February 28, 2016

Album: Noise Complaint (2016)
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Songfacts®:

  • Some songwriters commemorate weddings, births, or seismic political upheavals. On this song, Koe Wetzel commemorates the night he landed in a Stephenville, Texas, jail cell.
  • "February 28, 2016" takes its title from the exact date Wetzel was arrested for public intoxication in Stephenville. At the time, he was living in the area and working at the town's baseball fields.

    That Friday evening began with a bottle of White Wolf vodka. Wetzel and friends drank for hours at a house gathering, which might have remained a forgettable blur had he not developed a craving for Taco Bell.

    Friends tried to stop him from leaving. This did not work.

    His truck was later found five blocks away, out of gas, hood popped, front doors flung open. Wetzel was discovered face down in the middle of a soccer field. The responding officer reportedly thought he was dead. Instead, he woke up in jail with no memory of how he'd arrived there.

    The song recounts the episode in vivid detail, blending bravado with self-aware humor. There's rebellion in it, certainly, but also the unmistakable tone of a man who recognizes the absurdity of his own legend.
  • A poignant footnote: the friend who later filled him in on the missing details of that evening has since passed away, giving the track an undertone of nostalgia beneath the chaos.
  • "February 28, 2016" appears as Track 9 on Noise Complaint, Wetzel's debut full-length album under his own name. (He had released Out on Parole the year before as Koe Wetzel and the Konvicts; a title that proved unintentionally prophetic.) The song is stomper: loud, loose and unapologetic.
  • The music video was filmed live at City Limits in Stephenville, the very town where the arrest occurred.
  • Over time, fans have elevated the date into an unofficial annual celebration known as "Koe Wetzel Day." Each February 28, social media fills with jokes about Taco Bell pilgrimages, public intoxication, or ambitiously attempting both. On the 10th anniversary in 2026, fellow Texans Corey Kent and Wyatt Flores paid tribute, and Wetzel reportedly even tried to have the date recognized as an official Texas state holiday. (Legislative progress on that front remains, one assumes, pending).
  • The song is certified Gold, proof that sometimes rock bottom comes with a plaque.

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