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April 2, 2025 111 mins
Hosts Jimmy Star and Ron Russell along with Actor/Producer/Casting Director Carmen Aiello join us on this episode of The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell broadcast live from the W4CY studios on Wednesday, April 2nd, 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):
Jimmy gave me, Please.

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

Speaker 4 (00:59):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:03):
Hey, hallo, what's up everybody? Welcome to the Jimmy Star
Show with Ron Russell and Astro. We're back.

Speaker 6 (01:10):
Astro loves it. He comes every week. He knows what
we're doing. He jumps in my lap and he looks
at the TV screen. Don't tell me this dog is
not stupid. He's not stupid. He is very camera ready, right, Astro,
look at the camera, Honey, say hi to all your fans. Hi, everybody,
this is Astro talking.

Speaker 5 (01:31):
Really, So, what's up everybody? Hope everybody is doing well.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
I'm not. It's that time of year. The winds are blowing.
I mean like a hurricane. The sand is blowing, it's
in my eyes, it's in my nose, it's in my ears,
it's in my everything. And I am not well. So today,
don't expect too much. Adam me. Jimmy said, cheer, we cancel.

(01:56):
I said never. I'm from the olden days. Show must
go on no matter what. And uh, and.

Speaker 5 (02:03):
We're having all kinds of difficulties. So Ron's not feeling well.
I haven't been feeling well, but today I'm feeling better.
Our first guest, I don't think he's coming on. I
just I got a message from him, but I didn't
see it until like an hour ago. And he's in
the hospital with kidney stones, So so we're gonna make
shift and come up with something else. His name is

(02:24):
Steve Stanielis, and I don't think he's going to be
coming on unless he got out of the hospital yesterday.
But I haven't gotten a message back from him. But
he's a great actor, producer, director, and author, and uh,
we will reschedule him. So we'll have to fill some
time today. And then our second guest is Carmen I
Yellow and he's a big big Way casting director and

(02:45):
the rumor is that he is he's the one who
He's the one who discovered Rachel Brosnahan. Who the fuck
is Rachel Marvelous Smiths?

Speaker 6 (02:55):
Mazel Who that's her name? Yes, that's her whole name,
that hand, this is a long name.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
And we love her. And that's I love her.

Speaker 6 (03:06):
I never really knew her name. I just knew her character,
miss Mazelle. I knew the character. Yeah, so I'm joked up.
You know, I took all the the infetamines. You no, no,
not drugs. No, you took like cold medicine. I took
sinus stuff. But and history meanes an I took anti histamines,

(03:31):
not in fetter means. I mean I'm gone. I'm shot today, folks,
So I feel sorry for me. Bear with me.

Speaker 5 (03:38):
Well, we're back from Boco. We had a fun time.
We relaxed a little bit. We had a good time.
The weather was good all but two days, two days
at rain, but it was kind of nippy and cold
in Florida.

Speaker 6 (03:47):
We ate in. The best restaurant ever was in our hotel.
I was shocked. It was called the Captain's Table.

Speaker 5 (03:54):
The farmer's table.

Speaker 6 (03:55):
Oh the farmers. It was somebody's table. But anyway, the farmer.
I wrote on Facebook it was the Captain's table, but anyway,
it's the farmer's table. And I had lemonade made with honey.
It was delicious, and also spare ribs that were health
food spare ribs in some kind of a while whatever.

(04:15):
It was delicious. The food was fabulous. I can't wait
to go back and have the tomatoes and the blueberries
and everything on that big long plate.

Speaker 5 (04:26):
It was good.

Speaker 6 (04:26):
It's a health food place, I guess.

Speaker 5 (04:28):
Yes, it's a health food place. And the food was
really good, really good at it.

Speaker 6 (04:32):
Honestly, I would recommend. You know, they're not cheap, it's pricey,
but it's worth it. You know, we go to so
many restaurants and the food stinks, and the bills are
like one hundred bucks. The's nothing. I mean, a dinner
for two people today with tip one hundred and twenty
bucks is the average. And that's not even eating a lot.

Speaker 5 (04:52):
That's like, that's not even a super nice restaurant.

Speaker 6 (04:55):
Yeah, that's not even a very expensive restaurant. And I
forgot what I was saying. See what I mean's not
going to be a good name.

Speaker 5 (05:04):
That's going to be a great thing. Going to be
a good show. Anyway, we saw lots of Ron's friends,
his dearest and oldest friends, Terry and John. They've been
friends forever and we spent time with them. Right we
drove around. We went to South Beach and saw South changed.

Speaker 6 (05:21):
Oh my god, it was a trip to South America.
I felt like I was a real de Gennio. I
loved it. The beautiful people, those South Americans are good
looking women and men. And the colors they wear, they
wear all the shit that I wear, you know, the
multicolored clothes. And the food is outrageous. The restaurants are beautiful,

(05:42):
the tropics are there. They really made South Beach into
South America. It definitely is real Degenera.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
It was beautiful. So we had a really good lover.

Speaker 6 (05:52):
If I were young, I would live there. If I
were younger, like say thirty, I would. I would move
there if I were thirty years old, which is so happening.
We were there in the afternoon in the traffic of
people and going and doing in music, I mean, the
band's playing, and it was just phenomenal. I felt so alive,
as opposed to here in Palm Springs, where I feel

(06:14):
like I'm dead. This is so friggin boring.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
So we're back though, and lots of cool things going on. First,
let's say hi to the chat rooms, the fun and
Lady Laker in the chat room, Hey hoo, how you
guys doing. Please send our best to Tina and I.
So she said hi to Tina, and we have a
lot of fun things going on, you guys, A lot
of cool stuff getting ready to happen. I think I
think I'm going to work.

Speaker 6 (06:38):
Finally there's a movie I'm making.

Speaker 5 (06:41):
Yeah, I think so, yes, next week or something not
that fast, because you got to do pre production and everything,
and we're going to be funded. We'll be in pre
production in two or three weeks. I think, yes, hallelujah.
We also, uh, what movie is that? Well? You have
several of them? So, uh, you have red River? That's
you have Zombie. What's the one you said I might
be working? Do you have several of that?

Speaker 6 (07:04):
Oh? Several? I can't wait.

Speaker 5 (07:06):
Dred River, you guys, helmed by Jennifer.

Speaker 6 (07:08):
I'm doing a cameo there. I think I have five lines,
that's all.

Speaker 5 (07:13):
And then we have Zombie with a Shotgun, which is
Hill in the ariool Ruiz's film we have another film
that I have a lot of interest in and we're
actually going location scouting on Saturday with the team. It's
called Carnievil and it's got a great team of people
and you guys that know many of them, you guys
don't know Mark Bocker, Anthony but he's an Emmy winner,
Jeff Kperton, Cory Garyak, who was in is the DP

(07:37):
for like the Last Indiana Jones movie, and Steve Steve
Ross who wrote it. And there was a big article
about the film in the Beverly Hills Elites Magazine I
think that was what it was called, or the Hollywood
Elites Magazine or whatever. During the Oscars, in the Oscar party,
there was a big article about it. So it should
be a lot of fun. So we have a lot
of cool stuff going on.

Speaker 6 (07:58):
And I have to teach you how to speak.

Speaker 5 (08:02):
I know how to speak.

Speaker 6 (08:02):
No, you have to learn breathing. You don't breathe. You
do one bread. Here's what you do, and then you're
talking till the brett is gone. You have to breathe.
You have to have sentences. After a sentence, you breathe,
so the next sentence is powerful.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
That's okay either way.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
Mumble in the car, I want to hit you.

Speaker 5 (08:24):
We have a lot of fun things going on and
it's going to be very busy the rest of the year.
We're hoping that so so. I think everything is going good.

Speaker 6 (08:33):
With the help so Too before. It's real estate in Florida.
I don't even want to sound pretentious, but it sounds pretentious.
You know, the house is start to get really pretty special.
At one million dollars. How many people have a million dollars,
especially in cash at our ages. We don't get mortgages

(08:57):
thirty years. I've got our ashes. Do they think iBOT
to pay of mortgage thirty years from now?

Speaker 5 (09:03):
And the market has really jumped. We went and looked
at my old houses. I have two old houses that
I had in Florida. One of them was my very
first house. I bought it for one hundred and fifty
five thousand dollars in Victoria Park in Fort Lauderdale and
it just sold for one point one million. And from
that house, I bought a three hundred and fifty thousand
dollars house and it just sold for one point eight million.
So hopefully the real estate bubble is going to crash

(09:24):
because it's unbelievable of the press.

Speaker 6 (09:26):
And the half that I owned when I met Jimmy.
I paid two hundred and fifty thousand for it and
it's selling now for like eight or nine hundred thousand.

Speaker 5 (09:34):
Yeah, it's just unbelievable.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
So it's really sad. Yeah, got people. I can't buy houses.

Speaker 5 (09:42):
It just is everything is so expensive. Every time. Every
restaurant we went to was expensive. And we didn't go
to really nice restaurants. I mean we didn't go to
dumps and fast food restaurants. But you know, every restaurant
we went to, you know, it's just it's gotten a
lot more expensive.

Speaker 6 (09:54):
For Alexander's is a nice rest.

Speaker 5 (09:56):
Alexanders We went to j Alexander's and we went to
a really great pizza place. It was the best pizza
I've ever had, and I had shrimp farmers on but
it was a good Do you like that pizza? But
I mean that I guess an Italian restaurant, But there's
specialty is pizza, right, But it was really good.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
I liked that.

Speaker 6 (10:14):
What I liked was every morning having my bagel and
cream cheese and coffee at Bagel World Town. What was it?

Speaker 7 (10:23):
Big?

Speaker 5 (10:23):
I forgot Town East or something.

Speaker 6 (10:28):
That was fun because I was sitting with all the
old Jews, all the Aldacoccas. There was so sweet. One
lady was adorable, this little blonde, and she ordered a
thing this big if I don't know what the hell
woed cream and all kinds of crap. So as we're leaving,
I looked at her. I said, I'll tell me a
little girl like you was going to eat all of that.
And she said, well, why don't you come and help me?

(10:52):
So down in Florida, if you're halfway decent looking man
and you're available, boy, oh boy, are you and demand
the women that hung they're looking for men down there
like crazy.

Speaker 5 (11:02):
That's true, that's really true. He was getting hit on
everywhere or so. It was fun.

Speaker 6 (11:06):
I was hit on quite a few times. They sort
of scouted around to see if I was married or
if I was straight. Okay, you know they do that.
They're very good at it.

Speaker 5 (11:15):
Then I walked up. Then they kind of figured it out.
Then they figured it then they figured it out. But
when he was on his own, they were hitting on him,
went and right.

Speaker 6 (11:23):
They figured it out. When Jimmy said, oh, husband, they said, oh,
they're fingers.

Speaker 5 (11:32):
Anyway, So let's do some business yet things real quick.
Thanks everybody for tuning in. Please check us out. We
are on Podbean, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, SoundCloud. There's no
water in here because you have a bottle. You told
me you didn't need it. You have a bottle of water.

Speaker 8 (11:49):
Okay, you did tell me that.

Speaker 5 (11:54):
Hang on Podbean, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, SoundCloud, iTunes, Spotify,
Amazon YouTube, Google podcast Radio, Public tune in Amazon Prime
in three sixty TV, and so please listen to us
on all the different platforms. Also check out o my
horror publication, Dark Frights Magazine at dark frights dot com.

(12:15):
We're number twenty on the list of horror publications in
the world, which is pretty good because we're only three
months old. So please check us out darkfrights dot com.
Now you got one of you?

Speaker 6 (12:24):
Okay, done? Fine?

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Okay?

Speaker 6 (12:26):
On Facebook. Every day on Facebook, I write a little
something I guess to help people out because you'd be
surprised how many people out there don't know at a
walk one foot before the other, and they need to
be taught. I do my experiences in life. I write

(12:47):
about it to help people through what they're doing and today,
I wrote. My headline was do you believe in ghosts?
And I wrote, I do, I don't, and I wish
because I want to be a ghost. After I got
to the next room, I want to come back so
I could see Jimmy, my children, my friends, and all

(13:09):
of my dogs, which led me down to Jane Russell,
who was my buddy. Jane and I always have these
crazy conversations, and Jane said to me, when I die,
she said, I will go to heaven and when I
see Jesus, I will sit in his lap. And then

(13:30):
Jesus will turn to me and say, Jane, now you're here,
what am I going to do with you? And she
thought that was really funny. I didn't, but she thought
it was funny. I guess she considered herself a problem,
but she wasn't ever a problem. She was very easy
to understand and to know. I don't know what my

(13:53):
response is yet because I haven't gone back to my
computer to see what people are writing. A lot of
people think death is just sleeping, you know, Like my
mother used to say, you didn't know what was going
on before you were born, did you. And there was
cleopatraa there was Napoleon. There was everybody. They were all
here on the planet living, but you didn't know anything.

(14:16):
And it's the same thing after you die, you don't
know anything. And I thought, what a grim thought to
be taught. But my parents were socialists, and show socialists
do not believe in religion. They don't believe in Christ
or God or anything. They really don't. They don't believe
in church. I never went to church. I wanted to

(14:38):
because all my friends went, but I never went because
I wasn't allowed because socialists are communists. That's another word
for communists. But in the day that my parents were socialists,
it was very chich and very in because it was
a depression, the Great Depression, and everybody was struggling to eat,

(14:59):
and they had to have some kind of an idea
of a social party. Anyway, today it doesn't work, but
it worked back then. So that's why I don't believe. Really,
excuse me, in any religion. You believe your religion, Yeah,
you think when you tell you going some point.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
I have no idea. I have no idea, but I
believe other people believe it. I think everybody gets to
believe whatever they want.

Speaker 6 (15:25):
When you talk, you think you're going to go to
a glory home.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
No, not anyway, a new conversation tell you guys many
years ago, like maybe I don't know when Ron and
I were in New York. Actually we were in New York.
We taped an audio drama. It's called Dead Exit, you guys, politics,
Hollywood and murder. It's set in the future and the

(15:49):
world is upside down. A vengeful senator devises a plan
to use death row prisoners as movie stunt men and
government sanctioned executions and Dead Exit the audio drama. So
we did this, we did and we recorded it. It's
an audio drama like an old fashioned radio show from
back in the day. It's just been released on all
the different digital platforms. It's got lots of people, you

(16:12):
guys know in it. I Lean Shapiro's in it, So
Johnny's in it, Ron's in it. I'm in it. Who
else is in it? Roxy Saint is in it. Steve
Ham who's been on the show a bunch of times,
Sean Caanan is in it, Sadie Katz is in it,
Kenny Aronoff is in it. So we cast about half
of it with people who've been guests on the show.

(16:33):
It's a really fun audio drama that they want to
eventually turn into a movie. But it just came out.
It's on all the digital platforms, so please check it out,
listen to it, let me know what you think. I
forgot who Ron plays. I played Johnny B Hollywood, so
I'm like a Hollywood newscast person like so it kind
of like fits.

Speaker 6 (16:52):
And I probably played the Keller, the wise guy, the
mean person, the nasty person.

Speaker 5 (16:58):
I don't remember. You don't remember what you played. I
think church Tom Churchill's in. I mean, there's a lot
of fun.

Speaker 6 (17:02):
I don't even remember doing it.

Speaker 5 (17:04):
There's about fifty people in it, so I think it's
a lot of fun.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
Oh, it's all news to me. I have no recall
of this whatsoever.

Speaker 5 (17:11):
That's funny, none at all. So it's available now. I'm
probably going to do a press release about it coming
out and the list everybody who's in it, because I
think it's a lot of fun. Oh, we had a
good time hearing now.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
I want to hear it.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
But it's called Dead Exit you guys, and I think
it's a lot of fun, and you guys could check
it out. We also want to welcome Harlow's Haunt to
the chat room, and I mean, I'm really bad.

Speaker 6 (17:31):
We went to a movie one night and the guy
talking Jimmy turned to me and he said, that's you.
I said, that's me. I was doing a voice over.
I don't remember doing the voiceover, and I didn't even
recognize my home voice when I was speaking.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
Yeah, that was in the Day of the Chickeada, David,
Day of the Chicada. So we want to welcome to
the chat room Harlowe's Haunt. That's Terry, a friend of
mine Facebook friend of mine who's also a writer for
Duck Fright's magazine. He has a great film called Those
Haunt and said he'd shot it in Florida. He's a
great guy. So welcome to the chat room. Hello, Hello,

(18:07):
I think we're going to do some announcements. So I'm
sorry you guys that our first guest got sick, so
you'll be stuck with Ron.

Speaker 6 (18:14):
And I remember we were driving from Ohio now where
we were going.

Speaker 5 (18:19):
From Florida to We were driving from Florida to Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania,
and Jimmy had an attack of stones and we had
to pull into a hospital somewhere in Asshole, Georgia.

Speaker 6 (18:33):
But I don't know where the doctors came from, but
they looked like they were going to flow off his
legs and arms. Anyway, I was worried. I said, Jimmy,
you can't go in that hospital. It's like this is
like nowhere in the world. And he went in and
he had stones.

Speaker 5 (18:49):
And you had to stay outside because we had Shazam
in the car. We were bringing him back from Florida,
our big you.

Speaker 6 (18:54):
Know, Brazilian Fila dog. So I stayed in the car.
Is haunted town. It was really like haunted and it
was three o'clock in the morning.

Speaker 5 (19:06):
It was terrible. It was mad stones like four times.

Speaker 6 (19:11):
There's a movie here, you know, there's really a good
horror movie there about I could have been killed in
the car waiting for you, and then they got you
and they chucked you up in there. Anyway, it was.

Speaker 5 (19:23):
Scary, absolutely, So you guys, I thought, I, since we
don't have a guest, I'd promo some of the cool
stuff that we have going on. I have three movies
that are out and one movie that will be out
this summer. That's Ron's movie, Clown Motel, Three Ways to Hell,
What is it called the Clime Hotel Three Ways to Hell.

(19:44):
So we're gonna play trailers for some of these movies
because I have another movie, Night Mistress that just came
out on Amazon Prime. Purgatorium was on two B, and
The Beast in Side is on like a whole bunch
of different platforms, of which Ron did a cameo in
that one. And so I thought we would start with
Clown Motel three because it's fun and everybody loves this
trailer and Ron looks great in it. So this movie's
coming out this summer.

Speaker 9 (20:05):
The I think the we know we have in the
premierees in August, right August seventh, and you know what,
they have over one hundred and eight clowns killer clowns,
the biggest ever, the biggest cast of killer clowns ever
in any of the horror movies.

Speaker 6 (20:21):
And it's fascinating to see all these watch it's good.

Speaker 5 (20:25):
So you guys, here's the trailer for Clown Motel three
Ways to Hell, where Ron plays General Milan.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Enjoy fill your ancenstorous separation.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
That's healing world and the clown moment. First you came
the steal our gold.

Speaker 6 (21:00):
So I'm going to steal your soul. What's the herder?

Speaker 5 (21:10):
We have twelve missing military members.

Speaker 6 (21:21):
You can do it.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
General, are you seeing one last rescue mission?

Speaker 6 (21:26):
We have one shot at this. Let's break it couch.
We go from silent down to kill our clowns from
outer space.

Speaker 5 (21:37):
Welcome to you, the clown your shot.

Speaker 6 (21:54):
Ever hearing the blood ritual. The transformation was a success.

Speaker 4 (22:01):
Now go get me those sacrifices. I love you.

Speaker 5 (22:40):
To see the queen was chosen.

Speaker 6 (22:52):
Welcome Brown motto, Assi.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
Yay.

Speaker 5 (23:15):
Climb Motel three Ways to Hell.

Speaker 6 (23:17):
So, you guys, there is so much to see in
that movie that really and truly it's gonna have to
be a very long film.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
It probably is going to be a long, very long.

Speaker 6 (23:27):
Film because there's so much to see. Your money's worked
with that one, believe me.

Speaker 5 (23:32):
I think what they're going to do is re release
clim Motel two and then release Climb Motel three after
the premiere in August. It should be a lot of
fun because Run's in both of them, and they're fun.
You know, there can't be low budget movies, but they're fun.
Can't be low budget movies.

Speaker 6 (23:48):
I mean, if I was a kid of eight nineteen
eleven twelve.

Speaker 5 (23:51):
You know you love them. This one has a lot
of kids in it.

Speaker 6 (23:55):
Well, I know children have My children have a better
imagination than old people. All people are set in their ways.
They go look at those stupid jerks with that shit
all over their faces, you know. But young kids don't
see that. They see, oh my god, look at that heart.
That's funny. They laugh. It's a good movie, folks. I
would recommend you go see it because it's visual. It's

(24:18):
not a boring movie. It's not gonna be one where
you say, okay, where's the action. The action is right
from the get go.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
Absolutely from the minute I walk in and.

Speaker 6 (24:27):
Say what the hell is this bang? And I thow
that whatever it was on the table.

Speaker 5 (24:33):
It's fun anyway. It's a fun movie, you guys. So
I think you guys will like it. And since we're
taking up time to show you some different things, we're
going to do a couple of them here for you.
So the next film, this film's out actually called Purgatorium
and it's on TV right now. It's been on TV
for a while. It's a really really good film. It's

(24:54):
only shortcoming as it doesn't have anybody in it who's
famous you know which in it? Which hurts it? You know,
like clim Motel three has a bunch of well known
horror movie people in it, and and it has Ron
and a Purgatorium doesn't. But it's available on two B
nap for you to check it out. It's not as
much a horror movie as it is a psychological thriller,
but check out. Here's the trailer for Purgatorium. So what

(25:26):
is this?

Speaker 3 (25:27):
I'm I'm stuck any.

Speaker 6 (25:30):
One did, sir? I gave it to you in writing
Bart in Black and White.

Speaker 5 (25:35):
I really don't want to hurt trumanthan now evil is
with this. The wise Man wants life.

Speaker 6 (25:44):
It's like a stream spe.

Speaker 5 (25:48):
Not doing it.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
It does not stop straight up there.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
The funny thing about streams, though, once it's off course,
you can never change it back.

Speaker 5 (26:27):
So you guys, that's Purgatorium. It's a great film that
won all kinds of awards throughout Europe. Again, it's available
on twov so you can check it out. And it's
free on two B, which I like. And now we're
gonna take a quick music break. I think I want
to break things up.

Speaker 6 (26:43):
I feel bad for the people that are not watching us.
That are listening to us because they don't get to
see the trailers, but they heard them. But you know,
tune in watch us. You don't have to only listen
to us.

Speaker 5 (26:56):
That's right.

Speaker 6 (26:57):
It's more fun watching us, I think than listening radio.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
It is like no, but we want you to listen
to us. H. So please keep listening, all right, you guys.
So then the next thing, we're gonna play International Nova.
Ron and I used to hang out with him when
we lived in Pennsylvania. He's a really super talented guy.
Now he's on a reality show and I think he's
in Georgia. Yeah, he's on a hip hop reality show

(27:22):
and h. The name of this song is mansioned in
Auto Mars and the artist is International Nova. He's got
a beautiful wife. He's a super cool guy. We really
enjoyed getting to know him. So check out Mansions and
Auto Mars play International Nova.

Speaker 6 (27:51):
Show things.

Speaker 10 (28:00):
Everything between Living Secret, you worth your.

Speaker 5 (28:06):
Winning cause in my Native.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
Merchants and mart.

Speaker 7 (28:15):
So right right the time, bitch im o me that
healthy Pashkatto flowers because I nal friends, little Sea, my
little mama, hold it ten my heal queen.

Speaker 6 (28:28):
Shop.

Speaker 5 (28:29):
Wish she much a queen between his sh wdamn tad
my missus.

Speaker 11 (28:36):
Hobio nose flower bomb bab because she knows up.

Speaker 5 (28:40):
So ship you see you can take you there. We
can take a trip around the world where I take
you there today white.

Speaker 11 (28:47):
Sin, So we're with nice tants to the moon, head stars,
humble right.

Speaker 10 (28:53):
Rings and shiny things shine treasures of every keel.

Speaker 11 (28:58):
On the sun, the stuff, the woods, bathing.

Speaker 3 (29:03):
Set.

Speaker 5 (29:08):
Your winding cause in my lady more lord merchants and
the water. So that was failed to six in the morning.

Speaker 11 (29:22):
You can hut a running spanking hippo and now can
we can make our own sas baby keep it quiet
because the neighbors they'll be him to day. Say that
with such a funny beginning his own Now you show
he's one of Buny and the classes. Five baby has
your own face week got rush back.

Speaker 5 (29:41):
I can make this zon take Jimmy one.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
Now you look at and see I can go your monk, make.

Speaker 11 (29:47):
This less your whole like today, Why saint somewhere with
nice teams.

Speaker 4 (29:52):
To the moon at the star rains and shiny thing
just treasures off.

Speaker 11 (30:00):
Be key the sun, start motything between.

Speaker 10 (30:06):
The secret sing because you were so much, so much
small love merchants and moheah.

Speaker 5 (30:24):
And a lot of more.

Speaker 6 (30:34):
Say baby, you were so much more.

Speaker 5 (30:39):
Measures and not parts some such shine.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
International question.

Speaker 5 (30:58):
So you guys got the International Note about sindylod Cindy
Lady Lakes basically says that he's on love and hip hop,
Love and hip Hop the Atlanta addition, it's on MTV.
He's got a great, great sound, he's a great musician,
and he's just a lot of fun and really classy guy.
So check out International Note and follow him on Instagram.
I think you guys will like it.

Speaker 6 (31:19):
A story that goes with it. There's a black nightclub
in New York City which is downstairs, is very very private.
You have to be a member. And he was having
a song release party in that nightclub and he invited
Jimmy and I and I said to Jimmy, you know what,
we're going there and it's all black people, and they

(31:40):
dress outrageous and wild, and if we go in suits,
we're going to look like two white guys in suits assholes.
We can't do that. We have to go dress wild.
So Jimmy agreed. I wore a tuxedo with tails, and
jeans and boots and I don't know what the hell else,
and Jimmy got an all adult up and crazy shit.

(32:01):
And when we got there, all theomen in that nightclub
were dressed in Rolph Lauren. They had suits with vests
that all looked stunning. They look like models. They were
dressed like we would have been dressed. And I said
to Jimmy, now I really feel like a schmuck. Look
at us, the two of us.

Speaker 5 (32:21):
We're trying to look stupid.

Speaker 6 (32:23):
What the hell were we going? And nobody said anything,
but I think they were looking us up and down,
saying these two white guys are really we're out there somewhere.

Speaker 5 (32:32):
They liked They liked us, and he likes us, and
I love his wife.

Speaker 6 (32:37):
She's lovely. So we got a long way all our
friends there, but just goes to show don't try to
dress for the room. Never dress for the room. I
learned that. I knew that actually before we went there.
I used to say that all the time. I don't
dress for a room because the room could be different.
I dress for who I am, because who I am

(32:59):
goes everywhere.

Speaker 5 (33:01):
So I want to give a shout out to hub
benos joined us in the chat room. Hello, hub, how
are you?

Speaker 6 (33:06):
How's the romance?

Speaker 5 (33:07):
And the ramance is good? And I follow him on
TikTok and I see it every day. They posts like
five videos a gay together.

Speaker 6 (33:13):
We still don't have a wedding day.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
I guess not yet. And I want to give a
plug to Terry. He says, great, I want to give
a Terry. Who's Harlow's Haunt in the chat room? You guys,
he did his very first movie. It's called Harlow's Haunt
and ancient evil stalks and claims the souls of anyone
who awakens its presence. Children playing with Luigi board as
adults are confronted with the consequences of dabbling in the

(33:37):
occult and must face the true essence of evil at Halloween.
Set in the backwoods and swamps of central Florida, Harlow's
Haunt leads you through a maze of treachery and the sea,
spanning decades on this emotional and harrowing journey to an
end or is it? And you guys have the films
on almost every major platform. Terry is the guy who's
in the chat room for Harlow's Haunt. He's one of

(33:58):
my writers who writes for Dark Fright magazine, and this
was his very first film and he won all kinds
of awards and did really really well. And it stars
John Dougan, you guys from the Texas chance On Massacre franchise,
And it's an indy, low budget film that's done extremely well.
And we want to give him props and tell everybody
to check it out because I think you guys will
like it. It's actually really good and he's he's working

(34:20):
on the sequel now.

Speaker 6 (34:21):
I would like it because I like WEECHI boards, and
I like, you know, I like the unknown. That's spooky.
That's spooky. I don't care if it's slashing when they
chop everybody up, that's stupid. Well, when you have haunting
and spooky stuff, I like spooky.

Speaker 5 (34:37):
I'll sell you guys. We went to Semon.

Speaker 6 (34:39):
Do then use that word anymore? Spooky? I think so
that's a word from mine, Davey from one hundred years ago.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
Spooky. I think spooky is more like to to describe,
like a family horror movie.

Speaker 6 (34:52):
Like spooky means dark dungeons, creaking doors, cop webs, everything,
it's spooky looking. I mean you mean scary sports. I
guess they don't use the words I don't.

Speaker 5 (35:07):
Spooky's more like for a kid to do would describe
more for a kid's movie. Now it's like a kid
like Halloween Town would be.

Speaker 6 (35:12):
It's amazing how my language has gone. Nobody speaks like
I drew.

Speaker 5 (35:18):
It's just totally different. So also, so, Ron and I
have been watching some modern day movies for the last
couple of nights, and let me tell you the movies today.
Just first we watched Heretic Horrible. It's Hugh Grant like,
like the worst movie ever.

Speaker 6 (35:35):
He never shuts up, He bores the hell out of you,
and the end was so predictable and the whole thing
was a waste of my time.

Speaker 5 (35:43):
It was terrible. I don't know how it did so well.
It did sixty million dollars and I don't know.

Speaker 6 (35:48):
Res publicity and him him, he's got a fan base.

Speaker 5 (35:53):
It was terrible, you guys, I don't know how it
did good.

Speaker 6 (35:55):
And then last night The Side for Yourself, that's our opinion.

Speaker 5 (35:59):
And then last night we watched another bomb, the new
what's that lady's name? Well, Nicole Kidman has a new movie.
It just boomed. It was on Prime Call Holland and
it's about Holland, a town in Holland, Michigan or something.

Speaker 6 (36:14):
I mean, really, a movie like that piece of shit?
And why do people get that kind of funding Because
they get Nicole Kiindrill, who gets fifteen million for the movie.
She's not worth fifteen million. Her performance was nothing better
than anybody else, some of the people we have on
our show starting off a better actress than she is.

(36:35):
So I get angry when I hear that bullshit.

Speaker 5 (36:38):
We also get angry at knowing that we have films
that are way better, way way better, stories, way bad
we can't get two or three million dollars for and
they're probably twenty million dollars for these movies that are terrible.
That bomb, I mean, that could be a career in
any movie.

Speaker 6 (36:50):
It's so bad. Oh yeah, she hung herself because she
hasn't been doing too well with box office and now
she's hung herself. Nicole, listen to me, choose your scripts.
Don't do any shit just to get on screen.

Speaker 5 (37:05):
We need money.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
That bad No, she had to get on screen because
she was disappearing.

Speaker 5 (37:10):
I think it's just terrible. Bye, you guys, there are
a bunch of cools.

Speaker 6 (37:13):
Another one, three of them.

Speaker 5 (37:14):
I don't know what the other one was.

Speaker 6 (37:16):
That's how bad it was.

Speaker 5 (37:17):
I don't remember what it was, so I don't know
you that I only remember two of our country that it.

Speaker 6 (37:24):
Was so bad, I don't even I don't remember it either.
We saw three in a row. Horrible. They're not making
movies like they used two years ago, where they had
story and you could follow a movie. Today they do
so many flashbacks and they jump all over the place.
It's very difficult. You have to concentrate. Entertainment is not concentration.

(37:48):
Nobody wants to go to theater and concentrate. People want
to go to theater and be free and laugh and
scream and do whatever they want. Because the film dictates that.

Speaker 5 (38:00):
If you watch the hairtake, if you don't listen to
everything that's going on, you have no idea what's going on.
Same thing with this movie, Holland, if you don't actually
pay attention, you have no idea what's going on. It's
done so poorly.

Speaker 6 (38:10):
But I want to just tell him to shut up.
For Christ's sake, it's your grandstanding. The movie to you,
You know what was granted? You grant was grand standing.
He was doing his solidoquies, he was doing his thing,
and he was making the movie shitty.

Speaker 5 (38:28):
And there was no action, really hardly at all.

Speaker 6 (38:29):
It was no man, it was stupid. It was contrived,
it was done. The plot was old. Please enough, he's
been said about it.

Speaker 5 (38:37):
Yeah, it was terrible. So, but you guys, I haven't
watching some really good TV shows I think a lot
of you guys would like. So I'm just gonna recommend them.
I watched TV and listen to it while I'm like
working at home. Some of the really shows that I
think are really good. Right now, Suits La, you guys. Suits.
They have a regular Suits and now they made an
LA version. It's really good. It starts the guy who

(38:59):
was in Arrow, the guy who played Arrow in the
Arrow TV series. The Hunting Party is really good. Mobland,
which you have the biggest stars on the planet doing television.
It stars Tom Hardy, Helen Mirren, and Pierce Brosnan. And
it's a new TV series on My Pink Cocker Paramount.
It's really good. Happy Face is also on one of

(39:20):
those two networks, Peacock or Paramount. I should be a
mob Lern and Matt Locke and Matt Locke, Well, I
think Mobland though, because I watched the first episode. It's
mostly it's like an Irish mob It's not like the Attackian.
I could look irish, you could look irish and Matt Lock,
you guys stars, what's the lady Kathy Bates really really
good show, and Ladylake turned me on to like a
really good show too, And now I forgot the name

(39:41):
of it. But it has the lady who plays Geene
Smart's daughter from Hacks as the lead in it, and
lady like, what's the name of that show? It's the
one with the girl who liked smarter than everybody.

Speaker 12 (39:52):
Else, girl that plays a secretary. No, the girl who
plays for daughter her daughter in uh she saw somewhere else.

Speaker 5 (40:05):
Yeah, she's in this other show. And now I forgot
the name of it because I'm trying to think about it.
It's just thinks, just thinks High Potential. Yes, she's right,
it's called High Potential, you guys. It's on ABC. I
think it's a great show, high potential and really really good.
I'm my favorite show of the season. Well that I
love her Jean Smart.

Speaker 6 (40:23):
Jean Smart is absolutely one of the most beautiful. Also
a timing. I love, you know, in acting, I study
everything when people are on screen friends of mine, there's
lots of times they say what you think, and I said, well,
the timing was not right. Timing is everything when you're
in a movie. If you don't deliver the lines at

(40:46):
the right time, people get bored. Have you ever seen
a movie where they're so slow you say, come on,
speed it up. And she has timing. I mean, gene
can just belting out there. She bangs him out like crazy.
I love her work.

Speaker 5 (41:04):
I do too. It's a lot of fun.

Speaker 6 (41:06):
It's a fabulous comedian.

Speaker 5 (41:09):
Yeah, she's just a great actress in general, and she's
done everything she I didn't even know she was until
Hecks came out, but now I'm seeing her in all
kinds of things now that I know who she is.

Speaker 6 (41:17):
She was a great character, not even a character. Now
she's a star.

Speaker 5 (41:21):
Oh yeah, absolutely, so, you guys, we have another trailer
we're going to play. This one is for a movie
called The Beast Inside. I produced it with Eileen Shapiro,
and Ron has a cameo in it. It starts Stadie Cats,
Loreen Landon and Vernon Wells. It's out on all.

Speaker 6 (41:37):
Louren London was superb in this. She got an award.
I think did lore get wrenching.

Speaker 5 (41:44):
But she got mentioned for the best acting was Loreena Landon.
And so Johnny is in it, you guys, and he
got mentioned as being you know, he plays a main
character in it, and everybody loved his It's like a
family affair. It's yeah, everybody like loved it. But it's
available on all the different digital platforms right now, so
check get out. Here's the trailer for the Beast inside.

Speaker 13 (42:03):
And you missed your appointment, remember, and this is part
of your path back to your son.

Speaker 14 (42:08):
How have things been?

Speaker 6 (42:10):
It's something difficult. You look tired. I feel tired.

Speaker 15 (42:14):
You know this thing here?

Speaker 13 (42:15):
It doesn't work if you can't bring yourself to be
honest with me. Yes, trust me, you don't want me
to be honest with you. I have something inside me
trying to take over. Started a year ago when my
mother died screaming.

Speaker 6 (42:33):
We all have to wrestle with that on personal team
and go from my mother and to me. It's going
to help me my son when I die.

Speaker 3 (42:44):
If you can get.

Speaker 6 (42:47):
Name, then that will give you power over it. You
are going to try to exercise this thing out of
yourself by yourself. You think that's a bad idea.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
Yeah, you're relaxed and at peace.

Speaker 6 (43:02):
I want you to tell me what.

Speaker 5 (43:03):
Do you see something that.

Speaker 6 (43:06):
Is growing insite me. I can feel it break up,
yourn my skin trying to get out. Do you want
to see you more?

Speaker 5 (43:16):
I want you here.

Speaker 4 (43:18):
I don't care what I have to do your area,
why I want to go?

Speaker 6 (43:34):
You'll up our secrets?

Speaker 5 (43:50):
Hey, everybody, So that's the Beast inside. It's available on
all digital platforms Amazon, I know all the different ones.
Just google it, check it out. So take a look
and see what you think and let us know. Thank you,
chatting hum. Everybody says they love it. And then I
was going to say something else, but now I forgot

(44:11):
what And you're not even old And I'm not even old.
I am getting old though people are telling me I'm
getting old. Lately, I've been forgetting things because there's so
many things going on.

Speaker 6 (44:23):
So maybe it's time for me to trade you into
a younger model.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Now.

Speaker 5 (44:28):
I'll never be that old, honey, I'm.

Speaker 6 (44:32):
Telling you're not. It's starting to look old. You're not
so attractive now.

Speaker 5 (44:35):
I don't look old. At all. I look good. I
had my best health.

Speaker 6 (44:38):
Yeah naked, you're not exactly gorgeous.

Speaker 5 (44:40):
I am gorgeous. I lost a lot of weight, you guys.
I weigh one hundred and seventy five pounds today. When
I met Ron, I weighed to sixteen. So I weigh
almost fifty pounds less now than I didn't when I
met him. And I'm fabulous anyway. So I got one
more trailer because we got one more move that's out.

(45:02):
We have one more movie. This movie just came out
last week. It's called Night Mistress. It's a very low
budget indie horror film. We went to the premiere and
it took a couple of years for this to actually
come out. We had a great time at the premiere.
Has a lot of recognizable names in it, and I
think that you guys should check it out. They say
it's going to be streaming on a bunch of different
platforms soon, but right now it's only on the Amazon

(45:22):
Prime and it's called Night Mistress. So check it out.
I think you guys will like this one. Mm yay,

(46:42):
you guys. So that's got Sharon Winters, you guys. She
was in the original Batman television series. She was Catwoman's
like Kitty one on one of the Two Kitties that's
as Tracy Lee. Koko has been on the show a
bunch of times, and she's from Star Trek Ray Michael's
Corolla's in and he was a ranger. So it's fun.

(47:02):
It's a great story. Actually, it's got a really good
story to it. Like I said, it's a little budget film,
so maybe not the best film ever, but it's a
fun film to watch and I think you guys will
like it. So those are all the films that we
have right now that I worked on. I have got
a Night Mistress, Purgatorium, and The Beast Inside. We have
the Dead Exit thing that we want you guys to

(47:24):
listen to. The audio drama that Ron doesn't even remember doing.
And I don't think a lot of people remember because
I think they all forgot because everybody's in it, you know.
But it is a lot of fun and I think
they're going to maybe eventually be a comic book for
it and everything too. So check that out. It's on
Apple and Amazon and I don't know all the different
light platforms where you would like listen to things. SoundCloud

(47:46):
you can listen to the drama. It's it's pretty long.
That's probably like an hour and a half long or something.
It's like a movie, but it's a radio drama. But
excuse me, I think you guys will like it.

Speaker 6 (47:57):
There.

Speaker 5 (47:59):
Yeah, the story seems good.

Speaker 6 (48:00):
So we actually have better films coming up. Some of
the films coming up the pike are really good ones.
Good scripts too, in particular that I'm in not because
i'm in them, I'm in them because I love the script.
A script should have a story. A story should get
people's interests. We should not actors only chop up people

(48:24):
to get your interests. Because any idiot can chop up something.
It's not called acting. Chopping up a person, stabbing, shooting,
beating up, that's not called acting. Acting is when you
become another person and you bring your audience into where
you are and you make them feel what you feel.

(48:45):
That's called acting. So I'm in two of those movies,
and I'm very happy to say one is All Negative,
which is a great script written by Ming Ballad, and
the other one is The Gift of Magic, written by me.
So I'm happy about those two.

Speaker 5 (49:04):
And he has another one too, which one saving Paradise.

Speaker 6 (49:07):
Oh, saving Paradise. I'm crazy about the script, so you
guys believe it. Let me tell you a story about
that one. I was hired to play the handsome old
ex soap opera star, possibly opposite Joan Collins, and I said,
I am not comfortable with the part after reading the script.

(49:31):
There's a character in the movie called Bernie, and Bernie's
a jew from New York, and he's a fast talker
and he's a smart ass. And I said to everybody
on the staff, I said, listen, I would give my
part up to George Hamilton. Let him work with Joan Collins,
and I will play Bernie because Bernie is who I

(49:53):
am and I can do a wonderful job with Bernie.
So I got Bernie, and I cannot wait to shoot
this movie because Bernie is absolutely the funniest guy, wise guy,
smart ass, everything New York. George perfect, and it's gonna
be a great part for me to play. So you see,
we actors do like to play certain roles. Some parts

(50:16):
get we don't like. We play them, but we don't
like them, but it's always fun and better. When we
like a part, we do a better job with it.

Speaker 5 (50:24):
So I've got a story for it. So you guys,
ciddy Ladylake, she's in the chapol. Everybody knows there's Lady
League music on social media and we've been friends for
I don't know. We met on Twitter maybe fifteen sixteen
years ago. We've been friends for a very long time.
We talk every week on the phone for fifteen years.

Speaker 6 (50:40):
I was twenty when we met.

Speaker 5 (50:42):
And I've never actually met her physically. We do zooms
and video calls and phone calls, but we've never actually
touched each other.

Speaker 6 (50:50):
And said, I never met her either, but I did
receive her blow up doll. It's in her image.

Speaker 5 (50:58):
No, So anyway, you guys fabulous. And she came to
me with an idea last year at the end of
last year, you know, I don't know, maybe in like
the summertime or the end of the summer. And she said,
you know, she had an idea for a movie.

Speaker 3 (51:11):
And she gave me a.

Speaker 5 (51:12):
Reference to something else that it could be similar to
but a little bit different. And she says, what do
you think of this idea? And I love the idea.
She was a genius idea. She said, you think we
could turn it into a movie. And I went and
found Jennifer James to write the script and she's going
to direct it, and Cindy and Jennifer and I are
producing it. And it's called Saving Paradise. It's a great,

(51:34):
great script, kind of like a Hallmark movie. A little
bit cheesy, but a lot of fun. It's going to
have a lot of song.

Speaker 6 (51:40):
I don't think it's cheesy at all.

Speaker 5 (51:42):
You guys are going to have well, it's got a romance,
it's got all the things.

Speaker 6 (51:45):
I think if it's acted well and done like the
movies of yesteryear where they were made with quality, it
could be a great film. It's going to be a
great film because if we have George Hamilton and Joan
Collins ross stars, that's a great headline, and then a
bunch of soap opera stars will be in it.

Speaker 5 (52:05):
It's gonna be a bunch of people that were famous
in the eighties and nineties, is what we're working on.

Speaker 6 (52:10):
You'll get a chance to see all your soap opera stars, not.

Speaker 5 (52:13):
Just soap opera stars, those stars from the eighties and nineties.

Speaker 6 (52:17):
So not really Sean Ron, a bunch of them that
is soapy.

Speaker 5 (52:23):
Okay, but there's Okay, well there's everything. No, there's a well,
we don't have anybody yet because we don't have the
money in the bank to hire them. But the people
work who are considering for it are all around a
little bit of everything. So we're gonna have all age
groups and demographics in it, from people stars from their
twenties to their eighties. So I think it's gonna be
a lot of fun. And uh, I think you guys

(52:43):
are gonna love it. And the movie any right, that's
great love and romance, a bit of comedy and magic,
So it's gonna be a great film. We believe that
we're already going to be funded for it, and we're
hoping to shoot it at the end of the year,
so it's going to be a good one.

Speaker 6 (52:57):
The movie I wrote. It's about nineteen forty three about
an Italian mafia guy married to a Jewish bookie who's
a woman, and they're they're kind of corrupt, but you'll
love them because they're nicely corrupt. And she receives a
gift of magic from the voodoo lady where she's able
to kill people at demand, and they decide to go

(53:18):
to the Brooklyn Navy Yard and kill all the Nazis
that are trying to blow up the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

Speaker 5 (53:25):
And it's it's sort of a dark horror movie because
the blow comedy.

Speaker 6 (53:31):
Because the blowing up is the fun part when you
see people explode. I know the audiences will enjoy that.
But the majority of the film is comedy and very funny,
very very funny. So we're going to do that one.
That one I'm excited about because it's a movie, it's
a story. It's just it's not just chop them up.

(53:51):
Anybody can make a movie where you have every every
other footage, every other foot of the film is a
chop up, and I hate that. I turn away. I
don't even watch those movies.

Speaker 5 (54:03):
Well, we have a lot of good projects coming up.

Speaker 6 (54:06):
Movies have to go back to being movies and their stories.

Speaker 5 (54:09):
We have projects that all have good stories. They have
a beginning, of middle, and an end. We have one
other horror movie that we're going to be doing called
The Legend of Bunny Man. We've already got lots of
interest from like famous horror movie people that I didn't
even have to reach out to them. They all reached
out to me to be a part of it, So
hopefully we'll get that one going to sometime this year.
We just started working on it now. And then I

(54:31):
told you about the film that we have Carnival, that
we're going this Saturday to go look at locations and
stuff for so lots of cool things coming on. So
we're hoping to by the end of the year to
have a whole bunch of great tess.

Speaker 6 (54:43):
We're trying to make a film better. We're trying to
bring back the quality of film of thirty forty years ago,
when film meant something, the horror movies of yesterdayar I mean,
how can you The Creature from the Black Lagoon one
of the best, and it was a story and you

(55:04):
felt bad for the creature when he at the end
died and we think he dies, but he doesn't. We
developed a character. They developed a character, and the creature
was a friend and we liked him even though he
was a creature. But everybody was afraid of him because
he was different. Like today, if you're different today, people

(55:27):
are afraid of you. So it had a meaning, it
had a storyline. Then the Night of the Living Dead, Okay,
they did burn people and eat them in the cart
when the truck was on fire, but the majority of
the film was zombies being shot in the head to
be killed, cemeteries, to be eerie and scary. Locked in

(55:49):
the house with zombies tearing off the shutters, trying to
get in, to get you. It was a story and
we were frightened because, oh my god, look the zombies
getting in. Dracula bela Lagosi story. They took him from
Europe and brought him here in a coffin, and the
crazy guy that took care of him ate bugs. I mean,

(56:12):
it was a story. Frankenstein the same thing. Frankenstein was
a monster that was created and he terrorized the town.
So we want to bring that sort of quality back
to horror films. Horror films needed because people are becoming
numb to the chopam. I saw a movie where a

(56:34):
man's penis was chopped off several and I thought that
had several penises. You guys, just seven movies with that. Yeah,
that's the ultimate disgusting bullshit. If you have to do
that in a movie to make a movie work, I'm sorry,
I'm not your I'm not your i'm not your audience.

Speaker 5 (56:55):
Well you're not the really horror horror movie audience anyway, But.

Speaker 6 (56:58):
No, I am a horror I like horror. Listen Christopher Lee,
who have a story. I met Christopher Lee at a
cocktail party in Beverly Hills and we were talking and
his wife was standing next to him, and I said,
you know, Christopher, I love your Dracula. Nobody has ever been,
has ever done Dracula as well as you since Bella Lagosi.

(57:22):
And he was six foot four or five. He stood
up and said to me, I have done more than Dracula,
and he walked away. So I said that fuck you.
But his wife she said to me, he's very sensitive
about that. I said, honey. He said that meant coat
you're wearing you got it because of Dracula, so cut

(57:44):
it out. He made a lot of money with Dracula.
I said, I wish I could make the money he
made with Dracula. And now he's a snob about being Dracula.
You met a straighten him out. Have ridiculous to do
that to me. He didn't know who I was, and
I was writing a column at the time. I could
have destroyed him, but I didn't. Anyway, And getting back

(58:08):
to the subject, so we're trying to bring back the
quality of films. Red River is a story, and a
good story. I'm not going to tell you what happens
all of the movies. I'm not picking. Listen. I did
a couple of cameos for friends of mine. I did
Beasts Inside for Sadie, and I did what else? Did

(58:32):
I do another cameo somewhere else for somebody else. I'm
not doing that anymore because it puts me in movies
I don't want to be in because they're not good.
I'm closing my scripts. Only movies that have stories, quality stories,
stories that people will see the movie twice. Most movies today, Bailey,

(58:57):
you can get through once.

Speaker 5 (59:00):
We have seen some bad ones. But I even like
the bad ones, though I mean I don't, I don't.
The bad ones are still better than what we've been watching.

Speaker 3 (59:06):
That there.

Speaker 6 (59:07):
Jimmy's Jimmy is today's Hollywood. Jimmy is new, Jimmy's is green.
I'm old. I'm old Hollywood. I was around in the
classic days when we had stars like Clark, Gabel, Tyrone, Power,
Marlon Malina, Diatrich, Betty Davis, Joan Crawford, I Lipino, Barbara Stamward.
We had great stars in my day, and the movies

(59:30):
were great scripts, and the acting was beautiful, and everybody
would cry in the movie. If the actress made you cry, left,
if she made you left. And I remember leaving the
theater and hearing people say, oh, I love that movie,
I want to see it again. I have never heard
that yet in the horror movie that I've been to
a red cop premiere where anyone has ever said I

(59:52):
want to see it again. So we have got to
get back to film quality. Sensationalism. It is shallow and
it doesn't work. At last a minute. I know that
if my friends were here, some of my if Betty
Davis was here, she would tell you that the quality
of the film is what makes the film work. And

(01:00:15):
she made some bombs. But it wasn't because the film
had poor quality. It was because the storyline was not
the audience's favorite. Because back in the nineteen forties and fifties,
if you didn't please the audience by giving them what
they want, meaning at the end of a movie, they
better kiss and makeup, and they made a kiss because

(01:00:37):
if a movie ever ended with a love interest didn't kiss,
people hated the film. They'd walk out forget it. When
Alfred Hitchcock started making movies, and he started making the
endings where people didn't understand them, his films weren't very popular.
People said, oh, I don't like Hitchcock. He leaves you hanging,
he doesn't complete a movie. But that was his Today

(01:01:00):
we think he's a genius. Of course, so again I repeat,
we're going to bring back the quality of films. Jimmy
Starr and a few of his friends, who are all
big producers, will only select good scripts, scripts with the story.
We want to get the audience interested. We want to

(01:01:21):
get you like this, what's next. I want to see it,
not sit back and say, oh, look ahead, fellow off,
Oh look they chopped his dick off.

Speaker 5 (01:01:30):
One thing too about it, though, is said, even though
horror is my favorite genre, and I do have four
or five really good horror movies scheduled one good stories.
One of the films I'm the most excited about is
actually Saving Paradise. It will be my venture into non horror,
but a really great story and very run with really
fun people are going to like us.

Speaker 6 (01:01:51):
One. Yeah, my character is such a wise as he
reminds me of the gold one of the Golden Girls
and his which one is the big Toll? What's her name?

Speaker 5 (01:02:03):
The author?

Speaker 6 (01:02:04):
The author? Yeah, but Bernie reminds me of the author.
He has that wonderful New York sarcastic humor, and of
course I do that well. So it's gonna be a
fun movie.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
So I want to give one more shout out too,
because Harlow's Hunt since since we may be in Florida
in the in the upcoming future. Also, I've been reaching
out to different great filmmakers. Terry is a really great guy,
and he says Harlow's Haunt to Infinite Delirium is the
name of the title of the sequel, and it'll be
that they're starting to go into figuring it all out now.

(01:02:39):
But again, you guys, check out Harlow's Hunt on two B.
Let's take a quick music break, and I don't guess,
should be here pretty soon. Okay, let's do that, all right,
So you guys, we're gonna the name of the song
is Striving featuring Chris Bell. Hopefully you guys will like it.
Check it out, and we'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (01:03:12):
Driving.

Speaker 15 (01:03:14):
If I don't know my way, then I'm gonna find it.
I always speak the truth I'll never signent, never going down.
I'll keep on rising, so I'll make confidence and I
keep on playing in.

Speaker 6 (01:03:25):
You are already know. Always move the fusing.

Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
I'm slow.

Speaker 15 (01:03:29):
You know you you better catch up with the probe.
It's funny how the DEMI ship with both the man
I'm crazy. I feel that for anybody it betrays me.
I put it in my photos of it is delayed.

Speaker 6 (01:03:43):
One of a council.

Speaker 15 (01:03:44):
You should know.

Speaker 6 (01:03:45):
You can't a place room.

Speaker 15 (01:03:47):
I try to keep my focus, got a strategize.

Speaker 5 (01:03:49):
I'm suing photo scars. I'm looking pat this guys.

Speaker 6 (01:03:52):
If reading ad spokes, I'm.

Speaker 15 (01:03:54):
Like a mass of man.

Speaker 5 (01:03:55):
I'm hoping that I'll make consider after life this music.
But it's been my dation.

Speaker 15 (01:04:00):
Don't do nothing because we only need to relate. I
started from the bottom like a face.

Speaker 6 (01:04:06):
Then let's not saying how farm about to take?

Speaker 15 (01:04:10):
Yeah, let's go be in flex mode before I finish one,
I'm looking at my next go. I've already even shining
outn't even my neck code.

Speaker 5 (01:04:18):
It's like those other teachments that you gotta let go.

Speaker 6 (01:04:21):
Let's striving.

Speaker 15 (01:04:22):
If I don't know my.

Speaker 6 (01:04:23):
Way, then I'm gonna find it. I would speak the truth.
I'll never sign, never going down.

Speaker 15 (01:04:29):
I'll keep on rising, so I'll make it sence. I
keep on crying.

Speaker 6 (01:04:33):
You already know.

Speaker 5 (01:04:36):
Always move to me stow.

Speaker 15 (01:04:38):
You know you better catch up with the prop. It's funny,
how then ship with bat.

Speaker 16 (01:04:44):
I mean everything I say, and I say everything I mean.
Promises are promising my promises?

Speaker 5 (01:04:49):
I can't. Let's why the air party Yama strip strive.

Speaker 16 (01:04:53):
That's w an air party. Yam a living cell pass away,
but we can't actually pass away. It's on by my
energy that they can never take away from this because
I'm tavy, contously spinning.

Speaker 5 (01:05:03):
They call it vy. She can't be striving their eyes
and the safe. It's perfect time. I see people showing
every but I never got it. I see shouting.

Speaker 16 (01:05:13):
Cold in you when she should be finding handy for away.

Speaker 6 (01:05:17):
That's not what they find.

Speaker 5 (01:05:18):
I know what you're looking for.

Speaker 16 (01:05:19):
It just call it the scape, kind of learn it sick.

Speaker 3 (01:05:22):
It's out the same in the day in that it years.

Speaker 5 (01:05:25):
I've insteady driving, put myself in gears, but give me
striving striving.

Speaker 15 (01:05:31):
If I don't know my way, then I'm a fighter.

Speaker 6 (01:05:34):
I speak the truth.

Speaker 15 (01:05:35):
I'm gonna have a sign never going down. I'll keep
on rising, so I'll make consider time. I keep on crying.
You are already know I always moved me. I'm so
you better catch up with the prope. It's funny how
and she would pope?

Speaker 5 (01:06:23):
All right, you guys, but that was Rob saying so.
I don't even know how you say, Rob say Rob
saying something like that. But the name of the song
is driving. It's a lot of fun. I enjoy it.
I listened to a lot of his stuff, and I
follow him on social media. He's got the funniest videos,
so it makes it a lot of fun. Let's see.
So our next guest, I guess should be coming on
in the next minute or two. In the meantime, the

(01:06:43):
chat room has been very active. So hey, what's up
everybody in the chat room? And I forgot what.

Speaker 6 (01:06:50):
Else I was gonna say. So he's forgetting everything. We
gotta get rid of him. We got to replace you
with a young one. I know, a young, sexy, handsome one.

Speaker 3 (01:06:59):
I know one thing.

Speaker 5 (01:06:59):
We can look up the hang on, go go ahead
and talk from minute.

Speaker 6 (01:07:03):
I have a splinter. I have a splinter? Right there?
Did I get a splinter?

Speaker 5 (01:07:10):
So we want to also give a shout out too,
then because Lady Cindy, Lady Lake works with a great
musician David Martinez. He was on our show many years ago.
He has a brand new single called My Sweet Love.
It's out now, so we want everybody to check it
out stream and it's everywhere and you guys will love it.
And Stefan is in the chat. And to make sure
you say hi to Tina, I guess I got nothing else.

Speaker 6 (01:07:30):
Cina, China, my sweet little China. When am I ever
going to see you again.

Speaker 5 (01:07:37):
One of these days?

Speaker 17 (01:07:39):
Look at a splinter. I got a big splintet it
really hurts. That just looks like a piece of skin. No,
it's a splinter a glass. I have a glass on
my finger anyway.

Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
Yeah, yeah, you do.

Speaker 6 (01:07:51):
Okay, we're on the air.

Speaker 5 (01:07:54):
It's okay.

Speaker 6 (01:07:56):
I have a heece of glass in my finger. How
I got it, I'll live know. I don't know either.

Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
How you got it, But don't pick at it until
you get it. We'llet tweetters when the show is over.
We'll do something with it and we'll get it off.
All the dogs are sleeping all around our feet.

Speaker 6 (01:08:12):
You guys, I want to go to sleep on. So
I hate to sign this bullshit. I got to get
out of Palm Springs. I can't live. This is the
first time I lived here. Twenty years ago I had
this problem, and I moved because of this problem. Not
only I, but my daughter Leslie. She's sick with the
same problem with the sand. And my other kid who

(01:08:35):
moved to Pennsylvania. She was sick when she was here,
but now she's okay in Pennsylvania and.

Speaker 5 (01:08:41):
It's freezing her there. It's very cold in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 6 (01:08:44):
I know that, but they don't have sand up your nose, all.

Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
Right, you guys.

Speaker 5 (01:08:47):
The winds are so bad that the main streets here
you have shut down. They like closed them because the
wind was blown so much you can't see the drive,
so they and you don't.

Speaker 6 (01:08:55):
Want to drive your car through it because it pits
your windshield and gets rid of the paint on your car.
You wind up with a silver car of a black car.
So it's really horrible.

Speaker 5 (01:09:06):
The desert was not meant for people, and you don't
want it to get into your sun roof area because
it wreck your sunroof and it wrecks your convertible top.
So you have to be careful, and it wrecks the people.

Speaker 6 (01:09:18):
The sand is terrible, terrible, And not only that, but
the rain we had made everything bloom. The desert usually
doesn't bloom. The sun kills all the plants, so you
don't get the pollen. But now with the rain that
we've had, the plants are happy, and they were saying, hello,
I'm going to kill you. I'm going to get you. Yeah,

(01:09:40):
that's terrible. I like hate that.

Speaker 5 (01:09:44):
I hate it just in general. I hate that, just
in general, I hate that. Well, you were just talking
about all the different shit you just said. We're also
trying to paint the patio out in the back.

Speaker 6 (01:09:58):
See this, I'm not ship stand in my eyeballs.

Speaker 5 (01:10:05):
I think it's funny.

Speaker 6 (01:10:07):
Your house is full of sand, very fun. How it
gets in, I don't know, but it gets in. It's
it's super super fun. It's not like stand like at
the beach.

Speaker 5 (01:10:18):
So I guess to see you ready to bring him on? Yeah, alright,
let's bring him in.

Speaker 6 (01:10:23):
I have to get the sand out of my eyes.

Speaker 5 (01:10:26):
Hello comment, Hey you guys, what's wrong with your eyes? Rod?

Speaker 6 (01:10:31):
The sand and the winds are blowing in palm screen.

Speaker 3 (01:10:34):
No, I live on the level floor of a guesthouse,
and there's always like when did stand that? You can't
get rid of it?

Speaker 5 (01:10:44):
Are you in Pop Springs?

Speaker 6 (01:10:46):
No, but I'm gonna wait.

Speaker 3 (01:10:48):
I'm gonna come visit in a couple of months though.
Are you guys down there?

Speaker 5 (01:10:51):
So we live in Pop Springs where I I know?
Can I come say hi to you? I'll be there
in May?

Speaker 17 (01:10:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:10:56):
Absolutely?

Speaker 6 (01:10:57):
So where are you?

Speaker 3 (01:10:59):
I'm in Hollywood. Oh.

Speaker 5 (01:11:01):
For some reason, I thought you were like, like East Coast.
I didn't know you were West Coast. I just assumed,
I know you started in Chicago or someplace I think
I read.

Speaker 3 (01:11:11):
Yeah, I started in Chicago. I grew up in Denver, right.

Speaker 5 (01:11:14):
Okay, so let me let me out there. It's terrible.
It's terrible. Half the main roads are shut down because
the wind is so bad. You can't see, Okay, sand
blowing every.

Speaker 6 (01:11:27):
If you drive down valley and look at the mountains,
you can't see the mountains because the sand is in
the air and it blocks the view of the mountains.

Speaker 3 (01:11:38):
That's terrible.

Speaker 6 (01:11:40):
Well, you shouldn't be living in a desert.

Speaker 5 (01:11:42):
We shouldn't be living we shouldn't be living in the desert.

Speaker 6 (01:11:44):
I mean, they should never have built homes here.

Speaker 3 (01:11:47):
I say that, I literally say that all the title, Like,
what what idea was it that someone?

Speaker 6 (01:11:54):
I'm not in the mid desert, you know, I'm not
fucking Lawrence of Arabia. So hold on, we're.

Speaker 3 (01:12:01):
Gonna get along.

Speaker 5 (01:12:03):
We're gonna, We're gonna, We're gonna do an actual introduction
on now we want to welcome to the Jimmy Star
Show with Ron Ussel, actor, producer and casting director carmen Iello.
How do I pronounce it, Danny I yello? Carmon iyello.

Speaker 3 (01:12:17):
You did it right, mister Starr, there you go.

Speaker 6 (01:12:20):
I love it.

Speaker 5 (01:12:21):
You have a French mother and an Italian father.

Speaker 8 (01:12:25):
I had an Italian father. You got half of it right,
you's the Italian half, Okay, Italian.

Speaker 6 (01:12:37):
I'm so proud to say one. Nothing is in me
but Italian.

Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
My my Italian family lives out here. Actually, they said,
to my father's side. So I found them a couple
of years not a couple of years ago, like seven
years ago. They came knocking and that was really nice.
Like I never knew I had the Italian side of
the family out here.

Speaker 5 (01:13:01):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 3 (01:13:02):
It's like Oprah Woodfrey Show. Like I just I was
with my mom and you know, it was just be
my mom my whole life. I had a you know,
I had a godfather obviously godmother, so I had the whole,
that whole thing. But most of my Italian family passed
away in Denver. I didn't know my father's side was
out here. So I had my aunts and my cousins

(01:13:24):
contact me and said, are you the son of Joe? Well,
yeah I am, I'm the son Joe. And then I
met them, all the whole family. There was like all
a whole bunch of them. I didn't you're living fifteen
minutes away for me, and I had been out here
like four years already, so I had like family fifteen
minutes away. You know, you can feel lowly in this
city sometimes, but it was nice.

Speaker 5 (01:13:46):
Oh well, real quick saying hi to the We have
a bunch of people in the town.

Speaker 6 (01:13:51):
All my Italian relatives are still in Italy. They won't
come here. They love it. They live very well in Italy.
In Italy.

Speaker 3 (01:14:01):
No, I've been to France with my mom to visit
my friend's family. Most of them are you know, passed
away now. But yeah, I love to go to Italy.

Speaker 6 (01:14:10):
But my friend, my family, my cousins, and whether it's
left there. They live very well and they don't care
for America. They've been here and they didn't care for it.

Speaker 3 (01:14:21):
Yeah, we could have a conversation about that.

Speaker 6 (01:14:24):
Yeah. So I was upset about that, and I said
to my cousin Lilia, I said, listen, I come here.
I don't say things bad about Italy. You shouldn't say
things bad about America. But they say a lot of
Europeans don't like they come here. They're very disappointed. They
like Florida because it's pretty. No, they like Florida because

(01:14:46):
it's pretty and tropical. They like tropical Italians. But as
far as New York goes, no, they didn't like.

Speaker 3 (01:14:53):
Oh no, of course not. No, we don't even have
to discuss that. No, they'll definitely not like New York.
It's not that I to New York.

Speaker 6 (01:15:00):
I love New York.

Speaker 5 (01:15:02):
So wait, so what did you You were born in Colorado?

Speaker 3 (01:15:06):
You said I was born in San Francisco.

Speaker 5 (01:15:09):
Okay, born in San Francisco. How are you in Chicago?
What were you doing? How did you get to Chicago
from wherever you came from? Have you guys been to Chicago.

Speaker 3 (01:15:19):
I know, I wonder if any of your viewers have
been to Chicago was such a beautiful city. I wanted
to go to either La or New York. But I
was very integrated into a theater and I did my research.
I went to a few years of college and my
pelgram right now, and I had to make a decision
whether to continue college or spend all my money there

(01:15:44):
or use money to go, you know, move to a
different city. So Chicago seemed like a place after I
researched that had really good theater. It does really have
good theater too. Yes, you know, it's a great like
launching pad for people who want to you know, move
New York or stage Chicago. But the economy for theater
is not good. Either you are a union member and

(01:16:08):
you are performing of like one in six different like
theaters that allow you, or you're non union. So I
went out there just started, you know, dancing and choreographing.

Speaker 5 (01:16:21):
He started more like as the performer.

Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
Yeah, well I wasit. I was a choreographer too and
a dancer. Okay, so I auditioned for Broadway and all
that stuff. You know, Ron, I'm sure you're familiar that
the audition. He auditioned form West Side Story back in
the day.

Speaker 6 (01:16:41):
The way he's he's an exaggeration, Well, you always say
that that he's exaggerating. I know one of the cast
members of the original Broadway play show Okay the Queens.
She was a friend of mine and I said to him,
I want an audition for a West Side Story. And

(01:17:03):
he said, let me see what you can do. So
I was pirouetting all around and he looked at me.
He said, sick to acting? No I can't.

Speaker 7 (01:17:15):
I did.

Speaker 6 (01:17:19):
He just looked at me. He was hysterical.

Speaker 17 (01:17:22):
So I could.

Speaker 6 (01:17:24):
Boy, I couldn't be. I was too tall. I'm six
foot one. You are, yeah, so being you look so
small and tiny.

Speaker 5 (01:17:34):
Now you're like, oh, he's a little under the weather today.
So he's not sitting up the sand because of the time.

Speaker 6 (01:17:42):
Listen, about a hundred years ago, the troop that I
was working with said we got a club in Chicago.
And the club was a very prestigious club, drag club.
And I said, oh my god, they're going to book us.
I'm so excited February because nobody got there, nobody wanted

(01:18:02):
to go.

Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
Have we got that?

Speaker 6 (01:18:05):
They said the ropes are so you don't get blown away.
I said, because there were ropes. You had to walk
and pull ropes. And I said, I will never come
back here again, but I have gone back.

Speaker 5 (01:18:21):
So wait a second, I want to go back to
the dancing things. First of all, we haven't ever, we
haven't really. I think we've only had one casting director
on the show before, and they really didn't cast the time,
the really big stuff, like you've cast you know, you've
cast some pretty big things. But I want to talk
a little bit about the dancing thing. And I have
a reason. Why do you like all those dance movies
like did you?

Speaker 3 (01:18:40):
Yeah, because I'm really sad at being pop quiz being
put on the spot, but yes, I love them classics
and everything. Yes, absolutely, well.

Speaker 5 (01:18:50):
You you did a show. Okay, So my favorite, one
of my favorite all time actresses was in a step
up movie and her name is Seannie Vincent Shut and
she was on the show about two months ago and
we've become friends. We got eighteen million plays on her

(01:19:10):
show because she's a huge horror icon and horror you know,
but then she's also this great dancer, and so she's
in the show The Guardians of Justice of which you
have an affiliation with. So that's our six degrees of separation.

Speaker 3 (01:19:25):
So tell me that's awesome.

Speaker 17 (01:19:27):
I was.

Speaker 5 (01:19:28):
My wedding.

Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
Starting was at my wedding as well.

Speaker 5 (01:19:32):
Oh my god. I love her so much and I'm
working on a bunch of films and I'm hoping that
when I get the funding that I can afford to
bring her into them, because i want to work with
her so bad. She's literally my favorite actor, one of
my favorite all time actresses. And so tell us what
so the Guardians of Justice. First of all, you guys,
I wrote down it's an animation action adventure. I started

(01:19:52):
watching it yesterday, okay, But the people that are in it,
I wrote down Diamond Dallas Page, which goes by Dallas
Page now, Shawnie Vincent, Denise Richard, Zachary Tye Bryant. The
Eric Meers has also been on the show. Jackson Rathbone,
Kellen Lutz, Edie Gothigi, Max Adler has been on the show.
Jane Seymour, Richard Epcar and r.

Speaker 6 (01:20:11):
Jamie Sebol Yes, Bill James Sebol, Yeah sherely.

Speaker 5 (01:20:18):
So, so tell us a little bit about the show
and what you do with the show. Well, Okay, I'm a.

Speaker 3 (01:20:26):
Co creator of the series It's It's It's a TV
series on Netflix. I'm the casting director, a co producer,
and the first inclusivity advocate in Hollywood to be credited
on a television show, which was really nice. It's It's
the superhero show. It's based off of DC characters, and

(01:20:48):
the whole purpose for me was to go and find
our r J middies in it as well from Breaking Bad,
but the whole purpose was to find people who don't
normally play these type of roles or who have been
put in boxes and give them an opportunity to play.
Yeah two stuff do.

Speaker 5 (01:21:07):
Something totally different because like that. First of all, I'm
a big superhero, So I collect superheroes, superhero action figures,
action figures of people who've been on the show, and
horror movie action figures and memorabilia.

Speaker 3 (01:21:18):
Okay, so I have all action figures from that show.
I was told there might be some merchandise in the futures.
I hope, so that would be great. Yeah, pretty show.
I mean it's like a little low it's a it's
a low budget show. I mean we did it barely
with like with our hands, you know, but it was.
It ran the course of almost like five years, and

(01:21:40):
studios director Audie shake Guard, director Brett Anice who was
one of our showrunners, director Sean Dealoch who was our writer.
Jenny Powell was our producer. I mean there were so
many like great people behind the scenes like that just
like kept it running and.

Speaker 5 (01:21:59):
It's still now. I mean you can still see it
on Netflix. There's seven episodes I think I saw right, Yeah,
it is.

Speaker 3 (01:22:05):
It's really like this collage of of animation, stop motion miniatures.
All the miniatures you see that those were all built
for the show and live action. It's it's not one
of your normal superhero DC shows. It's not like the Penguin.

(01:22:26):
It really runs in this kind of like I always like,
I always kind of compared to like like an animated
live action of Doctor Who. Like, it's it's we really
built the whole the whole thing with our with our hands.
So but it's it's great. All these people wanted to
onboard because it was something just really unique. You know,
that's how it goes.

Speaker 5 (01:22:45):
You know, I'm gonna actually like watch it. It won't
really be something he'll like, but I will love it.
And I hope that you're not gonna like it.

Speaker 3 (01:22:53):
No, and that's okay. I'm really objective about my work.
But all the actors, like Jade Seymour smokes this gar
like she told me, She's like, I never would ever
do this in my whole life. I vehemently it gets tobacco.
But we needed one of our characters to smoke a cigar.
Like people were doing stuff that they'd never done before
on the show. Not like smoking a cigar is anything

(01:23:14):
that's interesting, but like people were coming on and like,
you know, just taking risks.

Speaker 5 (01:23:20):
It was really cool.

Speaker 6 (01:23:21):
I love it.

Speaker 5 (01:23:21):
Well, you're going to say something.

Speaker 6 (01:23:22):
Yeah, we got to red Parpets that Jane Seymour was
in because our friend.

Speaker 5 (01:23:27):
Is Michael Damiens.

Speaker 6 (01:23:29):
Michael Michael Damien, you know who. Michael Damien is a singer.

Speaker 5 (01:23:34):
Direct man.

Speaker 3 (01:23:35):
I'm not going to go there because no, I don't.
It's start coming out.

Speaker 6 (01:23:38):
Damien was very famous years back, and he has done
two movies that are stupendous. They're fabulous. You must see them.
They're dance movies. They're musicals. He broke okay, he brought
back the musical and I forgot.

Speaker 5 (01:23:53):
That high strong and high strong free dance Jane Seymore
was in both of them.

Speaker 6 (01:23:56):
And Jane Seymour was in both of them. But Hi Strong.
There's a scene in the subway where they're dancing that
my breath was taken away from me. I really mean it.
I was breathless. The dancing was unbelievable, the music, the chord,
the whole thing. I look like cuswumps, look look at that.

Speaker 5 (01:24:17):
Michael Damian too has he's the one who researched Lindsay.

Speaker 6 (01:24:21):
Lohan and his wife, Michael and his wife.

Speaker 5 (01:24:23):
Yeah, he's the one who got Linda Lohan back, you know,
and did what she did one of his films and
and came back on doing all these films again. And
Nichola he's the one who discovered Nicholas GLITZI who now
he's like the movies with Everybody and Hathaway and yeah,
the biggest movie.

Speaker 6 (01:24:38):
And I interviewed that cute little man we entered.

Speaker 5 (01:24:41):
He was super nice when we met that.

Speaker 6 (01:24:42):
I interviewed that cute number and I wanted to ask him,
are you okay? Because I knew already Bob, Well, I can't.
I don't help people, but anyway.

Speaker 3 (01:24:52):
I'm to help people either. But you have no idea,
how many people are are we do?

Speaker 1 (01:24:58):
I know?

Speaker 6 (01:24:58):
We do know. I said to him, you're too cute
to be strict.

Speaker 5 (01:25:05):
It's Jude.

Speaker 6 (01:25:07):
He didn't argue with.

Speaker 3 (01:25:10):
Actually you have take a like that.

Speaker 5 (01:25:13):
No, it's a great compliment. He was very, very nice.
And all the movies in Michael Dean, all the people
in Michael Damian movies.

Speaker 6 (01:25:19):
You know Jimmy and r And didn't you know that Jimmy.

Speaker 5 (01:25:22):
They were married. So so I actually wrote down first
of all, these are films that you did the casting.

Speaker 6 (01:25:31):
On some of the films.

Speaker 5 (01:25:32):
And the reason I did it is because like we've
had like so many of the people that you have
cast in films on our show. Many did Corbin Nash,
which was a great movie, by the way, and it
starred Corey Fellman, who's been on the show. Malcolm McDowell's
been on the show. Courtney Gaines has been on the show.
Bruce Davidson. I just had a phone call with he's

(01:25:53):
gonna come on the show, and Rutger Howard then you
did uh one time and then he he did The
Employer that also has Malcolm McDonald, David das Masci and
who I Love and Billy Zane, Armed Response, Ethan hang Away,
Armed Response with Ethan Ambry, Cleo Duval, Carrie Always, Alan Arkin,

(01:26:13):
Adam rk and Ving Raims, The Monkeys, Paul which Is
were great. Stephen Lange, we interviewed him on the show
CJ Toms, Charles Dunne, Gut Shot Straight with George Ees
and Aneline McCord, Stephen Segal, Ted Levine, Vinnie Jones, Stephen
Lang again, Tia Career, Fiona Dor she's been on the show.
To Stephen Lane was fabulous though we love Stephen Ron

(01:26:35):
danced with him and everything.

Speaker 14 (01:26:37):
You dance with Stephen Lane, shut up cheap to cheap, No, yes,
because live, I have it on video.

Speaker 6 (01:26:46):
I have it on video. I was interviewing him and
I said to him, you are the least homophobic human
I have ever met. You are so gay friendly, it's wonderful.
And he said, I love gay people. Well, I said,
so dance with me and he said okay, and he
got up and we did a slow dance cheek to
cheat there. We I love the man. He's an absolute dull.

(01:27:14):
After the interview, we hung out, we ate, we had
a beautiful evening with him and learned all about his wife,
who was a costumer for movies, was quite formal. And
he's just a gent and a wonderful human being and
a brilliant actor.

Speaker 3 (01:27:32):
So now, oh absolutely, Now have you guys seen Severings
on Apple TV? Have you watched that show?

Speaker 5 (01:27:38):
I watched it, but like, somebody just texted me to
this in our chat room said that they just watched it.

Speaker 6 (01:27:42):
Was it good?

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
Up?

Speaker 3 (01:27:44):
Just down, like like a half an hour ago. Oh
that's so wild. I'm really intuitive. Anyway, Well, whoever texted
you in what chat room? This chat room?

Speaker 6 (01:27:54):
Chat room?

Speaker 3 (01:27:54):
Yeah, oh, well, whoever want Christopher? Since you guys were
talking about gays. I mean, like, Christopher Walking is super
amazing that he plays a he plays a guy.

Speaker 6 (01:28:06):
Here you go. I lived when I was a kid,
We lived in a storia and they used to call
Christopher's name is really ron Ronnie. It's not it's wrong.
And his aunt on the bakery up the block from us,
and I used to get my birthday cakes from it,
and I would ride the BMG train home with Christopher Walking.

(01:28:29):
I know him for years and I knew his wife.
That's so wild. What the hell? From my neighborhood and
Christopher was on was doing The King and I. He
was one of the children on Broadway and The King
and I and we used to somehow come home three
o'clock in the morning, you know, from Manhattan on the

(01:28:50):
b MT. And he'd be there in his white tight
dungarees with red sox and hand of a weird shirt
and I'd go sit with him. We both wet, We
both got off the same stuff, and he was a
nice guy.

Speaker 3 (01:29:08):
Duns, did you say dungrease? Yes, reminded me of that
song from Fun Home where She's.

Speaker 5 (01:29:15):
Likes that jeans.

Speaker 6 (01:29:18):
Yeah, he knows. He was in his white jeans, red socks,
and white tennis sneakers.

Speaker 5 (01:29:25):
How did you so, how did you become a cast
How did you go from like this the star to
also then becoming a casting director? Was that a difficult
thing to do?

Speaker 3 (01:29:35):
I mean, it's just part of you know, being creative.
I mean to me, it was not separating one. It was, well,
it was separating one from another, but it was more
of like an organic journey.

Speaker 5 (01:29:45):
Like I was an actor in Chicago.

Speaker 3 (01:29:48):
I mean I auditioned for Broadway and I was in
the circle of theater, the amazing, amazing artists at Chicago.
Like I still to this day, every day wake up
and I think of that, And that is not being saggerating.
I think of it all the time. My my, my, start.
But you know, I I noticed, like after being in
all these like really great, amazing shows. You know they

(01:30:10):
were nominated for I think they were called Jeff they
were the Non Equity Jeff's so the Tony version of
the Jeff Award for Non Equity theater, right, But the
actors of that circle, like I just felt like, you know,
you're backstage, you know when it's like backstage, you know.

(01:30:31):
But I was doing plays, So I stopped doing musicals,
not because I stopped, but I just was on just
speak for plays, and I just you would constantly hear
because you're in the circles of theater. You know, what's next?
What do you want to speak for?

Speaker 5 (01:30:44):
What's going on?

Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
What's the next project? You know how it works? Right, Ron,
are you following me? Yeah, Jim, Like you know you're
what are you gonna do? You're in a show, so
what are you gonna talk about? What you're doing next?
And I would hear about all these like horror storyories
of these auditions that people were going on in our
own circles. I I was thinking, this is really crazy.

(01:31:05):
It's not possible that you could be treated this way,
like like like cattle, you know. I mean, I understand
the cattle calls, but in the inner circle of theater,
when you're being called in with a director for you know,
for a seasonal audition, knowing that the actors are all
running in the same circles. It didn't seem that artistic

(01:31:27):
directors or directors or casting directors were so negatively impacting
actors that they would be telling hord audition stories backstage
in Chicago in the tidy circle of theater that's like
the inner group. So anyway, whatever, I just decided that
I wanted to start changing the way it worked and

(01:31:48):
start having more of a dialogue with actors. And I
decided someone's got to do something about this shit, because
it's horrible the way actors are feeling. I mean, you
tell I'm sorry, I'm talking too much.

Speaker 5 (01:31:58):
You tell me how many how many horrible.

Speaker 3 (01:32:01):
Audition stories have you heard throughout the years of actors
talking about their like awful audition stories.

Speaker 5 (01:32:07):
Have you heard of any of those?

Speaker 7 (01:32:08):
You know?

Speaker 5 (01:32:08):
You know, I hear them all the time, and I'm
very similar. I don't I'm not a casting director. But
because we have so many great people come on this show,
I keep a list and I get contacted all the
time by people saying, hey, you know you have you
know who?

Speaker 11 (01:32:22):
Do you know?

Speaker 5 (01:32:22):
I'm looking for some India actors. I got about five
hundred actors that are famous that I can go to
you know for sure and just find out. And so
I help, but I don't get paid for it. I
just do it to be a nice guy and help
you know people.

Speaker 6 (01:32:33):
And you you brought up Christopher Walkin's name. Did you
know that his wife was a casting director?

Speaker 3 (01:32:40):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:32:40):
I did not not, but now I do.

Speaker 6 (01:32:42):
She's retired now because she's like a hundred.

Speaker 5 (01:32:45):
But she worked in Full Circle, Silver Cup or something.
So she worked in Queen's Plaza in Silver Cup Studios,
which used to be a breadmaking factory that converted it
to a studio. And she had a business in Manhattan
and she was a casting director for you. So it
is a big one too. So you did it, you

(01:33:05):
became a casting director? Are you frozen?

Speaker 17 (01:33:08):
Like?

Speaker 3 (01:33:09):
I want only wanted to have a dialogue with with
actors instead of just like a monologue, so like it's
a one way street. Really, there's no reciprocation at all,
you know, Like listen, I love the lgbt Q YA
plus A, B, C, D, E, F G H I
j K community, right, I mean, that's fantastic. But my
community is the artistic community. Like I could tell already

(01:33:31):
you guys are part of my community. I don't judge
people based on a group. I judge people based on individuals.
And I felt like actors were becoming part of a
group so like this mass and I didn't feel that
that was like really right for artists, and.

Speaker 5 (01:33:47):
So yes, they still had to do it. It's not right,
You're right, it's yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:33:53):
I mean, why why am I quizzing an actor that
I've seen that?

Speaker 5 (01:33:57):
Why are we quizzy actors that.

Speaker 3 (01:33:58):
We've seen on the stage like five times, we know
their capability and then calling them in and having them
read these lines like they can't do it in the
first place. I mean, I feel like the process always
has to be about trust and my relationships. My relationships
I always have to base off of trust, you know,
and in respect I mean obviously, I mean I'm not

(01:34:18):
the most perfect person in the world either, but I
certainly don't degrade actors and artists no matter what their
resume is, like, it doesn't matter. There's a place for everybody.
Will said he wants to be an actor. We hear
the term bad actor all the time, and there's really
I mean, you know what they say.

Speaker 6 (01:34:37):
There's no.

Speaker 3 (01:34:39):
There's no small parts, only small actor's, no small roles,
only small actors. You've heard that ship before, right, It's like, well, no,
there are small parts, and there are no small actors.
It's just the actors that get to play small parts.
But yeah, there are small parts in shows.

Speaker 5 (01:34:57):
I'm sorry, I know plenty of I was in a
movie you read.

Speaker 6 (01:35:07):
I was in a movie where I played a cop
who was from New York and he liked to push
people around. So he went to Pennsylvania where he could
push the farmers the hicks around. Okay, I am a
character that's like, I know you did it, I know
your brother did it.

Speaker 5 (01:35:23):
You did it, yelling at.

Speaker 6 (01:35:25):
This guy and he got up and he said, oh,
you're a bastard, like your what were bastard? So I
looked at the camera and to kill wonderful you know,
come on and do it. I charged them up with

(01:35:47):
my total New York horrible nasty cop miss and all
he could think to me was, Oh, you're a bastard. Meanwhile,
the guy was so horrible, so terrible, I couldn't work
with him.

Speaker 3 (01:35:59):
Well, see now that that's attitude and ego. And attitude
and ego have everything to do with someone not being
able to be capable of acting.

Speaker 6 (01:36:06):
Now you know why I couldn't work with him. I
told the producer, He's making me look like I'm grandstanding.
He's making me look like I'm a show off. He's
making my parent see I listen, I know what you're saying.

Speaker 3 (01:36:19):
But that.

Speaker 6 (01:36:21):
I knew Betty Davis, and I knew Betty pretty well,
and she used to always say, my leading men have
to be weak because the two strengths we're gonna we're
gonna fight each other. So she always had men that
were not tough and strong. And I said to her, why, why,
why it would be wonderful to see you work with

(01:36:42):
somebody else that's tough. She said, no, it wouldn't happen.
It doesn't happen on the screen run because then it becomes.

Speaker 3 (01:36:49):
Mean, you guys, because you guys have way more more
interesting stories than I do. Let me just tell you
I'm fascinated right now.

Speaker 5 (01:37:00):
First of all, so Ron Ron will be eighty five
and next month. So he's a little older than Christopher Walkin,
but he was friends with Betty Davis. His best friend
was during Jean Russell.

Speaker 3 (01:37:12):
Oh my god.

Speaker 5 (01:37:13):
He worked with Elizabeth Taylor. He's worked. He's kind of
like done the Gammuck you know of older Hollywood, and
I'm like the eighties friends with Cory Haym, but what
a Felman and those kinds of people.

Speaker 6 (01:37:22):
When I did it, it was.

Speaker 5 (01:37:25):
I was very good friends with Corey Haim.

Speaker 6 (01:37:27):
But Barbara Barbara Standwick used to love to scream with
people in the film you know, that was our thing.
We went to see Barbara Stanwick. I do a crazy
ship with a guy. So when you have it, when
you are acting strong and your person you're talking to

(01:37:48):
doesn't come back strong, it doesn't play.

Speaker 3 (01:37:53):
Yeah, I mean that's yeah, that's a leg a kid
aesthetic response what you're talking about.

Speaker 5 (01:37:57):
Yeah, No, I absolutely.

Speaker 17 (01:38:00):
Stood.

Speaker 6 (01:38:00):
That's the best to come up. I said, who wrote
that ship? What man said?

Speaker 5 (01:38:07):
I want to go back to him though, I'm going
to go back. No, I love it.

Speaker 3 (01:38:11):
No, Ron, please keep going.

Speaker 8 (01:38:12):
No.

Speaker 3 (01:38:12):
I mean this is frustration that I hear a lot.

Speaker 5 (01:38:15):
You know, we've never had a pasting director. So you
you you went from doing places because now you're doing
you know, movies, and these aren't little shitty These are
a little two hundred thousand dollar movies. These are movies,
you know, real real productions.

Speaker 3 (01:38:27):
Yeah, they're getting theatrical releases, but you know subb is
going to watch them and they I mean, I'll have
to be honest. I mean, they don't stand up to
like a Universal or you know, Universal Studios, Philbore anything
like you know, we still we still have limited budgets.
But it's about it's about the people that make the film.

(01:38:48):
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter what
story I say. What's out there is out there. And
that's what I find is the beauty of theater is
that every night is a different performance, like you know,
and then when it's over, it's done. You can't go
back to it. But in film, I could tell you
about all the amazing takes and rehearsals in the entire process.
The only thing you're gonna see is what we ended

(01:39:10):
up with, you know what I mean? So it doesn't
matter what. Like, you know, your experience is the same
as everybody else's. It's also it's like, you know, it's
subjective to whatever the viewer sees. But I always say,
grab a great bag of popcord. If you don't like popcorn,
find some reason that's or whatever.

Speaker 6 (01:39:27):
Is that you like.

Speaker 3 (01:39:28):
And I mean, I usually feel that people will enjoy
the films that I've worked on because the actors are great,
and it's really interesting to see these stars and these
type of roles that you don't normally see them in,
and that's what really makes it exciting.

Speaker 5 (01:39:42):
I've seen several of your films. You ask, I've seen
several of the films, and they're really good.

Speaker 6 (01:39:48):
You're you're an honest casting director. There are casting directors
that are not honest. For a thousand dollars, they'll put
you in the movie. All for sexual favors, they'll put
you in the movie.

Speaker 14 (01:40:00):
Yeah, I know, I know we can talk about that.
That's extremely important. Yeah, I know these stories today we
have pay to play. You know what pay to play is? No,
we don't you have it even.

Speaker 3 (01:40:19):
And I think that's hard and I don't try that
kind of said. You could ask me a quite of course. Yeah,
I understand where you go, you go, keep going run.

Speaker 6 (01:40:26):
I just finished a movie where I was furious with
the producer because he had a bunch of pay to
play people in it, and I said, they stink. They
just stood there jerking off and they didn't know what
the fuck they were doing, and it possess off. Everybody
got pissed off, all the actors. We don't want to
be doing with people that don't know how to act.
They were cleaning a street on Thursday and Friday.

Speaker 3 (01:40:48):
They're in the movie, yep, because they had the money
to do it right, because they had the money pay
to play.

Speaker 6 (01:40:56):
We know one jerk that was in the movie I finished.
I won't mention them. He listen. He's not an actor,
but he has over one hundred and one movies. He's
been a year in a year. He's been in one
hundred and one movies in a year, and he walks
around like he's Mall and Brando. I mean, really and truly,

(01:41:18):
guy's an idiot. He paints every movie to be in it.
You got his name in it.

Speaker 3 (01:41:23):
I don't know how to comment on that particular per se.
I'm just listening to what you're saying. But when I
say bad, when you say bad actors, I think non actors,
they're not.

Speaker 5 (01:41:33):
Really that's where I go.

Speaker 6 (01:41:35):
You hit it. I was going to say that even.

Speaker 3 (01:41:37):
If you're a bad actor, you're still an actor. But
the people you're writing to me are not actor.

Speaker 5 (01:41:43):
Act No, right, no, you're right about that. So wait,
I want to go to because we only have eight
minutes and I have two things I want to let
go over forget no, no, no.

Speaker 3 (01:41:52):
No, hold on, I really I'm not messing around.

Speaker 6 (01:41:55):
I want to.

Speaker 5 (01:41:55):
I don't know how to get a hold of you,
and maybe I should call back, but HI, just get
ready to do that. So you guys, I really want to.

Speaker 6 (01:42:11):
Here, Please Springs come see us.

Speaker 3 (01:42:15):
Now, Okay that's what Okay, that's what I would saying.

Speaker 5 (01:42:18):
I really want to I really want.

Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
To see you.

Speaker 5 (01:42:20):
Matt that you want to match, got my phone number email.
I'll just tell Matt that I said it's okay to
give it to him. But I want to thank Matt
Chason because he set this up. He told me that
you're directing a one act play and an adaptation of
Snows of Kill Him and Jarrow and uh and uh so,
Gary Cooper is my favorite actor of the of the

(01:42:41):
old Gary Cooper and and uh and carry granted because
I think they're the two hottest like men on the planet.
And uh so they were like always like my favorite.
So you're doing a one act play of it, so
tell us a little bit about it, because I know
it starred Gary Cooper and Ingland Berdman. Yeah, so okay,
I'll tell you a little bit about it.

Speaker 3 (01:43:00):
First of all, I cannot describe to you how and
now I have goosebumps, but how incredible this cast is.
It's a two person cast that Matt fostered for me,
and it's, uh this I'm kind of I hope I
don't like call them out, but right now, as of now,
like as long as they're staying in. And it's this

(01:43:22):
fantastic actress as Sarah Gaston and actor Brian Forrest that
are both in the in the show. I So here's
the deal. My mom came from France. She immigrated to
this country. She was in New York. It's not a
long story, but this is really interesting. And she was
a French made for a very rich family in New York.

(01:43:42):
When she got here, I think that was like in
the late like in the sixties, and she was forced
to wear a French made outfit, like a French made outfit,
you know.

Speaker 5 (01:43:54):
Like clue with her.

Speaker 3 (01:44:00):
No no, no, okay. So she was forced to wear
this type of outfit and she spilled food on the
floor and it was an accident, you know, like at
the same time, she's going to school at nighttime because
she wanted to become a flight attendant learning English, and
they had the Snows of kill Manjaro playing that evening
on the television, you know those old rotary televisions. And

(01:44:23):
because she spilled food, the woman of the house said,
go straight to your room and falls and go to sleep.
You're not doing anything tonight. And my mom said, please,
they're playing the Stoves of killibin jar tonight. I really
want to see it. And she said absolutely not. She's like,
look at what you've done. And my mom called her home.
She had one phone call that night. She called and

(01:44:45):
she called her mom crying, my min my grandmother, and
I just then story never left my head because I
remember watching the Stoves of Killbanjaro, you know, like on
Saturday morning, ors you know the Saturday those old reruns
that you know, yeah, movie runs on television when I
was growing up, and I wanted to do something for

(01:45:06):
my mom to honor her, and I said, I want
to write I want to adapt this place so that
my mom never has to ever be without it, like
so that it will always be in her memory. So
I wrote this a long time ago, adapted it, and
I've gone. I had a stage reading where I invited
my mom here to watch the stage reading, and for

(01:45:28):
years I've been like working out finessing the play. It's
really it's Earnest Hevyway is very difficult, but this show
was a lot more than just the man degrading a
woman and stuff, and there was a spirit there that
I wanted to have that could like bring in all audiences.
He's very very difficult writer, because you know, I don't

(01:45:50):
want the woman to be subjected to just like all
this like you know, manipulation. So I wrote it. I
wrote it in my voice as well, and I researched
a lot of Ernest Heavyway. I pulled stories from outside
of the book as well, and I kind of like
almost like wrote it like a poem.

Speaker 5 (01:46:09):
So it just moves really fast.

Speaker 3 (01:46:10):
It was originally around like I don't know, fifty sixty pages,
it's down to like forty two. Now it's one act
and there's no que coup drivers, there's no Molo, he's
out of the character. It's just the man and the woman.
And by the end of the hope, by the end
of the show, you feel some sort of empathy and

(01:46:32):
hatred for both of these people. But what I really
wanted to do is the landscape of the show is
set in a museum diorrama. So you know, the taxidermy
animals that you go to natural history museum and you
see like like you know, that's the set, So this
set would look like a museum di rama. It's not

(01:46:52):
really in Kilbanjaro. It feels like these people are absolutely
stuck there. So like the little box that we're in,
it's framed like a museum dirama. There's the museum pedestals
at the at the front of the stage, which has
the you know, the description of kilban Jarro, the set,
the scenery, so it feels like you're walking into a
museum and then these things come to life and there's

(01:47:13):
a dog in front of me. So I it's a
little there's a there's a theme to it. But the actor,
the actor I asked her from like the Jetsons. Yeah,
you guys are hilarious. Anyway, I had it performed and
I just I really am very excited, mostly because of

(01:47:34):
Matt Who's.

Speaker 6 (01:47:34):
You think your audience would know who Gary Cooper and
Ingrid Bergman are.

Speaker 3 (01:47:40):
I would hope that my audience forgets about Gary Cooper
and Ingrid Bergman in order to fall into a new,
a new world, not forgets about them, but that their
their preconceived notion of this show are eliminated when they come.

Speaker 5 (01:48:00):
You have a you have a producer for this to play.

Speaker 1 (01:48:05):
You have a.

Speaker 6 (01:48:08):
Don't know why because I was going to recommend stan Zimmerman.
You know Stan Zimmerman.

Speaker 3 (01:48:14):
I uh, sounds familiar, but I'd have to talk to
about because I mean, I'm like already.

Speaker 6 (01:48:19):
Have them throwing a name of him. You never know
if he wants to talk to stan stan Zemmerman does
all the.

Speaker 5 (01:48:26):
Plays, and he used to be the writer for the
Golden Girls.

Speaker 6 (01:48:28):
So he used to write for the Golden Girls.

Speaker 5 (01:48:30):
Shut up because it's.

Speaker 3 (01:48:32):
A friend of ours, have they have to he has
to watch this reading that we did and not we
should set Matt up with to be honest, like, but anyway,
that's sorry everybody, it's we're we're we're doing what is
it called industry talk. But I hope that everybody gets
a chance to see it and you know or hear

(01:48:53):
about it. The future play cold I'm calling it White
Mountain and adaptation.

Speaker 6 (01:49:00):
He's not say it because you're going to have an
old audience, So say it's slow.

Speaker 5 (01:49:07):
They can hear me.

Speaker 3 (01:49:08):
I still age doesn't matter to me, by the way, but.

Speaker 6 (01:49:12):
We only have like ten.

Speaker 5 (01:49:13):
Seconds, so you check it. So always bought by older people.

Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
White Mountain, I know a white white Mountain. A play
by carbon I Yellow adapted from the short Stories Does
Abound killiman Jaro by Ernest Hemingway.

Speaker 5 (01:49:29):
Okay, perfect, so real quick, because we're out of time.
We want to thank Matt Chason for setting this whole
thing up. I also want to congratulate you we didn't
have time that you're going to have a role in
Michael Musaso's film Once Upon a Killing Time, which he's
actually a really good indie filmmaker. He's one of the
ones I have a lot of water. Yes, I have

(01:49:49):
a lot of respect for him. And all the things
that he does. He pays all his actors and he
does a really good job, and his graphics and everything
is good and sometimes hens, but he does and crowd
fun for the actors he lets. He only hires real
actors and stuff. So he's really got a ship together.
And so thank you so much. So tell Matt to
give you my contact and let's talk. And thank you

(01:50:11):
so much for coming on the show again. Thanks Matt Chason,
and we'll see you soon.

Speaker 6 (01:50:15):
Look forward.

Speaker 3 (01:50:17):
I can't wait to see you guys. Thank you, guys, goody,
goodbye bye.

Speaker 5 (01:50:21):
Hi everybody, we'll see you next week. Thanks for tuning in.
We had a good time. Hope you did too, and
we'll see you next week. Bye bye. Gimme I don't
drinking well we yae.

Speaker 2 (01:50:44):
We got the detective Wick to give me. We don't
want to help me, don't want to know jimsy ways, Jimmy,
give me.

Speaker 4 (01:50:57):
Take you

Speaker 5 (01:51:00):
Stop
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