Posts tagged Mardi Gras
GRELA WON’T ROLL IN 2012 AFTER FAILING TO GAIN SPONSOR!
0This is one sorry and sad feature.
For 2012, Gretna loses their most historic Mardi Gras Day parade, Grela, the West Bank’s only local celebration on Fat Tuesday.
Just last month, Grela announced their plan of cobbling together $60,000 from 3 Greta City Council members and a corporate sponsor but the corporation couldn’t pull off their commitment.
Gretna stopped funding Mardi Gras in April when officials had to choose between paying for Mardi Gras activities and giving money to the Gretna Heritage Festival.
Yes, Gretna Fest has grown into a really nice festival, but Grela is Jefferson Parish’s oldest Carnival krewe. Gretna Fest has a huge budget with the dozens of bands that play the several day festival. They have corporate funding, charge a cover charge to enter the Festival, and sell a lot of food, drinks, and beer. They certainly could have covered the $30,000 much much easier than Grela could, and this is an obvious fact the Council should have seen a mile off.
Therefore, a Carnival Jeer goes out to the Gretna City Council for backing the total wrong horse with this poor decision in April 2011. The krewe was founded in 1947 as a men’s club, but it changed its name to Grela, an acronym for Gretna, La.
Grela Vice President Carmen Kass said she feels “rotten” about the krewe’s missed year, questioning whether the council ever really wanted to save Grela. She said initially the krewe was told it would cost the city $67,000 to host a Mardi Gras parade, but that number grew to $85,000. Kass said that amount would have been very difficult, if not impossible, for the krewe to raise in addition to the $150,000 to $165,000 price tag for the parade. More important, she said city officials told Grela that raising the money wouldn’t be a temporary fix until the city got back on its feet financially, but the new status quo.
After this slap in the face, Grela may end up returning in 2013 in Westwego. We’ll have to see.
Earlier this year Rhea, another Jefferson Parish krewe, called it quits. Rhea was formed in 1969, making this parade over 40 years old! It began as an all woman parade, but became coed in later years. Rhea was the first Jefferson parade to roll down Veterans Boulevard, and the one of the few Jefferson parades to hold their ball in the Municipal Auditorium in New Orleans.
2012 New Orleans Area Mardi Gras Parade Schedule
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| Saturday | Feb 4 | Krewe du Vieux | French Quarter | 6:30 pm (I’m in KdV!!) | |
| Sunday | Feb 5 | Lil Rascals | Metairie | 12:00 pm | |
| Friday | Feb 10 | Cork | French Quarter | 3:00 pm | |
| Oshun | Uptown | 6:00 pm | |||
| Cleopatra | West Bank | 6:30 pm | |||
| Excalibur | Metairie | 7:00 pm | |||
| Eve | Mandeville | 7:00 pm | |||
| Atlas | Metairie | 7:30 pm | |||
| Saturday | Feb 11 | Choctaw | West Bank | 11:00 am | |
| Adonis | West Bank | 11:45 am | |||
| Pontchartrain | Uptown | 2:00 pm | |||
| Nemesis | Chalmette | 2:00 pm | |||
| Olympia | Covington | 6:00 pm | |||
| Sparta | Uptown | 6:00 pm | |||
| Caesar | Metairie | 6:00 pm | |||
| Pygmalion | Uptown | 6:45 pm | |||
| Sunday | Feb 12 | Carrollton | Uptown | 12:00 pm | |
| Alla | West Bank | 12:00 pm | |||
| Dionysus | Slidell | 1:00 pm | |||
| Rhea | Metairie | 2:00 pm | |||
| Thor | Metairie | 3:00 pm | |||
| King Arthur | Uptown | 1:15 pm | |||
| Barkus | French Quarter | 2:00 pm | |||
| Wednesday | Feb 15 | Ancient Druids |
Uptown | 6:30 pm | |
| Thursday | Feb 16 | Babylon | Uptown | 5:45 pm | |
| Muses | Uptown | 6:15 pm | |||
| Chaos | Uptown | 6:30 pm | |||
| Friday | Feb 17 | Hermes | Uptown | 6:00 pm | |
| Krewe d’Etat |
Uptown | 6:00 pm | |||
| Selene | Slidell | 6:30 pm | |||
| Orpheus | Mandeville | 7:00 pm | |||
| Morpheus | Uptown | 7:00 pm | |||
| Centurions | Metairie | 7:00 pm | |||
| Saturday | Feb 18 | NOMTOC | West Bank | 9:45 am | |
| Tucks | Uptown | 10:00 am | |||
| Iris | Uptown | 11:00 am | |||
| Endymion | Mid-City | 4:15 pm | |||
| Isis | Metairie | 6:30 pm | |||
| Sunday | Feb 19 | Okeanos | Uptown | 11:00 am | |
| Mid City | Uptown | 11:45 am | |||
| Thoth | Uptown | 12:00 pm | |||
| Bacchus | Uptown | 5:15 pm | |||
| Napoleon | Metairie | 5:30 pm | |||
| Monday | Feb 20 | Proteus | Uptown | 5:15 pm | |
| Orpheus | Uptown | 6:00 pm | |||
| Zeus | Metairie | 6:30 pm | |||
| FAT TUESDAY | Feb 21 | Zulu | Uptown | 8:00 am | |
| Rex | Uptown | 10:00 am | |||
| Elks Orleans | Uptown | 11:30 am | |||
| Crescent City | Uptown | follows Elks | |||
| Argus | Metairie | 10:00 am | |||
| Jefferson Trucks | Metairie | follows Argus | |||
| Elks Trucks | Metairie | follows Jefferson Trucks | |||
| BES | West Bank | ||||
Is the King of Carnival Shrinking in Stature??
0Quite possibly, as they are going after the smallest parade in all of Carnival, the ‘Tit Rex parade!! This cool little parade is composed of shoe box sized floats, and they throw miniature doubloons, beads, etc. As to their name, ‘tit is short for the french word for small, ‘petit’.
Now ‘tit Rex wasn’t as well known as the King of Carnival, but now that the Times-Picayune newspaper has thrown a big picture of the diminutive krewe on the front page of today’s paper, along with a nice story covering these developments, ‘tit Rex’s popularity has soared.
Rex has asked them to stop using their name, as the King of Carnival, in all their wisdom, think the name ‘tit REX will confuse the public. Rex attorney Andrew Rinker Jr said that allowing ‘tit Rex to keep their name would embolden other groups to follow suit, diminishing the uniqueness of the name. ‘Tit Rex doesn’t have an attorney at this point, but if Rex files suit, they will surely obtain one.
Based on these facts, I think Rex is making a mountain out of mole hill. I don’t think anyone in their right mind would confuse a few shoe box sized floats in the Bywater neighborhood with the mighty King of Carnival, which heads down world famous St. Charles Avenue on Fat Tuesday morning at 10:00 am sharp.
This kind of baloney can only happen in the Crescent City!
Spring Break & Mardi Gras Overlap!!
0I love posting cheesy beach pictures! Had no cause to do it before, but now I’ve got plenty!!
Alexa V. Staden and her fiance had just one thought when it came to spring break this year: Mardi Gras in New Orleans.
“We figured it was now or never,” said Von Staden, who recently completed her master’s at the University of Florida. “Because Mardi Gras is so late this year that it matches up with spring break. Who knows when that will happen again?”
Mardi Gras is March 8. The next time it will be this late is in 2038, when it falls on March 9. New Orleans tourism officials, who have begun an advertising campaign to attract younger visitors, believe the happy convergence will give them a boost over Mardi Gras 2010, which was the biggest since Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005. A study done for the New Orleans Convention and Visitors Bureau said the city was not getting its share of 18- to 34-year-old visitors, despite its reputation as a party town.
New advertising campaigns are being geared to that demographic, said bureau spokeswoman Kelly Schulz. “I was kind of surprised by it,” Schulz said. “We are family friendly, but we also think people should see more of our night life.” The campaign, with the theme “New Orleans, you’re different here,” puts further emphasis on the city’s food, music and night life.
At Mardi Gras, the party takes to the streets, packing the parade routes in many areas, and turning Bourbon Street into a raucous, X-rated celebration for the young and free-spirited. Certainly those in the hospitality business are expecting a nice bump, even above last Mardi Gras when the New Orleans Saints’ Super Bowl victory was helping to draw people to the city.
“This year we are about 30 to 35 percent ahead of the pace compared to last year and we had a very good year last year,” said Gil Zanchi, general manager for the New Orleans Marriott and the five other Marriott hotels in the city.
Spring Break will have to bring lots of visitors to equal last year. 2010 was an extraordinary Mardi Gras as the Saints won their first NFC Championship and very first Super Bowl during those last weeks of Carnival 2010. Those 2 wins packed the French Quarter almost as much as Mardi Gras does.
Students looking for spring break adventures can’t be credited for all the boost in room bookings, said Diana K. Schwam, who wrote the “Frommer’s New Orleans” guide book.







