logo
#

Latest news with #TheJoeRoganExperience

Andrew Huberman Makes It Clear What He Really Thinks About Joe Rogan
Andrew Huberman Makes It Clear What He Really Thinks About Joe Rogan

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Andrew Huberman Makes It Clear What He Really Thinks About Joe Rogan

Andrew Huberman didn't hold back his admiration for Joe Rogan during a recent chat with comedian Tom Segura on the Huberman Lab podcast. "One of the main reasons why Rogan is the top podcast in the world," Huberman says, "is because he has lots of different kinds of friends—and he can sit down with intellectuals, he can sit down with comics, he can sit down with criminals—he likes the understanding and communication with different kinds of people." Huberman also praised Rogan's work ethic and ability to connect. "His life is filled with these people outside of the studio, so he's very comfortable in the presence of anyone. You put anyone in front of him, and he can be genuinely interested in learning from them," Huberman says. Both Huberman and Segura agreed you can't fake that kind of curiosity. "Some podcasters, they're not that interested in what other people have to say—so they're not the best interviewers, unless it's someone directly in their genre," Huberman later shared the clip on X, where fans weighed in on his Rogan take. "It's what makes him. He's not afraid to talk to anyone and ask hard questions," one X user commented. One X user pushed back, asking if the Joe Rogan Experience was still the biggest podcast in the world and commenting that numbers seem to have dropped. Huberman defended his buddy with a comment back: "Rankings reflect acceleration among other things. Rogan is still the most listened to media channel by a HUGE margin." Huberman has appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience multiple times. Their conversations often dive deep into neuroscience, performance, health, and human behavior—an area both men clearly care Huberman Makes It Clear What He Really Thinks About Joe Rogan first appeared on Men's Fitness on May 23, 2025

AI could spark bloodbath for white collar jobs — and send unemployment to 20%: Anthropic CEO
AI could spark bloodbath for white collar jobs — and send unemployment to 20%: Anthropic CEO

New York Post

time17 hours ago

  • Business
  • New York Post

AI could spark bloodbath for white collar jobs — and send unemployment to 20%: Anthropic CEO

Artificial intelligence could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs and cause US unemployment to spike as high as 20%, according to the chief executive of a top AI company. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, whose firm built the 'Claude' AI chatbot, warned that executives and politicians should stop 'sugar-coating' the mass layoffs that could occur in fields like tech, finance and law and be honest with workers about the extent of the threat. 'Most of them are unaware that this is about to happen,' Amodei told Axios in a Wednesday interview. 'It sounds crazy, and people just don't believe it.' Advertisement 3 Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei expects AI to cause major upheaval in the job market. AP 3 Amodei says AI could cause US unemployment to spike as high as 20%. Phimwilai – The Anthropic boss expects the job market bloodbath to play out over the next one to five years. At the same time, he expects AI to provide massive benefits to the economy and fuel unprecedented advancements in medicine. Advertisement 'Cancer is cured, the economy grows at 10% a year, the budget is balanced — and 20% of people don't have jobs,' said Amodei, describing one potential scenario. At present, the national unemployment rate stands at 4.2%. Amodei's latest warning came even as Anthropic competes in a breakneck race with other tech giants like Google, Meta and OpenAI to develop artificial general intelligence, or AGI – which describes an AI model with human-level cognitive capabilities or greater. Amodei, who started Anthropic after previously working at OpenAI under its CEO Sam Altman, is one of several executives who have warned about impending upheaval in the job market. Advertisement Earlier this year, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg discussed how AI was taking on a bigger role in Meta's workforce. 3 Entry-level white collar jobs could be hit hard by AI. Kirsten Davis/ – 'Probably in 2025, we at Meta, as well as the other companies that are basically working on this, are going to have an AI that can effectively be a sort of mid-level engineer that you have at your company that can write code,' Zuckerberg said during an appearance on 'The Joe Rogan Experience' podcast. Elsewhere, Google CEO Sundar Pichai warned in April 2023 that he expected 'knowledge workers,' such as writers, accountants, architects and software engineers, to be hit hard by the rise of AI.

Joe Rogan Teasing Future A-List Podcast Guest Thrills Fans
Joe Rogan Teasing Future A-List Podcast Guest Thrills Fans

Newsweek

time18 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Newsweek

Joe Rogan Teasing Future A-List Podcast Guest Thrills Fans

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Joe Rogan teased a possible future A-list interview during a recent episode of his podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience. The Context Rogan began his career as a stand-up comedian in the 1980s, before becoming a sitcom star in the 1990s with roles on Hardball and NewsRadio. The 57-year-old later hosted the stunt reality show Fear Factor, and today, he has one of the most popular podcasts in the world with The Joe Rogan Experience. For years, the program—which was launched in 2009—has been at the top of Spotify's podcast charts. At the time of publication, he's completed 2,327 episodes. What To Know On Thursday's episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, Rogan spoke with comedian Jimmy Carr. At one point during the show, their conversation turned to the topic of Oasis. "Adam Eagan. He's the best," Rogan said, referring to the talent coordinator he often works with at his Comedy Mothership club in Austin, Texas. "He's in Hawaii this week, I'm missing him," Carr responded. "Oh, well he'll be back," Rogan assured, before Carr added: "He's coming to London to see Oasis with me." UFC commentator Joe Rogan announces the fighters during a ceremonial weigh-in for UFC 264 at the T-Mobile Arena on July 9, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. UFC commentator Joe Rogan announces the fighters during a ceremonial weigh-in for UFC 264 at the T-Mobile Arena on July 9, 2021 in Las Vegas, British rock band Oasis rose to fame in 1994 with their hit debut album Definitely Maybe and later produced such hits as "Wonderwall," "Champagne Supernova" and "Don't Look Back in Anger." Band members, brothers Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher were infamous for their constant feuding. And after years of tension, they're reuniting in a highly anticipated tour beginning in July. Their tour announcement in 2024 came just one day before the anniversary of their split on August 28, 2009. "Oh really? Oh wow, that should be incredible," Rogan said of their upcoming tour. "Don't they hate each other? They hate each other but they're touring together. The Gallaghers." Carr hinted that "there's an amount of money you can put down" to put those differences aside, before suggesting: "You should get Noel on the show." Newsweek reached out to Noel Gallagher's representative via email for comment. "I would love to," the UFC commentator replied. "Noel is so fun," Carr said, to which Rogan expressed: "I love them, I love them." In 2017, Liam Gallagher posted a message to X, formerly Twitter, that Noel Gallagher had "reached out" and "we're all good again." What People Are Saying In the comments underneath the podcast on YouTube, listeners urged Rogan to book Noel Gallagher for an interview. YouTube user @THEJAM-EATERS wrote: "Yes get Noel Gallagher on please!" @finn8598 said: "I've said for a long time that Noel Gallagher would be an amazing guest." @debonaire_nerd shared: "YES! Get Noel Gallagher on the show. Based Jimmy." @ipostedacomment added: "If you could somehow get Noel and Liam Gallagher together for a podcast it'd be one of the best ones ever." @barrywatson6620 chimed in: "Nostradamus checking in here..I predict Noel Gallagher on this show just before the Oasis concerts this chance." What Happens Next New episodes of The Joe Rogan Experience are released weekly on platforms including Spotify, Apple Podcasts and YouTube.

Aaron Rodgers drops hint about where he might play, rules out one NFC team
Aaron Rodgers drops hint about where he might play, rules out one NFC team

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Aaron Rodgers drops hint about where he might play, rules out one NFC team

A big question this NFL offseason has been whether Aaron Rodgers will return for Year 21 or if the four-time NFL MVP will retire. And he might have dropped quite a hint about his future on Friday. During an appearance the YNK podcast with Mike Stud, Rodgers was asked by a fan if he'd consider playing for the Chicago Bears — his longtime rival while Rodgers quarterbacked the Green Bay Packers. Advertisement 'No, but I believe there's a team that might play in Chicago this year, for a road trip.' Rodgers said. 'I don't know, I'm not sure, I'm going to check it out.' That team, of course, could be the Pittsburgh Steelers, who play the Bears on the road in Week 12. Rodgers did, however, rule out the New Orleans Saints. 'I'm too old,' he said. 'I don't want to live in Louisiana. Sorry.' Rodgers has been connected to the Steelers essentially the entire offseason. The two sides met in March, but left without a deal in place. The 41-year-old told 'The Pat McAfee Show' in April that he was dealing with personal things that needed his attention more than football. He elaborated a bit more when he appeared on 'The Joe Rogan Experience' that people he's 'been in the weeds with' have cancer. Advertisement It's unclear when the four-time NFL MVP will make his decision, but ESPN's Adam Schefter predicted it will come sooner rather than later. 'I think that we've heard Art Rooney, the team owner, say he expects Aaron Rodgers to sign there, and they have mandatory minicamp June 10th to the 12th,' the NFL insider said on ESPN Milwaukee. So, I would think that Rodgers is on the table here in the next week or so." More Patriots Content Read the original article on MassLive.

Democrats want a liberal Joe Rogan to help them win elections. I'm right here.
Democrats want a liberal Joe Rogan to help them win elections. I'm right here.

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • USA Today

Democrats want a liberal Joe Rogan to help them win elections. I'm right here.

Democrats want a liberal Joe Rogan to help them win elections. I'm right here. | Opinion I mean, they could sink millions of dollars into hosting community town halls throughout the country that connect actual Democratic candidates with actual voters to…you know…talk. But nah. Show Caption Hide Caption Donald Trump appears on Joe Rogan's podcast With the election days away, Donald Trump was in Texas for a sit-down interview on the podcast 'The Joe Rogan Experience' with Joe Rogan. I've been told scores of wealthy Democratic donors are eager to identify and recruit a 'liberal Joe Rogan' who will do for their party's candidates what the actual Joe Rogan apparently did for President Donald Trump in the 2024 election. After giving it 15 seconds of careful thought, and as a devout believer in forced authenticity, I formally accept what I assume is a multimillion-dollar offer and proudly take on the title of 'the left's Joe Rogan.' Before detailing my plans as America's next great 'progressive influencer/podcaster/talentless middle-aged white guy who somehow became popular,' let me refresh your memory on how we got here. Democrats think they can buy authenticity and create a liberal Rogan It's generally believed a big part of Trump's success in his 2024 campaign to retake the White House stemmed from the fact that, as the New York Times recently wrote, "he cultivated an ecosystem of supporters on YouTube, TikTok and podcasts.' In particular, Trump won over younger male voters by chatting with bro-centric influencers like Rogan and Theo Von. Opinion: What's an oligarchy? With Trump's 'Big, Beautiful' bill, we're living in one. Because Democratic strategists tend to be extremely bad at their jobs, they've concluded the party's best path forward is to spend millions of dollars creating a similar left-wing-influencer ecosystem that will allow liberal candidates to 'connect' with 'desirable demographics' in 'authentic' ways that seem 'organic' and not 'created by Democratic strategists.' Cool. Democrats are flailing to find something that simply doesn't exist The Times reported that the Democratic donor network American Bridge plans to launch a company called AND Media. The 'AND' stands for 'Achieve Narrative Dominance,' which certainly sounds better than 'This Will End Badly,' or TWEB Media. Based on an AND Media business plan it reviewed, the Times reported: "Hoping to move away from 'the current didactic, hall monitor style of Democratic politics that turns off younger audiences,' AND Media will focus on directly funding influencers and co-producing their content.' Nothing says 'we can nail the youth vote' quite like the phrase 'didactic, hall monitor style.' Liberals would be served better by getting out and meeting people I mean, they could sink millions of dollars into hosting community town halls throughout the country that connect actual Democratic candidates with actual voters to…you know…talk. And they could spend more millions blasting ads on every available platform that show people exactly how unhinged and self-enriching the current administration is, and how it's actively defying court orders while trying to slash Medicare, Medicaid and SNAP benefits and punish educational institutions that don't follow the government's ideology. Opinion: I wrote a speech for Trump's Golden Dome defense. Get ready to feel something. But none of that sounds like something the bros would do, so probably better to spend the money creating a podcast sponsored by 'LibBlast!,' the new progressive energy drink getting chugged by liberal influencers like me. Which brings us back to me. I'm clearly the perfect pick to become the liberal Joe Rogan. Introducing the progressive Joe Rogan - me! He's 57, I'm 54, so we both have that 'older dad who's cool' vibe that apparently works in the manosphere. I am, of course, liberal, so that box comes pre-checked. Rogan, as host of 'Fear Factor,' made people eat bugs. I once ate a chocolate-covered cricket, so I'd call that about a tie. And like Rogan, I have few truly redeeming qualities, so why not let me babble in front of a microphone with little concern whether the words I'm uttering offend people or make any sense? Where are all my disaffected young white men at? Let's get this started. All insecure men who were born on third base and feel bitter that the world hasn't walked them to home plate yet, please get ready for a fresh, totally organic and extremely rich voice that will make you feel seen. OK, there's a possibility this won't work exactly as intended. Rogan and other right-wing influencers, it seems, derive their power from pandering to disaffected straight white men angry they have to share power and clout with other men and…gulp…sometimes even women. They're anti-woke, and the left is, inherently, kinda woke. I'd love to take Democratic donor money, but it ain't gonna work So if you're looking for the left-wing Joe Rogan, you're going to get a high-profile liberal white dude who's woke, smart, and kind of emo, in a self-assured sort of way. You'd basically be getting MSNBC's Chris Hayes, who already exists and isn't accomplishing what Democratic strategists envision such a figure would accomplish. So I'm again drawn back to the whole 'maybe we should just spend a ton of money on getting out there and talking to people and being ourselves and clueing folks in to all the very bad things Republicans are doing' idea. Of course, that probably wouldn't get me my $50 million contract to be the progressive answer to Joe Rogan. But it would save the country from having another random dude spouting off on the internet, pretending he's something more than just a salesman for sports drinks and men's hair growth products. Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Bluesky at @ and on Facebook at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store