She comes off like a 12 year old to me I’m not sure why but I couldn’t even watch this like you said it kinda reminded me of trying to explain something to someone who has no idea what’s going on nor do they care. Have you ever been in the middle of explaining something or in the middle of a conversation when you realize “oh this person doesn’t understand or care” ? I’ve had that happen to me multiple times I have a family friend who’s like that he will talk for hours and as soon as you chime in he just sits there completely silent pretty much not paying attention to you he won’t acknowledge what you’re saying at all. Whenever he does that too me now I just stfu in the middle of whatever I’m saying and walk away then he usually comes chasing after me because he wasn’t done talking he just didn’t want to hear you talk.
I actually have a friend like that who just keeps talking talking and talking and when you try to say something he talks over you. Doesn't listen at all. He might as well just have a conversation with himself. When he calls me on the phone, i just put the phone down for 20 minutes and come back and he his still going. I say "YEAH i agree" and hang up LOL
@@inkwellflood8276 you can have a serious conversation while drinking, laugh and dance afterwards? Also it was just an analogy to how annoying this woman is to TRY and have a serious convo with. She just "ehahaha's" at everything, interrupts or has a non-serious self-humorous comment.
YEP! It gets draining trying to carry a conversation when you've done it a million times. After a while, one just goes, "Fuck it, lets stop wasting the mental energy and just let out what ever the fuck I want onto this lazy listener..."
dude i literally had that same thought, like put any real book reader/Stephen king fan in front of him in this and it would be a cool conversation but Eleanor clearly is only a fan of the movies and doesn't do much reading. Her mom likes stephen king that's about as far as she goes I think from this.
No one but King has got the ability to do this. The movies they have made of his work is always so underwhelming!! As soon as a new book is out I read it.
How can you hate reading? Having a conversation with this woman would be about as deep as a puddle. Also, Stephen King is an epic genius. I'd love to see him on JRE!
I hate reading books, I ve read countless articles, scientific papers , blogs etc but when it comes to fiction paperback books with small font....it just hurts my eyes/head
@@itsa-itsagames I can't recommend audiobooks enough. I used to read a lot of fiction, but stopped about a decade ago, mostly because of time. But a couple of years ago I gave audiobooks a try and it's amazing. Reading used to tire my eyes, but that's obviously not a problem with abooks. Also, I now read (listen) mostly during otherwise wasted time, like driving, cooking, cleaning, even during #2. You'd be surprised how much listening you can get out of these dead periods in the day. I get an hour a day easily. Often 2 hours.
@@ASJC27 agreed. i've loved audiobooks since I was a kid. The first one I fell in love with was The Body from Different Seasons. It was made into the movie Stand By Me, ot's read by the master, Frank Muller, who reads many of King's stories.
I love the story about Stanley Kubrick phoning King at 2 in the morning asking him if he believes in God and King says "yes" and kubrick says "I knew it" and hangs up.
Stephen King actually wrote about this in his introduction to The Stand (uncut version). He uses the word "limiting". As in, once you've seen the movie (take The Shining, for example), you'll read the book and be unable to picture anything but Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance. In King's words: "it's not necessarily a bad thing, but it is limiting." Solid point there, I think.
@@JDean3780 About Game of Thrones right? He'd probably be saying the opposite if he wrote the joke after the show's lazy pos ending. I can see why he wouldn't want to read those though they're like 4,000 pages per book and there are 5 books finished, 2 more planned that are never going to be finished.
When i was 15 my family moved to Maine from the suburbs of NJ a 45 min train ride to NYC it was 79 an exciting time for the city. It was a depressing feeling to be moving to a farm as a teenager. City slicker, flatlander or greenhorn, were common labels, i was definitely out of my element, but it didn't take long to understand how cool it was to live in a rural setting. Cars, bikes, snowmobiles, boats, lakes, ocean, forest, great parties and Good People who know the value of a hard days work and how to live in Harmony with Nature. What's not to like? As a teenager even the harsh winters were fun. As someone who has lived many places Maine is one of the better places to grow up.
The Dark Tower series is one of the best ever written imo. It spans his struggle with addiction to him finally beating his demons. You can literally see the change in his writing style. Legend.
Thankee Sai! Honestly to this day Wizard and Glass is just fucking epic. Nothing will touch the stand or Swan song for me, but fuck wizard and glass is my #3 in books read.
You should read the Dark Tower series in that case... his whole life’s work of books revolves around it and he ends up being central to the story including certain major events in his life.
My great uncle tutored Stephen King at Uni…he said he was a terrible student and bottom of the class. Shows that you should trust your talent and ignore negative noise
Joe covered a lot of the good reasons books tend to be better than movies, but he missed a **really** important one: When reading, we actually insert ourselves into each character. We're accessing parts of our brain, often in ways we otherwise couldn't, by empathizing with and considering the thoughts and actions of each of these characters. Even though the words are there to guide us, we are the ones creating these characters.
The remakes are very, very good. They are shocking close to the book. Even little side stories that happen in the book (start of the second movie) made it in. Its awesome.
The Rocky Horror picture show is classic though if you ever get the chance to go see it at Halloween and throw toast sing along etc. or dress up you should.
She was elusive. She was today. She was tomorrow. She was the faintest scent of a cactus flower, the flitting shadow of an elf owl. We did not know what to make of her. In our minds we tried to pin her to a cork board like a butterfly, but the pin merely went through and away she flew.” I saw the trailer for Stargirl and I thought they did a great job capturing what star girl felt like when you read it, especially because I was familiar with girl they casted for the role, and her uniqueness and weird charm fit perfectly with the character. Until someone commented the quote above. That’s when I realized, anyone watching the movie without reading the book will definitely not have the same experience. The way an intelligent author is able to make a reader feel with words is something technology cannot always grasp.
One of his greatest stories in my mind was 1408, and it was a short story! In fact that entire book Everything’s Eventual was fantastic I def recommend it for any King fans 🙌🏼
Its his only book I havent read... but I probably know everything he says in it. Sadly his politics today make him unbearable but his writing is still great. Lisey's story was great.
I remember watching the 90s ‘IT’ as a child on a VHS, literally couldent shower and walk past drains for the rest of my childhood lmao, defo one of the scariest movies ive ever seen as a kid. Shame it dosent really hold up today
@@jdailey01230 Horror movies in general don't hold up. Some new ones are better but none are scary. The Exorcist is still the best horror movie ever made.
@@funtimes8296 Exorcist was way ahead of its time. A few come to mind that still hold up imo: Alien, Silence of the Lambs, The Shining, The Thing, Halloween.
I was sooo scared of Alice Cooper (from The Black Widow tour) until he came into the store I worked at wearing a fanny pack and no makeup. I think all of our imaginations fill in more than we realize when it comes to Stephen King.
Hearts in atlantis is a great read. Very good movie too, probably second behind Shawshank redemption for Stephen King movies, yet the movie still doesn't get close to the book
Watching a movie shows you what something looks and sounds like. The descriptive language an author uses tells you how he or she feels about what they're describing. That's *easily* just as important as what's being described, and it's something visuals don't generally capture. A scene narrated by five different perspectives maybe sound very different each time.
The reason Stephen King books are scarier when you read them than when you watch them in the movie is because he has a way of writing where he uses your own imagination against you. When you watch the movie you're just seeing some other jackasses imagination
Cujo, in great part, was told from the perspective of the dog. That is virtually impossible to commit to film without coming across like an r-rated Homeward Bound.
@@xanbra that is bullshit also. So do you just say things knowing that they lies? Have you looked at what he's posting about because it's definitely not a "cesspool" like you claim.
@@nicolemegyeri5267 that's why I don't follow him. I couldn't care less about rich people and their politics and fake problems, but he is a brilliant writer.
@@nicolemegyeri5267 clearly you don’t follow him on Twitter if you think he’s not batshit crazy, and a raving lunatic. If you do follow him and don’t think that, maybe it’s time to look in the mirror.
Joe Rogan: "The TV IT is not that scary..." Me watching it as a 9 year old kid with my 9 year old friends SECRETLY toghether in the 90s late at night: BRUH
Desperation and The Regulators always fascinated me as a kid. Desperation written under Stephen King and Regulators under Richard Bachman. I loved how he had the same characters and evil entity in both books but completely different stories. Does anyone know of other authors doing similar stuff with 2 different books?
Steve has said several time that he had a good healthy childhood, despite his Dad stepping out of the picture when he was young. But in an interview with his mother she said how Steve witnessed his best friend get hit by a train as a child. The moment was so traumatic for him he black it out, walked home and couldn't remember what happened. His mother pieced it together later on when they found the boys body.
Actually movies can capture thoughts there’s ways to do it remember the show the wonder years where the narrator would explain what the kid was thinking.
As a huge fan of King's work, "On Writing" is, by far, one of my favorite books by him. It literally changed how I look at both fiction and reality. I particularly loved the audio book, and I mostly hate audio books.
Steven King was the master of *naming* his characters. Try doing it: invent a person in your mind, and name that person. It’s really hard to create a believable complete name that doesn’t feel like the author randomly chose them from a phone book (remember those?)
When you see a movie of any book, you are seeing the directors and actors interpretation of the story. When you read the book, your own imagination interprets the tale. It's so much better.
I was originally scared of IT when I was a kid. Watching it in my adulthood, the movie's not scary...but Pennywise definitely freaks me out to this day.
Stephen king’s imagination is awesome. He wrote a few books that are almost foreshadowing of real events. The dead zone, 11/22/63, insomnia. The stand could be an even deadlier version of what’s happening occurring now.The political upheaval that’s going on is something right out of a Stephen king book. Really dark, but really fascinating. The man is genius.
I don’t think that’s her fault, That’s just because she’s got literally zero interest in the topic of conversation, that tends to happen when you talk to people about things they have no interest in
@@scottmartin7717 Definitely, I got hooked when online gambling became legal in jersey. More states are giving it the green light and eventually it's gonna be a problem for a lot of people.
@@ZackWilliams_TheProducer glad you kicked it man 🤘🏻. A friend of mine was in rehab for hard drugs a long time ago and he was there with some gambling addicts and he remembers hearing their stories and thinking "damn I'm glad I didn't fuck my life up *that* bad" Shit is no joke
Being super creative is a must to write anywhere near King's level, but the guy also read countless books himself. Many authors say that reading is the best school for aspiring writers.
(Spoiler Alert) The Stand was one of the craziest books I've ever read, also one of the biggest let downs. It was 1,000+ pages of setup all leading up to this giant post apocalyptic supernatural war, then right when everything is about to climax and make sense some psycho rolls up with a nuke that he just happened to find lying around, then blows everyone up...
Just remember its the journey not the destination the stand is not supposed to have a crazy end all be all ending because the book in its self is about a beggining its starts with an end and ends with beggining
@@Bg66648 wow... I actually like you're take on this. A lot. I hadn't thought of it that way. I still feel let down by the ending though...like if you're gonna do so much beautiful setup to a great new world, why blow everyone up in the end?
Joe has literally said “I hate when people say you gotta read the game of thrones series. Why would I read it when I can watch it?!” He’s always contradicting himself
YES! I've tried explaining this to people, and nobody agrees with me. His characterizations are brilliant (probably the best character writer since Dickens). His characters often save what would otherwise be a pretty mundane plot. But his endings are generally awful. And I 100% agree on him as a short story/novella writer. Most of the King books that I go back to for rereads are his short stories.
I don't agree with that especially when he was in his prime, Carrie, Salem's Lot, Pet Sematary, The Dead Zone, Needful Things, Christine and Rage all had great endings.
Just to correct Joe some of these amazing movies, the credit also goes to the directors, music directors and make up artists as well. Transporting pages from a book into a good visual production is a very tough process.
I'm not gonna lie, Cujo was a fucking trip to read. Possibly had to do with what I was going through in my own life at the time... but dragging you back to being alive I guess. Seeing Cujo as a family pet that was basically losing his mind was just fucking heartbreaking. Can't remember all of it but it still jerks at my heartstrings. The ending was like an almost comfortable dagger in the heart to top it all off / add a little more misery before you go
There was stuff in IT the book that noone would ever put on film. I listened to it on audible and played in the bed while listening with my eyes closed or doing tasks. Most insane book
If you want to hunker down and watch an incredible series, watch King's "The Storm of the Century." Its on youtube and it is the scariest King movie I've ever seen. Quite unlike the rest of them and the best ambiance ever.
“Live in sin, come on in” I agree the storm of the century is frightening, it doesn’t have scary visual effects but the storyline is terrifying. Could you imagine having to give up a child to the devil or whoever he was.
“Born in lust, turn to dust” what frightened me when I first saw this movie year’s ago was what if someone or something knew every bad thought or thing that I’ve ever done. I won’t lie, the thought that I’d maybe have to answer for my actions someday did shape the way I acted through out life. I don’t really believe in that stuff but why not act the part just in case.
I’m from Maine. Still here, born and raised 38 years lol it’s def different life here. We’re lucky to have a lot of access to nature and simplicity’s that people vacation to experience. I will say, our woods and oceans carry an energy that’s magical at times.
I never realized how bad I need Joe to interview Stephen King until just now.
You should interview Stephen King.
Love your Stephen King reviews dude
WHAT!! finding this comment is like finding a hidden gem :) love your reviews mike!
Yes
TBH
Joe: let's discuss books with someone who doesn't read
Joe hasn't read them either.
Joe is all of us trying to discuss books with someone who's only relationship to reading is "my mum read books"
She comes off like a 12 year old to me I’m not sure why but I couldn’t even watch this like you said it kinda reminded me of trying to explain something to someone who has no idea what’s going on nor do they care. Have you ever been in the middle of explaining something or in the middle of a conversation when you realize “oh this person doesn’t understand or care” ? I’ve had that happen to me multiple times I have a family friend who’s like that he will talk for hours and as soon as you chime in he just sits there completely silent pretty much not paying attention to you he won’t acknowledge what you’re saying at all. Whenever he does that too me now I just stfu in the middle of whatever I’m saying and walk away then he usually comes chasing after me because he wasn’t done talking he just didn’t want to hear you talk.
@@Evergreen1400 I hear you man, I work with some people like that. Imagine having to keep an interview going with them!
@@anon17472. Smh yeah that’s tough lol.
I actually have a friend like that who just keeps talking talking and talking and when you try to say something he talks over you. Doesn't listen at all. He might as well just have a conversation with himself. When he calls me on the phone, i just put the phone down for 20 minutes and come back and he his still going. I say "YEAH i agree" and hang up LOL
Stephen King isn’t “reading.” LMAO. Tolstoy is reading.
This is like talking to a drunk girl at the bar, and trying to have a serious discussion.
EXACTLY. SHE MISSES THE POINT EVERY TIME
Why would you meet a girl in a bar and want a seriously boring conversation, not drinks, laughs and a dance???
👍🏻
I legitimately gagged when she said “Whatever lady I’m not reading.” It’s like, my god… are you that dense?
@@inkwellflood8276 you can have a serious conversation while drinking, laugh and dance afterwards? Also it was just an analogy to how annoying this woman is to TRY and have a serious convo with. She just "ehahaha's" at everything, interrupts or has a non-serious self-humorous comment.
@@FargSchitter instead of this to serious conversation, I'm gonna get pist and dance, have a fine evening, good egg.🤘🏻
I like how Joe is just having the conversation he wants to have, irrespective of who's sitting opposite him.
Hahahahahahaha
Been watching Joe for over 5 years and this comment is the best description of the show I've ever heard
well, in this particular interview, this chick obviously has nothing to add...
@@everwhat013 shes the hole like opie and anthony used to say
YEP! It gets draining trying to carry a conversation when you've done it a million times. After a while, one just goes, "Fuck it, lets stop wasting the mental energy and just let out what ever the fuck I want onto this lazy listener..."
dude i literally had that same thought, like put any real book reader/Stephen king fan in front of him in this and it would be a cool conversation but Eleanor clearly is only a fan of the movies and doesn't do much reading. Her mom likes stephen king that's about as far as she goes I think from this.
Most people don’t realize one of his short stories is Shawshank redemeption, one of the greatest stories of all time, just off the top of his head
Yes! I read it it’s in Different Seasons. Shawshank n Stand by me or “the body” were absolutely excellent novellas. N movies.
YES!!! "Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption" did something to me, even more so than the movie, which is saying a lot.
👍💯
There's a lot of thought process that goes into creating short stories as well.
My favorite movie 🎬
I'm more scared of trying to have a conversation with her without being interrupted than reading a Stephen King book.
Oh my goodness I know. It had me cringing so hard.
Ditzy gal
Thannnnnnnkkkk yew. Lord. Rogan always handles it so well though
That’s why he gets paid the big bucks,fuck talking to that lady for free.
Yea, she's annoying
90s pennywise terrified me for YEARS. Saw it when I was like 12 and it traumatized me.
My mom let me watch it at 5
No clue why
Freaked out to this day. I'm 31 now.
Me too! The 90s version was terrifying!!
TBH, I still am not a huge fan of clowns. I am just uncomfortable around them.
Tim Curry was brilliant and made pennywise a very scary character at that time and I think that's the strongest part of the original TV movie.
The scene when the boy can’t think of the characters name looks across the the marsh and sees his dad is so creepy
King's ability to create characters with incredible depth is why his novels don't always translate well to film.
No one but King has got the ability to do this. The movies they have made of his work is always so underwhelming!! As soon as a new book is out I read it.
He is incredible descriptive, that first chapter of it was insane.
@@annievanniekerk4650 shawshank redemption and green mile was pretty good though
Apparently langaleirs is word for word with the short story.
Correct, most of what truly shines from his works is the character development
How can you hate reading? Having a conversation with this woman would be about as deep as a puddle. Also, Stephen King is an epic genius. I'd love to see him on JRE!
I hate reading books, I ve read countless articles, scientific papers , blogs etc but when it comes to fiction paperback books with small font....it just hurts my eyes/head
@@itsa-itsagames I can't recommend audiobooks enough. I used to read a lot of fiction, but stopped about a decade ago, mostly because of time. But a couple of years ago I gave audiobooks a try and it's amazing. Reading used to tire my eyes, but that's obviously not a problem with abooks.
Also, I now read (listen) mostly during otherwise wasted time, like driving, cooking, cleaning, even during #2. You'd be surprised how much listening you can get out of these dead periods in the day. I get an hour a day easily. Often 2 hours.
@@ASJC27 agreed. i've loved audiobooks since I was a kid. The first one I fell in love with was The Body from Different Seasons. It was made into the movie Stand By Me, ot's read by the master, Frank Muller, who reads many of King's stories.
@@ASJC27 oh i use audiobooks too, im not against learning , its just the actual act of reading a book on print that gets me
@@itsa-itsagames Have you ever tried reading large print books? They're usually available in libraries too.
I have a feeling she’s never read a book.
Or seen a scary movie
Or had an original thought.
Have you seen the video
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
It’s hilarious!! 👽 😂
Joe has? He just reads stuff the day before and pretends to be an expert
"When I was your age, television was called books." --The Neverending Story
Didn’t he go through some trauma?
Joe: Well yeah he grew up on Maine
That's not a funny joke tho
That was funny
@@kidoliva do you have any dead family members???
@@gsmokezz848 That's a little personal
@@kidoliva I need to know ASAP
Imagine Stephen King reading Cujo for the first time after he wrote it:
"Damn, this is a good fucking book."
Have you seen the video
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
It’s hilarious!! 👽 😂
Imagine him reading this and saying "wtf is this shit, was I high? Oh wait" and the chuckles 😂😂
@@wodansam75 haha
The English title is "this dog is a fucking knobhead"
good movie also
She's like "could you imagine what the book is like?" Yeah, call me crazy but I've actually read a book.
I love the story about Stanley Kubrick phoning King at 2 in the morning asking him if he believes in God and King says "yes" and kubrick says "I knew it" and hangs up.
Joe's right about this, the one major strength books will have over visual adaptations is allowing readers imagination to fill in the blanks
This is exactly why a lot of King's stuff works better on the page than onscreen.
Stephen King actually wrote about this in his introduction to The Stand (uncut version). He uses the word "limiting". As in, once you've seen the movie (take The Shining, for example), you'll read the book and be unable to picture anything but Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance. In King's words: "it's not necessarily a bad thing, but it is limiting." Solid point there, I think.
And in that way you become part of the story yourself and the story part of you. Essentially “The Neverending Story.”
I am glad to hear him say this because he has a stand up bit saying the opposite. I was always pretty sure it was just a joke.
@@JDean3780 About Game of Thrones right? He'd probably be saying the opposite if he wrote the joke after the show's lazy pos ending. I can see why he wouldn't want to read those though they're like 4,000 pages per book and there are 5 books finished, 2 more planned that are never going to be finished.
I'm sure everyone in Maine loves that Joe makes it sound like a Russian gulag.
It is.
He wouldnt be wrong
You've never been there and it really shows.. North Korea and Russia are like the perfect resorts compared to it. Lmfao.
& if yah live south of Bangor ya ain't a Mainah um yay!
When i was 15 my family moved to Maine from the suburbs of NJ a 45 min train ride to NYC it was 79 an exciting time for the city. It was a depressing feeling to be moving to a farm as a teenager. City slicker, flatlander or greenhorn, were common labels, i was definitely out of my element, but it didn't take long to understand how cool it was to live in a rural setting. Cars, bikes, snowmobiles, boats, lakes, ocean, forest, great parties and Good People who know the value of a hard days work and how to live in Harmony with Nature. What's not to like? As a teenager even the harsh winters were fun. As someone who has lived many places Maine is one of the better places to grow up.
When you "realize" how many of his stories are ACTUALLY a part of the Dark Tower Series. Mind-Blown....
ruclips.net/video/D4bjY68Gmik/видео.html..
My brother told me that too! Never knew that!!
Every pony only comes with one trick. Some of them just figure out a way to repeat that trick from different perspectives.
Hey man there are other worlds than these
Yes. There was nothing quite like waiting for the next Dark Tower to come out. Except, maybe, waiting for.the next Green Mile booklet.
The Dark Tower series is soooo underrated. There are soooo many King fans that don’t realize his stories are ALL connected
I don't know about underrated. It's a very popular series and one of his best known works (although, to be fair, he has A LOT of well-known works).
The Doctor Sleep film let everyone who didn't already know that know.
Everything that has ever happened is underrated
@shaska ocelot lol wut
@@cornbredx Yes! I was so happy to see how blatant Doctor Sleep was being with the Dark Tower references but I loved it
The Dark Tower series is one of the best ever written imo. It spans his struggle with addiction to him finally beating his demons. You can literally see the change in his writing style. Legend.
Lobstrosities! 😱
Hey... Do you think Stephen King has ever been to Maine?
@@casidelbowen2675 Dod-a-chum?
@@bbb462cid Ded-a-chek? Did-a-chick?
Long days and pleasant nights!
Thankee Sai! Honestly to this day Wizard and Glass is just fucking epic. Nothing will touch the stand or Swan song for me, but fuck wizard and glass is my #3 in books read.
Steven king should make himself the scary guy in his book just one time, he’s pretty terrifying
Well, you aren't too far off actually😂 Song of Susannah anyone?
King is Randall Flagg.
How about when he’s the cleaner in Sons of Anarchy
You should read the Dark Tower series in that case... his whole life’s work of books revolves around it and he ends up being central to the story including certain major events in his life.
Kings a normal dude normal childhood nothing out of the ordinary with him
He said this on plenty of interviews
My great uncle tutored Stephen King at Uni…he said he was a terrible student and bottom of the class. Shows that you should trust your talent and ignore negative noise
Stephen King is trash
Sometimes. Other times you're just an idiot and/or suck at what you do.
Wonder how much of that was down to playing Hearts all night a la Hearts in Atlantis.
@@sappyjohnson shawshank? Green mile?
@@sappyjohnson how many of your books have been made into movies? He is a libtard but his writing is on point.
Joe: "Stephen King is awesome."
This chick: "Yeah, I would never read that."
Compelling interview...
She never read it. What would you like her to say?
Joe covered a lot of the good reasons books tend to be better than movies, but he missed a **really** important one: When reading, we actually insert ourselves into each character. We're accessing parts of our brain, often in ways we otherwise couldn't, by empathizing with and considering the thoughts and actions of each of these characters. Even though the words are there to guide us, we are the ones creating these characters.
Stephen King is an absolute genius. I still can't fathom how so many utterly terrifying, creative stories can come from just one mind.
Whiskey and cocaine
oh, why dont you marry him then?
Hmmm, wonder what’s working through him 🤔
Did you see this clip of Alex Jones making fun of Joe?! Joe gets pissed! ruclips.net/video/L5qynOa-mKo/видео.html
@@666goats wtf lol
Salem's Lot was absolutely terrifying, I think it's one of his scariest books and the TV mini series was equally horrifying as the book
While I was reading this book I had a nightmare where the vampires were attacking my home and I was killing them all lol. Great book
ruclips.net/video/Z56AC8YIExg/видео.html.
The miniseries was terrifyingly bad lol. Rob Lowe really?
Have you seen this clip of Joe getting mad at Kanye?! ruclips.net/video/FHDvR1X8Kso/видео.html
What’s up with that kid levitating, scratching on his friend’s window, smiling with those huge fangs. Terrified me as a kid.
Reading the dark tower was a significant point in my life. Long live the king.
The original mini series was definitely scary 😦
i still think the original the stand mini series was amazing, plus the audiobook is the best book ive ever read hands down
Agree 100%! Tim Curry was outstanding!
The recent movie sadly loses the dreamlike vibe of the miniseries.
I used to think so but watching it again I recently it doesn’t hold up for
Scary.It’s fun but pretty cheesy,not scary.Try watching it again.
Needlessly racist
I was waiting for Joe to give her the “look” as she kept on interrupting him 😂
Shawshank Redemption is, in my opinion, one of the greatest works of the 20th century.
I’ve yet to see the new “IT” but I still love the old version, to this very day. I personally thought it was amazing, the man truly is a genius.
The remake was good, but I looove the classic mini-series
The remakes are very, very good. They are shocking close to the book. Even little side stories that happen in the book (start of the second movie) made it in. Its awesome.
Agreed man, the classic series got the feeling and atmosphere that was better than the remakes
I highly recommend watching the remakes. They do it justice for sure.
ruclips.net/video/Z56AC8YIExg/видео.html.
Tim Curry was in the running to play the Joker for Tim Burtons Batman, he would have been absolutely awesome.
He probably would’ve made a good Joker but definitely not better than Nicholson.
You can still find clips of Curry recorded for the pilot,he came back over the years to voice numerous characters on the show
I always pictured Snape as Tim Curry before they made the movies. Rickman was awesome but I think Curry would have been awesome.
The Rocky Horror picture show is classic though if you ever get the chance to go see it at Halloween and throw toast sing along etc. or dress up you should.
She was elusive. She was today. She was tomorrow. She was the faintest scent of a cactus flower, the flitting shadow of an elf owl. We did not know what to make of her. In our minds we tried to pin her to a cork board like a butterfly, but the pin merely went through and away she flew.”
I saw the trailer for Stargirl and I thought they did a great job capturing what star girl felt like when you read it, especially because I was familiar with girl they casted for the role, and her uniqueness and weird charm fit perfectly with the character. Until someone commented the quote above. That’s when I realized, anyone watching the movie without reading the book will definitely not have the same experience. The way an intelligent author is able to make a reader feel with words is something technology cannot always grasp.
One of his greatest stories in my mind was 1408, and it was a short story! In fact that entire book Everything’s Eventual was fantastic I def recommend it for any King fans 🙌🏼
Agreed. I can picture the cover in my head right now
King’s On Writing book is one of my absolute favorite books I’ve ever read.
Me too!
Same.
Its his only book I havent read... but I probably know everything he says in it. Sadly his politics today make him unbearable but his writing is still great. Lisey's story was great.
@@GODHATESADOPTION One thing that I have learnt in my life is to separate the art from the artist.
@@vivek27789 most musicians have horrible politics
I remember watching the 90s ‘IT’ as a child on a VHS, literally couldent shower and walk past drains for the rest of my childhood lmao, defo one of the scariest movies ive ever seen as a kid. Shame it dosent really hold up today
Most 90s movies don’t hold up today. It really makes you wonder how we saw the world so differently back then.
ruclips.net/video/D4bjY68Gmik/видео.html.
ruclips.net/video/D4bjY68Gmik/видео.html.mk
@@jdailey01230 Horror movies in general don't hold up. Some new ones are better but none are scary. The Exorcist is still the best horror movie ever made.
@@funtimes8296 Exorcist was way ahead of its time. A few come to mind that still hold up imo: Alien, Silence of the Lambs, The Shining, The Thing, Halloween.
Pet Sematary scared the crap out of me when I was a kid...
Zelda was the scary part for me
Sometimes… dead is better.
That was too close to home if you're a parent!
Don’t do it, Stotch!
ruclips.net/video/Z56AC8YIExg/видео.html.m
On Writing is legit one of my favorite books of all time. King has a great sense of humor and it shines throughout.
Joe: "He grew up in Maine and poor." "Anyone would be a sociopath growing up like that."
Ahhh it ain’t that bad, King still lives here.
Lol
(Henry Bowers has joined the chat)
I was sooo scared of Alice Cooper (from The Black Widow tour) until he came into the store I worked at wearing a fanny pack and no makeup. I think all of our imaginations fill in more than we realize when it comes to Stephen King.
Little does Joe know everyone from Maine grows up poor..... uh oh are we fucking crazy? A real Mainer would respond " fuckin right guy"
Fascinating.
Hey, is Norm gonna be a guest before you reach episode 2,000?
ruclips.net/video/Z56AC8YIExg/видео.html.
NORMNORMNORMNORMNORMNORM
WE WANT NORM
Lol the conversation chemistry between these two was brutal
When they finally make a movie based off The Long Walk, it will be amazing.
For real
It’s the perfect time for it, too! Especially with the resurgence of using kids for mature story lines. One of my top ten
yes
Yess
The rights have been bought and apparently a screenplay is being written.
"Apt Pupil" is the perfect example of King's style of slowly drawing you into the antagonist's madness, bit by terrifying bit.
Just watched that on Hulu
“Hearts in Atlantis” is so phenomenal.
“Eyes of the Dragon” was brilliant.
I had forgotten Eyes of the Dragon. That was a beautiful fucking story.
Eyes of the dragon is an absolute favourate of mine!
Hearts in atlantis is a great read. Very good movie too, probably second behind Shawshank redemption for Stephen King movies, yet the movie still doesn't get close to the book
Currently reading Eyes of the Dragon and it's a page turner.
Nice to see someone mention 'Hearts in Atlantis' - hardly ever gets a mention and it's a gem of a film.
Misery is by far the best Stephen King movie adaptation.
That’s my number two. I prefer The Shining. But I prefer the novel Misery to the novel The Shining.
Christine is top notch. One of Carpenter's masterpieces.
Cujo 😎
Stand By Me, Shawshank, The Mist.
Kathy Bates was SO SCARY/GOOD in that movie.
Watching a movie shows you what something looks and sounds like. The descriptive language an author uses tells you how he or she feels about what they're describing. That's *easily* just as important as what's being described, and it's something visuals don't generally capture. A scene narrated by five different perspectives maybe sound very different each time.
The reason Stephen King books are scarier when you read them than when you watch them in the movie is because he has a way of writing where he uses your own imagination against you. When you watch the movie you're just seeing some other jackasses imagination
Exactly.
Cujo, in great part, was told from the perspective of the dog. That is virtually impossible to commit to film without coming across like an r-rated Homeward Bound.
Haha..I actually didn't know that, interesting...., btw yer name is funny haha!
@@redstaplerguyforlifepastpr5763 Thank you!
@@nuclearpoultryproductions5039 yer welcome, I do remember enjoying the movie on vhs 📼 as a kid , on a movie night with fam haha.
The Stand is one of my favorite stories of all time. Went back through it at the beginning of this whole pandemic.
Stephen king scares me as a person bro
@@xanbra Bullshit. I follow him.
A lot of people from where he’s from are like that.
@@xanbra that is bullshit also. So do you just say things knowing that they lies? Have you looked at what he's posting about because it's definitely not a "cesspool" like you claim.
@@nicolemegyeri5267 that's why I don't follow him. I couldn't care less about rich people and their politics and fake problems, but he is a brilliant writer.
@@nicolemegyeri5267 clearly you don’t follow him on Twitter if you think he’s not batshit crazy, and a raving lunatic. If you do follow him and don’t think that, maybe it’s time to look in the mirror.
Joe Rogan: "The TV IT is not that scary..."
Me watching it as a 9 year old kid with my 9 year old friends SECRETLY toghether in the 90s late at night:
BRUH
I still don’t walk in gutters past stormwater drains!
Desperation and The Regulators always fascinated me as a kid. Desperation written under Stephen King and Regulators under Richard Bachman. I loved how he had the same characters and evil entity in both books but completely different stories. Does anyone know of other authors doing similar stuff with 2 different books?
Have you seen the video
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
It’s hilarious!! 👽 😂
the regulators is lit
Both are amazing
Tak!
Steve has said several time that he had a good healthy childhood, despite his Dad stepping out of the picture when he was young. But in an interview with his mother she said how Steve witnessed his best friend get hit by a train as a child. The moment was so traumatic for him he black it out, walked home and couldn't remember what happened. His mother pieced it together later on when they found the boys body.
"I'm not a big reader."
Yeah, we can tell.
Salem’s Lot.
Read it as a teenager in a cabin in Maine.
Never forget it.
Wow I bet it practically felt like you were living the novel.
Damn cool
@@craigsovilla7225
My older sister jump-scared me while reading. It nearly ended me.
Have you read it?
@@johnjenkins5854 the made for tv movie scared the shit out of me as a kid lol
@@johnjenkins5854 Not yet! I've been reading a lot of Stephen King here lately though, I'll be reading it here before too long.
Great point about books allowing access to characters' thoughts. Movies can't capture that. That's why story books will always be around.
Actually movies can capture thoughts there’s ways to do it remember the show the wonder years where the narrator would explain what the kid was thinking.
As a huge fan of King's work, "On Writing" is, by far, one of my favorite books by him. It literally changed how I look at both fiction and reality. I particularly loved the audio book, and I mostly hate audio books.
Steven King was the master of *naming* his characters. Try doing it: invent a person in your mind, and name that person. It’s really hard to create a believable complete name that doesn’t feel like the author randomly chose them from a phone book (remember those?)
@Computer Science I love it!
He's good at killing them off too. The Stand is full of side charracters who are just there to die. Its great!
When you see a movie of any book, you are seeing the directors and actors interpretation of the story. When you read the book, your own imagination interprets the tale. It's so much better.
I've read many of his books, his earlier works like The Long Walk are masterpieces. Would love to see him on JRE one day
Loved The Long Walk, in my top seven! The suspense is perfect. You don't want to believe how it's going to go, but you know it will, and it does.
Long Walk was great. A great look into teenage psyche
The uncut version of the stand is the best book I've ever read in my life. Under the dome is also amazing.
Uncut vs of the stand ,got it I'll make a ✍of it .
@@redstaplerguyforlifepastpr5763 It's a long read but worth every minute! Enjoy!
I was originally scared of IT when I was a kid. Watching it in my adulthood, the movie's not scary...but Pennywise definitely freaks me out to this day.
ruclips.net/video/D4bjY68Gmik/видео.html.m
Watched it in 1999 and had to shit standing up
Did you see this clip of Alex Jones making fun of Joe?! Joe gets pissed! ruclips.net/video/L5qynOa-mKo/видео.html
Try reading the book. It’s so scary! The movies were meh. Kinda creepy but not scary. The book will have you sleeping with your light on.
@@katet_33 ...think I'll past. Read a scene involving the children that I'd rather not give interest to.
Just finished 11/22/63. Great book and a must read for any true King fan!
I’m alive in a generation to hear this podcast
Bro I forgot you existed 😭
Omg I remember the animated The Hobbit movie. They showed us it in elementary school in the 80s
I read Hobbit, LOTR, and Silmarillion once a year, and I watch the Extended LOTR trilogy and animated Hobbit when I finish reading.
Joe literally had a bit making fun of people who say "The book was better".
Key word “bit”
Key word "key".
Stephen king’s imagination is awesome.
He wrote a few books that are almost foreshadowing of real events. The dead zone, 11/22/63, insomnia. The stand could be an even deadlier version of what’s happening occurring now.The political upheaval that’s going on is something right out of a Stephen king book. Really dark, but really fascinating. The man is genius.
Most of that is based on past events. Human history repeats itself.
Did someone time travel and change the past? I'm confused
The Stand was the first Stephen King book I ever read, I was 14. It was incredible and I became a King fan.
Mine was It. Then my second was The Stand, possibly. Read a bunch of King in my senior year of high school
I love that Joe just said, “the T” as if everyone should know what it is…still some Boston boy in him.
This interview would be better if Joe was talking to a wall.
Omg yes. Most obnoxious commentary. "This book was great" "yes, I never read it but it was really big and heavy"
He kinda is.
I don’t think that’s her fault, That’s just because she’s got literally zero interest in the topic of conversation, that tends to happen when you talk to people about things they have no interest in
The Dark Tower is my personal Lord of the Rings
It and the Stand were epic, but Pet Semetary was just plan terrifying.✌🏽
My favorite Richard Bachman story was about the doctor stranded on an island. Sick man. Sick!
“He was the It” 😂 that phrasing killed me haha
Haha
People should read The Stand.
Very suiting for these times
Captain Trips is coming
Read the stand over forty years ago. It was my favorite book back then. Same year I saw Springsteen twice in the same year 1978
You did a whole bit on this joe. It’s never better to not see something? 😂
I came on here just to say the same thing...he had a whole rant on ppl reading the book or watching the movies
With every episode my hatred for draft kings grows just a little bit larger.
Amen. The post-millennial generations are going to be massive gambling addicts too
@@scottmartin7717 Definitely, I got hooked when online gambling became legal in jersey. More states are giving it the green light and eventually it's gonna be a problem for a lot of people.
@@ZackWilliams_TheProducer glad you kicked it man 🤘🏻. A friend of mine was in rehab for hard drugs a long time ago and he was there with some gambling addicts and he remembers hearing their stories and thinking "damn I'm glad I didn't fuck my life up *that* bad"
Shit is no joke
I remember reading nightmares and dreamscapes, really good short stories in there
Being super creative is a must to write anywhere near King's level, but the guy also read countless books himself. Many authors say that reading is the best school for aspiring writers.
(Spoiler Alert) The Stand was one of the craziest books I've ever read, also one of the biggest let downs. It was 1,000+ pages of setup all leading up to this giant post apocalyptic supernatural war, then right when everything is about to climax and make sense some psycho rolls up with a nuke that he just happened to find lying around, then blows everyone up...
Last book I tossed in the trash.
@brotherhood lol you didn't like the ending either huh?
Just remember its the journey not the destination the stand is not supposed to have a crazy end all be all ending because the book in its self is about a beggining its starts with an end and ends with beggining
@@Bg66648 wow... I actually like you're take on this. A lot. I hadn't thought of it that way.
I still feel let down by the ending though...like if you're gonna do so much beautiful setup to a great new world, why blow everyone up in the end?
I can’t believe Joe got the VP on his show
Joe has literally said “I hate when people say you gotta read the game of thrones series. Why would I read it when I can watch it?!” He’s always contradicting himself
True.
TBF I don't really want to read those books, either. Even if they're good. Don't really care.
@@cornbredx i agree, i just don’t flip flop from opinion to seem smart or dumb/more relatable depending on who I’m speaking with
I'm glad this got posted ASAP. Riveting!
What's funny is that Stephen King thinks Joe Rogan is an idiot
That's the thing about writers, very perceptive.
I’m sure Rogan would agree with him
@@jdailey01230 he says it all the time too lmao
@@rr-brown6445 Daniel's brain.
What’s funny is that back in 1980 North Bergen new Jersey Joey Diaz farted on an elderly man on cocaine on a bus.
Love King's books. But the guy can't write a decent ending. He seems better suited to short stories.
Agreed!
YES! I've tried explaining this to people, and nobody agrees with me. His characterizations are brilliant (probably the best character writer since Dickens). His characters often save what would otherwise be a pretty mundane plot. But his endings are generally awful.
And I 100% agree on him as a short story/novella writer. Most of the King books that I go back to for rereads are his short stories.
I don't agree with that especially when he was in his prime, Carrie, Salem's Lot, Pet Sematary, The Dead Zone, Needful Things, Christine and Rage all had great endings.
Lol...SK 400 million books sold ; you 10-20 troll comments...lmfao!
My fave so far has been duma key and i was very satisfied with the ending to that novel tbh, awesome book
I’ve always wondered why he doesn’t have King on his show. I’d watch that episode over and over again. I live in Maine and absolutely love King.
@@mablesfatalfable6021 only to morons. To level-headed right-thinking people, he's paying attention to reality and acting accordingly.
@@mablesfatalfable6021 I hope not. Though, if that’s the case, I’ll try to separate the artist from his work, because I do think he writes well
Just to correct Joe some of these amazing movies, the credit also goes to the directors, music directors and make up artists as well. Transporting pages from a book into a good visual production is a very tough process.
The Stand is my favorite! Gotta read the uncut version.
🤔...... another one I see.
Always wanted to read it but whew it looks overwhelming!
She keeps cutting him off driving me nuts
Get over it?
King was drugged out when he wrote Cujo and The Tommy knockers, arguably two of his worst novels.
But... Cujo
Late last night and the night before
Tommyknockers tommyknockers at my door
I really liked Tommyknockers!
It was a different kind of book then he usually writes. Very fun
I'm not gonna lie, Cujo was a fucking trip to read. Possibly had to do with what I was going through in my own life at the time... but dragging you back to being alive I guess. Seeing Cujo as a family pet that was basically losing his mind was just fucking heartbreaking. Can't remember all of it but it still jerks at my heartstrings. The ending was like an almost comfortable dagger in the heart to top it all off / add a little more misery before you go
He was also balls to the walls lit up when he directed Maximum Overdrive, which is based on his novella Trucks.
Joe Rogan's guest line up has fallen wayyyyy off. She interrupts way to much
Ms pat was pretty bad, joe fake laughing
so nice to hear the joe reads almost every stephen king book. big fan
There was stuff in IT the book that noone would ever put on film. I listened to it on audible and played in the bed while listening with my eyes closed or doing tasks. Most insane book
I read the title and thought Joe had King on and I almost shit my pants
Tim Curry was way better as Pennywise gtfo
Tim Curry makes everything better.
If you want to hunker down and watch an incredible series, watch King's "The Storm of the Century." Its on youtube and it is the scariest King movie I've ever seen. Quite unlike the rest of them and the best ambiance ever.
I looked for that series almost a year ago and it wasn’t available, now I see that it is Thanks. I’m going to start watching it tonight.
“Live in sin, come on in”
I agree the storm of the century is frightening, it doesn’t have scary visual effects but the storyline is terrifying. Could you imagine having to give up a child to the devil or whoever he was.
“Born in lust, turn to dust” what frightened me when I first saw this movie year’s ago was what if someone or something knew every bad thought or thing that I’ve ever done. I won’t lie, the thought that I’d maybe have to answer for my actions someday did shape the way I acted through out life. I don’t really believe in that stuff but why not act the part just in case.
King’s Detective series he released recently is fantastic. As is the Outsider
Is it The Outsider or just Outsider?
@@Highspirekid13 the Outsider on HBO max right now.
@@garryjohnson9328 gotcha I thought you were talking about the Outsiders the one tv show that was on amc I think. I gotta watch that though.
it would be insane if John Carpenter & Stephen King were in same room in Joe Rogan Broadcast
I’m from Maine. Still here, born and raised 38 years lol it’s def different life here. We’re lucky to have a lot of access to nature and simplicity’s that people vacation to experience. I will say, our woods and oceans carry an energy that’s magical at times.
Acadia is beautiful!
He also wrote "the body" which was then turned into the classic movie Stand By Me. Dude is one of a kind
Pet Sematary
The new It ruined several lives, including mine for like 3 days.