Ok…I’m not really THAT cool and this probably isn’t your dream job, however, I am hiring an assistant to start in January. Your first day would be MONDAY JANUARY 4TH, 2010. How exciting right? Please read ALL INFO below before e-mailing me.
JOB DESCRIPTION
Your job would be simply being my assistant, which might not be too simple. You would call people for me, keep me organized, help me plan events and parties, go to shows and events with me, and get a solid understanding of the ups and downs and ins and outs of the music industry. You would be helping me with my marketing, music management, festivals, everything. You would be MY assistant and you would have a blast, I promise.
JOB HOURS
Monday: 1PM - 6PM
Tuesday: 1PM - 6PM
Wednesday: 1PM - 6PM
Thursday: OFF
Friday: 1PM - 6PM
Total hours: 20 hours/week
JOB LOCATION
Dallas, TX 75229
JOB PERKS
+ Free concert Tickets
+ Company Events
+ Free Lunch (sometimes)
+ Meet Bands
+ Free Stuff From Sponsors (Fuze, Vitamin Water, and more)
+ Learn All the “Ins and Outs” of the Industry
+ Other Cool Stuff…
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED PLEASE EMAIL MIKEZIEMER@GMAIL.COM with you resume, any job experience, why you want the job, etc. No experience necessary so if you’ve never had a job, don’t let that deter you.
I was reading the latest issue of Inc. Magazine and stumbled upon an article about Twitter. What a surprise right? Seems like EVERYONE is talking about Twitter these days.
Anyways, the article is titled “Four ways to make a fool of yourself” and I completely agree with this even though I’ve been guilty of doing a few of them.
1. Airing private grievances in public
No one really cares that you hate someone, broke up with someone, had sex with someone, etc. You’re probably going to be “unfollowed” for posting too much of that nonsense.
2. Diss your customers
You have to watch what you say. Me for example, I cannot diss bands or the kids that go to shows, why offend the audience that built the platform you’re speaking from?
3. Screw up the etiquette
The way you post tweets is either normal or over the top. All capitols, yelling at people, spamming, any abuse of “proper” Twitter etiquette will get you blacklisted.
4. Get too personal
This is the one I’m most guilty of. You are posting to a large public platform of people who are likely more interested in your business, your advice, your tips, etc. than the fact that you’re showering, wasted, giving birth, whatever it is. Know your audience and post what they want to see!
Hope this helps!
I will be giving away a pair of tickets to UNSILENT NIGHT 3 tonight to a lucky winner.
Here’s how you can win!
1. YOU MUST BE FOLLOWING ME ON TWITTER (@MIKEZIEMER)
2. YOU MUST POST THIS TWEET “Tickets for #UnsilentNight3 are onsale now! Purchase them here: http://bit.ly/2ppswF or follow @UNSILENTNIGHT & @MIKEZIEMER to win!!”
More information on UNSILENT NIGHT…
UNSILENT NIGHT 3
Third String Productions and MetroPCS present the third annual UNSILENT NIGHT music festival coming to Dr Pepper Arena on December 27th. The event features two stages with notable acts such as A Day To Remember, Senses Fail, Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, Breathe Carolina, Oh Sleeper, The Secret Handshake, as well as support acts: Analog Rebellion (formerly PlayRadioPlay!), I Set My Friends on Fire, In Fear And Faith, Of Mice and Men, Stephen Jerzak, The Ready Set, The Summer Set, Disco Curtis, School Boy Humor, Amely, Everyone Dies In Utah, and Head Over Hills.
Tickets for this event are $27.50 in advance.
Suites are available for your groups of up to 14, however they will go fast so contact us as soon as possible.
More information can be found at www.thirdstringproductions.com









My good friend Colby Domino sent me an e-mail today. It was a very well thought out message written about the downfall of the music scene from the eyes of a kid that grew up on the same bands I did. I often wonder the same things he does. Like honestly, bands like The Rolling Stones, Beatles, even “newer” bands such as Nirvana and a few others will have their music live on forever, but will bands like All Time Low, Forever The Sickest Kids, and other bands making it on the radio today actually still be played in 10 years? I love these bands, but they ARE NOT the kind of bands people are likely going to listen to in 10 years on the radio or tell their kids about. His blog is below. It’s long, but worth reading…
“Sometimes I wonder if every generation just thinks the music they grew up with is the best, or if what’s popular with young teens today really does absolutely suck. It amazes me how much has changed since I first fell in love with music. I’m not even 20, but the difference between what was getting kids into music when I was 13 and the shitstorm of synth/dance/crunkcore bullshit that kids are getting into now is just baffling.
The very end of the 90’s and first few years of the new millennium saw a wave of goofy, energetic, and often heartbroken suburban kids who didn’t know how to play their instruments (and didn’t try to pretend they did) break into popular music. Kids of all ages (I was about 10 when I discovered Blink182) could relate to the fist-pumping, heart-on-your-tiny-sleeve lyrical content, or at the very least the catchy melodies and twangy guitar lines. Baggy shorts, baby-sized tees, and striped tube socks became badges that connoted membership to a movement that was always seeking new members. No elitism, no self-destructive stigmas, no bullshit. Just catchy music, positive energy, and community.
That’s all dead and nothing can ever bring it back. Pop-punk posterboys New Found Glory, a band that I will praise until the day I die, is now the most tell-tale example of why the genre they helped thrust into the mainstream will never influence impressionable and desperate young teenagers ever again. New Found Glory
Ten years ago yesterday (10/20), NFG released their debut full-length Nothing Gold Can Stay on Drive-Thru records, a label that played a huge role in shaping my early music taste but has since gone to shit trying to adhere to the ever-changing (in the worst possible way) “underground” rock scene. NGCS is raw, unpolished, and downright immature, but in a way that foreshadowed an immense amount of maturity-via-immaturity to come from this promising group of five dudes from Coral Springs, FL. Alternative Pressnamed it one of 1999’s influential albums. AP writer Brendan Manley writes foreshowingly, “Like it’s title implies, Nothing Gold Can Stay is the sonic transcript of a glorious, fleeting time for NFG – and for pop-punk. But just as gold never loses its luster, it’s only fitting that 10 years later, Nothing Gold Can Stay still shines.” NFG released their self-titled album in 2000 and Sticks and Stones in 2002. Both became landmark albums in the pop-punk scene. To this day, I can put on Sticks and Stones in my car at any given time and be able to belt out the words to “My Friends Over You” with absolutely anyone who happens to be sitting shotgun at the time.
In 2004, NFG released Catalyst, an angrier, more explorational follow-up to Sticks and Stones. The album saw the band fidgeting and veering slightly off the pop-punk path. It seemed as though, if only for a brief moment, they were tired of wearing the pop-punk tag and shed their old skin. This was the same year that Blink182 released their dramatically polarizing, relatively experimental untitled album. The fact that the album was fantastic and just what maturing Blink fans needed (whether they let themselves know it or not) is beside the point; 2004 watched two of pop-punk’s most monumental figureheads slide away from their signature sounds that propelled a movement. This wouldn’t have been a bad thing had the music scene remembered to take its ADD meds. Unfortunately, it didn’t.
The band rediscovered and even embellished its sunny energy on the tragically underrated Coming Home in 2006. The album was decidedly happy and carried nothing but uplifting messages throughout. NFG’s guitarist and de-facto leader Chad Gilbert said the songs came out that way because he and lead singer Jordan Pundik were both engaged and everyone in the band was comfortable and happy, for the most part. The album didn’t sell as well as expected. By 2006, kids were just not interested.
The bands that were influenced by bands like NFG were marketing a new kind of “underground” pop music (oxymoron) that twisted and mutated any aspect of pop-punk that could be sold as a gimmick. Personally (anyone who knows me knows this might stem from a personal vendetta), I blame Fall Out Boy bassist/frontman (not lead singer) Pete Wentz for getting that ball of dung rolling. In all fairness, Fall Out Boy started as a pop-punk band with decent intentions. Singer Patrick Stumps melodies are solid and catchy and Wentz’s lyrics, though they may be empty, are occasionally clever in a way that one might be able to squeeze out a few drops of meaning. But once Fall Out Boy landed heavy rotation on MTV (or at least MTV’s distant cousin who lives up in the high-200 channels and still plays music videos), Wentz began to market his face and sell his image. The music isn’t as terrible as I sometimes like to let on, but I have an awfully hard time extracting any sense of honesty from it. Wentz has a knack for knowing what’s going to be popular with early highschoolers a second or two before it happens, and he uses it to his full advantage. Pop-punk bands in the late 90’s/early 2000’s lacked this foresight, and didn’t give a fuck. They just made energetic, therapeutic music for themselves in which others happened to find similar meaning. I have trouble taking a band seriously whose least talented member is placed smack-dab in the middle of t-shirts and promo shots simply because he is the best looking.
Furthermore, the sense of innocence and revered youth is gone from pop-punk entirely. Popular motifs like sex, drugs, and alcohol replaced heartbreak, (reasonable) teenage rebellion, and fuck you ex-girlfriend. Some examples of song titles from one of the most popular pop-punk bands of today are “Damned if I Do Ya (Damned if I Don’t)” and “Holly (Would You Turn Me On?).” Both songs are by All Time Low, whose name came from the NFG song “Head On Collision” off Sticks and Stones. I don’t want to sound like a dad and say today’s music is the devil, and I’m not trying to hold All Time Low responsible for bastardizing the genre (not single-handedly, anyway). In fact, they started out with the best of intentions too. But growing popularity can do awful things to a band’s integrity. If they tried to tell me they weren’t marketing toward a very specific demographic (one that happens to dictate the charts), I would call bullshit right in their faces and fight them.
Pop-punk bands used to crack the eggshell of innocence from the inside just enough to interest young teens who were starting to develop a sense of independence and identity. The bands today are outside trying to smash it with a hammer. In all seriousness though, with the shift in subject matter comes a certain stigma. Bands like Metro Station, Brokencyde, 30h3, etc. are all riding the wave of every 15-year-old girl’s fantasy (and, subsequently, every 13-year-old boy’s): jealousy, pettiness, sexual implications (that most of them don’t fully understand), dancing, drinking, ect. Instead of writing songs about what high school kids actually go through, they write about what high school kids wantto go through. And what kid in high school doesn’t want to seem older? What kid in high school isn’t curious about drinking or drugs and wouldn’t jump at the chance to indulge in them to look cooler? The scene has evolved in such a way that style, all-too-often style in which cigarettes and cheap vodka are accessories, is much more important than the music. People used to look up to the kids who got their shit together, learned how to play instruments (to some extent), wrote songs, and played shows at local VFW’s and church basements. Now all you have to do is look like you do.
It could be that true pop-punk as we knew it in 2002 has simply not existed since then. There have been bands that tried to revive it or showed some glimmer of hope; bands like Hit The Lights, who are essentially the poor man’s NFG, and Cartel, who completely blew it with their follow-up to their fantastic debut, Chroma. But even these bands are bringing to the table a different kind of pop rock, even if their intentions are similar. In reality, pop-punk is geared toward a very specific demographic and always has been. Someone who was 20 when Sticks and Stones came out probably wouldn’t have been interested. But today’s age group that would have eaten up Sticks and Stones wants nothing to do with that kind of scene. There’s no place for real pop-punk in the world today. Case in point: New Found Glory’s most recent release, Not Without A Fight. The record sees the band return to their original aggressive, electric, pure pop-punk form, singing about breakups, rebounds, and listening to your friends when they tell you she had bad intentions. Not Without A Fight is no Sticks and Stones, but it would have sold like hotcakes had it been released six or seven years ago. In the opening track from which the album gets its title, Pundik sings “You can’t get rid of me that easy. No, not without a fight.” The song is about a relationship, but the undertones are just too obvious and too timely too ignore.New Found Glory has consistently written great music (perhaps giving Catalyst the benefit of the doubt) and treated their dedicated fans with nothing but the most astoundingly genuine respect and appreciation. Three days ago they played a show in Coral Springs for 100 fans in their practice space. The setlist included almost entirely old favorites, all per request from the audience. Drummer Cyrus Balooki even generously lent his drumset to a fan while he and the band played 2001 single “Dressed to Kill” and Cyrus went outside for a few minutes to cool off. In 2007, they released their second cover album, From the Screen to Your Stereo II, because they knew the fans had been asking for it for years. NFG constantly goes out of their way to make their fans happy, perhaps because they know they have one of the last remaining legions of true fans who listen to music for the right reasons.
At the end of their latest video for Not Without a Fight’s second track “Don’t Let Her Pull You Down,” a frame pops up real quick to show blood splattered on a wall spelling out “Pop-punk’s not dead.” It lives in the few bands like New Found Glory that are still making music for their dedicated 20-something fans. But sadly, once NFG’s illustrious and influential career is over, pop-punk will, in fact, be dead.”
Hello.
I’m Mike Ziemer. I have no need for a bio because you already assume you know everything about me. I will tell you why I am awesome so you can tell me why I suck. I will tell you all I have accomplished so you can discount all my hard work. I will tell you that I care about you so you can assume I say the same thing to everyone else. I think you get the point.
The facts are this though… I work hard, my close best friends are amazing, I am very caring, I listen to every band’s demo I get, and I love my life… you WILL NOT bring me down.
Love me or hate me, I’m here to stay and I have a heart of gold even if you have a heart of hate.
What’s up, What’s up?
I found a random TV today while walking my dogs.

Blink 182 - Enema Of The State Vinyl Cov

Blink 182 - Enema Of The State Vinyl
SO EXCITED FOR THIS!
All of my Twitter followers in the past have had the chance to win concert tickets and other cool stuff. They’ve always gotten the word out and increased my follower count. As I am approaching 6,000 followers, I want to do a bigger contest. Sort of a “thanks” to everyone that follows me and finds me even remotely interesting.
The contest is simple, however you have too, get me to 6,000 followers on Twitter.
If you post on Twitter, you get a point. If you post on Facebook, you get another point. If you post on MySpace, you get another point. If you post on Tumblr, you get another point. If you post on YouTube, you get 2 more points (videos aren’t easy to make).
That means you can get entered up to SIX times.
All you have to do is creatively convince your friends to follow me.
When I get to 6,000 followers I will pick a winner from all entries to receive a $100 iTunes gift card and 2 tickets to Unsilent Night. So even if you don’t care for Unsilent Night, you still have $100 to spend on your favorite iTunes movies or music.
This is not a scam. Get me to 6,000 followers and I’ll pick a winner.
Once you enter, send me links to your Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, MySpace, and/or Tumblr to show proof! Mike@mikeziemer.com
When looking at “WeFollow.com” I am listed under a few different categories. The two biggest are “promoter” and “Dallas_TX.” People follow me for many reasons: music, advice, positive thinking, business stuff, but no one wants to follow a whiney little bitch. I’m not tagged under “emo” or “whiney” or “little bitch.” I’m under things like “Dallas” “promoter” “socialmedia” and more. Except for the occasional backslides, hopefully in the positive nature, I don’t want to post about girls, break ups, and all that. I’ve got a lot of funny stories I might share for comedic relief, but it’s time to bring the professional back and do what I do best: work hard and make things happen. I’m also gonna stop entertaining haters. Hate all you want, I’m making a name for myself, I sleep okay at night, and I can look myself in the mirror.