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Joe Rogan Experience #1071 - Steven Crowder & NotGay Jared

Steven Crowder is an actor, comedian and former contributor for the Fox News Channel. He currently runs his own website and also a podcast along with producer NotGay Jared called “Louder With Crowder”

Joe RoganhostSteven CrowderguestNotGay JaredguestGuestguest
Jan 30, 20182h 27mWatch on YouTube ↗

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Rogan, Crowder clash with YouTube, woke culture, and free speech

  1. Joe Rogan, Steven Crowder, and NotGayJared spend most of the episode dissecting perceived ideological bias at YouTube and in broader Silicon Valley, focusing on demonetization, content strikes, and inconsistent enforcement of policies. They detail specific run‑ins with YouTube, including parodies of Bob Ross and Mr. Rogers, and recount a contentious YouTube “conservative outreach” meeting that highlighted double standards in what’s considered advertiser‑friendly. The conversation then pivots into culture-war territory: antifa infiltration, gender ideology, puberty blockers for minors, campus activism, transgender politics, media cowardice, and conspiracy thinking. Throughout, they argue that selective censorship and ideological conformity on the left are driving polarization, fueling fringe movements, and making genuine debate nearly impossible.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

5 ideas

YouTube’s enforcement of policy appears inconsistent and ideologically skewed.

Crowder describes parody videos being struck or demonetized while graphic or highly profane left‑leaning content is promoted or monetized, suggesting that enforcement depends as much on viewpoint and internal culture as on written rules.

Creators have little recourse when large platforms misuse copyright and “safety” tools.

They recount estates and individuals using copyright or privacy complaints to force removals even when the content is clearly parody or legally recorded, illustrating how strike systems can be weaponized against unpopular speech.

Secretive or blunt moderation tools erode trust and push audiences toward extremes.

Rogan and Crowder argue that opaque demonetization, vague “hate speech” designations, and selective crackdowns make people feel persecuted and can radicalize both right and left by confirming persecution narratives.

Media often avoids inconvenient facts when they conflict with preferred narratives.

Their antifa sting—where organizers casually talked about knives and guns—was largely ignored or downplayed by on‑scene journalists, reinforcing their view that mainstream outlets protect certain movements from bad optics.

The line between protecting marginalized groups and suppressing dissent is blurring.

They cite examples where questioning puberty blockers for minors or critiquing gender ideology is labeled “hate speech,” making careful scientific or ethical debate about children’s medical treatment socially dangerous.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

You can't be authentic and play by YouTube's rules unless you completely agree with them.

Steven Crowder

If you call someone a Nazi for reasonable views long enough, eventually they just say, 'Okay, fine, I'm a Nazi,' and the pendulum swings further the other way.

Steven Crowder

I’m 100% in favor of grown adults deciding to transition. What drives me crazy is people making decisions for six‑year‑olds.

Joe Rogan

The solution to media bias is not to have a bunch of people in Silicon Valley deciding what’s true.

Steven Crowder

If you think someone’s wrong, the answer isn’t to lock them up for it. The answer is proving them wrong and having a conversation.

Joe Rogan

YouTube censorship, demonetization, and alleged ideological biasParody, satire, and copyright/strike abuse (Bob Ross, Mr. Rogers, etc.)YouTube’s advertiser guidelines vs permissive treatment of some edgy contentAntifa undercover operation and media/ law-enforcement responseTransgender activism, puberty blockers, and children’s medical ethicsCampus activism, social-justice culture, and the labeling of critics as “alt-right”Conspiracy thinking, media distrust, and political polarization (AIDS, 9/11, Vegas, etc.)

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