कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
All British life is at Glastonbury - except Nigel Farage...
The Observer
|June 29, 2025
The pastoral quilt of glamping tents and a VIP backstage area reflect the UK’s increasing disparities. Can the idealistic city hold out against the hypercommercial music industry, asks
The aerial photograph of Glastonbury is part of the festival’s identity. Here lies an English pastoral quilt of field boundaries, roads, farm buildings and an old railway line, but scattered with the colourful dots of tents and stages, as if a kaleidoscope has been broken and shaken over it.
In recent years, this chaotic assemblage has changed, the original festival site now surrounded by neat rows of glamping tents and yurts that can cost thousands of pounds each. In their precision and tidiness, these photographs bear an uncanny resemblance to old images of army encampments, somewhere far away in the 19th-century British Empire.
This is the elite side of Glastonbury. On Thursday afternoon, the Flightradar24 aircraft tracking website showed helicopters buzzing to and from the festival site. One charter firm had been offering flights from London to the festival site for £13,950 return, with the 20-minute hop from Bath at £7,250.
In May, some well-heeled festivalgoers were left out of pocket when glamping company Yurtel, which had been selling £10,000-a-head luxury packages including hot tubs, cocktail bars and a chauffeur service, went into administration. One off-site pop-up hotel charges £38,000 for its top packages (any luxury camping offerings are run by external companies).
यह कहानी The Observer के June 29, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Observer से और कहानियाँ
The Observer
‘Fakery is now the coin of the realm. Underlying it is a sense we’re all hustlers’
On a walk along the Thames Embankment, the investigative journalist tells Basia Cummings about his new book, London Calling, and how the online world and Trumpist nihilism led the young man at its centre to his death
9 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
Another crypto king heads home to keep funding Reform
When the bitcoin cryptocurrency surged to new heights about a decade ago, the Hong Kong-based crypto entrepreneur and Reform UK donor Ben Delo was catapulted into the ranks of the global super-rich.
1 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
The future of Labour’s economic vision
Three essays suggest different ways to fix broken Britain. About time, says Ben Zaranko
3 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
How the face of party membership has changed since Corbyn's tenure
The Labour party that will choose their next leader is not the one that existed a decade ago.
1 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
Nationalist and pro-Palestine rallies flood the streets around Westminster
Police under pressure as thousands jostle to hear Tommy Robinson while others protest over Gaza and Ukraine
3 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
Conspiracy theories dismissed after bodies found in Brighton
Social media speculation and conspiracy theories surrounding the deaths of three young women in Brighton last week have pushed the police to confirm that no third parties are believed to be involved in the case.
2 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
The jury’s out on Musk v Altman, the bitter tech bro battle over purpose and profits of AI
One of big tech’s most acrimonious feuds has spilled into a federal courtroom in Oakland, California.
3 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
Italy shows where shortcuts get you. It isn't pretty
My country's woes are a lesson for those trying to depose Keir Starmer
3 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
What divides and unites Wes Streeting and Andy Burnham?
One of the first people Wes Streeting spoke to after he resigned from the cabinet on Thursday was Andy Burnham. The former health secretary and the Greater Manchester mayor discussed Labour's catastrophic results at the local elections and agreed that Keir Starmer had to be replaced.
3 mins
May 17, 2026
The Observer
A rate cut is off the table for Fed’s new chair Warsh
Soaring inflation is not usually good news for a central bank tasked with keeping prices stable. Yet the surge in US inflation reported last week may be just what the Federal Reserve needs now.
1 min
May 17, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
