Careercow Brandon "Bam" Margera - From Jackass to Lolcow

SteveO explained on Stern years ago that Bam was the second highest paid after Knoxville in Jackass.
Knoxville & Tremaine started Jackass but the CKY videos were huge and they wanted the content in Jackass so the two camps merged.
Now I know these could be very inaccurate, but a decade ago he was estimated to be worth 40 million. Now it's 5. I've always specifically remembered that since I looked it up after Jackass 3 and when Dunn cooked himself and Bam started really spiraling.


It's no wonder that he's doing cameo now. He's such an immature nigger that never grew up, it's no wonder he blew through all of that on lambos and who knows what else.
 
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Bam is more Chad Muska than Rodney Mullen
This is a good example actually, guys like Muska and Bam or even Jim Greco are guys who were great skaters in their own right but they were also paid mascots for a different sub genre of skater and served as a giant walking billboard for a plethora of companies. They ended up doing just as well as the boundary pushers like Tony Hawk, Eric Koston, and Rodney Mullen by selling a personality to insecure teenagers through overpriced sneakers, backpacks that are also boomboxes, leather bracelets with the logo of his boyfriends band, and self released punk albums.

ETA - the earliest example of this type of pro would be Lance Mountain. He’s always shredded pools, transitioned decently to street, and still skates to this day. He has spoken on the fact that during the era of Bones Brigade he felt extremely out of place on a team with guys like Rodney Mullen, Tony Hawk, Caballero, and Mike McGill who were actively inventing new tricks on a regular basis while he was an entry level pro skateboarder who couldn’t match their talent.

Yet he still served a valuable purpose to modern skateboarding alongside those guys because those guys were all fucking dweebs going through puberty with subpar looks, shitty 80s fashion mishaps, and by their own admissions they were far from hip. Lance Mountain was selected by Stacy Peralta to be their epic cool guy and as a result he became the prototype for what modern skaters look like.
 
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This is a good example actually, guys like Muska and Bam or even Jim Greco are guys who were great skaters in their own right but they were also paid mascots for a different sub genre of skater and served as a giant walking billboard for a plethora of companies. They ended up doing just as well as the boundary pushers like Tony Hawk, Eric Koston, and Rodney Mullen by selling a personality to insecure teenagers through overpriced sneakers, backpacks that are also boomboxes, leather bracelets with the logo of his boyfriends band, and self produced punk albums.
But did they win Olympics like Tony hauk? No? They fuck off then!!!
 
pretty sure this is the only time Bam's skating ability has been compared to that of our lord and saviour Saint Rodney
I know it wasn’t “fair,” but there was a point.

I see a lot of people qualifying that Bam was good “for back then” or “for his time.”

Mullen started skating in 1980, so no, people had already seen good skating.
 
I know it wasn’t “fair,” but there was a point.

I see a lot of people qualifying that Bam was good “for back then” or “for his time.”

Mullen started skating in 1980, so no, people had already seen good skating.
Like the music industry it's all about marketability. I understand Tony Hawk was able to be marketed so well for the first few generations of THPS because he had exposure from x-games and doing the 900 on t.v but with Bam I think at the time it resonated with being a young abusrd free kid more than anything. I heard around that Bam is a competent ( not nessecarily best ) skater so he had enough to back up his claims/image.

This is a good example actually, guys like Muska and Bam or even Jim Greco are guys who were great skaters in their own right but they were also paid mascots for a different sub genre of skater and served as a giant walking billboard for a plethora of companies. They ended up doing just as well as the boundary pushers like Tony Hawk, Eric Koston, and Rodney Mullen by selling a personality to insecure teenagers through overpriced sneakers, backpacks that are also boomboxes, leather bracelets with the logo of his boyfriends band, and self produced punk albums.

Got to it a little after I scrolled up but this sums it up quite nicely. Putting in honest work or passion into the sport rarely ever makes you marketable. It has to an extent in Hawk's case but that is a bit of an exception than a standard.
 
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I agree, Bam is somewhere between Jason Lee and Devendra Banhart. What made Bam special was he would drop in on insanely high ledges and stuff.


Devendra Banhart, like the singer? Like "Für Hildegard von Bingen"?

Visual artist and music turned skater or has he always been a name on the skate scene?
I rarely follow the artists I listen to more closely so just got a bit surprised he would show up here
 
Earthrockers, I don’t feel so sober… 0827B925-EFAF-4A42-A8A1-D4196C321676.jpeg3088B872-D6DD-4E68-B78E-A472E91CDC6A.jpeg
 
Speaking of Andy, looks like Bam is going to have another interview out soon:
935646A6-8DC4-498D-9139-34DCF6ECB4AF.jpeg1BE8666C-5B0D-42CF-9462-5C113789D8BF.jpeg4BC28F72-C14C-4044-AE7E-C4C4896E116D.jpegE7102D87-E83A-4014-80E4-B17D369C3CBA.jpegHe’s either high on medication or a few drinks in.
I understand Tony Hawk was able to be marketed so well for the first few generations of THPS because he had exposure from x-games and doing the 900 on t.v
Tony Hawk was an absolute nobody outside of skateboarding until the X-games realized skateboarding’s marketability and landing the 900 changed his life overnight. Prior to that he was your average ‘cool Gen-X dad with a weird job‘ but after the 900 the market clamored for more skateboarding and that probably had a lot to do with Jackass being greenlit. He landed the 900 in the summer of ‘99 and Jackass premiered in September 2000.
Putting in honest work or passion into the sport rarely ever makes you marketable. It has to an extent in Hawk's case but that is a bit of an exception than a standard.
Tony is the exception. Other jock skaters get clowned on, when’s the last time anyone praised Andy Macdonald for his contribution? In the beginning Tony Hawk was very uncool even within skateboarding because his dad worked for the association that ran the local contests he entered and for being a snot nosed kid who showed up and made every burnout pool skater from the ‘70s look like a chump. They said he was a skateboarding robot with no style ( true though). He was bullied in school, bullied by older skaters, and his ex-wives friends all used to talk behind his back about how he was a broke, pathetic, manchild for clinging on to skateboarding during its downturn rather than getting a real job.
 
This is a good example actually, guys like Muska and Bam or even Jim Greco are guys who were great skaters in their own right but they were also paid mascots for a different sub genre of skater and served as a giant walking billboard for a plethora of companies. They ended up doing just as well as the boundary pushers like Tony Hawk, Eric Koston, and Rodney Mullen by selling a personality to insecure teenagers through overpriced sneakers, backpacks that are also boomboxes, leather bracelets with the logo of his boyfriends band, and self produced punk albums.

Speaking of Andy, looks like Bam is going to have another interview out soon:
View attachment 4255704View attachment 4255706View attachment 4255708View attachment 4255712He’s either high on medication or a few drinks in.

Tony Hawk was an absolute nobody outside of skateboarding until the X-games realized skateboarding’s marketability and landing the 900 changed his life overnight. Prior to that he was your average ‘cool Gen-X dad with a weird job‘ but after the 900 the market clamored for more skateboarding and that probably had a lot to do with Jackass being greenlit. He landed the 900 in the summer of ‘99 and Jackass premiered in September 2000.

Tony is the exception. Other jock skaters get clowned on, when’s the last time anyone praised Andy Macdonald for his contribution? In the beginning Tony Hawk was very uncool even within skateboarding because his dad worked for the association that ran the local contests he entered and for being a snot nosed kid who showed up and made every burnout pool skater from the ‘70s look like a chump. They said he was a skateboarding robot with no style ( true though). He was bullied in school, bullied by older skaters, and his ex-wives friends all used to talk behind his back about how he was a broke, pathetic, manchild for clinging on to skateboarding during its downturn rather than getting a real job.
Dam dude, when he landed the 900 with all that in mind, he really did have his life change overnight.
 
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Dam dude, when he landed the 900 with all that in mind, he really did have his life change overnight.
I think the reviews of THPS held more weight than the 900.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater was already in development in 98. He was already a name brand by the time he did the 900.
It was a second wind more than anything. Tony was already the biggest name of the late 80's. Skating went through a huge slump in the mid-90's. Rollerblading filled the gap, came and went, and then THPS ushered in a new era.
 
I remember this show and it was stupid as fuck then and it's stupid as fuck now. Every retarded millennial in the early and mid 2000's went around acting like these retards and these retards were adults. At least age wise I can't say much for their mental maturity. It's a real surprise that most of them are washed up douche bags now. Jack Ass was a product of cringey shit early and mid 2000's culture. It needs to stay dead.
 
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