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February 19, 2025 111 mins
Actor/Producer/Stuntman/Blacksmith/VoiceOverArtist/Comedian Bryan Forrest and Actress/Producer/Director and Prime Time Emmy Winner Patrika Darbo join us on this episode of The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell broadcast live from the W4CY studios on Wednesday, February 19th, 2025.

The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell - XX-XX-2023

The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell is radio’s coolest fashion, entertainment, music and pop culture show hosted by none other than the Celebrity Renaissance Man and King of Cool, Dr. Jimmy Star, along with his extremely Cool Man About Town Co-Host Ron Russell!

In each live two hour-long radio program, Jimmy Star and Ron Russell have a blast talking with their celebrity friend guests and bringing you the Good Times with ideas, songs, movies, and fashions fit for a highly successful and high style lifestyle. 

The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell is broadcast live Thursdays at 12 Noon ET and Music on W4CY Radio (www.w4cy.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on the Talk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com).

The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell is also available on Talk 4 Media (www.talk4media.com), Talk 4 Podcasting (www.talk4podcasting.com), iHeartRadio, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, Audible, and over 100 other podcast outlets.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following show contains adult content. It's not our intent
to offend anyone, but we want to inform you that
if you are a child under the age of eighteen
or get offended easily, this next show may not be
for you. The content, opinions, and subject matter of these
shows are solely the choice of your show hosts and
their guests, and not those of the Entertainment Network or
any affiliated stations. Any comments or inquiry should be directed

(00:22):
to those show hosts. Thank you for listening.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Jimmie, give me help, please that m.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
Give me stop?

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Thank you?

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Hey, Hello, what's up?

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Everybody?

Speaker 5 (01:04):
Welcome to The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell. Bring
you need the good times in music, fashion, pop culture
and entertainment. We got a fun show for you guys today.
We have Brian Forrest coming on, and then we have
Emmy Lennard, Patrika Dargo coming on. It's going to be
a fun show. But before we get started, let's talk
about say hello to Michael. I read span about co
host mister Ron Russell in Astro.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
What a build up? And come on yeah height, Oh
my god, I could throw up anyway, this is Astro.
He's on television again. He loves it. He's a ham.
He's always camera ready, right Astro stay hi to everybody. Hello,
look he's ware. You're okay? Now get down enough, I

(01:50):
have to go. You want to kiss me?

Speaker 6 (01:51):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:51):
I'm into making up with my dog?

Speaker 5 (01:54):
So what's up chatting him? People are starting to show
up Sidney Lady Lakes and chatting him. Thank you so much,
Sydney for all your help with the promotions of everything.
Stefan Bella has joined us in there along with Tina.
Tina's off to work. Hey Tina, how you doing?

Speaker 7 (02:07):
Hi?

Speaker 3 (02:08):
Tina, are you still with that guy? I mean, when
are you going to get smart? A girl like you
should be with a multi multi millionaire and you should
be kept in luxury. You should be living in the
Riviera or driving a Rolls Royce. You're so perfect. I
love you, Tina.

Speaker 5 (02:26):
Well, I love Eustafon. So there also we want to
give a shout out to don Him who just also
joined us, and she had surgery on her shoulder, so
I hope everything's going well.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
She said it was her shoulder. She really became a man.

Speaker 5 (02:44):
The Claudia just joined us. Everybody's saying they like my haircut,
so most of you guys know, I have a knee
surgery tomorrow, so I just cut it all off. Wrong,
cut it off. But I like it too. I look
younger and dinner.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
I said, he looks like an erect penis that head.
It's definitely ahead of a penis. Penis head. That's your
new nickname.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
There you go, all right, everybody, I don't feel like working.
They like the red I'm in today, so they are
that's good.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Good, But I don't feel like working today.

Speaker 5 (03:15):
That's okay. This isn't work, this is play.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
I'm tired, you know, I've guy told you maybe if
I got paid, I might get excited to work. But
when you work for free for fourteen years, you get tired.

Speaker 5 (03:27):
So if you guys want to sponsor the show, hit
us up in social media.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Yeah, I could use some money.

Speaker 5 (03:32):
My car brope down, which is getting fixed now, you guys.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
God knows what they're going to charge. You know today
a simple thing in their mechanics place is in the
thousands of dollars. It's insane how people are scalping each other.
Everybody's up bidding. You know, I'll charge you more of
It's just insane. Living in California, as I wrote on
Facebook today, is getting to be an impossibility. You can't

(03:56):
get earthquake insurance, you can't get fire insurance. Everything costs
an arm in a leg. Electric food, gasoline is the
highest in California in the whole country. So you really
have to have a lot of money if you live
in California, or you have to live very meekly, you know,
like don't go to dinner, don't go out, don't travel,

(04:17):
don't buy tampons, don't do any of that stuff because
you know, costs a lot of money. Anyway, I want
to go to Florida next week, but you know where
Jimmy's getting his knee done, and so many things that
we have to do. It seems to be an impossibility.
But where there's a way, there's a will. Oh no,

(04:39):
there's a will, there's a way.

Speaker 5 (04:41):
Won't be next week, it'll be it'll maybe.

Speaker 3 (04:44):
March twenty second.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
I believe, Yeah, it's a possibility we might be able
to go.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
I really want to go. I really want to go.
I have friends I haven't seen there. I'm going to
hook up with other friends who are down from New York,
so it'll be a nice, fun week and we'll do
our show from Florida. That would be a different scenery.
You know, for those of you who watch us. Jimmy

(05:10):
said that more people listen to us than watch us. Okay,
whatever your choice is.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
About four million people listen to us, and about two
thousand people to seven thousand people watch us.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
It's all seven thousand people watching. So why do I
bother shaving or combing my hair? Not that I ever
combed my hair for those seven thousand seven So where
are these seven thousand people? We go all over and
no one stops us and says a UoN Russell.

Speaker 5 (05:41):
Seven thousand people out of the millions that are now.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
When I had my Set the Record Straight, that was
on television, the real television, not just pod crap. And
people then used to stop me.

Speaker 5 (05:53):
Residents because it was only here, you know, I was up.
It was only in California. Yes, all around the world.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
I know that, but I live in California. So the
people that watch Set the Records Straight new me. But
people here don't know us now because we go to China.
Our biggest place that people watch US is New York.
That's the number Our number one demographic is New York. Yeah,
because I'm from Brooklyn and I'm from New York and
I love.

Speaker 5 (06:18):
Me and so New York watches US, New Jersey watches
US a lot, UK watches US a lot.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
New Jersey loves me too, and guineas the Guidos in
New Jersey. California. Wise, guys, twenty people don't love us
Noli California. People are drunk. They're always drinking, so they
wouldn't know us if they fell over us. That's right,
don't they like to drink out here? Have never seen
people drink like in California, Florida and New York. They're

(06:47):
drinking New York, but not like California, California. No matter
where you go, they have a glass in their head.
So I guess you have to be a little high
to live here.

Speaker 5 (06:58):
So here's some updates for some different things you guys. Again,
we want to make sure everybody knows the Beast Inside
is out. We want you guys to check it out. Also,
my movie Purgatorium is on TV, and yesterday we put
a teaser trailer up for another film called get Her.
It's on The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell YouTube channel,
so check it out. It's really short, only like a

(07:19):
minute and a half. But you should check it out.
And no, you're not in that one, and that movie
will be coming out sometimes.

Speaker 8 (07:26):
Oh my gosh, I'm sorry you guys miss missed the movie.
We actually talked for a second, talk for that's the
hospital calling. I could talk for I could talk for long.
That's his hospital calling.

Speaker 3 (07:38):
Tomorrow, I have to get up at four o'clock in
the morning, I think earlier maybe and drive to the
Redlands because Jimmy has had three surgeries. This is Jimmy's
third surgery. The first knee they put in was a
half kneecap and it was crooked. It didn't work, so
then he had a second operation and they put a

(07:58):
kneecap in too big. So now that they have to
take that one out, scrape all of the scot tissue,
and put the proper knee in so he can walk correctly.
Hopefully this surgery will make it. But they said this
is a very very painful surgery because it's the third one.
So you know, I'm a little apprehensive of what's going

(08:21):
to be with this surgery. So, you know, I find
that most people who have their knees replaced. It's a crapshoot.
Some have great success and walk beautifully and some have difficulty.
So it's all according to the doctor and how you
heal and if you go to therapy. So Jimmy's pretty

(08:43):
good with all of that. And I think the third
one will be a success. So everybody get in his
corner and root for them, Okay, that the third surgery
will be a success and Jimmy will walk like he
used to walk before his knee went.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
Sorry about that, everybody, And they call for my my,
my time, and they have changed it. So my surgery
is at one, so I don't have to be there
till eleven. Oh so we don't have to get up
at four in the morning.

Speaker 3 (09:10):
Oh good good, that's such a you know, that's such
a nice thing because four in the morning.

Speaker 5 (09:17):
It's dires him too, because he's got to take me
and go with me.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
Right, it's nighttime, and I hate driving in the nighttime
when it's really morning.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
Yes, So we don't have to leave until like nine
thirty or ten in the morning.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
Right, Because when I'm on a movie sometimes I have
to get up at five o'clock in the morning to
get to make up and hair or whatever they're going
to do. We've got that wardrobe, you know. So you're
so terrible. You're up at like five o'clock and you're
driving to La or wherever you're going to film. So
I like, I like to sleep till ten o'clock every day.

Speaker 5 (09:53):
I'm happy. It just means that I won't be uh
no out of it because it's a four or five
hour surgery, so I won't be done with surgery until
five or six at night, right, But anyway, so that's
where we're at, you guys. And I was gonna say
something else, but I forgot what. But more people have
joined us in the chat room. Hey, everybody in the
chat room, and thanks for all the prayers and the

(10:15):
well wishes. And they're saying that the worst part about
having your surgery at a later time is the fact
that you can't eat anything after midnight. So that's even
like longer, so I don't get to eat anything for Yeah, yeah,
I can lose some weight, you guys. I'm still trying
to lose a little bit more. Since my last surgery,
I've lost like fifteen pounds, and since my first surgery,

(10:35):
I've lost twenty four pounds.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
It was fat. I guess I was.

Speaker 5 (10:39):
Fat like when I first met in.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
I never remember him being fat. I remember him being hulky. No,
he was bulky, but never fat. No, no, no, not
like a muscle bounce ill no, no, don't get get
over yourself. Not musculine, just hulky, bulky, yes, like like
a like a big like a hamster.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
Bulky hamster's bulky hamsters are not bulky.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
I wish there's a rat. They're not rats. Hamsters, they're cute.
I used to have one, of course you did. I
know what you did with it too. No, I didn't know.

Speaker 5 (11:19):
That's Gerbils that they used to dobs gerbils did that?
Not not rats? That was Richard.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
I don't think that that was all some screwball. You know.
The media puts out such garbage. Don't believe the media, folks.
I mean, they just make press. They wake up on
Monday and they say, okay, what can we lie about
to make people read us and listen to us, And
then they create a lie and then people think it's

(11:48):
the truth. I mean, it's just nonsense. Believe believe what
happens happens, but don't believe what they say can happen
because they don't know the future and they don't know
their asses from their elbows. So forget it. I'm done
with the media.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
So I want everybody to check out Dark Frights Magazine.
Go to Darkfrights dot com. And I've turned my ringer
off because I had to leave it on because I
knew they were going to call uh so dark Fright's
mag You guys, and I guess where we can bring
on our first guest.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
What do you think, man, we have to bring on
our first guest. Yes, that's what we are. We're a show.
We'd bring on our guests. So that's what we did.

Speaker 5 (12:27):
You have anything else you want to talk about before
you have?

Speaker 3 (12:29):
You how magnificent I am, and how beautiful I am,
and how intelligent I am, and how funny I am,
and how wonderful I am, and how terrific I am,
and also how modest I am.

Speaker 5 (12:41):
So b said she had a hamster named Sebastian. They
love the yeah, and then she killed it and she
did the hamster. They love the name of Sebastian. And
then they said the hamster would have red glasses like me. Oh,
I love these glasses.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
All right, So it was a gay hamster.

Speaker 5 (13:00):
No, it wasn't a gay. It doesn't make you gay.

Speaker 3 (13:02):
Those red glasses make you very gay.

Speaker 5 (13:04):
I get so many compliments on the glass.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
Because I know you're a fairy. They know you're If
you were supposed to be straight, you wouldn't like the
compliments you got. No, everybody loves them. They love the
pink ones the best I can hear. Pink glasses. Yeah
you really looking? You really a they're going bald look? Yeah,
your butcher. Pink glasses make you very important I am.
So let's bring on our first guests. All right, well,

(13:27):
let's let me in.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
Hey, Brian, how you doing good?

Speaker 4 (13:33):
How you guys doing good?

Speaker 5 (13:35):
I wanted to make sure I could hear you. Make
sure you speak up, just because we want to make
sure we can hear you, and and so and now
I'm going to introduce you now that we can hear you.
So you guys, now, we want to welcome to the
Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell. And this dude has
a lot of titles. You guys, actor, producer, stuntman, stunt coordinator, comedian, blacksmith,

(13:55):
voiceover artist and puppeteer. Brian Forrest, Hello, and welcome to
the show. Did I miss anything? I was gonna say.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
You know, when you're an actor in Hollywood and you
bounce when you walk and you're always hungry, you can't
be a waiter. So I've just kind of adopted any
hat to let me wear in the industry. So there
you got on the film said, I've probably done it.

Speaker 3 (14:14):
There you go.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
I love it. So this is our cool, outrageous Man
about Town. Co host mister Ron Russell.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
Hey, Brian, answer me your question. If you saw a
man with pink are glasses? We think it was a fag.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
I have these glasses of pink. I am gay.

Speaker 4 (14:32):
I was gonna say. I was gonna say, I think
I think it takes a real man to wear pink.
And I think as long as it accentuates your skin
tone or says a little something about your personality, or
if you're just trying to catch people's attention and make
a statement, I think anybody can wear anything.

Speaker 5 (14:47):
My favorite color, I wear it all everywhere. I have
every color of pink polo shirt that's ever been made.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Jimmy's just a fair that.

Speaker 4 (14:56):
I was gonna say. One of my first modeling jobs
was literally for a magazine, faery magazine, and I was
holding an owl, and I was wearing glitter and ears.
But I am just a basic cisgendered, white, straight male.
But I think I look amazing with a glitter beard.
So I don't think anyone's ever going to stop me
from wearing glitter.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
The no I knew Rock Kutson. I knew her enough.
I didn't know him well. I knew him a little bit,
and he might not be enough, you know Cutson is.

Speaker 4 (15:25):
Of course, I was just gonna say. I was warned
that there might be some some dated references, and I
was like, are you kidding? I literally grew up. My
first crush was Anne Miller. I got to.

Speaker 3 (15:35):
Meet esther, Wayne Miller. Oh yeah, Oh I knew it.
And also I knew it.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
I knew Anne in her old age when she was hunchback.
She was so bent over when she walked, she was carnosa,
almost was on the floor. And I was in a
Chinese restaurant in Beverly Hills and Anne came in, and
of course on my way out, I stopped at her
table and there she was, with her face this far
from the plate because she was so hunched over bad rheumatism,

(16:05):
and I thought to myself, this dancer of dancers, nobody
could stop like Anne Miller, no one, and looked at her,
now old lady bent over, So you see, enjoy your
youth while you have.

Speaker 5 (16:18):
I thought you were about twenty five or thirty and
prematurely gray. So I'm surprised. You know Anne Miller, So
good for you. His best friend was Anne Russell. His
best friend was Jane Russell. So I'm sure if you
know Ann Miller, you know Jane Russell. You know the
worst my Anne Miller's story. Who interrupted it?

Speaker 3 (16:33):
We were at the end of it. It wasn't at
the end of it. She looked up at me to
say hi, but she couldn't lift her body, so she
looked like that with one eye, and I thought she
looked like Quasimoto. You know that. It was weird, and
that was my last last time I ever saw her,
and then she passed away. Ann Miller was very nice anything.

(16:58):
Oh yeah, she was a regular girl. She was no
movie star. Annie was right to earth and sweet.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
When I got to meet Esther Williams, I actually asked
her about Anne Miller, saying that, you know, I was
a big fan of Esther's work and everything, and I said,
but you know that's who my first love was was
Anne Miller. She goes, I met Anne Miller a couple
of times at the studio functions and she goes. I
was like, oh, what did you talk about? She goes, well,
I've watched right up to her and said, Anne, you
do a lot of amazing things, but if you ever
get in a pool, I'll break your fucking legs. And

(17:27):
I was like, well, she goes, and she goes because
Anne could do anything, so she's like. Esther was like,
I've got one thing. I'm a swimmer, and if Anne
gets in the pool, I'm done. My career is over.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
Well, I've been in Esther Williams house. Jane Russell and
Esther Williams were best friends, and Jane brought me to
Esther Williams house and I said to Esther, will you
come on my TV show which is called Set the
Record Straight? And Jane said to Esther, yeah, but be
careful because he asked crazy, crazy questions. And Esther said,

(17:58):
like what she said, well, well, he asked me what
size bra I was and I said, Jane, after all
you were famous for your tins. So I wanted everybody
to know what size bra you were, and all you
were was a thirty six B. And Esther said that's
all you are, Jane, and James said, yeah, I'm not
big at all. I'm a thirty six B. So I

(18:19):
brought up the tit conversation at Esther's house. Esther was
beyond belief. She made coffee and little things for She's wonderful.
I miss Esther. She was a lovely swimmer, right the swimmer, yes,
and mermaid. Lovely woman she was. And her husband was
a doll too, sweetheart. I think he's still alive.

Speaker 5 (18:42):
Ron knows everything about the Golden Age of Hollywood. He
did stuff with, He worked with the Elizabeth Taylor Aids
found Outabeth Taylor.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
I grew up in here.

Speaker 5 (18:51):
He knew, he knew who's the other one? Everybody liked
It's so who's the other really? The biggest one? Betty Davis? Oh, Bertie,
you knew Betty Davis?

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Know?

Speaker 5 (19:01):
He knew a whole bunch of tab Hunter. He knows
it because.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
Because back in the you know, fifty years ago. Imagine
I could talk about I'm eighty four, so fifty years ago,
Hollywood was very little. It was not a big place.
It was a town, a little town, and you could
see these people and meet them at parties and become
friendly with them. Today it's an impossibility because j Lo,

(19:27):
if you look at her, she has you arrested. And
the rest of these jerks, these stupid young actors of today,
think who the fuck they are? And you can't talk
to them. I mean Angelini, Julie grew up, grew up
in my house in Beverly Hills. She went to school
with my daughter, Deirdre, so Angie. I made peanut butter
and jelly sandwiches for Angie and she swam in my

(19:50):
pool in my house in Beverly Hills. So I don't
think if I saw Angie today. I ran into her
about fifteen years ago a drug store on Beverly Hills
and she was with her then a husband, Billy Bob,
and she was very sweet and very nice, but not friendly.

(20:13):
I'm not encouragingly friendly. So the people, the stars of
today don't have the grace, class, or warmth of the
stars of years ago. Even Betty Davis, who was a
bitch at times, you know, tough, tough broad, very watch
what you said. Yeah, oh, if you had to watch
your peas and cues around that one. If you said

(20:35):
something she didn't like, she shut you down in one second.
She didn't give a shit about feelings. She told it
like it was. But if she liked you, she was
a dog. So I find Hollywood today not the same.

Speaker 4 (20:52):
I think that's that's fair.

Speaker 5 (20:54):
Yeah, I'm going to steer this conversation a little bit.
First of all, where are you are you in California?

Speaker 4 (20:59):
I actually I'm in LA. I was born and raised
in Orange County and then went to UC Santa Barbara
and then moved to LA.

Speaker 3 (21:06):
I'm definitely a West Coast specialistic. Why did you leave
Santa Barbara for that sewer? I loved saying.

Speaker 4 (21:16):
It wasn't too expensive. We think it's expensive in LA,
but Santa Barbara. Once I graduated, I was like, I
can't afford to stick around the city.

Speaker 3 (21:25):
You know, Jane lived up in Santa Barbara for a while.

Speaker 4 (21:29):
I see her, I think too, Yeah, yeah, and then
she moved.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
Yeah. She she ohdeed on booze and it was hospitalized
and her son went and bought a house up in
the hell was it? I used to go there all
the time. I forgot north of Santa Barbara, and Jane
was miserable because she loved Santa Barbara. You know, she

(21:54):
had beautiful she had a boat at one time, and
all her friends were there. Okay, So and I used
to go to the other one nice to Santa Barbara.
What the hell is it called? We're cho Montecito, were
chair Punto. So I'm very familiar with that. I would
live there in a minute if I could afford.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
It, exactly, exactly someday.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Maybe I love Santa Barbara. I love it so much.

Speaker 5 (22:22):
Just so you know, the chattern loves your smile.

Speaker 3 (22:26):
They're very cute. Are you straight or gay?

Speaker 5 (22:28):
He's straight?

Speaker 4 (22:29):
I am straight. Oh, I was gonna say. I went
to a theater school, so I definitely know him straight.
You have a girlfriend, fiance? Yeah, how good for you.

Speaker 5 (22:39):
Congratulation.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
You have a girlfriend Beyonce, Beyonce, did you give her
a nice ring or cheap one? A nice one? Actually?

Speaker 4 (22:47):
We actually we've been together. We've been together for eleven
years and we actually we actually this last year last
fall we went to Edinburgh Fringe and did stand up
and so afterwards we ran away to the Islas Sky,
which is where they filmed just all these you know,
eighties fantasy movies that we grew up with. So, you know,
we went to the place called Fairy Pools, which is

(23:08):
basically a series of very treacherous waterfalls coming down off
the mountains.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
The question is, you had eleven years of pre marital pussy?

Speaker 7 (23:18):
Now, how big?

Speaker 3 (23:20):
How big was the diamond as well?

Speaker 4 (23:25):
Funny enough, she's she's not a diamond kind of gal.
She'd actually given me a ring because I was there
for her her Actually, her older sister had passed away
from cancer when she was fairly young. Yeah, and so
a lot of her friends just kind of couldn't handle
that in their early twenties and stuff that the emotional
weight of all that. But I stuck around and I

(23:46):
was there for her. So she actually gave me a
ring that says in Gaelic on amkara, which actually means
soul friend, which can be romantic or it could just
be you know, it's your soul recognizing counterpart in another.
So basically she oh, go ahead, you know.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
I was kidding and cheasing you. Of course, of course,
you know, Jesus, give me her phone number. I'll call
an educate her.

Speaker 4 (24:11):
Basically, she had given me this ring as like a
thank you, and I used to wear it on red
carpets to get people leaving alone.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
It's like a fake.

Speaker 4 (24:19):
So basically, yeah, so but she gave that to me.
We hadn't even started dating yet, and so here we are,
eleven years later, after we'd actually started dating, and I
gave it back to her and I said what I
thought was very funny that our relationship had come full circle.
She didn't even blink, because she's the funny one, she's
the stand up comic. But she did say yes, and

(24:41):
we were witnessed by the fairies there, as well as
a lot of very nosy sheep in the Scottish Highlands
from our propo.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
So she hung around for eleven years. Give me her
phone number.

Speaker 4 (24:54):
Well, hey, it took me that long to convince her
that getting married was a good thing. She was raised
by a burn your bra hippie, very hippie parents, so
she she didn't want any sort of like She's like,
I'll never get married. I don't want no government involved
or anything like that. I said, well, at least for
the tax purposes, we should at least proably sign a
piece of paper.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
No, she's stupid because I have to call her because
if you're married and the marriage doesn't work, you've got
to support her in her lifestyle for two years and
she gets money. If you don't marry, how you kick
her out? She's in the street with ship.

Speaker 5 (25:29):
Anyway.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
That's not a conversation. Anyway, it's not a good conversation.
But everybody loves this kind of comor. We're going to
get to his career. You know, I don't ask both
questions because my audience gets bored. But he said, we
don't give a shit about what his career. Asking about
it now, and he's wait, he's very shute, and we

(25:49):
want to know his private life. So I'm the one
that goes into the private life.

Speaker 5 (25:54):
Usue that we do that after we do the career stuff.
So let's do some career stuff.

Speaker 4 (25:57):
Some career stuff.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Looking at this, he does too many things to even
talk about.

Speaker 5 (26:02):
No, he doesn't know. It's my turn.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yeah, but I want to ask him a question, how
are you a blacksmith? There are no horses or no way.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
So okay, I was going to say, I think this
is this is a question from both of you because
this is like, it is something.

Speaker 5 (26:16):
That I, well, I want to know about the black
because if you're our first blacksmith seventeen years, we've never
had anybody who's a blacksmith, especially anybody who's been a
blacksmith on some of the biggest things on in Hollywood
that you can be in.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
So, yeah, we'll keep it interesting, we'll keep the historical
stuff short. But basically, a blacksmith just means that you
heat up metal, you hit it with a hammer, and
you make something out of it. So people that were
with horses, those are called farriers, so they're specifically making
horseshoes working in the Old West, you know, Not's berry farm.
I think they still have some that was the first
one is growing orange kinny that I remember ever seeing.

(26:51):
But what I actually do as far as blacksmith is concerned,
is medieval arms and armor, meaning you know, suits of
armor and then weapons, so swords, axes and things for
the entertainment industry. So when I first went to LA,
like I said, I didn't want to be a waiter,
So I was like, I got to get a day job,
and I'd like to be something in the industry. And
I actually grew up working in industrial machine shops, so
working in my dad's shop. So I found this place

(27:13):
that makes all the swords and stuff, and since I
also do stunt work, I was like, great, I want
some of these swords. And I said, hey, are you
hiring and they said, I don't know, actor, we don't
really want your kind around here. Your accident prone. And
I said, well, I actually know how to use all
these things growing up around here, and I'm also real
good at sweeping the floor. And so they went, all right,
I will give you a chance. Maybe we'll give you
a call. And literally eight days later they said, hey,

(27:34):
what are you doing for the next two weeks and
I said nothing. I said, great, bring a sleeping bag.
We got to make two sets of horse Armoor in
eight days for some big award show, and so I
literally They're like, if you survived this, you have a
job here. And it was awful. It was awful. I
almost lost a finger, I almost lost a toe, but like,
I survived. And then I've been working off and on
there for thirteen and a half years now. Anytime things

(27:57):
get slow, I go and I work on Marvel movies
or Star Wars projects and all kinds of weird stuff.
That's my my go to day job instead of bartending
or working at Starbucks or anything.

Speaker 5 (28:07):
I like love it.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
So I have a quarter.

Speaker 5 (28:09):
Wait, wait, I have a question sometimes, just sometimes, do
you also play a blacksmith, because like I think I have,
I wrote that you played a bat blacksmith in Babylon?
Is that right?

Speaker 3 (28:23):
I was gonna say not.

Speaker 4 (28:23):
For I I helped Tony basically, the owner of the
shop I work out as Tony Swadden. He's literally been
doing this since before I was born, and he's made
stuff for He made the Hook and Hook, he made
you know, blades sword for all the Blade movies. You know,
the first Thor's Hammer, he worked on that. You know,
he made the Infinity gallt the real metal one, not
the CGI one. So but so yeah, So I worked

(28:46):
on Babylon. But then I played a blacksmith in like
shows like Mythic Quest on Apple TV and stuff like
that where they're like, hey, we want to do this
real And then actually Tony and I got to go
to set and work with Bryce Alice Howard uh for
an episode of The Mandal Orient slash like Book of
Boba Fetah because they're a character there, Yeah, the armor
at Emily Swallow, who's just amazing since she's now a

(29:07):
friend of the Forge, and we hang out and weld
blacksmith together because she's like, well, if I'm playing the blacksmith,
I got to learn how to do it. So we
actually got to go to set on their you know,
half a billion dollar sound stage with you know, the
big volume they they have there and actually do live blacksmithing,
and they were not happy to see us. The TD
was like what is that. I said, Oh, that's a
fifty you know, fifty gallon propane tank. He's like, so

(29:29):
that's a bomb and I went, I mean kind of.
And he's like, what do you have in that box?
I was like, Oh, it's just a bunch of different
types of like corrosive acid. He's like, what, I want
that back and I was like, oh, it's just full
of metal dusts and he goes, that is a half
a billion dollars worth of electronics. I don't want to
like who would like why are you here? And he
tried to kick us out and Bryce had to be like, no, no, no,
they're supposed to be here, and we weren't allowed in
the actual volume they brought some of those floating panel

(29:51):
screens over to us so we could set it up
and actually do like inserts on the show. There's a
scene out to give anything whay. There's a scene where
they tank, they take a spear and they turn into chainmail,
and if you notice, there's like some like close up
shots of that process. So that's actually real and we
actually got to do that home set. Great crafty.

Speaker 5 (30:11):
Hey, you're a blacksmith on the book of Boba fet
We actually have Daniel Logan coming on, who was Boba
Fett in the original Star Wars movies. Yes, then you
were also a blacksmith on Black Adam with Dwayne Johnson,
Pierce Brockton and Alvis Hodge and Henry Winkler, and also
for Babylon with Jeans Smart, Margot, Robbie Fleet here At Roberts,
Olivia Wilde, Kai Garber, Patrick Fuguen, and Brad Pitt. I mean,

(30:35):
those are like the biggest movies like on the fucking
planet though, So I think, you know, it's a very
cool thing that you got to do.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
Well, it's a funny thing people always see that resume
and like, I've also worked on stuff for every Disneyland
Park on the planet that is in the parks that
you can go and you go see the people go
what's it like to work on these Marvel movies and
stuff like that? And I go, like any arts department person,
I don't know because I was literally an a warehouse
in Burbank. And then some little RPA comes picks it
up and takes it a set and we go okay,

(31:03):
on the next so I didn't get to go, So
I didn't actually get to go on set, but we
got to play with all this stuff beforehand.

Speaker 3 (31:10):
Ye.

Speaker 5 (31:10):
Also, though, because you were on a lot, you did
a lot of reality TV stuff as a blacksmith.

Speaker 3 (31:14):
Right I have. Yeah, I was gonna say, I do
a lot of hosting stuff as well.

Speaker 4 (31:19):
So we've done a lot of different like shows where
we're like, hey, what would it take to actually blacksmith
these things from either like animated series or from like
you know, Batman or like a James Bond and stuff
like that. So we've actually done shows where like, here's
what it would actually take to make those things, and
then we do one of my favorites being stuntman and
a stunt coordinator is we test them so we've literally

(31:40):
bought like five hundred dollars cars and then brought them
in like some sort of street fighter level, and we've
taken these swords from like Game of Thrones that we
forged for real, and then we just destroy the car
with them, like stabbing the through windshields and things.

Speaker 5 (31:53):
Just to be like how effective are they?

Speaker 6 (31:55):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (31:55):
Yes, for science, and we go yes, for science. That's
why we did this.

Speaker 5 (32:01):
Okay, So go back to stunt So you have stunt
coordinator and stunt man. Tell everybody the difference between the two.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Basically, Oh yeah, I mean I never I never thought
you didn't don't work. Yeah, yeah, so yeah, a stump
performer stuntman. But you know, nowadays it's it's you know,
anyone can be. A stunt performer is basically the person
on camera falling out of the building, getting lit on fire,
falling off a horse, sword fighting, what have you. And
then the stunt coordinator, just like any kind of department head,

(32:29):
is in charge of basically coordinating that action to make
sure it is done safely, but then also make sure
all the action is done in support of the story.
I hate action for the sake of action. I've definitely
worked with directors with it, like it'd be great if
he does a backflip, and I'm like, he's in a cafe,
he's on a date, why would he do a backflip?

Speaker 3 (32:48):
Like?

Speaker 4 (32:49):
You know, so I you know so so a lot
of that act my acting training and kind of you know,
coming from the theater as well, you know, for my
whole life, you know, to really support We want to
make sure the action is actually supporting the story, isn't
it makes people care. You know a lot of times
I fall asleep during action movies. That's his problem.

Speaker 5 (33:07):
He hates it when, like especially in horror movies, when
people just get killed but you don't even give a
shit about him.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
So, yes, there's no no character development development. Yeah, I'm
going to drop another name. I knew Burt Reynolds pretty well, right, Yes, Bert,
Burt and I were like, I would say, we were friends.
And one time at lunch, I said to him, listen, Burt,
when you were doing stunts, did you ever hurt yourself?

(33:32):
He looked at me, he said, I don't have a
fucking bone in my body that's not broken. And then
he started to tell me his injuries neck, shoulder, hip, knee,
ankle had I thought Jesus Christ. Oh yeah, you know
he said he almost died one time on a movie. Yeah,

(33:54):
really badly hurt.

Speaker 4 (33:57):
Yeah, really improved.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
Yeah, let's speed forward and Bert Bert is old. Now,
Bert is like eighty or whatever. And I went up
to Jupiter to see him, and he wasn't good in Florida.
In Florida, he wasn't in good shape. I mean he
was in such pain. His entire body hurt always. And
he said it's because of the stunts. I said, really, Bert,

(34:23):
you're paying for all that work now in your old age.
And he said, yep, he said, Ron, I can't move
here for my body. Most of my stunt work. He
really did stuff. I mean he was crazy.

Speaker 6 (34:36):
Bert.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
Oh, he's famous for doing like as many of the
stunts as they would let him do. He's like, great,
I'll do it.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
Not just rolling down, I mean big time stuff.

Speaker 4 (34:46):
He did driving. He did driving ones. He you know,
I think a couple of times he went through walls
and fights and stuff.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (34:53):
So to finalize that Bert Reynolds conversation, he was everybody's friend,
a pal. It was a dream. I love Burt a lot.
We all did. And sorry, he's gone. But Burt Reynolds
people out there. He was a regular joke. It was
not a movie stock.

Speaker 6 (35:12):
He was.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
I love that.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
The I was gonna say, yeah, safety is definitely the technology.
When I first started in stunts, you know, I came
to LA in two end of two thousand and nine
and there was still you know, most stunt coordinators were
from the Cowboys scene. Everyone comes through stunts through different things,
whether you were like some sort of like motorcycle rider
or a figure skater or a circus performer. I came

(35:36):
from like the theater, like sword fighting, Shakespeare, and then
like the western so like like cow what we call
like cowboys stunts, riding horse and stuff like that. So
a lot of the people that I worked with were
those guys that you know, their heyday of the seventies,
and they were all about like you don't need a pad,
and they'd call people names if they wanted a pad
and stuff like that. And it was very much like, oh,
to break your arm, we'll do two more takes, then

(35:57):
we'll get a PA to drop you off at the hospital.
So I like, I was like, oh, maybe I don't
want to do this, But I was very fortunate that,
you know, when I started to make the transition to coordinator,
because you got to be a performer first. You got
to know how to do it. What does it take
before you ask someone else to do it? And to
trust you? You know, it's all about some people. It's
very close knit community because you got you're trusting everyone

(36:20):
with your life, you know, so that you don't end
up oh yeah, oh yeah, they're there and what you
do worst one I will say a disclaimer here, a
disclaimer here is that things are much better. And my
mentor was this wonderful stunt coordinator woman who now is
one of the leading interestry coordinators named Jessica Aaron Bennett.

(36:40):
And her whole thing was like, you got you look
at these movie stars and they can't move, you know,
all these these stuntmen are you know, they turned fifty
and they're like, my body don't work no more. And
you're like, well that's not great. So she's like, there's
never a zero percent chance of injury. She's like, it's
gonna happen. But if we got to do the work,
we got to embrace technology, do the search to make
sure the injuries are minimized.

Speaker 3 (37:03):
The risk of injuries minimized.

Speaker 4 (37:05):
However, I have done creature you know, things where actors
just full on punch your right in the skull, or
you know, where you're doing a big fight and somebody
misjudges and they almost cave in your skull with like
an actual war hammer. I've literally done horse falls where

(37:26):
they're like, hey, there's not enough time, and I go, well,
I haven't worked with the horse, and they're like, no, no, no,
the horse knows what they're doing. And I'm like all right,
and I you know, I'm comment in a full gallop.
I've literally comment in a full gallop in full armor
with a shield and a big old sword, and a
guy jumps out with an axe and he's supposed to
hit me and knock me off.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
The horse.

Speaker 4 (37:44):
Fine, But as soon as he jumps out and he
goes ah, the horse goes no thanks, rears up and
just throws me into a tree. Oh wow, And I'm
just like, okay, normal Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (37:56):
That's great.

Speaker 4 (37:57):
But but the funny thing is is that a lot
of these what you would think are dangerous stunts being
set on fire, a lot of are underwater. I've done
a lot of underwater work where I've literally been like
gorilla duct taper on my wrist, my ankles, my mouth
and just turned upside down in a fully blacked out
pool and just shoved underwater.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
And you, oh, yeah.

Speaker 4 (38:20):
So you definitely got to find a little Nomas day
moment there to slow here a heart right down so
you can stay underwater as long as possible. But things
like that, honestly, those aren't the stunts that worry me.
You know, you always do your due diligence. You always
got to make sure everything's safety, You trust the safety team,
the stunt team, stuff like that, But even some of
the smallest things. I literally did a commercial as an
actor where I'm talking about this like video game and

(38:43):
I'm just like walking and talking and basically there's these
two guys who are supposed to be like shadow boxing
and they didn't even nit a coordinator.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
So the first day he's like, don't touch.

Speaker 4 (38:51):
Each other, don't freaking touch each Other's no stunt coordinator,
and they're like, yeah, no worries, And I was just
like walk and talk and I walk between him and
this like six foot five, like ultra heavyweight guy just
full on punches me in the side of the head, and.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
I'm like the host, Oh yeah, I was a.

Speaker 5 (39:09):
Commercial, so you're not supposed to touch anybody.

Speaker 3 (39:11):
I'm not supposed I'm literally.

Speaker 4 (39:13):
Like I'm wearing like a suit. I'm just like hello,
blah blah blah. And this guy just like punches me
and knocks me down and I pop up and I'm
like looked at him and he goes sorry, and I'm
like what And then they're like, hey, do you retally
take him minute? And then we'll get back to filming,
and I'm like, oh my god. So it's funny enough.
You always kind of be on your toes, as you

(39:33):
both know. A film set is an inherently dangerous place.
There's a lot of gear, there's a lot of things
going on. So it is like when I stunt coordinate,
I always in my safety meeting speech, I always say, please,
safety is everybody's job. Help me, help you. Send you
home in the same condition. It's not better that you
arrived in.

Speaker 5 (39:49):
We've had yeah, no, I've had a lot of stunt
coordinators on, and we've had a lot of stunt actors on,
more actors than coordinators, but we know a lot of them.
I don't know if you know who came Hunter is
a stunt coordinator, and he's yes, kind of mine and
I know all the horror of people in horror.

Speaker 4 (40:05):
I was just say, I know him through horror. Yeah, yeah,
the horror world.

Speaker 5 (40:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
I said I could do a stunt in a movie
I was in and I played a mafia guy and
this gigantic rat the size of a Volkswagen was supposed
to come and grab me and throw me across the
room and rip my arm off, I believe, tear my arm.
And I began to do it and suddenly someone runs

(40:33):
on the set and said, hold it, Ron. How old
are you at the time. I was like maybe eighty
eight one, I think eighty one, And he said, you
can't do this, and we don't have a stunt person
on board, so what are we going to do. It's
it's stand to the movie. It's literally the same yea culmination.

(40:53):
What they did was so that I wouldn't be injured.
They said that my character went down in the basement
and the rat ripped my arm off in the basement.
So now you see the rat coming up from the
basement with my arm in it, and you identify it
by my wristwatch. So I was grateful because I thought, Jesus,
if they're going to be throwing me around like that

(41:15):
con bus to him so you see that.

Speaker 4 (41:17):
Oh yeah, they do protect you, but they things have
gotten a lot better.

Speaker 3 (41:23):
They should have.

Speaker 5 (41:24):
Oh yeah, you know it depends on the budget.

Speaker 3 (41:26):
I think, well, you should have been on the set.
You could have been my double. That would it be? It?

Speaker 6 (41:32):
Okay?

Speaker 5 (41:32):
So here I want to go switch the topic. We're
going to talk about your your base and forty stuff
in the minut but I want to talk about one
other thing is because I want to understand like what
it is. So I'm very familiar with Ultraman. You have
a lot of stuff on your on your IMDb, But
are you actually ultraman like because I don't know what

(41:53):
ultra man victory. I haven't seen any Ultraman things in
a long term. Wait a second, you can know every
time I heard a Walmarte Ultraman like action figures, are
you actually okay?

Speaker 3 (42:04):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (42:06):
So, so basically the Ultraman you're seeing now is basically Netflix,
I believe as a Netflix bought the rights to create
new stuff. So where I basically the creator of Ultraman
was approached in the late eighties early nineties to basically
say hey, we want to americanize this, and he said, no,
Japanese creators are very very I've done this a lot
with anime as well, that they're very protective. Their artwork

(42:28):
is who they are, so if the artwork is misinterpreted
or disrespected, they take it very very personally. It doesn't
matter that they get a check for however much money. However,
Power Rangers creator said yes, Power Ranger is now a
multi billion dollar franchise for the last forty thirty forty years.
So basically when they he's getting older and he was like, hey,

(42:50):
I know, maybe I'm open to basically at least dubbing
over the movies. So I am an English dub voice
actor for the live action Ultraman franchise. So we did, like,
I think, like a like ten or twelve. And then
it's also very rare to voice over more than one Ultraman.
There's never been anyone who gets to be more than one.
So I am Ultraman Victory, which ron it's basically these

(43:14):
are you know, some sort of like quasi sci fi
fantasy people who basically find things that power them up.
And it's very much like those old Godzilla movies where
they're now three hundred feet tall and they fight in
these giant kind of like rubber suits, so it's very
almost kitchy, but like in a classic sort of like
Japanese horror monster kind of way. So basically, so I

(43:34):
am I'm the English dub. I'm the English dub of
Ultraman Victory. And then actually later because they couldn't find
anyone that they liked for the voice to kind of
voicematch the actor, is that I'm the voice for Ultraman
Dina for when he's older. So when that actor actually
came back in the nineties and early two thousands to
read you his characters, so I'm technically the only new's

(43:56):
ever done two. But yeah, no, that was just in
a studio. I actually recently got to stunt coordinator movie
whose inspiration was Ultraman, so it's really great because I
got to be on set and stunt coordinated like big
monster fights and like crush a city and stuff like that.

Speaker 6 (44:10):
I love it.

Speaker 5 (44:11):
I'm going to get the Ultraman action figure. I was
gonna I collect the action figures of anybody who's been
on the show, and we've had everybody you know has
Action figures, so I have I have an extensive Action
figure collection, and we've had a bunch of Power Rangers
people on the show. I love the Power Rangers. I
have a lot of them in my collection also. But
I just thought that was the coolest thing because I
was looking at it and you're like, Ultraman. You're in

(44:33):
the series of films, Ultraman Victory, Ultraman Victory thirteen episode
TV series, Like you're in like a lot of it.
Like you're like Ultraman. That's like a big deal. For
people who don't really watch that kind of stuff, it's
not a big deal. But Front of God yeah, huge.

Speaker 3 (44:47):
I have no idea Ultraman. I've never seen it. I've
ever seen one.

Speaker 5 (44:51):
No, you've never seen it.

Speaker 3 (44:52):
So where did he come from? Ultraman?

Speaker 5 (44:54):
Oh, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (44:55):
It's Japan. Oh yeah, it's basically it's in the vein
of godzill you know, like with the same creator as
Godzilla and stuff like that, the same studios and stuff
like that. So it's it's basically like their kids version
show version, and it's a it was a TV show
for for a long long time. It's like a Superman
and a Batman exactly.

Speaker 3 (45:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (45:14):
I think of it like like some are most are earthlings,
but they basically get powers and then they basically can
transform into these ginormous, you know, kind of alien entities.

Speaker 5 (45:24):
No, he's like that though that you're thinking Power Rangers.
He's like, it's it's like the Japanese version of Power Range.

Speaker 3 (45:29):
You know, it's an injury the little Yeah.

Speaker 5 (45:32):
It's like the Japanese version of that.

Speaker 4 (45:34):
Okay, same Power Rangers is originally Japanese as well.

Speaker 3 (45:37):
Yeah, but he just I know the Power Rangers. We
had them all, Yeah, we had that.

Speaker 5 (45:45):
I was actually I almost said was the one who
killed himself? Not I forgot his name because I'm on
the air.

Speaker 4 (45:49):
Jason, Yeah, No, I had the pleasure of meeting him
a few times. Actually Power Rangers. Uh So in the
original mighty more from Power Rangers than Jason on there's
the two so as you remember in the original show
in like the nineties and stuff, there was like the
two punk old bleak kids named back in the skull

(46:09):
like this one heavier guy in City Guy. So the
skinnier guy, his name is Jason Narvy. And when I
went to UC Santa Barbara. I was going to be
an engineer or like a history teacher, keemical engineering history teacher.
And I saw for you know, your you know, general
education requirements. They had like an intro to acting and
growing up the theater and stuff like that. I was
like easy four units. Jason Narvie Freaking skull Skullovich from

(46:34):
The Mighty Morpharm Power Rangers was my professor because he
was getting a pH d at the time. He made
me refall in love with acting. We did like scenes
from Rosencrantz and Gillingstone are Dead, and watching him work
and him giving me notes reinvigorated me and went, oh no,
my parents are going to be so mad. I want
to be an actor. Oh no, I went went to

(46:56):
college to be like an engineer or a history teacher
and so yeah. So I blame Jason Narvey. He knows
he played my dad.

Speaker 3 (47:04):
And after I.

Speaker 4 (47:05):
Graduated that uh right.

Speaker 3 (47:08):
You must never ever again, sir, hey, you must never
ever again say I want to be an actor. You
must say I am an actor.

Speaker 4 (47:19):
There's a big difference, Yes, sir, I was at the time.
I was I was like eighteen.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
If you were auditioning anyone, if anyone who auditions for
us and they say I want to be an actor.
I say, okay, go to school. But if you say
I am an actor, I say, what have you done?
So there's a big difference. There's definite you have to be,
you know, in this fucking business. I love that you

(47:45):
have to conn everybody into who you are. I mean,
you got a light, cheat and steel to get a
part in the movie. It's very difficult.

Speaker 4 (47:54):
My favorite college professor was was a Sage Parker Lang,
who's Mary Louise Parker's older sister, who had in her
own career for the longest time before a safety concern
she was really injured on set and then she went
into teaching, and so she said, she said, you are
your brand as an actor, you are in marketing.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
You're your brand.

Speaker 4 (48:15):
If you don't believe in the product, why would anybody
else do it? She actually brought a less I seeah
all the time. You know some people, Here's what I say.

Speaker 3 (48:26):
If I were a plumber and I talked about a
clogged toilet, you wouldn't get upset about it. You just listen.
But if I'm an actor and I told at a movie,
I mean, you get upset. You get jealous, you get envious,
you get nasty, or you just tuned me out. I
don't like people that tuned me out. I'm an actor.
That's my craft, So I talk about my job just

(48:49):
like you talk about your job as a waiter or
a plumber. Only thing is yeah, actors are very, very envied.
Everybody wants to be famous, Everybody wants to sign autographs.
Everybody wants to be an actor. So being an actor,
you have to keep your mouth shut, and then they

(49:10):
think you're stuck up or dull because you don't talk
about yourself. Well, how can I talk about myself when
you think I'm conceited or who the hell I am?
It's difficult. I'm in the business sixty four years and
I get that I still have difficulty with it. After
sixty four years. You would think I would have found

(49:32):
a solution. There is no solution there. Let me know.
The only time you could talk about being an actor
is with other actors, and they don't listen. They want
to tell you about themselves. So it's a difficult way.

Speaker 4 (49:45):
I do like being on set, though, because I feel
like being on set when everyone's working, I feel like
that is a great time and having worked in so
many different departments, I'm in this weird kind of place
where I am accepted by department.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
I am accepted, you know, by by stunts, you know,
acting stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (50:04):
So even if I'm.

Speaker 4 (50:05):
Working like just as an actor and I'm dealing with
they're suiting me up in armor. I literally did a
commercial last year where I was wearing armor and the
customers were like, hey, forgive us, it's going to take
us a minute. We you know, haven't done a lot
of work in armor, and I go, if you don't mind,
And that's the thing. You got to approach it respectfully,
you know, you got to stand your lane, you know
what's have one on the toes and just go, hey,
if you don't mind, I can help. I am actually

(50:27):
a professional armorer armor as in with armor, not as
in like, yeah, I.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
Have six movies coming up this year. I heard yeah,
and the whole you know, a lot of movies are
coming in. Of course now the money's loosening up, We're
getting funded. And yes, I sometimes have to hold back
from saying it because I sound conceited, well like I'm bragging,
But no, this is what I fucking do.

Speaker 4 (50:54):
See, I feel like for people though, is that what
a lot of people don't understand is that like when
people talk about, you know, coming from that conservatory BFA
program at UCSB, obviously I knew all the upperclassmens. So
when they went off to New York or LA and
they're talking about all these things, it made me excited.
And I think I had really good mentors and a

(51:14):
really good community. That kind of instilled in me is
that when I see people working, I get excited because
that means there is work to go and get. I
don't you know, I try never to be It doesn't
of course, it always happens, like you said, you know,
you get jealous or I know, but that's the kind
of thing that I'm trying to I work a lot
actually with film schools, teaching them how to work with

(51:35):
stunt departments and stuff like that, of how to be
safe about things, and you know, instill in the next
generation of filmmakers. And they always go like, do you
ever get jealous? Like you're here working with us and
I know for a fact you're a friend that just
went off to work on this Marvel movie. And I go, no,
there's no way, Like, how do I know that it
was me instead of that, Like the only reason I
didn't get the part is because they got the part.

(51:56):
It's like, I want to be excited for my friends.
My community is whoever is going to be supportive, whoever
is making art, whoever is just being a supportive person.
So I've had friends reach out to you. You're very
unusual actually you know, yeah, you know what, But I
would like to become the usual. So I think the
only way you can put you know, get good around
you is to put good out there and hopefully that

(52:18):
comes back to you.

Speaker 3 (52:19):
I love it.

Speaker 5 (52:19):
So now we're gonna, we're now we're gonna. Jimmy wants
to change, so yeah, we have to change the subjectcause
I don't want to run out of time and not
talk about all the day fair. I want to talk
about So now one of your things, and this will
be happy for all our horror movie fans. You're in
the never Hike a Loan series.

Speaker 9 (52:34):
I don't know that.

Speaker 5 (52:35):
I think there's two of them. In the third one
coming out and you play Jason Voyde, there's three and.

Speaker 4 (52:41):
Then basically because they were always made as an anthology,
the creator, Vincent Dessenti, is actually like kind of recuts them,
adds in more footage that they shoot, and then he's
now actually embarking on that that I'm not involved with
kind of a new kind of a new series kind
of based on his or owner series, and that it

(53:02):
was really great being on that. I actually met Vinnie
working on this like indie science sci fi movie and
it was in the snow and it was awful, but
basically I was stunt coordinating and then I was also
some doubling in it, and so he was like, Hey,
you don't seem to panic when things are going crazy.
You don't mind being at crazy high altitudes and freezing

(53:22):
to death. I'm developing these movies. Do you want to
be a part of them? And I was like maybe,
And he wanted me to stunt coordinate, and I was
really busy at the time, and I was like, oh, man,
to sun coordinate features, like that's kind of your life.
And I was doing all these different things, wearing too
many hats. But basically I was like, okay, how about
I connect you with this. I ended up being my

(53:44):
mentor Jessica Aaron Bennett to sun coordinate all these movies,
and then literally as soon as she got the job.
She was like, hey, so he wants to be Jason,
but like he needs a stunt double and you guys
are the exact same size, So you're now Jason Boorhiest
because if I'm going to go freeze up in the mountains,
you're coming with me. So we got to do three
features across seven years.

Speaker 5 (54:04):
I mean, oh yeah, Jason is one of the most
iconic horror people in horror. We've had everybody who played
Jason on the show, all of them. We've had every
single person.

Speaker 4 (54:13):
That's Okain and and Doug Tait and stuff like that, and.

Speaker 5 (54:17):
Derek Mears oh yeah, yeah, yeah, they're all friends of ours.
And we even have James Stokes, who's you know, the
Jason and a bunch of the other fan films from.

Speaker 4 (54:30):
Oh yeah, one of the one of those. Yeah, So
I actually took the trailer never Hike a Loan Too trailer.

Speaker 5 (54:36):
I thought we would play it for everybody real quick. Yeah,
since you're Jason.

Speaker 3 (54:40):
And.

Speaker 5 (54:42):
So introduce it for us, and then our engineer want
to play it and then we'll be right back afterwards.

Speaker 4 (54:48):
Of course, Hey guys, you're about to watch the trailer
for a never Hike a Loon two. This is the
third installments.

Speaker 10 (54:54):
Uh in it.

Speaker 4 (54:56):
We had a lot of fun making it and uh
there's a lot of blood warned.

Speaker 5 (55:00):
And we've had Tom Matthews on the show too.

Speaker 4 (55:02):
Oh yeah, we'll talk about Tom in a second.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
Yeah, take it away. One.

Speaker 7 (55:24):
There's a legend around here. His name was Jason, A
killer Berry.

Speaker 3 (55:35):
But not did.

Speaker 7 (55:42):
A curse on Crystal Lake.

Speaker 5 (55:44):
It's got a dress curse.

Speaker 7 (55:49):
They're all dead, old.

Speaker 5 (55:53):
Legend has said Friday the thirteenth, Jason saw his mother
be ahead of that night.

Speaker 11 (56:03):
They say he dyed his oi, but he keeps coming back.
You have seen him and lived. Some of ead have

(56:37):
tried to stop him.

Speaker 6 (56:46):
Between me and.

Speaker 3 (56:47):
Jason, no one can.

Speaker 7 (56:52):
Wherever the red dot goes, the bad people forget say

(57:14):
sits out there.

Speaker 4 (57:18):
Waiting, waiting, waiting.

Speaker 1 (57:28):
For what.

Speaker 7 (57:31):
To pull me down with him.

Speaker 12 (57:46):
He went into his territory. He drew him out and
help people are dead. Jason belongs in hell. Let me

(58:10):
see he gets there.

Speaker 5 (58:42):
I freaking loss A great trailer. It's really a good trailer.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
How did it feel hitting the guy in the face
with a knox?

Speaker 7 (58:51):
Pretty good?

Speaker 4 (58:51):
Because I missed that was just I didn't because because
I didn't. Actually, yeah, that was I was gonna say,
yeah we did. We had an amazing, amazing makeup team
that they made all those prosthetics and stuff, and yeah,
so it was a lot of fun. What they don't
tell you about though, And I actually talked to Doug

(59:13):
Tate about this too, because he actually came in on
the last one.

Speaker 5 (59:16):
Well you actually in.

Speaker 4 (59:17):
That trailer you kind of see like a sheriff kind
of shining a flashlight at the cabin.

Speaker 3 (59:21):
That's also me.

Speaker 4 (59:22):
I also played a deputy because I was on location
with them, like we need a deputy, and then he said, oh,
we also need to kill somebody. I was like, kill me.
So literally in the movie, I shoot myself in the
face effectively like as Jason, and then venue switched over
to Jason for the final moment where I get shot
in the face.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
But yeah, what is Jason? Is he a zombie?

Speaker 4 (59:45):
Basically for our story? Basically there's a lot of stuff
they've messed with because it's like, you know, it's very supernatural,
so that like, is it druidic in nature? Is it
just a pure like zombie?

Speaker 1 (59:58):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (59:58):
So our Jason in the French is considered a ghost,
So he's called ghost Jason morhes So a ghost. Yeah, yeah,
so so so the idea of being yeah, so he
bartically he's the Not to give too much away, but
basically you saw Pam's the mom's head you know, on
an altar, so basically all of his powers that as

(01:00:20):
long as he still has that head, he's able to
keep coming back.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
So that's why you can't kill him.

Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
So and fun fact is that Pam in both never
hike in the snow and never hike alone too, So
two of the movies Pamble of where Hee's is actually
played by Lennon Hobson, who is my fiancee.

Speaker 5 (01:00:39):
Was loved that that.

Speaker 4 (01:00:41):
They were like, oh, I love that, Like, you know,
Pam and Jason in real life are together and like
talk about confusing role play. I think bloody disgusting, said
and I was like why and she was like, that's hilarious.

Speaker 3 (01:00:51):
I'm putting it on my website. I was like, weird, But.

Speaker 4 (01:00:54):
Basically being Jason, it's so iconic. I was very nervous
because I was like, if we do.

Speaker 3 (01:00:58):
This wrong, is the most famous of them all, isn't it?

Speaker 5 (01:01:02):
Jason and Michael Myerson.

Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
Yeah, a long finger nail Freddy Krueger, Yeah, the one.

Speaker 4 (01:01:09):
The fun thing too is that Vinnie actually got blessing
from the original creator, but obviously got a cease and
desist from the studio because there's this historically not to
get into a battle between the two, but basically the
fans consider us cannon, and like if you look on
the different like you know, fan wikipedias about everything like that,
I'm listed, which is amazing to kind of count myself

(01:01:31):
amongst you know, Caine and Doug and like Mears and
everybody who's been Jason and and getting Tom Matthews and
then Vince, you know, Vinnie Gustafarrio, you know who was
the original sheriff it Cologne Tommy Jarvis to literally come
back and be like, hey, we never got to see
what happened to these guys. Great, fast forward thirty years.

(01:01:51):
How does it actually.

Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
Almost seven foot Jason animatronic that you plug him in
and he makes the noise too many swings, swings the thing.
I am an extensive collection and I.

Speaker 7 (01:02:06):
Like love it.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
We should get Jamie on our show.

Speaker 5 (01:02:10):
She's from Halloween.

Speaker 3 (01:02:12):
We should I just thought of about it.

Speaker 5 (01:02:14):
Okay, Well, you know I knew.

Speaker 4 (01:02:15):
She's also a big nerd. You should talk about a
world of warcraft.

Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
I know my father, well, Tony Curtis and I were friends,
so I wonder if she would come on, because I
don't think Tony didn't get along with us, so maybe not.

Speaker 5 (01:02:28):
So I also want to mention because we're gonna run
out of time here. You also played The Killer Santa
and Grandma's Cookies, a Christmas Tale starring Eileen Deets by
Michael Coolambay, who was just a guest of ours two
weeks ago. We played the trailer then. That's why I
didn't play it now, because we played it then it
already played it. And then you did a movie called
Quasi and I don't know what it is, but Kevin
Effrin and and Steve let Me have both been on

(01:02:50):
the show, and I lived in Florida like I used
to see and hang out with them a lot. And
it also has Brian Cox what an A List star
and Adrian Plicky? What is Quade? Is that a movie?

Speaker 4 (01:03:01):
So that is basically that was another one where I
was a blacksmith building stuff for it. It's basically the
Broken Lizard guys that did Super Broken Lizard. Yeah, so
so yeah, it's basically it's kind of a it's hard
to explain. It's basically, what if there was more of
a like rom com approach to the story of Quasi Moto,
but with the humor of super Troopers. So we did

(01:03:21):
like a lot of like torture gear and like random
swords and weird things for the for the film itself.
But that's another one where I got to work on it,
but I wasn't all on set for it. But the
horror movie that I've actually, if I can plug some
I've got a horror movie. Oh yeah, yeah, but I
was gonna say the horror movie that we actually just
laugh that ron I was hearing about that. You're you've

(01:03:44):
got a movie that's dropping any day now on to B.
I have one as well called Nome six seven Slaves
Till Mithriss, which is actually like a Christmas slasher kind
of like black comedy cult film that should be dropping
on to B. I think they're going to do the
Christmas in July kind of.

Speaker 3 (01:04:01):
Plus.

Speaker 4 (01:04:02):
And then also Amazon Prime, well that's another one where
our friend just wanted art department support and then I
was like offering that, yeah, then whatever you need, and
then he was like, actually, do you want to audition
for it? Hey, do you actually want to be the league?
Do you want to actually come on as a co
producer of it? Do you want to stunt coordinate? So
we wore way too many hats. We do have more
planned in that kind of franchise, but it's basically the

(01:04:23):
idea of like taking you know, people's souls and putting
them into these Christmas gnomes and they come to life.
And there's a cult of Mythruss, which is actually a
pagan sun god and who a lot of the like
Jesus and Christmas kind of like you know, you know
the dates and you know, evenstar and stuff like that.
A lot of that is kind of copied over from
the pagan holiday and pagan calendar. So we're like, hey,

(01:04:44):
how do we mix all this stuff up?

Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
So now.

Speaker 5 (01:04:48):
Six seven Slaves till Mithras And then to your question,
so Jamie, oh, yes, Jamie Lee Curtis is in Halloween
and Halloweens Killers called Michael Myers.

Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
Yeah, but the ugly one, long, skinny face Michael Mylers.

Speaker 4 (01:05:03):
Michael Myers with the hood, Yeah, ghost face, ghost face.

Speaker 5 (01:05:09):
It's if it's a good. Yeah, that's that's ghost face.
That's my one of mine face. I'm a big onme ones.
We've had the people, lots of people from that on.
I've had the people under the mask of every major
horror thing. And because that's I'm a big horror fan.
So it's like a lot of fun. But also you
want to.

Speaker 3 (01:05:27):
Tell you as you can tell, I'm in a movie,
but I need to watch them so I have more.
These people are I have never seen Halloween. I have
never seen any of them. I can't. I sit there
and I say to myself, this is statistic ship and
it's ruining the minds of young people, and it's making

(01:05:51):
it making a lot of people crazy. I think, you
know you've got people by putting people on fire and
doing horrible things, and I think it's in from went
By these movies. If I were up to myself, I
would ban or horror movies. I think, why do you
like making them? Though?

Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
What kind of deed do you like them?

Speaker 5 (01:06:09):
Because they gets offered?

Speaker 3 (01:06:11):
No, because I have I select my parts. My horror
movies are not ever super bloody. They're very very him
so nobody gets blood on me and I don't die
in them.

Speaker 4 (01:06:26):
Do you like it for the psychology of it, because.

Speaker 5 (01:06:28):
I feel like.

Speaker 3 (01:06:32):
The work like I'm in a movie called I'm Having One.
My third movie is oh Negative. I play a gay vampire.
The script is magnificent. It's not a comedy. My daughter
finds out that I'm a vampire, and she also finds
out I'm gay, and I take her to a wonderland
where it's all unusual people. It's a brilliant script. So

(01:06:54):
I'm in horror movies that are not horror. My movies
have stories, the characters have development, and the acting is
good on everybody's part.

Speaker 7 (01:07:05):
I love that.

Speaker 3 (01:07:06):
So I will not be in a chop of movie.
I turned those scripts down. All the Slashers, Yeah one,
He's going to be in one. One.

Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
I can't tell you because I'm although oh Negative.

Speaker 3 (01:07:19):
I just found out that I'm very gory when I
become a vampire, so I'm not happy with that. But anyway,
we have.

Speaker 5 (01:07:28):
A lot of films in development. I'm actually doing a
horror western that since you can ride horses, like, we'll
see what we're shooting in Texas.

Speaker 3 (01:07:36):
So great.

Speaker 5 (01:07:38):
I'm going to keep you in mind for everything. I'm
following you in social media, so it'll work, let me know.

Speaker 3 (01:07:43):
Yeah, and I encourage writers to write horror movies that
have story, that have characters. Yeah, that makes sense.

Speaker 5 (01:07:52):
He hasn't seen Art to Clown. He would have a
heart attack if he saw heard the clown movies, the
terrifying movies. Because all of it's a new one.

Speaker 4 (01:08:00):
Yeah, we want to watch that.

Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
I have heard of this movie, but I've never seen
it with I can't let him see it. They feed
each other's ask.

Speaker 5 (01:08:09):
No, he's talking about the human centipede.

Speaker 4 (01:08:11):
I was like, that's human centipede.

Speaker 5 (01:08:13):
Yeah, that's I like that. I had the entire cast
of the first movie on. We did one show with
all of them on at the same time.

Speaker 3 (01:08:18):
I have never seen that movie, and I think it's
a disgusting movie.

Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
I have also skipped I went ahead and skipped that one. No,
I think you're right, though. I like movies that are compelling.
I want to learn about people. I want to see
as an actor, as loving film. I want to see development.
I want to see people face challenges. I've got one
that we're supposed to be filming later this year where

(01:08:43):
it is literally it's called rush Week and it's it's
it is very much a psychological thriller. Yes, people do
get killed, not giving it anyway, it's a horror film,
but the whole point is that the psychology behind everything
of why these things are happening, why these just find themselves.
And I was like, so it's like a mystery. It's
a psychology kind of in depth look about these things,

(01:09:05):
and I'm like, those are films I would love to
be a part of.

Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
AhR.

Speaker 3 (01:09:09):
So now I choose my scripts well because I don't
ever want to be known as a old crazy man
in in chugh of movies. I'm developing a repute. We
got to go.

Speaker 5 (01:09:22):
Okay, we'll have to talk again.

Speaker 3 (01:09:29):
Let me say something. You're a terrific guest. Oh, thank
you guys, great conversational list, you joined in. Wonderful guests.
Please come back.

Speaker 5 (01:09:37):
So you guys, stuff coming out. We'll bring you back.
We want to say follow Brian you guys on Instagram
at Sir Brian Forrest. We also want to thank Matt Chasin.
He's a good friend of mine for setting this into
view out. MAT's like one of the greatest guys in Hollywood.
He's really one of my favorite people in Hollywood, and
he doesn't live in Hollywood. That's terrific. But thank you

(01:09:59):
so much for coming on. Good luck with everybody. Everybody
look out for Nome six seven Slaves till Mithrus. When
you tell me that it's on, send me a message
on Instagram, tell me that it's all. Yeah, I'll let
everybody know and maybe we'll even come back.

Speaker 4 (01:10:11):
Oh, thank you, appreciate it. All right, well to meet
you guys.

Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
Come back. You'll be married.

Speaker 5 (01:10:16):
Oh yeah, when are you getting married?

Speaker 4 (01:10:17):
Yeah, not till twenty twenty six. The number thirteen is
a big thing in our relationship. We went out, we
started dating on October thirteenth. We are literally in the
Friday the thirteenth movies. So we're gonna wait till twenty
twenty six, and then we'll have been together for thirteen years.
Oh my god.

Speaker 5 (01:10:32):
So my birthday's October fifteenth. That's cool. It's right near you.
Hear you?

Speaker 3 (01:10:37):
So I not everybody.

Speaker 5 (01:10:38):
Brian Forrest, thank you so much.

Speaker 4 (01:10:40):
Hi guys, thank you, bye bye Brian.

Speaker 5 (01:10:43):
All right, everybody, So that was Brian. Follow him on Instagram.
Great guy. We're gonna bring on our next guest, Patrika Darbo,
so let's bring her in and see if we can
hear her and get it going.

Speaker 6 (01:10:53):
Hello, and I'm sorry, I have a little bit of
a frog.

Speaker 5 (01:10:58):
That's okay, she says, she has a little bit of
a frog in her throat. That's okay. You look fabulous.
We want to make sure we can hear you. All right, everybody, Now,
we want to welcome to the Jimmy Stars Show with
Ron Russell, actress, producer, director, and Primetime Emmy Award winner
Patrica Darbo. Hello, and welcome to the show.

Speaker 6 (01:11:17):
Thank you, thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:11:19):
I'm excited to have you because we first of all,
let me introduced you already know are cool, outrageous, man
about town. Co host Ron Russell.

Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
I kiss her every time I see her, and be right,
I give her big hugs when I see her. You
know what, I'm seeing you all over the place. I
see you in commercials. You're really working. I saw you
in a couple of movies. So you're doing it.

Speaker 9 (01:11:45):
I'm trying to hang it in there, hanging in there.

Speaker 3 (01:11:48):
You're a busy girl. I try. I like love it.

Speaker 5 (01:11:53):
So you guys, first of all, you can follow Patrica
on Instagram. She's at Darbo Patrica. So you just got
to reverse it. I wrote down that you were born
in Jacksonville. I went to high school in Jacksonville.

Speaker 6 (01:12:04):
Really, yeah, I was born in Jacksonville in Saint Business Hospital,
the same hospital that.

Speaker 9 (01:12:12):
I can't remember, so I'm not going to tell that story,
that's okay.

Speaker 5 (01:12:16):
And I also wrote down some fun trivia that in
nineteen ninety nine, you were named one of TV Guide's
Sexiest Stars in August for the role for your role
on Days of Our Lives, which you were on five
hundred and six episodes, according to IMDb, five hundred and
six episodes. And I don't I didn't watch. I watched
it when I was young because my mom watched it.

(01:12:38):
But I remember the hour glass that has done these
are the Days of Our Lives. But I didn't really
see it. But five hundred and six episodes is a
long damn time.

Speaker 9 (01:12:46):
It's been like a little over twenty years. It's been fun.

Speaker 6 (01:12:49):
I thought I was going on to serve beer and peanuts,
and then I ended up with Kevin Spiritus as my husband.
Going I think they hired the roll wom and because
I wait, about two hundred and pounds and I was
not your soap opera looking lady.

Speaker 9 (01:13:05):
So I was like, okay, oh my god, I'm sorry
we met him.

Speaker 5 (01:13:11):
I said, well, we've had Kevin Spiritus on the show before,
you know, and we I know he had been on
soap operas, but he also is like on another like
gay soap opera, and so we were kind of talking
about that since I didn't know days of our lives.
And he was also in one of the Friday the
Thirteenth movies, you know, So we like talked about like
kind of like the other things. But we at our
show here we call him soapies. We love the soapies.

(01:13:34):
We've had everybody we know on the show, Michael Damien,
Da Rogers.

Speaker 3 (01:13:38):
I ask every soaphie the same question. Can you do
what Sean Canaan can do? Thirty pages in an hour?

Speaker 6 (01:13:48):
Is he not to be believed you, honey? It's really
what most every one of us soap person does. We
shoot an entire movie a day, so you have to
memorize twenty and thirty maybe forty pages, yes, she said, yes.

Speaker 3 (01:14:05):
It's forty.

Speaker 7 (01:14:05):
It takes me two weeks to learn one line.

Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
It's true, but what.

Speaker 6 (01:14:14):
Your brain is a muscle, and the more and more
you do it, the easier it becomes.

Speaker 3 (01:14:21):
Eighty five soon, and when you're eighty five soon, you
don't remember too much or anything. I mean, Jane Russell
was my best friend. Jane. I could put you in
movies again, Jane, I have the contacts. And she would
say to me, Ron, I can't remember lines. I said, yes,
but they'll put a speaker in your ear, and she said, oh,

(01:14:45):
you're crazy. So it happens when you get to be
my age. It's very difficult to remember lines. But Sean
is amazing forty pages in an hour. She can do
forty pages in an hour.

Speaker 9 (01:14:59):
I'm not sure I can do it in an hour,
So I do give him much cud.

Speaker 5 (01:15:03):
I mean, how much time do they give you though?
How much time do you get to learn that? Like
they give you the day before.

Speaker 6 (01:15:08):
No, you get four days to memorize it, but you
may have three or four steps.

Speaker 3 (01:15:14):
Okay, no, no, Tristan Kristin Rogers said, they went on
the set. They'll say, okay, Tris, here's a new script,
and you have to learn it in a matter of
minutes because they change the script. Am I right, Well,
I haven't.

Speaker 9 (01:15:30):
I haven't found that in days of our lives. And
I didn't really notice it.

Speaker 6 (01:15:34):
And Bold and the Beautiful either, I mean, we got
our scripts two or three days ahead. Now days in
our lives is you know, it's seven months ahead of
So they're trying to catch up because they're on Peacock.
So they shoot it. They shoot a day a script
every day, but the show is now aired on Peacock
and they want more product all the time, so they're

(01:15:56):
seven months ahead.

Speaker 5 (01:15:58):
That's awesome.

Speaker 10 (01:15:59):
Yeah, so you're doing a wonderful job on Studio Studio City.
I loved every moment of that. And I'm sorry I
hasn't got any further. But you know, when our Sean
Kanan suddenly.

Speaker 6 (01:16:10):
Becomes are back on Bold and the Beautifulness are back
on co work, eye leaves a little.

Speaker 9 (01:16:16):
Time for him to get back into filming studios.

Speaker 5 (01:16:20):
Yes, brag a little wait wait.

Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Wait wait, I want to finish with this. A while ago,
Michelle said, Michelle Kanaan said to me, you're going to
play you'll protect his wife husband and I rape No,
you're the rapist. I rape you and when we're young,
and I'm a studio head, and I rape you when
you we're very young and we have a child. But

(01:16:44):
it never happened, but I would like to still do
it if they want to do it, because I'd love
working with you. I can it would be exciting working
with you because I don't work with too any professionals
in my movies. I work for pay for pay for
pay to play people, and they stand there like morons
and read lines. So it's just true.

Speaker 5 (01:17:06):
Well, some of you haven't been in one, but you've
only been in one movie that other people paid.

Speaker 6 (01:17:10):
To be in.

Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
All the other movies, it was a nightmare. Okay, so wait,
let me bring working with you would be such a thrill, absolutely.

Speaker 9 (01:17:19):
Really well, hopefully we'll get back to it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Yes, so you guys, here's some other I mean because Patricia,
but Patrica is a is a consummate awesome. She's been
on every great soap opera Days of Our Lives five
hundred and six episodes. She had a small arc on
The Young and The rest List, both in The Beautiful
a lot of episodes seventy four. She's also on six
episodes of City and six episodes of the Bay. We've

(01:17:43):
had almost everybody from the Bay on the show. Everybody
who's been on there has been on our show. And
besides that, so I didn't know a lot of the
things that you were in. In all the years we've
been seeing you at events and during COVID, we've watched
Speed Too. We watched Speed to Cruise Control, right, so
we're like watching it and all of a sudden you

(01:18:04):
pop up in there. You're all over it and I
was like, oh my god, that's patricka dormo and Speed Too.
How awesome? And it was a fun movie.

Speaker 3 (01:18:11):
Did you do that?

Speaker 9 (01:18:13):
It was fun.

Speaker 6 (01:18:14):
We had a great time that we weather. It wasn't
that good to us. I mean a lot of times
we couldn't get off the ship because it was too hard.
And it was also we shot the same time James
Cameron was shooting Titanic, So unfortunately we didn't get to

(01:18:34):
polish Speed Too the way it should have been, because
monies are running out because Tantana was big budget.

Speaker 5 (01:18:42):
Big big budget.

Speaker 1 (01:18:43):
See I.

Speaker 5 (01:18:44):
Speed Too had Sandra Bullock, Jason Patrick, and will Willem Dafoe.
It was a good movie.

Speaker 3 (01:18:49):
Though.

Speaker 5 (01:18:49):
You were really good in the movie, very good and well.

Speaker 3 (01:18:51):
You were a good actress. You know you have enough.
You know what soap operas train you with all those
performances you do every day you learn, you know your mistakes,
you know how to move your face, you know what
to do with your hands. It's wonderful training. So I
find soap opera's soap opera soap piece to be the

(01:19:12):
better actor than most people. Now let's talk about Kate.
I love Kate, and I know you love Kate Took.
I think she's one of I fainted when I found
out she was an airline stewardess.

Speaker 6 (01:19:27):
And she's so fine. She just qualified to find even more.
She hasked, you know, you have to go through the
training again to make sure you're up to par. You know,
she can grab that you know, the tinian, little bitty
thing that she is, she can grab that door, throw
it back and get people off the plane in time.

Speaker 9 (01:19:44):
She's amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:19:45):
She's wonderful. And I said, I never knew it. And
I said to her, you know, Kate, you're a piece
of as she said to me, Oh my god. Her
husband's name was Ron also, and Ron used to say
to her, you're a piece of ass. So you know,
it was very sentimental because she's very very much in

(01:20:06):
love with her husband, who has passed away. And I
love Kate, so whenever I see her, I'm very specially
hugging her and hugged kissing. She's a sweetie part.

Speaker 9 (01:20:16):
She is a doll.

Speaker 6 (01:20:17):
She just was re elected to the governorship of the
TV Academy, so she's one of the performers governors.

Speaker 3 (01:20:25):
And I want to and I know you are very
close with Kate, your close friend.

Speaker 5 (01:20:28):
At least you go out a lot, because we see
you guys at the same events to.

Speaker 9 (01:20:33):
Popsey, Honey, I can't keep up with her.

Speaker 5 (01:20:37):
I like love it so here I'm gonna buy it
because you guys audience listening, we can't talk about all
the different TV shows she's been in, and I wrote
down all the ones everybody knows. So this is just
like a bragging on Patrika Darbo on some of the
fabulous things she's done. Lab Rats, Elite Force, Big Bang Theory,
Desperate Housewives, DBUS, Maids At George Carlin Show, Dexter Gilmour, Girls,

(01:20:57):
Married with Children, Seinfeldt, Step by Step, Zan Different Strokes,
Saved by the Bell, The Tonight Show Starting Johnny Conston,
which I actually watched that it was on YouTube, General Hospital,
Saint Elsewhere, Punky Brewster Married with Children, which I think
I wrote down twice. Okay, oh well I wrote it
down twice. That's some of the TV shows, you guys.
I picked out the ones I thought everybody would like
for sure, no, which is unbelievable. And then you've also

(01:21:22):
done some really big like I don't know, I guess
you don't call Babe an animated movie, but Babe, and
you also did Rango and Babe got an Academy Award nomination,
and you played like a sheep. I think, right, yes, I.

Speaker 3 (01:21:34):
Was wanted a sheep, so how it was. And then
you watched television and a hairdressing commercial comes up, a
beauty follow and there she is. So I said, oh
my god, this board's all over. You know, you're amazing.
You're really a family. You're a fabulous personality, is what
you are. So really you have a personality that shows

(01:21:55):
and everything. I don't know what it is. Some actors
have it, some don't. You have it. Definitely have that.

Speaker 5 (01:22:02):
And she's even been in Horror. Okay, so so so
uh you know, so I want to talk about it,
but first of a want to go back. So first
of all, even though you don't have a huge role,
one of my favorite like movies that that maybe people
don't know as much, but they can stream it as
The Birds. The Birds is a fabulous movie, you guys,
with Tom Hanks and Bruce Dern and Carrie Fisher and

(01:22:23):
Corey Fellman and Courtney Gaines. And then Troop Beverly Hills
with Shelley Long, Craig Nelson, Carla Kuchino. Those are two
like kind of like cult films for me that I
think we're fabulous. So talk a little bit on how
were how was that doing those? And Top Beverly Hills
is a great movie. I was working with Shelley.

Speaker 6 (01:22:40):
Long, you know, I didn't quite get to work with
her personally that much, but it was a fun, fun thing.
Is still run all the time and I have a
number of fans that always calling me up going I'm.

Speaker 5 (01:22:52):
I'm on, you're on.

Speaker 6 (01:22:53):
It's I'm watching truth that really Hills again, I mean,
which I love it, But what was the other one
you asked? The burs is very interesting. It was a
fun experience because they just asked me to come in,
get out of the car, and then just start talking,
why's my house on fire, where's my husband, What's going on?

Speaker 9 (01:23:15):
Hell happened here?

Speaker 6 (01:23:17):
And just that was the end of the movie, me
just screaming about my house on fire, screaming, and then uh,
after that, they wanted.

Speaker 9 (01:23:25):
To keep my clothes.

Speaker 6 (01:23:27):
I was like, what they said, Well, we got some
long shots to shoot and we don't want to, you know,
hire you just to be a background person. So would
you please leave your clothes and somebody else will dry
cling them and bring them home showing the long shots
way far far away. It's not me and the other

(01:23:47):
part of Isney.

Speaker 9 (01:23:48):
And then the same director did Gremlins too, and I
saw im in Gremlins too also.

Speaker 7 (01:23:57):
That one down.

Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Ex choose me for a minute. My sugar has dropped.
I'm a diabetic, sugar has dropped tremendously and I'm starting
to shake. So I have to you go and I'll talk.
I have to get some sugar, baby, go.

Speaker 5 (01:24:16):
This is live TV, and we have all kinds of
the mailman comes. People call I'm having knee surgery tomorrow,
and during our first guest, the hospital call to give
me my time to go in for it, you know,
and I had to take it because I don't want
to like miss it. So that's why people like the
show so much, though, is because it's real life.

Speaker 9 (01:24:31):
And I'm just going to say, because it's real life,
that's the best part.

Speaker 5 (01:24:34):
So I have a lady in the Miss Cindy Diadamo,
and we're doing a movie called Saving Paradise and Saving
and she actually came up with the idea for the
film because of your film Ladies of the Eighties, A
Diva Christmas and with Loney, Lennie Anderson, Morgan Fairschild who's
been on the show, Donna Mills has been on the show,
Linda Gray, Nicholas Sheridan, and Christopher Atkins And how was

(01:24:58):
it working on that. I'm actually doing it. I can't
tell what the story is about, but that inspired us,
and she came up with an idea. We got a
director and a writer, we're already funded, we're going to
be shooting later this year. But it was based on that.
And to give you a little hint, instead of women,
we're going to be using the hunky guys in a show.
But it's not Christmas, but it's similar. It has a

(01:25:19):
similar theme. So tell us a little bit about that
and working with all those great people, and because it
was one of the most successful Christmas movies.

Speaker 6 (01:25:28):
Of that year, I have to say that I never
worked with any of those ladies, no probube, I never
saw any one of them. I was asked was, I
was hired and given my lines, and I shot on
the last day where they're taking down the set striking things.

Speaker 9 (01:25:49):
My lines were all read with the assistant director.

Speaker 5 (01:25:55):
Does that happen a lot for you?

Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
No, not so much.

Speaker 9 (01:25:59):
Usually at least get to work with an actor. It's
very hoty.

Speaker 6 (01:26:03):
This was a stage manager who's trying to tell people
what to box up, what's got to go back here,
get out of the way, keep it quiet and do that, and.

Speaker 9 (01:26:11):
Then giving me my line so that I can respond.

Speaker 13 (01:26:15):
So that's like that happens. Everyone though that was funny.
I need a minute to explain to our audience. I
now have a thing on my arm, a little round
thing that goes off when my sugar goes along me.
It goes to my telephone.

Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
It beeps. It's an alarm. It said you're sixty, which
is very low. Because I'm shooting new insulin, so I'm
learning how to get it.

Speaker 5 (01:26:44):
He just got this thing, so he has to learn
how to work it.

Speaker 3 (01:26:47):
So I have a little bit of a problem. So
forgive me for interrupting the show.

Speaker 5 (01:26:51):
All right, let's go back.

Speaker 3 (01:26:52):
All right.

Speaker 5 (01:26:52):
So then, so here's some of the big films you
guys that you've seen. Patrico in, uh, mister and Missus
Smith with Brad Pitt and Inseel and Joe Angelina just
was was with. I usually good friends with Ron's daughter
growing up.

Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
I used to make peanut butter and Joey sandwiches for
her when they swam in my pool.

Speaker 5 (01:27:12):
And because you have such iconic movies, I'm looking at
this list. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

Speaker 3 (01:27:17):
That's all. I love that movie. I love that speed too.
Did you play in that?

Speaker 9 (01:27:22):
I'm the nurse that bags the hands and then testifies
in the court.

Speaker 5 (01:27:27):
Yes, it's a great movie and with a great cast.
I mean you basically, when you look at the list
of people that you've been in things with, whether you
worked with them or not, you're in a movie with them,
so he counts, you know. The list is like the
big biggest stars like to ever live in the last
twenty five years, and you're in with all of them,
which I think is great. Which let's go back real

(01:27:48):
quick to Babe, Like, so, how was that's an Oscar
winning movie or Oscar nominated. I don't know if it won.

Speaker 9 (01:27:56):
I can't remember either.

Speaker 6 (01:27:57):
I will tell you that I was part of an
ad R group at that time where we were hired
to come in and be the voices. I don't think
at the time on the First Babe they had any
idea how big it was going to be, how much
people were going to fall in love with it, and
because there was really no marketing. If you think about
the First Babe, there were no stuffed animals. There were

(01:28:19):
no little piglets with the hair piece up here. And
then after that for the second movie, they they really
there was every kind of sheep with every kind of
thing was stuff sheep, public sheep, all kinds of sheep
and the dog and all that kind of stuff. And
the worst thing, quite frankly, was and no Aspersions. I'm casting,

(01:28:45):
no aspersions. The only persons that didn't need marketing it
was McDonald.

Speaker 5 (01:28:50):
Oh yeah, because they had the toys for the kids.

Speaker 9 (01:28:52):
No little toys. So come in and have your bacon
sandwich and oh bye, why bacon is big?

Speaker 3 (01:28:58):
Lit? I mean, what the hell would That's.

Speaker 5 (01:29:01):
A crazy tie in, isn't that like you would never
think that that they like that.

Speaker 3 (01:29:07):
In a million years.

Speaker 9 (01:29:09):
It was crazy. It was crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:29:12):
So so then you did you had at least one
horror movie?

Speaker 3 (01:29:16):
You know, you have so many things.

Speaker 5 (01:29:17):
I only picked that. I just picked out the things
that I thought everybody would really like. Know for sure
you did, though, you're in Hatchet. So we've had Adam
Green on the show, and Kane I and Robert England
and Tony Todd, they've all been on the show. Joel
David Moore from the Avatar he's like from the Avatar movies.
So how was it being in a horror movie? I
don't actually remember who you were in Hatchet. I've seen

(01:29:38):
all of them because I think there's three of them,
and I know we've had almost everybody from all of
them on the show. But what did you think of
being in a horror movies? And do you even watch
horror movies?

Speaker 9 (01:29:47):
Well, I'm kind of like ron I don't watch them.

Speaker 5 (01:29:50):
Yeah, she doesn't watch me.

Speaker 3 (01:29:51):
He didn't even watch his own if they don't have
a premiere.

Speaker 6 (01:29:54):
I did see I did Beangoria magazine gave me best
kill there. Oh yeah, so yeah, and it was I mean,
it was amazing work with all those young kids and everything,
and some consummate older professionals. Uh, the one the gentleman
that played my husband, he was my husband. He was

(01:30:16):
Santa Claus and two Santa Claus movies. I do, Oh,
we've been married a number of times.

Speaker 5 (01:30:22):
Who played your husband? Do you remember who it is?

Speaker 6 (01:30:25):
Riley?

Speaker 9 (01:30:25):
Is this last name?

Speaker 6 (01:30:26):
I can't think of the first name right now. I
apologize that my head is just not okay.

Speaker 7 (01:30:32):
You can't remember forty pages, but you can't remember.

Speaker 3 (01:30:37):
That's that's that's good.

Speaker 5 (01:30:39):
You're doing really really good with all of it.

Speaker 6 (01:30:41):
Actually, and my page is yeah, but I remember who
I'm acting with and stuff, but I can't. It's going
to drive me crazy now because I adore him and
he's a wonderful, wonderful actor.

Speaker 9 (01:30:53):
Richard Riley.

Speaker 5 (01:30:54):
Yes, here, there we go. So then another big one
that you're in is In the Line of Fire. That's
another huge, huge film with Clint Eastwood, John Malkovich, Gary Cole,
Rene Russo, Dylan McDermott. It's really like amazing, actually, like, so,
how did you actually get into all of this because
these are such huge movies. Did you like grow up
in Jacksonville and think, oh, I'm going to be an
actress and I'm moving to Hollywood or how did that

(01:31:15):
actually happen?

Speaker 6 (01:31:16):
Well, my mom and dad divorced, and when we divorced,
my mother took my sister, brother and I to live
in Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Speaker 9 (01:31:26):
And then my dad was where my mom is from.

Speaker 5 (01:31:28):
My mom went to Marquette.

Speaker 9 (01:31:31):
My stepdad was with the Braves Organization.

Speaker 6 (01:31:36):
Okay, he'd been with the Braves Organization from Boston to
Milwaukee to Atlanta, and he and Ted Turner didn't quite
get along, I guess, and after all those years he
fired my dad while they were on the road. Yeah,
my dad was the traveling secretary, so he said, and

(01:31:57):
he left.

Speaker 9 (01:31:58):
He packed up his stuff and left.

Speaker 6 (01:32:00):
Now he keeps all the tickets, he keeps all the
reservations for hotels, all the reservations for planes. So there
was nobody in there to take over. I mean, it
was just anyway. So I'm in Georgia and I decide
I'm going to do something else. So I moved to
California to be an actor and ended up being a
credit manager for.

Speaker 9 (01:32:24):
Thirty five years.

Speaker 5 (01:32:25):
Or wow, way, you couldn't be for thirty five years?
Could you've been acting? For like, you've been acting for
like one hundred years.

Speaker 6 (01:32:36):
Have you been acting full time since nineteen eighty four?

Speaker 5 (01:32:41):
Yeah, well, like that would make you like seventy five
years old or something like, like you're not like, you're
not that old?

Speaker 3 (01:32:48):
Must what's that old? It's clarified thirty.

Speaker 5 (01:32:56):
Five years and in nineteen eight what did you say
in nineteen.

Speaker 6 (01:32:59):
Eighty nineteen eighty four was when I first tirted working
permanently as not having a second job. But I worked
in the seventies, thirty nine, thirty nine YEARSNY on April six,
I'll be seventy seven years old. Oh my god, you're like,

(01:33:19):
you're right here, and I'm telling the world now on
your show.

Speaker 3 (01:33:22):
Shit, I'm in the business sixty four years. And people
say to me, how could you be in the business
sixty four years? I said, I am, How could I be?
I am? It's a fact.

Speaker 5 (01:33:34):
He'll be eighty five in May. Yeah, And I was
clocking you, honestly, I was in my head. I was
clocking you like sixty two or sixty three.

Speaker 6 (01:33:42):
You know, I'm very blessed because I do that. I
play in my sixties.

Speaker 3 (01:33:47):
Yes, I played much younger too. I came I was.

Speaker 9 (01:33:50):
Fortunately my grandmother. My grandmother passed away.

Speaker 6 (01:33:53):
It up just after her one hundred and first birthday,
and she looked like she was in her sixties when
she went.

Speaker 3 (01:34:02):
So I'm supposed to be in a movie, say it.
I don't give a shit with Kevin Bacon. And I'm
playing Kevin Bacon's father. So the producers said to me,
could you look older? Because you look younger than Kevin Bacon.
So I said, well, yeah, I wear glasses and comb

(01:34:22):
my hair differently. Sure I can look older than he.
So that's a compliment. But I play much younger than
I am.

Speaker 6 (01:34:31):
I play unfortunately I do too. I mean, if I
have to go to an audition where they know me
and they know my age, that I you know, I
stand out like a whore in church because look like
the other little ladies with gray hair and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (01:34:46):
No, you could play younger, you still have to audition.

Speaker 9 (01:34:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:34:51):
I wouldn't just I would just think you with your
body of work, you're such a big body of work
that you would not have to audition that much.

Speaker 3 (01:34:57):
Because I agree with you, I agree with you.

Speaker 9 (01:35:00):
Why do I have done this?

Speaker 3 (01:35:02):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:35:02):
I think so like I think that would be terrific.
So I think you're terrific addicts.

Speaker 3 (01:35:07):
So okay, So here's something I like that you'll get
to be a certain age. You don't audition anymore now.
When they need an old bag, they say, get Russell.
So it's easy. You got to play your grandfather or
a hundred year old man, get Russell. So no more
auditioning for me.

Speaker 5 (01:35:29):
That's funny, that's just funny.

Speaker 3 (01:35:31):
I remember the cattle calls of years ago. Do you
remember them?

Speaker 1 (01:35:35):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:35:35):
Yeah, three hundred people came for one.

Speaker 6 (01:35:39):
Part that was you know, those were mostly for me,
was when you were auditioning for a musical, because the
equity call was for equity and then non equity, so
there were lines around the building.

Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
Do you sing? You sing?

Speaker 9 (01:35:54):
Yes, but not today today?

Speaker 3 (01:35:56):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:35:57):
Like what have we said? Like have you sung in
a movie before?

Speaker 6 (01:36:02):
A Christmas movie?

Speaker 3 (01:36:04):
That's fun?

Speaker 12 (01:36:05):
And then.

Speaker 9 (01:36:07):
I think I was saying that in another movie or not.

Speaker 6 (01:36:09):
I think in one of the horror films, which wasn't
a horror film as much as it was a psychological thriller,
which is a vagrant, I sang a little prayer at
night when I went to bed. No, I'm lying too.
That was leaving normal, I sang and leaving normal. Okay, Meg, Telly,

(01:36:31):
you can't.

Speaker 5 (01:36:32):
Oh, I love me. That's a phenomenal cast you have.
There's so many good casts and everything. I also wrote
down you were in Karina, Karina.

Speaker 3 (01:36:40):
Man, you want to give us a little tip of
what's going on in Studio city.

Speaker 5 (01:36:46):
She doesn't know. I bet if there's anything going. Is
there anything going for a new season or you don't
know yet?

Speaker 9 (01:36:51):
No, I don't know anything at all.

Speaker 6 (01:36:53):
I can't.

Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
I'm not going another season.

Speaker 5 (01:36:55):
They don't have time right now to Shawn's working.

Speaker 3 (01:36:58):
Sean's Sean's on Bald and Beautiful and that's in the morning,
so he could do it.

Speaker 9 (01:37:03):
He's also Cobra Kai and he's writing a bunch of stuff.
So he's been busy writing.

Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
And we went to his book signing here and while
the book they wrote the Married Book about we had
them on last week. Yeah, it's a terrific book, it
really is.

Speaker 9 (01:37:17):
I've been married fifty one years. I think I can
tell a few things, too, said.

Speaker 5 (01:37:22):
She said, I've been married fifty one years, so I
can tell you a few things too. They right, very good.
That fifty one years is a long time. We've been
together thirteen and so fifty one. Congratulations is your husband
in the entertainment world.

Speaker 6 (01:37:35):
He worked for Disney for a long time, but then
when the all the big wigs happened and stuff, they
kind of took swept out all the people that were
at Union and weren't that had worked with Walt Disney.
So then he became my my That was the same
time that I suddenly my career went this way. So
he became my business manager. So that's why I owned

(01:37:57):
my house, I owned my car. I own it for you.

Speaker 5 (01:38:01):
So here's something I like to ask everybody, and for you.
It's going to be an interesting question because because your
your body of work is so extensive. But I asked
all the actors this. I didn't ask the last guy
because we ran out of time. But if you have
a bucket list, if you could work with any actor
male and female, pick a male and a female. They

(01:38:22):
can be living or dead. But if you could have
worked with any actor that you haven't had a chance
to work with, who would you like to work with?
And then the second part of the question will be
if you could have ever been in any movie ever made?
What movie would you have liked to have been in.

Speaker 3 (01:38:38):
Well?

Speaker 6 (01:38:38):
Of course, being a Southern all I'd love to have
been in Scarlet. It worked with Miss.

Speaker 3 (01:38:43):
Scarlet, Yes, there you've been and gone with a.

Speaker 9 (01:38:46):
Win win, ye.

Speaker 6 (01:38:48):
But I as far as there are so many new
and young actors coming up, as well as many actors
of fine line, so I'm not sure. I think Zendaya
I would like to work very good pick. I think
she's amazing, and I know Shalom is uh very big

(01:39:15):
right now, but I just I'd rather work with some
of the people that work around him.

Speaker 5 (01:39:20):
Yes, you know, I like some of his stuff and
I don't like some of his stuff.

Speaker 9 (01:39:25):
That's it.

Speaker 6 (01:39:27):
It's not like.

Speaker 5 (01:39:28):
Talented actors, young people. They consider him to be like
the best, you know, young actor, and I think he's
very very talented. I'm not a huge fit. It's like
Tom Hanks, you know.

Speaker 6 (01:39:41):
I mean working with Tom Hanks would be amazing too,
his wife Rita. There's two people you work with right.

Speaker 5 (01:39:54):
Follows me on Twitter. EXX is called X.

Speaker 9 (01:39:56):
Now listen everything and that thing is over my head.

Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
I go for the wrong button. Who not call.

Speaker 5 (01:40:06):
No like I like a lot of these like for
me if I well, first of I don't act.

Speaker 3 (01:40:10):
I produce.

Speaker 7 (01:40:11):
He acts.

Speaker 3 (01:40:11):
I produce.

Speaker 5 (01:40:13):
But like for me, like I would love to work
with Charlie Strong just because, like I think she's like,
you know.

Speaker 9 (01:40:18):
Oh my god, Yeah, did you see the movie with
the airplane?

Speaker 3 (01:40:24):
What's with that? Okay, there's an actress that's English that
I'm dying to get on the show and work with.
I think she's the best actress, better than any actress
in Hollywood right now.

Speaker 9 (01:40:39):
Oh, thank you very much for you.

Speaker 3 (01:40:42):
No serious, no, this is serious stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:40:45):
This girl.

Speaker 3 (01:40:46):
She was in downtow naviage Light.

Speaker 5 (01:40:48):
Risk, Flight Risk.

Speaker 3 (01:40:50):
Did you see Flight Risk?

Speaker 9 (01:40:52):
I don't think, I asked.

Speaker 3 (01:40:54):
She was on camera the entire time she held that
movie together. I have never seen such a performance in
my life. She changed characters every two minutes, cried, laughed, killed,
did I mean? It was amazing.

Speaker 5 (01:41:07):
So we should tell them what flight Risk is. So
Flight Risk is the new movie that came out about
a month ago. Mel Gibson directed it, and the entire
entire movie takes place in the cockpit of a little
teeny playing Michelle Dockery and Michelle Wahlberg and Toafer Grace
and that's it. The whole movie is those three and.

Speaker 3 (01:41:23):
Michelle, Michelle Dockertty is absolutely the greatest actress of our time.
She's better than Meryl Streep, She's better than any of them.
These English girls, these English actors like if fabulous actors,
If Clutch Downton Abbey.

Speaker 9 (01:41:40):
Yes, of course.

Speaker 5 (01:41:43):
She played Lady Mary and Downtown Abbey.

Speaker 3 (01:41:45):
Listen.

Speaker 6 (01:41:46):
Who could take their eyes off of the what's it face?

Speaker 3 (01:41:50):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (01:41:51):
It's like yeah, carry listening, and then I lose my thought.
That is my old age, I guess sh No, Maggie,
Maggie Stewart, Yes, yes, everybody in that one. I mean,
what I find so interesting is the training that they

(01:42:12):
go through there, Yes, extensive, is so much more extensive
than we do. They can suddenly be talking in their
British accent and suddenly be doing an American accent, I
mean and sustaining it through a full movie. And and
they're trained to sing, dance, do everything.

Speaker 9 (01:42:33):
But if you, if you like, watch like any one
of the films, this person today may be down here.

Speaker 6 (01:42:43):
You know, separate doesn't have a separate card that has
two cards or four people listed. And then the next thing,
they're the star in this one. They just love to work. Yeah,
and one day they can be the out of the show.
The next day they can be almost a background. It's

(01:43:03):
just a few little lines in it, I assume sometimes,
and it could make an ass out of me that
some of them just take roles as for friends and
stuff like that. Yes, but I also think, uh, they're
not physically caught up with beauty and body that we

(01:43:28):
are here. Yes, you watch, if you watch, if you
watch their television, I mean, somebody looks goofy all the time.

Speaker 9 (01:43:36):
They don't you know, they don't get coffed, you know, makeup.

Speaker 3 (01:43:40):
Let's know. I mean, they're there's real people. Look at
we have Judy Dench plow Right, Maggie Smith. The list
goes on and on and on. They're Shakespearean actors, they've
trained in shakespeare theater. Now they have a quality about
them that the American actor doesn't not have. I don't

(01:44:01):
know what it is, but English people, when they speak,
they sound very elocate and very educated. When we speak,
especially me from Brooklyn, I sound like, you know, I
don't know the hell I sound well.

Speaker 5 (01:44:14):
I want to tell you something real quick though. I
want to So there's a show and it's on Max.
You can see it if you have Max. It's a
TV show that used to be on TNT and it's
called Good Behavior, and it's starters Michelle Dockery and it's
Michelle Dockery as like a hooker, drug addict, you know,
thief and all these different things that you would never
expect Mary Lady to do. And it's the best show

(01:44:35):
ever had two seasons and it's a really, really good show.
Watch it with your husband. It's just amazing to see
her change, you know, from Lady Mary to this.

Speaker 3 (01:44:44):
You really don't remember her name. She's going to be
another couple of years. She's going to be an Academy
Award winner, and she's going to be one of the
most popular actresses in the world. She is beautiful, phenomenal
and doesn't care about make or here she's an actor.

Speaker 5 (01:45:02):
Okay, so we have five minutes left, and I want
to say, first of all, you guys make sure to
follow Patrica on Instagram at Darbo Patrica. Don't worry about
her on next because she doesn't go on and she
hasn't been on it in a long time, So don't
go on and worry about that one. And so, so
what are so, like, do you have any kind of
a story, like what's one of your best experiences on
what project that you've ever done? Like, what was one

(01:45:22):
of the projects that you did that you were like,
Oh my god, this is like the greatest project, whether
it's a big one or a little one. What was
one of your best experiences?

Speaker 6 (01:45:28):
Well, in the Light of Fire, I mean working with
John Malkovich was what an incredible actor he is, I mean.

Speaker 9 (01:45:39):
And kind.

Speaker 6 (01:45:40):
I was doing a stage by a musical and one
of the young girls in the chorus.

Speaker 9 (01:45:45):
Like, grab me, but if I don't get to meet
I'll kill you.

Speaker 6 (01:45:50):
So I got permission to bring her on the set
and John said he would talk to her because she
was a theater major at UCLA and he does much theater.
I mean, he started all but seconds in Chicago, and
he talked to her for at least an hour and

(01:46:11):
a half. Theater and stuff like that, and approaching characters book.
He was really wonderful and that lady now owes me.
I owe you my children, I said.

Speaker 3 (01:46:25):
Uhever he is.

Speaker 5 (01:46:29):
He's a phenomenal actor. And that's a great movie. I've
seen the movie like ten times.

Speaker 6 (01:46:33):
Well, he was like doing and talking with her, and
he was also sketching some plans for his home in
Paris because he was.

Speaker 9 (01:46:40):
Redesigning the kitchen, I think it was.

Speaker 6 (01:46:42):
And all of a sudden they came and said, John,
we're ready for you, and it was kind of like
he put down the paper and then he.

Speaker 3 (01:46:49):
Went and left.

Speaker 6 (01:46:59):
You saw him and its form himself in the person
that was killing my roommate in the other room.

Speaker 9 (01:47:05):
And was soon going to kill me.

Speaker 3 (01:47:08):
I like love it.

Speaker 5 (01:47:08):
So we have three minutes three minutes?

Speaker 3 (01:47:10):
What do I want to say? Who if you worked
with that, you really loved working with them, would want
to work with again. Sandra Bullock, Sandra Buller.

Speaker 5 (01:47:21):
I love her.

Speaker 3 (01:47:22):
I love her. She's fabro.

Speaker 6 (01:47:24):
She was wonderfully kind to everybody, A generous actress too.
I mean the camera was on the other person. She
was there to give them their minds the same way.
I mean, she was wonderful. She truly, in my opinion,
was is the girl next door at who she was
in her her growth to see where she was going

(01:47:46):
to leave the business because of her failed TV series
and then suddenly becomes America's sweetheart and is in everything and.

Speaker 9 (01:47:56):
Just amazing.

Speaker 5 (01:47:57):
I'm so happy.

Speaker 3 (01:47:58):
That first movie, the first movie I was in I
played a soldier in nineteen fifty nine, was that kind
of woman with Sophia Loren And I am telling Jimmy,
please try to get her. I want to work with
Sophia again, and I would love Sophia to come on
our show. I don't know that we'll ever get her

(01:48:20):
because she's still interesting. Never never say never say never
is right. You're right because she's an international superstar and
she's making a comeback. She's all over the place now
on Facebook and all the media at ninety years old.

Speaker 6 (01:48:36):
So it's kind of one of those things. I am
a technical diner, so I don't have the stuff going on.
If I don't fringe you back, it's because I have two.
They go, you can't have any more friends.

Speaker 9 (01:48:47):
I can't have as me as I want. No, you can't,
Yeah no, But it gives you.

Speaker 5 (01:48:50):
The fact that you got on stream Yard, though, is
really good because a lot of people, a lot of
people have had difficulty, like you know, hitting the button
and getting in. So the fact that you got honest
without a problem is really late.

Speaker 9 (01:49:03):
It said, go to Crown and then push the button.

Speaker 3 (01:49:05):
That's all I needed you you read the instructions.

Speaker 5 (01:49:09):
I think other people don't read the instructions because a
lot of even like like young twenty year old people,
and they get all you know, fumbled and messed up.
And so when you were there and we could hear
you right off the bat, I was like, this is awesome.

Speaker 3 (01:49:21):
I'm so happy.

Speaker 9 (01:49:24):
Come on to sound like a frog.

Speaker 5 (01:49:26):
That's okay.

Speaker 3 (01:49:27):
So you have to take you're a true performer because
the show must go on, and you made the show happen,
even at a disadvantage.

Speaker 6 (01:49:36):
Well, I felt bad because we had to cancel the
first time because I booked another commercial.

Speaker 9 (01:49:40):
Y we were shooting, so there's no way I wasn't
going to be on here today.

Speaker 5 (01:49:45):
No fabulous, And our audience basically are big. The majority
of our audience is like forty to eighty, you know,
And I think your people, this show is going to
get a zillion million plays because you know, because you
have done such a great body of work and you
have such wonderful things that you've done, and you're you're

(01:50:07):
nice person. Yes, that's what I was going to say.
So we want to thank you for coming on. Please
take care of yourself.

Speaker 6 (01:50:13):
Yes, and we look but in closing time to talk.
I could probably drive a buggy. I'm not good riding
a horse. I'm patching that movie.

Speaker 5 (01:50:24):
Oh I'm actually now that I've talked to you like once,
I like know people, and I get to talk to
them a little bit more. I have because I have
seven films, four of them funded that I'm working on.
And I have too that that will would actually work
for you. So we will be in touch, you know,
once we start casting. I will get in touch with you.

Speaker 3 (01:50:42):
To play with them after all of them.

Speaker 5 (01:50:43):
And we have to go because we're out of time.

Speaker 3 (01:50:45):
So Patria, take care, guys, and I.

Speaker 14 (01:50:48):
Hope to see you soon. Bye bye, bye bye bye.
All right, everybody, thanks so much for tuning in. We'll
see you next week. We've got some really great guests
next week. We want to thank everybody for tuning in,
and we'll see you later every weekend by bye.

Speaker 3 (01:51:01):
Word you can.

Speaker 9 (01:51:10):
Yeah we in the mix.

Speaker 4 (01:51:11):
Yeah, we in the mixed. It's end of the episode.

Speaker 9 (01:51:13):
We did stars.

Speaker 5 (01:51:14):
So we're on Russell Interview with the Hottest newsst.

Speaker 3 (01:51:18):
To this mixed.

Speaker 9 (01:51:19):
Should have subscribed it.

Speaker 4 (01:51:21):
You can get thirty five weekly to the start News
became the cool, he said, was just to.

Speaker 5 (01:51:26):
Chair rooms live if you wouldn't be a pool, not
to live with us at the Star Show. US wants
a live one to be four c Y Radio.

Speaker 3 (01:51:33):
Miss some past episodes down Hi Show, Why Star Show.

Speaker 5 (01:51:40):
We're Russell
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