Burning Man Festival

Burning Man Festival

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Ratings: 4.86/10 from 22 users.

The Burning Man Festival has grown from a small group of people gathering spontaneously to a community of over 48,000 people. There are no rules about how one must behave or express oneself at this event rather, it is up to each participant to decide how they will contribute and what they will give to this community.

The event takes place on an ancient lake-bed in the desert of Nevada, known as the playa. By the time the event is completed and the volunteers leave, sometimes nearly a month after the event has ended, there will be no trace of the city that was, for a short time, the most populous town in the entire county.

Art is an unavoidable part of this experience, and in fact, is such a part of the experience that Larry Harvey, founder of the Burning Man project, gives a theme to each year, to encourage a common bond to help tie each individual’s contribution together in a meaningful way.

Participants are encouraged to find a way to help make the theme come alive, whether it is through a large-scale art installation, a theme camp, gifts brought to be given to other individuals, costumes, or any other medium that one comes up with.

This documentary about the Burning Man gives some great insights into the whole project and expresses in beautiful pictures how it is to be part of the Burningman-Project.

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40   Comments / Reviews

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  1. what is the song at the start - who singes it, the we don't want no more competition no more, no more drunken tears on the floor.. i would love to have this full song .. anyone knows??

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  2. Burning Man is a party. Always has been and always will be. Sex, drugs and music are obviously part of the lives of 40,000 people but that's the case everywhere on earth. I don't get the negative that people are associating with that reality. I don't do ANY drugs but love the desert and the whole scene.Great Art is probably the best part part of the whole event however. I personally love the Art Cars and hope to construct one for exhibition one year. The nonsense about ideology and guiding principles is nothing more than poster quotes but that's ok. It's a great party and everyone should go at least once. Don't delude yourself that it means anything more than it does though. We aren't changing the world here. If you have a great time in the desert it may very well change your life and that's great. If you come back with nothing more than dust in your shoes then that's ok too. Let everyone take from it what they want, give to it what they want and leave the judgemental bullshit about "not getting it" at home. There is nothing to "get". It's just a party, same as every other festival on the planet, Canada, U.S. or Europe. Most are cloaked in some existential bullshit that was dreamed up while high one night but really doesn't amount to anything in reality. That is entirely cool though. Just go, be happy and enjoy. Ciao

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  3. For Canadians, Shambhala is closer, cheaper and more liberal but it doesn't compare in art. Tickets are on sale, less than 2000 left for online sale.
    No booze!(hum! at least officially)
    az

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  4. Interesting event and interesting comments as well lol....I have not been to one of these events yet have heard about it though..will watch this now that i have come across it....

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  5. I've been to BM several times, this is a pretty bad doc about it. I really don't feel it was well made, the video and sound were bad and random, it missed so many things. Don't base your opinion on this. There are much better ones, I thought Burning Man Beyond Black Rock was better made, and it shows you all the work that goes into making the festival happen, it's history, etc.
    People like to call out BM as being hypocritical, the fact is it takes place within the US and therefore can only happen if it obeys the rules of the land, therefore it can't be an actual Utopia, and is not meant to be one. It is a little taster from which you can take what you want from it to apply to your life the rest of the time, and bring to it what you want - it is made by its own participants so is only as good as what it's participants make of it. If you bring nothing good to the event you will take nothing good.

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  6. I don't feel like this documentary is relevant or represents the event that takes place now. I have returned to Burning Man the last five years and its kinda different than the way it seems portrayed here. If you ARE curious about this festival don't let this bizarro documentary be the end of your research. There are some other docs out there that show other sides of this event. For the record, the nightmarish soundtrack at about 21:00 minutes through left a bad taste in my mouth...though the dust didn't. ;)

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  7. Who's the Artist on the ending of this Doc???

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  8. greatest party on earth! I have been 4 times going again this year. cost for tkt $160 not $2000 Jack M seems like a moron, ignorant at best

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  9. I got to go to the Burning Man Festival and consider myself extremely lucky. I had several epiphanies. The shrine monument was particularly moving for exorcising regrets. It was the largest crowd I've been in and didn't feel threatened. In fact, most, if not all the participants were helpful and accomidating. Radical self suffeciency and radical self expression seemed to be the credo. It was extremely liberating to see so much creativity amongst everyone. You don't have to do drugs or have indiscriminate sex to have a good time. I highly recommend going at least once. If I never go again, it was enough to change my life for the better. 40,000 people "looking in the same direction." WOW

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  10. Ive been a trance party fanatic for some time.

    I run a psytrance record label and have never been to burning man. I didnt enjoy this doco much!!

    I think it did have a slightly cheesy element to it and while Im all for free love...........it always comes at somebodys expense.

    personally I think ill stick to parties that are about the music rather than 10 guiding principles. While the principles seem wholesome and good willed i dont think i could apply them to my life and thus feel my attendence would not be in the right spirit.

    Im sure full time burners wont miss me, but its pretty assured ill be having a good time elsewhere.

    still tho...........looks like a good event. Wont count out going in the future. my only wish is that it wasnt in the USA.

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  11. The festival tickets are now $360 or thereabouts. Everyone must have a ticket so if you are five people in a vehicle and one of them doesn't have their ticket no one will be admitted to the event (after all you can't just dump the guy at the curb). its obvious from the documentary that many participants do not live up to the festival ideal; there was a dog running around and dogs are banned, there was a lot of litter left behind. Radical self-reliance for one week will cost you more than $2000, just look at the suggested list or mandatory items you would need for a week. The use of toilets is a big thing and if you really have to go fast you'll end up pissing in the desert wind. They check your vehicle when entering kind of like TSA at the airport but without the pat down. There are rules. Rules about vehicles, rules about bikes, where to camp, drug use, where you can have sex etc. Law enforcement agencies work the event so its not as if you are 'outside society' at all so remember you can be busted for having drug paraphernalia. The dream of chaos or living without rules is just that, a dream. It would be impossible for the event managers to keep anarchy alive once the festival grew. What you have now is a festival where there are limits to ones behaviour which is fair enough. If you want the burning man experience and have not yet been then your years too late. Better off going and starting your own scene or joining a new one that has just flowered.

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  12. I want to see the instalations and to meet some strangers...that's it...isn't it enough...For me it is.....

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  13. ever heard of BOOM Festival? is mutch bether than burning man, people come from all around the world.

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  14. So I've been to burning man. It was a great start, but it's much more of a place for upper-middle class white people to party. Thats not what it started as and not what the core of the burning man community is about. And most of the people that are into just "hooking up with chicks" are not there because of burning man, they went for a party. Sure there are lost of drugs there, but there are lots of drugs everywhere. The real "burners" tend to use them responsibly to enhance the experience, the way drugs should be used. Most of the bad stuff talked about that people do or had happen to them has nothing to do with the burners, it's all the rich yuppies and their children that show up looking for a crazy party. They don't even know what the purpose of burning man is or the principles that guide it, as do most of you who have posted here. If all you know about burning man is what is shown in this doc then your criticisms are valid, however it is not the complete picture. Also, the event coordinators are not lining their pockets. They might make a decent living but the tickets to the event are only $275 for a whole week. You can't take a 8 hour seminar to listen to some "expert" speak about anything at a Hyatt for that price. And the cost of the infrastructure to support 50000 people for a week is a lot. Not to mention the cost of all the permits required to use the land. the $2000 price tag includes all of the stuff you might bring and renting a truck and gas and etc none of that goes to the organizers.
    I no longer go to the big burn, but am becoming more and more active in the local burning man scene. There is less money involved, everyone is a volunteer, and people work together. The Goal is to take all 10 guiding principles to apply them to our daily lives. So the idea is to do something all the time and for free and change the world, at least around you, as much as you can.

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  15. The doc touches on the question of why aren't there more 'colour people' at BM several times. As a person of colour who comes from a third world country this thing looks like it might be fun and artistic but not realistic. If you ever come from a place so poor where the currency is worth nothing and you have to barter to survive then you will know how crappy it is to barter. All these people who grew up in nice homes, eat as much as they need,drive/fly to this dessert and spit on the very economic advances that allowed them the luxury of having this festival seem phoney.

    When you know the true nature, and the great suffering of living in a sustenance economy then its obvious that the people in this documentary know nothing about what they claim to be recreating. Thats why I as a 'coloured person' would not go to Burning Man. Call it artistic and end it right there, but please don't feed me hypocritical b.s. about something you know nothing of.

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  16. wow - SAVE your money - It's VERY important to revisit and focus on the part about how this is an ELITE EVENT - YOU HAVE TO PAY LARGE SUMS OF MONEY - which lines the pockets of the event masters and excludes the folks back in town already living "with nothing' in the streets.

    EVERY single person I've known that frequents this festival seems to be rather ungrounded and zombie-like.

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  17. does anyone have an idea of the name of the first song played in the doc?? love it but cant seem to find it...
    it starts like "we don't no, we don't no confrontation no more, we don't no, we don't no dragons tears on the floor, we don't no confrontation no more, we don't no confrontation no more...."
    thx for your help!

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  18. I have been to a Burning Man Festival, (required as a Wiccan priest in my order, whatever... let that go...)

    Bunch of muddy hippies. Some good music, but mostly really bad theology!

    I had to leave the faith after that last one. Just a bunch of dirty apes...

    Awful, really... SCIENCE!!! Put your clothes back on, you silly youngsters!

    I want to eat your tender fleshes...

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  19. Oh and if you do go dont leave a tonne of mess for someone else to pick up....remember leave no trace!!!!

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  20. $2000 and don't forget the air fair if your'e going from another country. A few of my friends have gone from the U.K. and go about it all the time, now I have seen the doc I wont be going anytime soon. Anyway the U.K. is the festival capitol of the world and has been since before Burning Man started. You have to hit the festivals when they first start out before the corperations get involved like they will always do in the end. The Big Chill and Glastonbury to name but a couple. Change your mindset and dont go to places that make you feel like you have changed you mind set costing you a small fortune to do it.

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  21. Michael Mithoefer, Rick Doblin, Ann/Sasha Shulgin, Amanda Feilding, Leah Martin, and many more lectured at the 2006 BM. The topics they covered deal with some of the most vital and fascinating realms that deal with for brevity, address the alleviation of human suffering and then towards reaching foundations of well being and critical thinking. They and the huge tent of audience members alone are easy retort to so much ignorance and bias seen posted in here.

    Andrine:
    None of the males I've known from BM have that mentality. Obviously they are there and in possibly decent number, yet, I apparently migrated towards chat with the other side of the spectrum from your view.

    I actually went alone and found carpool thingy on the forum for BM. Another factor for me was having a significant other at the time, however, even without there wasn't any draw abuse various psychoactives (use, abuse and carelessness being very different) or seek out easy lays.

    I wandered into a medium tent called the Lucky 777 or something along those lines. Had a sit down and a chap who was a part of the group started a conversation with me for in theory friendly reasons. He invited me to join his friends later for the burning fest later that night. I showed up, met them all, all nice and cheery and no wasted or overly high grins to note.
    Being my first time, I didn't realize you need a bike... They lent me a bike and simply requested I return it the next day. We wandered miles around and many stops at various sights and activities.
    These half a dozen people were nothing akin to your stories.

    There was a whole lot worthwhile art and experience to be taken in, especially if it's dust.

    P.S. I returned the bike the next night and they were surprised that I did. It seems that it's not uncommon people are flakey and lazy with such things.

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  22. Most of the guys I know go to Burning Man because they know they'll be able to get laid very easily, and by many, many, many different women—this is primarily why they go. Getting high/wasted out of their minds for several day runs a close second.

    The stories I've been told about all the irresponsible "free love," have completely turned me off. I'm not sure the women realize that the sex is what it's all about for a lot of guys who attend.

    I don't know, but my vagina is pretty sacred to me—I wouldn't feel liberated by letting everyone have a piece of it, even if they were peace-lovin', open-minded, soulful, faux hippie dudes.

    Respect yourselves, for crying out loud.

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  23. Pretty irrelevant but, so are all the religious debates that are CONSTANTLY posted on almost every single documentary on this site... There's an episode of Malcolm in the Middle that's particularly funny, when the whole family unknowingly travels to burning man, hah. It's totally worth a watch.

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  24. jack M - I'm sure most of the people there don't think they're 'buying a revolution', it seems more about experiencing a world where people are sharing and giving instead of always doing something for personal gain, and what do you expect them to do when they go back to their lives in the city, quit their jobs and never buy anything again? if you dont work as part of the system you die, quite literally, even a homeless man has to buy food sometimes, we are completely trapped in the system

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  25. I went to BM in 2006. At the time I was living way up in northern Ontario, Canada. Recently introduced into the psychedelic culture and electronic music. All of this seems obvious, however, upon living the experience, I noticed that no matter how much one tries to define an experience, it will forever remain subjective. I thought that the music was an electronic cliche, I thought too many people there relied on a mind altering experience through drugs. Out of the 50 odd thousand people there, I may have met 3 legitimate movement pioneers, the rest were just escaping, like myself. No matter how much one wants to believe that they are contributing to a "better" society, the fact is, if you do it only once a year, it's like working out once a year, it does nothing for yourself, nor the world around you.

    I don't do heavy drugs anymore, and I don't go to clubs and party. Though the desert is calling me, more than anything, I feel the geography was the change I needed, and seeing people high as shit running about reminded me of all the city folk hoped up on coffee doing the same thing, pointing fingers in each others chest claiming that the other "just doesn't get it". To that end, everyone with an opinion that isn't directly followed by action are just ant's from a different colony, whether it be hippies or conservatives, we all got it wrong, and we're all too self involved to notice that.

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