This leaked Fyre Festival pitch deck shows how Billy McFarland was able to secure millions for the most overhyped festival in history
Tech Insider
The Fyre Festival was the subject of two documentaries in January.
YouTube/Fyre Festival
A leaked sales deck for 2017's Fyre Festival contains the pitch CEO Billy McFarland gave investors ahead of the failed event.
The sales deck contains misleading information about Fyre Festival and has been described as "beyond parody."
McFarland got investors to pump $26 million into his company, money he was ordered to forfeit after he was sentenced to six years in prison for fraud.
A leaked sales presentation from Fyre Media reveals the pitch CEO Billy McFarland gave investors in the lead-up to 2017's failed Fyre Festival.
Fyre Festival was advertised an upscale music festival in the Bahamas, complete with luxury beach villas, gourmet food, private jets, and supermodels and influencers galore.
A 43-slide sales deck containing Fyre's investor pitch contains many of the exaggerated claims and outright lies that would eventually doom the festival. The pitch deck was first reported on in 2017 by Vanity Fair's Nick Bilton — who uploaded the full deck online — and recirculated on LinkedIn.
Read on to see some of the most shocking, outlandish, and surreal slides from the Fyre Festival pitch deck.
In 2016 and 2017, Fyre CEO Billy McFarland secured $26.4 million for his company from more than 100 investors.
This story was originally written in February 2019 and has since been updated.
McFarland's investor pitch deck begins with a primer on Fyre's app, which would enable users to directly book artists and celebrities for events. (Fyre Festival was conceived with the intent of promoting the app.)
A few slides in, the deck shifts to the festival itself.
Scribd/NickBilton
Fyre Festival was marketed as a luxury music festival in the Bahamas, with the cheapest tickets costing about $1,200. Some packages cost more than $100,000.
In the pitch deck, Fyre asked investors, "What if we reimagined what it means to attend a music festival?"
Scribd/NickBilton
And it promised the festival would ignite "energy" and "power" in its guests.
Scribd/NickBilton
One slide showcased an ambitious five-year plan for Fyre Festival: to host the event on different "untouched lands" each year through the purchase of "significant land."
Scribd/NickBilton
Marketing for Fyre said the event would take place on Norman's Cay, a small private island in the Exuma region of the Bahamas. But just months before the festival, Fyre switched the location to a desolate section of the biggest Exuma island near a Sandals resort.
Included in the deck was Fyre Festival's now infamous promotional video, which showed influencers and models partying on the beach and was shared widely on social media.
Fyre touted its lineup of more than 60 "Fyre Starters," social-media influencers who were enlisted to promote the festival. Several of the influencers faced backlash for their participation in the campaign after the event fell apart.
The pitch deck leans heavily on Fyre's partnership with Kendall Jenner. The model reportedly received $250,000 for a single Instagram post, which she has since deleted, promoting the event.
Although Fyre's pitch deck is short on specifics, it's filled to the brim with corporate buzzwords like "ideate" and "conceptualize."
Scribd/NickBilton
It lists several of Fyre's "pending" corporate partnerships and cites McFarland's previous company, Magnises, as a confirmed partner. Another partner, the ticket vendor Tablelist, is suing Fyre for $3.5 million. The lawsuit alleges Fyre violated its contract and defrauded the company. A third listed partner, Snapchat, had no connection to the event, according to a representative at the company.
In one telling slide, a section called "financials" is glossed over.
Scribd/NickBilton
McFarland was sentenced to a six-year prison sentence after pleading guilty in 2018 to wire-fraud charges in relation to Fyre Festival. He agreed to forfeit more than $26 million that investors poured into the company. McFarland was released from prison in 2022. Fyre cofounder Ja Rule denied liability for the fiasco.
Vanity Fair's Nick Bilton, who reported on the Fyre pitch deck in 2017, called the document "beyond parody" and said it "resembles an amalgamation of a Miami Beach spa package with selfies you might find saved on a teenager's smartphone."
"The remorse I feel is crushing," McFarland said during his sentencing, according to Vice News. "I lived every day with the weight of knowing that I literally destroyed the lives of my friends and family."