Video summary
Joe Rogan Experience #2504 - Skylar Grey
In this excerpt from The Joe Rogan Experience, Joe Rogan and Skylar Grey discuss the emotional core of songwriting, the growing role of AI in music, and what still makes human creativity distinct. Skylar Grey also shares parts of her early life in music, from performing with her mother as a child to eventually striking out as a solo artist.
Music with real emotional weight
The conversation opens with a discussion about the emotional power of music and how a specific song can carry deep personal meaning.
AI, tools, and the blur between real and fake
Joe Rogan and Skylar Grey talk about AI-generated songs, voice cloning, and why human-made creativity still feels different.
A childhood shaped by music
Skylar Grey describes growing up in a musical family, performing from a very young age, and recording with her mother.
From child performer to solo songwriting
She explains buying her first grand piano with money she saved as a child performer and later writing songs on her own.
Topics
The emotional power of music
A discussion about how songs can carry deep personal meaning and emotional weight.
AI and creativity
Conversation about AI music, voice cloning, and the difference between tools and authentic human expression.
Early music career
Skylar Grey reflects on performing as a child, touring with her mother, and building an early music career.
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.
Show timestamped transcript excerpt(1 passage)
But there's always I mean look there's always going to be tools that people use to enhance creativity but Right. the thing that's weird now is that they're making entire song like they can make a total Skylar Grey category. And they sound pretty good. They sound really good. You know, that's what's crazy.
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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.
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YouTube API
Transcript, comments, and video metadata endpoints that return normalized JSON.
YouTube transcript extraction
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YouTube creator intelligence
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Audience comments snapshot
Comments focus on the guest reveal, Joe’s emotional reaction, and a running joke about microphone breathing
Public comments are mostly playful and reactionary. Several viewers joke about the guest’s appearance or whether they recognized her, while others focus on Joe getting emotional almost immediately. A noticeable thread is the humor around audible breathing/panting on the mic, with multiple comments calling it the funniest part of the episode.
Comment themes
Humor over analysis
The comment sample is dominated by light comedy and quick reaction jokes rather than deeper discussion of the episode’s topics.
Attention to live conversational details
Even in a short sample, viewers are drawn to small on-mic moments and immediate emotional cues, which become the main talking points.
Audience signals
Guest recognition and surprise
Viewers joke about the guest’s identity and surprise at the interview setup, including comments about not knowing who she was or guessing she didn’t know certain older artists.
Joe’s emotional reaction
Comments repeatedly highlight Joe appearing emotional very early in the conversation, treating it as a notable moment.
Mic breathing/panting jokes
A small but loud joke thread centers on the audible breathing/panting picked up by the mic, with commenters finding it especially funny.
Representative public comments
She told her hairstylist she was looking forward to the Joe Rogan Experience, so she gave it to her.
Marshall’s breathing 🤝 Marc Andreessen’s breathing
I literally have never heard of this person before, and 3 seconds in, Joe is crying.
She 100% had no idea who Peter Frampton was.
Marshalls breathing is the best part of a Rogan pod ever
Marshall's panting being picked up on mic is fucking hilarious 😂😂
Use Crawlora's YouTube comments API with the video and transcript endpoints to collect viewer language, thread activity, and audience signals.