Thousands seeking refunds after disastrous music festival at Texas beach

[ad_1]

HARLINGEN, Texas (ValleyCentral) – The organizers of a beach festival on South Padre Island have come under fire after organizing an “unorganized” event and failing to perform as promised.

Austin is the only place that still has lunar towers, and the city wants to keep them in good shape

Thousands of visitors to the Sol Beach Festival on Saturday evening are outraged and are demanding ticket refunds after the concert, at which Puerto Rican rapper Myke Towers should have played, turned out to be a flop.

Although Myke Towers and all the artists were at the event, no one was able to perform due to power outages due to insufficient generators.

The event was scheduled to start at 8 p.m. in a parking lot in Isla Blanca Park and promised VIP areas and tables, several bars and food trucks.

Judge temporarily prevents further potential lawsuits from being filed under the Texas Abortion Act

ValleyCentral spoke to several attendees who said the event was “disorganized,” a “terrible experience,” and a “waste of time and money”.

They all say that after waiting several hours in line to enter the event, they found that not only was the event not as advertised, but that the artists never performed.

Videos for the concert, broadcast to ValleyCentral, show an angry crowd standing in the dark, throwing drinks and knocking over the railing in some cases.

Much of the frustration came from the lack of communication between the promoters and the crowd after repeated power failures.

The only message received was from a DJ promising power would be restored, but after waiting over two hours, attendees said to leave without explanation.

Many who paid extra for VIP tickets waited longer in line than those who bought standing room.

“We waited in line for three hours, at first some artists were singing, but it seems like the lights and music went out, then nobody came out. We finally got there around 11:30 am and when we were there everyone was everywhere, no areas were assigned, nobody did nothing at all, we waited for the police to show up and tell everyone to go, ”Lyseth Mayorga said Serna who drove from Houston to SPI for the event.

Joe Vega, director of Cameron County Parks, said the AARM Business Group, led by father and son George and Jorge Garcia, were the organizers who reached out to the county to put on a show on the beach. He says this was the first show of its kind on Isla Blanca.

“We made an agreement with them to hold this event and we thought it would be a great event. They had a wonderful setup, but unfortunately it didn’t happen, ”said Vega.

The Cameron County Parks and Recreation released a statement stating that any issues with ticket refunds or refunds and any other concerns should be directed to the AARM Business Group.

GG Promotions, which is also affiliated with the Garcias, is, as many say, responsible for the course of the concert.

A separate show promoter, Ram de la Cruz, says some of the problems were due to a lack of staff at the entrances and generators that couldn’t provide enough power. Although he and his staff were only hired for marketing and ticket sales, some of his people, including artists who were to perform, had to help set up just before the concert started.

“It was just a big mess.” said de la Cruz. “I just know that the artists were there; Everyone who had to be there was there, they just didn’t have the staff to set up or the equipment … It was just badly organized by these guys. ”

Cruz says many approached him about refunds, but he says Garcia is responsible for the show and the refunds, and he hasn’t heard from Garcia since Saturday morning.

On Monday evening, Garcia and his family posted a statement on social media stating that tickets to the event are non-refundable, “but the promoter will ask artists to return and end the event at a later date, and will recognize all previously sold tickets … if the artists agree. “

Garcia also addressed the failure of the generator, saying that “it was not the fault of the organizer who paid for the generators and staging indicated by the artists”.

[ad_2]