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@dan27notts | 1 July 19 | |
@ 3mel - 29.06.19 - 10:28am I clicked info on the TV, it was saying the headline on whatever stage was some Aussie or Kiwi band, Tama something ? Tame Impala? There's so many stages so always something different on each one. I enjoyed the Chemical Brothers on saturday night, gutted i missed sunday though. Think im going to watch Miley Cyrus's set on bbc iplayer tonight |
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@wakeup4 | 1 July 19 | |
@ 9362 - 30.06.19 - 11:36pm How would you know? Because I know how sanctimonious t**ts operate. plenty on here |
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@3mel | 1 July 19 | |
you should look up the meaning of words you don't fully understand.
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@9362 | 1 July 19 | |
If you could pick 3 acts from any era to be the Fri, Sat, Sunday headliners and 1 for the legends spot who would you pick? Massive Attack, jimi hendrix, and the Beatles. For the legends spot, Ella Fitzgerald
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@dan27notts | 1 July 19 | |
Eric Prydz, Eminem, Oasis. Legends slot I'd go with Johnny Cash
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@recurve16 | 2 July 19 | |
What stinking hypocrisy! They cheered David Attenborough like a god at Glastonbury, but as the crowds headed home, they left a squalid mess that makes a mockery of their eco-posturing Brightly coloured tents twisted, snapped and tattered lay strewn in piles with deflated air beds, soggy sleeping bags and spindly camp chairs collapsed in the dust and debris. Then there was the sea of bottles, plastic bags, cans, tissues, wet wipes and paper cups, mile after mile of it. The event was partly powered by solar and wind energy, and boasted an on-site recycling facility to process cans, glass and other waste. Impressive stuff indeed. But yesterday, as revellers shambled their way to the exits looking shattered and filthy, I stayed behind to see if the impressive, and ambitious, measures had come good. If ever there were a fitting illustration of our lazy, throwaway culture its this shanty-town of equipment destined, no doubt, for landfill because so many couldnt be bothered to take it home. The camping areas are shocking. Seagulls fight over discarded pizza and scavengers root through abandoned tents hunting for booze or forgotten valuables. There are also hundreds of deflated unrecyclable balloons, the result of youngsters taking laughing gas. It is utterly disgusting, but sadly typical. The sight of field after field covered in rubbish has become the inevitable fall-out of the summer festival culture as people (usually young people aged 17-24) let their hair down, party their socks off and then stagger back to their middle-class homes leaving environmental carnage behind. The 250 ticket price for a festival like this puts attendance in the middle-class bracket. These festivals are a post-exam or pre-university rite of passage. Theirs is an educated audience and they should know better... |
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@ogdenz | 3 July 19 | |
Emily Eavis just said that 99.3 percent of tents were taken home.
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@jezebel | 3 July 19 | |
Because no doubt she's impartial
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@recurve16 | 3 July 19 | |
@recurve16 | 3 July 19 | |