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August 28, 2007 3:44 AM PDT

The Man burned on Monday

by Daniel Terdiman
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BLACK ROCK CITY, Nevada--The Man burned Monday night. Seriously.

For years at Burning Man, the joke has been, "We should burn the Man on Wednesday."

The Man
Credit: Elinor Mills/CNET News.com
The Man, not yet on fire, in 2005.

The Man, of course, is the tall wooden figure at the center of the annual countercultural arts festival.

Well, late Monday night--OK, early Tuesday morning--the mantra came true.

As groups of people were gathered around, watching the eclipse of the moon, just as the moon went into full eclipse, word--which I listened to--started to filter across "Com," the official Burning Man organizational radio communications system, that someone had set the Man ablaze.

In the first moments, it sounded like a joke. But within a minute, the reports were that one of the Man's legs was on fire.

People in earshot of the radio--carried by many volunteers and staff members--rushed to places where they could see if the reports were true. They almost completely forgot that the eclipse was happening.

And within the shortest period of time--maybe five minutes, the wooden figure was completely engulfed.

On Com, most of the officials discussing what to do were remarkably calm. I was impressed, though, of course, that this has to have been a contingency that has been rehearsed again and again.

Still, it took several minutes before fire crews were able to get water onto the Man, and it is likely that, though it did not fall, it is irretrievably damaged.

As a reporter, I apologize for not being able to provide a photograph, but the burning took place so quickly, there wasn't time to grab my camera.

In any case, perhaps the most poignant moment of all, however, was when Crimson Rose, one of the six people on the Burning Man board that runs the event and the person in charge of the Man, said, on Com, "I want that asshole arrested....And I want the first shot."

Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel.
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Counterculture?
by jmdecombe August 28, 2007 8:55 AM PDT
I guess that's what happens when you want to turn a supposedly
countercultural event (yeah, right) it into a perfectly planned,
organized, and controlled meeting of hippie wannabes. The voices
told him to burn the man... too bad for those who weren't there to
enjoy the show. Anyway, greetings from the Bay Area and its
beautiful weather!
Reply to this comment
Counterculture II
by lmasanti August 28, 2007 10:33 AM PDT
quote:
"was when Crimson Rose, ..., said, on Com, "I want that *******
arrested....And I want the first shot.""

Is this "counterculture" or just "George W. Bush's culture"?
Reply to this comment
Man Burning
by samkass August 28, 2007 10:42 AM PDT
They PUT OUT the burning man? It seems to me more in the spirit of the event to have it burn, unphotographed, during the eclipse than according to some manager's time schedule.
Reply to this comment
The eclipse
by baconstang August 28, 2007 12:16 PM PDT
seems like the perfect time to light him up. Suprised they didn't
schedule it for then.
View reply
Lousy timing during the Eclipse
by Shankland August 28, 2007 12:40 PM PDT
Had I been there, I would have been peeved at the distraction from watching an eclipse in the desert. Of course, I probably would have gone to some place darker and tamer in the first place.
Reply to this comment
Burning man = ultimate Silicon Valley losers
by free_people August 28, 2007 12:47 PM PDT
What a bunch of losers!
Here we live in a country that does not have Universal health care, Universal Education, and many other social services of European countries, as a result of which we are getting poorer and poorer as evident by the ever falling Dollar vs Euro and the weakling housing market in US vs strengthening housing market in Europe. Here we are a country that is in its 5th year of occupying
a small defenses country of Iraq and having brought it unimaginable death, misery & Genocide and these pathetic losers rather than demonstrating about these injustices by having demonstrations in DC or elsewhere they go to the desert in Nevada, act like they are enlighten silicon valley digiteriats and set a wooden statue on fire!

Viv La France indeed. For if there was all that is wrong in US in France, the French people would be demonstrating in the streets of Paris and elsewhere, burning down those SOBs who were responsible for these injustices. And not going to the desert to burn down a wooden man.
Reply to this comment
Someone got up on the wrong side of the bed
by Peter Glaskowsky August 28, 2007 1:20 PM PDT
C'mon, Mr. Grouchy, turn that frown upside down.

Yeah, we don't have universal health care, but neither does any
other country.

We provide universal access to emergency care, but require
people to pay for their routine health maintenance and advanced
care. This approach provides an incentive to healthcare
providers to develop and offer the latest technology.

Other countries provide universal access to both emergency care
and routine health maintenance, but effectively discourage
providers from offering advanced care; if high-tech medicine is
made available in most countries, it must be made available for
free, which is simply impractical.

If it wasn't for the profit motive in the US healthcare system,
much of modern medical technology wouldn't even be
developed... and nobody would have access to it.

There are at least tens of millions of people who would rather
live in the United States, under the present health-care policies,
than in any other country on Earth. We know that because
they're here already. There may well be billions of these people,
but there's really no way to tell.

And there are plenty of countries that offer the social services
you say you value, yet you don't move. So I guess you like it here
better too.

It's good to express your discontent. Please continue doing that;
it helps us all. But don't call us "losers" when we are clearly
winners by any objective standard as well as the subjective
standard of people voting with their feet. And try really hard to
keep your more outrageously stupid opinions to yourself; lying
is not a legitimate form of political expression.

. png
git 'er done.
by tisha2 August 28, 2007 5:04 PM PDT
excellent point.

so where and when is your protest?
Paul Addis -- photo and interview!
by jaxnight August 28, 2007 5:47 PM PDT
This is strange. This web site interviewed both Larry Harvey and Paul Addis within eight weeks of each other.

http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/2007/08/28/burning-the-man-with-hunter-s-thompson/
Reply to this comment
Who Cares?
by lcftn August 29, 2007 4:38 PM PDT
A real non-news-news event Right up there with Paris Hilton.

WHO CARES?
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