Following fans’ initial shock at their first impressions of Qatar’s World Cup accommodation, one TikTok user has given a deeper dive into the country’s £175-a-night fan tents.
Earlier videos had showed a “tent village” of closely huddled white canvas structures, with glimpses of simple, wood-framed twin beds and campsite style toilet blocks.
On Monday, BBC sports journalist Emily Brooks posted a more in-depth video review of the tents, which appear to be in the same unnamed fan village as the earlier footage. She said she arrived two days before the World Cup started on Sunday.
“POV: You’re staying in one of the World Cup fan camps,” wrote Ms Brooks, showing footage of white tents lined up along a gravel pathway.
In the video, she pulls back the square of carpet in her own tent to find sand underneath; goes to austere metal toilet blocks to find no toilet paper; and advises residents to “let the water run for a bit before you brush your teeth”, showing murky water initially spurting from a tap.
Ms Brooks filmed the footage at Doha’s Qetaifan Island Fan Village, which sold units to guests visiting for the event for £175 a night, including a breakfast box, wifi and 24-hour reception.
In the clip, she also shows a small, flimsy padlock used to lock the zip-edged “door” of each tent; and films herself waking to 29C heat, with only a small standing fan provided as air conditioning.
“The first thing that hit us was the heat – it was pretty hot in there,” she describes in the video. “We did have a fan though, but at this point it felt like it was just pushing hot air around.”
Defending the hospitality, she also confirmed that “there was electricity and pretty decent wifi”.
The tent villages, which are in several locations around Qatar, have been widely compared to 2017’s Fyre Festival, which promised influencers luxurious accommodation but then provided government-standard hurricane relief tents.
In Ms Brooks’ video, the “breakfast boxes” provided to tent guests are certainly reminiscent of the festival’s infamous cheese sandwich. They contain a croissant, small bottle of water, muffin, orange juice carton, banana and a sachet of instant coffee – though Ms Brooks writes: “There was nowhere to fill [it] up with hot water”.
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