

Rogan, in an Instagram post early Saturday, responded to the supercut of him saying the N-word on the podcast. Markle’s podcast Archetypes, which premiered in August, did not crack the top five, though it had sometimes topped Rogan in Spotify’s daily podcast charts.It’s unclear whether Spotify removed all 70 of the episodes Friday because of Rogan’s utterance of the racial slur. Other top podcasts globally on Spotify this year included Call Her Daddy, Anything Goes With Emma Chamberlain, Caso 63 (All Languages) and Crime Junkie, respectively. Despite the earlier controversy, Rogan did not shy away from dipping his toes into other conspiracy theories, including a right-wing talking point that schools were providing litter boxes for students who identified as cats, though he later walked back the claim. In July, Rogan said he had declined repeated requests for former President Trump to appear on The Joe Rogan Experience. Though Spotify does not release podcast streaming numbers, it’s estimated Rogan reaches 11 million people per episode. In an apology video, Rogan said he would seek out more balanced viewpoints in the future.


A content warning was added to episodes of his show that discussed Covid-19. Spotify CEO Daniel Ek said stopping Rogan’s show was not the answer, but Rogan chose to remove over 100 episodes of the show from the streaming service. As ire grew at Rogan for helping to spread the disputed Covid-19 claims, clips of him using racial slurs re-surfaced. Meghan Markle, who has a Spotify-exclusive podcast, expressed concern to the company. Several artists, including Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, removed their music from Spotify in protest. Peter McCullough on his show, who used the platform to spread misinformation and unsubstantiated claims about Covid-19 and vaccines. Rogan drew criticism early in the year for featuring Dr.
