Still, he joked, “It’s kind of weird people will get really mad if you use that word and tweet about it on a phone that’s made by slaves.” He claimed the racial slurs were only ever “in context” and that he hasn’t “used that word in years.” LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP via Getty Images Daniel Ek, CEO of Spotify, refused to follow calls to cancel Joe Rogan. “I’m me and I’m watching it saying, ‘Stop saying it!’ I put my cursor over the video and I’m like, ‘Four more minutes?!’” he joked of the compilation he earlier called “the most regretful and shameful thing I’ve ever had to talk about publicly.” Joe Rogan said he plans to stay on Spotify. Even to me!” he told the crowd at the Vulcan Gas Company club. “Somebody made a compilation of every time I said that word over 14 years and they put it on YouTube, and it turned out that was racist as f–k. The comedian addressed his previous use of the racial slur when he returned to the stand-up stage Tuesday night in his hometown of Austin, Texas, the Hollywood Reporter said. Joe Rogan admitted that he even agreed that he looked “racist as f–k” in the viral video that emerged of him repeatedly saying the N-word. The week in whoppers: Justin Trudeau’s low blow, AOC’s idiocy and more Joe Rogan’s podcast vanishes briefly from Spotify Joe Rogan trolled after sharing fake news about Steven Seagal joining Russian forces Jackson slams Joe Rogan’s N-word use, defends Quentin Tarantino
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