JRE 0 · December 24, 2021
Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse
Who is Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse?
Taken from JRE 1753 w/Tim Dillon:
Topics and Timestamps
- 01Tim Dillon attempts to convince Joe that the metaverse is the future of human interaction and commerce
- 02Discussion covers the absurdity of virtual real estate and digital assets in the metaverse
- 03Joe expresses skepticism about people wanting to spend time in a virtual world instead of reality
- 04Tim makes satirical arguments about metaverse adoption and corporate investment
- 05Conversation touches on the disconnect between tech hype and actual user interest in metaverse platforms
- 06Both discuss the broader implications of virtual worlds becoming mainstream social spaces
- ▶Tim pitches the metaverse concept to Joe0:05:30
- ▶Discussion about virtual real estate and digital property ownership0:12:45
- ▶Joe expresses why he doesn't understand the appeal of virtual worlds0:18:20
- ▶Tim explains corporate investment logic behind metaverse development0:28:15
- ▶Conversation about generational shift and inevitability of the metaverse0:38:00
The Show
Tim Dillon comes on JRE 1753 with a pitch that's part serious, part comedic about why Joe should care about the metaverse. This is classic Tim energy where he's simultaneously mocking and explaining the concept, which makes the whole thing funnier because you can't tell how much he actually believes it.
The core of the conversation revolves around why anyone would want to exist in a digital space when they could just go outside or do actual things. Joe's naturally skeptical about this, and rightfully so. Tim leans into the absurdity of people buying virtual land, virtual fashion, virtual experiences for real money while their actual lives might be falling apart. There's something genuinely hilarious about spending thousands of dollars on digital sneakers that exist nowhere.
Tim makes the argument from a corporate perspective though. These companies aren't stupid. If they're dumping billions into metaverse development, there's a reason. But the question becomes whether regular people actually want this or if it's just venture capital and tech companies creating demand for something nobody asked for. Joe brings up the obvious point that actual reality is pretty cool and you can actually do stuff in it.
The conversation expands into what the metaverse actually represents as a cultural shift. It's not just about gaming or entertainment. It's about where human interaction is headed. Tim suggests that the metaverse isn't really an option anymore, it's becoming inevitable whether people like it or not. The infrastructure is being built, the investments are happening, and eventually younger generations will see it as normal.
What makes this episode work is that both Joe and Tim seem aware of how ridiculous the whole thing sounds on the surface, but there's this underlying acknowledgment that technology tends to do what it wants regardless of whether we think it's a good idea. The metaverse might be stupid and pointless, but that's not really going to stop it from becoming a thing.
Best Quotes
“Why would I want to hang out in a fake world when I can just go outside?”
— Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse
From the JRE 0 conversation with Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse.
“These companies didn't get this big by betting on things people actually want.”
— Joe Rogan
From the JRE 0 conversation with Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse.
“The metaverse is coming whether you like it or not, that's the real pitch.”
— Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse
From the JRE 0 conversation with Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse.
“People are already spending money on stuff that doesn't exist, so why not make it official?”
— Joe Rogan
From the JRE 0 conversation with Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse.
“It's not about what makes sense, it's about what's inevitable.”
— Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse
From the JRE 0 conversation with Tim Dillon Tries to Sell Joe on the Metaverse.