Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The 'Fan Village' For The Qatar World Cup Is Being Compared To Fyre Fest—And We Can See Why

World Cup Qatar 2022 Fan Village Cabins Free Zone
Fu Tian/China News Service via Getty Images

The makeshift cabins, which cost attendees over $200 a night, reportedly offer electric fans and brown water in the sweltering heat.

Fans who secured the more affordable accommodations at the Fan Village Cabins Free Zone for this year's World Cup held in Qatar were in for a rude awakening reminiscent of the 2017 Fyre Festival debacle.

The FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 event in Qatar, a country located in Western Asia, was already riddled with controversy before it kicked off on November 20 due to the country's horrendous reputation for human rights violations and corruption.


Thousands of migrant workers who worked 12 years to prepare for the tournament since its announcement in 2010 have died unexplainable deaths.

According to the Washington Post, human rights groups cited "lax oversight by soccer’s international governing body, FIFA, and abusive labor conditions in the host country,"

In protest, artists like Dua Lipa made it clear they would not be performing at the event.

An estimated 1.5 million fans who planned to attend the month-long tournament found it nearly impossible to find sufficient accommodation given the lack of hotels and affordable Airbnb options on the peninsula that is smaller than the size of Connecticut.

To accommodate wayward visitors, the Fan Village Cabins Free Zone was a solution.

However, the conditions in the village were very suspect.

The village–which was still under construction in some areas–was made up of a series of plastic portacabins in the desert that is roughly a 20-minute metro ride away from the sporting venue in the city of Doha.

Arriving visitors paying roughly $200 a night for a 29-day stay at the Village found the makeshift plastic chambers too hot–with only electric fans provided instead of air conditioning units.


Comparisons were drawn to the lodging conditions found at the Fyre music festival in the Bahamas, where those who paid top dollar to attend found scattered disaster relief tents; soaked mattresses from the previous day's rain; and cheese sandwiches in styrofoam containers as their "gourmet" meal option.

The Fyre Festival fiasco ended with its co-founder, con artist Billy McFarland, being sentenced to six years in prison for defrauding investors and ticket holders.

Social media users referred to the World Cup 2022 Fan Village as Fyre Festival 2.0.








Some chose to accentuate the positive.



Visitors hoping to take the edge off were also disappointed to learn about the country's tight alcohol restrictions.

Because booze is only served in licensed restaurants and bars, and the government tried to remove the already-constructed beer stands from the World Cup stadiums, officials scrambled to have "beer vans" available on the Village grounds authorized by the government

However, contractors told the UK Times:

"We have heard that the site still hasn't been granted an alcohol license for the World Cup. They said it was tied up in Doha."
"If there is no license, there will be no beer. There will be a lot of angry fans."

More from Trending

gray knitted beanie hat
rocknwool on Unsplash

Random Skills People Think They Could Make A Living Doing

Hustle culture is a lifestyle that prioritizes work over self. In hustle culture, even hobbies must be done for profit.

Enjoy knitting? You should be selling your creations online. Like to bake? Find a way to sell your culinary creations.

Keep ReadingShow less
Woman's Story Of Getting Called A 'F***ing Socialist' For Kind Shopping Cart Gesture Has TikTok Cackling
@heyyyyitsray/TikTok

Woman's Story Of Getting Called A 'F***ing Socialist' For Kind Shopping Cart Gesture Has TikTok Cackling

A woman extended a kind gesture to an elderly stranger at a grocery store and got the worst reaction for it, and it prompted her to share the shocking encounter immediately on TikTok.

Ray, a.k.a TikToker @heyyyyitsray, posted the video with the text overlay that read, "Storytime: Grocery shopping at Aldi."

Keep ReadingShow less
JoJo Siwa
@pinknews/TikTok

JoJo Siwa Sparks Backlash With New 'Gay Pop' Tattoo—And Her Fans Have Jokes

The former child reality star JoJo Siwa is all grown up and continues to be a polarizing figure in the entertainment industry with her eye-raising antics and bonkers statements on social media.

Her latest stunt was getting a tattoo of the words, "CEO OF GAY POP," a reference to a statement she made expressing a desire to "start a new genre of music" she would call "gay pop."

Keep ReadingShow less
Trinity Rodman; Dennis Rodman
Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/Getty Images; Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Soccer Star Trinity Rodman Opens Up About Fractured Relationship With Dad Dennis Rodman

Former NBA star Dennis Rodman is one of America's most famous sports legends, but according to his daughter, he's a better athlete than a father.

Rodman's daughter, soccer star Trinity Rodman, recently spoke out about her famous dad on the Call Her Daddy podcast, and it wasn't particularly flattering.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Elton John and Stephen Colbert
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert/YouTube

Elton John Jokes About Why His 'S**t' Birth Name Was Actually 'Spot On'

Legendary singer Elton John explained during an appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert that he hated his birth name Reginald but that it fits him nonetheless given his sexuality.

John, born Reginald Kenneth Dwight, reflected on the transformation that propelled him to stardom, emphasizing the importance of shedding the name given to him by his parents to forge his own identity.

Keep ReadingShow less