Wow - A whole lotta people want to be Mayor of New Orleans!

New Orleans 2006 mayoral race

Quite a diverse group of candidates. Platforms are an interesting read.

Is there a front-runner yet?

Check out Kimberly Williamson Butler! She uses a picture of Disneyland in her campaign ad.

I guess a lot of people are encouraged to run due to the low standard currently on display.

Yeah, well I bet they don’t have an Action Hero in the running.

(us Californians luv our guv ;))

Well duh! You guys got the last one!

Are there any hot ones?

Surprisingly, probably Nagin. A big reason he was elected was due to the rich white folk, who are pretty much all still there, whereas all of the poor black folk are still dispersed throughout the country and still adjusting to many changes, so they’re going to be less likely to vote than ever. I don’t care for his politics and think he was worthless during the hurricaine and batshit insane afterwards, but he seems like a guy who genuinely cares about bettering the city, so meh.

Peggy Wilson is kind of decent. Her idea to make the city completely tax free for five years is unfeasable, but on the right track to rebuilding as quickly as possible. Plus she’s never done or said anything to piss me off.

Thanks, BabaBooey. Looks like it’ll be an interesting election to keep track of.

One of the candidates (Tom Watson) is my next-door neighbor. I wish I could give you guys some dirt on him, but I’ve only spoken to him once and he was nice as could be.

Nagin and Landrieu will have to battle it out as the candidates to be the next mayor. Whoever it is, they need to be a strong leader to get New Orleans back on track with tourism, and economically stable again. Nagin really didnt prove to do that while Katrina was happening. Hopefully Landrieu can improve New Orleans.

Given that The Big Easy is a party town, I suggest this:

‘We are all one in Landrieu.’

Festival! Festival! The red hour has struck!

Speaking of partying, did anyone go to the first weekend of JazzFest? I saw an article that seems like it was pretty sucessful but personal stories are always much better, so who went and how was it?

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,193561,00.html

First Post-Katrina Jazz Fest Opens in New Orleans

Saturday, April 29, 2006

NEW ORLEANS — New Orleans’ music scene, languishing along with the city after Hurricane Katrina, was rejuvenated Friday as the city’s annual Jazz & Heritage Festival provided electric moments from both its homegrown musical heroes and superstar acts.

The festival, the biggest music event in the city since the devastating hurricane, began its two weekend-long extravaganza with a host of musical performances from blues to rock to gospel. Thousands of fans packed the outdoors venue where the event was held, hop-scotching between several different performing stages that demonstrated the breadth of the city’s diverse musical heritage.

A bit of Mardi Gras was also present — a brass band, surrounded by dancing festival-goers, snaked through the fairgrounds, its dancers waving white feathers to the beat of its booming horns.

For many musicians, Friday’s kickoff was a homecoming of sorts, and helped to ease some of the pain of the last few months. Many were forced to relocate after the storm, which destroyed much of the city, leaving it only partially populated.

“It’s a little bittersweet,” said John Thomas Griffith, the guitarist for the New Orleans band Cowboy Mouth, which performed on Friday. The band has been on the road since Katrina, only performing in their native city occasionally.

“It’s tough because a lot of my friends still don’t have homes … but I think this jazz festival is a triumphant feeling. I guess you can say we got knocked down, but we got back up.”

Bob Dylan was the day’s biggest name, and thousands gathered to hear what the music legend, a repeat visitor to the Jazz Fest, had to offer. He didn’t disappoint. He and his band provided perhaps the best embodiment of the city’s musical heritage, with a performance that melded blues, rock, folk and even hints of zydeco. Fans danced on the lawn as Dylan grunted his way through an hour-long performance of his hits, dabbling on the keyboards and occasionally playing his harmonica as he crooned hits like “Highway 61 Revisited” and “Like a Rolling Stone.”

One of New Orleans’ most famous musical sons, Dr. John, was the closing act on the festival’s main stage. As he performed at his piano, adorned with a human skull and other reminders of the city’s voodoo heritage, he crooned about his beloved city, singing: “Home sweet home, home sweet home, we gonna come back two times strong.” As the crowd clapped he yelled out, “Y’all hear that?”

Others synonymous with Crescent City music — the Meters, Charmaine Neville of the Neville family, rapper Juvenile, Allen Toussaint and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band — are set to perform throughout the first weekend.

Folk singer Ani DiFranco, a Buffalo, N.Y.-native who relocated to New Orleans before the storm, was also scheduled to perform Friday. She said she hopes the festival will bring more attention to New Orleans-based artists.

“New Orleans itself, this part of the country, it’s like an epicenter of music in America,” she said.

Not only is New Orleans a music center, but, added Griffith, music is its center — the focal point to its colorful, exuberant image.

“A lot of people don’t realize how much New Orleans depends on the music community for its soul,” he said. “The general vibe of the city is music.”

And some of the music world’s biggest names will help celebrate it. The Dave Matthews Band, who like Dylan has played Jazz Fest before, will perform Saturday. Springsteen will be one of those closing the first weekend on Sunday evening, performing songs from his new tribute album to folk singer Pete Seeger.

Jazz Fest will continue next weekend with performances by Keith Urban, Paul Simon, Irma Thomas and Fats Domino, who has not performed in public since being evacuated from New Orleans during Katrina.