Category Archives: French Quarter
Up with the working people
I am an early riser. That is not a valued trait in a city filled with people who regularly stay up ’til 2 or 3 am or later and who live in homes that come with heavy shutters and deep rooms that close out the light of day.
What you notice if you share the affliction of dawn rising syndrome is that there are a goodly number of people also out at 6 a.m. on a Monday or 7 a.m. on a Sunday. They are mostly working people or parents of young children or senior citizens (well besides the runners who avoid contact with us lower-level humans).
Men slowly biking with blue service shirts with names sewn on the front. A woman zigzagging to the neutral ground with a sleeping baby at her shoulder, heading to the corner store. Seniors sitting quietly at the bus stop, thinking. The people washing the sidewalks of the Quarter or dropping off the bread seem like me in more important ways than those usually considered by census takers or sociologists. After all, on a day-to-day basis, why allow ourselves to be counted with those because of the same hue of skin or shuffled into line based on a shared birthplace of grandparents or great-grandparents or decide where and with whom to socialize relying on which diploma each of us gained long ago? Isn’t one of my real tribes the people who share the feeling of finishing hours of tasks only to look at the clock to see it is only 9 am? Who go to bed at such a scandalous time that we refrain from telling others? Those that get to see the streaks of dawn across the sky and the dew on the grass?
Dear morning people, I salute you all and will do so again bright and early tomorrow.
Experts ask if New Orleans’ ‘exceptionalism’ masks grimmer reality
Writer Katy Reckdahl covers New Orleans with her usual tact and fair approach in this article from the Advocate. I wish there was more of the story covered here, but at least the idea of examining New Orleans’ “exceptionalism” has been raised along with comparing that assertion to its massive challenges. Certainly, the larger idea of American exceptionalism and its etymology should be examined as well. In other words, only reminding ones citizens about “positive” indicators-what for us is tied up entirely in our culture-seems to blind or restrict a more in-depth conversation about the systemic inequalities that also characterize life in New Orleans. Or as one astute online commenter said : let’s not keep falling for bread and circuses.
Allison Plyer, of the Data Center, who has crunched the city’s demographic numbers for nearly two decades, said the city is exceptional “only in terms of culture.” For the few indicators the Data Center keeps about culture, New Orleans is “well above the national average,” she said.
“We’re also well above the national average in incarceration,” Plyer said. “But we’re not different than other places in other measures of hardship, and those are glaring and need to be addressed.”
For all of New Orleans’ numerical similarities to places such as Cleveland, when Plyer looks up from her spreadsheets and PowerPoints, she sees a city that is special, she said. “And because it is special, I am interested in working to address issues of hardship and well-being here,” she said.
Tony Recasner, who heads Agenda for Children, said that because of the city’s small size and tight geography, the problems of the poor are often in plain view, just like the brass bands and parades. That proximity among people of all income levels contributes to high levels of volunteerism here, he thinks.
Petit Amelie
One of my favorite restauranteurs in the Quarter, Cafe Amelie has added a storefront just down the street with lovely items and a pleasing dining space. Jerry and Danny have done wondrous things with the Princess of Monaco courtyard in the middle of the 900 block of Royal and now give early risers a chance for a salmon and bagel plate, healthy juices, tasty pastries and morning espresso and afternoon drinks, or if you like, morning drinks and afternoon espresso-after all, this is the Quarter.
The two have been long time supporters of local produce and cottage industries and have even spent time as vendors at the farmers markets. You can be sure that they source fresh ingredients from farmers and fishers whenever possible.
Stop in at Dumaine and Royal (8-8 Weds-Sun) for a cheerful, healthy breakfast soon.
Walk On The Wild Side credits
One of the best sets of opening and closing movie credits done by the great Saul Bass ( http://annyas.com/screenshots/saul-bass-title-sequences/), and especially suitable for a movie set in New Orleans. Crazy 1962 movie but with an amazing cast: Anne Baxter as a Mexican for chrissake (why does she always looks middle-aged), Jane Fonda in a small role that she was too perky and oddly wholesome to pull off (the hustling teenager Kitty Twist), Tatum O’Neal’s mother Joanna Moore, as an abused prostitute with the classic heart of gold and exposition role (aka a “she ain’t here” role), Barbara Stanwyck as a lesbian bordello owner, Laurence Harvey as a Texas cowboy, Capucine of Pink Panther fame playing the romantic lead wearing modern clothes and who sounded like a bitch on the set; sadly she took her own life in the 1990s. The accents and plot are ridiculous and of course you could guess what happens to which character from the beginning of this movie, but still worth a watch.
Jax beer on the shelf, 25 cent poor boys signs, shots of lower Chartres street, Lafittes Blacksmith Shop, a few other great shots of the old city. Enjoy.
“The odds against going to heaven are six to one…”
Moveable Feast On Location with Poppy Tooker in New Orleans
My pal Poppy Tooker gives a short and sweet overview of a few places that visitors and locals should check out or renew their acquaintance with in our city, many of them right here in the French Quarter. That alone makes Poppy an original and an authentic voice for the city and its culture since she is not afraid of embracing the Quarter and its delights and yet I know she won’t say it unless she means it. Brava Poppy. Moveable Feast On Location with Poppy Tooker in New Orleans – FineCooking.com.



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