The Three Questions with Andy Richter - Steve-O (Re-Release)
Episode Date: February 20, 2024(Re-Released from March 2022) “Jackass” star Steve-O joins Andy Richter to talk about doing “Jackass” stunts in his 40s, his international childhood, finding stand-up comedy, his surprising fo...ray into manufacturing, and more!
Transcript
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Hey everybody, it's Andy Richter. You're listening to The Three Questions. I am the host of The Three
Questions and we are digging into the archives this month and we are looking back on some of
my favorite episodes, which is why you are going to listen to me talking to Steve-O because this
was one of my favorite episodes, one of the best conversations I've had, and I have thought back on this conversation many, many times.
So give it a listen. I spoke with Steve-O back in March 2022, soon after the release of Jackass Forever.
Here it is, me, Steve-O, enjoy. Hey everyone, this is Andy Richter
and I'm very excited today
because I have
one of my favorite
entertainers on the show
a big thrill to have
a member of the Jackass
Squad. I'm talking to Steve O and a member of the Jackass Squad. I'm talking to Steve-O.
And also one of the fucking most hardcore members.
Well, thank you, man.
And yeah, dude, it's great to be here.
Is there competition among you guys of like hardcore-ness?
Like who is the most?
And like, is there a ranking within you guys that you you know that you guys try and one
up each other i mean historically i've definitely gotten more credit than i deserve in that
department yeah you know like sort of i i was uh kind of branded as the guy who wouldn't turn down
anything i would nothing was too gnarly for me.
And I was the most unhinged and craziest of them all.
But again, I don't deserve that title.
Absolutely the craziest of us all.
The most hardcore is Knoxville.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was never any getting me in front of a bull.
Right.
That's for sure.
You know, but with that said, I always felt very unaccountable for my actions around sharks.
So I think that.
What is that?
You're just so like you've got a crush on sharks and you can't help yourself?
I've described it as like superheroes, you know, like different superheroes have different superpowers.
My superpower is sharks. Yeah. And Knoxville's superpower is bulls.
But, you know, it's it's a loose it's a loose analogy to superheroes. And I really think Knoxville is just by far the craziest,
particularly because the rest of us,
most of the rest of us grew up skateboarding.
So, you know, we have this kind of ability to fall down.
We're used to it, you know, like we, you know,
we would throw our bodies around where we're pretty used to it.
We've got a sense for where we are in the air and how to land.
And Knoxville has never had any of that.
So when Knoxville's in the air, not only does he not know how to land, but it's just always devastating.
And I mean, he's bad at it, is what you what you're saying yeah he's he's bad at it
he's his commitment to the art is is unparalleled now is there a variation between you guys of like
like what you rank you know sort of like within the internal status of the group
you know the actual sort of physical harm, like a shark or a bull,
and then being covered in human shit. Like, you know, like the,
because to me that port-a-potty thing, like that's like, I'll let a bull,
I'll let a bull hit me, but I don't want to get covered in shit.
I don't know why that is. I don't know why.
I think we're onto something there because that's where,
that's where I truly excel is. And,
and I think that like to demonstrate a willingness to be covered in feces
really, really conveys the kind of message of like, wow, this guy's crazy.
He's gnarly, you know, unhinged, the wildest, the most hardcore of the bunch.
However, I think that's perhaps the secret to my success
because I've been really pretty careful about picking my battles over the years.
Like I'll go for, I'll roll my dice with hepatitis all day long before I put my spinal cord in jeopardy.
All right.
You know, there's a lot there's a logic to that. It's rather clever on my part because I view my immune system as a muscle which needs exercise.
And this is something that goes way back to when I was in eighth grade.
I went to a very privileged school, you know, the American school in London.
I was there, you know, I was there and gone and back, you know,
from fourth grade all the way through high school.
And during eighth grade at this very privileged American school in London,
I went on a field trip to Egypt, you know, because, because.
Sure, why not?
Yeah, it was like an alternatives week. And, and,
you know, it kind of makes sense because when I did graduate from high school, my,
my senior graduating class, 12th grade, 80% of my class went on to Ivy league universities. Wow. And I, and I was a loser for going to the University of Miami, where within two weeks of class starting, I was placed on final disciplinary probation.
What an overachiever.
Right. But back in eighth grade on this field trip to Egypt, I remember being told that, um,
that it was very dangerous to drink the tap water there, that it was, uh, you know,
it would make us very sick that, uh, we should be careful in the shower that, that if, if, uh,
if we were to order a, uh, a soda at, uh, you a soda with a meal,
do not put ice cubes in it because the ice cube, you know, like,
and they were, you know, really, they seemed really serious about that.
But while we were having a meal outside a restaurant,
it was like a patio situation really parked right on the Nile River.
I watched this Egyptian dude literally kneel by the Nile River and dunk a toothbrush in it,
sit there brushing his teeth. And I thought to myself, what, you know, if the tap water here is so bad, then what the hell is the Nile?
Right. I mean, God. And and, you know, I thought if that guy who's OK, evidently OK, brushing his teeth in the Nile, if he went to England where I live or if he went to America and drink tap water there, he'd probably get sick because it's a quite the question is, it's a matter of what you're used to what your immune system, you know, and I determined in that moment,
that the healthiest thing for me to do the smartest thing for me to do would be to deliberately drink
tap water everywhere I go around the world. And I was afforded that opportunity when we filmed our show Wild Boys,
which was a little bit of a homoerotic nature show. Right. You and Chris Pontius. Yeah. Yeah.
And that show brought us to so many countries. It was absurd. Every continent except Antarctica,
where I wouldn't be surprised if the water was purer than anywhere
else and and and as soon as i checked into every hotel room as soon as i put i i you know long
flights and i would go and brush my teeth and i would think that and i would guzzle tap water
just guzzle it and i drank i drank tap water in ind, Rwanda, like everywhere, everywhere.
And as such, I do believe that I am healthier.
My immune system is stronger and I can handle being covered in feces, which I've done regularly.
Well, wait, so you never have had any.
I mean, have any of these been disasters? Like was that first one in Egypt, an explosive ending? No, I don't, I don't remember.
I think that was something that kicked in a little later, but, uh, and I did get a little bit sick
in Kenya. I definitely got a little bit sick in Kenya, but I think
that was from drinking
the box wine that had been
like a
box
Kenyan box
wine. Yeah, which
I drank with legit
what are they called? Not
samurai.
There's a famous tribe
oh zulus not zulus uh samurai but it sounds like samurai ah whatever i can't think of it yeah yeah
well but you know that's you know that like a doctor will tell you that. Not a Maasai. Maasai warriors.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now, a doctor will tell you that that's just wrong because it's the particular, you know,
bacteria and organisms that are living in the water that the people, the natives get used to.
So I don't even know if you're capable of getting an all over the globe kind of, you know,
you've done it. I mean, I told you, yeah, I've done it. I'm not here to lie to you, Andy.
I understand. I understand. But I mean, so it's like now today, if you were to go,
like if you were just to go to say Oaxaca and start guzzling tap water.
Oh, my God. I was in I was in a little sort of a shanty town in Peru called Juarez, where where I found my dog, Wendy.
And I've seen the videos of that. Yeah. Yeah. And she's on the bus right now.
And while I was in Juarez, Peru, I drank toilet water, brother.
I literally took a mug and scooped toilet water and pounded it.
All right.
Just to show the dog that you were serious about, I don't know, owning it or being its master.
Yeah.
And you know, the video that I made of finding Wendy in the streets of Peru garnered, it garnered more viewership than any video I have ever put on the internet.
I can imagine.
Yeah.
Dogs, they're a big seller.
Yeah.
But can you imagine how that made me feel?
I mean, yeah, I can imagine, but you know, right.
But, but what I left out of that, that, uh,
incredibly viewed video and probably cleverly left out of it.
One of the first things I witnessed Wendy doing in the streets of Peru
was eating
feces out of a diaper
on the sidewalk.
I'm like, dude, that's
my dog.
Oh my God.
She's coming with me.
Yeah, get that dog.
Get that shit-eating dog.
Put it on the plane with me.
All right, now you mentioned your early upbringing,
and I'm just going to read some of these, just to get her over with.
Family moved to Brazil when he was six months old
because his father was the president of Pepsi-Cola in South America.
At that point, it was just Pepsi Cola in all of Brazil.
In all of Brazil.
Okay.
And you were born in London.
Then they moved to Brazil.
Your first words were in Portuguese.
Then they moved to Venezuela and you became fluent in Spanish.
Moved back to the U.S. when you were four.
Not back to the U.S. I moved to the U.S.
for the very first time when I was four. Wow.
Or is it Darien, as they say? As I understand, Darien
will do the trick. Darien, Connecticut, which is a fancy
place. And Miami before moving back to England when he was nine.
Here's the fun part. Okay. My, yeah,
my dad was the president of Brazil and two years old, we moved to Venezuela.
That dad got a promotion and that's when he was president of PepsiCo in a
considerably larger region.
Then still working for Pepsi when we moved to America when I was four years old,
but it was when I was six years old, we moved to Miami, that dad became a big tobacco executive.
He worked for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, famously the makers of Camel cigarettes.
camel cigarettes yeah and this was during the 1980s when it came to light that cigarettes weren't actually good for you you know like they they actually made the link to to cancer i think
shortly before that right which they had made but they just kept come and everybody right everybody
you all you have to do is know smokers and know that's not good for you. There's no way like all that shit when they used to have people like smoking menthol cigarettes and saying doctors recommend it for your, you know, for your respiratory health.
You know, there's no way nobody could like, in the, the 1980s there, that was when it became like litigious about it kind of a thing.
And, and the, the, the tobacco companies got shit scared about lawsuits and everything and, and just the future of, of their, their products.
Right.
So, so the tobacco companies got proactive about buying up food companies.
And that, that's what inspired what at the time was the, the largest corporate merger
slash takeover in the history of the world. It was called, uh, was called the KKR merger.
This was when R.J. Reynolds bought, merged with Nabisco and became they became a super company called R.J.R. Nabisco.
And that merger represented an aberrationally good year for my dad.
And that was when the houses that my family lived in grew.
Yes.
And that was when my mom started drinking a lot more
and dad was traveling a lot more.
So I had a little bit of a pippy long stocking effect.
You know, I, I didn't have a whole lot of parental supervision and the house just got
bigger and bigger. But what I think is particularly funny about that is that my dad being such a
wildly successful corporate executive started out with soda,
moved on to cigarettes and then ended up at cookies.
Well, that's, I was, I was going to say,
I was going to say soda wasn't deadly enough for him.
He had to move on to cigarettes.
Yeah. Yeah.
But we ended up at cookies and right at the time when Nabisco figured out
cookies and cream, the time when uh nabisco figured out cookies and cream oreo ice cream
i mean win win
right on the cutting edge
my dad thought it was hilarious that that they had such a financial fucking hit
with just sweeping the ore factory of all its debris.
And just dumping it into something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, dude, hilarious.
That's more disgusting than the story of American cheese.
Well, now, I mean, you know, you use the word privilege.
You know, you had like a pretty special upbringing you you know you you use the word privilege you know you you had like a pretty
special upbringing you know and first of all why no accent we got to six years old moved to
miami yeah you know i like i i had learned three different languages by the age of three
and completely forgot two of them by the age of five. Yeah. I only remember speaking American like my parents.
Yeah.
And it was at the age of nine that we moved back to England.
Of course, it was my first experience there that I could remember.
And when we moved back to England,
I attended, again, the American school in London.
So my folks at home spoke American
accent, my teachers and largely the kids at school. It was sort of an American bubble that
I lived in, in England. And it didn't help that, uh, didn't, it thwarted my English accent, my,
my skateboarding habit, you know, everything, everything dude yeah so i kind of stayed american
in england right now um was uh was skateboarding like did that start early when did you start
skating um i i first started skateboarding within 20 minutes of walking out of the movie theater
seeing back to the Future Part One.
Oh, really?
Yeah, where Michael Jackson was like,
or sorry, Michael Jackson,
Michael J. Fox was holding onto the cars
and skating through the streets.
And they had like, I just thought that was cool, man.
And that was 1985.
And I started skateboarding that day.
In London or in Miami?
In London.
Wow.
And was there any kind of scene of kids, you know, like were kids skateboarding much in London at that point?
Yeah.
Back to the Future brought about a absolute fad of skateboarding. Like you'd save to say that under the majority of Christmas trees
and Christmas of 1985 lived a skateboard. Yeah. And, uh, I mean, it was really pretty incredible.
I don't know that the yo-yo ever had such a run as skateboards did on the back of back to the
future, but it was really pretty quickly that, um um all of these kids who were gifted skateboards
learned that not only was skateboarding incredibly difficult but that it it came with quite a bit of
like falling down and and uh yeah meeting meeting the concrete and getting getting uh
scuffed up and and and bruised and dinged and it hurt it hurt a lot
it was very difficult and it it really uh i'd say that the overwhelming majority of those kids
you know like just sort of tried it and thought oh this isn't for me and it was a very very select
few who uh who were willing to persevere you know know, sort of tolerate the injuries,
put in the work that it took.
And skateboarding just absolutely isolated a type of person,
a type of person who is just like very, very dedicated, you know.
And another thing that skateboarding did in the 1980s
was it led kids to the video camera now in the 1980s the video camera was not yet a bona fide
household item i mean it certainly wasn't in everybody's pockets and and there were no other
activities which lent themselves to the use of a video camera.
But every skateboarder wants to become sponsored.
Every skateboarder is going to document their tricks with a video camera.
If you want to excel in tennis, then you got to win your matches.
But nobody's videotaping everything.
So skateboarders got a very,
very significant headstart in video production.
Yeah.
And actually it was Spike Jones in the 1980s was a photographer for a skateboard company
called World Industries.
And the guy who owned World Industries just decided,
you know what? Like'm gonna make a i
want our company to make our own skateboard video because he was frustrated that up to that point
that skateboard videos were very very sugar-coated because the industry was dependent upon the
approval of mothers you know and and if the skateboarding videos showed really
brutal you know injuries and slams and and the like the attitude and the reverence that would
turn off mom and it would it would turn off the the flow of money into the industry yeah but this
guy this guy who owned world industries he said man i'm so sick of kissing mom's ass and i'm gonna
make a video that's just gnarly that shows skateboarding for what it is.
And Spike Jonze, being the photographer for World Industries, got the job of producing that first World Industries skateboarding video by default because there was nobody else really like on hand to do it.
Or who would be as cheap probably either.
Right, right, right, right.
So Spike Jonze's very first video project ever was in the 1980s. And it was a video called Rubbish Heap, which featured professional skateboarders, like forcing a child to eat
an earthworm. And then the child barfs and then the dog comes over and eats the
barf and the skateboarders are just howling laughing and that and that that was the vibe
yeah yeah yeah and well and you can see you can see the birth of jackass in there i mean dude this
is where it gets really good this guy who owned World Industries was like the most narcissistic, like Napoleon, like just guy.
I mean, he was epic.
And this was his attitude.
He's like, I'm not kissing anybody's ass.
I'm going to be gnarly.
The biggest magazines in skateboarding were Thrasher and Transworld.
in skateboarding were Thrasher and Transworld.
And part for the course, Steve Rocco,
the guy who owned World Industries,
he made a full page ad for World Industries,
which he submitted to Thrasher Magazine and Transworld Magazine.
The ad featured a young boy with a gun in his mouth.
And it said, World Industries, industries kill yourself and that was it and
yeah that was steve rocco got a kick out of that but what happened was both thrasher magazine and
transworld magazine sent back that ad both saying that there was no way that they would run that in their magazine.
One of the magazines even said, this particularly upset me, the editor of the magazine,
this particularly upset me because one of my best friends in high school actually killed himself.
And Steve Rocco's response to that guy was, okay, man, maybe you can put together a little list of every little
thing that's hurt your feelings over the years so that I can run my business based on your little
sensitivities. He says, you know, he says, he says, you know what? I'm going to never run another ad
in Thrasher or Transworld. And I'm going to go ahead and start my own
skateboarding magazine. This was Steve Rocco at work. So that was the reason
why Big Brother Magazine was born. To serve as a forum for content that would never be allowed
to grace the pages of Thrasher or Transworld.
And Big Brother Magazine was chock full of nudity. They had articles like objective,
like journalistic integrity. They had an article that listed the 10 most effective ways to commit
suicide. They had a legit article on how to buy crack in a neighborhood they
had articles on how to make fake ids they had for one of the covers they had um a pro skateboarder
dressed up as satan doing a skateboard trick through the air over a legit stack of burning bibles. Oh my God. While,
while,
while holding a pitchfork,
they did,
they did it all.
Big brother was my favorite thing that I had ever,
ever like experience.
I loved it so much.
And how old are you when this is happening?
This,
this is my early twenties.
Yeah.
When,
when,
when this kicks off and big brother that their magazines came out at first, they were a little bit sparse because Steve Rocco wasn't so organized.
But they ended up becoming a monthly publication. It was it was a crazy first rights issue.
Larry Flint of Hustler Magazine bought Big Brother from Steve Rocco, at which point the guy in charge of Big Brother Magazine was Jeff Tremaine. And Jeff Tremaine was really
just enjoying it. He was enjoying it because it was bigger than skateboarding. The craziness,
the antics was bigger than skateboarding. And as well as
having the print issues coming out every month, you know, every six months or a year came out an
actual video, which really filled in the gaps and like, and let you behind the scenes of all the
crazy stuff that's going on. And by the time the, the Big Brother skateboarding videos really developed this cult following and became like bigger than skateboarding.
By that point, Spike Jonze had become an Oscar nominated Hollywood movie director, I believe, for being John Malkovich.
He got he got he got an Oscar nod.
And Jeff Tremaine of Big Brother Magazine reached out to Spike Jones in, I believe, like
1995 or 1996, maybe 96 or 97. And he said, hey, Spike, our Big Brother videos are really getting
attention. People really love them, but they love the crazy shit. i don't think anybody really cares about the skateboarding
and i think that if we subtract the skateboarding from our big brother videos then what's left over
like we can make it into a tv show yeah and so so they they made like the sort of like 10 minute
long vhs you know like south park type thing sure to bring it in. They went into a couple of pitch
meetings. They described going into HBO as an absolute disaster where it was like a female
executive. They were pitching it to who just wasn't feeling the sensibility of it. And they
thought maybe this isn't a good idea. But when they brought their pitch to MTV, MTV was clamoring for it.
And what was left over when you subtracted the skateboarding videos from,
or when you subtracted the skateboarding from the Big Brother videos,
you had Johnny Knoxville, Wee Man, Chris Ponia, Steve-O.
You know, like I had found Big Brother.
I was living in Albuquerque in 1996 and Big Brother came through Albuquerque on one of their tours and I just tracked them down. I said, dude, I found them at a skate park.
of our big movies.
I told Demetri, I basically said, I'm going
to be in Big Brother. I said, I love Big
Brother. And I'm just telling you, I'm going
to be, I'm going to force you to
put me in Big Brother
because what I'm going to do tonight
is going to be so
spectacularly insane.
You're going to have no choice but to print me in. I don't care
if you like me.
I just, I'm going to, you know,
and that night at a backyard tech party,
I taught this professional skateboarder how to breathe fire with rubbing
alcohol, which is a terrible thing to use for breathing fire.
But I didn't know that.
And I told him, I said, I told this pro skater, I said, okay,
I've got this can of hairspray. I'm going
to spray it all over my head. And so I'm going to spray it all over my head. I'm going to light
my, my head on fire with the lighter. I'm just going to set all my hair on fire.
So that's your torch. Okay. You're going to spit the fire, like using my head as a torch,
but I'm going to have my own mouth full of rubbing alcohol and I'm going
to douse my arm. So when you blow the fireball at my head, I'm going to stick my arm into the
fireball, which will leave my hand on fire. And then my hand will be my torch. And I'm going to
do a back flip simultaneously blowing fire out of my mouth with my head on fire while I do a backflip.
And it was all a pretty killer plan. But because I wanted to put my hand into the fireball,
I pictured that it would make more sense to have him blow it from the side.
ball i pictured that it would make more sense to have him blow it from the side and that was the critical flaw because from the side this whole side of my face was exposed and he blew the fireball
point blank into my face making my whole head on fire from the shoulders up but this was my chance
to be in big brother skateboarding magazine so as i realized that my whole fucking face was on fire my thinking was
i better hurry up and do this fire breathing back flip quick
so that so there's this unbelievable shot filmed from behind me where i do the back flip i
successfully blow the fireball and and you see my see my whole fucking head just in the middle of a big fire.
It's all just fire.
And it comes rotating.
But I came up a little bit short on the backflip.
So I landed on my knees.
And so I landed on my knees and I came down.
So it was a struggle to get back up to start putting out the fire.
Right, right.
And like it wouldn't go out like right away.
And I'm flailing through this whole backyard keg party, batting at it.
You know, like by the time I got the fire out, all the skin on my face was like rolled up in my hand like a joint.
And I had to go to the hospital.
Someone came over and they said, are you okay?
I look at the camera and I go,
no, dude, not even.
I went
to the hospital and
they scraped all the skin down.
They called it
debride.
The burnt skin is now going to rot and can like cause infection so they have to scrape
scrape it down to the bottom layer and uh with my second degree burns on half my face they said
that i wouldn't be able to go out in the sun for six months that
that did this and that and like certainly for the next two weeks
like most of the next two weeks i recall in the morning having to peel my pillow off my face
because there was stuff there was stuff oozing out of it yeah and that was that was the condition
that i was in still with these burns oozing and when I got the call to let me know that I had been accepted into
Ringling brothers and Barnum and Bailey clown college.
And I didn't know,
I had no,
I had no idea if putting on clown grease paint was going to be in the
cards,
but fortunately I heal like fucking Wolverine,
probably because my immune system is so strong.
Right.
Exactly.
From all the shit drinking.
Yeah.
Can't you tell my loves are growing?
Now,
what do you, what do you think it is like do you think there's anything kind of wrong well i mean yes obviously there's something i mean because well
first of all and i mean you guys are already you guys are talking about that you the jackass crew
is already talking about like this is a young person's game and the fact that you guys are talking about that you the jackass crew is already talking about like this is a young person's game and the fact that you guys are still doing it is incredible and
it's not just it's not just because your body heals it's not just because the physical because
like you know i've done pratfalls i like you know part of the comedy that i would do and i mean
and we would practice pratfalls at parties. Like I learned to fall downstairs for a laugh at parties and stuff.
And you just, you know, and it was like a combination of knowing a little bit about professional wrestling and how professional wrestlers protect themselves.
So I had all these pratfall things.
practical things. And then like, you know, like when I was kind of out here, probably in my early thirties, I did something for a video where I, I was supposed to kind of face plant, but I was
using my folded arms to protect myself, kind of my elbows to catch the fall. And I fucked up my
elbow for six months. And I was like, if I had done this three years ago, it would have taken
a week maybe of sore elbow.
And that was when I really realized, okay, I can't do this anymore.
But it's not just the physical part.
It's that as you get older, you don't want to die.
You know what I mean?
Right.
I mean, I view it as I'm very much with you.
I'm very much with you. And I view it as even another level of that,
where when you reach a certain age that the question becomes,
is it creepy to watch?
Yeah.
Like,
is it funny for like older guys to be like harming themselves?
You know?
And when, when Knoxville, when Knoxville, to be harming themselves.
When Knoxville purposed the idea that he wanted to do a fourth
Jackass movie, I thought, dude,
I've been pushing my luck and I believe that I have that
in me because I've stayed active and it's still working for
me. But as a collective ensemble,
I think it's a lot trickier, you know,
like for us to get away with that collectively as a group in our late
forties and some of us in our fifties, you know, and, uh,
and Knoxville, um, like strongly disagreed with me.
Knoxville's position was the older we get, the funnier it is.
And I completely don't see it that way.
And as a matter of fact, speaking of pratfalls and such,
there was a movie about Laurel and Hardy that came out a few years back.
It was called Stan and ollie it's really
good yeah it's it's it not only is it really good it is it it straight fucked me up you know to see
those guys in whatever it was their 60s and 70s like financially destitute and like, and, and,
and like just being like they were in a position,
they had no choice,
but to keep doing this old stick and they were just visibly like old.
And it just was very tragic and upsetting and being the attention whore that I
am and, and having thisore that I am and,
and having this career that I've had,
like the idea of being in that situation,
which that movie so masterfully portrayed,
like it just,
it put me in a funk and a depression for like a solid week,
as did the movie about Buster Keaton,
as did the movie about Judy Garland, as did the movie about judy garland
yeah you know like like there's just that story and so personally i am so terrified of that i'm
so deeply profoundly affected and and upset by that that i i'm like really really with you and and not even in the sense about whether
like my personal uh healing time is is any uh is extended due to my advanced stage it's not even
it's not even about that what what it's about is fuck is is it is it is it depressing is it tragic you know you're becoming a circus
geek you're becoming a right you like a lot down on his luck guy that's biting the head off of
chickens right so so so the way that i've approached it now i mean i'm 47 like in a couple months in a
couple months i'll be 48 and uh and I'm very sensitive to all of this.
So what I've been doing for the last,
well, since Jackass 3D came out in 2010,
I got into stand-up comedy.
And I really, really dove into it in earnest.
And I spent 11 straight years.
Of course, 2020 was a little bit less activity, but but but relent i'm an attention whore and and uh and
and it was a way to just be active and be on stage and and get attention you know you see i have a
problem shutting the fuck up listen you're making my job real easy i love it right well thank you
but over the over the course of those 11 years um a couple things happened um my comedy became
it evolved into a multimedia affair where my first stand-up special was uh it was me on me
and a microphone and just what happened on stage i did intermittent intermittently i did a couple
stunts on stage like to pepper it in but it was just what happened on stage as I did intermittent, intermittently. I did a couple of stunts on stage, like to pepper
it in, but it was just what happened on stage. As I put together the second show I toured with,
which became my second comedy special, like it struck me pretty early on as I put the show
together that, you know, the majority of the stories I was telling, I was just going for the
craziest stories that lent themselves best to stand-up
comedy. And it occurred to me that they, for the most part, had transpired on video. So I thought,
man, my head exploded. I thought, oh my God, what if I make a comedy special where as I tell the
stories in my stand-up, I edit the footage of the stories actually unfolding interstitially in post-production yeah
it would be like the first multimedia comedy special and i was just like dude i i my head
exploded and i immediately got to recording my my performances and bringing bringing the footage
into the computer and editing it all in. And I saw that it worked.
And what struck me, because up to that point, you know that for a stand-up comedian to watch footage of their performance can be a little bit tough.
And I was very resistant of that.
But this exercise in editing the footage into the performance, it forced me to sit down and watch it and study it.
And that brought about a progression in my performance of stand-up comedy that was so accelerated compared to before that it benefited me so much.
And the stories I was telling were old stories.
I was regaling the past. And the stories I was telling were old stories. I was regaling the past and the
multimedia really worked, but that multimedia came in and post the footage wasn't coming on
tour with me. So after, after doing my second comedy special, I just, I felt strongly about
two things. I no longer wanted to live in the past because i felt like i was turning into a fucking asshole who
won't shut up about what he could bench press in high school and and i wanted to have the benefit
of bringing the multimedia component on the road with me sure and i was shit scared about reaching
a point where i'm running out of time to do the crazy shit you know yeah yeah so so i decided all right
you know like like if i want to film new stuff to create new stories then like shit you know like
we've pretty much done everything except i knew exactly what hadn't been done because there were
these ideas i'd been just kind of sitting on
forever that there were less less actual like you know practical ideas than they were just crazy
things to say and i ended up i called it my my bucket list right and what so what particularly
fucking tickles me is that everything I filmed
for this, but I like in my live bucket list show, there are, there are 10 different video breaks
where after each bit, each bit represents an item on the list. And after each bit,
I screen the footage of the culmination of the bit and the backdrop of the whole show,
the running narrative is my relationship
with my fiance and the unavoidable implications of me carrying out these absurd plans on our
relationship you know there's yeah there's there's conflict there's like mind-bogglingly unlikely
loving support you know like like you know like how it all how it all lands against the backdrop
of my relationship really is compelling and it provides like a a cohesive narrative that really
brings it all together and it and it plays like a love story which is which is pretty beautiful
and uh and and the the things i did for this fucking show are so goddamn ridiculous. And many of them flagrantly fucking illegal.
I got a medical professional to assume a disguise and then administer stolen general anesthesia drugs into an IV that they put in my arm to knock me out.
I'm like, I want you to fucking knock me out while I'm hauling ass on a bicycle.
And if that is not the most fucking illegal goddamn thing,
then I went and found another medical professional to put a four inch needle in my spine
inject a drug into my spinal cavity to paralyze me while i was in a full sprint
because that's what the fuck i'm up to now and i might not have that much longer to get away with
this you know it might not be much longer before it gets creepy to watch me do this,
but dude,
I'm going to the finish line and I'm not fucking around,
dude.
It is a love story.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
And while we have your audience,
I really,
really want to let everybody know that my,
my story is,
uh,
yeah,
as you kind of can, can the gist it's it's been i lived my
life for the purpose of it being notable and and and memorable and and entertaining and um you know
i have a memoir which is i mean the the-star rating on Amazon indicates that it's a goddamn good book.
Yeah.
And it really is.
And it's an unlikely inspiring story of redemption and recovery.
Yeah.
Because I just celebrated 14 years of continuous sobriety.
Congratulations.
Yeah, yeah.
Thank you.
And every single copy of my memoir, which is called Steve-O Professional Idiot,
which I sell at my website, which is steve-o.com is signed by hand with my Steve-O signature,
which looks just like a dick. So much Brandon.
Yeah, it's great.
And I just finished my second book,
which comes out in September.
That one's called A Hard Kick in the Nuts.
What I've Learned from a Lifetime of Terrible Decisions.
And that was a little bit of a pivot
because what it started out as was,
you know, like Steve- Steve's Guide to Middle Age.
Right, right.
Because because my confronting middle age is so fucking terrifying, as I explained.
I can imagine.
But I didn't want to alienate people who aren't necessarily personally concerned with middle age.
Right.
So I just made it more of a book of general wisdom, which I've gleaned from a lifetime of terrible decisions terrible decisions now i want to ask like because you know we talk
about you it's a privileged upbringing most people with privileged upbringings do not have this kind
of i mean well well there's certainly there's certainly people from privileged upbringings
that have a self-destructive drive but then they don't maintain it so that it is like self-destructive but then you know
ongoing you know like that where it becomes basically a cottage industry uh you know
self-destruction and i wonder what is it about what is it that why do you think you do this
i mean you have to have asked yourself that.
And I mean, and I imagine you've been in therapy to sort of ask those kind of questions.
I have.
And I've got, I've got my own theory about this.
Yeah.
And it might be more, like's my, my take on it. Um, number one, uh, I spoke my first words in
Portuguese because I was raised by live inmates. Yeah. Dad, dad being the president of Pepsi Cola
in Brazil. I mean, he was popping off. Mom and dad were partying.
And so you don't have to be Sigmund Freud
to maybe think that lack of attention from my parents
sort of made me crave attention.
And that could be why I'm such a rabid attention whore.
Now, on a bigger level, and this is something that might,
there will be a follow-up to my Bucket List tour.
And that one's called, it's going to be called
Steve-O's Gone Too Far Tour.
And holy shit, am I going to go too far?
And that one will really get into the physical implications of my age.
But the thing, and I bring in what my vision is for the next tour,
because I had a bit, I have a bit on my, like as a comedian,
it's really a challenging bit, but I won't let go of it.
And it really drives at the,
the inspiration for like what's behind what I do. And the bit,
the premise for the bit is I just, I, I said,
I said I have a theory that God hates us, human beings specifically, because as I understand it, human beings are the only living organism which can hypothetically contemplate their mortality outside of the actual present moment. Yeah. You know, we're the only ones in that. And,
and now add to that, that we only have one instinct, which is to survive.
And, and yet we only have one guarantee, which is we won't survive. So so so it's like i mean right there that to me is a blatant
catch-22 fucking cruel prank on us like we're sitting here thinking like we have to deal with
the fact that we know down the line in a hypothetical sense we are barreling towards
the one fucking thing that our whole makeup cries out against like we're playing
a game that we're going to lose and we know that yeah and so so i view the human experience
as sort of a prank on us but but really from a for practical, I view the human experience as an exercise in wrapping our heads around our mortality.
And I've identified three ways that people do that.
One is to procreate because they feel like that's why they call them the family jewels.
You want to keep your legacy going.
So it's okay, I'm going to be dead because i've got my lineage carrying on
but that's not for me dude i got a fucking vasectomy and i filmed it for my bucket list
show i called it the vasectomy olympics you know like and it's the most hilarious bit and it
actually makes dudes pass out sometimes oh really wow yeah but so i didn't ever want to have kids kids isn't for me
the second way people wrap their heads around their mortality is to
is religion you know like every religion as i get it is i i understand it the religion is
promised you that it's okay that you're gonna die because you're gonna go to heaven and everything
is gonna be great but it all feels kind of transactional and self-serving and a little silly.
And also made up and also transparently made up. Yeah.
Right. Right. Like I just can't, I could never really grasp onto that.
And then the third bucket, which is the one I fall into is, you know,
like the legacy bucket. And I think that, you know, the, the, the earliest cavemen, you know like the legacy bucket and i think that you know that the the earliest cavemen
you know they scrawled stick figures on cave walls because they were shit scared that they
were gonna die they hated the fact that they were mortal and they wanted to leave these drawings on
the cave walls because those drawings would outlive them you know like that's me man like i when i took to the video camera as a young skateboarder
like i was i was like really blown away by the fact that a i could edit out the failures and
just assemble just the the successes right right sort of manipulate how i was you know seen sure
sure increase your batting average to a thousand.
Yeah, right.
Exactly.
And on top of that,
that with the whole mortality complex going on,
that these videos won't die.
You know, like this fucking,
this shit's going to live for. So, so I, you know,
I was final disciplinary probation within two weeks of class starting.
And I was kicked out of the dorms in short order after failing and dropping out to boot.
So I felt that I lacked the survival skills to make it in the real world.
I was convinced that I was going to die young of having failed at life.
And I wanted to hurry up
and film as much crazy as shit
as I possibly could
so that that would be my legacy.
You know, I really like my religion,
my legacy, my purpose
was to make myself immortal by doctoring.
You know, I was like,
it was important what I was doing when I was lighting myself on fire at a
backyard keg party,
because that footage would play and entertain people and have an effect on
people like beyond my years. So fuck, fuck death. I'm, you know,
I'm going to live forever because of this. Yeah. But,
but what shocked my system was that when jackass came
out all of a sudden like i moved out to california as quick as i could to sort of seize this
opportunity and ride the wave and i i heard so many people tell me hurry up and strike while
the iron's hot because invariably your show is going to get canceled and then you're going to
be old news and and then like her and i remember just being frustrated by that like ah you know like
fuck you i'll make the iron i'll fucking make the iron hot and fucking everyone else can strike it
fuck you you know yeah but but there was really something to that and what i learned is is uh was
scary and depressing is that footage i what i've i've viewed video footage as eternal
as immortal but once i got actually in the mix of you know of basic cable television
i learned that not only is video footage not immortal but it has a very distinct expiry date, which is precisely the date when it
airs.
Yeah, yeah.
As soon as it's come out, it has expired.
It has gone rotten and it is no longer of any use to you.
And now everyone's question is, what's next?
What's your only as good as your last thing?
So then what I thought I was chasing, I was going to ensure my immortality.
All that ended up happening was that I came to find that the spotlight is so fleeting.
And that my life was now like the spotlight's moving and I'm chasing it, trying to stay in it.
And that's where it gets so scary
and anxiety inducing and dark and depressing. Like fame is really not a healthy fucking dynamic.
You know, it's not, it's not a healthy dynamic. And thank God I, I, I fell apart and flamed out
with drugs and alcohol because were it not for a spiritual practice and 12-step recovery which
has allowed me to find some separation between steve-o the character and then me and what's
important to me as a person yeah like i'd be fucked because it like to identify as steve-o
would be a dark fucking road. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah.
But that's what that's what that that that was my way to answer.
That's why I do what I do. Yeah. Yeah.
Can't you tell my loves are growing?
What do you see happening like in 10 years for you?
I'll tell you exactly.
I mean, before we started recording this show,
I let you in on the fact that I had a very late night last night
putting a tattoo on a guy from Italy.
Like I got into tattooing just as a gag kind of a thing.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I became active with a YouTube channel.
Actually, at this point, I upload videos weekly to four different YouTube channels.
I've got my main YouTube channel, which is kind of jackass-y, like sort of more marquee content.
Then I've got my Wild Ride podcast.
Then I've got my Wild Ride podcast clips channel.
And then I've got my Steve-O in Spanish language channel with the voice actors,
which is a hoot.
And I can't wait to add more and more.
But for a video, I thought like,
I'm always thinking about creating content.
I thought for a video, let me make a, you know, let me make a YouTube video dedicated
to giving people tattoos, which I had done.
People would present me with a tattoo machine
and I would maybe put my name on them, whatever.
And it would be all half-assed.
But I thought, wouldn't it be interesting
if I tried as hard as I possibly could to do the best job i possibly could and challenge myself and i made
this video where like i was like hold on a second dude like this is way better of tattoos than
anybody would expect steve would do so i did more videos of that and then like now I've got to tell you, there is the most inexplicable demand for a shitty tattoo from Steve-O.
I mean, I'm telling you, it's ridiculous.
So I had this contest with the members of my subscription page, which is uncensored.
I've got this uncensored page where I have no rules that
like, I'm not getting in trouble for showing my wiener, you know, like, and, and every member of
the, of the page, I had said, Hey, I'm going to have a contest. If you guys all, if anybody wants
a tattoo for me, submit your designs and, and I'll pick the one I like the best. The guy who
submitted the tattoo design, I like the best happens to be from Italy. So he won. I said, I'll fly you and a guest out. So I flew these two Italian dudes to join me on
my tour bus on my tour. And I gave him his design of Satan, a satanic Satan chef with the pentagram
pizza. It was a hoot. And I was up all night doing that. Yeah, but you flew him to Salt Lake City.
and I was up all night doing that.
Yeah, but you flew him to Salt Lake City.
Well, I flew him to LA.
Oh, all right.
And then rode him on the tour bus cross country to have the experience to be a VIP at my shows.
Oh, nice.
And then flew him home from,
flying him home from Salt Lake City actually tomorrow,
making the visit a little bit long and awkward.
But it's all good. The kid's great.
And the reason I mentioned the tattooing is because I do view it as a safety net where, you know, like in the worst case scenario, I have a career as a tattoo artist.
I mean, like, I don't think I would ever want to
or hopefully ever need to.
Right.
But I have that,
I have that as a potential way
out of the attention whore game.
You know,
I could,
I could,
I could,
I don't have to do any
Stan and Ollie shit.
Right, right.
You know,
but,
but I've got way more,
way more avenues
that I'm building.
That's what 10 years from now looks like.
Everything that I'm setting up for myself now,
which represents a way out of the fucking attention whore game,
big time in that is my merchandising operation.
I've got two brands of Stevo hot sauce.
When the slides go out on my tour bus, you can see Steve-O's hot sauce for your butthole.
And my newer brand, Steve-O's butthole destroyer hot sauce.
And my hot sauce business is thriving man like that's great when i when i
promote when i promote it it shoots number one hot sauce on amazon we like um i mean i don't
want to like brag about like you know money come in but i'm very happy with what we're doing with
um with hot sauce and uh i sell so much shit.
Like I'm the Gene Simmons of jackass, dude.
Yeah.
A Steve O'Coffin, is that in the works?
Yeah, I don't have a Steve O'Coffin,
but I've got like obnoxious Bluetooth speakers
that are the loudest Bluetooth boom boxes in the world.
I've got all the skateboard sunglasses.
Like I sell signed all the skateboard sunglasses.
I still signed dick pics on tour.
But what's important
about that is that
I got to a point
of shipping
and
my online merchandising
operation reached a level where it became
frustrating to me that, uh, I was sort of lost in the mix of this third party fulfillment center.
Yeah. Like I was, I was a client of a wearer and I got to a point where I was like, dude,
you know what? Screw it. I got my own warehouse. I got my own
warehouse, got my own warehouse staff. And so I've got my own fulfillment company. And I love
to name my companies. My fulfillment center is called Tight Box Packing. And it's thriving. It's thriving to the point that I've added a second warehouse.
Both warehouses are chock full. And in the spirit of trying to set myself up to not have to be an
attention whore, I've already developed my fulfillment business
to take on third-party clients. That's what I was just going to ask, because yeah,
you got the infrastructure. You might as well do the same merchandising for other people.
Right. I'm already fulfilling orders for certain orders for Tony Hawk or Dick house, the production company behind Jackass for, you know,
multiple other Jackass cast members.
And you got to get Oprah in there somehow.
Right. And, and there's, I mean,
I'm still with the fulfillment business.
I'm at a kind of a level where the profit margins on my steve-o merch are like
so like so it's so lucrative to sell my own merch that selling other people's merch really like you
know i would have to level up to uh you know the profitability per square foot of my warehouses
for my merch compared to the third party stuff yeah yeah like
the disparity is pretty off the charts i see i see yeah but with that said like uh it you know
it could really be a volume game and uh it could be an absolute retirement party for me if uh it
if i level that up and so that's one thing where I'm very,
very sensitive to being in front of the camera when it's just a bummer to look
at me.
I've considered those, those, those options.
Now I want to ask, are your folks still alive? Are your parents still alive?
Not my mom, but my dad.
And what does he feel about his son becoming a businessman?
He loves it.
Yeah, I mentioned like it's been got to been quite a journey to go through.
Yeah.
Setting your head on fire and now talking about the profitability of the product in your various warehouses.
Yeah, for sure.
And thank you for asking that too, man. Like when I, when I dropped out of college,
I, um, you know, my dad raised me with, you know, like with, with a level of pride,
since they, even though I had a very privileged upbringing, you know, dad was, was a wealthy man.
Um, when I dropped out of the university of Miami, when I left, I didn't ask him for any handouts.
I didn't even tell him where I was, man.
I didn't have the heart to, I didn't have any good news to report.
And I wasn't doing anything that he would have been proud of.
If I called him, it would have been proud of or or like you know like if i called him it would
have been a bummer and and the sad thing is that i didn't call him he didn't even know where i was
for like six months yeah and and the truth of where i was i was in a fucking laboratory
having the government test drugs on me for money. And the way that these medical studies go,
like the FDA approval,
anything that comes into contact with the human body requires FDA approval
and,
and,
and,
you know,
rigorous testing.
And the more dangerous the medical study,
the more money they pay.
So I,
so I signed up to have drugs for pigs and cows tested on me.
Yeah, the drug was called Ractopamine Hydrochloride.
This happened in January of 1994.
And I was paid $2,000.
But while I was homeless, man, you know, I actually did not have a home.
I was a couch surfer.
I would say homeless, but I was a little more charismatic than that.
I was a couch surfer.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
You were unhoused, but charming.
Yeah. Yeah yeah for sure you know i i had like i'd make it a couple days before people would or you know it's kind of uh encouraged me to find another
place to go uh but uh but yeah that went on for three years and um and and uh the the drugs for
pigs and cows thing was hilarious they they uh that it was going to raise our heart rates.
The purpose of the drug was to appeal to a more health conscious consumer.
They wanted to give this drug to pigs and cows because it would cause the pigs and cows to have less fat and more muscle.
and cows to have less fat and more muscle to produce leaner meat for the more health-conscious consumer. But by the virtue of the fact that that health-conscious consumer would be ingesting a
trace of this drug because it was in the meat, then that meant that the FDA had to run a test
to determine how much the human body could withstand of this shit,
as I understood it. So the purpose of the medical study was to pump a group of human subjects
full of this racked dopamine hydrochloride until one of the subjects had a resting heart rate of 150 beats per minute,
which is pretty cool. And, and, and at that time, you know,
I had dropped out of the university of Miami. I dropped, I, I,
I left the university of Miami, like Thanksgiving weekend of,
of 1993. And, and on my way out of the university of miami people were like wow you really blew it
now dude kicked out of the dorms you were failing and now you're dropping out like what's your plan
and i told everybody at that time i said i'm gonna become a crazy famous stuntman with a home video
camera i'm gonna home videotape the fucking such crazy ass shit that it's gonna
i'm gonna be famous yeah dude every person i i explained this plan to felt fucking sorry for me
like they're like dude what a tragedy what a fuck what a loser and uh you know dude it's just it's nuts how it turned out but i didn't talk to my dad
for it for six months i'm having the government test drugs on me i'm homeless and uh and then
you know there was fairly limited communication with my dad period because we weren't really
vibing on the same wavelength yeah and uh and dad. And dad was not fucking feeling that I'm going to be a stuntman thing.
His approach to that was to go to, he went to the library,
back when they had libraries in the 90s.
It was 1995.
They didn't even have the goddamn internet yet.
Right, right.
In 1995, my dad was in the physical library doing research on CGI.
Back then, he said, son, I've done my research here,
and computer graphics, computer animation, digital
is going to make the career of stuntmen obsolete.
And I was like, unfazed.
I was like, oh, dad, dad but i'm gonna be gnarly
you know but i'm gonna be gnarly and i yeah he was beating his head against the wall trying to
convince me not to do the stuntman thing the next thing you know i'm going to fucking clown college
like he wasn't feeling that for a even a little bit. But then I went to Clown College in 1997.
And I was living with my sister by that point.
And it was after I graduated from Clown College,
after I had been featured in a couple issues of Big Brother magazines.
There was the first article.
There was a little sidebar article called
the burning boy festival yeah like my prediction had become true i i i got the article i was looking
for and then um you know i was in big brother a couple times i graduated clown college but not
gotten a contract with the circus and i basically had not made a fucking dime from from
my you know and that's so special to me because in 1998 specifically in october of 1998 my dad and i
were together um and and he initiated a conversation himself. He said,
I have to tell you,
I believe I've done
a disservice to you
by not supporting you in this
career path that you've
clearly committed yourself to.
He said,
I think I've done a disservice to you.
He says, you didn't go
down the path that I would have chosen for you, you know, but I can tell that
you're committed to it. And just like my dad didn't, you know, my dad was the black sheep of
his family for going into business because, because everyone in my dad's family was PhD by clergy clergymen, theologists,
theologians,
like highly,
highly academic.
And it was,
it was not fucking cool to go be a capitalistic,
greedy businessman,
you know,
selling soda and cigarettes.
Right.
And so,
so my,
my dad's dad,
my paternal grandfather had the same crew said,
dad related to me. He said, my, my, my dad's dad, my paternal grandfather, had the same. He said, dad related to me.
He said, my dad wouldn't have chosen for me what I did, but he said this to me.
He says, now I'm saying it to you, son.
I've done a disservice by not supporting you.
And I want you to know that I just want you to be the, you're committed.
And I just want you to be the best at what you've committed. And I've you to know that I just want you to be the, you're committed and I just want you to be the best at what,
what you've been. And, and, and I, and I, and I've got your back.
I pledge to support you and I hadn't made any fucking money.
I hadn't done shit. And where I went from,
where I went from that conversation with my dad, you know, again,
video cameras were not a household item. There was enough video.
There was enough home video footage being produced to support America's funniest home videos.
But then there was a second show, which was less comedy driven.
It was called Real TV.
Video cameras were becoming more prevalent.
And after that conversation with my dad, when I saw the, uh, the commercial for real TV saying,
if you have any home video footage that you think we should see,
then call us and let us know. And I called that number and I said, Oh,
I don't have footage. You might want to see, I have footage. You know,
I have footage you guys, I have footage you need badly, you know,
and I put together all my footage,
I send it to them and
they called me back and they said we're interested in the footage of you on the roof of the three
story building lighting yourself on fire and doing the simultaneous fire breathing front flip off the
roof of the three-story building into the five foot deep pool and i was like and i was like is
that out of everything i sent that's all you want
like that's it and then and then and they were like yeah that's what we want we also want you
doing it up the same building in a day so we can show the daytime and then the night with the fire
and we want to give you we want exclusive rights to this uh to these clips and we'll pay you $500 for exclusive rights.
I'd never heard the word exclusive. You're like, maybe ever.
Definitely not.
You don't know what that means.
Definitely not in that context. And I said, well, what does exclusive mean?
And they said, well,
that means that we would then own the footage and only we own it.
I'm like, so I can't do anything with it ever again.
And they were like, that's correct.
So my next call was to my dad.
I said, dad, and I'm off like,
dad, they wanted to have a exclusive
and they wanted him to be on TV.
And dad says, Steve, calm down.
This is real simple.
He says, ask yourself at which point
is it a deal breaker?
Draw a line in the sand.
He says, it sounds like exclusivity is a deal breaker for you.
So why don't you call them back and say you will not do the exclusivity,
but you'll give them a non-exclusive right to play it
and tell them that it's got to be a thousand.
And I called them back and I got precisely that.
And I called him back and I got, I got precisely that. Yeah.
Dad was the mastermind behind my very first ever contract.
And dad was, dad was in my corner ever since.
And it makes me emotional, like to the point of like goosebumps and like,
to be able to say that I don't have a great relationship with my dad because I'm successful,
but rather I'm successful because I have a great relationship with my dad.
And that distinction, that distinction is fucking huge.
That's great.
And I love it.
Yeah.
Thank you.
That's great.
Well, thank you so much.
You spent so much time with me.
Thank you so much. You know, to wrap it up, I just want to know, I mean, it's kind of Thank you. That's great. Well, thank you so much. You spent so much time with me. Thank you so much.
I, you know, to wrap it up, I just want to know, I mean, it's kind of, you know, the
end question here is always like, what do you want people to take away?
Well, like what lesson do you want people to learn from the Steve-O story?
I mean, I don't know.
In the beginning, it was like, I just wanted to be remembered.
Yeah.
I just wanted to, I just wanted to be remembered yeah i just wanted i just wanted to
to like uh yeah i was an attention whore and i wanted to get more attention i wanted to keep
getting attention after i died that was my whole thing was like dude like what like why do you do
what you do and i was like you know i do what i do because i don't like work and I don't like school and, and I want to be remembered forever, you know, like I want to, and, um,
and then like over the years, like the, you know,
I've sort of become, uh, scared of, uh, not scared of, but,
but, uh, nervous around like the implications of the spotlight and,
um, where I never, like, I,
like I, I never cared about money. I only wanted the attention. And then, and then, you know,
once I got clean and sober in 2008, I started thinking, oh shit, I always figured I was going
to be dead, like young, like sort of burn out, live fast, die young, drugs and alcohol and crazy.
And in 2008, I changed my lifestyle such that I was no longer smoking, drinking, doing drugs.
I was like kind of being a little bit mindful about what I ate.
I was taking care of myself.
taking care of myself yeah and it i had this terrorizing notion that i might like not die young and i actually might be only like halfway through my life staring down the
barrel of like many more decades that i'm gonna have to feed myself like what the fuck you know and that was that was when i uh really like
you know that was like from that point on like i i want i was less about about like eyeballs and
attention and more about like let me like literally think about my future and what it's going to look
like and not have it be dark and
depressing and uh you know the life of a touring stand-up comic on the comedy club circuit is a
fucking like i mean i know that it sounds ungrateful to be like i'm a headliner in a
comedy club and i've got special engagements and i get paid really well but but despite that
you know it's groundhog's day
airport hotel like it's like it's a miserable fucking existence and i yeah we went on the
cone and you know in between the tonight show and tbs we went on a tour for about three months
and that was all i could i was like if i this, I would be addicted to every fucking substance and I'd be
350 pounds. Like just because it would just, and, and there was, there was like a day where there
was like a rush, rush, rush to get from one matinee show to like rush, rush, rush to get
to our next hotel. And it's all this activity and all this push. And then I get to the hotel
and I almost cried. Cause that's like, this is what I was rushing to this empty fucking hotel room.
And I did that for I did that for 11 years. Wow. And and I did it relentlessly.
And I just I just, you know, I'm not going to like I'm not going to bullshit you and say, oh, this was my passion.
This is my dream. Like I was trying to sock away as much fucking money that I possibly could and
doing it every week of every year that I possibly could.
So that 10 years down the road,
I wouldn't be in some shitty situation thinking, fuck,
why didn't I earn all that money when I could, you know, I did, I,
I did it for the money, but the, but the, the,
the happy unintended consequence was that i really developed a craft
you know like yeah you know because i don't do anything half-assed man i pour myself into
everything that i do and and every show that i did i did the best fucking show i could
it evolved it grew it improved it progressed and then now i've graduated from comedy clubs
to theaters man like the normal
night for me is like at like six shows in a comedy club packed into one fucking theater
every night and i don't have to check in and out of hotels i don't have to fly on fucking airports
i live on a i live on a tour bus which i love and i got my editor with me i got my fucking
assistant my merch guy and we're all this happy family just
running around making crazy videos and flying assholes in from italy to you know like you know
it's like you know and then uh you know the italy guys will fly home tomorrow and then the next day
uh our new jackass cast member poopies will fly in. And so that's where,
that's what's keeping life fresh instead of it being a groundhog day is that I
can just fly in people to make every day a new day.
Yeah. So is it about adapting?
Is it about just sort of honoring your basic skills and then adapting and
finding different ways to.
I mean, okay. If we're,
if we're looking for advice that i have for people because people
will ask me for advice and and whether it's like hey i want to become a stuntman or hey i want to
get into comedy or like anything yeah i like i like dysentery how can i make money up getting
you know hepatitis yeah right um you know like whatever it is, I just, I would say very clearly that the meaning of life is to get off your ass and
pick one, you know, like, like the life is,
the meaning of life is it's clearly that the purpose is to bring,
to give meaning to your life. You are in charge. It's like,
it's like you are in charge of giving meaning to your life. You are in charge. It's like, it's like you are in charge of giving
meaning to your life and finding meaning for your life. You know, you cannot ever hit a bullseye
unless you start by aiming at a target, you know? So without, without identifying a goal,
you are never going to accomplish a goal.
And I think that that's largely like most people.
The biggest problem, I think, for most people is that they have not identified something about which they are passionate.
They have not identified a goal.
And if you don't identify a goal, then you're never going to achieve a goal.
So it starts with asking yourself,
what do you want your life to mean? What do you want to do? And all of those people who are asking
me for advice about how to accomplish something, they're ahead of 90% of the fucking world because
they've actually got an idea of what they want to accomplish. The fact that they've asked for
advice, the fact that they've even asked me for this advice is indicative of the fact that they've asked for advice. The fact that they've even asked me for this advice is indicative of the fact
that they're ahead of everybody else.
And then my advice that I give them,
regardless about what it is they're asking is that, you know,
whatever you want to do, start doing it.
Yeah.
With one caveat that you be mindful uh getting direction or because let's say
you know it's very possible to let's say you want to be a juggler you know it would be a really good
idea to have somebody who knows how to juggle help you so that you're not learning bad habits with the one caveat be be mindful about
learning the right way because you don't want to go in the wrong fucking direction and have to
unlearn yeah like the wrong shit but with that cab with that caveat make sure you're not going
in the wrong direction figure out what the right direction is towards getting good at your goal
and start down that fucking path don't waste any any time. Don't wait. Don't wait for an opportunity to
arise. Don't wait to be picked. Don't wait, but don't procrastinate. Just fucking start doing it.
And then I'd say, you know, with that in mind too, that it does not, it does not matter what you want. Like really what matters is how fucking bad you want it because as,
as helpful as talent is, talent, talent's great.
Talent's a real helpful thing to have and intelligence.
It will give you an advantage, but,
but those two things cannot fucking touch enthusiasm yeah all the talent in the world
all of the intelligence in the world without enthusiasm is bullshit you know and i say that
this is really fucking special to me because i've said that so many times, like,
uh,
you know,
talent,
intelligence,
great enthusiasm is where it's at.
And,
uh,
somebody,
um,
and,
and,
uh,
and,
and one of my,
uh,
spiritual,
you know,
like,
uh,
men's group,
somebody,
somebody,
somebody brought up the word enthusiasm.
And they said that the Latin brought up the word enthusiasm and they said that the latin root for the word enthusiasm is en theos which means with god and i just and i just got goosebumps
under my fucking hoodie you know so like they said the key to life the the most important ingredient in life
is enthusiasm and who knew and who knew that you're on the fucking path of god when you're
fired up and fucking enthusiastic about something so find what you're enthusiastic about make that
your purpose make that the meaning that you're going to bring to your life and
fucking hurry up and get to your life and fucking
hurry up and get off your ass and do it now.
Thank you,
Steve-O for being here.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for taking us into your world.
There's something I have to say.
You,
that being you,
the listener can watch Jackass Forever on Paramount plus starting today and
buy it on digital starting March 29th
with nearly 40 minutes of exclusive stunt footage.
I'll be there watching that.
And it's 40 minutes of exclusive stunt footage
not seen in theaters.
So check that out.
And Steve, again, thank you so much, man.
This is really, really a fun talk and I'm such a fan
and it's such a thrill to get to meet you and see you.
And after we're off, I'm going to give you my phone number so I can see some of those tats.
I love it, dude. I absolutely love it.
Thank you so much. And thank you for not making me feel like a douche for not shutting up once.
Like I said, it's easy.
I was raised in with this philosophy that work is always to be avoided.
And in this venue, me talking is work.
So you were doing all the work.
And I'm getting the same check either way.
My enthusiasm is for communication.
And I do it with real passion.
I communicate.
Well, for years you've also, you're very much an open book.
And that's a very brave and admirable thing to do.
And I mean, I've listened to you on Howard all those years and stuff.
And you've always been really, I mean, there's a bravery to be an open.
I mean, sometimes there's a stupidity to be in that open,
but sometimes it's just plain old bravery
because so many people are afraid to show themselves.
And you're not quite frequently.
I mean, you show every bit of yourself.
So, well, thank you.
And when you tell the truth,
you never have to keep track of what you said.
And that's, that's real helpful too.
And speaking of open books,
everybody go to steveo.com
and buy my Dicko Graft memoir,
Steve-O, Professional Idiot.
And dude, thank you so much, Andy.
It's been a real pleasure.
Thank you, Steve.
And thank all of you out there for listening.
And we will be back next week
with more Three Questions.
I've got a big, big love for you.
The Three Questions with Andy Richter
is a Team Coco and Earwolf production.
It is produced by Lane Gerbig, engineered by Marina Pice, and talent produced by Galitza Hayek.
The associate producer is Jen Samples, supervising producer Aaron Blair,
and executive producers Adam Sachs and Jeff Ross at Team Coco,
and Colin Anderson and Cody Fisher at Earwolf.
Make sure to rate and review The Three Questions that Andy Richter on Apple Podcasts.