Jason Silas "Jase" Robertson is an American television star on the A&E reality television showDuck Dynasty, the COO of the businessDuck Commander, an innovator, and a professional duck hunter. Jase Robertson lives in West Monroe, Louisiana with his wife Missy and their three children: Reed, Cole, and Mia. He is known for avoiding work in favor of hunting and fishing, speaking "duckinese", and for his self-proclaimed frog-hunting abilities. He calls himself "a frog's worst nightmare".
Childhood
Jase Robertson was born to Phil and Marsha "Kay" Robertson in Bernice, Louisiana. His parents gave him the middle name of in honor of his uncle Silas Robertson, Phil's brother. Jase has one sister and three brothers - Alan, Willie, Phyllis, and Jeptha. Growing up with his father as the town's Duck Commander, Jase wanted to spend as much time with him as possible, going on various hunting expeditions to strengthen their bond. Soon, Robertson developed the same passion for the sport that his dad has. From the age of eight, Robertson wanted to spend as much time in the rugged lifestyle in the woods as possible, even missing the maximum possible number of school days as allowed by Louisiana law.
Business with Duck Commander
With his brother Willie as the CEO of the business, Jase Robertson was previously the COO of Duck Commander. Now, he works on Wall Street per his explanation on “Unashamed With Phil Robertson” podcast on April 28, 2019. Robertson's job at Duck Commander was to fabricate the duck calls made by the company, fine-tune them, and to invent new ones. It takes him about two to three minutes to make one duck call. One of Jase's inventions is a duck call called the "Triple Threat", a duck call which utilizes three reeds instead of the usual two.
''Duck Dynasty''
Jase Robertson is one of the stars of A&E's reality showDuck Dynasty. He is portrayed as a foil for Willie Robertson, and often acts as a mischief maker. Jase said he thought that the show would never take off as a popular series. He stated in an interview with Fox News's Todd Starnes that:
I was one of the ones who said the reality show would never work...We were in the hunting world. I had this perception of reality shows that you had to have all this friction and fits of rage and four-letter words...We're pretty calm compared to that...We've got some crazy characters in our family — but I didn't think people would want to see that.