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Sied Van Riel on the Fly2Miami Twitter Campaign and Direct Dutch Flights to Miami

How many Dutch DJs, producers, and dance music fans does it take to get a major airline to completely re-route its flight plans? The answer: About 150 of them, plus the power of Twitter and the co-sign of Dutch dance music god Tiësto himself. On the Wednesday of the sprawling...
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How many Dutch DJs, producers, and dance music fans does it take to get a major airline to completely re-route its flight plans? The answer: About 150 of them, plus the power of Twitter and the co-sign of Dutch dance music god Tiësto himself.



On the Wednesday of the sprawling week of parties surrounding Ultra Music Festival, a special KLM flight will touch down in Miami filled only with industry types, and only from Amsterdam and its environs. It wasn't supposed to happen that way -- in fact, KLM wasn't even set to start direct service to Miami from Amsterdam until April.



The airline, though, is very social media savvy -- just like Dutch progressive trance producer Sied Van Riel and his buddy, filmmaker Wilco Jung. Thus, the Fly2Miami campaign was born, translating a Twitter hashtag into real-life plane trips to South Florida.



The idea first germinated last year when van Riel made his maiden voyage to Winter Music Conference, spinning at Nikki Beach, Nocturnal, and Karu & Y, with extracurricular partying at Space and Ultra. Though he arrived in town following a South American tour that brought him to Miami from Buenos Aires, getting home was circuitous, with a re-route through Dusseldorf, Germany. Still, it was par for the course.



So when he and Jung booked their tickets for this year, they noticed something curious. "When I tried to book my flight, I saw I could get from Miami to Amsterdam, but not from Amsterdam to Miami," recalls Jung, whose company We Are the Night produces videos for Tiësto and other titans. "That was odd, so I started to Twitter to KLM."



Van Riel also took up the cause. "I saw a Tweet from KLM saying that they where going to open up a direct flight between Amsterdam and Miami on March 28. So I replied and said, 'Why don't you start a week earlier. We need a direct flight as we are all going to Miami in that period,'" he recalls. "They eventually replied and said, 'Okay, we will give you a plane as long as you can fill it up in six days.'"



They needed at least 150 reservations, and van Riel was then touring in Australia. He was working against a huge time difference. But the Internet has legs. Thanks to the hashtag #fly2miami, and the close-knit nature of the Dutch electronic music community, word spread quickly.



But the major coup came when Tiësto himself tweeted a message about the flight. "Tijs is a good friend of ours," says van Riel. "He liked the idea, and once we went public he was kind enough to share it with his followers." That Tweet may seem like a small gesture -- but consider the fact that Tiesto enjoys over 346,000 followers on the site.



Not only did Jung and Van Riel meet the crazy deadline, but they made it in under half the time allotted. The flight sold out in 48 hours. "It became clear to KLM very quickly that the idea of a direct flight to Miami is a popular one among the Dutch dance scene," says Martijn van der Zee, vice president of e-commerce at KLM. "We can rightly call it a first -- the first time KLM will deploy an aircraft following a request on Twitter."



The event is marked by an illustrious group of travelers. Besides DJs, producers, publicists, A&R types, bloggers, and so on, van Riel says the CEO of KLM and the mayor of Amstelveen (where KLM has headquarters) will also be taking the inaugural Amsterdam-Miami flight. And to mark the occasion, Jung and Van Riel are releasing an official compilation via Black Hole Recordings, featuring many of the artists on board.



There's one more first planned for Fly2Miami, too. Dutch television network BNN and radio station 3FM will join the trip to document it for posterity -- a move that, organizers say, will mark the highest-altitude radio broadcast ever. "As far as I can tell now, it will all be live. We have been discussing every small detail as flight safety is our main priority," says van Riel.



Yet even if the broadcast ends up being recorded and broadcast later, the entire affair will be kitted out in a way befitting the party-hearty dance music industry. "We have a DJ booth set up during the flight. The in-flight entertainment system has been adjusted. We have special food on board," he says. "We [even] have a DJ booth setup at the check-in desk in Amsterdam, and special decorations. You name it, we got it!"



Sied Van Riel with Aly & Fila, W&W, Ronsky Speed, Triton, Simz, and more. Friday, March 25. Dream, 1532 Washington Ave., Miami Beach. Ages 21 and up. Call 305-674-8018 or visit dreammia.com.



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