El devastador impacto del huracán Katrina en Nueva Orleans y las consecuencias que transformaron para siempre a una ciudad y su gente.El devastador impacto del huracán Katrina en Nueva Orleans y las consecuencias que transformaron para siempre a una ciudad y su gente.El devastador impacto del huracán Katrina en Nueva Orleans y las consecuencias que transformaron para siempre a una ciudad y su gente.
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10lstatti
Even though it's been 20 years since Katrina the impact of the storm and its aftermath are still being felt. I was amazed at the candor of some of the high-ranking officials who were interviewed for this production and who admitted they made mistakes. The devastating impact of disinformation was well-presented. The resilience of many of the survivors who ended up returning to New Orleans to rebuild their lives was amazing and inspiring. It's sad that many never returned.
Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time was a real eye-opener for me. I already knew Katrina was devastating, but I didn't realise just how badly it impacted the community afterwards. Hearing the survivor stories was harrowing but also powerful, as they shared their own experiences of losing family, friends, and homes. It really showed how much pain people carried, and how some felt the government didn't do enough to help them through it.
The documentary also raised the issue of race and inequality. While racism is undeniably a big issue worldwide, I felt that in the face of a natural disaster, the most important thing is people coming together as human beings, no matter their race or beliefs, to support each other in times of need. Still, it was clear that many found it hard to rebuild their lives, and as often happens, the rich seemed to come out better while the poor suffered most.
The pacing of the series was well done. Each episode felt different, focusing on a specific element of the disaster and its aftermath, and it kept me engaged from start to finish. The footage shown was shocking, showing the devastation in raw detail, and it really hammered home the scale of what people went through.
Overall, I think Race Against Time tackled important issues and raised real concerns that still matter today. I would definitely recommend it to others, especially those with an interest in global warming or natural disasters, because it's not just a story of the past - it's a warning for the future.
The documentary also raised the issue of race and inequality. While racism is undeniably a big issue worldwide, I felt that in the face of a natural disaster, the most important thing is people coming together as human beings, no matter their race or beliefs, to support each other in times of need. Still, it was clear that many found it hard to rebuild their lives, and as often happens, the rich seemed to come out better while the poor suffered most.
The pacing of the series was well done. Each episode felt different, focusing on a specific element of the disaster and its aftermath, and it kept me engaged from start to finish. The footage shown was shocking, showing the devastation in raw detail, and it really hammered home the scale of what people went through.
Overall, I think Race Against Time tackled important issues and raised real concerns that still matter today. I would definitely recommend it to others, especially those with an interest in global warming or natural disasters, because it's not just a story of the past - it's a warning for the future.
As Episode 1 of "Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time" (2025 release; 5 episodes of 45 min each) opens, it is "August 25, 2005", 4 days before Hurricane Katrina makes landfall. Everything seems alright, but behind the scenes, the weather forecasters and hurricane specialists are worrying more and more by the hour. In a flashback, we learn that exactly 1 year earlier, the New Orleans authorities had run a Hurricane Pam exercise, but its findings were either not implemented or simply ignored altogether.
Couple of comments: the narrative of this 5 part documentary series comes primarily from people that lived through it. Thousands of hours of video and camera footage were reviewed, and the big picture that emerges is that Katrina was a "hurricane of government failure". No doubt that the first responders did what they could, but it doesn't excuse the fundamentally flawed preparedness and response at all levels: at the city level, at the state level and, yes, at federal level. Which makes one wonder: what lessons were learned? Are the authorities be better prepared for the next Hurricane Katrina, now exactly 20 years later? (No need to respond, we all know the answer...) Kudos to the production team for presenting all of it in a clear way. Beware, some of the footage is truly revolting, but it simply shows what really happened.
"Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time" started airing on the National Geographic Channel earlier this week, and all episodes are now streaming on Hulu, where I caught it last night. This documentary series is currently rated 100% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. If you want to understand the many failures of local, state and federal authorities in dealing with this catastrophe of epic proportions, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusions.
Couple of comments: the narrative of this 5 part documentary series comes primarily from people that lived through it. Thousands of hours of video and camera footage were reviewed, and the big picture that emerges is that Katrina was a "hurricane of government failure". No doubt that the first responders did what they could, but it doesn't excuse the fundamentally flawed preparedness and response at all levels: at the city level, at the state level and, yes, at federal level. Which makes one wonder: what lessons were learned? Are the authorities be better prepared for the next Hurricane Katrina, now exactly 20 years later? (No need to respond, we all know the answer...) Kudos to the production team for presenting all of it in a clear way. Beware, some of the footage is truly revolting, but it simply shows what really happened.
"Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time" started airing on the National Geographic Channel earlier this week, and all episodes are now streaming on Hulu, where I caught it last night. This documentary series is currently rated 100% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. If you want to understand the many failures of local, state and federal authorities in dealing with this catastrophe of epic proportions, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusions.
The documentary series is exceptionally well-made-thrilling, disturbing, and absolutely worth watching.
Some reviews criticize its focus on the treatment of African American residents, but that is a shallow interpretation. The series' real focus is on the poor, the elderly, and the disabled-those who had no means to escape the catastrophe. Many of these individuals happened to be African American, so the attention naturally falls there-not out of racial emphasis, but because these were the people most severely affected, both during and after the hurricane.
Across its episodes, the series examines the disaster from multiple perspectives, including official accounts, media narratives, and the voices of those on the ground. Even so, the neglect, misinformation, and mistreatment are clear to see. The contrast between the political handling of the crisis and the suffering of people left starving and dehydrated in the streets is impossible to ignore. The viewer is left to witness the events as they unfolded-and to draw conclusions that are hard to dispute.
Some reviews criticize its focus on the treatment of African American residents, but that is a shallow interpretation. The series' real focus is on the poor, the elderly, and the disabled-those who had no means to escape the catastrophe. Many of these individuals happened to be African American, so the attention naturally falls there-not out of racial emphasis, but because these were the people most severely affected, both during and after the hurricane.
Across its episodes, the series examines the disaster from multiple perspectives, including official accounts, media narratives, and the voices of those on the ground. Even so, the neglect, misinformation, and mistreatment are clear to see. The contrast between the political handling of the crisis and the suffering of people left starving and dehydrated in the streets is impossible to ignore. The viewer is left to witness the events as they unfolded-and to draw conclusions that are hard to dispute.
It makes you sad and wonder why they didn't get the help they needed when this disaster happened. They got treated like dirt and they had to be on the streets and live like that- so sad.
FEMA was suppose to help and it looked like they didn't care.
The guards were ungodly rude and treated them unfairly.
Why do we have planned situations or emergency services if no one takes those things seriously.
Great documentary about how scary and how messed up life can be when disasters happen and your life is ripped apart.
FEMA was suppose to help and it looked like they didn't care.
The guards were ungodly rude and treated them unfairly.
Why do we have planned situations or emergency services if no one takes those things seriously.
Great documentary about how scary and how messed up life can be when disasters happen and your life is ripped apart.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Ураган «Катрина»: Гонка со временем
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 3h 37min(217 min)
- Color
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