The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1620 - Nate Bargatze

Joe Rogan and Nate Bargatze on nate Bargatze And Joe Rogan Deconstruct Comedy, COVID, UFOs, And Donuts.

Nate BargatzeguestJoe Roganhost
Jun 27, 20243h 8m
The evolution of a stand‑up career: from open mics to theatersWriting, building, and retiring material in the age of frequent specialsPandemic-era comedy: drive‑ins, masked audiences, and filming specialsMentorship, peer influence, and the emotional impact of praise in comedyConspiracy culture, UFOs, Bigfoot, and internet-fueled belief systemsUFC and combat sports as modern entertainment and storytellingHealth, food, addiction to junk, and lifestyle challenges for touring comics

In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Narrator and Nate Bargatze, Joe Rogan Experience #1620 - Nate Bargatze explores nate Bargatze And Joe Rogan Deconstruct Comedy, COVID, UFOs, And Donuts Joe Rogan and Nate Bargatze spend the episode talking about the craft and business of stand‑up, from starting out in small clubs to building hours on the road and navigating fame, specials, and pandemic shows. They swap stories about early breaks, the power of encouragement from veteran comics, and how different generations of comedians treat material turnover.

Nate Bargatze And Joe Rogan Deconstruct Comedy, COVID, UFOs, And Donuts

Joe Rogan and Nate Bargatze spend the episode talking about the craft and business of stand‑up, from starting out in small clubs to building hours on the road and navigating fame, specials, and pandemic shows. They swap stories about early breaks, the power of encouragement from veteran comics, and how different generations of comedians treat material turnover.

The conversation frequently detours into larger cultural topics: COVID-era comedy (drive‑ins, masked audiences, restrictions), UFOs and government disclosure, conspiracy thinking and YouTube rabbit holes, Bigfoot and cryptids, drug cartels, and the evolution of UFC and combat sports fandom.

They also explore personal habits and vulnerabilities—Bargatze’s diet and weight struggles, Rogan’s views on weed and sleep drugs, the difficulty of eating well on the road, and the insecurity that returns every time a comedian has to build a new hour after a special.

Throughout, they keep circling back to what makes stand‑up unique: its constant reset, the humility of starting from zero after every special, and the deep relationship between comics and their audiences in an era of podcasts and social media.

Key Takeaways

Open with new material to grow faster and manage audience expectations.

Bargatze likes to start shows with new jokes because he’s most excited about them, and crowds are most forgiving early; clearly signaling when the new material ends also makes audiences feel they got something fresh post‑special.

Frequent specials force comics into a “perpetual beginner” cycle that keeps them humble.

Rogan and Bargatze describe how releasing an hour means discarding it and starting from scratch, which regularly makes even established comics feel like they “might be the worst comedian ever” and yet drives growth.

Road work is critical for building long-form, durable material.

They contrast 10–15 minute club sets in New York or LA with the stamina and structural demands of doing full hours on the road, arguing that touring is where bits really deepen and acts mature.

Small and difficult rooms are invaluable for cutting ‘fat’ from an act.

Performing for tiny or indifferent audiences exposes weak tags, filler transitions, and reliance on crowd energy, forcing comics to tighten material and rely on core funny ideas rather than momentum.

COVID forced innovation in live comedy but also distorted feedback.

Drive‑in shows with honking cars and masked, mic’d audiences changed timing and made laughs hard to read, leading to shorter specials than planned and teaching comics to “trust they’re laughing” without normal auditory cues.

Podcasts have reshaped audiences’ expectations of stand‑up.

Because fans now understand writing processes from podcasts, they accept notebooks, half‑baked bits, and iterative versions of jokes, and they’re curious to see how an idea evolves between visits.

Conspiracies thrive when polished monologues go unchallenged.

Rogan notes that articulate, uninterrupted YouTube presentations about flat Earth, fake space, or QAnon can sound persuasive without real-time pushback, illustrating how format and isolation help fringe ideas spread.

Notable Quotes

I think you make it at 20 or 40; no one makes it in the middle.

Nate Bargatze

Comedy keeps you humble because you’re always a beginner every two years.

Joe Rogan

Agreeable is not funny. The whole point is I can’t agree with you.

Nate Bargatze

Those little pieces of praise from another comic when you’re starting out can power you for years.

Joe Rogan

If someone came up to me and said, ‘I don’t believe in the moon,’ I’d rather talk to that guy than the guy who does.

Nate Bargatze

Questions Answered in This Episode

How does constantly discarding material after each special change the type of comedy a performer writes compared to comics who kept the same act for years?

Joe Rogan and Nate Bargatze spend the episode talking about the craft and business of stand‑up, from starting out in small clubs to building hours on the road and navigating fame, specials, and pandemic shows. ...

What are the long-term cultural effects of audiences learning ‘how comedy works’ through podcasts—does it raise standards or make people too analytical?

The conversation frequently detours into larger cultural topics: COVID-era comedy (drive‑ins, masked audiences, restrictions), UFOs and government disclosure, conspiracy thinking and YouTube rabbit holes, Bigfoot and cryptids, drug cartels, and the evolution of UFC and combat sports fandom.

Where should platforms draw the line between protecting the vulnerable from harmful conspiracies and allowing obviously absurd ideas to circulate as entertainment?

They also explore personal habits and vulnerabilities—Bargatze’s diet and weight struggles, Rogan’s views on weed and sleep drugs, the difficulty of eating well on the road, and the insecurity that returns every time a comedian has to build a new hour after a special.

How might the UFC and similar organizations further leverage storytelling to help casual sports fans appreciate technical greatness the way Rogan and Bargatze describe?

Throughout, they keep circling back to what makes stand‑up unique: its constant reset, the humility of starting from zero after every special, and the deep relationship between comics and their audiences in an era of podcasts and social media.

For touring comics struggling with health and junk-food habits, what practical systems or constraints actually work in real life without killing the joy of the road?

EVERY SPOKEN WORD

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