidence, it… you can't be persuaded.”
[08:28]
Chris Williamson: “They found these huge columns, like eight columns that have coils around them… go down like 600 meters.”
[20:38]
Sean: “If you're in the middle, like say you're like a middle road or, you know, you're going to be pushed from either side.”
[48:06]
Chris Williamson: “They tried to make a female empowering movie to get back at the men… it's just trying to destroy something that already has value.”
[35:09]
Chris Williamson: “There's a billion obese people in the world. More obese people than starving people.”
[51:31]
Sean: “It was like one thing that I wish we would focus on… they really show kids, this is what happens if you keep eating like this.”
[56:36]
Chris Williamson: “He lost his mind, took off skiing, skied like 60 miles… got blown up by a landmine and then blown up another time with a door.”
[57:43]
These excerpts encapsulate the depth and range of discussions in the episode, providing a snapshot of the critical insights shared by the hosts.