Comic Jon Lovitz recalls sitcom days with 'genius' Joe Rogan in the '90s, says he's always been 'very honest'
In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, Lovitz reminisced on working with Rogan on the set of NBC's "NewsRadio," saying that back then, he could tell the young UFC aficionado and small-screen actor had some serious talent and drive that would one day make him the top podcaster.
"I knew him 20 years ago. He's like a genius, you know, he's really, really smart. And he's also very, very opinionated. But his opinions are, you know, highly informed." Lovitz praised Rogan as "very articulate and… very honest."
Comedy Legend Jon Lovitz Glad Doge's Efforts To Clean Up Govt's 'Crazy' Spending Is No Joke
Decades before "The Joe Rogan Experience" was the number one podcast in the world and one of, if not, the most influential platforms in media, Rogan was an up-and-coming actor who played Joe Garrelli on "NewsRadio," which aired for five seasons between 1995 and 1999.
The character is a handyman/electrician who is often coming up with his own homemade gadgets and seen spouting off conspiracy theories to his fictional coworkers at WNYX radio station, the sitcom's setting.
Read On The Fox News App
Legendary comedian and actor, Phil Hartman, also starred on the show, which was his first major TV role following his stint on "Saturday Night Live." Hartman played the fictional station's on-air anchor, Bill McNeal, for the show's first four seasons until the actor was murdered in 1998.
Hartman's "SNL" colleague, Lovitz, joined the "NewsRadio" cast following the actor's death, replacing the McNeal character as the fictional show's new on-air anchor, Max Lewis. During the fifth and final season of the show, Lovitz got to know Rogan, telling Fox News Digital that the actor had the budding talent and interests that made him into the household name he is today.
Jon Lovitz Knocks 'Idiot' John Oliver Panicking Over Us Aid To Israel: He's 'Shocked' America Supports An Ally
Lovitz, the co-host of his own comedy podcast alongside actress Charlotte McKinney, titled "What Do They Know?", acknowledged that Rogan has the "biggest" podcast today and explained why he believes he's earned it.
"He reads a lot and looks at everything, and he's a very interesting guy," the comedian said, also mentioning that he observed Rogan's fascination with the UFC take off.
The podcast host started working at the UFC as a backstage interviewer in 1997, while he was starring on "NewsRadio." Over the years, he became a co-commentator for the league and remains so today.
"And so he started doing his podcast, and I think around the same time he started doing the UFC. And I ran into him, I say, 'That was so smart of you to do the UFC,'" Lovitz said, recalling how he praised Rogan for making what the comedian thought was a savvy business venture.
However, Rogan told him it wasn't as much of a calculated business move as it was him simply leaning into one of his favorite pastimes.
Jon Lovitz Says Trump Will Keep Israel Safe, 'Going To Be Hell To Pay' If Hostages Aren't Returned
"And he goes, 'No, I just' – the UFC wasn't huge when he started doing his podcast – he goes, 'I just did it, and then it kinda happened.'"
"And I think that's one reason why his thing is doing so good. He doesn't hold back, you know? He says what he really thinks," Lovitz added.
The comedian, who started doing standup after his stint on "SNL" in the late '80s, said that kind of honesty is the key to the connection between an audience and a standup comic.
"And so, even in standup comedy, that also happens. If you say how you really feel about something, all of a sudden the audience is dying laughing, and you realize, 'Oh they feel that way too. It's not just me."Original article source: Comic Jon Lovitz recalls sitcom days with 'genius' Joe Rogan in the '90s, says he's always been 'very honest'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson regretted he wasn't involved with hit song due to ‘weak mental state,' book reveals
John Mason knew that Brian Wilson needed help – but it came at a high price. 'Brian was in a weak mental state,' the entertainment lawyer, who once represented the fragile leader of the Beach Boys, told Fox News Digital. 'Brian often said to me, as sad as it sounds … 'I fried my brain. I took too many drugs.' Brian couldn't get up in the morning without somebody getting him up. He couldn't eat healthily without somebody giving him something healthy to eat.' 'So, the good and bad of Dr. Eugene Landy in Brian's life was that he motivated Brian to become a participant in his own life,' Mason shared. 'But the bad part was that, as time went by and years went by, Dr. Landy expected more and more to replace Brian in the Beach Boys… Brian wasn't allowed to do anything without a Landy handler being with him.' Mason, who has worked with Roy Orbison, Reba McEntire, Shakira and Quincy Jones, among others, has written a new memoir, 'Crazy Lucky.' It explores what it takes to defend the famous during career-defining moments. 8 John Mason, an entertainment lawyer who once represented Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, discussed one if Wilson's regrets and mental state. FOX NEWS 8 Mason has written a new memoir, 'Crazy Lucky,' exploring what it takes to defend the famous during career-defining moments. The Unnamed Press The book delves into Wilson's relationship with Landy, a psychotherapist accused of holding a Svengali-like power over him. Mason said it led to one of the singer/songwriter's biggest regrets. 'Mike [Love] and Carl [Wilson] came into my office and said to Brian, 'Hey, we have the opportunity to write a song for this movie, [1988's] 'Cocktail,'' said Mason. ''It's going to be starring Tom Cruise. It's really great. We'd love you to join us. And Brian was really excited. He said, 'Oh, I'd love to do that.' But later in the evening, Brian called and said, 'I shouldn't do that. Dr. Landy said I shouldn't do that. Well, that turned out to be 'Kokomo,' the biggest hit the Beach Boys had had probably forever. And Brian felt really badly about not working on 'Kokomo.'' 8 'Mike [Love] and Carl [Wilson] came into my office and said to Brian, 'Hey, we have the opportunity to write a song for this movie, [1988's] 'Cocktail'' with Tom Cruise, said Mason, which Wilson turned down. ©Buena Vista Pictures/courtesy E 8 The project 'turned out to be 'Kokomo,' the biggest hit the Beach Boys had had probably forever. And Brian felt really badly about not working on 'Kokomo,'' Mason said. Getty Images 'When he heard it, and when I heard it, we went, 'Oh my gosh, was that a missed opportunity?'' Mason recalled. Mason wrote that Landy refused to let Wilson participate unless he, too, were listed as a writer on the song. However, Carl and Bruce Johnson, along with Love, refused. They went on to write 'Kokomo' without Wilson's input. It was a decision that Wilson deeply regretted over the years. 'Brian is truly a giant teddy bear and genius who regrets bad decisions and lives for better ones,' wrote Mason. According to Mason's book, Wilson's struggles began in 1968, when he quit performing and devoted himself to songwriting instead. While Wilson was determined 'to make the greatest music,' his mental health began to deteriorate. 8 The Beach Boys in 1964. From left to right: Dennis Wilson, Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine and Carl Wilson. Getty Images Mason wrote that Wilson's experiments with drugs, specifically LSD and cocaine, had 'diminished his mental capacity.' He rarely left his bed and, according to reports, would go without brushing his teeth or showering for weeks. 'He eventually became so bizarre that he would sit at the piano in his living room surrounded by actual sand that had been dumped in big piles in a sort of playpen,' Mason wrote. 'He was forsaking his young family — wife Marilyn Rovell, a singer with the group the Honeys, and young kids Carnie and Wendy — for his strange kind of creative peace. Four years passed, and he never left the house. His weight ballooned to 350 pounds from eating entire birthday cakes as a late-night snack.' 8 Brian Wilson and Mike Love of The Beach Boys perform onstage at the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards held at Staples Center on February 12, 2012 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images In 1975, a 'devastated' Marilyn brought in Landy, a psychologist known for his unconventional 24-hour treatment of celebrities. Wilson, who reportedly feared being committed to a psychiatric hospital, completely surrendered. Their first session took place in Wilson's bedroom closet, where the artist felt safe, the Los Angeles Times reported. Landy was successful. He padlocked Wilson's fridge, put the star on a diet and shooed away drug-enabling pals, The Telegraph reported. 'Dr. Eugene Landy [helped] Brian overcome his fears of everything,' Mason told Fox News Digital. 'I would call it an agoraphobia. . . . He feared going outside. . . . And he needed outside help.' 8 Mason's book explores the nature of the relationship between Wilson and Dr. Eugene Landy, accused of holding a Svengali-like power over the singer. Mark Sullivan Landy's strict methods worked. But in 1976, Landy was fired over a dispute involving fees, the Los Angeles Times reported. When Wilson was regressing into drugs and obesity, Landy was rehired six years later, the outlet shared. The 24-hour therapy resumed from 1983 to 1986. Landy said he was paid $35,000 a month. And as Wilson began recording and playing live again, Landy was a constant shadow looming over him. Manager Tom Hulett, who knew that Mason was friendly with the Beach Boys, suggested that he could be 'a strong, independent balance.' In 1984, Mason was hired. 'I was asked . . . if I would be Brian's lawyer, and I agreed,' said Mason. 'At that time, Brian was, I think, doing better, but he had a lot of issues. . . . Brian came to my office at least once a week. We started having Beach Boys meetings at my office once a month, and we all insisted that Brian come to those meetings without Landy.' 'Brian was my client. . . . [But] Brian did check in with Landy after our meetings, after our phone calls. Too often I would get a call back from Brian saying, 'I know I said that, but I have to change my mind.'' Mason wrote that Landy was eager to insert himself into every part of Wilson's life. Wilson was controlled by both prescription drugs and the 'Landy handlers' who 'secretly or openly recorded everything Brian and anyone else said' for the doctor. No decision was made without Landy's approval, leaving Mason bewildered and frustrated. 'Ultimately, it led me to say to Brian, 'I can't work with you if Dr. Landy is in a position to change your mind or to second-guess me,'' said Mason. 'And he said, 'I understand that.' But then, Dr. Landy called me and said, 'You told Brian that he can't work with me … so you are fired.' 'That's a shame, but that is the kind of control Dr. Landy had over Brian Wilson,' said Mason. After Mason was fired in 1990, Landy continued to tighten his grip. At one point, he was co-credited as a songwriter on several tracks. Wilson was 'an obsession' to Landy, Mason wrote. 8 Wilson died in June of this year at the age of 82. Getty Images But in 1991, the Wilson family took legal action to appoint an independent conservatorship. The goal was to stop Landy from further influencing Wilson both personally and financially, the Los Angeles Times reported. In 1992, Landy was barred by court order from contacting Wilson. 'The court ordered Landy to disassociate from Brian,' said Mason. 'Ultimately, Landy's license to practice psychotherapy in the state of California was revoked. And Brian's second wife, Melinda, was able to keep Brian motivated to perform.' 'He did a lot of shows,' said Mason. 'He wrote songs, he did a lot of work. His health seemed to be pretty good. I saw Brian a number of times after I wasn't his lawyer, and he looked good. He felt good. He was in a good mental state.' Landy passed away in 2006 at age 71. Wilson died in June of this year. He was 82. In his lifetime, Wilson admitted he didn't entirely regret his association with Landy. Mason doesn't either. 'I have to say that, in Brian's case, I don't think there was a better outcome,' Mason explained. 'Had Landy not become involved, Brian would have become an ineffective vegetable. He was taking too many drugs and couldn't find focus.' 'I don't think that, at that point, back when Landy came in, either Brian's ex-wife Marilyn or his daughters were able to motivate him to be independent. Drugs and alcohol have led to the demise of too many people. Many people we see end up dead from the process.' 'Saving Brian's life probably necessitated a Eugene Landy who could come in and force him to take control of himself,' Mason continued. 'I think they were the best years of his health, but the worst of his years with Dr. Landy.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
If he was the boogeyman as a challenger, Khamzat Chimaev is set to be a tyrant as a champion
It's a tricky business, the fight game, especially when lofty expectations are at the core of it. Everybody knew Dricus du Plessis wanted all the smoke at UFC 319 on Saturday night. He stared down Khamzat Chimaev with an unshakable demeanor, the unsung middleweight champion in Chicago to stop the tyrant of the class from a hostile takeover. When Chimaev returned that gaze with a wicked smile — flashing unnatural bemusement that only grew darker the moment his devilish eyebrow popped up to signal his bad intent — there was a perfect moment in the fight game. That fleeting moment right before a big fight when anticipation has been brought to the point of bursting, and all that's left to do is find out. God, it was good. Goosebumps! Then they moved toward each other and off we went. Or, more accurately, down DDP went. Chimaev wasted little time in torpedoing in toward du Plessis' legs and dumping him onto the canvas. Soon Chimaev locked an arm down with his knee and the South African sacrifice ended up in a crucifix position. Down came a series of low-impact fists to his ear, as if Chimaev were tenderizing a steak. DDP was forced to try to buck for dear life, to attempt kip-ups with a demon of the industry on his chest, yet it was futile. And maaaan, how quickly futility became the theme. Whatever drama fed into UFC 319, which did a record gate at the United Center — just over $11 million — changed to something like awe pretty quickly. Awe that DDP, who'd derailed Robert Whittaker, taken out Israel Adesanya and batted back Sean Strickland on two separate occasions, had nothing for Chimaev. Nothing. He was being tackled, dumped and splattered across the canvas with such ease that half the attention being paid swung toward his incompetence. The other half marveled at the rampant terror of Chimaev, who came exactly as advertised — a Chechen wellspring of violent impulses. For those of us who assumed Khamzat would fatigue in the second round, we found out we were duping ourselves. If we thought DDP surviving into the third would mean it was his fight, imagine the surprise at tuning in for a 25-minute torture film. And if we thought the fight hitting the championship rounds would look like an act of brilliant defiance, well, maybe it was. DDP was still there, trying to escape Khamzat's custody. Admirable stuff from a human spirit standpoint. Yet Khamzat let the will bleed out. He wasn't playing with his food, as a cat might, but it had something in common with the cruelty. In fact, there was something like joy in the onslaught. Fluffy Hernandez, who won his fight with Roman Dolidze last week and was seated cageside, might've been wondering if he could whittle his frame down to 170. Caio Borralho, the Fighting Nerd who fights next month in Paris against Nassourdine Imavov in what's expected to be a title eliminator, had to have been doing some hard math in his head a few seats down. Twelve takedowns + nearly 22 minutes of control time = total misery. How's that for incentive for an upcoming main event? The winner gets Khamzat! It can be said the world's toughest lamb will still struggle against the slaughterhouse, but, well, that's all for tomorrow … That's. All. For. Tomorrow. For Saturday night it was an arrival of a tyrant who's inviting anybody to stop him. Chimaev is daring the middleweight field to try their damndest to thwart his takedowns. He is telling all comers to prepare their silver linings, just as DDP had to. Did du Plessis have heart? Hell yes, he did. Did he have courage? No question. Did he have confidence in himself, that he could keep the fight in his world? That he could debunk the existence of a boogeyman for the world to see? Of course. Yet seeing fighters divested of their delusions is what UFC pay-per-views are all about. Against Chimaev you can't bring heart and courage as your intangibles. If you can't stop the takedown, it's going to be a hard night. Simple as that. Those who were disappointed in Saturday night's main event were upset that the drama couldn't hold up. In a dominant striking performance, somebody gets knocked out. In a dominant grappling fight, somebody usually taps. There's an abrupt end to whomever is being outclassed. In a hellacious wrestling display, like we witnessed at UFC 319, there's a sustained sense of helplessness. Of watching a man sink in quicksand over the course of 25 minutes, a visual that's not for everyone. DDP was smiling at the end of the first round, as he and his corner were keeping things as light as they could. He'd experienced what it's like to stand in there with Khamzat. And there was a realization in that smile, too, like he was coming to understand what was already apparent for most of us who were watching. As much as we wanted it to be the case, a competitive fight was not in the cards.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Michael Sloan, Co-Creator Of ‘The Equalizer,' Dies At 78
Michael Sloan, a television writer, producer, and novelist best known as the co-creator of The Equalizer, died in New York City on August 13. He was 78. Born on October 14, 1946, in New York City, Sloan built an impressive resume with early assignments as a writer and producer on a wide range of TV dramas. His credits included Switch, Quincy, M.E., The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, Battlestar Galactica, and three series under NBC's "Mystery Movie" umbrella: Columbo, McCloud, and McCoy. In 1978, he shared an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama Series for his work on Quincy, M.E., starring Jack Klugman. But it was The Equalizer, which Sloan created alongside Richard Lindheim in 1985, that became his signature achievement. The original CBS series, starring Edward Woodward as a former intelligence operative who helps people in danger, aired for four seasons. Sloan later returned to the franchise as an executive producer of the Equalizer film trilogy (2014, 2018, 2023) starring Denzel Washington. He also helped shepherd the 2021 reboot of The Equalizer TV series, starring Queen Latifah. In addition to his work in television and film, Sloan authored a series of Equalizer novels that expanded the universe of the franchise. His other TV credits included B.J. and the Bear, Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, Baywatch, and multiple entries in the Mystery Woman TV movie franchise. Sloan is survived by his wife, Melissa Sue Anderson, best known for her role as Mary Ingalls on family drama Little House on the Prairie; their children, Piper and Griffin; and his sister, Judy.