Only two columns were authored, and both ran in the short-lived Peterbelly Magazine. In 1998 he had a short run as an advice columnist with "Life Fixin' with Mojo Nixon". In the late 1990s Nixon worked as a radio DJ in San Diego (on KGB-FM) and Cincinnati (on WEBN-FM). The game's licensed psychobilly soundtrack also features two of his songs. Hobbes, a recurring enemy in the computer game Redneck Rampage. In 1997, Nixon voiced the character of Sheriff Lester T. The 1990s also saw Nixon appear in a further five films including Super Mario Bros. The B-side to the "Debbie Gibson" song, which was also the subject of a video, was "(619) 239-KING", a follow-up to "Elvis is Everywhere" in which Nixon, responding to then-active rumors that Presley was still alive, invited the singer to call and leave a message on what was, at the time of release, a legitimate telephone number. The film starred Dennis Quaid and Winona Ryder, the latter of whom appeared in Nixon's video for " Debbie Gibson Is Pregnant with My Two-Headed Love Child". Nixon made his acting debut as drummer James Van Eaton in the 1989 Jerry Lee Lewis biographical film Great Balls of Fire!. Nixon retired from the music business in 2004, playing his last live show on March 20 of that year at the Continental Club in Austin, Texas. Before his death the two enjoyed poking fun at each other such as Country Dick saying on stage that he'd been "fucking Mojo's Mama" which led to Nixon to retort: "Country Dick can keep on fucking my mama, as long as he keeps on sucking my dick". Country Dick Montana of the Beat Farmers, who was a close friend of Nixon's, was eulogized on Nixon's 1999 album, The Real Sock Ray Blue, after his 1995 death onstage of a heart attack.
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In the mid-1990s, Nixon collaborated on albums with Jello Biafra ( Prairie Home Invasion), Dave Alvin, and members of the Beat Farmers, including Buddy "Blue" Seigal ( Live in Las Vegas by the Pleasure Barons). Also among his later work was " Tie My Pecker To My Leg," which featured lyrics about bestiality, incest, and coprophilia. These later albums included songs such as "You Can't Kill Me," " Orenthal James (Was A Mighty Bad Man)," and the controversial "Bring Me the Head of David Geffen," which was ultimately released on a B-side collection due to pressure from album distributors. In the 1990s Nixon released a handful of albums on several labels with a backup band known as the Toadliquors. Shortly after Otis was released, Enigma Records went bankrupt, which left much of Nixon's early catalog in legal limbo. (Henley himself was unfazed on July 31, 1992, at The Hole in the Wall in Austin, Texas, the former Eagle jumped onstage and performed the song with Nixon, causing Nixon to praise Henley as having "balls as big as church bells.") Later career
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On this album, Nixon continued his assault on pop culture, as in the song " Don Henley Must Die", which caused a fresh round of controversy, even to the point of Nixon's record company begging radio stations not to play it. The following year Nixon recorded a solo album on Enigma called Otis. Nixon and Roper parted ways late in 1989. Meanwhile, Nixon and Roper also lampooned contemporary American culture and social issues in songs such as "I Hate Banks," "Burn Down the Malls," and "The Amazing Bigfoot Diet." " prompted him to sever ties with the network. Nixon appeared in several promotional spots for MTV during this period, but the network's decision not to air the video for "Debbie Gibson Is Pregnant.
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Throughout the late 1980s, Nixon and Roper produced several satirical pieces lampooning contemporary celebrities, such as MTV VJ Martha Quinn, in "Stuffin' Martha's Muffin," and Rick Astley and Deborah Gibson, in " Debbie Gibson Is Pregnant with My Two-Headed Love Child". Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper were also recorded in San Francisco during these early years by producer Sylvia Massy at CD Presents for the Rat Music For Rat People compilation album. Nixon and Roper's third album, 1987's Bo-Day-Shus!!! featured the song "Elvis is Everywhere," a deification of Elvis Presley, which is probably his best known song (Nixon later declared his personal religious trinity was Presley, Foghorn Leghorn and Otis Campbell). The song "Jesus at McDonald's" from that album was the duo's first single.
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Nixon and Roper released their first album in 1985 on Enigma Records, Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper. Roper mostly provided instrumental backup to Nixon's lyrics. He paired with Skid Roper in the early 1980s in San Diego. Nixon was born in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.