Who would've thought Agent 47 had a soft spot for high-tech gadgets? Well done, Zack! It's about time you met your long-lost twin, Agent 47. Looks like secret agents aren't the only things that run in the family. And that red tie has made my day.
Jerry Please read!! Min 5:00 I work in a machine shop, and I worked with many many lathes, and the way you have your bar sticking out of the machine so much it's super dangerous. That bar with the speed that is turning it could easily whip itself out. Because of all the forces I have seen so many accidents where a bar bends while spinning and then all hell breaks loose, the machine will start jumping and if the piece will break off it will be flying so fast thru the shop that it could harm someone really bad. It happened in my shop, thankfully the piece went in the direction of the wall and just made a hole in a brick wall. So please just use caution, and I do agree with you It's one of the most dangerous machines there.
That is literally what these machines are designed for. They are designed for mass manufacturing. Anything that needs to be manufactured on a lathe, from what I know, a rod of aluminum like that should be able to stick out at least 5 ft without issue
@@AndyGneissif the bar stock is over a certain length i'm pretty sure it's 5 ft or so then this is what you do for safety reasons. But having that bar stock sticking out like 4 ft isn't going to do anything because it's actually not going anywhere not with the amount of force that it's being clamped down with, the support is more because once you start getting really long bar stock the weight can be a problem
Yeah that is incredibly dangerous. I've personally seen a bar sticking out like that bend 90 degrees and damn near destroy the lathe. It was a much more robust Mori Seiki too. That was a massive no no.
Ive been machining for 15 years. If you're worried about the part flying out. Remember if youre part is more than 4x's the length it might start to chatter. 6x's than you might want to utilize tailstock. 10xs than you might want to use what haas calls ssv along with tailstock. Ive also heard it called solizoidal machining. Sometimes you can get away without using tailstock by instead of using hard jaws, use soft jaws you bored out to same diameter of what you are holding. Keep your tools sharp because. If you're sticking it out way too long that extra pressure on that leverage will pull out your part. Also different materials vary on how much you can get away with cutting long
What a trip in memory lane. My dad used to program one of those machines to make bolts and washers for my grandpas factory, when I was a kid I would simply go there watch the machine cut the metal bars and the weird smells of soldering on the other stations. Thanks Zack for the memories and congrats on your company!
@@NAS-nr1yzLOL. Parts can be helped by a tiny section of the jaws. Hard jaws biting into soft metal. You can grip stock with very little of the jaw length.
I am a Mechanical Engineer to be precise I am a Production Engineer in a CNC Machining Department. I love these type of videos. Good Job. Loved the video.
We used to operate manual lathes in 9th and 10th grade, making door hinges and other small details at a technical school here in my country. Was hell of an interesting thing to learn and when we were later introduced the programable ones we felt like we were in a spaceship. Still feel like a kid when I watch these kinds of videos.
Great video. Thanks for sharing. As someone who ran production on a Tormach lathe for years, I’d try and keep your through spindle bar stock to 24”. I know you’re not spinning it that fast, at least for the portion shown in the video, but as soon as something bends the stock you have hanging out of it, it can lead to a bad day.
Very cool Zack! As much as I love the teardowns and durability testing, switching it up to show the production/manufacturing side of your business is also very cool. Bonus points for the slick dolly zoom... unexpected awesomeness in a channel that's already friggin awesome!
I am aware that you have an indirect personal interest in the product you're making, and some people could think that makes your work less selfless, but I think it just means you're making a bigger impact by using your familiarity with product type. You seem like a genuinely wonderful person. I'd thank you for doing anything, be it something big or small, with the goal of making the world a better place, but you decided to go for huge, and that is awesome.
I lost a finger and split my palm open at work a few years ago running a CNC lathe. Company cared for production more over safety and removed all the door interlocks on 60+ lathes. Total neglect on the company and they tried to hide it from OSHA.
I've seen enough chinese workshop security camera footage for my entire life. And lathes are the primary suspect. Rumours are they still find bits of former workers years after the incidents.
Nice shop upgrade, the bar puller is a solid productivity booster. Minimize the chuck stick-out for speed/quality. Also keep an eye on the stock stick-out as if you stick stock out too far it turns into a metal whip at high rpm...
For the young people watching these videos who haven’t heard of machining before and think it’s interesting, becoming a machinist is an excellent career path. Not as much school as college but similar pay outcomes. And there is going to be extremely high demand for manufacturing roles like this as companies bring production back to the US
Nice Machine. And to think as young teens back in the 80's, in high school metal shop, we used full size lathes to mill Steel / stainless steel with no protection at all other than safety glasses. The only machine tool I do not like is an industrial wood shaper.
Lathes are most definitely one of the scariest tools I've used. I went to college for mechanical engineering and was familiar with lathes prior. A kid I never spoke to in college was not paying enough attention. It took his ring finger and enough nerves he lost total control of his arm. Tools are fun, but they need to be respected.
Congratulations on the new 15L! We enjoyed assembling it for you, knowing that it will be used for a great product like your affordable Not a Wheelchair wheelchairs. Happy lathing, and be safe! Oh, and make sure to nominate a worthy school to win the xsTECH router! The link is in the description.
I work in a factory with CNC lathes much bigger than this one, they can be very dangerous if used wrong so make sure you always use the door interlock and maybe look at getting something to cover the end of your bar that sticks out of the machine, I don't know if they make a mini bar feeder or something for that sized lathe but it would be worth looking into.
Very lucky man to own his own CNC center. Was amazed back in 1966 while attending a great Vo Tech school I saw my first CNC machine. Ran on paper tape maybe a 1" wide. Then in 1980's got to run wires for 3 HP CNC'S then 5 HP. Now amazed that they have 40 HP 5 axis CNC machines.
I designed and used a lathe as a kid at school in England. Loved seeing this video. I used Aluminium and Brass. I respect the lathe and more so in 1970's where We had no protection.
I teach high school kids how to use shop tools. I hold up my hands at every session and say.. "After 40 years of working with tools, I still have all my fingers, and I expect the same from everyone here.". Learning how to use any tool safely is important. Thx.
Wow.. !! I thought it Agent 47 from HITMAN against Jerry. Always happy to hear more about "Not A Wheelchair" project. Hope Cambry and kids are doing well. God bless you and your wonderful family.
I converted a small bench top lathe to full CNC with relative ease. The parts to convert it cost around £300 in total including the controller. Couldnt be happier with what this small beast can do. It cuts so much nicer than operating it manually because you are not exerting a leverage force via the wheels. Its crazy what you can get in a small workshop these days.
Imagine looking back and realizing you missed out on something as big as Amazons *APL66K* . Dont let that be your reality. Get informed and be a part of the future!
As an engineering student, I'm Just admiring the engineering masterpiece. And I'd love to have that petite one 😍❤️🔥. I love your videos ❤. Can't for you to get to 10 million subs ❤.
Take care with longer bar-stock.. that wobble outside the machine you showed in the lights-out demo, can suddenly turn into a bend with massive danger implications involved. Idler stabilizers recommended.
That's the most beautiful piece I've ever seen. I paused the video at the start, figured out it was Aluminium and Brass in cnc and then thought where can I make it the it turned out it was made exactly like I was thinking
1st, white goes on the right (setup chess board with white square on the home row to the right). Also I WANT THAT! Love chess but can't afford the fancy sets. 🙏
Would be Sweet to have a JerryRigEverything Chess Set available on the site right next to my The JerryRig Razor Knife link. Cant get enough of the amazing tech in this videos ...
That's a cool cnc lathe you have but PLEASE invest in a bar feed for that machine if you intend to load bars greater than three feet in length. It doesn't take much for a piece of material to get a bend in it and someone near getting hurt. I work in a machine shop and seeing that aluminum bar hanging out the back of the spindle unsupported while the machine was running was a bit of a pucker moment for me. LOL! Looking forward to seeing more videos, be safe.
I'm a machinest and I honestly feel alot more comfortable operating a CNC lathe than a CNC mill and feels easier to program for but yeah a manual lathe however is definitely something you gotta be more cautious on. Also if you plan on running production, I'd recommend investing in a collet chuck or better jaws with incerts that better clamp around your stock with more surface area
The piece flying off is only one danger. I was using a timber lathe and the tool rest was not tight enough. It slowly moved away and caused the chisel I was holding to suddenly bite into the timber. It ripped it down, jammed my hand between the chisel and tool rest. The machine was bolted to the floor but it still felt like it jumped. There was a huge bang and the machine instantly stopped in place.The work piece had a huge chunk taken out of it, the chisel was bent, my hand was sore but it could have been a lot worse.
That chess set is b-e-a-utiful .. WOW! Great info too. The auto feed is nifty, but leaving machinery running unattended scares me. Even something as simple as a 3D printer can experience things like thermal runaway that could easily burn down the house.
Never saw this coming… but is Jerry is really The Newest Star of the live action film inspired from everyone’s favorite game series. Introducing “Hitman that kills everything”
zack and jerry collaborating is always a treat
I giggled for this. Would have been more, but I'm currently bedridden with covid (first time, baby!), and a covid giggle is worth one healthy LOL.
Haha Nice!
Also speedy recovery @CDCI3.
i thought that was Agent 47
It's Agent 47
@@CDCI3Do not worry. it's just the flu
Who would've thought Agent 47 had a soft spot for high-tech gadgets? Well done, Zack! It's about time you met your long-lost twin, Agent 47. Looks like secret agents aren't the only things that run in the family. And that red tie has made my day.
Agent 47 is his clone, not twin 😉
He 100% dressed like hitman on purpose
Exactly what I thought.
Oh i thought he was lex luthor lol
Was it 47 disguised as Zack or Zack disguised as 47, or both are same😶
47 is always aware of the risks that the job brings, and he's cautious!
Hell yeah and you can't do anything about it lol 😂
Jerry Please read!! Min 5:00
I work in a machine shop, and I worked with many many lathes, and the way you have your bar sticking out of the machine so much it's super dangerous. That bar with the speed that is turning it could easily whip itself out. Because of all the forces I have seen so many accidents where a bar bends while spinning and then all hell breaks loose, the machine will start jumping and if the piece will break off it will be flying so fast thru the shop that it could harm someone really bad. It happened in my shop, thankfully the piece went in the direction of the wall and just made a hole in a brick wall. So please just use caution, and I do agree with you It's one of the most dangerous machines there.
Exactly what I've thought. 5:40 2500 rpm with a brass rod sticking out that much is very very dangerous!
What would you do to mitigate the issue? Have a roller support for the bar stock?
That is literally what these machines are designed for. They are designed for mass manufacturing. Anything that needs to be manufactured on a lathe, from what I know, a rod of aluminum like that should be able to stick out at least 5 ft without issue
@@AndyGneissif the bar stock is over a certain length i'm pretty sure it's 5 ft or so then this is what you do for safety reasons. But having that bar stock sticking out like 4 ft isn't going to do anything because it's actually not going anywhere not with the amount of force that it's being clamped down with, the support is more because once you start getting really long bar stock the weight can be a problem
Yeah that is incredibly dangerous. I've personally seen a bar sticking out like that bend 90 degrees and damn near destroy the lathe. It was a much more robust Mori Seiki too. That was a massive no no.
Love what you do Hitman, please don't stop publishing good content!
He makes some killer content!
) lol
Jerry finally accepts his fate as the Hitman 😅
jerry who?
Do you mean Zack?
@@kingzach74 Same thing, new viewers won't get it what I meant, that's why I said Jerry
Just get it already 🤦♂️
Who thinks Jerry can play a convincing bad guy in a movie. That intro was so awsome
More like Agent 47 playing with the target
More like hitman vibe
I'd be down for him to play hitman. Or something of that caliber.
He can do Fantomas😆
@@treislaloundyohorevoun7175 you are the first person I met (besides my father) who knows Fantomas! :D
Great work 47!
Ive been machining for 15 years. If you're worried about the part flying out. Remember if youre part is more than 4x's the length it might start to chatter. 6x's than you might want to utilize tailstock. 10xs than you might want to use what haas calls ssv along with tailstock. Ive also heard it called solizoidal machining. Sometimes you can get away without using tailstock by instead of using hard jaws, use soft jaws you bored out to same diameter of what you are holding. Keep your tools sharp because. If you're sticking it out way too long that extra pressure on that leverage will pull out your part. Also different materials vary on how much you can get away with cutting long
What a trip in memory lane. My dad used to program one of those machines to make bolts and washers for my grandpas factory, when I was a kid I would simply go there watch the machine cut the metal bars and the weird smells of soldering on the other stations. Thanks Zack for the memories and congrats on your company!
sure the machines and chess set look great but... can talk about that slick dolly zoom at 7:47?!?!
Can we talk about not fully inserting the first part into the chuck 👀 mini anxiety attack 😂
@@NAS-nr1yzLOL. Parts can be helped by a tiny section of the jaws. Hard jaws biting into soft metal. You can grip stock with very little of the jaw length.
@@NAS-nr1yz 3 teeth Is the minimum and it looks like he has that.
@@littlejackalo5326 yes but the less you grip onto it, the more likely it is to be pretty far off center unless you have a steady rest
I am a Mechanical Engineer to be precise I am a Production Engineer in a CNC Machining Department. I love these type of videos. Good Job. Loved the video.
What scares him the most is no scratches at a level 6
with deeper groves at level 7 ;)
We used to operate manual lathes in 9th and 10th grade, making door hinges and other small details at a technical school here in my country. Was hell of an interesting thing to learn and when we were later introduced the programable ones we felt like we were in a spaceship. Still feel like a kid when I watch these kinds of videos.
Great video. Thanks for sharing. As someone who ran production on a Tormach lathe for years, I’d try and keep your through spindle bar stock to 24”. I know you’re not spinning it that fast, at least for the portion shown in the video, but as soon as something bends the stock you have hanging out of it, it can lead to a bad day.
So nice of Agent 47 to agree to a sit down interview.
First, and Jerry finally becomes Agent 47
Yes.....pin this comment......
Jerry scares me 😮
Zack
The day we all have been waiting for
His name is actually Zack
someone start a petition to make Zack as new Hitman
Wym he’s already the current one 😮
Very cool Zack! As much as I love the teardowns and durability testing, switching it up to show the production/manufacturing side of your business is also very cool. Bonus points for the slick dolly zoom... unexpected awesomeness in a channel that's already friggin awesome!
1:38 - Zack wearing safety glasses, but not safety shoes while using forklift. :) Love your videos.
I am aware that you have an indirect personal interest in the product you're making, and some people could think that makes your work less selfless, but I think it just means you're making a bigger impact by using your familiarity with product type. You seem like a genuinely wonderful person. I'd thank you for doing anything, be it something big or small, with the goal of making the world a better place, but you decided to go for huge, and that is awesome.
Thank you!
@@JerryRigEverythinglol u great man! And I love your portrayal as agent 47 in this wonderful, informative video.
What a way to start a video , you talking to yourself was the best thing i saw today really made my day
Zack finally acknowledging his real identity
Agent 47
The only thing he didn't show is the barcode.🤣
@@pavanpavuluri we will have to wait for laser etching tool video
@@pavanpavuluriwe didnt see the back of his head
At first glance the khaki pants made me think he wasn't wearing any.
Thank you for releasing the 3d model files! I'm looking forward to printing them out asap.
I lost a finger and split my palm open at work a few years ago running a CNC lathe. Company cared for production more over safety and removed all the door interlocks on 60+ lathes. Total neglect on the company and they tried to hide it from OSHA.
Lathes are definitely terrifying and should be respected. I was always super aware when working on them, didn't wanna lose my fingers or arm!
God the word lathe always brings back those memories of a man caught on one and turn into pieces and red mist
I've seen enough chinese workshop security camera footage for my entire life. And lathes are the primary suspect. Rumours are they still find bits of former workers years after the incidents.
Chinese workshop videos the russian man lathe video are enough for me to be scared of them
@@gangsarisworo3759The videos are always low quality but that russian one had super high quality photos of the after math 😬
You should never be afraid of a lathe, that's how you get injured respect it yes definitely but never be afraid of it
Nice shop upgrade, the bar puller is a solid productivity booster. Minimize the chuck stick-out for speed/quality. Also keep an eye on the stock stick-out as if you stick stock out too far it turns into a metal whip at high rpm...
Been looking for this comment
For the young people watching these videos who haven’t heard of machining before and think it’s interesting, becoming a machinist is an excellent career path. Not as much school as college but similar pay outcomes. And there is going to be extremely high demand for manufacturing roles like this as companies bring production back to the US
Nice Machine. And to think as young teens back in the 80's, in high school metal shop, we used full size lathes to mill Steel / stainless steel with no protection at all other than safety glasses. The only machine tool I do not like is an industrial wood shaper.
Agent 47 saving lives instead of taking them. One not a wheelchair at a time.
Lathes are most definitely one of the scariest tools I've used. I went to college for mechanical engineering and was familiar with lathes prior. A kid I never spoke to in college was not paying enough attention. It took his ring finger and enough nerves he lost total control of his arm. Tools are fun, but they need to be respected.
what country?
@@AK-tf3fc United States.
I did not think i needed to see Jerry interview Agent 47, but here we are.
The chess set looked so good it appeared virtual as if in a software. That’s insane!
Yeah, I thought they are a 3D render or Zack is going to show some sort of new augmented reality tech and then disassemble it.
right? looks totally CGI
Cute seeing these kind of vids.
Work with Okuma machines myself, surprises me how many people never heard of lathes or milling machines
Jerry and 47
You made my week, the chess looks like a great tool for 47 tho
Please test the reverse spin - love to see it
Congratulations on the new 15L! We enjoyed assembling it for you, knowing that it will be used for a great product like your affordable Not a Wheelchair wheelchairs. Happy lathing, and be safe! Oh, and make sure to nominate a worthy school to win the xsTECH router! The link is in the description.
That chess set is so unique i have never seen pieces like that before
I wish that chess set was for sale
Yep maybe different size versions but I definitely would buy one, especially if it helps NAWC company.
I work in a factory with CNC lathes much bigger than this one, they can be very dangerous if used wrong so make sure you always use the door interlock and maybe look at getting something to cover the end of your bar that sticks out of the machine, I don't know if they make a mini bar feeder or something for that sized lathe but it would be worth looking into.
Very lucky man to own his own CNC center. Was amazed back in 1966 while attending a great Vo Tech school I saw my first CNC machine. Ran on paper tape maybe a 1" wide. Then in 1980's got to run wires for 3 HP CNC'S then 5 HP. Now amazed that they have 40 HP 5 axis CNC machines.
I designed and used a lathe as a kid at school in England. Loved seeing this video. I used Aluminium and Brass. I respect the lathe and more so in 1970's where We had no protection.
I teach high school kids how to use shop tools. I hold up my hands at every session and say.. "After 40 years of working with tools, I still have all my fingers, and I expect the same from everyone here.". Learning how to use any tool safely is important. Thx.
Zack is Finally turning into Agent 47 😂😂😂😂
Imagine waking up and the first thing you see is Jerry, Agent 47 inviting you to a deadly game of chess
inceI
bot
|nceIspammer
Wow.. !! I thought it Agent 47 from HITMAN against Jerry. Always happy to hear more about "Not A Wheelchair" project. Hope Cambry and kids are doing well. God bless you and your wonderful family.
Very glad to see mr 47 living a quiet life now
CNC machines are awesome, I’ve been doing it for a couple years and it’s art, the ability to create whatever you can imagine.
Anyone else wish they had a workshop like this at their disposal. And Zach looks like a spy or hitman
Hitman
Jerry finally channeled his inner agent 47
This man can easily make a 2nd TH-cam channel as Agent 47 and i would happily watch!
I converted a small bench top lathe to full CNC with relative ease. The parts to convert it cost around £300 in total including the controller. Couldnt be happier with what this small beast can do. It cuts so much nicer than operating it manually because you are not exerting a leverage force via the wheels.
Its crazy what you can get in a small workshop these days.
I agree the chess machine scares me too
As an agent he looks very friendly yet very dangerous.
Imagine looking back and realizing you missed out on something as big as Amazons *APL66K* . Dont let that be your reality. Get informed and be a part of the future!
0:17 I really thought that Jerry wasn't wearing any pants 😂😂😂
Can we all agree that Jerry can have all of our hearts with that intro🫶🏿
The greatest collab iv been waiting for 😅
I always believed Jerry would make a perfect Hitman but this video is the best way to illustrate it.
I saw the thumbnail and thought, "those pieces are unnaturally round, probably a lathe." sure enough, they were made with a lathe
Jerry in tuxedo look absolutely agent 47..😂😂
As an engineering student, I'm Just admiring the engineering masterpiece.
And I'd love to have that petite one 😍❤️🔥.
I love your videos ❤.
Can't for you to get to 10 million subs ❤.
I think our lathe is the scariest tool in our shop too...
Take care with longer bar-stock.. that wobble outside the machine you showed in the lights-out demo, can suddenly turn into a bend with massive danger implications involved. Idler stabilizers recommended.
Some died from extended bar outside of machine, so either buy bar feeder, or some support, or make those bars shorter..
The Hitman is strong with this one.
Look closely to view the barcode on the back of his head😅
Jerry definitely a hitman if he is not a youtuber(in alternative universe there's a youtube channel Jerry hits everything)
Completely agree with you. I've seen people get sucked into lathes while turning material, in my time as a mechanical engineer. Never a good sight
Differently wierdly satisfying. Your voice itself is very meditative. Keep up the rigging.
That's the most beautiful piece I've ever seen. I paused the video at the start, figured out it was Aluminium and Brass in cnc and then thought where can I make it the it turned out it was made exactly like I was thinking
Good to see Jerry and TLPL collabing again.
Normally I hate videos which are pretty much ads for a product however this one is amazing and you're really knocked it out of the park
1st, white goes on the right (setup chess board with white square on the home row to the right). Also I WANT THAT! Love chess but can't afford the fancy sets. 🙏
I like seeing the machines I use at work on TH-cam. Cheers
Agent 47 Zack just had a glorious day with Jerry, interviewing him while playing chess! That was epic! I love the design of the chess set too!
King's pawn, Barne's defense... unconventional but okay. Black really could have saved this with g6 forcing the queen to retreat.
Best collab ever! Agent 47 and Jerry the best duo!
3:36 The machine said this is my kingdom come.
"I'll try that out next time I'm using a deck" I almost died there
Never new that you also do mechanical engineering things. Incredible
Would be Sweet to have a JerryRigEverything Chess Set available on the site right next to my The JerryRig Razor Knife link. Cant get enough of the amazing tech in this videos ...
The lighting on the chess board makes it look CG, the board looks amazing!
That's a cool cnc lathe you have but PLEASE invest in a bar feed for that machine if you intend to load bars greater than three feet in length. It doesn't take much for a piece of material to get a bend in it and someone near getting hurt. I work in a machine shop and seeing that aluminum bar hanging out the back of the spindle unsupported while the machine was running was a bit of a pucker moment for me. LOL! Looking forward to seeing more videos, be safe.
I have never seen a more beautiful metal chess set before, it is freaking awesome.
I'm a machinest and I honestly feel alot more comfortable operating a CNC lathe than a CNC mill and feels easier to program for but yeah a manual lathe however is definitely something you gotta be more cautious on. Also if you plan on running production, I'd recommend investing in a collet chuck or better jaws with incerts that better clamp around your stock with more surface area
anyone who has seen lathe accidents knows how terrifying these machines are, safety protocols must be strictly followed.
Zack finally has everything he needs to start his own Etsy shop to make custom engraved anythings!
Jerry I watch your videos not of tech, but mindfulness. What makes you so calm 😊
Haven’t even watched the rest of video yet but big props for getting a sit down with agent 47. Respect ✊
That's definitely the best looking Chess set I have ever seen
You got a like just for the intro, didn't even watch the whole video, and I already love it.
I’m glad you have a heathy respect for the lathe, make sure you give the same respect for the fly cutter on the mill.
You really looks like the dude in Hitman with the suit on.
finally he confirmed that, he is not an agent 47
The piece flying off is only one danger. I was using a timber lathe and the tool rest was not tight enough. It slowly moved away and caused the chisel I was holding to suddenly bite into the timber.
It ripped it down, jammed my hand between the chisel and tool rest. The machine was bolted to the floor but it still felt like it jumped. There was a huge bang and the machine instantly stopped in place.The work piece had a huge chunk taken out of it, the chisel was bent, my hand was sore but it could have been a lot worse.
6:00 for a moment I thought I was on LockpickingLawyer’s channel on April Fools
A1 should be a black square( the first square to your left) 1:31
The Hitman look was just spot on for this dangerous clip 🤣🤣🤣
Agent 47 vs Zach is something we never thought we needed.
at the start, thats not checkmate, the kind can kill that rook directly !
Used one of these at a pipe shop I worked at in college, definitely should of respected it more.
That chess set is b-e-a-utiful .. WOW! Great info too. The auto feed is nifty, but leaving machinery running unattended scares me. Even something as simple as a 3D printer can experience things like thermal runaway that could easily burn down the house.
Never saw this coming… but is Jerry is really The Newest Star of the live action film inspired from everyone’s favorite game series.
Introducing
“Hitman that kills everything”