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Un aperçu exclusif des coulisses de l'infâme effondrement du festival musical Fyre.Un aperçu exclusif des coulisses de l'infâme effondrement du festival musical Fyre.Un aperçu exclusif des coulisses de l'infâme effondrement du festival musical Fyre.
- Nommé pour 4 Primetime Emmys
- 6 nominations au total
Billy McFarland
- Self - Fyre Co-Founder
- (images d'archives)
Jason Bell
- Self - Former NFL Player
- (images d'archives)
Ja Rule
- Self - Fyre Co-Founder
- (images d'archives)
Mdavid Low
- Self - Fyre Creative Director
- (as MDavid Low)
James Ryan Ohliger
- Self - Jerry Media
- (as James Ohliger)
Grant Margolin
- Self - Fyre Marketing Director
- (images d'archives)
Keith van der Linde
- Self - Pilot
- (as Keith)
- …
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Netflix's take on the Fyre Festival fiasco has a more grounded vibe than Hulu's more montage-driven version. But ultimately both platforms do well in building up what the Fyre disaster was all about, both before and after it all. We can debate on the ethics of what occurred behind the scenes of each doc, at the end of the day there was little bias to be had as the message was the same: Billy McFarland was a delusional fraduster.
The real entertainment is seeing wealthy people predictably buy into the facade of luxury only to experience first world problems as if they have it worse than the middle class. When the "worst 24 hours of your life" involves a botched Bahamas vacation because some huge festival party you paid thousands for didn't happen, it just looks ridiculous compared to people going through real issues like years of no clean water in Flint, MI.
No one deserves to suffer, but there is hilarity in seeing self-important narcissistic party socialites who never worked a day in their lives get scammed because they put their trust in some circle of wealthy social media models and "influencers"...for some luxury party.
This documentary illustrates the perfect analogy of the social media illusion with the Fyre fest disaster. Some things are just too good to be true, and may even be a facade of something much much worse. It is an important documentary to raise awareness of the problems of social media and the concept of understanding what it takes to do something seemingly impossible.
The real entertainment is seeing wealthy people predictably buy into the facade of luxury only to experience first world problems as if they have it worse than the middle class. When the "worst 24 hours of your life" involves a botched Bahamas vacation because some huge festival party you paid thousands for didn't happen, it just looks ridiculous compared to people going through real issues like years of no clean water in Flint, MI.
No one deserves to suffer, but there is hilarity in seeing self-important narcissistic party socialites who never worked a day in their lives get scammed because they put their trust in some circle of wealthy social media models and "influencers"...for some luxury party.
This documentary illustrates the perfect analogy of the social media illusion with the Fyre fest disaster. Some things are just too good to be true, and may even be a facade of something much much worse. It is an important documentary to raise awareness of the problems of social media and the concept of understanding what it takes to do something seemingly impossible.
You'll laugh at some of the scenes, but this whole thing is a no joke. The collapse of this whole event (it was inevitable since inception), shows that the governments should take necessary steps to prevent financial fraud caused by social media.
This is exactly the right documentary about the social media age and the so called influencers. How a specific guy took advantage of the whole absurdity in order to make a profit and turned out to be a huge crook, taking full exploitation of the morons who are so into the lifestyle of the 21st century - trying to be social media models (or look like them), playing their own little reality show by living the high life. And at the end you're reminded that there were some hard working people, festival professionals and local Bahamians, that worked really hard to pull this off and ended up losing a lot of money plus part of their own dignity. Strong piece of film.
It was almost palpable, the sense of unease that you feel as the concert goers began to realize just how much of a disaster they'd signed up for...even though you knew it was coming.
This was a very well told story, and aside from that, the best thing I could say is that it was told very to-the-point. It wasn't a long, rambling documentary...it said what needed to be said, yet also gives the viewer a nuanced view of just how some of the people behind this promotion were able to be dragged in over their heads. You can't help but feel for some of these guys, as they were taken for just as much of a ride as the festival attendees, but lost more than just the cost of a ticket.
There's currently a Gofundme page set up for the owner of a restaurant who worked tirelessly to provide food for everyone, giving up her life savings in the process. Apparently she was very reluctant to speak on camera, as the issue is still very hurtful for her, but hopefully it'll end up being worth it for her having done so.
If you don't know much about this event, this is one heck of a story insofar as the difference between what was advertised and what was eventually produced, the dichotomy itself provided quite a bit of entertainment value with its "wow" factor. Great documentary on a very interesting part of our zeitgeist, a testament to the power of social media as well as its potential for abuse and the superficiality it helps foster.
If you don't know much about this event, this is one heck of a story insofar as the difference between what was advertised and what was eventually produced, the dichotomy itself provided quite a bit of entertainment value with its "wow" factor. Great documentary on a very interesting part of our zeitgeist, a testament to the power of social media as well as its potential for abuse and the superficiality it helps foster.
A nice in depth look to the disaster Fyre event and a behind the scenes look at how a great business idea can explode when you don't plan properly and you're selling an idea rather than a product. You'll be satisfied by the outcome but bittersweet knowing that a rich boy never learnt his lesson in the end.
Hate Influencers? 'Fyre' Is the Documentary for You!
Hate Influencers? 'Fyre' Is the Documentary for You!
Looking for something to watch? Check out Fyre. After taking social media by storm in 2017, the notorious Fyre Festival is back in the spotlight with a tell-all Netflix documentary.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMary Ann Rolle set up a GoFundMe to help pay her staff. It reached $260000 in the first 9 days.
- GaffesThe copyright notice right at the end of the movie credits states: "Ownership of this motion picture is protected by copyright and other applicable laws of the United States of America and other countried."
- Citations
Himself - Event Producer: I got to his office, fully prepared to suck his dick.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Épisode #2.19 (2019)
- Bandes originalesTHE TIDES (OPENING CREDITS)
Written, Arranged, Produced, and Performed by Jason Hill
Assisted by Keely King and David Lewallen
Courtesy of Department of Recording and Power
Recorded at Department of Recording and Power
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- How long is Fyre?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 37 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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What was the official certification given to Fyre : Le meilleur festival qui n'a jamais eu lieu (2019) in India?
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