How Burning Man Got So Hot (September/October 2019 | Volume: 64, Issue: 4)

How Burning Man Got So Hot

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Authors: Bruce Watson

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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September/October 2019 | Volume 64, Issue 4

Bruce Watson is a Contributing Editor at American Heritage and has authored several critically acclaimed books. He writes a history blog at The Attic.

As the sun set over the Pacific on the longest day of the year, a dozen revelers on a San Francisco beach propped up a wooden man. The first Man. 

The Golden Gate Bridge loomed in the distance, but the Sixties cast a longer shadow. The year was 1986, and America was consumed with shopping channels and strip malls. The revelers on Baker Beach felt, as one said, like “remainders on the shelf in Reagan’s America.” One brought gasoline. Another brought matches.

“Wild hair, spindly legs, burlap skin... ‘it was just a crude thing stuck in the sand.”
— LARRY HARVEY, FOUNDER OF "BURNING MAN"

A festivalgoer at Burning Man paces across the desert. Photo by Kevin Cheng
A festival-goer at Burning Man paces across the desert. Photo by Kevin Cheng

Larry Harvey, who suggested that first burn, remembered, “It was just a crude thing stuck in the sand. “The wooden man had wild hair, spindly legs, burlap skin. At the touch of a match, “it practically blew up.” As the Man blazed on, strangers gathered on the beach. People held hands. One sang. The primal fascination with fire took hold and… 

Once again this month, a dry lakebed beneath scorching skies will become Nevada’s eighth largest city. A week later, Black Rock City will be gone. In between, 70,000 people will celebrate America’s wildest outbreak of joy — Burning Man.

Festival goers kick up dust at Burning Man. Photo by Christopher Michel
Festival goers kick up dust at Burning Man. Photo by Christopher Michel

Describing Burning Man is like capturing the kaleidoscope of childhood. The hope. The fun. The fascination with light, dance, possibility. “Burning Man,” said one Burner, “is about ‘why not’ overwhelming ‘why'.” Burning Man is Halloween crossbred with the annual bender the Romans called Saturnalia. It's the Silicon Valley wired to the Id, the Sixties “long, strange trip” compacted into a single week. And it’s the reason 70,000 people are now headed for the Nevada desert.

Once you’ve paid admission — $425 and rising — Burning Man runs on a “gift economy,” cashless and commodity free. But one concept is pitched non-stop — wonder. Beyond wondering who these people are back home, one can’t help but wonder at the beauty of some installations, the strangeness of others. And while you’re wondering, where does the electricity come from? The water? Will you see any of these people again? Would you want to?  And how did Burning Man come to this remote lakebed?

The iconic Burning Man stands over the festival. Photo by Kevin Cheng
The iconic Burning Man stands over the festival. Photo by Kevin Cheng

Following the first burn, Larry Harvey and friends gathered the following June to do it again. And again