Joe Rogan Movies

- 2007
- Add American Drug War: The Last White Hope to QueueAdd American Drug War: The Last White Hope to top of Queue
This documentary follows director Kevin Booth as he investigates the world of illegal drugs, from street-corner dealers to high level kingpins, from narcotics officers to powerful judges. Appraoching his subject matter with a skeptical eye, Booth questions the effectiveness of the drug war, and the motives of those who continue to fuel it from all ends. Through research and investigation, Booth asserts that there might well be just as much greed, crime, and corruption on either side of the narcotics battle, as the drug war is steeped in issues of race and class. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tommy Chong, Freeway Rick Ross, (more)
A multi-talented funnyman who is better known to many for hosting Fear Factor and The Ultimate Fighting Championship and co-starring in NewsRadio rather than for his talents as a stand-up comic, Joe Rogan goes back to the basics to deliver a gut-busting one-man performance that shows just how well he's honed his comedic skills after fifteen years on the road. Always opinionated and never one to back down from a challenge, Rogan touches on a wide variety of hot-button topics in this performance with an energy that truly makes him stand apart from the pack. In addition to presenting innovative ideas for peace in the Middle East, the veteran comic also touches on religious issues and speculates on just how little mankind knows about the vast universe. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Joe Rogan
Hosts Doug Stanhope and Joe Rogan valiantly uphold the lofty standards of their predecessors Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla as America's favorite raunch-fest The Man Show enters its sixth and final season. Yes, there's even more sleazy sketches and dirty movies than before, and the Juggies are just as cute and...outstanding as ever. The season opener sets the tone for things to come as Doug squares off against Tonya Harding in a boxing match. This is followed by a guest appearance by Jay Mohr as an Ass-Watch salesman. (You mean you don't have one?) Later episodes include a tribute to such manly men as the guy who threw water on a baby and a frozen baseball player; a visit from the show's female censor, whose efforts to dictate "What Men Want to See" indicate that she has confused her elbow with another portion of her anatomy; the "Juggy Boot Camp," in which the girls straighten their shoulders and swell up with pride; and the very special episode "Hot Tubs for Humanity." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Doug Stanhope, Joe Rogan, (more)
Season five of The Man Show is superficially (great choice of words) the same as the past four seasons: two leering, shamelessly chauvinistic hosts striking a blow against the "Oprah-ization of America" with beer, belching and boobs, featuring raunchy comedy sketches, films, and audience participation segments, not to mention the very formidable Juggies, a group of pneumatic lovelies whose principal talent is bouncing up and down on trampolines while dressed in harem outfits. But there's a major change this season: Gone are longtime hosts Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla, who have been replaced by Doug Stanhope and Joe Rogan. The argument that this change in personnel weakens the show may hold water only if you've actually been tuning in just to see the hosts. At any rate, Doug and Joe immediately make themselves at home in the season opener, in which they play the "Ass Crack Game Show" and are visited by The Magical Negro (Jerry Minor). This Noel Coward-like wit and decorum is upheld in all of the season's subsequent episodes, which include such fascinating titles as "Breast Implant Fashion Show," "Make Me Stiff," "Midget Porn," and "Toilet Expo." The season ends with Joe and Doug journeying to the Catalina Islands, armed with dozens of clips of highlights. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Doug Stanhope, Joe Rogan, (more)
The murder of NewsRadio regular Phil Hartman just after filming wrapped on the season's fourth season not only enveloped the rest of the cast in grief and sorrow, but also nearly prompted NBC to cancel the show. Reportedly, the producer kept the series afloat by relinquishing a financial piece of the property to the network--but even this move did not prevent the series' fifth season from being its last. The opening episode acknowledges the loss of Hartman with an unforgettable storyline deftly blending tears with bellylaughs, as the staff of radio station WNYX reacts to the fatal heart attack that claimed the life of vainglorious news anchor Bill McNeal. Well, most of the staff, anyway: Nerdish reporter Matthew (Andy Dick) is still laboring under the misapprehension that Bill has merely relocated to Afghanistan. Shortly thereafter, Jon Lovitz joins the cast as Bill's replacement Max Lewis, a neurotic "radio gypsy" who has lost 37 jobs in the last 20 years. However, no power on earth seems capable of removing Max from the anchor desk at WNYX--not even the resentful Matthew, who cooks up a bizarre scheme to get Max canned. Other than the opener, this season is remembered for a wacked-out three-part story arc, in which WNYX owner Jimmy James (Stephen Root) is arrested on the suspicion that he is actually notorious federal fugitive D.B. Cooper. This turn of events forces news director Dave Nelson (Dave Foley) to fend off the machinations of Jimmy's evil replacement Johnny Johnson, played by the ubiquitous Patrick Warburton)--at least until Jimmy is saved by the eleventh-hour intervention of Adam West (It makes sense when you see it!) The series ends with a 2-parter, built around the staff's efforts to prevent Jimmy from retiring (as if anyone could blame him after the D.B. Cooper debacle). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dave Foley, Maura Tierney, (more)
There's a bit of unanticipated irony in the opening episode of NewsRadio's fourth season, with Jon Lovitz cast as a would-be suicide who perches himself on the ledge outside the office of radio station WNYX's news director Dave Nelson (Dave Foley). One year later, Lovitz would join the cast as a regular, replacing the beloved Phil Hartman, who was murdered shortly after filming wrapped on Season Four. A quartet of subsequent episodes feature a story arc with Lauren Graham guesting as a manic efficiency expert. The abrupt departure of series regular Khandi Alexander obliges the writers to come up with a "Rashomon"-style episodes wherein everyone has a different story as to why abrasive news anchor Catherine Duke has left WNYX. Also, Bob Odenkirk and David Cross of Mr. Show fame, joined by one of that series' writers, Dave Posehn, show up as three members of the singing quartet to which Dave had once belonged; news reporter Lisa (Maura Tierney) becomes one of the guys--almost literally--when the station's other female staffers call in sick--and in a two-parter, pompous anchorman Bill (Phil Hartman) proves to be jaw-droppingly efficient when he briefly takes charge of the station. Best of the fourth-season batch is the fantasy finale "Sinking Ship", wherein the cast finds themselves on the deck of the "Titanic" way back in April of 1912, with resourceful maintenance man Joe (Joe Rogan) endeavoring to repair the iceberg damage with his ever-present roll of duct tape. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dave Foley, Phil Hartman, (more)
Season Three of NewsRadio opens with WNYX radio-station owner Jimmy James (Stephen Root) considering a run for the presidency--and in an even more frightening development, nerdish radio reporter Matthew (Andy Dick) acquiring a mustache. But wait, there's more! News director Dave (Dave Foley) and reporter Lisa (Maura Tierney) re-take the SAT to find out if growing older has made them dumber; vainglorious news anchor Bill (Phil Hartman) begins drawing up plans when a psychic informs him that he has only 36 more years to live; Matthew impulsively punches out Bill and becomes King of the Office for a whole entire day; the staff goes ballistic when they find out that Dave was born in Canada; Jimmy is suckered into purchasing phony Citizen Kane memorabilia (the name of the sled ISN'T "Rose Bowl"); Lisa shows a curious sense of priorities when she temporarily takes over the station; and Bill is carted away to the insane asylum on the occasion of the series' 48th episode, which is titled "Our Fiftieth Episode". Guest stars this season include cartoonist Scott Adams in an episode built around Matthew's obsession over Adams' creation Dilbert; James Caan in a story that turns out to be about Green Acres; Ben Stiller as a greedy gym manager; Jerry Seinfeld as himself in the saga of Lisa and Bill attempting to get a new show some ratings; French Stewart as a temp who manages to out-weird even Matthew; and, in an episode taped for the previous season but withheld from view because of one of the Words You Couldn't Use On Television Much, Norm MacDonald as a slick attorney representing Jimmy in a workman's-comp dispute. Also, Season Three offers the first of the series' celebrated fantasy episodes, "Daydream", which is topped by the penultimate offering "Space", wherein for no other reason than the producers thought it would be funny, the entire cast is thrust forward into the year 2228. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dave Foley, Phil Hartman, (more)
Wide-eyed Wisconsinite Dave Nelson (Dave Foley) becomes the latest in a long of a news directors brought in to the hype the ratings of New York all-news radio station WNYX as Newsradio beams forth its first season. Almost immediately, Dave clashes with newscaster Lisa Miller (Maura Tierney), who thought that she was in line for Dave's job. Lisa and Dave will eventually bury the hatchet and enjoy a brief affair, but not before our hero has made the acquaintance of the rest of the WNYX staff, namely his bombastic, buck-passing boss Jimmy James (Stephen Root), preening and pompous male news anchor Bill McNeal (Phil Hartman), antagonistic female anchor Catherine Duke (Khandi Alexander), terminally nerdish reporter Matthew Brock (Andy Dick), viper-tongued, all-knowing station secretary Beth (Vicki Lewis) and mercenary maintenance man Joe Garelli (Joe Rogan). In the opener for the series' seven-episode inaugural season, Dave finds out that his first responsibility is to fire his predecessor. Other crises loom large as Bill is forced to stop smoking in the office; a late-breaking news story takes second place to a turf battle involving desk sizes; Dave is stuck with the job of handing out unfairly distributed bonuses; and Beth spectacularly turns the tables on Bill when the lascivious newsman tries to make time with her at a restaurant. The season ends with a guest appearance by Janeane Garofolo as Dave's former girlfriend--who hasn't yet been informed that she is indeed his former girlfriend! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dave Foley, Phil Hartman, (more)
Baby-faced news director Dave Nelson (Dave Foley) continues to leap over unexpected obstacles in his efforts to put New York radio station WNYX at the top of the ratings heap as NewsRadio commences its second season. Ingredients essential to the action this season include a boobytrapped refrigerator (courtesy of indolent station maintenance man Joe Garelli [Joe Rogan]); a collection of nudie-cutie pictures featuring WNYX's acid-tongued receptionist Beth (Vicki Lewis); the short unhappy life of Mike the "office rat", and the rodent's subsequential funeral via the mail chute; the announcement by station owner Jimmy James (Stephen Root) that he plans to get married;a homicidal Santa Claus who has it in for swell-headed news anchor Bill (Phil Hartman); an embarrassing moment in which Dave overhears the staff making fun of him; a practical-joke war which threatens to go thermonuclear when Bill and his co-anchor Catherine (Khandi Alexander) are the combatants; a nocturnal poker game in which Jimmy loses Bill to a rival station; the dreams of nerdish staffer Matthew (Andy Dick) of having a "group home" in The Hamptons; and the on-again, off-again romance between Dave and news reporter Lisa (Maura Tierney) Season Two guest stars include John Ritter as a psychiatrist hired to de-stress the WNYX staff, Bebe Neuwirth as a friend of Beth's who copies her every move, and Mr. Show's David Cross as a pathetic magician. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dave Foley, Phil Hartman, (more)



















