NEW YORK, NY — What began as one of the most talked-about performances of the MTV Video Music Awards quickly turned into a full-scale rock-and-roll controversy that’s now sending shockwaves through the industry.
During Sunday night’s ceremony at Madison Square Garden, Aerosmith legends Steven Tyler and Joe Perry took the stage alongside British rocker Yungblud to deliver a roaring, theatrical tribute to Ozzy Osbourne — a performance meant to honor the Prince of Darkness’s decades-long legacy.
But while the crowd inside the arena went wild, not everyone watching from home was impressed. In fact, one fellow rocker’s reaction just reignited old rivalries that many thought were buried decades ago.
The Instagram Post That Lit the Fuse
Hours after the performance aired, Dan Hawkins, lead guitarist of the British glam-rock band The Darkness, took to Instagram to post a short clip of the moment Tyler, Perry, and Yungblud shared the stage — along with a scathing caption that read simply:
“What a bunch of idiots.”
The tone was unmistakably mocking. Hawkins didn’t elaborate, but fans didn’t need him to — the post spoke volumes. Within minutes, it went viral. Comment sections exploded with divided opinions, from those agreeing with Hawkins’ “authentic rock” stance to others blasting him for “disrespecting legends.”
One user wrote,
“Imagine calling Steven Tyler an idiot. The man basically wrote the book on rock performance.”
Another fired back,
“He’s not wrong. That VMA show looked more like a circus than a tribute.”
By sunrise, #DanVsTyler and #OzzyTributeDrama were trending across X (formerly Twitter).
The Performance That Sparked It All
The MTV VMA tribute had been teased for weeks — billed as “a one-night celebration of heavy metal’s enduring soul.” Tyler and Perry opened with a fiery rendition of “Crazy Train,” joined mid-song by Yungblud, whose punk-pop energy sent the crowd into a frenzy.
It was a loud, unapologetically theatrical set — pyrotechnics, smoke, and a massive holographic image of Ozzy flashing across the stage as the trio roared through the final chorus. Tyler, wearing a silver jacket and his signature scarves, closed the song by shouting,
“For the Prince himself — the one and only Ozzy!”
Fans in the arena erupted in cheers. Online, however, reactions were mixed. Some praised the spectacle as “a rock opera masterpiece.” Others — like Hawkins — saw it as “overproduced, self-indulgent, and tone-deaf to what made Ozzy iconic.”
The Fallout — and the Fans’ Reaction
Within 12 hours, Hawkins’ Instagram post had amassed over 400,000 likes and tens of thousands of comments. Musicians began weighing in. Motley Crüe bassist Nikki Sixx called it “a weird hill to die on.” Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash commented a simple eye-roll emoji — which fans immediately interpreted as taking Tyler’s side.
Meanwhile, The Darkness’ official X account posted nothing, fueling speculation that the band’s PR team was scrambling behind the scenes to control the backlash.
Music journalists couldn’t resist diving in. Rolling Stone called it “the most unexpected feud of the year,” while Billboard ran with the headline, “Dan Hawkins Picks a Fight with Rock Royalty.”
Even Ozzy himself entered the conversation — posting a cryptic laughing emoji under a meme showing Tyler and Hawkins in a boxing ring.
Steven Tyler Breaks His Silence
For nearly a full day, Steven Tyler stayed quiet — letting speculation swirl. But on Monday evening, he finally responded with what many are calling one of the coldest, most calculated rebuttals in recent rock history.
Posting a black-and-white photo of himself performing at the VMAs, Tyler wrote:
“I’ve been called a lot of things in 50 years — loud, wild, crazy. But never silent.
When you spend your life on stage, you learn that some people make noise, and some people make music. I’ll stick with the latter.”
No names. No hashtags. Just precision.
Within minutes, the post racked up over two million likes. Celebrities flooded the comments with support — from Jon Bon Jovi (“Class act as always”) to Lenny Kravitz (“Facts. Nothing more to say.”).
Even Yungblud, who had been uncharacteristically quiet, chimed in hours later:
“Some legends talk with their guitars. Others talk because they don’t have one.”
It was, as fans put it, a “mic drop heard around the world.”
Industry Divided — Respect or Rebellion?
The feud has since reignited an old debate in the rock world — one that’s been simmering since the early 2000s: authenticity vs. evolution.
Hawkins, known for his purist views on traditional rock, has long criticized modern performers for what he sees as “style over substance.” In past interviews, he’s blasted artists for “turning rock into theater.”
Tyler, on the other hand, has always embraced spectacle — blending fashion, energy, and showmanship to elevate rock beyond sound into something visual, emotional, and unforgettable.
Music critic Mariah Jones summed it up best in Variety:
“Dan Hawkins represents the camp that thinks rock should be raw and unpolished. Steven Tyler represents the belief that rock should evolve or die. The VMAs performance was more than a tribute — it was a statement. And now, it’s a battlefield.”
The Darkness Responds — or Tries To
After a day of silence, The Darkness finally issued a short statement to NME:
“Dan’s comment was taken out of context. He respects Steven Tyler immensely. The remark referred to the production choices, not the performers themselves.”
But the damage was done. Screenshots of Hawkins’ original caption — “What a bunch of idiots” — continued to circulate across social media.
One fan wrote:
“You can’t call Aerosmith idiots and then say you meant it respectfully.”
Another added:
“This isn’t 2003 anymore, Dan. The internet doesn’t forget.”
The Rock World Reacts
As the debate raged on, major rock radio stations began replaying Aerosmith classics, while morning talk shows invited commentators to weigh in on “the feud nobody saw coming.”
At a charity event in Los Angeles, Gene Simmons of KISS weighed in dryly:
“If you’re gonna throw stones in rock and roll, make sure your guitar solos are better than Steven Tyler’s screams.”
Meanwhile, Ozzy Osbourne himself released a brief statement through his management:
“I thought the performance was brilliant. If you can make rock ’n’ roll this loud in 2025, you’re doing something right.”
A Feud That Might Not End Soon
Insiders say Tyler has no plans to further comment — but those close to him say he was “deeply unimpressed” by Hawkins’ jab.
A longtime friend told People:

“Steven’s not angry — he’s amused. He’s been insulted by people a lot bigger than Dan Hawkins. He just finds it ironic that anyone in rock would call passion stupid.”
Yungblud, however, may not be as restrained. The young rocker reportedly hinted in an Instagram Live that he’s considering releasing a song “inspired by the hypocrisy of old-school rock elitists.”
If that’s true, the feud could soon move from social media to the stage.
The Final Note
As one fan wrote on Reddit,
“Dan Hawkins threw shade. Steven Tyler threw lightning.”
It’s the kind of generational clash rock was built on — raw pride, artistic ego, and the eternal question: What does it mean to be a real rock star?
For now, one thing is clear:
The Darkness might have lit the match, but Steven Tyler just burned the house down.