The Internet Is Calling This Chicago Festival 'the Fyre Fest of Pizza' [View all]
I couldnt deal with the chaos anymore.
https://www.thrillist.com/eat/chicago/pizza-city-fest-fyre-fest-of-pizza

Chicagoans have long history of
getting fired up about pizza, but thanks to a recent pizza festival debacle, theyre getting Fyred up over it too. In this case, though, the controversy is less about squabbling over the merits of deep-dish, and more about a pizza festival fiascomired in mishaps and chaotic crowdsthat led to a flurry of social media rage and biting hashtags like #coalfyrefestival, #garbagefest, and most frequently, #shitshow.
So what exactly happened here that turned
The Salt Shed into a veritable
Great Exuma over this past weekend? Its all centered around the innocuous-sounding
Pizza City Fest, a concept thaton papersounds like a bullseye in a pizza-loving town like Chicago. The problem, though, was that it all was soon mired in what sounds like logistical nightmares, overpriced tickets, and impossibly long lines. It also doesnt help that Steve Dolinsky, one of the most polarizing figures in the Chicago dining scene, was at its epicenter, pulling a Billy McFarland by seemingly overpromising and under-delivering.
A longtime TV journalist on the local food beat, masquerading as The Hungry Hound and signing framed photos for restaurants whether they wanted it or not, Dolinsky pivoted in more of a pizza-specific direction of late, running
pizza tours in Chicago, authoring a
pizza book, and hosting a
pizza podcast. Naturally, the next extension of his pizza brand was Pizza City Fest, which debuted at Plumbers Union Hall in 2022. Despite some hiccups, it was apparently successful enough to warrant a sophomore effort: a two-day pizza festival in a splashy new location, where attendees could sample different pizza styles from 40 vendors, including lauded restaurants Vito & Nicks and Bungalow by Middlebrow, coupled with panelists, live music, and all-you-can-drink booze options, all for $95 per ticket. Sounds fun in theory, but if the social media backlash is any indication, that theory didnt pan out.
The resulting hot takes have been spicier than soppressata. On Instagram, posts from
Pizza City Fest have been flooded with angry customers decrying chaotic crowds and bottlenecked lines that made it impossible to wait for more than a few slices. Users claim Pizza City deleted posts, to help mask the mayhem, while others describe the event as a nightmare, with lines that took 30 - 45 minutes to snag a single slice, and a complete lack of organization. One user said Id rather stay home and order pizza than attend a pizza city shit show. Another: Lol, if you are going to charge bonkers prices you better be able to deliver. And another: Left after 3 slices because I couldnt deal with the chaos anymore. On Reddit, a
Pizza City Fest Chicago thread has not been much kinder, with more echoes of shit show and overpriced tickets, and one commenter
expressing hope for a future Netflix special.
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