Jackass Cast Immortalized With Their Own X-Rated Constellation

The Jackass team have been given a tribute in the night sky, and it’s exactly as NSFW as you’d expect.

The gang are preparing to head back to the big screen once more, with the film set to arrive in theaters on June 26, 2026. The official promotion has also made clear this is being treated as the franchise’s farewell, with Jackass: Best and Last positioned as the fifth and final main installment.

In a message shared online ahead of the release, fans were told there will still be a lasting reminder of the franchise’s chaos for anyone willing to glance upward after dark.

Jackass: Best and Last promises another batch of reckless, ill-advised and over-the-top stunts, mixing fresh material with some familiar favorites that longtime viewers will recognize.

The franchise began as a television series in the early 2000s, before making the jump to cinemas with Jackass: The Movie in 2002.

From there, it expanded into multiple shows and films, with the most recent movie release arriving in 2022 with Jackass Forever.

The post explained: “While this is indeed the last jackass movie, you can always look up to the night sky and see their legacy in the stars.”

It followed that up with: “Yes, that’s right, they’ve got their very own c**kstellation.”

To pull it off, the team arranged for a group of stars to be named in celebration of the cast.

That doesn’t mean they literally purchased celestial bodies, of course, but they did secure the naming rights attached to them.

As a result, the sky now features a constellation linked to cast members Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Chris Pontius, Dave England, Jason ‘Wee Man’ Acuña, ‘Danger Ehren’ McGhehey, and Preston Lacy, as well as newer faces Zach Holmes, Sean ‘Poopies’ McInerney, Jasper Dolphin, Eric Manaka, Rachel Wolfson, and Bam Margera.

Staying true to the franchise’s brand of humor, the stars were arranged so that when connected like a dot-to-dot, they form an explicit image in the sky known as ‘The Little D**ker’.

The film is due in theaters on June 26, and the Instagram page described it as ‘one last wild ride’.

The project was directed by Jeff Tremaine, while Knoxville delivered an emotional introduction to the final outing.

“My name is Johnny Knoxville, and I’m going to try to not get emotional,” he said. “This is the last Jackass film the world will ever see.”

If the movie really is the franchise’s farewell, it will be remembered for some of the most absurd and painful stunts ever put on camera.

One of the simplest in concept was also one of the hardest to watch, as Ryan Dunn inflicted paper cuts on Johnny Knoxville and Steve-O using an envelope in especially sensitive spots, including between the toes, between the fingers, and even on the tip of Steve-O’s tongue.

For a cast used to blood, bodily fluids and all manner of revolting moments, that stunt still managed to leave the camera crew gagging.

Another unforgettable moment from the 2002 film saw Dunn insert a toy car sealed inside a lubricated condom into his rectum.

He then visited a proctologist while pretending it was the result of a fraternity party mishap, and the reactions from the medical professionals were secretly captured for the audience.

The situation was apparently mortifying enough that the doctor reportedly urged Dunn to go straight to the hospital and keep quiet about what had happened.

Then there was the stunt involving Ehren McGhehey’s ‘crooked’ tooth, which ranks among the nastiest in the series.

For the 2010 movie, a string was tied to the tooth and attached to a Lamborghini, which then sped away and tore it out in brutal fashion.

Reflecting on it years later, McGhehey told GQ that the stunt ‘broke my face all the way up to my eyeball’.

“It took nine months to heal.”

Steve-O’s infamous Poo Cocktail Supreme also remains near the top of any list of the franchise’s most disgusting ideas.

He was strapped inside a porta-potty connected to a bungee system, before being launched through the air as the contents of the toilet were flung all over him.

When he emerged covered from head to toe in filth, crew members reportedly vomited on the spot.

Steve-O later told Graham Bensinger that, for health and safety reasons, the production used dog waste rather than human waste, though that detail hardly makes the stunt seem any less revolting.

The 2006 film also featured Knoxville, Chris Pontius, Ryan Dunn and Bam Margera balancing on a teeter-totter inside an enclosure with an aggressive bull.

Animal rights group PETA criticized the production over the repeated use of animals for entertainment, but the sequence is still remembered as one of the wildest scenes the crew ever filmed.

As the bull scattered the others, Knoxville was left behind and violently slammed into the teeter-totter’s frame before narrowly getting away.