Video summary
Joe Rogan and Luke Grimes discuss acting, music, touring, and stage fright
In this PowerfulJRE episode, Luke Grimes joins Joe Rogan for a loose, conversational interview that moves between acting, music, touring, stage fright, and the pressures of taking on new creative challenges later in life. The discussion also touches on Yellowstone, Taylor Sheridan, and the balancing act between family, work, and ambition.
TV and film talk
The conversation touches on Yellowstone, Marshals, and Luke’s thoughts on Taylor Sheridan’s workload and success.
Music, nerves, and balance
Luke talks about starting music later in life, dealing with imposter syndrome, and balancing creativity with family and work.
Lifestyle and personal stories
The episode includes stories about touring, stand-up, pool, golf, and the challenges of trying new pursuits as an adult.
Topics
Yellowstone and Taylor Sheridan
The conversation includes thoughts on Yellowstone, Marshals, and admiration for Taylor Sheridan’s productivity and success.
Music and late-start creativity
Luke shares how music became a serious pursuit later in life and how it differs from acting.
Stage fright and confidence
He discusses performance nerves, imposter syndrome, and the challenge of being on stage as a singer.
Start with the video endpoint to capture ID, channel, publish date, duration, and source context.
Pull timestamped transcript data for summarization, search, citation, and RAG preparation.
Collect visible audience comments to identify themes, objections, questions, and engagement signals.
Persist structured JSON, run analysis, and publish dashboards, alerts, or research reports.
Public transcript excerpt
Transcript
Timestamped public transcript passages group captions into readable sections, making the video easier to scan, cite, and summarize.
It's like the really kooky ones don't I don't think Kanye's ever gotten imposter syndrome. You know what I'm saying? It's like the the I'm going to be Also, he's a genius. But it's like the The who are sane, like it doesn't make any sense. Like none of it makes any sense. Yeah. Well, I I get
Related Crawlora APIs & guides
Build YouTube data workflows with Crawlora
This showcase is built from Crawlora's public YouTube data APIs. Use the same endpoints and guides to build your own transcript, comment, and creator-intelligence workflows.
More Podcasts video examples
Browse structured transcript and comment showcases in Podcasts.
YouTube API
Transcript, comments, and video metadata endpoints that return normalized JSON.
YouTube transcript extraction
Build searchable, RAG-ready transcript pipelines from public videos.
YouTube creator intelligence
Monitor creators, audiences, and content trends across channels.
Podcast & audio intelligence
Turn long-form audio and podcasts into structured, analyzable data.
Related showcases
More structured YouTube examples
Joe Rogan Experience #2505 - Tom Segura | Texas Pigs, Hunting, and Cooking
Joe Rogan and Tom Segura discuss Tom’s new season, weighted training, hunting preparation, and the abundance of wild hogs in Texas, along with wild game cooking and how some hunters handle the full process from shooting to butchering to eating.
Joe Rogan and Skylar Grey on AI, real music, and growing up performing
Joe Rogan and Skylar Grey talk about the emotional power of music, the rise of AI-generated songs, and why human-made art still feels different. Skylar Grey also shares how she grew up in a musical family, started performing at a young age, and moved from singing with her mother to writing and performing on her own.
Joe Rogan and Eric Weinstein Discuss Dark Energy, Physics, and Big-Think Theories
Joe Rogan and Eric Weinstein discuss theoretical physics, dark energy, and the risks of narrowing scientific inquiry to one dominant framework. Weinstein critiques the “only game in town” mindset, compares scientific inference to solving a Wheel of Fortune puzzle, and argues for broader thinking in physics.
Audience comments snapshot
Listener reactions to a wide-ranging hangout conversation
Comments focus on the relaxed, conversational dynamic between Joe Rogan and Luke Grimes, with many viewers noting how natural and engaging Luke is as a guest. A few commenters joke about Joe talking a lot, while others want to hear more from Luke in a podcast format or mention his work on Yellowstone.
Comment themes
Casual, conversational vibe
The comments frame the episode as a laid-back, guys-hanging-out style conversation rather than a formal interview.
Guest appeal
Viewers respond strongly to Luke’s personality and delivery, suggesting he translates well to long-form audio/video discussion.
Acting and personal background
There is clear interest in Luke’s acting work, especially Yellowstone, alongside curiosity about hearing more of his personal story.
Audience signals
Audience wants more of Luke
Multiple comments say Luke is a strong podcast guest and should have his own show.
Joe’s presence stands out
Several viewers joke that Joe dominated the conversation.
Praise for Luke’s acting
Yellowstone is mentioned positively as a standout role.
Playful crossover joke
One comment uses humor to reference Rick Grimes.
Representative public comments
Real nice of Luke to come in and interview Joe for 3 hours. Thought I was gonna learn more about Luke, instead just listened to Joe talk about himself.
Jeremy Clarkson would be an interesting guest for sure
Was great of Luke to have Joe on his show. Don’t think I’ve ever heard Joe speak so much
I’ve learned from this : Luke Grimes needs a podcast of his own. Such a good podcast guest, it felt like a genuine , guys hanging out conversation piece”.
This guy was AWESOME on Yellowstone
Can we get Rick Grimes next? Want to hear him and Joe talk about surviving the zombie apocalypse.
Use Crawlora's YouTube comments API with the video and transcript endpoints to collect viewer language, thread activity, and audience signals.