Team

 

CURTIS ROBINSON

After a 20-year community journalism career that includes launching and editing newspapers in five states, Curtis moved from Colorado to Washington D.C. in 2001 to become vice president of media relations in the relatively tiny grassroots division of the relatively giant Burson-Marsteller communications company. There, he worked on issues ranging from broadband internet policy to municipal housing zoning.

From Burson, he became a partner at Qorvis Communications, at that time the largest independent public affairs firm in D.C. (since acquired). In 2009, he returned to journalism to launch and edit newspapers in Portland, Maine and eventually launch High White Noise.

His evolution from newspapers to issues-focused documentaries and podcasting was complete in 2019 with the announcement of projects with Rhino Films, the Los Angeles production company behind narrative films including Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas along with a series of documentaries.

CHRISTOPHER TIDMORE

For twenty years, Christopher Tidmore has served as lead political writer and Editor At-Large for The Louisiana Weekly, as well as a political and foreign correspondent for the National Newspaper Publisher’s Association (NNPA) News Service. He also has written and lectured extensively on the history of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, in mid-2015, redesigning the Creole Queen’s Battle of New Orleans Battlefield tour, crafting its present story recounting the importance of the most consequential battle in American History after Gettysburg and Yorktown.

Christopher has served as Communications Director and a Board Member of the Louisiana Living History Foundation. Through his efforts along with Tim Pickles and others, Christopher played a key role in staging the Bicentennial re-enactment of the Battle of New Orleans.  For this purpose, he helped raise over $200,000 and obtained the lease of a piece for property to create a dedicated ‘Meraux Living History Park’. A model of the January 1815 battlefield, along with its own ‘Line Jackson’ was constructed a less than a mile from Chalmette National Battlefield, and hosted 1588 historical re-enactors on January 9-11, 2015.

Christopher also has served in public outreach positions for several non-profits and issue-based causes–and as a senior advisor to two U.S. Senatorial campaigns, as well as having hosted one of Louisiana’s top political talkshows, political blogs and newspaper columns. Currently, besides his work for The Louisiana Weekly, the state’s oldest and most respected African-American Newspaper, he co-hosts a political affairs talkshow on WRNO 99.5 FM (Sundays 8-9 AM, rerun on WSLA 1560 AM, Mon., Wed. & Fri 8-9 AM).

In other work in the historical/non-profit world, Christopher currently serves as a Board member of the Winston Churchill Society of New Orleans, responsible for the annual national symposium at the World War II Museum, the high school essay contest, annual speakers dinners, as well as other events.

A native New Orleanian, Christopher first developed his love for public outreach participating in National Catholic Forensics League Debate tournaments and Student Congresses. During his college years, he worked at the Leadership Institute in Washington DC, the training ground for many young activists in the public arena, and studied under the late historian Dr. Stephen Ambrose, Eisenhower Center, University of New Orleans–the founder of what would become the National World War II Museum.

In his first forays into the realm of public relations, Christopher served as a press aide to Republican Quentin Dastugue’s bid for Governor in 1995 and Regional Campaign Coordinator for Woody Jenkins’s 1996 run for U.S. Senate.

Later, after serving in PR and fund-raising capacities for two different non-profits, Christopher began to write columns for The Louisiana Weekly and several local publications, and unearthed political deals that were holding back the state, especially within the New Orleans Levee Board. In the late 1990’s, Christopher launched his radio career on WTIX 690 AM with a successful political talkshow, called “Politically Speaking, Louisiana Style”. Amongst its achievements were getting former KKK leader David Duke to admit that he had not paid income taxes on the voting list he sold to Mike Foster–leading to search warrants of his home and offices, and his eventual indictment. Christopher hosted gavel-to-gavel national coverage of the opening of the D-Day Museum–and the first announcement of a presidential candidacy.

On his TV program of the same name, he moderated Louisiana’s only Presidential debate with representatives of all four campaigns, explored reforms in education, and the state of the local media. By mid 2001, Christopher converted WBYU AM into a talk station and on his new radio show with partner Sidney Arroyo (and in his newspaper column), first revealed that the President of the Orleans Levee Board Jim Huey had used public money to hire private investigators to follow a member of the media and several dissenting employees of the Levee District. Later that year, Christopher published a series revealing that  then-State Rep.-turned-Congressman David Vitter had a multi-month tryst with a known prostitute Wendy Cortez (nee’ Yow Ellis). This was later confirmed nationally, and Christopher appeared on ABC’s Nightline, in the Washington Post, and elsewhere for breaking the story.

This led to a statewide radio program with Louisiana Network on 14 stations across Louisiana and to several nationally syndicated newspaper columns covering war protests in Western Europe at the on-set of the Iraq War and to two series of articles about attitudes towards America in Egypt and in Russia. (Later in India, Tunisia, and throughout Central Asia as well.)

Also in late 2002, Christopher took a leave of absence from his reporting work to serve as Communications Director for Republican Suzie Terrell in her race for the US Senate. Post-Katrina, Christopher formed the news department at WRNO 99.5 FM, the state’s newest news/talk radio station. He helped conceive, with his friend Roger Wilson, a proposal called Broadway South. It would extend the state tax credits that the film industry enjoys, to live legitimate performances: jazz, opera, ballet, cabaret, and theater.

In 2007, Christopher took a break from the news and ran for the Louisiana Legislature from District 82, which encompasses parts of Uptown, Old Jefferson, and Metairie. Impressive for a first time candidate, he won 43% of the vote while being outspent 4-1.

He also serves on the Board of Directors for Crimefighters, Inc. (Louisiana’s leading Victims Rights Organization) and continues to write a nationally syndicated column for the NNPA press association, and occasionally for the UK Guardian Newspaper. He has appeared on ABC’s Nightline and MSNBC’s Maddow Show as an expert political commentator.

Over the last fifteen years, Christopher has visited 51 countries.  He has camped with Bedouins in the Sahara desert, rode stallions with Indian Princes across Rajasthan, fished with locals in the Arctic sea above Norway, and narrowly missed being bombed in the London Terrorist attack of 2005. Most recently, he completed a memoir on retracing the steps of Lewis and Clark by boat and train, and led a lecture tour through the Great Lakes and down the historic Erie Canal.

He has written extensively on all these topics at www.louisianaweekly.net.

OTHER COLLABORATORS

Hunter-Gatherers (coming soon)

WEHOville

National Courts Monitor

Confocal Communications