Tim "No 37" Martinez is a veteran music personality. He got his start in the industry when his best friend, Juliya Chernetsky, put him in front of the camera on her show "Uranium" on Fuse TV (formerly MuchMusic USA). He became a regular personality on the show for 4 of the 5 seasons the show was on the air. After Uranium, Tim became a concert producer & promoter on his own as Tim No 37 Productions as well as teaming up with Gotham Rocks & 2 Legit Booking to create No Mercy Metal. Producing shows for bands such as Kittie, Alekhine's Gun, Firewind, Otep, Sworn Enemy, Candiria, Ice Nine Kills and more.

Tim Martinez is a former live event DJ who has spun his eclectic metal mix at NYC venues such as Irving Plaza, Highline Ballroom, The Stanton Social, Gramercy Theater and more as well as doing a national tour as a DJ. He also hosted & produced two seasons of a show called Indi Diaries on the streaming music video network IndiMusic TV (those can be seen here: https://indimusic.tv/page/indidiaries )

Tim Martinez is also an award winning equality advocate, and supporter of the LBGT community, having created the anti-bullying & suicide awareness charity concert series HATE the HATE, with the support of Chris Santos and Jessica Pimentel (which has boasted celebrity participants such as, Mina Caputo, Carson Kressley, Cisely Saldana and 2 Broadway editions with performances by Broadway stars from Rock of Ages, Aida, Newsical the Musical, etc) and won a USA Network Character's Unite Award. He also created The Elizabeth Martinez Foundation: Rock N Roll for the Cure which is a Cancer Research charity concert series.

Tim Martinez opens up about to The You Rock Foundation about the flux of light and dark times in his life. Well known for his work in the New York music scene, Tim describes his encounters with Marylin Manson and Otep, two of the bands that saved his life. He also goes on to discuss getting better doesn't not necessarily mean the absence of all fear and anxiety, but rather an understanding of balance between dark and light times, “There’s this weird balance, that’s not balanced at all, but with dark times and good times one always seems to follow the other. A lot of the time it seems the dark times aren’t always going to go away, but they eventually do and the good times do tend to roll in and start to happen. On thing I’ve learned in my life, at 37 years old now, is, you gotta focus on the good. Even though it doesn’t seem like there is much good as there is bad and dark, but even those little slivers of brightness and sunshine and happiness… you gotta hold on to them. That’s what makes life worth living in my opinion.”

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