The Joe Rogan ExperienceJoe Rogan Experience #1754 - Suzanne Santo
Joe Rogan and Suzanne Santo on suzanne Santo, Survival, Art, and Sanity Amid Viral Blizzards.
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Suzanne Santo and Suzanne Santo, Joe Rogan Experience #1754 - Suzanne Santo explores suzanne Santo, Survival, Art, and Sanity Amid Viral Blizzards Joe Rogan and musician Suzanne Santo have a long, free‑flowing conversation about navigating anxiety, pressure, and identity through the pandemic, touring shutdowns, and social media overload.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Suzanne Santo, Survival, Art, and Sanity Amid Viral Blizzards
- Joe Rogan and musician Suzanne Santo have a long, free‑flowing conversation about navigating anxiety, pressure, and identity through the pandemic, touring shutdowns, and social media overload.
- They dig into mental health, body image, COVID risk, government overreach, censorship, and the corrosive effects of online outrage culture, contrasting that with real-world connection, discipline, and self-work.
- Santo shares personal stories of isolation, moving to Austin, finding love, near-childhood dangers, and how therapy, boundaries, and creativity reshaped her life and career.
- The episode closes with discussions on technology, surveillance, meaning, and the power of live art, culminating in Santo performing an intimate, emotionally heavy new song live in the studio.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
7 ideasPressure and uncertainty can become catalysts for deep personal work.
Santo describes 2020 as a forced pause that exposed emotional baggage she’d been outrunning on tour; confronting it led to major life changes like moving to Austin and ultimately meeting a healthier partner.
Your identity cannot be entirely built on your work or your art.
Rogan notes many performers spiraled when live shows stopped because their core sense of self was tied to performing; both emphasize cultivating inner balance so you’re not psychologically destroyed when external structures vanish.
Being ‘nice’ without boundaries leads to burnout and resentment.
Santo admits her people‑pleasing and feeling she ‘owed’ others her energy left her drained and sometimes trapped in unhealthy dynamics; learning to say no and step away is framed as late but essential emotional maturity.
Health conversations need honesty without shaming.
They argue that obesity, like addiction, is often rooted in deeper emotional or educational problems; avoiding the topic to spare feelings doesn’t change outcomes, but approaching it with concern and an emphasis on positive change can.
Mandates and digital control mechanisms are more dangerous than individual choices.
Regardless of one’s stance on vaccines, Rogan stresses that coerced medical decisions and emerging ideas like social credit or digital health passports erode personal agency and create systems ripe for abuse.
Social media amplifies victimhood and outrage, distorting reality and self-worth.
Both describe how timelines full of confessionals, metrics (likes, followers), and pile-ons pull people into comparison, dependency, and performative suffering, whereas time in nature, books, and offline relationships restores perspective.
Live art is ‘medicine’ that reconnects people to meaning and joy.
Santo credits seeing Rogan and Dave Chappelle live in Austin as a turning point that reminded her how vital in-person art and laughter are; Rogan frames comedy and music as shared experiences that keep society humane amid chaos.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesIf I’m waiting for the success I’ve always wanted, I’m gonna be miserable.
— Suzanne Santo
You can’t just give up control. Even if you’re right, the real problem is telling someone that they have to do something.
— Joe Rogan
My life gets smaller as the world gets crazier. My juice, my life force, is the simplest shit — art, love, quality time.
— Suzanne Santo
We’re not designed for the internet. We’re not designed for the ability to access the opinions of millions of people simultaneously.
— Joe Rogan
Don’t wait until you die, ’cause you can always change your mind and make it right.
— Suzanne Santo (lyrics from her song performed live)
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow did the forced isolation of the pandemic change your relationship with your work and sense of identity?
Joe Rogan and musician Suzanne Santo have a long, free‑flowing conversation about navigating anxiety, pressure, and identity through the pandemic, touring shutdowns, and social media overload.
Where do you personally draw the line between compassionate support and enabling in conversations about health and weight?
They dig into mental health, body image, COVID risk, government overreach, censorship, and the corrosive effects of online outrage culture, contrasting that with real-world connection, discipline, and self-work.
In what ways has social media subtly reshaped how you value yourself and others, and what boundaries might you need to put in place?
Santo shares personal stories of isolation, moving to Austin, finding love, near-childhood dangers, and how therapy, boundaries, and creativity reshaped her life and career.
How do you balance legitimate public health concerns with the dangers of government overreach and digital tracking?
The episode closes with discussions on technology, surveillance, meaning, and the power of live art, culminating in Santo performing an intimate, emotionally heavy new song live in the studio.
What forms of art or live experiences have felt like ‘medicine’ for you during the last few years, and why did they matter so much?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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