Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Tents and a portable toilet set up for attendees for the cancelled Fyre Festival. Jake Strang/AP

'Closer to The Hunger Games than Coachella': Fyre Festival hit with $100m lawsuit

The festival was cancelled despite thousands flying to the Caribbean.

ORGANISERS OF A music festival in The Bahamas that was billed as a luxury getaway but collapsed in chaos have been hit with a $100 million lawsuit alleging fraud.

The Fyre Festival was aborted on Friday after hundreds of partygoers arrived only to find relief-camp style tents and rudimentary sandwiches rather than the promised lavish experience.

Tickets for the festival cost up to $12,000 with some VIP packages rising to $250,000.

“The festival’s lack of adequate food, water, shelter and medical care created a dangerous and panicked situation among attendees… that was closer to The Hunger Games or Lord of the Flies than Coachella,” reads the lawsuit filed on behalf of Daniel Jung in Los Angeles.

The festival, led by New York rapper Ja Rule and tech entrepreneur Billy McFarland, was billed as “the cultural experience of the decade.”

Organisers apologised over the weekend, announcing that all festival-goers would be refunded.

But Jung’s attorney, Ben Meiselas of celebrity law firm Geragos and Geragos, said on Twitter a simple refund was “not enough,” posting the opening pages of the class-action suit filed in US District Court in California.

Guests promised a “posh, island-based music festival featuring first class culinary experiences” were instead lured into “what various media outlets have since labeled ‘a complete disaster,’ ‘mass chaos’ and ‘a post-apocalyptic nightmare,’” according to the filing.

Numerous festival-goers posted pictures of shambolic scenes as they arrived and quickly turned around — setting off mockery in corners of the internet over the high prices many had handed over.

Organisers admitted they were “simply in over our heads,” saying they were overwhelmed by the numbers arriving as transport jammed up and high winds knocked down half of the original tents.

“Ultimately, we didn’t think security could keep up, so we had to postpone the festival,” a statement read.

Fyre Festival / YouTube

The government of The Bahamas, a country of more than 700 islands and cays where tourism is the largest industry, also apologised and assisted in evacuations — but stressed it was not involved directly in the event.

Ja Rule tweeted an apology Friday, saying he was “heartbroken,” while insisting that the debacle was “not my fault.”

Fashion model Bella Hadid, who had helped promote the festival, was in no mood to take any blame either, tweeting Saturday that it was “not my project whatsoever,” and that she hadn’t been told how it would be run.

Comments have been closed for legal reasons

© – AFP 2017

Read: A Ja Rule-organised festival promised music and models on the beach, instead it turned into chaos >

Read: Here’s why the internet is captivated by Fyre Festival, an expensive music festival that’s turned into a farce >

Close
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds