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Uday Hussein Killed 200 People Annually at His Parties

Joe Rogan Experience · #2505 - Tom Segura · May 25, 2026
Uday Hussein Killed 200 People Annually at His Parties
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
#2505 - Tom Segura
"At least 200 people died at his parties every year. He would just kill people at his parties, and the music would have to keep going. One time he killed the guy for not laughing hard enough at his joke."
Segura's research into Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday revealed unprecedented sadism including torturing Olympic athletes with iron maidens, feeding women to dogs, and routinely executing party guests. Uday operated as a serial killer with state protection for decades before being killed in 2003 by US forces after being shot 17 times.

About this episode

Joe Rogan hosted comedian Tom Segura for a wide-ranging three-hour conversation covering dystopian government programs, sports corruption, comedy industry dynamics, and historical atrocities. The most explosive revelation centered on Canada's medical assistance in dying (MAID) program, which Rogan revealed accounts for 5.1% of all Canadian deaths—over 76,000 since 2016—including a 26-year-old man with seasonal depression killed by a doctor who has euthanized over 400 patients. Segura shared his research into Saddam Hussein's son Uday, detailing how the eldest son operated as a state-protected serial killer who murdered at least 200 people annually at his parties and systematically tortured Olympic athletes. The pair also dissected FBI entrapment operations, revealing that 12 of 14 people involved in the plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer were federal informants. On lighter notes, they discussed Texas's wild pig crisis requiring military-style eradication with special forces tactics, Segura's Netflix series 'Bad Friends' getting creative freedom rarely seen in comedy, and Ray J's suspicious boxing match where he appeared to admit on camera to match-fixing. The conversation touched on AI's threat to college graduates, insider trading by Congress members, the discovery of Noah's Ark in Turkey, Trump's settlement granting permanent immunity from IRS audits, and vintage cars including a carbon fiber 1967 Mustang. Rogan and Segura also explored the darker side of power through dictators, assisted suicide, FBI quotas for arrests, and James Cameron's solo submarine descent to the Mariana Trench.

Key takeaways

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