The Tao of Poo
When I was in high school, I knew a guy who would eat
pieces of aluminum cans to get attention. He swore up and down that he had a digestive disorder that allowed him to eat metal and would dramatically chew and swallow shiny chunks for horrified and captivated crowds of tenth graders. I like to tell this story, hoping to produce similar reactions from my peers. Most of the time, however, their responses involve equally disturbing anecdotes about "weird kids" from their own schools. It would seem that everyone has a similar story of the outrageously "different" classmate (eating aluminum cans turns out to be only mildly aberrant behavior compared to some of these deviant tales). And if they didn't, now they can watch Jackass.
True to its name, Jackass is comprised of idiotic acts, more precisely, videotaped practical jokes, foolish stunts, and unusual behaviors perpetrated by several white male twentysomethings for broadcast on MTV. The show is the latest of the channel's male-oriented, lowbrow comedy programs with predecessors like Beavis & Butt-head and The Tom Green Show. (Other channels have been quick to follow suit with their own versions of these shows, as evidenced by Comedy Central's South Park and The Man Show and E! Entertainment Television's The Howard Stern Show, starring the man who set radio-broadcast precedents for many of today's TV performers, who also derive from Spike Jones, Benny Hill, Monty Python, et. al.)
Beavis and Butt-head were comically pathetic in their
stupidity and, consequently, the show was a highly
ironic and self-mocking representation of young men's
inexplicable fascination with poo and dead animals,
among other things. Tom Green rushes, somewhat less
ironically, to embrace such leanings, and so his
stunts range from humping a dead moose and deriving
sadistic pleasure by forcing his hapless co-host
(Glenn Humplik) to eat a pickle out of a jar
(supposedly) flavored with Green's urine, to playing
elaborate and sometimes cruel practical jokes on the
unsuspecting, his own parents, and the elderly (like
when he turned a seniors' aerobic class into a
simulated
porno film). On the irony scale, Jackass situates
itself somewhere between its two predecessors in
relation to its lowbrow content. On the one hand, the
show resembles The Tom Green Show in that its cast
members look like they genuinely enjoy playing with
poo, taking unrepentant delight in behaviors that
would be called disgusting by most observers.
Jackass is also self-mocking, however, because (as
the show's title implies) its stars are, themselves,
the most frequent victims of their twisted, inane
experiments. To the sadism of Tom Green's practical
jokes, the cast members of Jackass add strongly
masochistic tendencies and turn their skewed
practices upon themselves.
The show's host, Johnny Knoxville, is probably the
most abused of all. In the premiere episode, he wears
Elvis-style sunglasses and hoists an American flag
while an accomplice variously sprays him with mace,
shocks him with a stun gun, and shoots him with tazer
darts. The ordeal is, to say the least, a surreal and
disturbing spectacle and only hints at the great
lengths taken to shock the audience into horrified
laughter. To this end, the premiere closes with its
host entombed in a port-o-potty, which is then
summarily dumped upside down by a garbage truck. The
crew is crafty enough to position a camera inside the
outhouse (the "Poo Cam") in order to show every
revolting detail of Knoxville's experience. There's
more, apparently indefinitely more. In the show's
brief tenure on the air, the unfortunate Knoxville has
been tossed around by a sumo wrestler and caned by the
match's referee, sprayed repeatedly by a skunk, and
set on fire and used as a human grill to cook steaks.
Such stunts are at once more horrific and more
enjoyable than the shenanigans on most other
like-minded shows on television, as these tend to make
unwilling minorities the butt of every joke (women in
The Man Show, the infirm on The Tom Green Show,
and everyone on the planet on South Park). Jackass
doesn't wholly promote self-abuse, however, no matter
how much fun it looks like. And so whether for
insurance reasons or out of genuine concern for
viewers' safety Jackass makes it clear that no
one should be emulating this behavior. On the show's
official website a warning reads, "MTV insists that
our viewers do not send in any home footage of
themselves or others being jackasses. We will not open
or view any submissions, so don't even bother." A
similar warning, replete with skull and crossbones,
runs at every commercial break during the show's
airing.
And yet, the outrageousness might look for a minute
anyway like fun. Certainly, other cast members join
in, repeatedly. The first episode highlights the joys
of riding in shopping carts as they push each other at
high speeds into parking lot medians. Some of the more
spectacularly violent crashes are replayed from
different angles for full effect. Other sketches show
cast members riding skateboards, kayaks, wheelchairs,
pogo sticks, and children's big wheel bikes down
cement steps, through four-way stop intersections, and
into suburban bushes and shrubbery. The results most
closely resemble the painful outtakes from a bizarre
extreme sports competition.
"Bizarre" is perhaps the best word for it. After
South Park and The Tom Green Show burst onto
television with their brands of taboo-smashing pranks
(anal probing aliens, suckling from cow udders, etc.),
it seemed a safe bet that the avant-garde of comedy
had pushed the boundaries of cable TV to their limits.
The excesses of Jackass prove just how elastic those
boundaries are, and just how far television producers
think they have to go to provoke laughter. Spike
Jonze, noted director of the unconventional film
Being John Malkovich and music videos like the
Beastie Boys' "Sabotage," is one of the show's
co-producers and it's clear that the surreal
quality of Jackass is informed by his tendency to
break from standard forms of entertainment.
Of course, comedy has always pushed the envelopes of
"acceptable" entertainment (see Lenny Bruce, Andy
Kaufman, Richard Pryor, etc.), and so, Jackass is
just the latest effort in a long standing tradition of
comedy's antagonistic relationship with cultural
norms. No sooner did Tom
Green simulate porno with a live sheep, than Jackass
showed Steve-O swallowing and then regurgitating a
whole live goldfish. No sooner did we see cartoon
children throwing up all over themselves in South Park, than Jackass staged its very own hard-boiled
egg-eating contest (modeled after the famous scene in
Cool Hand Luke) that soon disintegrated into a
free-for-all barf-o-rama. While these displays are
obviously gross, to condemn them as such is to
misunderstand a key element of the cultural function
of comedy. The eye-popping, gag-inducing,
jaw-dropping comedic assaults of Jackass are funny
because they take such exaggerated steps over the
boundaries of acceptable behavior. Some may laugh in
horror at the shocking behavior represented by the
show, others may laugh vindictively at the indignities
suffered by its cast members, still others may laugh
because the cast get to do transgressive things never
before considered by straight laced members of
society. For any (or all) of these reasons, then,
Jackass is a success and will continue to be so
until that day when something as bizarre as "Poo
Diving" becomes merely tame and passe.