Joe Rogan doesn’t lack confidence, and he made that clear again when he explained why he didn’t apply for the Golden Globe Best Podcast Award.
Rogan said he didn’t need to. In his mind, he already knows he has the best podcast. That belief has been consistent throughout his career, and frankly, it’s part of what helped build The Joe Rogan Experience into the biggest show in the medium.
Still, the explanation invites a deeper look. Did Rogan skip the application because he views the process as a sham, or because he was afraid of what might happen if he didn’t win? Those two motivations aren’t mutually exclusive. They can exist side by side, even for someone operating at Rogan’s level.
On one hand, Rogan pointed to the $500 application fee and the paperwork required. He didn’t like it, and he said so plainly. He’s right to question it. I’m on the record saying the process, as described publicly by Megyn Kelly, is a farce. It feels more like a pay-to-play exercise than a meaningful measure of excellence. If that’s the basis for Rogan’s objection, it’s hard to argue against him.
The podcast industry has spent years trying to distance itself from old media gatekeeping. Charging creators hundreds of dollars just to be considered doesn’t help that cause. It reinforces the idea that prestige is something you buy, not something you earn. From that perspective, Rogan’s refusal makes sense and even feels principled.
But confidence complicates the story. Rogan didn’t just say the process was flawed. He said he didn’t need the award because he already knows he’s the best. That’s where the logic gets shaky. If you’re truly convinced you’re going to win, why not apply and take the trophy anyway? Validation may be overrated, but it’s also human.
Everyone wants recognition, even when they pretend they don’t. Awards exist because acknowledgment still matters. It matters to audiences, peers, advertisers, and platforms. Rogan has already achieved more than most podcasters ever will, but that doesn’t mean external affirmation suddenly stops carrying weight.
There’s also the uncomfortable question of risk. If Rogan applied and didn’t win, he would be forced to confront an idea he’s never had to entertain publicly. Maybe he doesn’t have the best podcast in the eyes of that institution. For someone who speaks often about intellectual honesty, that could be an interesting moment.
Of course, it was always unlikely that Rogan was going to win. The Golden Globes were never going to crown an outsider over a Hollywood favorite. Amy Poehler was the eventual winner, and that outcome felt inevitable from the start. That reality fuels the self-fulfilling prophecy. You won’t win, so you don’t apply. You don’t apply, so you definitely won’t win.
That dynamic lets everyone stay comfortable. Rogan avoids the possibility of losing. The awards body avoids a disruptive winner. Nobody has to test their assumptions. The system stays intact.
Yet if Rogan is as confident in his show as he claims, and he has every reason to be, the smarter move would be to apply and see what happens. The fee is trivial to him. The paperwork is an annoyance, not a barrier. The upside is symbolic, but symbols still matter.
What does he really have to lose?
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Garrett Searight is Barrett Media’s News Editor, which includes writing daily news stories, features, and opinion columns. He joined Barrett Media in 2022 after a decade leading several radio brands in several formats, as well as a 5-year stint working in local television. In addition to his work with Barrett Media, he is a radio and TV play-by-play broadcaster. Reach out to him at Garrett@BarrettMedia.com.



He got more publicity by not being nominated…