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Burning Man Is Desperate For Cash (sfstandard.com) 123

AzWa Snowbird writes: Burning Man is urgently calling for millions more in donations amid faltering ticket sales and staff layoffs. The nonprofit's CEO, Marian Goodell, primarily blamed flagging higher-priced ticket sales and increased operating costs since the pandemic.

The festival has sold a tier of higher-priced tickets since at least 2016. In 2023, a limited number of more expensive advance tickets were available between Feb. 1 and Feb. 3, with 1,000 tickets costing $2,750 each and 3,000 costing $1,500, according to an archived version of Burning Man's 2023 ticket page. Ticket sales for the annual bacchanal in Black Rock City flopped this year after a rain-plagued 2022, and scores of burners later resold their tickets, eating huge losses.

Burning Man Is Desperate For Cash

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  • sellout (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:05PM (#64910447) Homepage

    You sold out, man.

    Your counterculture went mainstream and you cashed in. Now the money is gone, and so are the people. It's over.

    • Yup. And it exploded outward to the point that its influence can be directly seen in miniburns, and indirectly seen in renaissance/fantasy faires and furry campouts (like Feral! or Wild Nights) pretty much throughout the continent at this point.
      • I don't want to know more about furry campouts. I did not just google search that and regret it. Hopefully no actual dogs or cats or other animals are harmed/present at these events. I understand they fantasize about anthropomorphic animals, but still. I judge.

    • Re:yep (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:13PM (#64910463)

      Burning Man used to be a counter culture event. People setting off explosives and doing whatever they want in the middle of the desert. Now celebrities show up in their million dollar motor homes.

    • Re:sellout (Score:5, Insightful)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:16PM (#64910469)

      You sold out, man.

      Your counterculture went mainstream and you cashed in. Now the money is gone, and so are the people. It's over.

      This. The festival that celebrated counter-capitalism, has now been infected by it.

      Just saw a video from a couple outlining their expenses for a week at BM, keeping in mind you’re in the middle of fucking nowhere.

      Over five thousand dollars to rent your way though BM, is NOT what one would define as anti-capitalist.

    • Re:sellout (Score:4, Funny)

      by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:17PM (#64910471)
      You can go to the UK instead and enjoy "Gurning Man"!

      If you're feeling really adventurous, you could try gurning on the Isle of Mann.
      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Congrats for best of the Funny, but the target had more potential for Funny... Only three in total (as of now).

    • Uh... no. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:29PM (#64910503) Homepage Journal

      You sold out, man.

      Your counterculture went mainstream and you cashed in. Now the money is gone, and so are the people. It's over.

      Not even remotely true.

      Burning man changed it's campsite rules, making it difficult for people to come and camp as a group. They changed the a ticket lottery to favor individuals and not groups, so that not everyone in your campsite might be able to get a ticket.

      They did this with the best of intentions, people realized that only a subset of their campsite friends would be able to get a ticket and so everyone decided not to go under those rules.

      BM was having growth issues (ie - far more people wanted to go than they had permission from the BLM), tried to change the rules to with the best of intentions, and as a result implemented a system that discouraged groups.

      If they go back to the previous rules, Burning Man would be wildly popular again.

      • Re:Uh... no. (Score:5, Informative)

        by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @08:57PM (#64910673)

        BM was having growth issues (ie - far more people wanted to go than they had permission from the BLM), tried to change the rules to with the best of intentions, and as a result implemented a system that discouraged groups.

        If they go back to the previous rules, Burning Man would be wildly popular again.

        2020 and 2021 were directly affected by COVID, but 2022 and 2023 both saw massive attendance numbers (70K+), with 2019 reporting near 80K.

        Not sure how you figure it’s not still wildly popular. Those are all-time record attendance numbers, and the event is capped at 87K.

      • So you describe how the process of becoming mainstream was having issues all while saying that the problem was not because they went mainstream.

        Your thought process is broken. Really relax and think about the situation again.

        Burning man changed it's campsite rules, making it difficult for people to come and camp as a group.

        That is part of becoming mainstream.

        BM was having growth issues

        Again, mainstream.

        Hm.

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:48PM (#64910535) Homepage Journal

      Not 10 minutes after this Slashdot article posted, I received the following E-mail from Maid Marian:

      Support Black Rock City & Beyond

      Hi,

      If you’re getting this email it’s because you've probably had a ticket to Burning Man in the last 20 years.

      Either Burning Man is still a huge part of your life, you F **#$% ing hate Burning Man, or maybe you’re ambivalent. Wherever you land, it’s probably been just as impactful for you as it has been for many of us.

      What started for me in 1995 at the edge of a dry lakebed — where a tall man wearing a bedsheet and holding a plastic flamingo told me to "drive 12 miles to a black mountain and then left until you see five pointy things" — has evolved from a bunch of weirdos with guns into a global institution reimagining and reinventing what the world could be like if we did things a little bit differently.

      Burning Man now is a worldwide cultural phenomenon that, since 1986, has been built and experienced by nearly a million people, both in Black Rock City and at more than 80 annual official events around the world. You may be one of those people. Whether or not you come to Black Rock City regularly, you are part of the community and we value the ways you have contributed to make Burning Man happen. Thank you.

      It’s a little-known fact that revenue from tickets does not support the cultural movement that Burning Man has become. We do not want to raise ticket prices. In the name of Radical Inclusion, we actually prefer to lower them. But, the fact of the matter is that the cost to produce Black Rock City in 2023 was $749 per participant while the main sale ticket price was $575. You can read more about this inflection point and the reduced ticket sales in 2024 and how this has forced a much larger fundraising goal to keep operations going. Or explore the summary financial information going back 10 years to see how the higher-priced tickets have been subsidizing the event for some time, and how the drop in those sales threatens Burning Man.

      The plan for 2025 and beyond is to flip the script. It’s time to think about the most Burning Man way to close this gap.

      No, we won't go towards corporate sponsorship, additional RV fees or merchandise sales. Instead, we will turn to the community and invite participation and support to help fill the gap. Yes, we have reduced the number of regular year-round employees on staff, and we’re diving into the budget to trim what is already a lean and tight Black Rock City infrastructure and nonprofit management. But that alone isn’t enough.

      Now is the time to ensure that Burning Man can persist into the future — not just as an annual event in the desert, but as a cultural institution that will be here decades from now, empowering future generations to reimagine the world they live in.

      I would certainly prefer that our focus be solely on pushing the edge, rather than having to raise money all the time. But as we continue to provide containers for the future to be prototyped, we operate in the context of the default world, and that requires ongoing charitable support year after year to keep this thing going.

      You already know we're not a normal nonprofit — we never wanted to be “normal.” But we are a nonprofit and to keep doing what we do, we need your help.

      F-*&$ commercial sponsorship! \/

      Contribute today so we can:

      Prototype new ways of living, working and being together
      Support art and artists through grants
      Get Black Rock City off fossil fuels
      Nurture Burning Man culture around the world
      Capture the DNA of what we are doing to hand off to the next generation
      Get funky and bring more cacophony of chaos

      We are moments away from announcing the Black Rock City 2025 t

      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        > the cost to produce Black Rock City in 2023 was $749 per participant

        For those who've been, what do they spend that on? Does everyone get a personal porta-potty? Catered gourmet meals? "Free" beer, or just a free tow out of the mud?
        • They sponsor art (Score:5, Informative)

          by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday November 01, 2024 @12:24AM (#64910979) Homepage Journal

          > the cost to produce Black Rock City in 2023 was $749 per participant
          For those who've been, what do they spend that on? Does everyone get a personal porta-potty? Catered gourmet meals? "Free" beer, or just a free tow out of the mud?

          They sponsor a lot of art. IIRC, the "Belgian Waffle" (several years ago) was given $200,000 to create their exhibit.

          There's a lot, and I mean a *LOT* of art at the festival, much of which is truly breathtaking. Every year the "Temple" is breathtaking, and "The Man" is pretty impressive too.

          Additionally, the infrastructure is top notch. They've got a lot of skip loaders, tractors, and backhoe-like things that run around and help setup and strike the event. Also lots of electrical infrastructure that powers the management (lights and power for central camp, ranger radio stations, lights for the man, and on and on.)

          Additionally, that $749 is for a full week, so roughly $110 per day to attend the event. They rent a lot of porta-potties which are cleaned frequently (maybe twice a day?), there's water trucks that go around spraying water on the roads to keep the dust down, they've got a free medical center staffed with doctors (possibly volunteer) with at least a working X-ray machine (determined experimentally when I accidentally got injured).

          Did I mention their infrastructure was top notch? Go talk to some of the organizers or long-time volunteers some time, they're available, approachable, and highly knowledgeable.

          (Apropos of nothing, Burning Man (infrastructure) gets power from solar panels. A few years ago the solar panel rebates federal and local added up to more than the price of the panels, and Burning Man has free labor, so for several years they set out solar panels, then after the event they donated the panels to Gerlach, the local "out in the middle of nowhere" town next to the event. IIRC, they had done this enough times to put Gerlach completely electrically independent, meaning that the town doesn't need to run generators to power the town.)

          • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

            The fact that they gave away the solar panels is insane. They knew they needed them again next year, why give it away instead of loaning it? The money is for running the event, not building electrical infrastructure for rural towns.

            I'll bet if anyone looked even a little below the surface, there's huge amounts of money being wasted for feel-good reasons, and maybe even some really dumb reasons. They probably haven't seriously negotiated a lower price for the land, or considered moving it somewhere cheaper.

            • They probably haven't seriously negotiated a lower price for the land, or considered moving it somewhere cheaper.

              I don't think they pay anything for the land. BLM requires permits for large gatherings, but doesn't usually charge fees.

              • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

                BLM requires permits for large gatherings, but doesn't usually charge fees.

                This article mentions a $3 million permit fee: https://www.cnbc.com/2019/12/2... [cnbc.com]

                Also it's another data point in my argument. They were overcharged millions of dollars for years and didn't bother to correct the problem.

                • BLM requires permits for large gatherings, but doesn't usually charge fees.

                  This article mentions a $3 million permit fee: https://www.cnbc.com/2019/12/2... [cnbc.com]

                  Also it's another data point in my argument. They were overcharged millions of dollars for years and didn't bother to correct the problem.

                  Hmm. When the BLM does charge fees, it's to cover BLM expenses related to the permit. In this case, it doesn't seem unlikely to me that the cost to the BLM of supervising the event and ensuring cleanup of the site afterwards would be in that ballpark.

      • Wait, what? It costs them $749 per participant to put on the event?
        Assuming 75,000 people attending, that puts the cost of Burning Man at over $56 million dollars.

        • Also, if your expenses are 50% higher than the revenue you're booking per sale, why are you in the least bit surprised that you're bankrupt?

          That's what's supposed to happen. Try charging what it actually costs to make the event happen, and see how that fits? This is some Fyre Festival level nonsense.

      • They clearly have powerful drugs there.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I'm confused here. This is an event that everyone brings their own stuff to, is held on Federal land... why is so much money needed for it? There are other events like Wasteland Weekend that have a different, less hippie vibe, but don't seem to have the issues that BM does. It doesn't that that much money to draw out spots in the desert for people to park at, provide security, and get some events going. When I read about stuff like the Solar Womp (which is from a number of years back), and BM having a l

      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

        I think the BLM or bureau of land management does charge them a nominal fee of like $150,000 or something. It's not totally free; the BLM grants them exclusive use of the flat for like 6 weeks, maybe longer; several weeks to set up and several more to tear back down and pick up every hair tie and toothbrush in the mud, plus dispose of literally thousands of abandoned bicycles each year. The actual event only lasts for 7-9 days but most of the flat is restricted access for the entire back half of summer.

        • Could move the offices out of California to the midwest and cut the staff budget in half with twice the quality of life. The hippies and non trafficking counterculture invaded and a were driven from california by cost 1960-1980.
    • Yup, i was in western Arizona near Kingman when Burningman was about to start and thought i could drive to Burningman, got online looking for Buringman info and seen the high cost of admission and parking and the exorbitant prices killed that idea
    • Burning man began as a counter-culture event and turned into exactly what it was supposed to protesting. Reminds me of that quote from Batman: You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.

    • Came here to say the exact same thing. This is what happens when you overmilk your cow.

    • Selling out is a common thing, even amongst the most "principled" of groups.

      Pink Floyd, which used to be one of my musical heroes, what with their tales of how eeeevil the record co's are, etc...

      Well, they sold all their shit to Sony for 400 million USD. Would've been a nice round half billion but Waters had to go shoot his mouth off wiht the whole Palestine thing, and that cost them 100 million.

      https://www.rollingstone.com/m... [rollingstone.com]

      KISS also sold out, but they sold out the day they were formed, so I'm less off

    • And, stupidly, the money isn't gone. It's still fuck tons more income than they had 20 years ago. It just can't keep up with the "growth mindset" that they tried for.

      Assuming the org didn't go into debt to finance future growth, all they really need to do is stop paying for so much.

      • Or, charge usage fees commensurate with the cost of producing such an event.

        If the average cost per attendee is 50% more than what you are charging for them to be there, then you have a fairly simple issue of not knowing how math works.

    • by Askmum ( 1038780 )
      Everything has its lifecycle. We've now seen the one for Burning Man.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Just another "non-profit" which has feasted on cash by wasting it on extravagant staff salaries. (See also: Mozilla Foundation.) Nature will reassert itself as god intended.
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:20PM (#64910481)

    I thought Burning Man was a hippy, alternative culture sort of thing. It sounds more like a hippy simulation for rich people to me now...

    They should rename it Burning Cash.

    • I thought Burning Man was a hippy, alternative culture sort of thing.

      I thought exactly the same thing, if I were ever to go I assume I'd just show up on a flaming chariot or something, and camp wherever.

      I mean how do they even check for tickets?? It looked like chaos driving in from all the pictures I've ever seen.

    • Only the early tickets cost that much. The general sales are more somewhere in the $500 range. Though truth be told to do BM right and not be a mooching sparkle pony you're probably going to be spending several grand to get there and setup camp be it a tent or rented RV depending on how far away you live. I considered going before and renting a small RV the ticket cost, vehicle pass, rv rent, fuel to drive from the east cost, and other supplies for the week i estimated in the $5-8K ballpark range. Not excep
      • The tickets went to a individual lottery, not a lottery with your group, meaning splitting a RV was a bit more of a crowdsourcing event. With a group known for their anarchism and clanism and diverse motives, the move was just bad marketing choice.
      • If they claim it costs ~$750 per attendee to put on the event (according to numbers they include in their fundraising email posted above), why the fuck do tickets only cost $500ish? And why are they surprised that they're bankrupt?

        Can we fix the public education system in this country now? Please?

  • Woodstock 99 should have warned you.

    But now where will all the tech bros bang drugged up hippie chicks?

  • by fatwilbur ( 1098563 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:38PM (#64910515)
    That hippies who wanna do drugs, get naked, and listen to music in the desert can’t afford expensive tickets. News at 11. Don’t get me wrong, I fully approve all those activities, but just call that’s been the free thing to do other than buying the drugs.
  • I thought the cost of burning man was to physically get yourself into the desert and be outfitted with enough stuff to survive on or trade, and hopefully get back home. plus the cost of all the weird or crazy crap you need to show off how crazy you are. I was not aware that land rent was so expensive to in the desert. "Sir your ticket says Lot 5A, but this is 3B. what are you trying to pull here? ahy?" Apparently my understanding of Burning Man was all wrong. or a decade behind.
    • Anarchy works really well for one person, it's kind of workable for two... but by the time you get to larger groups, if you don't have organization and authority you're asking for trouble.

      Of course, once you have organization and authority, you'll get people trying to claim the top spot and rip everyone under them off.

    • Re:What? (Score:5, Informative)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @11:07PM (#64910879)

      I thought the cost of burning man was to physically get yourself into the desert and be outfitted with enough stuff to survive on or trade, and hopefully get back home. plus the cost of all the weird or crazy crap you need to show off how crazy you are. I was not aware that land rent was so expensive to in the desert. "Sir your ticket says Lot 5A, but this is 3B. what are you trying to pull here? ahy?" Apparently my understanding of Burning Man was all wrong. or a decade behind.

      1993 Attendance/Cost: 1,000/$40

      2023 Attendance/Cost: 70,000+/$575

      There’s growing pains, and then there’s dealing with the unmitigated nightmare of your event turning into a Superbowl-sized clusterfuck filled with rich attention whores mining for clout while glamping in the desert, blissfully unaware of the original point of it all.

    • I always though it was kind of odd that Burning Man was even as popular as it was. Participating was pretty expensive if you weren't relatively close to the event location, and as you said, visitors had to arrive equipped to deal with spending several days in the middle of a damn uninhabited desert of all places. It was never anything I was particularly interested in, because I already live in a miserably hot climate and that's not my idea of a vacation.

      Plus, I want my vacation spots to have modern infras

      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

        I'd wager about 1 in 8 people who worked at startups in SF went to burning man each year. The office would just clear out that week. These are not people who have trouble throwing down $6k for a spot to sleep in an air conditioned bus + food and booze for a week.

  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @07:38PM (#64910519)

    The moment they had a CEO position they should have seen they were no longer what they stood for.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      The moment they had a CEO position they should have seen they were no longer what they stood for.

      LOL you don't have a clue about your history. CEO is nothing more than a leader. Every event needs a leadership, and virtually every long running event with that kind of turnover and planning requirements has a professional organisation orchestrating it from the top. When you run long enough leadership changes and new people need to be employed. What do you call those people in the job ad? Cuddly Decision Daddy? Tsar of the Flame? or just CEO.

      The first CEO position was formalised in the 90s. They've had a C

      • The moment they had a CEO position they should have seen they were no longer what they stood for.

        LOL you don't have a clue about your history. CEO is nothing more than a leader. ... Find a better attribution.

        Their CEO is "nothing more than a leader " who makes over $350K [givefreely.com], so there's the attribution that they've lost their way.

        • Their CEO is "nothing more than a leader " who makes over $350K [givefreely.com], so there's the attribution that they've lost their way.

          Oh yeah, when you are the host of an event like this you should be paid in hugs. That will attract people who know how to manage these superbowl sized events. /sarcasm

        • There leadership can simply move the off year work outside of california and half the employee costs and double the quality of living for mid level employees. Perhaps they will even find that another set of BLM administrators will be more receptive to a 100k jamboree.
        • And apparently their CEO is an incompetent leader who charges $500 a head for entry to a festival that costs $750 per head, and wonders why they're broke.

          They should give their $350k/year back as the donations they need, because they haven't even got a grasp on simple math.

      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

        Their CEO is a full time position. It's not a three week a year part time job. That pays $350k. And they've been doing it for a decade. And they manage 120 other full time employees.

        • Indeed. Big events are complex. Fuck man small events are complex, have you ever tried to host something before? Once you get beyond about 10000 people in a recurring event your management requirements basically become full time.

          The fact you think organising an event of this scale is a 3 week job really speaks to your ignorance on a matter.

  • BMORG is the issue (Score:4, Interesting)

    by anoncoward69 ( 6496862 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @08:10PM (#64910575)
    The fact that during covid an unofficial burn was done on the site for little money shows that the BMORG is the issue here. They've gotten too greedy.
    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @09:21PM (#64910725)

      The fact that during covid an unofficial burn was done on the site for little money shows that the BMORG is the issue here. They've gotten too greedy.

      5,000 people at an unofficial (COVID) burn vs. 75,000 people at an official one.

      Last time the event was that small was damn near 20 years ago. Perhaps we do the math before assuming.

      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

        So have 15 small events of 5000 each instead of a single large one. What's the problem? The desert's huge.

      • 5,000 people at an unofficial (COVID) burn

        Not to mention all of those 5,000 most assuredly died from COVID because they didn't adhere to the government's guidelines, thus there were 5,000 less for the following years...

      • OK, I did some math.

        From their most recent Schedule 990 they had $62 million in income, $58 million in expenses with a net income/profit of $4 million.

        Total expenses for the event itself, not including any wages, travel, insurance, legal costs, etc. was $18.1 million. With 80,000 attending, that is $227 per person to cover the basic cost of infrastructure.

        Salaries and other compensation for employees was $26.6 million or 46% of all expenses.

        Form 990 here: 990 [propublica.org]

        • "Salaries" for what is supposed to be mainly a volunteer and participant run event. Sure they probably need a few maybe dozen or two paid employees to do the year round paper work, event planning, permit pulling, etc. but salaries shouldn't be 46% of their expenses. They're either heavily overstaffed with paid employees, or there are a few dozen taking home super fat paychecks.
  • I mean burning man identified a problem. People don't know themselves. But think about it there is a state or national park every 20 miles or so in this country, fought for between legislators. Places to preserve nature but ultimately places to get closer to the center of things. And the infighting in congress? Who deserves to enjoy these places and who does not. Who even deserves to be in this country and who does not. Funny, since the fight was set because the early leaders knew everyone had to decide on
  • Burning man hasn't been a relevant event for at least 25 years.

  • by jlseagull ( 106472 ) on Thursday October 31, 2024 @11:26PM (#64910913) Homepage

    BM was boring and corporate even back in 2004. Full of stuffy aging anti-fun hippies

    Culture has moved on. BM is irrelevant and over.

    The real revolutionary counterculture is now churchgoing Republican families with 6 kids.

  • It is the only way to be sure.
  • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Friday November 01, 2024 @01:04AM (#64911019)

    I'm more into another genre, but you see the same things in festivals across the board: ticket sales dramatically reduced this year, markets saturated, promoters not sure how to play it... and artists hanging on for what they can. Pre-pandemic the festival count was dramatically lower, and then everybody made a festival after the pandemic to capitalize on extra spending money burning a hole in people's wallets.

    Next year I will skip a few of my favorite festivals-- they are dropping the offering to the point that it isn't worth it. I'll focus on some of the smaller events that still have some energy.

    • https://www.melodicmag.com/202... [melodicmag.com].

      Chicago’s Lollapalooza Music Festival held its 33rd edition in downtown’s historic Grant Park (its 20th in the location) this past weekend, featuring over 170 artists on 8 stages. The four day festival has grown in recent years to include more than just music; as the festival partners with brands to create enticing activations, provides a family friendly area full of activities, and partners with local eateries to provide a taste of Chicago.

      Attendees were
  • The organizers are finding out that value is always relative "to whom". People's most honest voting is always with their money, not some surveys. It seems that BM is just not worth the price to its fans. Either make it worth the price you want o the customers, or keep lowering the price to see how much the attendees really value it and whether it's possible to organize it for that much. Of course you could always try to rob people at gunpoint to get the money - just convince/bribe a government to do it for
  • If they aren't managing the drug trade at the event they should at least be receiving a split. If they're savvy businesspeople.

    In no way do I mean this in a disparaging way. Some things just pair naturally with drugs, like Riesling and Brie. I, for one have never been to Burning Man. But if I had, my urine would have to take the 5th.

  • Pay all that money to party in a hostile environment that is just crawling with cops?

    No thanks.

    YOUtopia, the San Diego area regional event, was cool when it was on the Indian reservation but "leadership" incompetence and sensible Indians put an end to that golden era in the mid/late 2010s.
  • with 1,000 tickets costing $2,750 each and 3,000 costing $1,500

    Never underestimate the amount a man is willing to pay in the hopes of seeing a nude woman dancing in a colorful hat.

  • I've been to Burning Man twice, have briefly talked with Larry Harvey, and still have the insulator from the 2005 burn. So, what made Burning Man great is that it brought together engineering-types with artist types. How many artists could afford a 2,500 experience? With the price so high, it attracts only the affluent.
  • "Aflluenza" is what the cultural elite call this phenomenon.
    • "Affluenza is a portmanteau of âoeaffluenceâ and 'influenza' used to describe a social condition in which individuals pursue material success at great personal and financial cost. While the term addresses the social and psychological effects of wealth, affluenza is not a medical or psychological diagnosis." https://www.thebalancemoney.co... [thebalancemoney.com]

Basic is a high level languish. APL is a high level anguish.

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