So, we're about 20 minutes into a live podcast and Tom has made the following claims.
1. Aliens are for sure real
2. There is a global cabal of world bankers that has co-opted the CIA and every other intelligence agency on the planet
3. This cabal, upon learning that Tom reads lots of books about aliens, contacted him through people in NASA, so that he can act as their PR department. BECAUSE
4. This agency, which has created prototype spaceship engine that sounds a lot like Star Trek, is unable to do their own media production.
He is also talking fast and is very sniffly. I'm sure these things are not related.
My buddy sent me the link 5 minutes ago. Usually Joe's non-comedian guests speak about really interesting things and Joe spends 2 hours acting like he's following what they're saying. Watching Joe's approach with someone like Tom DeLonge, on the other hand, is hilarious and refreshing: he doesnt call bullshit to Tom's face, instead he keeps spurring him on to find out what else he can pull out. "I once met with a retired 4-star general who was both director of the CIA and NSA. I won't say his name." "Michael Hayden?" "...No..."
You should hear Tom Segura and Kreischer complaining about hot yoga on Your Mom's House. The only valid conspiracy here is that Joe never quit weed for sober October.
Dude's been a nutcase for a long time. I actually think it's part of the reason Blink kicked him out after they got back together from their "Hiatus".
Now it's at $1.8 million. Guess his Joe Rogan Experience appearance really payed off. One of my friends posted this to his Facebook earlier today: Me, though, I just think a lot of people are quite stupid. Could be a bit of both, though.I'm starting to think that there must be Kickstarter financing companies - companies that dump a bunch of money into a Kickstarter, to give the campaign an appearance of legitimacy and viral popularity, and once the campaign is funded and complete, that money is returned, plus interest, to the financing company. Its the only logical explanation of the fact that there are hundreds to thousands of absolutely idiotic Kickstarter products that exceed their funding goals by like 300% within days. I constantly see products that have zero press coverage and/or social media buzz, but inexplicably get $500,000 dollars of funding in 2 days for ... a seat cushion... or flavored tea bags.... or jeans.