Fahrenheit-182 isn’t your typical rockstar memoir—it’s a loud, raw, and unexpectedly heartfelt dive into the life of Mark Hoppus of Blink-182, told with biting honesty and the kind of humor that only comes from someone who's seen it all and lived to laugh about it. From garage band dreams to global stardom, cancer scares to emotional spirals, this book is a front-row seat to the chaos, comedy, and courage behind the guy who helped soundtrack a generation.
If you’ve ever wondered what really happens behind the scenes of fame, this book doesn’t sugarcoat it. There are no PR filters here—just awkward teenage years, terrible haircuts, record deals, broken friendships, screaming fans, and a brutal cancer diagnosis that flipped everything upside down. Through every chapter, Mark’s voice cuts through like a familiar song: sarcastic, self-deprecating, painfully honest, and always somehow hopeful.
This memoir is more than just a story about music. It’s about survival—mental, emotional, physical—and finding meaning in the mess. It’s about the weird way life makes you laugh when you’re supposed to cry, and how sometimes the punchline is what saves you. Whether you’ve followed Blink-182 since their early days or you’ve faced your own version of rock bottom, there’s something here that hits home.
For fans, misfits, survivors, and anyone still trying to figure life out—Fahrenheit-182 is your next must-read. It's bold. It's brutally real. And just like the band, it doesn’t hold back.