The Columbus Dispatch

Fyre Festival faces $100M ‘Hunger Games’ lawsuit

- By Kim Bhasin and Polly Mosendz

A $100 million lawsuit was filed against organizers of the inaugural Fyre Festival, a music festival in the Bahamas that was billed as a luxury experience only to quickly devolve into an island landscape of half-built tents, cheese sandwiches and a distinct lack of musical talent.

In a lawsuit filed Monday in Los Angeles federal court, Fyre Festival and its organizers were accused of fraud, negligent misreprese­ntation, and breach of contract. The plaintiff, attendee Daniel Jung, seeks class action status for the thousands of tickethold­ers who flew to the remote venue.

“The festival’s lack of adequate food, water, shelter, and medical care created a dangerous and panicked situation among attendees — suddenly finding themselves stranded on a remote island without basic provisions — that was closer to ‘The Hunger Games’ or ‘Lord of the Flies’ than Coachella,” the complaint stated, referring to a similar festival held annually in California. The plaintiff alleged that the organizers knew the Fyre Festival was a “serious danger” to attendees in advance.

The suit, filed by celebrity Hollywood attorney Mark Geragos, seeks $100 million in damages on behalf of a purported class of concertgoe­rs. Jung’s ticket to the Fyre Festival cost $2,000, according to the complaint.

The event was hyped by ads featuring supermodel­s enjoying an island paradise and promising luxury unmatched by older, name-brand music festivals. Attendees expected “the culture experience of the decade,” a music-filled escape in a tropical utopia of glitzy yachts and ornate villas.

That’s not what they received, according to festival attendees who said they arrived to a dismal city of disaster-relief tents. Their baggage arrived piled in a shipping container, and the gourmet cuisine they expected turned out to be ham and cheese sandwiches and a side salad in a styrofoam tray.

Organized by rapper Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, and business partner Billy McFarland, the Fyre Festival was meant to grow global brand awareness for Fyre Media, a talent booking startup the pair founded in 2015. McFarland is also the founder and chief executive of Magnises, a social club for rich millennial­s.

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