StarTalk Radio - The Joe Rogan Experience
Episode Date: October 5, 2013It’s a different kind of StarTalk as Neil deGrasse Tyson interviews Joe Rogan, host of The Joe Rogan Experience, about everything from science and sports to evolution and Kim Kardashian. Subscribe t...o SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Welcome to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Welcome to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In my day job, I'm an astrophysicist at the American Museum of Natural History,
where I direct the Hayden Planetarium, right here in New York City.
In the current show, we're featuring my interview with Joe Rogan.
He's an actor and a comedian, a mixed martial arts specialist,
but perhaps he's best known as the powerhouse podcaster behind the Joe Rogan experience.
We start off by talking about why he often features science in his stand-up comedy.
So Joe, you always talk about science.
It infuses almost everything you do.
Because all of it, the physics, biology, chemistry, engineering, there's got to be some force
operating.
What is it?
With me? Yeah. it's just curiosity um i just think we live in extraordinary times and the the ability to access
information is so unprecedented and because of social media especially because of twitter and
i have a message board that's very popular as well the message board is even more comprehensive
because they're not limited to links they They can actually post full articles with pictures, but there's so much interesting stuff out there.
You're constantly being bombarded with new stories and new technological achievements and
new discoveries. To me, it's just natural curiosity. So it's not anything special. It's
something anybody could have. Yeah. I mean, in this day and age, the amount of access to information we have allows the average person
just to read peer-reviewed articles, to be wowed by incredible videos and photos that the Hubble
takes. And it's just, we live in such crazy, crazy times that for me, it's like I said,
it's just a complete natural inclination to pay attention to this stuff.
So there's no teacher, there's no family member, there's no museum you visited as a kid.
Something must have kept that curiosity going beyond when other people would have lost it entirely.
No, I think because of being a stand-up comedian, I don't have the time constraints that a lot of folks have.
My day as part of my job.
Yeah, and also part of my job is being curious.
And the more I read about things, the more I have stuff to talk about.
Like I have a whole bit.
More material.
Yeah, I have a whole bit about the Large Hadron Collider.
Oh, let me hear something.
Go, give me one.
Oh, it's like a long bit about human beings, about time travel.
It's a huge bit.
Gay marriage, it's like 10 months long.
It's really, it's not something that you can do.
You've got a routine that combines the CERN, Super Collider, finding the Higgs boson, and
gay marriage.
Yes.
Okay.
I'll have to find that online.
All right?
I'm going to look for that.
So the broader question is, how often is science material for you?
A lot.
Yeah.
Some of my best bits have involved science is any
quick one you well i know i know the mood isn't there or whatever no no it's not even that it's
just my style of stand-up is more like these long chunks it's not had you heard the one about that
yeah it's not like a one-liner you know like one of them is the anti-evolution of man which explains
like pyramids and the idea is that we are the bastard children of the idiot stone workers of Egypt.
And what happened was the dumb people just outfucked the smart people.
And it just got to a point where there was no smart people left.
And the bit was about like how many of us really, truly understand how this world operates.
And I would like tap on a microphone and go, why is that loud?
I'm a stand up comedian. My whole life depends upon this, but I have no idea how this world operates. And I would like tap on a microphone and go, why is that loud? I'm a stand-up comedian.
My whole life depends upon this,
but I have no idea how this works.
I just get up here and I do my job.
And I'm like, how many of us understand
how the power is on?
And if the power went off, what would you do?
For most of us, if the power goes out,
we sit around and we wait
because you figure somewhere out there,
there's someone who knows how to turn that thing back on.
But what if that guy died? Or we know have that been monitored i mean one day
we're gonna out fuck all the smart people and there's gonna be no smart people left because
women they want to have sex with rappers and baseball players i mean maybe you you're like
a celebrity scientist i'm sure you get a lot of hot college chicks that are knocking it your way
but like for the average dude involved in science, there's very few opportunities to breed.
So you're making an argument that for perhaps other comedians, there's a whole resource, a place to draw drugs or reflections on what role science can play in their comedy.
Sure, if that's what you're curious.
I mean, I think for a lot of comedians, the most important thing is they give you an accurate representation of what they find funny and what they think is interesting.
For me, it happens to be a lot of it is science.
A lot of it is ancient history.
A lot of it is speculation about our future.
There's a lot of scientific inquiry for me just in my daily life.
So it has to make it into my comedy.
Because that's the natural effort of a good comedian, I guess.
Yeah, it has to be here's the world through your eyes.
And plus, a lot of science has made front page headlines
so that you can even reference science that people have some chance of having read about.
Sure.
I mean, everyone kind of knows.
Because comedy doesn't work if they don't know what you're talking about, right?
Well, you can explain some things, you know?
Yeah, but it's not a lecture, right?
So there's a trade-off at some point.
Right.
There has to be a certain amount of time in between the laughs.
When you get to something like the Large Hadron Collider, you have to be able to explain it in a somewhat comedic form.
And you have to have at least somewhere along the line, you've got to throw some dick jokes in there.
You've got to figure out a way to keep them occupied. But the idea of the Large Hadron Collider, I had a bit about a Big Bang machine.
And the idea was that scientists have never figured out what started out the Big Bang.
And then I think that 14 billion years ago, there were some scientists.
And they were probably autistic.
And they were on anti-anxiety medication and drinking Red Bulls.
And nobody touched them ever.
And one day, they made a Big Bang machine.
And one guy sat around and went, I'll press it.
And he hit the button, and the whole thing restarted.
And that is the cycle of humanity.
It goes from single-celled organism to multi-celled organism to conscious entity to autistic dude who figures out how to make a Big Bang machine to hitting the button.
And it happens every 14 billion years.
And that is the birth and the death of the universe, infinity.
So according to that theory, we're minutes away from that happening again.
A second now.
I mean, when you look at what they've discovered with the Large Hadron Collider,
whether it is the quark-gluon plasma,
which is, I believe it's one sugar cube,
is some insane amount of weight that we can't even process.
Like where you would drop it, it would go straight through to the center of the earth.
I mean, it exists in just tiny microscopic form, but the fact that that's real,
that's something that they have created.
It begs the question, where does it all end and does it?
And where does it go?
And is it sustainable?
Is it controllable? What is the
future? Is it a big bang machine? If it keeps going, someday someone will figure out how to
reset the universe with the press of a button or a sequence of events that can be set off.
It seems to me like it's inevitable. It seems to me like there's no way to stop that.
Is that your biggest fear? That technology and dorky autistic scientists might push the button?
No.
Yeah, I mean, I guess...
It's in the list, but it's not the top of the list.
No, I mean, I think that would be like a pretty cool way to go.
If that is how it gets reset, there's very little suffering involved.
The only suffering is doing it all over again.
The cave people have to suffer, you know?
That's the suffering.
And migrate around on the ice flows of the Bering Strait.
You've been listening to StarTalk Radio.
I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
When we come back, we'll have much more of my interview with Joe Rogan. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In this show, we're featuring my interview with Joe Rogan, a stand-up comedian and the voice behind the popular podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience.
In this segment, we talk about how he uses science as a touchstone to share his social commentary and perspective on the world.
So, for you, it's not enough apparently to just be curious, because anybody could pick up a book and read a headline and even chase down the original research papers. You also philosophize.
You think about what it means.
You think about whether it should be true, whether or not it is true.
And so where do you get your philosophy?
Well, again, I think it really comes from just the access to time that I have,
meaning that my days,
literally part of my job is researching things.
Part of your job as a professional stand-up comedian.
Yeah, as a professional stand-up comedian,
you must be curious.
And if you are curious
and these articles stumble through your path
or you run into a documentary
or I watch your show, The Cosmos,
which I'm sure is going to set a lot of people down certain paths.
I don't know what it is that started me down there,
but, you know, in having this job as a stand-up comedian,
it's just allowed me to explore so many different things,
like really in-depth to the point where most people,
if they have a full-time job,
they have to be concerned with whatever it is they do for an occupation.
Whatever the boss tells them.
Yeah.
And you're bossless.
Yeah, I'm basically bossless.
So I don't have those constraints.
So that's where I get my philosophies from.
I mean, obviously, it's an accumulation of other people's thoughts that's resonated with me as well.
people's thoughts that resonated with me as well, and different discoveries that people have had,
whether they're psychological discoveries or philosophical discoveries that have also resonated with me that I've adopted into my own point of view. But it just really all comes from
being curious. Who's your audience? Did you create your audience or did your audience create you in
the podcast? That's a good question. That's a really good way of putting it. Because you got
your stand-up, but there are other comedians and they do their stand-up, but not all of them have the following that is represented in your podcast.
So did you create them, or did they create you?
I'm not smart enough to answer that.
But I think that, for sure, the podcast represents me in a better way than anything I've ever done before.
It's easy to have a perception of someone, but how well do you
really get to know someone unless you hear them talk for hours and hours and hours and end?
And I think that anything else I've done, whether it's hosting the ultimate fighting championship
or fear factor or what, even stand up comedy, it's going to give you like a sort of a limited
view into how a person functions. It's sort of like you're operating in a very specific bandwidth or specific frequency, rather.
Whereas with the podcast, we talk about everything.
Frequency bandwidth.
I like the words.
Keep the vocabulary coming.
Physics vocabulary.
I'll grade it at the end.
See how you did on all your vocabulary.
I'll be happy with a C.
But with the podcast, it's really anything that I find curious. And that has resonated with a lot of folks that I think felt like they were unrepresented before.
I think that for a lot of people, they feel like a lot of these subjects,
they're not being necessarily indulged in mainstream media.
They're not being pursued in the average conversation that they have at lunch with their coworkers.
So what it is, is obviously they can read the science section of the paper that's not you.
They could go to a pure comedy club that's not you. There are pieces that are all contained
within you so that when you start talking, you are drawing from this huge portfolio of identity
and outcomes this, what should I call it a it's a smorgasbord
that people dine upon that's a good way to look cornucopia it's a cornucopia that people dine upon
that certainly is the podcast it also represents and it sounds it's gonna sound really weird
it represents friends to people who don't have friends like that. There's a lot of folks
out there that they might have curious thoughts or they might have ideas about things, but they
don't have anybody to talk to about it. And they don't have anybody that they know that's interested
in these things. They don't have these conversations to be had at work or wherever they you know or at home or anywhere
and so what what a podcast represents is a chance to sit in on a true unedited organic conversation
for hours and hours at a time and it allows you access to a lot of other different ways of
thinking and i think that is another thing that's really resonated with people right but so unscripted
it goes wherever organically is right.
Yeah.
And there's not just unscripted.
And you can't hide anything.
Yeah.
Because it eventually comes out.
Right.
No agenda and no one telling you where to go with things.
I mean, if we had a producer, there's several things, especially Brian, my co-host, he says unbelievably ridiculous shit.
You would say, stop, edit that out, don't do that.
But that doesn't happen on this podcast.
And because of that, because of the randomness of it all, it kind of makes it a little bit more fun.
And it kind of makes you also realize, like, this is just completely unscripted.
Like, this really is just a bunch of people sitting down and talking.
And because of that, they get very comfortable.
And because of the honesty that we exhibit and the, you know, the true.
Sincerity.
Yeah, completely sincere.
It feels good.
It feels like this is the type of people that I want to talk to.
Love him or hate him, there is no doubt that Joe Rogan's podcast has a large and growing following.
In addition to science and comedy, he often loves to talk about conspiracy theories.
When I was a guest on his podcast,
he grilled me at length about whether the Apollo moon landings actually happened.
And over that time, we also discussed the Mayan apocalypse, or the non-apocalypse,
and planetary alignment, and how some people were dejected when they discovered that the world was not going to end. We also discussed anti-intellectualism. He's a big philosopher
in his own right, and so
the idea that people are not thinking about what they're saying disturbs him greatly. We talked
about exoplanets made of diamond, and man-made versus natural diamonds, and mining asteroids,
and that was just in the first hour of the show. We talked about super volcanoes, and earthquakes,
and impact craters, and timeales of the universes and solar systems.
We went on talking for another hour and a half. Apparently there was no time limits. I didn't know this when I was there. We just went on and on and on and on. You can find the entire video of that
podcast online. It's episode 310 or just Google Joe Rogan and Neil Tyson. It'll take you right
there. Here's an excerpt from Joe Rogan's podcast.
It's a snapshot of his unique style that has attracted legions of fans.
In this clip, he talks about how scientists are testing the theory of the multiverse.
Check it out.
That multiple alternate universes exist inside their own bubbles,
making up the multiverse, is for the first time being
tested by physicists two research papers published in physical review letters and physical review d
are the first to detail how to search for signatures of other universes physicists
are now searching for disc-like patterns in the cosmic microwave background relic heat radiation left over from the big bang which could provide telltale evidence of collisions
between other universes in our own whoa collisions evidence of collisions of universes that's the
alternative concept to the big bang as well the idea that our universe whether it's in a bubble like the multiverse or the people that propose membranes they
propose like that the brains collide at certain points and that creates like a
recycling of the world we just can't wrap our head around something that's
that far or that much longer a period of existence than our own life the idea of
this cycle that's billions and billions of years we are so existence than our own life. The idea of this cycle that's billions and billions
of years. We are so important in our own lives that the idea that that's how small a part we
play for real. I'm going to exist for 80 years inside some weird biological body and some crazy
process that happens every 16, 17 billion years. these things collide with each other and everything
starts completely from new no planets man no nothing just particles and gas and heat and
nuclear explosions and mass connects all these different objects together and they slowly form
planets and then life grows on them and then life becomes complex life becomes intelligent self-aware life
creates technology goes to war blows up the universe and then they collide again and more
collide all around and it's a constant cycle of you society life everything the universe complexity
gets to a certain peak and then just they just hit each other boom it just to me it was almost like a little message that everything
is preposterous do you ever stop and wonder how much of your life how much of the the things that
you go through are real and how much of it may be some sort of background noise going on in this
weird play that you're creating for yourself that your imagination
is put forth and then someday you're going to understand it all but right now it's all the
people that are in front of you are the bit players and you're supposed to be trying to
figure this thing out as you move along all that stuff that's going on the background car accidents
and war it seems like there's too many pieces going together too like too much too look too
many times i'm like that's just weird that that just happened like that you know like it just seems like it's just like you're manifesting things with your own
mind yeah yeah yeah yeah it's not it's not foolproof you know it's not like you can prove it
right but there's something going on Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
In this show, we're featuring my interview with Joe Rogan of the Joe Rogan Experience podcast.
of the Joe Rogan Experience podcast.
In addition to his podcast,
Joe Rogan once hosted the television reality show Fear Factor,
which dared contestants to perform stunts such as eating live bugs or being handcuffed underwater with a handful of keys
in order to win the grand prize of $50,000.
So, of course, Joe had a lot to say about the current TV landscape
and how that taps into human psychology.
I am obsessed lately with subsistence shows.
Subsistence shows like the people that live in Alaska and live off the land and just hunt
and fish all day.
I am completely obsessed.
Like my wife constantly makes fun of me because the DVR is filled with all these shows of
people living this like really primitive lifestyle.
So you're getting ready for something.
No, no, no, no, no.
I'm amazed, first of all, that people find great joy in this.
I think that's fascinating because I think it speaks to the...
Primal.
Yes, the primal reward systems that's in our DNA.
I mean, we have bodies essentially that are in this environment that has changed unbelievably
radically in a short period of time but the physical entity the human being is really not
that different from the human being of a thousand years ago or ten thousand years ago and the reality
of our environment is incredibly different and i think that those reward systems they manifest
themselves in weird ways and for some people that hunting and trapping and fishing and living off the land is like
insanely rewarding on like a biochemical level.
Speaking of biochemical levels, you hosted Fear Factor.
Have you thought much about the bio psychology of what drove that show?
Yeah.
Well, I spent a lot of that show as an amateur scientist,
just trying to figure out the human game show contestant
and what it is that causes the reality game show person
to do what is required of them to win on these shows.
The idea of needing attention is a trip.
And the idea essentially comes from
in the ancient days of human beings, the person who got the most respect was the one who was the most successful in the hunt, the most successful in battle, the one who was the most successful in breeding.
That lead was to be followed because there was benefit in being the leader.
There was benefit socially.
There was benefit sexually.
And they had more offspring yeah as well right and as i said we
were talking about before about reward systems built into our genetics well these reward systems
are now hijacked in this weird way where you can kind of circumvent all regular reality like all
hierarchies and all you have to do is get a camera on you where other people see that and you get some benefit.
And it's really, really strange.
It's a strange and aberration.
A strange sort of a blip in the matrix where you get like this Kim Kardashian type human where you just get someone who's famous for having a lens put on them.
And that is essentially it.
There's not that much interesting going on you
know there's prettier girls there's certainly smarter girls but because this lens is on there's
a great amount of power and energy focused in this one really mundane spot so it's a perversion
of evolutionary features that exist within us yeah i think so i think the human body is not designed to interpret the medium of television and film in a way that makes sense. I think that we're so designed to follow successful behavior that when we see a hero on a movie screen and his head is 60 feet tall and every time he talks, music plays and his words are perfect because a team of writers has labored on them for hours and hours.
I think the impact of that is really confusing to a lot of folks.
And that is why we have all these weird cultural misrepresentations of monogamy and of ideology.
And our view of the world is very childlike in a lot of ways, very much like a movie. Our perceptions of global economics, our perceptions of war, a lot of them are very much
childlike and very movie-like in our good guys and bad guys and how things work out in the long run.
I mean, they're all very much like a Sandra Bullock movie. And as we know in real life, you know, even her own life is not like a Sandra Bullock movie.
So I think it's really interesting to watch this relatively new over, you know, the past less than 100 years item in human civilization and how it's impacted us. The evolutionary attraction that we have for people who are actually successful in protecting the tribe has been distorted into the awe and respect we give for someone who is big in front of us, no matter who they are.
Absolutely.
I mean, Snooki is the best example.
I mean, there's no reason to pay attention to that. I mean, I guess there's a little amount of entertainment value you can get
for their antics, but there are people that genuinely worship people that are on television
for no reason other than that they're on television. And it's a very, very odd thing.
I really enjoyed Joe Rogan's reflections on how television plays into our psychology, our culture, our politics, our world, our past, our future.
The guys thought a lot about a lot of things.
And so that made my time with him quite enjoyable.
It's it's so that made him a different kind of guest.
He wasn't really.
It was another sort of talk show host talking to, and we're
there just spilling all our guts onto
the table in a kind of free-for-all.
When StarTalk Radio returns, more of my
interview with controversial color
commentator Joe Rogan. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
You can find us online at startalkradio.net,
on Facebook at StarTalk Radio,
and we also tweet.
And what else? At StarTalkRadio.net, on Facebook at StarTalkRadio, and we also tweet, and what else, at StarTalkRadio.
In this show, we're featuring my interview with Joe Rogan. He's a stand-up comedian and the voice behind the popular podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience. A topic he often likes to discuss
on his show is mixed martial arts. He's a black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, and he provides commentary for TV broadcasts of
the Ultimate Fighting Championship. In this segment, I talk with Joe about the physics of
wrestling, something I know a little bit about. I used to wrestle. I wrestled for eight years,
so I think about the physics of balance and strength. And so given your curiosity, you've got to do a lot of the same.
You're in that same club, right?
Yes.
It's not just an art form to you.
It's got to be a science as well.
Oh, most certainly.
Yeah.
There is certainly a science to techniques.
And I'm a big fan of technique.
I mean, I am a mixed martial arts commentator.
I'm the guy who
breaks down what's happening essentially most of it is for people at home that really don't
understand the the real intricacies of especially submissions and grappling there is a uh a real
science to that and that science is tried and tested over many many years and it has to do
with leverage and it has to do especially today. And it has to do, especially today,
Give me a place to stand. Yeah, I can move the world.
The measurement of the way techniques work, and in what situations that work, and you're dealing
with, especially in situations where we're dealing with leverage, you're dealing with like very small
areas where something's effective, where it's ineffective just a few inches further,
or just up here or there.
It's all about where it's applied.
It's not about the amount of force it's applied.
It's about how it's applied and what kind of leverage
and how the knowledge of these positions
leads to getting someone tied up in a knot
that doesn't want to be tied up in a knot,
and then they have to tap out and get submitted. I i mean it sounds logically that that would make you a better
fighter but presumably there are fighters that don't think about that well there's they might
also still be good there's a bunch of variables there's physical athleticism there are some people
that are just unbelievably strong there's wrestlers who are just cock strong and they
could just pick you up and dump you on your head.
And until you run into someone who can counteract these unbelievable physical advantages with better leverage,
better technique, and better knowledge of the positions.
Because a big thing, especially in jiu-jitsu, is knowledge.
Your specialty.
Yes.
Yeah.
I've been doing jiu-jitsu since 1996.
I wrestled in high school as well.
I only wrestled for one year, though.
I was doing taekwondo at the time.
I was trying to do both of them.
But the knowledge of grappling is incredibly intricate. Every year there's new submissions and new positions. And
I just had a phone conversation with a friend of mine who's a black belt. He's been a black belt
for 10 years. And he came up with a new triangle last night. He goes, I got this new variation.
I can't wait to show it to you. And it's always about that. It's always about innovation. And
if you're not paying attention to the jujitsuitsu world you will miss out on a lot of different techniques and then when you're
in those situations you will be at a disadvantage because someone will be doing something you don't
understand and that's all it takes to tap you do you think science literacy if every fighter had
it would improve their fighting yes unquestionably. Because a lot of fighting is hindered by emotions.
And I think science literacy would benefit fighters extremely.
I think that, as I said before, technique is the most important aspect of martial arts.
And technique, up to a point, allows you to overcome physical advantages and that's very
scientific and I think that the ability to use leverage and the ability to
understand force and mass all of that applied with the understanding of the
cardiovascular system the understanding of the scientific principles of
nutrition and rest and recuperation all of that would unquestionably benefit not just fighters, but any athlete, anyone involved in doing anything that's difficult where you look at NFL or science and the science of applied understanding of the human body to physical training has
changed athletes. Football players are much larger. They run faster. They move better.
And the techniques of mixed martial arts absolutely benefit from the use of science.
And I believe the more scientific a fighter is
the more chance they have not only to achieve victory but to prolong their career and to avoid
damage when star talk radio returns more of my interview with actor comedian podcaster
mixed martial arts extraordinaire, Joe Rogan.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson.
We're wrapping up my interview with the stand-up comedian, actor, and TV and internet commentator Joe Rogan.
In the previous segment, we talked about wrestling and mixed martial arts.
And so, in this final segment, we address a fundamental question that many in the boxing world can spend hours debating. Who would win a boxing match?
Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson. I believe Mike Tyson was in a different era. And I believe Muhammad
Ali was dealing with people who had never exhibited that type of athleticism, that type
of ferocity. And he was incredibly successful in his era. I believe if
Muhammad Ali grew up in Mike Tyson's era, he would be better than Mike Tyson. Because I believe his
mind was incredibly strong. His will and his ability to not just overcome stardom, but transcend
it and be a leader was one of the reasons why he's still beloved to this day
and no one mocks him even though he has a horrible debilitation of you know his Parkinson's is just
unbelievably bad it's still incredibly loved whereas Mike Tyson was just a completely different
sort of a guy he was an out of control train that could only go so far down the track. But man, when it was going down
that track, the physical aspect of just watching him demolish people was really incredible. And I
think unlike anybody who had ever existed before. And I think that if you took the Mike Tyson of
like the, when he knocked out Larry Holmes, when he knocked out Spinks, I don't think anybody stacks
up with him. I think he destroys almost everybody in history.
But he couldn't maintain that.
It was an insane amount of RPMs that he was operating on.
He was redlining his intensity for so long.
Because I would think of Muhammad Ali having extraordinary technique.
I mean, you're coming in muscled.
I mean, that's the George Foreman fight.
You come in muscled, and he avoids you.
I was just analogizing that to your discussion of the martial arts.
Yeah, you can't compare Mike Tyson and George Foreman,
because what Tyson had that was really unbelievable was speed.
True speed like a welterweight.
He had unbelievable hand speed,
and he could move physically better than anybody I'd ever seen at over 200 pounds.
When you look at his fights, like...
Is it true that he caught pigeons?
Yes, yeah.
He was a...
Yeah, he used to have carrier pigeons.
He kept them company in Brooklyn.
He kept a whole bunch of them, yeah.
He was an unbelievable physical athlete.
And his obsession with boxing was at a completely different level
than I think anybody before him.
I think his life, which was horribly tragic in his childhood, boxing represented to him this way out.
And he was just driven in a way by whether it's the demons of his childhood or the realities of his environment.
of his environment, but he was driven in this incredible, perfect storm of athleticism, mind,
and obsession with technique and detail with an incredible coach in Customato, who literally raised him as a father figure. So I think in Mike Tyson, you have a very, very unique situation that
I believe that for two or three years, he's the greatest heavyweight that ever lived.
But Muhammad Ali, I believe, was a greater champion and Muhammad Ali I think was a greater man and I think Muhammad
Ali especially like to me he's a greater hero his insistence on not going to Vietnam his stand I
think really sort of shocked a nation with debate and it really sort of defined him as this true like not just a fighter not just an athlete
but a true leader in our culture and i think that's really the difference between him and a
mike tyson i just think he was an incredibly strong person and i think that if ali lived in
the mike tyson era if they grew up together if they came up together he would have found a way
to beat tyson so can i ask you something are like, because your name is Tyson, are you like more inclined to like lean towards
his name?
Going towards like thinking that he was one of the greatest?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I grew up with Muhammad Ali.
So you think Muhammad Ali was the greatest?
Yeah, yeah.
Especially if you put him in another time, he would have become that person in that time.
That's what I think.
It's got to be cool having a name that's the last name of one of the greatest dudes
who's ever lived.
The good one.
When he's not in jail. Yeah one when he's not in jail.
Yeah, when he's not hurting people.
I really enjoyed my time with Joe Rogan.
We split the visit.
I first was interviewed by him on his podcast.
That went for more than two hours.
Then I pulled him aside and pulled out my mobile microphone and recorded him for StarTalk Radio.
I just want to publicly thank him for
granting the time to do that, particularly after the long session we had together.
It's interesting. I love deep thinkers of any stripe. And here's a guy who just shatters
anybody's stereotype of who should be an expert at what. He's a mixed martial arts expert,
and he philosophizes about the future of the universe. And he kind of dabbles in conspiracy theory, a little odd for me.
But nonetheless, he comes back and hits the news hard, anything that's in science and how it affects pop culture.
So Joe Rogan is okay in my book.
It's my first time ever meeting the guy.
ever meeting the guy. I think his strongest points have been just to be cautious of how the media is controlling what they want you to think and who they want you to vote for. We're both a big fan
of just getting people to think for themselves. That's something that not enough people do,
even educated people, people who like to think that they're the source of opinion.
Often you part the curtains and there they are just peddling back something they saw
on television.
So why don't we all just raise a toast to free speech, free thought, and all the freedom
that brings us.
You've been listening to StarTalk Radio, brought to you in part by a grant from the
National Science Foundation.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, bidding you until next time to keep looking up.