• Errol Laborde & Twelfth Night / Bourbon St. Terror Attack
    Jan 2 2025
    Errol Laborde, the newest columnist for the Times-Picayune, joins Hy and Christopher for our Twelfth Night/commencement to Carnival program! The New Orleans magazine, editor and producer of WYES’ Informed Sources highlights excerpts from his new monthly “Streetcar” newspaper column in the T-P Living Section, including how he played a role in (re)creating the Phunny Phorty Phellows as “Heralds of Carnival”, and how in 2009 the King of Zulu joined them as guest of honor. Read the inaugural column here!


    Speaking of Zulu, we also talk about Lundi Gras and how Zulu came to meet Rex each year on the day before Shrove Tuesday, outlined in Errol Laborde’s new book When Rex Met Zulu and Other Chronicles of the New Orleans Experience, available at The Garden District Book Shop, 2727 Prytania in the historic Rink, (504) 895-2266.

    Briefly we mention the events of New Year’s Eve, but reserve that discussion for next week's show, when information is more available However, we do point out an upcoming article by Christopher in The Louisiana Weekly which questions: Why the bollards were replaced all at once?

    NOPD Officers Reportedly Asked City Hall to Replace Bollards One-by-One
    By Christopher Tidmore
    Worries that construction would not be finished by Super Bowl may have enabled terrorist attack, as all bollards remained down at the same time.

    A 43 year veteran active duty veteran of the NOPD told The Louisiana Weekly on background that Mayor Latoya Cantrell’s desire to install more attractive, stainless steel bollards in time for the Super Bowl may have left Bourbon Street unprotected from the New Year’s morning Bourbon Street terrorist attack.

    NOPD Eighth District officers reportedly objected to the bollards being taken down simultaneously by Hard Rock Construction Co., LLC to replace the old bollards with new removable stainless steel bollards.

    The process, which began in November, and was scheduled to end in time for the Super Bowl, many NOPD officers worried, would leave most of the French Quarter defenseless from out of control automobiles. Apparently administration officials at the Mayor’s behest in the Department of Public Works rejected calls to replace the bollards individually, block by block, worried that the work would not be completed by February’s big game.

    According to the city’s website, work began on November 18, 2024 on a stretch of Bourbon Street from Canal to St. Ann Streets to replace the current exposed bollard system with “new removable stainless-steel bollards”.

    As nola.gov explained, “These can be securely locked behind each crosswalk. Construction will focus on the first 60 feet of each block where the old bollards are. The road will be taken out and replaced to put in the new bollards. Some sidewalk repairs, like fixing missing bricks, will also be done. The removable bollards will help close the street to cars during pedestrian-only times but will be stored away when the street is open to all traffic.”

    Personal observation by the author on New Year’s Eve noted that as late as 10:30 PM, many of the existing bollards bordering Bourbon Street remained down. Still, as former PANO President (and current President of the Victims Rights organization Crimefighters) Irv Magri told The Louisiana Weekly that, normally, in such a circumstance where no other substantial barriers exist, two police officers would park their units perpendicular to one another, in order to block traffic. The police cars would act as impromptu bollards. Instead, law-enforcement on the scene utiluzed multiple white and orange plastic barricades and fencing.

    The lack of weighty obstruction allowed 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar to drive his white truck down Bourbon Street killing 15 and wounding 35 at 3:15 AM on New Year’s morning. Jabbar, an Army veteran, also had weapons and a potential improvised explosive device in the rented truck, the FBI said. There were other possible IEDs planted nearby in the French Quarter, two of which have been rendered safe. An ISIS flag was reportedly also in the truck.

    The FBI is working to determine the suspect’s potential associations and affiliations with terrorist organizations.

    Jabbar served in the Army on active duty as an IT Specialist from 2006 to 2015 and then in the Army Reserve from 2015 to 2020, according to three U.S. defense officials. He had deployed to Afghanistan in 2009 and was a staff sergeant when he was honorably discharged in 2020, the officials said.
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    54 mins
  • The Top Stories and Trends of 2024
    Dec 27 2024
    In this final show of 2024, Hy and Christopher examine the top stories of the year through the lens of how they reveal the direction where local politics will travel over the coming decade. We have chosen seven different stories that give a glimpse at how the politics of the Pelican State has irrevocably changed over the last year.
    • The City of St. George in Baton Rouge promises more incorporation to come - will it have a ripple effect across the state?
    • Use of schools as a loophole to limit permitless carry.
    • The fight over displaying The Ten Commandments in schoolrooms may stretch to other states soon.
    • Loss of population brings fears of decline and the elimination of a Louisiana congressional seat.
    • Income tax reductions reverse the legacy of Huey Long.
    • Racial and demographic changes in Orleans and Jefferson parishes promise very different political futures for each.
    • The insurance crisis in Louisiana threatens home ownership.
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    54 mins
  • We Wish You A Merry Christmas
    Dec 21 2024
    Hy and Christopher welcome you to the Christmas edition of the Founders Show.
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    54 mins
  • Is The Final Tax Reform Deal The End Of The Battle?
    Dec 14 2024
    Hy and Christopher host Louisiana GOP insider and Trump transition advisor Brian Trascher. He gives us all the insights on the upcoming 2025 Regular (Fiscal) Session and whether Jeff Landry is going to pursue his tax reform agenda even further. We also talk about the upcoming Washington Mardi Gras and how Troy Carter has become the “go to person” liaisoning between the parties.

    Read more from the Louisiana Weekly:
    Final deal for tax reform may not be the end of the battle
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    54 mins
  • Book Launch with Justin Watson: "1919: The Romanov Rising"
    Dec 7 2024
    Book Launch: Justin Watson, 1919: The Romanov Rising
    Tues. Dec. 10th, 6PM, Garden District Book Shop, Free and Open to the Public

    Both Theodore Roosevelt and Winston Churchill advocated intervention in Russia after WWI. The Romanov Rising imagines the beginning of the beginning of the campaign to defeat the Bolsheviks and rescue Russia from a dark and terrible path.

    The authors of the Romanov Rising 1919 join Hy & Christopher to talk about this—and the event on Tuesday, Dec 10.

    The premier of this second volume of groundbreaking Alternate History imagines the survivors of the imperial family stuck in a little out of the way town, with no road, rail or river connection for most of the year. Thus, already, with the corpses left from their rescue still being collected, Tsarina Tatiana, the First of Her Name, is striking out for better position. A battle must be fought against a seemingly overwhelming force of Bolsheviks, just to hold on to their tiny Tobolsk, in Siberia. Yekaterinburg, rich in precious metals must be taken to fund the war, with only a dozen men available to take it. The beautiful nun and imperial aunt, Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna, and her companions must be rescued from a vile fate. Also, the lines must be laid out for the various fractious anti-Bolshevik forces to unite under the Imperial Crown. Finally, the two possible successors, Maria Alexandovna and her sister, Anastasia, must be whisked to safety in the United States and the United Kingdom, where one of them will learn love not just of a man, but of his people, his country, and their way of life.

    Clever spying, desperate battles, subtle diplomacy, terrorism, counter-terrorism, propaganda, and romance: the campaign to defeat the Bolsheviks and rescue Holy Russia from a dark and terrible fate continues.

    Event date:
    Tuesday, December 10, 2024 - 6:00pm
    Event address:
    The Garden District Book Shop
    2727 Prytania St
    New Orleans, LA 70130
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    54 mins
  • Louisiana Tax Reform Special Session, Trump's Proposed Tariffs
    Nov 27 2024
    Join Hy McHenry and Christopher Tidmore on this week's edition of The Founders Show as they review the recently concluded Louisiana Tax Reform special session, talk about proposed "Day 1" tariffs from President-elect Donald Trump, and more.
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    54 mins
  • Gaetz Drops Out, Louisiana Tax Reform, Opera Cook-Off
    Nov 22 2024
    Hy and Christopher weigh in on Matt Gaetz withdrawing his nomination to become U.S. Attorney General, mostly due to a choice that Mike Johnson allowed his backbenchers to make happen. Knowing that likely they were not enough votes in the U.S. Senate to confirm Gaetz as AG, President-elect Donald Trump had pushed Johnson to put the U.S. House in recess. The Senate was poised to enter recess for a few days as well, and absent Congress-in-session, Trump could appoint Gaetz into the AG position for up to two years without need of confirmation. Instead, Speaker Johnson allowed some of his members to set a schedule to keep the U.S. House in session all the way through Christmas and the inauguration. The North Louisiana Republican leader could have used his influence to convince them to bang the gavel into recess. He opted not to do so, likely remembering the Gaetz tried to eject him from his job as House speaker.Christopher observes how Johnson could’ve used certain procedural methods, similar to this, to diffuse the entire bathroom controversy.Delaware elected the first transgender congresswoman, Sarah McBride, and in reply, Nancy Mace, a South Carolina Republican representative, had introduced a bill to ban transgender people, including congressional members, officers and employees, from using single-sex bathrooms and other facilities on Capitol Hill that correspond to their gender identity.To thwart a legislative battle over that bill, Speaker Johnson declared the public bathroom access must be according to one’s birth gender, “It is important to note that each member office has its own private restroom, and unisex restrooms are available throughout the Capitol. Women deserve women’s only spaces.”The hosts speculate could Johnson have vocally urged Sarah McBride to use her member’s bathroom, and simply proceeded to ignore the problem? What if Johnson had taken no action either way? Nancy Mace, a flamethrower, would have pursued her legislation, but the speaker could have quietly killed it in committee. No one would have been the wiser. Or maybe not.Hy and Christopher then examine the results of the LA legislative session and wonder if raising the sales tax by a penny was the only politically possible alternative to fund an income tax cut.We conclude the show talking about an exciting new partnership between the New Orleans Opera and SoFAB with guest NOOA General & Artistic Director Lila Palmer.Dozens of times in the last 200 years, new works of opera have premiered in New Orleans, earning the Crescent City the moniker “The First City of Opera” in the United States. On December 8, The Cook-Off, a new comic opera in English about the creation of the Mac & Cheese, will premier at the Southern Food and Beverage Museum in honor of SoFAB’s 20th Anniversary--and in honor of the retirement of SoFAB’s founder Liz Williams. The New Orleans Opera Association in cooperation with SoFAB brings a nationally acclaimed cast to put on the new production. They even debate in song whether the “Mac & Cheese” was invented in the Big Easy. With Music by Shawn Okpebholo and Text by Mark Campbell, the new opera features three competitors from the nation’s favorite fictional cooking show, “America Loves Food”, as they battle it out to make the best version of a classic comfort food: macaroni & cheese! The Cook-Off will premier in two back-to-back performances in the SoFAB’s main Museum gallery at 11:30 AM and 2:00 pm. on Sunday, December 8, to the musical accompaniment of members of the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, at 1504 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans, LA 70113. The 11:30 AM performance will include a special curated brunch in SoFAB’s restaurant space. Tickets are available at https://noo-internet.choicecrm.net/dist/#/event-details/S0:E475The New Orleans Opera’s production of the opera The Cook-Off in the museum is the first of several planned partnerships between the two cultural institutions. The joint ventures are the brain children of NOOA General & Artistic Director Lila Palmer and SoFAB Director Constance Jackson. Palmer has previously produced opera with heritage partners including the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Boston, London Transport Museum and Museum of London. Jackson, a New Orleans native, also pioneered artistic partnerships in the UK capitol city as a non-profit executive over the past decade.NOOA Premier of NEW English language opera The Cook-Off at Southern Food & Beverage Museum In celebration of 20th AnniversaryDATE: Sunday, December 8, 2024 TIME: 11:30 AM and 2:00 PM LOCATION: Southern Food & Beverage Museum, 1504 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., New Orleans, LA 70113Tickets for Brunch & Opera: Call (504) 529-3000 or go online at www.neworleansopera.org
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    54 mins
  • Louisiana Senators May Redesign Tax Reform in Potential Deal
    Nov 15 2024
    On this week’s show, Hy and Christopher wonder if a deal could coming together to preserve the Film, Live Performance, Digital, Quality Jobs and Historic Restoration tax credits?It looks like a compromise may be in the works, according to highly placed sources who spoke to The Louisiana Weekly on the condition of anonymity, but it remains less clear how the Landry administration could plug an additional $500-million hole in the budget. Retaining those credits would create such a deficit. Absent other tax changes, the legislature would find it difficult to achieve the governor’s desired three percent flat income tax rate on individuals, 3.5 on corporations, abolition of the state corporate franchise tax, as well as enacting a permanent $2,000 per year pay increase for teachers. In fact, the potential fiscal hole may have grown even larger after the La. House rejected a slew of sales tax hikes on Thursday, November 14, 2024. That decision alone created the potential of an additional $500 million deficit.In the Special Session’s first week, a series of tax changes (including a constitutional amendment) comfortably earned better than a 2/3 majority of the Louisiana House of Representatives, but one major piece of legislation failed by one vote. Many GOP legislators felt deeply uncomfortable instituting several new sales taxes – especially on boat storage. Revenue Secretary Richard Nelson maintained in the House Ways & Means Committee a week prior that the package had to pass in its entirety, as written. He argued that eliminating any element would unbalance the revenue-neutral nature of the entire reform. That was also the case that Gov. Jeff Landry made in a private Thursday morning meeting less than 15 hours after he opened the Special Session on Tax Reform on Nov. 6, 2024. Landry asked several skeptical legislators to support the entire package of bills in the House, both in committee and on the floor. However, the Governor reportedly added would be willing to reconsider the sunset of several of the more popular credits and exemptions by the time the package of bills reached the La. Senate Revenue & Fiscal Affairs committee. Nevertheless, Landry’s pleas ended up being insufficient to save HB10 one week later to pass certain sales tax hikes, but pressure from the governor proved enough to convince the House members to sunset some of the most popular tax credits for the arts and historic restoration. By better than 80 votes, the La. House voted to abolish the Louisiana Quality Jobs Program which rebates up to 6 percent of annual payroll expenses for up to 10 years and costed $153.3 million in 2023; the Film, Digital, and Live Performance Tax Credits which cost collectively $250 million and provide 25 percent rebate on production costs and 35 percent on labor costs; and the Historic Restoration Credit which covers 20 percent of construction costs at just over $100 million. In addition, companion legislation had sought to renew the soon-to-expire .45 cent “temporary” sales tax along with imposing sales taxes on services previously untaxed. It was the imposition of many of these new sales taxes which ran into trouble. One of the two bills barely passed, while the other failed. House Bill 10 crossed the 2/3 finish line by one vote, 71-33. In fact, to insure passage, the legislation had to be amended to replace the expiring 0.45-cent state sales tax with an 0.4-cent sales tax, a reduction of .05-cents. As a result, the La. Treasury would receive roughly $50 million per year less per year. After approving another 47 amendments without objection, House members did deft Landry by maintaining some sales tax exemptions—including those for the purchase of diapers and Bibles.Despite the pressure which the governor put on wavering state representatives exactly seven days before, House Bill 9 (which would have raised sales taxes on may of items listed below) failed by one vote on Thursday, November 15. Landry vowed to push for another vote. Interestingly though, the failure of HB9 in the House might provide a pathway for a key Senate committee to also save the Film, Live Performance, and Historic Restoration Tax Credits in the coming week.Originally, HB9 and HB10 would have placed sales taxes on: 1 Storage for boats and vessels of less than 50 tons load displacement and trailers along with auto club services and fees; 2 Car wash services; 3 Coin-operated machines; 4 Computer software installation, repair and maintenance; 5 Condominium timeshare and exchange services; 6 Dating services and marriage bureaus; 7 Delivery, shipping, freight and transportation services associated with taxable sale of tangible personal property; 8 Non-medical diet and weight reduction services; 9 Immovable property repair, maintenance and installation services (excluding new construction, reconstruction and capital improvements); 10 Information services such as research publications, ...
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    54 mins