Oooh, a new Brad Pitt interview! He’s promoting Make It Right NOLA, and he’s likely doing press for it because the five-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is upon us. Brad spoke to Douglas Brinkley, noted historian and author of one of the seminal works on Katrina, The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast. This was all for The Times-Picayune, but the NOLA site has the full piece. Thanks to Ecorazzi for the heads up! Here’s how Brinkley introduces Pitt (the full interview is here):
Whenever actor Brad Pitt is in New Orleans, he gets on his old thrift-store bicycle and tools around the city enjoying the architecture and ambiance. It’s his way of staying in shape. His favorite destination is pedaling across the retractable North Claiborne Avenue Bridge to the Lower 9th Ward to inspect his Make It Right Foundation houses.
The entire Make It Right saga is a “Hail Mary” pass that worked.
Starting in 2006, Pitt’s foundation commissioned 13 architecture firms to design affordable, eco-friendly houses. Pitt decided to build these houses — nearly 50 at last count — on the exact spot where the Industrial Canal levee breached on Aug. 29, 2005.
Pitt is in New Orleans this week to attend Katrina anniversary events. A true Hollywood workhorse, seldom getting a day off, Pitt spoke to me following a brutal 50-hour-a-week production schedule on a Hollywood set.
[From NOLA.com]
Since this piece is so lengthy, I’m really going to try to edit it down to the bare essentials. Hint: I’m taking out all of the crap about sports, because I just don’t care. But Brad did have nice stuff to say about the Saints and Reggie Bush. Whatever. Here you go:
Tell me about your love affair with New Orleans. You’ve become perhaps the city’s most effective booster. How did that happen?
I came to New Orleans back in 1994 doing the “Interview with the Vampire” movie, based on the Anne Rice novel, and fell in love with the city. It got under my skin. Everything was sexy and sultry. I’d ride my bike all over the place, amazed by the architecture. I’d return to New Orleans every chance I could. What can I say; it’s got the best people, the best everything. It’s the most interesting city in America.Where were you when Hurricane Katrina hit on Aug. 29, 2005?
In Calgary, up in Canada, making the movie “The Assassination of Jesse James.” I couldn’t get my eyes off the TV. It was frustrating seeing all those people on rooftops screaming for help. It was abhorrent. I was gutted. I remember thinking we can do better in America. Everybody seemed to make mistakes at a federal, local and state level. I used to ride my bike around the Lower 9th — usually going to the Holy Cross area to look around. My instinct said that we have to find a way for those people to find a road home. New homes were clearly going to be needed.When did the idea of Make It Right houses come into focus?
I got involved with Global Green and various Bill Clinton initiatives. I met a lot of smart people. But nobody was doing what I thought needed to be done. Look, I’m an architecture junkie. And the holy grail of architecture is finding ways to design sustainable urban communities. The Lower 9th had become a clean slate. Everything had been washed away. So quite naively — and I know I’m naive — I said let’s start at ground zero, the very historic neighborhood that got devastated by Katrina. We brought architect William McDonough into the picture and things took off. We started building prototypes. The Lower 9th is the iconic spot of Katrina. It’s where the levees breached. It represents a marginalized people stuck in a man-made disaster. I met Katrina victims who had been given FEMA trailers and had nothing to hook them up to. Others had formaldehyde problems. What was the message? We were telling people to come home and yet when they got back to New Orleans they were treated in a substandard way. I just thought it was atrocious.How do you feel seeing those Lower 9th families living today, on the fifth anniversary of the storm, in beautiful Make It Right houses?
Great! I was in the Lower 9th for Memorial Day. Families were barbecuing and swimming in the little, you know, pop-up swimming pools. And families were coming together and saying hi. You know, the simple acts of kindness. A lot of residents no longer have only a cynical view of Katrina, they have a brighter perspective about life. And when I say kindness I mean Make It Right was built on the donations of people. Americans donated. That has a deep effect on the people living in these homes. We have solar panels providing the energy, and it works and fellow Americans paid for it. Not the government.When you came down from Calgary to see the Lower 9th in person back in 2005, were you shocked?
Yeah. It was, like I said, a blank canvas. It was obliterationville. It was a blank, blank, blank canvas. A house sitting on top of a house on top of a house sitting on top of a station wagon with a boat jammed through it. It was, you know, shocking devastation. The place looked like a giant eraser had come in and just erased away those homes. You know, these weren’t just houses. These were people’s lives shattered. Families in pain, memories washed away, just obliterated.A lot of people saw the devastation in the Lower 9th. But only you acted on rebuilding it?
OK, I was naive, totally naive. I credit naivete with our success. I was also an opportunist. I saw this land, it was available, and I thought we could make a difference. Starting from scratch has its benefits. Too often we give disaster victims cheap building products, slipshod materials, and then put on top of them the burden of energy bills and medical bills. You know it’s the badly built levees that destroyed these people’s lives. We needed, as a country, to do something right for them. A new paradigm was needed. The technology was available. So I thought, ‘Let’s build houses that answer all the problems.’ We needed to make amends for over 1,500 deaths. We had to fix the grave injustice the best we could. Let’s face the facts: Shoddy Army Corps levee work was the culprit behind the 2005 flooding of New Orleans. People in pre-Katrina had been sold cement slabs in the Lower 9th next to the levee. These folks were told it’s all right to build homes, for example, on Tennessee Avenue. They were set up. I mean not necessarily intentionally, but through the negligence of levee maintenance. But, lo and behold, the Lower 9th is now the greenest — I don’t even like the word green — it’s the most high-performing clean neighborhood in the world, according to the Green Building council.Are you hoping this can be a pilot project or prototype community to develop elsewhere? Do you have a global vision?
That was the plan. That was the plan all along. This thing could become a template for other communities to follow. And we’ve trained New Orleans contractors on how to build these homes.When did you decide to be a New Orleans homeowner?
I’ve always wanted to have something there. I had looked into some properties in the late ’90s and almost bought a home. But my personal life didn’t make it possible then. After Katrina, in 2006, it just became a need. I needed to be down in the Lower 9th and I wanted to make films in New Orleans because I love being in the city so much.Can you still get around New Orleans on your bike? Do you put a sweatshirt hood over your head? Or does your facial hair serve as a disguise?
In New Orleans, the people are great. They leave Angie and me alone. Unfortunately, we drag paparazzi with us from other places in the world. They become a bit of a hindrance. We try to go out and all the locals are so great, and then these paparazzi ruin it. But otherwise, man, we can just live and breathe and ride bikes. We can take our kids on bike rides, and local people just give us a shout out—and let us move on. It’s very free for us in New Orleans, very nice for us. It’s like Venice or Rome; an essential world city. So we feel honored to be involved with the community. Everybody treats us like neighbors.How do you feel about the grass-roots movement of Brad Pitt for U.S. senator or mayor of New Orleans?
Yeah, with my past? (Laughs). It isn’t going to happen. Oh, my, the skeletons that would come out of my closet. That’s a losing venture.Did something in your Missouri upbringing connect you emotionally to New Orleans?
Yeah, there is a strain of that. New Orleans holds a southern mentality but also an East Coast mentality regarding the importance of art and culture in life. Somehow Springfield, Mo. — in the southern part of the state — seemed more connected down the interstate to New Orleans than St. Louis or Kansas City. It’s a Southern thing in me.When you’re working in L.A. or Europe, do you listen to New Orleans music?
Truthfully, my favorite sound in the entire world is opening up the balcony doors in the French Quarter and hearing four different sounds playing at once from the apartments across the way or down the street. Or, you know, behind our house. And it’s a balmy night, twilight, and I’m drinking a beer and this feeling just falls over me, of contentment. It gives me goose bumps to talk about it.If you had a magic wand, what would you want to see happen in New Orleans during the fifth anniversary commemorations?
I’d like to see more people still be able to get back. More specifically, for our Make It Right project, I would like to expand our template to St. Bernard Parish. You know, out of all the Lower 9th homes we built, all are producing more energy than they are spending, than they are consuming. They’re all pollution-free. This is an amazing story to me. Many of our homeowners don’t owe anything for energy use. We can prove that low-income and high-performance houses work. No more antiquated building practices are needed in New Orleans; let’s put that one behind us. We’re on track to build more homes in the Lower 9th and perhaps in St. Bernard Parish. We are getting the prices down. All our safety measures are intact. I hope house experts will come look. I can back up what I’m saying. Our homes are affordable, high-performance, and safe. And there is an aesthetic to them all. Now I want to drive the price down. OK, that is fair to say, the price needs to come down. But any other criticism you hear doesn’t hold up.What do you say to people who don’t think the Lower 9th is safe because the levees are still weak? How do you know the wall won’t collapse again in a Category 3 or 4 or 5 hurricane?
Sure, I have concerns. I mean it was the first question we had to ask: Are we putting people back into the danger zone? Well, there is a Road Home program. Nobody is giving them enough money to return safely. In our eyes, you’re setting people up for another catastrophe. Our houses are built high enough from the ground to endure flooding if the levees don’t hold up. As for the iconic Industrial Canal breach spot? It’s been dealt with by engineers to a large degree, dealt with better than the other walls. You know what my worry is? My worry is not the Lower 9th, it’s the upper 9th. Because that protection wall wasn’t dealt with. It’s a foot or two lower than the levee in our neighborhood. If the Army Corps would just have spent a little bit more time, put in a little more focus and a little bit more money and done it right the first time, New Orleans would be a far safer place. And it wouldn’t have cost the billions of dollars to fix what was wrong. And I find that inexcusable. So our Make It Right homes are built right. And that’s where the title came from: Make It Right. Just make it right for everybody. Make things fair to the people of New Orleans. Make it right.
[From NOLA.com]
Look, I know Brad it probably going to get bashed for this interview, just because he gets bashed for breathing at this point, but I personally think on this point, on this issue, he is 100% authentic, passionate, dedicated and awesome. We can bitch and moan about the costs or the architecture or the timing or all of it, but the truth of the matter is that Brad puts his time and money where his mouth is, and that’s always something I respect. Make It Right NOLA is one of his greatest passions, and he’s stuck with it, and I believe he’ll continue to stick with it, no matter how complicated things get. For this, I have nothing but admiration and applause for him.
Header: Brad in D.C. discussing Make It Right NOLA in March 2009. Credit: WENN.
That’s nice. Such a special special person. When was the last time this family were in NOLA for more than a day? He must not hear his favorite sound very often.
UPDATE: Pretentious twat
I’d tap that.
“East Coast mentality regarding the importance of art and culture in life.”
Um, this is not an East Coast mentality, this also is deeply rooted in Southern culture.
Thought interviewer was going to ask to touch his hair next.
@buckley – but he does have braddy bend over so he can kiss his humanitarian ass.
I am not a fan of Brad anymore, anyone who cheats is just wrong to me, but I have to say that his work in NO is wonderful. He has truly done something to help.
ACK…I had to say a good thing abnout him, that was pretty hard. Too bad because he used to be one of my favorites.
Interesting stuff.. kudos to Brad. He did something he thought was helpful for a community, when it would have been so much easier for him to have done nothing. I give him loads of credit for that.
for me, this interview goes a long way in explaining his preference for the involved, engaged angelina over the vapid, silly jen. the two women are worlds apart. i’m thinking brad got tired of having to tell jen, ‘yes, dear, you’re the prettiest of all the friends. yes, honey, your hairstyle is rockin’. yes, love, vacationing in mexico is exactly the same as charity work.’
They might not be able to go there as often as they used to right now but Brad still goes to check in with the homeowners. They have work commitments right now that require them to live in different places.
I really enjoyed this interview. You really feel Brad’s love and passion in his words. I was really touched when he says he rides past those houses and the people are living happily. I love that he states Americans built those homes and its true. Brad was really able to rally people together for donations plus it really shows how much people wanted to help. Its soo awesome. I really loved this interview, melted my heart.
“Look, I know Brad it probably going to get bashed for this interview, just because he gets bashed for breathing at this point”
Um, yup!
Good for him. Nice to see a celeb putting his money where his mouth is.
While I think it’s commendable, 50 houses in 5 years is a mere drop in the proverbial bucket. And Mr. Pitt speaks like he actually resides in NOLA for lengthy periods of time, which he does not. He’s a visitor, a tourist. A perpetual one at that. LA is where Pitt wants to live but St. Angie won’t allow it.
meme well according to the locals they are often in NOLA, usually the paps show up after 2-3 days of them being down there. Jen wind -I’m sorry Brad cheated on you. Jen says he didn’t cheat on her.
Good for him. He should ignore all “the crabs in the barrel.”
LOL seriously Meme. Whats the matter? Do you actually believe what your posting? Where do you get this stuff?
I’ve lived in New Orleans and am still very near. My neighbors’ lives were and are obliterated by Katrina very near the lower 9th. Several facts here from residents:
People consider this whole project a bit of an embarrassment. They chuckle after Pitt has made his little photo op.
Six thousand homes have been demolished in New Orleans with many thousands still to go. This PR effort has made an infinitesimal contribution and is something of a local joke. “Hey, the Make It Right people want to come around to get their pictures taken with us (followed by sounds of knees being slapped and quiet laughter)”
The pink house concept merited a WTF reaction from everyone I’ve talked to.
This is NOT making a difference except for allowing Pitt and company to pat themselves on the back while the locals shake their heads and privately wonder why doesn’t he stop living like effing royalty in his multiple houses and stop this sh*t and do something that will make a real difference. Fifty houses in five years. Yeah, making it right. Bull crap.
I see MIR as good intentions, mediocre results. Personally I’ve chosen to support other programs that do a lot more with a lot less media attention and money, but something is always better than nothing, and he is at least passionate about it. So how’s that, not so bitchy? 😀
It doesn’t seem like they are in NO for any significant amount of time, only when doing PR for MIR. If they are somehow managing to evade the paparazzi and have a few undocumented days here and there, good for them, but I kind of doubt it.
Sara, thanks for a local’s perspective. I have my opinions of the program, but haven’t really heard how people actually experiencing it feel.
lucy2, I think I can just copy and paste your post as my own.
ditto to everything you said.
i don’t understand all of the negativity. he doesn’t have to do anything and he chooses to help folks… he could just keep all of his $$$.
Yeah Brad take what’s left of the $5 million donation from the Jolie Pitt foundation and leave. Apparently you have to live fulltime in a area before you should try to help. Also take back the $2 million donation for the AIDS/TB Clinic in Ethiopia since you are rarely there.BTW he has spoke of the beauty of that country and its people too. Good intentions….FYI MIR started building homes in 2008 so they have built 50 award winning green homes in 2 years not 5 years, not that it matters to the critics and naysayers. Sara which organization would you suggest a person donate to to help the people in the 9th ward rebuild the homes? Thanks in advance for your inside info since you are in the area.
It doesn’t really matter what we think about the project or not. The only opinion that matters is the one of people acquiring and living in those new homes.
They are the ones who benefit from the project and can express better if it changeS THEIR life for the better or not. If it does, then it’s a success for that specific family, if not, then, it’s a waste of money for the american citizen who gave money and try to help a fellow one as they see fits.
At least they try. Only people who never try never fail.
Brad is doing great work. I’m glad to hear the houses can withstand flood. One request — more houses please! Stat!
@ Kim:
“Jen wind -I’m sorry Brad cheated on you. Jen says he didn’t cheat on her.”
This is full of win!
Brad cheated good for him, snarky self-centered old bitch, Jennifer Aniston deserved it he is now in love with and have a loving family with the right person, Angelina Jolie, wish those two humanitarians all the best.
@ Kim:
“Jen wind -I’m sorry Brad cheated on you. Jen says he didn’t cheat on her.”
yep, awesome. 🙂
@tiki: “yes, love, vacationing in mexico is exactly the same as charity work.’ this came to my mind as well, too funny.
Also, I love when people sit on their a$$es and then mock people who try to help.
It sounds like they have some good prototypes to work with here. Look forward to an expansion of the project now that the kinks are out.
Thank you Sara and Lucy2. I rest my case.
@Love Angelina, I don’t think you’re off your rocker, I just think you have THE KOOLAID in your veins instead of blood. LOL
(…while filming in Serbia, Ms. Jolie decided to take a a few days off and schlep her family, including the Braddy to NOLA for a couple of days…)
They started building 2 or 3 years ago not five. An organization isn’t going to start the next day. I’m sure some are unhappy people but I’m also sure most people are happy about this project. If everybody in NO hated MIR I’m sure there would be a lot of publicity about that.
I have seen many interviews from the people that actually live there in the lower ninth.. They talk about the fact hat he and his family do visit. That he has provided money for furniture, gift cards for the families at Thanksgiving and Christmas, that he has given the kids tickets to sporting and various events.
The people that have a decent home don’t think he is pretentious or a twat..they are happy to be able to go home. MIR was not intended to give anyone a free home. Most of the families there owned their homes and the property it was built on. When they were destroyed many sold the property and others could not come up with enough money or financial support to rebuild; especially in that area.. where people just wanted it to disappear. So MIR is a bridge to help them get back some or more of what they lost. Brad did and does not owe anyone a free home. BUT I am sure other communities that that were devastated would love to have a Brad or someone involved to keep them in the media and keep the focus on them too.
I think what he has done is awesome.. NOT because he is Brad Pitt but because he is a man and just a human being that wanted to help. It is always funny how people get bashed for wanting to help because they are famous.
@ Kim:
“Jen wind -I’m sorry Brad cheated on you. Jen says he didn’t cheat on her.”
Really…out of my whole statement this is the part that bothers you the most?
Whether jen says that he cheated on her or not, that is her business, but the the way it all went down is suspect, and to me he cheated. Whether he had sex before they seperated or not, have an emotional affair is cheating also, and he DID have an emaotional affair.
I have not however boycotted any of his movies, stilwatched Inglorious Bastards, thought he was good in it, he is still in one of my favorite movies and I watch it over and over again, but as a man I don;t car for him. He is a weak individual for how he let things go down. Sorry my opinion, and that is all that matters to me.
For the record, I have never liked Angelina Jolie movies, I have never really cared for her, and that has nothing to do with the unholly triangle, but I do not blame her for the break up of his marriage, I blame it all on Brad, plain and simple.
He still knows how to wear a tight white tee.
Great article, good to hear about something besides the kids & Angie.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzJbBPUzeZY
make it right nola
Completely agree with you Kaiser, everything you said.
Great interview with Brad.
It’s nice when those who have resources to draw upon do so — including media attention and thus all of us monkeys — for pressing sustainability issues. NOLA was/is a nightmare. I felt he was sincere, albeit a little hokey, and that he is seriously committed to doing good work. Also was chuffed by his pointedness that at its heart it’s a grassroots movement… he sounds vaguely like an anti-authoritarian. I’m nowhere near NOLA or the lower 9th, and thus don’t know the daily-life effects or lack thereof, but the intention sounds super-genuine. I only hope it makes the difference he hopes it does. I was there several times before Katrina, and New Orleans is such a sensuous, strange and wonderful place.
Sara, maybe some people consider the project a bit of an embarassment but for those people who are living in those houses consider it a BLESSING.
It is amazing how some people are so judgmental. At least Brad and the others are doing something for the people of New Orleans instead of not doing anything at all like the government and others who talk a lot of sh*t and don’t do anything.
awww lets give Meme, Sara and Lucy2 a pat on their backs, they did something good today…NOT
As a resident of Arabi, I find the locals appreciate Brad Pitt’s efforts. When the homes first went up, I remember thinking they looked a little out there, even for New Orleans, but they’ve grown on me. Every person I’ve talked to about the project has been at least positive about it, if not downright enthusiastic.
Make It Right, while not rebuilding homes as quickly as other organizations (check out the St. Bernard Project, which I’m particularly proud to point to — they’re currently in the process of renovating 5 homes in 50 hours for the 5th anniversary), has injected a bleak, run-down (even before Katrina) area of town with excitement and energy.
Even five years later, we still need all the help we can get. Brad Pitt and the Make It Right organization are welcome parts of my community as long as they wish to be here. It would be amazing if some of the energy conserving ideas found in these model homes managed to catch on. I can’t imagine New Orleans becoming a shining example of smart environmental practices, but then again, I couldn’t imagine us winning the Super Bowl.
@Alex: 🙂
I visited NOLA last month, and went to the 9th Ward specifically to check out the damage, along with the rebuilding effort (including Brad’s “Make It Right” foundation homes).
While Brad’s effort is commendable – what has been built is actually a little on the odd-looking side. Those homes look nothing like the homes that were destroyed … so what you have are a mix of odd-looking multi-colored nouveau manufactured-type homes nested within neighborhoods of old homes. Sure – the people have places to live … but it just looked ODD to me.
So – I applaud the effort, but not the architecture.
err meme,
1. Not 50 houses in 5 years, building only began around 2 years ago, and these are houses that are at the leading edge of technology, innovative ways of home building have been developed and are now being duplicated, plus families had to be worked with to get clear title to land and their financing in order, and the land had to be remediated. Brad is doing something from his heart, something Angelina supports him in, and for that he is to be commended.
2. Actually Brad and Angelina and the kids are seen fairly often in NOLA, it takes the paps a couple of days to latch on to their location, and by then they are gone so no pics. As Brad said they were in the area over Memorial Day.
3. Brad and his family are parttime residents as they own a home in NOLA, not tourists or visitors.
4. Brad has said many times that he loves NOLA, that he loves travelling, that he loves France and Venice and other cities, that LA is one of his family’s homebases but not the only one. Angelina has NEVER said one word about not living in LA, after all she was born there and is a native. Angelina seems quite happy to live where ever Brad wants to live. After all she happily lives in the Los Feliz home that Brad has had for many years.
I wish that some people would stop sitting as biased judge and jury about people they do not have any personal knowledge or acquaintance with based purely on the basis of what they read in tabloids or on experiences of their own lives, and then exhibiting bitterness when none is called for. No one here was married to Brad Pitt, and no one here knows why a marriage between 2 strangers failed going on 6 years ago. Such demonstrated and prolonged bitterness seeping into one’s life for years and years is a tragic waste of one’s life. Long past time here in almost September 2010 to move on, really.
Brad Pitt has built 50 homes in the Lower 9th . . . that is about 50 more than the U.S. government (FEMA) has built for these people in the five years since Katrina, and that is their job. Say what you will but if it wasn’t for MIR and other organizations, NOLA would still be a useless place for its citizens.
@Meme, Sara and Lucy
what crawled up yall azzes today?
Brad choose Angie, GET OVER IT,MOVE THE FUGG ON..
last time I checked Brad doesnt owe anybody sh’t..if he wants to spend some of his millions and help people in need, thats on him..
so wat if he has an agenda, at least people got a roof over there head..
who cares how the houses look?
I doubt the people who got a roof over their head,(for free) thinkin, damn my old house was better looking, my old house had a sunnroom..
gosh people gets on my nerves with their simple minded self..
brad, god bless u..ur doing a great thing..i doubt half these twits on here whos complaining, ever did sh’t for anybody else…
the jennifer stans on here bashing brad, I have a quetions for yall..what have jen done to help other people ?
does she ever take the millions she gets for her pics and donate that shit to some poor country?
god forbid she has to go to a poor country without her perfect hair and makeup.
until then shut yall ungratefull asses up.
@InTheZone: I know right 🙂
they are on every thread,
it’s so entertaining 🙂
thanks yall, carry on 🙂
makes you hope they are getting paid
Random questions: Does anybody actually live in those houses?…I live in New Orleans and whenever i drive past them to go to school there are no cars or people around and @in the zone if they were free why would he say he’s working on lowering the prices??
Interesting being judgmental when you don’t even know these people and only know what the media dishes to you. Even with divorced couples that you know personally, you cannot really ever know who was mainly to blame. People only tell you what they want you to hear. Sometimes they don’t even admit their own faults in the marriage. Sometimes one is driven away from the marriage by a fault of the other. We cannot go by our own experience either, in judging. Every situation is DIFFERENT!
He’s helping. Not sure why people are down on him. Nobody else in Hollywood seems to give a damn. Cut the guy some slack.
And you’re still calling the guy a homewrecker? And what home would that be? The one he had with “No Kids” Aniston. Please.
Pitt is the real deal. A man with a purpose. He’s doing a tremendous charitable service in the city of New Orleans. Kudos to Pitt!
What is wrong with certain adults in here who like to show the extent of their immaturity and obsesson about a divorce that doesn’t belong to them ?
What is wrong with you people ? Mendling in other people divorce of several years ago to the point of bringing it in serious matters, no matter what, not being able to separate the two, bringing your blatant unrelated obsession in every matter to justify your biased view ? WOW.
That is not a proper adult balanced way of behaving, of having a sane opinion on serious matters.
There is a time for juvenile, childish unrelated rants and highschool stuff, there is another one for serious matters.
Make it right is getting shit for not building enough homes, last time I checked Brad Pitt was not the president but a private citizen and 50 well built homes built above the floodline sound better to me that Fema trailers. BTW not to put down other charities or their efforts, but the whole point of MIR is to build sustainable houses that will be better suited to face whatever the fates have in store for NOLA building homes with the same vunerablities is only a temporary fix.
It’s shameful if people are laughing at what this charity is doing. Anyone who wants to laugh at the Make It Right foundation should donate millions of dollars so they can show what they believe should be done – otherwise, they have no right to laugh at a private citizen’s generous donation.
Any amount of help is help.
To the people snarking on MIR, I repeat to you the famous last line of “Wanted”:
What the fuck have you done lately?
Glad he’s helping but the houses I’ve seen don’t seem to fit into the architecture-they are fugly. But shelter is shelter so good for MIR, I hope they help more families with houses that fit into the culture.
COME ON CELEBITCHY – HOW MANY POSTS ON CHEATERS ARE YOU GOING TO PUT UP TODAY??? BOOOOOO TO BRAD.
There will always be people who laugh at the Lower Ninth. That says something about them. A number of corporations wanted to take over all that land in the Lower Ninth and redevelop it for their own commercial, non-residential purposes. Those corporate entities did not and still do not want the residents to return to their neighborhoods. I’m sure they and others still seek to undermine the efforts of Pitt and others who dare get in their greedy way.
No one of consequence or knowledgable about what Make It Right is doing is laughing at its work.
Brad Pitt is not building cheap tract housing for the masses. He is helping home owners return to their neighborhoods and rebuild their homes better and safer.
I love modern architecture so I truly appreciate these designs. If one spent the time actually studying the homes and their landscaping it is obvious that they have drawn from the roots of the area and incorporated that old style into a modern design. Not all old housing and its outdated elements are desirable.
Kudos to Brad Pitt for his patience for staying the course in encouraging homeowners to return when it is still difficult to live there, when expensive and complicated environmental obstacles had to be overcome before any building could begin, when government paperwork and property ownership issues threatened to scuttle some families’ efforts, etc.
When the story of the Make It Right Project is finally written most people will be amazed at how well this was accomplished despite very long odds.
Maybe instead of being so particular about aesthetics and modernism, they could have built 200 well-constructed, hurricane/flood safe, and simple but enviro-efficient homes by now instead of only 50. I’ve seen pictures of some of the homes and I wouldn’t pay market value for them. They so do not reflect the history of the district.
50 houses that wouldn’t be there otherwise… sounds like a great start to me.
MIR is a perfect example of why people with passion and energy are always better than big government when it comes to getting something done.
Get big, overblown, power hungry government off people’s backs and stuff gets done.
@anon and In The Zone – and the same can be said for those who worship at the alter of Brangeloonieville.
Seriously, all those pink boxes in the last picture are houses? What is the purpose of the pink ramps laying around for? Is each house on its on own plot of land? It looks like a child’s Legos got dumped on the ground. I had no idea it was still that bad in that area. Where’s the govt. help? I know their actions (FEMA, what a joke) were disgraceful after the flood, but I thought by now things would be close to back to normal. This picture is shocking to me. Has the govt. at least done something to make sure this flooding doesn’t happen again? (Please say yes)
a good article on how things are going in the lower 9th…
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2012217_2012252_2012673,00.html
@ #51 “Any amount of help is help”
AMEN!!! ENOUGH SAID…
@ Lady D-the pink boxes are not houses. They represent where houses will be built by the MIR foundation.
Honestly, people are complaining about the architecture now? Give me a break. A house is a house and the pics I saw of the houses being built by MIR are really lovely.
Both Brad and Angie walk the walk, they go so much to make this world a better place.. Love them both,,
for me, this interview goes a long way in explaining his preference for the involved, engaged angelina over the vapid, silly jen. the two women are worlds apart. i’m thinking brad got tired of having to tell jen, ‘yes, dear, you’re the prettiest of all the friends. yes, honey, your hairstyle is rockin’. yes, love, vacationing in mexico is exactly the same as charity work
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I think Brad and Ang, just fit together so much better, they have goals that are very unselfish,I wish more hollywired couples were more like them. its hard to find people rather famous or not, that seem to really care.
“Look, I know Brad it probably going to get bashed for this interview, just because he gets bashed for breathing at this point”
Um, yup!
Good for him. Nice to see a celeb putting his money where his mouth is
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The wonderful thing is, He is not getting bashed by people that matter, getting bashed by a bunch of bottom feeding haters really does not matter the the totally scheme of things, The people that matter and have some remnents of intelligents and a soul, can see things for what they really are,
@ Rita
I wish that some people would stop sitting as biased judge and jury about people they do not have any personal knowledge or acquaintance with based purely on the basis of what they read in tabloids or on experiences of their own lives, and then exhibiting bitterness when none is called for. No one here was married to Brad Pitt, and no one here knows why a marriage between 2 strangers failed going on 6 years ago. Such demonstrated and prolonged bitterness seeping into one’s life for years and years is a tragic waste of one’s life. Long past time here in almost September 2010 to move on, really.
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Beautifully said.
What is wrong with certain adults in here who like to show the extent of their immaturity and obsesson about a divorce that doesn’t belong to them ?
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They are sadly bitter and jadded, they are projecting what happened to Jen with what happpend to them, why else in the world would someone be so angry and have such an unhealthy emotional connection to a strangers life, and failed marriage,, Its 101, they where obviouly left by a man/husband, that got with someone else that had much more in common with him than they did. It does not take rocket science to see this, I think is very very sad, and I can only feel sorry for them, they have not moved on, and they used Brad and Angies happiness, as their personnnal dart board to unlease their failed marriage…
@Moreaces-Co-sign completely.
A tale of 2 celebs both have homes in NOLA and both started charities/ foundations to help the city. Both have expressed their love for the city and its residents. Both live primarily in other cities. Brad Pitt primarily in LA, Sandra Bullock primarily in Austin. Both will be doing interviews to mark the 5 yr anniversary of Katrina.Which one will be criticized and accused of using the anniversary as a PR/ photo op? Will anyone criticize Sandy for living primarily in Austin rather than in her son’s birthplace?
Well I look forward to seing interviews with both and hopefully hearing from the homeowners of the MIR homes and the students from the school Sandy supports
“Brad Pitt has built 50 homes in the Lower 9th . . . that is about 50 more than the U.S. government (FEMA) has built for these people in the five years since Katrina, and that is their job. ”
@mslewis: thank you!! you beat me to the punch on this and i agree completely. i lived in NOLA for about 7 years and visit often – once you fall in love with NOLA you can never leave for good! i am so proud of the way the people of that city have bounced back with dignity, pride and humor. i have lots of friends who still live there have nothing bad to say about the jolie-pitts and their contributions to the city, even if they are a bit naive. FEMA, on the other hand…well, i won’t repeat what they say about FEMA, as there may be small children nearby. and for those complaining that the new houses don;t “fit in architecturally” with the area…um, did you actually SEE the 9th ward before katrina? no, you probably didn’t even know what is was. it was a very poor, run-down and unsafe area, and the homes that are being built there are safe, enviro-friendly, efficient, etc. and they are being offered to people who were otherwise living in FEMA trailers or in houses that were coated in black mold.
“they are projecting what happened to Jen with what happpend to them, why else in the world would someone be so angry and have such an unhealthy emotional connection to a strangers life, and failed marriage,, Its 101, they where obviouly left by a man/husband, that got with someone else that had much more in common with him than they did.”
Erm – that’s a pretty big assumption you’re making there. And also, at least one of Brad’s dissenters here claims to be a man (in case you missed it).
“and have such an unhealthy emotional connection to a strangers life”
and Crash2GO2, can’t you just SMELL the hypocrisy in that statement? (not that it’s not true, but…)
some of the so-called brangeloonies are just as “unhealthy” (if not WAY worse) with the emotional connection to a stranger’s life…
I find it kind of creepy when I read things like “Angie would NEVER do that because…” or “Angie would only do that if…” or “Angie thinks that…” like they KNOW them personally and are privy to their thoughts and feelings.
@kitten, thank-you. I’m in school taking a difficult and complicated course, and that picture of those pink boxes just kept invading my mind. About the potential, future flooding, have preventative measures been put in place, or are they still just being talked about?
Brad Pitt 50.
Government 0
I have seen this first hand over and over again. My landscaping business has been trying to work with HOAs to keep these up so the houses stay looking nice.
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