"Josie" is an ode to the perfect relationship companion. Bassist Mark Hoppus wrote the song imagining the ideal girlfriend; "It is about a common feeling that everyone can understand, which is being stoked on a girl," Hoppus told
Billboard in 1998. Though the song is fictional, it was named after a dog owned by Elyse Rogers, Hoppus namedrops the band, as well as fellow
Poway pop-punkers
Unwritten Law, in the lyric "My girlfriend likes UL and DHC". The trio recorded a
demo of the song with
Warren Fitzgerald of
the Vandals; this edition is featured in the 1996
surf film Drifting, directed by filmmaker
Taylor Steele. Its final version was recorded with producer
Mark Trombino for the band's second album,
Dude Ranch, between 1996–97. The song also alludes to Sombrero Mexican Food, a restaurant chain in San Diego, that the trio ate at frequently when recording. The group later partnered with the chain with the lyrics emblazoned on shirts. The band wrote a sequel to the song, "Online Songs", for their 2001 album
Take Off Your Pants and Jacket. The song is composed in the
key of
B major and is set in
time signature of
common time with a very fast
tempo of 200
beats per minute. Hoppus's vocal range spans from G#3 to F#4. In
Australia, the song spent eight weeks in the top 50 and 24 weeks in the top 100, where it peaked at number 31 on July 6. ==Music video==