The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Rogan Experience #2342 - Jim Norton

Joe Rogan and Jim Norton on jim Norton and Joe Rogan Tackle Shame, Censorship, Sex, and Sanity Online.

Jim NortonguestJoe Roganhost
Jun 25, 20252h 55m
The evolution of shock radio (Opie & Anthony) into modern podcasting formatsPersonal shame, self‑image, and watching/criticizing one’s own workAI, social media, censorship, and political bias in tech and news mediaExtreme online content (porn, violence, beheadings) and psychological impactSexual compulsivity, fetishes, privacy invasions, and public shamingHealth, aging, injuries, diet (especially U.S. bread and inflammation), and supplementsFame, stalkers, and the psychological quirks of ultra‑high achievers and celebrities

In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Narrator and Narrator, Joe Rogan Experience #2342 - Jim Norton explores jim Norton and Joe Rogan Tackle Shame, Censorship, Sex, and Sanity Online Joe Rogan and Jim Norton have a long, free‑wheeling conversation that jumps from comedy and self‑loathing to censorship, social media, AI, and sex and shame. They reminisce about the chaotic Opie & Anthony days, how that format became the blueprint for modern podcasts, and how Norton's new standup special and podcast fit into the current landscape. The pair dig into political bias in media and tech, platform censorship of topics like Hunter Biden and election content, and how lawfare against Trump sets dangerous precedents for everyone. Threaded through are brutally honest discussions about porn, sex addiction, humiliation fetishes, stalkers, aging bodies, diet, and the mental health impact of social media and violent content online.

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Jim Norton and Joe Rogan Tackle Shame, Censorship, Sex, and Sanity Online

  1. Joe Rogan and Jim Norton have a long, free‑wheeling conversation that jumps from comedy and self‑loathing to censorship, social media, AI, and sex and shame. They reminisce about the chaotic Opie & Anthony days, how that format became the blueprint for modern podcasts, and how Norton's new standup special and podcast fit into the current landscape. The pair dig into political bias in media and tech, platform censorship of topics like Hunter Biden and election content, and how lawfare against Trump sets dangerous precedents for everyone. Threaded through are brutally honest discussions about porn, sex addiction, humiliation fetishes, stalkers, aging bodies, diet, and the mental health impact of social media and violent content online.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

7 ideas

Create your own distribution rather than relying on legacy media.

Norton describes losing his SiriusXM show after 20 years and immediately spinning up a YouTube podcast and self‑released special, illustrating how comics and creators need independent platforms to survive changing corporate priorities.

Too much feedback—positive or negative—can quietly damage your mental health.

Both explain why they avoid reading comments: chasing praise is as unhealthy as obsessing over criticism, and it distorts your sense of self and your work.

Defend free speech and privacy even for people you dislike.

They argue that cheering when enemies are censored or exposed (e.g., Donald Sterling tapes, Hunter Biden leaks, platform bans) erodes norms that eventually can and will be used against your own side.

Modern social media and news algorithms reward outrage and distortion.

Rogan points out how mainstream outlets mischaracterize him as “far right” and how platforms suppressed the Hunter Biden laptop story, showing that engagement incentives and political alliances often trump truth.

Highly processed American food—especially bread—likely worsens inflammation and mood.

They discuss how U.S. flour is stripped, bleached, bromated, and doused in glyphosate, contrasting it with European bread and noting how dietary changes and supplements (vitamin D, C, creatine, nootropics) can markedly improve how you feel.

Extreme online content desensitizes you and can quietly raise anxiety.

Norton candidly describes watching beheadings and burnings “before bed” on gore sites until he realized it was warping his emotions, while Rogan admits his own algorithm is flooded with violent clips from years of sharing them with friends.

Genuine human contact defuses cartoonish hatred in a way online debate cannot.

Both note how meeting people like George Santos, Lauren Boebert, or even former Klan members (via Darrell Davis’ work) makes it harder to sustain one‑dimensional caricatures, highlighting the power of in‑person conversation over abstract online enemies.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

“Too much feedback is bad for you. You should be shying away from feedback.”

Jim Norton

“The most frustrating thing was seeing it on CNN. This thing I thought was the news forever—now I know you’re not accurate at all.”

Joe Rogan

“You’re not a big free speech warrior if you only raise a flag for people who agree with you.”

Jim Norton

“We have all the information, but it’s still got guardrails on it.”

Joe Rogan

“Everyone in the country thinks they’re a free speech absolutist. They’re not.”

Jim Norton

QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE

5 questions

How much responsibility should platforms and news outlets bear when they censor or down‑rank politically inconvenient but true stories?

Joe Rogan and Jim Norton have a long, free‑wheeling conversation that jumps from comedy and self‑loathing to censorship, social media, AI, and sex and shame. They reminisce about the chaotic Opie & Anthony days, how that format became the blueprint for modern podcasts, and how Norton's new standup special and podcast fit into the current landscape. The pair dig into political bias in media and tech, platform censorship of topics like Hunter Biden and election content, and how lawfare against Trump sets dangerous precedents for everyone. Threaded through are brutally honest discussions about porn, sex addiction, humiliation fetishes, stalkers, aging bodies, diet, and the mental health impact of social media and violent content online.

At what point does consuming violent or extreme content online stop being curiosity and start becoming self‑harm?

Is it possible to design AI and recommendation algorithms that don’t amplify outrage and tribalism, or is that baked into engagement‑based business models?

How can comedians and other creators balance financial security from big platforms with the need for genuine creative autonomy and uncensored expression?

What practical steps can an average person take—dietary, digital, or social—to reduce anxiety and shame in an environment saturated with surveillance, judgment, and performative outrage?

EVERY SPOKEN WORD

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