“I like you until I c*m-” Joe Rogan and Andrew Schulz engage in a weirdly interesting talk on ‘post-nut syndrome’


“I like you until I c*m-” Joe Rogan and Andrew Schulz engage in a weirdly interesting talk on ‘post-nut syndrome’

Andrew Schulz- Joe Rogan

Joe Rogan is one of the most celebrated MMA personalities in the world today, so much so that he is easily more popular because of MMA than almost all the MMA fighters themselves. A former Taekwondo national champion, Rogan is a blackbelt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu as well. But Rogan’s rise to fame comes from him being a stand-up comedian and later on commenting during the UFC events.

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But Rogan is one of the most well-known guys in the world today due to his podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience (JRE), which is often called the #1 podcast in the world. This podcast is responsible for being the root of many controversies that had Rogan getting almost cancelled on the internet, but showed a side of his true supporters as well, especially from the MMA community. In one of the episodes of JRE, Rogan sits with famous comedian Andrew Schulz and talks about what is ‘post-nut syndrome’ from a male perspective which involves getting interested in women as you grow older.

“Like, I don’t know I like you until I c*m,” says Schulz. To which Rogan quickly replies saying “Yeah! That’s true.” Schulz goes on to explain what post-nut syndrome means and how is it different from being a ‘f*kboy.’ Rogan follows up saying on the boys’ side “Yeah, you realise you made a mistake especially if the woman is really into you and you’re really not into her and you’re like- Oh I made an error. And then you do feel like an a**hole.”

Also Read: How much money Joe Rogan earns from commentating in the UFC

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Joe Rogan’s journey so far as a UFC commentator

Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan

Rogan started as a backstage interviewer for the UFC at UFC 12 in 1997. Eventually, Rogan made this a part-time hobby to be a media correspondent. When the UFC was brought over by Zuffa through the Fertita brothers and Dana White in 2001, Rogan did the first 15 shows for free, after which Rogan had a paid job sitting on the desk. Rogan now only works during the UFC’s numbered PPV events. As per Way Of Martial Arts, a famous combat sports news and information source, Rogan makes $50,000 per show, which means $550,000-600,000 per year.

For the longest time, Rogan worked alongside longtime combat sports broadcaster Mike Goldberg. When Goldberg left the UFC after the parent company, Zuffa got sold to WME-IMG in 2016, a number of people started working alongside Rogan. Rogan has now worked alongside former UFC fighter Paul Felder, former WEC-UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz, UFC Hall of Famers Michael Bisping and Daniel Cormier, and longtime UFC broadcaster Jon Anik.

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What do you make of Joe Rogan and Andrew Schulz’s take on ‘post-nut syndrome’? Do you think such a phenomenon exists in the building of romantic relationships between men and women? Where do you put Rogan amongst the most beloved MMA personalities of all time?

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