Very different skis.
As near as I can tell, Blistergear has not reviewed current ON3P offerings.
I have not skied the current fat Jeffreys. I've repeatedly demoed the 120 Bent Chets, not the 100 (which I'm told is better in chop/crud) or the 110 (which I'm told does about the same as the 120, with slightly greater versatility, in this case, being narrower).
You would pretty much have to be a freestyler, bent on that approach, to go for the Bent and give up directional chop/crud skiing at even a bit of speed, except with very active feet.
ON3P tends to make heavier, more stable skis, designed for their home base, the Pacific Northwest, but also great elsewhere.
I own and enjoy a pair of older 110 Jeffreys, love them, and know nothing directly of the current versions, other than the Billy Goats (great ski).
My older version of the Jeffreys was a classic for ON3P, even for their employees; and was in some ways more comparable to the Bent Chets, being very playful and flexible like the Bents - but at the same time, big difference: the fatter Bent Chets get tossed in chop/crud at a bit of speed, whether the earlier, heavy versions, or the more recent lighter ones; my older 110 Jeffreys, on the other hand, do not get tossed - very damp and stable, and heavy. And at least my Jeffrey 110s can be driven forward in spite of being twin tipped, whereas the Bent Chets like more upright and centered, mostly.