Making festivals roll for initiative
I promise that festivals aren’t the only thing I talk, but here’s a couple more things I want to say.
After my first festival experience last year, and my enjoyment of such, I started thinking about what it would take to get me to go to another one and how to make that call. So, here are my items for consideration.
The Bands: This, of course, is the most critical part. I am devising a points system for the Lollapalooza lineup. The lineup needs to amass 20 points for me to make the trip. Rumored headliner Green Day, who I think will do amazing things with the big space as well as putting on a truly remarkable show? 8 points. Chicago locals Company of Thieves, who are phenomenal live? 1. When the big lineup comes out, I tally up the points and figure out if it’s worth the trouble.
The Location: I like beds and the indoors. After a long day of standing outside, I want a shower and maybe a coffee in the AM. This rules out Bonnaroo, Coachella, and most English festivals, as these all require camping. (I would love to do the Bonnaroo VIP package where you get to stay in a tour bus.) In the points system, being near a hotel is +3. Requiring camping is -10. Minimum.
The Douche Factor: And now we get to the crux. I dislike when people are mean to other people, and I get enraged at things that are exclusive to be exclusive. This is why I will never, ever go to SXSW. The way the festival is organized, two hundred shows in teensy venues, the people who paid up to $800 for a badge or a wristband are not guaranteed entry. Hole is playing in a sports bar that seats 500. This plays into the festival’s “exclusivity for exclusivity’s sake.” People with badges get in first. Then locals with wristbands. Then anyone else who wants to pay. But supposing 700 people with badges show up? 200 people who paid for badges still won’t get to see Hole. And the wristbands can go eff themselves. What’s the point of that system other than being a dick? Let people who paid go to shows. Let people who won’t get in make other plans. Lots of bands are going to play to ten people while everyone tries to get into the Hole show. On the point system, let’s call this a -20. Me spending all of that money and then not getting to see the bands I want to see drops the whole concept way down.
Summary: I’m resigned to not going to any festivals other than Lollapalooza and maybe All Points West (which is a hassle to get to, but technically possible from my apartment) in my lifetime. Maybe someday, when I’m a rich and famous blogger, I’ll rent a house near Coachella or a tour bus at Bonnaroo. But it seems unlikely.
March 4th, 2010 at 12:12 am
If ever you want to camp, you know I will be your tentmate!
March 4th, 2010 at 10:38 am
Katie: I would camp with you, but you would have to do the festival on the last day by yourself, as I would be so miserable from sleeping on the cold hard ground and peeing in chemical toilets that I would spend the whole day sulking.
March 4th, 2010 at 12:18 am
To be fair, like 90 percent of the people who have badges didn’t pay for them at all. Their companies did, since SXSW is supposed to be an industry conference with a festival attached. But hey, that just says more about the state of the industry really.
It would probably help the crowding matters if they actually put multiple “headliners” up a night, instead of spacing them. Like at Lolla where they have two main stages going! You can only really pick one!
March 4th, 2010 at 12:26 am
Is that really how SXSW works? What a nightmare. Even Patrick Stump playing in a tiny venue with The Young Veins couldn’t get me to put up with those shenanigans!
Lolla is probably the only festival I’ll ever go to too. Unless there are other ones located in or near a city with hotel accommodations. You know how I feel about camping and other outdoor related activities!
March 4th, 2010 at 3:16 pm
Maybe I’ll hit the Mega Friday night and then it’s a long journey to all of the festivals on my custom built bus! Living the dream…