A family dispute has spilled into public view after Ashley Cummings, sister of comedian Whitney Cummings, made allegations about podcast host Joe Rogan’s influence on her sibling’s health choices.
On a recent podcast, Ashley Cummings recounted discovering medical syringes in her sister’s 2022 Range Rover, an encounter that left her deeply concerned about what subst ances the comedian might be using.
“I open the door and I see all these syringes in the bottom left, like, pocket of the car,” Ashley stated in the recording. “And I’m, like, first of all, alarmed by the syringes. Like, what is my sister injecting herself with?”
According to Ashley’s account, she confronted Whitney’s boyfriend at the time, demanding answers before her sister arrived. His response only heightened her concerns.
“He goes, oh, that’s just something that Joe Rogan tells her to take,” Ashley said. When pressed further about the specific stuff, she recalled the boyfriend’s response: “I think it was human growth hormone and testosterone.”
The revelation particularly troubled Ashley given her sister’s personality. “And when my sister said testosterone, I was, like, you don’t need any more testosterone. Like, you have the biggest d**k in every room we go into,” she said.
Ashley also talked about Rogan’s influence on her sister. “I don’t like Joe Rogan at all. He gives her a lot of advice. I don’t know, like, what that whole sphere is about. But he tells her things to put in her body. He tells her what to do. Like, I did not like the vibe I got,” she explained.
The situation reflects a pattern Ashley describes of her sister’s relationship with the podcast host. “She’s like, Joe is like our brother. And I’m like, he’s not my f**king brother. My brother lives in London. Joe Rogan is a f**king loser,” Ashley stated.
Rogan himself has been open about his own use of performance-enhancing therapies. He has discussed beginning testosterone replacement therapy in his late thirties and has mentioned in past podcast episodes taking small daily doses of human growth hormone, specifically referencing 1 IU (approximately 0.33 mg) per day in conversations with guests.
Neither Whitney Cummings nor Joe Rogan has publicly responded to Ashley’s allegations about the comedian’s supplement regimen or the influence behind it.