logo
Billy McFarland Sells Fyre Festival Brand on Ebay for $245,300

Billy McFarland Sells Fyre Festival Brand on Ebay for $245,300

Yahoo2 days ago
The long, pathetic, sordid, criminal saga of Billy McFarland and the Fyre Festival came to an ignominious end Tuesday afternoon at precisely 12:44:11 pm EST when the convicted fraudster unloaded the brand and all trademarks related to the ill-fated musical festival on eBay for $245,300.
McFarland still owes $26 million in restitution related to his wire fraud conviction, so he's going to have to keep scrounging around to raise the remaining $25,754,700.
More from Rolling Stone
Billy McFarland Is Now Trying to Unload the Fyre Fest Brand on eBay
Billy McFarland Is Looking for a Buyer Who Wants to Make Fyre Fest Their Problem Instead
Fyre Fest 2 Postponed, Obviously
For those of you with no memory of 2017 and somehow missed Hulu's Fyre Fraud and Netflix's Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened, the Fyre Festival was advertised as a luxury musical festival on an island in the Bahamas with lineup that included Blink-182, Pusha T, Tyga, Desiigner, Major Lazer, Disclosure, and Migos.
But when fans arrived at the festival site, they were greeted with little more than dinky tents, grounds that resembled a refugee camp, and cheese sandwiches. It turned out that McFarland and his investors, including rapper Ja Rule, didn't have the money, means, or experience to stage the event. A wave of lawsuits followed, and McFarland was sentenced to six years in prison.
McFarland was released in 2022 and immediately started to plan a second Fyre Festival. 'We have the chance to embrace this storm and really steer our ship into all the chaos that has happened,' he told NBC. 'And if it's done well, I think Fyre has a chance to be this annual festival that really takes over the festival industry.'
Unsurprisingly, McFarland had absolutely no ability to deliver on that promise. This time around, however, the plug was pulled long before any guests arrived. In the aftermath, he decided to cut his losses and forever part ways with the brand.
'This brand is bigger than any one person,' Mr. McFarland said in a statement on Instagram. 'It's clear that I need to step back and allow a new team to move forward independently.'
It's unclear who bought it, but they now own the Fyre Festival brand name, the social media accounts, 'comprehensive marketing assets,' the domain names, 'artist & talent relationships,' an 'extensive media coverage archive,' and 'access to the core team (optional).'
This poses a few questions. First off, how exactly can 'artist and talent relationships' be sold? And weren't those relationships forever poisoned by the historic debacles of the past? It's hard to imagine that Blink-182's team sees this as a solid relationship. They won't exactly be like, 'A random person bought the Fyre Festival. We're obligated by the terms of an Ebay listing to work with them on their next endeavor, even though we were humiliated and stiffed out of money eight years ago by the original team.'
Secondly, it's nice to see that access to McFarland and Ja Rule is optional, but is that really a selling point? They haven't proven themselves very adept at putting on this particular festival. Someone is going to give them a third attempt with their own money on the line?
Finally, what exactly is this media archive? Is it linked to online articles documenting the collapse of the festival, the lawsuits that followed, and the pathetic attempt to stage a second one? Did they make a scrapbook of the print articles? These are assets?
As we await answers, it's good to know that the Fyre Festival dream isn't dead. It's now in the hands of somebody else with $245,300 to spare. We look forward to seeing what they do with it.
Best of Rolling Stone
Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mail scams are still targeting Canadians even today – here's what to watch for
Mail scams are still targeting Canadians even today – here's what to watch for

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mail scams are still targeting Canadians even today – here's what to watch for

As a compliance and anti-fraud professional, Amber D. Scott is no stranger to scams. But even she was surprised to find one waiting in her community mailbox, addressed directly to her. The letter purported to be from Ledger, a maker of cryptocurrency hardware wallets, asking her to scan a QR code to enable a new security feature. If she didn't complete the setup by July 30, the letter says she could lose access to her cryptocurrency. Scott, chairperson of Outlier Compliance Group, says the letter had several hallmarks of legitimacy at first glance. It contained no obvious spelling mistakes, listed devices a recipient might own, included brand logos and provided a signature. It also created a sense of urgency by imposing a deadline, she says. 'There's likely a higher open rate when you get a piece of mail addressed to you,' she added, whereas it's easier to delete an email. The scam Scott encountered is part of a growing trend of increasingly sophisticated fraud targeting Canadians, sometimes even through old-fashioned mail. While many scams have moved online, experts warn that physical letters can appear highly convincing and prey on urgency or fear. Canadians lost over $342 million to fraud in the first six months of 2025, according to Jeff Horncastle, client and communications outreach officer for the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC). Roughly $827,000 of that was a result of mail fraud. In 2024, investment fraud — including cryptocurrency scams — was among the top three fraud types reported to the CAFC, accounting for more than $310 million in losses. While cyber-enabled fraud accounts for about 75 per cent of reported losses to the CAFC, the organization has noted an increase in certain types of mail fraud, such as foreign money offers which include inheritance letters. Mail scams continue to deceive Canadians because they look official, Horncastle says. Printed letters often mimic the formatting and logos of those they're impersonating, and they can include real details, including your name and contact information. Fraudsters may also lure victims with promises of rewards or large amounts of money via what appears to be formal communications, he says. Scott says her approach to anything cryptocurrency related is to assume it's a scam, and then try to disprove that hypothesis. She didn't scan the QR code as advised, and suspects it would have led to a fake Ledger site asking her to download information or enter private keys or seed phrases (a crypto wallet recovery passcode) that would give scammers access to cryptocurrency. Or, it might automatically download malware that steals crypto automatically, she says. Horncastle similarly recommends Canadians not to scan QR codes received through unsolicited messages, which include letters in the mail. Always contact the company or agency by finding their official contact information first — outside of what appears in the letter. When doing so, Scott recommends searchers avoid any websites that don't look familiar. 'People can be less critical when they're evaluating Google search results,' she said. To debunk the scam, Scott also searched online for the suggested 'Ledger transaction check' alongside the word 'scam' and quickly found a warning from Ledger itself. The company confirmed it does not send physical letters to customers, suggesting such scams have circulated before. The scams may possibly be related to a previous data breach involving customer names and addresses, Scott says. She recommends others also search for two related terms + 'scam' when receiving suspicious communications. To break the sense of urgency scams create, Scott recommends taking a beat and talking to other people about what has been received — or find other ways to reflect on how to respond. It will decrease a sense of agitation that could spur a quick reaction. 'This is the challenge of our times,' she said. 'Figuring out what's real and true.' If you suspect a scam, report it to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Former police worker must pay back £100,000
Former police worker must pay back £100,000

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Former police worker must pay back £100,000

A former South Yorkshire Police worker who stole thousands of pounds from the force has been ordered to pay back a further £100,000. Jacqueline Fletcher, 55, of Boundary Walk in Rotherham, was jailed for two years eight months in 2018 for four counts of theft, and told to pay back £47,000. The order has since been reviewed, and a judge at Sheffield Crown Court said on 8 July that Fletcher must pay another £108,256. If she does not pay the total in three months she could be jailed again, police said. Fletcher worked in Attercliffe Police Station's property store and in 2013 a "large amount of cash" was seized during a police investigation, the force said. Fletcher said she counted and banked the money for the force but she actually banked £98,500 to her own account with £1,500 into the force account. She left the force in 2015. The theft came to light in summer 2017, police said, when a Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA) investigation connected to the seized money requested the cash but it could not be found. An investigation was launched by the Yorkshire and Humber Regional Organised Crime Unit (YHROCU) and Fletcher was told to pay £47,000. Police said the original 2018 order had been reconsidered and Fletcher must now pay the extra sum calculated from assets acquired since the first confiscation order. If she fails to pay in three months she could face a 12-month prison sentence. Det Supt James Axe, the force's head of professional standards, said police employees should behave "professionally, honestly and with integrity" but "Fletcher showed none of these traits" and had "behaved disgracefully". He said the money recovered by YHROCU's "vital work" means more money is secured for community grants and police training so criminals cannot keep benefitting. Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North More on this story Police worker stole £100k of seized cash Related internet links South Yorkshire Police

Olivia Rodrigo Plants Her Flag in the U.K. With Double Duty at Glastonbury & BST Hyde Park
Olivia Rodrigo Plants Her Flag in the U.K. With Double Duty at Glastonbury & BST Hyde Park

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Olivia Rodrigo Plants Her Flag in the U.K. With Double Duty at Glastonbury & BST Hyde Park

It might be Fourth of July week here in the U.S., but this past weekend of music very much belonged to the U.K. Glastonbury Festival wrapped up Sunday night with a headlining set from American pop star Olivia Rodrigo, which included a cameo from The Cure frontman Robert Smith to duet on his band's hits 'Just Like Heaven' and 'Friday I'm in Love.' But that wasn't it for Olivia: She also headlined the BST Hyde Park concert series on Friday night and surprised her crowd with Ed Sheeran for a duet on his breakthrough song 'The A Team.' More from Billboard Olivia Rodrigo Brings Out The Cure's Robert Smith at Glastonbury 2025 Could Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter Tour Guests Lead to First 'Telephone' Performance With Lady Gaga? Controversy Is Sabrina Carpenter's 'Best Friend' With Scandalized Reaction to New Album Cover On the new Billboard Pop Shop Podcast, Katie & Keith are talking about the busy weekend of music in the U.K., which included Glastonbury sets from Charli xcx, Doechii, Scissor Sisters and The 1975. To hear all about it, check out the new episode below: Also on the show, while Morgan Wallen's I'm the Problem sits tight for a sixth week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, Benson Boone's second full-length studio album American Heart debuts at No. 2, Karol G's latest bows at No. 3 and the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack slays with a No. 8 debut. Meanwhile, as Alex Warren's 'Ordinary' rules for a fourth week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, Cardi B's latest single 'Outside' makes a splash with a top 10 debut. The Billboard is your one-stop shop for all things pop on Billboard's weekly charts. You can always count on a lively discussion about the latest pop news, fun chart stats and stories, new music, and guest interviews with music stars and folks from the world of pop. Casual pop fans and chart junkies can hear Billboard's executive digital director, West Coast, Katie Atkinson and Billboard's managing director, charts and data operations, Keith Caulfield every week on the podcast, which can be streamed on or or your favorite podcast provider. ( on Best of Billboard Drake's Historic Chart Week: How He Matched The Beatles' 57-Year-Old Record How Elton John Keeps Up His Hot 100 Hot Streak With Dua Lipa Duet 'Cold Heart' Pink's 'All I Know So Far' Has Us Looking Back at the History of Live Music on the Charts Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store