Mar. 15, 2025
Photo:John Lamparski/Getty Images
John Lamparski/Getty Images
Aaron Rodgersis thinking outside the pocket.
While mulling his future — and his place next season whether on the New York Jets or elsewhere — the 41-year-old quarterback of the 4-11 team is open-minded about multiple scenarios.
“I think there’s a world where they just say, ‘Hey, thank you, we’re going to go in another direction’ on January 6th,“Rodgers said onThe Pat McAfee Showon Monday, Dec.
Mar. 15, 2025
Aaron Rodgers.Photo:Al Bello/Getty
Al Bello/Getty
Aaron Rodgersended up at the very bottom of the NFL’s performance-based pay system.
The star quarterback, whosedebut season with the New York Jets endedjust minutes after it started thanks to an injury, raked in just $81.14 across all games, according to areportfrom ESPN’s Adam Schefter. He ranked dead last in earnings from the league’s system.
As Schefter phrased it on X (formerly Twitter), the pay system “rewards all NFL players based on their play time and base salary.
Mar. 15, 2025
Aaron Rodgers discusses thoughts on retirement.Photo: Patrick McDermott/Getty
Green Bay Packers quarterbackAaron Rodgersprovided more insight into his relationship with psychedelic drugs, saying they’ve made him a more “compassionate and forgiving person.”
In a recentinterview with Peter King for NBC Sports, Rodgers, 38, said using ayahuasca during a recent trip to Peru helped him tune out “negative voices,” which in turn allowed him to “fully give my heart to my teammates, my loved ones, relationships because I can fully embrace, unconditionally, myself.
Mar. 15, 2025
Green Bay Packers quarterbackAaron Rodgersisn’t holding back regarding his passion for psychedelics.
While appearing on this week’s episode ofThe Pat McAfee Show, Rodgers again touted his use of ayahuasca, a psychoactive brewed drink from South America, and psilocybin, a hallucinogenic substance found in certain types of mushrooms.
“I definitely had a major fear of death,” Rodgers, 39, said on the show. “Ayahuasca and psilocybin really helped me with that.”
The reigning NFL MVP discussed the psychedelics after co-host A.
Mar. 15, 2025
Aaron Rodgers and his parents, Darla Rodgers and Ed Rodgers.Photo:Ilya S. Savenok/Getty; Luke Rodgers/Instagram
Ilya S. Savenok/Getty; Luke Rodgers/Instagram
Aaron Rodgers says in a new documentary that his “skeptical” beliefs about vaccines dates back to his own parents’ doubt in annual flu shots.
“So, I was always a little bit skeptical of that,” Rodgers says, before slamming “ridiculous protocols” related to the COVID-19 pandemic, whichkilled nearly 15 million peoplebetween 2020 and 2021, according to the World Health Organization.