Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Netflix Star Jas Leverette of Canine Intervention on What Dogs Have Taught Him

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Jas Leverette, owner of Cali K9 and star of the Netflix show Canine Intervention, is framed in a tight mid-shot, addressing the camera with his forearm parallel to the ground. In his Bay Area lilt, he emphasizes the need to work with one’s dog every day. “Pop!” he says midsentence, seemingly unprompted, before resuming his talk. And then, from camera left, an airborne dog latches onto the forearm — a fake forearm, it turns out — in a classic Hollywood jump scare. “It’s like catching a football — a big football,” he tells The Manual. “Some people like to jump out of airplanes? That dog coming at you 35 miles per hour, and you have to catch him safe and fluid, it’s the fun part of everything we’re doing, the adrenaline rush of the work.”

Leverette, 37, was born in New York, but from the age of 2 he grew up in Oakland, California, where he still lives. The son of a single mother, he took time to find his footing, first with avionics after high school and then in car customization before landing in the medical cannabis industry in the early 2000s. While he’d grown up with dogs, including his mother’s penchant for cocker spaniels, it was in his cannabis career where he found a new passion for animals. German shepherds, brought in as a means of security for grow sites, were smart and efficient, but they had to be worked as hard as the crop to maintain their efficacy. “As I was incorporating them, I was learning how to train them,” he says. “I fell in love with the process of that.”

Related Guides

He was a natural, but not in the way we think of a horse whisperer, nuzzling up on dogs. “We have to understand it is a predatory animal,” he says. Pack dominance, boundaries, discipline, consistency. All of these, evenly applied, create the separation necessary for a well-behaved canine and, paradoxically, strengthen the bond between alpha and beta. He learned these lessons through individual research and several well-timed mentors, the latter of whom he credits for his development. “They’re just like me,” he says. “They start with a passion for dogs and then it turns into more. That’s the common denominator dog people have.”

Image used with permission by copyright holder

But the biggest lessons came from the animals themselves. In the same way athletic performance trickles down from the elite to the everyman, so too did Leverette see long-term results on friends’ rescue mutts after honing them on some of the smartest dogs in the world. “A lot of this is what I learned through the high levels of protection training and those high-caliber dogs,” he says.

Since 2010, Leverette has been training his and others’ dogs full time, and over that decade he’s seen a wide range of behavioral issues. Some dogs, admittedly, have problems that even the best trainer cannot fix, and his voice grows sad remembering his pit bull Sinbad, which had to be put down with terminal aggression issues. However, for the lion’s share of animals, “It can be fixed,” he says, “but it takes the person to adjust to that situation — the dog’s not going to do it on its own.”

Helping others with their dogs was always a part of the plan, even before his Netflix show. He launched a YouTube channel almost immediately with a videographer friend with whom he still works, and even today, at the helm of a runaway smash and a burgeoning business, he still offers free lessons to followers twice a week via his Instagram. “There’s this block of information, and I’m just trying to get the secret out,” he says.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

While IG “dog parents” may induce eye rolls, Leverette, father to a 13-month-old and expecting his second child, a daughter, in July, says that there are surprising parallels between dog ownership and parenting. “The discipline and consistency you have to have is similar. Everything is always shaping, so it’s a process of what’s being reinforced and what’s being blocked and what’s being encouraged and what’s being discouraged,” he says. “All these things are similar: You leverage motivation.

“But fatherhood is a different level. It’s a piece of you.”

With fatherhood has come introspection and a long view of where all his work, granular in execution, is leading in the bigger picture. It’s motivated him to consider adult words like “legacy” and “retirement,” and it’s also spurred him to dream more broadly. Over this year and the next, he’ll be launching a national and then an international tour, taking his methodology and personality off the web and into the world. While dates and locations are still being finalized, he’s confident there’s an in-person audience out there for his work. “We’re ready to take Cali K9 to the streets,” he says.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

With widespread coronavirus quarantines around the country, 2020 saw a run on everything from toilet paper to bicycles, and animal shelters witnessed adoptions rise so rapidly that in some months, you couldn’t buy a shelter dog even if you wanted to. Those same people, overwhelmed and doing their best, are now in desperate need of expert advice on how to train their new dogs, and Leverette, whose show debuted on January 27 of this year, is perfectly positioned to be this next generation’s Cesar Millan.

Sure, as vaccinations roll out and local economies open up, he admits some concern for animals that might be neglected when there are more entertainment options available. Still, it’s a great thing that more people than ever have dogs. “Dogs need homes, people need dogs,” he says. “Yeah, once the bars open up, some people are going to prioritize things over their animals,” he laughs.

“But some people will learn that they can train their dog to go to the bar with them.”

Jon Gugala
Features Writer
Jon Gugala is a freelance writer and photographer based in Nashville, Tenn. A former gear editor for Outside Magazine, his…
How long should you let new cigars rest in a humidor?
Cigar humidor

Looking at those beautiful, oily cigars you've just unboxed or unwrapped, the calling to light up is real. I get it. I always want to smoke my cigars right away, too. But you shouldn't. Mail day is always exciting after you've ordered a slew of new cigars. When they arrive, the real fun begins. You'll probably need to organize your humidor to make the new sticks fit or arrange them for optimal humidification. As you're handling them, it's difficult to resist the temptation to crack open the cellophane or boxes and smoke one right away. While you can do that in most cases, I would recommend against it. Depending on where those cigars came from, where you live, and how they traveled, they might need a little time to rest in a humidor. They'll need to replenish some humidity and moisture or dry out a little.
How long should you let your new cigars rest?

When you put cigars in a humidor, especially one that's filled, they'll soak up and release humidity over time until they reach the average RH (relative humidity) that you have set inside your humidor. If you have a device like a that does this automatically, it will produce moisture and humidity to keep the levels optimal. You can also achieve the same thing with in smaller humidors, which release and soak up the humidity to match the levels on the label. Boveda packs come in a range of RH levels, from the low to mid-60s to the mid-70s.

Read more
The 11 best Kevin Costner movies, ranked
He has a full resume of films, but if you're a Costner fan, then you must see these movies
Kevin Costner in Dances with Wolves

An all-American, blue-collar working man turned Hollywood essential, Kevin Costner has lived a life full of experience and dreams that some can only imagine. Starting out as a small kid -- 5'2" at high school graduation -- who moved around a lot, Costner was fond of things like poetry, writing, and singing in his Baptist choir. Outside of the arts, he was also very interested in sports of all kinds, which is reflected in his film career to this day. Also a man of the outdoors, Costner built his own canoe at 18 and paddled it through sections where Lewis and Clark ventured. Fun facts aside, Costner had a full and interesting life before the world got to know him as the charming and eloquent movie man we know him to be today.
From his past life, accomplishments, and hobbies, Costner was fully prepared to write, direct, and act for the screen as he fulfilled yet another lifelong dream. A man who was once called "The King of the Sports Movie," Costner has been able to act in films of a subject matter near and dear to his heart that became the films he is best known for. And that doesn’t include his many other successful movies having to do with politics, crime, and romance that also make for some of his best roles. Luckily, we’re here to talk about all of those films at once as we celebrate the man who has accomplished more in one lifetime than some could in many. Here are the best Kevin Costner movies of all time.

11. Open Range (2003)

Read more
The best Quentin Tarantino movies, ranked – Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and more
If you haven't seen these films at least one time, you need to ... and then watch them again and again
Scene from Pulp Fiction, John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson

Of all the contemporary film auteurs, perhaps no one’s work has permeated pop culture as thoroughly as Quentin Tarantino's. This director’s hyper-stylized, retro fantasy worlds have come to define cinematic coolness. His clever mashups of genres, exquisite sense of aesthetics, impeccable editing, uproarious suspensefulness, and impossibly quippy dialogue have been endlessly imitated.
Given the current political landscape, Tarantino’s work has undergone a serious critical re-evaluation from Black and feminist critics and scholars who point toward both his allegedly abusive behaviors and the offensive politics and rhetoric of his films. It’s true that in this new light, for many, there may be nothing redeemable about his entire oeuvre. 
However, to discard all Quentin Tarantino movies would discount the impossible talent of his frequent collaborators and stars, such as Sally Menke (who edited all of Tarantino’s movies until her death in 2010), Uma Thurman (who not only played the protagonist of Tarantino’s most iconic movies but was also credited as a co-writer on Kill Bill), Samuel L. Jackson (a frequent Tarantino star), and many more.
With that in mind, here’s our (subjective!) ranking of the greatest directed Quentin Tarantino movies of all time.

9. Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood (2019)

Read more