
Jerky Boys founder reveals nutty truth about characters, plans return to big screen 30 years after film debut
He was born to be jerky.
The founder of prank-call comedy legends The Jerky Boys credited his own mom and dad for inspiring his insane characters – and now he's ready to take his career full circle.
Johnny Brennan is planning to head back to the big screen 30 years after the release of 'The Jerky Boys: The Movie,' this time playing his father Tony in a biopic tentatively titled 'Don't Hang Up' about his uncanny rise from New York wiseass to a wisecracking pop culture phenomenon in the 1990s.
5 Johnny Brennan is planning to head back to the big screen 30 years after the release of 'The Jerky Boys: The Movie.'
Matthew McDermott
'If you spoke to my father, it was just a normal guy just speaking like I'm speaking to you now,' he told The Post in a recent interview, the day after he received the script.
'But when my dad got pissed off that's when Frank Rizzo came out,' he said, then flipped the switch into the familiar voice of his foul-mouthed, short-tempered alter ego. 'And things [came out] like, 'Hey get over here, you f–king rubberneck f–k.' But he would only speak that way when he was pissed off or when it was time for one of us to get a f–king asswhooping.'
Chronically nervous Sol Rosenberg was just a riff on his mother, Gloria, while other characters were based on uncles or others he came across growing up in the 1960s and 1970s, he said. His characters had New York accents and used phrases he heard growing up like 'sizzlechest' while sprinkling in new quotes of his own like 'skid plate.'
His father and mother — who died in 2000 and 2017, respectively — didn't mind the notoriety, Brennan said, even when a Maxim magazine reporter laughed in his mother's face when she spoke and Rosenberg's voice came out.
5 Brennan went to the top of the Billboard album charts with his former partner-in-pranking Kamal Ahmed.
Getty Images
Brennan, who's now 63, told his mother it was all 'pretty extraordinary.'
'Just by me copying your voice and knowing that you were f–king hysterical, you know we were able to touch the world with these characters I've created, based on the family,' he said.
Long before Brennan went to the top of the Billboard album charts with his former partner-in-pranking Kamal Ahmed, he said he was already causing trouble in a big Irish family and a household that he describes as 'nutty as a nuthouse.'
He was the oldest of five rowdy siblings and a class clown at Mater Christi school in Astoria before his family packed up and moved upstate to a ranch house in Salisbury Hills in the 1970s.
5 Brennan will playing his father Tony in a biopic tentatively titled 'Don't Hang Up' about his uncanny rise from New York wiseass to a wisecracking pop culture phenomenon in the 1990s.
Matthew McDermott
He started recording himself and he remembers his dad once walking in on him while he taped a twisted audio skit on his reel-to-reel about his elderly neighbor getting run over by a lawnmower – screams and all.
'I say, 'Dad I'm just making some s–t. I'm making some tapes and whatnot,' he said, before unleashing the Frank Rizzo voice again. 'He goes, 'Jesus Christ, boy, you're a f–king nut.' And then he would go out and shut the door.'
By the late 1980s, the home-recorded prank calls had spread through bootleg copies of cassette tapes from his brothers to their friends – then across the country. The off-the-wall tapes had unsuspecting 'victims' on the other end trying to make sense of bizarre scenarios, including a call where Brennan-as-Rizzo tries to buy balloons to float his child around a party 'like a pinata' – though he worries the kid might float away into the sky.
The viral-before- viral comedy act was so massive that the pair hit the big screen in 1995, with a plot that involved Rizzo calling the Mafia and a cast that included Oscar-winner Alan Arkin.
5 'We had a great f–king time with that film and I think we have more of a following for that Jerky Boys movie now than ever before,' Brennan said.
Matthew McDermott
The movie wasn't a critical or commercial success, which Brennan partly blames on a massive snowstorm that hit the northeast the weekend it premiered – but fans have stuck with it over the years, he said.
'We had a great f–king time with that film and I think we have more of a following for that Jerky Boys movie now than ever before,' Brennan said.
Brennan downplayed any rift or hard feelings between him and Ahmed, despite reports in Rolling Stone and elsewhere of bad blood when he left the act in the late 1990s to pursue filmmaking. But Brennan admitted the whole game had changed when he set solo out in recent years.
'The people are not the same. First of all, nobody picks up the phone anymore… and if they do pick up the call, they're waiting to be pranked or 'is this some reality show,'' he said. 'This time I had to literally do anywhere from five to 20 calls to get a call on a subject I was going to use.'
5 Brennan's honored that after 40 years later, fans still come up to him with bizarre requests.
Matthew McDermott
But the calls really just a vehicle to get his characters out into the world, he said. New vehicles include his popular Cameo page, the planned biopic – written by Billy Narducci and produced by Wolfden films –and even a Seth McFarlane-produced documentary on The Jerky Boys, he said.
He's honored that after 40 years later, fans still come up to him with bizarre requests.
'''Hey Johnny if I call my brother can you tell him you're gonna wrap his head in with a f–king ratchet?'' he said, quoting one of his character's infamous threats.
Fans sometimes apologize for bothering him with the weird requests, but he said he never gets jerky with them.
''What do you feel bad about?,' he said. 'I created something that the people f–king love, they love that s–t, they loved it for decades.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ananda Lewis, Influential MTV Host, Dies at 52
Ananda Lewis, who had a celebrated run on MTV as a veejay and as the host of shows including Total Request Live and Hot Zone, has died at age 52. News of Lewis' death was confirmed in a Facebook post by her sister, Lakshmi Emory. In 2020, Lewis revealed that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer, saying that she had long avoided mammograms and urged early testing. More from Billboard DJ Akademiks Denies Taking Payola From Drake During Kendrick Battle Raekwon and Ghostface Killah Release Trailer for 'Only Built 4 Cuban Linx' Documentary SEVENTEEN Have a Good Time Being a 'Bad Influence' in Futuristic Video For Pharrell-Produced Single Her last post to Instagram was in February, when she wrote that 'prevention is the cure. If you're in a healthy body, you're holding a winning lotto ticket. PLEASE learn how to avoid cancer. Because you still can.' Lewis is survived by her son, Langston, who is 14. Born in Los Angeles, Lewis attended Howard University and then came to cultural prominence in the late '90s as an MTV veejay. After joining the network in 1997, she hosted programs including the countdown show Total Request Live and Hot Zone, which featured music videos and Lewis' artist interviews. The network also called upon Lewis to host specials on school violence after the 1999 Columbine shooting along with a tribute program following the 2001 death of Aaliyah. Lewis launched The Ananda Lewis Show in 2001 and later served as a correspondent on Entertainment Tonight spin-off The Insider, eventually leaving that project to pursue carpentry. Her final project was as the host of TLC's While You Were Out. On social media, fellow former MTV veejay Dave Holmes remembered Lewis writing 'Well, this is awful. Ananda Lewis has died. She was the best: friendly funny kind clever cool committed passionate patient stylish and smart. If you were working with her, you knew you'd be having fun, and you'd want to step your game up to match her effortless charisma. You couldn't, but the trying made you better. We bonded over our shared love of this song, it has reminded me of her ever since, and now it always will. All my love to her family.' Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Fat Joe & Jadakiss Host Father's Day Lunch for 70 Families Impacted by Criminal Justice System
Fat Joe and Jadakiss hosted a Father's Day luncheon at Sei Less NYC on Wednesday afternoon (June 11) for 70 fathers and their families who have been impacted by the criminal justice system. The Joe & Jada podcast co-hosts shared words of wisdom and traded stories with the families on hand while munching on an array of delectable Asian fusion dishes at the Manhattan staple. More from Billboard Fat Joe & Jadakiss Team Up to Launch New Music, Sports & Culture Podcast Jewish Groups Withdraw From 2025 San Diego Pride Festival Over Kehlani's Support For Palestine Elizabeth Hurley Gushes About Being 'In Love' in Birthday Suit Picture Amid Billy Ray Cyrus Romance After posing for photos and selfies, some of the fathers even had the chance to play their own music for the pair of New York rap veterans throughout the afternoon. 'A lot of kids grew up, parents used drugs and parents in jail and all that — the fact that I had my father, a real leader in my household, and working and always kept me focused on the right things,' Joe said of his relationship with his father. 'Kiss reflected on the importance of helping reintegrate those who were incarcerated back into productive members of society. 'Just hitting that switch to let them know that they can come back and get right due to whatever hardships they went through,' Jada said. 'There's some hope now when you come back to get readjusted. Hopefully change your financial situation.' Joe also implored fathers who have fractured relationships with their kids to reconnect. 'Reconnect with your kids because sometimes kids can get bitter their parents were away in jail,' Joe added. 'You gotta find that bond. It's always there, but you gotta find that red tape to get in sync.' He continued: 'Start now. Forget if you messed up the last 10, 20, 30 years. Start now to be a productive father and get your relationship with your kids. … On New Year's everyone want to lose weight; I think Father's Day should be an adjustment with you and your kids.' Joe and Jadakiss hosted the event in collaboration with Sei Less co-founder Dara Mirjahangiry and the REFORM Alliance, ensuring that this Father's Day these families had something to celebrate. 'Working with Fat Joe, Jadakiss and REFORM to celebrate these fathers at Sei Less was truly special,' Mirjahangiry said. 'Ahead of Father's Day, we really wanted to shine a light on these fathers who have been impacted by the criminal justice system and support their re-entry journey with compassion. It was a powerful way to bond through culture, community and cuisine.' Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart


Cosmopolitan
3 hours ago
- Cosmopolitan
These are the most popular Irish baby names for boys and girls
Naming your baby is a big deal. Seriously. Once you've locked the title in, there's no going back. Unless you're Kylie Jenner, that is. Which means new parents or parents-to-be often spend ages going back and forth on potential ideas, trying to agree on the perfect name for the newest addition to their family. These days, picking a name isn't as simple as it was when your mum, gran, or great-gran were naming their kids, either. There's less pressure to pass down titles to keep them in the family, and more of a focus on creativity. From seasonal to traditional to vintage to geographical, it's also popular to give a nod to your heritage, too. With that being said, if you're looking for the perfect Irish baby name, we've got you. Whether popular in Ireland or traditionally Irish, we scoured the data provided by the Central Statistics Office to see which names, for both boys and girls, are big hitters right now. The list of most popular baby names in Ireland is currently a mix of names with English origins, Irish origins, and Latin origins, so we've also sought out some well-known and more unique Irish names for you to browse for inspiration too. Good luck! Some Irish names can be a challenge for people to pronounce if they're unfamiliar with Gaelic (and, as we all know, there's nothing worse than having somebody butcher your, or your child's, name). So, with that in mind, we asked our good pal Brooke Scullion, a bona fide Derry girl, to lend a hand with how to correctly say some traditional Irish names (which are also listed below). Sophie Williams is a Freelance Journalist and Copywriter, covering everything from Fashion to Entertainment to music, Lifestyle and Features. She has interviewed a range of musical artists and authors including Alyssa Edwards, Courtney Barnett, Confidence Man, The Vaccines, Loyle Carner, Gabrielle, and John Niven, and has written for publications like Metro, Reader's Digest, ITV's Woo! and Vice's NBGA. She is also working on a book for HarperCollins about Taylor Swift, due to be published in 2024.