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Festival of the Year Riot Fest Celebrated a Monumental Milestone the Only Way It Knows How

December 23, 2025 | 8:00am ET

Consequence's 2025 Annual Report highlights this year's Riot Fest as our Festival of the Year. If you haven't already, you can check out the Best Albums, Best Songs, Best TV Shows, and Best Films of the Year, and check out all our lists and interviews.


It's easy to overlook the miracle work it takes to put on a successful festival -- let alone a truly great one. In a space crowded with hundreds of yearly offerings — ranging from massive, influencer-infested four-day weekends to niche, localized gatherings; from genuine destination draws to whatever the hell Billy McFarland's latest scheme is — the true challenge of nailing logistics, community, and music to pull off these large-scale events is lost in the vast sea of multi-phased lineup announcements and RFID wristbands.

Now with 20-plus years now under their belt, Riot Fest understands the monumental challenge of not only pulling together one weekend of punky fun, but building something that lasts for decades on end. While the 2025 incarnation has earned the honor of being Consequence's Festival of the Year, Riot Fest founder Mike Petryshyn (aka Riot Mike) doesn't take the event's continued success for granted -- because he knows they haven't done it alone.

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"The fans make Riot Fest what it is. The fans haven't stopped fighting for Riot Fest, so neither have I," Petryshyn tells Consequence. "That longevity comes from the fans who believed in it and stuck with us."

riot fest 2025 festival of the year green day

This September, Riot Fest celebrated its 20th anniversary with a characteristically strong lineup and its signature brand of irreverent, self-deprecating humor. But underneath memorable sets from folks like Green Day, Jack White, and IDLES, as well as the cheeky chants of "RIOT FEST SUCKS," is an earnest, humble sentiment.

"Reaching 20 years feels less like a milestone we planned for and more like something we’re incredibly grateful to have earned together," Petryshyn says.

Now a staple of American music festivals, Riot Fest's path to its 2025 anniversary bash was long and winding. When it kicked off in 2005, it was in much different form than today's attendees are familiar with. Rather, it was a collection of connected shows in small rooms, clubs, and basements. "It was DIY in the most literal way," Petryshyn explains. "Calling friends, booking bands we loved, wheat posting, handing out flyers, hoping enough people showed up so we could do it again. It was community-first, not scale-first."

But throw quality shows for long enough, and that scale will inevitably come. In 2012, Riot Fest had gotten big enough to move to a centralized outdoor venue, ultimately landing in Douglass Park in 2015. Despite outside forces nearly precipitating a move from the beloved site, it's been held there ever since.

All of which is just a snapshot of Riot Fest's expansive history, though it serves as important context for what made the 2025 edition feel so special. For its platinum anniversary, the crew looked beyond merely throwing another solid weekend of quality tunes in Douglass Park. Instead, they folded Riot Fest's past back into its present and, as a result, showcased why it may very well last for another two decades -- or, with any luck, many more.

For one, longtime attendees likely noticed some familiar names on the flyer. Acts like The Effigies, Alkaline Trio, Smoking Popes, Bad Religion, and others were ripped straight from the previous Riot Fests, performing alongside punk and indie-rock newcomers (Militarie Gun, Weakened Friends, Consequence Rookie of the Year Lambrini Girls) and the towering headlining acts (Blink-182, Weezer) alike.

Then, there's the Uncle Jessie-sized elephant in the room -- the payoff of a gag 12 years in the making.

For context, back in 2013, Riot Fest had claimed they had unsuccessfully attempted to reunite Jesse & The Rippers, the fictional band from Full House. What followed was a tongue-in-cheek, mainly one-sided, decade-plus-long beef between the festival and the titular Jessie, aka John Stamos. Perhaps on the cusp of a quarter-life crisis, the festival spent much of 2025 burying the buttery hatchet.

riot fest 2025 festival of the year john stamos

This included booking The Beach Boys, for which Stamos serves as the touring drummer, and meeting his wonderfully absurd list of demands (including but not limited to stocking his green room with a Gibson guitar case filled with hummus, a foot rub from "Riot Fest Twitter Person," and Petryshyn gracing his body with a John Stamos tattoo).

riot fest 2025 festival of the year john stamos

Stamos' presence was inescapable throughout the September weekend, from the larger-than-life butter statue to his surprise appearance during Hanson's mid-day set. Still, Uncle Jessie had to notably share the spotlight with another icon with great hair: one Mr. "Weird Al" Yankovich.

While Yankovich might not have as storied a history with Riot Fest, his mark on the 20th anniversary bash was no less fantastic. Taking the event's longstanding irreverent energy to the max, the parody star transformed the side stage on Friday into his own Weird World Stage. Prior to his own headlining set, the stage housed similarly silly acts like Mac Sabbath, Puddles Pity Party, and (for good measure) Sparks. As the day went on, Yankovich's area of Douglass Park began to fill more and more with "Weird Al" lookalikes and, by the end of the night, had one of the largest, most engaged audiences any non-main-stage-headliner commanded all weekend.

Beyond the celebrity-led spectacles, Riot Fest 2025 also offered its usual fanfare: live wrestling, local pop-ups, an arcade, and the full-on carnival that is Riotland. It even drew national (MAGA-led) attention thanks to GWAR's... onstage antics with Elon Musk and Donald Trump.

riot fest 2025 festival of the year weird al yankovic

This year's greatest strength, though, was more subtle. In fact, it's the same strength that's kept the event thriving for as long as it has. Simply put, the experience of watching killer programming with thousands upon thousands of other like-minded punks. For all of the extra bits of fun they've adopted over the years as they've grown, the core appeal of Riot Fest remains consistent: good music and good people.

riot fest 2025 festival of the year weird al yankovic

"IDLES and Jack White were both brilliant," Petryshyn says, recalling some of his personal favorite performances from 2025. "Those were the kinds of sets that cut through everything else and reminded me why we keep doing this."

It's putting your arms around strangers while one of your favorite bands plays one of your favorite records front to back. It's seeing a reunion you never thought possible right after being blown away by a set from a band you've never heard of. It's celebrating the DIY, community-interested energy no matter how big Riot Fest gets.

"Twenty years is a long time, and getting to 40 years is almost twice as hard," Petryshyn reflects. "That can never be taken for granted. To be able to pass that generationally is our job."

Ask us, and we're raising a Riot Pop to as many Riot Fests as the rock gods are willing to grace us with. That includes next year's event, which is already set for September 18th-20th, 2026.

Oh, and in case you were wondering how Petryshyn's John Stamos tattoo is looking, here's his response: "Which one?"

Photos by Sophia Castro, Anthony Linh Nguyen, and Jason Pendleton
Design by Ben Kaye and Kat Lee Hornstein
Editing by Ben Kaye