
Johnny Knoxville Q&A
So
Johnny. You're known from your Jackass days for stunts like crashing into
walls, shooting yourself with a gun, putting live leeches on your face
and swimming in s**t - all the while reveling in the deep discomfort.
The question is, why?
Call it
dimwitted optimism. Man, I've done some very naughty things.
In your latest
movie, Walking Tall, you and The Rock become sheriffs who bust up bad
guys. Were the Walking Tall stunts harder than the Jackass stunts?
Oh this
was a lot easier! On Jackass, we did it for real. In Walking Tall, it
was all make-believe. But it was a little difficult in its own way. In
the past, I've had to fail doing stunts. In this, I had to actually succeed.
The stuntmen walked me through and showed me how to do it.
So until this point
in your life, you could say your aim was always to fail?
Yeah - that's
been the idea so far in my life.
There's a scene
in Walking Tall where you get smash tackled into the ground in a football
match. Did that hurt?
I got the
wind knocked out of me a couple of times but it wasn't too bad compared
to going to the hospital or anything.
So no broken bones
this time around?
No, no.
It was all gravy, compared to my earlier work. It's all uphill from there,
man!
Are you any good
at sports generally?
I'm good
at jumping into bushes. I played baseball and football growing up. I was
decent at baseball, alright at football. I like sports but I am kind of
uncoordinated.
Working on Walking
Tall must have been boring for you, then?
No, it's fun but a different kind of fun. It wasn't boring. But it
wasn't traveling around the world with my mates. It was still fun. I mean,
I get to hang out in Vancouver for the summer. Come on!
So did they send
the stuntman home?
No, because
I need a stuntman. During rehearsal, they walked me through everything
and showed me how to do it. Without them, I would have looked even worse
than I did.
What was it like
working with The Rock?
He was a
cool guy. I'd heard he was nice but when I showed up he was easy going,
funny, seems like a guy you grew up with. There's no pretense bullshit
about him, he's cool.
Did you get him
to show you some wrestling moves?
I'm not
much of a wrestler. He was a big boy. We didn't get to talk much wrestling.
But we got to hang out in Vancouver for the summer. Men grappling was
the least of our concerns.
In one Walking
Tall scene, you destroy a truck with a chainsaw and sledgehammer. That
must have been fun
Yeah, man.
That was fun. I would turn up on set and say, "Right, what are we
doing today?" That's because I don't read the script. And they hand
me a chainsaw and say, "Destroy this truck." I'm like, "Sure
thing. I can do that." And I did.
Do you have more
fun with Jackass or making movies?
Well, compared
to digging ditches, they're all great, man. Digging ditches is what I'm
qualified to be doing. But Jackass was great. It was just me and my friends.
I don't think anything will ever eclipse the fun of Jackass for me. But
making movies is a whole different type of fun.
What's that tattoo
you've got on your arm?
It's an
American punk band called The Germs. That was their symbol. I have a bunch
of bad tattoos. But none worse than this! (Shows off a massive Leon Spinks
tattoo on his right shoulder) I just got it. I got it in Austin about
ten days ago. It says LEON and it's a picture of the former heavyweight
boxer Leon Spinks. Yeah, good thinking, huh?
Was the tattoo
something you'd planned for a long time?
No, no!
I thought of it the night before I got it. I was sitting in a bar, thinking
"I should get a tattoo of Leon Spinks on my arm!" I wrote, "Get
a tattoo of Leon Spinks tomorrow on your left bicep." I was pretty
well oiled that night. And I woke up and I thought, "Wow! That's
an awesome idea!" I just wish the guy that thought of it could talk
to the guy who has to do it. They are two different people.
So what's your
interest in Leon Spinks? Was it his outlandish lifestyle?
Well, there
wasn't one! (laughs) That's the damndest thing about it! I just had a
vision!
You must have been
pretty drunk?
Oh yeah
But I wasn't drunk when I got it. I don't know why I got it.
Did it hurt?
No. It just
hurt for a second. Here (shows tattoo on inside of wrist) it hurts.
So how did a small-town kid from Tennessee grow up to be an internationally-recognized
star? How did Jackass come about?
About two
months after graduating high school, I moved from Knoxville to go to the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena, California. I dropped out
after two weeks and then knocked around Hollywood for about five or six
years. Then my then-girlfriend got pregnant so I went, "Oh - now
I gotta do something." So I started writing for some skateboarding
magazines. I was working on a story for Big Brother magazine, about self-defense
equipment. I was testing the devices on myself and the magazine's editor,
Jeff Tremaine, convinced me to start filming my articles. Soon my antics
were being put in skateboard videos and it kinda took off. It turned into
a TV show, which turned into a movie. Then I got other offers for movies.
Do you sometimes
sit back in bewilderment at how it all came off?
Yeah. I
try to not think about it too much. I try to pretend it's all normal.
But it's pretty incredible, how everything came together.
What is the worst
injury you have had?
I went to
the hospital four times for the show, three times for the movie. Mostly
it wasn't too bad. It was just sprains or concussions. I don't remember
having breaks on the show but I have broken a lot of bones in my life
just because I am really clumsy. I was kind of lucky in terms of Jackass.
But was there one
particular stunt where you thought, "What the hell am I thinking?"
Anytime
I worked with guns or bulls, I pretty much thought, "What the hell
am I doing?" I rode a bull called Mr. Mean which none of the cowboys
would get on. Sitting on his back in the shoot before they unleashed us
was one of the loneliest moments of my life. He was bucking and snorting.
I got a sprained elbow out of that but luckily he didn't get me too bad.
The thing I did for Big Brother, I was testing self defense equipment
on myself and someone else was supposed to shoot me with a .38 in a vest,
which I just bought off the internet. I didn't have much money at the
time so I had to buy the cheapest vest they had. When we got out there
my friend refused to shoot me so I had to shoot myself. I haven't messed
with guns that much and I was preying the vest would work. It did and
I am here.
We know you have
thousands of female admirers. What's the weirdest offer you've received
from a female fan?
I have had
girls come up to me and punch me in the mouth and say, "I love your
show". Or they'll burn me with cigarettes or lighters. I have cigarette
burns all up my arm.
Look. Some will say, "Can I ask you a question? Are you looking for
a little something tonight?" I'm like, "A little?" It's
weird. Most times they come up and say hello but other times you get the
extreme version of that.
That's what you
get for being a star, Johnny.
It's what
I deserve.
That's what you
get for dragging down American culture.
And international
culture.
Were you amazed
at the success of Jackass?
We didn't
think it could be a TV show much less a hit TV show. We were confused
as anybody. And it was really successful in a lot of countries. I travel
abroad a lot and I get recognized all over from Singapore to Tokyo to
somewhere in Europe.
Who is the most
famous person you've got to meet as a result of your Jackass fame?
Me and the
Jackass boys met Brad Pitt. He couldn't have been any nicer or any cooler.
He hung out with us in our van for half a day and he was just like one
of the guys. He was up for doing whatever and finally at the end of the
day he gets out of the van and leaves. All the guys are sitting there
and everyone looks at one another and is like, "Yeah, I'd do him."
Even we had to admit how good looking he was. He was a cool guy.
So you obviously
like a drink. What is your alcoholic drink of choice?
What have
you got? I like scotch but if they don't have scotch, tequila's good.
If they are out of that I'll drink vodka and if they are out of that,
gin's real good. I will drink whatever you got. Anything that's too thin
to eat.
Are you a smoker?
No, I don't
even smoke that much weed. It always hits me wrong. It hits me so wrong.
And then you'd
wind up getting a tattoo, right?
No, that
was just booze.
Because, given
your extracurricular activities, it would be pretty funny if you said
you didn't smoke because it was bad for your health.
No, I'm
asthmatic. And it is bad for your health!
Looking back to
your youth, was there any sign that you would one day injure yourself
for laughs?
I wasn't that much of a daredevil. I was always getting injured because
I was clumsy. And I was always active. But I was real sick with asthma
growing up so I really never was that big of a daredevil. My old man was
always pulling s**t and stunts and pranks and what not. So I guess I always
tried to emulate him. He had a tire company and he was always trying to
pull pranks on his employees whether it be making dodgy milkshakes for
them or staging gun fights at Christmas parties with blank guns. He would
send letters to my sister's friends from the health department and it
had 'VD Clinic' written on it. The letters said they had contracted VD
and asked them to list their last ten partners. It was signed Dr Highland
C. Titmore. People would go down to the health department with these VD
clinic letters which were completely bogus. So he's full of all kinds
of s**t. I guess it rubbed off.
So if you learned
how to be a clown from your dad, maybe your 8-year-old daughter will learn
from you? Are you scared she'll try to emulate her father?
No, my kid
is in no danger. She is a little girl and she is so feminine and she has
a good sense of humor but she doesn't care to engage in any of those activities
nor would I encourage it.
So you've been
to England and Europe a few times. What kind of music are you into there?
I like Turbo
Negro. They are one of our favorite bands. Some of their songs like Rock
Against Ass, I love. We love Eilert Pilarm from Sweden. What's that song
he sings? Oh, good God, what is it?! I'm so fucking stupid now. I have
been in New York and I have been drinking so my mind's not working that
well. Yellow House Rock! That's it. Eilert Pilarm was considered the village
idiot for a while and now he's like the global village. And The Hives.
I like The Hives.
Which skateboarder
do you admire most?
I don't
know which one I admire most but the Finish skateboarder Arto Saari is
really good friends with my Jackass buddy Bam Margera and is one of the
best in the world. I met him in Paris and Pennsylvania and we've hung
out together. I like him. I don't have tattoos of him on my body like
Bam does but I like him a lot.
Can you think of
what you might be doing today if you hadn't made Jackass?
Before all
this started I tried to get a job doing construction and they wouldn't
hire me. I couldn't even get a f***ing job doing construction. I'd be
doing some minimum wage job, I am sure. I'd be probably putting ketchup
on your hamburger at McDonald's or something.
Will there ever
be more Jackass?
No, we are
done. We let the movie be the exclamation on the show. Bam and Steve Owen
and Pontius have shows on MTV which are amazing. I'm really proud of the
guys.
Were you all mates
before Jackass or did you come together for the show?
Everyone
on the west coast was friends. I hadn't met Bam at that point but some
of the boys had. Then we all joined up to do Jackass. We all still talk.
I just went to Indonesia with Steve-O and Pontius to film some episodes
of their show, Wild Boys. Boy, they are naughty. Oh gees. You should see
Steve-O in a country where he can't score weed. There's a death sentence
for drugs in Indonesia. Compound that with us drinking Indonesian moon
shine called jungle juice. Steve-O comes home one night and rips everything
down in the hotel room. Everything is beaten up, there are broken walls
everywhere. My room was next door and I heard it and I was like, "Oh
s**t. That's going to cost." So we wake up the next morning and we
go to the front desk and they are like, "OK, that's going to be 500
American dollars!" And we were like, "All of us would have broken
everything if we knew it was only going to be that much."
What kind of parts
do you want to take in your film career?
I want to
stick with comedies and I want to do some more action. I am getting ready
to do this small part in this film called Lords of Dogtown. I want to
be able to do a number of things. I am producing a movie at Paramount
right now which I am starring in. I want to do my own material.
And you've been
working with the Farrelly Brothers recently, who are the kings of gross-out
comedy
Yeah, I
did a movie with them in Austin, Texas called The Ringer, which is one
of the coolest things I ever did, if not the hardest. I get hard up for
dough and my uncle, Brian Cox, gets in debt to some bookies, convinces
me to rig a challenge in the Special Olympics. On the surface that sounds
like it would be mean spirited but it's not because mean stuff happens
to me. We cast real competitors in the roles and they are amazing. And
they have such a great perspective on things and they are so positive
and each one of them is unique. I am going out bowling with one of the
guys tomorrow night, he is in town. He likes blonde girls. We're going
to try to find him a blonde girl. He's in the right spot, here in Hollywood.
You're obviously
a wild, funny man who loves life. But what really pisses you off in life?
Every night
around 2am when they yell, "Closing time!" Last call gets me
angry every time. Last call always makes me angry or cry, depending on
what mood I am in. I am nothing if not sensitive.
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