New Orleans

Thousands Throng to New Orleans for Mardi Gras, Where ‘People Can Act Like Fools'

Mardi Gras marks the end of the celebratory Carnival season before the solemn, forty days of Lent begin Wednesday

The streets of New Orleans are filling up with costumed revelers, dazzling floats featuring kings and queens, and people of all ages screaming for trinkets and beads. Lots of beads.

Tuesday marks the culmination of the Carnival season, which started Jan. 6.

One reveler, Craig Channell said Mardi Gras is "the one time of year people can act like fools and get away with it."

Channell, his wife, Darlene Channell, and friend Dian Walsh were visiting from Tampa, Florida. Host Bill Tucker pulled a wagon holding a big cooler and four roll-up chairs. The group was among 30 or so people who took the 7 .m. ferry Tuesday to Canal Streets. The crowd included people in tutus and a half-dozen pirates.

Tarrant County has its first new sheriff in 16 years. He was sworn in on Sunday and on Monday, Sheriff Bill Waybourn told NBC5 about his plans for the office.

The biggest parades take place along the St. Charles Avenue parade route, where the Krewe of Zulu kicks off the morning's parades and is followed by the Krewe of Rex.

Families, tourists and locals set up their chairs and ladders early to get a good seat for catching the trinkets thrown by riders on the floats. The hand-crafted coconuts handed out by members of Zulu are particularly sought-after.

In another part of the city, people dressed in elaborate costumes take part in the St. Anne's parade — an eclectic walking parade that starts in the Bywater and Marigny neighborhoods and ends in the French Quarter.

Members of various Mardi Gras Indian tribes — they're African-American rather than Native American — also will be out on the streets in hand-sewn, beaded and feathered outfits that they have been working on for months.

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In Alabama, the port city of Mobile is transforming itself into one big parade route for Fat Tuesday.

Government offices and many businesses are closed as parades roll almost continuously through the city starting Tuesday morning. The weather is supposed to be good, and tens of thousands of people are expected to line parade routes trying to catch colorful beads, Moon Pies and Mardi Gras trinkets.

Alabama parades also are planned in Gulf Shores and Orange Beach on the Baldwin County side of Mobile Bay.

At the stroke of midnight, police on horseback in New Orleans do a ceremonial clearing of revelers on Bourbon Street to mark the formal end of the Carnival season before Lent begins Wednesday. The word "carnival" comes from the Latin words meaning "farewell to flesh," and was originally a time to revel and to use up all the fat and meat in the larder before the austerities of Lent.

Host Jimmy Fallon invited the audience to participate in a freestyle session about Valentine’s Day and Mardi Graas with house band The Roots.

This year's Mardi Gras season was marred by a suspected drunken-driving incident that sent more than 20 people watching a parade to the hospital Saturday night. No one was killed.

Police say a drunken driver whose blood-alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit plowed into a crowd of people watching the Krewe of Endymion parade in the Mid-City neighborhood. The driver, identified as 25-year-old Neilson Rizzuto, was arrested and is being held on $125,000 bond.

On Sunday, a man fell off a float and injured himself near the end of another parade. Penny Larsen, a spokesman for the Krewe of Thoth, told The Times-Picayune the man had a concussion but was reported to be responsive.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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