How does it feel to be back with Blink-182?
It’s awesome. It’s kind of tripping me out a little bit. I’m completely blown away by the size and the enormity of this tour. We’re doing 30,000 people in multiple cities; it’s insane. Blink-182 really captured a crucial period in a lot of fans’ lives. You’re going to have fans in their late ’20s at the shows that were super into you in high school. Does that trip you out? Yeah, it does. Maybe they’re bringing younger brothers or something too—packing it down. It’s not like the band has been on the radio and really present over the past few years [Laughs]. I think it’s going to be amazing, and I hope the fans get what they’re looking for. I will be there to see if we’re good too [Laughs]. What do you plan on giving them? I think it’s going to be the most amount of rock production that you can do with the most amount of bad words mixed together in a beautiful soup. So George Carlin meets Iron Maiden? Yes! That’s a really, really great way to look at it [Laughs]. I think so. What sparked