Posts tagged Hurricane

Hurricane Season Notes

September 8th, 2008 by Loki

From the Archives, an email that was forwarded around several years ago. You can tell its from Pre-Katrina/Levee Failure due to the lack of FEMA references. Still, as you will see, some things remain constant.

-Loki, HumidCity Founder

To ex-Louisianans, present Louisianans, and future Louisianans:
Louisiana Hurricane Season Notes

We’re now full swing into hurricane season. In the coming months, you’re going to turn on the TV and see a weather person pointing to some radar blob out in the Gulf of Mexico and making two basic meteorological
points:

(1) There is no need to panic.
(2) We could all be killed.

Yes, hurricane season is an exciting time to be in Louisiana . If you’re new to the area, you’re probably wondering what you need to do to prepare for the possibility that we’ll get hit by “the big one.” Based on our experiences, we recommend that you follow this simple three-step hurricane preparedness plan:

STEP 1. Buy enough food and bottled water to last your family for at least three days.
STEP 2. Put these supplies into your car.
STEP 3. Drive to Nebraska and remain there until Halloween.

Unfortunately, statistics show that most people will not follow this sensible plan. Most people will foolishly stay here in Louisiana. We’ll start with one of the most important hurricane preparedness items: Read the rest of this entry »

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If You Are In Gustav’s Path You Must Take 5 Minutes to Read This

August 30th, 2008 by Loki

Okay folks, wile I am still not convinced that Gustav will smite New Orleans many people are still exercising justifiable caution and getting the hell out of dodge. This article by Web 2.0 Security expert W. David Stphenson is a must read. His tips on utilizing cameraphones, twitter, flickr and other online tools to communicate during a Hurricane or evacuation are a must read. Lives could be saved by this information.

In his words:

Looking ahead to the likely landfall of Gustav next week, I want to reinforce how critical it is to know now how to creatively use your personal communication devices and Web 2.0 apps in an emergency when conventional communications may be disrupted.So here, drawn from the VITA Advisory tips I created for the Wireless Foundation and my “21st-century disaster tips you WON’T hear from officials,” — and some new ones to boot! — are IMHO the key things you should learn now to be prepared if and when disaster strikes

Go. Read. Use. Share.

-Loki, HumidCIty Founder

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Contraflow Maps

August 29th, 2008 by Loki

If you’re leaving after 4am Sunday you need to look at these. Don’t get caught in the wrong lane unable to get where you’re going.

-Loki, hunkered down and watching the weather

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Mandatory Evac For St. Bernard

August 29th, 2008 by Loki

Mandatory Evacuation will be called for St. Bernard Parish on Saturday afternoon.  Residents with special needs can contact the following number to register for the City Assisted Evacuation plan.  These residents with special needs will be bussed to a triage site and then taken to special needs shelters in the state of LA.  Those without transportation or resources to evacuate may also call this number to register. (504) 278-1593 Via Alli

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Hurricane Cocktail Recipes

August 28th, 2008 by Lord David

Reposted from that bathroom wall of cyberspace, Myspace…

MANDATORY EVACUATION

  • 1 1/2 oz. Absolute Ruby Red vodka
  • 1/2 oz. VermouthClamato
  • Prune juice

Combine vodka and vermouth in cocktail glass. Fill remainder of glass with equal parts Clamato and prune juice. Stir. Drink.

Ask next-door neighbor whose fichus tree blew over and crashed onto your roof - even though you’d warned him for months to uproot it - if you can use his bathroom.

Repeat.
CATEGORY 5

  • 1/2 oz. vodka
  • 1/2 oz. tequila
  • 1/2 oz. rum
  • 1/2 oz. bourbon
  • 1/2 oz. gin
  • Sweet-and-sour mix
  • Splash of fruit juice

Combine vodka, tequila, rum, bourbon and gin in a tall glass. Fill remainder of glass with sweet-and-sour mix and splash of juice. Stir, then garnish with an inverted drink umbrella. Drink during peak storm hours, and vow not to believe anyone who tries to tell you the hurricane that flooded your garage and destroyed your shed was just a Category 1.

CONE OF PROBABILITY Read the rest of this entry »

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Fay the Unprecedented, Intensifies Over Land

August 19th, 2008 by Loki

From Jeff Masters Blog on Weather Underground:

Tropical Storm Fay (AKA “The Joker”) is pulling a trick that may be unprecedented–significantly intensifying over land, developing a full eyewall. The radar and satellite images of Fay this afternoon (Figures 1 and 2) show a much better-organized storm than the Fay that made landfall this morning. Fay now has a symmetric appearance with a full eyewall, and the winds near the center were sustained at 60 mph this afternoon at Lake Okeechobee. These winds are higher than anything measured at landfall this morning. Remarkably, the pressure has fallen over 10 mb since landfall, and I can’t ever recall seeing such a large pressure fall while a storm was over land. Hurricane Andrew of 1992 crossed South Florida and did not weaken significantly, but “The Joker” has significantly intensified. It does happen sometimes that the increased friction over land can briefly act to intensify a hurricane vortex, but this effect is short-lived, once the storm is cut off from its oceanic moisture source. To have a storm intensify over land and maintain that increased intensity while over land for 12 hours is hard to explain. The only thing I can think is that recent rains in Florida have formed large areas of standing water that the storm is feeding off of. Fay is also probably pulling moisture from Lake Okeechobee. Anyone want to write a Ph.D. thesis on this case? Wow.

Somehow facing a storm called “The Joker” is not something I want to do after seeing Health Ledger’s stellar final performance. Holy Hurricanes Splatman, this one’s off its rocker!

-Loki, HumidCity Founder

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stop me if you’ve heard this one before

June 20th, 2008 by Louis Maistros

Yes, please do stop me if youve heard this one before. Because the punch line stinks.

Spoiler alert:

(photo by Louis Maistros, copyright 2006)

The italic bits are from the Associated Press, June 14, 2008. Stay with me. Im trying to sort this out for myself as I go.

The dark, filthy water that flooded Iowa’s second-largest city finally started to recede Saturday after forcing 24,000 people to flee, but those who remained were urged to cut back on showering and flushing to save the last of their unspoiled drinking water.

This does sound familiar, but keep going, maybe its just kinda-sorta familiar but not really.

President Bush was briefed on the flooding in Iowa and other parts of the Midwest while he was in Paris, and was assured that federal agencies are making plans to help people affected by the high water

Yes, this does ring a bell. Because I remember how it was ok to do very little, way too late, or, really, nothing at all, as long as a person in a position of ultimate authority told us they have been officially assured by some vague figure employed by a vaguely referenced government agency that someone who knows someone is most assuredly (if vaguely) making plans to do something, vaguely, about this currently very specific and not vague-at-all problem thats destroying lives, homes and families right here in the good old USA even as I type this. Its like a memory of a dream of a memory of a plan of a dream of plan of a plan. Shit, Im getting dizzy here. But wait, theres more

“He expressed his concern for people who may still be in danger and for those who are hurting from the impact of the storms”

Yes, I clearly remember a fleeting warm fuzzy feeling that manifested itself in the midst of a traveling nervous breakdown. It hit me fuzzily on the road to God knows where after hearing widespread reports of genuine heartfelt concern from the president but the feeling came and went so quickly Im not sure if it was real or a dream now. Keep going, its a sort of dj vu, but I need to be sure

“The levee broke in two places,” said Keithsburg Alderman George Askew, 76. “We’re getting under water.”

OK, this part I remember.

“Since I’ve been involved in public office we’ve not seen this kind of devastation,” Obama said of the Midwest flooding. He vowed to push the federal and state governments to provide needed aid to the stricken areas.

Oh, Senator Obama; you wound me, sir. You know I love you, baby, but Im pretty sure you were “involved in public office” in August of 2005. But thank you so much for noticing the Iowa flood, and for vowing to push for help there, and I hope you remember this one in three years time. I hear you even filled a few sandbags for the cameras youre catching on quick to this campaign trail stuff; good for you. If only you remembered about the 2005 thing, if only anyone in pubic office remembered, maybe things would be going a little smoother over in Iowa right now. You know, all that we must learn from history or be doomed to repeat it horseshit?

“Things happened really fast,” said Toby Hunvemuller of the Army Corps of Engineers. “We tried to figure out how high the level would go. Not enough time. We lost ground.”

Yes, that I remember as well. These things do happen very fast, dont they? Its why all these vague plans and preparations need to be a little less vague. But still, its nice to know the folks in charge of this stuff are at least very concerned. Really, all that concern after the fact just fixes everything right up. In fact, all you need is love. This must be true because I heard it in a song once.

And here is that stank-ass punch line that I hoped never to hear again, or, as my friend John Doheny says, the money quote:

Authorities knew the aging levee near Birdland, a working-class, racially diverse neighborhood, was the weakest link among the city’s levees. A 2003 Corps report called for nearly $10 million in improvements across Des Moines, but there wasn’t enough federal money to do all the work.

Bada bing, bada bang, bada boom. And there it is. Total recall. Just like here, they knew this was coming and did nothing. Even AFTER what happened here, so freshly in everyones minds, knowing full well how bad it can get.

The real kick in the pants is that, according to the Corps Report mentioned by AP, all Iowa needed to prevent this heartbreaking disaster was $10 million. Does that seem like a lot of money? Guess what, its not. Louisiana needs billions. $10 million is chicken feed. Bill Gates lost $10 million dollars while sneezing this morning and didnt even miss it. It came right out his left nostril along with a Cheerio or two. This could have been prevented with relative ease.

There was not enough federal money to do all the work?

The war in Iraq costs US taxpayers $341.1 million dollars PER DAY.

All Iowa needed was $10 million to prevent catastrophic flooding that the authorities KNEW was bound to happen. 10 million dollars is the equivalent of a 20 minute coffee break in the war on terror.

Does widespread devastation at home not count as terror? For chrissakes, will someone get a cup of coffee already?

Are we really that much more afraid of a handful of psychopaths armed with box cutters than we are of a potentially endless series of ticking time bombs built by our own government and planted on our own soil?

You know, we in the gulf region like to take a small comfort in believing that what happened here in 2005 might not have been in vain if only those in power were to take the lesson learned, do their goddamn jobs, and try very hard to make sure it doesnt happen again here or anywhere else.

My heart goes out to the people in Iowa whose lives have been needlessly devastated this past week. I wont play the our disaster was bigger than your disaster game because that game is bullshit. If you lost a loved one, or a home, or a livelihood, then you can give a rats ass about the statistics. Its just a bunch of fucking numbers. The bottom line is this: it happened. And it didnt have to.

One can only hope that the levees in Iowa are at least not stuffed with old newspaper as they apparently are here.

I hate to say what I feel I must say. Forgive me, but here it is:

For those who lined up to laugh at and mock the people of New Orleans for their stupidity in living in a city below sea level, who said shit like, why dont they all just get up and move to higher ground?, that we should move from a place called home, a place we love, a place that existed and thrived a hundred years before America was even born can you really look at what happened in Iowa and still believe all or any of that heartless bullshit you threw at us? Wouldn’t it be more productive to simply take a massive crap in your own hat?

The common thread here isnt in the unpredictability of Mother Nature. The common thread is the bad, incomplete, poorly designed, poorly implemented, and badly kept structures brought to you by our own Army Corps of Engineers. And the jackasses in Congress, in the Senate, and in the White House who refuse again and again to give money back to taxpayers in the form they need it most; towards the basic protection of American citizens in their own homes.

This time it was a levee. Last time it was levee. Next time it might be a bridge. Or a highway. Or a damn. I bet you have one of those near you, wherever you are in America.

The Army Corps of Engineers is immune from prosecution for their actions or inactions; even if the damage is ruled malicious, even if they knowingly create faulty structures; lie about it, then actively covers up these facts. There need to be new laws on the books that hold them, and all government agencies, accountable for their actions. Otherwise they can do whatever the hell they want and thumb their noses at us while they snicker behind our backs and tell us how concerned they are about our shattered lives.

You are probably thinking: What can I do except hope it isnt me next?

If you really believe theres nothing you can do, the jig is up. The bad guys win. Game over.

Please dont ask me for instructions. Use your imagination.

(Note: Click here for the full article quoted in this entry)

***

Cross-posted from These Things May Not Be Right, But They Are True.

http://louismaistros.com


The Sound of Building Coffins by Louis Maistros is due for publication from The Toby Press in Spring 2009.

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c’est la vie … say levee?

May 22nd, 2008 by PH Fred

well after 2 years in a fema trailer, give or take a few half lives and a couple of missed doses of depakote, i’m finally back in a house. so armed with a contempt for capitalization and punctuation, let me hit the ground punning… as my head begins to spin into puddles of creativity, i realize the biggest problem with post-k new orleans or post reagan politics isn’t reality, it’s all perception. my jazz fest experience as a performer made me think that we weren’t in the small print…. all those people opened up for us,,,, when i recently donated one of my paintings to the grace house for an auction, i didn’t consider myself a starving artist with only 3 pieces sold in my 44 years, rather score now is fred 3, van gogh 1.

it’s all in the perception… the spin… the lie even.

as i sat recently blurry eyed and pumped with manic endorphins, a piece of “lie” and perception hit me or kicked me or fondled me… it has to do with the reason i’m only recently in a house and may be back in a trailer or a boat or homeless when hurricane season arrives on my freshly unpainted doorstep august or thereabouts:7400 Leake Ave, New Orleans, LA 70118???? leake ave? LEAKE? LEAK? oh yes, the physical address of the U.S. CORP OF ENGINEERS… c’est levee! well, as i investigated further the PUBLIC AFFAIRS dept of the corps (or is that corpse????) no longer uses7400 Leake Ave, New Orleans, LA 70118 as their addy…. they got a P.O. BOX… go figure… you can’t sue ‘em, you can’t find ‘em, BUT YOU CAN STILL BLAME ‘EM. I suggest they get a new physical addy on TUPPERWARE ST or WATERPROOF RD or ME CULPA DR or better yet on WE ADMIT IT WE F’D UP ROYALLY AND WE PROMISE WE WON”T LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN BLVD.

a p.o. box? you gotta be kiddin’ me!

BLOG THIS!

p.h. fred (phfred@notthat.com)

?

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Humberto: The Wetlands Tour

September 13th, 2007 by Loki

Hurricane Humberto

Joy, joy, joy.

Keep your eyes open kids!

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Thunderstorms and Killer Bees

September 13th, 2007 by Loki

Shortly after arising this morning I was struck by the sounds of thunder. Lots of thunder. I counted 12 times in the span of forty minutes. Hurricane Humberto seems to have scooted east after hitting Texas and is now crossing Louisiana somewhat north of us. Everyone keep an eye on the pumps! Looks like we have an unscheduled test on our hands.

Then the joyous news comes in that killer bees are once more a threat to New Orleans. How seventies….

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New York Floodplain

June 14th, 2007 by Loki

As you may be able to tell, I am a bit snarky today. Gee, go figure. Just wanted to share this lovely little bit of documented data with you:

Why would anyone build the largest securities market in the country in a flood zone? 

Take a look at the Official data about New York, Hurricanes, and floodplains. I offer this up in answer to the constant deluge of “screw NOLA, its below sea level,” emails that I receive.

UPDATE: 

Nation of Morons has moved to Blogger and can now be found here.

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open letter to a closed media

October 13th, 2006 by PH Fred

it appears the the local media (TV and TP as well as Gambit) is busy reporting stories about business as unusual in the Big Easy (crime, corruption, and frustration). Readers are growing tired of false expectations and bad promises. Readers have grown weary and bleary-eyed of the focus on the BAD NEWS of bad, bad New Orleans. Shouldn’t we try to see something positive? Wouldn’t we be more likely to get people to return? Wouldn’t we be more likely to get businesses to stay? Wouldn’t we be more likely to convince other states to help? You know… it’s the old flies and honey cha cha cha… Vigilantes and murders may sell papers, but they’re not going to help the economy. I know there is good news out there, I beg you to shout it from the top of monkey hill… we need it. We need it desperately. We need it now. No shots need to be fired. No crimes have to be committed. But, is that such a bad thing? BLOG THIS!

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Can’t Happen Here

September 21st, 2006 by Loki

I will be leaving the posting to my other contributors for the next several days as I am buried in work. Before I evaporate I would just like to share the following thought with all of my readers.

On Sept. 21, 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming more than 600 lives. It would behoove people everywhere to watch what is happening here in New Orleans, especially if they live near any Army Corps of Engineers projects.

It can happen to you.

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Welcome to New Orleans, Have a Nice Day

September 1st, 2006 by Loki

Today a year ago was the day that I finally found out that my family was alive and well, although scattered across the US. My grandmother made it back to NOLA few months after the Storm and died recently in her home on Jackson Ave. Like most of the city’s elders she is gone now, but at least she was able to pass in her own bed in the city that has been her home. Many are not so lucky.

While there are children and a few elderly here in the city the overall demographic seems to mostly be twenties, thirties and forties. A strange new world with no guidance or wisdom (I guess that does make Ray the best mayor for us doesn’t it?) The stories and lessons of the older generations are not being told, the traditions are not being passed on, and the muisc is slowly dying. I know Lex has posted on this before, but it is a situation that demands revisiting. With housing and healthcare in a state that would make a third world country feel superior it is flat out dangerous for those getting on in years to be here. In a city so rich in tradtion that is an incredible loss.

There are times recently when even I wonder if I am doing the right thing for myself and my wife to be by staying here. I immediately pull myself back and reaffirm my desire to fight for something larger than myself, New Orleans, but the doubts persist. All of us have them. It is a daily triumph to stick it out one more day. There is so much at stake right now, we cannot give up or all will be irrevocably lost.

I cannot wait for the begining of October. I will be getting out of the city for the first time since the Storm, going up to visit friends who lleft never to return and to visit soon-to-be family in Bloomington, IN. The trip is an early Birthday present from my future mother in law, and I hope it will be a boon to my mental health.

Last Year’s Posts This Day: One year ago I was looking for many friends and family. Thanks to the wonders of the internet I had already found many people, but to this day there are those I have not yet found. It was also the day that we got news that our new apartment had made it safely through the deluge and began to make plans for the rest of our exile.

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Flashflood. Oops, I Mean Flashback

August 31st, 2006 by Loki

One year ago:

trying desperately to turn my fear, pain, and shaking hands to good cause I continued to attempt to get an audio record of my fellow New Orleanians during this disaster. By this point I was rather wild eyed and crazy, just like most others.

Having just paid for our honeymoon and wedding, as well as having the Storm fall right before payday, L and I had practically no resources. We knew that wee only had a matter of two or three days in the hotel before we would be completely destitute in a foreign state a long way from home.

http://humidcity.com/2005/08/31/112550809130377077/
Michael Guilliot of Kenner speaks

http://humidcity.com/2005/08/31/112551409023146492/
File With FEMA Now (little did I realize at the time that this would be so useless to so many of us. My own adventures with FEMA, distasteful as they are pale in comparison to what others have experienced in the bungling of the last year.)

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I Miss My Friends

August 29th, 2006 by Loki

One year ago this minute I was crammed in a small car with all five of our cats, my business partner, my finacee, and a lot of general crap. It would be five hours yet before we would finally hit W. Memphis. It was obviously the Storm of the Century, we might even be gone three or four days. Little did we know.

The intervening year has been a tempest of emotion. Suddenly I really have  empathy when I see a natural/man made disaster strike. I mean really have empathy. The visions of Lebanese cities and towns after the bombings, the view of normally arid areas of India submerged, these images almost give me physical pain now. I have seen my friends and family suffer through the devastation. I know people who have died both due to the storm and by their own hand, unable to deal with the aftermath.

Like all the bloggers out there posting on the subject I wanted to put out a magnum opus, a tirade of Homeric proportion which would incite the people of elsewhere to rise up and shout, “Thou shalt not desert our countrymen!” Alas, illness and depression dictate not.

As I sat here, staring at the blank text field which waits for me to fill it’s taunting tabula rasa, I realized that I had no words. At least not the type of words that would fit the gravity of the occasion.

In lieu of the Battle Cry For New Orleans you will have to settle for more personal, simple sentences:

I miss my friends.

I miss streets devoid of looters, rubble, and fear.

I miss having even a shred of faith in the social contract.

After tomorrow the mass media will forget us, and so will the people.

I miss the phrase “oncoming hurricane,” meaning a day off and a beer run.

I can’t believe I’m actually glad the National Guard is back. Yes, me.

My family got here with Bienville, I’m fighting for my home!

Hold the Corps Accountable!

Sinn Fein! We Are NOT Okay! 

Rebuild, Reboot, Renew!

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Misery

August 28th, 2006 by Loki

Just got off the phone with an old friend who I have not seen since way before the Storm. We did not talk long, but long enough. Hearing the tale of how his mother died during the night of The Storm and then had her body lost for weeks was like a punch to the solar plexus. Horror movies have nothing on the plight of our friends and family members. One year later and the tragedies continue to mount. It is, quite simply, heart rending. No wonder I have the shakes.

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Humid City v2.3 » Blog Archive » Run Away: Podcast

August 28th, 2006 by Loki

At this time one year ago we began our evacuation, little knowing what the coming months would bring. I had sent out a link to the newly formed Humid City (then on Blogger) and told friends and family to check it regularly for updates on our situation. Here is a recording done via cellphone from the Bonnet Carre Spilway as we drove through the oncoming storm bands.

Humid City v2.3 - Blog Archive- Run Away: Podcast

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Rising Tide Blog

August 27th, 2006 by Loki

I have posted a collection of links to all the post conference posts I can find. From Liveblogging notes on the panels to expansions on the themes we tackled, it should all be there. The blog set up for the evnt seems like it may become a new group blog, check it and my links out on the Rising Tide Blog

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Water Rising: Wind Driven Bullet Points

August 25th, 2006 by Loki

As expected, it is getting deep now that the Anniversary weekend is here, on top of which I have been physically ill lately. A nurse friend tells me its probably stress related. Big surprise. Anyway, since I am behind on posting (as well as everything else) I am going to collate everything into one post now. Please pardon the abbreviated format.

  • Rising Tide - this is a must do! Go take a look at the guests and attendees, that should crystallize your decision. If not read Adrastos’ list of Ten Reasons To Go
  • Mayor Wonka has exceeded the stupidity of his, “chocolate city,” remarks by making some pretty inflamatory statements about 9-11 Stybbie over at Nation of Morons will have to supply the vitriol, I am too worn out.
  • As the Anniversary looms so does another probable hurricane in the Gulf. Joy. I miss the days when an oncoming hurricane meant having to stock the bar and buy extra candles….
  • The Geek Dinner II- man it was a success, but I fear it was also what pushed my health over the edge. Many of the usual suspects were there along with a wonderful array of new faces. It was brilliant finally meeting Ernie the Attorney, who it seems knows some of my family. Likewise GBitch was a grea new face to add to our rogues galley. A majority of the NOLABloggers were there although we did miss Maitri who was having fun flying to Toronto at the time (Don’t worry she did not bring any toothpaste and as a result made it through without being incarcerated).The list of pissed off and motivated bloggers continues to grow. My pics from the dinner are here.
  • The BBC did interviews with Alan from ThinkNOLA, Kalypso, and myself. To listen to the broadcast you’ll either need to listen live between 8 and 9pm Central Time on Monday OR the archive goes up the next day - click on listen link in the sidebar at http://blogs.bbc.co.uk/podsandblogs
  • Rocky Vaccarella is a traitor to New Orleans. His FEMA trialer visit to DC and comments about wanting four more years of Bush we elegantly staged, but he has GOP roots and questionable motives. Gee, a photo-op as spin control from the Bush Administration? No….. See the Carpetbagger Report for more disturbing details.
  • Midsummer Mardi Gras looms Saturday night. Last year we missed it because we had just crystallized our decision to flee Katrina. This year we will not miss it, bad health or not.
  • On the Anniversay I will be doing radio interviews for the Mike Malloy Show on Air America as well as on Channel 4 Radio News for the UK. Details will go up as soon as they are worked out.

That is all I have the energy for this morning. I had meant to expand upon each of these points, but I am wiped out. I’m off to write some websites for a gig I have and then get some rest so I can be ready for Rising Tide (did I mention that you should go?).

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Truth

August 25th, 2006 by Loki

Here is the single most concise and accurate depiction of what we have learned from Katrina. Sad and pathetic, but true.  They Know Nothing! Suspect Device | Greg Peters

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Rising From The Murk

August 17th, 2006 by Loki

The following Rising Tide Conference schedule is up at the conference website. Also available on the front page is a registration form, which I strongly suggest you fill out so we have an idea of seating and food requirements.8:00 - 9:00 Arrival & Registration

9:00 - 10:00 Keynote Address by Chris Cooper and Robert Block, authors of Disaster: Hurricane Katrina and the Failure of Homeland Security

10:15 - 11:15 Panel Discussion: Personal Viewpoints moderated by Mark Moseley

11:30 - 12:30 Think New Orleans by Alan Gutierrez

1:30 - 2:30 Panel Discussion: New Orleans Politics moderated by Peter Athas

Local politicians Michael Duplantier, Shane Landry and Peggy Wilson

2:45 - 3:45 Panel Discussion: Influence of Journalists and Bloggers moderated by Maitri Venkat-Ramani and Mark Folse

4:00 - 5:00 Panel Discussion: Bloggers & Neighborhood Associations moderated by Morwen Madrigal and Peter Athas

Bloggers and neighborhood activists representing the Gentilly, MidCity, Northwest Carrollton, Broadmoor, Irish Channel and Bouligny Riverside neighborhoods

5:00 - 6:00 Mixer & Cash Bar

Exhibitors

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Katrina Ink

July 20th, 2006 by Loki

Tattoos of The Storm :NOLA.com: Photo Galleries

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Day 296, part III: New Orleans Filmmakers Document a City Worth Rebuilding;

June 20th, 2006 by Loki

Collaborative Local Filmmaking Effort to Present Duality of Life in Post-Katrina New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS — In a new approach to telling stories from the front lines of post-Katrina New Orleans, the New Orleans Video Access Center (NOVAC) has collaborated with local filmmakers to produce a series of short documentaries on the people, culture and spirit that make New Orleans an American city worth rebuilding. In addition, NOVAC is producing a one-hour documentary called The Drive. It’s an extensive driving tour through four of New Orleans’ most devastated neighborhoods supported with maps, interviews, and an original score by Emmy nominated composer, Gil Talmi (http://www.giltalmi.com/ ).

“A painful irony is how few people throughout the country understand the extent of what has happened to New Orleans. In many respects, things are progressing. Families are moving home, cultural activities are abundant and, in some neighborhoods, life has a sense of near normalcy; however, a short drive in almost any direction provides a
different picture. The magnitude of flooding was incomprehensible and nearly 10 months later, New Orleans has many challenges to overcome. We hope that this project conveys the duality of life in post-Katrina New Orleans and presents New Orleans as a city worth rebuilding,” says Tim Ryan, NOVAC director/producer.

The documentaries are available for free viewing on YouTube.com -
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=8080681AD2517F7E  (keyword:
NOVACDOC).

The entire series is also available on DVD at cost ($4.75 + shipping)
through a partnership with Customflix.com - http://www.customflix.com/210796 .

In addition, FriendsofNewOrleans.org - http://www.friendsofneworleans.org/ - a non-profit devoted to the rebuilding of New Orleans, features a trailer of The Drive on their website.

The project is funded by the Greater New Orleans Foundation; Newman’s Own Foundation; The RosaMary Foundation; Matt, Suzanne, Andy and Betty Wisdom; Cambridge Community Television; and other private funders. NOVAC continues to accept tax-deductible donations to support ongoing production.

For more information and links to view project, visit http://www.novacvideo.org/

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