Joe Rogan (born August 11, 1967, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.) is an American comedian, actor, television host, podcaster, and announcer for the competitive mixed martial arts organization Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). He has become an extremely popular and highly paid podcaster, despite courting controversy for his occasionally divisive opinions on current events.
Rogan spent his early childhood in Newark, New Jersey. By his own account he had a difficult upbringing under his father, whom he described as extremely aggressive and physically abusive. Rogan’s interactions with his father were traumatic for him. His parents divorced when Rogan was five years old. When he was seven, he and his mother moved to San Francisco, where she remarried. Rogan and his family eventually settled in Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, where he attended Newton South High School, graduating in 1985.
During his teens Rogan developed an interest in martial arts. He studied tae kwon do and eventually won the Massachusetts full contact tae kwon do championship, which he held for four consecutive years. When he was 19, Rogan won the U.S. Open Tae Kwon Do Championship’s lightweight title and then its Grand Championship after defeating both the middleweight and heavyweight title holders.
After seeing Richard Pryor’s concert film Live on the Sunset Strip (1982), Rogan began a stand-up comedy career in Boston in the late 1980s. In the early 1990s he moved to New York and developed an edgier, blue comedy style that he said was inspired by the comedians Sam Kinison and Bill Hicks. By the middle of the decade Rogan had successfully segued to a career in acting by landing a role on the short-lived sitcom Hardball on the Fox broadcasting network in 1994. In the following year he joined the cast of the NBC sitcom NewsRadio as Joe Garrelli, an office handyman with a penchant for homemade gadgetry and conspiracy theories. In 1997 Rogan made his first appearance on a UFC broadcast as a backstage interviewer at the mixed martial arts event UFC 12: Judgement Day in Dothan, Alabama.
In 2001 Rogan became the host of the television reality game show Fear Factor. The show featured a competition in which contestants were put into situations that tested their physical strength and internal fortitude. The challenges included hanging upside down from a rope attached to a helicopter and eating disgusting foods such as a variety of animal eyeballs or living worms. Fear Factor was a hit for NBC, airing for six seasons until 2006 and returning for one more season with Rogan as host in 2011.
While hosting Fear Factor, Rogan continued his acting career, taking on several minor film and television roles. In 2002 he guest-starred in an episode of the office sitcom Just Shoot Me!. Also in 2002 he appeared in the holiday family movie It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie as a fictionalized version of himself. He had a small role in the action comedy Venus & Vegas in 2010 and a supporting role in the Kevin James comedy Zookeeper in 2011.
After his initial stint as an interviewer for the UFC in the 1990s, Rogan maintained his involvement in mixed martial arts, though mostly as a fan. In 2001 he became friends with UFC president Dana White, who was quickly impressed with Rogan’s knowledge of combat sports. White offered Rogan an onscreen role with the company, and Rogan agreed to be a color commentator. His first broadcast event was UFC 37.5: As Real as It Gets, held in June 2002.
Rogan has continued in this role for more than 20 years. His charismatic enthusiasm for the fights, combined with his extensive knowledge of mixed martial arts, has endeared him to fans of the sport. Since 2010 the Fighters Only World MMA Awards show has named Rogan the MMA Personality of the Year 11 times.
One of Rogan’s most successful endeavors has been a podcast called The Joe Rogan Experience (also called PowerfulJRE). Launched in 2009, the podcast features Rogan expressing his personal views on current events and trending topics. The show has also hosted guests who casually converse with Rogan through long interviews. The guests have included an eclectic variety of famous and influential individuals, such as astronomer Neil DeGrasse Tyson; business magnate Elon Musk; the World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) superstar Mark (“The Undertaker”) Calaway; the front man of the rock band Tool, Maynard James Keenan; and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders. Rogan’s show has been a highly popular podcast on the audio streaming service Spotify.
Despite its popularity, The Joe Rogan Experience has been a large source of controversy in Rogan’s career, largely because of the raw personal opinions that he shares on the show. Rogan was accused of spreading vaccine misinformation during the coronavirus pandemic, and his anti-vaccination stance led to calls for boycotts of his show. In 2022 the singer-songwriter Neil Young reacted to Rogan’s misinformation by demanding that Spotify remove his music from its streaming service. In addition, many of Rogan’s views on LGBTQ issues, such as the participation of transgender athletes in professional sports, have been called transphobic by LGBTQ activist and media-monitoring organizations such as GLAAD.