Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

Tl;DR piece on Joe Rogan from The Atlantic

YellowSnow
YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,744 Founders Club
@DerekJohnson thought you might find this interesting. I debated whether to post in the Tug or me Shoppe, but it seems more pop culture than politics.

https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2019/08/my-joe-rogan-experience/594802/
«13

Comments

  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,744 Founders Club

    I felt like I learned less about Rogan than I did about the worldview of self-loathing males.

    I kind of have a love-hate attitude towards Joe. On the one hand, I think he's a UFC, meathead, douche canoe. But then he gets a lot a great guests on his pod and I like his style of hosting.
  • UW_Doog_Bot
    UW_Doog_Bot Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 18,587 Founders Club
    yyyeeeeeesshhh, "I couldn't get an interview or even a comment from this guy so I tried to live like him" this is some vox level reporting.

    I think this tells you most of what you need to know about the author.

    [The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.]
  • GrundleStiltzkin
    GrundleStiltzkin Member Posts: 61,516 Standard Supporter

    I felt like I learned less about Rogan than I did about the worldview of self-loathing males.

    I kind of have a love-hate attitude towards Joe. On the one hand, I think he's a UFC, meathead, douche canoe. But then he gets a lot a great guests on his pod and I like his style of hosting.
    I had that preconception too and then started listening to selected pods recently. It's good shit.

    That writer's handwringing over Joe was beta as fuck.
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,744 Founders Club

    I felt like I learned less about Rogan than I did about the worldview of self-loathing males.

    I kind of have a love-hate attitude towards Joe. On the one hand, I think he's a UFC, meathead, douche canoe. But then he gets a lot a great guests on his pod and I like his style of hosting.
    I had that preconception too and then started listening to selected pods recently. It's good shit.

    That writer's handwringing over Joe was beta as fuck.
    Agree. Lot of Beta here. Still and interesting piece though and he does give Joe some respeck.

    I think I started to come around to Joe when I listened to his pod with my hero, Sam Harris.
  • creepycoug
    creepycoug Member Posts: 24,309

    yyyeeeeeesshhh, "I couldn't get an interview or even a comment from this guy so I tried to live like him" this is some vox level reporting.

    I think this tells you most of what you need to know about the author.

    [The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.]

    I, too, have contempt for men who get barbed wire tatoos, and energy drinks are fs. Do I need to apologize?
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,744 Founders Club

    yyyeeeeeesshhh, "I couldn't get an interview or even a comment from this guy so I tried to live like him" this is some vox level reporting.

    I think this tells you most of what you need to know about the author.

    [The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.]

    I, too, have contempt for men who get barbed wire tatoos, and energy drinks are fs. Do I need to apologize?
    No.
  • UW_Doog_Bot
    UW_Doog_Bot Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 18,587 Founders Club

    yyyeeeeeesshhh, "I couldn't get an interview or even a comment from this guy so I tried to live like him" this is some vox level reporting.

    I think this tells you most of what you need to know about the author.

    [The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.]

    I, too, have contempt for men who get barbed wire tatoos, and energy drinks are fs. Do I need to apologize?
    It's more the fact that this is the stereotype the author needs to fall back on to justify his feelings about Joe Rogan.

    I'd expect he'd use the same stereotype to describe HH were he to visit.
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,744 Founders Club

    yyyeeeeeesshhh, "I couldn't get an interview or even a comment from this guy so I tried to live like him" this is some vox level reporting.

    I think this tells you most of what you need to know about the author.

    [The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.]

    I, too, have contempt for men who get barbed wire tatoos, and energy drinks are fs. Do I need to apologize?
    It's more the fact that this is the stereotype the author needs to fall back on to justify his feelings about Joe Rogan.

    I'd expect he'd use the same stereotype to describe HH were he to visit.
    I fucking love stereotyping @UW_Doog_Bot

    Fucking weirdos!!


  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 48,646 Standard Supporter
    a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt

    Damn fucking straight. The elites hate my schtick.