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Film industry figure claims director abandoned project after pre-production, refused to pay back investors

Joe Rogan Experience · Joe Rogan Experience #2519 - Scott Eastwood · July 1, 2026
Film industry figure claims director abandoned project after pre-production, refused to pay back investors
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience #2519 - Scott Eastwood
"We started working on a film with a director, and they decided, you know, after we had spent a bunch of money, that they just didn't feel like they wanted to work with this other person and didn't want to do the job. And so I was like, okay, well, you need to pay that money back now. And they're like, I don't do that. It's like, well, yeah, you do."
Eastwood described working with an unnamed director who abandoned a film project mid-pre-production after taking money from investors, then refused to reimburse them despite having caused the project to collapse. He expressed shock at behavior he says would be unacceptable in any other industry but is tolerated in Hollywood because of star power. The incident underscores ethical lapses and financial recklessness among powerful industry figures.

About this episode

Joe Rogan sits down with actor Scott Eastwood, son of Clint Eastwood, for a wide-ranging conversation covering mental health, Hollywood ethics, nutrition, masculinity, warfare, and conspiracy theories. Eastwood reveals that taking a year off at age 40 made him more depressed, contradicting the idea that overworked people simply need rest. He also exposes unethical behavior in Hollywood, describing a director who abandoned a film project mid-production and refused to reimburse investors. The conversation shifts to the American food industry, with Rogan highlighting how U.S. bread contains chemicals banned in Europe and China, including chlorine gas and potassium bromate. Eastwood discusses his new World War II film Lucky Strike and his emotional encounter with 107-year-old Colonel Herbert Irving Stern, a Battle of the Bulge veteran who validated the film's accuracy. Rogan and Eastwood criticize the term toxic masculinity, arguing it conflates criminal behavior with protective male virtues like strength and responsibility. They also discuss Guy Ritchie's unconventional directing style, in which he rewrites scripts in real time on set. The episode takes a conspiratorial turn when Rogan repeats allegations that Thomas Crooks, the attempted Trump assassin, had his apartment professionally scrubbed and possessed multiple phones with no social media presence, suggesting intelligence involvement. Eastwood shares his belief that psychedelics and extreme sports like surfing provide unmatched mental clarity by forcing individuals to confront fear and mortality. The conversation underscores both men's distrust of institutions, celebration of traditional masculinity, and belief that purpose and discipline are essential to well-being.

Key takeaways

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