Friday, January 25, 2019

Society of the Spectacle, or, Feeling Groovy, 2019 style.


In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all of life presents itself as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation. -- Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, 1967

In the midst of all the talk about the Oscar nominations, someone I know on twitter recently commented that the two Fyre Festival documentaries were the feel-good movies of the year.  The documentaries (“Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened,” on Netflix, and “Fyre Fraud,” on Hulu) depict the events leading up to, during, and after, an extraordinarily inept music festival that was supposed to occur on Great Exuma, in the Bahamas, in the spring of 2017.

Both documentaries gleefully expose the huge amount of hubris required to stage such a big failure, so the viewing pleasure the tweeter referred to was either the fact that they showed lots of rich people having a very bad time and also, perhaps, that the promoter, Billy McFarland, was sentenced to 6 years in jail. In fact, my own ability to take pleasure in thes documentaries referred to something else entirely: the fact that, as co-promoter Ja Rule says at one point, “at least no one died.”

Although that sounds ridiculously cynical, it’s actually a good point. Altamont, 1969: one man killed in full view of the audience by a Hell’s Angel, who was later acquitted. Roskilde, 2000: 9 people dead. Love Parade 2010: 19 deaths. Route 91, Las Vegas: 851 injured, 51 dead. At the  Fyre Festival, concert goers were merely inconvenienced by having to spend a night at the airport. Oh, plus, they lost their money, but what else is new?  Anyway, given the comparative gentleness of the punishment, it’s easy to mock the whole fiasco – if you don’t care to take into account what happened to the Bahamanians who were involved.

The Fyre Festival documentaries were of especial interest to me, because music festivals are my scholarly area. In fact, I just published a book about them, in which I trace the seeds of the kind of dystopia that the Fyre Festival made real. Much like the people who made these films, I started my book with a core research question. I wanted to understand why music festival goers see festivals as being spaces of freedom, when in fact they are the opposite: jails, almost, where basic amenities are costly and privacy is non-existent.

If you have attended even a small outdoor music festival, you are probably aware that they are the direct opposite of every one of these promises. A photograph of Bonnaroo by air, for example, depicts  an urban nightmare of overcrowding transposed on a once-pristine meadow. Yet year after year, concert goers fall for this disjunction and my goal, in taking on this project, was to understand the roots of this riddle.

In my book, I looked at a number of historical festivals to identified four appeals that I claimed underpin festival rhetoric. These were geographical remoteness, idylls of nature and ecology, the availability of sex and drugs, and racialized narratives about unity that obscure the way that race is usually coopted at festivals and used as a form of spectacle. The Fyre Festival organizers definitely took advantage of some of these false narratives – certainly the availability of sex and drugs is heavily implied, as was the appeal of being at an obscure location on a ‘private Caribbean island’ (a natural feature that would soon be wrecked by the advent of 10,000 concert goers). But to those, it added a few new twists, such as the use of the name Pablo Escobar, a video ad using a lot of super famous models cavorting on yachts, and a lot of ad-copy touting access to the most obvious types of vulgar luxury – private jets, beaches, backstage passes, and so forth.

These appeals don’t really conform to any of my ideas about typical music festival appeals, which skew more towards concepts of community-building, utopian ideals, and Bohemian hipness. True, those narratives aren’t any more real than the ones of Fyre, but the Fyre festival ones are so far off the usual ones that it’s like looking at them in a funhouse mirror. For example, the romanticization of Escobar – who, as the Hulu doc pointed out, was not so much a role model as a brutal murderer — is more in line with the way young people today worship businessmen like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk without assigning a judgment to their foibles. Billy McFarland’s inane insistence on using the name “Pablo Escobar” in his promotional materials at the risk of losing access to the island in question – which he did — shows that he had absolutely gauged the appeal of that narrative at it’s worth. The concert sold out in hours.

The distortion of reality – even just the distortion of the illusions that  underpin festival going -- extends way beyond the rhetorical appeals of the original ad for Fyre and the whole idiotic concept of it, all the way through to its denouement. For me, one of the most telling moments in the documentary was when Andy King – the infamous ‘give a blow job for the team’ guy – says that at the height of the madness, he kept thinking about Woodstock, and how what was really a disaster on the ground has been remembered throughout the ages as this fabulous success. In once sense, he’s right, and it makes sense to invoke that image. But Woodstock had one thing that the Fyre Festival lacked: legendary performances by contemporary musical giants. The aesthetic excellence of the Fyre Festival’s musical content  was nil. It was all just an excuse to cavort on the beach with imaginary models.

All of this is just to say that to my mind, the Fyre Festival simply wasn’t a typical musical festival at all. There may be some lessons to learn from it, but they are not the ones that the documentaries say they are. Both of them blame three things for the debacle: McFarland, social media (specifically, Instagram), and, most prominently, Millennials, and what are said to be their values and practices. But I don’t buy it. Sure, McFarland was a huckster, abetted by a number of other hucksters, most prominently Ja Rule. Nothing new about that, it’s the American condition, and why someone once said,  there’s a sucker born every minute. But social media and Millenials come in for a very bad rap here – so bad, that one can’t help but think that the makers of these documentaries are trying to avert our eyes from something far worse.

Instagram, for example, surely doesn’t deserve to bear the brunt of this debacle. Certainly the Fyre Festival’s use of Instagram exploited a particular area of it – that space where ‘influencers’ hawk their lifestyles. But there are millions of users of Instagram, myself, for instance, who have never gone near an influencer’s page, who had no idea about the Festival, and who wouldn’t be induced to by a ticket to it if they did. I never once saw one of those Fyre-colored profile pages, and I’m on Instagram constantly. Surely the Fyre Festival certainly maxed out the number of people who’d buy into its false promises – and remember, many of those we see in the documentary were being comped in, so they didn’t spend any money on it.

To put the onus on millennials is even more specious, because not all millennials are obsessed with glamour. Example: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is a millennial, and one who spends a lot of time on social media, too. She isn’t a Fyre-faller, nor are simply millions and millions of others, even ones who go to music festivals. To taint them all as being shallow and obsessed with their image is to willfully ignore the fact that the Fyre Festival appealed only to a relatively small number of people who had bad judgment about this one thing. Hopefully, they learned a lesson from it.

Besides, one should always distrust blanket assessments of generations like the ones that the Hulu documentary was laden with: “millennials do this, millennials do that.” Millennials come in all shapes and sizes, and one thing often not noted about them is that many of them are incredibly hard workers. This was evident in the documentary, as we saw many millenials continue to work for McFarland well beyond the point when it became clear that the concert was going down. True, judging from the interviews in both, many employees weren’t even remotely concerned about the fact that they worked for someone they fully recognized as a scam artist, to build an app (or a festival) that was clearly sleazy, and this is curious – but I wouldn’t attribute it to their generation alone: this lack of moral grounding is a question that haunts not just the Fyre Festival, but our entire economy right now. Indeed, the same question could and should be asked about the people involved in the Trump administration. Both sets of employees exhibit complete disinterest in ethics of their employers: they’re obviously smart and well educated, or they couldn’t do their jobs, but don’t seem to make any value judgment about what they’re involved in supporting. From the seemingly sensible woman in the Netflix doc who was working on the Fyre app to the young guy who booked the festival by paying the artists way more than their typical fees, their focus is not on the content of what they’re doing, but on how well they themselves can do it.

If you’re going to lay a guilt trip on the people involved in Fyre, that might be the place to lay it – except that there is a word for that kind of detachment: Marx called it ‘alienation,” and it’s a core feature of capitalism. So, much as I’d like to indulge in some schadenfreude, I personally don’t think it’s something any of us should feel superior to, especially not the producers of the Hulu documentary, who paid Mr. McFarland an undisclosed sum just so he could appear on camera and say “No comment” or “I don’t know” over and over again. Isn’t that exactly the kind of cynicism and bad faith that they spend the whole documentary accusing other people of indulging in?

Neither of those realizations made this a “feel good,” movie for me exactly, but not everything about it sucked. In fact, after it aired, some people started a Go Fund Me page for the Bahamian woman, Maryann Rolle, who’d lost $50,000 feeding all the workers at the festival site, and within days they’d surpassed that goal. In short, the Fyre Festival documentary may have exhibited some of the worst impulses of a few people who live amongst us right now. But it also prompted some of the best – and that fact alone kind of shows that the documentaries had a flawed thesis.