User talk:Jerromepeters

Mark Dorio
Mark Dorio, song-writer and keyboardist, was born on March 20, 1980 in Burbank, CA. In 2000, he received a provisional recording contract from Nothing Records worth somewhere around $900,000. His duties included stage performance and musical writing for various groups under the Nothing Records' label. This led to the astonishing signing of Dorio in 2003 to the band Marilyn Manson for a record setting sum of $11.4 million dollars to be paid in full after eight years. What makes this so incredible is the mere fact that Dorio was not actually a part of the group, but rather simply a technical and demo artist. After a reported spout of numerous personal conflicts with other band members, Dorio departed from the band in 2005 denoting Dorio's signing to become what Brian Warner now calls, "the worst mistake of my career." Dorio, however, proved to be instrumental and took part in the recordings of 48 gold and/or platinum albums on the Nothing, Elektra, and Converse record labels. Dorio's lasting contribution to Marilyn Manson is his work on the live performance versions of the band's songs. While Dorio never wrote anything published and recorded by Manson, almost all of the band's songs were reworked for performance enhancing properties by Dorio. This, "Dorio-Efect," as stated by Charles Dreyer of Musician Magazine is perhaps what makes Manson performances to be the best in the Industrial Rock genre. Dorio then signed with the band Nine Inch Nails in 2005 for an undisclosed amount. Given the fact that nearly all of the band's sub-producers and demo artists were fired in 2005 leads one to believe that Dorio was extremely well paid and considered crucial to the bands future at that time. According to an MTV interview with Dorio and Nine Inch Nails in 2006, Dorio had a hand in writing almost everything that the band produced since all the way back to 2003 when he initially signed with Nothing Records. Dorio officially departed from Nine Inch Nails in 2007, claiming that he was suffering from extreme depression and unable to adequately write music. Dorio's last known whereabouts were as of 2007 when he resided in Burbank, CA. Since then, Dorio entered the United States Celebrities Persons In Hiding Program after numerous death threats and other uncomfortable circumstances. To the best of my knowledge, Mark Dorio is retired and probably living very comfortably somewhere in either Germany, Austria, or Great Britain.

Speedy deletion nomination of Mark Dorio
Hello Jerromepeters,

I wanted to let you know that I just tagged Mark Dorio for deletion, because the article doesn't clearly say why the subject is important enough to be included in an encyclopedia.

If you feel that the article shouldn't be deleted and want more time to work on it, you can contest this deletion, but please don't remove the speedy deletion tag from the top.

You can leave a note on my talk page if you have questions. Thanks,  Dewritech (talk)  09:18, 1 March 2013 (UTC)

Mark Dorio
Mark Dorio, song-writer and keyboardist, was born on March 20, 1980 in Burbank, CA. In 2000, he received a provisional recording contract from Nothing Records worth somewhere around $900,000. His duties included stage performance and musical writing for various groups under the Nothing Records' label. This led to the astonishing signing of Dorio in 2003 to the band Marilyn Manson for a record setting sum of $11.4 million dollars to be paid in full after eight years. What makes this so incredible is the mere fact that Dorio was not actually a part of the group, but rather simply a technical and demo artist. After a reported spout of numerous personal conflicts with other band members, Dorio departed from the band in 2005 denoting Dorio's signing to become what Brian Warner now calls, "the worst mistake of my career." Dorio, however, proved to be instrumental and took part in the recordings of 48 gold and/or platinum albums on the Nothing, Elektra, and Converse record labels. Dorio's lasting contribution to Marilyn Manson is his work on the live performance versions of the band's songs. While Dorio never wrote anything published and recorded by Manson, almost all of the band's songs were reworked for performance enhancing properties by Dorio. This, "Dorio-Efect," as stated by Charles Dreyer of Musician Magazine is perhaps what makes Manson performances to be the best in the Industrial Rock genre. Dorio then signed with the band Nine Inch Nails in 2005 for an undisclosed amount. Given the fact that nearly all of the band's sub-producers and demo artists were fired in 2005 leads one to believe that Dorio was extremely well paid and considered crucial to the bands future at that time. According to an MTV interview with Dorio and Nine Inch Nails in 2006, Dorio had a hand in writing almost everything that the band produced since all the way back to 2003 when he initially signed with Nothing Records. Dorio officially departed from Nine Inch Nails in 2007, claiming that he was suffering from extreme depression and unable to adequately write music. Dorio's last known whereabouts were as of 2007 when he resided in Burbank, CA. Since then, Dorio entered the United States Celebrities Persons In Hiding Program after numerous death threats and other uncomfortable circumstances. To the best of my knowledge, Mark Dorio is retired and probably living very comfortably somewhere in either Germany, Austria, or Great Britain.