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What’s notable about that video is that it was the first video project of Spike Jonze, who at the time was a photographer for Steve Rocco’s skateboarding company. We’re not going to kiss Mom’s ass anymore.” And he made the first video to properly embrace skateboarding being criminal and reckless and it was gnarly: The Rubbish Heap. But then came this guy named Steve Rocco, and he said, “Fuck that. Like they wouldn’t show very violent falls off of skateboards. So all the skateboard videos that came out in the early 1980s were very careful to be sugar-coated, not scare off Mom. And in the 1980s, the skateboard industry was really at the mercy of the approval of mothers. STEVE-O It all started with skateboarding.
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Will the boys’ legions of die-hard fans brave omicron to cheer on their favorite antiheroes getting slapped at full force in the testicles with a flip-flop? The answer remains to be seen. 4, the fourth film in the Jackass saga, Jackass Forever, premieres under the strangest set of circumstances yet: exclusively in theaters during the third year of a global pandemic. The topic of Margera remains off-limits pending litigation.) But the show goes on. (Earlier this year, Margera was served with a three-year restraining order from Jackass co-creator Jeff Tremaine Margera has responded by suing the Jackass creators and Paramount for wrongful termination. Dunn’s childhood friend and co-star Bam Margera has struggled with alcoholism and in January 2021 said on the Knockin’ Doorz Down podcast that Paramount would not allow him to perform in future Jackass films. 'Jackass' Star Settles Lawsuit Over Being Dropped From Newest MovieĪlong the way, there has been sadness and tragedy: In 2011, Jackass performer Ryan Dunn, 34, and production assistant Zachary Hartwell, 29, died in a drunk-driving accident with Dunn behind the wheel.
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Knoxville pulled the plug on the show after just three seasons and 25 episodes, but corporate sibling Paramount Studios found a way to keep the money-minting franchise alive in the form of three feature films: 2002’s Jackass: The Movie (which grossed $80 million worldwide) 2006’s Jackass Number Two ($85 million) and 2010’s Jackass 3D ($172 million). Something about its bum-fights-meets- Three Stooges energy instantly clicked with MTV audiences, giving the network its highest ratings in history (2.4 million among 12-to-34-year-olds) while sending lawmakers like Sen. 1, 2000, Jackass debuted on MTV with a shot of Johnny Knoxville being fired out of a cannon to the now-familiar strums of “Corona” by Minutemen - and the world would never be the same.īorn out of skate-culture shock videos, Jackass featured a lovable gang of ne’er-do-wells - including clown-college grad Steve-O, thong-loving exhibitionist Chris Pontius and occasional Oompa Loompa impersonator Jason “Wee Man” Acuña - performing a three-ring circus of Candid Camera-style pranks, gag-inducing dares and flat-out lunatic stunts.