
Call it iconic. Call it explosive. Call it a full-circle pop-punk moment — but when Billie Eilish and Hayley Williams joined forces to perform Paramore’s “Misery Business,” it was nothing short of seismic.
The surprise collaboration took place during Billie Eilish’s headlining set at Coachella — and it blew the roof off the desert. As the lights dimmed and the first notes of “Misery Business” rang out, fans erupted, unsure if they were hearing a cover or being punked by a deep-cut interlude. Then, like a vision straight out of a teenage fever dream, Hayley Williams emerged, microphone in hand, ready to burn the stage down with the very anthem she once retired.
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Billie Eilish, a lifelong Paramore fan, couldn’t hide her joy. Wearing her trademark oversized fit and black boots, she grinned ear to ear as she sang the first verse — the voice of Gen Z paying homage to one of the fiercest voices of the 2000s emo scene. When Hayley jumped in, the energy soared: two distinct generations, two powerhouse vocalists, one rebellious anthem.
Together, they traded verses, screamed choruses, and leaned into every beat with raw emotion and sisterly electricity. Hayley’s signature grit met Billie’s breathy cool in a sound clash that was thrilling, tender, and gloriously loud.

But this wasn’t just a duet. It was a moment of musical lineage — a torch-passing that wasn’t about stepping aside, but rather, joining forces in a full-blown, no-apologies celebration of women who feel too much and sing even louder.
Social media exploded. Fan edits flooded TikTok within minutes. Twitter trended worldwide under hashtags like #HayleyAndBillie and #MiseryBusinessLive. Paramore fans and Billie’s following stood united in awe — an emo-pop truce decades in the making.
What made it even more powerful? The song’s history. Hayley Williams had famously pulled “Misery Business” from live sets in recent years due to its controversial lyrics. But here, alongside Billie, she re-embraced it — not as a mistake, but as a moment. Together, they reclaimed it. Reinvented it. Owned it.

And when the final chorus crashed, and Hayley screamed that final “Whoa, I never meant to brag…”, Billie stood beside her, headbanging like she was 15 again — or maybe like she still is, deep down.
This wasn’t just nostalgia. This was resurrection. A genre reborn. A new era of punk-pop queens. And one hell of a performance.
Misery? Nah. This was pure magic.