Note to Bill O’Reilly and Geraldo Rivera: if you think you can say whatever you want to about New Orleans, without rebuttal, here’s this from the Times-Picyaune:
A conversation between Fox News pundits Geraldo Rivera and Bill O’Reilly — containing a couple of prominent inaccuracies and the assertion that everything outside the French Quarter in New Orleans is a “vast urban wasteland” — drew an angry letter from a collection of local civic groups on Monday.
The segment aired last Friday after video clips emerged in court showing prisoners at the Orleans Parish jail complex drinking, using drugs and brandishing a gun while behind bars. After running the clip, Rivera and O’Reilly discussed the city’s crime and corruption problems in the same astonished tones that many locals have, but fired off sweeping generalizations about how New Orleans has been corrupt for “hundreds of years,” and how problems plaguing the criminal justice system look solvable if enough residents would just demand some tougher police tactics.
“As you may know, that city has been corrupt ever since Andrew Jackson defeated the British down there in the Battle of New Orleans,” O’Reilly said in introducing the report.
The Business Council of New Orleans and River Region, Citizens for 1 Greater New Orleans, Common Good and Greater New Orleans, Inc. penned this response to Mssrs. O’Reilly and Rivera. To wit:
Dear Mr. O’Reilly and Mr. Rivera:
Your April 5 “Fridays with Geraldo” segment, “New Orleans prisoners gone wild,” was adisservice to New Orleans, America and the truth. Its broadly dismissive tone was all themore disconcerting because as recently as February 4 you had proclaimed, “New Orleanshas come back big time from Katrina. It’s once again a great American destination.”
Now let us be clear: the truth is that the prison video is shocking. But it is also true thatthe video is four years old, and that the prison has been closed. There will beconsequences. And we are confident that we will fix this problem, because as you willsee below, the truth is that New Orleans has confronted and defeated an extraordinaryrange of other challenges over the past five years.
On this theme, The Wall Street Journal recently ran a much broader, more balanced andmore accurate story – “The Real Super Bowl Winner: Why New Orleans Came Backfrom Katrina Better than Ever” (attached). In this piece, the Journal describes how NewOrleans is now a national model for reform, suggesting “Other troubled cities andWashington, take note.”
For the truth is, in the few years since the devastation of Katrina, the largest manmadedisaster in the history of the United States, New Orleans has addressed long-standingchallenges with a speed and efficacy unprecedented in the history of our great nation.
* * *In your segment you asked two basic questions about New Orleans: “Why can’t itimprove?” and “Why doesn’t it get better?” The truth is, it can and it does, dramatically.
There is a preponderance of evidence:
Education – Previously burdened with some of the worst schools in the country, NewOrleans was recently named “America’s Best City for School Reform,” and thegraduation rate has now passed the national average. Our universities are booming too,
(2)with Tulane recently attracting more applications – 44,000 – than any other privateschool, of any size, in the country.
Civic Reform – With diverse civic and business groups working in partnership withpolitical leadership, New Orleans has “enacted more major reforms simultaneously thanany other modern city” (Brookings Institution).









