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Mark Hoppus says that Blink-182 and Green Day rivalry during their 2002 Pop Disaster tour made them a better band. Hoppus ...
The band’s singer and bassist recounts his personal struggles and the dramatic ins and outs of the trio’s history in a new memoir, “Fahrenheit-182.” Credit... Supported by By Mark Yarm ...
It was September 2021 and Mark Hoppus had just completed six months of aggressive chemotherapy. Blink-182 had re-formed and the stars had aligned for Hoppus, guitarist Tom DeLonge — who had left ...
Blink-182 rocker Mark Hoppus struggled a great deal when the band first broke up. After more than 10 years as a group, guitarist Tom DeLonge announced his exit in 2005 — leaving Hoppus adrift ...
Blink-182 bassist Mark Hoppus admits that his band’s rivalry with Green Day was “very strange.” In “Fahrenheit-182,” the ...
In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE, Hoppus also reveals Blink-182's plans to make a new record ... Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty For decades, Mark Hoppus had been told that he should write a memoir.
"It was this back-and-forth about who could put on the better show and who could win people over," Hoppus explained.
Mark Hoppus has revealed how his accidental cancer announcement was a blessing in disguise. The Blink-182 frontman had been undergoing chemotherapy for three months for aggressive form of blood ...
and “The Rock Show,” Blink-182 has been creating iconic cultural moments for more than 30 years. Now, bassist, singer and founding member Mark Hoppus is telling his true punk rock story in a ...
Blink-182's Mark Hoppus has explained why he's spent the greater part of his life playing punk rock. “A total sense of community,” he tells writer Alexis Petridis. “I didn’t belong to any ...
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