Tomorrowland Co-Founder Michiel Beers Gives Rare Interview on Mainstage Fire, SFX Buyout Attempt, and More - EDM news article
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Tomorrowland Co-Founder Michiel Beers Gives Rare Interview on Mainstage Fire, SFX Buyout Attempt, and More

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Summary of the article

For more than two decades, Tomorrowland’s elusive mastermind Michiel Beers has maintained a strict “no photos, no videos, no interviews” policy, seamlessly blending into his own festival crowds completely unrecognized. However, in a rare and deeply revealing live recording for the Dutch music podcast De Machine at the Ancienne Belgique in Brussels, Beers broke his twenty-year silence.

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For more than two decades, Tomorrowland’s elusive mastermind Michiel Beers has maintained a strict “no photos, no videos, no interviews” policy, seamlessly blen...

For more than two decades, Tomorrowland’s elusive mastermind Michiel Beers has maintained a strict “no photos, no videos, no interviews” policy, seamlessly blending into his own festival crowds completely unrecognized. However, in a rare and deeply revealing live recording for the Dutch music podcast De Machine at the Ancienne Belgique in Brussels, Beers broke his twenty-year silence. From the absolute chaos behind the infamous 2025 Mainstage fire to wild, hilarious showdowns with American billionaires, Beers laid bare the inner workings of the world’s ultimate dance music festival. Here are the biggest bombshells from the interview. The True Cause of the 2025 Mainstage Fire The tragedy that leveled the Tomorrowland Mainstage in 2025 was by far the most talked-about festival disaster of the year. Rumors flew rampant, but Beers set the record straight for the first time: the entire disaster came down to human error. Apparently, the culprit was a poorly connected special effects device dispensing ethanol for the stage’s flame throwers. “A lot of ethanol leaked onto all kinds of materials, and that caught fire,” Beers shared. “The speed with which everything was ablaze—it was hallucinatory. The steel structure completely melted and bent, and steel only melts at 1,200 degrees [Celsius]. Within 40 minutes, the entire stage was gone.”. – Michiel Beers The fire caused an estimated €30 million in damages, wiping out millions of dollars worth of custom decor, video panels, lights, lasers, and sound systems. Tomorrowland is still locked in an active legal battle to hold the responsible parties accountable. The 36-Hour Miracle and Surprising Marketing Boost Despite the total devastation, the festival pulled off the impossible. In just 36 hours, crews worked around the clock to clear the melted steel and erect a brand-new replacement stage out of the ashes. The logistical rescue required bringing in Belgium’s largest telescopic crane from the Port of Antwerp via three massive oversized flatbed trucks. The crew had to track down the only crane operator in the country capable of handling it, who was literally rushed back from a vacation in France to back the rig onto the muddy festival grounds in the middle of the night. Remarkably, the fire had a strange side effect. “It’s strange for me to say this, but it really was the best marketing ever for Tomorrowland,” Beers admitted. “To suddenly be on the news everywhere between New Zealand and Canada.” The numbers speak for themselves: registrations for ticket sales skyrocketed from 1.6 million for the 2025 edition to a staggering 3.3 million registrations for 2026. The SFX Saga During the EDM boom of the early 2010s, American entertainment magnate Bob Sillerman was on a warpath to buy up the entire electronic music sector under his company, SFX. Beers recounted a surreal, 15-minute meeting on Broadway that sealed Tomorrowland’s refusal to sell out. “We walked into a conference room with a huge glass table,” Beers laughed. “Suddenly, three old men came in arm in arm, and the one in the middle had this red hair—the kind of wig you can buy at a ski resort. He lay down in the middle of that glass table.” Sillerman, who suffered from throat cancer, spoke with a raspy, electronic voice box. Beers noted he sounded exactly like Darth Vader. His message to the brothers was brief: “You’re gonna see me twice. Today, and the day I write you a big check for your company.” The brothers walked downstairs and immediately decided they wanted nothing to do with SFX. While Sillerman eventually bought a stake in Tomorrowland indirectly by acquiring their former partner ID&T, the Beers brothers cleverly maintained absolute voting control because of a single, crucial sentence they had literally scribbled in pencil at a notary’s office years prior: “up to holding level.” Michiel’s gut was prescient, as SFX eventually went bankrupt, and Tomorrowland learned a hard lesson about letting a partner company in on the Tomorrowland magic. The company remained so cautious about this saga that only in 2025 did Tomorrowland begin working with Insomniac in a much more limited capacity in the US to bring CORE Festival to LA. Tomorrowland’s Independence Today, Tomorrowland remains completely independent and structured as a family business run by Michiel and Manu Beers. They have proudly turned down massive payouts to protect their creative freedom. “We don’t have external investors,” Beers emphasized. “You can sell your company for a lot of money, but what we do is also what we genuinely love doing every day. For us, that is not for sale. We really want to remain independent for a very long time—or forever—because we think that is super important to keep making our dreams come true.” The Future of Tomorrowland That independence allows Tomorrowland to expand into uncharted territory. Beers jokingly calls their current trajectory “reverse Harry Potter”—instead of a book becoming a theme park, their festival world

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