The Reclamation of Bam Margera: Sober, Rolling, and Building an Empire on the Edge of Everything
From an ER visit in May to a cannabis brand launch, a Tony Hawk intervention, and a decisive door slammed on Jackass forever — the most consequential month in the Bam Margera cinematic universe, reported in full.
There are figures in the long history of American spectacle who fall so publicly, so completely, that their mere continued existence becomes a kind of rebuke to gravity itself. Bam Margera — West Chester, Pennsylvania's most famous export, a man who once made a generation believe that chaos was a lifestyle one could sustain indefinitely — is, in the late spring of 2026, apparently surviving the fall. More than surviving. He is, according to multiple outlets and documents — photographs — reviewed by this publication, skating again. He is sober, by his own account. He is, improbably, building something.
To understand June, one must return to May 1st. According to reporting by PennLive.com, Margera found himself in an emergency room following a skateboarding mishap — a detail that, in a lesser narrative, might have read as the closing parenthesis on a cautionary tale. It did not have to be this way. And yet, it was not the end. Within days, BroBible had published footage that appeared to show Margera back on a board, moving with what observers described as alarming fluency for someone who had endured years of well-documented physical and personal turbulence. Barstool Sports, a publication not historically given to understatement, would later declare him to look "like a million bucks." History will note they said it first in print.
Then came the business. On or around May 14th, Margera and his wife Dannii sat for an interview with Cannabis & Tech Today to discuss BAM THC, a cannabis brand the couple is reportedly building together. According to VISTA.Today, the venture is being positioned at the intersection of Margera's rehabilitated public image and the expanding legal cannabis market — a pivot that this correspondent finds, upon reflection, genuinely shrewd. The brand is not merely a celebrity licensing arrangement. It appears, based on available reporting, to be a family operation, with Dannii Margera named as a co-architect. The discourse around celebrity cannabis has been crowded and undignified. This one, at minimum, arrives with a coherent story.
Meanwhile, the Jackass question — which has haunted Margera's narrative like a Greek chorus composed entirely of men in shopping carts — received what may be its most definitive answer yet. According to BroBible, Margera stated flatly that no sum of money could compel him to participate in a Jackass reunion. "You couldn't offer me enough money," he allegedly said. He also, per the same reporting, identified a specific stunt from the original run that he described as traumatizing in ways the others were not. This correspondent will not speculate as to which stunt. The statement, taken whole, reads less like bitterness and more like a man who has done the arithmetic on what certain rooms cost him.
The Tony Hawk dimension adds further texture. According to BroBible, Margera had apparently been removed from the upcoming Tony Hawk's Pro Skater remakes — before Hawk reportedly intervened personally to ensure his inclusion. The nature and extent of that intervention remain, per available sourcing, unconfirmed in granular detail. What is confirmed, per the same reporting, is that Margera appears to be in the game. Literally.
What emerges from the accumulated signal of a single month is not a redemption arc — that framing is too tidy, too televisual, and this correspondent rejects it on principle. What emerges is something messier and more interesting: a man in his mid-forties, moving at speed, building things, burning bridges with intention, and skating in his own backyard. For all of us who have watched the Bam Margera story from a distance and wondered which direction the momentum would finally carry him, the answer, for now, appears to be forward.