Tim Dillon makes Joe Rogan laugh with references to Ukraine head Volodymyr Zelenskyy's former acting career: "A comedian became the President"
Tim Dillon elicited both laughter and reflection from Joe Rogan with his breakdown of Ukrainian politician and ex-entertainer, Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The American comedians also discussed their country's alleged role in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
On the Joe Rogan Experience (JRE) podcast, Rogan previously discussed the U.S. government's alleged regime-change operation, wherein they supposedly overthrew and replaced a pro-Russian government with a pro-U.S. regime in Ukraine in 2014.
Rogan recently addressed it again on Dillon's podcast, The Tim Dillon Show. Filmed with a JRE background, the episode saw Rogan allude to the Russia-Ukraine war that's been underway since February 2022.
Rogan and Dillon acknowledged that ex-actor and comedian, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has reigned as Ukraine's president since May 2019. Some analysts have alleged that Zelenskyy was installed there by the U.S. government. The American side has consistently refuted the myriad of regime-change allegations levied against it.
Referencing Russian President Vladimir Putin, Dillon implied that the supposed American regime-change operations aren't even well-executed anymore. Also, recalling the 2015 Ukrainian comedy TV series, 'Servant of the People,' in which Zelenskyy essayed the role of the president, Dillon stated:
"I mean, most people don't know that the president of Ukraine right now, Zelenskyy, played the president on a television show, a comedy show. And the premise of the comedy show was that a comedian became the president. And then they made him the president. And Putin has got to be sitting there in his palace with his wh*res, going, 'Are they f**king kidding me?'"
Joe Rogan laughed at Tim Dillon's criticism of the geopolitical mishaps. Meanwhile, Dillon notably named the late Jeffrey Epstein, an accused human trafficker allegedly connected with the international socio-political elites and the U.S. government:
"He [Putin] is sitting in his palace by the Black Sea, and he's going, 'They're making this guy the president of the Ukraine, and I'm sitting here, and ...' It's hilarious, like, it's not even well done anymore. That's the thing. With what they're doing with, like, Epstein, and all this stuff; it's not even artful, the way they're doing it. It's lazy. All of this is lazy."
Joe Rogan then laughingly opined:
"It's like a bad cop show."
Watch the segment from their conversation below:
Watch their discussion below (44:15):
Joe Rogan and Tim Dillon on U.S. foreign aid to Ukraine against Russia
The 2014 'Maidan Revolution,' which some also call the 'Revolution of Dignity,' is oft-credited as a key incident that facilitated the alleged U.S.-driven regime change in Ukraine. Moreover, Volodymyr Zelenskyy's regime has faced allegations of corruption and fueling the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war.
Around the 48:50-minute mark of Dillon's podcast, he opined that America should reduce its foreign interventions. He and Joe Rogan speculated that the 'Revolution of Dignity' was possibly a euphemism to downplay America's alleged interference in Ukraine. Furthermore, Rogan questioned the U.S. government's reportedly massive funding for Ukraine in the war:
"The crazy thing is they just keep sending money over there."
Dillon reiterated the theory that the American government is unconcerned about dignifying other nations and simply wants to fight its longtime geopolitical competitor, Russia, by funding and using Ukraine:
"'Cause we think that the Ukraine is going to be like a client state of the U.S. State Department, which is what it has been."