Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label Burning Man culture

Burning Man Bans $100K Campers “Humano the Tribe,” After Exploding Toilets

#BurningMan # BurningManculture # MarianGoodell # HumanotheTribe Burning Man has banned a $100,000-a-ticket camp group after other Burning Man attendees complained the camp was so obnoxious even the toilets exploded. A weeklong culture event in the middle of a Nevada desert, Burning Man asks participants to camp out, make art, and leave the place spotless after the week is up. But a growing set of Instagram influencer types are changing the character of the event, walling themselves off inside luxe campsites, Burning Man CEO Marian Goodell said in a Saturday blog post. Now the worst offender, a glam affair called “Humano the Tribe,” is banned from the next festival. Burning Man is an egalitarian experience—at least in theory. The event preaches “radical inclusion” and money is prohibited. But some attendees have found a way to pay upfront for luxury, through membership to high-end campsites. Residence in Humano the Tribe’s campsite (a map on their website shows the camp enci...

Burning Man volunteers rescue the 747 airplane from the desert: 'It will get done'

The 747 airplane from Burning Man is about to move off of public land -- as soon as it gets over one more hurdle: soft playa. “We’re part way through the move," said Big Imagination Camp CEO Ken Feldman. "Sometimes things take longer than expected. We’re doing our very best. Just trying to get to that final spot. "We started this, we’re going to finish it," he added. Almost three weeks after Burning Man 2018, a partially reconstructed 747 that was converted into a nightclub art car was still on the playa due to a series of logistical breakdowns. But there is a saying at Burning Man that "the playa provides." It mean s that when someone needs something, the temporary community of 70,000 people mysteriously provides exactly what that person requires to survive. So, despite widespread condemnation of the situation on social media, volunteers from unconnected camps returned to the Black Rock Desert two hours north of Reno to help drag the multi-t...

These photographers want you to see what Burning Man 2018 was really like

Each year we hear about the headaches and gripes related to Burning Man , and yet roughly 70,000 participants make the trek to the Black Rock Desert each year. For those that have never been, the rationale behind setting up camp outside of Gerlach, Nevada for a week can be a bit of a mystery. But a "Doc Team" of volunteer photographers and videographers tries to demystify the event for the uninitiated and chronicle it for those who want to relive the memories. Professional photographer Sidney Ertha l is one of those photographers. He attended his 14th burn this year and is co-creator of the best-selling photo coffee table book Burning Man Art on Fire . He has provided SFGATE with photographs of the event in the past, and shared many of his best 2018 shots in the gallery above The Brazilian-born Erthal found his way to California to study English. After earning a degree in tourism, he "accidentally" ended up in Sausalito, where he had the opportu...

Burning Man entry wait times reportedly hit 10 hours after dust storms forced organizers to close the gates

Thousands of people arrived in Black Rock City, Nevada, over the weekend for Burning Man, which officially began on Sunday. Dust storms caused dangerous driving conditions that day, prompting a three-hour closure of city gates. Wait times peaked around 10 hours and were still six to seven hours-long on Monday morning. During the closure, festival organizers told attendees to return to nearby Reno or stay put on the highway. Wait times to enter  Black Rock City — the temporary city in Nevada where Burning Man is held every August — reportedly hit 10 hours on Sunday after dust storms caused dangerous driving conditions and prompted a three-hour closure of the gates,  the Reno Gazette-Journal reported . Most of the 70,000  Burning Man  attendees went to the desert this past Sunday when the festival officially began. The drive from a local county road to the city gates can take as little as 15 minutes. However, it's common for attendees to experience whi...