What's Inside?
- Joe Rogan says his name appears in the Epstein files solely because he refused a 2017 meeting request.
- Emails show Jeffrey Epstein asked Lawrence Krauss to introduce him, but Rogan never responded or agreed
- Rogan criticized the Department of Justice’s redactions and questioned official claims about missing evidence.
Joe Rogan has addressed why his name surfaced in newly released Epstein documents. The podcaster says he appears in the files for declining an invitation to meet Jeffrey Epstein in 2017. On a recent episode of his show, Rogan laid out the timeline and rejected any suggestion of association.
The disclosure stems from emails released by the Department of Justice in January, part of a wider document dump tied to federal transparency efforts. Rogan’s name appeared in correspondence between Epstein and a former podcast guest who had offered to connect them. Rogan insists the meeting never happened and never stood a chance of happening.
Joe Rogan Explains Why His Name Appeared On Epstein Files

Speaking with Cheryl Hines, wife of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Rogan details the incident. “I’m in the files for not going,” Rogan said (via The Daily Beast). Emails show Epstein contacted theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss in September 2017 after seeing him on The Joe Rogan Experience, asking, “Can you introduce me.” Krauss replied that he would try, later noting that Rogan had not responded. “Jeffrey Epstein was trying to meet with me,” Rogan said.
“And I was like, what? Like, no thanks. It’s not even a possibility that I would’ve ever went, especially after I Googled him.”
He recalled his reaction in blunt detail. “I was like, ‘What the f**k are you talking about?’” he continued.
“This was like 2017. One of my guests was trying to get me to meet him. I was like, ‘B***h are you high? Like, what the f**k are you talking about?’”
Rogan suggested that proximity to wealth and influence can cloud judgment. “If I was a guy who was like sucking up to the rich and powerful, if I was into hanging with rich and powerful people,” he said.
“Some people get intoxicated by being in a circle of rich and powerful people — even if they don’t have any ambitions of being one of those people. They just want to be around them.”
He added that Epstein’s strategy was “very clever,” explaining, “Yeah. And you would figure like, [former President Bill] Clinton’s here. How could this be bad? You know, he’s a genius.”
Joe Rogan Rejected the Invitation to Epstein Island

Rogan made clear that the idea of travelling to Epstein’s island never crossed his mind. “It’s not even a possibility that I would’ve ever went,” he said, stressing that a quick online search ended any discussion.
Rogan further questioned how authorities handled the release of the documents, especially heavy redactions. “It looks terrible,” he said.
“It looks terrible for Trump when he was saying that none of this was real, this is all a hoax. This is not a hoax. Like, did you not know? Maybe he didn’t know, if you want to be charitable, but this is definitely not a hoax. And if you’ve got redacted people’s names and these people aren’t victims, you’re not protecting the victims. So what are you doing?”
He also challenged official claims about missing evidence. After FBI Director Kash Patel said, “Not of what you want,” when asked about alleged tapes (per The Hill), Rogan responded weeks later: “The guy’s saying there’s no tapes, there’s no video. That doesn’t make any sense. Everyone knows it doesn’t make any sense.”
Rogan endorsed Donald Trump in 2024 and hosted him on his podcast, yet he has since accused the administration of “gaslighting” the public over the files.







