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Archive for June 27th, 2008

 
Jun
27

Chris DeBarr, the chef who put the Delachaise Hotel on the food map with his acclaimed bar menu, has left the restaurant, according to a blog posting this afternoon by his partner, the novelist Poppy Z. Brite.

DeBarr was named the city’s “Best New Chef” by New Orleans magazine in 2006. In Gambit’s current cover survey of the 50 best bars in New Orleans, the Delachaise ranked #4, with the editors citing DeBarr’s “adventurous menu of wild-boar patés and duck fat pommes frites.”

No word as to why DeBarr has left, or where you’ll be able to eat his chilled watermelon soup and Creole tomato BLT salads in the near future…



 
Jun
27

“We used to have a downtown here in Hull. Now we have a soda machine. It’s next to the post office.”

“You have a post office?”

“No, they closed it. And we’re afraid they’re going to come back for the soda machine.”



 
Jun
27

From the country that brought you Braveheart, here now is Frightened Rabbit. No, this band is not from New Orleans; indeed, it’s the first foreign entry in this Jazz Fest-baiting series. But the Selkirk, Scotland, outfit does happen to be playing in New Orleans, and I would be remiss in my position as Quint Davis’ self-appointed chief antagonist were I not to at least dwell on it for a minute. If Bailey, with his limited Quarter club resources, can summon such a fantastic, imminently cresting rock act to our southernmost island of a city, then surely the well-heeled festivaliants under Davis’ employ can as well. “The Modern Leper,” the knockdown opening track from April knockout The Midnight Organ Fight (Fat Cat), is one giant rock climb, its handles and footholds a jagged brogue and a sheer-face wall of bracing guitar. It’s as swell as swells come.

Frightened Rabbit and Oxford Collapse play One Eyed Jacks tonight at 10 p.m.  



 
Jun
27

The lead supervisor here in Hull is a great guy. But I think he’s
somewhat tired of my incessant questions. Or maybe he’s put out by my
threatened work stoppage.

Speaking of questions, we are of course being barraged by the one
question everyone else in America wants answered by us: “How did that
(deleted) mayor of yours get re-elected?” For a little while “$90,000″
held the spotlight but that now seems like old news. “Our Mayor” is
the big perplexity about the Big Easy.

After we explain it for the two hundredth time, walking through Mitch
and Uptown Republicans’ involvement, they seem to think we’re not as
dense as they previously suspected. I’m thinking New Orleans should buy
media space nationwide to offer the Nation an apology and explanation
for “Our Mayor.” This would be way more efficient than having to do it
one American at a time.

The rain has let up. It’s sunny and 90° meaning we’re working in a
steambath. The locals say the Yats should feel right at home.



 
Jun
27

Food arrived but we’re breaking anyhow. The skies are near black; big
rains heading our way. This is not a welcome event. Volunteers and
National Guard are all heading into the Western Elementary School
building. I’m in our truck which smells awful so going to make a run
for it back to be with the others. The pace will no doubt pick up when
we can get back at it. Rain means breaching.



 
Jun
27

We’re working at a less frantic pace this morning. Things appear to be
holding along the 50 mile stretch of levee near Hull. Rain is expected
this afternoon and tonight so they’ll be watching to see what starts
leaking. Kind of like a chess game going on here with an unpredictable, but
worthy opponent.

There’s one boil of concern still in Dead Dog. We’re going to try and
check it out. Clear water boils are not a problem. That’s pure levee
water leaking out which is ok because it’s relieving pressure. Dirty
water boils are, however, a major concern. These indicate the levee
itself is becoming compromised. Knowing this difference now apparently
makes the Yats more knowlegeable than some of the Corps workers here.
According to the locals there are Corps staff assigned here who’ve
never seen a boil. And on it goes.

The Yats have threatened a work stoppage unless fried chicken and
music appear shortly. The locals appear to like our style. Your
Working Boy, Darryl



 
Jun
27

If you’re going to attempt to amend the U.S. Constitution to protect the sanctity of heterosexual marriage, and you’ve got eight Senators signed on as cosponsors of the bill…do you really want two of them to be Sen. Larry Craig and Sen. David Vitter?

While some will no doubt find humor or even irony in this situation, it’s good to know that Craig and Vitter haven’t let their own troubles deter them from letting this legislation stall in committee, and have taken a clear position on their mutual stance on pampering immoral behavior.



 
Jun
27

We’re back at it sandbagging in Hull this morning. Last night, one of the nearby levees in Missouri broke. So this has a trickle down effect (no pun intended) on where people and resources are allocated. The whole ballgame here is coming down to what the rain is going to do in the next few days.

The Hull site at Western University is lightly supervised and there’s a whole new cast of volunteers. So we’re the old veterans showing the newbies how to set up five-person bagging teams, etc…Go Yats.

The level of organization and coordination here between state and local government is amazing. It’s also infuriating to see their level of competence and excellent planning/communication compared to our experiences back home. More specifics later. I have to go now that I’ve been promoted to Sandbag Technician II.



 
Jun
27

Late Thursday night, June 26

We’re finally done for the day after a great meal with the local families hosting us here. I ache all over.

Our group concluded the workday by following the trucks laden with our handiwork of finely-stuffed sandbags to their final resting spot: the levee at Park-N-Fish, Illinois. Despite two vodkas at dinner, I’m serious about the name.

We encountered several locals at the drop-off point who described the back-to-back disasters of 1993: The Great Flood and then having to deal with FEMA. The only governmental entity for which they have greater disdain is the Corps of Engineers (I told you last night these folks are our perfect sister-city-on-the-river). Both are considered utterly useless. I’ve never met a populace, which can so readily grasp our furor over the Corps’ incompetence.

Folks her are already chafing at the fact that once this is all over, the Corps is going to make them take down all of the levee enhancements and reinforcements — just so they get repeat all of this sandbagging again next year. Apparently the additional sand is an irritant to a class of endangered and protected snails. You can imagine how this goes over with Southern Illinois farmers.

I’m tired, hurting and going to bed. But with a huge smile on my face over the great people we’ve met and worked with today and the opportunity to give back. Tomorrow, the Yats sandbag some more then join about 2,000 volunteers and locals for a blues concert in the town park.