Episode 175: Words About Words with Editor Reine Dugas
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
2w ago
Words are for reading, but sometimes it is good to pause and have a word or two about words themselves: how they are used; where they have taken us. Louisiana Life magazine Editor Reine Dugas joins Louisiana Life’s Executive Editor Errol Laborde, along with producer Kelly Massicot, to discuss Southern literature and who have been some of the best practitioners. They also discuss the art of writing, as well as the future of the book industry and some of their own writing tips. (They might have added a list of cliches that should be avoided “like the plague ..read more
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Episode 174: A Department Store, a Sugar Refinery and the Man Who Founded Both
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
2w ago
Just having survived in New Orleans as a poor French Jewish immigrant was a major accomplishment for young Leon Godchaux. But having lived a life in his adopted city where he eventually opened his own department store, mastered the use of the newly-invented sewing machine for better clothes quality and then to establish a major sugar refinery upriver from New Orleans – which would be a model or the rest of the sugar industry – was a life well lived. Peter M. Wolf, the author of “Sugar King: Leon Godchaux: A New Orleans Legend; His Creole Slave and His Jewish Roots,” joins Louisiana Life Execut ..read more
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Episode 173: Louisiana Through the Lens with John Lawrence
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
1M ago
Louisiana is a state full of images: the swamps, New Orleans, Mardi Gras, sunsets over the Gulf, shrimp boats, musicians and you can add a touch of Voodoo. Longtime curator for The Historic New Orleans Collection John Lawrence joins Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde, along with producer Kelly Massicot, to discuss the history of photography as presented in the collection’s must-have new publication, “Louisiana Lens.” The book is filled with fascinating images dating back from the early days of  “metal, paper and glass” photography to the present digital explosion. Law ..read more
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Episode 172: Cultural Historian Explores Storyville and Prohibition
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
1M ago
Sally Asher is a historian, photographer and tour guide who specializes in the bawdy days of the early 20th century in New Orleans and the life and death of the Storyville bordello district. Asher joins Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde, along with producer Kelly Massicot, to discuss how the city adapted to two major concerns of the times: prostitution and boozing. In both cases New Orleans has its own creative solutions. As a photographer she also has fascinating stories to tell including the time when the Dali Lama met Dr. John and who was most impressed with whom ..read more
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Episode 171: Julius Rosenwald - A Saga of a Man and His Schools
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
1M ago
Even in the worst of times great stories about compassionate people emerge. Stories such as the case of Julius Rosenwald, who in the tense days pf the early 19th Century was concerned that kids from African American families in the South were denied educational opportunities because of segregation laws. Rosenwald, who had achieved wealth at the managerial level of the Chicago based Sears and Roebuck company, became a major philanthropist and used much of his wealth to fight social problems. He cooperated with educator Booker T. Washington to help fund schools throughout the South that gav ..read more
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Episode 170: Warren Bell's Search for Buried History
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
1M ago
As a former TV news anchor, Warren Bell reported news of the day. Now in retirement, Bell is discovering news from the past and his sources are archives and cemeteries. Bell joins Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde, along with producer Kelly Massicot, to discuss his new documentary “Buried History: Finding Our Past.” The story centers around St. Louis Cemetery # 2 where he discovered a deteriorating family tomb. That began a search for family records and also an investigation of  the old cemetery, which once was the burial place of  mixed family groups including African-Am ..read more
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Episode 169: Making Headlines – The Evolution of Louisiana's Newspapers
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
1M ago
Louisiana has always been known as a great state for news. The news itself my not have always been great but the flow of reporting on the politics, disaster, lifestyles and good times within a multi-cultural state has been continuous. Jari C. Honora, historian and genealogist for the Historic New Orleans Collection, joins Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde to talk about the evolution of newspapers in the state including the rise of publications targeting the black community and the challengers of the modern news media ..read more
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Episode 167: A Conversation Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club President Elroy James
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
2M ago
This week's episode is a crossover with sister podcast "Beyond the Beads" from New Orleans Magazine. Since the early 20th Century, the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club has been a prominent figure in Carnival culture. From the meeting of the Courts every Lundi Gras to throwing their famous coconuts each Mardi Gras day, Errol and Elroy tackle all aspects of the krewe both in and outside of the Carnival season ..read more
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Episode 166: Slithering in the Swamps - Captain Caviar John Burke's Cajun Encounters
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
3M ago
John Burke knows about swamps. He spends time living close to the Atchafalaya swamp near Patterson, Louisiana. Earlier in his career  he was involved in a business of making caviar from the roe of the choupique, a  native fish whose eggs have some of the similar properties properties usen in European caviar. Now he gives swamp tours. His company, Cajun Encounters, not only takes everyday tourist into the swamps, but media celebrities too, such as Troy Landry, the star of the "Swamp People" TV series. Burke talks to Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde about life in the ..read more
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Episode 165: Michael Hecht - Making the Region Stronger
Louisiana Insider
by Louisiana Insider
3M ago
Why are people from Louisiana leaving? Well, not all of them are, but there has been a subtle decline enough to make people wonder. “Jobs” is usually the answer, but there is some good news for the future, including in the energy- and tech-based industries. Michael Hecht, president and CEO of Greater New Orleans Inc. (a nonprofit agency dedicate to economic development), talks to Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde about both the challenges and the successes of the Gulf South region. We will also hear why Houston and Atlanta developed so quickly from once being relatively small south ..read more
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