The company said it removed those at the request of Rogan and his team after talking about his “racially insensitive” language in some episodes. But, he wrote, “I do not believe that silencing Joe is the answer… canceling voices is a slippery slope.” That came after Spotify pulled 70 episodes “The Joe Rogan Experience” from the platform, dating from 2009 to 2018. Spotify CEO Daniel Ek earlier this month sent a memo to employees saying the he was “deeply sorry” for how the Rogan controversy has affected them. 8 episode of his podcast, Rogan complained that a viral video compilation of him using the N-word two dozen times was “a political hit job.” Just three days earlier Rogan, in an Instagram post, apologized over the supercut clip of him saying the N-word, calling it “the most regretful and shameful thing I’ve ever had to talk about publicly.” Over the past month, Rogan has faced a backlash from Spotify users and artists over his use of the N-word in past episodes of his podcast and accusations that Rogan’s show has spread COVID misinformation. A few weeks ago, if you read these names out to someone and asked them what their significance is or how they relate to one another, you’d probably just say both men are on Spotify well that’s exactly the problem we’re seeing. Representatives for Array did not provide a reason for why the company terminated the deal. In addition, Ava DuVernay - who last year inked a multiyear first-look deal with Spotify for podcasts through her Array production company - has severed her ties with the audio company, as first reported by the Times.
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