The Joe Rogan ExperienceJoe Rogan Experience #2339 - Luis J. Gomez & Big Jay Oakerson
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Rogan, Gomez, Oakerson riff on drugs, danger, comedy, and culture
- Joe Rogan hosts comedians Luis J. Gomez and Big Jay Oakerson for a long-form hang that jumps from hormone therapy, weight loss drugs, and hair treatments to AI deepfakes, dangerous protests, and police overreach.
- They swap dark personal stories, including Gomez’s father’s murder, autoerotic deaths, mental illness, and near‑misses with death, while constantly undercutting everything with aggressive, offensive humor.
- The trio dissect the business and culture of standup—podcasts, Skankfest, Kill Tony, clubs vs. arenas, and how social media and censorship have reshaped careers—while taking shots at media, politics, cops, and academic gatekeepers.
- Throughout, the conversation blends absurd bits (electric car ‘dock sluts,’ gladiator trivia, Atlantis theories) with surprisingly sincere reflections on mental health, cancel culture, immigration, and what it means to build your own platform.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasPerformance drugs without monitoring is reckless, even if normalized in comedy circles.
The guys joke about taking testosterone, peptides, Ozempic-style drugs, and hair treatments without proper blood work, but Rogan repeatedly stresses that real doctors should be tracking side effects like blood thickness, mood changes, and hormonal crashes.
Electric vehicles are great tech with serious real‑world tradeoffs.
Rogan loves his Teslas’ reliability and self‑driving capabilities, but he and the comics worry about charging times, safety for lone women at chargers, cold-weather failures, and catastrophic battery fires on ships—highlighting how convenience clashes with infrastructure and risk.
Modern protests can quickly slide into attempted murder and opportunistic crime.
They describe bricks thrown off overpasses, cops being targeted, and reporters shot with rubber bullets, while also acknowledging looting frenzies and paid protesters—arguing that genuine grievances get drowned out by chaos and thrill‑seekers.
Jokes about real people have real collateral damage, especially in the internet age.
Gomez admits he’s had to apologize to families of disabled kids he mocked on Skanks; Rogan regrets calling out an archeologist with stage‑four cancer, realizing that casual insults to millions of listeners can be cruel and counterproductive.
Owning your platform is now the safest way to do transgressive comedy.
They credit Opie & Anthony and Stern as precursors but emphasize that Legion of Skanks, Skankfest, Story Wars, and Kill Tony survive because they control distribution, expect offense, and cultivate audiences who actively seek that edge.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesIf my father lived, I’d probably still live in Paterson, New Jersey. I’d have a shit life. My father was a drug dealer and a pimp.
— Luis J. Gomez
You guys are on the right course. They’re early on the war of the machines… you should probably start killing robots.
— Joe Rogan
I always describe Kurt [Metzger]: he’s the first person I’ve seen where there’s a price of genius. His mind works in such a way, but when you’re not talking to him, it’s just formulas going through.
— Big Jay Oakerson
The whole idea [of the Mothership] is you want to develop new talent… This business is about being likable and getting people to wanna watch you succeed.
— Joe Rogan
We started Legion of Skanks pretty early, not thinking anything would happen. Calling it ‘the most offensive podcast on Earth’ is probably why we’ve never gotten in trouble—if you listen, you know exactly what you’re gonna get.
— Luis J. Gomez
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