Search Query
Show Search
News
Capitol Access
Education
Environment
Politics
Gulf States Newsroom
Utility Bill of the Month
NPR News
Capitol Access
Education
Environment
Politics
Gulf States Newsroom
Utility Bill of the Month
NPR News
Music
Classical
Jazz
WWNO Music Hour
Classical
Jazz
WWNO Music Hour
Arts & Culture
Events
Events
Podcasts & Programs
All Shows
Schedule
All Shows
Schedule
About
Our Mission
Our People
WWNO Events Calendar
WWNO Live Events Galleries
Ways To Listen
Connect With Us
Our Mission
Our People
WWNO Events Calendar
WWNO Live Events Galleries
Ways To Listen
Connect With Us
Support
Become A Member
Market Your Business
Donate Your Car
Sustainers
Producer's Club
Cokie Roberts Fund
Other Ways to Give
Get NPR+
NEW! Donate old tech devices
Become A Member
Market Your Business
Donate Your Car
Sustainers
Producer's Club
Cokie Roberts Fund
Other Ways to Give
Get NPR+
NEW! Donate old tech devices
Newsletters
© 2026 WWNO
Menu
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
WWNO 89.9
On Air
Now Playing
Classical 104.9
On Air
Now Playing
Jazz 89.9 HD3
All Streams
News
Capitol Access
Education
Environment
Politics
Gulf States Newsroom
Utility Bill of the Month
NPR News
Capitol Access
Education
Environment
Politics
Gulf States Newsroom
Utility Bill of the Month
NPR News
Music
Classical
Jazz
WWNO Music Hour
Classical
Jazz
WWNO Music Hour
Arts & Culture
Events
Events
Podcasts & Programs
All Shows
Schedule
All Shows
Schedule
About
Our Mission
Our People
WWNO Events Calendar
WWNO Live Events Galleries
Ways To Listen
Connect With Us
Our Mission
Our People
WWNO Events Calendar
WWNO Live Events Galleries
Ways To Listen
Connect With Us
Support
Become A Member
Market Your Business
Donate Your Car
Sustainers
Producer's Club
Cokie Roberts Fund
Other Ways to Give
Get NPR+
NEW! Donate old tech devices
Become A Member
Market Your Business
Donate Your Car
Sustainers
Producer's Club
Cokie Roberts Fund
Other Ways to Give
Get NPR+
NEW! Donate old tech devices
Newsletters
Local Newscast
Hear the latest from the WWNO/WRKF Newsroom.
Listen Now
This newscast is updated weekdays at 6am, 9am, noon, 3pm, and 6pm.
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
The Reading Life: Curtis Wilkie
Listen
•
27:00
The Reading Life: Scott Billington, Rosalyn Story
Listen
•
27:00
The Reading Life: Scott Billington, Nick Courage
Listen
•
27:00
The Reading Life: James Lee Burke
Listen
•
27:00
The Reading Life: Alex Jennings, Kyle Bravo
Listen
•
27:00
From The Frontline: John Pope
The Historic New Orleans Collection spotlights John Pope.
Listen
•
4:40
Where Y’Eat: New Orleans Restaurants and a Summer That’s Far from Normal
The calendar says summer started June 21, which basically tells us calendars don’t know New Orleans. We all know summer really starts immediately after Jazz Fest and lasts until sometime around Halloween.Still, the “official” start of summer signals what is historically the roughest time of the year for New Orleans restaurants. Things could be different this summer, though, considering the history we have lived through and with which we are still contending.Will it be the normal slog of low tourism, slow business and inevitable restaurant closures? Or will the pent-up desire to get out and experience life carry through the swelter?Either way, restaurants seem to be facing a double-edged sword of summer ahead.After absorbing all the hits of the pandemic, they badly need the boost of a busier-than-normal summer season. But at the same time, most can’t always handle the business. Right now, so many restaurants are running flat out, trying to keep up with demand while short-staffed and while trying to rewrite the old business models around spiraling cost hikes across the operation.It's enough to make the plain old New Orleans summer doldrums seem like a breeze.We have to go back to 2019 to find the last “normal” New Orleans summer. The pandemic dictated terms for restaurants over the last two years much more than the usual seasonal rhythms.That’s why plunging into summer 2022 makes me particularly worried. Restaurants have been on the ropes for so long now, the usual coping mechanisms may not work.Heading into deep summer though, some restaurant people tell me they’re actually hoping for a slowdown this season, after a frenetic spring.This could be a season to reset, and maybe even try to restructure for the higher costs and changing business conditions they have to navigate now.What they can still rely on, hopefully, is their best customers, the locals and those visitors who are so faithful and frequent they practically count as locals to the restaurants.That at least is one thing that should endure through whatever this inscrutable summer throws our way.
Listen
•
2:20
The Reading Life: Marti Dumas, Dean Thomas Ellis
Listen
•
27:00
The Reading Life: Richard Campanella, Elisa Marie Speranza
Listen
•
27:00
First Vietnamese-American Congressman Shares His Migration Story
The Historic New Orleans Collection spotlights politician Joseph Cao.
Listen
•
4:42
Previous
47 of 36,197
Next