Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - JRE 520 Week in Review Arsenio Hall, Duncan Trussell, Protect Ya Neck
Episode Date: April 12, 2026In this week's Joe Rogan Experience review, I break down all three episodes from the April 8 to April 10, 2026 run: Arsenio Hall, Duncan Trussell, and JRE MMA Show #177 Protect Ya Neck. I get into why... the Arsenio Hall episode felt like classic Joe with a real entertainment legend, how Duncan Trussell turned the podcast into a wild conversation about AI, propaganda, religion, psychedelics, and modern consciousness, and why Protect Ya Neck continues to be one of the most fun recurring formats in the Rogan universe. I also cover the online reaction, the strongest moments from each conversation, the biggest themes across the week, and which episode felt the most shareable. If you want a smart, entertaining JRE week in review with deeper analysis and clear takeaways, this is the one. For more Rogan exclusives support us on Patreon patreon.com/JREReview www.JREreview.com For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Please email us here with any suggestions, comments and questions for future shows.. Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Quick Rogan review of the week.
A bit of a lighter week for Joe, just three episodes and really kind of technically two.
And then the MMA show, which a lot of people do skip.
I know they are not the most downloaded episodes.
They're more of just kind of a favorite for Joe.
So really, yeah, just a two-episode week in a lot of ways.
I mean, you can count it as that.
So a lighter.
Rogan Weeks, some interesting episodes, though.
I do have to say, before we get started, let's go into a kind of common question that I keep getting.
Now, for fans of the show that listen to the review shows, you may also know that there has been another review show that exists alongside mine.
that isn't called the Joe Rogan Experience Review, but it's called, was called the Joe Rogan
Experience Experience. And they're a bunch of three Canadian guys, and they've been doing
the show, their show for many years, where they review Rogan. They do it once a week,
and they do multiple hours, like a three-hour kind of breakdown where they break all the
episodes down. They have quite a different style to how I do it, but in their own way, you know,
they do a good job, kind of dissecting things, and they have their own loyal following.
And recently, they've mixed their show up and kind of rebranded.
And they've changed the name of their show.
And, you know, in a way, kind of stepped away from reviewing Rogan episodes and just made a change.
And one question that I keep getting is, when am I going to do something similar?
And this question comes in not in relation to their show, but just as a separate question.
Like when will I start doing something just unrelated to Rogan and do something myself?
So, yeah, something I've been thinking about.
And to be honest, I don't really have an answer for it.
I like reviewing Rogan stuff.
I like talking about that world.
I'm not really too keen into just going into talking about current events or what's going on in the world.
Things like that kind of depress me.
If anything, I would go into Rogan-esque stuff, which is things about just kind of, you know, doing hard things, organizing your life, interesting things to learn, leveling up, stuff like that.
So there could be an angle there.
stay tuned we'll see if i pick something and travel down that way but that's as close as i've got
and that's about as best of an answer as you're going to get at this time um jump it into the
reviews we have arsinio hall is the first review of the week um episode 2480 interesting to have
Arsenio on. He's one of those guests who brings instant cultural memory with him before the
conversation even starts. The official episode description frames him as a comedian, producer,
writer, actor. You know, we remember him from coming to America with the obvious landmarks
being the Orsiniro Hors Show and Harlem Knights. And while the episode also serves,
as part of the push around his new memoir that, you know, he was talking about.
This was one of those Jerry episodes where the biggest strength was not some explosive news cycle angle,
but the fact that Joe had a guest with enough real history to keep the whole thing moving.
The conversation opened with a reflective tone,
then gradually settled into stories about old Hollywood, comedy,
music, fame, career timing, and the mechanics of late-night television, which he was a big part of.
One of the strongest stretches was Orsiniou explaining how stiff old late-night used to feel
and how intentional he was about breaking that format, including getting rid of the desk and changing
the energy in the room. That part matters because it reminds you Orsinio was not just a host
who got lucky. He was...
more of a format disruptor, in a sense. The other thing that worked here was that Arsenio had the right
mix of veteran confidence and looseness. He could talk the craft, but he could also drift into
funny memory lane territory without sounding canned. The Prince run was especially good, the stories
about how revolutionary Prince was, how badly record contracts,
wrapped artists, and that great bit about Prince sending him a suit with no ass in it.
That is exactly the kind of specific showbiz insanity that gives Rogan episodes real replay value.
This is what Jerry sounds like when Joe has a guest from actual entertainment history instead of just current internet heat.
Arsenio brought stories, timing, perspective, and a reality.
real sense of machinery behind fame. The late night section is the heart of the episode because it
reveals that Arsenio was not just part of a cultural moment. He helped reshape it. Then the print
stories and the old industry reflections gave it texture. This was less about controversy and more
about craftsmanship, era change and charisma. That made it feel old school, but in a good way.
The online feel and vibe for this, the reaction was warm right out of the gate.
Reddit comments were basically saying this was a great guest choice,
and one popular reaction called it Old Joe on full display,
which is something I think a lot of fans have been yearning for,
and said that Arsenio appearance hit a nostalgic button hard.
That feels accurate to me.
The general vibe was relief.
People liked hearing Joe in a mode where he was engaged, curious,
and not hijacking the whole show with pet obsessions every five minutes.
One of the early Reddit reactions summed up the anticipation well
by calling Arsenio a fucking meatball right down the middle.
I like that.
Meaning a guess that should be easy for Joe to hit straight out of the park.
Another joke that Joe saying, I don't know what's coming out of my mouth right now, should become the new slogan for the show.
This is funny because it also captures why the episode worked.
It had looseness without becoming a mess.
Overall rating for this episode was high across the board at 8.8 out of 10.
This was not some world-changing episode, but it was one of the most pleasant lessons of the week for the week.
sure. It had pace, warmth, humour, stories and enough cultural depth to feel worthwhile from the
beginning to the end. The only thing keeping it from true top-tier territory is that it did not
really produce one huge forgettable segment beyond the overall vibe. Still, this is the kind of
booking that reminds you how strong Jerry can be when it leans into legacy entertainers with real mileage.
Up next, we have classic legend, the Duncan Trussell.
Episode 2481, coming in, of course, wearing the NASA uniforms, you know, in honor of the
Artemis II mission.
And Duncan, I don't even know how many times Duncan's been on, but of course Duncan
stand-up comic, voice actor, you know, made the Duncan Trussell Family Hour and got a bunch of
dates coming up at Zanies that he was pushing. This one was the most sprawling episode of the
week by far. If Arsenio was the clean nostalgic lesson, Duncan was the cosmic junk draw.
The conversation ranged across propaganda, war narratives, religion, AI, media distortion, UFO talk, of course, psychedelics definitely, and mythic thinking.
And the feeling that modern reality is getting more manipulated and less trustworthy.
Some of the index topics pulled out of the listeners included the illusion of truth in government propaganda,
the future of AI and global focus,
humanity and AI's reflection,
exploring black holes in the universe,
and the overview effect and psychedelic use.
That is a hilariously broad map, of course,
but it really does describe the episode.
There was a lot going on.
The AI material is where the episode got most interest, really.
There is a line in the transcript where Duncan asked,
What is AI, what image is AI made in in the image of man?
That is classic Duncan because it takes a tech discussion and suddenly reframes it as theology, mythology, and self-recognition all at once.
The propaganda material also landed because both he and Joe were circling the same thesis.
Institutions lie.
attention is manipulated, and the modern person is increasingly trapped inside engineered narratives.
Whether you agree with every implication or not, the episode had an actual theme instead of just random banter.
Duncan still gives Joe permission to be weird, expansive, and philosophical, but he also drags the show into more poetic register than most guests can.
That's always Duncan's strength.
This episode was basically a three-hour argument that we are living through an age of spiritual confusion disguised as information overload.
AI is not just software in this conversation.
It becomes a mirror.
Propaganda is not just politics.
It becomes a condition of consciousness.
Psychedelics are not just trip stories.
They become a way of talking about scale, war and.
humanity. This is not a clean, disciplined episode, but it is a rich one. The online feel and vibe
overall, Duncan looked more fragmented than Arsenio, but that is normal for him. The Reddit thread
itself reads more like a map of the episode than a verdict, with people keying in on specific topics
and moments rather than just saying great episode or terrible episode. That usually means the
listen was dense enough to create multiple entry points. It did not hit with the same easy
nostalgia factor as Arsenio, but it seems to have landed as substantial idea-heavy conversation.
The most revealing thing about the reaction is not one killer joke or one angry backlash
line. It is the topic spread itself. When your community indexing of an episode includes
propaganda, cults, AI, black holes, UFOs, and Epstein files. You are either listening to a mess
or to a very specific kind of Rogan Duncan fever dream. In this case, it was more of the latter.
Again, episode rating, this week for this one, high also, 8.6 out of 10. Duncan almost always
scores high because anyone that sees Duncan come on and is a Rogan fan immediately jumps on it,
you know what to expect. It's always a good ride. It's a good time. This was probably the most
intellectually textured episode of the week, but also the least disciplined. There is a version
of this conversation that could have been even sharper with more structure. Still, Duncan brings
out something in Joe that many guests do not. Curiosity without dead air and strangeness without
total collapse. If you like Idea Soup with some soul in it, this was your episode. Up next,
protect your neck, MMA show 177. This one featured the usual multi-man MMMA chaos energy
with Joe joined by John, Rallo, Matt, Sarah, and Din Thomas.
This was the loosest and funniest listen of the week,
but also more substantial than these panel episodes sometimes get credit for.
They covered fight scoring, fight evaluation, jujitsu hierarchy,
glove design, upcoming cards, White House event, insanity,
and the external question of how much the current judging system
actually rewards what matters in MMA.
There is a great stretch where they basically argue that the scoring system is broken
because it was borrowed from boxing
and does not fully account for the different layers of MMA damage and control.
Later in the episode, they get into the idea that submission threats
should matter more than just position or control,
especially in reference to Charles Alvara.
Those are the kinds of details hardcore fans love
because they are not just surface level hype.
Again, with MMA ones,
if you're not a big MMA episode watching,
listening individual,
you're not going to find it that interesting.
If you are a UFC fan or just into Jiu-Jitsu and love fighting,
you're going to nerd out on this episode.
And again, the panel is great.
Matt Sera is super smart.
For people that love that sort of talk,
The episode rating was high. It was 8.7, but easily skippable if this isn't your universe,
nothing new there. Not a massive headline episode, but very strong format episode. Good chemistry,
enough technical content, enough laughter, and just enough insanity with the White House fight card material to make it memorable.
Overall, like I said, a fairly short week. Verdict, total for the week.
Online scored it pretty high. 8.7.
This was a quietly strong three-episode week.
Arsenio gave you warmth and real entertainment history.
Duncan gave you sprawling cosmic paranoia with enough heart to keep it all compelling.
Protect Your Neck gave you informed nonsense in the best possible way.
No single episode totally detonated the internet,
but the set was a whole felt balanced.
and somewhat replayable.
This is often better.
Some weeks are about one huge guest.
This week was just kind of a broad range.
Hope you enjoyed that.
Look out for our bigger breakdown of the week.
Don't know what we're going to do.
Maybe Arsenio, maybe Duncan.
We'll see. Talk to you guys later.
