Article 5W412 I almost died. But I’m still here!’ Johnny Knoxville on parties, moral panic and risking it all for Jackass

I almost died. But I’m still here!’ Johnny Knoxville on parties, moral panic and risking it all for Jackass

by
Chris Godfrey
from on (#5W412)

His outrageous stunt show ran for just 10 months, but became wildly popular. He tells of being inspired by his hard-drinking father, his years in therapy and suffering brain damage

I hear Johnny Knoxville's Tennessee drawl before I see him. I'm gonna getcha!" he barks - part children's entertainer, part axe murderer - as he chases the small child of one of his entourage down the hotel corridor. Where's my little honey bunny?" His infectious cackle and her giggling shrieks ricochet into the room where I am waiting to meet him.

Knoxville has been provoking shock and delight for 22 years, ever since his TV show Jackass first aired on MTV. The formula was beautifully simple: a ragtag group of skateboarders and oddballs with a punk-rock aesthetic filmed themselves undertaking painful, grotesque DIY stunts - no context necessary. Audiences tuned in for the back yard suburban anarchy, but stayed for the gang's camaraderie. It was absurd and puerile - the New York Times dismissed the film that followed the TV series as a documentary version of Fight Club, shorn of social insight, intellectual pretension and cinematic interest".

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