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Talk:Burning Man

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ha ha

Burning Man's icon goes up in flames, 4 days prematurely

Joe Garofoli, Chronicle Staff Writer

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

(08-28) 11:27 PDT BLACK ROCK DESERT, NEV. - A San Francisco man was arrested on felony arson charges today after the 40-foot-tall "Man" statue whose torching is the annual highlight of the Burning Man festival in Nevada went up in flames four days early, authorities said.

Paul Addis, 35, of San Francisco, was booked into the Pershing County Jail in Nevada on the arson charge and misdemeanor possession of fireworks, Sheriff Ron Skinner said.

Festival organizers, meanwhile, pondered the smoldering remains of the Man and promised to rebuild the big guy in time for Saturday's regularly scheduled burn in the Black Rock Desert north of Reno.

"The Man is still standing, and an assessment is under way to determine the structural integrity of the Man and the Green Man Pavilion," according to a statement posted today at www.burningman.com. "The event will continue as scheduled."

Jamie Thompson, a spokesman for the federal Bureau of Land Management, which manages the land where the event is held, said the platform and material around the statue was intact.

Some 40,000 people are expected to gather in the desert by this weekend for Burning Man, and Thompson said about 15,000 revelers are already at the festival site. Many were on the playa early this morning watching the lunar eclipse when the fire ignited at 2:58 a.m., according to Burning Man organizers.

Thousands of festival-goers streamed out onto the playa from the surrounding Black Rock City encampment to view the spectacle, witnesses said. Black Rock City rangers rushed to the scene and doused the conflagration within about 25 minutes.

Reactions ranged from amusement and support to frustration and anger.

"I am disturbed that the Man is burnt. As I looked at it, I was going, 'This can't be happening,' " said Bob Harms of South Lake Tahoe, a seven-time burner.

Kyle Marx of Eugene, Ore., said the fire started from the Man's left leg and spread to engulf nearly his entire body.

"Some people were chanting, 'Let him burn, let him burn!' and some were chanting, 'Save the man, save the man!' " Marx said.

Several people were seen clambering up the tower of logs below the statue's platform base shortly before the fire began.

"Someone went to a great extent to interfere with everyone else's burn. I think, frankly, an attention whore has made a plea for attention," said a Burning Man volunteer named Ranger Sasquatch. "In three days, we will have this rebuilt."

A festival-goer who identified herself as simply Erica said she and her friends were "upset by the fact that someone would take this away from everybody who comes to the event just to see the man burn. To try to sabotage him is completely wrong. We wait all year long. This is an adult's Christmas party."

Paul Addis

Paul Addis is a writer, poet, and performer living way too happily across the street from San Francisco's First Chinese Southern Baptist Church.

  • If you haven’t heard, Dodger and Paul Addis and Carolyn Anhalt produced a one-man play about Hunter S. Thompson called GONZO: A Brutal Chrysalis.
  • Mouthful of Frogs is a one-man show that explores the panoply of

afflictions making up the complexities of early 21st Century urban life. Through electrifying spoken word elements, Paul Addis weighs the temptation of expatriation against the allure of America's frequently unrealized potential. Unabashedly political, unflinchingly perverse, and inexplicably odd, his subjects reach into corners of life frequently ignored by contemporary word thrashers. If you're tottering on the edge of staying or going, fending off your relatives' pleas that you seek therapy, or don't think you can put out one more time without losing more than you gained, come get the view from a guy who's walked all three and refuses to give up. Paul Addis is a weird product of nature. His captivating spoken word performances combine somber playfulness, wicked irreverence, and a healthy dose of San Francisco freak factor for a show that will cauterize your synapses. Paul's been featured at Popcorn Anti-Theater, Writers With Drinks, Venue 9, and iBabylon. His short story 'Good Cop Karma' was recently picked up by SoMa Literary Review.

sweet

This article is looking pretty fucking good.

--subseven 17:42, 28 August 2007 (CDT)

I went to Burningman a few times

It was fun. What is nice about it is that if you don't go, then who the eff cares about what goes on there. It is like living in a city, most of its inhabitants will not be people you like or wish to spend time with, except in the case of Burningman, they are in Nevada, with each other, and not asking you to deal with them. So what is the problem? Your lifelong love of the Nevada desert, of the Paiute Indian tribe? your hatred of people using drugs? the way burners are way into their event? that you don't think it is a legitimate form of enjoyment?

I won't be going again, since it was not my thing, but then there are a lot of churches I don't go to, temples, new age retreats, football games, baseball games, raves, clubs, redbull promotional events, the black and white ball, and so on and so on and so on, all of them grounded in cultures I couldn't care less about. So why your negative obsession with Burningman in the article? You either enjoy that sort of thing or don't. And having tried to participate I found the whole thing innocuous, hardly a threat to the world worth railing against.

  • Cry more. What do you think goes on at ED anyway? - that shit is so cash 20:21, 2 November 2008 (CST)
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