Blink-182 & Akaline Trio to rock Walmart Amphitheater
Blink-182 and special guests Alkaline Trio's Missionary Impossible 2025 tour will be at the venue on Sept. 24. Citi presale tickets began today.
General tickets will be open on Friday, April 11 at 10 a.m.
Blink-182 hit mainstream success in 1999 with the release of their third album, Enema of the State, which featured 'What's My Age Again?', 'All the Small Things' and 'Adam's Song.' The band's latest albums, 'One More Time…' and 'One More Time… Part-2', were released on Oct. 20, 2023, and Sept. 6, 2024, respectively.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Washington Post
3 days ago
- Washington Post
What's a spredge? The latest booming trend in book design.
The saying goes: Never judge a book by its cover. But what about the edges of its pages? Sumptuous fore-edges — sprayed a bright color, stenciled with city skylines, made to look like pointy teeth — used to be relatively rare. But in recent years, publishers have brought decorated edges to the masses. Edge-painted books are now so widespread that you can find them at Walmart. The feature has spread from romance and fantasy to horror, thrillers and even literary fiction; it's spread from works by famous authors with ravenous followings to those by debut novelists hoping to make a splash. It even has a (horrifying) portmanteau: spredges. On social media, readers show off floor-to-ceiling shelves crammed full of these books — spines facing inward, of course.


Buzz Feed
3 days ago
- Buzz Feed
23 Obsolete Items That Surprisingly Still Exist In 2025
Recently, older adults on Reddit shared some things that people think have disappeared from the face of the earth that shockingly still exist, and it completely blew my mind. Here are some things that I sincerely thought weren't around anymore that inexplicably are: "Phone books. I saw one in a small community bank, and I asked how old it was. The receptionist said it just arrived." —Texanakin_Shywalker "It's still possible to buy a new typewriter. The mechanical sort that doesn't require electricity." "AOL." —lmgreene48"I still have my AOL email address from when I was 14!"—oldfatcranky1 "I still have a map in my car. Some places in my state, it's still hard to get a signal, and I don't want to be stuck." "Cowboys. I live in rural Idaho. I mentioned on a social media platform that electric vehicles would not be feasible for our rural cowboys and farmers due to being so remote. Someone replied and told me there are no more cowboys, so stop lying. Trust me, we still have cowboys, and some go months without seeing other people." —shaynna9"My husband's cousin has been a photographer and cowboy his whole life. He goes on cattle drives, works ranches, etc."—oingapogo "I saw disposable cameras just about two days ago when cutting through the electronics section at Walmart. I was kind of surprised they still made them. I don't even know where you'd get them developed anymore because Walmart no longer even has a photo counter. Maybe Walgreens or something? Or are we back to the days of mailing it off and waiting two weeks like it's 1987 again, lol." "I have a Rolodex. I bought it on Amazon, of all places. Having experienced computer crashes and broken phones, I realized I still need a hard copy of people's addresses and phone numbers. I've had address books with pages representing a given letter of the alphabet, but people move and change numbers, and as my nieces have gotten married, they've even changed names. It makes more sense to have cards on a spindle that you can pull off and put back on again. If someone's information changes, you can fill out a new card for them. If you make a new friend named Smith, you can put their card between your friend named Sloan and your friend named Snell, and in that way keep everyone in alphabetical order so you know where to find them." —Eddie_Farnsworth "I deliver newspapers on the side, and when I tell people, the most common response is, 'I didn't know that was still a thing.'" "Two-dollar bills." —my_clever-name"I'm middle-aged now, but in the '80s, my parents got me one of those and made a big deal about it, saying how rare they were, how if I kept it, it would be worth a lot of money someday, and so on.I believed them because hey, they were my parents, and the internet was not yet around for me to use to I guarded that thing with my life for years until I stumbled across the fact that while two-dollar bills are rare-ish, the treasury still prints off a few million every so many years. So there had probably been tens of millions printed off since I got mine. I went out and spent it shortly after.I never have gotten around to asking my parents if they were kind of fucking with me or if they legit thought it would be worth something. I guess more the latter since they were not really joking around type of people."—non_clever_username "Magnetic tape and cassettes still exist and are currently being produced, albeit not in the formats common people were accustomed to. Magnetic tape is still the cheapest and longest-lasting data storage medium." "Cursive." —DirkCamacho"Yeah, you can't kill cursive. They don't teach it at my kid's school. Except they do, because now it has a mystique and kids actually beg for it. My oldest's 5th-grade teacher basically offered 'teaching cursive' as a reward to the class for good behavior. Other teachers teach it because kids insist on writing in it, and they can't read bad cursive as easily as they can read trained cursive. It's so funny. It's no longer practical, but kids genuinely like it, so it lives forever."—gg-Rooser "Pay phones still exist. They're pretty rare, though!" "It seems most people don't realize that over-the-air reception of TV channels still works. Most digital TVs have tuners, and free TV is still available." —soupcook1"And you can get a plug-in antenna and pull down even more stations, some from quite a ways away, depending on your situation and gear."—do2g "I spin wool on a spinning wheel. Whenever people see me doing so in public, they assume my spinning wheel is an antique and ask how old it is. Nope, not an antique! Made in 2016!!!" "Checks. A lot of grown adults have never even seen one. The only ones I've seen in my life were from my late grandmother. I was very surprised to learn they are regularly used in the USA." —quokkafarts "Pagers are still available and widely used in healthcare and in emergency services." "I had a coworker who scoffed at the notion of a new manual transmission car. She was surprised when I told her that my 2020 Subaru Crosstrek is a six-speed! Standard transmissions aren't going anywhere." —TheNeonCrow "Telegrams. I was talking with a Cuban immigrant, and he said that the only way he could communicate with his family back in Cuba faster than by mail was by telegram! They still exist in Cuba. Oddly, you can create your Cuban telegram online, and pay with your Google wallet." "Boeing uses floppy discs to update flight software that is crucial to safe operation of the plane." —centstwo "Carbon paper was needed before copier machines. I just saw some in a craft store." "Fax machines are still in use in some industries." —Randygilesforpres2"Medical is a big one. Just the other day, I had to fax a document for my mother-in-law. They didn't even take email. It was a big, huge medical university too, not some podunk office."—oboshoe"It's because of HIPAA (medical privacy law). Faxing is considered secure since you can't realistically do a man-in-the-middle attack on a fax line like you can on the internet. Funny how it seemed like the medical profession wasn't keeping up with technology, and now it looks like they were ahead of the curve on privacy and security."—Aggravating-Art-3374 "Dot matrix printers." And finally, "I see people all the time like, 'I wish I had my old iPod.' They still make MP3 players, with headphone jacks and ample storage and everything. Streaming services suck, so I still buy albums and load them onto my MP3 player. Then I don't have to use my phone battery for listening to music on the go." —alanaisalive Is there anything you would add to this list? Share it with us in the comments or via the anonymous form below:


CNET
5 days ago
- CNET
Walmart Deals of the Day: $111 Discount Drops the Apple Watch SE to a New Record Low
Walmart usually has a handful of decent bargains available, but today's selection is particularly enticing. The second-gen Apple Watch SE is one of the best smartwatches out there for those on a budget, and it just dropped to $138 -- a new all-time low price -- thanks to a $111 discount. Plus, you can score $250 off a massive 75-inch 4K Hisense TV, and grab a rugged GoPro Hero 12 Black action camera for just $279, which saves you $90. These are some of the best offers we've seen since Walmart's summer sale ended earlier this month, but they could expire at any moment. Don't wait too long or you could miss out. The second-gen SE is already the most affordable Apple Watch on the market, and a top smartwatch of 2025. And this incredible Walmart deal drops it down to a new all-time low price. It offers essential features like fitness tracking functions, on-wrist calls and texts, crash detection and lots more. Our reviewer was a little disappointed that it lacks an always-on display, but at this price, that may be something you're willing to overlook. Just note that only the midnight color variant is available at this price. When it comes to buying a new TV, our expert's advice is that bigger is usually better. That makes this 75-inch Hisense an excellent option for most living rooms, especially now that you can snag it for 35% off. It boasts 4K resolution, as well as Dolby Vision, HDR and HDR10 support for crisp visuals and rich, vibrant colors. Plus, DTS Studio Sound provides immersive audio, and it's compatible with both Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa for serious convenience. If you have some serious adventures planned for the summer, you'll want a camera that can capture all the action. This compact and rugged GoPro is a generation old, but it can still handle just about anything you throw at it. Plus, it's a great value now that you can grab it for over $100 less than the latest model. It captures stunning 5.3K videos, as well as 27MP still photos, and it even supports 240 fps slo-mo for truly cinematic shots. The device can record for up to 2.5 hours per charge, and it's waterproof up to 10 meters.