CKY Collection
Video series created by "Jackass" star Bam Margera.
Landspeed presents: CKY (1999)
01 March, 1999
The first entry in the CKY series of skateboarding programs and extreme stunts, directed by Bam Margera and featuring Margera, Brandon DiCamillo, Ryan Dunn, Chris Raab and Rake Yohn.
CKY2K (2000)
22 May, 2000
The second entry in the CKY series of skateboarding programs and extreme stunts: it includes a very chaotic trip to Iceland, some rather disgusting fecal footage, some furniture surfing on the highway, and a demonstration of how to destroy a rental car and get off scot free.
CKY 3 (2001)
12 February, 2001
The third entry in the CKY series of extreme stunts and skateboarding programs. Directed by and featuring Bam Margera and Brandon DiCamillo, starring Margera, DiCamillo and the rest of the CKY crew.
CKY 4: The Latest & Greatest (2002)
10 November, 2002
Fourth and final entry in the CKY series, directed by Bam Margera, featuring the CKY crew and the Margera family.
CKY Documentary (2001)
04 July, 2001
Clips from CKY, CKY2K, and CKY 3 as well as some new clips with commentary from the cast and crew in between. It also includes the infamous "How To Rob a House" sketch.
CKY 5 (2025)
01 April, 2025
Years after the CKY crew first started filming their reckless stunts and disgusting pranks, CKY 5 digs into the archives to unleash a huge collection of never‑before‑seen chaos from Bam Margera, Brandon DiCamillo, Ryan Dunn, Rake Yohn, Raab Himself, and the rest of the West Chester misfits. Veterans of broken bones, rooftops, and terrible ideas, the crew returns through decades of lost tapes — remastered and assembled by longtime collaborator Zera Starcat, with help from dedicated fan archivists. What comes out is a raw mix of abandoned skits, Iceland misadventures, fake G.I. Joe insanity, Phil‑tormenting wake‑ups, drunken kitchen disasters, and the juvenile mayhem that defined CKY before Jackass hit MTV. Never officially released, CKY 5 survives through high‑quality fan rips, becoming a cult bootleg for anyone raised on extreme skating and early‑2000s stupidity.