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New York Times Reporters Claim No Evidence Epstein Was Intelligence

Joe Rogan Experience · Joe Rogan Experience #2522 - Tony Hinchcliffe · July 2, 2026
New York Times Reporters Claim No Evidence Epstein Was Intelligence
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience
Joe Rogan Experience #2522 - Tony Hinchcliffe
"Tim Dylan had these two New York Times reporters on his podcast and they said there's no evidence that Jeffrey Epstein was intelligence. And I was like, What? What? There's no you [ __ ] watch one Mike Ben's episode of my podcast where he breaks it down. It's almost impossible that he's not"
Joe Rogan expresses shock that New York Times reporters told Tim Dillon there is no evidence Jeffrey Epstein was connected to intelligence agencies, calling it impossible given available information. Rogan suggests this represents mainstream media avoiding or suppressing obvious facts.

About this episode

Joe Rogan sits down with comedian Tony Hinchcliffe for a wide-ranging conversation that covers the ongoing controversies surrounding Hinchcliffe's comedy, the state of modern media, combat sports, and the entertainment industry. The episode provides extensive new details about the fallout from Hinchcliffe's appearances at both the Trump rally at Madison Square Garden and the Kevin Hart roast, with Hinchcliffe revealing that his controversial Puerto Rico joke was a last-second addition when organizers gave him more stage time than planned. The conversation exposes significant political censorship, including the revelation that UFC champion Sean Strickland was banned from the White House UFC event specifically for his criticism of Israel. Rogan and Hinchcliffe discuss the credibility crisis facing legacy media, with Rogan expressing shock that New York Times reporters claimed there's no evidence Jeffrey Epstein was connected to intelligence agencies. The two dissect the hypocrisy in comedy, revealing that Hinchcliffe and Shane Gillis were the only major comedians to refuse Saudi Arabia money, yet Hinchcliffe was falsely accused of taking it at the Kevin Hart roast by performers who actually did accept Saudi payments. Hinchcliffe provides a detailed account of attending Kanye West's revolutionary popup stadium shows, describing them as the greatest live production he's ever witnessed. The episode also covers Floyd Mayweather's reported financial troubles despite earning $750 million, the evolution of MMA and boxing, wrestling's formative influence on both hosts, social media's toxic culture of outrage, and reflections on growing up in crime-ridden Youngstown, Ohio. Throughout, both emphasize the importance of authentic comedy over political correctness and critique the weaponization of outrage for engagement.

Key takeaways

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