

However, Morgan agreed they both have "an open mind" and how Rogan doesn't "park himself into any particular political or social tribe." "To be fair, he was probably speaking for many of his fellow countrymen who understandably objected to being told how to live their lives by a snooty reincarnation of George III," Morgan wrote. "Joe Rogan once branded me an [.} after I called for more gun restrictions in America - and said my British accent should itself be restricted to ‘selling mops and non-stick cookware’ on late-night TV.

In his latest New York Post opinion piece on Monday, The 56-year-old recognized the criticism Rogan once spewed about him, recalling how the podcaster once branded him an. In his new column the 56-year-old broadcaster has taken issue with the fact that Meghan has called for a podcast by American podcaster Joe Rogan, 54, to be removed from Spotify after he interviewed two controversial scientists about the Covid-19 virus.

The former Good Morning Britain co-host has a long history of being angry with the Duchess of Sussex who he claims he was flattered to meet years ago only for her to ‘ghost’ him after they spent a night out together. In a post on Sunday, Spotify chief executive Daniel Ek laid out more transparent platform rules given the backlash stirred by Young, who on Wednesday had his music removed from Spotify after the tech giant declined to get rid of episodes of The Joe Rogan Experience, which has been criticised for spreading coronavirus misinformation.TV presenter Piers Morgan took fresh swipe at Meghan Markle as he weighed in on Joe Rogan podcast backlash. It comes after singer-songwriters Neil Young and Joni Mitchell removed their music from Spotify in protest against the popular streaming service allowing the airing of misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines.

Rogan additionally welcomed the idea of adding advisories before podcasts related to COVID-19. Rogan noted that he earlier sat down on the show with Dr Sanjay Gupta, the chief medical correspondent for CNN, Dr Michael Osterholm, who is a member of President Joe Biden's COVID-19 advisory board, and Dr Peter Hotez from Baylor College of Medicine. He also said that he schedules the guests on his podcast himself, and that he would try to book doctors with different opinions right after he talks to "the controversial ones". "I've never tried to do anything with this podcast other than to just talk to people." “I'm not trying to promote misinformation, I'm not trying to be controversial,” Rogan said.
