2009–2012 During the early 2000s, Rogan hired
Brian Redban, a self-taught video editor and an employee at a
Gateway 2000 computer store in
Ohio, to work for him full-time to film, produce, and edit videos for his website. Rogan had noticed video work that Redban did for comedian
Doug Stanhope and invited him to film him and his group on stand-up comedy tours. Coupled with his interest in popular live video streaming services of the time, Redban wanted "to do the same thing I was filming, but live," and set up live streams on
Justin.tv from the
green room at Rogan's various comedy gigs. The first episode aired live on December 24, 2009, which initially took the form of a weekly broadcast on Ustream, with the pair "sitting in front of laptops bullshitting". Much of the first episode was
dead air with the hosts figuring out the equipment, The show developed with Rogan inviting friends as guests and having lengthy conversations on various subjects; comedian
Ari Shaffir was the first, who appeared on episode No. 3 on January 6, 2010. Rogan said that maintaining a consistent schedule was important in jumpstarting the podcast's growth, and it soon grew to two episodes a week. By August 2010, the podcast was formally named
The Joe Rogan Experience as an homage to
The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and aired live several times a week. In May 2011, Rogan secured a deal with the
satellite radio service
SiriusXM to have the podcast air on its uncensored talk channel
The Virus.
2013–2020: First YouTube era In January 2013, video episodes of the podcast started to be uploaded onto
YouTube under the account PowerfulJRE; its episodes regularly achieved viewership in the hundred thousands to millions. Later in 2013, Redban started to reduce his time as the podcast's sole producer as Rogan had increased the number of podcasts each week, "and it got to the point where [Rogan] wanted to keep on going, six, seven hours" which became too much for him to handle alone. As a result, Jamie Vernon was hired as a second producer, initially to fill in as Redban's assistant, leaving Redban to produce roughly half of subsequent episodes. Vernon soon took over full time and Redban subsequently appeared on the podcast as a guest. Originally, the podcast was recorded at Rogan's home in California. Beginning on November 27, 2012, the majority of episodes were recorded in a private studio that Rogan acquired in
Woodland Hills, Los Angeles. The 1,000th episode aired on August 18, 2017, and featured comedians
Joey Diaz and
Tom Segura as guests.
2020–2024: Spotify-exclusive era In May 2020, Rogan announced that starting September 2020,
The Joe Rogan Experience would be available on
Spotify in an exclusive licensing deal worth an estimated $200 million. Under the terms of the agreement, uploads of full episodes to YouTube continued until December 2020, after which the podcast became exclusive to Spotify. Highlight clips are still uploaded to YouTube. Rogan emphasized that the podcast would retain the same format, and that Spotify would not have any creative control. On the day following Rogan's announcement, Spotify's share price increased by seven percent. The move to Spotify coincided with Rogan's relocation from Los Angeles to
Austin, Texas, and the debut of a new, temporary studio there. The first new episode released on Spotify was no. 1,530 with comedian
Duncan Trussell, which lasted for over five hours. (He has subsequently moved to another, more permanent studio in Austin.) After the podcast became available on Spotify on September 1, 2020, people reported on social media that past episodes with more controversial or far-right guests, including
Alex Jones,
Milo Yiannopoulos,
Gavin McInnes, and
Chris D'Elia, among others, were missing from the platform. Episodes featuring comedian and activist
Tommy Chong, comedian Joey Diaz, and Mikhaila Peterson, daughter of
Jordan Peterson, were also unavailable.
VICE later reported that Spotify CEO
Daniel Ek defended having episode No. 1,509 on the platform, during which Rogan and author and journalist
Abigail Shrier discussed topics that some deemed transphobic, causing some Spotify employees to voice their concerns to management. A Spotify spokesperson said the episode was within its content guidelines. Rogan later clarified that the company had said nothing to him about plans to
censor or
editorialize the podcast, as some employees had suggested. He also pointed to the abundance of song lyrics hosted on Spotify that some would consider offensive. In October 2020, the production of new episodes was put on hold for a week after Vernon tested positive for COVID-19. Rogan and the rest of the staff tested negative and resumed once they got the all-clear from a doctor. In episode No. 1,554,
Kanye West clarified his reasons for running for president of the United States in 2020 and how it began in 2015. West was one of Rogan's most anticipated guests after the idea of Kanye coming on the podcast first surfaced in late 2018 and a premature confirmation by West in early 2019, ultimately taking close to a year before Kanye finally appeared on the show. In January 2022, an open letter signed by 270 health care professionals called on Spotify to develop a counter-misinformation content policy. An epidemiologist who signed the letter stated that she viewed Rogan as "a menace to public health", and that his ideas are "fringe", and "not backed in science". The health care professionals especially took issue with an episode that featured
Robert W. Malone which was criticized for a comment Rogan made where he stated that he believed that young, healthy people do not need a COVID-19 vaccine. It was later reported that the letter gained an additional thousand signatures. On February 1, 2024, only a month before the
murder of Collin Small, alleged perpetrator Sheldon Johnson was featured as a guest on
The Joe Rogan Experience, wherein he talked about his criminal history and advocated for prison rehabilitation.
2024–present: Return to YouTube and other platforms In February 2024, Spotify signed Rogan to a new $250 million contract but announced his show would not be exclusive to its service and instead be available to other platforms. Shortly thereafter, the podcast returned to
Apple Podcasts. On February 29, 2024, for the first time in more than three years, a full episode of the podcast, an interview with
Katt Williams, was released on YouTube. Episode No. 2,219 featured former US President
Donald Trump during his
2024 presidential campaign. The three-hour episode went viral and acquired over 26 million views in its first 24 hours on YouTube. YouTube noted in a statement that the full episode “didn't appear prominently” in searches on the site, which was later fixed. On October 29, Rogan had uploaded the episode on his personal X account after he claimed YouTube hid the video from search results on purpose. The video gained 18.4 million views on X in two days. On October 31, the YouTube video had amassed 41 million views, becoming the podcast's second-most-viewed episode on the platform. ==Format==