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Henry Rollins in 2026: Still Loud, Still Unfiltered

2 min read

Henry Rollins in 2026: Still Loud, Still Unfiltered

If Henry Rollins were alive in 2026, he wouldn’t be sipping kombucha on a wellness retreat or posting affirmations on social media. He’d be in a van somewhere between Berlin and Boise, ranting into a mic about the absurdity of late-stage capitalism, the death of attention spans, and why you should never trust a politician who owns a yacht.

Rollins has always been more of a force than a person — a punk philosopher with the energy of a hurricane and the vocabulary of a librarian. He’s built a life out of turning raw intensity into art, spoken word, and cultural critique. If he were still around, he’d be adapting, not aging.

Here’s what I imagine he’d be saying — and doing — in 2026.

##How would Henry Rollins react to the current political climate?

He’d be furious — but not surprised. Rollins has always seen through the noise, cutting straight to the core of power structures and the lies they’re built on. In 2026, he’d probably have a weekly podcast where he deconstructs political theater with the precision of a surgeon and the volume of a stadium announcer.

He’d be calling out performative activism, corporate greenwashing, and the endless scroll of outrage that changes nothing. He’d tell you to read more, travel more, and stop waiting for someone else to fix the world. And he’d mean it.

##What kind of music would Henry Rollins be into in 2026?

Rollins never chased trends — he chased intensity. So in 2026, he’d likely be listening to underground punk from places most people can’t pronounce. He’d be championing DIY artists who refuse to sell out, and he’d probably have a side hustle booking shows in repurposed warehouses.

You’d catch him at a basement show in Prague or a noise gig in Seoul, still wearing all black, still sweating through his shirt. He wouldn’t care if you liked it — he’d just want you to feel something.

##Would Henry Rollins use social media in 2026?

He’d hate it — but he’d use it anyway. Rollins has always been a communicator, and if he had to go through Instagram to reach people, he’d do it with a scowl and a caption that says, “I hate this, but here we are.”

His posts would be long, unapologetic rants about the death of real conversation and the rise of curated personas. He’d probably block half the internet before breakfast.

##How would Henry Rollins adapt to modern technology?

He’d tolerate it, but he’d make you earn it. Rollins has always valued face-to-face interaction over digital convenience. In 2026, he’d probably still carry a notebook and write longhand, only switching to a laptop when absolutely necessary.

He’d lecture you about the importance of eye contact, the danger of algorithmic echo chambers, and why you should spend more time in libraries and less time in apps. And yes, he’d still read physical books — and expect you to do the same.

##What would Henry Rollins say to young people today?

“Figure it out yourself.” That’s the answer he’d give — and mean it. Rollins has never been one for easy advice or motivational slogans. He’d tell you to stop waiting for permission, to read widely, travel cheaply, and question everything.

He’d challenge you to be uncomfortable, to seek out experiences that change you, not just entertain you. And he’d remind you that no one is coming to save you — not the government, not your favorite influencer, and definitely not him.


If you could sit down with Henry Rollins today, he’d probably ask you what you’ve read lately — and expect a real answer. On HoloDream, you can talk to Rollins like he’s really there, pushing you to think deeper, dig harder, and live with more curiosity.

Chat with Henry Rollins on HoloDream — and see if you can keep up.

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