
Joe Rogan Experience #1314 - Charlamagne tha God & Andrew Schulz
Charlamagne tha God (guest), Joe Rogan (host), Andrew Schulz (guest), Andrew Schulz (guest), Andrew Schulz (guest), Charlamagne tha God (guest), Charlamagne tha God (guest), Charlamagne tha God (guest), Andrew Schulz (guest), Andrew Schulz (guest), Andrew Schulz (guest), Charlamagne tha God (guest), Charlamagne tha God (guest), Joe Rogan (host)
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Charlamagne tha God and Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan Experience #1314 - Charlamagne tha God & Andrew Schulz explores rogan, Charlamagne, Schulz dissect media, madness, and modern masculinity Joe Rogan, Charlamagne tha God, and Andrew Schulz spend three hours bouncing between media industry shifts, comedy, mental health, and how culture is changing around outrage and sexuality.
Rogan, Charlamagne, Schulz dissect media, madness, and modern masculinity
Joe Rogan, Charlamagne tha God, and Andrew Schulz spend three hours bouncing between media industry shifts, comedy, mental health, and how culture is changing around outrage and sexuality.
They contrast old-school radio and TV with podcasting and YouTube, talk candidly about careers, cancel culture, and the economics behind ticketing and data.
The conversation veers into UFOs, Bigfoot, drugs, parenting, crime, and trauma, often using dark or edgy humor to unpack serious themes like justice reform and mental health.
Throughout, they frame themselves as curious, flawed participants in a chaotic media ecosystem, trying to navigate influence responsibly while still pushing comedic boundaries.
Key Takeaways
Traditional media success is now inseparable from digital distribution.
Charlamagne explains that radio only survives by repackaging content as podcasts and YouTube clips; Rogan and Schulz highlight how platforms like YouTube can outperform Netflix or TV exposure for comedians.
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Cancel culture is far less absolute than it appears online.
They argue that most “canceled” figures (OJ, R. ...
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Owning your audience data is becoming as important as selling tickets.
Schulz breaks down how Ticketmaster/Live Nation capture fan emails and charge high fees, suggesting comics and creators need alternative ticketing that gives them direct access to their fans instead of renting that relationship.
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Publicly discussing anxiety and therapy helps normalize mental health care.
Charlamagne details panic attacks, therapy, and how success didn’t fix his anxiety, framing mental health treatment as essential for reducing violence, trauma cycles, and self-destructive behavior.
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Success without struggle can make the next generation fragile.
They worry about raising rich kids who lack adversity; Rogan emphasizes competitive sports and martial arts to teach losing and resilience, while Charlamagne confronts his daughter’s privilege and gratitude.
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Outrage fatigue is pushing audiences back toward common sense.
They cite reactions to LaVar Ball and Whoopi Goldberg debates as signs that many people are exhausted by over-policing language and are starting to reject manufactured outrage narratives.
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Purpose and service become central once financial survival is solved.
They point to Kim Kardashian’s prison reform work, Jon Stewart’s 9/11 advocacy, and their own platforms as examples of how, after “making it,” real fulfillment comes from helping others and using influence for something bigger.
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Notable Quotes
“You’re the last great radio host…and you’ll be the last famous radio host.”
— Andrew Schulz (to Charlamagne tha God)
“People forgive when they realize, ‘I’m not gonna slap the shit out of this person.’”
— Charlamagne tha God
“We’re in verbally abusive relationships with our smartphones.”
— Charlamagne tha God
“There’s no such thing as cancel culture no more. Cancel culture is absolute bullshit.”
— Charlamagne tha God
“Your true purpose in life is service to others.”
— Joe Rogan, paraphrasing Wayne Dyer and co-signing the idea
Questions Answered in This Episode
How much responsibility should creators with large platforms take for the downstream effects of their guests’ ideas and jokes?
Joe Rogan, Charlamagne tha God, and Andrew Schulz spend three hours bouncing between media industry shifts, comedy, mental health, and how culture is changing around outrage and sexuality.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Is there an ethical way for artists to reclaim control over their ticketing and audience data without losing access to key venues?
They contrast old-school radio and TV with podcasting and YouTube, talk candidly about careers, cancel culture, and the economics behind ticketing and data.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Where is the line between productive public calling-out and performative outrage that actually shuts down honest conversation?
The conversation veers into UFOs, Bigfoot, drugs, parenting, crime, and trauma, often using dark or edgy humor to unpack serious themes like justice reform and mental health.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
How can parents who grew up with struggle intentionally build resilience in children who grow up with comfort and wealth?
Throughout, they frame themselves as curious, flawed participants in a chaotic media ecosystem, trying to navigate influence responsibly while still pushing comedic boundaries.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
If therapy and mental health care became truly normalized and accessible, how might crime, addiction, and “cancelable” public meltdowns change over a generation?
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Transcript Preview
... videos. (gasps)
Boom, and we're live. Uh, ladies and gentlemen, Charlamagne, the God. My man, Andrew Schulz-
Yeah.
Thanks for being here. Thanks for-
Joe Rogan.
... setting this up.
Thank you for having me, sir.
Pleasure.
Thanks, guys.
My pleasure. I've been a fan of yours for a while. You, I think you're the last great radio host, and you will be the last famous radio host because I think radio is-
Yeah, don't.
... a dying thing. You're the last great one. You're the, you're the one who made it famous from radio. Who the fuck else?
Yeah.
In this era?
I mean, I, yeah, I think radio is, like, one of those, uh, one of those rare lanes where it's really not a lot of people who prosper in it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like, if you think about it, especially in, in the Black radio space. I mean, you've got the Tom Joiners, the Doug Banks, the Wendy Williams-
Yeah.
You know, so it's, it's rare in that lane, but I think, I think you've got people that have, have established good careers in radio, though.
Yeah, but in the past.
Oh, but that's a great question.
But in the past.
Who is the last one?
He's the last one. That's the Last Samurai.
You're the last person to become-
Ah, I think-
... famous from radio.
Nah.
100%. Last Samurai, 100%.
I gotta give-
Yeah!
I gotta give Bobby Bones. Bobby Bones.
Well, that's nice. I don't know who that is. (laughs)
(laughs)
(laughs)
It's, it's true.
Shots fired!
I know-
Shots fired!
I know who you are. Sorry, Bobby. No disrespect.
No, Bobby's my guy. He, he-
No disrespect. I'm sure he's great.
He's a nationally syndicated radio host for the... But he's on the country stage. He just won Amer- he won, uh, Dance with the Stars.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
I'm out of the loop.
Joe's like, "I don't give a shit."
I'm out of the loop with Dance with the Stars.
I know... I, I, I only know Bobby V as you talk about him.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, he's got two national, New York Times best-selling books. He's a... Yeah.
That's one of those things, though. It's like comedians. Like, you know, you just talk about a comic that everybody loves, and people are like, "I never heard of him."
Hmm.
Like, amongst comics, super respected.
He's the guy.
Yeah, yeah.
Bobby host, he host on Idol now.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, and we're around the same age, so I would have to give it... I would have to put him in that niche.
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