Published • loading... • Updated
New Orleans Hosts Final Mardi Gras Parades as Carnival Ends
Mardi Gras marks the end of Carnival with parades like Rex and Zulu featuring traditional costumes and throws, as thousands celebrate before Lent begins.
- On Fat Tuesday, New Orleans is hosting the final Mardi Gras parades, marking the climax and end of the weekslong Carnival season.
- Beyond New Orleans, Carnival includes the Courir de Mardi Gras in Central Louisiana with costumed participants and communal gumbo, and parades occur in Mobile, Alabama and Pensacola, Florida.
- Among the final parades, the Zulu Social Aide & Pleasure Club features African-inspired garb and throws like beads, candy, doubloons, stuffed animals, and hand-decorated coconuts, while Rex rolls along St. Charles Avenue past oak trees draped in beads.
- People head back to work Tuesday even as beads fly, crawfish boil and parades roll through New Orleans during Mardi Gras' final festivities.
- The festival's customs blend elaborate masking, homemade outfits and rural rites, featuring beaded Black masking Indians and hand‑decorated coconuts as coveted throws alongside the Courir de Mardi Gras.
Insights by Ground AI
14 Articles
14 Articles
Reposted by
ecotopical.com
It’s Mardi Gras in New Orleans. This Year, the Party Might Be a Bit Greener.
New Orleans is having Mardi Gras regrets, and not just the kind that come from too many daiquiris. In recent years, the city’s huge, weekslong party has been producing more waste than ever: an average of 1,123 tons per year for the last decade, according to the city’s Sanitation Department. “It’s an environmental catastrophe,” said Brett Davis, who runs a nonprofit group, Grounds Krewe, that’s trying to make Carnival greener. The New Orleans are…
Coverage Details
Total News Sources14
Leaning Left6Leaning Right2Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution46% Left
Bias Distribution
- 46% of the sources lean Left
46% Left
L 46%
C 39%
15%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium













