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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Rogan blames ultra-processed American food for why Americans feel better eating in Europe

Joe Rogan Experience · Joe Rogan Experience #2519 - Scott Eastwood · July 1, 2026
Rogan blames ultra-processed American food for why Americans feel better eating in Europe
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience #2519 - Scott Eastwood
"I just got back from Europe. My body there feels so much better. And I eat pretty healthy, okay? I eat healthy here and I eat pretty healthy there. So, what's going on? It's our food. Our food is bad."
Eastwood and Rogan discussed the widely reported phenomenon of Americans feeling healthier when eating in Europe despite similar diets. Rogan attributed this to chemicals, preservatives, glyphosate, and processing methods used in American food that are banned in Europe. They cited specific examples like bread additives and dairy processing differences.

About this episode

Joe Rogan speaks with actor and producer Scott Eastwood, son of Clint Eastwood, in a wide-ranging conversation covering American food quality, political division, masculinity, Hollywood culture, and World War II history. The episode's most newsworthy moments center on Eastwood's claim that government elites deliberately foster political division to prevent unified citizen action, and Rogan's extended criticism of ultra-processed American foods that he blames for the widespread phenomenon of Americans feeling healthier when eating in Europe. The pair discuss the chemicals, preservatives, and processing methods banned in Europe but standard in American food production. Eastwood promotes his WWII film Lucky Strike, revealing that thousands of German-Americans returned to fight for Nazi Germany during the war, and describes meeting 107-year-old WWII veteran Colonel Herbert Stern who liberated a concentration camp. Rogan delivers a direct warning to young listeners about marijuana and alcohol's permanent effects on developing brains, calling it 'not good for you' despite legalization trends. Eastwood criticizes unnamed Hollywood figures for financial misconduct and lack of accountability, describing an actor who refused to repay investors after abandoning a film mid-production. The conversation touches on toxic masculinity discourse, with Rogan arguing the term conflates criminal behavior with positive masculine traits like protection and provision. They discuss psychedelic experiences, Eastwood's dyslexia, working with directors like Guy Ritchie, the Charlie Kirk shooting conspiracy theories, and the precariousness of civilization. Eastwood emphasizes his father Clint's blue-collar work ethic and resistance to Hollywood excess, crediting it for keeping him grounded. The episode blends cultural commentary, health advice, Hollywood insider stories, and political skepticism.

Key takeaways

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