More on the Burning Brand
Can Burning Man survive being in the public domain? The event's original hometown paper, the San Francisco Chronicle, weighs in, with a quote from yours truly.
My long Newsweek interview on the topic, previous blogging on this fresh lawsuit over ownership of the Burning Man brand here, and my book This Is Burning Man , which explains everything you would, and wouldn't, want to know about Burning Man.
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Definately in the hippie spirit:
Burning Man tickets went on sale this month...
...suing his two partners over the rights to the Burning Man name and logo.
...Burning Man trademark's value...
...Law wants to collect on the creative capital he put into Burning Man...
...the Burning Man blogosphere...
See JWZ's (a founding Netscape engineer and SF nightclub owner) "Burning Hypocrisy" for a look at Burning Man Inc. waaay back in 2002:
http://www.jwz.org/gruntle/burningman.html
As I wrote in another forum:
"Come on now, Burning Man validates my whole existence as a Baby Boomer.
"How else do you recognize the singular most self-important, self-entitled generation in all of history but by fawning over everything they did."
I've never found Burning Man to be particularly hippieish, or particularly Baby Boomerish (I would guess a plurality of Burners are in the 25-35 range).
Of course, Burning Man is many things to many people. My favorite event this year was the "Fight Club." Yes, you could have an actual, violent, fight with anyone you wanted. Complete with very loud metal music. Hippie? Not really.
Funny!
But not as funny as THIS.
Er...that last post was meant for the Drug Propaganda Thursday thread...
Nothing ruins a good thing like success.
Warren
At this point, they should just sell the thing to Disney and be done with it.
Burning Man has always struck me as being Gen X-centric and dominated by geeks pretending to be hippies for the duration, not Boomer-anything.
Cool, I'd love to go to Burning Man. Is there a time machine that can take me to 5 minutes ago?