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  • What's up everybody? It's Marko and Alex,

  • the Vagabrothers, and you're watching the first video

  • in a new chapter of our travels.

  • That's because for the next couple months, we are

  • trekking around America, and we're

  • starting in one of its most unique cities,

  • New Orleans, Louisiana.

  • We're here during the biggest celebration of the year:

  • Carnival, known locally as the Mardi Gras

  • Founded by the French, traded to the Spanish,

  • and bought by the Americans.

  • New Orleans, Louisiana sits at the mouth

  • of the Mississippi at the intersection

  • of European, American, and Afro-Caribbean cultures.

  • New Orleans, or "Narlins"

  • as locals call their city has always

  • been a place where diverse influences mix and melt

  • to produce new forms of culture found only here.

  • From jazz music to Cajun cooking

  • in the city's most decadent celebration:

  • Mardi Gras.

  • Where are we going? We're going to New Orleans.

  • Mardi Gras 2014

  • What was that?

  • Why not?

  • We've been back home two months.

  • We're between San Diego and Los Angeles.

  • We're working really hard. We're trying to pitch a television show.

  • At heart, we're vagabonds; we're travelers.

  • We can't sit still for very long.

  • So, it didn't take much convincing for us to go to the

  • biggest festival in America:

  • Mardi Gras.

  • I'm pretty excited. I have never been to the American

  • south. I've never been to Louisiana. Never been to New Orleans

  • On the airplane we started to find out what makes

  • New Orleans so different.

  • It's got this blend of cultures you don't find anywhere else.

  • First and foremost, this was not always part of America.

  • It was part of France. It was part of Spain.

  • And America purchased Louisiana

  • in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.

  • It's actually more of a Caribbean city than anything else in America.

  • It's a very cool place, and it has this tradition of

  • Mardi Gras, which you will not find anywhere else in the States.

  • We knew there was a lot more to Mardi Gras

  • than just Bourbon St, beers, and beads.

  • And boobs.

  • We were on a mission to find out more about Carnival,

  • learn about the city's history and traditions

  • and also check up on New Orleans a decade after

  • Hurricane Katrina, one of the worst natural disasters

  • in American history.

  • We got off the plane and got right into it.

  • We made it to the house of our hosts, Leslie and David.

  • They weren't there. They left us a key,

  • and basically told us to come meet them at the party.

  • Thanks to our friend Cassidy and her family

  • who are hosting us here. The house is under

  • reconstruction, but they're letting us stay upstairs.

  • So, we're going to find our room, drop our bags,

  • and hit the streets. Let's go.

  • So we hopped on a streetcar and headed downtown

  • to the French Quarter.

  • New Orleans has streetcars, which

  • are some of the oldest in the country.

  • When we got on, they were full of drunk partiers

  • from around the United States.

  • So we met up with Leslie and David, saw our first

  • parade, caught some beads, and then did what every

  • other tourist does when he comes to New Orleans

  • for Mardi Gras: we headed to the French Quarter on

  • Bourbon Street. Total chaos.

  • How you feeling?

  • Pretty good.

  • One night down. Four more to go.

  • The next morning Leslie and David told us

  • that as fun as Bourbon Street is, that's not what

  • Mardi Gras is about.

  • It's about family and it's about community.

  • So, they invited us to a house party where

  • we ate local homemade food

  • and checked out a parade, known as

  • a Krewe.

  • local community clubs that organise the events every year.

  • Amidst the parades, the noise

  • the music, the screaming, the beads,

  • we found a convent,

  • full of nuns, where Sister Rita invited us in

  • to tell us a little bit about the Catholic roots

  • of Carnival.

  • The idea of Mardi Gras, itself, was a chance to let off

  • steam and have a good time before Lent started.

  • Finish off the meat, eat all the stuff that you weren't

  • supposed to eat during Lent.

  • Is that what Carnival means? Yes.

  • It means "levare" was to cut off.

  • To cut off the "carne," the meat.

  • The whole idea of cutting off the pleasures of the flesh,

  • not just eating flesh meat.

  • It's comical here in New Orleans because we're

  • right here in the seafood capital of the world.

  • So as soon as Lent starts, which is supposed to be

  • a term of penance, all the restaurants are advertizing

  • the wonderful Lent and seafood menus.

  • After the convent, the parades rolled all afternoon

  • and deep into the night.

  • After two days in New Orleans,

  • we spent most of our time in the French Quarter

  • and Uptown. That's called the Sliver on the River.

  • It's one of the only elevated parts in New Orleans,

  • and it escaped Hurricane Katrina

  • relatively undamaged.

  • This wasn't my first time in the city.

  • I came here in 2008 as a volunteer, shortly after Katrina.

  • We came to rebuild houses

  • because huge sections of the city were totally destroyed

  • including the Lower 9th Ward,

  • which is where the levies actually broke

  • and flooding was the worst.

  • I wanted to go back to the 9th Ward to see

  • how the reconstruction process has been going.

  • So we headed over to Common Ground,

  • which is an NGO that came one week after

  • the disaster, set up shop,

  • and has been rebuilding the 9th Ward ever since.

  • So to put it all in perspective, we climbed up

  • the levies, the concrete barriers

  • that are supposed to protect the lower parts

  • of the city from flooding. I'm going to climb up there

  • and see how the neighborhood is doing.

  • I guess I have to climb up one-handed

  • with the tripod. Where's the help, Bro?

  • Walking along the levy

  • and looking at the Mississippi there

  • and trying to imagine what it would have been like

  • with this entire neighborhood under water.

  • That's enough to break the will of

  • any city. Standing there you can see that there's been

  • a lot of recovery in process.

  • It's nowhere near done. There's still so much work to be done.

  • But, the culture's still there.

  • People are still proud, and they're coming back to

  • their homes.

  • Mardi Gras. The big day.

  • 7 am wakeup call.

  • Dudes are out there in the middle of the street,

  • playing drums, drinking beers, and

  • the day started off very cold,

  • and unfortunately, it started pissing rain.

  • But locals were out in full force

  • in a number of parades. But we made

  • our mission more specific,

  • to find one of the most unique and interesting traditions

  • in the city: that of the Mardi Gras Indians.

  • Mardi Gras Indians are African Americans

  • who dress up as indians

  • totally decked out in the most

  • elaborate costumes. We didn't know much about the

  • Mardi Gras Indians, so we were curious to find them

  • and tell us their story. The problem was finding them.

  • It was cold. It was wet. It was raining,

  • and we didn't know exactly where to find them.

  • We thought, where is it going to be dry?

  • How about under the I -10 freeway?

  • I don't even know how to say it. There was just a tunnel

  • of parties, barbecues, music,

  • food, beer. And in the distance........

  • feathered head dresses.

  • We found them. And next thing you know,

  • dance battle.

  • Why are you dressed the way you're dressed?

  • We were in the Lower 9th yesterday, and we know

  • there was a lot of damage during the hurricane.

  • How do you feel the city is doing now?

  • It's come back tremendously.

  • Are you going to be an Indian one day?

  • I was. You were?

  • Hearing the story of the Mardi Gras Indians made

  • me realize that the city has a long tradition

  • of people coming together to help each other

  • out during hard times.

  • After Katrina, a lot of Americans wrote the city off as

  • finished. But that's not true. it's very alive.

  • And that's because what keeps a city alive

  • are the communities that make it up

  • And New Orleans is blessed to have such a strong

  • community spirit. And that is what we see on display

  • here at Carnival. It's been a crazy couple of days

  • and one that has really opened my eyes to

  • the amount of cultural diversity we have right here

  • in America. I'm just so beyond pleasantly surprized

  • with what I found here in New Orleans,

  • and we will most definitely be back.

  • Hopefully, you've enjoyed our take on New Orleans

  • Mardi Gras. If you've been here or you're from here,

  • let us know your favorite thing about the city in the

  • comment box below.

  • Also find us on social media @Vagabrothers

  • and as always, we'll see you on the road.

What's up everybody? It's Marko and Alex,

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