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Guy Ritchie Throws Out Scripts on Set and Directs in Real Time

Joe Rogan Experience · #2519 - Scott Eastwood · June 26, 2026
Guy Ritchie Throws Out Scripts on Set and Directs in Real Time
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
#2519 - Scott Eastwood
"You learn the script, then you show up and he's just like, throws it out the window and goes, you say this, you do that, you do this. He's wearing multiple hats. He's seen the movie, what he's already shot. And then he's like, I actually don't want that scene. He kind of like is molding the movie in real time."
Eastwood revealed director Guy Ritchie's unconventional method of discarding rehearsed scripts and directing actors moment-to-moment based on footage he watches during filming. Ritchie reportedly watches scenes from a blacked-out trailer and radios adjustments to actors on set, a technique Eastwood said no other director uses.

About this episode

Joe Rogan hosted actor Scott Eastwood for a wide-ranging conversation covering Hollywood ethics, World War II filmmaking, conspiracy theories surrounding political violence, and the darker sides of fame. Eastwood, son of Clint Eastwood, revealed that his famous parentage actively hindered his acting career, forcing him to spend years proving his talent independently without family assistance. The conversation turned to filmmaking when Eastwood disclosed Guy Ritchie's unconventional directing method of discarding scripts on set and directing in real-time based on footage he watches during filming. Eastwood also accused an unnamed director of abandoning a film after securing investor funding and refusing to return the money, describing it as behavior Hollywood tolerates that other industries would never accept. A significant portion of the episode focused on suspicious details surrounding recent political violence, particularly the Thomas Crooks attempted assassination of Donald Trump and the Charlie Kirk shooting. Rogan cited congressional testimony alleging Crooks' apartment was professionally scrubbed before federal investigation, with computers, phones, and even silverware removed. He questioned forensic inconsistencies in the Kirk shooting, noting the lack of an exit wound despite the alleged use of a high-caliber rifle. The discussion also covered Eastwood's experience filming World War II movies, including meeting 107-year-old Battle of the Bulge veteran Colonel Herbert Stern, and the emotional weight of portraying that generation's sacrifices. Both Rogan and Eastwood emphasized the importance of maintaining normalcy and ethics in Hollywood, criticizing the industry's tolerance for entitled behavior and the dangers of child stardom.

Key takeaways

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