Bowling For Soup - High School Never Ends Info
If you graduated high school in the early 2000s, you likely had a burned CD that included three specific tracks: Stacy’s Mom , 1985 , and High School Never Ends by Bowling for Soup. While the first two were nostalgic winks to the past, the latter was a sharp, cynical jab at the future.
Watch closely, and you’ll see the janitor (the overlooked kid) becomes the CEO. The librarian (the nerd) becomes the tech support manager. The looping visual structure—people entering doors as teenagers and exiting as weary adults—suggests a purgatory of social anxiety. bowling for soup - high school never ends
Jaret Reddick has stated in multiple interviews that the song wasn’t born from a bitter place, but from a pattern of observation. "We started noticing that the mean girls in high school became the passive-aggressive office managers," Reddick once joked. "The jocks became the guys who scream at referees during their kid’s soccer games." If you graduated high school in the early
It is all three. It is the sound of a band looking at the American social contract and realizing there is no graduation. There is only a revolving door between the locker room and the boardroom. The librarian (the nerd) becomes the tech support manager
In recent years, Reddick has released acoustic versions of the song, stripping away the distorted guitars to reveal the folk-blues sadness underneath. Without the power chords, the song sounds less like a joke and more like a confession.