The Joe Rogan ExperienceJoe Rogan Experience #2041 - Steve Strope
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Hot rods, eyesight battles, and aging: Joe Rogan and Strope reflect
- Joe Rogan and custom car builder Steve Strope spend much of the conversation walking through Strope’s career, from building show‑winning muscle cars in borrowed spaces to running his Pure Vision shop and landing multiple Hot Rod magazine covers.
- They dive deep into specific builds—Rogan’s ’69 Nova, Strope’s Chargers, Road Runners, Mustangs, and other pro‑touring projects—unpacking the hidden design work, suspension choices, and aesthetic philosophy behind them.
- Strope also details a brutal, years‑long series of eye surgeries from glaucoma, cataracts, and repeated retinal detachments, discussing the fear of losing his remaining vision and the hope that stem cells or future tech might restore function.
- Along the way they riff on aging and time, stem‑cell life extension, Satan and immortality, rats, owls, hunting, LA vs. Texas culture, and what it really takes—years of grind and a good team—to turn passion for cars into a life’s work.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasPassion plus persistence can turn improvised beginnings into world‑class work.
Strope went from building cars in barns, tandem apartment garages, and borrowed driveways—covering neighbors’ cars with plastic at 2 a.m.—to running Pure Vision, collecting magazine covers, die‑cast licensing deals, and OEM design awards.
Great builds hide complexity under apparent simplicity.
Many of his cars, including Rogan’s Nova and the GTXR, look almost stock at a glance but contain re‑engineered sheet metal, custom grilles, hidden suspension tricks, paddle‑shifted automatics, and Easter‑egg design cues that only careful observers catch.
Serious craftsmanship is a team sport, not a solo performance.
Strope repeatedly credits his painters, interior craftsmen, fabricators, and long‑time employees for pulling off back‑to‑back SEMA “Car of the Show” wins and ambitious timelines; talent plus a reliable crew is what makes extreme projects possible.
Health maintenance is easier than health recovery.
His graphic story of glaucoma, multiple retinal surgeries, pressure mismanagement, and nearly losing both eyes underscores how much harder it is to claw back function than to preserve it—driving home Rogan’s point about staying “on top of everything” as you age.
Emerging regenerative medicine offers hope but comes with unknowns.
They discuss stem‑cell research, organ bioprinting, experimental eye work, and 120‑year lifespans, balancing excitement about future fixes for things like retinal damage with skepticism about side effects, identity, and extended working lives.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesYou will never feel this level of happiness if you don’t go for something in your own life.
— Israel Adesanya (clip Rogan plays at the end)
Our car set is the Easter egg hunt. You keep coming back and finding, ‘I didn’t even see that.’
— Steve Strope
You’ve got the wrong car if you don’t park it, walk away, and turn around to look at it again.
— Steve Strope
I’m so fortunate that I wake up at three in the morning with ideas and have people around me who will actually help me make them real.
— Steve Strope
Those cars to me are like how someone wants to buy a Van Gogh. It’s art, but it’s functional art.
— Joe Rogan
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