
Joe Rogan Experience #1568 - Tom Green
Tom Green (guest), Narrator, Joe Rogan (host), Narrator, Narrator
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Tom Green and Narrator, Joe Rogan Experience #1568 - Tom Green explores tom Green’s Van-Life Odyssey, Wilderness Reflections, And Podcast Origins Joe Rogan and Tom Green spend a long-form, freewheeling conversation talking about Tom’s new life traveling alone in a solar‑powered van with his rescue dog, Charlie, camping off‑grid across the American Southwest. They dig into the practical side of van life—gear, solar and battery setups, food, safety, and getting stuck in the Mojave—as well as the psychological side: solitude, fear, and how isolation changes your thinking.
Tom Green’s Van-Life Odyssey, Wilderness Reflections, And Podcast Origins
Joe Rogan and Tom Green spend a long-form, freewheeling conversation talking about Tom’s new life traveling alone in a solar‑powered van with his rescue dog, Charlie, camping off‑grid across the American Southwest. They dig into the practical side of van life—gear, solar and battery setups, food, safety, and getting stuck in the Mojave—as well as the psychological side: solitude, fear, and how isolation changes your thinking.
The discussion ranges into hunting, fishing, ancient Native American ruins, ghost towns, and the aesthetics of filming and photographing remote landscapes, with Tom using drones and mobile studio gear to create music, podcasts, and videos from the road. They also reflect on health, COVID fears, aging, alcohol and drugs, and how to take better care of one’s body while living rough.
A significant thread is media and creativity: Tom’s pioneering early‑2000s internet talk show, how it directly influenced Rogan’s podcast, and how both men escaped traditional TV constraints to build their own platforms. They finish by talking about polarization in politics, free speech, empathy, and the importance of not treating America as two opposing sides but as one country of individuals.
Throughout, the tone is equal parts nostalgic, technical, philosophical, and intoxicated; it’s as much about two veteran comics appreciating each other’s impact as it is about the nuts and bolts of off‑grid living and modern media.
Key Takeaways
Off-grid van life is viable with modern solar and battery tech.
Green’s van uses roof-mounted solar panels feeding high-capacity Battle Born batteries, powering computers, cameras, audio gear, a refrigerator, and lights—allowing him to stay in remote BLM and national forest land for days, limited mainly by food and water rather than electricity.
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Planning and redundancy are critical for safe, flexible overland travel.
Tom keeps his fuel tank above three-quarters, uses apps to locate BLM/Crown land and fire roads, carries recovery options (AAA, tools), insulation for cold nights, propane for cooking and boiling water, and basic survival items like bear spray, a compass, and a shotgun for worst-case scenarios.
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Solitary time in nature forces personal inventory and can be psychologically beneficial.
Days without cell service, waking with the sunrise, long solo hikes, and nights surrounded by coyotes have made Tom realize he handles being alone better than expected and pushed him to reassess his phone addiction, life choices, and what genuinely makes him happy.
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Content creation can be fully mobile if you design for constraints.
Tom built a compact, road-case-based studio under his van bed with wired-in mics, cameras, and a pull-out table, plus drones and portable instruments, letting him podcast, score his own videos, and record music entirely from remote locations without sacrificing production quality.
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Health, age, and diet matter more when you’re living rough and worried about illness.
Green’s high COVID anxiety (due in part to past cancer) leads him to avoid indoor stores and rely too heavily on canned and shelf-stable foods; Rogan presses him about fresh vegetables, vitamins, and basic exercise, underscoring that off-grid living magnifies the impact of every health choice.
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Early adoption and independence in media can pay off long term.
Tom’s early-2000s house-based internet show—with servers, cables, and live calls—directly inspired Rogan’s belief that you could bypass networks and build your own long-form show. ...
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Refusing rigid political “sides” can reduce stress and increase honesty.
Rogan argues that seeing America as just red vs. ...
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Notable Quotes
“Every day I get up and go, ‘What the fuck am I doing?’”
— Tom Green
“If you’re like sitting around at home right now, and you’re bored and you’re angry about shit… you can just get in your car and drive out to these beautiful places.”
— Tom Green
“You were one of the reasons why I do this… When I went to your house and you had these wires going through your living room, I thought, ‘Look what Tom Green did. This is amazing.’”
— Joe Rogan
“We don’t have two sides. I think it’s a lie. I think we have America.”
— Joe Rogan
“I’m flying the flag. I’m very proud to be an American… Part of what I’m doing is just to show how much there is to celebrate in this country. It’s beautiful out there.”
— Tom Green
Questions Answered in This Episode
How much of Tom Green’s positive experience with solitude is due to his personality versus the specific way he structured his van life (gear, creative projects, dog, etc.)?
Joe Rogan and Tom Green spend a long-form, freewheeling conversation talking about Tom’s new life traveling alone in a solar‑powered van with his rescue dog, Charlie, camping off‑grid across the American Southwest. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
What ethical lines should self-described non-hunters like Tom consider before transitioning from simply carrying a shotgun for ‘bear country’ protection to actually hunting and eating what they kill?
The discussion ranges into hunting, fishing, ancient Native American ruins, ghost towns, and the aesthetics of filming and photographing remote landscapes, with Tom using drones and mobile studio gear to create music, podcasts, and videos from the road. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
In what ways did traditional television gatekeeping delay or distort the emergence of long-form, authentic conversations like Rogan’s and Green’s, and what new ‘gatekeepers’ might be emerging today on digital platforms?
A significant thread is media and creativity: Tom’s pioneering early‑2000s internet talk show, how it directly influenced Rogan’s podcast, and how both men escaped traditional TV constraints to build their own platforms. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
How could cities meaningfully address homelessness so that people living in tents under bridges see a clear, realistic path that’s more attractive than remaining on the street?
Throughout, the tone is equal parts nostalgic, technical, philosophical, and intoxicated; it’s as much about two veteran comics appreciating each other’s impact as it is about the nuts and bolts of off‑grid living and modern media.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
If more Americans openly rejected rigid left/right identities the way Rogan describes, what practical changes might we see in media coverage, elections, and day-to-day interactions between neighbors?
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Transcript Preview
(drumming) Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night. All day. (rock music) Hello eccentric character known as-
(laughs)
... Tom Green.
Joe, how are you? Thank you.
You're, you're the wild man living in a van now.
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
You, you are that eccentric character. You go from being a television and movie star-
Mm-hmm.
... to being a wild man-
Uh-huh.
... traveling the land-
Uh-huh.
... with your vagabond dog-
Yep.
... that you got from another country.
Yeah, yeah.
She's a rescue from the Bahamas?
Yeah, Charlie, yeah, she's a rescue-
She's-
... from the Bahamas, yeah.
... she's goddamn adorable-
Yeah.
... by the way.
Yeah.
I love her.
Yeah, she's beautiful. I'll show, I'll show everyone around.
And you are this eccentric character now. Look at you.
I guess so. I feel like maybe ... I feel like in some ways what I'm doing right now is the most normal thing I've done in my life, but it is actually kinda crazy too.
It's, it's crazy compared to people, but I think it fits you l- like a glove. I really do.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Well, you know, I like going out into the wilderness, I always have.
Yeah.
And I've been out in this van that I just got, which is amazing, and I'm going pretty hard with it. Like I-
Is this the first time you've been tested since you got tested the last time on my show?
I got tested one time between, uh, but that's a- another interesting story. But, uh-
Let's hear it. What happened?
Uh, well, my ex-wife asked me to come on her talk show, and I hadn't talked to her in 15 years.
Oh.
You know?
Drew?
Drew, yeah. So-
Oh.
And so, I thought, "Well, that's, that's-"
Was that a trap?
Uh, it was nice, it was nice.
Did you feel, did you get nervous?
It was nice, it was nice. It was nice.
Oh.
We had a good time.
That's cool.
And, uh, but I had to get tested to do the show.
Oh.
And, uh, but it was interesting 'cause, you know, I mean, it was very sort of, uh, interesting thing 'cause, you know, uh, we hadn't talked in 15 years.
At all?
At all.
Mm-hmm.
And, uh, and then, uh, you know, all of a sudden, uh, you know, got a call from her saying, "You wanna come and do the new show?" And her show's, her new show's really pretty wacky, you know, like, it's, she's, she's, she's getting really kinda-
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