UFC champ Israel Adesanya passionately defends Joe Rogan amid controversy: 'F— the noise'

Jesse Watters: Joe Rogan beating cancel culture

Fox News contributor Joe Concha explains how the left couldn’t cancel Joe Rogan on ‘Jesse Watters Primetime.’

UFC champion Israel Adesanya riled up the crowd at a UFC 271 press conference Thursday ahead of his fight against Robert Whittaker in which he hopes to defend his middleweight championship.

Adesanya expressed support for UFC commentator Joe Rogan, who won’t be calling the fight due to a “scheduling conflict.” Rogan has been under fire after a compilation video surfaced of him using the N-word amid allegations he spread misinformation on his Spotify-hosted podcast.

Israel Adesanya of Nigeria faces Robert Whittaker of Australia at the ceremonial weigh-in prior to UFC 271 at Toyota Center Feb. 11, 2022, in Houston.
(Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Israel Adesanya of Nigeria poses on the scale during the UFC 271 ceremonial weigh-in at Toyota Center Feb. 11, 2022, in Houston.
(Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC)

“We are living in very strange times,” Adesanya wrote, adding several sheep emoji to the end of his post. “When a voice speaks out against the mainstream narrative, the establishment have a systematic way of shutting said voice down. I’m not asking you to think like me, I encourage you to turn off your tv and think for yourself. Don’t let them pull the wool over your eyes,” 

Rogan was back on the stand-up stage Tuesday night in Austin, Texas, and made light of the controversy, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Comedian Joe Rogan responded to criticism over past racist comments.
(Vivian Zink/Syfy/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

“I used to say it if [I was talking about] a Richard Pryor bit or something, I would say it in context,” Rogan said. “Somebody made a compilation of every time I said that word over 14 years, and they put it on YouTube, and it turned out that was racist as f—. Even to me! I’m me, and I’m watching it saying, ‘Stop saying it!’ I put my cursor over the video, and I’m like, ‘Four more minutes?!’”

“I haven’t used that word in years,” Rogan added. “But it’s kind of weird people will get really mad if you use that word and tweet about it on a phone that’s made by slaves.”

Fox News’ Tyler McCarthy contributed to this report.

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