Joe Rogan

Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan.png
Rogan in 2017
Born
Joseph James Rogan

(1967-08-11) August 11, 1967 (age 54)
Occupation
Years active1988–present
Spouse(s)
Jessica Ditzel
(m. 2009)
Children2
Relatives
Comedy career
Medium
  • Stand-up
  • podcast
  • television
  • film
Genres
Subject(s)
Websitejoerogan.com

Joseph James Rogan (born August 11, 1967) is an American podcaster, Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) color commentator, comedian, actor, and former television presenter.[1][2][3][4][5] He hosts The Joe Rogan Experience, a podcast that he launched in 2009 in which he discusses topics such as current events, comedy, politics, philosophy, science, and hobbies with a variety of guests.

Rogan was born in Newark, New Jersey, and began his career in comedy in August 1988 in the Boston area. After relocating to Los Angeles in 1994, he signed an exclusive developmental deal with Disney and appeared as an actor on several television shows, including Hardball and NewsRadio. In 1997, he started working for the UFC as an interviewer and color commentator. He released his first comedy special, I'm Gonna Be Dead Someday ..., in 2000 and hosted the game show Fear Factor from 2001 to 2006.

After leaving Fear Factor, Rogan focused on his stand-up career and hosted more comedy specials. He launched The Joe Rogan Experience in 2009; by 2015, it was one of the most popular podcasts in the world, regularly receiving millions of views per episode. Spotify obtained exclusive rights to The Joe Rogan Experience in 2020 for US$100 million. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Rogan drew controversy for espousing COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy on his podcast and hosting physicians who allegedly provided misinformation regarding COVID-19.

Early life

Joseph James Rogan was born on August 11, 1967, in Newark, New Jersey, US.[6][7] He is of three-quarters Italian and one-quarter Irish descent.[8] His father, Joseph, is a former police officer in Newark. Rogan's parents divorced when he was five,[9] and he has not been in contact with his father since he was seven. Rogan recalled: "All I remember of my dad are these brief, violent flashes of domestic violence... But I don't want to complain about my childhood. Nothing bad ever really happened to me... I don't hate the guy."[9] From ages seven to eleven he lived in San Francisco, California,[9] after which his family moved to Gainesville, Florida.[10] They later settled in Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, outside Boston, where Rogan attended Newton South High School,[11][12] from which he graduated in 1985.[13]

Rogan participated in Little League Baseball and developed an interest in martial arts in his early teens.[14] He recalled being "terrified of being a loser" as a child,[15] and martial arts "gave me not just confidence, but also a different perspective of myself and what I was capable of. I knew that I could do something I was terrified of, and that was really difficult, and that I could excel at it. It was a big deal for me."[15] Martial arts were "the first thing that ever gave me hope that I wasn't going to be a loser. So I really, really gravitated toward it."[16] At age 14, Rogan took up karate and, a year later started Taekwondo.[9] When he was 19, he won the US Open Championship taekwondo tournament as a lightweight.[13][7] He was a Massachusetts full-contact state champion for four consecutive years and became a Taekwondo instructor.[7][9] Rogan also practiced amateur kickboxing and held a 2–1 record;[17] he retired from competition at age 21, as he began to suffer from frequent headaches and feared he might sustain worse injuries.[7][9]

He attended the University of Massachusetts Boston but found it pointless and dropped out early.[9] He lived in the Boston area until he was 24.[18]

Career

1988–1994: Early stand-up career

I didn't have a direction until I became a stand-up comedian. I was pretty nervous about my future. I couldn't imagine myself working a 9-to-5 job.

—Rogan on his career.[19]

Rogan had no intention of being a professional stand-up comedian, and initially considered a career in kickboxing.[20][21] He was a fan of comedy from a young age, and comedian Richard Pryor's film Live on the Sunset Strip affected him "in such a profound way. Nothing had made me laugh like that."[7] Rogan's friends from gym and Taekwondo school, whom he would make laugh with impressions and jokes, convinced him to have a go at stand-up comedy.[7] At 21, after six months preparing material and practicing his delivery,[22] he performed his first stand-up routine on August 27, 1988, at an open-mic night at a Stitches comedy club in Boston.[11][20]

While living in Boston and working on his stand-up, Rogan held several jobs to secure himself financially, including teaching martial arts at Boston University and in Revere, Massachusetts, delivering newspapers, driving a limousine, doing construction work, and performing duties for a private investigator.[11][9] Meanwhile, his blue comedy style earned him gigs at bachelor parties and strip clubs.[7] One night, Rogan persuaded the owner of a comedy club in Boston to allow him to try a new, five-minute routine. At the show was talent manager Jeff Sussman, who liked Rogan's act and offered to become his manager. Rogan accepted Sussman's offer.[7][23]

In 1990, Rogan moved to New York City. As a full-time comedian, he was "scratching and grinding" for money and stayed with his grandfather in Newark for the first six months.[24] Rogan later cited Richard Jeni,[25] Lenny Bruce,[26] Sam Kinison and Bill Hicks as comedy influences.[20]

1994–1999: Hardball and NewsRadio

In 1994, Rogan relocated to Los Angeles,[9] where his first national television spot followed on the MTV comedy show Half-Hour Comedy Hour.[7] The appearance led to the network's offering him a three-year exclusive contract and a role in a pilot episode of a "dopey game show" for $500. Rogan declined, but it prompted Sussman to send tapes of Rogan's performances to several networks, which sparked a bidding war.[20] After a period of negotiation, Rogan accepted a development deal with the Disney network. He secured his first major acting role in the 1994 nine-episode Fox sitcom Hardball as Frank Valente, a young, egocentric star player on a professional baseball team.[20] Rogan called the hiring process "weird", as the network had no idea if he could act until he was asked by Dean Valentine, then-president of Walt Disney Television, to whom he replied: "If you can lie, you can act, and if you can lie to crazy girlfriends, you can act under pressure."[20] The filming schedule was a new experience for Rogan, who started to work 12-hour days.[14] Rogan later said: "It was a great show on paper until a horrible executive producer with a big ego was hired by Fox to run the show and he rewrote it."[20] Around this time, Rogan began performing at The Comedy Store in Hollywood and was hired as a paid regular by owner Mitzi Shore. He performed at the club for the next 13 years for free and paid for the venue's new sound system.[27]

From 1995 to 1999, Rogan starred in the NBC sitcom NewsRadio as Joe Garrelli, an electrician and handyman at the show's fictional news radio station.[7][28] The role was originally set to be played by actor Ray Romano, but Romano was let go from the cast after one rehearsal and Rogan was brought in.[20][29] The switch caused Rogan to work with the show's writers to help develop the character before the show was set to launch,[30] which he later described as a "very dumbed-down, censored version" of himself.[23] Rogan befriended fellow cast member Phil Hartman, who confided his marital problems to him. Rogan claimed he tried to persuade Hartman to divorce his wife five times, but "he loved his kids and didn't want to leave." In 1998, Hartman was murdered by his wife.[31] The loss affected Rogan's ability to perform stand-up, and he cancelled a week of scheduled gigs.[32] Rogan later saw acting as an easy job, but grew tired of "playing the same character every week",[33] and only did so for the money.[34] He later viewed his time on NewsRadio as "a dream gig" that allowed him to earn money while working on his stand-up as often as he could.[20][11] During the series, he worked on a pilot for a show entitled Overseas.[33]

1997–2006: UFC commentator and Fear Factor

Rogan and Gerald Strebendt flexing in a ring
Rogan (right) posing with Gerald Strebendt in a boxing ring, 2002

Rogan began working for the mixed martial arts promotion Ultimate Fighting Championship as a backstage and post-fight interviewer. His first show took place at UFC 12: Judgement Day in Dothan, Alabama on February 7, 1997.[35] He became interested in Brazilian jiu-jitsu in 1994 after watching Royce Gracie fight at UFC 2: No Way Out, and landed the position at the organization as Sussman was friends with its co-creator and original producer, Campbell McLaren.[36] He quit after two years as his salary could not cover the cost of traveling to the events, which were often held in rural locations at the time.[37]

After the UFC was taken over by Zuffa in 2001, Rogan attended some events and became friends with its new president Dana White, who offered him a job as a color commentator. However, Rogan initially declined as he "just wanted to go to the fights and drink".[36][9] In 2002, White was able to hire Rogan for free in exchange for prime event tickets for him and his friends.[35] After about 15 free gigs as a commentator, Rogan accepted pay for the job, working alongside Mike Goldberg until the end of 2016.[9] Rogan won the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Award for Best Television Announcer twice, and was named MMA Personality of the Year four times by the World MMA Awards.[38]

In 1999, Rogan secured a three-album deal with Warner Bros. Records and began tentative plans to star in his own prime-time televised sitcom on Fox named The Joe Rogan Show.[21] The show, co-written by Seinfeld writer Bill Masters, was to feature Rogan as "a second-string sportscaster who lands a spot as the token male on a View-style women's show".[23] In December 1999, he recorded his first stand-up comedy album in two shows at the Comedy Connection at Faneuil Hall in Boston,[39] which was released as I'm Gonna Be Dead Some Day... in August 2000.[7][20] It received national exposure on The Howard Stern Show and downloads from Napster.[40] "Voodoo Punanny", a song Rogan wrote after Warner suggested to produce a song they could play on the radio, was subsequently released as a single.[41] Around this time, Rogan also worked on ideas for a film and a cartoon with his comedian friend Chris McGuire,[33][20] and began to operate a blog on his website, JoeRogan.net, which he used to discuss various topics that helped him develop his stand-up routines.[34]

In 2001, the development of Rogan's television show was interrupted after he accepted an offer from NBC to host the American edition of Fear Factor. He declined initially as he thought the network would not air such a program due to its content, but Sussman convinced him to accept.[7] Rogan later said that the main reason he accepted was to obtain observations and anecdotes for his stand-up comedy.[42] The show increased Rogan's national exposure which caused turnouts at his stand-up gigs to grow. Fear Factor ran for an initial six seasons from 2001 to 2006.[43]

Rogan's role as host of Fear Factor led to further television opportunities. In 2002, he appeared on the episode "A Beautiful Mind" of Just Shoot Me as Chris, the boyfriend of lead character Maya Gallo.[44] In December 2002, Rogan was the emcee for the 2002 Blockbuster Hollywood Spectacular, a Christmas parade in Hollywood.[45] In February 2003, Rogan became the new co-host of The Man Show on Comedy Central for its fifth season from August 2003, with fellow comedian Doug Stanhope, following the departure of original hosts Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla.[46][47] A year into the show, however, the hosts entered disagreements with Comedy Central and the show's producers over content. Rogan recalled: "I was a little misled ... I was told: 'Show nudity, and we'll blur it out. Swear and we'll bleep it out.' That hasn't been the case".[48] The show ended in 2004. Around this time Rogan entered talks to host his own radio show, but they came to nothing due to his already busy schedule.[48]

2005–2009: Comedy specials

Rogan commentating for the UFC in 2006

In 2005, actor Wesley Snipes challenged Rogan to a cage fight. Rogan trained for the event for five months before Snipes backed out following an investigation by the IRS for alleged tax evasion. Rogan believed Snipes needed a quick payout to alleviate his debt.[49]

After Fear Factor, Rogan focused his career on his stand-up comedy, as concentrating on television had made him feel lazy and uninspired to work on new material for his act. With the money he had earned from television, Rogan hired two people full-time to film him and his comedy friends on tour, and release clips on his website for his JoeShow web series.[50] In May 2005, Rogan signed a deal with the Endeavor Talent Agency.[51] Two months later, he filmed his second stand-up comedy special, Joe Rogan: Live, in Phoenix, Arizona. The special premiered on Showtime in 2007.[52][53]

In 2005, Rogan wrote a blog entry on his website accusing comedian Carlos Mencia of joke thievery, a claim he had made since 1993.[22][54][55] The situation culminated in February 2007 when Rogan confronted Mencia on stage at The Comedy Store in Hollywood.[56] A video of the incident was uploaded onto YouTube and included evidence and comments from other comedians, including George Lopez, "The Reverend" Bob Levy, Bobby Lee and Ari Shaffir.[57] The incident led to Rogan's talent agent expelling him as a client of The Gersh Agency, who also managed Mencia, and his ban from The Comedy Store, causing him to relocate his regular venue to the Hollywood Improv Comedy Club. Rogan later said that every comic he had talked to was happy and thankful that he did it,[52] and went on to sign with William Morris Agency.[27] Rogan returned to The Comedy Store in 2013 to support Shaffir in the filming of his first special.[citation needed]

In April 2007, Comedy Central Records released Rogan's fourth comedy special, Shiny Happy Jihad.[52] The set was recorded in September 2006 at Cobb's Comedy Club in San Francisco, and contains excerpts of an improvised Q&A session with the audience that was typical of Rogan's act at the time.[58][36]

2009–present: Latest endeavors and podcast

Rogan performing stand-up in 2011

Rogan hosted the short-lived CBS show Game Show in My Head, which aired for eight episodes in January 2009. It was produced by Ashton Kutcher.[35] The show involved contestants who try to convince people to perform or take part in increasingly bizarre situations for money. He agreed to host the show as the idea intrigued him, calling it "a completely mindless form of entertainment".[19]

In 2010, Rogan accused comedian Dane Cook of joke thievery.[55]

In 2011, Rogan resumed his role as Fear Factor host for its seventh and final season (until 2012).[43] Rogan took the job, saying he "would hate to see somebody else do it."[59] Later in 2011, Rogan played his first major film character, Gale, in the comedy film Zookeeper.[60] He was also working on a book around this time that he tentatively titled Irresponsible Advice from a Man with No Credibility, based on his blog entries on his website.[16] Rogan played himself in Here Comes the Boom, another action-comedy film starring Kevin James that was released in 2012.[61]

In December 2012, Rogan released his sixth comedy special Live from the Tabernacle exclusively as a download on his website for $5, following Louis C.K.'s example.[62]

In 2013, Rogan hosted the television show Joe Rogan Questions Everything on the SyFy network, which aired for six episodes. The show covered topics discussed on his podcasts, including the existence of Bigfoot and UFOs, and featured several comedians, experts, and scientists with the aim of trying to "put some subjects to bed... with an open-minded perspective".[62] SyFy agreed to produce the show without a pilot episode. The production team gave Rogan some creative control over the program and aimed to present it in his own words where possible.[63]

The Joe Rogan Experience

In December 2009, Rogan launched a free podcast with his friend and fellow comedian Brian Redban.[9][64] The first episode was recorded on December 24 and was to be a live weekly broadcast on Ustream,[65] with Rogan and Redban "sitting in front of laptops bullshitting".[16] By August 2010, the podcast was named The Joe Rogan Experience and entered the list of Top 100 podcasts on iTunes,[66] and in 2011, was picked up by SiriusXM Satellite Radio.[16] The podcast features an array of guests who discuss current events, politics, philosophy, comedy, hobbies and numerous other topics.[67] In January 2015, the podcast was downloaded over 11 million times.[68] By October that year, the podcast was downloaded 16 million times each month, making it one of the most popular free podcasts.[9]

On May 19, 2020, Rogan announced that he had signed a multi-year licensing deal with Spotify worth an estimated $100 million, making it one of the largest licensing agreements in the podcast business.[69] The deal made The Joe Rogan Experience available on Spotify starting September 1, 2020, and exclusive on the platform from January 2021. Clips from the video version will continue to be available on YouTube.[70][69] In February 2022, Spotify removed 113 episodes of The Joe Rogan Experience over the course of a few days owing in part to some of the episodes having racist and insensitive language.[71][72][73]

Personal life

Rogan married Jessica Ditzel, a former cocktail waitress, in 2009.[9][74] The couple have two daughters; the first was born in 2008 and the second in 2010. Rogan is also a stepfather to Ditzel's daughter from a previous relationship.[75] The family moved to Boulder, Colorado in 2008, where they lived for four months, but returned to Southern California when his wife became pregnant. They settled in Bell Canyon, California, where Rogan had lived since early 2003. They purchased a new home in the area for almost $5 million in mid-2018.[76][77][78][79] In 2020, the family moved into a $14 million home on Lake Austin, Texas.[80]

He has vitiligo on his hands and feet.[9]

Rogan became interested in jiu-jitsu after watching Royce Gracie fight at UFC 2: No Way Out in 1994.[37] In 1996, Rogan began training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Carlson Gracie at his school in Hollywood, California.[17] He is a black belt under Eddie Bravo's 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu, a style of no-gi Brazilian jiu-jitsu,[81] and a black belt in gi Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Jean Jacques Machado.[82]

Rogan was raised Roman Catholic, having attended Catholic school in first grade, but has since abandoned following any organized religion and identifies as agnostic.[83] In October 2019, during an episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Rogan confirmed that he is a cousin of My Chemical Romance lead vocalist Gerard Way, although they have never met.[84]

In January 2020, Rogan went on a carnivore diet for the entire month, only eating grass-feed beef, elk, eggs, and vitamins and supplements such as amino acids and fish oil. As a result of this diet, Rogan said that he lost 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) and said he experienced an increase in energy and relief from some prior health issues. However, Rogan admitted that this diet also negatively impacted his digestive system. In January 2022, Rogan announced that he would go on a meat and fruit diet for the entire month.[85]

Views

Political positions

In 2020, CNN described Rogan as "libertarian-leaning".[86] Rogan has said that he holds a wide variety of political views and does not easily fall on any particular side of the political spectrum.[87] He has described himself as socially liberal, saying that he supports same-sex marriage, gay rights, women's rights, recreational drug use, universal health care, and universal basic income, but also supports gun rights and the Second Amendment.[88][89] Rogan describes himself as a strong supporter of freedom of speech, and has criticized what he describes as "cancel culture" and what he perceives to be suppression of those who hold right-wing views in the television and film industry.[87] He has also criticized what he describes as an American foreign policy of military adventurism.[90]

Rogan endorsed Ron Paul in the 2012 U.S. presidential campaign[91] and voted for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[92] He endorsed Bernie Sanders during the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries,[86] but ended up voting for Jo Jorgensen in the general election.[93] Rogan has criticized political polarization in the United States and accused American liberals of hoping for former U.S. President Donald Trump to fail simply because they disliked his persona.[87][non-primary source needed]

2020 presidential election

Rogan publicly supported Tulsi Gabbard and encouraged her to run for the U.S. presidency in 2020.[94] On January 21, 2020, Rogan said he would "probably" vote for Bernie Sanders in the 2020 Democratic primary, adding, "He's been insanely consistent his entire life."[95] Sanders was criticized by fellow Democrats for touting Rogan's endorsement during the 2020 presidential campaign, including by MoveOn, which referred to Rogan as "someone known for promoting transphobia, homophobia, Islamophobia, racism and misogyny". The Human Rights Campaign called on Sanders to reject Rogan's endorsement.[86]

After Sanders dropped out of the race, Rogan said he would "rather vote for Trump than Biden" adding that "I don't think [Biden] can handle anything." He claimed that he was concerned that Biden, who turned 78 shortly after Election Day, lacked the cognitive ability needed to run the United States and would not be able to handle the pressure of the presidency. Rogan criticized Biden for his verbal slip-ups, which he described as "not a normal way to communicate, unless you're high".[96] Rogan has stated "Biden, to me, is like having a flashlight with a dying battery and going for a long hike in the woods, it is not going to work out. It's not going to make it."[97] Donald Trump subsequently retweeted Rogan's comments on Biden's mental fitness.[98]

Rogan offered to moderate a four-hour debate with Trump and Biden in an effort to avoid what he referred to as media bias; Trump said he would be willing to do such a debate.[99] A Change.org petition was started "to elect Joe Rogan as the moderator for the 2020 Presidential Debate," claiming that Rogan was qualified to handle the debates because he is nonpartisan. The petition received over 300,000 signatures.[100]

Rogan later revealed during a live election night podcast that he voted for Libertarian candidate Jo Jorgensen.[101]

Drugs and spirituality

Rogan supports the legalized use of cannabis and believes it holds numerous benefits. He hosted the documentary film The Union: The Business Behind Getting High and was featured in Marijuana: A Chronic History and The Culture High. He also supports the use of LSD, psilocybin mushrooms, and DMT toward the exploration and enhancement of consciousness, as well as introspection. He was the presenter in the 2010 documentary DMT: The Spirit Molecule.[102]

Rogan has an interest in sensory deprivation and using an isolation tank. He has stated that his personal experiences with meditation in isolation tanks have helped him explore the nature of consciousness and improve his performance in various physical and mental activities and overall well-being.[103]

Other views and advocacy

Rogan is an avid hunter and is part of the "Eat What You Kill" movement, which attempts to move away from factory farming and the mistreatment of animals raised for food.[104]

Rogan is opposed to routine infant circumcision and has claimed there is a lack of significant scientific evidence for any benefits to the practice, which he considers not entirely different from female genital mutilation because of its nonconsensual nature.[105]

Rogan has been an outspoken critic of trans women fighting cisgender women in MMA matches.[86]

Controversies

COVID-19

In April 2021, in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, Rogan stated his belief that young and healthy people should not get vaccinated against COVID-19.[106] Rogan was criticized by White House chief medical advisor Anthony Fauci, who accused him of making misleading comments regarding the COVID-19 vaccines.[107] Subsequently, Rogan backed down on his statement, and called himself a "moron" and "not a respected source of information".[108][109]

In August 2021, Rogan expressed concern that means of mitigation such as vaccine passports would bring society "one step closer to dictatorship".[110]

On September 1, 2021, Rogan tested positive for the virus.[111] Soon after, he released an online video reporting on the status of his condition and stating that he had begun a regimen including monoclonal antibodies, prednisone, azithromycin, NAD drip, a vitamin drip, as well as ivermectin, a drug usually taken to treat parasitic infestations and not endorsed by the FDA as an effective treatment for COVID-19.[112][113][114] This caused some controversy due to multiple people reportedly being hospitalized after self-medicating with an over-the-counter form of ivermectin designed to treat ailments in livestock, which typically has a significantly larger dosage.[111] Rogan criticized CNN for describing ivermectin as a "horse dewormer".[115] Outpatient prescribing of ivermectin had recently increased significantly due to the unproven claim that it is effective against COVID-19. The FDA called this trend "disturbing".[116] On September 3, 2021, Rogan tested negative for the virus.[117]

In January 2022, 270 scientists, physicians, professors, doctors, and healthcare workers wrote an open letter to Spotify expressing concern over "false and societally harmful assertions" on the The Joe Rogan Experience and asked Spotify to "establish a clear and public policy to moderate misinformation on its platform." The 270 signatories took issue with Rogan "broadcasting misinformation, particularly regarding the COVID-19 pandemic" and more specifically "a highly controversial episode featuring guest Dr. Robert Malone (#1757). The episode has been criticized for promoting baseless conspiracy theories, including "an unfounded theory that societal leaders have 'hypnotized' the public." The signatories further assert that "Dr. Malone is one of two recent JRE guests who has compared pandemic policies to the Holocaust. These actions are not only objectionable and offensive, but also medically and culturally dangerous." The signatories also note that Malone was suspended from Twitter "for spreading misinformation about COVID-19".[118][119]

On January 24, 2022, musician Neil Young posted an open letter threatening to remove his music from Spotify if they did not remove the podcast The Joe Rogan Experience from their service. The podcast, one of Spotify's most popular, has been criticized for spreading COVID-19 misinformation. Young wrote that "Spotify has a responsibility to mitigate the spread of misinformation on its platform".[120] On January 26, Spotify removed Young's music; a spokesperson said Spotify wanted "all the world's music and audio content to be available to Spotify users" and that it had a "great responsibility in balancing both safety for listeners and freedom for creators".[120] On January 29, Joni Mitchell removed her catalogue from Spotify in support of long-time friend and fellow polio survivor "Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue".[121][122] In response to the controversy, Rogan said that he would try harder to maintain a neutral point of view in his podcasts, and said that he agreed with Spotify adding a disclaimer to the beginning of his videos.[123]

Racial slurs

In February 2022, footage of Rogan saying the racial slur nigger on The Joe Rogan Experience resurfaced. Rogan apologized, calling his language "regretful and shameful" while saying that he was not racist and only quoted the slur to discuss its use by others.[124][125][126] Spotify CEO Daniel Ek called Rogan's language "incredibly hurtful", but was against "silencing" him.[127]

Filmography and discography

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1994 Hardball Frank Valente
1995–1999 NewsRadio Joe Garrelli
1996 MADtv Himself, guest appearance Season 2, Episode 7
1997 Bruce Testones, Fashion Photographer Writer, himself
1997–present Ultimate Fighting Championship Interviewer (1997–2002)
Color commentator (2002–present)
2001–2002 Late Friday Host
2001–2006
2011–2012
Fear Factor Host
2002 Just Shoot Me! Chris "A Beautiful Mind"
2003 Good Morning, Miami Himself Season 1, Episode 17: "Fear and Loathing in Miami"
2003–2004 The Man Show Himself Host
2003–2004 Chappelle's Show Himself Season 1, Episode 4
Season 2, Episode 12
2003–2007 Last Comic Standing Celebrity talent scout
2005–2008 The Ultimate Fighter Announcer
2006 Inside the UFC Host
2007–2009 UFC Wired Host
2009 Game Show in My Head Host
2012–2013 UFC Ultimate Insider Himself
2013 Joe Rogan Questions Everything Host
2015 Silicon Valley Himself Season 2, Episode 6: "Homicide"

Feature films and documentaries

Year Title Role
2002 It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie Himself, cameo
2007 The Union: The Business Behind Getting High Himself
2007 American Drug War: The Last White Hope Himself
2010 DMT: The Spirit Molecule Himself
2010 Venus & Vegas Richie
2011 Zookeeper Gale
2012 Here Comes the Boom Himself
2017 Bright Himself

Comedy specials

Year Title Format
2000 I'm Gonna Be Dead Someday ... CD
2000 "Voodoo Punanny" CD single
2001 Live from the Belly of the Beast DVD
2006 Joe Rogan: Live DVD
2007 Shiny Happy Jihad CD
2010 Talking Monkeys in Space CD, DVD
2012 Live from the Tabernacle Online
2014 Rocky Mountain High Comedy Central special, online
2016 Triggered Netflix[128]
2018 Strange Times Netflix

Video games

Year Title Role
2014 EA Sports UFC Himself
2016 EA Sports UFC 2 Himself
2018 EA Sports UFC 3 Himself

Awards and honors

See also

References

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