These are the types of interviews that got me into JR. An extremely knowledgeable, well spoken expert talking about something they are passionate about.
@vanyllinha11 ай бұрын
Yes! As opposed to the same comedians on and on
@elmica11 ай бұрын
yeah, the funny shit is that my next video is, is big foot an interdimensional being?
@koondog200011 ай бұрын
Yes, without Joe's BS.
@Foreskinflavourednuts11 ай бұрын
@@vanyllinha That or random conspiracy crap
@smohan12311 ай бұрын
100%. This guy is a fantastic speaker. Super engaging and knowledgeable
@tommyoneill976111 ай бұрын
There’s nothing more refreshing than hearing someone know what they’re talking about and also being passionate about it.
@jaeslow634711 ай бұрын
It’s weird of him to say that deaf people think of not deaf people as the enemy, I find that hard to believe.
@ned266611 ай бұрын
how would know if ure not deaf @@jaeslow6347
@The_Hokage11 ай бұрын
there is a story to tell i have a story to tell i am mace windu i had many mentors all of them were wise . what do you mean. what would make you think that there is something wrong with what i said did you see kit fisto spelling off a mentor who was like a brother to me once told me “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat later” “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat and a danger to our later generation our loved ones.” -teleportdinero i’m not saying that i agree with you but then again I’m not always correct either I remember a time back in the 80s when I was growing up things were different back then these youngsters today what makes you think that? It’s all right to disagree with people I remember when I was a young man growing up in the 80s in America it was a different time then back then we used to call each other this is the best I’ve seen from you guys in a while was about to say the same exact thing m “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat and a danger to our later generation our loved ones.” m m hi hi m -teleportdinero m m mm mm m m m m m m m m m everybody have a blessed day.🙏🏻 and stay safe . 😂❤💯 . . 🥹🫶💯 . .
@alfredomora555511 ай бұрын
@@jaeslow6347 I met a deaf coworker when I worked at a warehouse, I learned enough to understand and he signed one day that none of his family knew sign and his parents thought he was dumb. So not hard to believe when you understand how people treat them
@ether529411 ай бұрын
@@jaeslow6347Deaf people are so looked down upon in the hearing world that they are often discriminated against or many people believe that deaf people can’t do things or they are dumb and many hearing people have that Audism where being a hearing person became a synonym of being ‘normal’
@Mattchu4411 ай бұрын
My sister was born deaf. She’s had a vastly different life than everyone else I know. My family is very musical, it’s weird knowing she can’t hear anything we play. She struggles with maintaining any relationships because people simply can’t relate to her and vice versa. People were absolutely evil to her in high school and taunted her on early Facebook, telling her to kill herself. Treat your fellow humans kindly, friends.
@jeffgo574211 ай бұрын
Yes social media is a cancer
@lulumoon694211 ай бұрын
❤️🙏💞
@SammyjoCowboy11 ай бұрын
I can relate with your story. My mother and father are deaf and they were limited education. I am 52 so and their upbringing was very difficult.
@Filthee_casual11 ай бұрын
I used to wanna hit on a deaf girl I knew but had no idea how to communicate lol
@moniqueengleman87311 ай бұрын
That is terrible. Sounds like she was stronger than they were.
@hollyp981111 ай бұрын
The pastor of my church adopted a deaf boy. The whole family learned sign language. His wife signs all events their son attends. I have tremendous respect for her ability to translate so fast. It’s not easy work.
@freerangeinternational802311 ай бұрын
My brother was born profoundly deaf and I remember being told by one of his teachers at the Maryland School for the Deaf that our family was unique because we all knew how to sign. Most of the children went home to families where they could not communicate with anyone. That was 40 years ago and one hopes the ASL ability of hearing family members has changed significantly.
@Maxtana510 ай бұрын
God bless that family I read your post & all i thought of was how Jesus would heal the deaf & make the blind see, the lame walk, & the dead to rise what a life altering experience He gave em! Jesus is my Lord & my Savior King of Kings!
@oRaioDeSol9 ай бұрын
yea there is a 0% chance that that boy was not molested by that pastor bro...
@No_ReGretzky998 ай бұрын
I used to know fluent sign language my neighbors across the street had three kids the parents were deaf but the kids weren't and they taught me sign language also I lived in council bluffs Iowa and we had Iowa School for the deaf❤❤❤
@jackpaul33158 ай бұрын
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.
@dustinjones888711 ай бұрын
He's right about the thinking process with language. After I took 4 ASL classes in college, I had a conversation with a deaf person before our class started one day, and one thing I asked her was: When you think to your self, what do you see? I told her I hear my voice talking to me. She said she envisions herself signing, more specifically her torso and head region signing to herself. This episode blew me away when he talked about the Deaf not have any language at one point and how they would have to handle thinking to themselves. Wow.
@ButtaFingerzz11 ай бұрын
That’s so cool, thanks for sharing
@texasfossilguy8 ай бұрын
my girlfriend is also completely deaf since childhood, and I asked her the exact same question, and she also envisions words as signs. She truly has a somewhat vague concept of sound, in general, but I have been trying to explain it to her physically how it is and what it seems like. Music is a big deal to me and I like to share it with her in the ways I can.
@Smilejustsmilebby7 ай бұрын
Very interesting. But we obviously think to some degree without words like animals do. Like babies do and 3 years old do eventhough they don't have language yet. They're thinking what's that bright object I want to grab that let's try throwing it etc. I basically find it hard to fathom that we need language for basic thought I think only intricate though processes but you can still reason surely. Its mind-boggling to think about anyway
@dustinjones88877 ай бұрын
@@Smilejustsmilebby - Thanks for some deaf feedback. The absence of language, though is crazy deep. Ex, you stated a 3 yr old or cat thinking "What's that bright object I want to grab" . Even though the object not named, you're still describing their thinking around the object in language. I mean I was blown away, as how the deaf would think without any words or signs to put the thoughts together. My only guess would be them visualizing the actions they're thinking about.
@juan1256roblox4 ай бұрын
I learned Cued Speech (Cued Language Transliteration) for 22 hours 😮
@prelvas8811 ай бұрын
This guest’s enthusiasm and passion was insane! You can see it just carrying his story.
@justayoutuber190611 ай бұрын
Moshe Kasher - he's a comedian married to Natasha Leggero
@prelvas8811 ай бұрын
@@menwithven8114 Yes, we watched the same video. Not sure why you would think that a parent’s “disability” would translate to a child’s passion. Plenty of kids end up resentful instead.
@ericachacon833711 ай бұрын
@prelvas88 I think he may have been resentful, as a kid. If you know his life story, he got into a LOT of trouble as a relatively young kid.
@The_Hokage11 ай бұрын
@@prelvas88 there is a story to tell i have a story to tell i am mace windu i had many mentors all of them were wise . what do you mean. what would make you think that there is something wrong with what i said did you see kit fisto spelling off a mentor who was like a brother to me once told me “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat later” “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat and a danger to our later generation our loved ones.” -teleportdinero i’m not saying that i agree with you but then again I’m not always correct either I remember a time back in the 80s when I was growing up things were different back then these youngsters today what makes you think that? It’s all right to disagree with people I remember when I was a young man growing up in the 80s in America it was a different time then back then we used to call each other this is the best I’ve seen from you guys in a while was about to say the same exact thing m “if we don’t stop barack scumbama now he could become a threat and a danger to our later generation our loved ones.” m m hi hi m -teleportdinero m m mm mm m m m m m m m m m everybody have a blessed day.🙏🏻 and stay safe . 😂❤💯 . . 🥹🫶💯 . .
@jjrr227311 ай бұрын
@@justayoutuber1906 Yep talked his way under that skirt when so many others were trying and smart guy
@kidathlete11 ай бұрын
This feels like old Rogan, where he has a guest who's able to tell us about a very fascinating topic. We just sit back and be entertained
@Kqxer11 ай бұрын
I agree. Haven’t been captivated by a story like this in a while
@Chef-vg4pu11 ай бұрын
I know I like the old Joe, or he would just have random people with wonderful stories that you would never think that they would have…. Like one time I got hit by a train literally on foot…. True story.
@byronwilliams797711 ай бұрын
The OLD JRE was awesome, since he moved to Texas it's been mostly dog shit. Whatever he was doing before he needs to start doing that again.
@byronwilliams797711 ай бұрын
@@Chef-vg4pu I read " Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History Book by S. C. Gwynne " because the podcast was so good.
@charismatic946711 ай бұрын
He's never changed you've just stopped listening.
@TheAprone11 ай бұрын
Man this is the best clip I've seen in a while. I learned a TON in 15 minutes that I have somehow never heard in my entire life! Well done, and what a fantastic guy to interview!
@Chef-vg4pu11 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing….. and my daughter is fluent in sign language. She needs to take a second language so she’s picked sign….. I gotta go talk to her!
@becomed111 ай бұрын
Came here to say exact same. Learned so much. Had no idea it's a completely separate language the way he explained it was fascinating. Absolutely fascinating information to learn about
@DursunX11 ай бұрын
same. picture this.. its 11am in Australia, now i have to lock my doors for the next 2.5hrs and watch the Spotify interview. not what i had planned for today
@mariotrujillo492711 ай бұрын
Just go to another country by yourself and not know the language. You'll get a sense of what deaf people go through. It's not oppression. It's complicated.
@hardikkothari358711 ай бұрын
You didn't hear.. hehe
@terra_solido11 ай бұрын
I am a CODA (Child of deaf adults), put an immigrant spin on that and that is my life. I understand this guest a hundred percent and agree totally about what he is saying. ❤
@winros10 ай бұрын
Me too.
@andcch47179 ай бұрын
I'm a cohp
@ironlungz231511 ай бұрын
Took 4 semesters of ASL changed my entire mindset, the culture the language is a hidden gem.
@danielaustin95311 ай бұрын
Same
@lostineuphoria11 ай бұрын
Same! It’s such a beautiful emotive language. I think in sign sometimes now.
@kellishostall258311 ай бұрын
I had a design firm and hired 2 deaf employees. Every Friday, I stopped work and they would teach the rest of us ASL. My whole office was fluent. One of them was born deaf, the other lost his hearing as a young child. The one that lost his as a child was a bull rider, would go dancing, heavily engaged in society. The other one..I asked him if he could get implants if he would get them and he said, no. Fascinating experience and people. Edit: I did not realize so many had reacted to my comment! So, of course they were paid and they were very happy, productive and highly competent employees. We had a positive, healthy workforce. No client issues with deadlines..that's just a ridiculous comment because anyone working in a deadline oriented business knows how to schedule. I completely appreciate the positive feedback! ❤️
@I14Realok11 ай бұрын
Good on you! I love this ❤
@jtlpwilliem11 ай бұрын
That's awesome
@scoon211711 ай бұрын
Cool boss!
@Vitalbowhunting11 ай бұрын
Really inspiring.
@CantTellYou11 ай бұрын
Yall did a great thing! In middle school we had only one single deaf student who (with her interpreter) taught every single class once a month, even the students who didn’t have classes with her. While relatively basic, I’m forever grateful for being shown how to communicate with people whose first language *is* ASL
@jasonkirkbride378311 ай бұрын
My dad is an ASL interpreter for a government funded video relay service called Sorenson. Basically it’s the original FaceTime so that deaf people all over the US can take phone calls like any average American. He’s shared many scenarios he’s interpreted for. Like this guy mentioned, murder trials, informing family members of death, breaks up. you name it, he’s interpreted it. The craziest part about all of it, is my dad lost all fingers on his left hand, besides his thumb at 18, I have never understood how the deaf community understands what he’s saying. (I never learned ASL besides the alphabet and cuss words despite growing up around it) They always ask if he’s a CODA (Child Of a Deaf Adult) which blows my mind when I really think about it, which isn’t often, cos he only has 6 fingers in total, yet still communicates with the deaf flawlessly. Truly is a beautiful language
@danadomino11 ай бұрын
I took ASL in college and I will say that getting by with only one hand makes sense to me. Even the fundamentals like the entire alphabet and counting is all done with one hand. Atleast for ASL. But for example BSL (British Sign Language) uses two hands when counting.
@bryanergau668211 ай бұрын
He just has a lisp in sign language.
@jasonkirkbride378310 ай бұрын
@@rralbq there is no personal information shared. He’s not giving me details or giving me word for word playbacks of the conversations. When I say story’s I’m literally getting as much info as I just gave you. And it’s not right after his work day. I’ll ask if he’s ever interpreted X Y or Z and he’ll state “yes” and that’s it. Trust me I’ve tried to get stories but he is very professional about his work. Nice try, trying to over assume though.
@jaisheridan11 ай бұрын
I grew up with deaf grandparents in Australia. I love them so much. Would have been so hard growing up in this world. But they raised three kids, worked hard and taught me so much.
@lukebruce523411 ай бұрын
Empathy and love are not senses
@mcseforsale11 ай бұрын
True story. I grew up driving by the first deaf school in America. We'd see it every time we'd get on the highway and as a child, it was just curious. Fast forward years and years and one of my kids was born with a condition that made her deaf before she would normally start picking up speech...only miles from that place. We moved before she would start her education, but landed in Cobb County, Ga., which is one of only a couple of counties in the country that had a DHH program in the public school system. My daughter is now dean's list in her second year of college, double lettered in orchestra in high school and was a competition-level dancer throughout her life.
@laylahassomethingtosay10 ай бұрын
How wonderful! Y'all have a lot to be proud of❤
@ADayintheLifeoftheTw11 ай бұрын
As a CODA and Interpreter, this guy speaks truth. For all the good and bad of the community. He is speaking truth.
@uhlane10 ай бұрын
Ayyy I’m a coda and I’m going to college to become an interpreter!
@ADayintheLifeoftheTw10 ай бұрын
@@uhlane Hey, there is a lot of unsolicited advice I can tell you as a someone whose been in the field for 14 years. But if you are serious, the moment you pass the EIPA, take the RID/NIC immediately. Odds are you will pass it first try if you manage to get past the EIPA. That one came as a surprise to a lot of the newbies in my department, so I figure they aren't telling you guys in the ITPs about this.
@uhlane10 ай бұрын
@@ADayintheLifeoftheTw I’m going to look into that! Thank you so much for the advice!
@4RILDIGITAL11 ай бұрын
This was a deeply powerful and enlightening exposition on the trials, tribulations, and struggles that the deaf community has faced over the years. Thank you for sharing such profound insights in your personal journey, it underscores the importance of sign language in empowering and connecting people.
@ReaperAHHH11 ай бұрын
This is ai bro
@PurpleHazeVanNederlands11 ай бұрын
It's so clearly GPT or AI
@I.no.ah.guy5710 ай бұрын
Wow, this was an awesome episode. I am one of 5 CODAs (Children of Deaf Adults) and we are all hearing. Both of my parents were born deaf though, my mom got it genetically and my dad became deaf while he was in the womb due to German Measles. So the way they both were raised was very different. My mom already had two older siblings that were deaf as well so the whole family learned ASL (as best they could) and my grandma and aunts would interpret for my mom while she was in school, until she was able to have an interpreter provided to her by the public school. My mom wanted to be in public school because the Deaf Institutions at the time were not challenging the Deaf at all. They only cared about basic education for the Deaf and there werent any accelerated programs. So my mom insisted on going to public school so she could learn as much as she could, just like all the other hearing kids, and she did very well, despite problems with interpreters and being the only Deaf student. With my dad though, he had a small family and they didn't really know what to do with him, they werent used to deaf people. So they did what most parents did at that time, that had a Deaf child, per the doctor's recommendation, they sent them off to boarding school so they could be taught speech pathology/audiology and basically be forced to learn to talk and be like a hearing person. My dad is able to talk, but not all Deaf can. So it doesnt work for the majority of Deaf. My dad wears a hearing aid, but my mom HATES them so she doesnt. Theres also different levels of deafness. Some people can hear higher tones, but not low tones, and vice versa. Obviously, the ears arent always on the same level, just like our eyes arent. I could go on and on about Deaf culture and the issues my parents face, like hearing people not understanding that Deaf people are (usually) normal people who just cant hear. They are as intelligent and aware as anyone. They can text, use a computer, drive a car, take care of themselves, LEARN AND TEACH, and many many more. Ive gotten ALOT of dumb questions over the years 😂, but its all good because awareness is important. I dont see people getting upset at how little Deaf Awareness there is, but it is getting better, and videos like this are so good for that. The reason i said Deaf people, usually, are just normal people, is because a lot of the time (like with my dad) Deafness is caused by a deformity or disease while in the womb. So it is very common to meet a Deaf person that has a vision impairment/colorblindness, or is completely blind, or has physical or mental limitations. Which is another reason why the Deaf community has been so oppressed for a long time. I knew this was gonna be long, but if you read all this, youre awesome! Im just so happy to see Joe have this guy on the pod so he could spread the history and awareness about Deaf people and how important Sign Language is. If you have any questions for me, lmk!
@TheSkRlptZ8 ай бұрын
Do a pod, tell me all about it
@rob1168311 ай бұрын
There were many moments in deaf history over the past 100 years that led to the reinstatement of a deaf education. What he is referring to in the 70s is when my grandfather Willard Madsen traveled the world giving lectures to teach the education program that allowed a hearing teacher to educate a deaf person. A program he created as a professor at Galludet University in Maryland. He also wrote "You Have To be Deaf To Understand " and the textbooks used to learn ASL.
@tidepride868 ай бұрын
Fascinating stuff. Wow
@SinkMMA11 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how enthusiastic he sounds when trying to explain it to Joe. You can tell he’s extremely passionate about it, which is awesome
@markplautz684211 ай бұрын
Since I am a hearing person I cannot experience what a deaf person does and does not experience. That being said I cannot imagine the loss or not having had any sense from birth and not wanting a medical way of having it. I realize that sometimes it’s better not to hear certain things but I believe that would be a circumstance of exception. Waking up in the morning hearing the birds singing, the wind blowing through the trees, a baby laughing as its mother laughs back… Thanks to this podcast I will never again take my hearing for granted. Thank you both so much! ❤
@farmschoolchicks191311 ай бұрын
I’m a hearing person with a kindergarten level of ASL and learning ASL has made me more grateful for my eyesight and comfortable with the idea I could lose my hearing- more likely in old age. We sign to our children, and the idea of losing my ability to see- not too far off since my prescription is pretty bad- and to have to learn Sign by touch scares the hell out of me.
@markplautz684211 ай бұрын
@@farmschoolchicks1913 Then live every minute in appreciation of what you have now… I think that’s the best you can do. May God bless you…
@anti-antifamclovin762711 ай бұрын
This is actually fascinating. Someone needs to make a good documentary about this
@miguel277511 ай бұрын
A silent film
@Therealgirlinthedesert11 ай бұрын
There is=Sound and Fury is one.
@WaLeeZyyy11 ай бұрын
Nope this is enough
@lamarionettebleue11 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/hn2YlWuhrr-Ih80 Through Deaf Eyes
@Casiotron7411 ай бұрын
If you don’t want to wait for the movie someone already wrote the book. Seeing voices by Oliver Sacks
@stabdirt11 ай бұрын
My dad is Deaf from birth and my mom was hard of hearing. The stories I've been told from their childhoods are crazy. So happy to have sign language be my first language.
@vahnn011 ай бұрын
I worked at a restaurant in my 20s and we hired a deaf guy as a dishwasher. He did a really good job of communicating with the rest of the staff with just basic general gestures and facial expressions. After a couple weeks, I decided to learn the alphabet and some basic phrases and started talking to him, and he taught me a little more every day. A few more people started learning too and we had a little signing community going. It was a lot of fun! That dude was really smart and funny as fuck, and god damn he partied hard lol. Then he went on vacation to Thailand and Vietnam and I never heard from the dude again. Wonder what he's up to from time to time.
@SalvadorButtersworth11 ай бұрын
He never heard from you either
@hairypeak428211 ай бұрын
@@SalvadorButtersworth hahahahahaha jesus, thanks internet
@Rohan_Trishan11 ай бұрын
@@hairypeak4282 Puns are the best part of the internet
@ChristopherTrout-n9y11 ай бұрын
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL @@SalvadorButtersworth
@PurpleHazeVanNederlands11 ай бұрын
Bangkok has him now
@GOLDENKAIOKEN11 ай бұрын
ASL Interpreter here! It truly is a privilege to listen to a native speaker tell the tale of the Deaf, and the inception of their culture; as turbulent of a journey as it was/is.
@cpack67511 ай бұрын
When rogan has intellectual individuals on it makes my day. The comedians are good but you cannot beat a well put together, smart passionate conversation.
@beccawang20619 ай бұрын
moshe kasher is actually foremost a comedian!
@Yugemos7 ай бұрын
This guy isn't tardreaded but he's not an intellectual by any means.
@byronedwards815711 ай бұрын
My grandfather knew indigenous American “trade talk.” That’s fascinating and yet not surprising it had a role in creating a culture of sign language. Thank you for sharing.
@justcallmpeter11 ай бұрын
That's an incredible story! I never thought about 2 deaf people being able to create their own language.
@drugsarebad9711 ай бұрын
Bruh every civilization on the planet has made their own language.
@chicagonorthsider11 ай бұрын
And if you got enough deaf people in one place for a long time they would create their own religion and gods too. Their devil would be hearing and their god would be deaf.
@justcallmpeter11 ай бұрын
@@drugsarebad97 yeah... through talking.
@PeterOla-Itan11 ай бұрын
Twins do that sometime (look for the Gibbons sisters)
@drugsarebad9711 ай бұрын
@@justcallmpeter it’s so ignorant to assume people couldn’t make sign language tho. Legit just like the people who used to think the deaf couldn’t think 😂
@Gilsworth11 ай бұрын
Finally, a CODA with a platform who has such a rich and full knowledge of history to share. I literally teach this history at a University but could not have put it as eloquently as Kasher did here.
@TheRealMadDogMac11 ай бұрын
He really did tell this quite succinctly and eloquently. Was the first lesson I learned in my beginning ASL class.
@rustlemejimmys11 ай бұрын
@user-jx2kz4hh5f Yet you can't understand evolution of language and changing meanings.
@Gilsworth11 ай бұрын
@user-jx2kz4hh5f I am a teacher, and the subject I teach involves exactly the subject Kasher talked about, meaning that I literally - yes, actually literally - teach this at school. Take a good long look in the mirror, because you seem to be fine with being a terrible negative force stemming from trivial things that you somehow also happen to be in the wrong about.
@newp0rt11 ай бұрын
@user-jx2kz4hh5f like honestly i get the hate for the word and how overused it is as an adjective but cmon dude. at least point out when its actually used incorrectly.
@danielj688011 ай бұрын
@user-jx2kz4hh5f Literally, the least worthwhile people in society are grammar Nazis who make errors when trying to police others...you incorrectly posted "it's" (it is) where 'its' belonged.
@pkcrume10 ай бұрын
As a fellow child of deaf parents (CODA) and a college professor who teaches Interpretation and Deaf Studies, this guy's comments are straight on. He's a very good storyteller who connects to what people know and understand and expands on it. It's such a gift to get this information out to the general public. There's more to the story now. Research on Signed languages has exploded, and there are more than 150 known signed languages in the world and that research has helped us understand so much about linguistic universals and what is shared between spoken and signed languages.
@damelalana6 ай бұрын
To me, Moshe Kasher's eloquence is bar none. And his parents being deaf-mutes is simply astounding.
@jkk238511 ай бұрын
I’m deaf and I love hearing people stand up for our community.
@HowTheGodzChill11 ай бұрын
🤔
@FHMER2111 ай бұрын
I'm deaf too and I hear you
@twinstar256611 ай бұрын
Bruh
@CorbCorbin11 ай бұрын
😂
@CorbCorbin11 ай бұрын
@@FHMER21 I’m not dead, and I can’t hear any of you. I’m reading your comments though.
@dawnkeener983611 ай бұрын
This is absolutely amazing. I love learning new things that I have never ever thought about before.
@user-tt6rx1cy4f11 ай бұрын
Watch Jack Hibbs ❤ Daze
@JupiterJane198411 ай бұрын
I'm 60 and in 7th grade I made friends with a deaf girl and she taught me sign language, I haven't seen her for over 40yrs but I still remember sign!😊
@BrightResultsMedia11 ай бұрын
Too bad she didn’t teach you grammar. 😂😂😂
@JupiterJane198411 ай бұрын
@@BrightResultsMedia say what 🤪, that's rude dude!!!
@TheVolume111 ай бұрын
@@BrightResultsMediayour content is garbage.
@BrightResultsMedia11 ай бұрын
@@JupiterJane1984 I’m 50 and have 7th grade humor. Lol
@JupiterJane198411 ай бұрын
Gotcha 🤪🤪👍
@jaymannewell11 ай бұрын
My cousin who was born deaf and as a result of the community aspect married to a deaf woman decided not to have kids on the probability they would not be deaf. They considered the issues and were put off, Then along came mobile phones and the text message or SMS and talk to text, 3 healthy hearing kids later they credit the SMS as the reason they decided they could tackle parenthood it changed their lives so drastically.
@Mapifyy11 ай бұрын
I am a CODA (Children of deaf adults) Both my parents are deaf, my sister, and my grandma. & I’m the only one that can hear. Growing up in this environment, I wouldn’t change a thing. It has taught me so many things that most people wouldn’t even ponder about. Growing up I would have to interpret and help in ways that matured me faster than my peers. Growing up it was hard sometimes cause people wouldn’t really understand the deaf world. I would get made fun of sometimes. Because of the way the “sound” or just the sheer fact they speak with their hands. Or I would be with my dad waiting in line and he would accidentally be in someone’s way, they would say excuse me and obviously my dad couldn’t hear them so he has no idea. So people get frustrated easily because them being deaf is the last thing they’d expect. Stuff like this really aggravated me growing up. And this happened many many times. And when I would say hey he’s deaf. They shut right up and walk away. If you’re reading this. Just next time. Keep in mind that people are deaf. And don’t be ignorant thinking everything is the same with everyone. Another thing, deaf people CAN DO EVERYTHING A HEARING PERSON CAN DO BUT HEAR. Literally. They can drive, they can reproduce, they can do anything we hearing people can do. It’s okay to ask questions but not stupid questions. Thank you. Hopefully this shed some insight into my world. 🤟🏼
@shannoncrisp91111 ай бұрын
I took am a coda and people would ask me the silliest questions like .how does your parents sleep..I would say hanging upside down like vampires..you should have seen their faces... some people just don't get it 😂
@C-er3ik7 ай бұрын
You said that they can drive. I wasn't aware of that. How do they compensate for not being able to hear horns, sirens, etc? Are there modern devices that help with this?
@brendabennett130411 ай бұрын
Thank you for the closed captioning & transcript ❤ I’ve been hard-of-hearing all my life and with CC and or the transcript it helps me understand what is being communicated.
@rawxtir11 ай бұрын
Been a big fan of Kasher for a long time but this is next level - he's throwing down hard here- big ups yo
@DefineMeAsOne11 ай бұрын
This is so fascinating. Something I never thought about. We take it for granted that we have all our five senses. It reminds me to be more grateful and more compassionate to those that are born differently.
@SkitzoJo11 ай бұрын
Nah they don't like us fuck them
@magicegg950311 ай бұрын
They don't need your pity . There are aspects to using sign language you will never experience which you are missing out on with all your 'perfect senses '.
@DefineMeAsOne11 ай бұрын
@@magicegg9503 being compassionate = pity to you?? I actually respect those that are born with a disability but they don't let it hold them back, especially blind people. However it's ridiculous to say that being "deaf is not a disability" like what the guy said in the video. Sure there may be experiences I will never experience because I'm not deaf but that's true for anything. Every person's life experience is an experience that I will not truly understand.
@DefineMeAsOne11 ай бұрын
@@magicegg9503 I had an amazing vision, and hearing. And because of those "senses", that you despise for some reason, which gave me a great awareness and reaction time. Now I've gotten older and my vision and hearing are not the same. I still wish to get those "perfect senses" back. And if I found out there is a 6th sense that I don't have, I would definitely want that too. I would say it's ridiculous for a deaf or blind person to not want an ability if they could get it.
@magicegg950311 ай бұрын
@@DefineMeAsOne Go look up the Social Model of Disability . You are clearly in the Medical Model perspective. Its people with attitudes like yours that holds people back a lot of the time and creates the barriers that people who are different to you face.
@dustinjones888711 ай бұрын
I took 4 semesters of ASL in college and learned A Lot! Half of it was cultural education similar to this episode, and I still learned a lot from this episode. On all those outings we went on, socializing with deaf people, I was amazed how easy they picked up on what I was trying to say with my bad beginner signing. The Deaf are incredibly bright. If you ever encounter a deaf person where you need to communicate with them, just do your best to gesture something and 99% chance they will pick up what you're trying to say...very quickly.
@rhoanjcepe202911 ай бұрын
I am a nurse from philippines and we were taught ASL back when we were in our 3rd year in college by having us assigned for school nursing in a special education school. It opened my life to how wonderful some of these kids are, esp those on the spectrum. Turned out i related so much to them coz i am one of them, also on the spectrum. My family is poor and probably saw it as being hyperactive and needed attention only. As for the deaf/mute kids, they taught me how to improve my sign language skills to the point i can tell em jokes using it. Its one of the best skills i have picked up since despite working in the middle east, ASL is also understood here with only a few variations of theirs being implemented. I still kept in touch with those special ed kids even though its more than 15yrs since i met them.
@RolandSpecialSauce11 ай бұрын
Jamie trolling us with this sign language video with no audio.😂
@out_of_orbit196811 ай бұрын
chad jamie
@lilkevin21911 ай бұрын
I'm not trying to cause any riff-raff but I don't see why it's funny
@ctwhiskey305811 ай бұрын
@@lilkevin219read the headline and read the post comment...have a laugh man 😂
@ModeratelyAmused11 ай бұрын
@@lilkevin219 it's funny because it isn't true. he put troll intent on Jamie but Jamie only puts sound on when requested to be putting sound on because it gets clips in youtube demonetized for "fair use."
@lilkevin21911 ай бұрын
@@ctwhiskey3058I want to have a laugh. Again, I am not trying to be rude or disrespectful in any way, but I still don't see why it is funny. What is the headline? The comment said Jamie trolled us with a sign language video with no audio. I seen he muted the video at the beginning, but why would he play the audio? We didn't need the audio which is why Jamie muted it. The only thing I can think of is if you're trying to imply it's funny that you can't hear sign language? Can you please explain more for me? What exactly is the joke?
@ThatWhichErodes11 ай бұрын
Joe's always been really interested in language (ancient languages, other scripts, etc.) and I've always wished he would have a professor of linguistics on the show some time, I think he'd really enjoy learning more.
@johanansowahable11 ай бұрын
Professor John McWhorter would be the perfect guest for this
@brah62911 ай бұрын
I think Steven Pinker was close. I think he’s a cognitive scientist who focused on linguistics and language acquisition. Don’t really remember his JRE episode but I think it was more focused on his book which was something like a hopeful take.
@ThatWhichErodes11 ай бұрын
@@brah629 yep agreed, pinker was on but didn't get into the linguistic weeds with Joe. I think we need a linguist on who can answer Joe's curiosity around ancient languages, cryptolinguistics, historical linguistics, and stuff like that-- Joe always has good questions but nobody around has the answers (minus this video)
@Noah-ce6cl11 ай бұрын
Wow. This is probably the most fascinating story I’ve ever heard on the JRE. This guy is great!
@norascott256511 ай бұрын
My husband's parents are deaf. His mother attended and lives across the street from the California School for the Deaf. He said this was very interesting and informative.
@rockpops706311 ай бұрын
When he said, "they had to be exceptional in order to be average" I felt that in my soul. While not being deaf, there have been other places in life that maxim applied to me.
@luisavilez0911 ай бұрын
Seriously this is one of the most interesting episodes I’ve heard on the JRE in a long time, thanks very entertaining 👏
@mcnamaraky11 ай бұрын
An ex of mine had a deaf sister, so I saw a lot of sign language being used (picked up a tiny bit) and we once went to see a BLIND AND DEAF woman speak at our school. She was born deaf and lost her eyesight as well later on due to a genetic conditon. She AMAZINGLY earned a PhD and really the only way she could communicate was palm writing (so sign language where you use your finger on someone elses hand). It was amazing honestly.
@michaelward952811 ай бұрын
My mom and dad are both Deaf they met at the Tennessee school of the Deaf and had four kids that all hear and speak and I wouldn't change my parents for the world they are unique in their own way and the Deaf community all stick together they help each other they help baby sit each other kids my God Parents are Deaf as well I love the Deaf Community ❤
@taciouno11 ай бұрын
My Dad is a Deaf Mexican immigrant. 1 of 18 brothers and sisters, multiple deaf. Non had ASL until they came to America. He met my Mom and had my brother and myself. We grew up with our own in house/family shared sign language all my life. He wasn’t educated in America or Mexico in order to learn American or Spanish Sign in his 30s. He’s a good father and person. Great time seeing him meet other deaf people in public. I now have epilepsy myself. Enjoy it while you can. ✌️. Good journey.
@TJKInterp8 ай бұрын
Both of my parents are deaf! Known ASL all my life and now I’m an Interpreter doing community work and I love my job! Glad to see this being discussed on my favorite podcast! God is Good! 🙏
@chase864911 ай бұрын
I honestly just cant imagine being locked out from perceiving the world in such a vital way, there's no doubt that other senses would begin to compensate but not being able to enjoy things like music boggles my mind.
@5dollarshake26311 ай бұрын
Do blind + deaf next
@farmschoolchicks191311 ай бұрын
Deaf people actually still enjoy music. They can feel the beats and vibrations and there are deaf musicians and rappers.
@alwaysrecycles36511 ай бұрын
Hilarious that the Closed Captions aren't available on this video yet 😂😂
@jonathansoko108511 ай бұрын
No it's not those things take processing time it's normal.
@slaytanicsabbath11 ай бұрын
Don’t let the deaf hear about this
@onespecies-human34411 ай бұрын
It's the only way we have left the keep them down
@onespecies-human34411 ай бұрын
Or the thing we're we put our hands over our mouths so they can't read lips
@RollMeWanKenobi11 ай бұрын
It was just posted 😂 this will age well
@orionhauk296811 ай бұрын
I watched the whole clip w/ no audio and CC. Even though the print size was hard to read, I realized how important it is to see the expressions and movements of the people communicating! Hopefully technology will start to break down barriers and everyone will live together as who they are, as opposed to Which Identity Box the system has categorized into people.
@kellyquigley761311 ай бұрын
My brother was born hard of hearing so went through life trying to go between hearing and deaf communication. I took asl in community college to try to understand him better. This is such a fascinating look at how we have handled deaf or hard of hearing people in our society . Thank you for showcasing this important subject! ❤
@BlkOMNI11 ай бұрын
The biggest thing I miss now that joe is on spotify is the comments. Never knew how much I missed reading jokes an opinions while listening to the pod.
@wendysalter11 ай бұрын
I have just learnt something really important and it has instantly changed how I understand deafness.
@archiewebster503411 ай бұрын
I think Terrence McKenna said something about how language models our realities and reasoning. What he said earlier on in the video about a closed loop cultural system among the deaf people seemed to be in parallel with this idea. Very interesting.
@betterchapter11 ай бұрын
I love when Joe Rogan's guests talk about something we are interested in but feel we don't have the time to explore
@dilldowschwagginz26748 ай бұрын
He talks about people who were born deaf and not having that inner monologue of processing what you're seeing through a language filter... Just imagining dealing with that is giving me sweaty palms. That's more horrifying than most people could imagine
@JustDaniel67648 ай бұрын
Whoooaaa, so they've not even got an inner voice? That freaks me out a bit
@Doofy411 ай бұрын
An absolutely amazing story followed up by the most Joe Rogan question ever lmao
@niks965211 ай бұрын
"do you think chimps will be able to create their own sign language?"
@LindaC61611 ай бұрын
@@niks9652 too late, they're there
@khush189411 ай бұрын
that's what we love this podcast for 🥐🥐
@jopo799611 ай бұрын
It's so nice of Joe to have Natasha Leggero's wife on the podcast.
@KryMoore11 ай бұрын
Ari is too much of a coward to do anything to him so he attacked Bobby Lee numerous times.
@nb-wp2qz11 ай бұрын
@@KryMooreTrue, but her*
@gregorynobles486311 ай бұрын
lol can someone explain this comment, please?
@Predanator9911 ай бұрын
Yes please! @@gregorynobles4863
@MikeStivicATS11 ай бұрын
This made me chuckle, thank you for that !
@Nekotaku_TV11 ай бұрын
I have a huge interest in linguistics and sign language is super interesting, been learning a little bit ASL and I so wanna learn more. SL should really be taught in every school...
@davidwong657511 ай бұрын
This is a great telling of this story. My grandparents are deaf and went to the deaf school here in Pittsburgh. Its different now but when they went to school there they used to get in trouble for signing to each other(possibly corporal, i know there was definitely abuse in one way or another there)
@benben985110 ай бұрын
Thank goodness this information was shared by someone who knows their stuff, especially from the perspective of a CODA. One little thing missing was the Milan Conference in 1880. That's why Thomas Gallaudet went to Europe. At that conference he learned about the French school that was using sign language instead of teaching oralism. The result of the Milan Conference was that schools should teach deaf people with the oral/lipreading system. Students who used sign language in those schools often had their hands smacked with rulers and yard sticks. Also, when that fake interpreter was at Nelson Mandela's memorial, deaf South Africans started contacting the event organizers to let them know that he wasn't using South African sign language at all.
@TheEmm36511 ай бұрын
it almost sounds like bros on the verge of crying at any point, such emotion i love it
@lilithinaries856311 ай бұрын
Both my parents are/were deaf. My mom is alumni of Little Rock School for the Deaf and my dad is alumni of the school for the deaf in Flint Michigan. My brother and I can hear. It was a different way to come up.
@cathypaz355511 ай бұрын
My Oldest sister is hearing impaired and I learned how to sign first than how to speak. Hahahah! I love my sister. 🤟🏻🤟🏻🤟🏻🤟🏻❤
@shawnaweesner3759Күн бұрын
Think of Helen Keller, and how she acted (angry, confused, and disconnected from most everyone) before Anne Sullivan (Helen’s teacher) came to teach her using sign language, sight unseen, but felt in the palm of her hand.
@PlayStationAddict8 ай бұрын
I remember in college taking an ASL class and it was incredible. The teacher was deaf never said one word and just took total control immediately. We were signing like experts by the end. Super cool experience 😎.
@jimferris944711 ай бұрын
I started working in a grocery store when I was 16. I started seeing a deaf girl around my age that would come into the store. She was from the orphanage nearby (I think called a children’s home by then). She’d come in to get one or two things - a soda or a candy bar. She’d always come through my line at the checkout. The first time I didn’t know that she was deaf. I said hello to her and she just smiled. Later she’d wave to me when she came in. Always come over to see me. She started saying a few words, but seemed self-conscience about it - probably because she couldn’t hear herself. She was beautiful. I wanted to ask her out but either didn’t know how to go about it or was just a goofy teen kid that was afraid to ask. It would have been interesting to have gotten to know her better and learn her language.
@Kito-vc9re10 ай бұрын
You should have asked her out man, what a shame. I hope she’s happy and living a good life ❤ thanks for the story
@omar18ization11 ай бұрын
woah this story is super interesting. if a documentary ever comes out on this topic it would be golden
@farmschoolchicks191311 ай бұрын
PBS’s Through Deaf Eyes is a decent one. Highly recommend the book Seeing Voices by Oliver Sacks
@salty82ndveteran11 ай бұрын
One of the villages I often go to in Nicaragua has a deaf guy named Dea. And he's created his own sign language within the community.
@crisisactor42011 ай бұрын
Woah that's amazing
@salty82ndveteran11 ай бұрын
@@crisisactor420 always a good time in Nicaragua!
@crisisactor42011 ай бұрын
@@salty82ndveteran What brings you to Nicaragua so often, your job?
@Zaygium11 ай бұрын
This is crazy , listening to this man explain my life with my deaf parents and 3 brothers , being tasked to interpret everything till DCF came around. Nice to hear it's normal in the deaf community
@billp556611 ай бұрын
when Galledet opened the School for the deaf in Washington, some sisters from a convent in Quebec came down to learn how to teach Quebec deaf people. When they went back to Quebec, there was a period of time without contact of other ASL. The language continued to evolve and now Quebec has LSQ.
@qcrew293811 ай бұрын
This is why Rogans the GOAT.. he asks the questions we're all thinking
@khush189411 ай бұрын
💥
@camerannC11 ай бұрын
This guy is so engaging! Love this.
@podawe805111 ай бұрын
As much as people want to shit on the Catholic church(and sometimes well-deserved) it really has done amazing things for the world. The father of genetics was a Catholic monk, the inventor of the modern calendar system was a Catholic priest, and now I'm learning that it was a Catholic priest who invented sign language. Remarkable.
@ETS18611 ай бұрын
If I'm not mistaken the person who "gave" alphabets to the Vietnamese language was a Catholic priest.
@jazerasor145511 ай бұрын
It's an incredible motivator, tell people they or others they care about will literally burn for all eternity if certain conditions aren't met. Damn you're going to try and meet those conditions. Shows that priests truly good heart for caring about a deaf boy enough to do what he did, if there is a god id hope he'd reward that rather than some devotion to himself in service of nothing but devotion to himself. That's just a narcissist
@spamcatcher276011 ай бұрын
@@jazerasor1455 You should read the book. It also says that you go to heaven if you say sorry.
@jazerasor145511 ай бұрын
@@spamcatcher2760 sorry to who and for what? What I said wasn't even in critique of religions. If anything its a social progressor
@minervacuervo466211 ай бұрын
Catholic priests taught the natives in Spanish-ruled Mexico how to do pottery and agriculture, they taught them music and painting and encouraged them to write their legends and stories. They are the reason we know about the Aztecs and the Mayans because they left no written language.
@brandonm890111 ай бұрын
Incredible clip - the first 10 minutes was so dense with informative and fascinating content. Fantastic storytelling from the guest
@whtetrsh6211 ай бұрын
As a father of a deaf 3 year old this world became my own... I hope Joe begins to dive deep into this community as well as its implications of free speech and a power of language to facilitate thought
@theangryhog11 ай бұрын
Very interesting story about the origins of ASL. I was not aware of any of that. Would make a great movie, honestly.
@garrett597411 ай бұрын
The dude is wearing the same type of shades my grandma wore in the early 1990s
@edp320211 ай бұрын
At Del Boca Vista
@spamcatcher276011 ай бұрын
He's getting in-touch with the seeing-impaired.
@Pestsoutwest11 ай бұрын
My wife is a twin and not deff, but her and her sister communicated in their own language as children.
@farmerdave3311 ай бұрын
This makes so much sense about ASL being its own language. I've got a deaf friend, and reading his emails is rough due to the syntax.
@tictocbang744311 ай бұрын
I recall in the early 70s there was a misconception that deaf people had an intellectual handicap. Perception always changes with connection and new understanding. Amazing guest.
@Tony525_11 ай бұрын
Life was hard af 350 years ago....nobody got time for that.
@streetguru93509 ай бұрын
They didn't know how important language was to the brain, without it they saw deaf people as invalids
@virginianative84711 ай бұрын
Joe’s range of topics and guest is what makes him just so may steps ahead of any other podcast I listen to. I just miss it being on KZbin only because of the comments hahaha
@kristianbonis48311 ай бұрын
The shit I have learned in this one space is unbelievable he may not be the funniest dude but he’s at the very least the gateway to so much information which is cooler honestly
@FoursWithin6 ай бұрын
Actually seems bizarre to me that anyone would value comedy above information. Comedy is vital and important , However information is what has created the modern world and almost everything we have and value.
@lundysden678111 ай бұрын
I took a yr. of college ASL. The course was taught by a deaf teacher! Imagine 25 hearing students in front of her. She could not speak. We were literally forced to learn or we would fail. We had to go to 3 deaf events where we needed to sign with strangers. It was required. Our final exam was a 10 minute long video about ourselves all in ASL. It was one of the most stressful yet important classes I ever took.
@russell29107 ай бұрын
I have autism. I relate to this. When there are limitation on peoples ability to comunicate, there are people whos reaction is to strip their humanity away.
@ianmeadows694111 ай бұрын
I remember learning this during my final year of high school. Me and other students that learned sign through our school online protested and convinced the system to have an instructor teach us in person because we weren’t getting the credits we were supposed to earn. Wound up actually better as each semester counted as a year.
@OngoGablogian18511 ай бұрын
My ex-wife was deaf. She ended up cheating on me with my best friend. I was mad for a bit but, to be honest, I should have seen the signs.
@zachmoyer184911 ай бұрын
the selective hearing of men knows no bounds lol
@billyin4c51411 ай бұрын
Yeah, I've found that deaf women are very animalistic when it comes to sex. The first time I fell in love with a deaf woman I was 8. I just remember her being so fiery.
@x-techgaming9 ай бұрын
Good tip for when driving, too
@NYKnick1678 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@user-yb2cs2xs7x8 ай бұрын
Comedy gold 🥇
@Scott-vv5dp11 ай бұрын
I worked with a deaf guy years ago and I always wondered how a deaf person's thoughts differ from normal. For instance wouldn't their internal dialogue be in text instead of a spoken language? When I read or write something I'm in real time saying the words in my head as I go and I know the deaf must have a different way.
@MrJaybeezy12311 ай бұрын
My parents and siblings are deaf, and so I'm also entrenched in the community. I've never asked them about internal dialogue, but I have about dreams. Everyone I've asked so far all say they don't sign in their dreams, but speak and hear. It's fascinating. Anyway, you've made me want to ask about inner dialogue now.
@fhornet312311 ай бұрын
I can hear and I don't think in language. Speaking is translating abstract ideas into language.
@digitalsalsas11 ай бұрын
@@fhornet3123aphantasia would like a word
@MrIllMatticc11 ай бұрын
I’m a CODA like Moshe. Also been a Joe Rogan fan my whole life since my Deaf dad loves UFC and we used to all watch Fear Factor every week as a family. It’s really awesome to see Joe being genuinely interested in this because like Moshe, I too tell this story to al my hearing friends hoping to get people interested in Deaf culture. However while we’re on the topic of language and accessibility and seeing the overwhelmingly positive reaction from the JRE fans to this clip, I find it incredibly ironic that despite all the hundreds of millions of dollars that goes to this culturally impactful show, we still can’t get professional captions so that it’s accessible to the community that they’re discussing here…the Deaf. The auto captions on KZbin are insufficient, just try watching without volume. There’s no distinction of who is talking, no punctuation, capitalization, improperly spelled words, etc. By not properly captioning content, you “hearing” content creators are continuing to perpetuate this language and culture deprivation to the Deaf, further isolating them from society.
@Arbiter198611 ай бұрын
So I live with a NHS nurse, she left mental health and challenging behaviour after 10 years to start as a deaf community nurse. Had to learn sign language obviously, and it's one of the most impressive things I've come across, that was about 6 years ago.. but for all the things hearing people like us never think about, music films general joking with someone sarcasm... Normal stuff.. then eyes opened.. how do u explain or teach someone sarcastic tones with sign or anything that you just understand or question from hearing it. Incredible.
@downsouth33311 ай бұрын
Used to like this guys standup alot,he had good stories
@Mister_Malice11 ай бұрын
I didn’t know the history behind sign language either. Extremely interesting!
@morbloe45599 ай бұрын
Good bot. Very convincing
@MsBritanie7311 ай бұрын
My son went to Gallaudet and was shamed by many for using S.E.E. and not ASL. He's got Ushers, born deaf, but raised around "hearing." He feels "weird" around most deaf ppl per him. It's hilarious when he starts in on them. 😂
@insuchaway11 ай бұрын
This is interesting; I have never thought about the difference between the Sign Languages.
@MsBritanie7311 ай бұрын
Two different languages. Different sign, sentence structure , use of facial expression . ASL speakers look down on you if you use S.E.E. At least in my experience for 30 years as a hearing mother and fluent SEE speaker.
@ADayintheLifeoftheTw11 ай бұрын
@@insuchawayoh yeah, and wait until you get to accents in sign language as well. East coasters don't like how west coasters sign, and for a good long while, Texas Sign language was considered the educated sign language.
@UKhomestead11 ай бұрын
This works well for people who can hear but not speak. My daughter uses a type of bsl its a life saver for her and the rest of the family
@AMillsOnRS11 ай бұрын
My father was old school deaf, hated cochlear implants. The responsibility of translating for him was always rough, especially at medical appointments
@vandergruff11 ай бұрын
Moshe Kasher might just be the most articulate comedian out there.