Some old Green Day lore has resurfaced nearly two decades later, with Linda Perry finally addressing the rumor that she was slated to produce the follow-up to the band’s blockbuster 2004 record, American Idiot.
In a new interview with NME, Perry confirmed that she was set to helm the album: She cleared her calendar and even met with frontman Billie Joe Armstrong to discuss the project. But the band abruptly backed out after news of her involvement leaked and Green Day’s fans got upset, ostensibly over Perry’s work with more pop-leaning acts.
“Suddenly they started getting backlash from their fans, upset they were ‘bringing in Linda Perry, who produced Pink and Christina Aguilera,’” Perry said. “And then those guys just stopped calling me. I would reach out to figure out what was going on. Nobody called. I lost six months of scheduled work. That was fucked-up — all because Billie Joe’s a little pussy and got all this backlash from his fans and didn’t like it.”
The source of this leak was, famously, Courtney Love, whose debut solo album, America’s Sweetheart, Perry worked on. In a 2007 interview with the BBC, Love claimed that Perry “got the Green Day record” thanks to their work together, then quipped, “That’s a scoop — I just gave that away with my big mouth.”
At the time, Green Day’s management appeared to promptly shoot down the rumor, issuing a denial to the popular fan blog and forum, the Green Day Authority. Here in 2026, a rep for Green Day did not immediately return Rolling Stone’s request for comment.
“It happened because I was a woman and I’d written pop songs,” Perry said of the debacle. “I was disappointed in those guys, and then I was mad at Courtney because if she would have just shut up, we would have made the record, and it would have come out and it would have spoken for itself. I had a vision and knew I was going to kill that record.”
Perry teased that vision, claiming she was surprised to learn that Green Day didn’t record their albums as a band, but each member came in and cut their part separately. “I suggested they set up in a little circle, and they should go ‘60s, and I put a playlist together. Love [the Sixties rock band] was one of the inspirations on there.” (Perry noted that Green Day went on to make a Sixties-style record a few years later: 2008’s Stop Drop and Roll!!!, released as the Foxboro Hot Tubs.)
Ultimately, Perry insisted she was “good with” how things shook out, but still called the band’s alleged treatment of her “harsh and rude.” She continued: “Just call me and say, ‘Hey, we’re going to go a different way. I’m not digging this backlash we’re getting’. Just balls-up, man. Not returning my calls was such a pussy move, and I lost a lot of respect for Billie Joe.”
