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IMDbPro

Fyre Fraud

  • 2019
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
7K
YOUR RATING
Fyre Fraud (2019)
Documentary exploring the lead-up and aftermath of 2017's disastrous Fyre Festival, including an interview with 25-year-old entrepreneur and Fyre Festival mastermind Billy McFarland.
Play trailer2:10
1 Video
25 Photos
Crime DocumentaryDocumentary

Concert promoters and rapper Ja Rule advertise a high-end festival experience that fails spectacularly when they don't plan for the infrastructure to support the venue, artists and guests.Concert promoters and rapper Ja Rule advertise a high-end festival experience that fails spectacularly when they don't plan for the infrastructure to support the venue, artists and guests.Concert promoters and rapper Ja Rule advertise a high-end festival experience that fails spectacularly when they don't plan for the infrastructure to support the venue, artists and guests.

  • Directors
    • Jenner Furst
    • Julia Willoughby Nason
  • Writers
    • Lana Barkin
    • Jenner Furst
    • Jed Lipinski
  • Stars
    • Billy McFarland
    • Jake Horowitz
    • Polly Mosendz
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jenner Furst
      • Julia Willoughby Nason
    • Writers
      • Lana Barkin
      • Jenner Furst
      • Jed Lipinski
    • Stars
      • Billy McFarland
      • Jake Horowitz
      • Polly Mosendz
    • 35User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:10
    Official Trailer

    Photos25

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    + 21
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    Top cast68

    Edit
    Billy McFarland
    Billy McFarland
    • Self - Founder, Fyre Festival
    Jake Horowitz
    Jake Horowitz
    • Self - Editor at Large, MIC
    Polly Mosendz
    Polly Mosendz
    • Self - Reporter, Bloomberg
    Calvin Wells
    Calvin Wells
    • Self - Venture Capitalist
    Jia Tolentino
    Jia Tolentino
    • Self - Writer, The New Yorker
    Vickie Segar
    Vickie Segar
    • Self - Social Media Strategist
    Ben Meiselas
    Ben Meiselas
    • Self - Partner, Geragos & Geragos
    Jesse Eisinger
    Jesse Eisinger
    • Self - Senior Editor, Propublica
    Randall Jackson
    Randall Jackson
    • Self - Billy McFarland's Attorney
    Anastasia Eremenko-Berg
    • Self - Billy McFarland's Girlfriend
    • (as Anastasia Eremenko)
    Ja Rule
    Ja Rule
    • Self - Co-Founder, Fyre Festival
    Emily Boehm
    Emily Boehm
    • Self - Former Employee, Magnises
    Grant Margolin
    Grant Margolin
    • Self - VP of Marketing, Magnises
    • (archive footage)
    Delroy Jackson
    Delroy Jackson
    • Self - Local Fixer, Fyre Festival
    Ava Turnquest
    Ava Turnquest
    • Self - Chief Reporter, Tribune News Network
    Dave Brooks
    Dave Brooks
    • Self - Senior Correspondent, Billboard
    Austin Mills
    Austin Mills
    • Self - Influencer
    Alyssa Lynch
    Alyssa Lynch
    • Self - Influencer
    • Directors
      • Jenner Furst
      • Julia Willoughby Nason
    • Writers
      • Lana Barkin
      • Jenner Furst
      • Jed Lipinski
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.87K
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    Featured reviews

    5TwinkleLights

    Adds some additional context, but Netflix's is superior

    I was very interested in the Fire festival fiasco when it broke in the spring of 2017. I watched the Netflix documentary first, and then Hulu's Verizon. Overall, I think the Netflix version has a more linear story progression and I like how it focused on the victim impact more so than the Hulu version. This Hulu doc also simply seems more amateur than the Netflix doc. I'm surprised no other reviews have mentioned it, but in this documentary when they want to relay informtaion from a court filing or statement, they have it read by one of those awful computer reading services which just sounds incredibly hokey and is frankly distracting. I've never seen that "artistic" choice in a film before. However, it you are very interested in all the details of this scandal, I would recommend both documentaries as they both contain distinct information. If you're trying to choose between them, then I would recommend the Netflix one over this.
    7ejonconrad

    The Netflix Documentary is better, but watch this, too.

    When it rains it pours. Both Netflix and Hulu decided to come out with documentaries about the Fyre Festival at almost exactly the same time.

    The Netflix film is definitely a superior documentary, with broader coverage of the story, but this is worth watching for the interviews with McFarland himself, which Netflix doesn't have.

    Unfortunately, it seems like in exchange for the interviews, they kind of soft pedal what a thoroughly loathsome human being McFarland is. Yes, the make it clear he lied to a lot of people, but you could still walk away from this thinking he's still a basically decent guy who just got in over his head. He's not. He's a pathological liar and a sociopath.

    For example, they leave out the fact that he started a new ticket sales scam *while he was out on bail* for the Fyre fraud charges.

    The biggest flaw in this documentary is they don't even mention the biggest victims of the scam; namely, all the Bahamians who worked round the clock to try to try to make this happen, and then didn't get paid.

    Still, the main takeaway from both documentaries is just how easy it is to separate people from a *lot* of money if you're willing to lie with a straight face, and when i comes to that, there's really no substitute for letting McFarland tell the story in his own words.
    7cherold

    Best to watch this after the Netflix doc, but they're both good

    Two documentaries about the Fyre Festival debacle came out days apart, Netflix's Fyre and Hulu's Fyre Fraud, and each shines in different ways.

    The Netflix documentary approach is a methodical chronology. It describes what happened as it happened and how people saw it at the time. It really puts you into the day-by-day experience.

    Fyre Fraud takes a different approach. It actually sketches out the basics of the entire thing in the first 15 minutes, then builds upon the various components to create a whole.

    The titles actually hint at the different approaches. Fyre describes the Fyre Festival as a slow-mo disaster, only at the end fully revealing the shadiness of Fyre's charismatic creator, Billy McFarland.

    Fyre Fraud, on the other hand, immediately establishes Billy as a sleazy con man, and portrays Fyre as a series of shady transactions. Netflix portrays the festival as a disaster, Fyre Fraud as a crime.

    Fyre Fraud spends a lot of time framing the Fyre Fraud hysteria within the current culture. It's the sort of pundit "hot take" that is easy to poke holes in, but it's sometimes persuasive. Fraud also has an interview with Billy, although the guy is to slippery to offer much satisfaction.

    If you only wanted to watch one Fyre documentary, go for the Netflix one. But after you've seen it if you want more details and a different angle, Fyre Fraud is well worth your time.
    8genious-35413

    Frustrating yet Very Entertaining

    One thing I found endlessly frustrating is that there is a sit-down interview with the Zuckerberg wannabe/Con Artist who gets to trot out his highly fabricated version of what happened but he is repeatedly asked direct questions which he never appears to answer - but it's hard to know because it's a quick cut edit and on to something else. If he doesn't answer 'You lost a box of keys to $2 Million worth of houses? Why didn't you tell that to the guests?' - I want to see him sit there and squirm for as long as he did in the interview. But overall, it's a fascinating spectacle to watch, as was the other Fyre documentary. I don't despise the type of people that are featured in this film: cell-phone zombies that begin every sentence with 'Literally..' and describe everything as 'Amazing'... but I do enjoy watching them actively make themselves a victim of their own narcissism.
    6LnineB

    More a study of our society than it is of a fraudster

    Con Artist have been around forever but there are particular times when they thrive and benefit from a societal situation more. For example Con artist ran rampant during America's Great Depression era due to the heartbreaking need to survive at all cost by the public. Most people needed to have faith in something during that time and con artist were more than happy to provide that source in things like fake jobs, get rich quick schemes or even religion. What this documentary exposes is that we are in a new era that appears to be ripe for the same tactics used in previous times but on a larger scale. The big difference is the size and scope of the scam and more importantly the fact that we aren't in a Great Depression. As a matter of fact , these new scams are now in the form of politics, social status and popularity. And often times take advantage of the very wealthy. This particular scam only worked because of the uncanny need of its victims to want to be apart of something exclusive and to , in a way, execute their very own scam of false success through social media. What this documentary does a good job of showing is that the success of cons are as much about the people who fall for them as it is about the con artist. The main culprit in this film looks and acts like every single con artist through out time, he's confident to the point of arrogance, talks a mile a minute and never takes no for an answer. He's narcissistic and greedy but yet really doesn't hide those negative traits. As a matter of fact, like most frauds, the first con is to convince people that those negative traits are actually positives. On the surface, none of this scam should've worked. But like what his developer parents no doubt taught him, it's not about what an item is in the present , it's what it could be in the future. In many ways real estate developers have the same traits as con men because of that ability to sale what isn't there. They are masters at getting people and financial institutions to buy into a speculation. This main character spent a lifetime doing exactly this over and over again. And like most con men they fail, they fail big, but yet they find a way to convince their victims to not focus on their past failures but to focus on the awards of the future. Every single person who was involved with or attended this failure of a festival could've used the same social media to find out that its leader was a con artist. But yet they didn't. They decided to once again put their faith into the speculation. Ja Rule ,for example, who maintains the whole thing wasn't a scam , actually worked with the guy before ,executing a previous scam that was funded by yet another scam artist oil tycoon. How do you ignore all of this and decide to go into business once again with the same person? Well the same reason a bank decides to invest into a development when the developer has filed bankruptcy 3 times, by investing into the dream. Ja Rule , like everyone else desperately wanted to be a part of the dream. Whether it's greed or the need to be wanted, those desires override the logical because being logical is not "exciting". Mark my words, we will hear from the main character again and I guarantee the next con will be bigger than this one and once again it will be successful, because the victims will need for it to be.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Billy McFarland agreed to appear in the documentary on condition that he be paid.
    • Quotes

      Billy McFarland: I think it's really easy to play "Monday morning quarterback" for myself right now, looking back and saying, "I should've done this, should've done that," and I certainly made a lot of mistakes, there's no question about that. But, before we had the worst luck, we had the best luck. It sounds crazy, but so many things had to go right to make it this big of a failure.

    • Connections
      Featured in 420 Awards - 2nd Annual Event (2020)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Fyre Fraud?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 14, 2019 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Hulu
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Файр-афера
    • Production companies
      • Hulu
      • The Cinemart
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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