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Sep
23
2011

New post: "Bloggng the Unfinished Story in Post- #Katrina #NewOrleans" by #Nola native @phdaisy http://t.co/ZFtFeFgH #women #socialmedia

Katrina Nola women socialmedia startweets

Aug
26
2011

My Katrina anniv & #nola tricentennial post is worth the length, I promise. What are your thoughts on this? http://t.co/yUUsH2B

nola startweets

Aug
8
2011

Check out the 1st in our new series about #Nola bloggers. Marcia Wall of @411Nola http://t.co/Arz1hSf #Bloggers #blogs #writers #media

Nola Bloggers blogs writers media startweets

Feb
22
2011

#NOLA RT @faraichideya: The "global Katrina" metaphor used in this article is #fail, esp. in this biz-alarmist context. http://ow.ly/40gzr

NOLA fail startweets

Aug
28
2009

  • Katrina was a fairly terrible natural disaster. But it turned into a horrific social catastrophe because of the response of the people in power, spurred on by their willingness to believe a hysterical, rumour-mongering media. (Journalists on the ground were often fiercely empathic and right on the mark, but those at a remove were all too willing to believe the usual tsunami of cliches about disaster and human nature.)
Aug
26
2009

  • Home to more than 3,000 charities and nonprofits, 270 neighborhood associations, and dozens of coalitions and community groups, New Orleans is in the midst of a civic renaissance.  Frustrated with inept and inefficient local and federal governments, the people of New Orleans have harnessed the vast power of the Internet to network, fill their needs, and reach out to the traditional media.  Armed with blogs, Twitter, Yahoo groups, and wikis, nonprofits and citizen groups are transforming grassroots community, organizing into a potent force that is helping to determine how New Orleans will be rebuilt.
  • Yet what makes post-Katrina New Orleans unique is the degree to which digital networks have become ensconced in physical communities, even four years later. This digital revolution is not limited to bloggers and tech geeks—many people who had barely used the Internet before Katrina for more than sending e-mails are some of the leaders of the grassroots digital activism movement.
Aug
17
2009

  • Ask a New Orleans blogger why they started blogging and you'll get a variety of responses: wanting to provide a written record of their life, striking out against the perceived inaccuracies of the mainstream media, connecting with friends and the thrill of seeing their work on the Internet. But if you ask them to pinpoint their inspiration, many will say the levee failures and a basic human need to give and receive information.
  • Part of what inspired so many New Orleanians to become bloggers in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath was the high level of misinformation being promulgated by the national media, such as the levee failures being caused by improper maintenance by local officials.
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