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'''Brandon Ralph "Dico" DiCamillo''' (born November 15, 1976) is an American actor, stuntman, and screenwriter. He was a founding member of the ] and rose to fame through appearances in the ] and ]'s '']'', '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://movies.nytimes.com/person/300679/Brandon-DiCamillo/filmography | work=The New York Times | title=Movies: Filmography forBrandon DiCamillo}}</ref><ref name="movietome">http://www.movietome.com/people/100495/brandon-dicamillo/bio.html</ref> |
'''Brandon Ralph "Dico" DiCamillo''' (born November 15, 1976) is an American actor, stuntman, and screenwriter. He was a founding member of the ] and rose to fame through appearances in the ] and ]'s '']'', '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://movies.nytimes.com/person/300679/Brandon-DiCamillo/filmography | work=The New York Times | title=Movies: Filmography forBrandon DiCamillo}}</ref><ref name="movietome">http://www.movietome.com/people/100495/brandon-dicamillo/bio.html</ref> | ||
==Career== | ==Career== |
Revision as of 05:44, 1 July 2014
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Brandon DiCamillo | |
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Born | (1976-11-15) November 15, 1976 (age 48) West Chester, Pennsylvania |
Occupation | Comedian/Actor |
Years active | 1995–present |
Brandon Ralph "Dico" DiCamillo (born November 15, 1976) is an American actor, stuntman, and screenwriter. He was a founding member of the CKY Crew and rose to fame through appearances in the CKY video series and MTV's Jackass, Viva La Bam and Bam's Unholy Union.
Career
DiCamillo is the comedic voice talent and vocalist with the band Gnarkill. DiCamillo is also well known for his prank calls and freestyle raps, some of which can be viewed in the CKY movies, on the CKY Vol. 2 CD, and on the Otimen Recording Hell CD produced by Bam Margera.
DiCamillo was cast with other members of the CKY crew to the MTV series, Jackass, appearing in the series and their movies (having an uncredited role in Jackass 3D, the latest in the film series). When the Jackass series ended in 2002, DiCamillo was featured in Bam Margera's film Haggard: The Movie. DiCamillo then starred in Margera's Viva La Bam show, which ran from 2003 to 2005, and airing a special in 2006. DiCamillo then co-starred in his own show with Rake Yohn called Blastazoid, which only lasted two episodes until MTV cancelled the show due to dispute between MTV and the makers of the show. DiCamillo then appeared in Bam Margera's Bam's Unholy Union series. In 2008, DiCamillo starred in Chris Raab's short film, Hotdog Casserole. In 2009, DiCamillo starred in Bam Margera's Minghags.
DiCamillo also released prank phone call recordings. In 2001, he released a collection of calls titled Otimen Recording Hell! (A.K.A. Bran's Freestyles). In 2010, DiCamillo released four more prank call collections, under the name Gnarkall, via digital download through his own record label, Roman Sausage. The first three volumes are available on iTunes with the fourth an exclusive to CD Baby. The fourth volume includes all the tracks from the first three volumes, as well as thirty extra minutes of prank calls. In February 2011, DiCamillo announced that he is planning to release some freestyle raps in the near future. He made a cameo appearance as John Madden in the Mega64 "Mega64: Madden Rap 2012" YouTube video. Additionally, DiCamillo has also provided voice overs for the Xbox Live Arcade game Trials HD and its sequel Trials Evolution.
World Record
In September 2008, DiCamillo achieved a world record in Arcade Mortal Kombat. The event was held at Challenge Arcade in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania and was attended by approximately two dozen event participants, as well as Mark Alpiger (representing ClassicArcadeGaming.com) and Chief Referee Dave Nelson (representing TwinGalaxies.com). Dicamillo's final score was 10,226,500, which beat the previous record holder, David Nelson's score of 7,691,000. In 2009, Dicamillo's world record was beaten by Isaiah-TriForce Johnson, with a score of 24,821,500. Since 2009, Dicamillo has remained in 2nd place.
Personal life
He previously worked for Neiman-Marcus, and is the co-writer with Bam Margera for the CKY videos and Haggard. He dislikes Hollywood work, and has said that the CKY work for MTV was sometimes "too corporate."
Filmography
Television
- Jackass (2000–2002, 21 episodes) – Himself
- Viva La Bam (2003–2006, 41 episodes) – Himself
- Blastazoid (2006, 2 episodes) – Himself
- Bam's Unholy Union (2007, 5 episodes) – Himself
Films
- Jackass: The Movie (2002) – Himself
- Haggard: The Movie (2003) – Falcone, minor characters
- Jackass: Number Two (2006) – Himself
- Jackass 2.5 (2007) – Himself
- The Wrestler (2008) – Audience Member (uncredited)
- Hotdog Casserole (2008) – Glen Butler, minor characters
- Minghags (2009) – Ponce, Hook Bar Hessian, Rut Ru
- The Vampires of Zanzibar (2010) – Lord Weasel Titties
- Cattle Bag (2012)
- Borrowed Happiness (2012)
Other
- Jump Off a Building (1998) – Himself
- CKY video series: CKY, CKY2K, CKY3, and CKY4: The Latest & Greatest (1999–2003) – Himself
- Destroying America (2001) – Himself
- Viva La Bands: Volume 1 and Volume 2 (2005–2007) – Himself
- Bamimation (2008) – Himself
- Cattle Bag (2010) – Himself
Discography
- CKY Vol. 2 (1999)
- Otimen Recording Hell! (A.K.A. Bran's Freestyles) (2001)
- Gnarkill (2002)
- Gnarkill vs. Unkle Matt and the ShitBirdz (2006)
- Gnarkill Prank Calls, Vol. 1 (2010)
- Gnarkill Prank Calls, Vol. 2 Assault on Call Waiting (2010)
- Gnarkill Prank Calls, Vol. 3 Spring Time Cootchie (2010)
- Gnarkill Prank Calls, Vol. 4 Pleasures Treasures (2010)
- Brandon Dicamillo, Pizza Pasta Pizzelle 1 (2012)
- Brandon Dicamillo, Pizza Pasta Pizzelle 2 (2012)
References
- "Movies: Filmography forBrandon DiCamillo". The New York Times.
- ^ http://www.movietome.com/people/100495/brandon-dicamillo/bio.html
- ^ "Twin Galaxies International Scoreboard, Mortal Kombat". Twin Galaxies. Retrieved 9/8/2013.
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(help) - "World Record Weekend event results". classicarcadegaming.com. Mark Alpiger. September 2008. Retrieved 9/8/2013.
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(help) - "Twin Galaxies International Scoreboard, Mortal Kombat". Twin Galaxies. Retrieved 9/8/2013.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "Killing Yourself to Live -Balls to the Wall With Bam Margera & His Crew". Village Voice. September 17, 2002. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- , additional text.
External links
- Brandon DiCamillo on Twitter
- Brandon DiCamillo on MySpace
- Brandon DiCamillo on Facebook
- Gnarkill on PureVolume
- Brandon DiCamillo at IMDb
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