“WELL, IN THAT CASE, I’LL DRIVE TO YOUR HOUSE, THROW YOU IN THE CAR, AND TAKE YOU TO THE SET MYSELF.” Burt Reynolds used to tell this story with that half-grin of his — the kind that said he knew he was being a little crazy, but he didn’t care. One afternoon, he called Jerry Reed and asked him to join Smokey and the Bandit. Jerry apologized, said his schedule was packed, and he couldn’t make it. There was this small pause on the phone, the quiet kind where you can almost hear someone thinking. Then Reynolds said, completely calm: “Well, I’ll just drive to your house, throw you in the car, and take you to the set myself.” Jerry laughed. “You’re joking, right?” “No,” Reynolds said. Just like that. And the funny part? Jerry got in the car. No long contracts. No big negotiations. Just two friends, a wild promise, and a role that ended up becoming unforgettable. Snowman was born out of one stubborn moment — and fans still love him for it.

The Phone Call That Changed Everything: Burt Reynolds, Jerry Reed, and the Birth of “Snowman”

Burt Reynolds loved telling this story — you could always tell. He’d lean back, grin, shake his head a little, as if he still couldn’t quite believe how it all unfolded.
It all began on an ordinary afternoon when Burt picked up the phone and dialed Jerry Reed. He already knew what he wanted: Jerry in Smokey and the Bandit. To Burt, there was no backup plan. If it wasn’t Jerry, it wasn’t anyone.

Jerry, honest to a fault, told him the truth — he didn’t have the time. His schedule was packed, the highway was calling, and he was still riding high on the success of “Guitar Man.” The song had become welded to his identity. Everywhere he played, someone shouted for it. Every smoky bar, every late-night crowd — they wanted the man whose guitar sounded like it had a heartbeat of its own.

So when he told Burt he couldn’t make the film, he meant it.
Or at least, he thought he did.

Burt paused — just long enough for Jerry to wonder what was coming. Then he said, in a voice as casual as if he were reciting a shopping list:

“Well, in that case, I’ll drive to your house, throw you in the car, and take you to the set myself.”

Jerry laughed that deep, raspy laugh musicians earn over years of late shows and smoky stages.
“You’re joking, right?”

“No,” Burt replied. “I’m not.”

And that was it. Moments later, Burt Reynolds was literally on his way to Jerry Reed’s front door. No studio driver, no producers, no fancy meetings — just Burt, doing exactly what he said he would do.

Jerry climbed into the car. Maybe it was loyalty. Maybe it was instinct. Or maybe it was that mysterious pull musicians know all too well — when life knocks with a rhythm that feels right, you follow it.

The Moment Snowman Was Born

That spontaneous decision created “Snowman,” a character fans still quote and celebrate more than forty years later. But it did more than give the film its heart — it brought Jerry Reed into an entirely new spotlight.

Suddenly, the Guitar Man wasn’t just known to pickers, players, and country crowds. Millions of movie fans met him for the first time, discovering the charm, the humor, and the talent that had always been there in his music.

It’s funny how one stubborn moment — a phone call, a laugh, a car ride — can change the entire course of a career.
And thanks to that moment, the world got to meet Jerry Reed in a whole new way. 🎸

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