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  • Okay, hell yeah, here we go.

  • Yellow Stone, the show, and the fights, and the explosions.

  • It's a little bit about the class struggle, you guys.

  • I was gonna go to this camera,

  • but maybe this is the camera

  • where I talk about emotional intimacy.

  • (beat boxing)

  • What do you think,

  • do we need a less psychotic version of that?

  • (rock music)

  • Hey guys, what's up?

  • This is Jefferson Y., I play Jimmy

  • on the Paramount Network's Yellowstone,

  • and this is welcome to the Yellowstone, episode two.

  • We're figuring it out as we go.

  • I feel like we learned a lot of good stuff, Breia.

  • (Breia) Yeah? Yeah.

  • (Breia) It's been good? Yeah.

  • (Breia) I think we should keep doing it.

  • They explicitly gave me permission

  • to talk to Breia now.

  • (Breia) You did!

  • They were like dang, Jeff (Breia) Permission granted.

  • That fifteen-minute monologue

  • came off as a little insane.

  • Feel free to talk to a human being, like a person.

  • So we're doing that now.

  • Also, we have this new intro music.

  • It goes like this.

  • (singing musical tones)

  • And get used to hearing that

  • at the beginning of every episode.

  • Exactly like that.

  • We'll use that sorta thing that like acapella YouTuber's do,

  • where we put my face in different boxes

  • and I sing, you guys know what I'm talking about.

  • (beat boxing)

  • Get ready, get ready, get used to that.

  • They told me, they're signalling they want more acapella.

  • (Breia) Yellowstone goes Glee?

  • Yellow Stone goes Glee!

  • We might have to beep that out.

  • I don't know if we can say that song, that show.

  • (Breia) Glee is just a feeling.

  • Wow, good point, excellent work around Bri.

  • Breia with that legal mind.

  • So, today we're gonna talk about

  • Yellowstone episode 102, Kill the Messenger.

  • Episode 101, as you may recall, a lot of s### happens.

  • So let's do a one minute, what happened last time?

  • All right?

  • Here we go, begin.

  • Episode 101, there's four, (groans) oh god.

  • Okay, check it out.

  • You got John Dutton, he's got a bunch of kids,

  • he owns a giant cattle ranch,

  • there's a nearby Indian reservation,

  • and there's also land developers in Montana

  • who are trying to, sort of, bite off pieces

  • of his giant cattle ranch.

  • A bunch of cows wander from John Dutton's land

  • onto the Indian reservation.

  • John Dutton goes to get those cows back.

  • That erupts in violence.

  • John Dutton's youngest son' wife's brother

  • kills John Dutton's oldest son,

  • and then John Dutton's youngest son

  • kills his wife's brother.

  • And that trauma right there,

  • is gonna set off what happens in 102, Kill the Messenger.

  • I've got 15 seconds left.

  • I can use that to talk about whatever I want,

  • and what I want to talk about

  • is Jimmy Hurdstrom and Rip Wheeler.

  • Rip is John Dutton's number one bada##,

  • go get 'em, tough cowboy,

  • and Jimmy Hurdstrom is his number two bada##,

  • go get 'em, tough cowboy.

  • It's close, they're close,

  • it's hard to say which is really tougher, amazing.

  • Okay great, now let's dig into,

  • I'm gonna reset a new timer, five minutes.

  • Begin.

  • Yellowstone episode 102, Kill the Messenger.

  • So, from the very beginning of this episode,

  • we are sort of living in the trauma

  • of Yellowstone episode 101, the explosive events of 101.

  • So,

  • at the very beginning, John Dutton and Rip Wheeler

  • are trying to break the stallion

  • that Kayce gave John in episode 101.

  • It's not going great.

  • That's a tough, mean horse.

  • So, you now what you gotta do?

  • You gotta get a tough mean cowboy to break 'em,

  • or just a young guy who likely will survive that experience.

  • So, they tape Jimmy Hurdstrom, this fella,

  • to that horse in the hope

  • that they'll wear each other out and they'll sort of,

  • by the end of that experience

  • both be a little more broken in.

  • Okay.

  • Boom.

  • Cut to,

  • Kayce on his house out at the reservation.

  • He's trying to dig up a stump.

  • It doesn't work,

  • so he has to use some explosives.

  • He blows the s### out of the stump,

  • and in doing so, uncovers some dinosaur bones.

  • Remember those dinosaur bones,

  • that's important to hold on to.

  • And then, we cut to Jamie,

  • what's going on in Jamie's world.

  • He's meeting with the Governor,

  • because there's evidence that there's

  • maybe some foul play afoot.

  • So there was this horrible trauma.

  • Robert Long killed Lee,

  • and then Kayce killed Robert Long.

  • And the Dutton's had their own sort of explanation for it,

  • that it was self-defense and that they killed each other.

  • But, upon investigating the scene of this violence,

  • it's pretty clear that that's not what happened.

  • There might be a third shooter.

  • Right, there might be a third person involved

  • in that killing.

  • And we all know that that's Kayce Dutton,

  • but the Dutton's are trying to cover this up

  • because basically Kayce didn't have,

  • like Kayce's not a legal entity.

  • Kayce killing somebody isn't a sort of legal action.

  • So, it's very important for the Dutton's

  • that they cover up the fact that Kayce

  • was involved with this.

  • And there's some loose ends.

  • You got some witnesses that are, witnesses at the scene.

  • And then, you've also got the bodies themselves, right?

  • And over the course of this episode,

  • one of the things that we're navigating

  • is how we're gonna tie up all these loose ends.

  • So there's a few different ways that we approach that.

  • John Dutton goes after the witnesses.

  • So, basically he calls in some favors.

  • He calls on one of his old school business friends

  • to lean on their son to say that Kayce wasn't there.

  • And then he also goes to this pastor

  • who he sort of gets to preach this sermon

  • the basic gist of which is hey John Dutton is important

  • to this community, we gotta protect our flock,

  • you gotta lie to save his son.

  • Right, so they handle the witnesses in that way.

  • And then, you've got this medical examiner

  • who has seen the bodies, right?

  • Has seen the bodies and can effectively prove

  • that there was this third shooter involved,

  • that Kayce Dutton was involved.

  • And so, John Dutton sends Rip to take care of that problem,

  • and as we are, you know, pretty quickly learning,

  • sending Rip to take care of a problem

  • generally involves an explosion of some kind.

  • And in this case that holds out.

  • Rip kills this medical examiner,

  • and blows up the office and makes it look like a suicide.

  • Classic Rip move.

  • Okay, what else goes on here?

  • Oh, man.

  • There's a lot.

  • So, Kayce and Monica basically are,

  • they're processing what happened to Monica's brother.

  • She doesn't know that Kayce's the one that killed him.

  • And they're driving along the highway,

  • and then they drive past an explosion, effectively.

  • It's a meth house that explodes.

  • And Kayce gets out of the car,

  • he wants to go see if he can help,

  • if there's any survivors.

  • And there's one guy who survived,

  • but is so badly burned that there's no way he'll survive.

  • So, Kayce puts him out of his misery by killing him

  • so he doesn't have to burn to death.

  • And then tribal police show up, they see what happened here,

  • and they sort of agree with Kayce

  • that he did the right thing,

  • but in order to cover up, the sort of--

  • it wasn't necessarily,

  • technically the legal thing to do,

  • so they help Kayce cover it up

  • by basically switching gun barrels

  • between the chief of tribal police's gun and Kayce's gun.

  • They switch barrels to make it effectively a legal killing.

  • And then we sort of get Kayce--

  • Kayce's caught in the middle of this conflict

  • between his father and the reservation,

  • and so through, sort of, living on the reservation

  • and engaging-- oh my god.

  • It can't be done.

  • It can't be done.

  • It was a foolish effort to begin with.

  • You can't-good TV, you can't summarize in five minutes.

  • It's too complicated, right?

  • It's not so cut and dry.

  • It's not so simple, cause there's a lot of like--

  • these characters are all very complicated.

  • Every scene has like deep ramifications.

  • Nothing's wasted, you know?

  • So, it can't possibly be done in five minutes.

  • That is to say, we'll hit the sort of important pieces here.

  • Basically, the important pieces of episode two

  • is the cover-up as they sort of work

  • to try to cover up this violence,

  • and it's Kayce sort of being torn in two

  • between his loyalties to the reservation

  • and his loyalties to his family, right?

  • And Kayce and Monica, obviously,

  • big Romeo and Juliet situation here.

  • Kayce is-Rainwater, the Chief of the reservation

  • wants to use Kayce as a pawn to take down John Dutton,

  • but Rainwater also, I think, feels

  • tremendous sympathy for Kayce.

  • And Kayce and Rainwater maybe relate

  • just as much as Kayce relates to his family.

  • So, this episode, if you ask me,

  • the episode MVP, Kayce Dutton.

  • This is a Kayce episode if there ever is one.

  • It's about, for me, my experience of watching it

  • is very much about the tension

  • between Kayce's past and his future.

  • The tension between Kayce's family,

  • his biological family, and his chosen family,

  • Monica and the Broken Rock Reservation.

  • Kayce really is caught in the middle.

  • And Kayce's family, Monica too, and Tate

  • are caught in the middle of this explosive conflict.

  • And, the terms of that conflict

  • have really been changed by the violence

  • that occurs in episode one.

  • So, episode two is largely about

  • the Dutton's trying to cover up and protect Kayce,

  • and it's about Kayce sort of contending

  • with no matter where he goes,

  • no matter what steps he takes to try to escape violence,

  • it feels as though violence is his destiny, right?

  • Violence erupts he watches his brother in law

  • kill his brother.

  • The next day, or you know a little later,

  • he's driving down the road and a meth house explodes.

  • Everywhere he goes, violence follows him.

  • And I think he's starting to contend with that

  • and starting to ask himself how he can protect his family

  • and how he can stand for what he wants to stand for

  • and stand for his code

  • when violence follows him everywhere he goes.

  • Tricky stuff.

  • Episode MVP, Kayce Dutton.

  • And then my grandma's favorite line of the episode.

  • My grandma loves all the swearing on the show.

  • She's really big on the profanity.

  • It's her favorite part.

  • And so my grandma's favorite line of the show

  • is Kayce Dutton in the second scene

  • while he's working on breaking this horse says,

  • "F###, god damn it, piece of s###."

  • That's my grandma's favorite line.

  • Some Easter eggs for this episode,

  • some fun little tidbits.

  • It's the first bunkhouse scene of the TV show.

  • The bunkhouse will come to be this familiar set

  • where the wranglers, the Yellowstone cowboys,

  • spend their time, where they live their lives.

  • Episode two, first bunkhouse scene,

  • and it's the first time we see Lloyd

  • sitting at that table playing cards.

  • And we learn that Lloyd wears the brand.

  • So a lot of these early episodes of season one,

  • we don't know what the brand means.

  • We don't necessarily understand what it means to wear the brand.

  • We learn in episode two that Lloyd

  • wears the brand and Kayce.

  • We also learn that Kayce wears the brand in this episode,

  • so we're sort of slowly uncovering what that means.

  • This is also episode two is where I met

  • Bobby Roberts for the first time.

  • Bobby Roberts has been playing Jimmy

  • as long as I've been playing Jimmy

  • because the horse duct tape scene

  • was the first scene of the show that I shot.

  • So the way that TV like this works

  • is you do what's called block shooting.

  • So you shoot a couple episodes at once

  • to make it more efficient based on location.

  • And so the first scene of the show

  • that I, Jefferson White, shot

  • was Jimmy getting strapped to the bucking bronco.

  • But thankfully, that wasn't me.

  • That was Jimmy as played by Bobby Roberts,

  • who's an incredible real-life cowboy and bronc rider

  • and who has been playing Jimmy as long as I have.

  • He rules, and we've been friends ever since.

  • A little segment I like to call Jeff's favorite guest stars.

  • Look, I'm a character actor.

  • I'll be doing this my whole life.

  • I don't have a Wes Bentley face or a Luke Grimes face,

  • or Wes Bentley acting chops or Luke Grimes acting chops,

  • if we're super honest with ourselves.

  • So I'll spend my whole life sort of coming

  • in and out of different shows,

  • being various little guest stars, various parts.

  • So I love to flag those cool guest stars in every episode.

  • In this episode, we got John Aylward.

  • Do you guys know him?

  • IMDB him, he plays Father Bob.

  • He's got an incredible career.

  • He's got 100 credits on IMDB.

  • You'd recognize him, might not necessarily know his name.

  • Check him out, he's an amazing actor.

  • I was so delighted to see him doing this show.

  • What an incredible treat, as a guy who loves

  • character actors and loves that world.

  • What a gift.

  • And then as long as we're sort of tracking

  • Jimmy's physical state from episode to episode,

  • episode 102 Jimmy gets strapped to a bucking horse

  • and gets beaten up real bad.

  • Gets kicked around a lot.

  • Personally, this is about the time in the season,

  • I think, that I gave up on the idea of the scars

  • on my b### ever healing.

  • I would ride for a couple weeks,

  • and they would open up and be like scabs, really bad.

  • Really bad situation.

  • But then I would maybe have a week where I didn't

  • ride as much and they would heal.

  • And I'd be like, "Okay, I think there's a future

  • in which my b### isn't permanently damaged."

  • This was the point at which I realized

  • there's no going back.

  • The show has changed my life in many ways.

  • One of the ways in which it's changed my life

  • is that my b### has permanent scars

  • on the sort of inside cheeks of my b###.

  • Like a Rorschach test where you see

  • the sort of symmetrical pattern?

  • My b###'s like that, but with scars from horse riding.

  • So as long as we're tracking Jimmy's injuries,

  • first episode, Jimmy gets tased, branded,

  • punched at some point probably.

  • It's safe to assume.

  • Kicked in the b###, for sure.

  • Second episode, Jimmy gets strapped to that horse.

  • I had to throw up from being strapped to the horse

  • and getting sort of shaken around so much.

  • And it turns out if you fake

  • throw up enough times, you'll throw up.

  • You can only fake it so much.

  • Your body doesn't really know

  • the difference at a certain point.

  • So that's how Jimmy's doing.

  • In memoriam, episode two, throwing up,

  • pour on out for the medical examiner

  • who smoked embalming fluid.

  • Dang man, hate to see him go out like that.

  • Pretty f###ed up, Rip.

  • Dang.

  • And also pour one out for the meth house guy

  • whose house exploded.

  • S###, dark stuff.

  • Dark stuff.

  • Breia, let's get some questions from the fans.

  • (Breia) Sure, all right.

  • Country living at its best wants to know

  • what's your favorite part of working on "Yellowstone"?

  • My favorite part of working on "Yellowstone"

  • is that every day I get to go to work

  • and be surrounded by an incredibly talented cast

  • and an incredibly talented crew

  • who I feel so lucky to consider my friends after three years.

  • It is such a gift to go to work with people

  • that you admire and trust and can learn so much from.

  • So yeah, that's my favorite part of working on "Yellowstone"

  • is that every day I get to go to work

  • and feel like I'm surrounded by 100 of my best friends.

  • (Breia) Blackroanfarm asks how's the food on set?

  • It's so good.

  • There was a day when I ate eight ears of corn,

  • and it really messed my stomach up for real.

  • For a week, my stomach was a mess.

  • You know what I mean, you know what I'm talking about.

  • Eight ears of corn in a day?

  • And what happened was it was the first take.

  • So the way that making a TV show works

  • is you set up a bunch of cameras

  • and then you do the scene over and over again

  • until you get it right,

  • and you do it from different camera angles

  • so you can piece it all together later.

  • But if in the first take, you eat an entire ear of corn,

  • you're committed to eating an entire ear of corn every take.

  • And every shot I'd go, "Hey, can you guys still see me?

  • Am I still in the background of this one?"

  • And they'd be like, "Yeah, bro."

  • And I'd be like, "All right,"

  • And I'd have to eat an entire nother ear of corn.

  • My stomach wasn't right for most of season two.

  • (Breia) What about the craft service food?

  • Oh, the craft service food's incredible.

  • Gator, our craft services chef,

  • and Gecko, his assistant, are f###ing amazing.

  • And our caterers are great.

  • There's so much food on set.

  • I gained 25 pounds over the course

  • of shooting "Yellowstone" season two.

  • I know, I was almost maybe stress eating

  • because I was depressed,

  • but I gained a ton of weight.

  • The food is so good; it's out of control.

  • And it's just ubiquitously available.

  • Yeah, a lot of people put a lot of work

  • into making sure that we're well fed,

  • and they're great at it.

  • They're very, very good at it.

  • And I'm very good at eating, to give myself some crap.

  • (Breia) Jeepduncan wants to know

  • what's the best part about filming in Utah and Montana?

  • Utah and Montana are incredible and they're beautiful

  • and they're beautiful in very different ways.

  • When we shoot in Utah, we shoot in Park City, Utah,

  • which it's like a postcard.

  • You're surrounded by mountains.

  • Utah is a state with incredible biodiversity.

  • If you drive an hour in Utah,

  • you feel like you're in an entirely different state.

  • There's mountains, there's deserts.

  • It's an incredible place.

  • So it's amazing to be out there; the hiking,

  • but the food's also amazing.

  • There's so much.

  • I think it's also we have a tendency to reduce

  • other places to very simple ideas.

  • We have our idea of what Utah's like

  • or what Montana's like or what New York is like,

  • but we've spent so much time in those places now

  • that I'm like, "Oh yeah, there's everything there."

  • (Jefferson laughs)

  • Montana and Utah can't be reduced

  • to a sort of single experience.

  • They're beautiful and complex places.

  • Some of the best coffee I've ever had

  • in my life I had in Montana.

  • Shout out to Big Creek Roasters in Hamilton, Montana.

  • That place rocks.

  • What's up, Zach?

  • And I've done some great hiking in both places,

  • and there's just cool s###.

  • There's a cool vintage store in Missoula, Montana

  • that I like a lot.

  • They're both really beautiful.

  • I'm not just about coffee and vintage.

  • I also see nature.

  • I'm big into nature, too.

  • I do all sorts of nature stuff.

  • Nature, love it, birds all the time.

  • (Breia) Same user, Blackroanfarm,

  • want to know will we see any romance for Jimmy

  • or any of the bunkhouse boys in season three?

  • (Jefferson sniffs)

  • (Breia laughs)

  • On that note, I think you should que up some voice mails.

  • Heck yeah, let's listen to some voice mails.

  • Amazing, what have we got?

  • What do we got?

  • Okay, let's listen to some voice mails.

  • We set up a voice mail inbox where you can

  • call in and ask us questions.

  • I haven't heard these questions before.

  • We're listening to them for the very first time.

  • Let's hear them.

  • (Patrick) My name's Patrick Grimaldo.

  • My favorite scene was when Jimmy fell off the horse,

  • and after all the bunkhouse boys were pushing

  • the cattle forward, he made that split decision

  • to pick up that calf and carry it back.

  • It was pretty good moment for his integrity

  • to show that he belonged there.

  • And I am 18 years of age

  • and my Instagram is theinfamousarcoursepig

  • and phone number is (beep) one.

  • I would love to be on the show.

  • Thank you.

  • Heck yeah, that rules man.

  • Thank you so much.

  • That was one of my favorite scenes too.

  • That's amazing.

  • If I had any say in it, you're cast, you're in it.

  • That would rule.

  • Thanks man, very cool.

  • I don't have any say in it.

  • All my friends are unemployed actors.

  • If I had any say in it there'd be 80 people

  • in the bunkhouse.

  • I don't even have a say in my own job.

  • Can I have a job for season four, please?

  • I hope, finger's crossed.

  • Spoiler alerts, we don't know. (laughs)

  • We don't know.

  • Okay, let's listen to another voice mail.

  • (Caller) Hey, Jefferson, my name's Cristan Baker.

  • What's up man?

  • (Caller) I live in the Ogden, Utah area.

  • A big fan of the show and your character.

  • Saw you guys were out at Antelope Island recently.

  • Super cool spot, glad you guys are here

  • and looking forward to season three.

  • My Instagram handle is @cristandbaker

  • C-R-I-S-T-A-N-D-B-A-K-E-R.

  • And side note, you followed my little brother Dylan Baker

  • and his photography page on Instagram.

  • His handle is just dylanbakerphotography.

  • We're both big fans of you and your photography

  • as well as your acting.

  • Best of luck filming in season three

  • or if you guys are already done

  • we are looking forward to seeing it.

  • Take care man.

  • Oh man, that's so cool, that's so nice, thanks so much.

  • Yeah, went to Antelope Island, it was beautiful.

  • It's this state park or national park near Salt Lake City.

  • They got a herd of buffalo out there, it's incredible.

  • If you're ever around Salt Lake City check it out.

  • It's amazing.

  • And yeah Dylan Baker,

  • so this sounds like Dylan Baker's brother.

  • Dylan Baker's Instagram account is @dylanbakerphotgraphy.

  • He's an incredible analog photographer

  • which is something that I personally love

  • and it's very fun to follow other photographers

  • and see what other people are doing

  • and learn from other people.

  • So, thanks very much for calling in man, that rocks.

  • I keep waiting for someone else to do something but it's me.

  • It's all you. I'm the problem.

  • I keep thinking like,

  • "Why, why are they just letting me die out here?"

  • It's not them, it's me.

  • Whoa, here we go, here's another one.

  • (Caller) Hi, this is Jefferson White.

  • And my Instragram is @_ffersonwhite.

  • Hey, Jefferson, has your b### ever been the same

  • after the shooting of Yellowstone season one?

  • Thanks man, bye.

  • No, no it hasn't.

  • (Caller) I loved it when my Jimmy realized

  • that he had a family at the Yellowstone.

  • That was the best.

  • I'm crazy Karen from Instagram.

  • Love you.

  • Amazing, thanks Karen.

  • You're not crazy.

  • Well we're all a little crazy.

  • (crew laughs)

  • Thanks Karen from crazy Jeff.

  • So, we're gonna do a little phone call.

  • We're gonna call up Bobby Roberts.

  • Bobby Robers is the stunt performer

  • who does all the very difficult, dangerous, amazing

  • cowboy s### that Jimmy does on Yellowstone.

  • I met Bobby Roberts during the filming of the first season.

  • My first day on the show was the bucking sequence

  • in the first season where Jimmy gets duct-taped to the horse

  • and that was the first time I met Bobby Roberts.

  • So, Bobby is a real life bronc rider

  • and incredible stunt performer.

  • He's an incredible actor.

  • He's an incredible guy.

  • He's taught me so much

  • over the course of the last three years.

  • I feel so so lucky to work with him.

  • He's really been for me what some

  • of these wranglers are for Jimmy on the show.

  • He's really been a sort of guiding light

  • and somebody helps takes care of me,

  • make sure I'm safe

  • but then also help me look as cool as possible

  • at any given moment.

  • I can't remember, there's like so many times

  • that I like, I'll ride a horse through a field

  • and I'll be really proud of myself.

  • I'll feel like I really pulled off something bada##

  • and then Bobby will come up to me afterwards

  • and I'll be like,

  • "Bobby, how was it man?"

  • He's nice about it, he goes,

  • "It's really good Jeff.

  • You looked really good.

  • You're going very slowly."

  • So, he not only is a positive, helpful, amazing mentor,

  • he also pushes me to try to do my best job,

  • the best job I can.

  • And he's been playing Jimmy as long as I have.

  • So we're gonna talk to Bobby Roberts,

  • real life cowboy.

  • Here we go.

  • (phone chiming)

  • Hi you've reached the phone (cows mooing)

  • of Bobby Roberts.

  • I'm unable to come to the phone right now.

  • Please leave your name and number

  • and I'll get back to you as soon as possible.

  • (Woman) At the tone please record your message.

  • When you've finished recording you may hang up

  • or press one for more options.

  • (phone beeps)

  • That's pretty cowboy.

  • Did you hear that in the background

  • of Bobby's voicemail message?

  • There's fully cows just fully like baying.

  • (Crew) Did you hang up?

  • No, we're leaving a message for Bobby.

  • Oh okay (laughs)

  • Bobby that's a bada## voicemail inbox message dude.

  • s###, and I get it, you're busy.

  • You're too busy to take my call.

  • I get it, we're not real friends.

  • We're only friends on set.

  • I understand man.

  • All right, well, you're gonna listen to this message

  • and it's not gonna make a lot of sense.

  • Talk to you soon Bobby.

  • (phone beeps)

  • Bobby!

  • (Bobby) Jeff how you doing?

  • Good man, how you doing?

  • (Bobby) Good, so I get so many telemarket calls

  • and I got my phone set on to where

  • if it's an unknown number it just sends directly

  • to voicemail but it doesn't show me the number

  • a lot of times. (laughs)

  • (laughs) Oh got it.

  • (Bobby) And it wouldn't allow me to answer.

  • And we just could've been f###ing anybody.

  • We could have been somebody trying to sell you some s###.

  • (Bobby) Hey, believe it or not I did get scammed

  • by someone in SAG office when I first paid my dues.

  • It was like 37.50.

  • They took my credit card information

  • and went on a shopping spree in New York.

  • Oh s###, really?

  • (Bobby) (laughs) Yeah.

  • And what is your credit card information?

  • (Bobby) Yeah, I can't give that to you.

  • (laughs) There you go, hell yeah.

  • That's the important lesson 'cause I

  • totally would have I trust you Jeff,

  • gone on a shopping spree. I trust you but goddang

  • I know, that's a lot of trust.

  • How you doing brother?

  • (Bobby) Good, how you doing?

  • Pretty good man, where are you in the world right now?

  • (Bobby) Actually, I'm at home.

  • I'm in nice sunny California

  • and J Rod's on his way out here

  • and we're gonna rope and brand a bunch of calves.

  • I got about 700 journal.

  • That's amazing man, you're with J Rod right now?

  • You guys are working?

  • (Bobby) Well, he is on his way here.

  • J Rod's the stunt coordinator of the show.

  • (Bobby) This weekend, now, this weekend

  • he will be working for me.

  • I'm gonna treat him just like he treats us.

  • (laughing)

  • That's amazing, man.

  • Say hi to him for me.

  • (Bobby) I will.

  • He told me too, he goes, when he called the other day

  • I told him that we were gonna do this and he goes,

  • "You guys better give me a shout out."

  • He says,

  • "Jeff always does the Bunkhouse scenes

  • but he never gives me a shout out," he says.(laughs)

  • I swear to you, Bobby, I spent like 45 minutes

  • shouting him out when we shot the Bunkhouse Boys

  • this year and if it doesn't make it

  • to the edit that is not my fault.

  • (Bobby laughs)

  • J Rod is very good, J Rod's great at his job,

  • we all love J Rod, J Rod's great,

  • we're not here to talk about J Rod, Bobby.

  • He gets enough shout outs.

  • How are you doing man?

  • Talk to me about your experience shooting Yellowstone.

  • Have you done other stunt stuff

  • or done other film stuff before Yellowstone?

  • (Bobby) Yeah mostly commercials though.

  • I never worked on a full show like that.

  • Everything I ever done before was actually all commercials.

  • And it mostly involved riding bulls really.

  • I've done quite few horse stunts with my friends,

  • with Dill and Bick and Derrick LaCasa

  • but I never had to do any on film until Yellowstone.

  • And then it just happened that everybody kind of prepared me

  • for when something did come

  • and when it came and I guess it came pretty good.

  • I mean it feel like we did a good job.

  • Yeah man. (laughs)

  • (Bobby) You sure looked great. I mean,

  • You look great,

  • (Bobby) Looks just like you.

  • Yeah, I was telling the folks at home

  • that we been playing Jimmy for the same amount

  • of time 'cause my first scene was the scene

  • where they duct taped us to the horse.

  • So you been playing Jimmy for three years

  • just like I have.

  • (Bobby) Yea, it's been a good run.

  • It's been a good run, man.

  • And hopefully, you know, fingers crossed, we get

  • to keep going for a while.

  • (Bobby) Right, no I hope so.

  • It sounds like it.

  • Yeah, sounds like it's pretty good

  • and everybody's enjoying it.

  • So what do you do the rest of the year,

  • you're a real life cowboy?

  • Talk to me about your life when you're not on Yellowstone.

  • (Bobby) The rest of the year I'm a real cowboy.

  • I ride horses, train horses, take care of a ranch

  • right here at my house.

  • Take care of a cattle ranch right here.

  • And actually I shoe horses too.

  • I put the shoes on them.

  • Oh, amazing.

  • (Bobby) That, then when I'm not, when the weekend comes

  • we're normally rodeoing,

  • we go to ropings and rodeos.

  • Do you still compete then, you still buck?

  • (Bobby) Yeah, I don't necessarily ride anything

  • that bucks anymore.

  • I kind of quit riding bulls.

  • Actually the last, see I quit riding bulls in 2015

  • and then first season of Yellowstone,

  • I played Toby at the bull riding scene

  • and I rod a bull there that was the last one I got on.

  • Man, that is wild.

  • I didn't know that was you in that bull riding scene

  • in season one.

  • That s### it crazy.

  • (Bobby) Yup, yeah that was me.

  • That's so cool.

  • Do we get it right on the show?

  • Do you feel like, when you see the rodeo sequences,

  • does it feel like real life to you?

  • (Bobby) Yeah, you know it's,

  • you know, I think so for the most part.

  • You got enough guys that know what its all about.

  • You got, of course you got Jason Rodriguez,

  • which he's like third generation team roper.

  • His granddad was a world champion team roper.

  • And his dad is a world champion team roper, you know,

  • so they kinda-

  • just him alone knows how the rodeo set up should be

  • and then Taylor's familiar with the rodeos and stuff.

  • You know, I feel like they got a pretty good mindset of it

  • by the time actually reaches down to us to do.

  • I'm always amazed at how much of a community it is.

  • It feels like it's-

  • every time we go out there and you watch guys ride

  • there's so many other guys helping him get the rig set,

  • sort of taking care of each other.

  • (Bobby) You know, and that's the thing about rodeo

  • it's just like your average sport, you know.

  • I mean, you are competing against one another

  • but it's more or less like a whole nother family, you know,

  • like we'll go-

  • we travel all over the rodeos, you know.

  • You go to Washington for three weeks up there for rodeos

  • and you stay at friend's house up there

  • and there's so many other people do the same thing

  • and then they come down here for the spring rodeos,

  • they come to my house and stay at my house

  • and it's just like a whole nother family, you know.

  • Something-

  • you break down along the way someone goes

  • hey, I know somebody up there who will pick your rig up

  • and get your horses set up, we'll get you fixed up.

  • No big deal, you know.

  • And it's actually, you know, a lot of people overlook

  • the fact of it's more of a family sport

  • than it is actually an independent sport

  • cause almost all the guys, all the family guys,

  • they got a big live in trailer

  • and they're taking the wife and kids with them

  • every weekend, every week to all the rodeos, you know.

  • Yeah, it's amazing to see that.

  • I feel like every time we do one of those sequences

  • it's so fun to watch the way-

  • but they also talk s###, right?

  • Like I also watch all these-

  • (Bobby) Oh, yes.

  • Yes, yes, yeah.

  • Yeah, I mean, yeah.

  • They're going to-

  • they are going to talk crap to you

  • but they mean it in a good way, you know.

  • Yeah.

  • So Bobby, this is your opportunity.

  • If there is anyone that you want to talk crap to

  • you've got a national audience right now.

  • You can say--

  • you can talk any crap you want right now

  • and we'll just let you--

  • they can't talk back.

  • (Bobby) I mean, I don't--

  • I feel like I don't want to make any enemies.

  • (laughing)

  • That's a good point.

  • I'll say for you.

  • (sighs)

  • Any other cowboy out there,

  • Bobby Roberts is better than you.

  • Bobby Roberts is tougher and meaner.

  • He'll beat your a##.

  • If you see him out in public, try to fight him.

  • (Bobby) Just pack a lunch and go along with it.

  • Yeah.

  • No, we'd never let that happen, Bobby.

  • (laughs)

  • Thanks again, man.

  • Thank you so much for everything you do on this show.

  • It really like--

  • like what you're saying about the community

  • and the family, I really feel that on this sh--

  • and I hope you feel the same way.

  • I really feel that on the show at this point.

  • (Bobby) Oh, and no doubt, too, you know.

  • You know it's amazing when I come home and people

  • are like, you know, people are like

  • how are the guys to be around?

  • How are the big time actors?

  • I say, you know, they're people.

  • They're normal to us.

  • And even Dillon Heist.

  • When Dillon came on the show to do some rodeo scenes

  • with us over there he was like man, these guys

  • are all like super nice to hang out with.

  • Like I have dinner with you sometimes

  • or Ryan or Luke and, you know, Cole, like--

  • everybody's nice around us.

  • It's like rodeoing, you know, it's like family there.

  • Everyone's nice.

  • Well, man, I'm so glad to hear that.

  • (Bobby) Everybody treats you, you know,

  • everyone treats you the same around there

  • and that's like, you know, that's the way we grew up,

  • you know, you treat-

  • the way I grew up around here you treat people

  • the way you want to be treated.

  • And you know, it's super nice, you know.

  • You get there and you get the gratitude and respect.

  • And people are just super nice to you

  • and they love what you do

  • and when you do it they're excited

  • because they do a good job and it makes it look nice

  • and you know, Jason sets it up where it's completely safe

  • where none of us are going to get killed.

  • Flets might try and kill us once in a while

  • but Jason doesn't really let that happen.

  • (laughs)

  • Is there anything else you want to shout out

  • while you're here, while you have America's captive ear?

  • Is there anyone else you want to shout out?

  • (Bobby) Nah, I'll tell you what,

  • I want to give you some credit, Jeff.

  • From start to where we're at now

  • you've come a long way

  • and when my wife, Jamie, told me the other day

  • that you won the celebrity kite

  • I was like, I guarantee he did.

  • And she goes, Jeff?

  • Out of all of them why do you think that?

  • And I said because Jeff

  • has improved the most out of everybody

  • like Jeff come from New York City,

  • to scared of a horse,

  • to be being able to ride a horse by himself,

  • stop a horse, slide a horse, you know.

  • Like you've come so far it's amazing.

  • You've done an awesome job doing it.

  • And acting as well.

  • There ain't no way I could do any acting.

  • I'll stick to the falling off for you

  • but I can't say lines.

  • Thanks, Bobby.

  • That means the world and it's just because any learning

  • I've done or any progress I've made

  • is just because of what you're describing.

  • That family and that community of really talented people

  • around me who, at every step, you know,

  • take care of me and teach me

  • and you guys are so patient with me

  • and sort of I've really felt the benefits

  • of that community and that family

  • so thank you very much for everything from day one.

  • (Bobby) Not a problem.

  • No, I've noticed it from about the third episode

  • that we started together and it was just progressive

  • and then when we got down to--

  • when we got down to our last scene

  • where we were riding bucking horse

  • how you had to creep up on him

  • and yeah, you creeped up on him the exact same way I did.

  • And I mean, shoot, yeah, no one's even going to know

  • that it was even me.

  • You did an outstanding job right there.

  • Ah, thanks, Bobby.

  • Well, I'll talk to you soon, man.

  • I hope I see you in a few months.

  • Soon as we get the green light to go back

  • and go back to work.

  • (Bobby) Yes, sir.

  • Hey, if you get--

  • I'll take you up the ranch

  • and you can hang out with us for a day.

  • I will, brother, I'd love that.

  • (Bobby) Thanks, take care, Jeff.

  • See you soon, Bobby.

  • (Bobby) Bye.

  • Bye now.

  • Look, we didn't tell him to say that I had--

  • that I was good.

  • He did that all on his own.

  • He said himself, he's not a very good actor.

  • If that was fake it wouldn't have sounded that good.

  • Thanks, Bobby.

  • And J-Rod-

  • J-Rod's got this thing where-

  • God bless him.

  • J-Rod, every time we do this I shout you out.

  • I spend hours talking directly to the camera

  • about how to talented you are.

  • J-Rod, Jason Rodriguez, he's our stunt coordinator.

  • Incredible stunt coordinator, incredible writer,

  • incredible roper.

  • I spend so much time doing this, J-Rod,

  • and they just always cut it out.

  • They always edit it out of the final take.

  • So it's not me, it's the producers.

  • They're looking at me right now

  • and they're telling me we're not going to use any of this.

  • And that's not on me.

  • If only I was in control.

  • If I was in control, believe me.

  • This show wouldn't even be called

  • Welcome to the Yellowstone.

  • It'd be called a ten hour podcast tribute

  • to Jason Rodriguez,

  • stunt coordinator, talented writer,

  • team roper, teacher, mentor, hero,

  • legend,

  • myth.

  • But it's not-

  • It's staggering how much happens in every episode

  • of Yellow Stone because this is also the episode

  • where Beth and Rip go out into the park

  • and chase the wolves.

  • It's also an episode where we learn so much more

  • about Beth and Rip.

  • Wow.

  • The show is very good.

  • There's a lot going on.

  • There's a lot of very complicated characters

  • interacting all the time.

  • And that makes it hard to distill into a summary.

  • That said this has been

  • Welcome to the Yellowstone, episode two.

  • Hope you had a good time.

  • Thank you so much for your questions,

  • and your comments, and your kindness,

  • and your engagement.

  • That means the world to us.

  • Never forget, never forget that you have to follow us.

  • Legally speaking because you watched this

  • you are legally obligated to follow us

  • on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook,

  • and follow and like on YouTube.

  • No, you're not, but it would be cool if you did.

  • That'd be fun.

  • And on TikTok.

  • (beat boxes)

  • I'm trying to make them to make a TikTok.

  • (chuckling)

  • And this is how you do TikTok.

  • (beat boxes)

  • And then they'll have to--

  • now because I did that they're going to have to pop up

  • little things that say stuff

  • and if they don't I'll look like an idiot.

  • If they just leave me here going like--

  • I'm going to look so dumb.

  • They would never do that to me.

  • They would never betray me in that way.

  • Right, guys?

  • (beat boxes)

  • What if I just do this for a minute and a half?

  • (beat boxes)

  • It's like a really long one.

  • It has a very long-

  • It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • See you next time.

  • (upbeat music)

Okay, hell yeah, here we go.

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イエローストーンへようこそ」第2話|パラマウント・ネットワーク ('Welcome to the Yellowstone' Episode 2 | Paramount Network)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 02 月 04 日
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