Joe Rogan Seeks to Clarify His Comments on Young People and Vaccines
April 29 2021 - 6:44PM
Dow Jones News
By Anne Steele
Podcaster Joe Rogan sought to clarify his stance on Covid-19
vaccines after suggesting young, healthy people didn't need
them.
The comments on his popular podcast Thursday came a day after
Dr. Anthony Fauci, White House chief medical advisor, called Mr.
Rogan's advice incorrect and said unvaccinated people "are
propagating the outbreak" as they can infect others who may be at
severe risk of illness from the virus.
On his Thursday show, Mr. Rogan, 53 years old, said the argument
that young, healthy people should think about others who are at
risk "makes sense." He also said he had been going to get the
Johnson & Johnson vaccine, but that scheduling didn't work out
before administration of the vaccine was temporarily halted.
When his guest, stand-up comedian and actor Andrew Santino,
called himself a sheep for getting the vaccine, Mr. Rogan said,
"it's not being a sheep, there's some legitimate science behind
this."
"I'm not an anti-vax person," he said. "In fact I said I believe
they're safe, and I encourage many people to take them."
In last Friday's episode, Mr. Rogan said he believed the
vaccines are safe and said his parents were vaccinated. He also
said that his children contracted the coronavirus and "it was
nothing" for them. Speaking of what he described as healthy young
people who eat well and exercise, he said, "I don't think you need
to worry about this."
Mr. Rogan is among podcasting and pop culture's most popular and
polarizing figures. The vaccine-comment controversy this past week
is the latest flare-up Spotify Technology SA has had to reckon with
since it struck a licensing deal last year for the show worth more
than $100 million. "The Joe Rogan Experience" is far and away
Spotify's top-performing podcast, according to a person familiar
with the matter.
The show has troubled some company employees, who in a town-hall
meeting in September expressed concern over material they felt was
anti-transgender. Other employees have said they consider the
host's controversial style a positive that draws listeners. Spotify
has broadly stood behind Mr. Rogan, whose contract gives him
creative control over his show.
In its first-quarter earnings report this week, the company said
"The Joe Rogan Experience," which arrived on Spotify in September
and became exclusive to the service at the end of the year, helped
add and engage more users than the company expected; it didn't
disclose how many.
While discussing earnings Wednesday, Chief Executive Daniel Ek
wouldn't comment directly on Friday's episode but reiterated that
Spotify has a content policy and removes content that violates it.
Upon review, it was determined the episode didn't violate the
policy, according to a person familiar with the matter. Episodes
that do violate the policy have been removed, the person said.
Write to Anne Steele at Anne.Steele@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 29, 2021 18:29 ET (22:29 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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