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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
59 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Impact New Orleans--But Little Information Re Other Regions,
By
This review is from: National Geographic - Inside Hurricane Katrina (DVD)
Aired in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, this National Geograph program does an exceptional job of detailing the disaster, both natural and man-made, that overcame the city of New Orleans. Unfortunately, it also does an extremely poor job of describing the disaster that struck south Mississippi.
In terms of natural disaster, New Orleans was actually on the weaker western side of the storm. It took a glancing rather than a direct blow from Hurricane Katrina, a fact that is never really noted by this documentary. If New Orleans "dodged the bullet" in terms of natural disaster, however, it was not so fortunate in terms of man-made disaster. The levee system, long neglected by state and federal officals, failed under the weight of water the storm piled against it. Situated below sea level, New Orleans began to fill water like a great bowl. INSIDE HURRICANE KATRINA does an excellent job of presenting the details of both the levee failure and the chaotic local, state, and federal response, a response that effectively made a very bad situation incredibly worse. Communications failures, sloppy planning, and arrogant attitudes probably cost more lives in New Orleans than the hurricane itself; the portrait is disturbing, to say the least, and you are left with a great desire to give everyone from mayor to president a good swift kick in the pants. As previously noted, however, INSIDE KATRINA largely fails in its consideration of the Mississippi gulf coast, which was in the northeast and strongest quadrant of the storm. Hurricane Katrina would unleash a storm surge of thirty feet that caused more than 90 percent of all shorefront structures, no matter how well built, to fail; large tracts of metropolitan districts flooded while relentless winds and hurricane-spawned tornados devastated inland areas, and hurricane force winds were felt as far inland as the state capital of Jackson. Just as New Orleans and southeastern Louisiana endured a largely incompetent first-response from state and federal teams, so too did Mississippi, where FEMA authorities feared rioting due to their own poor planning in everything from food supplies to emergency housing (and indeed there was some rioting in inland cities, where citizens were largely unprepared for Katrina's far-reaching impact); to Mississippi's credit, however, these failures were not further complicated by the political bickering that tended to characterize events in Louisiana. If Mississippi receives little attention from this documentary, Alabama receives still less--even though Mobile, one of the gulf's major port cities, experienced some of the worst flooding in its history. Simply put, Hurricane Katrina was too large in scope for a documentary running slightly less than two hours. The south Mississippi television station WLOX has created a similar documentary that focuses on the Mississippi coast. Titled KATRINA: SOUTH MISSISSIPPI'S STORY, the DVD includes a two-hour documentary as well as four hours of extended footage; at present, however, it is available only through WLOX itself. Those interested in hurricanes in general or Hurricane Katrina in particular would do well to seek it out as a companion to this National Geographic production. Gary Taylor, Amazon Reviewer And Resident of Biloxi, Mississippi In Memory of James and Shamsi Hyre, killed in Hurricane Katrina 29 August 2005
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Remembering Hurricane Katrina,
By
This review is from: National Geographic - Inside Hurricane Katrina (DVD)
I myself was a resident of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Having just moved there in January of 2005 to start graduate school, I learned to love everything about the city (with the exception of the crime, traffic, and racial indifference). Literally, everything about it--the culture, the music, the people--I loved it. Even with the things I didn't appreciate, I was rather content and happy to be there. Fast-forward almost nine months later, I was watching the place I lived become submerged in polluted water from a relatives home in Alabama. This DVD has become an essential scrapbook for me.
"National Geographic - Inside Hurricane Katrina" is quite possibly the best comprehensive coverage of the devestation that unfolded out right now. To its downfall, it fails to extensively cover some of the horrible things that occured in Mississippi and Alabama. With that said, since I lived in the Crecent City, at the time of the storm, my mind was only focussed on that. Thus the reason I liked this DVD so much. I would appreciate another companion disc to solely talk about what happened in the coastal regions of Mississippi and Alabama. Two DVDs wouldn't even fully satisfy what happened because of this storm. The great thing about this disc is it timelines what went down from the start of the storm to its final dissapation. It doesn't play the politcal game either, this documentary points fingers and shows flaws in all levels of governement, not just federal, but state and local as well, which probably had more to do with the destruction that took place afterward than Washington. Fair and balanced, this DVD presents that facts and as it happened. Having seen the post-Katrina New Orleans with my very own eyes, I believe the film makers had people like me in mind when they made this.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
what about the mississippi gulf coast the true target,
This review is from: National Geographic - Inside Hurricane Katrina (DVD)
Im from Gulfport,Ms and it is really a shame that we recieved so little news coverage. We were hit head on and had tremendous damage and we were just forgotten... All my extended family live in New Orleans so im not undermining what happened to our beloved New Orleans, but lets face it what happened to New Orleans was not Katrina but ERROR in the levees... Gulfport 5 years later is still struggling and will never be the same... home insurance has gone through the roof leaving many uninsured... My sister lives above I-10 and had major damage to her home. It is not a contest of who suffered more but the lack of coverage and help to the Gulf Coast tragedy loss was and is painful...
Annette d. Cahalan
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