More Than a Wish List
On the surface, creating a fake festival poster seems like a simple exercise in fantasy booking. You grab your favorite headliners, sprinkle in some buzzy indie darlings, add a legacy act for good measure,
and call it a day. But for the Bonnaroo faithful who haunt subreddits and message boards, it’s a sophisticated game, closer to fantasy football than a daydream. These fans aren’t just listing bands they like; they’re operating as amateur promoters, armed with an encyclopedic knowledge of tour cycles, album release schedules, booking agent rosters, and radius clauses that dictate where and when a band can play. A “good” mock lineup isn’t just stacked with A-listers; it’s *plausible*. It demonstrates an understanding of the festival’s budget, its unique identity, and the intricate chess match of the live music industry. The thrill comes from cracking the code and the community validation that follows when your speculative headliner actually shows up on the official poster months later.
The Search for Agency
Being a fan in the 21st century can often feel passive. You buy the ticket, you stream the album, you consume what you’re given. Creating a mock lineup is a powerful act of rebellion against this passivity. It’s a way for fans to reclaim a sense of agency and control over an experience they deeply cherish. In a world where ticket prices are soaring and festival experiences are increasingly corporatized, the mock lineup becomes a manifesto—a declaration of what the festival *should* be. It’s a space where a fan can correct what they see as booking missteps from previous years, elevate underappreciated artists, and build a utopian version of The Farm in Manchester, Tennessee. This act of creation provides a potent antidote to the feeling of being just another customer. You’re not just attending Bonnaroo; you’re helping to imagine it into existence, shaping its theoretical soul.
The Social Currency of Fandom
These mockups are not created in a vacuum. They are designed to be shared, debated, dissected, and celebrated. They are, in essence, a form of social currency within the Bonnaroo community. Posting a well-researched, thoughtfully designed mock lineup on r/Bonnaroo is like contributing a major piece of research to an academic journal. It sparks conversation. It invites arguments (“No way would Daft Punk play second fiddle!”) and affirmations (“You totally nailed the undercard vibe!”). This discourse is the lifeblood of the community during the long offseason. It keeps the spirit of the festival alive when The Farm is just an empty field. Building a reputation as a savvy predictor earns you respect. Your posts get more traction, your opinions carry more weight, and you become a recognized voice in the digital tent city. It’s a way to belong, to contribute, and to prove your bona fides as a true devotee.
Crafting the Collective Myth
This brings us to the hidden reason: mock lineups are a form of collective myth-making. Bonnaroo, more than many of its peers, is built on a specific ethos—the “Bonnaroovian Code” of “Radiate Positivity.” Its identity is a carefully balanced blend of jam bands, superstar headliners, cutting-edge hip-hop, and weirdo electronic acts discovered at 2 a.m. at a silent disco. When fans create mock lineups, they aren’t just predicting the future; they are reinforcing and redefining this collective identity. They are telling a story about what Bonnaroo means. Every choice—from placing a legacy act like Stevie Nicks on the main stage to slotting in a rising TikTok star for a daytime set—is a vote for a certain vision of the festival. This collaborative storytelling ensures the festival’s essence is preserved, not by the promoters, but by the fans themselves. They are the guardians of the vibe, using their speculative posters to write the next chapter of the Bonnaroo legend, one beautifully rendered, completely fictional lineup at a time.






