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Former PJ Now An Actor
Master Sgt. Brandon Hannasch, flight chief, Basic Officer Course, guides actor Jon Huertas as he lays down a burst of suppressive fire from an M249 machine gun during a simulated assault May 4 at Camp Bullis. (U.S. Air Force photo/Alan Boedeker)
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Former Airman credits AF for success in acting career

Posted 5/23/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Mike Joseph
JBSA-Lackland Public Affairs


5/23/2012 - JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-LACKLAND, Texas (AFNS) -- A former service member credits the Air Force for helping him make a successful jump from the military to a television and film career.

Jon Huertas, born Jon William Hofstedt, served eight years in the Air Force as an aircraft nuclear and conventional weapons specialist. He took advantage of the Air Force educational opportunities to pursue his first love -- acting.

"I wanted to be an actor since I was a small child," said Huertas. "The success I've been able to accomplish in the entertainment industry I always correlate to my time in the Air Force."

Huertas was on base last week as part of a Hollywood entertainment industry group visit to Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland and Camp Bullis. Huertas, president and CEO of Soldier Stories Entertainment, currently portrays homicide detective Javier Esposito on the television show "Castle," now in its fourth season.

The two-day visit served multiple purposes for the 36 entertainment industry executives, producers, directors and writers. The visit's purpose was to: educate and inform the group about the people, mission and equipment of the Air Force and the 37th Training Wing; generate ideas for future portrayals of the Air Force in television and film; and equip entertainment industry professionals to more accurately and realistically depict the Air Force people, mission and equipment in existing projects.

"It definitely is going to help and inspire me," Huertas said about the visit. "One lady in the group is developing a script on (another service branch), but after seeing a basic training graduation, said she would switch it to the Air Force. She had tears in her eyes; it definitely affected her.

"A lot of these writers and producers are looking for ways on, 'How do I tell a new story about the Air Force?' 'How do I incorporate it into a story the general public would want to see?" said Huertas, who is also working on a project about the Air Force. "I can already see people gaining interest from this trip. They will take away a lot of knowledge, and I think it's going to benefit their projects and the Air Force."

Huertas graduated high school at 17, spent a year in college, and then joined the Air Force in 1987. His decision to serve in the military simply followed a family pattern.

"A lot of men in my family went into the military, and I decided that as kind of a rite of passage I would go into the Air Force," he said. "It was also a place to take advantage of a great (educational) system.

"I was in for eight years, but my desire was to always be an actor," Huertas said. "The Air Force helped me achieve that by allowing me to get an education, to study as much theater as I could, and eventually earn a degree in theater. The support I got from the people I worked with was just amazing."

Huertas has parlayed his military background into numerous roles in film and television. He played a sergeant in the HBO miniseries "Generation Kill," about the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and a lieutenant in the film "Stealth Fighter."

He does get calls to be a technical advisor because of his Air Force service, particularly on "Castle."

"("Castle's) executive producer allowed me to create the back story of my character," Huertas said. "I wanted my character to be a veteran, an Army special forces guy. He let me work that in.

"They always ask me to help with tactical things, weapons and scripts that come down about the military."

Huertas credits what he learned and experienced in the Air Force as a driving force in his acting career.

"(The graduation parade) showed me that team building is still very important, and I think that's what I got from the Air Force," he said. "The team support allowed me to keep reaching for my goal.

"Without the structure, discipline and initiative I learned in the Air Force, I don't think I would have lasted because of the ups and downs in this business," Huertas added. "The 'never quit' warrior mentality carried me through. The character building also helped me, and I don't think I would be a working actor today without the Air Force."



tabComments
5/30/2012 6:13:02 PM ET
AF Website - Why not a short line at the bottom noting the corrected story Other news outlets do this why not the AF website
Caveman, Bedrock
 
5/29/2012 7:13:29 PM ET
Mr. Huertas has set the record straight. The original story on Lackland AFB news site was rewritten to take out references to anything PJ/Pararescueman related...although that version has apparently not made it to the AF News site. Sadly there was no public retraction or acknowledgement of the errors involved in the story...just a rewritten story as described above...integrity first, right?
TE, Nellis AFB NV
 
5/29/2012 1:09:23 PM ET
Why is this still on the website? There are clear errors with this story.
John, GA
 
5/27/2012 7:53:39 AM ET
I expect more from The official website of the U.S Air Force. Please remove this false story now and work with your reporters on the concept of fact checking.
Retired Brig Gen, Albuquerque
 
5/27/2012 7:41:42 AM ET
I have it on good authority that the USAF PA got the part of the nuclear weapons technician wrong.The guy was a aircraft weapons loader from 1988 to 1998 at Carswell AFB. He probably did do service in Desert Storm as support for the B52s. The first hand report says that he was a great guy who always pushed himself to do more and better.
Neil Zampella, Pittsburgh PA
 
5/26/2012 12:13:02 PM ET
his wikipedia page says he particpated during OJC and Desert Storm
BS, KS
 
5/26/2012 9:24:52 AM ET
Lets not be too hard on the guy I've seen interviews where he's said he was in the Air Force and did serve in Desert Storm but I would have remembered if he had claimed that he was a PJ.His IMDB.com brief bio saysIn real life Jon William Scott Hofstedt or better known as Jon Huertas is an Air Force Veteran. All his TV and Movie credits are of Characters with active or past Marine background. Ramirez a Marine Recon Sniper Spotter in JAG Recon Marine Sergeant Espera in Generation Kill Homicide NYPD Detective Javier Esposito in Castle retired Marine Sergeant Jack Kale in NCIS.
Retired Nuke Puke, Pittsburgh
 
5/25/2012 11:10:06 AM ET
I'm not a uniform nazi but what's up with the baseball cap
Caveman, Bedrock
 
5/25/2012 10:02:45 AM ET
Wow AF public affairs needs to do the proper due diligence on this guy.
Caveman, Bedrock
 
5/25/2012 6:51:25 AM ET
The only website or person I've seen so far that claims he was a PJ is af.mil. I don't see a quote from him here or elsewhere on the internet that says he was a PJ. This looks more like a PA mess up than a stolen valor case to me.
Mike, WA
 
5/24/2012 4:25:56 PM ET
this guy will be exposed for the fraud fake phony liar that he is. TO MAKE FINANCIAL GAINS OFF THE BLOOD AND SWEAT OF OUR BROTHERS WILL NOT GO WITHOUT THE LEAST OF BEING DISCREDITED AND EMBARASMENT
TINY, new york
 
5/24/2012 3:23:02 PM ET
My crack staff investigated and it appears this individual was an Aircraft Weapons Loader and then retrained into Supply. Both admirable AFSCs but a far cry from being a PJ. Shame shame.
Chief, Here
 
5/24/2012 11:40:27 AM ET
For the two posters recommend you look into the Stolen Valor Act. It may be a crime if he's also claiming medals that he didn't earn.
Stolen Valor, Undisclosed
 
5/24/2012 8:23:20 AM ET
As a former PJ I can tell you this person was never a PJ and should not be telling people that he was.
Thomas, VA
 
5/23/2012 3:17:15 PM ET
Me thinks one should vet this man's claim of being a former Pararescueman...he was not. In various other interviewsbiographys he claims to be a veteran of OJC and Desert Storm...I know every PJ that took part in OJC either on the combat jumps or the helicopters and he was not among them. Additionally he is not known by any current or former PJs as a Pararescueman and is not on the list maintained by the careerfield showing every former and current PJ or CRO.I would ask the editors to look in to his claim of being a former Pararescueman.
Retired PJ, NAFB
 
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