{"id":1343,"date":"2025-03-12T15:27:22","date_gmt":"2025-03-12T16:27:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/pilotshopworld.com\/?p=1343"},"modified":"2025-03-13T15:00:54","modified_gmt":"2025-03-13T15:00:54","slug":"all-american-rejects-are-still-moving-along","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/pilotshopworld.com\/index.php\/2025\/03\/12\/all-american-rejects-are-still-moving-along\/","title":{"rendered":"All-American Rejects Are Still Moving Along"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Tempe, Arizona is scorching hot, and trying to hide from the sun feels impossible. <\/p>\n
Luckily, there’s a shady spot beside a few artist trailers behind Inning’s Festival’s<\/a> Right Field stage to wait for Oklahoma-raised pop-punk darlings All-American Rejects<\/a> to come chat before their set. There’s been lots of focus on nostalgia during the two-day fest that takes place during Major League Baseball’s spring training. The line-up is a who’s who of early aughts hitmakers like The Killers and Fall Out Boy. Attendees are all dressed in their favorite team’s jersey or a band tee that could be considered vintage, even though they likely bought it new.<\/p>\n In fact, the obsession with looking back starts before we even step foot on the festival grounds. The night before, All-American Rejects invites fans to Phoenix’s Carry On<\/a>, a retro plane-themed bar with seats that vibrate and flight attendants who serve cocktails as visuals of clouds play across realistic windows (later the band jokes if “you could get the staff to sign an NDA, you can really do some fun stuff in there”). <\/p>\n At one point \u2014 ignoring the seatbelt sign \u2014 front-man Tyson Ritter<\/a> stops by our seats and a guest briefs him on just how impactful the band’s first album, their self-titled 2002 release, meant to them. It’s the same sentiment you can feel and hear as they take the stage during the festival \u2014 with the crowd screaming back the words of “Move Along,” “Swing Swing,” and “Dirty Little Secret.” <\/p>\n The band \u2014 comprised of Ritter, lead guitarist and backing vocalist Nick Wheeler<\/a>, rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist Mike Kennerty<\/a>, and drummer Chris Gaylor \u2014 just started touring again last year for the first time in over a decade. Dressed in their Baseball Uniform, with the word “Rejects” <\/em>emblazoned in red and black across their chest, you’d think they’d never stopped. Sure, it’s been years and everything is different, but for one weekend in Tempe, it felt like nothing had changed. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n \nSee on Instagram<\/a>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n <\/p>\n One of the conversations we were having last night [at Carry On] was about how so many of us burned your debut album on Napster. I want to take this time to admit that … and to apologize. <\/strong><\/p>\n Tyson Ritter: <\/strong>We know how it goes, we don’t make money off records. <\/p>\n Were you aware that a lot of people were getting into your music that way?<\/strong><\/p>\n Nick Wheeler:<\/strong> I think so. I mean, senior year of highschool, which would of been around ’99 or 2000 I got Napster I was ripping music. The way young people now are finding music on Spotify, that’s how we were finding music back then. It was part of our culture. Of course, kids are gonna put us on burnt CDs. That’s what we did, so it’s an honor. Will probably find them at some point, break their legs or something. [Laughs]<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/h3>\n
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