San Francisco Chronicle

Music festival chaos forces cancellati­on

- By Tamara Lush Tamara Lush is an Associated Press writer.

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

In the case of the illfated 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, disorganiz­ation 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 morning, 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 statement sent to the media. “Hundreds of visitors to Exuma were met with total disorganiz­ation and chaos,” the tourism office wrote.

In a statement posted on the Fyre Festival website Saturday, co-organizer Billy McFarland said festivalgo­ers 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 festival,” he wrote.

The hype for Fyre Festival 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 menswear designer in Charlotte, N.C.

The Instagram ads looked especially “ridiculous” — parlance 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 29year-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,” Strang said.

The festival website was also enticing. It promised a treasure hunt with over $1 million in riches to be found.

Purgason said he was skeptical, but went ahead with the planned vacation anyway. “Worst case scenario, I figured, we’re still in the Bahamas in a villa.”

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