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It’s called ‘confirmation bias.’ It’s a real problem with people and ideas,” Rogan says. “They only see things that confirm their idea. “There are real, legit anthropologists who believe in Sasquatch,” Rogan says.īut some true believers in Sasquatch and UFOs ignore contradictory facts and evidence of hoaxes. He gave me a five-minute primer on gigantopithecus and Homo floresiensis. Rogan is open-minded but values facts and truths over ideology.

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“If you really saw a UFO, and you tried telling people - how crazy would you sound, even if it really did happen? It would (mess) with your head because nobody would believe you,” Rogan says. The pattern is: True believers risk looking foolish, even if they are telling the truth, so they can get pretty defensive. “The same pattern exists in people who believe in UFOs, or who believe in ghosts, or who believe in psychics,” says Rogan - who performs stand-up on Friday at the Hard Rock Hotel. Joe Rogan is hosting a new TV show about Bigfoot, UFOs and ESP, and he says the show is teaching him “a lot about crazy people.”

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UFC's Arianny Celeste loves to eat healthy.

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