70,000 at Burning Man festival are isolated, still stuck as rain returns

Authored by nbclosangeles.com and submitted by pomonamike

Burning Man's estimated 70,000-plus attendees were isolated at the venue known as Black Rock City as rain returned Sunday and closed roads, muddy campgrounds, and one reported death darkened the day.

But the CEO of Burning Man Project, Marian Goodell, told NBC News interview Sunday, "There is no cause for panic."

"We're very pleased and surprised that there has been such a fuss over us," she said.

Organizers under the nonprofit project planned an orderly exit Monday, which is the last day of the event, and have so far turned down help from the Nevada National Guard, she said.

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"We've made it really clear that we do not see this as an evacuation situation," Goodell said. "The water is drying up."

The crowd at the countercultural music and arts festival was first advised to “shelter in place” and conserve food and water on Friday, according to notices from organizers.

Read the full story at NBCNews.com here.

Violet_Nite on September 4th, 2023 at 16:53 UTC »

I bet some people are having a blast in the mud, and some are miserable.

ccminiwarhammer on September 4th, 2023 at 16:19 UTC »

I saw some bro commenting yesterday that their 20 foot raised yurt was still ok and their neighbors we still partying.

How’s it going today?

grimatongueworm on September 4th, 2023 at 15:54 UTC »

Funniest thing I’ve read in a long time was Burning Man Missed Connections. They went something like this: I was the steamboat Captain in the leather thong and top hat, you were the dolphin princess in the thigh-hi lace ups. I was pretty high on ketamine, but I thought we had a moment behind the dumpster that was on fire