MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The tarp is being removed from the pool for the first time this year at the Jokic household.
“We have good weather,” Nikola Jokic said Sunday afternoon in Memphis, his mind already back in Denver enough to know the local forecast. “So I’m going to go in my swimming pool. … Probably get some treatment. Relax a little bit.”
The Nuggets have five nights off before they play again, in Game 1 of the Western Conference playoffs Saturday at Ball Arena. They have two full days before they’ll know their first-round opponent — either the Los Angeles Lakers or New Orleans Pelicans.
They intend to enjoy the brief moment of stillness while they can. Because they hope to enjoy what happens next even more.
“I think we all kind of were tired of the regular season,” Michael Porter Jr. said.
Common side-effect of winning a championship. The first 82 games suddenly don’t feel as important. The playoffs can’t arrive soon enough. Champions become adrenaline junkies, living for the pressure and excitement. After a rollicking win over the Timberwolves last Wednesday, Nuggets players sat in the locker room and fantasized about the crowd noise of a playoff environment, the extra oomph of player introductions. Ball Arena had just given them an early taste of it.
Maybe that’s why they fell apart two nights later in San Antonio. Second-half blowout. Lottery team. Lethargic crowd. Minds in the future. The Nuggets lost focus, lost a 23-point lead and lost their stranglehold on the No. 1 seed in the West.
The regular-season finale in Memphis was an opportunity seized to salvage something out of their slip to third place in the standings. Minnesota’s loss to Phoenix handed the No. 2 seed back to Denver (57-25), an extra series with that coveted home-court advantage and a different path through the playoffs. Lemons to lemonade.
“In the second round, we’ll get another round of home-court, and then the only way we wouldn’t get the Western Conference Finals home-court is if OKC makes it all the way,” Porter said. “Which they very well could. So definitely some benefits to being the second seed.”
“We’ll see in a couple months how it played out for us,” Reggie Jackson said. “Still a tough loss in San Antonio, just because we completely controlled our own destiny. But we still control our destiny. It’s just about playing our best ball at the right time.”
First, a few days to breathe. The afternoon game time Sunday allowed the Nuggets to fly home from Memphis immediately after the game and have most of the evening to relax. Monday is also a “black-out day,” with nobody going to the team facility or working.
“Let everybody stay home, get some rest, be with your families, whatever it is you need to do,” coach Michael Malone said. “And then obviously on Tuesday, maybe have a light player development type of a day. And may get together as a team to watch that game on Tuesday night.”
That’s the burning question now. Who would the Nuggets rather play in the first round? The seventh-seeded Pelicans, a roster that might end up without an All-NBA selection and a core with minimal playoff experience? Or the eighth-seeded Lakers, a franchise that strikes fear into everybody but a current iteration that has lost eight consecutive games to Denver? It’s a fresh matchup or a grudge match.
“I think it’s pretty even throughout,” Porter said. “New Orleans presents a lot of challenges. Especially with (Brandon Ingram) being back. But the Lakers are a very good team as well. We may have swept them last year (in the Western Conference), but it was a battle every game. I think they ran every game, and then it came down to the last two or three minutes where we kind of pulled away. So it may have looked like we dominated, but that was a very good matchup last year, so we’re taking everyone serious.”
Porter, despite Denver’s scoreboard-watching Sunday, wanted to be clear: “We don’t have a preferred opponent.”
Meanwhile, Malone wasn’t focused on the “who” so much as the “when.”
“You find out a lot sooner than you did as a 1-seed,” he said. “So that helps.”
Indeed, the Nuggets will have more time to scout one specific opponent than they did last year as the top seed, which doesn’t find out its adversary until Friday at the conclusion of the Play-In Tournament. The real work starts Wednesday for Denver. Even that rumored gathering for the Lakers-Pelicans game Tuesday night would be more of a social event than a work function.
“We’ll probably get together and watch it and just try to relax at the same time,” Jackson said. “Try to do a little bit of scouting, but just trying to do a little bit of hanging out. Build some comradery and just relax a little bit.”
The situation in New Orleans will be intriguing. The Lakers were already there Sunday for Game 82. Their 124-108 rout vaulted them to the No. 8 position and knocked the Pelicans from No. 6 to No. 7 … all for the two teams to play again in the same arena 48 hours later. The Lakers don’t even have to fly home to Los Angeles and back.
The leading scorer for one of these teams has never played a playoff game in his career. The leading scorer for the other has played 282. One team has nightmarish depth. The other is overwhelmingly dependent on two stars likely bound for All-NBA recognition. One finished the regular season ranked No. 6 in the NBA in net rating (Denver was fourth). The other finished 19th … but it’s the Lakers.
Take your pick. Jokic won’t.
“I think every team is really good in the West,” he told The Denver Post when asked about the Nuggets’ place in the finalized bracket. “So it really doesn’t matter. I think what we need to focus on is us. Even in life, you’re just trying to focus on yourself. Not on everybody else.”
‘Life is what you ‘bake’ of it’: Woman shares journey from homelessness to owning a bakery
Updated: 3:59 AM PST Feb 25, 2024
BUSINESS, IT’S THE STORY OF A NEW ORLEANS WOMAN WHOSE JOURNEY TO SUCCESS IS ONE YOU’LL REMEMBER WELL. WDSU REPORTER SHAY O’CONNOR JOINS US WITH THE STORY OF A NEW MID-CITY BAKERY SHOP OWNER WHO WAS ON THE STREETS JUST YEARS AGO. THE OWNER OF NOLITA EXPLAINS WHY LIFE IS WHAT YOU MAKE OF IT. BAKING IS A LOT LIKE LIFE. IT TAKES A LOT OF WORK AND THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF PATIENCE TO GET THE BEST OUTCOME. AND THERE’S NO ONE WAY TO TRULY DO IT RIGHT. IT JUST HAPPENED. I DIDN’T KNOW THAT I LOVED THIS PROCESS, BUT IT IS SO. IT IS SO METICULOUS AND PARTICULAR AND BEAUTIFUL. FOR MARTHA GILREATH, THE OWNER OF NOLITA BAKERY IN MID-CITY. IF YOU WANT A GOOD RESULT, SHE SAYS, YOU HAVE TO TRUST THE PROCESS. I LIKE MILLIONS AND MILLIONS OF PEOPLE. UM, AM AN ADDICT AND AN ALCOHOLIC, AND I LIVED WITH THAT FOR A VERY LONG TIME. I WAS SICK FOR, YOU KNOW, THE BETTER PART OF 16 YEARS. GILBERT’S ADDICTION TO HARD DRUGS AND ALCOHOL LED HER INTO HOMELESSNESS OFF AND ON FOR ABOUT TEN YEARS. AND I KNOW THAT AT SOME POINT YOU WERE HOMELESS. IF YOU COULD KIND OF TELL ME ABOUT, UM, HOW THAT HAPPENED, I THINK THAT IT DOESN’T HAPPEN OVERNIGHT. IT’S GRADUAL. YOU STOP PAYING BILLS, YOU STAY IN A HOTEL ROOMS, YOU SLEEP ON OTHER PEOPLE’S COUCH. THE LONGER I WAS IN ACTIVE ADDICTION, THE MORE WILLING I WAS TO ACCEPT THINGS. AT ONE POINT, GILREATH LIVED UNDERNEATH THE CRESCENT CITY CONNECTION BRIDGE. FOR THE MOST PART, IT’S JUST SURVIVAL. UM, IT IS VERY SCARY, BUT I THINK AT THE TIME YOU’RE NOT AWARE OF ANY OF THAT BECAUSE YOU’RE JUST TRYING TO SURVIVE. YOU’RE JUST TRYING TO GET RIGHT. JUST TRYING TO FIND MONEY, DO THE NEXT THING. BUT GILREATH SAYS GOD AND FATE WOULD INTERVENE IN 2019. UM, AND ONE OF MY FRIENDS I CALLED HER AND SHE PICKED UP THE PHONE AND I ASKED HER IF SHE WOULD COME GET ME AND SHE SAID, IF I GET IN THE CAR, WILL YOU STAY WHERE YOU ARE? AND I DIDN’T MOVE FROM THAT SPOT. SO I KNOW THAT YOU KNOW, SOMETHING BIGGER THAN ME WAS HELPING. AND SHE GOT ME AND I WENT BACK INTO TREATMENT. THIS TIME, RECOVERY WAS A LOT EASIER. MONTHS LATER, SHE APPLIED TO CULINARY SCHOOL AMID THE PANDEMIC. RIGHT HERE AT NOKI, LESS THAN A BLOCK AWAY FROM WHERE SHE ONCE LIVED. SHE GRADUATED VALEDICTORIAN OF HER CLASS. I OWE THEM A DEBT OF GRATITUDE. I WILL NEVER BE ABLE TO REPAY BECAUSE THE TRUTH IS, I HAVE NOT HAD DIRECTION IN MY LIFE SINCE I WAS PROBABLY 19 YEARS OLD, AND WHAT THEY ASKED OF ME PUSHED ME TO BE BETTER. UM, YOU KNOW, IT REQUIRED DISCIPLINE. IT REQUIRED REQUIRED FOLLOWING DIRECTION AND LISTENING TO OTHER PEOPLE, UM, PUSHING MYSELF THAT PUSH WAS THE LASTING ONE. I HAD TRIED TO GET SOBER BEFORE, AND I WAS NOT WILLING TO DO ALL OF THE THINGS THAT WERE ASKED OF ME, OR I DIDN’T THINK THAT I HAD TO, UH, THIS TIME, I THINK IT WAS A MATTER OF REALIZING THAT I WAS NOT GOING TO DIE THIS WAY. YEARS LATER, HER BAKERY IS THRIVING HERE ALONG ORLEANS AVENUE. AFTER ACQUIRING THE PROPERTY LAST JULY, SHE WAS ABLE TO OPEN UP HER SHOP IN JANUARY, SHE SIGNALING A FRESH START TO THE YEAR AND HER LIFE. IT ALL HAPPENED VERY QUICKLY. UM, MY SISTER, MY BIG SISTER DESIGNED THE SPACE. UM, I’VE HAD ONE BROTHER HELP ME WITH OFFICE WORK. ONE BROTHER. UH, DO WOODWORKING IN THIS SPACE. ANOTHER BROTHER HAS HELPED ME WITH BOOKS FOR THE CHILDREN’S LIBRARY. THIS. NOT TO MENTION AN AWESOME TEAM OF HELPERS AND CUSTOMERS THAT HELP MAKE WORK FUN OVER AT THE FRONT DOOR IN EVER GROWING COLLECTION OF ITEMS. DONATE BY COMMUNITY MEMBERS MARTHA GIVES THESE ITEMS TO THE UNHOUSED POPULATION ALMOST WEEKLY. IT’S GOOD TO SEE PEOPLE OUTSIDE. IT’S GOOD TO SEE THE KIDS TAKING BOOKS OUT OF THE LIBRARY. HER MESSAGE TO OTHERS WHO MAY FIND THEMSELVES IN A SITUATION SIMILAR TO HERS IS YOU HAVE TO ASK FOR HELP. WHETHER WHETHER YOUR HARD TIMES ARE SOMETHING EXTREME, LIKE NEEDING TO GET SOBER, HOMELESSNESS OR YOUR HARD TIME IS. I DON’T KNOW HOW TO FIND A BANKER TO FINANCE MY DREAM. YOU HAVE TO ASK FOR HELP. WE’RE NOT MEANT TO DO ANYTHING IN THIS WORLD ALONE. MORE THAN A HALF MILLION PEOPLE EXPERIENCED HOMELESSNESS ACROSS AMERICA JUST LAST YEAR HERE IN NEW ORLEANS, THE POPULATION HAS BEEN GROWING, BUT LEADERS ARE TRYING THEIR BEST TO OFFER THE SUPPORT AND RESOURCES NEEDED. I SIT DOWN WITH THE DIRECTOR OF HOMELESS SERVICES ON HIS PLAN. YOU’LL HEAR MORE ABOUT THIS TOMORROW RIGHT HERE ON WDSU. EXCELLENT STORY THERE. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT MARTHA’S INSPIRATIONAL STORY, OR EVEN HOW YOU CAN DONATE ITEMS TO THE UNHOUSED POPULATION BY VISITING HER BAKERY
‘Life is what you ‘bake’ of it’: Woman shares journey from homelessness to owning a bakery
Updated: 3:59 AM PST Feb 25, 2024
From homelessness to running a business — it’s a story of a Louisiana woman whose journey you will remember.Our sister station WDSU has the story of a New Orleans bakery owner who was on the streets just years ago. The owner of Nolita, Martha Gilreath, explains why life is what you “bake” of it. Gilreath said she struggled with drugs and alcohol for “the better part of 16 years,” which led her to be living on the streets on and off for about 10 years. In 2019, she went into treatment for her addictions and saw success in the program. Amid her recovery, she applied to culinary school at the New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute and graduated valedictorian.”I had tried to get sober before and I was not willing to do all of the things that were asked of me,” Gilreath said. “This time, I think it was a matter of realizing that I was not going to die this way.”Years later, her bakery is thriving in the Mid-City neighborhood of New Orleans. Last July, she acquired the property for her bakery and opened in January.”It all happened very quickly. My big sister designed the space, I’ve had one brother help me with office work, one brother do woodworking in the space, another brother has helped me with books for the children’s library,” she said.In addition to a children’s library in the space, there is also a collection of items like clothes and toiletries at the front of the story. These items are donated by community members and Gilreath gives them to the unhoused population in the area almost weekly.She has a message for others who may find themselves in a situation similar to hers:”You have to ask for help. Whether your hard times are something extreme — needing to get sober, homelessness or your hard time is ‘I don’t know how to find a banker to finance my dream,’ you have to ask for help,” she said. “We’re not meant to do anything in the world alone.”
NEW ORLEANS —
From homelessness to running a business — it’s a story of a Louisiana woman whose journey you will remember.
Our sister station WDSU has the story of a New Orleans bakery owner who was on the streets just years ago.
The owner of Nolita, Martha Gilreath, explains why life is what you “bake” of it.
Gilreath said she struggled with drugs and alcohol for “the better part of 16 years,” which led her to be living on the streets on and off for about 10 years.
In 2019, she went into treatment for her addictions and saw success in the program. Amid her recovery, she applied to culinary school at the New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute and graduated valedictorian.
“I had tried to get sober before and I was not willing to do all of the things that were asked of me,” Gilreath said. “This time, I think it was a matter of realizing that I was not going to die this way.”
Years later, her bakery is thriving in the Mid-City neighborhood of New Orleans. Last July, she acquired the property for her bakery and opened in January.
“It all happened very quickly. My big sister designed the space, I’ve had one brother help me with office work, one brother do woodworking in the space, another brother has helped me with books for the children’s library,” she said.
In addition to a children’s library in the space, there is also a collection of items like clothes and toiletries at the front of the story. These items are donated by community members and Gilreath gives them to the unhoused population in the area almost weekly.
She has a message for others who may find themselves in a situation similar to hers:
“You have to ask for help. Whether your hard times are something extreme — needing to get sober, homelessness or your hard time is ‘I don’t know how to find a banker to finance my dream,’ you have to ask for help,” she said. “We’re not meant to do anything in the world alone.”
CHICAGO — When asked if he could use one adjective to describe Daisy’s Po-Boy & Tavern, a bustling counter service restaurant in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood, diner Wallace Good made one up.
“Is there such a word as New Orlean-ish?” joked Goode, who serves as the Executive Director of the Hyde Park Chamber of Commerce. “Even though you’re in the middle of Chicago and the middle of Hyde Park, you feel like you’re in the Big Easy.”
Daisy’s Po-Boy & Tavern is the brainchild of James Beard Award-winning chef Erick Williams. Williams, who launched the critically acclaimed Virtue in Hyde Park in 2018, said he opened Daisy’s to honor his late Aunt Daisy and to serve the Louisiana cuisine he learned to cook at a young age.
“We chose to celebrate the flavors and style of New Orleans because my Uncle Stew, who was my late aunt’s husband, was the first man to work with me at the stoves,” he said. “And he’s also the first person to teach me how to make gumbo.”
Daisy’s especially comes alive with the spirit of the French Quarter on the first Wednesday of every month, when a live band is invited to play the tunes and sounds of New Orleans jazz. While enjoying po’boy sandwiches, gumbo, fried chicken and other southern fare, diners swung to the beat of Chicago’s Four Star Brass Band on the first Wednesday in February.
“People are dancing in their seats, bobbing their heads,” said Williams. “I’d like to say that it feels like Mardi Gras every single day here.”
Williams said the mission of his restaurant group, Virtue Hospitality, is to create a positive impact in the communities that they serve while also serving delicious fare and offering equitable opportunities for their team. Its non-profit foundation, Virtue Leadership Development, raises money to provide grants for young people in the culinary industry so they can learn how to transform their skills in the kitchen to skills that help them navigate business and make a living.
“The deepest feeling is knowing that you’re doing the work that you both love and also the work that impacts so many other people around you on a day to day basis,” said Williams. “It wasn’t my aspiration to become a chef; I feel very fortunate to have become a part of such a giving and supporting community.”
Decked out in the green, purple, and gold of Mardi Gras, Williams describes Daisy’s as more relaxed and freestyle than his restaurant Virtue. While the plating may be on paper and trays, Williams says the food still stands out in Chicago.
“Our hot sausage po’boy, bar none, is one of the most amazing sandwiches in the city,” said Williams. “Our muffulettas are to die for and the fried chicken is a no-brainer.”
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.– During Mardi Gras in New Orleans – home to Princess Tiana and her big dreams – they say “laissez les bons temps rouler!” And the good times will roll this summer when Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opens in Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. Oui, cher!
With Princess Tiana at the helm, this new attraction “digs a little deeper” into her story after the events of the Walt Disney Animation Studios film “The Princess and the Frog.” It is Mardi Gras season at Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, and the bayou will light up for a journey full of music, Mama Odie’s magic, and a whole boatful – log-ful? – of new friends, in preparation for a celebration where everyone’s welcome.
They got music, it’s always playin’
Music is at the heart of New Orleans, and guests will be tapping their toes all throughout the attraction thanks in part to adorable critters, who sing and play instruments made of natural materials found in the bayou. Tiana’s new friends include an otter, a rabbit, a racoon, a beaver, a turtle and more. Their spirited stylings will turn the bayou into a party with zydeco and other types of music authentic to the region of New Orleans. There will be new, original music alongside favorite tunes from the film, created in collaboration with award-winning artists PJ Morton and Terence Blanchard.
In addition to musical critters, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure welcomes talent voices from the film as they reprise their roles, including Bruno Campos as Prince Naveen, Jenifer Lewis as Mama Odie, Michael Leon Wooley as Louis and the one and only Anika Noni Rose as Princess Tiana.
Grab somebody, come on down
As guests float through the cypress trees and Spanish moss of a beautiful Louisiana bayou, they may see some familiar faces as part of the dozens of entirely new Audio-Animatronics figures. Along with Princess Tiana, Louis and Mama Odie, keep an eye out for Eudora, Charlotte, Prince Ralphie, Prince Naveen, and others.
A new mural reveals the opening season for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Walt Disney World Magic Kingdom Park in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. The new attraction opens this summer and will take guests on a musical adventure inspired by the beloved story and characters from the fan-favorite film “The Princess and the Frog.” (Olga Thompson, Photographer)
As “The Princess and the Frog” makes its home in the Big Easy, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is more stuffed with authentic NOLA artistry than Charlotte is with Tiana’s “man-catching” beignets! Artwork from Louisiana artist Malaika Favorite will delight guests as part of the queue, and guests can see an original metalwork weathervane from third-generation master blacksmith, Darryl Reeves and his apprentice, Karina Roca. New Orleans artist Sharika Mahdi’s artwork has inspired the attraction from the beginning. And, for some lagniappe (a “little extra”) guests will have a nose full of the sweet scent of beignets frying – reminiscent of strolling through the French Quarter – as part of the attraction queue.
Dreams do come true in New Orleans
The heart of Tiana’s story reminds guests that everyone has the potential to make their dreams a reality. With teams of Imagineers, Disney Animation artists, Cast Members and Louisiana artisans working together, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is sure to pass a good time when it opens at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida in summer 2024 and later in 2024 at Disneyland Park in California!
LAS VEGAS – The business of Super Bowl LVIII ended with the official handoff from Las Vegas, to New Orleans on Monday morning inside of the Mandalay Bay. Las Vegas proved to be an exceptional host city. Buoyed by decades of hosting major conferences and big sporting events, the city’s host committee begged NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to forgo the rotation of cities and put another Super Bowl back in Vegas quickly.
Las Vegas was a no-brainer to be a host once the home of the Raiders, Allegiant Stadium, would be open by 2020. Plus, the city has more than 150,000 hotel rooms. Lastly, Vegas’s ability to host high level events in nightclubs, convention halls and event spaces while allowing the NFL to take over the city’s core was a plus.
“Thank you to the NFL for believing in Las Vegas and thank you to the Las Vegas Super Bowl host committee for making this historic Super Bowl possible,” said Nevada Governor Jay Lombardo. “And I will take this opportunity to use the Governor’s discretion to ask the commissioner to forgo their rotational plans for the Super Bowl and maybe get it here sooner than later.”
President of the Las Vegas Raiders, Sandra Douglass Morgan, center, speaks during a news conference for the winning head coach and MVP of Super Bowl LVIII at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center on February 12, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)
Previously, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority worked with the NFL when they hosted the 2022 NFL Draft which allowed both sides to build their relationship with all eyes focused on Super Bowl week.
“This was an all hands on deck effort and I think this event truly showed when everyone is able and willing to work together in Nevada, we get it done in the fastest time ever,” said the President of the Las Vegas Raiders, Sandra Douglass Morgan. “I also wanted to acknowledge UNLV they were incredible partners as well and making sure that we had access to their facilities for teams. Also, for my team at the Las Vegas Raiders to make sure we have the best headquarters in the world to be able to host two great teams that played yesterday.”
New Orleans set to host Super Bowl for record-tying eleventh time
The City of New Orleans will host its eleventh Super Bowl, tied for most with greater Miami. There is no doubt New Orleans is a more than capable city to host America’s biggest sporting event. There are at minimum 26,000 available hotel rooms within two miles of the French Quarter and 41,000 hotel rooms in greater New Orleans.
New Orleans Saints owner Miss Gayle Benson speaks during a news conference for the winning head coach and MVP of Super Bowl LVIII at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center on February 12, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)
“We look forward to welcoming thousands of fans, sponsors, media, and volunteers in celebration of the big game,” said Owner of the New Orleans Saints, Miss Gayle Benson. “Hosting the biggest sporting events in the world takes great team effort and participation from our entire community. And I’m confident we will pull together as we always do to deliver our guests from around the country and world the greatest experience possible.”
The game will be played on Sunday, February 9, 2025 inside the Caesars Superdome. The legendary stadium is currently undergoing a $500 million renovation project that has been underway since 2019. Working in phases, the project will be complete by the time Taylor Swift hosts concerts in October 2024. Among the renovations will be more field clubs, wheelchair users have new ADA-accessible seats and viewing decks on various levels, along with ADA-friendly elevators.
New Orleans Mayor, LaToya Cantrell, speaks during a news conference for the winning head coach and MVP of Super Bowl LVIII at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center on February 12, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)
A 2013 University of New Orleans study showed a $480 million impact in economic activity for the city the last time it hosted the Super Bowl.
“It speaks to how the NFL has been a part of our city not just with this being our eleventh Super Bowl, but even coming in 2025,” explained New Orleans Mayor, LaToya Cantrell. “We will be focusing on the resilience of the city coming back better than ever before. It’s been 20 years since Hurricane Katrina, but the NFL has been solid in our recovery. We’re looking forward to showcasing our resiliency, our sustainability, but most importantly, the people of our great city rooted in the culture of the city of New Orleans. So thank you so much again, the city is ready, and we are prepared.”
New Orleans would have hosted Super Bowl LVIII if it didn’t conflict with Mardi Gras. The game would have coincided with the final weekend of the festive season. 1.5 million people travel to the Crescent City to revel in the annual event.
Craftsman Row Saloon is bringing the merriment of New Orleans to Philadelphia with a pop-up celebrating Mardi Gras, otherwise known as Fat Tuesday.
The Center City hangout, known for its elaborate pop-ups during holidays like Halloween and Christmas, is serving Bourbon Street vibes with Mardi Gras-themed food, drinks and decorations. This year, Mardi Gras falls on Feb. 13, but due to popular demand the bar is extending its pop-up through Saturday, Feb. 24.
The bar is packed floor-to-ceiling with gold, green and purple decorations, plus glittering beads, feathers, umbrellas, jazz instruments and masquerade masks. There are also illustrations depicting some of New Orleans’ most famous streets and destinations. Craftsman Row Saloon sets the mood with festive jazz paying homage to Carnival, and there will be some Mummers tunes on the playlist too.
Craftsman Row Saloon’s fourth Mardi Gras pop-up will also include an indulgent food and drink menu inspired by NOLA. Hungry guests can enjoy crawfish mac and cheese, fried chicken, Jambalaya, the “Big Easy” burger and several Po Boy offerings. Drinks include an over-the-top boozy “King of Bourbon Street” milkshake and several themed cocktails like the Cajun Margarita, Louisiana Hot Honey Margarita and Voodoo Queen.
“We are excited to bring our Mardi Gras Pop-Up Experience back to Philadelphia,” co-owner Vasiliki Tsiouris said in a release. “It was great to bring the spirit of Bourbon Street and The Big Easy first to the scene and we have added more this year, all geared to totally envelope the senses with the sights, sounds and tastes of Mardi Gras.”
Reservations for the pop-up can be made online. During the Mardi Gras season, Craftsman Row Saloon is open Tuesday through Thursday from 4-11 p.m., Friday through Saturday from 12 p.m.-12 a.m. and Sunday from 12-11 p.m.
The top 10 hottest housing markets are expected to be spread across the South, Northeast and Midwest this year, according to an analysis by real estate marketplace Zillow. But a “hot” market isn’t always great for would-be buyers.
Buffalo, New York, made the top of the list, as the area is slated to see increased job growth compared with the number of approved construction permits for new homes.
“In markets where you’re going to have a ton more job creation than there is housing supply, you’re likely going to see homes move faster, stronger home value appreciation,” said Orphe Divounguy, a senior economist at Zillow.
The list is based on an analysis of home value appreciation, how long it takes to sell a home and job growth relative to housing supply. That’s important information that can help you decide where you may want to look for a home — and places you may want to avoid.
Market growth in some areas may not correlate to newly created jobs.
Florida, for instance, is attracting baby boomer residents who are seeking warmer, tax-friendly places to retire, said Jessica Lautz, deputy chief economist and vice president of research at the National Association of Realtors.
The claim that “the biggest share of homebuyers are baby boomers looking into warmer climates is a trope, but it’s a trope that’s true,” she said. “They’re looking into warmer areas, favorable tax conditions and better housing affordability.”
Baby boomers are also the generation that holds most of the wealth and some of them are going to be cash buyers as they can tap into their home equity.
Meanwhile, home values are expected to decline this year in the “coolest markets,” or places that will be less competitive. These places are New Orleans; San Antonio; Denver; Houston; and Minneapolis.
“It’s a matter of affordability as well; if a market has gotten less affordable … you’re likely not going to see that type of heat in the market,” Divounguy said.
Denver, for instance, was a popular attraction for homebuyers during the pandemic, but it has turned into an area where affordability was constrained.
“Denver had a massive population flow,” Lautz said. “Finding the new Denver will be important to buyers.”
Millennials will also be major buyers; most are in their prime homebuying age and some have reached their peak earning potential.
Unlike baby boomers who are looking for favorable areas to retire, this cohort may be seeking employment opportunities or the ability to work remotely in new areas.
Supreme Court rejects request to fast-track Trump immunity dispute; How learning from the best in the business turned this New Orleans chef into a culinary star
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During the summer of 1997, my wife and I picked up our 9-year-old daughter from a ballet camp in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and drove to the nearby Gettysburg National Military Park, which they had never seen and I barely remembered from a boyhood visit. The park’s presentation of history left much to be desired. The visitor center’s small museum and the numerous monuments scattered across the battlefield conveyed a great deal about how the battle had been fought in July 1863, while offering almost no explanation of why the combatants were fighting. The park commemorated the Union’s greatest military victory, but its emotional centerpiece was the disastrous southern assault known as Pickett’s Charge, identified, in the romantic glow of nostalgia, as the “high-water mark” of the Confederacy. In labels accompanying the display of historic artifacts and images, the words valor and glory were almost always applied to soldiers who fought for the South, not for the Union.
Explore the December 2023 Issue
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That the place where the Civil War reached its turning point had become a shrine to the courage of those who fought to destroy the nation and preserve slavery should not have been a surprise. It has long been a commonplace that the South lost the Civil War but won the battle over historical memory. For decades, almost from the moment of surrender, the ideology of the Lost Cause shaped both popular and scholarly understanding of the conflict.
As Elizabeth R. Varon observes in Longstreet: The Confederate General Who Defied the South, her compelling new biography of James Longstreet, Robert E. Lee’s second in command, the Lost Cause was far more than a military narrative. It provided a comprehensive account of the war’s origins, conduct, and consequences. The conflict, in this telling, had little to do with slavery, but instead was caused, depending on which book you read, by the protective tariff, arguments over states’ rights, or white southerners’ desire for individual liberty. Confederate soldiers were defeated not by superior generalship or greater fighting spirit but by the Union’s advantages in manpower, resources, and industrial technology. And the nation’s victory was marred by what followed: the era of Reconstruction, portrayed as a time of corruption and misgovernment, when the southern white population was subjected to the humiliation of “Negro domination.” This account of history was easily understandable and, like all ideologies, most convincing to those who benefited from it—proponents of white supremacy.
Just how widely and publicly memorialized the Lost Cause narrative remained more than 150 years later became glaringly clear in the fallout from tragic events such as the Charleston, South Carolina, church massacre in 2015; the deadly altercation in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017; and the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers in 2020. The legacy of slavery was propelled to center stage in today’s culture wars. With unexpected rapidity, the Confederate battle flag came down from many public buildings. And dozens of monuments to southern military leaders—most of them erected in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to help provide historical legitimacy for the Jim Crow system of racial inequality, then being codified into law—were removed from their pedestals.
Of course, omission, not simply falsehood, can be a form of lying (as Alessandra Lorini, an Italian historian, noted earlier this year in an excellent survey of debates about historical monuments, titled Le Statue Bugiarde, or, roughly, “Statues That Lie”). For many years, the Civil War was remembered as a family quarrel among white Americans in which their Black countrymen played no significant role—a fiction reflected in the paucity of memorials indicating that enslaved men and women had been active agents in shaping the course of events. Lately, some historical erasures have begun to be remedied. For example, a memorial honoring Robert Smalls, the enslaved Civil War hero who famously sailed a Confederate vessel out of Charleston Harbor and turned it over to the Union navy, and later served five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, is now on display in Charleston’s Waterfront Park.
Back when we visited, the Gettysburg battlefield was beginning to be swept up in changing views of history. The site is strewn with monuments, memorials, markers, and plaques—1,328 of them, according to the National Park Service, approximately a quarter of which memorialize Confederate officers and regiments. (Visitors sometimes ask guides whether all these monuments “got in the way of the battle.”) The Park Service and the Gettysburg Foundation, which jointly administer the site, were raising funds to build a new museum and visitor center. And in 1998, an equestrian statue was installed of James Longstreet, one of the Confederacy’s most successful generals, present at the battle but never before memorialized at Gettysburg. Longstreet had warned Lee in vain that Pickett’s Charge courted disaster. (To Lee’s credit, after the attack, which left about half of the 12,500 Confederate troops dead or wounded, he declared, “All this has been my fault.”)
But the defeat at Gettysburg was not what explained Longstreet’s exclusion from the pantheon of southern heroes. Rather, his conduct during Reconstruction was the problem—an assessment that was endorsed by the branch of the Sons of Confederate Veterans that commissioned his statue. The general, the group explained, was being honored for his “war service,” not his “postwar activities.” What were those activities? After the war, Longstreet had emerged as a singular figure: the most prominent white southerner to join the Republican Party and proclaim his support for Black male suffrage and officeholding. Leading the biracial Louisiana militia and the New Orleans Metropolitan Police, he also battled violent believers in white supremacy.
Among the challenges of writing the history of the Reconstruction period is avoiding the language devised by the era’s contemporary opponents as terms of vilification. One such word is scalawag, applied to a white southerner who supported Reconstruction. White-supremacist Democrats viewed scalawags, who could be found in many parts of the South, as traitors to their race and region. The largest number were small farmers in up-country counties where slavery had not been a major presence before the Civil War—places such as the mountainous areas of western North Carolina and northern Alabama and Georgia. There, many white residents had opposed secession and more than a few had enlisted in the Union army. Even though supporting Reconstruction required them to overcome long-standing prejudices and forge a political alliance with Black voters, up-country scalawags saw Black male suffrage as the only way to prevent pro-Confederate plantation owners from regaining political power in the South. All scalawags were excoriated in the white southern press, but none as viciously as Longstreet.
Longstreet’s life (1821–1904) spanned the era of sectional conflict, Civil War, and Reconstruction. Although unique in many ways, his postwar career illuminates both the hopes inspired by the end of slavery and the powerful obstacles to change. To write his biography requires a command of numerous strands of the era’s complex history. Varon, a history professor at the University of Virginia, is the author of a general account of the conflict. She has also written books about the coming of the war and Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, and is as adept at guiding the reader through the intricacies of Civil War military campaigns as she is at explaining the byzantine factional politics of Reconstruction Louisiana. Her knowledge of the historical context is matched by her balanced appraisal of Longstreet’s attitudes, personal and political.
Longstreet’s unusual postwar political career, Varon insists, did not arise from lack of enthusiasm for slavery or doubts about southern independence. The owner of several slaves, he was a true believer in the Confederate cause. His grandfather was a plantation owner in Edgefield District, South Carolina, widely known as a center of cotton production, proslavery ideology, and secessionism. He was brought up by his uncle Augustus Longstreet, a prominent jurist who made very clear his belief in Black inferiority. Educated at West Point, Longstreet resigned from the U.S. Army in 1861 to join the Confederate war effort. Varon points out that unlike Lee, who on occasion recklessly risked casualties that his army could not afford by attacking Union forces, Longstreet preferred to fight on the defensive. This is why he advised Lee not to send Major General George E. Pickett’s troops to assault the well-fortified Union lines at Gettysburg. But defenders of the Lost Cause—especially those who could never forgive Longstreet’s strong embrace of political rights for former slaves—would blame him retroactively for the defeat at Gettysburg, accusing him of sabotaging Pickett’s Charge by deliberately arriving late on the battlefield with his troops.
Longstreet was at Lee’s side in the tiny village of Appomattox Court House in April 1865 when a note arrived from Ulysses S. Grant demanding the surrender of Lee’s army to avert further bloodshed. Longstreet, who had known Grant since their West Point days, was impressed by the leniency of his old friend’s terms of surrender, which allowed Confederate soldiers to return home on “parole.” They would remain unpunished, and even keep their personal weapons, so long as they did not take up arms against the nation or violate local laws.
In her earlier work on the Appomattox surrender, Varon offered a provocative interpretation of the long-term consequences of Grant’s generosity, making a case that Lee’s officers and many ordinary soldiers saw it as a kind of homage to Confederate bravery. Indeed, a substantial number, she now writes, expected to receive another call to go to war for southern independence. They later argued that the radical expansion of Black rights forced on them during Reconstruction violated the terms of surrender. Those terms, they claimed, did not empower the Union to impose its will on the white South. Thus, resistance to Reconstruction did not violate the promise that paroled soldiers would obey the law.
Longstreet rejected any such interpretation of Lee’s surrender, seeing in it “the flaw of hubris.” He understood that Grant’s terms were an effort to facilitate reconciliation (among white citizens) in the reunited nation and in no way justified political violence. In urging the white South to accept the reality of defeat, Longstreet made the obvious point that the losing party should not expect to impose its perspective on the victor. The white South, Longstreet declared in 1867, had “appealed to the arbitrament of the sword,” and had a moral obligation to accept the outcome: “The decision,” he wrote, “was in favor of the North, so her construction becomes the law.” He believed Confederates should accept that the Union’s victory demonstrated the superiority of a society based on free labor over one based on slavery, and seize the opportunity presented by Reconstruction to modernize the South. Longstreet’s understanding of the lessons and consequences of Confederate defeat, Varon writes, helps explain the mystery of how a man who went to war to destroy the nation and protect slavery decided to join the Republican Party and work closely with Black political leaders during Reconstruction.
Soon after the surrender, Longstreet moved his family to New Orleans, where he established a cotton brokerage and became the president of an insurance company. Then, as now, New Orleans was a city with a distinctive history and an unusually diverse population. Occupied by Union forces early in the war, it harbored a large anti-secession white population. Its well-educated, economically successful free Black community was positioned to take a leading role in the Reconstruction project of revamping southern society, eliminating the vestiges of slavery, and establishing the principle of equal citizenship across racial lines. Many Black men—both those recently liberated and those already free before the war—were elected to public office after Congress, in 1867, ordered the creation of new governments in most of the former Confederate states. New Orleans, and by extension Louisiana, seemed to be a place where Reconstruction could succeed. But the newly created Republican Party was beset by factionalism as various groups jockeyed for political influence. The city was also home to a belligerent population of former Confederates willing to resort to violence to restore their dominion over Black residents.
Very quickly, Longstreet plunged into Louisiana politics, having applied for a pardon from President Andrew Johnson, Abraham Lincoln’s successor. This would enable him to hold public office and retain his property, except for slaves. Johnson refused, but in 1868, as provided in the Fourteenth Amendment, Longstreet received amnesty from the Republican Congress. Lee, who had appealed to Grant personally for immunity from charges of treason but declined to condemn the violence of the Ku Klux Klan, chastised Longstreet for recognizing the legitimacy of Congress’s Reconstruction policy.
But Longstreet, as Varon relates, was adamant that he was anything but a traitor to the white South. The first requirement of reconciliation, he wrote, was to accept frankly that “the political questions of the war” had been settled and should be “buried upon the fields that marked their end.” There was no avoiding Black suffrage and the participation of Black men in southern government. In 1868, Governor Henry Clay Warmoth, a former Union-army officer, created the biracial Metropolitan Police Force, where Longstreet went on to play a leading role. The sight of armed Black men patrolling the streets of New Orleans outraged much of the local white population. Longstreet was also appointed adjutant general of the state militia, which was racially segregated but had Black and white officers.
Over the course of eight years, Longstreet was active on a remarkable number of fronts in Reconstruction New Orleans. Grant appointed him to the lucrative position of customs surveyor. He sat on the New Orleans school board, which began operating the city’s public-education system on a racially integrated basis. Meanwhile, the legislature enacted a pioneering civil-rights law, barring racial discrimination by transport companies and in some public accommodations. Louisiana Republicans split over this measure, with many white leaders—including Governor Warmoth, who vetoed it—opposing it as too radical, while Black officials embraced it. Realizing that Black voters constituted, to use a modern term, the Republican Party’s “base,” Longstreet aligned himself with the state’s activist Black leaders, including P. B. S. Pinchback, who served briefly as the country’s first Black governor after Warmoth was impeached. Uniquely among prominent ex-Confederates, Longstreet frequently spoke out in favor of Black voting rights, further eroding his reputation among white Democrats. Being condemned as a Judas only bolstered his support for Reconstruction.
Violence was endemic in Reconstruction Louisiana, and Longstreet played a major role in trying to suppress it. Terrorist groups such as the White League and the Knights of the White Camellia flourished. In 1874, after a series of disputed elections in Louisiana, the White League launched an armed assault on the state’s Reconstruction government. In charge of defending the city, Longstreet took part in the fighting. But the militia and police were overwhelmed, and only the intervention of federal soldiers restored order. The event exposed a reality that recent scholars such as Gregory Downs have strongly emphasized: The presence of Union troops was essential to Reconstruction’s survival. In 1891, anti-Reconstruction Democrats erected a stone obelisk paying tribute to what they called the Battle of Liberty Place. The accompanying text, added in 1932, celebrated the insurrection as an attempt to restore “white supremacy.” The memorial was removed in 2017, two years after then-Mayor Mitch Landrieu had approved a city-council resolution to do so.
Illustration by Justin Jenkins
By 1875, the persistent violence had convinced Longstreet that Reconstruction should proceed more slowly and try not to “exasperate the Southern people”—by whom he meant white people. Meanwhile, in response to what Varon calls a giant “misinformation campaign” by southern newspapers and Democratic politicians that depicted the South as mired in government corruption, northern support was on the wane, an ominous sign for the future of Reconstruction. Longstreet essentially abandoned participation in Louisiana politics and moved his family to Georgia, where he soon became a leader of that state’s Republican Party.
With Reconstruction ending, southern Republicans searched for ways to stabilize their party and maintain a presence in southern government. In Georgia, Longstreet pursued a strategy different from the course he had embraced in New Orleans. Instead of cultivating alliances with Black leaders, he now worked more closely with white Republicans, many of them scalawags, who urged northern Republicans to help “southernize” the party by boosting the power of its white members and limiting that of Black politicians. The “colored man,” Longstreet wrote to Thomas P. Ochiltree, a politician from Texas, had been “put in the hands of strangers who have not understood him or his characteristics.” By “strangers,” he was alluding to carpetbaggers (another of those tainted terms), northerners who took part in Reconstruction in the South and were derided by Democrats as merely seeking the spoils of office. Varon calls this letter “a blatantly racist piece of paternalist pandering.” Despite Longstreet’s efforts to reduce the political power of Black Republicans, white Democrats accused him of trying to “Africanize the South.” He remained popular, however, with Black Americans after Reconstruction ended, even winning praise from Frederick Douglass for his continued endorsement of Black suffrage and his condemnation of lynching. Longstreet also spent much of his time setting the record straight, as he saw it, regarding his wartime accomplishments. In 1896, he published a 690-page memoir, roundly denounced by adherents of the Lost Cause.
Varon offers a mixed verdict on Longstreet’s career. He could be arrogant and opportunistic, eager to bolster his own reputation. He benefited personally from the numerous positions to which he was appointed (in particular the patronage posts he enjoyed after the end of Reconstruction, including ambassador to the Ottoman empire and federal marshal for northern Georgia). But he also demonstrated remarkable courage, refusing to abandon the Republican Party, as many scalawags eventually did, or to change his mind about Black citizens’ political and civil rights.
Longstreet seems to have thought of himself, Varon writes, as “a herald of reunion.” And yet, she notes, his life exemplified the “elusiveness” of various kinds of postwar reconciliation—between white northerners and white southerners, between white and Black Americans, between upholders of the Lost Cause and advocates of a “New South.” His willingness to work closely with Black Americans, speak out in favor of their rights, and even lead them into battle in the streets of New Orleans overshadowed his military contributions to the Confederacy in the eyes of most white southerners. As a letter to a Georgia newspaper declared, when “it became a question of [the] negro or white man,” Longstreet chose the former and could never be forgiven. No statues of Longstreet graced the southern landscape.
Varon closes with a brief look at memorialization, focusing on the efforts of Longstreet’s second wife in the 1930s and ’40s to raise money to build a statue at Gettysburg. A formidable woman 42 years his junior, Helen Longstreet at age 80 worked as a riveter in a factory building bombers during World War II. The service of Black soldiers inspired her to defend Black voting rights, a stance much praised in the African American press. She died in 1962 at the age of 99. One wonders what she would have thought of the descendants of Confederate veterans who finally installed her husband on horseback at Gettysburg yet felt obliged as late as 1998 to dissociate themselves from his efforts to secure the equal rights of all Americans.
Longstreet believed that peaceful and just reunion would be possible only when the white South moved beyond the myth of the Lost Cause. The end of his erasure from historical memory highlights what a long and complicated evolution that has proved to be. Perhaps his restoration is also a sign that the time has come to shift attention from taking down old monuments to erecting new ones, including some to the Black and white leaders of Reconstruction, who braved white-supremacist violence in an effort to bring into being the “new birth of freedom” that Abraham Lincoln envisioned at Gettysburg.
This article appears in the December 2023 print edition with the headline “A Traitor to the Traitors.”
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New Orleans — On the sprawling campus of the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, the newly-opened Liberation Pavilion may be its most important exhibit hall, detailing the war’s legacy and its lessons.
Some of the last surviving veterans who fought for freedom attended the pavilion’s unveiling last week — as was 82-year-old Eva Nathanson, a Holocaust survivor born in Budapest, Hungary.
“In 1945, somebody had turned my mother and myself in,” Nathanson said. “…And they dragged us to the Danube, and they tied us together and shot us into the Danube.”
Nathanson’s story is part of an exhibit detailing not just the war’s jubilant end and aftermath, but its grim human toll. More than 400,000 American lives were lost in WWII, and millions massacred in the Holocaust.
This collection can provide insight into the Israel-Hamas war in the Middle East, said museum senior historian Robert Citino.
“People need to know their history,” said Citino. “If you don’t, you can’t really look to either side to know how other people got there. You’re just moving ahead blindly.”
Th exhibit includes relics, painful reminders and heart-wrenching accounts.
CBS News was with Nathanson as she toured the new pavilion, listening for the first time to her own recorded story.
“I mean, I almost have tears in my eyes,” Nathanson said. “It’s difficult to hear yourself, your own story, being said.”
The museum hopes narratives like Nathanson’s will guide leaders of the future.
“I feel I have to do it,” said Nathanson. “Not for myself, but for my children, my grandchildren, and for future generations.”
War’s lasting legacies, on display amid a backdrop of conflict today, and a never-ending battle for freedom.
Janet Shamlian is a CBS News correspondent based in Houston, Texas. Shamlian’s reporting is featured on all CBS News broadcasts and platforms including “CBS Mornings,” the “CBS Evening News” and the CBS News Streaming Network, CBS News’ premier 24/7 anchored streaming news service.
The Supreme Court on Monday ordered two internet sellers of gun parts to comply with a Biden administration regulation aimed at “ghost guns,” firearms that are difficult to trace because they lack serial numbers.
The court had intervened once before, by a 5-4 vote in August, to keep the regulation in effect after it had been invalidated by a lower court. In that order, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined with the three liberal justices to freeze the lower court’s ruling. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh said they would deny the request from the Biden administration to revive the rules.
No justice dissented publicly from Monday’s brief, unsigned order, which followed a ruling from a federal judge in Texas that exempted the two companies, Blackhawk Manufacturing Group and Defense Distributed, from having to abide by the regulation of ghost gun kits.
Other makers of gun parts also had been seeking similar court orders, the administration told the Supreme Court in a filing.
“Absent relief from this Court, therefore, untraceable ghost guns will remain widely available to anyone with a computer and a credit card — no background check required,” Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, the administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer, wrote.
The regulation changed the definition of a firearm under federal law to include unfinished parts, like the frame of a handgun or the receiver of a long gun, so they can be tracked more easily. Those parts must be licensed and include serial numbers. Manufacturers must also run background checks before a sale — as they do with other commercially made firearms.
The requirement applies regardless of how the firearm was made, meaning it includes ghost guns made from individual parts or kits or by 3D printers.
The regulation will be in effect while the administration appeals the judge’s ruling to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans — and potentially the Supreme Court.
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Drought conditions brought the Mississippi River to unusually low levels. As a result, New Orleans’ drinking water could become contaminated by saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico. Omar Villafranca has the story.
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A federal appeals court Friday significantly eased a lower court’s order curbing the Biden administration’s communications with social media companies over controversial content about COVID-19 and other issues.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans said Friday that the White House, the Surgeon General, the Centers for Disease Control and the FBI cannot “coerce” social media platforms to take down posts the government doesn’t like.
But the court tossed out broader language in an order that a Louisiana-based federal judge had issued July 4 that effectively blocked multiple government agencies from contacting platforms like Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) to urge the removal of content.
But the appeals court’s softened order won’t take effect immediately. The Biden administration has 10 days to seek a review by the Supreme Court.
Friday evening’s ruling came in a lawsuit filed in northeast Louisiana that accused administration officials of coercing platforms to take down content under the threat of possible antitrust actions or changes to federal law shielding them from lawsuits over their users’ posts.
COVID-19 vaccines, the FBI’s handling of a laptop that belonged to President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, and election fraud allegations were among the topics spotlighted in the lawsuit, which accused the administration of using threats of regulatory action to squelch conservative points of view.
The states of Missouri and Louisiana filed the lawsuit, along with a conservative website owner and four people opposed to the administration’s COVID-19 policy.
In a posting on X, Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry called Friday’s ruling “a major win against censorship.”
In an unsigned 75-page opinion, three 5th Circuit judges agreed with the plaintiffs that the administration “ran afoul of the First Amendment” by at times threatening social media platforms with antitrust action or changes to law protecting them from liability.
But the court excised much of U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty’s broad July 4 ruling, saying mere encouragement to take down content doesn’t always cross a constitutional line.
“As an initial matter, it is axiomatic that an injunction is overbroad if it enjoins a defendant from engaging in legal conduct. Nine of the preliminary injunction’s ten prohibitions risk doing just that. Moreover, many of the provisions are duplicative of each other and thus unnecessary,” Friday’s ruling said.
The ruling also removed some agencies from the order: the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency and the State Department.
The case was heard by judges Jennifer Walker Elrod and Edith Brown Clement, nominated to the court by former President George W. Bush; and Don Willett, nominated by former President Donald Trump. Doughty was nominated to the federal bench by Trump.
A federal judge has struck down a Texas law requiring age verification and health warnings to view pornographic websites and blocked the state attorney general’s office from enforcing it.
In a ruling Thursday, U.S. District Judge David Ezra agreed with claims that House Bill 1181, which was signed into law by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in June, violates free speech rights and is overbroad and vague.
The state attorney general’s office, which is defending the law, immediately filed notice of appeal to the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
The lawsuit was filed August 4 by the Free Speech Coalition, a trade association for the adult entertainment industry and a person identified as Jane Doe and described as an adult entertainer on various adult sites, including Pornhub.
“Government can log and track that access”
Judge Ezra also said the law, which was to take effect Friday, raises privacy concerns because a permissible age verification is using a traceable government-issued identification and the government has access to and is not required to delete the data.
“People will be particularly concerned about accessing controversial speech when the state government can log and track that access,” Ezra wrote. “By verifying information through government identification, the law will allow the government to peer into the most intimate and personal aspects of people’s lives.”
Ezra said Texas has a legitimate goal of protecting children from online sexual material, but noted other measures, including blocking and filtering software, exist.
“These methods are more effective and less restrictive in terms of protecting minors from adult content,” Ezra wrote.
The judge also found the law unconstitutionally compels speech by requiring adult sites to post health warnings they dispute — that pornography is addictive, impairs mental development and increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation and child sexual abuse images.
“The disclosures state scientific findings as a matter of fact, when in reality, they range from heavily contested to unsupported by the evidence,” Ezra wrote.
The Texas law is one of several similar age verification laws passed in other states, including Arkansas, Mississippi, Utah and Louisiana.
The Texas law carried fines of up to $10,000 per violation that could be raised to up to $250,000 per violation by a minor.
The Utah law was upheld by a federal judge who last month rejected a lawsuit challenging it.
Arkansas’ law, which would have required parental consent for children to create new social media accounts, was struck down by a federal judge Thursday and a lawsuit challenging the Louisiana law is pending.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A global software firm is relocating its U.S. headquarters from Delaware to New Orleans, state economic officials confirmed Thursday.
The move by 360insights will add at least 50 new jobs with an average annual salary of $85,000 to the New Orleans workforce, Louisiana Economic Development said in a news release.
“Expanding technology companies continue to select Louisiana as the ideal location to grow their business,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “360insights will have access to the nation’s No. 1 tech talent pipeline, ensuring it remains competitive and innovative. The specialized, high-paying jobs this project will create bodes well for the continued expansion and diversification of Louisiana’s future-focused economy.”
Indonesia’s top diplomat is warning of the threat posed by nuclear weapons, saying that Southeast Asia is “one miscalculation away from apocalypse” and pressing for world powers to sign a treaty to keep the region free from such arms.
The Solomon Islands has signed an agreement to boost cooperation with China on law enforcement and security matters in a move likely to raise concerns among the South Pacific island’s traditional partners.
Asian stock markets followed Wall Street higher Tuesday ahead of an update on U.S. consumer prices that traders hope will show inflation is easing, reducing the need for more interest rate hikes.
Russia’s war on Ukraine is in its 17 month and Western countries are sending increasingly hi-tech and long-range weapons and ammunition to help President Volodymyr Zelenskyy defend his country.
The company already has an office in New Orleans and founder and CEO Jason Atkins moved from Ontario to New Orleans two years ago, The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate reported.
“Two years ago, my family and I relocated to New Orleans to be part of this amazing city and experience the culture-rich, diverse and service oriented community,” Atkins said. “The programs, support and incentives offered by Louisiana to help us grow our U.S.-based technology team made it a perfect fit for 360insights. We look forward to welcoming NOLA to the 360 team. We are on an unbelievable journey, and we are just getting started.”
Founded in 2008, 360insights offers software platforms that help clients manage sales networks and marketing promotions, among other services. It works with more than 300 companies, including Samsung, Yamaha, Panasonic, Sharp and Mitsubishi Motors, and it has offices in Canada and the United Kingdom.
Louisiana lured 360insights with help from the state’s Digital Interactive Media and Software Development Tax Credit program, which offers up to 25% in tax credits for certain expenditures.
The company will begin recruiting software development and support positions this summer, looking to grow its current global workforce of more than 600 employees.
“We’re excited to continue to grow at a fast pace and we’ll be looking forward to continuing that growth with the New Orleans community over the coming years,” Heather Margolis, senior vice president of marketing, said in an email to the newspaper.
Members at the annual Southern Baptist Convention in New Orleans on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly to uphold a decision to expel two churches for ordaining female pastors, including California megachurch Saddleback. Janet Shamlian has more.
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Doreen Ketchens is an institution in New Orleans, where the jazz musician performs at the intersection of Royal Street and St. Peter, affectionately known as “Doreen’s Corner.” When “Sunday Morning” senior contributor Ted Koppel interviewed Ketchens in 2022, she stated her dream was to play the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. This month she got her wish, and “Sunday Morning” was there.
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Acantha Lang is a musical sensation who released her first EP in 2021. The record was a hit, and now, she’s about to release her debut album “Beautiful Dreams.” Making her U.S. national television debut, here is Acantha Lang with “He Said/She Said.”
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A man was fatally shot and a woman wounded Friday night outside a New Orleans restaurant near the annual Jazz Fest, which started Friday.
Officers responded to a call of shots being fired in the 3800 block of Canal Street about 8:20 p.m., the New Orleans Police Department said in a news release.
They found a man dead at the scene near Mandina’s Restaurant, a 90-year-old institution. A woman was taken to a hospital where she was in stable condition, police said.
A Mandina’s customer texted CNN affiliate WDSU that everyone inside dropped to the floor as gunshots were heard.
A woman on the streetcar at the time told WDSU the streetcar was stopped and police told everyone to get off but did not say why.
Customers left the restaurant after a 90-minute lockdown, the station reported.
CNN has reached out to the restaurant. It has drawn generations of locals and visitors and is known for its Creole-Italian food and casual atmosphere, said Times-Picayune restaurant writer Ian McNulty, who lives in the area.
“The neighborhood comes alive during Jazz Fest,” he said. “It would be busy on any Friday night, but especially after Jazz Fest.”
Partnership with Nolafunk Commemorates a Decade of Musical Legacy in New Orleans with Exceptional Line-Up of National Acts and Local Legends
NASHVILLE, Tenn., April 28, 2023 (Newswire.com)
– Volume.com’s newest sensation, Andy Frasco’s World Saving Podcast, with a massive audience of over 45 million tuning in to date, will debut its first-ever live episode, featuring the first-ever live stream and taping of the podcast with special guest Anders Osborne, who will be the podcast guest and will join Frasco in a live performance by Andy Frasco & the UN with more special guests. This promises to be an unforgettable experience for fans of the podcast and lovers of live music.
Volume.com Will Live Stream All Series Shows at Republic NOLA.
Republic showsInclude Daniel Donato & Cosmic NOLA; Andy Frasco’s Big Night Out in the Big Easy; Dead Feat; Earth Wind & Power; and Two Nights of Voodoo Dead.
The 10th Annual Nolafunk Series During Jazz Fest will be celebrating a 10-year milestone this year in the great city of New Orleans. In keeping with their tradition of providing exceptional musical experiences, the series features an outstanding lineup of unique combinations of musicians and concepts. All shows at Republic NOLA will be live-streamed by Volume.com.
The Nolafunk Series During Jazz Fest takes place during the evenings and weekends of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, from April 28-May 7, 2023. As always, the series features a diverse collection of special performances from musicians inside and out of the New Orleans cultural sphere, who all embrace the spirit and essence of the city. There will be more announcements to follow in the coming weeks.
More information and tickets can be found at www.nolafunk.com/nola. Sign up for the Nolafunk email list on the website to receive updates on special guest additions, exclusive pre-sale access and discounts.