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Museum of Pizza creator shares ‘bonkers’ story behind his nearly Fyre Festival-level catastrophe: ‘I lost a lot of money’

There is now a museum for pizza lovers everywhere thatâs popped-up in arguably Americaâs pizza capital, New York City. The Museum of Pizza is dedicated to all things cheese and sauce, but thereâs more to it than meets the tongue. âItâs often that the simplest ideas are the best. And we wanted to use pizzaâs ubiquitous appeal to get people through the door and looking at art and hearing about history in a different format,â said Alexandra Serio, Chief Content Officer at Nameless Network, the group that baked the Museum of Pizza idea. âOur approach to this Museum of Pizza is a fine art approach, so we went out to multiple artists contemporary in many mediums, and asked them for their interpretation of pizza,â said Serio. âAnd what we got back is it ranges the gambit, letâs just say that. Thatâs an understatement.â

Kareem Rahma just wanted a slice of the pie, but he got burned in the process.

In 2018, the New York City comedian wanted to cash in on the success of Instagrammable food-inspired museums in the Big Apple with the immersive Museum of Pizza, but his pie-in-the-sky idea resulted in his “biggest financial failure” that was nearly a Fyre Festival-level catastrophe.

Rahma, who is the host of multiple popular online series like “Subway Takes” and “Keep the Meter Running,” lost thousands of dollars in the process of creating the wildly popular Brooklyn pop-up — whose visitors were none the wiser that the museum almost didn’t open.

“All I could think about legitimately was the New York Post headline that would run if, for whatever reason, it didn’t open or some other thing happened,” he told The Post.

“And so for me, it was, like, I promised people a pizza museum … and I will deliver, no pun intended, to them a pizza museum.”

While appearing as a guest on “The Downside Podcast” this week, Rahma recounted details of the harrowing tale, taking listeners back to the summer of 2018.

“I mean, at that point, everyone and their mom was starting a museum,” he told The Post, recalling the crop of food-influenced museums, like the Museum of Ice Cream, that had spawned in NYC.

“But I saw so many of them, and I was, like, ‘Oh, this seems like it’s a fairly easy thing to get up and running, and pizza’s probably the world’s favorite food. I bet people would come to see a pizza museum.’”

With a few clicks on the computer, Rahma created a SquareSpace site before even booking a location for the pop-up, listing his half-baked ideas for installations, like a cheese cave and cheese beach.

To his surprise, he sold a whopping $300,000 worth of tickets in just 24 hours, he claimed on the podcast.

“It went bonkers,” he told co-hosts Gianmarco Soresi and Russel Daniels.

But there was one huge problem: He didn’t have even a basic idea of what the museum would include, much less where it would be located.

“I didn’t even describe a concept — I just put the word ‘cheese’ before other words and ‘pizza’ before other words.”

But there was one huge problem: He didn’t have even a basic idea of what the museum would include, much less where it would be located.

Mere months away from launching his barely-on-paper-only installation, Rahma made a mad scramble to book artists and architects to build the experience, filing permits with the city and eventually locking down a venue for the pop-up downtown.

Things seemed easy as pie — until the landlord suddenly “ghosts” Rahma with mere weeks to spare, taking his $20,000 security deposit and leaving the entrepreneur scrambling to book another space.

His fate seemed bleak as things snowballed, “getting worse and worse and worse and worse,” he told The Post, fearing that he would taint his reputation if his brainchild were to fail despite his “good intentions.”

“I was just thinking about how I had to do it — like, that was the only option,” he recalled, adding that his nightmare was becoming a “Fyre Festival 2.”

He eventually stumbled across a vacant space in the William Vale Hotel in Brooklyn, forking over hundreds of thousands of dollars for the temporary lease and hemorrhaging cash to build lighting, shelvings and walls — all in the span of just two weeks.

Running on very little sleep and a dream, Rahma luckily completed the exhibition and opened right on schedule, although he compared his near-miss to the viral Willy Wonka disaster that occurred in Scotland earlier this year.

Despite seeming like a blockbuster event, the Museum of Pizza resulted in a financial loss of an estimated $200,000, admitted Rahma, who had created the pop-up under a now-defunct media company.

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