When Will Steve O Hoodie Be Back in Sock

American entertainer, television personality, and stunt performer

This article is about the TV and stunt performer. For other uses, see Steve O. "Steve Glover" redirects here. For other people, see Stephen Glover. Not to be confused with Stevo.

Steve-O

Steve-O by Gage Skidmore.jpg

Steve-O in August 2011

Born

Stephen Gilchrist Glover


(1974-06-13) June 13, 1974 (age 47)

Wimbledon, London, England

Citizenship
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
  • Canada[1]
Education Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College (1997)
Occupation
  • Entertainer
  • television personality
  • stunt performer
Years active 1997–present

Notable work

  • Jackass
  • Wildboyz
  • Dr. Steve-O
Partner(s) Lux Wright (engaged 2018)[2]
Website steveo.com

Stephen Gilchrist Glover (born June 13, 1974), known professionally as Steve-O, is an American entertainer, television personality, stunt performer, YouTuber, and podcast host. His career is mostly centered on his performance stunts on the American television series Jackass (2000–2002) and its related movies, including Jackass: The Movie (2002), Jackass Number Two (2006), Jackass 2.5 (2007), Jackass 3D (2010), Jackass 3.5 (2011) and Jackass Forever (2022), as well as its spin-off series Wildboyz (2003–2006) and Dr. Steve-O (2007).

Early life and education [edit]

Stephen Gilchrist Glover was born in Wimbledon, London,[3] on June 13, 1974.[4] His mother, Donna Gay Glover (née Wauthier; d. 2003),[5] was Canadian, and his father, Richard Edward "Ted" Glover, is an American of English descent.[6] His maternal step-grandfather was voice-over announcer Wayne Howell.[7] When he was six months old, his family moved to Brazil due to his father's job as president of the South American division of Pepsi-Cola, and Steve-O stated in an interview with Graham Bensinger that his first words were in Portuguese. His family moved from Brazil to Venezuela when he was two, where he learned fluent Spanish; at age four, he moved to Connecticut; at age six, he moved to Miami, Florida; at nine years old, he moved back to England; at age 12, he moved to Toronto, Ontario; and at age 13, he moved back to England again, remaining there through all four years of high school at the American School in London until he graduated.[8]

He attended the University of Miami to study with the School of Communications,[9] but dropped out after one year due to poor grades and acts of disobedience in school. He also attended the University of New Mexico from 1996 to 1997.[10] He graduated from the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College in 1997.[11] After graduation, he was not selected to join the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, but worked as a clown in a circus at the Fort Lauderdale Swap Shop flea market. He filmed his stunts, including his clown performances, throughout this period.[8]

Career [edit]

Jackass and tours (2000–2003) [edit]

While performing in the flea market circus, Steve-O began sending videos of himself to Big Brother magazine editor and future Jackass director Jeff Tremaine. Once the connection was made Steve-O began to work on MTV's television series Jackass, which became an instant hit.[12] MTV has subsequently released six movies based on the series: Jackass: The Movie (2002), Jackass Number Two (2006), direct-to-video release Jackass 2.5 (2007), Jackass 3D (2010), and direct-to-video release Jackass 3.5 (2011). The installments Jackass: The Movie, Jackass Number Two, Jackass 3D, and Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa (2013) all became box office hits.

In 2001, he released Don't Try This at Home on DVD, which contained material MTV censored.[13] It went on to sell 140,000 copies.[14] He toured promoting the DVD doing stunts, which was filmed and released as Don't Try This at Home Volume 2: The Tour.[15]

On July 31, 2002, Steve-O was arrested on obscenity and assault charges for stapling his scrotum to his leg, and for being a principal to a second-degree battery, during a performance at a nightclub in Houma, Louisiana on July 11, 2002.[16] [17] [18] After several delays, in March 2003 Steve-O made a deal with Louisiana prosecutors placing him on supervised probation for one year, requiring him to make a charitable donation of $5,000 to a shelter for battered women and children and forbidding him from ever performing in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana again.[19]

In 2003, Steve-O toured Europe with Bam Margera, a friend and co-star of Jackass. On May 22, 2003, Steve-O was arrested and jailed while in Sweden due to footage of him swallowing a condom containing cannabis to get it past authorities while flying on a plane. He then regurgitated it live on stage, which he showed in his DVD Steve-O: Out on Bail (aka Don't Try This at Home – The Steve-O Video Vol. 3: Out on Bail) (2003). Steve-O reached a deal with the Swedish prosecutors and was released on May 27, 2003 after paying a fine of 45,000 kronor (equal to about US$5,800 at the time). As part of the plea bargain Steve-O admitted to possessing one ecstasy tablet and five grams of marijuana, although he claimed he had no knowledge of where the ecstasy came from.[20] The Swedish arrest was included in the third installment of the DVD series titled Steve-O: Out on Bail. Two months later on July 19, 2003, Steve-O was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct for urinating on potato chips in public during a Lollapalooza tour concert in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania. Steve-O claimed he was kicked off the tour by Lollapalooza producers because of the incident.[21]

After Jackass (2004–2007) [edit]

After Jackass ended, he co-starred with Chris Pontius on MTV's Wildboyz, which lasted four seasons from 2003 until 2006. The two performed stunts and acts with animals, often putting themselves in situations for which they were not trained.

In mid-2005, he became the spokesperson for the Sneaux brand of footwear.[22] Television commercials promoting the shoe company include such acts as Steve-O jumping into garbage, getting his foot bitten by an alligator (simulated) and drinking rotten milk. His slogan is "They're darn good shoes."

On March 27, 2006, he and Jackass co-star Chris Pontius visited The Dean Blundell Show, a morning show on Toronto radio station CFNY (102.1 The Edge), to promote their "Don't Try This at Home" tour. He urinated on the floor and performed a stunt called "Unwrapping the Mummy" all in front of a live studio audience. Hosts Dean Blundell, Jason Barr, and Todd Shapiro were suspended for the week following the appearance, after many complaints.[23] In April 2006, Steve-O later sued manager Nick Dunlap and attorney Jason Berk, accusing them of lying to him to fund their lavish lifestyles.[24]

On July 18, 2006, Steve-O became a late contestant on the British reality show Love Island broadcast on ITV from Fiji in an effort to boost ratings. Despite stating he had stopped drinking, he asked for beer while on the show. On July 19, 2006 he abruptly left Love Island because he was not allowed the beer which he had requested.[25]

In November 2006, he went on a drug binge after being misdiagnosed with cardiomyopathy, a serious heart condition.[26] He was later examined by heart specialists who concluded he was in good health.[26]

In 2007, Steve-O starred in his own television show called Dr. Steve-O on the USA Network. In the show, he helped make his guests cool and "de-wussify" them. That same year he appeared in Jackass 2.5, which mainly consisted of material that did not appear in the second Jackass movie. Additionally, he appeared with some Jackass alumni in National Lampoon's TV: The Movie.

On February 25, 2008, he appeared on The Howard Stern Show with Howard Stern, Robin Quivers and Artie Lange on Sirius Satellite Radio to promote his upcoming rap album Hard As a Rock. Another mix-CD released by Steve-O is called The Dumbest Asshole in Hip Hop.[27]

Psychiatric problems and rehab (2008) [edit]

On February 23, 2008, Steve-O joined the rest of the Jackass crew for the Jackass MTV 24 Hour Takeover, which promoted JackassWorld.com. He participated in several stunts, and even debuted his rap music video which was executive produced by recording artist D-Jukes, leading to Mike Judge bringing back the duo of Beavis and Butt-head for the first time in years to criticize it. During the live broadcast Steve-O was kicked out of MTV studios on the request of executives for his behavior and intoxication.[28]

On March 9, 2008, after receiving an e-mail from Steve-O that suggested his possible suicide, Steve-O's friends, including co-star Johnny Knoxville, became concerned he was a danger to himself and consulted with physician Dr. Drew Pinsky, who told them to get Steve-O to a hospital immediately. Steve-O was placed on a 72-hour psychiatric hold which was later lengthened to 14 days due to an alleged suicide attempt.[29] In a mass e-mail addressed to his friends, Steve-O expressed that he previously had thought of his drug use and bipolarity as a "good thing", but that he now realizes that his drug use was apparently hurting those he loved most.[30]

On June 4, 2008, Steve-O pleaded guilty to felony possession of cocaine. He avoided jail with the successful completion of a treatment program.[31] In July, after 115 days of sobriety, Steve-O announced he was "back in the loony bin".[32] He returned to the mental institution, he said, because "I've had horrible mood swings and severe depression. My brain is fucked up from using so much cocaine, ketamine, PCP, nitrous oxide, and all sorts of other drugs."[33]

Post-rehab, Jackass reprised and comedy tours (2009–2012) [edit]

In March 2009, Steve-O was on the 8th season of Dancing with the Stars, paired with Lacey Schwimmer. After the first week, he complained of pinched nerves and back spasms and did not compete in the second week after injuring his back further by falling on his microphone pack during dress rehearsal. The judges based their scores on his performance at the dress rehearsal.[34] He was eventually eliminated in the sixth week of the competition.

On May 3, 2009, MTV premiered a documentary titled Steve-O: Demise and Rise about how his life was affected by the use of drugs and alcohol.[28] The show featured home-made video footage of Steve-O using drugs and vandalizing his apartment. In an August 2009 interview with Johnny Knoxville for The Times-Picayune, Knoxville on the topic of Steve-O's recovery and rehabilitation said "He's taking to sobriety like he took to drugs and alcohol, I'm very proud of him. I think we'll see him doing some stuff here really soon. As a matter of fact, I know we are."[35] He later stated "Something's coming. We're pretty excited ... I think it'll be a big year next year, but I don't want to talk about it yet."[35]

Steve-O later told Comedy Digital Radio station Barry that he has never seen the MTV documentary. "When I saw the footage of myself doing drugs I felt like I could see them, I could taste them. It made me crave them and as embarrassing as that footage is, that just seemed like another reason to get high. I couldn't watch it; I haven't watched it since then. The producers put it all together and finished it up without any input for me, it's better that way."[36] Then in January 2009, Steve-O announced on his website the release of a new DVD titled Steve-O: Pounding Out Randoms, of which only 1000 copies have been made.[ citation needed ]

Steve-O was part of Jackass 3D, the third installment of the Jackass series, released in October 2010.[37] The movie was in 3D and began production on January 25, 2010.[38] In late May 2010, Knoxville has stated that Steve-O's sobriety is at its best and "There is no beer on set this time around even if some of us wish there was". He also said "And to be honest it's going great. Everyone has had different injuries throughout which is a good sign and Steve-O is probably getting the best footage out of everybody. He is really going for it. He wants to prove to everyone he can do these stunts sober. It's been two years since he had a drink now. Everyone has been real supportive of him.".[39]

When Jackass 3D was released in 2010, the movie broke box office records.[40] In promoting the movie, he appeared on The Howard Stern Show, lighting himself on fire. In reaction, Howard Stern yelled: "Put him out! Put his head out! Fucking maniac! Oh my god, you're a maniac! You're a goddamn maniac!"[41]

In November 2010, Steve-O began touring the United States performing stand-up comedy on what he called "Steve-O's Entirely Too Much Information Tour". In early 2011, he announced a nine-month-long American comedy tour.[42] He appeared in Jackass 3.5, which was released in April 2011.

On March 27, 2011, Steve-O was arrested by Canadian authorities at Calgary airport. Officers found an arrest warrant filed in 2003. Steve-O was accused of assault with a weapon. He was released after paying a caution of $10,000.[43] Before his arrest, Steve-O spoke about "how he outran police after a fan was, according to authorities, beaten on stage eight years ago."[44]

In May 2011, he took his stand-up show to Australia, playing a show in all the major cities.[45] In an interview with Comedy Digital Radio station Barry Steve-O explained the genesis of his comedy tour, "Someone invited me to a famous comedy club in Los Angeles and they asked that I get on stage and do something outrageous. When I got to that comedy club I looked around and it occurred to me that the craziest thing I could possibly do by far would be to try stand-up comedy. Like, that was genuinely the most terrifying, outlandish just crazy thing that I could do."[36]

On September 13, 2011, during a taping of the Comedy Central Roast of Charlie Sheen, Steve-O joked, "The last time this many nobodies were at a roast, at least Great White was playing". Steve-O has since apologized for the comment and requested that it be removed from the broadcast of the roast.[46] During the taping of the roast, Steve-O attempted to run into the fist of boxer Mike Tyson, but the first attempt did not work. Later, at the end of the roast, Steve-O made another attempt and this time connected, resulting in Steve-O getting a broken nose.[47] He also claimed to have been sober and clean for three and a half years. Steve-O was also shown to be visibly upset by Amy Schumer's joke about Ryan Dunn's passing, but later stated he wasn't offended by the joke.[48]

It was announced on October 3, 2011, that Steve-O would be hosting truTV's new reality game show Killer Karaoke, the American version of the British competition show Sing If You Can. The show first aired at 9p.m. EST on November 23, 2012.[49]

He told US Weekly in November 2012 that he credited his two rescue dogs, Walter and Bernie, with helping him to maintain nearly five years of sobriety.[50]

YouTube channel and SeaWorld arrest (2013–2018) [edit]

Despite joining in 2005, Steve-O has regularly uploaded on his YouTube channel of the same name and other channels since 2013. His main channel SteveO has amassed over 5 million subscribers as of September 2019.[51]

In 2014 Steve-O narrated a short video titled "What Came Before, featuring Steve-O: The Truth About Meat and Modern Farms" about some of the individual animals rescued by Farm Sanctuary and he also reveals the life of the less fortunate animals that are born into modern farming in the US.[52]

In December 2014, Steve-O was announced as one of the competitors in the second series of British TV show The Jump.[53] He was the ninth contestant eliminated.

On August 9, 2015, Steve-O climbed a construction crane in Los Angeles in a protest against SeaWorld. He lit fireworks and inflated a large whale blow-up doll on top of the crane. He broadcast the stunt on his Facebook page, resulting in LAPD and EMS responding with no knowledge of the stunt going on, and later was arrested after climbing down on charges of trespassing. Fans began a GoFundMe campaign for his bail.[54] For the protest, Steve-O was convicted of two misdemeanors and sentenced to 30 days of jail time and 36 months of probation.[55] He claims he told his attorney to get jail time because it would increase the publicity and make a statement about captivity.[56] He started his jail time on December 9, 2015. He is quoted saying "I mean, if your goal is to make a statement about captivity, you may as well get yourself locked up!"[57] Steve-O was released from jail after serving just eight hours in the Twin Towers Correctional Facility.[58] In 2016, he released his first stand-up comedy special, Guilty as Charged.[59] [60]

On March 9, 2018, Steve-O marked 10 years of sobriety.[61] On the September 2, 2020 episode 261 of the TigerBelly, Steve-O discusses his work in the 12 step program, especially to address a sex addiction.

Gnarly and Jackass resurgence (2020–present) [edit]

On March 19, 2020, Steve-O started his own podcast titled Steve-O's Wild Ride!. He hosts this podcast along with Scott Randolph and Paul Brisske.[62]

Gnarly is Steve-O's second stand-up comedy special at the Gothic Theatre in Denver, Colorado. He presented stories, stunts and previously unseen footage to the audience. The special marks the first time the entire cast of Jackass reunited after the death of Ryan Dunn. It was released on July 18, 2020 and is available to watch on Steve-O's website.[63]

In August 2020, he appeared on the VENN Network with host Sasha Grey on her show Grey Area.[64]

Steve-O starred in a supporting role in the film Guest House, released on September 4, 2020.[65]

During the first two days of production for Jackass Forever (2022), both Steve-O and Johnny Knoxville were hospitalized.[66] On December 15, 2020, it was publicly announced that Johnny Knoxville and Steve-O were hospitalized due to on-set injuries.[67] [68] Steve-O will serve as a co-producer on Jackass Forever.

On July 11, 2021, during Shark Week, the Discovery Channel aired Jackass Shark Week. It featured Steve-O as well as other Jackass cast members including Knoxville, Chris Pontius, Sean "Poopies" McInerney and Jasper Dolphin.

In 2021, Steve-O started going on tour throughout the United States. This tour, titled The Bucket List Tour, features Steve-O telling stories and showing stunts that he wasn't allowed to do for Jackass.

Personal life [edit]

Steve-O is known for his distinctive gravely voice, which he initially attributed to his drug use and various stunts he's done over the years. After visiting a specialist, however, he was surprised to learn that it's simply because of his habit of using his throat muscles to talk, rather than his vocal cords.[69]

Animal rights [edit]

In 2010, it was reported that Steve-O had become a vegan for both health and compassionate reasons. He stated that "being vegan, I can tell you, has benefited every single area of my life".[70] After the Jackass 3D stunt involving a ram (during which he injured his hand), he has expressed some concern about doing stunts in the future that "mess with animals."[70]

In June 2011, Steve-O released an autobiography entitled Professional Idiot: A Memoir, co-written with David Peisner. He stated that he follows only a strict vegan diet and is one of the many celebrities that got involved in the NOH8 project. In July, he received PETA's Nanci Alexander award for his "voice against cruelty."[71] [72] In 2013, due to his concern about animal rights he said that he was eating a vegan diet, and that he did not wear fur or leather.[73]

In December 2018, Steve-O revealed that he was no longer a vegan as he consumes fish and is a pescatarian.[74] [75] In 2019, Steve-O spoke out against "militant" vegans, stating they do more harm than good.[74] [76] [77]

Family [edit]

Steve-O spoke about his family life on the September 2, 2020 episode 261 of TigerBelly podcast with Bobby Lee and Khalyla Kuhn. Steve-O reveals that his mother suffered an aneurysm on October 10, 1998, which was before his rise to fame. Steve-O stated that she suffered major cognitive and physical disability as a result of the aneurysm, and eventually died in 2003.[78]

His father is still alive and proud of his success. Despite being divorced from Steve-O's mother, he returned from England when she suffered an aneurysm. On the TigerBelly podcast, Steve-O describes his father taking a moment outside the hospital to express regret for not fully supporting Steve-O's unconventional career path. Up to that point, Steve-O had not yet seen the success that the Jackass series would bring, and was a contrast to the corporate leadership career his father followed.[78]

Filmography [edit]

Films [edit]

Year Film Role Notes
2002 Jackass: The Movie Himself Writer
2003 Stupidity Himself Documentary
2003 Blind Horizon Man with Hat in Final Scene As Stephen Glover
2005 The Dudesons Movie Himself Cameo
2006 Jackass Number Two Himself Writer
2007 National Lampoon's TV: The Movie Various Writer
2007 Jackass 2.5 Himself Writer
2009 Passenger Side Bar Patron As Stephen Glover
2010 Jackass 3D Himself Writer
2011 Jackass 3.5 Himself Writer
2014 Lennon or McCartney Himself Short documentary film; interview clip[79]
2015 Barely Lethal Pedro
2017 What the Health Himself Documentary film; interview clip
2017 Dumb: The Story of Big Brother Magazine Himself Documentary film
2018 Game Over, Man! Himself Cameo
2020 Guest House Shred
2022 Jackass Forever Himself Co-producer, writer

Television [edit]

Year Title Role Notes
2000–2002 Jackass Himself 20 episodes
2002 Jackass Backyard BBQ TV movie
2002 MTV Cribs 1 episode
2002–2003 MADtv Guest star, 2 episodes
2003–2006 Wildboyz Host, co-creator, 32 episodes
2003 The Bronx Bunny Show 1 episode
2004–2006 Totally Busted 25 episodes
2005 Americas Next Top Model 1 episode
2006 Love Island 2 episodes
The Dudesons 1 episode
The O.C First Marine Episode 4.2 "The Gringos"
24 Hours with... Himself 1 episode
2006 MTV Video Music Awards Presenter
2007 Bam's Unholy Union 2 episodes
Dr. Steve-O Dr. Steve-O Creator, presenter, 7 episodes
2008 Jackassworld.com: 24 Hour Takeover Himself TV special
2009 Dancing with the Stars Finished 8th
Nitro Circus 1 episode
Steve-O: Demise and Rise TV movie documentary, executive producer
Glenn Martin DDS Steve-O from Jackass Episode 1.10, voice-over
2010 2010 MTV Video Music Awards Himself Presenter
Up Close with Carrie Keagan 1 episode
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon 1 episode
2011 Germany's Next Topmodel Episode 6.12
Minute to Win It
The Comedy Central Roast of Charlie Sheen
A Tribute to Ryan Dunn TV movie documentary
2012–2013 Killer Karaoke Host, on slice
2013 The Eric Andre Show Guest, episode 2.05
Ridiculousness Guest host, episode 3.03
2014 Tom Green Live Guest, episode 3.10
2015 Celebrity Juice 1 episode
The Jump 1 episode
2016 Steve-O: Guilty as Charged Showtime special[80] [81]
Comedy Bang! Bang! Episode 5.07
Mr. Pickles Pizza Guy 1 episode; voice only
2017 Billy Dilley's Super-Duper Subterranean Summer Tommy X 1 episode; voice only
2018 Sky1's Revolution [82] Himself
Happy Together S10CIL 1 episode
Ridiculousness Himself Episode 11.15
2019 The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants Lane Junkston 1 episode; voice only
2021 Straight Up Steve Austin Himself 1 episode
2021 Jackass Shark Week TV special

DVDs [edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1999 boob Himself
2001 Don't Try This at Home – The Steve-O Video Vol. 1 Executive producer
2002 Don't Try This at Home – The Steve-O Video Vol. 2: The Tour
2003 Steve-O: Out on Bail
2004 Steve-O: The Early Years Director, writer
2005 XYZ: Decade of Destruction
Steve-O: Gross Misconduct Producer
2006 The Dudesons Movie [83] Cameo
2007 Pinnernation
2009 Pounding Out Randoms
2009 Jackass: The Lost Tapes Writer, archived footage
2020 Steve-O: Gnarly Executive producer

Video games [edit]

Year Title Role Notes
2004 ESPN NFL 2K5 Himself
Tony Hawk's Underground 2 Guest appearance/Playable character
2007 Jackass: The Game Voice and motion capture

Music videos [edit]

Year Artist Track Role Notes
2002 CKY Flesh into Gear Himself Archived footage
2002 Andrew W.K We Want Fun Himself
2006 Chris Pontius Karazy Himself
2010 Weezer Memories Himself
2012 Machine Gun Kelly Wild Boy (remix) Himself
2013 Steel Panther Party Like Tomorrow Is the End of the World Himself
2018 Hank von Hell Bum to Bum Himself
2020 Blink-182 Happy Days Himself Cameo

Web series [edit]

Year Title Role Notes
2015 Jackass Reunion: 15 Years Later [84] Himself Rolling Stone special
The Slo Mo Guys [85] 1 episode
2016 Game Grumps 1 episode
DoubleToasted.com 1 episode
Shane and Friends [86] 1 episode
2017 H3h3Productions 2 episodes
Hot Ones [87] 1 episode
2018 Ultimate Expedition 10 episodes
David Dobrik [88] 1 episode
The Sidemen Show 1 episode
2019 ImPaulsive Podcast 1 episode
Bathroom Break Podcast [89] 1 episode
Wikipedia: Fact or Fiction? [90] 1 episode
2020 The Nine Club [91] 1 episode
Scrambled [92] 1 episode
No Pain In Vain: The Shocking Life of Steve-O [93] Documentary
2021 Hot Ones [94] 1 episode
Do A Kickflip! [95] 1 episode
Truth or Dab [96] 1 episode
Tales From the Trip [97] 1 episode

Discography [edit]

2008 – The Dumbest Asshole in Hip Hop (hosted by Whoo Kid) [98]

The Dumbest Asshole in Hip Hop
Mixtape by

Steve-O

Released April 29, 2008 (2008-04-29)
Recorded 2005–2008
Genre
  • Comedy hip hop
  • dirty rap
Length 22:33
Label
  • West Coast Madness
  • Universal
Producer
  • Red Spyda
  • DJ Whoo Kid
No. Title Length
1. "Steve.O's Goofy Intro" 1:24
2. "Hard As a Rock" 1:18
3. "People Giggled" (Interlude) 1:01
4. "Crack Cocaine (Feels So Good)" 1:39
5. "Discussions Begin" (Interlude) 1:45
6. "Poppin' Off" 1:22
7. "Whoo Kid" (Interlude) 3:17
8. "Down with STD's" 4:21
9. "I Wasn't Supposed To" (Interlude) 0:48
10. "Poke the Puss" (featuring Kool G Rap) 4:05
11. "Steve.O's Stupid Outro" 1:40
  • includes a bonus DVD (51:30)

See also [edit]

  • List of animal rights advocates

References [edit]

  1. ^ Steve-O [@steveo]. "Tweet from February 14, 2019". Twitter. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  2. ^ "Jackass Star Steve-O Is Engaged to Lux Wright! All About His Proposal". PEOPLE.com.
  3. ^ "Steve-O in with the law again". The Sunshine Coast Daily. March 5, 2008. Retrieved September 17, 2010.
  4. ^ "Today in history". The New York Times. Associated Press. June 13, 2014. Retrieved June 14, 2014.
  5. ^ "Steve-O' Talks About His Mother's Passing". Archived from the original on November 7, 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
  6. ^ Lovece, Frank (October 11, 2010). "Q&A: Steve-O of 'Jackass 3-D'". AZ Central. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  7. ^ Glover, Stephen "Steve-O"; Peisner, David (June 7, 2011). Professional Idiot: A Memoir: Stephen Steve-O Glover, David Peisner: 9781401324339: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN978-1401324339.
  8. ^ a b Steve-O: The Early Years DVD (2004)
  9. ^ Steve-O's Worst Injury Revealed!, archived from the original on November 7, 2021, retrieved March 16, 2020
  10. ^ "officiallysteveo comments on Steve-O here". Reddit.com. February 12, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  11. ^ "Steve-O: Jackass in the Flesh, and Blood". The Washington Post. December 31, 2002. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  12. ^ Rauzi, Robin (March 18, 2001). "Not Such a Dumb Stunt After All;". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  13. ^ Kenyon, John (December 19, 2002). "Steve-O takes great pains". The Gazette . Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  14. ^ "Drunken Jackass is often too much". The Record. March 25, 2004. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  15. ^ "Jackass-inspired 'extreme standup' show brings excess to Lupo's". Providence Journal. December 5, 2002. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  16. ^ "Steve-O Faces Obscenity Charges". MTV. August 1, 2002. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  17. ^ "For The Record: Quick News On". MTV. September 16, 2002. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  18. ^ "For The Record: Quick News On". MTV. December 16, 2002. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  19. ^ "Steve-O Gets Probation For Stapling". MTV. March 24, 2003. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  20. ^ "'Jackass' star arrested in Sweden". USA Today. May 27, 2003. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  21. ^ Vineyard, Jennifer. "Steve-O Arrested For Peeing In Front Of Lollapalooza Fans". MTV News. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007.
  22. ^ "Sneaux Shoes Official Website to Shop Online for Mens, Womens, Boys and Infant Skater Footwear". Sneauxshoes.com. Retrieved September 17, 2010.
  23. ^ Mihsin, Andre (March 29, 2004). "Steve-O Gets T.O. Shock Jock Kicked Off The Air". Chart. Archived from the original on November 14, 2009. Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  24. ^ Hafetz, David (April 30, 2006). "MTV Jack Assets Lawsuits". New York Post . Retrieved November 15, 2009.
  25. ^ "Jackass star departs Love Island". BBC. July 19, 2006. Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  26. ^ a b "They said I was dying so I got off my nut on drugs". Europe Intelligence Wire. November 3, 2006. Retrieved October 21, 2009.
  27. ^ "SteveO Rap CD/DVD". Steveomixtape.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2011. Retrieved September 17, 2010.
  28. ^ a b "Steve-O: Demise and Rise". MTV. 2009. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  29. ^ "'Jackass' Star Steve-O Hospitalized". The Baltimore Sun. March 13, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  30. ^ "Steve-O Tells Friends: I'm Paying for My Self-Destructive Behavior". People. March 14, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  31. ^ "Steve-O pleads guilty to felony cocaine charge but avoids jail time". Reality TV World. June 4, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  32. ^ "Jackass 'back in loony bin'". Brisbane Times. July 8, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  33. ^ "Steve-O's hospital return". ITV. July 8, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  34. ^ "Celebrity News: Latest Celeb News & Celebrity Gossip". Us Weekly. Archived from the original on April 20, 2009. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  35. ^ a b Scott, Mike (August 4, 2009). "Johnny Knoxville: 'Jackass' star Steve-O almost ready to dive back into his work". The Times-Picayune . Retrieved September 1, 2009.
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External links [edit]

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve-O

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