Selling ashes from the Man on eBay
Selling ashes from the Man on eBay
Here's somebody selling ashes from the Man on eBay! Claims all proceeds will be used to help burners who can't afford to go. Even if that's true, which I sincerely doubt, this is totally inappropriate imho.
She's also trying to auction a BMan calendar ($15.00 at burningman.com). Minimum bid $9.99 plus $3.00 s&h; I assume that this is a test run to see whether she can get enough to turn a profit by reselling them. (That's my cynicism speaking; maybe she bought two and only needed one.)
Just for the heck of it, I made this a poll, too.
She's also trying to auction a BMan calendar ($15.00 at burningman.com). Minimum bid $9.99 plus $3.00 s&h; I assume that this is a test run to see whether she can get enough to turn a profit by reselling them. (That's my cynicism speaking; maybe she bought two and only needed one.)
Just for the heck of it, I made this a poll, too.
Here's my thinking on that: ashes from Burning Man are MOOP. One way or another, it's got to be removed from the playa. What does DPW do with all that ash? Surely it goes to a landfill. So the ash itself is not something of value.
Is it explotative to sell cinders from the Man? I dunno... I can't imagine anyone looking at a pile of ash and getting the wrong impression. It's just ash, after all -- not like pictures where we might fear that they convey the wrong meaning of the event or, god forbid, attract lookie-loos to the event.
The one thing about it that rubs me the wrong way (and believe me, most rubbing is acutely appreciated so it's hard to go the wrong way) is the notion that a BM participant would use something from the event for their own financial gain. That seems to violate the notion of no commerce. But what if the proceeds from ash sales were to go toward Gerlach schools? I don't think I would object to that.
Is it explotative to sell cinders from the Man? I dunno... I can't imagine anyone looking at a pile of ash and getting the wrong impression. It's just ash, after all -- not like pictures where we might fear that they convey the wrong meaning of the event or, god forbid, attract lookie-loos to the event.
The one thing about it that rubs me the wrong way (and believe me, most rubbing is acutely appreciated so it's hard to go the wrong way) is the notion that a BM participant would use something from the event for their own financial gain. That seems to violate the notion of no commerce. But what if the proceeds from ash sales were to go toward Gerlach schools? I don't think I would object to that.
Tempest in a teapot, by the looks of it.
But as long as we're fussing over it, does anybody wanna buy a chunk of cement which I swear to God was part of the Berlin Wall? It's been dipped in sacred streams at four Rainbow Gatherings and had placenta puree drizzled over it under an eclipsed moon in Madagascar.
Can we start bidding at $100, a box of whippets and BART fare to Alice's?
But as long as we're fussing over it, does anybody wanna buy a chunk of cement which I swear to God was part of the Berlin Wall? It's been dipped in sacred streams at four Rainbow Gatherings and had placenta puree drizzled over it under an eclipsed moon in Madagascar.
Can we start bidding at $100, a box of whippets and BART fare to Alice's?
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.
I have a couple of little necklace bottles of ash from the Man and the Temple, given to me by my dear friend Lora (aka Das Bus). I like them, wear them, and plan to keep them. They're cool!
What disturbs me is not that someone might have some ashes, or that the ashes inaccurately represent Burning Man, but that someone is trying to make a quick buck from them. If the BMOrg decided to sell bottles of ashes, I wouldn't dig that either, but that's their perogative. Some individual selling ashes for their own gain is, I think, counter to the spirit of Burning Man, and I have no reason to believe the line about the proceeds going to help burners.
I would feel the same way about people selling playa dust, phony BMan tee shirts (which I have also seen on eBay), Alien Love Nest necklaces, etc. It's cheesy and sleazy and not in keeping with what I consider the Burning Man culture.
Illegal? No. Preventable by the organization? If they take the trademarked images from the bottles, probably not. Sleazy? In my opinion, yes.
What disturbs me is not that someone might have some ashes, or that the ashes inaccurately represent Burning Man, but that someone is trying to make a quick buck from them. If the BMOrg decided to sell bottles of ashes, I wouldn't dig that either, but that's their perogative. Some individual selling ashes for their own gain is, I think, counter to the spirit of Burning Man, and I have no reason to believe the line about the proceeds going to help burners.
I would feel the same way about people selling playa dust, phony BMan tee shirts (which I have also seen on eBay), Alien Love Nest necklaces, etc. It's cheesy and sleazy and not in keeping with what I consider the Burning Man culture.
Illegal? No. Preventable by the organization? If they take the trademarked images from the bottles, probably not. Sleazy? In my opinion, yes.
I ran a cheesy souvenir shop at BM this year. Available were bottles of ash, smoke, and playa dust from various years. Packaged very nicely if I do say so. Of course, all bottles were filled from the nearby burn platform upon arrival. I was amazed at the percentage of people wandering into the shop who believed they were authentic.
Cool! I especially like the idea of getting a bottle of three-year-old smoke. That's pretty funny.stuart wrote:I ran a cheesy souvenir shop at BM this year. Available were bottles of ash, smoke, and playa dust from various years. Packaged very nicely if I do say so. Of course, all bottles were filled from the nearby burn platform upon arrival. I was amazed at the percentage of people wandering into the shop who believed they were authentic.
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Kinetic II
"There's a sucker born every minute" - David Hannah
http://www.historybuff.com/library/refbarnum.html
http://www.historybuff.com/library/refbarnum.html
Fascinating! Wouldn't it be fun to pull off a hoax like that?Kinetic II wrote:"There's a sucker born every minute" - David Hannah
http://www.historybuff.com/library/refbarnum.html
- Bob
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Item number: 2199942099
Starting bid: US $1.25
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Burning Man 2003 Ravercandy
Item number: 3457568702
Starting bid: Two Fifty
History: 0 bids
Location: Bivalve, CA
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