All Episodes

July 23, 2025 110 mins
Multi-platinum singer Jimmy Constable from the UK Boy Band 911 and Australian actor John Jarratt (Wolf Creek) join us on this episode of The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell broadcast live from the W4CY studios on Wednesday, July 23rd, 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.
Mark as Played
Transcript

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):
Gimme Contective Gray, gave me.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
Don't want to wait, jim don't give me? Thank you?

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Hey, Hello, what's up everybody? Welcome to the Jimmy Star
Show with Ron Russell, bringing you the good times in music, fashion,
pop culture and entertainment. We got a great show for
you guys today. I'm super excited about it. Before I
tell you who's coming on, let me say give a
huge shout out to my cool, outrageous man about town post,
mister Ron Russell.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
Well, nothing too outrageous going on. It's summertime, and summertime
in Palm Springs is a graveyard, and eli of course
nothing is going on. Everything starts happening in October, then
we start going to red carpets and events. We have
the one up at the Penhouse, Madame, Halloween Hotness, Halloween Hotness,

(01:46):
and then we have Suffer Report. But right now it's quiet,
but I'll give you an update on my health because
a lot of people have been asking how I feel.
I have wonder battle with this stupid old age thing
that you get from too much anesthesia, where you lose
your marvels, and I've come back. The only thing I

(02:08):
make my own breakfast now. Jimmy brought me my breakfast
in bed. For the whole time that I was iilt,
I wasn't able to make my breakfast or cook or
do anything.

Speaker 4 (02:20):
But now I'm back.

Speaker 5 (02:22):
I only I'm only very sleepy and very weak. The
weekiece will go away. That is another couple of months.
But all lit all, I feel terrific and I'm happy
to be rolling again. Now if my energy onia came back,
I'd be really super happy.

Speaker 6 (02:41):
Cool.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
So the chant room is filling up quick. We got
a great show for you guys today. We have two
fantastic guests. I'm super duper excited for both of them.
The first guest, you guys, is Jimmy Constable. He is
from the UK boy band nine to one one. They're fabulous.
I first bought their first album. I was actually in
England when it came out and I bought it and

(03:01):
brought it back to America. I'm super excited about having
them on. I want to give a quick shout out
to Mark Love Rush Schneider, one of our favorite people
in the world. And bite Back, the bite Back Agency
who reps nine to one one. Because Mark Love Rush
went to bite Back, bite Back said yes, we'll bring
them on the show. I'm very excited and I'm thankful
and you guys can check them both out bitebackagency dot

(03:24):
com if you're ever looking for great talent for an event.
And I want to thank them and we'll thank them
again later. Also, our second guest today, you guys, is
John Jarrett. He's one of the biggest Australian actors in
the history of Australia for the last fifty years. He's
fantastic and he plays Mick Taylor in the Wolf Creek

(03:45):
movies and anybody who's a horror movie knows who what
Wolf Creek is and so I'm super duper excited about
having him on and he's got a new movie that
I don't think it's out in America yet, but it's
doing really well in Australia. And it's not a horror
movie because he's done all kinds of things. He's a
real actor who does everything, so I'm super excited about it.
I also want to remind everybody that my book Pop

(04:06):
goes to Collector on sale on Amazon fourteen ninety nine
for the book, seven ninety nine for the kindle, and
you can get it anybody who's interested in collecting Funko pops.
And Ron and I have our own Funko pops. I
should get those out one day and so we can
show everybody again because it's been a long time. Storage
Yes we did. And also we want to thank be Claudia.
Be Claudia sent a beautiful card me Be Claudia.

Speaker 5 (04:29):
It took a month to get here from Germany, but
she sent me a very beautiful get world card, and
I thank you very much for your caring and thinking
of me. And yes I'm doing very well. The doctors
are amazed at how I snapped back. Lots of people
take a year or more, but I did it in

(04:49):
three months, four.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Months, so we're rocking and rolling, you guys. We're going
away on vacation, so we're going to have one, I
think two more shows and then we're going taking two
weeks off and then we come back. I've already booked
some great guests, so everything is going really well. We
want to thank everybody. Last week's show did really really well,
and we want to say hi to some of the
people in the chat room. But it's starting to fill up.

(05:10):
I'm not sure who Tara Tara Sagas is exactly, but
hello Tara Sagas, unless that is Terry. That might be Terry.
Don Henn is in there, Lady Lake Music is in there.
Don says she loves our shirts in your.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Head, boy, do we clash today.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
Jeff Caperton just joined us. Hey, Jeff, Stefan Bell is
in there. It's filling up and it's going to be
a great show, you guys. I'm really looking forward to
it and I'm super excited about thee.

Speaker 5 (05:39):
And Jeff Caperton is doing so much. Is on my
Facebook page with so many things that he's doing. He's
a great guy. We really like Jeff and I'm happy
that all is going well for him right Jeff Right.

Speaker 4 (05:53):
Actually, Tara Sagas is a friend of mine Neil Day
in England, so hello, welcome, and I'm sure the other
Terry will be coming on.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
Shoot.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
Jeff Cabridgin's a badass and we're gonna have some films
coming out with him soon, you guys. I think we're
going to be funded soon, so we're going to be
working with him really closely, and you guys are gonna
love it. We also want to thank everybody for listening
on all the different platforms. You can hear the Jimmy
Star Show on The Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell
on a cast, Apple Podcasts, iHeartRadio, SoundCloud, iTunes, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube,

(06:26):
Google podcast Radio, Public tune In, and Amazon Prime. You
can watch us on YouTube and three sixty tv N
And I think you guys will like digg it. And oh,
Hub Reynolds Junior is in the chat room too, who,
by the way, is getting married in August, So congratulations
Hub on your upcoming nuptials. I forgot Whinny said it was.
I think it's like the first week of August though,

(06:47):
so it's coming up soon. And yes, the chat room rocks,
so everybody thanks so much for tuning in and supporting
the show. We totally appreciate it. I'm gonna move these
things out of the.

Speaker 5 (06:57):
Way, all right.

Speaker 4 (06:59):
So what did we do anything? We didn't really do
anything this week?

Speaker 5 (07:01):
Interesting?

Speaker 4 (07:02):
Did we we vegetated? Yes, we vegetated, well.

Speaker 5 (07:05):
Actually not. On Saturday, we helped our friend Diana Stone
move into her new house here in the desert.

Speaker 4 (07:15):
It was hard.

Speaker 5 (07:16):
It was like one hundred and thirteen degrees and we
were running around from store to store to get her.
She needs barstools and needs all sorts of things. And
I think we're going to do it again this weekend
because she's not familiar with any of the stores where
they are, and I know every one of them. So
that was it. But it's great having her here in

(07:37):
the desert. She's a very old friend of mine. She
was very big in the days of Govermento the garment center.
She launched so many high fashion designers, made them famous.
And she's just a wonderful girl. What else?

Speaker 4 (07:55):
So I was getting married on August fifth. You guys
in Alabama, and you and Holly only the best with
everything that you're doing, And.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
Where are you going to live in Alabama.

Speaker 4 (08:08):
Yes, he said he bought a ten acre. He bought
ten acres with four hundred feet of creek front farm
land and in the woods, and they're building a house
for you.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
Your song should be I'm Alabama. I got the whatever.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
You have to add a little bit more twang to
it to get that country twang in there.

Speaker 5 (08:33):
My Brooklyn accent. I doubt there's any twymph, But if
I was in a movie and I had to talk
like that, I probably could. You know, they kind of
sing all the time and talk like this, So I
don't know.

Speaker 4 (08:46):
If I washedon. If he's marrying his cousin.

Speaker 5 (08:55):
That's he's marrying a lovely old Jeff. She's really nice.

Speaker 4 (09:03):
I think that's hilarious.

Speaker 5 (09:05):
Yeah, and Jeff, you're looking very sexy and handsome on
Facebook with all those modeling poses you're doing and all
the cowboys shit.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
You really look good. Absolutely, I think it's terrific. We
also want to welcome don hitting back because she's been
having lots of therapy for her shoulder and so she's
been missed a bunch of weeks. So Hello Don, and
welcome back and therapy.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
I go to therapy for my knee and my guy
jumps on the knee and bends it and twists it
and gives me more pain than when I had the surgery.
So when I hear therapy, I just think, oh no.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
Just as he can't really talk because his family's from Arkansas.
His family's from Arkansas, so he's Jeff Caperton. So he
said he really shouldn't be joking about.

Speaker 5 (09:55):
Maybe he's from parents that her brother and sister they're
really bad. Dad. That's it? Wasn't that the Smoky Mountains
up Arkansas? There's a Smoky mountains.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
I don't know what's in Arkansas?

Speaker 5 (10:09):
Are they the Smoky Mountains in Arkansas? Where are the
Smoky Mountains?

Speaker 4 (10:13):
I have no idea.

Speaker 5 (10:15):
What's an angelly pot? And came from Tennessee, you know,
I don't know if you came from Tennis. I don't
know where are I don't know. I know the Smoky Mountains.
I think maybe Virginia.

Speaker 4 (10:25):
No, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (10:27):
I don't know where they are.

Speaker 4 (10:28):
It's funny, though, because I almost went to Upper Iowa University.
I was going to go to Upper Iowa University to
play tennis, and then I decided there's no way I
could like live like in Iowa, and they used to
joke about it that the only thing they have in
Iowa is steers and queers, isn't it? The only thing
they have in Iowa is steers and queers. And I
was like, and I would have fit, but I wasn't out.

Speaker 5 (10:47):
Then you better trim that bed.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
I know, I didn't have time. You look like, oh man,
that's okay.

Speaker 5 (10:55):
You don't look stock, you look old. I am. I
think it's trade in time.

Speaker 4 (11:01):
Now. There's Smoky mountains are where Dolly Parton is a
smoky mountain? Aren't they Smoky mountains?

Speaker 6 (11:07):
She can?

Speaker 4 (11:08):
Which is where hey bloomer Ma's just joined us too.
We're Tennessee the Smoky Mountain. I don't know where they are.
The Great Smoky Mountains are located along the border between
the United States of North calin United United States, between
North Carolina and Tennessee. Thank you wan.

Speaker 5 (11:23):
Okay, So you know, yeah, they're shit kickers.

Speaker 4 (11:27):
Absolutely totally.

Speaker 5 (11:29):
You got You know a lot of people from New
York are moving to South Carolina. And I said I
could never live in South Carolina because if I had
to hear that accent constantly, I go out of my mind.
It's really a very heavy I don't know Southern. What
the hell kind of accent is it?

Speaker 4 (11:47):
I don't know, but she said Dollywood, which is Dolly
Parton Steam Park that's in Tennessee.

Speaker 5 (11:51):
Right, And they talk really lock. I don't know what
they're saying, and I when they do what they all
that is, I would go nuts. You know. Some people
said the Brooklyn accent they don't understand, and I said, well,
it's not that you don't understand it. You're not cutting it.
I want to go, Okay, I wanna go. It's I

(12:15):
want to go. So we got rid of the other
stuff and we made it. I want to go. Do
you wanna go? Do you wanna go? So some people
just find the Brooklyn accent difficult to understand.

Speaker 4 (12:29):
And on today's show, besides a Brooklyn accent, we're going
to have a British accent in an Australian accent.

Speaker 5 (12:35):
Well, the Australian accent I really like a British accent
is elegant, so we'll see American South. The accent is
really I don't know what hillbilly or just not. It
doesn't sound sophisticated. That's why a lot of like Ava Gardner.

(12:55):
A Gardener came from North Carolin. Know Avagardener, the famous
movie actress married to Frank Sinatra. One of the greatest
beauties in Hollywood anyway, Averagarden that came from North Carolina,
and when Hollywood got her, they worked on her constantly
for her to get rid of her North Carolina accent.
Now you wouldn't think that North Carolina had a heavy accent,

(13:19):
but they do. So once you leave New Jersey you
hear all those nasal twining people.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
Two things real quick before we bring on our first guest.
First thing is pe Claudia has joined us now from Germany.
Hey be So we did a little shout out thanking
you for the card, Andron, thank you for the card.
So thank you so much. That's way you get to
hear it from us. But if you go back and listen,
we talked about you earlier and Stecond Stefan told me
to make sure that I mentioned to check out Collector's

(13:45):
Corner with Jimmy Starr and Dark Fight to Our News
with Jimmy Starr on YouTube because he said, when I
mentioned it here, we get a lot of hits. So
check them out, you guys.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
And when I talked about the get well card you
sent me, I also told people that you were latest
movie You're Totally Naked. Yeah, so it's called The German Girl.

Speaker 4 (14:09):
Love to Be. She said she'll listen to it. Thanks
for the mess, all right. So now we're going to
bring on our first guest. You guys, let's see if
everything's working and let's bring the.

Speaker 7 (14:18):
Money in one.

Speaker 4 (14:21):
Hello, up, his microphone is off. Say something hello, hey, hey, hello, hello,
and welcome. Oh are you you are good? Yeah, we're fantastic.

(14:45):
And before we start, let me introduce you uh to
everybody and so then I'll know who we're talking to
and then we'll just get right into it. So everybody,
now we want to welcome to the Jimmy Stars Show
with One Russell. Jimmy Constable singer, dance. He does everything,
but he's most well known as being one of the
founding members of the amazing UK boy band nine one one.

(15:08):
Hello and welcome to the show. Thank you guys, Thank
you for having me. I'm super excited. This is my cool,
outrageous man about town. Co host Ron Russell. Not so
outrageoust oh, he used to be more outrageous. Also, we're
both kind of on the men from knee surgery. So

(15:28):
we're we're we're getting better as we go along. But
and while we have you on at the very beginning,
I want to again give a shout out to Mark Love,
Rus Schneider and the byte Back Agency for helping set
this whole interview up. We're very grateful for both of them.
Mark's been on the show a bunch of times and
we get millions of plays when he comes on with
all the fabulous musical talent that he knows, and we're

(15:51):
super excited to have you on. And I want to
tell you so when your very first album, I used
to go to England all the time and I would
always go and I would go to Virgin Records because
we don't have that here, like a nice record stores
like that. We don't have those in America. And I
would go and I would just go through and find
all the boy band you know CDs and I would
buy all of them and bring them back to America.

(16:12):
So I got your very first CD. I was probably
in England like two months after it came out, and
I bought it and I listened to every Boyzone West Life.
I know they're Irish, but all the different boy bands
take that obviously, and all the different bands I also liked,
like Blazing Squad and West Life, and I like all

(16:33):
of them. And I'm collecting all the action the dolls
from all of them because I collect action figures and
stuff like that. So everybody who's got the dolls? I
just had my Robbie Williams one come yesterday, and you
guys don't have one. You need to you guys need
to push for them to make like action figures if
you guys, or Funko pops of you guys. Hang on,

(16:57):
something happened, but set it in. Hang on? Okay, what
what's that? What is that? We hear like a little
beeping noise?

Speaker 5 (17:12):
It's a crackling sound.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
Yeah, we hear a crackling sound. All right, try and
putting your mic back on. He needs to refresh the page.
Can you hear me? Refresh the page? It says there,
can you hear me?

Speaker 6 (17:25):
No?

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Yeah? Very good? All right, I do apologize. It might
have been my my ear pops.

Speaker 5 (17:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (17:32):
I think the the funk pops might be a better
idea because I think, obviously, whether you know it or not,
we are probably one of the smallest boy bands. We're
all kind of like five for three, So as you
can imagine, it's probably goes better down for funk pops.

Speaker 5 (17:51):
In England like they are here.

Speaker 4 (17:54):
Yeah, I mean it's yeah.

Speaker 8 (17:55):
My boy said he's fourteen, he's he's big into it
with the superhero and the phenophen arest. So yeah, they're
quite huge collectible over here.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
Yes, I have a huge collection. I just wrote a
book on how to collect them, you know, to make
money and with them and stuff, and I just published
it like three weeks ago, and I'm just very excited
to have you here. So I thought that what we
could do to start a little bit is tell people
a little bit how you you got into the whole thing,
because I read online that you were a dancer and

(18:26):
your other the other two members of nine one one,
you guys, Lee Brennan and Simon daubarn I read, and
I don't know if it's true that you and Simon
were also dancers with Jason Orange uh and that he
formed He got in to take that and they were
so successful. That's how you guys decided to form nine
to one one? Is that true?

Speaker 5 (18:45):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (18:45):
There was a big TV show over here called The
Hitman and Head. It was basically a show where they
would take comers into a nightclub just filmed people downsteam
basically and on the two presenters on stage, who were
Pete walters Man and McKay a Stracking and we would
be the kind of backing dancers if you like, and
myself and Spike. We don't spikeers, Simon and obviously because

(19:09):
again it's probably because of the high thing. And we
were both street dancers and breakdancers and we kind of
became the dancers for the show and got paired together.
And just at the time that we started, Jason Lawyne
was still with us, still break a dancing, part of
his breakdancing team. And when we kind of went off

(19:30):
to rehearse for The hit Man and Hair, we bumped
Jason in a place in Manchester and he would basically
in this other room with these guys. Obviously we didn't
know at the time, so obviously went in said hello
and he was like, oh you know, boy bar and we're.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
Like that will never do anything.

Speaker 8 (19:47):
Come back to The hit Man and are so yeah,
they come, you know, they were like massive as they are,
but yeah, it was kind of funny story that said,
Jay went on to do greater things, and I did
bump into properly four or five years ago. He hasn't
been seen by anybody, and I randomly bumped into him
in a street in Cumbria, up in England. We're had

(20:10):
a cup of coffee with him and he's okay.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
He just you know, he just doesn't.

Speaker 8 (20:13):
Like the the front side of it now. He kind
of wants to be a bit a bit more of
a recluse, which you know, which is fine as long
as he's happy. But yeah, we originally started on a
TV show with Jason, yeah him on in Hear.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
So how big was when you decided to form nine
One one was take that head. They already taken off,
but I don't know when they actually became famous or
they were just at the very beginnings.

Speaker 8 (20:34):
They'd actually literally just split in nineteen ninety five. Nineteen
ninety five was when we started as a band, so
it was literally off the back of them split in
and we obviously decided that, you know, we wanted to
do the same kind of thing, but we didn't have
another member, so we we kind of did things the
hard way and we weren't put together by anybody. Myself
and Simon were as the dancers. Kind of put the

(20:57):
band together ourselves and auditioned people, and our local radio
station had given us a letter that Lee had wrote
in to say, you know, we want to join a
boy band, blah blah. So we kind of met up
and we eventually moved into a place in Glasgow in
Scotland in England, and also our manager was from there.
And to be honest, we spent the first year lugging

(21:20):
our stuff in and out of hands, doing school tours,
trying to get a database before anybody was interested, and
long story show, we eventually had Virgin Records and BMG
in a bidding war. But by this time we'd already
released our own first single, which was nice to remember.
We'd kind of been we had a finance guy on
board with us, so we released it without any help

(21:43):
and it was kind of unheard of that it did.
It got into the charts without any help from the
rep company or the magazines or tv.

Speaker 4 (21:52):
Rgent it was great. That's what it says online. So
online it says basically like you guys formed the band,
nobody wanted you. Uh, then you did a cover of
Shala Mar's Night to remember and love Sensation and after
that it was like a bidding war, and I think
he went with Virgin, right.

Speaker 8 (22:09):
Yeah, I mean we I mean, you know, I don't
want to put it out there too much, but we
we discovered that. Obviously, Simon carl Was was BMG at
the time, and the reason he wanted to sign us
was was to what they call in the business sholds.

Speaker 4 (22:22):
Yeah, a lot of friends with in the past.

Speaker 8 (22:27):
It's very it's And the reason was because he had
this band called Five that were about to come out
and he didn't want to jeopardize anything. So that was
the We kind of found that out by accident, which
is why we went obviously Simon with Virgin.

Speaker 4 (22:40):
Lucially Five is a great band though there Actually actually
I think I wrote down you went on tour a
couple of times with Five, didn't you.

Speaker 8 (22:47):
Yeah, we've donet. You know, we're over there over the years.
We've donet because they have I'm sure they have them
over there as well. But like nostalgic kind of tolls.

Speaker 4 (22:55):
Yeah, we have time, so we have social doesn't know
who any of this stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
I have no idea.

Speaker 8 (23:02):
What the fucking if you that's okay?

Speaker 4 (23:07):
He's going to ask you about how all the women
throw their hes at you.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
First of all, I'm eighty five years old, so when
you were performing, how you were children? I mean you
weren't even born yet. Probably you weren't born yet.

Speaker 8 (23:25):
When you look amazing for eighty five one.

Speaker 5 (23:28):
Thank you so much. But I don't feel so amazing
when you guys talk about this. See I do the
inside stuff. Yeah, you're married, are you gay? Are you straight?
You have a girlfriend, you have children? I do all that.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
We're going to do that in a minute.

Speaker 5 (23:42):
I want to because I really don't know who you
are or what you've done. And that's not that's not
being offensive, it's just federation gup because I'm going to
quiz you. You know who Beggy Lee is? Peggy Lee?

Speaker 8 (23:58):
Do you know who is I'm going to say no,
I'm sorry, No, Where is no Johnny Manthis Johnny mathis?

Speaker 1 (24:07):
I know?

Speaker 6 (24:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (24:08):
Frank Sinatra, Yes, absolutely, those.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Are his favorite singers for people that I knew through
the years. My guarden, I like love it. So who
do you think is the Who's the biggest boy band
like that has ever come out of the UK? Not
including the Beatles? Because I guess they're probably the biggest.
But who do you think is the biggest boy band
that came out of England to.

Speaker 8 (24:32):
Come out of England, I'll probably say I'd probably have
to go with save that.

Speaker 4 (24:36):
Okay, because obviously they did they did the original whatever.

Speaker 8 (24:40):
It was ten years that they were together, and then
obviously they split up for ten years and then they're
back and now they're even even bigger than what they
were back then. So I think if you look at
it as an overall, I think that has to be
the biggest UK.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
Wasn't boy George in a boy band?

Speaker 4 (24:57):
No, boy George was a solo artist. Solo artist, So
I think that because I like, take that. Uh, And
I just watched the reason I bring it up. I
just watched that movie Better Man, which I guess it
tanked in the UK. It didn't do very well, but
it was very interesting actually, And then I was googling
Robbie Williams and take that, and it seems that like
Robbie Williams saw more records on his own then then

(25:19):
take that then he saw would take that absolutely, I
mean a big star. Yeah, he's Robbie. Robbie is huge.

Speaker 8 (25:26):
I mean he's like, yeah, he's like such a such
a huge starle But yeah, I watched the film as well,
and I thought it was amazing because I thought it
was it touched on so many things for me personally,
because obviously the music business for me was great, but
when I came out the other side of it, when
we kind of like kind of called it a day,
it was like I didn't know how to die. So

(25:47):
I kind of kind of went into the you know,
the drugs and the alcohol and the downside of things.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
So it it touched a nerve.

Speaker 8 (25:54):
I think when I watched that, I think it's it's
a great movie.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
I thought it was great.

Speaker 4 (25:57):
You know, I don't know why it didn't do I mean,
I guess I know why I didn't amazing, you know,
because I don't know that unless you really like boy
band's I don't know that if Americans know who Robbie
Williams and everybody is exactly not like they do. At
least he's a He was a judge on X Factor too,
because I always watch X Factor UK in the auditions,

(26:19):
I really only like the auditions. Robbie william We has
a house in La so.

Speaker 5 (26:24):
I have to go through my brain. Now, why why
that's huge?

Speaker 4 (26:28):
He there, he is right there, that's his I have
his accent, and I think I know this person. I
know you've never met him. You've never met No, I'm
positive if we met Robbie Williams, like we would have like,
instead of five million people watching the show, we would
have fifty minutes.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Absolutely, this is the name sounds so familiar.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
He's very popular.

Speaker 5 (26:49):
To ask you another question, what do you think of
Joan Collins?

Speaker 8 (26:54):
Yeah, I mean she's she's a huge star, isn't she.
I mean she's like, you know, there's some.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
When I was in England. When I was in England,
I went to theater and while we were waiting to
go into theater, I said to one of the people
standing there waiting, I said, so, what you know, what
do you think about Joan Collins? And she said, oh,
we're so sick of her, and we're so happy you
got her. So is that true that the English people

(27:21):
are sick of Joan Collins? No?

Speaker 8 (27:23):
I mean I think I think it's just that, you know,
there's so many people, and to be honest, I think
she's kind of stratosphial level.

Speaker 4 (27:30):
You know, there's only so.

Speaker 8 (27:31):
Many people that that that are that at that level.
You know you're talking John Collins is one of them.
But I think it's because we associate stars being you know,
the kind of you know, even to a point where
Robbie Williams and all them is that, yes, they're huge.
Well I think you know, Joan Collins and maybe a
few others. Sinatra is one of those that are like,
you can't reach that level.

Speaker 5 (27:52):
It's just not we love her. We love her here
and I'll plug her movie. She's got a movie she
just did I think for HB where she plays one
of the most famous English dignitaries, the wife of who you.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
Shouldn't plug stuff. If you don't know, then.

Speaker 5 (28:12):
You know. I'm hoping. I'm hoping that to work with
Joan right.

Speaker 4 (28:17):
Oh yes, absolutely, yeah.

Speaker 5 (28:19):
Joan may be in a movie that I'm going to
be in. I'm looking so forward to meeting her. You know,
to me, she's an icon because she's ninety years old
and looks gorgeous and sexy for ninety.

Speaker 4 (28:34):
I've never acted, have you ever acted?

Speaker 5 (28:39):
I was going there?

Speaker 4 (28:40):
Okay, well, I'm asking for my own reasons because I'm
doing a movie with boy band members and.

Speaker 5 (28:44):
Like, wait, listen, fuck this, wait your turn. Okay, we're married,
so I'm allowed to say things.

Speaker 4 (28:53):
Like yes, go ahead just to say what you want
to say.

Speaker 5 (28:59):
Because I'm for that age. We have to keep it.

Speaker 4 (29:02):
Have you ever acted it? Before?

Speaker 5 (29:05):
I was saying that, have you ever acted? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (29:08):
Well actually myself and another do you know?

Speaker 1 (29:10):
Do you know?

Speaker 4 (29:10):
Boy band Police seventeen? I love the seventeen. I've been
trying to tell and Mark he's got to help get
him on the show. I love him, especially when they
did the remake of Gabrielle. The Gabrielle and stuff was
super great. But He's seventeen is fabulous. They're one of
my favorites. As a matter of fact, I even when
I was there at a flea market, I bought an
East seventeen T shirt. I mean that's thirty years ago.

(29:30):
But I don't know what happened to him. But yes,
definitely Terry us in seventeen.

Speaker 8 (29:36):
So we're doing a movie at the minute where we've
only done the trailer, and I think it's a Netflix
thing that they're interested in called The Blog, which is
based on a true story basically true painter and decorators
that tried to get famous back in the late eighties.
So yes, we've been acting for a few years now,
been doing the trailer and stuff myself and Terry for

(29:58):
me seventeen.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
So I've kind of I actually do in a movie.
I have a really famous horror movie director, Adam Marcus,
and he directed and wrote Friday the Thirteenth, Jason Goes
to Hell, Jason Goes to Hell, and he also did
Texas Chainsaw Massacre three D. And in our movie, it's
like that, there's a bunch of military members in it,

(30:21):
and we're going to make all the military members members
of different boy bands. So we have members of like
in Sync ninety eight degrees, a bunch of different bands.

Speaker 5 (30:29):
And I know I know, just.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
As we've had some of them on the show.

Speaker 5 (30:34):
Besides beside that I like in Sync, I love what
they sing and how they perform.

Speaker 4 (30:39):
These guys are like them too. They're fabulous.

Speaker 5 (30:42):
Sorry, I don't know who you are, because I'm not
familiar with boy bands being gay and at my age
if I'm interested in boy bands, they'll pull me a pedophile.
So which will bring me to that subject. Were you
ever accosted by gay people? Because gay men love young men.

Speaker 8 (31:04):
I think it's always been well, you know, when we
were kind so we were kind of early mid nineties.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
To two thousand.

Speaker 8 (31:11):
Yeah, I mean, you know, we used to do you know,
especially in the early days because we always saw it
as again, you know, school tours. But we also did
gay clubs and it was all about kind of raising
your what they call like a database, so that when
you put your single out, you can't have obviously got
them to go and buy the single. So we yeah,
we did lots of gay clubs and we only did
the weekend just gone. We've just done Pride. I guess

(31:32):
it's the same over there as it Pride. Yeah, so yeah,
we've done loads ches to be loads loads of Prides,
and they're great because the best thing about them is
you can go there you know for a fact, there
ain't going to be any trouble, great atmosphere. Everybody just
wants to have a good time, and that's why we
do so many of them. But yeah, I mean, you know,
it's just great to be around that kind of happiness
all the time.

Speaker 4 (31:53):
Yeah, we have. I don't know if you know who's
have you heard of? CC Peniston? She sings very good
friend of ours. Actually she was. I'm a public sistant.
She was my client, and so when she comes here,
she performs for Pride a lot. We're in Palm Springs
in California, and.

Speaker 5 (32:09):
She performed video of she and I dancing in my
living room two Finally, which I think is classic video.
I have to really run that on this we.

Speaker 4 (32:20):
Can show it's not it's not from Finally though. It
was from her new single.

Speaker 5 (32:24):
No We're danced to Finally.

Speaker 4 (32:26):
Yes, now you vacuum to Finally, but when you dance
with her, it's to a different I know because I
put it on my TikTok and got in a lot
of plays. So so also, you guys, we should tell everybody.
You can follow Jimmy on Instagram. On Instagram, he's at
Jimmy Constable and then you can do at the nine
to one one Official the actual numbers nine one one
official to follow nine one one on Instagram. They're also

(32:47):
on TikTok. Let's brag a little you guys. Ten top
ten singles in the UK. They sold ten million singles
six million albums worldwide. You can check out their website
nine to one one official dot com. They've played with everybody.
They started as a dancer. My first single that I
ever heard of you guys as was the Love Sensation,

(33:09):
Like I had ever heard of you guys. I actually
loved the song. I think it's fabulous. You also had
I think Love Sensation was also in the Casper movie.

Speaker 8 (33:18):
Right it was, Yeah, I mean I know that he
ended up giving I don't think of about six Customer movies,
but the very I think it was Customer movie.

Speaker 4 (33:24):
The New Beginning, I think it's called. I think it
was a second begin you know bad.

Speaker 9 (33:30):
Than I do.

Speaker 4 (33:31):
I brought it up too, just because we've had Steve
Gutenberg on the show and he stars in the movie
with Lori Laughlin, Richard Mole, Michael McKean, and Rodney Dangerfield
and he was on Long Ago, Yeah, long time ago.
And then I wrote down that you guys won the
gmt V search for Next Big Thing and you were
voted the second best newcomer after the Spice Girls in

(33:53):
Smash Hits, which that's a pretty big deal because sp
Spice Girls has probably got to be one of the
most famous British pop bands. I don't know.

Speaker 8 (34:02):
The g m TV thing was was still while we
were still unsigned.

Speaker 4 (34:05):
We hadn't been signed of agent.

Speaker 8 (34:06):
So gm TV kind of basically took our level to
the point where you know, you're on national TV. I
think it was after the second single, so yeah, that
that kind of propelled us into the kind of TV
audience as well as the school tours that we've done previously.
So and the Spice Skills obviously were label mates, so
they were signed to Virgin as well, so we saw

(34:28):
quite a lot of them over the years. But yeah,
I mean she again huge band from UK.

Speaker 4 (34:32):
And you guys are still touring all the time now right.
We do a lot of stuff in Asia with them.

Speaker 8 (34:37):
Minute As I said, we do UK because it's summertime.
It's it's festival time, so every every weekend there's festivals, prides,
anything you can think of that wherever you you know,
the sunshine and everybody wants to be out watching shows.
So and as you said before, you know it's bands.
So I think we've just done shows with you know, Blue, the.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
Other boy band. Well actually we almost I almost had
them on the show a couple of years ago. I
almost had them on the show. But I love it
again about Blue. I found out about Blue when they
read the first time I found out about it is
when they remade sorry seems to be the hardest word
from Elton John back.

Speaker 5 (35:15):
In the day.

Speaker 4 (35:17):
And then then I became a fan. I know all
of them. I wrote down all the ones you guys
have liked, Blue five, I don't know a one which
I've actually met those guys before, Damage fifth, Story three
T and then I wrote that you went on tour
with Atomic, Kitton, Liberty X. I liked them a lot too,
Bewitched five and Honeys is the only one I didn't know.

(35:39):
Or Honey's zero. I don't know how you've even pronounced it,
but I've never heard. That's the only one I didn't
haven't heard of, and that's probably a mixed group or
a pop group, right, yeah, I mean.

Speaker 8 (35:46):
We'd obviously some of the name the name most of
the names there where. We did a TV show called
The Bigger Union, which basically got everybody back together, and
we did what started as a Walden show on a
TV ended up being a huge arenat all, which which
was great, but that again, that was I think it
touched the people's kind of hard to want to relive,

(36:06):
you know, the nineties, And we had smash its magazines
and it's kind of relives, you know, being a teenager again.
So it was fantastic from that point of view. But
we spent a lot of time in Asia with the
Minute because we we had a huge song called I Do,
which which is actually a song I wrote from my
wife for our wedding day, and it blew up in Asia.
So we've been flying in and out of Asia for

(36:28):
the past two three years.

Speaker 4 (36:30):
Now, how did you put how did you put the
single out?

Speaker 5 (36:34):
Like?

Speaker 4 (36:34):
Is it add on an independent record label or a
major record label.

Speaker 8 (36:38):
Well, what actually happened is we we did an independent
album which was called Illuminate, and basically what we did
we did a remix of some of art hits and
then added a few more songs, and I had a
song that called Idea, which I've written for my wife
and kind of we just kind of put it out there,
and then randomly somebody in Asia, one of our contacts
from Asia, began said, oh, I don't know if you

(37:01):
know it, but somebody people have been covering this I
Do song, which is never a single, And suddenly you
looked on YouTube and there's there's over one hundred million
views of this song.

Speaker 5 (37:11):
I Do.

Speaker 8 (37:12):
So what we did we basically brought in a and
the name is exactly how it sounds. Its spelled differently,
but it's called duck Fuck. It's an artist in Vietnam,
the very Lovely, Lovely, Lovely young lad, and he's great
on social media, and we ended up doing a duet
with him, and then, obviously, as you can imagine somebody
that's young and on great on social media, the song

(37:35):
just blew up. So we've literally been walking to the reason.
I asked us, I have the video and we're going
to play it. I'm hoping that we don't get snagged
because sometimes YouTube flags videos, you know, and and they
get super pissed. And I'm hoping they don't because it's
not put out on like Sony. If it's on Sony,
you definitely can't, you know, if it's on certain places,
you can.

Speaker 4 (37:53):
So we're going to try to play it and hopefully
they don't down with that part. So what I want
you to do so everybody can hear it, tell them,
tell us who you are, the name of the song,
and then we're gonna play I Do one. We're gonna
play the I Do video, and you just hang on
until we get done playing, and that way you know,
millions of people more we'll get to see it. Oh
for it.

Speaker 8 (38:11):
Okay everybody, this is a big song we've had in
Asia and hopefully it's going to be a great song
over in the UK. Originally ring written from my wife.
This is Jimmy from now on one and this is
I do.

Speaker 10 (38:35):
World Change from the lomanam and it.

Speaker 9 (38:43):
Say, well, got.

Speaker 1 (38:48):
This look.

Speaker 10 (38:50):
From the lormenta. Everything was perfect. I know this love
was worth it. Our mirror gone and make it until
this worst I've started. I'll still being away and waited

(39:11):
to make.

Speaker 8 (39:12):
That fut.

Speaker 10 (39:16):
Side, tell the thing that I'll be way until something,
not something something consome. I'll be away.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
Till smiles by a thousand mouths.

Speaker 10 (39:37):
It is all about traffic because sun see you cry
to Beaty saying the fountain to look at what comes up.
Sometimes wishes to couch. Now everything is perfect and know

(39:58):
this love.

Speaker 4 (39:58):
Is worth it.

Speaker 10 (40:01):
I'll never go to make it until this first absurd,
still being awaited and waited to make that up. Telling
me how you a way int something not something about something,

(40:27):
but thinking we wait the most sent you from how
you wait Sai here you say.

Speaker 5 (40:44):
At sat.

Speaker 10 (40:49):
How you win, said, I say.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
By.

Speaker 10 (41:09):
Tommy Wade's something something Tobby Wade and so.

Speaker 9 (41:25):
We shiney back down.

Speaker 3 (41:27):
She just look up stuff.

Speaker 4 (41:30):
Oh see, Yes, I love the song and it doesn't

(41:51):
look like we got flagged and it's beautiful. And in
the chat room they want to know what did your
wife think about the song since you wrote it for her? Yeah,
I think your wife from the video.

Speaker 5 (42:01):
Yeah, so is that your wife in the video?

Speaker 4 (42:05):
No, no, no, my wife is there.

Speaker 8 (42:07):
My wife doesn't like comeras, so she there's no way
we could have got here in the video. I look together,
but as far as I know, yeah, she loves it.

Speaker 4 (42:15):
So one thing I think is really cool about you
guys is you came out thirty years ago and all
of you guys still look terrific. None of you guys
got like super fat or big bellies. You know, you
all still look very handsome.

Speaker 5 (42:28):
I was going to say that because he looks very young.
You look extremely young.

Speaker 8 (42:33):
I think, you know, I think when you're when you're
still out there perform, especially as we do, because obviously
we still do a lot of breakdowns in backflips everything,
so you know, you got to keep in the gym
you've got to try and keep as fit as you come.

Speaker 4 (42:46):
But thank you.

Speaker 5 (42:48):
I think Jim said before that the women threw their panties.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
I'm just guessing they were like very popular. So, I
mean I went to a Tom Jones concert when he
was like seventy, and they were like three on their
penties on.

Speaker 5 (43:01):
That was all fake, That was those were paid people
to do that. No, seriously, I know that for a fact.

Speaker 4 (43:07):
I saw him in Vegas. I don't think they were paid.

Speaker 5 (43:09):
Yes, they were. He had every time he appeared somewhere,
he had a group of women that were paid to
throw their room key rooms, you know, their keys to
the rooms and their panties on the.

Speaker 4 (43:22):
Stage got panties thrown to them. Did you guys get
did you guys get people like just going that's crazy.
I know you had to going that's crazy for you.

Speaker 8 (43:30):
I mean obviously back in the day, it was you know,
it was crazy times.

Speaker 4 (43:34):
You know, we we we're very lucky that we did.

Speaker 8 (43:36):
You know, lots and lots of years of arenaturs and
obviously lot lots of fans and stuff. So yeah, you
know it was crazy at times. But I mean you still,
you know, you get the you still get people that
come along now. And the strange thing is you get
people that now bring their kids and the kids have
got obviously no clue, but they've been forced to listen
to Alan one, so you know, they go, they go up,

(43:56):
but they kind of never seem to leave that kind
of songs that used to mind and when they were younger, which.

Speaker 4 (44:02):
I love it because I love all the nostalgic stuff.
Like so we have about ten what do you call
those the casinos here like an around the area and
like all the like the psychedelic furs are getting ready
to come. Morrissey is coming, you know, all kinds of
like people, which which actually my favorite non boy band
act is Morrissey. Morrissey is like my freaking favorite. Have

(44:25):
you ever met Morrissey?

Speaker 8 (44:26):
No, I haven't met Some met a lot of a
lot of stars over the years, but no, I've never
met Morrissey.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
So who were the some of the coolest stars that
you either got to like go on tour with or
play with or just be like, were you guys on
top of the Pops? Yeah, we don't Top of the Pops?
I think ten times that's a lot.

Speaker 8 (44:45):
I mean obviously, when when we told the pops. I
mean we had people like when we would go there
with you know, like new Edition. I mean, for me,
I've always loved the American artists. Whenever I used to
I'm like, like you were saying any of it, But
whenever I used to go to the States, I would
always go and find, you know, American artists that like
back then, like you know, the likes of Brian McKnight,

(45:07):
next Silk, people that you know had never been heard
of in you not not never heard of, but the
likes of my my bandmates didn't really kind of enjoy it.
I always kind of I wanted to always go and
find look for something new, and I love the whole
kind of R and B production and everything. So for me,
American artists, I mean you look at you know, you

(45:28):
know boy bands now, I mean Backstreet absolutely incredible, incredible
boy band.

Speaker 5 (45:34):
I know that are people are people morning in England
now Osbroe's death.

Speaker 4 (45:44):
I think everybody is.

Speaker 8 (45:45):
Yeah, I mean it's such a again, such a huge iconic.

Speaker 5 (45:48):
Star is important in England, as.

Speaker 4 (45:55):
Is one of the biggest stars in the history of music.

Speaker 5 (45:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (45:58):
Yeah, he was Black Sabbath, the biggest fucking rock band
ever to live ever on the planet, I know all
of that. I love Ozzy Osbourne, so I think it's
fabulous and I think so.

Speaker 5 (46:09):
It's funny because it's been a lot of years since
Ozzie's a big star.

Speaker 11 (46:13):
Now.

Speaker 4 (46:13):
He just had a concert two weeks ago. Really he's
still been touring and yeah, he had his farewell concert
two weeks ago and then he died, which is very.

Speaker 8 (46:22):
He's a huge starle So yeah, it's very saddy.

Speaker 4 (46:25):
Huge, huge, huge. So when you talk about like Silk,
like I loved Silk. I used to work for a
record label here and we had h Town and we
had a Shy, a bunch of those bands. I think
Shy a boy band some British boy band covered Whenever
I Fall in Love Again or whatever by Shy. I
forgot who that was. It might have been Blue or somebody.

Speaker 3 (46:44):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (46:44):
I always followed all that stuff. And I love watching
like I don't really like to watch X Factor, like
the whole show. I just like to watch auditions because
I always think the auditions are like a lot of
fun to watch.

Speaker 8 (46:57):
A lot of the coach that people do, you know,
come from American artists because there's so many more obviously
there's so many more American artists, but I just think
from my production point of view, and certainly my opinion
is that the opinion and the songs are always better
American from American artists, whether you look at you know,
boy bands and Backstreet Boys, and a good friend of

(47:19):
mine is Danny from New Kids on the Block.

Speaker 4 (47:22):
I mean, you know, they're out there and you kind
of go.

Speaker 8 (47:25):
They just do it so well, you know, production song wise,
you know, and it stems back to the people like
Frank sin Ultra and people like that. We just think
they're just absolutely amazing artists with some great songs and
obviously got some incredible songwriters over there.

Speaker 4 (47:41):
Oh no, absolutely so I'm a big Backstreet fan. I am.
Matter of fact, back in the day, I paid twenty
four hundred dollars to sit front row for two tickets
front row for Backstreet Boys back when I was young
making a ton of money. In Sync I've seen a
bunch of times, and I was really good friends with
the opening acts for in Sync, so I got to
meet everybody. And I think uh ninety eight degrees has

(48:03):
been on the show. We've had them on the show.
We've also had I'm trying to get Otown. I'm a
big Otown fan, and I met all the guys because
I used to have a clothing store in Florida and
the apartment. They had an apartment building across the street,
and there was this super hot girl and all the
boy bands for some reason when they came into town
stayed at her apartment. So you would see like in
sync or o town, you know, and I would see
them because I was working, you know, and they would

(48:24):
all just be hanging out. Super hot girl. So those
two are the best cell phones.

Speaker 8 (48:31):
We're just talking about. We're gonna go and see the
Buckshi boys in Vegas. I think they're going to hopefully
do some more dates and obviously trying time because I
know new kids are doing MGM at the same time.
So we're gonna try and time and hopefully if they're
close to each other and so I can go see
my friend Donnie and I go as well.

Speaker 4 (48:52):
They're they're great. They do it in a sphere in Vegas.
The Baccy Boys, they say, it's super amazing. I like
all the older, you know boy bands. I'm not a
really big fan of like the like like One Direction
didn't do anything for me. I'm just too old, I think,
you know. And there's no nostalgia for me, even though
I do like their solo stuff a lot better than
I like their their stuff. So I'm not really too
big into the into the newer boy bands, but I

(49:14):
liked all the stuff from like the nineties and the
early two thousands.

Speaker 8 (49:17):
Yeah, and then when you wadges biers and said the
nineties were the best, man, Yes, absolutely, I know the
nineties are definitely the best.

Speaker 4 (49:24):
And and for me, music in general was best in
the eighties, and then boy bands were the best in
the nineties.

Speaker 8 (49:31):
She's not according to obviously the Frank sin Ultra era
will obviously be better for Ron.

Speaker 4 (49:35):
Yes, oh yes. Actually, Johnny Mathis is his out of doubt,
his favorite. He's met him a bunch of times.

Speaker 5 (49:41):
We have Johnny manthis has sold more records than anyone
in the business. He just retired at nineties. He has
sold over.

Speaker 4 (49:54):
Three hundred and sixty million, three hundred and.

Speaker 5 (49:56):
Sixty million albums or songs or whatever.

Speaker 4 (50:00):
International.

Speaker 5 (50:00):
He's international. He's this little black guy, cute as hell
and the sweetest man you ever wanted me. He's so
kind and gentle, and nice, and it's in his music.
And everybody that listened to him back in the fifties
and sixties got pregnant. No, because if you were making
out with your girlfriend in the car and he got

(50:21):
to sing, the girls all gave in because they just
fell in love with the music. So women were putting
out like persy and they all got And I told
that to Johnny. I said that to Johnny. He started
to laugh. He said, Ron, I have heard that over
and over again. No matter where I go on tour,
women will come up to me and say, I got

(50:42):
pregnant because of you.

Speaker 8 (50:45):
As a strange flashback with I always remember I have
an aunty of mycle Trish, and it's really random and strange,
but she used to have one of these record players
that it was like in a cabinet, would lift the lid,
and I always remember, I think I must have been
about I'd say probably, I don't know now. I always
remember Johnny mathis LP standing next to it, and she

(51:05):
was always playing it, and that's how I knew the name.
And obviously great songs, but.

Speaker 5 (51:10):
He had a voice that he never ruined because he
never shouted and destroyed it. That's why he was able
to sting up to ninety nine, and he sounded almost
as good as when he was young. How do you
feel about that, the shouting or the stress of your
voice or all of you.

Speaker 4 (51:30):
They don't see that it's shouting though I've never heard them,
so I wish we could have played it. I just
played a song a man ago that was their music.
Why would I play it?

Speaker 5 (51:40):
No, no, no, but I thought it was a different
kind of music.

Speaker 4 (51:43):
Now that's no their boy bands.

Speaker 5 (51:45):
But I looked they'd sound more like in sync. Now
they have a.

Speaker 4 (51:49):
Whole different style of different style.

Speaker 5 (51:51):
That's it, So we can't.

Speaker 4 (51:53):
We're going to play Actually, I'm going to play a
little clip of love Sensation because that was the first
song I ever heard, and I want to play it.
I hope we don't get in trouble with that one,
but I think what I wanted to say also, well,
first I want to congratulate you guys. So we've had
a lot of bands come on. We've had Chicago, We've
had earth Wind and Fire, We've had all these like
major you know, bands and people come on. But there's

(52:15):
always there's always somebody in the band that's not original.
And one of the things that I think is the
coolest about nine one one is it's been thirty years
and there was a hiatus and then you come back
and you guys are playing together, but it's all the
original members. You don't have like you and two other people,
and you know, and you're calling yourselves nine to one one,

(52:36):
even though you're not really nine to one one because
you know, only one person from the band is in it.
It's all the three original members. So I think that's
a super big kudos, and that whatever you know difference
is for the separation you guys have worked out in
your older age and then you're still putting out great music.
So I just want to say kudos to that because
I think it's a really cool thing and the fans
love it. Like us as fans, we really think that's

(52:56):
a really big deal. Yeah, I mean we're very lowkey.

Speaker 5 (52:59):
You know.

Speaker 8 (52:59):
You said, there's a lot of bands that either put
you know, not all the band members wanted to come
back and they put somebody else in, or there's only
one member or blah blah. But to be honest, I mean,
you know, the good thing with us is we always
said when we and we didn't you know, yes, we
split up, but it was more I think we just
had time. We the rec company, as most rep companies do,

(53:21):
just work you solid, you know, in the nineties, and
I think we just needed that break.

Speaker 4 (53:25):
And I think so.

Speaker 8 (53:26):
And for me, obviously, like I said before, is the
first couple of years I couldn't quite handle it. I
went down the drugs, depression, alcohol, all the rest of it.
So it was a good few years before we but
we never really kind of fell out. It was just
one of those things that we know, we'd come to
the end of our you know, four album deal. We've
done all our albums, and we just kind of had,

(53:46):
you know, needed a bit of a break. So we
never really fell out. And then when we did decide,
you know, we're going to do this, it was kind
of we sat down and said, we either do this
one hundred percent or we don't do it at all.
So for as long as we know and as long
as we can try it, as long as our bodies
will let us, you know, we will we will try
and give the show, the breakdance and the backflips, everything for.

Speaker 4 (54:07):
As long as we can.

Speaker 8 (54:09):
But yes, you're you're right, We're very lucky that all
three will still together.

Speaker 4 (54:12):
I like love it.

Speaker 5 (54:13):
I think you don't have a very heavy English accent.
Where are you from.

Speaker 8 (54:18):
I'm originally from a place called Liverpool, where the Beatles from.

Speaker 5 (54:24):
Yeah, right, I've been to Liverpool, but it's.

Speaker 8 (54:26):
Not you know, my accent is not very It's not
a very strong Liverpool. I live in a place near
a place called Cambridge, which is south of the country.
Now I've been here twenty years, so obviously my broad
Liverpool accent, if you were to speak to people that
live in Liverpool, has kind of.

Speaker 5 (54:42):
You know, what's your ethnic background? Because you look like
you could be Spanish or Italian.

Speaker 4 (54:48):
No, no, I'm British.

Speaker 8 (54:49):
My mom is Yeah, my mom and dad are both British.

Speaker 4 (54:52):
Yet I like love it, so I want to put
it in another plug for you. Because you're also a songwriter.
I wrote down the you like you know done some songwriting.
You worked with Rod Stewart and Les McKeon from The
bas City Rollers. The Ba City Rollers was one of
the very first out physical like LP albums I ever
got as a kid, Like are they still around the

(55:13):
bas City Rollers? Yeah?

Speaker 8 (55:15):
Well, actually, funny story. The one of one of the
guys that's still in the bas City Rollers, but the
lead singer is a guy called John McLaughlin who was
a songwriter and he's actually the guy that wrote a
lot of our hits from from the Journey album. Ron
is now the frontman for Basic Rollers. And the reason

(55:37):
that was because obviously he wrote a lot of songs
with it. When Less was still with us, I was
in the studio writing with John, writing songs for Lester's
EP album that was about to come out, and I've
got I've got a couple of songs on it on
his album. And then obviously, you know, les passed away
and they decided that, you know, as part of representing

(55:59):
Basicity Rollers then get back together and John, obviously knowing
the guys originally from the band, became the lead singer.
So yeah, it kind of comes around and shacles.

Speaker 4 (56:09):
You guys for anybody who's listening and doesn't know who
the Base City Rollers. And this is like a long
time ago. I must have been in the seventies, I
would guess in the seventies, and like the mid to
early mid to mid seventies they had that song s
A t U R D A Y Hey s A
and it was all about Saturday night, you know, like
going out on Saturday night and stuff. But it was
a huge, huge hit, like huge, can't sing. I think

(56:34):
Chanderland was quite a big sung. It was that big
sung over there. What was it called Shanga End, Yes
it was, it was, but not as big as Saturday Night.
That was a huge one, like because I remember my
first my first two LP full albums were Base City
Rollers and Elton John Captain Fantastic in the Brown Deir
Cowboy were the first two albums I ever, you know,

(56:55):
got as a kid. My first a tract tape was
Rod Stewart when a tract tapes came out.

Speaker 5 (57:01):
Now do you have children, Yes, I do.

Speaker 8 (57:04):
I have three children altogether. I have two with my wife,
Taylor and Ellie at least eighteen. Taylor was fourteen.

Speaker 5 (57:14):
Are they interested in the business.

Speaker 8 (57:17):
I think Ellie's Ellie's got a good voice, you know,
she can sing. Taylor I don't think shows any interest whatsoever.
He's quite you know, he's quite shy and reserved. He's
quite happy. Ones doesn't want to kind of be out front.
We all, we all have a bit of anybody that's
in the business, and there's kind of a little bit
of an ego in order to get on get on

(57:39):
a stage and be able to perform for people and
you know, want that attention and all the rest of it.
So yeah, Taylor's not that way. But Ellie, Ellie certainly,
you know, she can hold the tude.

Speaker 5 (57:49):
I I love it.

Speaker 4 (57:51):
You guys, if all the guys had children and they
could all sing that, you could do like you know
and I want one too, well, they could do like
the kids, you know, Like I don't think they know that.

Speaker 5 (58:02):
We had a cool we had a cool.

Speaker 4 (58:04):
Reality show here many years ago, and it was like
a reality show contest and it was like all the kids,
all the kids of the famous like stars, so like
it had like d Snyder's kid from Twisted's sister and
all these different ones competing, you know, Olivia Newton John,
you know, competing and stuff, and I met all the people.
There was really a lot of fun, which I like
all of it. So, so what is the most popular songs? Like,

(58:26):
when you guys go and play, what are you of
the nine to one one songs? What are the ones
that people like the most or that you play the most.
I guess I should say I.

Speaker 8 (58:35):
Mean everybody, everybody, whatever you go, as you can imagine,
has their own favorite. You can't please everybody, but we
had it. Obviously ample truck called Body Shaking, which was
and I think they liked that because of the obviously
there's a lot of dun streets, see a lot of
breakdownson in that one. Love Sensation, as you say, is
a great kind of what they call over here, like

(58:55):
a cheesy song but very very pop. You got all
of only is You Debbie fined Low. I think everybody
has their own favorites, but I think since we don't,
I do, I think I Do is kind of taken
over because obviously it's been such a huge hit, but
it's a recent hit, so I think that's what everybody likes.

Speaker 4 (59:14):
I think, uh, I think Love Sensation is what people
expect from a boy band, maybe like back in the
day when it came out, all the boy bands were
doing kind of like those upbeat songs like that. I
think that's why I liked it originally, even though I'm
actually more of a ballad like I like all like
I do. I like all the ballady stuff, you know better,
especially now that I'm old.

Speaker 5 (59:34):
You're old, You're not old. No one's old. They're only
old when they want to be old. So there's no
such thing as old. I don't believe in age. I
don't believe.

Speaker 4 (59:48):
Yes, I really don't believe I'm old. So what I
want to do is play a little bit of love sensation.
But I'm afraid they might kick a sauce, so only play.
I like a play like a minute of it and
then and then we'll come back and talk with Jimmy. Jimmy,
you introduce it for us real quick again, and then
we're gonna play it and then we'll be right back.

Speaker 6 (01:00:07):
Okay.

Speaker 8 (01:00:07):
This is Jimmy from number one. This song is featured
on Tasper the movie. You might remember it when you
hear it. This is low sensation.

Speaker 11 (01:00:22):
Go change Jambo be jam j Cheane jam be jo
be jam.

Speaker 10 (01:00:35):
To say so, jim.

Speaker 4 (01:00:48):
Yeah, Camera, I by sad song as Riven.

Speaker 9 (01:01:18):
It's I love it, I love it, I love it,

(01:01:39):
love it.

Speaker 4 (01:01:40):
No, they didn't cut us. I told them I need
to play a minute so we don't get cut off.
Because that was put out by Virgin.

Speaker 5 (01:01:45):
So you were quite a cutie when you were younger.
I bet you had the girls crazy.

Speaker 10 (01:01:51):
For you, and.

Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
He that's a good question. Out of all the girls
that were after you, what made you choose your wife?

Speaker 8 (01:02:01):
Well, again, it's a funny story. I actually went out
with my wife for about four or five months the
beginning of the band. I met her because she she
used to work for Boyson, which with the other band. Okay,
so yeah, she she used to work for Boyzone in
the office doing admin and stuff. And then obviously I

(01:02:21):
was away flying off then doing all kinds of stuff,
so obviously it wasn't going to work out. And then
we met randomly, years and years later. We hadn't seen
each other, randomly met in a club, and a funny
thing is I went back to the We did a
gig in a club, and I went back to the
lads backstage and said, do you remember the girl I
used to go out with for a few months and

(01:02:42):
the beginning, she's in the crowd. I hadn't speaking spoken
to her by this point, and I said, I'm going
to end up marrying her, and I I had met
her by then, I hadn't spoken to her. So yeah,
my wife is very very opposite to me. She's very
down to earth, very not that I'm not down to earth,
but very kind of like you know, no, no, no ego, no,

(01:03:04):
kind of like very homely person, big hearts.

Speaker 5 (01:03:08):
She's grounded. She's grounded.

Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
She keeps me, which is good as well.

Speaker 8 (01:03:12):
So yes, she's beautiful.

Speaker 5 (01:03:14):
It's important in our business to be married to somebody
who's grounded because we're off the wall. So we need
we need that stability, that person to say now stop it, yeah, behave.

Speaker 8 (01:03:27):
If you was to ask my you know, my kids,
they would tell you the same thing is that I'm
sometimes a bit out there.

Speaker 6 (01:03:32):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:03:33):
The business.

Speaker 8 (01:03:34):
Business sends you, you know, into all kinds of spatter spheres.
But yeah, you need somebody that's kind of pulls you
back on the reins when you need to.

Speaker 4 (01:03:42):
And just kind of calm you down.

Speaker 5 (01:03:43):
I guess, well, you seem to be a nice fellow,
and yes, you're very calm. And you know, we have
some nuts on our should that I can't deal with.
Oh no, we've had some really lunatics, really crazy that
being an interviewer is not easy because we have to
get out of you what's interesting for the audience. And

(01:04:05):
sometimes we have people on our show that are so
gone they don't even hear me. When I ask a question.
They simply, well, this is what I'm doing. I have
a movie coming out next week and I just finished.

Speaker 4 (01:04:18):
Or do you ask him a question? And they say yes, no.

Speaker 5 (01:04:22):
Do you know the American actor Cliff Robertson had to
be Award winning fabulous act? They're very important. I alo
I interviewed him and he gave me uh huh uh
uh uh uh. I couldn't get a word out of him,
so I I had to wake him up. I said

(01:04:45):
to I heard your wife is a bitch. He said, no,
she's not a bitch. She just plays bitches going and
then he started talking.

Speaker 4 (01:04:59):
I think I think of it is.

Speaker 8 (01:05:01):
I think a lot of is your attitude towards you know,
interviews in general, because I think certainly for me, I'm
an open book. You know, you can ask me whatever
you want. There's no point in me trying to.

Speaker 5 (01:05:13):
You're a good interview.

Speaker 8 (01:05:15):
You know, I can tell you with exactly what you know, drugs, alcohol,
I'll tell you whatever you want to hear, because there's
there's no point in me. I always think you'll end
up tripping yourself over if you're trying to, you know, say, oh,
I can't go down this street because I might say
this or this, then you're always going to be looking
over your shoulder all the time. It's for me, It's like, well,
this is me. If you know, I can tell you

(01:05:35):
what you want to hear, but you might not you
might not like it, but you know I'm going to
tell you what it is anyway.

Speaker 4 (01:05:41):
I think you know.

Speaker 5 (01:05:42):
I have had people have interviewed actors famous. When I
said a question about your wife, they said, I don't
discuss my family and my private life. So what the
fuck are you doing here? You're here to sell something. Well,
that's good for you, but this is not a show

(01:06:03):
of advertisement. We're not here to advertise your product. We're
here to make people, entertain people. And they don't get it.
So I just get very angry with them. And I've
walked off the show a couple of times because I
got nowhere. They come on and they don't want to talk.
So what are you doing here? You want to promote

(01:06:23):
a movie or an album that's using us.

Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
I'm not the music in the alm, no, but you
have to give me.

Speaker 5 (01:06:33):
You have to give me a show. And Jimmy gave
us a show.

Speaker 4 (01:06:38):
See, this is a great show.

Speaker 8 (01:06:40):
You know, I mean, I'm the same I watch you know,
your kind of shows, and I watched, you know, listen
of podcasts for the for the very same reason. Hey,
because there's people in the music business that I'm interested.
If I haven't met them, I'm interested in how they've
dealt with it. Are they as wacky as me? Sometimes?
Because like I have been, you know, I'm genuinely interested.
It's like in podcasts and you know that, you know,

(01:07:00):
shows like this, that's what they're there for. People want
to hear stuff they don't they haven't read in a magazine,
you know, because a lot of the stuff you know
put in the magazine, you'll say, because it sells records. People,
you know, genuine want to know what kind of person
that they're speaking to and what kind of life they've lived.

Speaker 5 (01:07:17):
But not every the compliments that I get when I'm
out in the public and people come up to me
and say, I love your show because I feel like
I'm with you. I feel like a part of your conversation,
you know. So I say to them, well, I tell
our guests, pretend you're in Brooklyn having coffee and Entelman's
crumb cake and we're talking, you know, and to my

(01:07:41):
celebrity movie star people, and they're very comfortable with that
and they love it.

Speaker 4 (01:07:45):
And that's the kind of show we're doing.

Speaker 8 (01:07:47):
So you know, if you don't like it, then go
and do a different show.

Speaker 5 (01:07:51):
This is a show, This is not an advertisement.

Speaker 4 (01:07:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:07:54):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:07:55):
So I have a question, and probably everybody else is
going to want to know who watch because this show
is going to get a lot of players because we
have you and you're a great guest, and our next
guest is also a great guest, a really big Australian actor.
Do you like horror movies at all? Do you ever
watch horror movies? I do.

Speaker 5 (01:08:09):
I mean I've.

Speaker 8 (01:08:11):
Obviously the likes of Scream and stuff like that is
a big horror movies, but I don't watch I'm not
a massive fan of them, but I do like when
when they come out with I'll tell you what it is.
What I don't like is the likes of Scream. I
remember obviously growing up watching Screen. But then they make
Scream seven and I'm like, yeah, I'm done with that.
If bring out a great you know, Final Destination, uh great.

(01:08:35):
You know, I'm not saying that they're rubbish, but you know,
what I mean, it seems to be that kind of
like the shock value was there at the beginning, so
you saw Jason with the mask on, and you know,
a lot kind of stuff. It's like, oh my god,
this is like great, but then when you start doing
ten of them, it kind of dilutes it.

Speaker 4 (01:08:55):
So but I do like them. So my my real
question I wanted to ask. Okay, so because fans are
going to want to know when they're listening to this,
So nine to one one, do you guys have any
any plans of any new music to come out in
the future since you just released that.

Speaker 5 (01:09:08):
I do.

Speaker 8 (01:09:09):
Like you said earlier, it's it's our thirty year anniversary
next year, so we've had obviously we meet most weekends
because it's Bestbuk week time, but we're having discussions obviously
what we're going to do for our fancy anniversary, so
we all kind of speak to people, we're all looking
at our for next year. And then I think new music, yes,

(01:09:32):
but I think new music is a bit different to
the way it.

Speaker 5 (01:09:35):
Used to be.

Speaker 4 (01:09:35):
You know, back when you when you used to buy the.

Speaker 8 (01:09:38):
Boy, it was about the charts. Nobody really cares about
the charts over here anymore music releases are now they're
just to kind of suppose, just get yourself back out
there again, whether it's TikTok or social media. I mean,
that's the strange thing for me is being you know,
the age that we are now is that social media
is a learning cave. We we don't know a lot

(01:09:59):
about it, so it's like starting again. But I understand
that you release music and put it on social media
because it kind of build your you know, your profile,
kinds of new fans.

Speaker 4 (01:10:12):
We gotta go want.

Speaker 5 (01:10:13):
I asked everybody this, what do you think of raph? Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:10:18):
Again I'm huge plan because I'm again American assist R
and B rap.

Speaker 4 (01:10:24):
You like, yeah, he likes rap, namely one rap artist
that you like a lot? Is there a current one
that you like? I mean, I like Chris Brown.

Speaker 8 (01:10:33):
But it depends depends what you call rap, because you
then you go, you then got the scales of like and.

Speaker 4 (01:10:37):
Now is hip hop. His idea of rap is more
like hip hop.

Speaker 5 (01:10:41):
Like you know, I mean the ship they do today
where they don't sing and.

Speaker 4 (01:10:44):
They talk, Yeah, that's that's hip hop.

Speaker 5 (01:10:46):
And they call that singing and I get offended by
that because it's not singing. I'm gonna go over there
and get.

Speaker 4 (01:10:54):
Or ice cube or something like that.

Speaker 5 (01:10:56):
Absolutely speaking the lyrics.

Speaker 4 (01:10:58):
We gotta go though, so let's let's roll it.

Speaker 5 (01:11:00):
Don't sing.

Speaker 8 (01:11:02):
There is some rock stuff and I have the conversation
with my daughter which makes me feel very old. It's
like and I'm like, this isn't music, This isn't how
it used to be, you know what I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:11:11):
But there is some of that like that.

Speaker 8 (01:11:13):
I can't understand it.

Speaker 5 (01:11:15):
No talent, I agree, it's no talent making millions of dollars.
And that's what I find objectionable because there are so
many singers out there who are wonderful, who really could sing,
and you're struggling.

Speaker 4 (01:11:30):
Yeah, that's when the thirtieth anniversary comes around. We'd love
to have you come back on especially I'm sure there'll
be at least one new song, so we would love it.
We want to thank again the bite Back Agency and
Mark Love Rushchneider for setting this thing up. I'm a
huge fan. Thank you so much for coming on the show.
We appreciate it, only wish you the best.

Speaker 5 (01:11:49):
And when you see Mark Love Love Rush Love Rush,
tell them to stop sending me flowers. I'm not interested.
I'm married. I'm married to Jimmy, and stop sending the
love letters and then also tell them to stop sending
me new pictures of himself.

Speaker 8 (01:12:09):
Thank you guys for having me on.

Speaker 5 (01:12:12):
I have a great Thank you, Take care Jimmy.

Speaker 4 (01:12:14):
Bye bye, I'm you. Hey you guys. That was Jimmy
Constable from nine to one to one.

Speaker 5 (01:12:20):
Now we're going to bring on our.

Speaker 4 (01:12:21):
Next guest because we don't have any time. We ran
a little late, so let's bring on John Jarrett Astro Stop.

Speaker 6 (01:12:29):
There you are.

Speaker 4 (01:12:30):
How are you not too?

Speaker 6 (01:12:32):
Fell from old book and so early?

Speaker 4 (01:12:35):
So thank you so much for getting up early to
come and visit with us. We're super excited. I spent
the last two days watching John Jarrett everything, even though
I've seen a lot of it. But we can't get
a lot of your stuff here in America unfortunately. But
let me do a proper introduction and we'll get rocking
and rolling now, everybody, we want to welcome to the
Jimmy Star Show with Ron Russell, doctor writer director John

(01:12:57):
jarreted all the way from down Under in Austria. Thanks
so much for coming and welcome to the show.

Speaker 5 (01:13:03):
And Jimmy does rave about you. That's all I've heard
for the last couple of days. I'm so excited about
our guest on Wednesday. So he's sincere and sincere. He's
not doing Hollywood bullshit. Good are So you're an old
time of two baby, right, how old are you?

Speaker 6 (01:13:20):
I'm seventy three, I'm eighty five.

Speaker 5 (01:13:24):
So we could have it so we can talk about.

Speaker 6 (01:13:27):
A lot of it. There's three ages of man. You
know what they are?

Speaker 5 (01:13:31):
What what?

Speaker 6 (01:13:33):
Youth? Middle age, and ge are looking good.

Speaker 5 (01:13:39):
And you're both looking good. I've heard that good.

Speaker 6 (01:13:45):
Cannot turn that light off and see if it's a
better Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:13:50):
The wonderful The wonderful thing is at our age we're
still working.

Speaker 4 (01:13:57):
It might be too dark, Yeah yeah, Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:14:04):
Well we could have somebody jump out and stab you as.

Speaker 4 (01:14:07):
Scary as you are in some of your movie works.
That's fine to.

Speaker 5 (01:14:12):
Say somebody should jump out and stab them and then
have a horror movie here. But what I said was, well,
I'm so happy that our ages were still working. This
is what's wonderful that today you can be any age
in film. Years ago. You know, at my age, they
buried you. So how do you feel about that?

Speaker 6 (01:14:32):
Well, it's you just got to stay fit and healthy.

Speaker 5 (01:14:38):
Exactly.

Speaker 6 (01:14:39):
People get old and stiff because they stop stretching.

Speaker 4 (01:14:43):
You just.

Speaker 12 (01:14:45):
And you don't eat shit food, you exercise, you do weights.
You just don't let the old man in this clindation.

Speaker 5 (01:14:54):
I said, I say the same thing that people say
to me. How come you look so good for eighty five?
I said, I never did drugs. I don't smoke and
I don't drink, and Jimmy doesn't either. I think that
has a lot to do with staying healthy.

Speaker 4 (01:15:10):
And you know, so real quick, we have a chat
room full of people. Could you just say, I fight
everybody in the chat room.

Speaker 6 (01:15:18):
Good night, chat room? How are you doing?

Speaker 4 (01:15:20):
And then we have a super horror fan, Don Hinton,
just say hi to down She'll love it.

Speaker 6 (01:15:27):
How are you don there you go?

Speaker 9 (01:15:30):
I love it?

Speaker 5 (01:15:32):
How do you How do you like working horror? I don't.
I'm in a lot of horror movies and I hate them.
I just think that horror movies are stupid. And the
slasher movies I really don't like. I never do those.
So do you have particular movies that you do and
don't do?

Speaker 4 (01:15:50):
He doesn't know about Wolf Crieg. I'm going to talk
about that in a minute, talk about I.

Speaker 6 (01:15:56):
Know horror movies. Uh, I don't the horror movies.

Speaker 1 (01:16:02):
I like.

Speaker 12 (01:16:04):
Psycho Kate, Fear with the Nero and h h, it's
just gonna having an old person's moment.

Speaker 6 (01:16:18):
Handle that and.

Speaker 12 (01:16:21):
The ones that act they're not wearing a mask, you know,
and that they could have and could happen.

Speaker 6 (01:16:28):
You know.

Speaker 12 (01:16:29):
I hate zombie movies and bloody all of that rubbish.
Vampires are a bit of fun because it's.

Speaker 6 (01:16:36):
A bit gay and we all love it.

Speaker 12 (01:16:38):
But yeah, I like horror movies that could happen, which
is what my horror film is all about.

Speaker 4 (01:16:46):
That's what I was going to Actually.

Speaker 6 (01:16:49):
It's not not acting as a mask. They can't act.

Speaker 4 (01:16:53):
First of all, I want to say, so, you're our
third You're our third very well known Australian guests that
we've had on We've been on the air for eighteen years.
But we've had other people, but they're not as well
known and respected as you guys. But I don't know,
do you know who Sharnie Vincent is? Who Sharnie Vincent.
She's she's like a dance she does a lot like

(01:17:14):
dance movies, but she also did one huge horror movie
that was a huge hit here in America, and so
she was on our show. We got twenty million plays
when she came on the show. And we also had
guy Sebastian who's like a singer X factor, one of those.

Speaker 6 (01:17:30):
Things Sebastian, He's brilliance we have and.

Speaker 4 (01:17:36):
Now we have you and Wolf Creek. The reason I like,
so we've had all We've had all the everybody who's
played Michael Myers, everybody who's played Pinhead, all the different
people Freddy Krueger has been on, not everybody who plays
just Robert England. And I think that what you just
said is totally true. The reason why Mick Taylor is

(01:17:58):
so scary and all the wolf creaks is because that
could be a real person, that could be your next
door neighbor, and you don't even fucking know it. It
could really be killing you. So I think WHATLF Creek
is one of the most brilliant horror movies of the
last well I'm sixty so of my lifetime. I think
it's because it's actually scary, because it could really happen.

Speaker 5 (01:18:19):
I believe in the script. If the script is good,
a horror movie is okay. But when a horror movie
is ten people in a room and one by one
they get killed, that shit we've seen forever and it's boring.
So I'm encouraging the horror writers to write. I am,
and so are many other actors. Give us a decent script,

(01:18:43):
give us something of value. Years ago, in my era,
in the nineteen forties, we had horror movies that scared you. Nowadays,
the horror movies don't scare you anymore because we're numb
to them. We see headscared and chopped off, faces blowing
up and if we laugh, look at that. So I

(01:19:05):
feel that we need to have good writers writing stories.
Let's learn who the characters are. Let's have some some
some character background. I just so when I do scripts
now I no longer do slasher movies, but I'm in
horror movies. But they're thrillers, thriller horror movies. Now did

(01:19:28):
that make sense?

Speaker 6 (01:19:29):
So?

Speaker 5 (01:19:29):
Am I full of shit?

Speaker 6 (01:19:30):
No? No, there's there's there's three things you need to
make a film. You know what they are?

Speaker 5 (01:19:36):
Tell us a beginning, of the middle and an end.

Speaker 6 (01:19:40):
No, you hit the nail on the head in the beginning.
The thing. The three things you need to make a movie.
The script, the script and the script.

Speaker 4 (01:19:53):
There you go, yes, I'm totally you know what.

Speaker 5 (01:19:57):
They sent me a script and the script was Queens
from out of Space.

Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
You know.

Speaker 5 (01:20:03):
I was supposed to play a Drea queen and we
came here to Earth to eat men because there were
no men left on our planet. And I sent it
around to all my producer friends and we had the
best laft. We thought it was hysterical. I mean, what
kind of shit do they think we're going to do?
And you know it makes us look bad. Now, I
know of your reputation. You have quite a reputation, and

(01:20:26):
you don't need to be in a slasher, crappy film
that any jerk can do. You're an actor. You need
to be in a great film. You need to be
in good work.

Speaker 4 (01:20:36):
He is in good work. I mean, okay, so I want.

Speaker 5 (01:20:38):
The better work.

Speaker 4 (01:20:39):
I don't know the biggest movies in the world.

Speaker 5 (01:20:43):
I know that, but I don't care for some of them.

Speaker 4 (01:20:45):
Oh well, that's you anyway, that's not I feel.

Speaker 5 (01:20:48):
That we actors if we're going to be in horror movies.
I think Christopher Lee. I met Christopher at a party
in Beverly Hills, and I unfortunately said to Christopher Lee,
you were the best dracu'er ever since Lagos. And he
looked at at me because he was seven foot taur
and he said, I have done more than Dracula.

Speaker 1 (01:21:12):
Yea.

Speaker 5 (01:21:13):
He was so offended that I knew him as Dracula.
And I made it as a compliment because he did
a wonderful drac deal. Don't you agree?

Speaker 12 (01:21:22):
I do agree. I love Boris Karloff as well. Your
rooms already now he was he was brilliant something. But
they had they had a particular style, and that does
seem to run in horror movies that you know, like

(01:21:44):
Hannibal elector that that Hannibal Elector thing. And my thing
is I've gotta I've gotta laugh and uh and I.

Speaker 6 (01:21:54):
Deeven my voice. I don't like that. Here you go
all right on a swing like that. I got a
little cracker in a thrive, a little jar when I talk.

Speaker 4 (01:22:03):
It's a little bit scary.

Speaker 6 (01:22:04):
And then went on a laugh.

Speaker 5 (01:22:05):
I got like.

Speaker 4 (01:22:07):
Like that. I I love it, I have to say,
I think because in the chat room they're all saying,
get him to do the laugh. And so you did
it and I didn't even have to ask you.

Speaker 6 (01:22:20):
Everyone loves the laugh.

Speaker 4 (01:22:23):
I also so Wolf Crea. We're going to talk about
other stuff too, but I just want to talk about
Wolf Creek a little bit because I love it so much.
I had no idea that there was a TV series.
I googled it on to b and you know, and
there's a t the TV series. So in America they
didn't promote that a lot. I didn't know there was
a TV series, So I'm gonna watch it. But I've
seen the first one in the second one. And one
of the things about Wolf Creek as a horror movie, also,

(01:22:46):
besides the fact that your character is so like you
think everybody you're gonna everybody's gonna like love you, you know,
until you're like laughing and killing people and it's really creepy.
It could be real. But the special effects in Wolf
Creek are so good compared to all the other horror
movies Jason and Freddy and everything. Like in Wolf Creek too,

(01:23:08):
when you're chasing the guy and the girl and the
jeep and then you shoot from Mike way away and
you blow half her head off, that's like the most
realistic thing I've ever seen like in any movie ever,
and I've seen every horror movie you know of the
last thirty years because I'm a big fan. So I
think that everything with the series, with the movie, the
films has been fantastic. And I think, how did you
Did you have to audition for that? Or did they

(01:23:29):
just come to you and say, hey, we think you're
going to play a great psychopath, or like, how did
you actually get that? Because you play the psychopath better
than like anybody I've ever seen.

Speaker 12 (01:23:40):
The do that sounding like a wankup? Are really auditioned anymore?
Because I had a pretty good start to my Korea.
And the guy who wrote, Greg McClain, who wrote Wolf Creek,
the first one and every other one, he had me

(01:24:01):
in mind when when he wrote it, so he saw
me in a ply I did a I did a
play called Dead Hot, and I played this racist cop
and he saw me do that, and then when he
wrote the script he thought I'd be the.

Speaker 6 (01:24:19):
Guy I could do it, so I didn't have to audition.

Speaker 12 (01:24:23):
Now when we sat down and had a good talk,
and he was very heavy at the end of the
talk that he made the right choice.

Speaker 6 (01:24:30):
He felt.

Speaker 4 (01:24:32):
Freaking like love it so, so you guys bragging a
little bit. When you google John Jarrett, first of all,
it comes up that he's one of the most terrifying
villains in Australian movie history. For Mick Taylor. It also, uh,
it also comes up that Quentin Tarantino says he's the
best Australian actor. And that's a pretty high bar considering

(01:24:56):
you have Nicole Kidding, and you have like all these
like huge people, and you actually work with quainting Tarantino
a little bit in d Djego.

Speaker 6 (01:25:02):
Unchained, right, Yeah, yeah, I did Djengo.

Speaker 4 (01:25:06):
Yeah, we have another friend.

Speaker 5 (01:25:08):
The reason why I believe what you said that he's
the best actor in Australia. How many years are you
in the business? Are your actor?

Speaker 6 (01:25:16):
I did to nineteen seventy four.

Speaker 12 (01:25:21):
I did a film called Picnic and Hanging Rock, which
is a very famous Australian film. It relaunched the Australian
film industry and went to Cahn, went to all the
festivals and it's a classic in Australia at least. And
Peter Weir directed it. And have you heard of Peter Weir?

Speaker 6 (01:25:45):
Dead Poet Society are in the.

Speaker 5 (01:25:47):
Business for thirty forty fifty one fifty one. That's why
you're a great actor, because you've learned, you're experienced. You're
not green today.

Speaker 4 (01:26:02):
Hanging worker, Yes, John, I watched the trailer for it
on YouTube.

Speaker 5 (01:26:10):
I don't know if this is done in Australia, but
here in America pay to play? Are you familiar with
pay to play?

Speaker 6 (01:26:18):
Not?

Speaker 5 (01:26:19):
Ordinary people off the street pay the producer and they're
in the movie. The aspect a vintaged actor of me
sixty five years to work with a pay for play.
I was in a movie with a pay for play
and I was furious. I was a cop and I
was furious with this guy who I suspected killed his brother.

(01:26:45):
And the pay for play person called me, oh, you're
a bastard. That's nice, and I turned to the directis
it is a Kennin here? I am screaming at it
with a gun and that's the reaction I got. Well,
the guy was not an actor. He was somebody who

(01:27:06):
knew somebody and pay for play. So I'm against that.

Speaker 4 (01:27:11):
And I'm to see you guys don't have that. Either
that or you guys or you don't participate in any
big films that are low budget enough to have that
because here in America, like people make these up to
you have a million dollar fun films where they they
like sell off all the rules on indieggo, you know,
and you.

Speaker 5 (01:27:26):
Have low budget, no high budget. You could be in
a ten million dollar film and somebody puts tenth. I
was called up, don't you remember? Yeah, someone called me.
Someone called me.

Speaker 12 (01:27:38):
All Australia, all all Australian films, with the exception of
very few a love budget films.

Speaker 5 (01:27:46):
I was called up. And then.

Speaker 12 (01:27:49):
Yeah, unless unless it's bes Lemon or doctor George Miller,
mad Max and you know best Lemons just did Elvis, Yes,
and listen half the time it's American orientated.

Speaker 6 (01:28:08):
But not many.

Speaker 12 (01:28:10):
Full on Aussie films, fully full Australian cast a big
budget films, because unless you have an eyelister or in it,
and it's a bit of a problem.

Speaker 6 (01:28:23):
And I'm a bit shitty about it, to be honest.

Speaker 12 (01:28:27):
That all right, We've got about twenty four A listers
and they very rarely use their Australian accent. And if
you know how I'm talking about, Yes, we got some
very big stars and they should come home and jump
into Ossie films and use their Australian accent occasionally.

Speaker 4 (01:28:48):
I agree. I agree with that, and actually you're my
favorite of all the Australian films. And I didn't I mean,
I basically know you from horror because I've seen all
your horror movies. I love the movie Rogue. I didn't
realize what an extensive career you have. And two days
ago when I put the thing that you were coming on,
this guy who lives in Australia who has a record company,

(01:29:10):
tweeted out this thing to me saying, oh, it's like
you have two different guests coming on. You have John Jerrett,
you know, Wolf Creek Killer, and then you also you
also have the guy who hosted play School, which is
like an Australian children's you know program that I grew
up on. He was like that I grew up on,
and what a great guest this is going to be.

(01:29:31):
And then I looked it up and you hosted like
Better Homes and Gardens TV show, and you've made like
Christmas films and Christmas down Under and you know you've
made a You're an actual true actor. Because most horror
actors get pigeonholed and only get to do horror, but
you actually didn't start in horror, and you do everything,
and I think that's a big kudos to the fact

(01:29:52):
that you are a great actor. That you can do
all these different things.

Speaker 5 (01:29:56):
Well, that's what makes you a great actor when you
do everything. That's why I tell you I don't do
just horror movies because they're boring and stupid. Thank god.
I have a couple of movies coming up. I have
one with a beautiful script. Oh negative, it's a fabulous
script because it's going to be very sensitive and informative.
It's about a vampire who daughter becomes of age and

(01:30:20):
he has to tell her he's a vampire and he
has to teach her to be a vampire. But he's gay.
So here we're going to expose the gay world with
the vampire. It's very intelligent. It sounds stupid, but it's not.
And I take my daughter to an enchanted land where
she meets various people, and the political view of it

(01:30:43):
is that we should all be together, no matter who
we are, or what we look like or how we sound.
And I love the whole meaning of the thing. It's
going to be a love story and I'm playing it
not like a stupid vampire. I'm not playing it. I'm
playing it regularly, and I just get crazy when I
need blood. So when I need blood, I become a

(01:31:05):
horrible creature. I'm excited.

Speaker 6 (01:31:12):
Listening to you talk about it. Says to me, to
be honest, I think the film sucks.

Speaker 5 (01:31:20):
No sucks.

Speaker 6 (01:31:29):
That was I got it.

Speaker 5 (01:31:31):
If you read the script, be very moved.

Speaker 4 (01:31:34):
I have a question.

Speaker 5 (01:31:35):
He's never seen a vampire that was kind and moved you.

Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
I want to go I want to go back there
to something you said before, when you say when you
say all Australian films are low budget, like, what's your
idea of low budget? Like under ten million, under five million?

Speaker 6 (01:31:51):
What's your went back in Wolf Creak three in January.

Speaker 12 (01:31:56):
We're looking like doing it in January. The muscles back
up there. It's seven million dollars and that's and that's
a that's a that's a film that we're probably the
most successful film franchise in the twenties from two thousand

(01:32:19):
and fort till today. We got as you said, we've
got two movies and two successful television series and we're
doing Wolf Creek three and it's seven million.

Speaker 6 (01:32:33):
That's not a lot of money.

Speaker 4 (01:32:34):
That's not a lot of money. In America, they waste
so much money. It's not funny. They couldn't do it
for seven million here, not the way I mean, it's
done so well.

Speaker 12 (01:32:42):
But it's sensible because the money is in the back
end with this film, right, so we can make it
to look like, you know, thirty million Wolf Creek two,
which was more action adventure horror. You know, there's trucks

(01:33:03):
going downhills and all sorts of stuff. That was I
think thirteen million from Memory, which is not big because
they had a lot of action in it. The next
Wolf Creek film is going to be more like the
first one, sort of dark and creepy, and you know

(01:33:23):
which is.

Speaker 6 (01:33:25):
I prefer that. I think it's much more fun.

Speaker 12 (01:33:29):
Yes, so, yeah, even our most successful films, unless it's
Wolverine or one of those Bandits movies, you know, which
I can't stand. I think they make Wolverine and thor
and stuff here because and as you know, Chris Hamsworth

(01:33:52):
and you are Australians. But yes, so they do big
block buses here. It's got nothing to do with Australian filmmaking.
Its financed overseason. I come here and do it because
there's got a really good text.

Speaker 6 (01:34:06):
Break right.

Speaker 4 (01:34:09):
I love it. So you have a new film that
we can't see here. I tried to see if we
could watch it. I watched the trailer a bunch of times.
You wrote it, you directed it, you're starting one of
the stars of it called what About sal And it
looks like a great movie. And is that the first
movie that you've directed or have you directed others?

Speaker 12 (01:34:29):
This is my third time, my third third film that
I've directed and wrote and produced and acted in. And
it's on Netflix in Australia and when when ont oh,
we've got to release a cinema release. We got it
into seventy cinemas around Australia, which is pretty good, and

(01:34:52):
everyone loves it. And it's on Netflix in Australia New
Zealand at the moment, and it's been in for a
week and it's been in the top ten every day,
so it's going really well. Everyone loves it and it's
not horror at all. It's a story of a down
syndrome man whose mother is a chain smoker and she's

(01:35:16):
got a un cancer and she's dying and he's going
to have to go to a group house because he
hasn't got anybody, and so he goes in search of
his father, who was a one night stand or one
night standing as he says, with my mother. You had
one night standing with my mother in nineteen eighty eight.

(01:35:37):
And because down syndrome, people are very literal.

Speaker 6 (01:35:41):
And the guy playing the.

Speaker 12 (01:35:43):
Lead is one of the best actors I've ever worked with,
full stop. He's extraordinary. He's been in the business since
two thousand and eighty one, best act of a thing
called Tropfest, and he said, I won three thousand dollars
from Nicole Kimman.

Speaker 6 (01:35:58):
And it's a brilliant story.

Speaker 12 (01:36:00):
And if I do say so myself, and hopefully if
it keeps going like it is on Netflix, it'll it'll
go worldwide Netflix.

Speaker 6 (01:36:09):
And it's called What About Sal?

Speaker 12 (01:36:11):
And it goes in search of his father and I
look a hell of a lot like the father, and
he's an alcoholic.

Speaker 4 (01:36:16):
You look a lot like the father.

Speaker 6 (01:36:18):
So let's do this.

Speaker 4 (01:36:19):
I have the trailer. I have the trailer, and I'm
want to play the trailer to introduce the trailer. One
play the trailer that says what about Sal. We're is
going to play a real quick because when it comes
to America that way, people will have already heard about
it here because we'll have about five million people listen
to this so.

Speaker 6 (01:36:34):
Fantastic, Thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:36:37):
So introduce it for us.

Speaker 12 (01:36:40):
This is the trailer for What About sal the story
of a down syndrome man who doesn't want to go
to a group house and his mother's dying, so he
goes in search of his father and he finds him
and he looks a lot like me.

Speaker 6 (01:37:02):
I'm afraid we've got some bad news.

Speaker 4 (01:37:05):
She's got lung cancer. Her house.

Speaker 5 (01:37:07):
She she doesn't have much time left. Where's cells are? Then?
That's Tommy O Joy Heaven help me feature Bloody's dad.

Speaker 12 (01:37:19):
It was a one night stand.

Speaker 3 (01:37:22):
What is a one night stand?

Speaker 4 (01:37:29):
So?

Speaker 12 (01:37:30):
Where are you.

Speaker 5 (01:37:32):
Hello?

Speaker 4 (01:37:34):
He is a very nice I thought I told you
to piss off. I have no words.

Speaker 3 (01:37:39):
I will end up in the house and I'll be
very sad for the rest of my life.

Speaker 4 (01:37:45):
Dad an accept some responsibility. I know that you and
I know I love you. It looks really good.

Speaker 5 (01:38:02):
Yeah, I can't worry for your coming.

Speaker 4 (01:38:03):
It looks really good. So you play a singer in it,
and I googled you because I saw on your IMDb
that it looked like maybe you had sung a song
a song in some other movies, and so you actually
liked to sing because I saw a video of you singing.
I don't know if it was karaokere or what it was,
but I saw a video of you singing. So do
you actually sing in this movie for real?

Speaker 6 (01:38:23):
Yeah? That's the only way I can sing.

Speaker 4 (01:38:27):
I mean, it could be like you like lip syncing
to somebody else, or is it.

Speaker 6 (01:38:31):
I can sing? No. I sang all the songs in it.

Speaker 12 (01:38:36):
And a bud called Craig McGlaughlin who's a very famous
Australian actor also a rock and roller, he wrote the songs.

Speaker 6 (01:38:46):
And yeah, I play an alcoholic.

Speaker 12 (01:38:53):
Ex rock and roll singers and he's singing in all
people's times because he's a drunken he can't get a
gig anymore. And I want to say too much more
because I'll give the game away. But yeah, so yeah,
I do sing. I've sung in other films as well,
and I've done a few musicals.

Speaker 1 (01:39:13):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:39:13):
I think it's because you actually were really good. I
was almost going to pull the clip, but I was like,
I'd rather show people the actual trailer because I know
it'll get it'll make it here eventually. If it's doing
that well in Australia, it's definitely going to make it here.
And it doesn't have to be dubbed, so we can
understand it. And I think it'll be a lot of fun.

Speaker 5 (01:39:30):
Do you find it difficult to lose the Australian accent
and have an American accent?

Speaker 6 (01:39:38):
No, that's uh. We can do any accent. Ossies can
do just about any accent, and Americans in accent.

Speaker 12 (01:39:51):
But I played I did a film in Portland and
I played an American. It's a horror film course, Shiver,
and and I got the role because of Mick Taylor.
But the character was nothing like Mick Taylor. He was
a real puny, little jeweler who got women's addresses and

(01:40:14):
went around and terrorized them and spoke poetry as he
cut their heads off and put it in a jar
and so and he was a real nerdy guy, and
I don't play nerdy guys very often, and so I
just stayed to make him slightly buck tooth, and he's.

Speaker 6 (01:40:36):
And he was kind of creepy, you know.

Speaker 12 (01:40:40):
And it was my first film with him with an
American accent, and I think I did well.

Speaker 4 (01:40:46):
I do Daniel.

Speaker 5 (01:40:49):
Wait a minute, can you do a Brooklyn accent?

Speaker 11 (01:40:53):
Uh?

Speaker 6 (01:40:54):
You're talking to me? Yeah, sure I can do that.

Speaker 5 (01:40:56):
You know.

Speaker 6 (01:40:57):
What's the matter. Why are you looking at him? Motherfucker?
Yeah I can do that.

Speaker 5 (01:41:02):
I gotta say this, John, forget about it.

Speaker 6 (01:41:06):
Get about it.

Speaker 5 (01:41:08):
That was good. Forget about so that?

Speaker 6 (01:41:11):
God, what are you talking about? You?

Speaker 5 (01:41:14):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 4 (01:41:17):
Motherfucker? Actually, Daniel Harris has been on the show and
she's a friend of mine, and she was in that
ship or movie with you.

Speaker 6 (01:41:22):
She was Yeah, I love her. She's great.

Speaker 4 (01:41:25):
Yeah, she's fantastic. So you also wrote a book, and
I never I love the title of the book. I
didn't know you wrote a book until today, but I
looked it up. It's called The Bastard. It's an autobiography
called The Bastard from the Bush. Yeah, plug it a
little bit because maybe we'll sell some copies.

Speaker 5 (01:41:42):
Interesting title that was.

Speaker 12 (01:41:44):
That was written about thirteen years ago, now quite a
long time ago, about ten years at least, and I
think it's solved out.

Speaker 6 (01:41:52):
I don't think you bought it anymore. Oh it's old.
But it's called The Bastard.

Speaker 12 (01:41:59):
From the Bush, which is a famous Australian poet wrote
a poem called The Bastard from the Bush.

Speaker 6 (01:42:06):
And I was born and raised in the country. And
that's why i can do Mick Taylor so well.

Speaker 12 (01:42:13):
Because I'm from the outback and as a teenager I
used to go out and shoot pigs and kangaroos and
stuff with my brother.

Speaker 6 (01:42:22):
And my dad was and that kind of guy.

Speaker 12 (01:42:26):
My dad was five ft nine and about ninety kilos.
I don't know what that is in pounds.

Speaker 6 (01:42:34):
We've moved ahead in Australia where metric you know, you
guys are still in pounds, shillings and pens and whatever
it is you do.

Speaker 12 (01:42:42):
And anyway, Dad was very stocky and here a tough guy,
very funny, and he said, well, if you get in
the fight with me and it gets up against a wall,
I fill your shirt with busted ribs, you know, and
stuff like that. And Mick Taylor is actually based on

(01:43:04):
my father. That's an impersonation of my father, who had
a really deep voice. But Dad wasn't a psychopath or
a serial killer. So I added psychopath and cereal and
I didn't I don't have his deep baritone.

Speaker 6 (01:43:17):
Boys and that's what I do and that's why I
do that.

Speaker 12 (01:43:21):
I can do that all day and it drops my
vocal tone. And so it's Mick Taylor is my father.
With Psychopaths and serial Killer thrown in.

Speaker 4 (01:43:33):
I liked you are. So you did a lot of
movies with Brian Brown, who's like my other favorite Australian
I love.

Speaker 6 (01:43:40):
He's very good friend of mine. Brian Brown, Brown, browne you.

Speaker 4 (01:43:47):
I love those.

Speaker 12 (01:43:48):
He rings the States and he talks. He's got a
very broad Australian accent. He rings and he said, who
is it?

Speaker 6 (01:43:55):
Who's tyking? Is Brian Brown? He said, brown Brown? Your
name's Brown Brown. Brown's brown Brown. And then he goes
Brian Brown. Oh, Brian Brown.

Speaker 4 (01:44:07):
He's a great, great, great actor. I first saw him
in The Thornbirds Back. I must have been in high school,
yeah or something back in the day.

Speaker 5 (01:44:15):
Now. That was a script.

Speaker 4 (01:44:17):
Yeah, that was a great script.

Speaker 6 (01:44:18):
Yeah, I'll tell the other day I met Brian Brown.

Speaker 12 (01:44:21):
He was I didn't know him. He was totally unknown,
but I knew his name before he was famous. I
remembered him when like a year or so later he
became really well known. I just done picking hanging rocking,
and he was. He was doing a concert that he
put together himself in a pub, you know, sort of

(01:44:44):
a review thing, and everyone said it was really funny,
and so I went up and had a drink with
a friend and I sat down at the table and
I watched these two guys come out and it was
very funny, and Brian was one of them. And I'd
done Picnic, Hanging Rock and another film called The Great McCarthy,
so my star was rising at the time. And at
the end of the show he came down off the

(01:45:06):
stage up to my table and said, goody, John, Brian Brown,
how the fuck do you get in the movies? And
I remembered him, and I remember his name, Ryan Brown,
And then later on I'm in a film with him.
A couple of years later. I said, I remember meeting you,

(01:45:28):
and I remember your name because you came up and
said it in my face. And he said, yeah, I
remember that. So yeah, he's a wonderful, wonderful person, a
very good friend of mine.

Speaker 4 (01:45:39):
Very good actor.

Speaker 5 (01:45:40):
And a little bit about your real self. Are you married,
Do you have children?

Speaker 12 (01:45:45):
Yes, I've been married four times and I've got six children,
or my wives get two kids.

Speaker 6 (01:45:52):
In a house each.

Speaker 12 (01:45:56):
And I'm married a fourth time and she is my
first wife and my fourth wife. I got two together
with my first wife. I know you were Yeah, I
went back.

Speaker 6 (01:46:11):
She was the only one. Then she was the only
one to kick me out, so I left the other two.

Speaker 12 (01:46:20):
But I wanted When I left the third wife, my
first wife was available, so I cracked onto her again.

Speaker 5 (01:46:27):
You know, there you go?

Speaker 4 (01:46:28):
Did only your children want to follow your footsteps into
the actors?

Speaker 6 (01:46:34):
Funnily enough, only only one?

Speaker 12 (01:46:37):
And oh no, William, my third youngest, is starting to
do some acting classes now. He's decided he's going to
go that way. He's a brilliant singer, but that's too hard.
He's working on it. My youngest Riley, he wants to
do it, and he can do any accent and he's

(01:46:58):
very funny and he'll do well.

Speaker 1 (01:47:01):
Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:47:02):
I think that's terrific. It's great too because he has
like a role model to follow for the whole thing,
so it works.

Speaker 6 (01:47:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:47:08):
I want to tell everybody you guys can follow John
Jarrett on Instagram. It's that real, John Jarrett. We have
three minutes. Do you want to come? I thought I
saw something maybe on Instagram or someplace that want that
you come here and do autograph signings that like horror
conventions and stuff. Do you have any of those coming up?

Speaker 5 (01:47:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (01:47:25):
I got one in Kentucky, and I got one in
New Jersey and I can't remember the name, but yeah,
I got all around the world signing Wolf Creek photos.
And yeah, I'm the only person who does this. They
want me to tell them off and say terrible thanks
to him. So to Bill, go fuck yourself, John Jarrett, and.

Speaker 6 (01:47:49):
And uh, you know I can't. You can't use the
C word, can.

Speaker 4 (01:47:55):
You know you care? Yes, you can. You can use
anything you want to see it.

Speaker 12 (01:48:00):
Well, in Wolf Creek two, I say, I called this
bike pammi kant, which is an English Englishman word that
we use if you're from England, you're a pummy. Anyway,
I went to Manchester and I'm signing these photos and
they all come up and said, could do that?

Speaker 6 (01:48:17):
Paumke Comp. Women said could you that?

Speaker 4 (01:48:21):
Permit comp.

Speaker 12 (01:48:22):
So I'm writing Tommy count all day for the Manchester people,
and these gay girls came up and she could do that.
Pomic Comp's all right, you pummy. Pair of kunts. In
October Ibby in Kentucky.

Speaker 4 (01:48:41):
I definitely if you come to one of them in California.
I want to, like, I want to come and meet
you because I think you would be a blast. So
we have like a minute left. I would like you
to do one thing for me. Uh you know how
like in the in in number two you say my name,
my name is Mick Taylor, pleased to meet you, but
do it in your like accent. You know that you
do it because that shit's creepy and fun as hell.

Speaker 6 (01:49:05):
My my name's Mick Tyler. Please tell meet you.

Speaker 5 (01:49:10):
And then he kills you. Sound like a seventeenth century pirate.

Speaker 6 (01:49:17):
It'd be silver.

Speaker 4 (01:49:20):
And a Pommy kuhn. So everybody follow John Jarrett again.
It's at real John Jarrett on Instagram. Check out all
his films, Wolf Creek three. I can't wait for it
to come out Wolf Creak right now, you guys streaming
on to be the number one and number two. Check
out What About sal when it gets here. And I
am also everybody should watch Rogue, even though you're not
like the mainest character. It's a really good movie. And

(01:49:44):
we also want to thank Dennis for helping set this
whole thing up, Dennis, your person who works with you
so Dennis, thank you so much, Thank you so much
for coming on the show. You're you're a true inspiration.
I love all your work and anytime you want to
promote anything, let us know. We'd love to have be back.

Speaker 7 (01:50:00):
It was a pleasure meeting you John, and it was
a pleasure meeting you too. Say it again, it's a
pleasure to see you guys y cunts.

Speaker 5 (01:50:14):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:50:15):
Thank you so much and thanks for getting up. Everybody
will see you next week. Bye everybody.

Speaker 3 (01:50:21):
Jimmy, every man, I'm drinking. What are we gonna be?

Speaker 4 (01:50:34):
Yo?

Speaker 5 (01:50:36):
You can't.

Speaker 8 (01:50:37):
We got the crazy gain.

Speaker 3 (01:50:40):
That's great to Jimmy, you got myself. You know you
don't want to know gipsys.

Speaker 8 (01:50:45):
That's plus.

Speaker 3 (01:50:46):
Jimmy don't want to want to be Gimmy stop, take
you out.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Fudd Around And Find Out

Fudd Around And Find Out

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd brings her championship swag to iHeart Women’s Sports with Fudd Around and Find Out, a weekly podcast that takes fans along for the ride as Azzi spends her final year of college trying to reclaim the National Championship and prepare to be a first round WNBA draft pick. Ever wonder what it’s like to be a world-class athlete in the public spotlight while still managing schoolwork, friendships and family time? It’s time to Fudd Around and Find Out!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.