'I do not think that that’s punk. I don’t think that’s the essence of punk,' Williams said of the frontman's comments

Paramore‘s Hayley Williams has responded to vulgar comments she says NOFX‘s Fat Mike made about her when she was just a teenager.

In reflection of Paramore’s co-headlining performance for last year’s pop-punk When We Were Young festival, Williams opened up to Billboard about the mixed feelings she had regarding her band’s return to the emo scene.

The nostalgia-based Las Vegas festival was described as “an epic line-up of emo and rock bands from the past two decades,” but Williams said her memories of the emo heydays were skewed. “Everyone’s just trying to remember better days, and I’m sitting there like, ‘They weren’t that much better,’” she said.

Popular on Variety

Related Stories

A wrecking ball swinging towards an old TV with a TV host on the screen VIP+

Late-Night TV vs. YouTube: Data-Driven Tips on Which Is Better for Celebs Promoting Films

Richard Gadd as Donny Dunn and Jessica Gunning as Martha Scott in "Baby Reindeer"

Judge Rules 'Baby Reindeer' Was Not a 'True Story,' Allows Real Martha to Sue Netflix

“I was really surprised that I had so much anger well up in me because I was like, ‘Wait a minute. They’re treating us like a prize now, but like, Fat Mike used to tell people that I gave good rim jobs onstage when I was 19 years old,'” she said.

“I do not think that that’s punk. I don’t think that’s the essence of punk,” she continued. “And I feel strongly that without young women, people of color and also the queer community, I just think we would still be where we were then.”

This was a sentiment Williams also voiced onstage at When We Were Young, telling the crowd: “When Paramore came onto the scene, roughly around 2005, the scene was not always a safe place to be if you were different — if you were a young woman, if you were a person of color, if you were queer — and that’s really fucked up if you think about it. I’ve had my fill of letting older people — especially older men — tell me what punk rock is and tell me what punk rock is not. Just today, there was a crusty old fuck on the internet saying that punk was supposed to be anti-establishment. Well it is. And actually, I can think of nothing more anti-establishment than young women, than people of color and the queer community.”

A representative for Fat Mike did not immediately respond to Variety‘s request for comment.

Read More About:

Jump to Comments

More from Variety

Most Popular

Must Read

Sign Up for Variety Newsletters

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Variety Confidential

ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN%2FjqasrKGTZLumw9Jon5qxnJrGbsPIpaOimZ2oeq%2B7xbFkn5mkYrqqt8Rmm56qn5yutbvRsmScp52isq%2FA0mZoa2tlaYZ6gpdrZg%3D%3D