1.6 Million Viewers Tune Into Burning Man Live Stream

By 09/01/2014
1.6 Million Viewers Tune Into Burning Man Live Stream

Today as people all over the United States celebrate the cohesive power of the American workforce, others have just finished up watching a massive celebration of radical self-reliance and self-expression. The Burning Man Festival, which started a week ago on August 25, 2014, attracted nearly 1.6 million viewers to its live streaming channel.

A screenshot from archive.org reveals that the channel had over 3.6 million views as of August 1, 2014:

1.6 Million Viewers Tune Into Burning Man Live Stream by Bree Brouwer of Tubefilter

Compare that to this screenshot taken today, which shows over 5.2 million views, an increase of roughly 1.6 million views over the course of a month:

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1.6 Million Viewers Tune Into Burning Man Live Stream by Bree Brouwer of Tubefilter

Taking place in the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada, the Burning Man Festival started in 1986 and occurs every year from the last Monday of August to the first Monday of September. This year over 70,000 attendees (aka “Burners”) celebrated art, culture, and all the self-expression and self-reliance they wanted at the event. The live stream captured all their major ongoings in and around the playa and featured a number of audio interviews with both new and longtime attendees, who often times waxed philosophical on the Burning Man experience.

And of course, Burning Man wouldn’t live up to its namesake without a few good burns. For starters, a statue called “Embrace” was burned to the ground on Friday night, August 29. According to Business Insider, the 72-foot statue of a man and woman was made from 160,000 pounds of wood and was on the same scale as the Statue of Liberty.

Event-goers and livestreamers also experienced “The Burn,” a traditional burning of a huge statue, on Saturday night, August 30, 2104. An attendee captured the flames in an incredible aerial footage video:

In accordance with Burning Man’s “Leave No Trace” policy, all of the burn remains (as well as the whole of the festival) had to be cleaned up at the end of the event, so the land was left the same as it was before. While the ethic is admirable, hopefully all you have to worry about cleaning up today is the remains of your barbecue.

Photo courtesy of The Pier Group’s “Embrace” Kickstarter campaign

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