Jesse James is done with
women. For the moment, anyway.
“I’m just single,” says the former West Coast Chopper shop owner who became
famous for marrying and then cheating on Sandra Bullock in 2010, only to get engaged and then split with tattoo artist Kat
Von D in 2011.
“Being a single dad, I don’t really have a place for it,” he says. His
life, he says, “was blown apart by a big atom bomb.” And that “made me realize what’s really important. I don’t, like, hate
women or anything, I just really honestly have been in a relationship since 1990. I need to like devote myself to my kids and
my shop and my skills and make stuff.”
Adds James, who checked into a treatment facility to deal with “personal
issues” after his split from Bullock, “It’s weird for everything that’s happened to come out better. And to feel great.
I’m healthy.”
He wouldn’t recommend people follow his path, though. “I wouldn’t suggest to anyone to go that route.
Everything happens for a reason. I learned a lot about myself.”
Such as? “Family first, work second.”
James,
42, closed his famous West Coast Choppers shop in Long Beach, Calif.,
where he had 175 employees working for him, building custom bikes and cars.
“I was spending like $300 a month on
toilet paper!” he says. So he closed the place, left town and set up The Austin Speed Shop in Texas, where he has 12
employees, plus two who work at his house garage. Although Bullock lives in Austin with baby Louis, the son she was adopting
right around the time they split, James says “no,” he never sees either of them. Instead, he’s focusing on his own three
kids (teens Chandler and Jesse Jr. with his first wife and Sunny, 8, with his second wife) their dogs (two pit bulls and a
French bulldog) and the newest addition to the family — a micro-mini pig named Bubbles.
And now the former Monster
Garage reality show star is back on Discovery with a new special, Jesse James: Outlaw Garage, airing
tonight at 10 p.m. ET/PT. In it, he challenges his crew with rebuilding a 1932 Ford roadster in 30 days, a job that would
normally take a year. He hopes that it will become a 20-episode series for Discovery.
“This is more soulful,” he says.
But he’s still showcasing a pressure-cooker situation. “On Monster Garage, I put the screw to people and made them
do impossible projects. This shop has never been tested.”
So he plans to test them in this special. “I like everything
to be drama-free, but in the heat of the battle there’s always going to be stuff happening.” He promises we’ll see how it
all really unfolds. “I’ve prided myself in 13 years in TV I’ve never faked or staged anything. If someone (screws) up,
that’s the way it is. I think the show captures a lot of that.”
Oh, and speaking of women, James says, “There’s a
couple kids in the shop girls are going to fall in love with, for sure.”