Several artists and podcasters, including Joni Mitchell, Nils Lofgren, Brené Brown, David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, Roxane Gay and Mary Trump, followed in Young's footsteps and requested to remove their content. The ongoing controversy started after singer and musician Neil Young pulled his music off of Spotify due to Rogan's harmful spread of false information on COVID-19. "While some might want us to pursue a different path, I believe that more speech on more issues can be highly effective in improving the status quo and enhancing the conversation altogether," he said. "If we believe in having an open platform as a core value of the company, then we must also believe in elevating all types of creators, including those from underrepresented communities and a diversity of backgrounds," said Ek, who added the company is "committing to an incremental investment of $100 million for the licensing, development, and marketing of music (artists and songwriters) and audio content from historically marginalized groups" as part of an effort to diversify Spotify's content. Their answer then is to give other people podcasts in order to balance Rogan's racist comments and misinformation Sure, they may need to remove a healthy chunk of episodes and provide warnings about content, but they'd do that for any creator, right? Or perhaps the creators who are lucrative. It's clear that Spotify wants to stay in the Rogan business, no matter what he does or says. canceling voices is a slippery slope," Ek wrote in Sunday's memo.
"I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer. Additionally, Rogan's multi-year exclusive licensing deal - established in May 2020 with Spotify - wouldn't be terminated. In a memo obtained by Variety, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek denounced Rogan's comments but asserted that Rogan would not be kicked off of the platform. Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.ĭespite this difficulty, Spotify is standing by Rogan. Robert Malone, which raised public health concerns amongst health professionals over COVID-19 and vaccine misinformation, is still available for listening.
However, a quick scroll through the podcast's home page shows that episode #1757 - Dr.
Meanwhile, Spotify removed 71 episodes of Rogan's podcast "The Joe Rogan Experience" from its archive for its content. In a quote tweet, the "Red Notice" star said he's "become educated to his complete narrative" and thanked author Don Winslow for making him aware of Rogan's past racist statements. The recent revelation also prompted actor Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson to reconsider his support for the controversial podcaster. I wish there was more that I could say, but all of this is just me talking from the bottom of my heart. "But I do hope that this can be a teachable moment for anybody that doesn't realize how offensive that word can be coming out of a white person's mouth in context or out of context. Obviously that's not possible," he continued. "I can't go back in time and change what I've said. "But whenever you're in a situation where you have to say, 'I'm not racist,' you've f**ked up. "I never used it to be racist because I'm not racist, Rogan said. RELATED: Joe Rogan podcast controversy underscores bigger problem driving misinformation: Analysis Rogan responded with a 6-minute-long video apology on Instagram, explaining that he used the slur in its entirety when it came up in conversations. "He shouldn't even be uttering the word - don't even say it, under any context," Arie said per The Hollywood Reporter. Last Thursday, India.Arie took to social media to share an edited compilation of video clips in which Rogan employs the N-word approximately "two dozen times" and likens Black people to "Planet of the Apes." The singer-songwriter described Rogan's "language around race" as problematic and announced her request to take off her music and podcasts from Spotify. The latest brouhaha centers on Rogan's demeaning comments about race and unapologetic usage of racial slurs.
Spotify's Joe Rogan debacle continues as more musical artists, podcast hosts and loyal listeners are bidding the streaming service adieu.