Mike Wiebe | |
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Background information | |
Born | Denton, Texas, U.S. |
Occupation(s) |
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Years active | 1997–present |
Member of | Riverboat Gamblers |
Mike Wiebe is a musician, actor, and stand-up comedian from Texas. Originally from Denton, he now lives in Austin. Wiebe is the lead singer of several nationally known Austin-based bands including Drakulas, High Tension Wires, and his most longstanding group, Riverboat Gamblers, with whom he has released six albums since 1997. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Since 2013, his work has also turned increasingly toward comedy, including two works released by comedy label Stand Up! Records. [5]
Wiebe is known for a high-energy performance style which has led to frequent accidental self-injury, which, in turn, has fed back into his iconic status in Texas punk rock. [6] [7] [8] He suffered a collapsed lung after a crowd-surfing accident in 2016. [9] He once accidentally broke a gas main while swinging from the rafters of a club in Denton, Texas, filling the room with flammable gas. [10]
Wiebe began performing stand-up in 2011. [11]
In both his music and comedy, Wiebe is given to outlandish theatrics and characters. With comic Avery Moore, Wiebe created a pair of satirical Southern youth group ministers, Dottie and Jefferson-Montclaire McCuewan. Wiebe's character as lead singer of Drakulas, Savage Lord Mic, parodies the postapocalyptic style of 1970s movies like The Warriors . [5]
Wiebe performs on the 2013 Altercation Punk Comedy Tour compilation Hostile Corporate Takeover, produced by Stand Up! Records. [12] [13]
Since 2019, Wiebe has hosted the podcast Contrarian Court with novelist Wayne Gladstone, in which a different unusual opinion such as "bathrobes are stupid" is argued for by each week's guest, with Gladstone and Wiebe acting as opposing counsel and judge. [14]
In 2019, he released the single "I Can't Die," a "theme song" for fellow Austin comic Ryan Cownie's Stand Up! Records album I Can't Die. [15]
Wiebe co-hosted the 2020 Austin Music Industry Awards. [16]
Wiebe attended college in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and worked as an actor in both New Mexico and Texas before concentrating on music. [7] His films include the 2001 low-budget indie superhero parody Cornman: American Vegetable Hero and 2003's women-in-prison satire Prison-A-Go-Go! , which he also co-wrote with director Barak Epstein. He has also appeared in several short films. [15]
Denton is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the seat of Denton County. With a population of 139,869 as of 2020, it is the 20th-most populous city in Texas, the 177th-most populous city in the United States, and the 12th-most populous city in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex.
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