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Justin Riley is a 40-year-old dance teacher, wilderness junkie, and organizer of alternative-culture partner dance events. (justindance.com)
Justin has spent nearly two decades designing events that blur the line between art, dance, and wilderness immersion. His festivals are more than just places to dance—they’re cultural experiments that challenge people to step outside their comfort zones and co-create something meaningful. Whether it’s a week-long floating dance party on Utah’s Green River or a countryside retreat in Spain, Justin’s spaces are deliberately messy and wildly participatory. (He’s also responsible for helping me fall in love with fusion dance in 2016.)
We discuss Justin’s early years as a dirtbag wanderer living on $5,000 a year while chasing dreams as a photojournalist and political activist and the joy he finds in solving life’s problems without money. Today he earns money through a combination of event organizing, dance teaching, and converting buses and vans. When work feels so much like play, Justin observes, “I feel like my whole life is filled with free time.”
Justin explains his "high risk, low consequence" design philosophy, his commitment to wilderness exploration (a vital counterbalance to his hyper-social work), and his belief that meaningful experiences don’t come from perfection but from trust, collaboration, mutual joy, and the willingness to let things break—and then building something new together.
Find Justin’s next events at unboundfusion.com.
Full transcript: dirtbagrich.com/justin
By Blake Boles5
66 ratings
Justin Riley is a 40-year-old dance teacher, wilderness junkie, and organizer of alternative-culture partner dance events. (justindance.com)
Justin has spent nearly two decades designing events that blur the line between art, dance, and wilderness immersion. His festivals are more than just places to dance—they’re cultural experiments that challenge people to step outside their comfort zones and co-create something meaningful. Whether it’s a week-long floating dance party on Utah’s Green River or a countryside retreat in Spain, Justin’s spaces are deliberately messy and wildly participatory. (He’s also responsible for helping me fall in love with fusion dance in 2016.)
We discuss Justin’s early years as a dirtbag wanderer living on $5,000 a year while chasing dreams as a photojournalist and political activist and the joy he finds in solving life’s problems without money. Today he earns money through a combination of event organizing, dance teaching, and converting buses and vans. When work feels so much like play, Justin observes, “I feel like my whole life is filled with free time.”
Justin explains his "high risk, low consequence" design philosophy, his commitment to wilderness exploration (a vital counterbalance to his hyper-social work), and his belief that meaningful experiences don’t come from perfection but from trust, collaboration, mutual joy, and the willingness to let things break—and then building something new together.
Find Justin’s next events at unboundfusion.com.
Full transcript: dirtbagrich.com/justin

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