Selling out seven consecutive screenings, it won the Audience Choice Award for Best Documentary at both the 2014
Sonoma International Film Festival, where it had its world premiere, and the 2014
Newport Beach Film Festival. It also won the Micro-Budget Feature Award at the 2014
Maui Film Festival. It held its Canadian premiere at the
Rio Theatre in May 2014.
Peter Mehlman described it as, "Funny, oddly heart-warming and beautifully produced... portrays Burning Man honestly." Fellow Vancouver filmmakers the
Soska sisters called it, "the real spirit of Burning Man." Chelsea Rush praised its depiction of the family bonding. Tommy Cook, although liking it, mentions it becomes, "an exercise in creativity-shunned, where the only answer to rampant corporate greed and the monotony of the '9 to 5' is to regress back to a constant state of adolescence." ==References==