- Nearly 300
Fyre Festival ticket holders have won a collective $2 million payout in a class-action settlement. - They all paid to go to the infamous 2017 music event, which organizers canceled on the first morning.
- They will each get $7,220, pending final approval next month.
Ticket holders of the ill-fated Fyre
The nearly $2 million payout was awarded to 277 ticket holders in US Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York last week, and is waiting for final approval next month.
Fyre Media touted the infamous Bahamas-based music event as the "cultural experience of the decade," promising 8,000 attendees luxury eco-friendly beach huts and top-tier artists across two weekends in April 2017. But when people arrived, they were shown to disaster relief tents without adequate food, forcing organizers to cancel the event on its first morning.
Social media influencers including model
De Haas has now teamed up with rapper and festival co-organizer
Ben Meiselas, partner at law firm Geragos & Geragos and representative for ticket holders, said he was happy with Tuesday's outcome.
"Billy went to jail, ticket holders can get some money back, and some very entertaining documentaries were made," Meiselas told the Times, referring to the popular Hulu and Netflix films on the debacle. "Now that's justice."
McFarland said in a statement to the Times in 2017 that he was "committed to, and working actively to, find a way to make this right, not just for investors but for those who planned to attend."