Dayton Daily News

Hyped Fure Festival flops in Bahamas

Organizers cancel event where tickets were up to $12,000.

- By Tamara Lush JAKE STRANG VIA AP

In this day and age, the young and beautiful live and die on social media.

In the case of the ill-fated Fyre Festival — a multiday music, art and culture party that promised “an invitation to let loose and unplug

with the likeminded” on the Bahamian island of Exuma — it’s been a sudden and ugly death, chronicled in real-time on YouTube and filtered through Facebook.

Organizers canceled the event at the last minute after poor planning, disorganiz­a

tion and lack of accommodat­ions. Most of the A-list acts had pulled out of the festival days before, citing a lack of payment.

It was supposed to be a sun-soaked experience filled

with yachts, gourmet food and models. Ticket prices ranged from $500 to $12,000.

But by Saturday morni ng, the partygoers had decamped, many of them to hotels in Miami in hopes of salvaging a weekend. People decried the festival accommodat­ions as being like a “disaster tent city” and a “refugee camp.”

The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism expressed its deep disappoint­ment in a state- ment sent to the media.

“Hundreds of visitors to Exuma were met with total disorganiz­ation and chaos,” the tourism office wrote in a statement.

In a statement posted on the Fyre Festival website Saturday, co-organizer Billy McFarland said festival goers will be refunded in full.

“We will be working on refunds over the next few days and will be in touch directly with guests with more details. Also, all guests from this year will have free VIP passes to next year’s fes- Marchers urge peace 25 years after riots Tents and a portable toilet set up for attendees for the Fyre Festival, Friday in the Exuma islands, Bahamas. Organizers of the much-hyped music festival in the Bahamas canceled the weekend event at the last minute Friday after many people had already arrived and spent thousands of dollars on tickets and travel. Hyped Fure Festival flops in Bahamas Rapper Ja Rule was among the entertaine­rs scheduled at the Fyre Festival. Ja Rule said he was “heartbroke­n” at the cancellati­on. tival,” he wrote.

The hype for Fyre Festi- val began months ago, marketed with slick videos on social media.

“I saw it on Instagram and booked it before the lineup was announced,” said Mitch Purgason, a 25-year-old bespoke menswear designer in Charlotte, N.C.

The Instagram ads looked especially “ridiculous” — par-

lance for amazing — what with models like Gigi Hadid

and rapper Ja Rule. Blink-182 was supposed to perform. Photos of the impossibly blue water and the sugary sandy beach looked incredible. And the veritable icing on the cake: wild, docile pigs lived on the beach and swam in the warm water, perfect props for a killer Instagram selfie.

Although the festival on the island chain east of Florida appeared to cater to the millennial trust fund crowd, it was people like Purgason and 29-year-old Jake Strang of Pittsburgh who purchased early tickets — young profession­als who wanted to spend a fun weekend in the tropics.

Like Purgason, Strang paid $500 for a flight to the island from Miami, lodging and food. Strang and seven of his friends planned the trip to coincide with a birthday. They reserved a “lodge” for eight, with four king beds and a seating area in the middle.

“Everything made it look amazing,” said Strang.

The festival website was also enticing. It promised a treasure hunt of “exceptiona­l proportion­s,” with over $1 million in riches to be found. It also said the event would be held on a private island.

Purgason said he was skep- tical, but went ahead with the planned vacation anyway.

“Worst case scenario, I figured, we’re still in the Baha- mas in a villa,” he said.

His first inkling that some- thing was amiss came on Thursday morning. Purga

son was on the first flight from Miami to Exuma and when they landed, organiz- ers said the villas weren’t ready. So they whisked the planeload of partygoers to a restaurant at a nearby resort. He noted that it wasn’t a pri

vate island at all. Still, food and drink were free and plenty. Cute pigs and bikini-clad girls roamed the beach. There was a D J.

“They actually treated us pretty well,” he said. “The first three hours was dope.” Jenna Conlin, 30, an advertisin­g profession­al in Venice, Calif., said, “They were putting down bottles of tequila on every table in an attempt to make everybody happy.”

Strang flew in later Thursday and wasn’t so lucky.

“When we arrived, it essentiall­y looked like a con- struction site. It looked like they were trying to sell lots for homes,” he said. The festivalgo­ers were suddenly told by the promoter to find a tent, and waved his arm in a direction. But the tents had holes that had obviously allowed rain to come in because the beds were wet. They were given a Styrofoam container of food that involved “two slices of ham, lettuce and one slice of cheese on soggy bread,” Strang said.

A few lucky patrons had been relocated to resorts. Most were left to find beds in the tents.

It wasn’t like it was easy to just grab another hotel room; Exuma is a small island with a population of about 7,000, without the well-developed tourist infrastruc­ture of Nassau or Freeport. The island’s hotels were already booked months in advance by a wellknown regatta, wrote Robert Carron, owner of the Bahamas Tribune newspaper. By daybreak, people had

already started to line up and complain, and buses began taking people to the airport. It was official: the festival was canceled. Word got out via social media that organizers issued a statement citing “circumstan­ces out of our control” for their inability to prepare the “physical infrastruc­ture” for the event in the largely undevelope­d Exuma. “I’m heartbroke­n at this

moment,” Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, said on Twitter. “I wanted this to be an amazing event. It was not a scam as everyone is reporting. I truly apologize as this is NOT MY FAULT.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States