Johnny Knoxville

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  • 03 July 2011 Roger Alan Wade singing at the 2011 Hootenanny festival in Irvine. He sang "the light outlives the star", the song he wrote for dunn.
  • 31 October 2012 Happy Halloween!!
  • 04 July 2011 Here's an iphone hipstamatic pic i took of one of my heroes John Doe singing 4th of July at this years hootenanny. Have a good 4th everyone.
  • 29 February 2012 I had dinner the other night w/ john waters & he told me about this great new cookbook. Bone' appetit!! P.S. photo by greg gorman
  • 14 May 2012 Thank you Dave England for sending me this receipt he has had since 1997. Nobody loves a Kum and Go joke like dave. Or me. Knox
  • 06 August 2012 The lady handling this eagle said they can pop a truck tire with their talons. Awesome damn animal.
  • 26 March 2012 Me and James White, the owner of the Broken Spoke in Austin,Tx.
  • 06 February 2012 Driving into the office and saw some bushes that would make Ron Jeremy green with envy.
  • 12 June 2011 At special olympics summer games at cal state long beach, wish you were here!!
  • 08 August 2011 Mat Hoffman told his friend Big Island how much I loved the Ryan Dunn shoes he designed & Big Island made a pair for me. Very touched.
  • 14 January 2012 Thanks to my cousin roger for my sweet new plaque. Nailing it above my backdoor now. Wahoo!! Knoxville
  • 20 November 2012 me & my hero Willie Nelson after recording a TownHall special on sirius/xm promoting willie's new book "roll me up and smoke me when I die"
Johnny Knoxville Snapshot
Born: March 11, 1971

Johnny Knoxville became both a beloved goofball and a lightning rod for controversy as soon as his signature TV show, Jackass, premiered on MTV in 2000. The show, which featured Knoxville and his friends executing a variety of stupid pranks and dangerous stunts, made an instant star of its hip, easygoing, developmentally arrested host, who was quickly signed on for a variety of film projects. However, its subject matter of foolish bicycle jumps, gross eating feats, and pepper spray testing drew the ire of concerned parents whose children were hurting themselves trying to imitate their hero.


Knoxville was born Philip John Clapp in Knoxville, TN, on March 11, 1971, son of a used car salesman. At age eight, the asthmatic suffered a simultaneous bout of flu, pneumonia, and bronchitis that nearly killed him. Knoxville would later joke that surviving this period convinced him he was invincible, making possible his future vocation as a performer who would injure himself for laughs. Knoxville had originally planned to go into acting through normal channels, attending the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena, CA. However, it was while writing for a skateboarding magazine called Big Brother that Knoxville got his big break. Working on a story about self-defense equipment, Knoxville agreed to let magazine editor Jeff Tremaine film him testing the devices on himself. Hence, Jackass was born, with Tremaine, Knoxville, and director Spike Jonze serving as co-creators. MTV won a bidding war with Comedy Central, and the show became a hit -- one quickly festooned with warning labels not to try this at home.


After a role in the little-seen indie Desert Blues (1995) (credited as Phillip John) and a blink-and-you'll-miss-him appearance in Coyote Ugly (2000), Knoxville was offered a string of film roles following the success of Jackass, as well as a stint on Saturday Night Live, which he turned down. However, his cinematic coming-out party was delayed when Big Trouble, which featured a nuclear weapon smuggled aboard a commercial airplane, was pushed back indefinitely due to the World Trade Center terrorist attacks. In 2001, he was also cast in the smaller films The Tree, The Ranger, and Life Without Dick, in which he plays the title character. As if one Knoxville wasn't enought to keep fans in stitches, the death-defying funnyman turned up as a two-headed alien in Men in Black II before taking his small screen antics to the silver screen, unrestrained by the restrictions of television, in Jackass: The Movie (both 2002).


Though to this point Knoxville's fairly minimal film roles (of course excluding Jackass: The Movie) called for any true acting ability, increasingly prominant roles in such efforts as Grand Theft Parsons (2003) and Walking Tall (2004) found the likeable Jackass successfully developing a notable film career. Following a supporting performance alongside wrestler-turned-actor in Walking Tall, Knoxville landed a role in self-described "Prince of Puke" director John Waters' Baltimore-based comedy A Dirty Shame. In 2005 Knoxville made two big attempts to court the mainstream, though neither struck box office gold. He starred as Luke Duke in the big-screen version of The Dukes of Hazzard, and was the lead in the comedy The Ringer, where he played a man who pretended to be disabled so he could compete in the Special Olympics. He reteamed with the Jackass crew for a second feature film playfully titled Jackass: Number Two. Derek Armstrong, Rovi
  • Johnny Knoxville