Coachella Ends, the Afterglow Begins: How Spatial Video Preserves the Sets That Actually Mattered
The polo fields are quiet. The stages are coming down. Somewhere in Indio a cleanup crew is pulling tent stakes out of the dirt while the rest of the internet argues about which set was the best, which surprise guest nobody saw coming, and whether the headliner justified the hype or proved the cynics right.
Coachella 2026 is over. But the afterglow is just starting. The livestream archive will stay up for a few weeks, maybe a month. The fan-filmed clips will circulate until the copyright strikes land. And then, for most of the sets that defined this weekend, the footage disappears. The moment becomes a memory that degrades a little more each time you try to describe it to someone who was not there.
That is the problem VPORT exists to solve. Not to replace the live experience. To preserve it. In full 360-degree spatial video that lets you Teleport back into the room — not watch a clip of the room, but stand inside it — months and years after the confetti settles.