Katrina Five Years Later - Some Thoughts
Posted on August 26, 2010 | Permalink
By Lane Casteix
Five years after the event, Katrina still defines New Orleans in many ways. BUT ... life goes on, the city is recovering, people have come back and rebuilt homes and businesses. Today, you can go through some areas of the city and get the impression this Katrina thing was all Hollywood. It wasn't, let me assure you.
You can ride through other areas and discover not a lot has changed since the storm, except much of the damage is gone, picked up by FEMA, replaced by green space in the place of the death-gray left by the receding flood waters.
Down here in New Orleans, late August is a painful time, as the subject of Katrina invariably comes up in conversations, even though we suffer from "Katrina Fatigue" just as much as the rest of you do. As much as we would like it to go away, it won't, because it is etched into the soul of those of us who call this area home. But we get over the annual Katrina Funk by about the second week of September.
Since the State of Louisiana gives generous tax credits for movies made in the state, Louisiana, especially New Orleans, has become "Hollywood South". It is fairly common to have your neighborhood, your business, or your commute affected by a hoard of movie vans and blocked streets. We work around the inconvenience, because it brings revenue to the state, and it is kind of cool, actually.
Going back as far as I can remember, I can't recall any movie made in or about New Orleans being even remotely accurate in its depiction of the local culture. (Danzel Washington's Deja Vu made right after Katrina came close in a passing fashion.) That was true until HBO launched Treme, a series about post-Katrina New Orleans.
It received fair viewership outside of the local area, but here it has god-like status for those who have seen it and know the local culture. Treme has done a great job of nailing New Orleans and is worth watching. And the music is great! The first season is concluded, and a second season has been ordered. I have included a trailer for your viewing but be warned - STRONG LANGUAGE.
And then comes BP, attempting to top Katrina. That turned out to be not nearly as bad as we all thought. Do you realize just how large the Gulf of Mexico is? And did you know that ALL the spilled oil would not fill the Super Dome but about one seventh?! Did you know the Gulf floor naturally oozes about a super tanker of oil per year? Did you know the Gulf has natural microbes that feast on that oil? This has been like Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner rolled together for them! They can't even find the oil out there now! The worst seems to be over and I, for one, am eating whatever seafood I can get - and it tastes great. Had some boiled shrimp and blue crabs last Friday and a fried shrimp poboy Sunday!
The Gulf Coast is still in business. My family took our July vacation in Destin, Florida and enjoyed emerald green water and sugar sand beaches with only an occasional BP beachcomber passing by and looking bored.
New Orleans is not still flooded from Katrina, and the Gulf is not covered by a giant oil slick! We are open for business. There are actually more restaurants open now than before the storm, including just about all of the old favorites and several new ones destined for "old favorite" status.
Oh, and how 'bout dem Saints?!
So, come on down, have some seafood, drink some coffee, have a bignet and laissez les bon temps rouler!

