5 Questions With: Steve-O
For those 'Jackass' fans who loved seeing Steve-O on 'Dancing With the Stars' each week, he's back on TV this Sunday, showing a very different side of himself. His new MTV documentary, 'Steve-O: Demise and Rise' (premieres May 3 at 10 PM ET), is an honest, explicit, first-hand look at his addiction to drugs and alcohol and the subsequent intervention that eventually made him decide to get help.
AOL TV talked to Steve-O exclusively to get his take on the graphic documentary, hear his account of hitting rock bottom and to find out why he'd rather watch a VH1 matchmaker show than see himself acting like a jerk. -- By Maggie Furlong
For those 'Jackass' fans who loved seeing Steve-O on 'Dancing With the Stars' each week, he's back on TV this Sunday, showing a very different side of himself.
His new MTV documentary, 'Steve-O: Demise and Rise' (premieres May 3 at 10 PM ET), is an honest, explicit, first-hand look at his addiction to drugs and alcohol and the subsequent intervention that eventually made him decide to get help.
Steve-O Photos
DANCING WITH THE STARS 8 Steve-O and Lacey Schwimmer star in the "Episode 806" - The remaining couples danced the Rumba or Jive. Airs Monday, April 13, 2009.
ABC
DANCING WITH THE STARS 8 Steve-O and Lacey Schwimmer star in the "Episode 806" - The remaining couples danced the Rumba or Jive. Airs Monday, April 13, 2009.
ABC
In this image released by ABC, Steve-O, left, and his partner Lacey Schwimmer compete Monday, April 13, 2009 on "Dancing with the Stars," in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Kelsey McNeal) ** NO SALES **
AP
DANCING WITH THE STARS 8 Steve-O and Lacey Schwimmer star in the episode "Episode 805" - It was a night of Viennese Waltz and Paso Doble on week five. Airs Monday, April 6, 2009.
ABC
DANCING WITH THE STARS 8 Lacey Schwimmer and Steve-O star in the episode "Episode 805" - It was a night of Viennese Waltz and Paso Doble on week five. Airs Monday, April 6, 2009.
ABC
BEVERLY HILLS, CA - APRIL 01: Actor Steve-O arrives at the Clarity Theater for the 9th annual Beverly Hills Film Festival opening night gala on April 1, 2009 in Beverly Hills, California (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Steve-O
Getty Images
BEVERLY HILLS, CA - APRIL 01: Actor Steve-O arrives at the Clarity Theater for the 9th annual Beverly Hills Film Festival opening night gala on April 1, 2009 in Beverly Hills, California (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Steve-O
Getty Images
BEVERLY HILLS, CA - APRIL 01: Actor Steve-O arrives at the Clarity Theater for the 9th annual Beverly Hills Film Festival opening night gala on April 1, 2009 in Beverly Hills, California (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Steve-O
Getty Images
LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 28: Dancer Lacey Schwimmer and TV personality Steve-O arrive at Perez Hilton's "OMFB" 31st Birthday Party held at The Viper Room on March 28, 2009 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Angela Weiss/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Lacey Schwimmer;Steve-O
Getty Images
LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 28: Dancer Lacey Schwimmer and TV personality Steve-O arrive at Perez Hilton's "OMFB" 31st Birthday Party held at The Viper Room on March 28, 2009 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Angela Weiss/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Lacey Schwimmer;Steve-O
Getty Images
AOL TV talked to Steve-O exclusively to get his take on the graphic documentary, hear his account of hitting rock bottom and to find out why he'd rather watch a VH1 matchmaker show than see himself acting like a jerk. -- By Maggie Furlong
1. Did your time on 'Dancing' help you feel like you're back?Um ... eh ... it made me feel good to get that much support from the fans. That was really, really awesome. As far as "I'm back!," I don't know if I really felt that comfortable about all that, but it was awesome. I'm a horrible dancer [laughs] and I stayed in the competition for six weeks ... that's hilarious.
2. What can you tell us about this documentary you shot for MTV?
It's a very graphic documentary about my descent into madness and drugs and addiction. I guess everyone kind of considers it to be like a public service announcement that might help people. If that's the case, then that's cool with me ... [laughs] ... it's just a really graphic, gnarly documentary, and it is what it is. I feel like when I was getting loaded, I would watch that 'Intervention' show, and I would just be comforted that the people on that show had bigger problems than I did. Now, I think this puts me right up there with them. [Laughs]

3. So what was the turning point for you, that made you decide to get clean?
When I first decided to really give sobriety a true shot, I was motivated by the idea of being like a role model and doing a lot of good in the world. That was kind of the wrong approach to it, and it took me a while to realize that I needed to be getting sober for myself so I wouldn't have to be this jerk that I'd been in the past. So, I don't know how I feel about being a role model character -- I just don't want to be a jerk, and that's my motivation for staying sober.
4. At your lowest point, how bad did things get for you?
I was nuts. I got really far outta my mind. At the when I was filming all this crazy stuff, when I was doing drugs, I thought everything was just genius! It took me kind of a while to realize that stuff wasn't that cool. I filmed a lot of it -- when I say I was pretty far out of my mind, I was hearing voices in my head and I was seeing people that weren't there. Really, just crazy auditory, visual, tactile hallucinations. I was in complete psychosis. It's pretty disturbing footage. To watch that seems like it would deter me from wanting to get loaded again, but that's not how it works. I
watched it once and it just triggered me to want to get high. So it's not a good idea for me to watch it ... anybody that really cares about me, it's a tough watch. There's a lot of footage of me doing drugs -- I never was a shooter upper. I was a swallower, a snorter, a huffer and a smoker -- not a shooter. I had boundaries. I was kind of a garbage can, but I never smoked crack, and I never did heroin -- and, although I never turned it down, I never really went out to go find crystal meth. [Laughs] So yeah, I had boundaries. 5. So are you at the point now where you can watch this and be OK, or is it too much?
This documentary feels to me like it's more likely to get me loaded than keep me sober, so I'm just kinda holding onto my support system and working to get through this. I think that what we've done, together with MTV, is provided some sensational programming to entertain people, because they love seeing other people suffer. [Like 'Jackass'], I can't imagine that it wouldn't have a pretty major warning on there. [Laughs] When this documentary airs, you can trust that I'll be tuned in to 'Tough Love' on VH1. [Laughs]
