Advertisement
Advertisement
United States
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Spotify podcaster Joe Rogan. Photo: AP

Spotify’s Joe Rogan apologises for racial slurs after video surfaces

  • The video compilation showed Rogan using racial slurs in clips of episodes over a 12-year span
  • In a video posted on his Instagram account, Rogan, who hosts a podcast called The Joe Rogan Experience, said the clips were ‘taken out of context’

Spotify’s popular US podcaster Joe Rogan apologised on Saturday after a video compilation surfaced that showed him using racial slurs in clips of episodes over a 12-year span.

In a video posted on his Instagram account, Rogan, who hosts a podcast called The Joe Rogan Experience, said his use of the slurs was the “most regretful and shameful thing that I’ve ever had to talk about publicly.” But he said the clips were “taken out of context.”

“It’s not my word to use. I am well aware of that now, but for years I used it in that manner,” he said during the six-minute video on his Instagram account. “I never used it to be racist because I’m not racist.”

India. Arie arrives at the Grammy Awards in New York in 2018. Photo: AFP / Getty Images / TNS

Rogan’s mea culpa follows Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter India. Arie’s announcement on Thursday that she was removing her music from the Spotify streaming service because of racial slurs that Rogan had made during his podcasts. She posted the video montage of Rogan’s clips on her Instagram account. In one clip,

In her video, Arie said even if some of Rogan’s conversations were taken out of context, “he shouldn’t be uttering the word.”

“Don’t even say it under any context,” she said.

Rogan’s apology comes as Spotify is promising to combat the spread of Covid-19 misinformation as part of a damage-control campaign sparked by musician Neil Young, who called out the streaming service’s top podcaster for magnifying vaccine scepticism.

Last Sunday, Spotify said it will soon add a warning before all podcasts that discuss Covid-19, directing listeners to factual, up-to-date information from scientists and public health experts. The company also aims to bolster transparency about its publishing decisions by laying out the rules it uses to protect users’ safety.

Spotify garnered 31 per cent of the 524 million worldwide music stream subscriptions in the second quarter of 2021, more than double that of second-place Apple Music, according to Midia Research. Spotify isn’t always popular with musicians, many of whom complain that it does not pay them enough for their work.

Arie said on her video that Spotify is built on the back of the music streaming business and that it uses that money to reward Rogan in a lucrative deal. She said she does not want to generate money that pays for the podcaster.

“Just take me off,” she said.

Spotify did not respond immediately for request for comment.

Post