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Roger
Joe Rogan podcast. Check it out. The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Joe Rogan
Come on, Roger.
Roger
Yeah, go for it. It.
Joe Rogan
We'll do it live.
Roger
Do it live.
Joe Rogan
That's a classic. Yeah, that's a classic. Look behind the scenes, crazy people telling you the news.
Roger
Yeah, that's good. And the, the will one where, you know, the studio guy, you know, he says, Shatner's doing some ADR for the cartoon, the Star Trek cartoon. And he says, you know, he uses the word sabotage and he gets corrected by the, by the studio guy. He's like, bill, it's pronounced sabotage. Please don't correct me. It's disgust me, sickens me. And you say sabotage. I say sabotage. I absolutely love William Shatner.
Joe Rogan
My favorite ones are the. Or. Excuse me, I can't remember his name. Rose, Bud. Orson Wells. Jesus Christ.
Roger
Orson Wells.
Joe Rogan
What happened?
Jamie
You started saying that.
Joe Rogan
I know what happened. My brain just said, nope, no access. When Orson Welles was doing the Gallo wine commercials, Remember those days?
Roger
Like Orson Welles, wine before it's time.
Joe Rogan
I know.
Roger
He was like, everything was like exhaustive sucking of air to come in.
Joe Rogan
But then he was making fun of how shitty the wine was in between takes. Like he's angry.
Roger
Yeah. There is a CD that you can get. I can't remember what it's called, but I have them at home. And it's like all these radio things like that where just when celebrities, you know, lose it on while doing voiceover and adr, it's hilarious.
Joe Rogan
Orson Welles is a crazy story. Right. Because when he made that movie, when he made Citizen Kane, which was about William Randolph Hearst.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
William Randolph Hearst essentially shut down one of the most talented guys alive at the time. Shut down his career.
Roger
Yeah, because the movie was kind of an insult about, you know, the whole thing about Rosebud is that's the name of his girlfriend's clitoris. That was his nickname for her clitoris. And so Orson Welles was doing a kind of very like, like he was jabbing at him in a very low level way. Like. Really? Yeah. Rosebud.
Joe Rogan
How did he know that that was the nickname of his girlfriend's clitoris?
Roger
People in Hollywood know these things. Oh, boy. Word gets around. Word gets around.
Joe Rogan
I would keep that one just to her.
Roger
Yeah. Who told?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, that's crazy. But I mean, if you go back to Of Worlds and then Citizen Kane, I mean, this guy was a dynamo. And then they shut him down.
Roger
Well, yeah, and he was doing things that nobody else would do. It's like he's like, oh, I want the camera down here, like, on the phone. Well, we can't get the camera lens down that low. Like, what you're talking about is impossible to do. And so he would just grab a. Like a pickaxe and just start chopping away at the studio concrete and dig a hole in the ground so you can put the camera down that low.
Joe Rogan
Oh, really?
Roger
Yeah, he would. He was obsessed with getting a vision on screen that was. Even today is so advanced. There's a shot in the very beginning when young Kane is like a little kid, and he's out there playing with Rosebud. He's out there playing with the sled in the snow, and the camera is on him, and then it kind of starts pulling back and it pulls through a window. And then we see his parents and the trust attorney and. And the camera keeps backing up all the way into the room. Well, to do that in a studio and to have all that snow and everything, you need so much light, but you also need a lot of light inside the. Because the exposure change. It's like an amazing, incredible dolly shot, a reverse tracking shot. It's fantastic.
Joe Rogan
And what year did he do this, too?
Roger
I don't know the exact year.
Joe Rogan
Citizen Kane has to be 40s, right?
Roger
Yeah, yeah, probably. It's. Yeah, it's in the 19. Late 40s, I would think.
Joe Rogan
Is that when it was, Jamie?
Roger
Yeah. Tell us the.
Joe Rogan
It should be.
Jamie
Yeah, 41 is when it came.
Roger
41. Early. Early 40s. Early 40s.
Joe Rogan
Wow.
Roger
Yeah. Wow.
Joe Rogan
Let me see that shot.
Roger
Wartime.
Joe Rogan
Can we find that?
Roger
Wartime. It's a wartime film. What?
Joe Rogan
Jimmy?
Roger
I was.
Jamie
I was looking for. I was lost and some other ones.
Joe Rogan
Wartime. 40s, right? Yeah, right. It's a crazier.
Roger
Yeah. Yeah.
Joe Rogan
I didn't even think of that. Yeah. Oh, my God.
Roger
A lot of stuff going on back then.
Joe Rogan
Probably hard to get people to go to the movies back then.
Roger
No, it would be easy to go to the movies because, in fact, wartime and depression and when things are bad, that's usually the best time for entertainment because people just want to escape.
Joe Rogan
Oh, well, that actually makes sense.
Roger
Yeah. Be careful, Charles. Pull your muffler around your neck, Charles. I think we shall have to tell him no.
Joe Rogan
Yes. I'll sign those papers now, Mr. Thatcher.
Roger
You people seem to forget that I'm the boy's father.
Joe Rogan
It's going to be done exactly the way I told Mr. Thatcher.
Roger
There ain't nothing wrong with Colorado. I don't see why we can't raise our own sons Just because we come into some money, if I want, I can go to court. A father has a right to. A boarder that beats his bill and leaves worthless stock behind. That property is just as much my property as anybody's now that it's valuable. And if Fred Graves had any idea all this was going to happen, he'd have made out those certificates in both our names.
Joe Rogan
However, they were made out in Mrs. Kane's name.
Roger
So in order to maintain that background exposure of the little kid in the window and the foreground, what you're not knowing is how much light they're using on the interior part in order to create that balance between the two. With the. With the film stocks back then. And the other thing is that table gets flown in. Like, they move that table into the shot because it's in the way of the camera move. And so there's all sorts of, like, you know, mathematics going on in the creation of this shot. And most people would just, you know, be like, oh, just, you know, shoot the kid outside and then cut inside and, you know, just do it like that. But, you know, Welles was. I mean, he was thinking on a complete other level, it's just we've robbed.
Joe Rogan
We got robbed of so many films, if you really think about it, what he could have made, you know.
Roger
Yes and no. My favorite film of his is Touch of Evil. And there's this amazing shot with Charlton Heston where he's playing a Mexican and he's got, like this, like, pencil thin, you know, mustache. This and like, Chuck Heston as a Mexican is fantastic. And then everybody's so sweaty in the movie. And it takes place in Mexico, but it's shot in Venice in California. And so the whole opening, which is this setting of a bomb in the trunk of a car. And then, yeah, here's the opening shot. And you can tell that it's actually downtown Venice.
Joe Rogan
And this is supposed to be Mexico.
Roger
Yeah, this is supposed to be like a border town in Mexico. I don't know if it's Tijuana or some other border town, but it's. He does this. This amazing, amazing single shot. Wow. And which back then, this is really hard to do. And this is kind of a. I mean, it's Charlton Heston essentially saying, I. I believe in Orson Welles and his vision. This is. See, that's. That's downtown Venice. There's. The beach is just beyond that.
Joe Rogan
Ah. Wow.
Roger
God. What year? Actually, I'm sorry, the beach might be behind us.
Joe Rogan
What year was this?
Roger
Yeah. 1958.
Joe Rogan
Wow. It's an incredible shot.
Roger
And. And this is incredibly difficult to do as well, because you've got a crane.
Joe Rogan
And now you're following the people.
Roger
Now you're following the people. And there's Charlton Heston with his mustache. And we know as an audience that there's a bomb in that car. But he doesn't know. And so, you know, he's still. You know, the.
Joe Rogan
Just the fact that this is all one shot is crazy.
Roger
And for back then. I mean, it's a big deal back then. The camera that you're using isn't just some little handicam or something like that. Now, you know, an iPhone. It's a Mitchell bncr, which is a. You know, it takes four guys to move that camera. It's made out of cast iron. You know, it's a giant camera with a blimp and blimp. A blimp is a soundproofing device that. So you have the camera, and then you've got to build a giant encasing.
Joe Rogan
For the camera because it makes so much noise.
Roger
You don't want to hear that.
Joe Rogan
What did that look like?
Roger
I have one in my home. It's.
Joe Rogan
Of course you do.
Roger
Well, I.
Joe Rogan
That shot's incredible. I would have never. I didn't know that film existed.
Roger
I bought. I bought mine from this commercial director named Charles Wittenmayer, and he had a massive collection of stuff, and then he liquidated. He just kind of cashed out of Los Angeles, and he's. He had a warehouse full of stuff. And so I went in and he's like, you know, well, here's. You can get this. And you can get this. I was like, okay, the Mitchell bncr. And we went over to it, and he's like, you know, this Mitchell BNCR was used, you know, to shoot the Godfather.
Joe Rogan
So that's what it looks like with the big lid on it.
Roger
Yeah, that's actually. Yeah, that's basically the camera. That's. That's the camera is that. They also have some camera.
Joe Rogan
Blimp. Is the thing on top of it?
Roger
Yeah, the blimp. Well, the whole thing is actually. The whole thing is a blimp. I mean, well, there's. There's a smaller camera with a blimp on it. The. The big one. Like, the whole thing is a blimp. And when you can actually open up all of these. These trap doors on it to reveal the camera inside of it, and then the reels that are in there, you go. It's. There's an open one. An opened up one. Wow. That one looks like it's holding an Arri on the inside. An Arri 100.
Joe Rogan
One of the things about old movies is they would let a scene cook. You know, you had so much time before people would talk, and you just let, like, the average daily life sort of play out.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And it set the tone for the film. And they don't now it's like. It's, like, built for Netflix.
Roger
Well, yeah. Well, now you have a white paper that Netflix gives you, and that, I think, was it Ben Affleck that was talking about it? You know how you've got to have a beat in the beginning, and you've got to have this and this and this in regular things? I mean, there was this book by Sid Field, which was a screenwriting book, that at one hand, it gave a kind of formula on what a movie should be. By page seven, your inciting event should happen. And by page 30, the first, he had everything mapped out by page. And that eventually found its way into the hands of studio executives. And they were like, oh, now we know what a screenplay is supposed to be structured, like, in order to have proper story arcs and structures in a satisfying.
Joe Rogan
Design.
Roger
And that's just the next iteration is Netflix giving you a white paper saying you have to shoot with these cameras. You have to process at these labs. You have to have tech specs that are within this range, and that's now extending to story because they've analytically looked at what audiences are able to process now, which is less and less, probably because of the COVID shot completely frying, their pineal glands, can no longer pay attention to anything. And then on top of that, the. The mind control device of cell phones. And, you know, with all of that, they. They're now like, well, how do we maintain the audience? And so you end up with white papers.
Joe Rogan
Don't you think it's options, too? It's almost like if something is not really fascinating within the first 20, 30 seconds, people just want to. Let's see what else is on. They just want to keep searching.
Roger
Well, there is that. I mean, there's something magical about being in a movie theater. You know, it's. You know, you're. You're. You're in this congregation.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
You know, Quentin always talks about how, you know, movies are my church. Well, it is a congregation, and you're having. You're sitting in the dark next to someone you don't even know. They might have completely different ideologies. You know, race, creed, color. Like, everything is different about them. And yet you're sitting in the dark next to them, having this ecstatic dream, this waking dream, sitting like insects, looking at the flicker on the screen. And you're sharing this kind of experience that you're physically trapped in. You know, like, you don't. You know, you don't get up and leave the theater and. Well, you might if you have to go to the bathroom or get some popcorn or something, but they'll even bring that to you. Now you. You're having this kind of ecstatic experience, absorbing the movie with someone you don't know, and you're sharing your bodily electricity with them. And I think this kind of. This is the magic that they often talk about of movies. It's not necessarily the movie itself on screen. It's the shared experience of being next to people.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
And that there is a kind of unseen electricity between people that unifies us. And I think that there are dark forces in the universe that are attempting to divide people up and to take that away, to take away that congregation.
Joe Rogan
Do you really think that that's by design, or you think that's just a natural function of streaming and televisions and phones and having access to things instantaneously?
Roger
I personally think that streaming was by design to eliminate residuals by design.
Joe Rogan
But isn't it just a function of technology emerging?
Roger
You notice that all of executives. Well, yeah, I mean, part of it is technology, but technology gets pushed and brought to the forefront for specific reasons. And, you know, digital cinema hasn't been the greatest thing for the creative process. And I think we see that in the works that we're looking at. I mean, if you watch stuff on Netflix and whatnot, we can see that it doesn't have the same power and impact. And also, you know, when you were making a movie, when you were making a film on film, it was like every time you turn on the camera, you're burning money. It's like every single frame is like $0.04 or whatever, whatever the calculation was. And so that was actually an expensive part of the process. And so, you know, there was all this preparation to get everything ready, like, oh, we want to get all of the props in place, you know, right before we shoot, and the actors are in their trailer and they're figuring out what they're going to do, and then you're on your way to set, and people are like, hey, I'll see you in the moment. And what they mean by that is, when the cameras turn on and you actually hear that happening, suddenly everything pops into play. And suddenly you're performing in front of, you know, you're, you're, you're. What you're attempting to do is capture lightning in a bottle. And you don't even know that you have it right away. You ask your DP like, do we have it? And it's like, oh, well, there's a, some dust in the frame or a hair in the frame. Let's get another one. You get another one. And like, then you hold that all in the dark, all that film, because you can't expose it and you send it off to the lab and then some alchemist at the lab, at the castle, you know, puts it into a potion and he. And the next day what comes out are these like little stained glass windows. And you watch it and you realize what you caught. You're like, we did it. We, we captured something, okay? Now everything is different. You, you know, you show up on set and everything's digital. And you've got producers and network executives and broadcasters and everybody's there, studio people in Video Village and they set up like a little tent and everybody's sitting there in their Canadian goose jackets on high chairs and they're looking at a big color corrected monitor and there's a guy doing color correction in a van and they're basically watching an approximation of what it's going to look like in the end. And they're sitting there, okay, on my first film, there was none of that. I had to stand next to the camera. We didn't even have video tap stand next to the camera and look at the actors and see, did the actors do what I wanted them to do? And now, you know, they just turn on the camera and it costs more money to stop the camera and to restart it again. So you just let it roll and you're just like letting it go. And you're like, hey, the director now is like, hey, go back, start over and smile this time. And then they redo it. And then the editor is now like having to take those takes and separate them in the, in the editing room. And the actors are like, suddenly the moment is gone in. In other words, it's vanished. It's.
Joe Rogan
Is there a way to do both? I mean, is it the medium of film? I mean, it seems like, but it's the environment as well. You're describing an environmental thing, right?
Roger
Video Village executives. And the problem is now suddenly you've got a chorus of people sitting there who are like, oh, yeah, you got it. I saw he got it. Didn't he get it? You got it. But you as the director still have to run back and forth to the camera and to the actors and everything. And you're like trying to keep it all in place. And look, it's, neither is worse than the other, right? They are both paint, but one is watercolor and one is oil paint. And those are opposingly different. You know, if you were a, an oil artist during the British Renaissance of watercolor paint, where all of a sudden watercolor came out, everybody wanted watercolor. Why would you try to make your, you know, watercolor paint look like oil or vice versa? They're just completely different mediums. They're both paint, but they're different. And so digital has its advantages and its purposes. You can, you know, because you can run like long mag of video. I call it video, everybody calls it digital cinema, but that was, that was just to push it through, you know. And actually the technology is different. You know, with film, light travels through the glass, it travels through a gate, it exposes the silver and the acetate and you keep it all in the dark and send it away. With video, the light travels through the glass, it strikes the golden sensor and then it bounces back into the glass. And that's why video or digital cinema is flatter by nature than most film. And so to combat this, filmmakers have started to do the exact opposite of what we used to do. It used to be that you would go to shoot something you're on, you're outside, you're on set, I've got my camera on Joe, and I have the sun behind me because I want all that light on you. For the most part I'm over exaggerating my point, but, and the analogy would be, or the, the saying would be that at the end of the day you go home in the back of your neck is sunburned because you've always had the light behind you. Now because the image is flattering, they rotate the camera 180 degrees and they shoot into the sun to get lens flare. And lens flare gives you the, the, the illusion of depth where there is none.
Joe Rogan
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Roger
You're doing an artificial. Yeah, that's because we associate, you know, we associate the faults of media as film. Like, people think of, like, old movies as gate weave and sepia tone and dust and scratches and kind of fast motion. Well, when those movies were originally made, the motion was corrected by the cranking of the projector. And so it was natural motion. There was no sepia tone change. There was no dust. It was originally. And there was no gate weave because it was a fixed image. The image, the celluloid hadn't yet shrunk or anything like that. And so we now we have this kind of filter, nostalgic filter, that we associate with what an old movie looks like. And so if you want to make something look old, you start adding all this crap to it. You're adding the faults, and it's the faults of cinema that actually make it really good. It's not the perfection of cinema. That's not, in my opinion, because you.
Joe Rogan
Would never be able to sell that if that cinema Never existed. Like, if cinema never existed. And video came around and then it was normal video, like, soap opera style. And then someone came along and said, hey, let's make it blurry in the background, and let's. Like, it's almost like we've become accustomed to the faults, and nostalgically, we look at them as if it's a positive.
Roger
And it's also led by, you know, everything is shot on iPhones now. And so that's becoming the cinematic vernacular, the grammar that people are used to, and they now expect to that in a big movie. And so suddenly you see something like the latest James Gunn, Superman, or Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein, and they've got these crazy wide lenses where there's no distortion and, you know, kind of infinite depth and. And they're shot in a. In a very large format, but what they're replicating is an iPhone.
Joe Rogan
Right?
Roger
And it just. I. I watched both of those movies, and I thought, okay, both of them are amazingly technically competent, and they're made by, you know, highly professional people, but, you know, it looks like iPhone footage.
Joe Rogan
I'm a huge Guillermo del Toro fan. I even loved his book the Strain. Like, it was really. It was really good till about, like, three quarters of the way through, and it seemed like he just wanted to finish the book. Yeah, probably, like a bunch of shit just sort of just happens in the last quarter of the book where I was like, this is kind of jarring.
Roger
It became dinner time.
Joe Rogan
Put this aside. I'm gonna seem like I can't keep going with this book. It's what it felt like. It felt rushed. Just my opinion, but I'm a huge fan of that guy, so I love Pan's Labyrinth. I love a lot of his films, but I didn't like Frankenstein.
Roger
I. You know, like, I love Guillermo, and I love his spirit, and I love his artistry. He is an amazing artist. He is. He's just literally, as a. As an artist, you know, his. His sketchbooks are beautiful, and he brings a great amount of passion to his work. He brings that kind of Mexican passion to his work, and I adore his. Him as a. As a person, but to be perfectly honest, I'm not wild about his movies that much. I, you know, I, I.
Joe Rogan
You didn't like Pan's Labyrinth?
Roger
I. I liked parts of it, but as a whole, it just kind of. And I don't know what it is, you know, about it, but, I mean, Blade two is probably my favorite film of his because it's, like, the least of well, actually it's quite a bit of him, but it's just the most accessible for me.
Joe Rogan
I didn't know he did Blade too. Which one that Patton Oswald was in where he had the. The whole bit about Wesley Snipes and then they replaced him with a cool, cooler Wesley Snipes. I think that was 3. Yeah, it was probably blade 3. I don't remember blade 2. I don't remember blade 2. Blade 1 was awesome, though. Yeah, that's my favorite of all the comic book vampire. Well, comic book movies. Because I was just a giant fan of the Blade comic book series.
Roger
I also like his Pacific Rim movie and I like parts of like the moment in Frankenstein that I think is, for me, the entire movie. Like, I could have like left the rest of it. So much of it was just so melancholic and, you know, it was just like I just couldn't engage with it and. But the part that I absolutely loved was at the Miller's house where he's learning language. To me, that was the movie when he's kind of secretly learning how to speak and how to be and learning morals. And to me, the mo. I could have watched an entire movie about that sequence. And it was also beautifully made. That part, just the rest of it with. I could have done without.
Joe Rogan
It was just a little flat.
Roger
And also it's like, why does it have. It's so freaking long. Like, he could really, like, learn a lesson. I was gonna say he could learn a lesson from Ridley Scott, who just clips through things. Like he takes. You know, there's a dialogue scene. I'm just gonna do the essentials and just get out. Like it's a commercial style scene. Doesn't need to be any longer than 30 seconds. And he just clips along somehow. Yet his movies are still like two hours long.
Joe Rogan
Well, they're so involved. You know what? I really loved Nosferato. Did you see the Nosferat?
Roger
No, I haven't. You know, I don't want to sound like a persnickety guy, but I had to be in the right.
Joe Rogan
Want you to be persnickety.
Roger
I had to be in the right mood to engage with that movie because, I mean, I like that guy's first movie. The Vivich or the Witch.
Joe Rogan
I never saw that. I heard it's great though.
Roger
I love that film. I think that's a great movie. And he's like a production designer.
Joe Rogan
He's doing a werewolf movie right now.
Roger
Yeah, of course he is. Of course he is. I did not like his moby dickish lighthouse movie.
Joe Rogan
Oh, I didn't see that. And that was the Willem Dafoe.
Roger
Yeah, the Willem Dafoe one. It was just. Just garish and kind of. I felt like lost its way halfway through and. But. And then, you know, this latest one, Nosferatu. Look, I am a Werner Herzog nut. And so, like, I adore Werner Herzog and I love his Nosferatu. So for me to, you know, like, watch this guy's version of that.
Joe Rogan
Which one?
Roger
I have to be in the right mood. I have to be in the right mood. I just wasn't yet in the right.
Joe Rogan
Mood to accept which one is Werner's.
Roger
Who.
Joe Rogan
Who plays Nosferato?
Roger
Oh, classic. The. The incomparable Klaus Kinski. And I know, I've seen. I mean, the thing about Werner Herzog when he made his Nosferatu. What's, you know, the Murnau movie, which is the original Nosferatu. The. The very first one with Max Schreck.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, I saw it at the library when I was exactly 10 years old.
Roger
So the thing about Werner Herzog as a filmmaker is that most filmmakers have their forefathers that they can look back to. They can, you know, they have a generation before them that they can kind of imprint on. And because of the brutality and tragedy of World War II, he had none. There were no German filmmakers that he could look to. And so he had to look to his grandfather, basically, which was Murnau when he made it. And so his film is almost like haunted by the. By the original. And then he bring, you know, Werner Herzog grew up not using a telephone until he was in his teens. He'd never seen a telephone before he had grown up like in, you know, Upper Bavaria in the mountains. And, you know, so he comes, like his film is almost displaced in time. It's like skipped a generation. And he does things like, you know, he'll show two actors in the most emotional part of the movie when Mina and Jonathan Harker are, you know, at the beach and they're basically saying goodbye. And normally in a Hollywood film, they would cut to a close up so that we could see the tears. You know, we would cut to that close up. But because his film is, you know, because he's displaced in time, he stays back like he doesn't even bother shooting a close up. To him, it's more melancholic to show them just isolated as figures, you know, in, in. In a wide shot. And it truly is. And so his film is super powerful that way. And then you Have Klaus Kinski, you know, who is the madman actor of German cinema and who is, you know, who was like. I mean, there's a documentary called My Best Fiend, which is about the relationship between Herzog and Kinski. And there's an amazing scene in the beginning of that where he. Werner Herzog, visits the apartment that he rented in. I think it was in Berlin that, you know, that. Where he was first becoming a filmmaker and where he first met Klaus Kinski. And he goes there, and it's now occupied by these two, you know, just very conservative, this German couple. And. And he starts going through the house and saying, oh, yes, here. This is where Klaus, you know, went crazy, and he started smashing it and shitting on the walls. And, like, you know, like. Because he was an insane guy, he. His whole thing was about provocation. And so he brings a kind of crazy vampire. I mean, it feels like a real vampire.
Joe Rogan
I remember it now, but I haven't seen it forever. What year was that?
Roger
You mean the Kinski one? Yes, I think it was in the 70s. So I'm thinking it was like 78 or 79, maybe even earlier.
Joe Rogan
I know I've seen all the Nosferrados.
Roger
Let me see.
Joe Rogan
Give me a. I will eventually see this new.
Roger
I will eventually see this new one.
Joe Rogan
It's good, man. It's good. The dude who plays the vampire, what's his name? The guy who played the. The clown and it.
Roger
Oh, yeah, Bill Scars.
Joe Rogan
So good. Well, he's so good. And so is this the scene when he meets the vampire?
Jamie
I don't know. I just clicked on it.
Roger
Yeah, this.
Joe Rogan
Oh, he cuts well, this is.
Roger
Yeah, this is. I mean, that's. I mean, Kinski brings just an amazing empathy.
Joe Rogan
It could give you blood poisoning.
Roger
Oh, this is the English version.
Joe Rogan
Please let me do it. It's the oldest remedy in the world.
Roger
Oh, forget it. It's hardly worth mentioning. Just a. You.
Joe Rogan
You know, it's only for the best.
Roger
The original German is incredible.
Joe Rogan
That's so awesome.
Roger
And that's probably Kinski. Like, you know, they're supposed to cut and Kinski just keeps going. Yeah. I mean, Bruno Ganz, I think it's. Bruno Ganz is probably terrified in real life because he doesn't know Kinski's crazy enough where he'll bite him.
Joe Rogan
Right. And he's got those fake teeth then.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Let's sit up for a while. All right, show me a clip from the new one. You got to see the. The new Nosferato.
Roger
I mean, I had never seen a Vampire like that. And then I think Salem's Lot was made after the TV movies.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, Salem's Law is super similar to it.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
There's a scene when he meets the guy at the castle.
Roger
I did see one scene from this online with Lily Rose Depp kind of reacting to something which was like very compelling.
Joe Rogan
Go full screen to this. This is when he makes it into the castle. It's really dark, man. He did a fantastic job of like capturing the creepiness of it. And also the surreal aspect of him being under the trance of this vampire. You recognize the. That reality is all up and skewed. Like time passes very quickly. It doesn't make sense. He's super confused as to what's going on.
Roger
I mean, I have to say this movie feels haunted. As haunted by the Herzog version as Herzog was haunted by the Murnau version.
Joe Rogan
For you.
Roger
For me it would be.
Jamie
Yeah.
Roger
Like I encourage anybody to like enjoy all three of them, I guess.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. I wonder if he was haunted by that or if I wonder who's haunted by the original. But this is with the use of all the little step frame modern ability. Yeah. But it's just the way they made the castle and the way they made him is very unique. There's so many aspects of it that I thought were very unique. Unique. Even the way the vampire feeds on people is unique.
Roger
This guy is a. He's a very, very, very good filmmaker. I just.
Joe Rogan
You are late.
Roger
The midnight hour has passed and my.
Joe Rogan
Attendants have all red eyed.
Roger
I don't know so much about the way he's talking. It's a.
Joe Rogan
It's weird, but it grows on you. Yeah, it grows on you.
Roger
Well, I'm sure it has a. Like a haunting quality over time.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, like. Like this. The guy just disappears and all of a sudden he's way far away. There's a lot of that in this movie. So the scene when they get him to sign papers, when he's get up to that. Questions about the. Many superstitions here that may seem backward to a young man of your high learning.
Roger
Sure. Prince Charles was like jacking off to this film.
Joe Rogan
Before they made that painting.
Roger
Apparently he visits Castle Dracula like every year.
Joe Rogan
Well, isn't he related to Brad? Vlad Tepes?
Roger
Yeah, it doesn't surprise me. I mean, he's German. He's of German ancestry.
Joe Rogan
So I think Prince Charles is related to the original Vlad the Impaler.
Roger
That would try with the whole baby eating thing.
Joe Rogan
They give you a look of what he looks like.
Jamie
I think it cuts Off. Probably.
Joe Rogan
Gonna cut it off. They don't want to give away too much. That was the other thing. Like you don't really get to get a look at them for quite a while. And when you do, it's horrifying.
Roger
Yeah. The movie is made in washes of darkness.
Joe Rogan
Mm. It's very dark. I mean it's very much a candlelit movie, which I like because I don't like a film where you're pretending that people are in a candle lit. But it's really well lit well.
Roger
And that's an example of where video actually is a better medium to choose because digital loves darkness and it can do things in darkness that film just doesn't have the capacity to do. And so it's an excellent choice. When we did Silent Hill, we made the choice of whenever we're in the dark we're shooting on digital and whenever it's during daylight, we're shooting on film to create a kind of dissonance between the two. And so. And that's largely because digital loves dark. And this is a great use of it. I'm warming up to it. I like. I've been waiting. I bought it on. On Blu Ray. I have the movie. I mean I keep it. It's in that stack. And I've just been waiting to, you know, for the right time to expose it, expose myself to it. But I'm in the right mood.
Joe Rogan
I loved it. I'm no film expert, but it's my favorite vampire movie ever.
Roger
Well, that's. That's. That's actually saying a lot. That's. That's incredible.
Joe Rogan
I loved it.
Roger
That's incredible.
Joe Rogan
My. A fun vampire movie is 30 days of night.
Roger
Yeah, 30 days of night is great.
Joe Rogan
I love that one too. It's not as good as this.
Roger
This is. This is a. I think I Am Legend is actually a pretty good vampire movie. The. The one with Will Smith.
Joe Rogan
I thought they're zombies.
Roger
Well, they're kind of. It's a contagion film. Technically they're not really zombies, but they've been turned into like vampire like creatures. They're in that film. That's a really good one. And then that one, that what's his name? Taitiki Wakataka Lakataka. That Polynesian director who did the Thor movie. Did. God, what was it called? The. We are. I can't remember the name of it, but it's like a comedy version of vampires, like kind of all living in a house and. And sort of.
Joe Rogan
How old was that?
Roger
This was made in Sometime in the mid-2000s, I think.
Joe Rogan
Vampires living in a house.
Jamie
What we do in the shadows.
Roger
Yeah, what we do in the shadows.
Joe Rogan
Did you see that?
Jamie
Nope.
Roger
That is an incredible vampire movie. It's kind of like a mockumentary, like where they're. But it takes all of the kind of vampire mythology and it makes it really, really fun.
Joe Rogan
I've never even heard of this.
Roger
It's fantastic. This is his best film. This is, I'm sure, the foundation of everything he's done has been on what we do for me. What we do in the shadows. Huh?
Joe Rogan
That's so crazy. I never even heard of it.
Roger
Yeah, it's. It's wonderful.
Joe Rogan
Show me the trailer.
Roger
Jamie.
Joe Rogan
We are granted protection for the subjects in this film. Oh, it's like a Blair Witch Project type deal.
Jamie
It's been like this the whole time. Deacon on dishes and it still hasn't.
Joe Rogan
Moved in five years. You're a cool guy, but you're not.
Jamie
Pulling your weight in the flat. Oh, I'm glad to hear that. I'm cool.
Joe Rogan
No, that's not the point though.
Roger
Yeah, no, I know.
Joe Rogan
Not a flat meeting about how cool you are.
Roger
When you get three vampires in a flat, obviously there's going to be a lot of tension.
Joe Rogan
Viago was an 18th century century Bambi.
Jamie
Look, a ghost cup. Battislav is a bit of a pervert.
Joe Rogan
This is my torture chamber.
Jamie
Deacons.
Joe Rogan
Like the young bad boy of the group.
Jamie
I'm supposed to pay rent, but I don't.
Joe Rogan
The trouble with being a vampire is you have to be invited in.
Roger
Will you invite us in?
Joe Rogan
We need some.
Roger
The whole movie's like that. It's fantastic.
Joe Rogan
Oh, that's funny. Will you invite us?
Roger
Just invite us in. The bouncer's like, no. And they can't do anything about it because they're vampires.
Joe Rogan
Let the right one in.
Roger
Oh, okay. That is of all the modern vampire movies. I mean, I haven't seen the. What's his name? Eggers.
Joe Rogan
The American version of it.
Roger
No, I hate the American version. The American version is Let them In is terrible. Like I had to wash my eyes afterwards with another movie.
Joe Rogan
I didn't mind it.
Roger
I. I hated the.
Joe Rogan
But because I loved the foreign version. Who. Which country was it from?
Roger
I think Sweden. Sweden. It's really, it's. It's an outstanding, outstanding film. And the book is fabulous as well. It's an amazing novel. Yeah.
Joe Rogan
I just love a good horror movie, a well made horror movie, because like, the suspension of disbelief is like inherent to the enjoyment of the film. Like you know, like, just show me. Show me how the guy turns into a monster. Show me. Yeah, make it.
Roger
Make it so. Make it so. And. And also, you can see, like. I mean, they have been making Dracula movies again and again and again. It seems like every year there's another vampire movie coming out or every couple years at least. And, you know, there never seems to be an exhausted. The market never seems to be exhausted right by it. You know, it's zombie movies. They. They continue making them.
Joe Rogan
You know, it's like that's the most overused genre is zombie films. Zombie films, zombie TV shows. I mean, how many versions of the Walking Dead are there? There's multiple.
Roger
Yeah. And I. I'm not a big fan of the. I like.
Joe Rogan
I mean, the beginning was great. I think first season it started, but then I.
Roger
When I realized, oh, it's just sadism. And I mean, I get the point. After the first season, I realized, oh, the point is that the walking dead are the living. They're actually the walking dead.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
Because they've become. Emotionally.
Joe Rogan
I didn't like it. It got into the point where they were just. It was just murder porn.
Roger
Yeah. And that. I mean, I think I even talked about this before. That's a real problem with television is that they're just trying to get the serotonin levels spiked by killing someone that you care about. And, you know, real television, you return because you. The characters and you want to return to it.
Joe Rogan
Well, sometimes it's done well. Like, Game of Thrones did a fantastic job of doing that, but even that.
Roger
Kind of lost its way after a while. I mean, actually eight seasons.
Joe Rogan
I'm. I'm rewatching it right now. We're actually on season three right now. It's great. I. I kind of forgot how great it was. But when you get to binge it and you don't have to wait, like. Like there was years in between seasons. It took so long to produce.
Roger
Have you seen the Pendragon cycle? The. The Rise of the Merlin?
Joe Rogan
No.
Roger
Okay. So these days, like, you almost don't know where television. Where to find television. And that's because you can find it anywhere. Like, and the main. The mainstay producers of it, the studios and everything, they're no longer reliable in producing quality television. And so suddenly we see stuff rising, you know, out of places that is completely unexpected. And this was produced by the Daily Wire of all place, of all people. Yes. And the CEO of the Daily Wire directed it. This guy, Jeremy Boring. Yeah. I hope I'm not mispronouncing his name. His name is boring. But.
Joe Rogan
And this is good.
Roger
Okay, this is. To me, this is better than, you know, it's. I have a very high watermark for, For Arthurian mythology. Like, to me, Excalibur is the high water mark. And this really went there. This. Like, I had a chip on my shoulder when I started watching this. I was like, okay, this is very unlikely that I'm going to enjoy this production. But they did it for like a. For a micro budget, effectively. They made something that is absolutely. Kind of reinvents the mythology and they do it like proper television where you kind of love the characters and they weave an entire reality and universe that is just fantastic. And it's done for, like, you know, for very, very little. You know, they're spending billions making these Lord of the Rings things and, like, nobody cares. They're just awful to watch. And in the meantime, these guys just, you know, without anybody paying attention, cranked this out and I've only seen four episodes of it, but I am, like, completely blown away by it.
Joe Rogan
That's so interesting.
Roger
The Daily Wire, anything about.
Joe Rogan
I think that's part of the problem.
Roger
Well, that's because, well, like, we don't hear about a lot of things and media is like, the least of it.
Joe Rogan
Right, Good point. But certainly with the Daily Wire, the problem is it's like associated with this right wing production.
Roger
If you can get over that and like, and put that behind you, then, I mean, this is to me as good as classic television.
Joe Rogan
My prejudice was initially, oh, they're gonna somehow or another embed right wing ideology in this.
Roger
Well, everybody's embedding their own ideology. Whenever you make any media, there's usually you have corporate propaganda and personal propaganda, and usually there was a balance between the two. You know, if you're making Midnight Express, for example, okay, that movie was nothing like the book at all, really. Not even close to the book. And it's a complete alternate experience. And you wonder why did that movie. Why was that movie such a big success? Why was that movie such a overwhelmingly, like, Oscars and everything? Okay. I think it had a little bit more to do with the politics of what was going on with Turkey at that time than anything else. And, and, and, you know, what's his name, Billy Hayes, who, you know, experienced it, lived it, spent the rest of his life basically apologizing for the movie and because none of it. He wasn't like, raped in a Turkish prison. And that's like, that's like the original. That's Like a joke that gets, you know.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
You know, an airplane. They're making jokes about it. Right. And so, yeah, Billy Hayes, he was the. The actual character or the person who lived the experience. And. And so the movie is a kind of propaganda element. And that's like all Hollywood does that we, you know, you kind of accept whenever you're making a movie that you're being used in a certain level to do something, whether it's to, you know, on a very basic level, whether it's just to, like, you know, mortify or scare audiences or, you know, to, you know, to do things. And we see that more and more obviously in media as the director. The personal propaganda, when you have something personal that you want to get on screen has become more and more diminished and you have, you know, sort of more corporate propaganda kind of taking over. And I think the most probably crass example of that is DEI stuff, you know, in movies and pushing characters in situations that are just completely out of whack.
Joe Rogan
Did you see the Star Trek that they tried to make? Like that.
Roger
Okay, I'm like a big Star Trek guy. I watch Star Trek every day in my house. We watch like two or three episodes. And I'm not kidding, my wife is like a Trekkie. She is like, crazy for Star Trek. And so she puts Star Trek on, you know, like at around 5 o', clock, Star Trek comes on.
Joe Rogan
Original.
Roger
Well, Picard, we cycle through. We go chronologically from, you know, the original series through the Next generation and then DS9 and then Voyager and then Enterprise and then we Luke and back to. And sometimes, you know, when you show an episode like in DS9, there's an episode called Trials and Tribulations where all the characters go into the past and they kind of interact with Trouble with Tribbles and they kind of blend them into the set and everything that's happening. We'll then go back and watch Trouble with Tribbles or, you know, same thing with Wrath of Khan. We'll do this, you know, so we'll. We'll kind of connect it all together. And so. But every day there's at least two or three episodes of Star Trek playing in my house. It's like I usually have to wrestle away the controller to say, we're watching a movie now. And so. And my children were, like, basically raised on Star Trek and, you know, the sort of morals behind Star Trek and, you know, you know, and people complain about, oh, you know, I don't like DS9 as much. It's not as dynamic. I hate Bajor and blah, blah, blah. But, but I think Captain Sisko is one of the most amazing captains there is because he's also a father. And there's all these like, father son lessons that are going on throughout it. It's like really elaborate television. And by the way, all that kind of DEI stuff is still in it. It's still there. They're exploring all sorts of things in Star Trek the Next Generation. Riker, who's like the second in command to Picard in, in that one, there's an episode where he goes to a planet of Neuters that are just, you know, they have one gender and he falls in love with one and they kind of waken up out of their single gender thing and realize, oh, I'm female. And that person then gets taken and reprogrammed like. And, and then there's an episode where Cork is turned into a woman in order to. For some cockamamie reason that they come up with in the show. And he kind of likes it. He's like, getting into it. So it's not like they aren't exploring gender and not just beating you over.
Joe Rogan
The head with it.
Roger
It's somehow integrated into good storytelling. And I think something happened at, you know, at the studios where they fired all of the legacy people and they hired on a bunch of new people who just weren't as good at storytelling and, or as respectful of the, you know, the, the canon, I guess you could say. Right, is what it was. But, you know, those seasons of Star Trek are, which I guess you could call the, from the Gene Roddenberry into the Rick Berman era. And I mean, they had such amazing writers. They had guys like Rene Echeveria and Naran Shankar and, and they had technical advisors and, you know, so if you were just into the tech, you could really like, you know, and, and, and most of our technology and most of our aspirations have come from Star Trek. You know, our telephones are basically, you know, like tricorder. Yeah. And we're, we're all. And you know, when we see it on Star Trek, like, oh, we talk to the computer. Well, I want to have that. And so somebody figures out a way to develop that and to make it so. And now we have that.
Joe Rogan
Didn't he actually say computer? Yeah, he would say computer. And that's computer question.
Roger
Yeah, well, like, hey, Siri.
Joe Rogan
Hey, Siri. Same thing.
Roger
Yeah. And so, you know, it's a, I mean, I think it's a fantastic show. And then this dweeb, Alex Kurtzman comes Along and just shits all over everything. Just like craps all over it. And I mean, I went in and met with the guy, you know, I was like, hey, I will write for scale, you know, I'll write on your new show. I like, I just want to be.
Joe Rogan
Part of it, just as an opportunity to work on Star Trek.
Roger
And he was. And I basically found out he didn't want anybody who had any kind of fondness for the original show. He wanted to do something new and to create something new. And boy, has he the bed, like, in a big way. And this latest thing that he. That they've made this Starfleet Academy now, it's still ongoing. Maybe it writes itself at some point.
Joe Rogan
You know, I think they canceled it.
Roger
Did they? Good.
Joe Rogan
The newest, the new.
Roger
They.
Joe Rogan
They read the room.
Roger
They read the room. Finally.
Joe Rogan
They didn't. They stop the idea of a season two.
Roger
That fucking Alex Kurtzman, man. His company is called Secret Hideout. I think he's gonna need a secret hideout after all these, like, after destroying Star Trek for, like, this latest generation.
Joe Rogan
Are we talking about the newest one? The one with Tig Notaro? That's the new Academy.
Roger
Starfleet Academy is an abomination. Is that what I could not. I could not get. Yes. I could not get through three episodes of Discovery. And I mean, they're just like. It is just awful. Awful storytelling.
Joe Rogan
Well, it's also clunky dialogue and bad acting.
Roger
Just horrible. And they're. They're more interested in. In the corporate. Corporate. In the corporate propaganda than they are with any kind of personal propaganda.
Joe Rogan
Right. It seems like that's the imperative. It's like they get across this inclusive. I.
Roger
The card.
Joe Rogan
The card was terrible.
Roger
It was. It was sad, actually. It was just depressing for me. And so, like, when, you know, when.
Joe Rogan
Well, it's so cool.
Roger
Seth, what's his name, did that show the Orville. And like, that is like, you know, the proper successor. Like, they brought back guys like James Conway, Convoy Conroy, the.
Joe Rogan
I don't know what the Orville is.
Roger
It was kind of like a comedy version. Seth MacFarlane did, but he hired all the original people that they had fired from Star Trek and basically use them to do his show. And it actually feels a little bit more like. Like a continuation.
Joe Rogan
I never heard of this either. And it's on Hulu.
Roger
Yeah, yeah.
Joe Rogan
Is it. It is a Star Trek or is it.
Roger
No, it's not Star Trek. It's the Orville.
Joe Rogan
So they just ripped off Star Trek.
Roger
They basically just ripped off Star Trek and they Have a sort of like tongue in cheek quality. But they, they bring all the, you know, all the writers from the original and showrunners and you know, people like that and the original directors, like, you know, like Jim got it like blanking on the same convert con. I want to say Conroy, but it's. I think it's whatever. And so they bring everybody back and it has a little bit more of the same spirit. Another really good Star Trek ish thing is Galaxy Quest. It's something that got kind of buried and with Sigourney Weaver.
Joe Rogan
Sigourney Weaver, yeah, that was good.
Roger
Galaxy Quest is hilarious. If you love the original series of Star Trek, Galaxy Quest is, is amazing. Like, it's so fantastic.
Joe Rogan
I love Sigourney Weaver. Yeah, she's one of my all time favorites. That, that's a good example of a movie that was like a DEI movie that you never even noticed. It was Alien.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
You have a female lead and you, you never think about it.
Roger
We didn't have like powerful women in movies before. We've like had them throughout history.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
You know, the history of cinema is built on, you know, and by the way, a, you know, a complex woman character can have faults.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
Like, that's part of it is characters have faults, characters have things wrong with them. You know, they're not always just, you know, like, you know.
Joe Rogan
Dominant and noble.
Roger
Dominant and like can do everything immediately.
Joe Rogan
Exactly. Like the. Some of the Star wars ones that went woke. There was a few of those.
Roger
Well, yeah, I mean, you know, it's funny, you had. I think it was, I think it was here Ben Affleck was on and they were talking about AI and how it always goes to the middle. And you know, it always goes to the middle. It always goes to the middle. And I was like, like J.J. abrams always goes to the middle. And boy, was that Star Wars. He did the middle where he just basically took the Luke Skywalker story and just reinterpreted it with a strong, strong woman, you know, character. And I just thought it was bland and just tasteless and just, you know, nothing new. He just went to the middle. So you don't need AI to go to the middle.
Joe Rogan
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Roger
Alien 2 or alien.
Joe Rogan
You mean Aliens as well. I mean Alien 1. I didn't like Aliens 2 as much. It was fun. But it was like, why are they so easy to kill now? Why are they so obvious?
Roger
They were, you know, space Marines. And Marines are tough, Marines are badass. And Marines can like. And the first, they still overwhelmed her.
Joe Rogan
I know, but the first Alien was clever. He was hiding. He would sneak around, he would jump. You didn't get to see much of it. And that was also cool too, because it kind of captured you with the suspense.
Roger
It's one of the best movies ever made, ever. And.
Joe Rogan
And it's a 1979 movie too, which is crazy. People don't even know how old it is.
Roger
What's funny, I recently went back and started watching all the Ridley Scott movies I had, I hadn't seen. You know, like, there's a ton of them that I just, you know, kind of missed along the way. And I started off with. God, what was it? I. Oh, I started off with Napoleon and like. Because I just missed it when it came out. And I'm like, what? What happened to Ridley Scott? It's all. And I have not liked any of his recent Alien movies. I just think they're. I'm confused by them.
Joe Rogan
The Prometheus ones.
Roger
It's just like when you need a web episode in order to understand what the hell he's talking about in the movie. You failed. And they're just like. They're high flow. They're technically technical marvels. Like, nobody shoots big canvas cinema like Ridley Scott. Like, no one shoots a helicopter crashing like Ridley Scott shoots a helicopter crashing. And you watch Napoleon and sure, the Battle of Austerlitz. Amazing to watch, you know, cannonballs going into the lake and the ice breaking and people falling in the water. But the minute anybody talks in that movie, it just collapses on its own weight. It's just like you just don't care. My wife was like, this is the worst date movie. You're not gonna sleep with me after this.
Joe Rogan
What's wrong with it? I didn't see it.
Roger
It's. Well, Joaquin Phoenix, Who? And I think he made a choice because I consider him to be an excellent actor. But in this movie, I think he made a choice to just play it like, you know, contemporary. Like, he just kind of talks. Everybody else is doing sort of a British or French. Ish accent. Like, they're all kind of pretending that they're in a. In a period piece. But not Joaquin Phoenix. He just plays it like he just, you know, walked off Hollywood Boulevard. Really? And. And he. And it. And just like, there's no passion in any of his performance. It's kind of this weird, dead, dead performance.
Joe Rogan
He did it on purpose to betray, like a sociopath.
Roger
I think he came on. He was like, I am gonna do whatever I wanna do the way Napoleon would, and I'm not. And I'm not gonna try. I am a Corsican, and I'm gonna be an outsider to all of these other people who are. I think there was an intellectual idea behind what he did, and it completely failed. And so I'm like, like, okay, I adore watching Ridley Scott do these big scenes, but what a terrible movie. And, you know, like, failure. And then I. And so then after that, I'm like, okay, let's. Let's watch something else. Well. Oh, he did Exodus. I've never seen that. Gods and Kings with Christian Bale. Same thing. It's like, you start watching that movie and there's some interesting things in the film. He's got, like, chariot battles and, you know, archers shooting things. And, like, you know, whenever he's doing that, like, Ridley Scott's like, oh, this is my day on set. And he's got a cigar and 20 cameras. You know, put cameras everywhere. And he's like, shoot from every angle. And he's like a. Like a great general, you know, shooting, but the minute anybody talks, that movie falls apart. And actually, I mean, I don't know how to say this, but that movie almost did its best to turn me on the juice. Like, I'm watching it and I'm like, this is like, first of all, is anybody even Jewish making this? Like, it seems like nobody involved in it was. Was Jewish. And, like, they start like, you know.
Joe Rogan
How is that even possible?
Roger
Well, Moses as a character, when he's an Egyptian, when he's like, the adopted Egyptian brother, I'm like, totally with him for some reason. Then he becomes Moses after getting like hit in the head with a rock. And all of a sudden he's, you know, kind of. He's like a lunatic. And like, you're like, everybody's following him. Like, he's like. He's distaste. He's distasteful all of a sudden. And. But every now and then they would show a battle scene and it's like, okay, I. I can. Like, Ridley Scott's doing his thing again. But, like. And you know who's also really good in it is God. I can't remember Joel Egerton who plays Ramses. It's really funny because Joel Egerton is, you know, usually you imagine Egyptians when they're cast as being kind of tall and, you know, sort of noble looking and everything. He's kind of like this butch, like, sort of tough, you know, wide bodied, butch Ramses. Like, just kind of like a tough Ramses. And every now and then his Australian accent comes out and so he's like, oh, oh. He's like an Australian Ramses. And John Turturro places his father, you know, a bald. I'm like, is that John Turturro? What a crazy choice this is. And so there were all sorts of, like, interesting things going on in the movie. But again, I was like, oh, this is awful.
Joe Rogan
Is it impossible for you to watch a movie without just becoming hypercritical about all these different aspects, like how I would do it, what I don't like, yes and no.
Roger
So the next Ridley Scott movie I watched, which I stayed away from, and with great apologies to Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, was the last duel. And I just kind of avoided it. I was doing other things at the time, and the poster looked awful. And I was like, I'm not gonna go see that. And then I put it on after watching these other two, and I was like, okay, here we go. Let's go again. And lo and behold, one of the best films of the century, in my opinion.
Joe Rogan
Really?
Roger
Absolutely. First of all, those guys know how to write a script. And I know that they wrote it with Nicole Hofsenotter or whatever her name is. And look at. And look at Ben Affleck. Like, when I saw him blonde, I was like, that's one of the reasons it kept me away from it. But he's hilarious in the movie. He's a genius in the film.
Joe Rogan
I never even heard about this.
Roger
I was gripped by this film. And this is a great date movie like this. My wife got turned on after this film, believe it or not.
Joe Rogan
That's hilarious. I don't know anything about.
Roger
And Adam Driver is magnificent and like. Like this relationship that these two guys have. And it's kind of a Rashomon story, meaning that, like, Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon, which was three stories that are all sort of the same event told from different perspectives. And so. And Matt Damon is like, a revelation. And this movie says so much about Hollywood. Like, when I watched this, I was like, okay, I'm Matt Damon, and Quentin is Adam Driver, for sure. Like, Adam Driver totally knows how to, like, you learn about Hollywood in this film. And I'm sure they're writing it, like, knowing about Hollywood that the way to really get along in court is to join the orgies. You know, to be in the orgy with everybody is like, how you get along. It's like we all fuck together, and that's how we do it. But Matt Damon, who by all accounts in this is a great. You know, he's a fighter. He's a great knight. He's true in his heart, but he's just a. Like a pill to hang out with. And he doesn't go to the orgies. And because of that, he's just kind of marginalized. And the whole movie plays off of this friendship that just kind of goes awry, where jealousy comes into play and it's ruinous to everything until they're finally fighting in the very end. And this is where Ridley Scott just does what he does, which is he has this insane fight between these two guys, which, like, was just. Every blow was painful to look at. And this, to me, was the best Ridley Scott movie I've seen of the century. I mean, I guess Black Hawk Down. I also very much like gladiator, although gladiator 2, I throw that in. I never saw that throw that in with Exodus, gods and monsters. It was actually boring to watch.
Joe Rogan
I love Gladiator 1, though.
Roger
Gladiator 1 is magnificent. It had some kind of secret sauce in it that was fantastic. And Gladiator 2, it just kind of goes through the paces. It's just kind of. Everybody shows up. Speaking of showing up, when Sigourney Weaver shows up in Exodus, Gods and Monsters, she's not even trying at all. She knows that she's there for a paycheck. Like, she just shows up, and she just, like, does not put on an accent of any kind. She just shows up and just speaks the lines, and I'm out of here. I'm going into Morocco or Whatever. Into town. I'm gonna go party for a while while.
Joe Rogan
Do you think she just thought it was a bad film and just checked out?
Roger
I'm not sure what she was thinking, but like she may have been thinking what. I mean, maybe she was trying, but I don't. It just didn't look like it. It just looked like she was. Well, that's got.
Joe Rogan
An actor makes a choice with a character and it just doesn't work and they don't realize it, but they're committed to it.
Roger
And the other Ridley Scott movie that I just watched that I hadn't seen, again, I avoided it partly because of the, the, the title of the film and there just nothing excited. I thought it was a comedy. In fact, I'd been avoiding it. It was on my plex. There it is. I, I look at the thing. It looks like a comedy. It's got Javier Bardem and Cameron Diaz and they're all kind of Javier Bardem looking exactly like Robert Downey Jr. Like in it. Like just kind of this crazy. Robert Downey Jr. In his crazy phase, you know, with like colorful glasses and everything. Robert Downey Jr. With like a broken up nose or whatever's going on with that nose. And okay, so I put on the counselor and this. So looking at that, I thought this was a comedy. I thought, oh, it's going to be a romantic comedy, this movie. After I saw it, I was like, I feel like I've seen too much. I feel like I know too much now about the world. Like it's it and it's made like right before. And I think this movie was kind of a disaster for Ridley Scott and he, you know, had to recover from it probably because of the, the failure of it.
Joe Rogan
But I never even heard of it.
Roger
It's written by, oh my God, Cormac McCarthy. And so, so it is dark, dark, dark. And it is a, an analysis of how power works in the modern world, which is basically a giant cartel. The cartel runs everything and you cannot escape the cartel. And it is such a spectacular. I think that's such a spectacular movie.
Joe Rogan
I loved it.
Roger
I loved it.
Joe Rogan
When did that come out?
Roger
Like 2014, I think 2013. 2013.
Joe Rogan
Did you ever hear of it, Jamie?
Jamie
I don't think so.
Joe Rogan
There's too much content.
Roger
Well, there's too much content and yet really Scott's and he's cranking out movies like every year he's doing a movie movie. It's like just knocking him back. Knocking him back. He's constantly making films and so that was why I hadn't. And so finally I was like, I gotta catch up on some Ridley Scott. And. And Quentin had been talking about Black Hawk down and how much he loved it and how he thought it was the best film of the century. And, you know, he's largely correct. That's not a bad. I could have done without the UNICEF commercial at the very beginning where it's just like, you know, a little UNICEF commercial about people starving in Africa and Somalia. But the rest of the movie is just insanely beautiful. And so I wanted to check out all the movies I hadn't seen of his. And. And so that's why I started researching them and looking them up again. And like, the counselor, how did that fall through the cracks? And it gets terrible reviews. Like, people hated the film, apparently.
Joe Rogan
And what's the criticism?
Roger
People like. I think they were just like, we don't believe it. I know. They just don't believe that that's what the world is like. And, you know, I found the film to be like, do you think that's.
Joe Rogan
Just because of the time period it was released more innocent?
Roger
I think Ridley Scott knows things that. And Cormac McCarthy know things about the world that they put on film before everything was known. Like, I think if that movie was released today, people would be like, yeah, that's what's happening today.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
And so. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, they're putting people in sulfuric acid into milk, into drums. Yeah.
Joe Rogan
What the fuck?
Roger
And shipping them around the world, you know, as a joke, you know, like.
Joe Rogan
That'S in the film.
Roger
Yeah. There's also.
Joe Rogan
You see the thing in the Epstein files.
Roger
Oh, yeah. Like, I've seen files, in fact, I can't believe that, like, everybody just kind of like, oh, okay. And they're moving on with their lives. Did you see that guy at the Atlanta airport flipping out the well dressed black dude who just freaks out at. In the. When? Just like a couple of days ago on. I saw it on YouTube and I saw it on Twitter or X. And this guy's just freaking out in the Atlanta airport. He's like, I read the Upstate Files. Like, all of you, you're going about your lives like nothing's happening. Look at your old zombies. And he's right. It's like Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Everybody is just numb to everything. Like, dudes, we had a global pandemic. Aliens, you know, all these, like, revelations. People are, you know, eating babies. Here's the guy. And there's a longer version of that where he's but he's basically like, you're all acting like nothing's happening. Like, what the fuck? You know, you're all just pretending you're just drones going on in your normal.
Joe Rogan
World, waiting for a condensed version that lays out all the facts. It's the people that are, like, really interested in reading all the emails.
Roger
I think the Luciferians cast a spell on the world.
Joe Rogan
For real?
Roger
Oh, absolutely. It's just like how vampires can't go into a house unless they're invited. They tell you, you know, what's going on ahead of time. It's predictive programming. And once you say it out loud and you put it out there and make fun of it and do a little skit like they. Like Stephen Colbert did a little skit on his show where, oh, here's a baby. I'm going to take this baby and I'm going to give it to Moloch. And he goes into, like, a cloudy red furnace and hands the baby over, and the baby's going to be fine. And they make a joke about it and the audience laughs. Okay. We're all now conditioned to it.
Jamie
It.
Roger
We've all seen it. And by laughing at it, we were complicit.
Joe Rogan
You think that that's a. That's on purpose, that this is like some sort of a grand design to get us to be desensitized to the idea of demons eating babies?
Roger
Yeah, for sure.
Joe Rogan
Really?
Roger
For sure. And by the way, nobody's doing anything about it. We know what's happening.
Joe Rogan
But that has to take, like, there has to be a person or some group of people.
Roger
Yeah. Like, about. About 8,500 people. Yeah.
Joe Rogan
That are manipulating the Colbert Show.
Roger
They're manipulating everything. It's all an illusion. Like, reality as we know it is fake. That's the revelation that that guy is having. And he's looking around and he's like, it's like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
Joe Rogan
Well, it's. See, I don't. The thing about the emails is one of the things is it's just stuff written down, and so that's sort of hard to digest. Like, what is this? Like, what are they saying? Like, some of it is in code. Like, walking over beef jerky. Like, saying. Talking about jerky. Could you walk beef jerky over to this person?
Roger
Like, what does that mean for all this pizza they're talking about? You never see any pizza, right?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, they're ordering.
Roger
I'm gonna get some rape soda. It's like, with my cheese pizza.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
And like, there's all this coded language. And everyone's like, you know, oh, that's. You're just. You just have periola. You know, the. You're just seeing things where you want to see them.
Joe Rogan
No, this is clearly a code. Well, that was the thing about.
Roger
Absolutely. A code. And in fact, mundus vult decipi ergo disipiatur. It's a long known concept. And so in Latin, mundis vult decepi means the world wants to be deceived, ergo decipiatur. Therefore it is. We want to be deceived. We don't want to believe the horrors that are actually behind the veil.
Joe Rogan
Well, I think with the Epstein files, people are. Because of these emails that have been released, people are just now starting to be aware of the bizarreness of the code and some of the things like the facts. Let's just talk about the sulfuric acid. So this was like right after he was indicted in 2000.
Roger
Yeah. I gotta get rid of some bodies. Yeah. How much do you dissolve up some bodies?
Joe Rogan
What did it say he ordered, like, let's.
Roger
Like 8, 000 gallons.
Joe Rogan
Maybe we can get our sponsor, Perplexity, to process this and give us a synopsis of what exactly happened. Some sort of a breakdown. Because one of the things they're saying is like, he was indicted. And then right after he's indicted, he orders how many gallons?
Jamie
6,55 gallon containers full of sulfuric acid.
Joe Rogan
Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ. What?
Roger
What? They're eating babies, man.
Joe Rogan
Like, that's so.
Roger
That.
Joe Rogan
That you think is real, so.
Roger
Well, yeah, not only that, I think that there's, you know, sacrifices going on every day in Los Angeles. I mean, you know, allegedly, like, you know, high level musicians. Let's say high level female musician is like, you know, killing chickens every day, doing sacrifices. Like, you know, high level. Well, I. I don't want to say. I don't want to say names because I don't want to get sued. And I. I don't want to be dead either. What?
Joe Rogan
Does it rhyme?
Jamie
Here's the purchase order. I go. I started looking at the comments for some stuff. Not that this is the best answer, but a quick answer someone gives is that this could be for like a reverse osmosis water treatment system.
Roger
True. He is on an island.
Jamie
He's on an island.
Roger
I mean, there's enough. There's enough pushback because. Mundus vault decipi, ergo decipiatur. You know, we. But like, the timing of all of that, like, you know, where are the purchase Orders for all of that sulfuric acid before then. Oh, no, I just want to put sulfuric acid into my swimming pool. Muriatic acid?
Joe Rogan
Well, that's the question. Was there orders for sulfuric acid before this? If they do have a water treatment plant, how does sulfuric sulfuric acid play into water treatment?
Jamie
It says it here. It says it's commonly used. This explains it. I don't know.
Joe Rogan
Okay, it says RO Plant Reverse Osmosis Seawater Desalination Facility. Sulfuric acid is commonly used in the maintenance of such facilities. Not everything you don't understand adds up to the worst possible thing. It could be deception.
Roger
Look, maybe they're all eating pizza and grape soda. How many.
Joe Rogan
Who is that guy? That.
Roger
How many billionaires do you know that you know, sit down and eat lots of pizza and grape soda and ice cream?
Joe Rogan
This is weird. Trial lawyer chicken.
Jamie
That's why I just go. Grain of salt. This is just a plausible answer. I don't know that it is the answer. It could even be wrong.
Joe Rogan
Okay, so does he have a desalination plant on the island?
Roger
Oh, yeah, for sure. He is. He is a. He had everything. He had a dump and like, they had all sorts of stuff.
Joe Rogan
So that's tunnels and so they were using that. So they're taking seawater and converting into fresh water. For what? For irrigation or for drinking? For all the above.
Jamie
One similar email that he wrote to someone said that, like, his around his island is like Damascus. And I'm like, what the does that mean? He was like, you go explore buried around my island or what? I mean, what else could he mean by that?
Roger
Huh?
Joe Rogan
What does that mean?
Roger
I don't know. I mean, that's. They say a lot of things and they're not really coding it. It very much.
Joe Rogan
Well, the code, it's glaringly obvious when they say pizza and when they say jerky. That's glaringly obvious. How do you walk jerky?
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
You know what I'm saying?
Roger
Why do I need a chilled container to. Right, you know, a chilled bag or whatever this.
Joe Rogan
Jesus Christ.
Roger
You know, And.
Joe Rogan
And so you think they're eating babies?
Roger
Oh, yeah.
Joe Rogan
I absolutely believe that you should get together with Kurt Metzger.
Roger
I don't doubt it for a second. Well, I think. And I think this dates back like, you know, a long, long time. Dates. This is Moloch worship.
Joe Rogan
Well, there was the other email that said thank you for the torture video. I enjoyed the torture video.
Roger
Yeah. And it's like people just. They don't. That is, they don't want to accept it. Like, people don't want to believe it. They don't want to accept it.
Joe Rogan
Okay. Some commentary notes that a remote island with water treatment and energy systems could possibly stockpile such quantities for one to two years of operations. Although others argue that using it directly for reverse osmosis, as stated in one social post, is technically questionable for membrane health. Highly corrosive, strong mineral acid that can severely burn skin, eyes dehydrate and char. Organic material, which is why it features in both legitimate industrial processes and in darker hypotheticals online.
Roger
Darker hypotheticals.
Joe Rogan
Darker hypotheticals is where I'm leaning. When you get indicted for sex trafficking and then you order six drums of sulfuric acid right away, are you really worried about your reverse osmosis plant right after you get indicted? I feel like, you know, you're going to.
Roger
Looks like a duck and it quacks like a duck. It's probably a duck.
Joe Rogan
It's probably a duck. 330 gallons of sulfuric acid.
Jamie
It says this was the only documented purchase order for it.
Roger
I came out here last time and I talked about, you know, the. The pedo cult inside of the Kubrick film.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. By the way, I went viral, and.
Roger
I got so much blowback from that. You know, online critics are like, no, no, there's nothing in there. Mundus Vault discip. They don't want to see it. They don't want. They don't want to see those two guys walking away with that girl in the end. They just like, no, no, it's. It wasn't in the Schnitzler novel and blah, blah, blah. I mean, dude, look at that movie. It's about a cult. Like, what are you talking about? It's a secret cult. And in fact, Sidney Lumet's character even says at one point, you know, do you know what these people do? I'm not going to tell you what they do, but let me tell you, if I told you what they do, they would, like, scare the hell out of you. I mean, like, that's. After he's been to the place and seen everybody walking around at the. In the sex club. I mean, it's obviously. There's obviously more going on in that movie, but people don't want to see it. I, like. Like, I had. What was it? New York Magazine or whatever went so far. It's like, you know, aggressively trying to get me to debunk it, and. Which is fine. Just fine. It's just an interpretation of a movie.
Joe Rogan
Right. But that. That interpretation resonated. I mean, that clip Went very, very viral, especially now.
Roger
It's like people are like, looking at it and they're like, well, you know, he was obviously saying something. Even if you extract that out of the movie, he's obviously saying something about people at high levels of power.
Joe Rogan
Well, there's always been weird secret groups and rituals.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And it's one of the ways to ensure that you're compromised, you'll stay.
Roger
It's a confidence operation. Yes. And so what you do is you find somebody when they're young and they're, you know, less inhibited and they, you know, or uninhibited, and you catch them doing something that is illegal and maybe you even provide the mechanism for that to happen. And then once it's happened, you, you now have the, the video proof or the audio proof or whatever proof you have. You've got proof of it and you show it to them and you say, look, this is what we have on you. And, and we can ruin you at any minute.
Jamie
It.
Roger
But you know what we're going to do? We're going to give you $20,000 a month or we're going to give you $20 million a year, whatever level that is, instead, and you're going to work for us. And what else explains some of these people who are so flipped out about, like, you know, about Trump? These are pots. He's like, it's over the top. It's, you know, it's strange how people are, how people behave in regarding that. It's.
Joe Rogan
Don't you think that's also just because the Democratic Party didn't want him to get into power because he was a complete outsider?
Roger
I don't think there are parties. I don't think there, there. I think that's all an illusion also. I think everything that you think that it is is an illusion. It's all fake. I don't think that any history before 1600. I think everything has been falsified before the year 1600.
Joe Rogan
How so?
Roger
Well, there's this guy, Anatoly Fomenko, who's a Russian mathematician and historian, and he wrote a book called the New Chronology. It's actually a series of books. It's like six volumes, and I've read them all. And also his addendum book, the New Chronology, he has an addendum book about it. And he basically says that all of history has been changed. About 1,000 years have been added to the timeline in order to justify land claims. And those land claims largely have to do with the Eurasian horde and the elimination of The Eurasian horde by collusion between the Vatican, the Romanovation, the.
Joe Rogan
So you mean like the Mongols and the Huns?
Roger
Yeah, there was a. And if you look on very, very old maps, you see that there used to be a country called Tartaria that was. That was in existence. And at a certain point, they wiped them out. And so his theory, and it's just a theory, it's just deposit. But when you see how history is constantly being rewritten in real time, it's not so hard to believe. And then he uses, you know, astronomical evidence and, you know, mathematically kind of proves it. And he basically says that. Let's see if I can get this right, that Rome and Greece and, you know, those. And Egypt were actually active till around 1600 and that Rome actually fell around 1600. So kind of imagine, or more like late 1400s, 1492, as opposed to. Was the conventional timeline about a thousand years before. And so. And so, you know, if you can wrap your head around it, the Salem witch trials took place around the same time as the Inquisition. Columbus was discovering America around the time Rome fell. And that all of this was designed to justify or to erase this entire civilization from history. And then there are people who believe that there are a lot of buildings that are still in existence that were this. They claimed that Jesus Christ was. I can't remember the emperor's name. It's kind of a composite story. There's a number of.
Joe Rogan
So they think a thousand years are missing from the time.
Roger
Well, think about it. If you're a Byzantine guy and you're like, hey, I want to move to the country. And you look over at France, let's say in Germany, and you're like, yeah, there's all these, like, indigenous peoples there, and we want to wipe them out. And so you hire, you know, a mercenary, you hire a guy named Charlemagne and you get him to go in there and kill all the chieftains in one day. Like 5,000 chieftains were killed in a single day, apparently by Charlemagne. And you completely wipe out everything. And then you move in, you become Jerome, the Jerome I, and you run Paris, or you begin, you know, France. And what it really is is just. Just land. And so you add time to the timeline in order to justify that land claim, because what makes more sense, that history was cruising along like this and then suddenly flatlined for a thousand years and then picked up again? Or does it make more sense that somebody took that time, that the Dark Ages and kind of added. Added to the timeline?
Joe Rogan
So I'm confused. So. But Isn't there like documented history from multiple cultures about that time period?
Roger
Yeah, but it's all like, you know, written down by the Jesuits who were completely in the control of that history. History is easily changed. And in fact, we see history being changed before our eyes in real time. And so the deep past is. Is easy to change.
Joe Rogan
So we're not in 2026?
Roger
No, we're like in the 1700s.
Joe Rogan
Oh, Jesus. Oh my God.
Roger
Just a theory. It's just this guy, Anton Anatoly flamenco. And. And it's a very interesting theory. And so I read that and I kind of had a tent pole collapse. I was like, well, holy crap.
Joe Rogan
Explain to me the flatness. Like, what do you mean by history goes up and then flattens?
Roger
Well, the progression, the progression of humanity through history as we kind of are progressing as we go. And then all of a sudden there's this flatline called the Dark ages where nothing happened.
Joe Rogan
Is there a conventional explanation for this flatline for a thousand years?
Roger
The collapse of Rome and falling into the time of barbarism?
Joe Rogan
That's not plausible.
Roger
Everything is plausible. It's plausible that sulfuric acid is used for ro reverse osmosis water cleaning. And so everything is possible. The question is, is it probable?
Joe Rogan
Well, Jamie just pulled up that that was the first time they had ever ordered that.
Roger
Oh, really?
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
Okay, so. Well, there it is.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, that's not good.
Roger
Yeah, that's not good. I mean, that's the least of the things. The thing is, we become desensitized to stuff. I mean, look at everything that has happened in the last six years. It's like an insane amount of stuff has happened and everyone's just kind of like, numb to it.
Joe Rogan
Well, they get desensitized.
Roger
And I think it literally is that people's brains have been fried.
Joe Rogan
You think by Covid vaccines?
Roger
Yeah, for sure.
Joe Rogan
Well, there's some scientific evidence that for some people at least, it crossed the blood brain barrier and had some sort of a detrimental effect on their cognitive function.
Roger
MRNA is reprogramming your. Your. Your system. And, and we're. I think. And we've been looking at a giant die off of people. People are collapsing left and right. Nothing is normal anymore. I mean, and that guy at the airport who's flipping out, that's what he's realizing. He's having a sudden awakening and he's tweaking over it. He's like. And he's looking around and no one cares. Everyone just wants to, like, you know, go through their day. Everyone wants to Just make their next movie, and maybe they'll let me make their next movie. And everybody wants to just, you know, I just want to keep going at my job, and I just want to do my thing, and I just want to protect my thing.
Joe Rogan
There's certainly a lot of that going on.
Roger
British only care about it as long as I have my daily pint. At the end of the day, that's all they care about. You know, they'll. In the meantime, their entire country is being overtaken and overrun by. Like, when else in history has this happened and ended well?
Joe Rogan
No. Well, it's so shocking how quickly it's happening in England that you just go, how do you bounce back from this? Like, what is the remedy? Yeah, because they're. They're doing this mass arrest thing with social media posts. Posts, which is bizarre. It's bizarre to watch. And then they eliminate jury trials for anything other than, like, murder and rape.
Roger
You say anything, you're in jail. If you post, if you repost anything, you're just immediately sent to jail. Look at what's going on in Canada right now, you know, with Carney. I mean, like, I think that's insane, what's going on. And most Canadians are just kind of vibing along with it. Nobody wants to rock the boat. Nobody wants to be racist. Nobody wants to be, you know, nobody wants to be discriminatory in any kind of way. Rightfully so. Like, you know, you. And you want to believe that your leaders are. Are taking care of you, and they're not. And it's over. We've lost. It's over.
Joe Rogan
I mean, you think it's over here in America as well?
Roger
Well, it got slowed down a little bit. It got. So whether you like Trump or not, and I'm not like a. I don't really like anybody, but that's a healthy perspective. It definitely added a road bump in the actions of the cabal of the Clintons and the Obamas and the bankers that control them. And that's. When you see the movie the Counselor, that's what you realize is that, wow, the cartels are the banks and they are law enforcement, and they are the media, and they are everything. And there is no fighting it. There is no individually fighting it. Like, there's nothing any of us can do that is. And I don't mean to be. I mean, the only thing you can do is, you know, affect what's happening around you locally within the moment.
Joe Rogan
But don't you think that more people are aware of what's going on right now there's more pushback than ever before, and so there's a possibility that it could be stopped.
Roger
Yeah, look at that guy. Look at that guy in the airport, though. Nobody. Everyone's like, he's crazy.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, but nobody wants to be yelling at a fucking airport. I would think he's crazy, too.
Roger
Well, if I was there waiting for.
Joe Rogan
My flight to go visit my parents, and there's some fucking guy yelling out the Epstein file. You're just living your life like, yeah, what do you want me to do, Dude? I'm headed to Florida right now.
Roger
Invasion of the Body snatchers was about McCarthyism and what was going on at that time, and.
Joe Rogan
Really?
Roger
Oh, yeah, it was. The original Invasion of the Body Snatchers was all about McCarthyism and I'm the.
Joe Rogan
I'm a fan of the Donald Sutherland one.
Roger
Well, and look at it. And look at how that ends. That ends with you're walking through the streets pretending to be, you know, like, you're just pretending to not be an alien, hoping that you can get by. And then, you know, the minute you show any kind of emotion, that's it. You're caught. And then they're going to make you go to sleep. And so, I mean, so that the.
Joe Rogan
Original script was written about McCarthyism.
Roger
The original. The original film. Yeah. Kevin McCarthy, the movie.
Joe Rogan
Okay. So.
Roger
And in the end, look how that movie ends. That movie ends with him, like, that guy in the airport on the street. You know, they're. You know, they're. It's. It's. They're aliens. Yeah. He's basically, you know, running through the street, just in traffic. People just keep driving.
Joe Rogan
I don't remember the original one. I might not have even seen it. But the Sutherland one was amazing. I never would have thought that that's what it was about.
Roger
I mean, we're experiencing a kind of Bolshevik revolution at the moment right now. So.
Joe Rogan
In what way?
Roger
Well, there's a rise of Bolshevism. You know, it's like we see it. We see it occurring.
Joe Rogan
And how do you define Bolshevism?
Roger
Well, it's. The Bolsheviks were essentially a kind of. I mean, it's. It's. It's not correct to say a communism, but it's basically a kind of authoritarianism, you know, in the guise of egalitarianism and. And helping the world know we're all going to be equal and everything. But it.
Joe Rogan
And they were.
Roger
Social socialism. Yeah, they were murdering Christians and social. And, you know, we're very, very close to that now. We're Very, very. We're on. We're standing on. Civilization is standing on the precipice at the moment. And by the way, you know, after this podcast comes out, people are going to be like, oh, Avery's crazy. Avery went to jail. Avery's, you know, a killer. They're going to say all sorts of shit about me to discredit anything that I say, and that's fine. Like, I'm easy to discredit. And so it's not really my right to speak up anymore about anything.
Joe Rogan
And so you're a human being. It's always your right to speak up.
Roger
Well, it is, but they can eat shit. As I look around, like, civilization is on the precipice, and, you know, mostly good people tend to not take action.
Joe Rogan
Against stuff until they have to.
Roger
Until they have to.
Joe Rogan
We were talking about this yesterday, actually, with Cheryl Hines, and I was saying. I think we were talking about this. I was talking about this recently where I was saying that it's almost like we need something like a 911 to wake us up. I would never want that to happen. But I do remember that after 9 11, we were united because we realized, oh, threats are real. Danger is real. Like, we really do need to be united as one group, a community, and recognize that our brothers and sisters in the streets are not our problem.
Roger
Yeah, but we even know about 911 now that so much of it was like building 7 thermite. The evidence is there for anyone to look at.
Joe Rogan
Nobody wants to look at it.
Roger
And nobody wants to look at it because.
Joe Rogan
And that is nobody wants to look into conspiracy. Like, how did these guys get a hold of these planes? How did they fly into the building? Why were the dancing Israelis watching it, cheering it on? Why did they get shipped out of the country?
Roger
Yeah. And that guy who owned the building, who bought it, who took out it, like, the insurance policy, and then, you know, had Elliot Spitzer kind of push it through and force it through so that he could receive his billions in insurance claim money and really made the decision because they wanted to tear down that building, and it would have been too expensive to do and all the asbestos and everything, so better to just destroy it.
Joe Rogan
It's like, what was that building housing? Like, Building seven.
Roger
Building seven was housing all sorts of. It was like. Was an IRS.
Joe Rogan
I mean, NSA.
Roger
Yeah, it was NSA.
Joe Rogan
What was in Building 7? Well, let's find that out. So we don't just. I think. But there was certainly some intelligence and data that was being collected in billions. The fact that no one wants to admit that that building fell like a controlled demolition is really crazy. And again, I'm not saying it's a controlled demolition, but the fact that people want to say no, it wasn't like a controlled demolition, like when was the last time you ever saw a fucking building collapse like that? Ever? Only controlled demolitions. Yeah, there's been many buildings that have been very badly damaged and lit on fire, but their frame remains reputable.
Roger
Structural engineers have basically also proven the towers could not have fallen the way they fell without explosives. You know, pre planned explosives. Okay, here it is. And the people on the scene, the, the rescuers on the scene, the people who were there said yeah, I heard explosion, boom, boom, boom, boom. They're describing the sounds of controlled demolition coalition.
Joe Rogan
U. S. Secret Service, floors nine through 10, CIA, the Department of Defense, sharing the 25th floor with the IRS and the Equal employment Opportunity Commission.
Roger
Like you put all that together. CIA, Department of Defense, irs. You know, who thinks any of those people have your right.
Joe Rogan
But also if you wanted your best interest in that you wanted to destroy data. Like didn't the part of the Pentagon that got hit, it wasn't. And that was also a day after Rumsfeld was saying that there was trillions of dollars that were unaccounted for. Yeah, didn't the accounting part of the Pentagon get hit by that air quotes plane?
Roger
Yeah, yeah, that, that plane. That was that plane that came in very jimmy.
Joe Rogan
The building contained about 24,000 gallons of diesel fuel for generators used by tenants like Salomon brothers and the emergency Command center floors 46 through 47. And parts of the lower level were mechanical spaces while files from federal investigations, Secret service cases were stored there but lost in the collapse and the SEC whoopsies.
Roger
And has the world been the same since then?
Joe Rogan
The SEC like having that there too. Boy, that's super convenient. Guys, we lost the data. Let's just start from scratch. There's no case anymore. Whatever they were doing, and yet nobody.
Roger
Wants to accept it. Nobody and nobody cares.
Joe Rogan
What's the video of it? That is like really shocking. I had this real, really dumb guy on the podcast once that was a skeptic, a professional skeptic. And he was really angry with me for saying that it looked like a controlled demolition. You know, you're, you're promoting a dangerous conspiracy theory. I'm like, no, I'm saying it looks like you're saying it doesn't. Look, let's watch it. I'm like, let's watch it.
Roger
I mean, conspiracy theorists have had a Pretty good run. Listen lately.
Joe Rogan
Let's watch it. Let's watch Building 7 collapse because it's kind of kooky. Now one thing that people do point out that is true is that the center, like there is a small structure at the top of the roof. Building seven that collapses first and it does it like I think a minute before the actual building stops.
Roger
These are skirt buildings. And what that means is that's actually the most structurally sound part of the building. The rest of the movie is a facade that's hanging off of the inner building.
Joe Rogan
Building.
Roger
Yeah, that's the. The most sound part of the building.
Joe Rogan
Is built over a Con Edison substation requiring large transfer trusses on lower four floors to support the tower above. Creating long span floors vulnerable to thermal expansion. Long unsupported floor beams and girders up to 50ft connected to critical in critical interior columns like column 79 with sheer studs that failed under fire. Induced lateral loads rather than just gravity.
Roger
It was the auto manual flip flop.
Joe Rogan
The exterior tube frame provided stiffness, but the open interior layout lacked redundancy to prevent fire. Induced progressive collapse with connections not designed for horizontal thermal forces. Okay, that's a cute way of saying that's why it fell at free fall speed and looks like a controlled demolition. Because if that was my building, I would say give me my my money back. You made this ass building. This building got lit on fire and just collapsed on itself. Let's watch it collapse. Because the way it collapses is so kooky. Because it really does it at freefall speed or close to it. It's strange. Like there has never been a building that looks that intact that falls like that. It's weird, man. I mean, it's weird. Anybody that says it's not weird. Look, this is how it happened. It's weird. Now the planes hitting Tower 1 and Tower 2. Okay, that makes maybe more sense to me.
Roger
Does it?
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
Does it?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, because it fell from the top down. Like it looks normal. It doesn't collapse into its base. Tower 7 collapses into its base. The way tower.
Roger
But how about the testimony of people saying they heard multiple pop, pop, pop, pop, pop explosions? Is that just girders snapping?
Joe Rogan
It could be, yeah. I mean you got to think you have immense immen weight and it is collapsing. So if it does collapse the way it looks, it's collapsing from the top down. It's not going to be silent. You're going to hear tremendous explosions when concrete hits the slabs below it. It's going to sound like explosions. Also you have the fog of war.
Jamie
Right.
Joe Rogan
So you have these people that are involved in extremely traumatic situation, and their memory is very like your memory is when you experience something like this, you remember things funny. You have confirmation bias. There's a lot of weird stuff that happens. So this is the, this is the explanation that a piece of the plane falls down and hits that building and.
Jamie
Big tower on top.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm sorry. A piece of the aerial building. I meant to say sorry. So that that piece of the building falls down and not a plane, obviously the hits the building next to it, Tower 7. And that gash is all it took to take that building down. That's super suspect. And I do know that there was a fire inside the building. I'm sure. I'm sure there was. But the way it fell was crazy. That see Tower one and Tower two, it's like, I don't know what happens when a jet flies into a building like that. Neither do you. And also you got to deal with corrupt construction companies, cutting corners, not doing things up to code. Perhaps, perhaps. I'll give you that. I'll be super charitable. But with Building 7, I'm like, come on, man, that's weird. That one's weird because it doesn't fall like 1 and 2. 1 and 2 fall from where the impact was the deterioration of the structure, the weight of what's above the impact, it falls down on it and you see a progressive collapse from the top to the bottom. Tower 7 is nuts. Tower 7 just drops. Just drops all at once. Free spot, free fall speed into its base. That's weird.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Anybody that doesn't think that's weird is being naive. Yeah, that's never happened before to a building that hasn't been a controlled demolition. Again, not saying it's a controlled demolition. Maybe it's accurate that these enormous drums of diesel are creating this fire unprecedented load on the structure of the building.
Roger
But see, even that with everything else, else that occurred, with all the tangential stuff that's occurred, you're still giving the benefit of the doubt. You'll have suspension of dislocation.
Joe Rogan
But I'm saying right now, I was trying to finish that. Fire is not on every floor uniformly. So why is it collapsing uniformly from the top down into the base? Why doesn't the base where you have this incredible fire load, why doesn't that weaken and it fall over sideways? Because it no longer has structure anymore. Why is it every floor has the same amount of damage and it gives in at the exact same time? That kind of doesn't make sense because the fire is not uniform throughout the building. It's not like the building is one gigantic flame ball and then it all gives out at the same time. But even then, I would think it would tip over, it would fall to the side, falling into its base. That seems to indicate some sort of a control. Like it was done uniformly. They time it. When you watch, like in Vegas, when they blow up a casino, it's like. And then it does that. Let's watch. Watch an actual controlled Demolition. So when you watch an actual controlled demolition, it looks just like that.
Roger
It looks just like that.
Joe Rogan
And then. I don't know.
Roger
I mean, the testimony of your eyes are telling you the truth, but that your brain, you know, will come up with all sorts of stuff because Mundus Vault, Sapi.
Joe Rogan
Well, I'm not allowing it to. With Tower 7. I've always maintained a pretty open mind with that. But also I lean towards shenanigans in that one because that one just seems Tower One and Tower Two, maybe. Maybe Tower Seven. Come on. Yeah, Tower Seven. Nobody looks. And if they're. If they're telling you the Tower 7 seems normal, that seems. They seem so gaslighty. Everybody that says that seems like they're gaslighting. So here we go.
Roger
Hit it.
Joe Rogan
Okay, this one's. They're setting up for a controlled demolition. So they're. So how. That's kind of a shitty one. There's other ones that have done a better job with. But it's the same kind of thing.
Roger
It's still falling into. Onto itself.
Joe Rogan
Yes, it's falling into itself the same way Tower 7 did. That's.
Roger
See that movie, that building, different shape. That has a. A skirt building. It's got a center structure.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it's a different kind of structure. It has a different look to it. Let's watch that one. Ok. Okay. They're like, there. Come on. That looks exactly like Tower 7 when you watch that. Back that up again a little bit, please. Watch that from the top. From the beginning. Just a little bit before. Right before it drops. So watch. They're looking. They're watching. We're gonna watch the building drop. There it is. That fucker goes right down. Like Tower, like from there. Come on. That's exactly like a controlled Demolition. And even the way it looks as it's going down looks exactly like Tower.
Roger
You know, we were talking about predictive programming and how movies and, like, spells can predict stuff in advance and, you know, kind of prepare you for the future of what's coming. You know, in 1999, a movie came out which was effectively a manifesto. And that movie was called Fight Club. And what's the end of that movie? The end of that movie is the collapsing of the buildings, which are the financial system. System, you know, of the future, so that they can create a new future. Who produced that movie? Arnon Milchan. Who is Arnon Milshan? And they got a commercial director to do it, Fincher. And, like, he's an excellent director, and I think it's a excellently, beautifully made film. But who is Arnon Milchan? Well, you know, he himself has said, I am a Mossad agent. And he said that out loud. Like, that's not me saying that. That's him saying that. And Fincher said, oh, yeah, my last movie, that was made by an arms dealer. Well, that's him. That's Arnon Milchan. And so, you know. And what's another Arnon Milchan movie? The Medusa Touch with George C. Scott and I think Lee Remick. And in that movie, what happens? An airplane crashes into a building. You could probably pull that one up too. An airplane crashes into a building. This guy's obsessed with airplanes crashing into buildings and. And buildings collapsing in movies. And so what's likely, you know, is he. Has he been reading these scenario plans that Defense departments make and that are maybe, you know, Mossad plans that are made. I've worked for the DoD through John Milius, and we wrote scenarios. They gathered together a bunch of Hollywood writers into, you know, into a. A what is like. Like a conference room. Like a. Was like more like a ballroom, but like a small one, and gather a bunch of us together around a table and said, let's come up with ways on how to attack Los Angeles. And we all wrote scenarios on how to attack la, and now they just use AI to do all that. But so, you know, has he just been, like, reading these? Does he have access to them? And so he just puts them into his movies? Well, that movie was made in 1999. And what happened right after that movie got released, least those buildings came down. Nine, 11 came down. And so is it predictive programming where you're showing the world what's to come and that makes it almost somewhat acceptable to do.
Joe Rogan
Whoa.
Roger
Or is it just coincidence? And most people. And most people out there will say, oh, no, it's just coincidence. It's coincidence. He just happens to be. I mean, that's what's. What he has said. I don't know if he is or not Mossad, but That's what he said. So.
Joe Rogan
Well, that's the thing about the majority of terms term conspiracy theorist.
Roger
It's.
Joe Rogan
It's slapped on things and it immediately sort of diffuses any real questioning of, oh my God, are things this bad? Is there this much? But as time goes on and you're confronted with more and more information, and I think we're in the beginning stages of reckoning with these files that were just released where so many people, like, I haven't really read much of it. I've only read the things that are really outrageous that my friends. Friends have sent me because I'm just trying to maintain my sanity.
Roger
Well, that's just it. Most people want to maintain sanity. You just like, I just want to get through the day, you know, I just want to. Like you're busy. Yeah, well, it's even more than busy. I want to be happy.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
I want to raise my children in a world that is, you know, a peaceful world and where people respect each other and where we can, like you can make something out of yourself, you know, through hard work and through merit. It's like, that's the world I want to live to in. And more and more it feels like we're not in that world.
Joe Rogan
Did you see that thing that was just released today? I think it's the AI company Anthropic. I think that's the company. So one of its engineers resigned and essentially said that humanity is doomed and he's going to move to the UK and just write poetry and just wait it out.
Roger
Hasn't that guy seen Threads? Like the UK is like one of the most dangerous places to be. That's where he's going to wait it out. Like that's.
Joe Rogan
Well, he probably has this.
Roger
Well, when he says uk, does he mean, like, where does he.
Joe Rogan
I'm not sure. Maybe he means like the Scottish Highlands.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
He's gonna hide.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And go into some small town. Just hang out at a pub.
Roger
Yeah. They're gonna populate that town with suddenly 800 war capable men from another country are gonna move in and they're gonna.
Joe Rogan
Move into the local someplace that the, the west has conveniently been bombing and creating refugees on.
Roger
Yeah. Creating angry people. Yeah, yeah. And who have a.
Joe Rogan
You don't want to think that it's all planned out like that, but of.
Roger
Course you don't like, you know, but.
Joe Rogan
That was a bit of the exposure of usaid, you know, So I, like many people thought USAID was about aid. I thought it was like a beautiful philanthropic program where The United States donates money to all these poor countries. That's how they get food. Like, I had Bono on the show, and he's like, I've heard that 30,000 people have already starved to death because of this. 30 million people are going to die. I'm like, okay, but do you know how much corruption was involved with this? Do you know that it's not aid, it's the Agency for International Development. And mostly what they were doing was regime change. And Mike Benz laid it out, and he said USAID was for tasks that were too dirty for the CIA.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Which is crazy. So, like, if they've been engineering this long game and engineering the collapse of legitimate governments all throughout the world, bombing places, creating refugees, and then having these. Not just open border policies, but inviting and helping people get into countries and then giving them money once they get there.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Like, so many people do not want to admit that that was really going on, despite all of the evidence. That's another. Like, it's designed to destroy whatever confidence you have in law enforcement, in civilization, in the electoral process.
Roger
Yeah. What's the answer? Okay, so given a choice between totalitarianism or cannibalism, you know, which would you prefer?
Joe Rogan
Right, right. You take cannibalism because you don't want to be eaten. Yeah. No, I mean, you take to take.
Roger
Totalitarianism because you prefer to want to be eaten. Like, I would rather not be in the movie the Road, but I feel like immediately. I feel like we're increasingly in the movie Children of Men. And I mean, that's. That movie was a pretty accurate futurist example of where we're heading with collapsing birth rates and at least portions of civilization looking at. At extinction.
Joe Rogan
And, I mean, they're experiencing the totalitarian South Korea, Japan.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
What is. Can you find that guy's manifesto? Excuse me.
Roger
Cuaron is a genius for making that film.
Joe Rogan
I just want to say Children of Men.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
Fantastic movie. So today is my last day at Anthropic. I resigned. Here's the letter I shared with my colleagues explaining my decision. That's a lot to read. What is the synopsis? Just ask Perplexity what the synopsis of what this guy said.
Roger
Said.
Joe Rogan
Okay. Sharma, who built defenses against AI assisted bioterrorism and push for transparency on model risks at the San Francisco AI firm, announced his resignation on Monday. He described struggles to let values guide actions amid mounting pressures, planning to return to the UK for a poetry degree and step back from the spotlight. His exit follows other safety team departures amid Anthropics launch of Claude Opus 4.6 in a massive, massive $20 billion funding round at $350. $350 billion valuation, fueling debates on balancing safety with commercial speed. Okay, but what is he saying specifically is the issue. Let's click on that. Let's fuck it. Let's click on his AI started talking.
Roger
To him and scared the bejesus out of him.
Jamie
The safe holds.
Roger
He's.
Jamie
He's part of the guiding of the. Damn it. Lost the word.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
Bioweapon. I mean, look, this guy's built something, and all of a sudden he's realizing all the players that are funding it are likely, you know, scary. Scary people.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, scary people who are all in.
Roger
The same club, you know, drinking baby blood and offal together. What's awful again, she meconium, which is like. It's a thing.
Joe Rogan
Baby poop.
Roger
Yeah, that's in the files.
Joe Rogan
What comes next? I do not know. I think fondly of this famous Zen quote, not knowing is most intimate. What my intention is to create a space, to set aside the structures that have held me these past years and see what might emerge in their absence. He's already working on his poetry right here. I feel called to writing that addresses and engages fully with the place we find ourselves and that places poetic truth alongside scientific truth as equally valid ways of knowing.
Roger
Yeah. It was written for him by AI Elon.
Joe Rogan
Said something very bizarre recently. He was talking about the speed of light, that the speed of light cannot be. You can't bypass or exceed the speed of light. If you believe Einstein, he said, unless.
Roger
We live in a simulation or Unless Einstein was wrong.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
I mean, a lot of astrophysics is based on a false premise that that P equals P prime and that the sun is, like, designed a certain way, and it's completely wrong. And everything that we know about the stars and how we view the nature of the universe is fundamentally incorrect.
Joe Rogan
How is it wrong?
Roger
It's based on this idea of the stability of Kelvin temperatures in the sun, and which is this P equals P prime thing. And the guy who invented, like, CAT scan machines, there's sort of a Venn diagram overlapping of. Of, you know, this photographic technique and astrophysics. And what he realizes, holy cow, that is not true. And therefore, so much of everything that we know about how we view the cosmos is incorrect. And so. And much.
Joe Rogan
Now, how'd they find out that it was incorrect?
Roger
Well, he's a mathematician. He figured it out. I would have to look up his.
Joe Rogan
Name and everything and what is incorrect about it. Do you remember that?
Roger
Well, it's at the beginning of astrophysics, there is this formula. And if that formula is wrong, then the preceding calculations are also wrong, or at least off. And so the idea is that what we view is really just. It's kind of a cartoon that's painted for us, us using all these formulas and, and using radio telescopes. And so, you know, it's. Things are not as they seem.
Joe Rogan
Well, they've already. They already have issues with the findings from the James Webb telescope.
Roger
Oh, yeah, well, that's probably part of it. Yeah. You know, I have to say, like, I mean, I'm a provocateur and so I'm always interested in finding that which I upsets people's, you know, concepts of things. And that's partly because I'm a screenwriter and I'm looking for these kind of conflicts and interesting ideas and stuff like that. So take what I'm about to say with a grain of salt. But the big one, the biggest conspiracy theory that freaks everybody out is flat Earth. Now, I don't know what the Earth is, but experientially, through the testimony of the eyes, it is flat. And there is very little chance that I will ever in my life, or most of us will ever in our life, experience anything other than what is effectively a flat Earth. And the way laser sighting across large bodies of water or navigation maps for air travel for pilots is always a presumption of a flat Earth.
Joe Rogan
Earth.
Roger
It's always in the pilot manuals and on and on.
Joe Rogan
How so?
Roger
Well, if you're flying a jet at low altitude, you're not making corrections for curvature, even though you're going fast enough where you should be. And so what's actually happening there? Well, and so the idea is, look, I don't know what the world is or what the realm that we're in is, but experientially, from my perspective, in life, it is nothing, but it's a flat Earth.
Joe Rogan
But what about travel routes? Like, what about when they fly over Antarctica? What if they.
Roger
Well, they don't fly over.
Joe Rogan
Well, you can watch the sun rise and fall.
Roger
They don't even fly from Cape Town to Buenos Aires.
Joe Rogan
There's a recession of the equinox.
Roger
They travel up into. Into the other hemisphere and like land in London or something and then travel back down whenever you're doing it. A flight across the Atlantic. And so, like, when you look at it on a flat earth map.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, but there's satellite photographs of Earth from space.
Roger
Those are all Cartoons?
Joe Rogan
What are you talking about?
Roger
I'm saying that even the NASA, the guys who actually do those composites. Those are composite imagery of. Listen, I am not saying that, but.
Joe Rogan
It seems like you're saying the Earth is possibly flat.
Roger
I'm saying experiential.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
That's a spirit from your daily.
Joe Rogan
It's a scale issue though.
Roger
Correct.
Joe Rogan
We're a tiny little thing on an enormous thing.
Roger
Correct.
Joe Rogan
But you know, snipers have to calculate for the curvature of the Earth when they shoot.
Roger
Only the curvature of the landscape that they're on. Right.
Joe Rogan
Why do you think the landscape curves?
Roger
The landscape doesn't curve. It is a mountainous. And not always.
Joe Rogan
No, on flat plains you have to do the same thing. Well, if you're making a long shot over a flat area, like if you had a shoot.
Roger
Well then why, then why don't pilots make adjustments?
Joe Rogan
I'm not a pilot. I don't know. But. But I do know that when you look navigation maps, always film from the space station.
Roger
Zoom. A flat Earth.
Joe Rogan
When you look at the film from the space station, you see an Earth that's not just round, but spinning.
Roger
I see what I actually, this. The. The space station, you know, the, the International Space Station is actually not high enough to see curvature. And what you're seeing is lens. You know, the lens distortion.
Joe Rogan
It's not high enough to see curvature.
Roger
When you look out into the horizon, it's actually even like it's very, very close to the.
Joe Rogan
Let's look at footage from the space station of Earth. So when you see satellite images that are taken of the Earth, you think they're lying. You think there's this grand conspiracy to piece all these pictures together and turn it into a circle instead of having flat.
Roger
That's the fundamental conspiracy theory that unravels everyone. And well, it doesn't make sense because.
Joe Rogan
Everything that we see in the cosmos that's a planetary body is round, including stars. So it's all round. Except for small moons, everything is round. And that's because I'm not even.
Roger
I'm not even certain certain that space exists that. Well, that the moon is anything more than a planet. Plasma.
Joe Rogan
A plasma, yeah. What does that mean?
Roger
That it's a. That it's a plasma effect, a lenticular effect of some kind so that it's.
Joe Rogan
Not a real thing, but it affects the tides. It is something that we have landed. At the very least. We've landed probes we don't know other countries have read.
Roger
People theorize this is that it affects the tide.
Joe Rogan
Footage from the space station. This is live footage from the space station.
Roger
And I'm saying that. And I'm saying that's lens curvature and that what you're actually seeing.
Joe Rogan
Why do you think that's lens?
Roger
What you're seeing is horizon.
Joe Rogan
So what you're talking about is like.
Roger
If I try to provoke you. That's what I'm saying.
Joe Rogan
Right, but let's not do that right now because I don't want you to be completely insane because this is a round body, just like the moon, just like Mars, just like Jupiter, just like Uranus.
Roger
That appears. That appears to be a. But. But in your practical life experience, you have to accept a certain amount of faith. But is what I'm getting at at any moment.
Joe Rogan
But they understand the procession of the equinox. Okay. Do you know that the procession of the ignorance is how they measure the. The sky over a period of 26,000 years?
Roger
I see right there a little stitching, like right there.
Jamie
I just said this would just keep going straight forever.
Roger
Do you see that line? Do you see that line right there?
Joe Rogan
What is that? What is that line?
Roger
Yeah, what is that line? Well, that looks like stitching to me. It looks like they've stitched together and it crosses over there through that mountain range right there.
Joe Rogan
That is weird, whatever that is.
Roger
But so for your. By your very example, I'm just saying that you have to have a certain amount of faith in that and on the surface. Mundus Vault Decip.
Joe Rogan
Okay, okay, you're freaking me out. Go back. Go back to that, Jamie. So what is the explanation? Go back a little.
Roger
Yeah, what is the explanation of that line right there?
Joe Rogan
Right, but how weird is that? That is weird that there's this line, right?
Roger
Because that in itself is a composite image, a cartoon that has been put together for you to look at. This. This apparent live imagery.
Joe Rogan
Is this multiple images that are supposedly pieced together? Is that what they're.
Roger
I'm saying that things fall into. Like the way perspective works is that things appear to fall into the horizon. But now you use a. What is that camera? Is it a P200 camera that. Where you can actually zoom in and lift things out of the horizon that have appeared to fall into the horizon.
Joe Rogan
This live video. This live video feed from the International Space Station has been interrupted because of.
Roger
Because you're watching too much due to.
Joe Rogan
Either a change and the onboard camera configuration or loss of signal with the communications network. The video return when the connection is re established. So this is during the live feed.
Jamie
This isn't from NASA's YouTube channel. It's just down right now.
Joe Rogan
It's just down right now. Okay, so you're. You're saying that this is like a fisheye effect of a lens. Yeah, I'm saying potentially.
Roger
I'm saying that. And. And that we can even see that whenever they're up there shooting with cameras outside, you're like, oh, there's the. There's.
Joe Rogan
But, you know, many people.
Roger
There's the curvature. And then every now and then, the camera turns and the. And it inverts for a moment, then it goes back down.
Joe Rogan
I've never seen that.
Roger
I watch a lot of NASA stuff and listen, I'm not saying that we're not living on a globe or at least an oblate spheroid, as Neil Degrasse Tyson says, but have you ever noticed how spasticated that guy gets whenever you throw out the word flat earth? He flips out. Like the way Robert De Niro flips out on, like, irrationally. He flips out.
Joe Rogan
He flips out. When you say that men can't be women, which is very weird.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
And that they should be able to compete in women's sports, which is very weird. Like a mat for a man of science. That's bonkers.
Roger
Or that they should be able to go to jail and that a sex offender.
Joe Rogan
Insane. Not just that, but rapists.
Roger
Yeah. Like people have put in jail women.
Joe Rogan
And then they have to pay for their electrolysis and breast augmentation, which is. Okay. At what point in time do you say that this is some sort of a bizarre agenda that you're trying to get us to accept something that doesn't make any sense? So much so that you're willing to house male prisoners in with females because they say they're a male with an intact penis. And then even if they get, like, female prisoners pregnant or rape them, we're.
Roger
All just trying to construct what reality is, and it tends to be a consensus of what it is. But, you know, there are fringes that on the ends that don't believe with what the consensus says. Are they wrong?
Joe Rogan
But do you know how many people would have to be involved to promulgate this idea that there's a flat earth and you gotta cover up that thing and pretend it's round. And what's the motivation of covering up the fact that the earth is flat?
Roger
I mean, if we're really fundamentally getting down to it, it's about God, and it's about what is this realm that we're in and are we part of Creation. And, you know, but why would it.
Joe Rogan
Be more likely for all Free culture.
Roger
Throughout recorded history draws us in this kind of flat, earthish environment with a dome, a firmament that covers it up until like when, the 1930s or something. Right.
Joe Rogan
When they start making telescopes.
Roger
When. Well, right.
Joe Rogan
I mean, so this is a grand conspiracy. Like Galileo was wrong, Copernicus was wrong.
Roger
All these people, all of recorded history is wrong. And I mean, the other, the other option is that we are just specks of nothing floating around in an endless vast nothing that goes on forever. And that you are completely insignificant, that you are not God's perfect creation, which I think you are.
Joe Rogan
Well, that doesn't. They're not mutually exclusive. You know, just because we are in this vast cosmos that's almost impossible for mammal minds to grasp the magnitude of it, doesn't mean that God's not real.
Roger
It's exclusive to people who believe the Bible word for word. I'm not saying I do necessarily. I would be considered apostate by most. By most people.
Joe Rogan
I've been reading the Bible a lot and one of the problems that I find is it's clearly got the hand of man on it.
Roger
Well, it's been edited. Yeah, it's been edited. You know, the King James or. Who was King James? He wrote Bible. He wrote books on demon. On demons as well. And so who.
Joe Rogan
Well, even the Old Testament. The Old Testament has the hand of man on it. Not just that, but it's also been translated so many different times. Like ancient Hebrew, the letters double as number. Numbers. There's no numbers in ancient Hebrew. So words have numerical value to them. And, you know, imagine translating such a complex language where like the, the word God and the word love, they have the same numerical value. I believe I read. Here's another thing I've read that I don't know if it's true. So let me find out if that's true. Put that into perplexity.
Roger
There's a lot of weird stuff in the Bible. In Genesis, when. How about the book, the Nephilim come down and they find women comely. And so they like, okay, what's actually going on there? These angels, or Nephilim are coming down and they're taking women from men and having sex with them and then creating, you know, hybrid offspring.
Joe Rogan
When Representative Anna Paulina Luna was here, she told me about the Book of Enoch. She says, you have to read that. Have you ever read it? I go, no. So I read it.
Roger
Have you seen the Carpenter Son, The Nicholas Cage movie?
Joe Rogan
No.
Roger
Incredible.
Joe Rogan
I Just what did I just have you look up, though, before I lose my train of thought?
Jamie
King James Bible thing.
Joe Rogan
What?
Jamie
That's what I was trying to ask specifically. Which part did you ask about?
Joe Rogan
No, what I. What I asked you was ancient Hebrew. So the letters also double those numbers.
Roger
That's what that movie PI is all about.
Joe Rogan
And that the word love and the word God have the same numerical value. I'm very, very certain that that's true, but I want to really double check.
Roger
Numerology exists around us everywhere, and, you know, everything. It seems to have a kind of. And that's what the Aronofsky film Pie was kind of all about. Is that.
Joe Rogan
That was a great movie.
Roger
Yeah, it's a very.
Joe Rogan
There was also.
Roger
He's a very interesting film.
Joe Rogan
A really fascinating statement by this mathematician. We talked about it on a recent podcast, was that, how strange is it that we find out that the universe is made out of math and that it's encoded in the universe itself. So a tool that we used that human beings created to measure the universe, it turns out that that tool is how the universe is actually encoded.
Roger
Well, this gets back to what Elon is saying about the world being a simulation. You know, I mean, what is a simulation? So it says.
Joe Rogan
No, in ancient Hebrew, whatever that word is Gematria, no direct name of God shares the exact same numerical value as the word for love. So what is the basis of that rumor? Sacred name equals 26. A name for God equals 86. Okay. Is there a word for God?
Roger
Okay.
Joe Rogan
Does that have the same.
Roger
It's a name, right?
Joe Rogan
What is the value of. Click on that. Below that. Below that, where it says. What is the gematric? What is that word?
Jamie
I had to look it up.
Roger
It's gematria. Gematria.
Joe Rogan
Primary Jewish mystic. Oh, Kabbalah. Religious studies to find hidden spiritual meanings in sacred texts. Okay. It is fascinating, though, that there's numerical value in words.
Roger
Words.
Joe Rogan
Like, there's no way you're going to get that when you translate it to Latin. So that is a.
Roger
Or Greek.
Joe Rogan
That is a value of 86. And what is love's value? What is the value? What is the ancient Hebrew word for love? What is the ancient Hebrew word for love? That's gonna.
Jamie
What you mean by love is going to be very. You have to say. Do you mean like love between two people?
Joe Rogan
Okay, what is the geometry? Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's a good point. That's a good point. I have different words for it, definitely. So what is that? Click on that. What's the geometry of value of Avala. Right there. Right there. Yeah, Click that. It's 13. So that's a different number too. Interesting thing. 13 twice equals 26, the value of Yahweh.
Roger
Yeah. Huh. This movie, the Carpenter Son is all about the infancy of Jesus. I think is written by Matthew and it's part of these. I mean, I may have this wrong, but Coptic texts and it is like Nicolas Cage is so good in this movie.
Joe Rogan
Movie. So twice 13 equals 26. The value of Yahweh, implying love mirrors or completes God's essence. Okay, so that's where that comes from.
Jamie
I was gonna ask where it came from.
Joe Rogan
Right, that's where it comes from. So God is love. So love twice is God. So here's a. Here's a question. What happened? So go put. I understand, I understand. Go to ask a follow up. So how was the numerical value of ancient Hebrew language lost when they translated it to Latin to Greek? To Greek first? Right. How is the numerical value of ancient Hebrew words numerical value of ancient Hebrew words lost when they translated it to Greek? Because it seems like if the. It's not just context, like, what is your word for that? Like, the word meant a different thing to them. You know, Numerical values of ancient Hebrew words calculated via gematria, where letters double as numbers, was not preserved in Greek translations. Hebrew letters inherently carry fixed numerical values, enabling word sums. Greek letters have their own values. Equivalents rarely match Hebrew sums exactly. So you're gonna lose it. Like, you know, when you read like Russian translations of English or English to Russian, it gets like super screwy.
Roger
For sure. For sure.
Jamie
Is this for sure?
Roger
Like real ancient Spanish Cervantes. Incredibly diverse.
Jamie
Difficult even. All words mean another number that all have some sort of secret meaning.
Roger
Runic writing from the Nordics is the same thing. And there is a striking resemblance between many of the runes with Hebrew. And so these ideas and these glyphs and symbols that Odin first saw while hanging upside down from the tree and learned language and how to speak are somewhat universal across the planet.
Joe Rogan
Let's get to that for a second. But let's find out what Jamie's saying. Primarily used in Jewish mysticism and religious studies to find hidden spiritual meanings in sacred texts like Torah. By assigning numerical values to Hebrew letters and words, revealing connections between concepts and exploring the universe's underlying structure. What's interesting is, like, it's an older language, but doesn't that seem like a more complex language, a language that combines numerical value with words like that? Like, if you said Something to me, it's not just implied by your tone or by the context of what you're saying that I understand what it means to you, but it's in the numerical value of the words. That seems like a better way to communicate than just nouns and verbs and adverbs rather than bifurcating numbers and letters. Like, sounds like a way better move. I mean, doesn't it? It seems like if you can understand that and if you grew up with that, that seems like that would be a much richer and deeper way of communicating.
Roger
Isaac Asimov wrote a book called Asimov on Numbers, which is fantastic, which talks about this. And he talks about Kalahari Bushmen who have no concept of the number 0 and how they process and understand concepts. Like, you know, when no one is around, you know, if the village is empty and things like that. And so, you know, just different people are just trying to figure out how to articulate everything. And, you know, computer programming is a language that utilizes numbers.
Joe Rogan
It's weird when there's like certain languages that don't have a word for something, so people really grasp. They have a hard time grasping. Yeah, what the fuck you're trying to say. Yeah, like, what's the translation for this?
Roger
Like what?
Joe Rogan
We don't have a word for that.
Roger
We don't. We don't understand the concept of empathy.
Joe Rogan
Well, there's certain cultures that are like tribal cultures that can't understand the concept of maintenance. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they don't have that.
Roger
I've heard that.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. Which is weird. Like, you think about it, like, oh, right.
Roger
Why would they need maintenance?
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
Why would they need maintenance?
Joe Rogan
If you live a subsistence lifestyle, you live off the land, you don't need maintenance.
Roger
And then suddenly you're thrust into the 24 1st century and Chinese are building highways for you and collapse. Yeah. And the highways has collapsed because no one's maintaining it.
Joe Rogan
Right. Yeah, it's interesting. But it's.
Roger
It's interesting pulling people out of the Stone Age and dropping them into. Or maybe the Iron Age or. And dropping them suddenly into.
Joe Rogan
To take this back to this idea that we're missing a thousand years. So if we really are missing this one, that there's two things. I want to. I want to get to that. And I added a thousand years. Added a thousand years. I really want to get to that. And well, the. I meant by missing, like, they don't. They don't exist in the real world.
Roger
Right.
Joe Rogan
I want to get to that. And I want to get to. Is there a conventional explanation for that stitching. Why that image? Like, what is the mainstream.
Jamie
I gotta dig up what. That. What we're even looking at.
Joe Rogan
I don't know. Right?
Jamie
I don't. It was not the NASA channel we were looking at. I don't. You know, I can dig down that rabbit hole.
Joe Rogan
What were we looking at?
Jamie
I don't. I've tried to pick up a video.
Roger
Of live, you know, the globe imagery that.
Joe Rogan
Hold on a second. So that image might not have been an official image. That might have been something that someone created.
Jamie
I'm not saying that. No. Well, let me retract. So words aren't taken out of context. I'm just saying it was. It seemed like a live video. It was live on YouTube.
Joe Rogan
Oh, but it could have been AI. Yeah.
Jamie
I have to go back to look at the. Try. I'm working fast over here.
Joe Rogan
No, I get it, dog. I get it. Jamie, you do the job. Job of 15 dudes. So I appreciate a video from 11.
Jamie
Years ago on Vimeo. That is from SpaceX. So it's not NASA, it's someone else. And it's like it's up and down of the rocket. You can argue all day that it's got curvature. It doesn't have curvature.
Roger
When you see a rocket launch, what does it do? It goes kind of sideways across the sky. And so, like, we've now seen that, you know, pretty regularly. And that's because they're really not going above the troposphere, which.
Joe Rogan
Well, I watched this. I watched the SpaceX launch lot. I was there. It went straight up in the air.
Roger
And then it curves and it travels sideways across the sky.
Joe Rogan
Well, it meets the horizon orbit, and then it traveled and dropped off in Australia. 35 minutes later. I went out of your view. No, I watched the entire thing from the command center. I watched it from, like, 24 different cameras.
Roger
But how high did it go? Did it go above the troposphere? Not likely.
Joe Rogan
Like, this is not above the troposphere.
Roger
This is like.
Joe Rogan
How many miles is that up?
Roger
This is low Earth orbit. Where.
Joe Rogan
Right, but at low Earth orbit. Jesus Christ. That looks like a globe, huh?
Roger
But watch as the camera rotates. Just.
Jamie
This is also an edited video. I don't want to get stuck in this.
Roger
Right, right. Like this. As Elon would say, it's real because it looks fake. Or when it looks fake, that's when you know it's real.
Joe Rogan
Say that about Bigfoot. Then Bigfoot looks fake as. And it's definitely not real. You know what's real? That Turkish sharpshooter That dude was a G up in the corner. Press play. See what this is supposed to be. It cuts. Yeah, okay. Oh, I see. I see.
Jamie
Yes.
Joe Rogan
It's a bunch of different now.
Roger
You can actually see an inversion occurring on the. On the horizon right there.
Joe Rogan
A small piece of it.
Roger
Correct. But the lens distortion on the side of the frame is causing the. The horizon there to go the opposite, to invert. And that's because of lens distortion.
Joe Rogan
I see what you're saying.
Jamie
If it was.
Roger
And the fact of the matter is, even at the height. Even at the height that these are orbiting at, and I'm not saying like presuming, presuming a globular planet and even the word planet plane. It's like a plane at, you know, or the horizon is horizontal. Like, you know, even presuming that the height that they're at right now, you would still only see, you know, a circular. You see the limit of your vision, which has a.
Joe Rogan
Because it's so massive.
Roger
Yeah. Which is. Because it's so massive, you're still high enough. Well, you're still not high enough to truly see curvature.
Joe Rogan
If we are in a simulation and if consciousness, it affects the reality of things and they are only real if we are experiencing them, that's when things get really squirrely.
Roger
The testimony of your eyes, like, I know that I am here right now.
Joe Rogan
Not just the testimony of your eyes, but your consciousness interacting with reality is what creates it.
Roger
Correct.
Joe Rogan
I mean, that's, that's where things get super.
Roger
How do you know gravity exists, for example?
Joe Rogan
Well, gravity is not clearly defined.
Roger
Correct.
Joe Rogan
We understand the numbers.
Roger
Gravity is a concept and it's a non, truly, non provable concept because you can prove the exact same thing through density and buoyancy. You know, the density and buoyancy, you know, make a lot of how come the ocean, you know, react the way they do. And don't, you know, it's, it's, it's not necessarily provable, but it's believable. You come to a certain point where you're like, okay, faith takes over at this point. My faith in that, in gravity, my faith in the globe. Because that's what's been told to me since I was a baby. At a certain point that just takes over.
Joe Rogan
Not just that, and you accept that.
Roger
As a fundamental piece of what reality is. Because we want to believe, we understand the universe. What I'm saying is we don't understand jack shit about the universe. We don't know anything. And all we do is we believe what they Tell us. And they is just the, the cumulative understanding of how things are. But in ancient times they had a different understanding of things and that was how it was back then. And so because they had no other way to describe.
Joe Rogan
Right. But even then. So reality is just built, built things based on where the sun was going to be during the solar equinox. They also were aware of the procession of the equinoxes, which is the wobble of Earth's orbit. So Earth spinning around doesn't spin perfectly. There is a 26,000 year wobble and you could predict it by the night.
Roger
Sky somehow Polaris remains centered in the sky and all stars rotate around it. That's extraordinary if we're traveling.
Joe Rogan
What do you mean? So during the procession of the equinoxes over a 26,000 year cycle, Polaris it has remained.
Roger
Exactly. Supposedly that's because that's where we're flying towards as a solar system as we travel through the galaxy.
Joe Rogan
Right. But in this dance of equinoxes, this wobble over a 26,000 year period, it will move in the sky.
Roger
Well, the point of Polaris will always remain where it is directly the point.
Joe Rogan
That our perspective of it will, will vary depending upon where we are. In this 26, 000 year cycle.
Roger
It undergoes a kind of penumbra of sort, a kind of motion of sorts.
Joe Rogan
It changes.
Roger
A figure 8.
Joe Rogan
It changes. It changes. Look at it says right here. Due to the 26,000year axial precession cycle, the North Star changes over millennia. While Polaris is the current North Star, other stars have held this position, including Thuban 3000 BC and future stars will include Arai, Aldermane, Alderman and Vega. So it's not the same star. It's just what is dependent upon where we are in the procession of the equinoxes. That's why. Well, there's not, not that the Earth is flat.
Roger
I know it's true because it's on Google.
Joe Rogan
But it's not just that we know where they've, they've, they've been able to accurately predict the motion of the procession. The equinox is based on the constellations which are clearly mapped out. So we understand this wobble and this wobble may be responsible for cycles of Earth's, Earth's climate. How things change and be dependent upon where the equator sits and where these poles sit and kind of wiggles around.
Roger
When we were younger, the sun was kind of yellow and orange and now it's just like, like white. Like reality is changing. I Mean, things change.
Joe Rogan
The sun looks exactly the same to me.
Roger
Does. Yeah, the sun is the same to me. It's.
Joe Rogan
I think pollution has affected it somewhat, especially if you live in la.
Roger
Well, there used to be more pollution, and so maybe that's an excuse of why the sun would be more yellow. But I've lived all over the world.
Jamie
Did you see Epstein talking about gravity?
Joe Rogan
Oh, boy.
Roger
Oh, here we go. Here we go.
Jamie
It's not. It's very. I'll just say.
Joe Rogan
What does he have to say?
Jamie
It's only 45 seconds.
Roger
I just let it go. So someone's pushing the ball. Because I know that I am confident that the only thing that gets something to move is with a force that pushes. So there's a force that's pushing the ball down, in fact. That's cool.
Joe Rogan
He called it gravity.
Roger
He measured how fast it was pulled, but. But never was able to explain why it happened.
Joe Rogan
How is it?
Roger
What is gravity? It's this. Everybody says, well, why did the ball fall to the ground? Because gravity took it. But what's gravity? As Feynman would say, that's the name of the thing. We have no idea what it is.
Jamie
That's the end of that clip.
Roger
Or it's just density and buoyancy.
Jamie
He was really into this topic, apparently. Apparently he knew a lot about it.
Roger
You know who you should have on is Eric Dubay. Do you know who this guy is?
Joe Rogan
Oh, he's the flat Earth guy.
Roger
Yeah, he's the flat Earth guy. And he's written a book called 100 Proofs. And in order to prove something, you also have to prove things wrong.
Joe Rogan
You went down some rabbit holes, Roger Avery? Well, I.
Roger
Look, I'm a screenwriter, and so I'm always looking for things like this to write stuff about. And so it's.
Joe Rogan
So in order to prove it all. In order to prove what?
Roger
Whenever you have a proof, you also have to disprove. And so, you know, he wrote a book called 100 Proofs about, you know, the nature of, you know, the Earth and how it is. And it has explanations for many of the things you're talking about.
Joe Rogan
Hasn't he debated people that actually understand how you could prove that the Earth is round?
Roger
He does it very calmly and it infuriates people.
Joe Rogan
Right. But I don't think he's done well.
Roger
It's very enjoyable to watch because it's really funny.
Joe Rogan
But to people that are actual cosmologists, he's not performed well in these.
Roger
Well, the cosmologists will say things that still need to be. If you're making statements, statements, they still need to be. You still need to disprove the other, you know, the other proofs.
Joe Rogan
Right, but there's plenty of people that have disproven that the Earth is flat.
Roger
All I'm saying, the Joe Rogan experience throughout life, you are really like when you go up into an airplane, I do not see the curvature of the Earth.
Joe Rogan
Well, you can't because of perspective. Because you're so tiny.
Roger
Correct, correct. Because we're so tiny. So all I'm saying is that through experience that the testimony of your eyes, you will never experience a globular Earth. You can't. You.
Joe Rogan
But you do experience of a Earth that's a globe. If you go to the other side of the Earth and it's dark out when it's sunny in California, they've made.
Roger
Models of how that could work on the dorks have. Dorks have made models.
Joe Rogan
But it doesn't line in with our understanding of cosmology. It doesn't line in with our understanding.
Roger
Of our orbit around. That's assuming you believe that we orbit around the Sun. And I know, listen, I'm not saying that we don't orbit around the sun, but if you live on a globular Earth.
Joe Rogan
But the numbers.
Roger
Don't take me wrong.
Joe Rogan
But the numbers match. If you do assume that they're correct that we orbit around the sun, but.
Roger
Their calculation, they make the calculations on their flat Earth model as well, then you still have to prove that wrong. Right?
Joe Rogan
But is doing that, is MIT NASA.
Roger
Like of all people to believe the ones who are digitally stitching shit and saying that's a government agency.
Joe Rogan
You went so deep with this boy.
Roger
No, all I'm saying is my experience, you know, when I get on the plane later today and I'm flying back and I look out outside, I'm going to see a flat, you know, a flat horizon, a horizontal horizon before me and, and, and when I land and, and you know, it's. Everything else is faith based. Well, that's all I'm saying.
Joe Rogan
It's not though. It's. It's science based. It's based on data. It's words on our science.
Roger
The word science means observation.
Joe Rogan
It means testimony, which I'm talking about the, the measurements, data.
Roger
That data is so far removed one from my ability to, to understand.
Joe Rogan
But you can understand the circumference of the Earth, right? You can understand the numbers. And the numbers line up exactly with how much time it would take for the Earth to go around In a day.
Roger
Sure. And.
Joe Rogan
And it works.
Roger
In what other experiment can you show me where water clings to a spinning ball? Like, that's kind of the classic flat earther thing that they'll ask you like. Well, show me any other example of.
Joe Rogan
That fucking ball that's 24,000 miles wide.
Roger
And the answer to that, Gravity. And what he's talking about in that clip that you just showed is gravity is just sort of this idea that we came up with to justify that.
Joe Rogan
But there's clearly a force that does that.
Roger
That's density.
Joe Rogan
Just density.
Roger
There's. Yeah, density.
Joe Rogan
Well, then how come these two things will fall at the same time if I drop them when this is far heavier? How come?
Roger
I do not have an answer for that.
Joe Rogan
Right, but gravity does. Right?
Roger
Gravity is. Like he said, it's just a measurement. It's a measurement of how things fall.
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
And the word that they invented, gravity, is just an explanation for how objects are pulled downward.
Joe Rogan
Right. But those objects, how come if it was just density, wouldn't a heavier object drop faster?
Roger
Well, when a.
Jamie
There's two balls, there's a bowling ball and feathers dropping in a vacuum, and they're falling at the exact same.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. How weird. Vacuum. No, density. They both fall at the same time because of gravity or whatever the force we call gravity is. But there is some sort of a force that we call gravity that could be measured in a vacuum.
Roger
Look how excited they all are.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. Brian Cox would be pissed. If he was here right now, he'd be shitting.
Roger
Oh, no, he'd be. I'm not. Listen, I'm not saying. All I'm saying is that my experience in the world. Of course.
Joe Rogan
But your experience is based on perspective of being a tiny little thing on an enormous thing.
Roger
Correct? Yeah, that is correct. Yeah, that is correct.
Jamie
A few YouTube channels that have broken down all of those Flat Earth ideas.
Joe Rogan
A ton to watch those. I tried years ago and I gave up.
Roger
It is absolutely a rabbit hole. But what's interesting about it is that if you extract, like, the faith that you have in these kind of ideas. Ideas, and you supplement it with the faith of, you know, these other ideas, they're exchangeable.
Joe Rogan
They're only exchangeable if you don't understand the data and if you don't understand what's actually been measured, or if you don't understand the path of satellites, or if you don't understand how many different people would have had to lie about this shit and not achieve the same observational results that all these different space agencies have that. The idea that they're all in collusion, that Japan and India and even countries that hate each other, they're all inclusion on this lie that the earth is round. It seems much more likely that there's a bunch of people with schizophrenia that think that the earth is flat. And they make these YouTube videos where they're very compelling because they're articulate and they use great words and they say it all in a nice way without being challenged by real facts along the way by someone who actually has studied this their whole life.
Roger
Right. I still saw digital stitching on your example.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it wasn't my example. It was some shit Jamie randomly pulled offline. That was weird though. And that's perfect for this world that we live in to have sort of a glitch like that.
Roger
But that's kind of what I'm getting at is there's so much out. There is so much out there that it. It just. It falls to faith. And also, what does it really matter? That's kind of what. What I'm getting at ultimately is what does all of that really matter? What does it matter to anybody that there's a cabal of 8,000 plus people who are secretly controlling the world and doing occultism and drinking baby blood? What does it really matter as long as you can just have your daily pint?
Joe Rogan
This is a very different subject now. We've shifted. You've moved away from the concept of the earth being flat. And it's a giant lie that's promoted by a huge group of people that aren't even connected in any way, shape or form to evil. People that are involved in cult like rituals which has, by the way, always existed. And this is why it's very difficult for people to imagine today that some of the things that you're hearing from the Epstein files, like the potential that they were eating children or killing children, or that they use that sulfuric acid to boil bodies. We don't want to believe in evil that is that deep. But in my opinion, if you can find out that evil is real. Real, Right. Evil most certainly is real. There's evil acts that we have documented all throughout the world. There's evil that the cartel does. I just watched a video where the cartel chopped this guy's head off and put it on a drone and flew it over to where the other cartel was.
Roger
That was funny. They probably thought it was funny.
Joe Rogan
Having a good time. That's clearly evil. There's plenty of.
Roger
Do you believe in demons?
Joe Rogan
I believe in the concept of demons.
Roger
I mean, demons have, don't, don't materialize before us necessarily. They rest upon the shoulders of men and whisper into their ears. And people do evil things.
Joe Rogan
This is what I believe. I believe that if I was a demon or if demons were real, they would get people to do things which are verifiably true, that they have done. If you were a demonic idea and you got into Oppenheimer's head or Patton's head or anybody, and you wanted them to do something horrific to a bunch of innocent people, and you could say, this is because we're at war, so we're going to drop a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima, like that's a demonic act. It's a demonic act of eliminating hundreds of thousands or a hundred thousand plus people off the face of the earth who did nothing. They're just citizens that are unfortunately involved in a country that is in a conflict with some people that they don't even know. And then you just got vaporize like that. That seems demonic. You've just expired.
Roger
But there are people who would argue souls. There are people who would argue that the war would have continued. And I've heard this argument, I've heard.
Joe Rogan
That argument too, that the war would.
Roger
Have continued and so many more would have died.
Joe Rogan
Well, if I was a demon, I would want to propagate that idea. I would want you to think that you have to do it.
Roger
And so like is, is evil justification of things.
Joe Rogan
Certainly of actions. If you wanted to find a way where a demon just assumed that demons are real, how would demons best be able to enact demonic things on earth? Would they do it by saying, I'm a demon and this is what you should do and this is horrible and evil? Or, or would you creep into someone's head and find justifications for doing a demonic thing? Like there's a lot of things like.
Roger
You would creep into someone's head, right, and you would, you know, you would boil the frog slowly.
Joe Rogan
Like, let's imagine this is the AIDS crisis. And you know that AZT is killing people, but you also, but you also know that you are making an insane amount of profit off of killing people with azt. And you have already established a narrative and Fauci said this publicly, that the reason why they only prescribe AZT is AZT is the only thing that is both safe and effective. He literally used the same language that he used during it.
Roger
He's been doing this for a long time.
Joe Rogan
He has. If I was a demon, I'd want to get in that guy's head. And I'd want to get him to keep doing it and say, look how much money they're making. You got to keep this money. There's a way to just justify this. You're the purveyor of information. You are the gatekeeper of the truth. You just find a way to dance around these numbers. You do not know what you are talking about. This is not gain of function. I mean, think just what he did there that was evil. By taking a virus, funding it, even though it was illegal to fund it in the United States, by doing it through EcoHealth alliance and then farming it out to them. They do it at the Wuhan label. And you are in fact doing gain of function research on a virus designed for human beings to make it more deadly and more contagious. That's demonic. You don't have a cure.
Roger
There was a researcher in Canada at the Manitoba Level 4 lab. Dr. Qui, I think is how you pronounce her name. And she was the one who solved Ebola. Like, she had come up with the vaccine for Ebola, which is. Which is manufactured by a California company that is basically a Chinese company. And like a rock star. She had made a. Like, it was like a hit. She had a hit, a huge hit. And just like a rock star, everybody's asking you what comes next? What comes next? And so she started actively working, working really, really hard at coming up with that next thing. And you know, like most people, you don't want to stand in line. And these level four labs, you know, they have to. Whenever you move your research from one lab to another, you have to go through all sorts of stuff in order to do that. Because it's all patented. All of these microbes and viruses and Ebola strains and whatnot, it's all patented. And so, for example, there was this one kid who was working at the lab in Canada and he was moving, I think, to the one in Atlanta. And so he was crossing the border and he was. He didn't want to, like, you know, have to reproduce all of his work. And so he just put it into a thermos inside of a thing and tried to cross the border. And he got caught. Well, she got caught in 2019 by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, basically moving stuff from Canada via Air Canada freight from Manitoba, from Winnipeg, this is the Winnipeg lab, to Wuhan. And she. They were moving everything. And I tracked where those were because I was writing a screenplay about it. And so I tracked, like, where did that come from? Well, it's like the the cutter, or maybe it was Abu Dhabi. I can't remember the lab there. And then that went through. In order to get around, it got sent to the one in Amsterdam, and that got sent to her. And she was able to do all this stuff, and she was basically just shipping, you know, everything. Hanta and all these patented things to Wuhan, you know, in order to. To do it. And the real Canadian Mounted Police basically, you know, stopped it, and she got, like, walked out of the laboratory and everything, because they were like, is there a misappropriation of money going on here? Like, what are all these flights that are occurring? And they redacted who her financer was, and we still don't know know who her financer was. But it's one of three people, and it's the people, you probably can guess, you know, these people who have an interest in this. But her thing was just ambition. It was just like anybody. She was just wanting to have that next hit. And she would do anything to, you know, to do it. To repeat what she did with Ebola.
Joe Rogan
So she was helping to engineer viruses.
Roger
Yeah, they were engineering stuff. And then she would ship them via Air Canada freight from Winnipeg to. Directly to Wuhan, literally, on Air Canada flights. So you're flying on Air Canada to Wuhan, and down below in cargo. There's all this, like, you know, some shit that you see and. Yeah, some horrible strain of something. It's something that's patented, and then they're just shipping it over to. And, you know, none of this is come out. Like, some papers in Canada, you know, like the Winnipeg Free Press or something, was trying to cover it, but, you know, it just gets kind of buried.
Joe Rogan
That was one of the weird things that I had also seen that I don't know if it's true in the Epstein files, that there was talk about engineering a pandemic.
Roger
Yeah. Yeah. Was it?
Joe Rogan
Did you.
Roger
Yeah, I read that, too. I read that, too. That they were, like, actively working on it, like. Like, you know, running models and figuring it out. And, you know, well, if we do this, then this will happen. And, you know, they were pretty successful at that.
Joe Rogan
But why would Epstein be involved if he's a financier? He was involved in everything, right?
Roger
He was involved in everything. It was, like, amazing. The energy that that guy had. Who has the energy to be, like, doing all this stuff like, all over the world and, like, oh, in Nigeria we're doing this, and in Yemen we're doing this, and here we're doing that. And at the same time, trafficking all these girls and, you know, and young children and like all this stuff, right? Who has the energy to do that?
Joe Rogan
It says no credible evidence in the recently released Epstein files links Jeffrey Epstein or his associates to engineering the COVID 19 pandemic. Claims stem from a misinterpreted 2017 email referencing routine pandemic preparedness discussions, not a plot. So what was the claim? The original claim go down.
Jamie
I didn't ask it about COVID 19.
Joe Rogan
Also, you just asked it about engineering a pandemic. So what is the pandemic claims? Scroll up a little so I can read that.
Jamie
That's all.
Joe Rogan
Scroll down a little. There it goes. So 2017 email, originally from 2015 discussions to Bill, widely assumed to be Gates, forwarded to Epstein proposed recommendations and technical specifications for pandemic modeling of various strains. It focused on healthcare data simulations for preparedness and neurotechnology, not creating or engineering a virus. Gates foundation later ran Public Event 2001 and 2019, a standard exercise with John Hopkins. And who, predating Covid, reports that whole Public event 2001 is fucking weird. Event 2001 is weird. Context and debunking pandemic simulations are common public health tools for the. Like those for SARS or flu. Right, but why is Jeffrey Epstein involved in these discussions?
Roger
Involved in everything. He's involved in gravity.
Joe Rogan
But how weird is that? How weird? A pandemic. A pandemic was reportedly mentioned in the Epstein files.
Roger
Running the world. The world.
Joe Rogan
Well, this is what my friend Eddie, creating the illusion.
Roger
In the meantime, Ghislaine Maxwell is running the Reddit forum on world news. Like, she's literally shaping the world news. Reddit forum. Reddit forum.
Joe Rogan
She was, yeah, she was running the world news forum on Reddit.
Roger
Yeah, she was. And it all went dark the minute she got picked up. Her. Her person. But she was like the. The main contributor did thousands of posts, like, all day long, posting world news, shaping our perception of things.
Joe Rogan
One email was a subject preparing for pandemics was sent by a person whose name was redacted.
Roger
By the way, the. Did you see that?
Joe Rogan
Why would they redact the person who sent that? That's not a victim you're supposed to redact.
Roger
I think they just. They did, like, supposedly they just did massive redacting, but sometimes you can see like, oh, the name is short. It's probably Bill. And then the one that comes after that, if it's a little longer, it might be Clinton. And if it's a little shorter, it might be Gates. You know, like, you could kind Of. But again, that's just, you know, there's no foundation. It's like plausible deniability until. Until they release all these names. Did you notice that Jeffrey Epstein's Fortnite account suddenly became active in Tel Aviv? And that somebody is playing under his right after his supposed death?
Joe Rogan
Right.
Roger
Suddenly he's playing Fortnite again.
Joe Rogan
Yeah. He doesn't even have the decency to make a new account.
Roger
Well, he wants to keep all of his, like, you know, stats. Wants to keep all that stuff.
Joe Rogan
Yeah.
Roger
And he's safe in, you know, in another country.
Joe Rogan
So do you think they just, like, did those. That's another thing. There was another Reddit thread about some guy who said that he was a guard.
Roger
It was a 4chan thread.
Joe Rogan
It was a 4chan.
Roger
Yeah.
Joe Rogan
So it was a 4chan thread where this guy said that he was a guard at the facility and he posted this before Epstein was killed.
Roger
He was a guard. They uncovered using whatever way they do it, but using phone records or whatever from 4chan, they discovered he was a guard and that he was like a legit guy. He got caught basically talking about it. That they snuck. They used a decoy body. There was an unscheduled ambulance arrival that night. They never logged in. And you're always supposed to log in. There's footage of like, you know, orange, people in orange moving through the facility on the. You know, just glimpses of it.
Joe Rogan
So you think he's alive somewhere?
Roger
It's.
Joe Rogan
It's not impossible.
Roger
It's not impossible. It's probable.
Joe Rogan
Also, didn't.
Roger
It's a probability. It may.
Joe Rogan
Whatever.
Roger
It's more than a possibility.
Joe Rogan
The guy who did the autopsy, did anything happen to him? The guy who.
Roger
He committed suicide?
Joe Rogan
Yeah, let's find that out. That would be fucking crazy because that happened to the guy who did the autopsy on Andrew Breitbart. Didn't he wind up dying shortly after that? Like Andrew Breitbart?
Roger
Yes.
Joe Rogan
And who's the guy who said the podest.
Roger
Alarming amount of people commit suicide.
Joe Rogan
Alarming.
Roger
Who are doing this stuff or die.
Joe Rogan
Of something to do.
Roger
So, yeah, suddenly they in jail. Who committed suicide and they didn't commit suicide. They got killed by their celly. Nobody bothered checking in on that.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, that makes sense. The guy who did the autopsy for Jeffrey Epstein. Did anything happen to him as a woman? A woman?
Jamie
Chief New York Chief Medical Examiner, Dr. Barbara Sampson. And she just resigned like a couple, like a year ago.
Joe Rogan
Okay, so nothing happened to her.
Roger
You're talking about evil. You know, who the devil was in the Exorcist, who. Well, they say it's like Pazuzu, and we're presented with an actual devil. But when you actually watch the movie, there's kind of evidence that. And people have talked about this, that, you know, there's evidence within the film that it's more than just demonic possession, that the demonic possession comes from someplace. And by the way, Jeffrey Epstein was doing also funding research in how trauma affects, like, clairvoyance and telepathy and things like that, how you're able to invoke those out of traumatic. Out of trauma. And in the Exorcist, there's, you know, you have Reagan, who's Linda Blair, and there's that party scene. And you remember in the Exorcist, they're making a movie within the movie. They're actually shooting a movie. The character of the mother, she's acting in a film inside of the movie. And there's a director in that film. And they have a big party scene after it. And the director, he's basically yelling at the butler, her houseman, calling him a Nazi and stuff like that. And he's. I bet you went bowling with Goebbels and things like that. Well, for a while, he vanishes from the party. And we later see, like, Reagan afterwards, like, completely flipped out, like, laying in bed. And then after that, she comes, and then he's leaving the party, and he turns to the mother, and he's like, I have to tell you something. I have to tell you something. Fuck it. And he looks, leaves. And so. And then after that, Reagan comes down and she looks to the astronaut guy and says, you're gonna die up there. And then she pisses on the floor, and everybody's like, shit. And from that moment on, there's all this, like, highly sexualized devil speaking through her with a British accent. And the guy. The director is a British guy. And so the implication. And then he is, for some reason, left with Reagan and then gets thrown out of the balcony and his head is twisted all the way around, and he dies as a character. So the implication is that the director is the one who has raped Regan and thus invoking this demonic presence into her. And it turns out that I thought.
Joe Rogan
It was some totem that they found and it was possessed.
Roger
All of that stuff is there. The Ouija board is there and everything, but. But it turns out that William Peter Blatty actually made a movie called John Goldfrap. Your life is blah, blah, blah. I can't remember the exact title of the film. And he made that movie with Shirley MacLaine. And the director of the film is this guy, Jay Lee Thompson, British director, who looks exactly like the actor in that. And so the idea is that Reagan's mother is Shirley MacLaine, and Reagan is her daughter Sasha. And the British director is Jaylee Thompson. And when you start looking at his movies, they're a little strange. You know, there's like. You know, he directed the original Cape Fear, and. Which has a kind of strange pedophilic thing going on in it.
Joe Rogan
So does the second one.
Roger
And, yeah, they all do. And then especially they amplify.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, with Juliet, Robert De Niro.
Roger
He did this movie, Kinjita, with Bronson, and that all has kind of like a weird pedophilic thing. He did this movie, the Reincarnation of Peter Proud, where Peter Proud dies, and then. Or rather, Peter Proud remembers his reincarnation. He remembers his iteration of his other self who was murdered, and then he hunts down the woman who maybe did it, and then starts sleeping with her daughter, which is basically sleeping with his daughter because he's reincarnated. So this guy, as a filmmaker, has done all this. And so the question. And so William Peter Blatty worked on that film with Shirley MacLaine and shortly thereafter wrote the book the Exorcist. And Sasha, in her autobiography, even mentions the person on the COVID of the book looked a lot like me. Everybody's just saying, oh, it's just a coincidence. And, well, I never walked down the stairs on all fours, and I never vomited, you know, pea soup or whatever, that none of that ever happened to me. But there's a pretty dark implication behind the whole film. And I brought it up with William Friedkin. Hey, is this meant to be? Jaylee Thompson did this. Like, is this a way to talk about that that actually happened, you know, in real life? And he said, I cannot talk about that. But I'm not saying you're wrong.
Joe Rogan
Whoa.
Roger
And so, you know, and there's actually a moment where Reagan is talking to her mother, and she's like, well, do you like him? Do you like him like you like Daddy? And so there's this idea that he's been coming over and they've been having this affair, and then all of a sudden, she says to her daughter. And it kind of jumped out at me when I rewatched it. She says to her daughter, well, I like pizza, but I wouldn't marry one. And it was like, oh, my God, there's like a pizza reference, like, in the Middle of this, in the middle of everything that's happening.
Joe Rogan
How long is this? That's Periola, but Ben Swan brought up during the whole Pizzagate thing that got him fired. But how long is the term pizza been used?
Roger
Well, it jumped out at me. And the Exorcist is in the early 70s. And so what is it, 1971. And that movie that he did with Shirley MacLaine, who is effectively. That's the movie that they're shooting inside of the movie. And so this was a way for Peter Benchley. I mean, not Peter Benchley, William Peter Blatty to kind of transcode all of that. And the astronaut in the film, Shirley MacLaine talks about the. I can't remember who was her husband or boyfriend that she remarried who was an astronaut. And in her autobiography, she talks about how he was cloned. He came back from space and a different person that he was cloned. And she kind of. Everybody kind of laughed it off. Like, oh, it was just kind of a joke. Joke that I wrote into my autobiography. But it's kind of weird.
Joe Rogan
Real weird.
Roger
Yeah, it's really strange. So people speak through movies and they. They hide information in. In films. And so I think that some more than others, right? Yeah. William Peter Blatty, kind of who was doing all sorts of Ouija stuff with Shirley MacLaine, who was really into that kind of thing back in the late 60s and early 70s. And, you know, he sits down to write his book and. What's he writing about? Well, he's writing. That Movie's about Shirley MacLaine. Her daughter. Her daughter, Sasha. Sachi. I'm sorry, Sachi. And, you know, the astronaut and, you know, it's all. And Jay Lee Thompson, who basically he eviscerates within the film but in a way that nobody really connects. Exit. It all happens off camera. But the implication is that she was raped by that director. And from that moment on has a kind of, you know, she's speaking with a British accent as the devil. It's his voice, actually, that's coming out of her. She's talking about, you know, being raped by a crucifix.
Joe Rogan
That actor. That's his voice. Is that what you're saying?
Roger
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It's like the voice of. I think is name is McGowan. And he was. He died, like, shortly after the film was made. Also shortly after the Exorcist was made.
Joe Rogan
Well, we know that people have encoded very bizarre things. Like, Kubrick was famous for it.
Roger
Yeah. Well, that's Kubrick. Everybody does it. I do it. Everybody does it. I mean, motion pictures are a kind of magic spell. And you know, when you write your hearing. I hear voices and they come through me and they land on the page and I don't know where they come from, but it is a kind of invite to possession. And that these things come into you and that you put it on the page and then you make this movie. And everybody, like I said, sits in a theater in the dark watching a flicker of this thing. And it's telling you both our myths and traditions, but it's also predictive program programming. Everybody. And so. Jesus, dude, have you seen?
Joe Rogan
Have I seen what?
Roger
Well, actually I was thinking about like that where the Daily Wire thing. But you know, media comes from a lot of different places now. We, you know, we. You don't know where you're gonna find your. Your next entertainment.
Jamie
Right?
Roger
And there's this show that I really like, the. That show, Rome. Did you see Rome?
Joe Rogan
No, I never saw it.
Roger
Okay. I loved Rome. It was.
Joe Rogan
I watched the first episode and I thought it was flat.
Roger
I love because it told the story of ancient Rome through, you know, through Shakespeare and through history and through Plato and, you know, all these kind of ideas of ancient Rome or Socrates and all these ideas of ancient Rome. And it then it told a very ground level story from the perspective of like handmaidens and centurions and still has Marc Anthony and Cleopatra and everything going on in it, but it tells a very, you know, soap opera like drama through it. And so there was this other show and it had been out like three seasons when I started watching it. And it did the exact same thing. Nobody had ever like, nobody was talking about it. Nobody had ever heard about it. Most people don't even know about it. It's the Chosen. Do you know this show?
Joe Rogan
What was that?
Roger
It does the exact same thing, but it does it with the gospels and it's all about Christ. And it's like a low budget or it was low budget, crowdfunded story of Jesus and it just basically like Rome tells this historical tale about Jesus and. Okay, so I'm watching. I've seen every movie about Jesus ever made. I've seen King of Kings of both versions. I. I've seen, you know, the Zephyrelli film. I've seen Last Temptation of Christ. I've seen the Passion of the Christ. I've seen all of them. I've seen the Jeremy Sisto Jesus movie. I've seen everything. I've worked with Paul Verhoeven on his Jesus film that was unproduced. And so, like, I had a lot of experience in it, and I never really got it, to be perfectly honest. I never really understood the story, this show. I started watching it, and I was like, okay, I've got a chip on my shoulder. Let's see. And it's really cheap. It's like rocks are made out of styrofoam. They can't afford a, you know, a house, and so they just use blankets and a gourd hanging. And so it's like, it's really, really inexpensive. And the. The script is even a little bit contemporary and. Which almost becomes like a joke as you're watching it. It's kind of funny. But lo and behold, I'm watching it. And there came a moment by about episode three where it was like, ding. I get it. Like, Jesus is kind of punk rock. He's basically saying there are no rules to anything. Like, you know, you can commit miracles on the Sabbath. You know, there are no rules. Anybody is like, all you need to be is wanting of salvation. And it was like a third eye opened up to me. And. And this show is fantastic, and it breaks all the rules. It's outside of the Pharisees of Hollywood. You know, they. One guy, this guy, Dallas Jenkins, who's absolutely my favorite modern filmmaker right now, I think this guy's brilliant. He's directed every single episode of this show. And they've got, like, seven seasons out, and you can watch it for free.
Joe Rogan
On what?
Roger
On anything. Like, if you have an Apple tv, you can just look up there, the Chosen App, and boop, up comes the. The Chosen App.
Joe Rogan
And so it's an app thing.
Roger
Or you can watch it on YouTube or you can watch it. I think Netflix eventually. I think it was. Netflix eventually bought it. Now they're showing it. Basically, you can see it anywhere. They give it away the way the Gideons give away the Bible, and. And, you know, I thought it was fantastic. And then season two came around, and suddenly they had all this money and they're doing all these, like, you know, they've got this ancient Judea set with cobblestone streets and, you know, like this detailed set and Roman colonnades and stuff like that. And I was like, wow, like, they really got a big budget. Then I looked it up, and I was like, oh, no, they're using. The Mormons have all these standing sets for their biblical productions in Utah. And they're incredible. These sets are unbelievable. If I had known it's Like China Cheetah in Utah. It's. It's. It's absolutely fantastic. And. And the characters are like. They only have money for, like, three Romans costumes probably. And so they're kind of like, making do with what they have. But they've got this guy playing the legate there who is hilarious. He's in the first season. He is absolutely hilarious. And the show is great. And then like proper television, you're watching it and you're starting to love these characters and you're starting to. To like, it's. And it's. You know what it is, the bread and butter of Hollywood is revenge and wrath. Like, that's what makes. That's the. The fuel that. That pushes most Hollywood movies. It is much more difficult and. And requires much more maturity to make a movie about forgiveness. And this kid, Dallas Jenkins, I call him a kid, but he's not a kid. That's an insult. He's. He's super great. He. He is making. Every single episode is effectively, because it's the gospels about forgiveness. And he has done this magnificent, unbelievable achievement. And the show is huge. Now. They've got like, seven seasons. They built a studio, you know, like, outside of Dallas, Fort Worth, on a Salvation army property that they've built the sound stages and everything. And it is, I think. And like. And that's like, you can get it anywhere. You can watch it anywhere. And they're making programming that should have been on hbo. It should have been produced by HBO the way Rome was. And instead, it's just. It's coming out of the ether. And it's almost like with the inattention given to, you know, most modern or. Or rather the. The way that people are making things that they're focused on wrath and revenge, like this other thing, like the Pendragon cycle and the chosen have kind of risen out of. Out of the vacuum that those other. That the studios have and broadcasters have kind of created because they're not. No longer making that kind of product, at least not as much. And so I think this is actually one of the most exciting times in media and.
Joe Rogan
And.
Roger
And television.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, I definitely think it's a very unusual time where the normal people that are producing things don't have a complete monopoly on what people see, that many of the times these alternative things have gotten much larger than the mainstream things.
Roger
I am. I find it, like, almost impossible to get a movie going. Like, I'm, you know, I'm like an independent filmmaker. I go out there and I usually. I work on a script and then I figure out the budgets and I figure out that and I go out and I hit the pavement. And it's really hard part. Probably because I'm a flat earther. Kid, I am not a flat earther. I just like to provoke people. But, you know, I go out there and I try to get this stuff made and it's like almost impossible. And then I built a technology company over the last year and basically making AI move and all of a sudden boom, like that money gets thrown at it and all of a sudden, just by attaching the word AI and that it's a technology based company. All of a sudden investors, you know, came in and we're in production on three films now.
Joe Rogan
AI's not right now.
Roger
Three. I know. That's the crazy thing is that it was so easy for me to get that going and so difficult for me to get a traditional movie going through the traditional route. Like going to, you know, a 24, blah, blah, blah, trying to like, you know, hit the pavement. I have to go to Europe to gather together financing and everything like that. No, just put AI in front of it. And all of a sudden you're in production on three features. And we're making a Christmas movie that. A family Christmas movie that'll be in theaters this, this holiday season. We're making a faith based film for next Easter. And then we're making a kind of big romantic war epic and like, as classical movies. And we have like a proprietary stack of technology that we use for our process. And I partnered with this company, Massive Studios, AI and formed my company, which is General Cinema Dynamics. And I'm based here in Texas now and. Or my company is, and I'm slowly transitioning. Nice. And it's like, it's actually kind of, I think, you know, so many people are against AI, like Guillermo and you know, know, love him, but he's like, fuck AI.
Joe Rogan
Fuck AI.
Roger
But all it is is visual effects. And I have experience, like with that Beowulf movie, doing it and what used to be a million dollars a minute is now $5,000aminute. And so to do it really, really well, like, it looks kind of amazing actually. And so I think for independent cinema and for the future of film and television production, these are super exciting times.
Joe Rogan
All right, Roger, we just burned through three hours plus.
Roger
Really? Oh my God.
Joe Rogan
Yeah, it's already four o'.
Jamie
Clock. Figure this out.
Joe Rogan
Okay with you?
Jamie
All right, so what I pulled up is this.
Roger
This is NASA, right? This is proper.
Jamie
So this is a far tv. They're Pulling in multiple feeds. There's three different boxes at the bottom, as you can see. This one in the middle says offline. So as I showed you, also, I pulled up the NASA feed, which is this says it's offline. When that is offline, this channel adds a 3D model showing where the satellite currently is so that you can still follow along.
Joe Rogan
Wrong.
Jamie
30 minutes ago, it wasn't offline and it was showing a different feed. And I wish I could have showed to you then, but I didn't interrupt, so.
Joe Rogan
Got it.
Jamie
There is a Flat Earth YouTube or Reddit account asking this exact thing. What is that? And the people on the flat Earth Reddit gave me the answer.
Roger
Yeah, those. The crazies. The crazies have come out to.
Joe Rogan
Mm. Okay, there you go.
Jamie
So that was what that was.
Roger
Well, I'm glad we put that to.
Joe Rogan
So it just says the video description. Switch to a simulation with the ISS above the Earth when the connection is lost, AKA I was going to point.
Jamie
That out because you can see the stars in there, and you can't see the stars while you can see Earth.
Roger
I'm glad we can be comforted by at least one thing that is secure and stable in our understanding of reality.
Joe Rogan
Roger, that was very fun, though. Thank you very much. Let's do this.
Roger
Really a pleasure.
Joe Rogan
It was a good time.
Roger
Really super pleasure.
Joe Rogan
Thank you, brother. Appreciate you very much. All right, bye, everybody.
Date: February 11, 2026
Host: Joe Rogan
Guest: Roger Avary (Oscar-winning screenwriter, director, and writer of "Pulp Fiction," "Killing Zoe," "The Rules of Attraction," etc.)
This episode features a wide-ranging, often mind-bending conversation between Joe Rogan and Roger Avary. The two traverse the history and craft of filmmaking, dissect iconic movies and directors, and spiral into provocative theories about media manipulation, government conspiracies, societal control, and the nature of reality itself. Avary brings both his Hollywood insider knowledge and a penchant for conspiracy, making for an episode dense with movie lore, social commentary, and late-night rabbit holes about everything from the flat earth to the rewriting of history. The tone is conversational, irreverent, skeptical, and occasionally conspiratorial.
The conversation is curious, skeptical, playful, and at times, provocative or even surreal. Joe acts as both skeptic and guide, pushing back while also letting Roger chase his big, sometimes wild ideas to their conclusions. Roger oscillates between cinephile, technologist, and conspiracy theorist, offering deep knowledge of filmmaking alongside speculative theory.
Absolutely—this summary provides a detailed mapping of all the episode’s topics, marked by memorable quotes and timestamps. It encapsulates both the expertise and eccentricities on display, and serves as a rich reference for anyone interested in film, cultural criticism, media, and the philosophy of storytelling—or who wants to hear two very different (but sometimes overlapping) worldviews go at it for close to three hours.