Ya, I’m totally sick of comedian interview podcasts!!! Lol. And I never even watch, or listen to them. Honestly, comedians just aren’t that interesting
This is the reason Joe rogans podcast is so great, brining stuff like this to millions of people just by talking to people and having open conversations
Na it's bullshit. Joe is an expert on two things mma and bullshit. He has his followers all talking like he's an expert on any topic spewing his babble the next day like robots.
@@residentpotato6023 na, back in sterns prime every Tom dick and Harry didn't have a podcast or show. The competition is so much harder now and Joe's killing it.
Word 😌👌 This is the first time I've tuned in for a while, just crossed my mind- "hey I wonder what Joe's doin',might just chuck an old good Ep on in the background.." *😳OK I AM ON-GROUND AN BACK, JOE!* Best dude ever to remind me how level logic n real JRE atmosphere is.. Miss it... 🥰
@@John_Redcorn_ true, it's interesting to a point if your a fan of the select entertainer as gives insight to what kind of person they are, 'cos comedians write the funny stuff for their shows, not interviews.
My favorite show yet. I'm stationed up here in fairbanks right now. Iv been all over this area gold panning and have driven by all the places shown on your 3 hour long podcast. So awesome to see what you can really find up here if you have the right equipment, patience, and of course the land to do it. This has really motivated me to explore this place a lot more.
That ancient apocalypse theory possibly? All that rushing and moving water had to settle in places, all the dead animals that would’ve been washed down would have to have settled there also, then frozen until now.
That's what I'm guessing. Even if you're conservative and only say their are 1,000 woolly mammoths there, as opposed to his friends 10k, a 5 acre plot of land could not support that level of biomass chomping on the trees there. So this isn't some sort of feeding ground.
Also.... The climate is changing.... but we are not the be all end all when it comes to the equation...... There's many natural processes at work here..... the magnetic poles are shifting and have accelerated over the last 100 years.... this has decreased the strength of the magnetosphere allowing the energy from solar coronal mass ejections to have a greater impact on our atmosphere.... this in turn has helped change the trajectories of the jet streams, upsetting our "normal" weather patterns..... There is also the chandler wobble which effects the geographical north and south axis.... the earth wobbles in precession every 26,000 years..... Earths rotation is speeding up, days are becoming shorter..... The sun micro novas and blasts off it's coronal shell.... There's also the milankovitch cycle..... this changes earths cyclical precession around the sun from a circular shape into a oval shape. This creates tidal heaving in earths core and continental plates, leading to more earthquakes and volcanic activity..... None of the above we can do much about and are all natural processes, we aren't causing these things to happen yet they will ultimately play the biggest roll on our climate and earth... that's why we're not told about it in the news daily, they can't sell us a solution to these problems...... notice how many are buying bunkers though, notice how many are preparing for serious issues..... We do however need to change our behaviour, we can do more to stop poisoning our environment and the air we breath, this is our home, let's stop poisoning the well before we can't anymore, destroying our environment for profit is madness. Peace, power and freedom to all.
This episode started off slow and ended up being amazing! I keep saying it, Joe is at his best when he brings scientist and real people. Comedians are okay but these are the best episodes in my opinion.
Lmao no way i thought i qas the only one thsmat does thst occationally. I do it mostly when im on a driving trip i sleep with my headphones on hearing it
This episode had me hooked the whole 3 hours... What a great guest with the storys and his life in full display. I want him back real soon with more story's!!!!!
Joe should have this guy back on in a year or so. He is a natural podcaster, and his current situation is so compelling that I’d like to hear an update
@@zarathustra8424 the guy was respectful but also rough around the edges. He was humble but still had a big personality. I found him enjoyable to watch and would like to see him again
"Impossible to believe these were not deposited as a result of cataclysmic events during the Younger Dryas. This is clearly overwhelming evidence of Atlantis."
In the early 90's while living in Fairbanks, my buddy was at his families fish camp in Husilia AK about 185 miles west of Fairbanks and found a complete steppe Bison skull and horns sticking out of the river bank there, it wasn't bone either, it was completely fossilized, he still has that skull today, so the Steppe Bison was probably prolific across Alaska and for a very long period of time too.
The one thing that makes Joe so famous and popular in my opinion......isn't actually one thing it's many things. That is it's the fact that he has so many people with so many topics you can't help but to be curious and interested in who and what is being discussed! Love it!
In my eyes it's actually a little more complex than that, he is in fact the perfect level of intelligence for what he does. Not that he knows everything, nor that he knows little. He knows enough to converse with a wide array of intelligent guests, but not so much that the audience isn't able to follow along. There are many other factors but this is one of the ones I attribute most highly to his success.
@@roems6396 we want the hypotheses. That's how the scientific method starts. Science isn't concrete its a method, once you stop allowing ideas and questions it becomes a religion or an ideology.
My mom Michele worked for Big John every summer my whole child hood workin at the gold dredge Nothing but positive things to say about John one of the most influential men i have gotten to speak and spend time with especially inside the Old Fairbanks historical library
🤣 🤣 5:48 What a sweetheart of an old man! That whole interaction, Joe' childish comic nature, his inability to let a name like that go un molested, just made my morning. Lmao as I write this.
Might be one of my favorite guests. I talk like that, but never found any prehistoric shit like this man did. I’m glad it’s a real man in Charge of these things. The universe doesn’t make mistakes
I think he said the few bones dated so far range in age from 3,000 years old to 22,000 years old. I haven't watched Ancient Apocalypse. I thought Graham Hancock thought the mass extinction occurred very quickly?
@@davidchamplin4865 From the known geological record, there were "melt water pulse A and B". The sea levels rose 400 feet. we know that. His theory is that those events wiped out civilizations; not whether they exist at all.
@@ThMindFdr 😮well that’s very condescending to say to someone you know NOTHING about. Only online are you able to speak to strangers like this. What a time to be alive for weak individuals like you.🧐😒you must have been enjoying the internet since ‘95 huh.
Thing I love most about Joe Rogans program is that, unlike a network show, no one pigeon holes his questions towards the guests. He doesn't direct the guests statements with prewritten questions to get the sensationalized statements.
They have found mammoth elephants quick frozen with tropical vegetations undigested in their mouths! Smithsonian won’t report that because it makes it look like the Earth is a lot younger than they want it to be! Again, how can we find dinosaur bones and mammoth elephants but no transitional fossils from monkey to man? That lived after these prehistoric creatures!?
Animals sense things, like how they'll head inland enmasse sensing an oncoming tsunami. I think the animals found themselves naturally gathering then moving together in just an enormous herd in an effort to escape what they all sensed was coming, and that's why a bunch of them were discovered all together like this when the global catastrophe hit with such tremendous force that they were instantly killed, churned up, then frozen like they were in close to a flash.
Yet beware, he says they went extinct 12000 years ago, bit the individual pieces could be 20, 30000 years old! So he thinks it is not a result of one single catastrophy! What a pity this scenario isn't analyzed deeper with maybe waves of bones from different ages - giving us correlation data about when such catastophies happened!
Lol, I have mined in the same area as John and met him several times. Weird seeing familiar people on the show. I have dug up many mammoth tusks and other bones while mining and that smell he refers to is like no other smell out there. Its a putrid scent like a bucket of fish guts left behind the garage for 3 months mixed with very active soil and it lingers on clothes thru several washes and stains the hands with stink. I know of a couple of spots that might be a lot like his depot of bones, just based on the stench and size of the area. Hard to say if there are 10's or 100's of thousands of specimens like his find but I am sure there are a lot at these sites. I pulled a few pieces out but nothing more due to access being extremely difficult. Great show.
@@John_Redcorn_ great observation. Where were the 3k bones located? Mixed in with the 12,000 plus year old extinct layer? It’s possible the 3k were contaminates without seeing them plucked from a known layer of extinct bones. From the RUclips videos he’s water blasting and collecting what washes out. The land cover above the area hasn’t been removed which makes contamination possible 🤷♂️ I think he has only carbon dated 4 specimens.
The presence of gravel is a great indicator that water was at play and also the muck, too...He should invite Randall and/or Graham to this place...i am so curious about what is also there in the surrounding acreage
Going off Randal Carslon's impact theory, those mammoths must have been flushed into a single place, although how they were preserved needs some more explanation. Idk if it was cold enough for the glaciers to smelt from the impacts, but then also be frozen again once farther away. (Although bones probably dont decay that much?) But it makes too much sense this being a result of these crazy flash-floods Randal describes... We're getting closer to the truth here. Also he mentioned they went extinct 12.000 years ago...
The guy says the bones are from 13,000 to 20,000 years ago, the animals went extinct at the same time but that doesn't matter if the bones are collecting. Johns migration theory might make sense, this spot could have been a mud pit or some other geographical death trap for migrating animals.
This would make sense as this guy says that the bones are in creeks which could be the remains of what were once massive pools of water that froze over time then eventually thawed and drained into the earth leaving the bones behind encased in mud, water preserves bones and tusks etc as still to this day trawling boats etc drag up bones and tusks from the bottom of the English Channel which was once populated by mammoth and more before it flooded.
@@SteHughes90 Yeah... idk man, going off the variety of animals that are found in this one spot, I don't think they were all so dumb to walk into a 'mudpit'. It's too much of a convenient excuse to stick to the current narrative and not tread outside of the established theories, let alone consider Randall's theories as viable.
Almost like there was a great flood like ancient texts say there was, funny how people would remember and record things that actually happened and yet we choose to make up our own history
The other Insane thing I think, is that a lot of these bones seem to come from Right after the last Ice age too. So they HAD to have somehow survived it. It sounds like either a mass extinction event, OR over thousands of years they just piled up from dying along their migration trail through the corridor. This shit is so fascinating!
I grew up in Fairbanks Alaska. Half of Alaska is tundra swampland if something dies it just sinks into the muck. Then it turns to permafrost it’s just a perfect condition type situation.
@@stuckinthemud4352 It is so incredible up there! I have travelled there before and its just so beautiful and un touched. (mostly) I totally get what youre saying.
you dont know anything because there is no scientific investigation after 10s of thousands of years there are probably 1 million natural occurrences that could have to happened
@@tigervalley62 in all seriousness. I went when I was a kid. And am now in my mid 30s and it's one thing I have never forgotten one Second of! It was incredible!
In another one of Joe’s podcasts, the guest said that when the temperature of the Earth changed, it didn’t gradually change it changed really quickly, so I wonder if they just got frozen right where they were all at.
I started listening to you a few months ago. Very interesting topics. I heard you say that you only choose topics and people that interest you. Well, it seems like those things are interesting to me and millions of other people. As a kid the only thing we really had to expand our knowledge was the brittanica encyclopedia. I just wanted to thank you.
It's weird though before I started watching JRE I'd put loads of this stuff out of my mind since being a child like it wasn't real and now I'm watching it every day 😆. My grandparents had books on just about everything from the animal kingdom, medicinal and edible flora, egyptology, geography aswell as some really old encyclopaedia's but I wasn't old enough or smart enough to ask for them. Something changed going from 1995 to 2005, like half the world closed their minds and the other opened.
I have seen mud flows full of massive rocks . The power of water is incredible. The animals were swept away in mud flows and buried layer upon layer in hours... not millions of years.
He is so spot on about Pelicans. I used to spend a lot of time in Florida Bay paddling around the little islands that boats couldn't get close to. When we came upon a group of these Pelicans, they felt more like the gorillas of birds. They way they would lock eyes and stare you down was simply horrifying.
I live in coastal Lousiana. Had a full fight with a Pelican. I was running. Say a maybe 3 foot tall Pelican by the pond edge. 99% of the time, Pelican turns, then flies away or goes about its business. For some reason unknown to me, the Pelican squared up like a street thug. I legit did a double take. I started to ignore thinking it was just scared and defensive. It made a large roar gulping sound repeatedly and stepped towards me. I started to run towards it thinking that would be enough to scare it away peacefully. It didn't stop or move and stepped again, I began running faster thinking that would scare it. Well, i tried to stop short of trampling the bird, I didn't want to hurt it, but this bird thug charged and tried to bite my torso. It didn't work, but he did scrape my skin raw through the shirt. my momentum carried me forward and this bird thought i was attacking and it tired to stop my weight, it kind of crumpled under my weight (its fine!) and it began to swat me with its legs and beak. i didn't know what to do so I rolled over and kicked the ever living sh1t out of its body and head one time each. The bird slowly got up. Made a warbling sound that was somewhat like (relax, bro. i didn't know it was like that.) And then it flew away. I stayed on the ground speechless for like 10 seconds just processing. My first fight was with a bird with an attitude problem.
One of the best episodes I’ve seen in a long while. Watched non stop which is rare. Amazing guest. A little upset how jumped to “ Do you think European explorers brought tools!?” Not once did I hear Pangea. Come on Joe!
I'm not American, but when I think of the best of you Yanks, this is the kind of guy I think of: honest, hard working, smart, blunt, rugged, a stay-the-fuck-out-of-my-way-I've-got-work-to-do kind of guy. The world needs more people like this.
I loved this episode, might've been the best of the year. I tend to skip the ones with stand up comics, they're not usually that funny or interesting but this and the ones with Jon Bernthal, Siddharth Kara or Neil deGrasse Tyson just to name a few were fantastic.
@@dogarse Right now I'm listening Demi Lovato's interview from 2 years ago for the second time. Not into her music but she's super cool. Gina Carano was great, Graham Hancock & Randall Carlson I loved, Matt Walsh, Will Harris, Dr. Phil, Alex Berenson, Mike Baker, Meghan Murphy... Suzanne Santo I had never heard of, but that was really cool one. And all the former seal's are relly interesting every time. Lex Fridman's episode I've listened 3 times. There are many many others too, these are just more recent ones.
A really interesting comment in the podcast was the fact that new (ice age) plants are growing once exposed and thawing... "never seen before plants" Exciting and scary stuff... Great episode 👏🏻 👌 👍
Dude sounds like Joey Diaz' Alaskan spirit brother.
Probably around the same age aswel
This guy is pretty cool
Lol!
Maybe if his voice was slowed down.
Lmao now i can't unhear it someone better burry this comment
Finally, some old school type of JRE
Exactly my thoughts. Finally lmao
These are the JRE's I fell in love with, fascinating as fuck
Absolutely
Learning about ancient fauna is pretty cool
That's exactly what I was thinking about!
Ya, I’m totally sick of comedian interview podcasts!!! Lol. And I never even watch, or listen to them.
Honestly, comedians just aren’t that interesting
@@matticusbond3975 The comedian ones are the worst
"We didn't believe these species lived in this area". "They sure as f*ck died here". Classic.
i laughed my ass off when he said that
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@thetruewoodstylesage6049 I have 0 ass left after laughing so hard💀
So simple but true.
No
Transported and deposited by numerous jungle floods
Source: museums and science
This is the reason Joe rogans podcast is so great, brining stuff like this to millions of people just by talking to people and having open conversations
ABSOLUTELY
Yea the variety of guests and topics is insane.
Na it's bullshit. Joe is an expert on two things mma and bullshit. He has his followers all talking like he's an expert on any topic spewing his babble the next day like robots.
Howard Stern > Joe Rogan
@@residentpotato6023 na, back in sterns prime every Tom dick and Harry didn't have a podcast or show. The competition is so much harder now and Joe's killing it.
This was the best JRE in a long time. What a genuine, no bullshit, interesting guy. Would love to hear another interview with him. 👍
Word 😌👌 This is the first time I've tuned in for a while, just crossed my mind- "hey I wonder what Joe's doin',might just chuck an old good Ep on in the background.."
*😳OK I AM ON-GROUND AN BACK, JOE!* Best dude ever to remind me how level logic n real JRE atmosphere is.. Miss it... 🥰
Yep. The comedian guest ones are a hard pass for me. The most uninteresting episodes
@@John_Redcorn_ true, it's interesting to a point if your a fan of the select entertainer as gives insight to what kind of person they are, 'cos comedians write the funny stuff for their shows, not interviews.
I miss good episodes. 👍
I'm just upset that Dick Mole isn't a dermatologist.
Jesus man get a life
Ahahahahahahah
😅🤣😂
U from Cleveland?
Or a muppet
My favorite show yet. I'm stationed up here in fairbanks right now. Iv been all over this area gold panning and have driven by all the places shown on your 3 hour long podcast. So awesome to see what you can really find up here if you have the right equipment, patience, and of course the land to do it. This has really motivated me to explore this place a lot more.
That ancient apocalypse theory possibly? All that rushing and moving water had to settle in places, all the dead animals that would’ve been washed down would have to have settled there also, then frozen until now.
I was thinking the same thing loll
That's what I'm guessing.
Even if you're conservative and only say their are 1,000 woolly mammoths there, as opposed to his friends 10k, a 5 acre plot of land could not support that level of biomass chomping on the trees there. So this isn't some sort of feeding ground.
Yes it's most definitely true.... check out suspicious observers.....
Also....
The climate is changing.... but we are not the be all end all when it comes to the equation......
There's many natural processes at work here..... the magnetic poles are shifting and have accelerated over the last 100 years.... this has decreased the strength of the magnetosphere allowing the energy from solar coronal mass ejections to have a greater impact on our atmosphere.... this in turn has helped change the trajectories of the jet streams, upsetting our "normal" weather patterns.....
There is also the chandler wobble which effects the geographical north and south axis.... the earth wobbles in precession every 26,000 years.....
Earths rotation is speeding up, days are becoming shorter.....
The sun micro novas and blasts off it's coronal shell....
There's also the milankovitch cycle..... this changes earths cyclical precession around the sun from a circular shape into a oval shape. This creates tidal heaving in earths core and continental plates, leading to more earthquakes and volcanic activity.....
None of the above we can do much about and are all natural processes, we aren't causing these things to happen yet they will ultimately play the biggest roll on our climate and earth... that's why we're not told about it in the news daily, they can't sell us a solution to these problems...... notice how many are buying bunkers though, notice how many are preparing for serious issues.....
We do however need to change our behaviour, we can do more to stop poisoning our environment and the air we breath, this is our home, let's stop poisoning the well before we can't anymore, destroying our environment for profit is madness.
Peace, power and freedom to all.
Bloat and float
I never grew a beard before till I listened to this man’s voice
Here is the full clip : ruclips.net/video/sM-ekyRca40/видео.html
@Chad 007 wait is that what your link actually goes to because I've had some questions about that myself 😐
Lmfao
@Chad 007 everybody know it was for the cigarets
“I see what you’re sayin’ there…”
This episode started off slow and ended up being amazing! I keep saying it, Joe is at his best when he brings scientist and real people. Comedians are okay but these are the best episodes in my opinion.
Yes, I tend to skip the comedians lately. I prefer the people with a real story.
Depends on comedians. Some of them has actual stories or open up. But most of them just laugh.
@@tomasviane3844 Most comedians are boring people.
yeah I made it about 30 minutes in and bounced to the next one. He talks like a writer and I couldn't do it.
@@A-A-RON918 john does? I went straight there from his short and it was one of the best guests I've seen so far.
He not only awesomely dug up fossils on his own, but he’s going to give joe an ancient animal skull and tusk. That’s so badass😊
Goes into the category of Joe's podcasts that I listen to as I fall asleep and gladly watch the next day or so.
This is the one that makes me finish the entire 3h episode at 4am
Oh yeah. Same thing with that regenerative farmer that was on recently.
That's exactly what I did last night. Woke up this morning and turned it back on!
Dudes voice is incredibly relaxing
Lmao no way i thought i qas the only one thsmat does thst occationally. I do it mostly when im on a driving trip i sleep with my headphones on hearing it
This episode had me hooked the whole 3 hours... What a great guest with the storys and his life in full display. I want him back real soon with more story's!!!!!
Thank you I was looking for this. Me and my husband love joes podcasts like this
thanks for that review
" You don't have a bison skull . " "Ima fix that shit. " 🤣😂. One of the most hilarious and coolest responses ever in fossil unearthing history.
One of the best guests ever to be in the podcast in my opinion. Fantastic episode
Yes I agree, one of the best most interesting podcasts Joe has ever done
Look up
“Joe Rogan asks Elon Musk HARD Questions about Cobalt Mining for TESLA Batteries!”
thank me later 🙏
Joe should have this guy back on in a year or so. He is a natural podcaster, and his current situation is so compelling that I’d like to hear an update
I want to know if people went on that bone rush ! Anyone know? I’m fixing to go there and find myself a sabretooth tiger ass bone
I've listened to this podcast twice - this John Reeves guy seems like the most modest amazing lovable dude ever. He gives me confidence in humanity.
he owns that land so its prob private.. you aint gonna find much@@brianmeen2158
He’s having him back next month you got it almost right on the dot
prediction accurate ^
I like this guy. Unique personality but cool as hell
Guy likes to tell a story. I feel like that's a lost art and you don't see much of his kind any more.
@@zarathustra8424 the guy was respectful but also rough around the edges. He was humble but still had a big personality. I found him enjoyable to watch and would like to see him again
@@kentcarmack5879 well chosen words make all the difference. the man is a master class in verbal eloquence.
He also has one hell of a Moose call. 🤣
Me too, but what the hell what he getting at with the “pelicans move in prime numbers” bs? 😂
Beyond fascinating. What a great character John is and what an amazing subject to cover. Great interview! One of my faves.
This guy was awesome. One of the best non regular guests ever!!!
1 minute in i was ALL IN. love stories like Mr Reeves and love a classic American tale like his.
Look up
“Joe Rogan asks Elon Musk HARD Questions about Cobalt Mining for TESLA Batteries!”
thank me later
Can’t wait to have John back in december 2024 for part 3. probably heard both episodes 3 times. Such a great guy
If you have the opportunity, you should absolutely go watch the whole episode, because this man is an excellent storyteller!
Who is he please?
@@caseysmith811 John Reeves from Alaska
@@BravoSeven Yes kind of, but that’s what I appreciate about him, he’s kind of like Forrest Gump lol
@@JamileeJamilee I think BW was talking about the wats app scammer
This dude was a terrible storyteller. Once he stopped telling stories and started answering questions it got better
I had to go watch the full episode after this clip. It did not disappoint. Love when Joe brings these obscure people on.
Graham Hancock is going to have a field day over this
hmmm 12,000 years ago sounds about right!
Randall will bring the beer.
Right
My mind went straight to Graham the minute I heard the story. As did a million other people's i'm sure. lol
"Impossible to believe these were not deposited as a result of cataclysmic events during the Younger Dryas. This is clearly overwhelming evidence of Atlantis."
Listen to this episode twice. One of my favorites. Tye things he’s discovered is absolutely incredible
In the early 90's while living in Fairbanks, my buddy was at his families fish camp in Husilia AK about 185 miles west of Fairbanks and found a complete steppe Bison skull and horns sticking out of the river bank there, it wasn't bone either, it was completely fossilized, he still has that skull today, so the Steppe Bison was probably prolific across Alaska and for a very long period of time too.
Joe is such a great listener. It's an amazing skill and the way he interjects to asks questions let's the speaker know they are actually listening.
The one thing that makes Joe so famous and popular in my opinion......isn't actually one thing it's many things. That is it's the fact that he has so many people with so many topics you can't help but to be curious and interested in who and what is being discussed! Love it!
I agree. His show is always interesting. He does a great job of letting people speak.
Back at you!
You nailed it!
Shh cnn is listening..
In my eyes it's actually a little more complex than that, he is in fact the perfect level of intelligence for what he does. Not that he knows everything, nor that he knows little. He knows enough to converse with a wide array of intelligent guests, but not so much that the audience isn't able to follow along. There are many other factors but this is one of the ones I attribute most highly to his success.
Joe: "Why would this one, small place have so many dead animals ?"
Joe's audience: " It's time for Randall again, he'll answer that one"
😂😂😂 bring the creative dude, he will give us more answers than we can process
It probably won’t be backed by any science....but sure, he’ll answer you as if he knows it.
@@roems6396 we want the hypotheses. That's how the scientific method starts. Science isn't concrete its a method, once you stop allowing ideas and questions it becomes a religion or an ideology.
screw all the "scientists" -- let's listen to Geology Santa, sacred geomythologist from the Rogan University of Bro-Science.
@@robertgituhu9975
Thanks for explaining the obvious, when I was making a tongue in cheek comment.
What a story teller! So enjoyed this interview.
What an AMAZING PODCAST!!!! 6 years of watching and 1 of my favorites!!!
Ok you convinced me to listen to the whole thing.
Naturally
Excellent
Let’s get Randall in here and our boy Graham! This is pretty amazing. Thanks for sharing this! I’ll have to see the full podcast.
My mom Michele worked for Big John every summer my whole child hood workin at the gold dredge
Nothing but positive things to say about John one of the most influential men i have gotten to speak and spend time with especially inside the Old Fairbanks historical library
This is one of the best JR episodes. Insane story!
We need more men like this in the mainstream! A real fucking man!
🤣 🤣 5:48 What a sweetheart of an old man! That whole interaction, Joe' childish comic nature, his inability to let a name like that go un molested, just made my morning. Lmao as I write this.
Me too!! I’m crying!!
He brings it up a few times throughout the episode. Hilarious 😂
You must not have seen the whole podcast.
@@JamesHoffa1 yea, I just caught this clip on this episode.. Lol. I bet it was hilarious.
You want to play hide the bone with him
Might be one of my favorite guests. I talk like that, but never found any prehistoric shit like this man did. I’m glad it’s a real man in Charge of these things. The universe doesn’t make mistakes
yesir
wtf
lol ok
I love how he tells stories. You can tell he’s deciding in his head; what he can and can’t say.
Just like all compulsive liars do.
@@smudger304or someone who doesn’t want to be punished for their extensive knowledge.
How polite this man is and an amazing person to know… he’s going to discover something amazing
Check for guidelines on futures trading
The humble will inherit the earth
@@CoteySpeaksEverythingonce again…
Ancient apocalypse sounds more and more legit. These probably got washed to John’s property
I think he said the few bones dated so far range in age from 3,000 years old to 22,000 years old. I haven't watched Ancient Apocalypse. I thought Graham Hancock thought the mass extinction occurred very quickly?
There's a similar area in Siberia, but I don't think that it's near as large.
Nah the watches piled em all up there after they quickly died. turns into oil.
@@davidchamplin4865 From the known geological record, there were "melt water pulse A and B". The sea levels rose 400 feet. we know that. His theory is that those events wiped out civilizations; not whether they exist at all.
Add One more piece of evidence for the 12,000 year catastrophe cycle micro nova magnetic excursion
I think we're gonna hear a lot more of this awesome man John Reeves. I sure hope so at least. Respect from Finland.
As long as he doesn't have a "accident"
@@luv2luv720 god damnit. Now I'm worried about that, in my opinion, very existing possibility :( Protect that cool man at all costs!
@@luv2luv720 Why would that happen? Will mossad kill a guy becouse he digs bison bones? Are you high on crack?
It was beautiful to see so many things in a small place in Alaska. Blessed to see some of his collection up close. 💗 Somthing I'll never forget.
I just wish I didn't have to switch to Spotify to watch full episodes
True
Bro u literally just open da app
Lol it’s so easy 😂
Yeh....but RUclips was censoring everything they didn't agree with. So I totally understand why he did it.
It's annoying, so much better when it was on RUclips
I like how soft spoken and respectful this guy is. He doesn't over dramatize or exaggerate just says what is.
He's got a LD with BDE
*Joe is even more flabbergasted than usually*
Have you seen
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
😆 it’s hilarious!! 👽
It's as if he's never talked to Graham Hancock or Randell Carlson before. 🤣
Because he halfway doesn’t believe them. They are still almost in the Eddy Bravo/Alex Jones category to Joe. This guy has physical evidence.
😀
😊
This episode was one of the best in the last couple of months. Incredibly fascinating story and Reeves is a fun guy
Thank you Joe for talking to this man. This is the real deal. Amazing discoveries that we need to hear about. Incredible.
THIS IS A MAGNIFICENT TIME TO BE ALIVE FOLKS!!!!!!!!! There is so much awesome stuff we are going to learn!!!!!☺️
Naturally
LOL, you have literally no clue whats about to take place, enjoy 2023...
The best explanation for the 5 acres bones is a flush caused by the great flood!
@@ThMindFdr 😮well that’s very condescending to say to someone you know NOTHING about.
Only online are you able to speak to strangers like this. What a time to be alive for weak individuals like you.🧐😒you must have been enjoying the internet since ‘95 huh.
“Ima fix that shit” this guy is awesome
He has a great story telling voice
Thing I love most about Joe Rogans program is that, unlike a network show, no one pigeon holes his questions towards the guests. He doesn't direct the guests statements with prewritten questions to get the sensationalized statements.
I like the variety of topics this channel visits.
Here is the full clip : ruclips.net/video/sM-ekyRca40/видео.html
This dude's story is so wild I almost didn't believe him. This is THE gold mine of ALL gold mines... ☠️
Im from Fairbanks and stories from the people there are unbelievable until they pull the pictures out that blow your mind.
What’s the documentary called?
They have found mammoth elephants quick frozen with tropical vegetations undigested in their mouths! Smithsonian won’t report that because it makes it look like the Earth is a lot younger than they want it to be!
Again, how can we find dinosaur bones and mammoth elephants but no transitional fossils from monkey to man? That lived after these prehistoric creatures!?
I love how in one breath Joe can bless you with notoriety. And he loves cool people. Thank you Joe!!
Animals sense things, like how they'll head inland enmasse sensing an oncoming tsunami. I think the animals found themselves naturally gathering then moving together in just an enormous herd in an effort to escape what they all sensed was coming, and that's why a bunch of them were discovered all together like this when the global catastrophe hit with such tremendous force that they were instantly killed, churned up, then frozen like they were in close to a flash.
*( I Was ActuaLLy ContempLating This Exact-Same Scenario ! )
Yet beware, he says they went extinct 12000 years ago, bit the individual pieces could be 20, 30000 years old! So he thinks it is not a result of one single catastrophy! What a pity this scenario isn't analyzed deeper with maybe waves of bones from different ages - giving us correlation data about when such catastophies happened!
Maybe it was a mixture of hunter gatherers hunting grounds and the impact of the comet and it whipped out the animals migrating and the people
You know it’s a good one when you see clouds of smoke floating around the room 😂
Super interesting dude…what a great storyteller. He needs his own pod. Also cool that he gives props, and is so respectful of Joe.
This was a GREAT Podcast. So excited whats about so happen in that case 🤗
Have you seen
"Joe Rogan asks Elon Musk HARD Questions About Cobalt Mining For TESLA Batteries"
My favorite part of JRE was the RUclips community you guys made JRE special thank you 🙏 😢
Lol, I have mined in the same area as John and met him several times. Weird seeing familiar people on the show. I have dug up many mammoth tusks and other bones while mining and that smell he refers to is like no other smell out there. Its a putrid scent like a bucket of fish guts left behind the garage for 3 months mixed with very active soil and it lingers on clothes thru several washes and stains the hands with stink. I know of a couple of spots that might be a lot like his depot of bones, just based on the stench and size of the area. Hard to say if there are 10's or 100's of thousands of specimens like his find but I am sure there are a lot at these sites. I pulled a few pieces out but nothing more due to access being extremely difficult. Great show.
Have any of you guys found any really well preserved flesh yet?
@@umageddon Yes, like bone marrow containing viable DNA for sequencing?
@Top Lobster I’m digging your get rich quick scheme 🥴
@Top Lobster Thanks for the job offer but I’m too busy “mining” Bitcoin at the moment ⛏️
I gotta go check this out on Spotify, love this guy so far!
@Tapmyprofiletocontactme98 haha you scammers can't even learn our language what a fail
Interesting stuff. Ties right in with the younger dryas catastrophe and mega floods that randall carlson espouses.
Indeed it does sound a similar tune doesn't it?.. What an great accompanying find.
your mum
Noah's flood
It does but some of the bones were only 3k yrs old. Very odd
@@John_Redcorn_ great observation. Where were the 3k bones located? Mixed in with the 12,000 plus year old extinct layer?
It’s possible the 3k were contaminates without seeing them plucked from a known layer of extinct bones. From the RUclips videos he’s water blasting and collecting what washes out. The land cover above the area hasn’t been removed which makes contamination possible 🤷♂️
I think he has only carbon dated 4 specimens.
Love this guy! He’s brilliant in his own way…
Joe Rogan’s Podcast is single-handedly rewriting history with his reach. Crazy to think about.
This guy was awesome, could listen to him and his stories forever
Gosh do I find these podcasts refreshing!!
Immanuel Velikovsky Earth in upheaval. Explains a lot pertaining to the subject excellent read!!
The presence of gravel is a great indicator that water was at play and also the muck, too...He should invite Randall and/or Graham to this place...i am so curious about what is also there in the surrounding acreage
What an incredible life this man has lived.
Going off Randal Carslon's impact theory, those mammoths must have been flushed into a single place, although how they were preserved needs some more explanation. Idk if it was cold enough for the glaciers to smelt from the impacts, but then also be frozen again once farther away. (Although bones probably dont decay that much?)
But it makes too much sense this being a result of these crazy flash-floods Randal describes...
We're getting closer to the truth here. Also he mentioned they went extinct 12.000 years ago...
The guy says the bones are from 13,000 to 20,000 years ago, the animals went extinct at the same time but that doesn't matter if the bones are collecting. Johns migration theory might make sense, this spot could have been a mud pit or some other geographical death trap for migrating animals.
This would make sense as this guy says that the bones are in creeks which could be the remains of what were once massive pools of water that froze over time then eventually thawed and drained into the earth leaving the bones behind encased in mud, water preserves bones and tusks etc as still to this day trawling boats etc drag up bones and tusks from the bottom of the English Channel which was once populated by mammoth and more before it flooded.
@@SteHughes90 Yeah... idk man, going off the variety of animals that are found in this one spot, I don't think they were all so dumb to walk into a 'mudpit'. It's too much of a convenient excuse to stick to the current narrative and not tread outside of the established theories, let alone consider Randall's theories as viable.
Almost like there was a great flood like ancient texts say there was, funny how people would remember and record things that actually happened and yet we choose to make up our own history
@@steveb9713 The ice age floods were massive. Look up the Missoula flood. It's not disproven by anyone. A lot got washed away by these floods.
I really loved this pod. When this guy did his moose call, I laughed for a good 30 minutes straight.
The other Insane thing I think, is that a lot of these bones seem to come from Right after the last Ice age too. So they HAD to have somehow survived it. It sounds like either a mass extinction event, OR over thousands of years they just piled up from dying along their migration trail through the corridor. This shit is so fascinating!
I grew up in Fairbanks Alaska. Half of Alaska is tundra swampland if something dies it just sinks into the muck. Then it turns to permafrost it’s just a perfect condition type situation.
@@stuckinthemud4352 It is so incredible up there! I have travelled there before and its just so beautiful and un touched. (mostly) I totally get what youre saying.
you dont know anything because there is no scientific investigation after 10s of thousands of years there are probably 1 million natural occurrences that could have to happened
@@mrbeans2425: From this video, it sounds like I'll be putting Alaska on my travel bucket list. Super fascinating lol😂
@@tigervalley62 in all seriousness. I went when I was a kid. And am now in my mid 30s and it's one thing I have never forgotten one Second of! It was incredible!
Awesome interview! This guy is funny and down to earth! Loved it! Hope people go for a dive in NYC.
I live in NYC and im going to dive it. Ill keep you posted
A dive in NYC? What do you mean?
This is what I watch jre for
In another one of Joe’s podcasts, the guest said that when the temperature of the Earth changed, it didn’t gradually change it changed really quickly, so I wonder if they just got frozen right where they were all at.
Easily a new top favorite podcast. Listened to this at work -- Dude is great with story telling
This was actually such a good podcast. I hope this dude comes back, so interesting.
Have a good 2023 JRE fam
Thanks you too!
just a fascinating interview Joe. thanks
This is such an interesting man. If he would’ve never found those bones, nobody would ever know who he was
There's plenty who would disagree. He's mined a lot of gold.
@@JackCarsonite The man lived a whole life by the time he was 28
He's one of the largest private landowners in Alaska. Doubt nobody knows who he is.
He been on TV for years. Old school gold miner
@@JackCarsonite man this dude is bad ass
Best line of this podcast: "All of our consultants are dead."
This pod was awesome, can't wait to see if anything turns up from the east river.
Excited to be on your podcast this year, Joe. #ChatSoon
This is officially the perfect JRE guest
This guy was a great guest. Awesome story teller
I started listening to you a few months ago. Very interesting topics. I heard you say that you only choose topics and people that interest you. Well, it seems like those things are interesting to me and millions of other people. As a kid the only thing we really had to expand our knowledge was the brittanica encyclopedia. I just wanted to thank you.
Loved those things. The encyclopedia is the older version of google.
It's weird though before I started watching JRE I'd put loads of this stuff out of my mind since being a child like it wasn't real and now I'm watching it every day 😆.
My grandparents had books on just about everything from the animal kingdom, medicinal and edible flora, egyptology, geography aswell as some really old encyclopaedia's but I wasn't old enough or smart enough to ask for them.
Something changed going from 1995 to 2005, like half the world closed their minds and the other opened.
I have seen mud flows full of massive rocks . The power of water is incredible. The animals were swept away in mud flows and buried layer upon layer in hours... not millions of years.
My thoughts as well
Hours?
Proving what?
Multiple smaller floods make more sense
I agree. Check out the mud and ash flows after Mount Saint Helen eruption. It swept away so much stuff in an hour or so.
last great world wide flood, was 13k ago. viper tv sumerian tablets.. @@jarcodolo8734
John's got a great voice... he could do those tv history voiceovers...
He is so spot on about Pelicans. I used to spend a lot of time in Florida Bay paddling around the little islands that boats couldn't get close to. When we came upon a group of these Pelicans, they felt more like the gorillas of birds. They way they would lock eyes and stare you down was simply horrifying.
dumb humans: awwww pelicans are so cute
pelicans: hmmm... can i eat that?
😭
smart humans: ...thank you god for making dinos smaller 🙏
I live in coastal Lousiana. Had a full fight with a Pelican. I was running. Say a maybe 3 foot tall Pelican by the pond edge. 99% of the time, Pelican turns, then flies away or goes about its business. For some reason unknown to me, the Pelican squared up like a street thug. I legit did a double take. I started to ignore thinking it was just scared and defensive. It made a large roar gulping sound repeatedly and stepped towards me. I started to run towards it thinking that would be enough to scare it away peacefully. It didn't stop or move and stepped again, I began running faster thinking that would scare it. Well, i tried to stop short of trampling the bird, I didn't want to hurt it, but this bird thug charged and tried to bite my torso. It didn't work, but he did scrape my skin raw through the shirt. my momentum carried me forward and this bird thought i was attacking and it tired to stop my weight, it kind of crumpled under my weight (its fine!) and it began to swat me with its legs and beak. i didn't know what to do so I rolled over and kicked the ever living sh1t out of its body and head one time each. The bird slowly got up. Made a warbling sound that was somewhat like (relax, bro. i didn't know it was like that.) And then it flew away. I stayed on the ground speechless for like 10 seconds just processing. My first fight was with a bird with an attitude problem.
@@NA1c158 hahahaha xD
@@NA1c158 he wanted all that smoke
@@NA1c158 ;LMAOOO that's a crazy story
One of my favorites in a long time. Real and interesting dude. Joe: Couldn't you contact someone and share this? John: Nope. LOL
I’m thinking they were essentially flood debris only thing I can think of why they’d all accumulate in one five acre plot like that
Noah's flood
Maybe they were being killed and eaten by humans and this was their cemetery? If they were overpopulated it would make sense.
Noah made a flood?
Like a Minecraft mob grinder
RIP to anyone that googled Dick Mole without the word Paleontologist
One of the best episodes I’ve seen in a long while. Watched non stop which is rare. Amazing guest. A little upset how jumped to “ Do you think European explorers brought tools!?” Not once did I hear Pangea. Come on Joe!
I'm not American, but when I think of the best of you Yanks, this is the kind of guy I think of: honest, hard working, smart, blunt, rugged, a stay-the-fuck-out-of-my-way-I've-got-work-to-do kind of guy.
The world needs more people like this.
Love these podcasts. Let's get Forrest back on!
Pretty dull tbh
Yeah, Forrest has great stories. I'd love to hear from him again.
I loved this episode, might've been the best of the year. I tend to skip the ones with stand up comics, they're not usually that funny or interesting but this and the ones with Jon Bernthal, Siddharth Kara or Neil deGrasse Tyson just to name a few were fantastic.
I agree with you, I don't really like the comics. Can you recommend any others?
@@dogarse the bee lady was great.
@@dogarse Right now I'm listening Demi Lovato's interview from 2 years ago for the second time. Not into her music but she's super cool.
Gina Carano was great, Graham Hancock & Randall Carlson I loved, Matt Walsh, Will Harris, Dr. Phil, Alex Berenson, Mike Baker, Meghan Murphy...
Suzanne Santo I had never heard of, but that was really cool one. And all the former seal's are relly interesting every time. Lex Fridman's episode I've listened 3 times.
There are many many others too, these are just more recent ones.
@@TheMockedy Name?
@@dogarse Steve rinella is always great THERES 3 or 4 with him
A really interesting comment in the podcast was the fact that new (ice age) plants are growing once exposed and thawing... "never seen before plants"
Exciting and scary stuff...
Great episode 👏🏻 👌 👍
Check for guidelines on futures trading
6:48 Joe Rogan Experience is more than all the media out der