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Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened: What the Must Watch reviewers think

Must Watch reviewers Scott Bryan, TV Editor at Buzzfeed, and Hayley Campbell, journalist and critic, share their thoughts on FYRE: The Greatest Party That Never Happened, which is currently available on Netflix.

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(Billy McFarland, founder of Fyre festival. Photo: Netflix)

Hayley says: "Watch it immediately"

"Anyone who uses Twitter will have heard of Fyre Festival - it was the most luxury music festival on a private island that never happened, it was the most spectacular failure.

"This is a documentary about how it was planned and came about and what happened and how a picture of a cheese sandwich finally killed it on Twitter.

"It is the ultimate documentary about the perils of social media nonsense and how you can post these beautiful looking lies but finally they will all catch up with you.

"It is insane, it's funny and it's kind of unbelievable.

"The great thing about horrible stuff happening to bloggers and Instagrammers is that there's so much footage and the documentary makers were just spoiled for stuff to use.

"While it is funny and insane, it's also kid of heartbreaking because the locals who were employed by the festival were never paid, and in some cases the local restaurant owners paid their own staff out of their savings which they will never get back... so it really shows all sides of the mess, and how the big guys truly mess around with the little guys."

(Photo: Netflix)

Scott says: "It is astounding" 

"It builds every 10 minutes in terms of its ludicrousness. 

"This whole narrative throughout the documentary verges on two arguments; whether it was a failure of poor planning just done by people who were completely clueless who had no idea what they were doing, or whether they went out of their way to willingly deceive the people who had spent a lot of money to get to the island in the first place. 

"For a normal festival, a Glastonbury, in Miami, Coachella, it needs a year of planning. They decided to pull this off in six weeks in a place that is not next to a large city or and without infrastructure.

"The thing that baffled me, and the documentary didn't explain, is they recorded so many of the meetings that they talk about in the documentary... For some reason I think they were making a 'making of' the festival during the festival, so they have the footage of all of those meetings, all of those crises.

"As the documentary goes on, you realise the serious implications of what people thought they were able to pull off."

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