Has Burning Man hit its cultural peak? Last year’s washout was a harbinger of waning interest, and the festival did not sell out as expected this year. A bout of capitalistic concern prompted the organization to do something unthinkable. The Burner powers that be took to TikTok to promote the event. A bold move, and one that clashes with Burning Man's Decommodification principle, sparked debate among long-time burners and forced others to sit this one out. In another unconventional move, the BM org pushed prominent camps like Mayan Warrior and Maxa to release their music lineups earlier than usual in hopes of drumming up excitement, a tactic traditionally frowned upon for attracting “DJ chasers” rather than true Burners. Despite this fundamental change in the lead-up to this year's TTITD (That Thing In The Desert), the irreverent Burner spirit persisted with events like the “Golden Hour Influencer Photobombing Bike Tour” and the Firm Globe theme camp, which hilariously satirizes corporate culture by pretending to be a real "technology information and internet" company working from The Playa, complete with a mock LinkedIn page. Burning Man’s pivot to commercial tactics shows the risk of straying from the core values of a strongly established proposition. A business, regardless of the type, will not win all the time.
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