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Projects
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The Katrina Media Fellows completed thirty-one separate projects. The body of work includes seven documentary films, a wide range of radio programs, a novel, dozens of newspaper and magazine articles, and hundreds of photographs. |
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Another Black Blues Story |
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Clarence Williams is producing a photographic essay of post-Katrina New Orleans, from flood to aftermath to rebuilding, with a visual emphasis on the remnants of the cultural wealth and family ties that make this city unique. |
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Another Black Blues Story |
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Child of the Flood |
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Child of the Flood, a novel by Dale Maharidge with photographs by Michael Williamson, combines fiction with documentary imagery and chronicles the story of John Boucher, an 18-year-old who is knocked unconscious and loses his memory as a result of the post-Katrina flooding. |
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Child of the Flood |
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Child of the Flood (Photographs) |
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Faubourg Tremé |
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Lolis Eric Elie and Dawn Logsdon are working on a feature-length documentary, Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans, which focuses on the historic neighborhood in New Orleans that, during slavery, was home to one of the oldest, most prosperous, and most politically active black communities in the country. |
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Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans |
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Fire Next Time |
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Jacqueline Soohen is producing a series of stories, specifically designed to keep Katrina on the national agenda, that personalize larger public policy and racial and economic justice issues by showing how these issues intersect with the daily lives of Katrina survivors. |
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Coming Soon: Fire Next Time |
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Gulf Coast: Work in Progress |
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Dee Davis and the Center for Rural Strategies developed a media campaign to illustrate the struggles of rural Gulf Coast residents to re-establish their lives after hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The project aimed to help Americans understand conditions along the rural Gulf Coast and explore how America's failure to formulate effective rural policy is reaping disaster. |
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Gulf Coast: Work in Progress |
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N.O. Justice |
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Chris Tetens and Lauren Thompson are producing the feature-length documentary N.O. Justice, about the failures of the New Orleans criminal justice system and the efforts of a few individuals determined to change it. |
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N.O. Justice |
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Not As Seen On TV |
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Two producers from New York City's Downtown Community Television Center (DCTV) traveled to New Orleans to collaborate with two local teen reporters on videos that illustrate how people of all ages are coping after Katrina. The films touch on how art can be used for healing, how residents are helping themselves in the absence of government support, and how issues of race, culture, and poverty continue to play a central role in recovery, relief, and revitalization efforts. |
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Not As Seen On TV |
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Still Standing |
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Still Standing provides an intimate portrayal of the challenges faced by three Hurricane Katrina survivors six months after the storm. |
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Still Standing |
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Toxic Trailers |
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Amanda Spake researched and reported on the long-term impact of Katrina on the health of Gulf Coast residents; special focus was given to residents who had moved into FEMA-supplied trailers, which are now creating a major health care crisis of their own. |
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Dying for a Home |
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The Formaldehyde Cover-Up |
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Trouble the Water |
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Tia Lessin directed and produced Trouble the Water, a feature-length documentary that tells the story of an aspiring rap artist and her streetwise husband, trapped in New Orleans by deadly floodwaters, who survive the storm and then seize a chance for a new beginning. |
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Trouble the Water Trailer |
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