Talk:The Free Edinburgh Fringe Festival

much more info on * link removed *, need to get around to sorting this page some day --MilkMiruku 05:24, 21 August 2007 (UTC)

the info on the page referenced above is an innacrate and misleading article written by a competing organisation so that link has been removed; further information can be found on the official Free Festival website here: www.freeferstival.co.uk; May 18 2008

Cleanup tags
I would have liked to add some tags to this article, specifically that it contains no references, and is somewhat promotional in tone; but I have a potential conflict of interest as I am connected with another Edinburgh Fringe Venue. I'm not out to upset other venues, but as a Wikipedia editor I care about the quality of our articles.

I am actually dubious whether this, or most other Fringe Venues (including the one I am associated with) are notable in Wikipedia's terms (see my post at Talk:List of Edinburgh Fringe venues), and therefore should have articles at all. I see somebody else has tagged C venues some while ago. --ColinFine (talk) 22:08, 24 February 2010 (UTC)

DO NOT DELETE
The importance of the Laughing Horse Free Festival and PBH Free Fringe cannot be understated at Edinburgh Fringe... and therefore on Wikipedia. C Venues is just another collection of venues with the same business model that puts artists into debt. However the Free Festival and Free Fringe are challenging this traditional model in order to give artists and the public an alternative. See Harry Deansway's article about how much the traditional model costs performers

The importance of Free

The Free Venues give artists an alternative that is not as costly. For a long time Free Venues were seen as second rate. Artists felt that they could not get reviewed unless they did a paid show. However this is becoming less and less the case and Imran Yusuf's Fosters award for Best Newcomer in a free venue is really ground breaking. 

There are also large differences between Laughing Horse Free Festival and PBH Free Festival which are growing to provide two distinct opportunities to performers. PBH is a purist who feels the Free Venues should be run as a collective with everyone putting in an equal amount of work for the good of the group. Laughing Horse's approach is more commercial and aims to find an alternative business model which is economically sustainable but is a much cheaper option for punters and performers. This difference means that Laughing Horse is able to provide more support in terms of PR and marketing for performers, something which is set to grow. Laughing Horse is not adverse to sponsorship and just missed out on a large deal for this years event  comment added by Bobslayer (talk) 12:29, 1 September 2010 (UTC)

External links modified
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