The, uh, feathered orange Mardi-Gra (priest?) outfit was. TOTALLY HILARIOUS! Not to mention dlightful to anyone who likes the over-the-top dramatic effect. Queens of San Francisco, you've been warned: this was deliciously too much.
That's a black Indian chief, key figure in parades and a tradition that goes back a while. Most historians credit it's origin to an alliance between local native Americans and African-African Americans during slavery.
The point of the scene was that an image that is odd to outsiders holds vast emotional and cultural import to the locals. It's important to realize that we're looking at the most dedicated residents of the neighborhood, as most people had not yet moved back to the city so soon after the hurricane.
So as expected I absolutely loved this. Hypatia's observation about how there is no background explicitly given, it just drops you in the middle of the story, is accurate, and a David Simon staple (I know a few people that were turned off by The Wire because they didn't immediately pick up what was going on). Local terminology and slang and personalities are thrown at you and you just have to absorb the atmosphere and the context. This allows for a more immersive dramatic experience. After all, when you first meet someone, they don't say "hi, this is how my accent and slang work..."
Fans of The Wire get a nice lead-in with the trombone player, played by Bunk from The Wire, and he's just awesome.
The only two things I thought were a bit much:
1. The D.J.- it's like a parody of the romanticized rebel DJs of yore. While I giggled at him blasting (New Orlean native) Mystikal from his apt to deliberately annoy his neighbors ("shake ya ass, show me watch ya workin with"), I didn't get the point. The part about the pledge drive play list was pretty realistic- I've noticed this on my local jazz station, too (one of only 12 full-time jazz stations in the country, last I checked).
2. The evil British journalist telling Goodman's character they shouldn't even bother to rebuild. Yes, there was that type of talk at the time (still is), but I can't imagine anyone actually going there and saying it like that, even an evil Brit.
But everything else was perfect.
Elvis Costello's cameo was nice. "I taught him everything he knows.. about Keynesian economics."
Kermit, the trumpet player, is a real musician. And he had the best line, after being accused of only wanting to "get high, play some trumpet and BBQ all day."
"That'll work."
I wonder how they film those music scenes when they mix real musicians and actors. I mean I guess they just teach the actor enough of the movements to make it look real enough and then overdub the playing by a real musician later or something.
The woman that played the trombone player's ex-wife should be recognizable to any fan of Simon's work- she starred in The Corner. She was amazing in that. so I look forward to her in future episodes here, especially since they gave her the earliest serious dramatic issue to deal with (the possibly dead brother).
Loved Goodman just continuing to read his paper and laughing when his wife had her tantrum. Otherwise I'm a bit iffy on that whole family, but we'll see how it goes.
But maybe the real star of the show is the music. God, so much of it.... it was so great. This guy goes into pretty good:
http://newsroom.mtv.com/2010/04/12/treme-recap-theme-song/