Two random things here:
1) Rolling Stone has a feature about twenty one pilots and there's this part in the interview with drummer Josh Dun:
"Things were even stricter at the Dun household. Video games and most rock or hip-hop albums were banned. "I'd hide albums like Green Day's Dookie under my bed," Dun says. "Sometimes they'd find them and get real mad. They'd find a Christian alternative, like Relient K, and make me listen to that." http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/twenty-one-pilots-inside-the-biggest-new-band-of-the-past-year-20160114?page=2
2) The Beck Center for the Arts which is located in Lakewood, OH (where I live) put on a performance of American Idiot in 2015. I received a letter in the mail that thanked me for attending the Beck Center this past year that read:
"Than you for visiting us this summer to see Green Day's American Idiot! It was a thrilling and challenging show to produce but drew both subscribers and new audience members, like you, to Beck Center"
"Green Day's American Idiot attracted our greatest number of new attendees to a Beck Center performace ever (883 to be exact) - thank you for being a part of that!"