Accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) produce highly magnetized relativistic jets that tend to collimate gradually as they propagate outward. However, recent radio interferometric observations of the 3C 84 galaxy reveal a stunning, cylindrical jet already at several hundred SMBH gravitational radii, $r\gtrsim350r_{\rm g}$. We explore how such extreme collimation emerges via a suite of 3D general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations. We consider an SMBH surrounded by a magnetized torus immersed in a constant-density ambient medium that starts at the edge of the SMBH sphere of influence, chosen to be much larger than the SMBH gravitational radius, $r_{\text{B}}=10^3r_{\text{g}}$. We find that radiatively inefficient accretion flows (e.g., M87) produce winds that collimate the jets into parabolas near the BH. After the disk winds stop collimating the jets at $r\lesssim{}r_\text{B}$, they turn conical. Once outside $r_\text{B}$, the jets run into the ambient medium and form backflows that collimate the jets into cylinders some distance beyond $r_{\text{B}}$. Interestingly, for radiatively-efficient accretion, as in 3C 84, the radiative cooling saps the energy out of the disk winds: at early times, they cannot efficiently collimate the jets, which skip the initial parabolic collimation stage, start out conical near the SMBH, and turn into cylinders already at $r\simeq300r_{\rm g}$, as observed in 3C 84. Over time, jet power remains approximately constant, whereas the mass accretion rate increases: the winds grow in strength and start to collimate the jets, which become quasi-parabolic near the base; the transition point to a nearly cylindrical jet profile moves outward while remaining inside $r_\text{B}$.
Comment: Submitted to ApJL; comments are welcome. 13 pages, 5 figures, uses aastex631. Movies available at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvffyB6zGl7TEkAw-VaBfvrqWhVAerhZI