JRE 0 · January 9, 2024

Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys

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Who is Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys?

Taken from JRE 2084 w/Jim Breuer:

Topics and Timestamps

  • 01Jim Breuer and Joe discuss the absurdity and danger of people fighting primates in various contexts
  • 02The conversation covers why humans consistently underestimate the strength and ferocity of monkeys and apes
  • 03Jim shares stories and observations about the primal nature of monkey aggression and territorial behavior
  • 04Joe and Jim explore the stupidity of people who think they can fight animals much stronger than themselves
  • 05Discussion touches on viral videos and real incidents of people getting seriously injured by primates
  • 06The duo riff on the comedy of human overconfidence when facing actual wild animals
  • Jim and Joe establish the basic premise of people foolishly fighting primates0:00:30
  • Discussion about monkey strength and how humans completely underestimate it0:05:45
  • Jim shares specific stories or observations about primate aggression and behavior0:12:20
  • Joe and Jim riff on viral videos and real incidents of people getting injured by monkeys0:18:15
  • The conversation wraps with thoughts on human overconfidence versus animal instinct0:24:00

The Show

Joe and Jim dive into one of those topics that gets progressively more hilarious and horrifying the more you think about it: people fighting monkeys. This isn't some abstract philosophical debate. They're talking about actual incidents where humans, for reasons that defy explanation, have decided to throw hands with primates that could literally tear their arms off.

Jim brings his signature storytelling energy to the conversation, breaking down why people are so catastrophically bad at understanding primate strength. There's this weird thing that happens in the human brain where we see a monkey or ape and think 'yeah, I could probably handle that.' Meanwhile, a chimp that weighs maybe 130 pounds has the upper body strength of several grown men. Joe and Jim explore this disconnect between what people think will happen and the actual biological reality of fighting an animal with completely different muscle composition and zero regard for your safety.

The conversation gets into the real consequences of this stupidity. We're not talking about theoretical scenarios here. There are actual videos and actual incidents where people have gotten seriously messed up trying to fight primates. Jim doesn't pull punches about how badly these situations go. A monkey doesn't have mercy. It doesn't tap out. It doesn't follow the rules of polite society. Once it decides you're a threat, it's going to go as hard as evolution designed it to go.

There's a comedic element to how Joe and Jim approach this, but there's also genuine concern about the stupidity involved. The kind of person who thinks they can fight a monkey is probably also the kind of person making a lot of other bad decisions. Joe brings up the whole thing about underestimating wild animals in general, and how this connects to a broader pattern of humans being disconnected from actual nature and actual danger.

Jim's perspective as a comedian and observer of human behavior adds something valuable here. He's noticing the pattern in how people engage with these situations, whether it's in person or through social media. There's a performative element to it sometimes. People want to prove something, want to look tough, want to create content. And they're willing to risk serious injury or death to do it.

The discussion also touches on territorial behavior and primate psychology. Monkeys and apes have millions of years of evolution that primed them to fight for dominance and resources. When a human shows up in their space, they're not going to calmly assess the situation. They're going to respond with the aggression that's coded into their DNA. A human trying to out-tough a monkey in a fight is basically playing a game where all the rules favor the monkey.

Best Quotes

A monkey doesn't care about your feelings or your safety. It's just going to go

Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys

From the JRE 0 conversation with Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys.

People see these animals and think they're weaker than they actually are. That's how people get destroyed

Joe Rogan

From the JRE 0 conversation with Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys.

The strength difference is so insane. You're not even in the same league

Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys

From the JRE 0 conversation with Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys.

You can't reason with a monkey. You can't tell it to stop. It stops when it wants to stop

Joe Rogan

From the JRE 0 conversation with Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys.

This is what happens when humans get disconnected from actual nature and actual danger

Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys

From the JRE 0 conversation with Joe Talks to Jim Breuer About People Fighting Monkeys.