The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #1886 - Robert Kelly

Joe Rogan and Robert Kelly on robert Kelly, Recovery, Craft, Wilderness, And Comedy’s DIY Revolution.

Joe RoganhostRobert KellyguestRobert Kellyguest
Jun 27, 20243h 5m
Craftsmanship, custom gear, and appreciation for handmade objects (glasses, tables, watches, knives)Bushcraft, camping stories, wildlife encounters, and the appeal/danger of the wildernessStand‑up comedy career arcs, bombing, the Boston scene, and DIY distributionLouis C.K., Andrew Schulz, and the shift away from traditional entertainment gatekeepersRobert Kelly’s history with addiction, juvenile jail, rehab, and long‑term sobrietyWeight, food addiction, gastric sleeve surgery, and building sustainable health habitsTechnology’s future: VR, metaverse, AI/VR porn, and the risk of retreating from real life

In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Narrator and Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan Experience #1886 - Robert Kelly explores robert Kelly, Recovery, Craft, Wilderness, And Comedy’s DIY Revolution Joe Rogan and Robert Kelly spend a wide‑ranging conversation moving from craftsmanship—custom glasses, handmade tables, watches and knives—to wilderness skills, camping misadventures, and the thrill and danger of nature.

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Robert Kelly, Recovery, Craft, Wilderness, And Comedy’s DIY Revolution

  1. Joe Rogan and Robert Kelly spend a wide‑ranging conversation moving from craftsmanship—custom glasses, handmade tables, watches and knives—to wilderness skills, camping misadventures, and the thrill and danger of nature.
  2. They dive deep into stand‑up comedy’s evolution: bombing in front of 14,000 people, the Boston scene, Louis C.K.’s and Andrew Schulz’s self‑distribution models, and how comics are bypassing traditional gatekeepers.
  3. Kelly shares a raw personal history of childhood abuse, juvenile jail, addiction, and rehab, explaining how recovery, gratitude, and now weight‑loss surgery radically changed his life, health, and outlook.
  4. The episode weaves in big‑picture themes—technology, VR, AI porn, societal fragility, nuclear war worries—with very grounded stories about family dinners, tiny houses, hunting, and what real success actually looks like.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

7 ideas

Custom, well‑crafted objects can add meaning and longevity to everyday life.

From bespoke East Village glasses to hand‑carved tables and mechanical watches, both emphasize that craftsmanship and uniqueness create emotional connection and a sense of story that mass‑produced items rarely offer.

Bushcraft and time in the wild reset perspective and build real resilience.

Their camping and hunting stories—coyotes at night, badgers, bears, tiny houses in the woods—show how discomfort, fear, and nature’s unpredictability create bonding experiences and a much‑needed mental ‘reset’ from modern life.

Comedy’s power now lies in bypassing gatekeepers through direct distribution.

Louis C.K. producing and hosting Kelly’s special on his own site, and Schulz releasing material on YouTube after streamer pushback, illustrate how comics can retain creative freedom, own their work, and still reach massive audiences.

Recovery and gratitude practices can fundamentally change life trajectories.

Kelly’s journey from juvenile jail and addiction to decades of sobriety, family life, and a daily gratitude routine underlines how structured help, supportive mentors, and intentional mindset shifts can break destructive cycles.

For some people, medical interventions like gastric sleeve are life‑saving tools, not shortcuts.

After years at 350 pounds and failed attempts to lose weight, Kelly used surgery as a ‘stomach rehab,’ then built consistent habits—walking, lifting, better diet—to eliminate sleep apnea and chronic pain and regain functional freedom.

Real success is more about relationships and quality of life than fame.

Both argue that having a family you love, real friends, a modest home, and the freedom to do stand‑up is ‘making it,’ and that chasing status alone often leaves people isolated, resentful, and hollow despite career wins.

Emerging tech (VR, AI, Neuralink) will transform entertainment and intimacy—and poses real risks.

With VR comedy shows, UFC events, virtual movie theaters and AI/VR porn already here, they foresee a near‑future ‘Matrix’ where people can attend any event or sexual scenario from home, raising questions about addiction, isolation, and what happens when virtual life becomes more appealing than reality.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

They made comedy punk rock again. They did the wrong thing, ’cause now we’re just gonna go do it ourselves.

Robert Kelly

What we got in it to do is to become Sam Kinison. We got in it to become those comics we would wanna pay to see.

Joe Rogan

I was 350 pounds. I was bigger than any heavyweight champion of the world… and I’ve got this beautiful son. My son’s gonna not have a dad because of pizza.

Robert Kelly

Success is: I have a house, I got a wife, I got a son, I got two cars. From talking shit. I did it. Whatever else is gravy.

Robert Kelly

Most things like that—big, giant, crazy things—are very overrated. They’re not worth the effort it takes to acquire them, and you don’t get the level of satisfaction you think you would.

Joe Rogan

QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE

5 questions

How much of comedy’s future do you think will live on independent platforms like louisck.com and YouTube versus traditional streamers?

Joe Rogan and Robert Kelly spend a wide‑ranging conversation moving from craftsmanship—custom glasses, handmade tables, watches and knives—to wilderness skills, camping misadventures, and the thrill and danger of nature.

Where should society draw the line between using medical interventions like gastric sleeve as tools versus seeing them as ‘easy outs’?

They dive deep into stand‑up comedy’s evolution: bombing in front of 14,000 people, the Boston scene, Louis C.K.’s and Andrew Schulz’s self‑distribution models, and how comics are bypassing traditional gatekeepers.

If VR and AI porn become hyper‑real and personalized, how do we protect real‑world relationships and mental health?

Kelly shares a raw personal history of childhood abuse, juvenile jail, addiction, and rehab, explaining how recovery, gratitude, and now weight‑loss surgery radically changed his life, health, and outlook.

What concrete skills—like hunting, bushcraft, or basic repairs—do you think more people should learn to be less fragile in crises?

The episode weaves in big‑picture themes—technology, VR, AI porn, societal fragility, nuclear war worries—with very grounded stories about family dinners, tiny houses, hunting, and what real success actually looks like.

In your own life, how do you distinguish between ‘enough’ and ‘never enough’ when it comes to success and material goals?

EVERY SPOKEN WORD

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