Why Mardi Gras Matters More Than You Think
A primer on the full Carnival season: why it starts January 6, what the 70-day arc looks like, and why the celebration is a window into New Orleans' culture, economics, and identity — not just a party.
Carnival season runs 70 days, not one. This series follows the krewes who choreograph the chaos, the neighborhoods that define the traditions, and the economics that determine who gets to celebrate.
Start with Part 1Most people know Mardi Gras as the last Tuesday before Lent. The reality is that Carnival begins January 6 — the Feast of the Epiphany — and runs for 70 days across hundreds of parades, balls, and neighborhood celebrations before the famous climax.
This series covers the full arc: the calendar, the krewes, the economics, the artisans behind the throws, and why a city that has survived hurricanes, floods, and economic collapse keeps throwing one of the world's largest annual celebrations.
Part 1 grounds you in the season's full scope. Parts 2 and 3 go inside the krewes and parade season. Part 4 covers the artisans and supply chain behind the spectacle.
Part 5 closes with the economics and cultural resilience that explain why this tradition — unlike most — keeps growing instead of fading.
A primer on the full Carnival season: why it starts January 6, what the 70-day arc looks like, and why the celebration is a window into New Orleans' culture, economics, and identity — not just a party.
The mystic societies and krewes that organize Carnival have existed for over 150 years. Some are exclusive institutions. Some are open to anyone willing to pay dues and pull a float. This article maps the power structure behind the spectacle.
The two weeks before Fat Tuesday are when Carnival escalates from warm-up to full spectacle. Parade routes, neighborhood traditions, timing, and the insider knowledge that separates a tourist's experience from a local's.
The doubloons, beads, and specialty throws that rain from floats are designed, manufactured, and obsessively collected. Behind the spectacle is a supply chain, a set of artisans, and a culture of krewe identity expressed through what gets thrown.
Mardi Gras generates over $1 billion for New Orleans annually and draws more than a million visitors. This final article examines why the tradition survives economic pressure, demographic change, and every disaster that's tried to stop it.
We cover AI, energy, sports, and culture — with the same depth we brought to Carnival. No noise, just signal.
Clarity over clickbait. Insight over hype. Unbiased analysis over partisan spin. Join curious readers who want to understand what's really happening.