Joe Rogan Experience #1088 – Bryan Callen




Bryan Callen is an actor and stand-up comedian, and together with Brendan Schaub he also hosts “The Fighter & The Kid” podcast.

42 Comments

  1. Love Joe, think he is off about antianxiety or antidepression medication. This is a case of correlation =/= causation.

    Maybe people with anxiety or depression could be more likely to be mass shooters or commit suicide. The fact they are on medication is due to their condition, most people who do this will have a condition and likely they will be on meds, it doesn't prove that medication caused them to do it though.

    Maybe without meds we would see way more incidences of this, blaming meds may be a little irresponsible.

  2. White supremacy take on black athletes: "Black athletes are a product of white supremists breeding black slaves for physical attributes.. WHITE PEOPLE MADE BLACK ATHLETES" So white people gets the credit 😛 ..

    ps. not a racist, just devils advocate 😉

  3. Rams have to get fucked up i seen a video of one knocking out or killing a cow

  4. Bighorn sheep ritually ram their heads into each other and woodpeckers slam their heads against trees thousands of times a day with neither species’ sustaining concussions or even much of a headache, as far as we know. Meanwhile, much lesser forces result in a concussion, or worse, in humans. Our analysis suggests that both woodpeckers’ and bighorns’ brains are naturally protected with mechanisms that slow the return of blood from the head to the body — increasing blood volume that fills their brains’ vascular tree, creating the Bubble Wrap effect.

    We have observed that the woodpecker uses muscles to do this, while the sheep has hollow pneumatic horn cores attached to its respiratory system that allow it to re-breathe its air and thus increase carbon dioxide in its bloodstream, expanding its intracranial vascular tree and enhancing the Bubble Wrap effect.

    That same bubble wrap effect also appears to lower the incidence of concussions among football players at high altitudes, according to a study by researchers at the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. They hypothesized that higher altitudes increased the volume of blood coursing through the brains arteries and veins, mimicking this bubble wrap effect seen in bighorn sheep.- Allison Eck on Mon, 06 Jan 2014

  5. The study about 60% have $500 in the bank is worded and referenced incorrectly all the time. The study says that $500 in their savings account. It doesn't state have $500 in their bank account. You can have many different types of accounts at a bank. You can have a checking account, an investment account, you can move your money to a brokerage account. It's not surprising to me no one keeps their money in savings accounts when savings accounts only give you less than 1% apy. The only people who have savings accounts right now are pretty much older people or people not in touch with the current financial offerings. If they combined all those accounts we would have way less than 60% who have less than $500 in their account.

  6. I don't know where his logic comes from sometimes. Universal income? He should listen to his own podcast with Peter Schiff

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