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Mark Hoppus Reflects on Blink-182 vs. Green Day Rivalry During 2002 Tour

"It was this back-and-forth about who could put on the better show and who could win people over," Hoppus explained.

Mark Hoppus of Blink-182 performs onstage during Lollapalooza at Grant Park on August 4, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.

Mark Hoppus of Blink-182 performs onstage during Lollapalooza at Grant Park on August 4, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.

Natasha Moustache/Getty Images

Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus opened up about the simmering tension between his band and Green Day during the iconic 2002 Pop Disaster Tour, describing it as a “musical battle” that helped sharpen Blink’s edge at a pivotal time in their rise.

The tour, which paired pop-punk’s elder statesmen with its ascendant newcomers, saw Blink-182 closing each night, despite Green Day being the band Hoppus idolized growing up.


“I literally waited for the day that Dookie came out,” he recalled in a recent interview with NME. “I was in line waiting to buy it.”

By 2002, Blink-182 were riding high off the back of their No. 1 album Take Off Your Pants and Jacket, while Green Day were in a quieter commercial moment between 2000’s Warning and their eventual resurgence with 2004’s American Idiot. That dynamic sparked what Hoppus described as an unspoken competition onstage.

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“We walked in thinking we were hot sh–,” Hoppus said. “And Green Day walked in ready to fight — musically of course. They blew us off the stage the first few nights and we were like, ‘Oh s–t, we have to up our game.’ It definitely made us a better band.”

Though he emphasized there was no personal beef — “Billie was super nice to us” — the nightly battle for crowd dominance created a performance arms race.

“It was this back-and-forth about who could put on the better show and who could win people over,” Hoppus explained. “I think I inspired them so much they were like, ‘We have to kill Blink-182 with an awesome album called American Idiot.’”

The story is one of many anecdotes included in Hoppus’ newly released memoir Fahrenheit-182, in which the bassist and vocalist reflects on his cancer diagnosis, pop culture moments, and his decades-long music career.

Blink-182 are currently preparing to hit the road again with Alkaline Trio this fall, with their U.S. tour kicking off Aug. 28 in Hollywood, Fla.

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This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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