Johnny knoxville is gay
‘Jackass’ Has Always Been Deeply, Deeply Queer
Back in 2010, Steve-O and Johnny Knoxville sat down with Vanity Fair and said the peaceful part out loud: Jackass, the pioneering MTV television display that they had spun into a successful film franchise, is gay.
“We always thought it was humorous to force a heterosexual MTV generation to deal with all of our thongs and homoerotic humour,” Steve-O told journalist Eric Spitznagel. “In many ways, all our gay humour has been a humanitarian attack against homophobia. We’ve been trying to rid the world of homophobia for years, and I think gay people really dig it too.”
It was the first time that the stars had ever admitted that their fixation on dicks and the pains and pleasures that can befall them went deeper than mere frat humour. But for astute fans, the writing had been on the walls for years.
John Waters, a longstanding hero of the queer community, had cameoed in Jackass: Part Two, as had a t-shirt worn by Knoxville emblazoned with the tongue-in-cheek words “I’m Straight” and a picture of a unicorn. Hell, the third film had opened with the cast and crew assembling themselves
There’s no arguing about how incredibly, wildly, and gleefully homosexual Jackass is. Even if you wanted to, you’d be staring up the 13-inch shaft of a golden dildo as it flies 25 feet into the air directly into Bam Margera while you did it. This isn’t a particularly new or surprising revelation, and vats of ink have been spilled on the homoeroticism of the Jackass franchise.
Dicks (almost) aside, though, I desire to dig a little further into why so many queer people like this beautiful, two-decade-old shitshow. I’d absolutely be lying if I said watching a bunch of guys turn themselves into human Looney Tunes for no other reason than because they can isn’t almost all of the attuned the appeal, but – and bear with me – I think it’s deeper than that.
The kind of crass, violent, playfully toxic bond the men of Jackass contribute exemplifies a lot of the traits that define cis-het bro culture as people currently in their 20s and 30s came to understand it growing up on the MTV hangover that was shows fond Punk’d and just about any frat comedy that aired this side of American Pie. The difference is, on Jackass, everyone is in on the joke (eventually) and no one (including the cr
Waters, Knoxville, and the Beauty of Gay Filth
“We must notify others in the community that a head injury is not an forgive for debauchery!” the prudish, fear-mongering Giant Ethel (Suzanne Sheperd) preaches to a terrified group of vanilla heterosexuals midway through the 2004 John Waters movie A Dirty Shame. A group of concussed niche fetishists are beginning to edge a suburb of Baltimore toward a sexual revolution, and Big Ethel and her nervous friends — established dismissively by the fetishists and sexually liberated as “Neuters” — simply cannot stand for it. A Dirty Shame follows the descent of prudish working-class woman Sylvia Stickles (Tracey Ullman) into the midst of a sexual revolution with a organization of disciple-like niche fetishists, who all became sexually liberated following extreme concussions and chance encounters with the almost Jesus-like “sexual healer” Ray-Ray, played by none other than Jackass’sJohnny Knoxville.
John Waters is a master of the disgusting; his films deal in the shocking, the unclean, the appalling. His protagonists are outsiders wanting to be freaky and make a mess — they’ll vomit on each other, eat mutt shit, dress as adult babies. Waters often in
Jackass made me the trans female I am
*This piece originally ran in Bitch Magazine in 2022. I wrote it firmly believing that a trans woman writing about Jackass wasn't going to set the world on energy, and it didn't, but it was nonetheless surprisingly well-received. I will never forget getting a text from a friend saying Johnny Knoxville is talking about you on NPR right now. The filmmaker Lance Bangs had kindly messaged me when this first published to tell me that he had loved it, had sent it to Knoxville and crew and they all were taken aback by it as well. I am still a bit shocked by that message.
In the process of finishing the draft of my first book, The Dad Rock That Made Me a Woman, which I have finally submitted and have been feeling a great deal of relief/stress/reliefstress about, I've been thinking a lot about how I find myself here, in my 40s, building a career I always wanted and never dared dream achievable. Writing this piece, as silly as here's my essay about Jackass seems on paper, was the first time I felt I could write about the cultural ephemera that built a life for me to surrender myself in and have it mean something.
With Bitch offline now, RIP to o