Behind The Lens episode 280: ‘The licensing of Essence’

Bernard Smith on conditions at Angola as heat alerts persist across the country. Gus Bennett on Essence Fest's rapid expansion — and questions about who it's serving.
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This week on Behind The Lens, more than 170 million people have been under heat alerts across the central United States, the Midwest, the Southeast and the East Coast, with some areas feeling temperatures as high as 115 degrees Fahrenheit.

In the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, the largest maximum security prison in the United States, incarcerated men are crammed into overcrowded spaces with no air conditioning, broken fans, and inadequate sanitation, and are asking the state for relief.

And one of the summer’s biggest festivals in New Orleans, Essence Fest, has seen dramatic growth over time. But with that growth comes confusion to some about who it serves, what it represents, and how it operates. According to one writer, the deeper issue isn’t logistics — it’s ideology.

Our guests this week are Lens criminal justice reporter Bernard Smith and Lens photographer and columnist Gus Bennett.

Theme music by Podington Bear. Additional music Mahalia Jackson, Keep Your Hand on the Plow.

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Carolyne Heldman

Carolyne Heldman has been in media for 35 years, most recently as Executive Director at an NPR member station in Colorado where she was responsible for new multi-platform content initiatives, strategic planning, research, branding, and non-traditional revenue generation. During her tenure she also created and launched four weekly news, public affairs and cultural affairs programs and monthly live Town Hall broadcasts. Heldman moved to New Orleans last summer with her husband and canine companion and they live happily in The Marigny.