Hurricane Katrina | 60 Minutes Full Episodes
In this poignant and compelling collection of reports from “60 Minutes,” we revisit the profound impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and the heart-wrenching stories that emerged in its aftermath. Originally aired in September 2005, Scott Pelley’s in-depth report unveils the dire conditions faced by residents as they struggled to rebuild their lives amid chaos.
The episode also features Ed Bradley’s gripping interview with Ed Compass, the New Orleans Superintendent of Police, shedding light on the challenges law enforcement confronted while trying to restore order in a city devastated by the storm.
In another critical segment from December 2005, Bradley covers the harrowing event where primarily Black evacuees were unjustly denied passage into Gretna, Louisiana, highlighting issues of race and authority during a national crisis.
Fast forward to August 2006, Byron Pitts sits down with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin to reflect on the city’s tumultuous year since the disaster, illuminating the complexities of recovery and resilience.
Finally, Morley Safer’s September 2006 interview with Dr. Anna Pou—a physician embroiled in a controversial case involving the deaths of patients at Memorial Medical Center—raises difficult questions about ethics and morality in desperate circumstances.
Covering vital issues of survival, social justice, and community rebuilding, this collection serves as an essential historical document that reminds us of the trials and tribulations faced by the citizens of New Orleans during one of the deadliest natural disasters in American history.
Join us as we delve into these powerful narratives that shaped the lives of countless individuals and the culture of a resilient city. Don’t forget to subscribe to the “60 Minutes” YouTube channel for more insightful journalism and coverage of significant events that continue to impact our world.
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Video “Hurricane Katrina | 60 Minutes Full Episodes” was uploaded on 08/23/2025 to Youtube Channel 60 Minutes
every story has untold chapters.
I remember Katrina 😢
Hisplane
This broke me💔NOLA strong🙏we will never forget🌹
Twenty years later, nothing has changed!!
This was one of our worst nightmares in the beginning of the 21st Century…. Katrina
Next week will be the 20th Anniversary of the Category 4 hurricane that wiped out 80% of New Orleans. Formed in what was then called the Gulf of Mexico
The government was wrong for bombing the levee walls down 👎🏾.
Damn
I read somewhere an account of the people stuck inside the stadium.
There were rapes, sexual assaults. Faeces overflowing toilets, Faeces in the aisles. "Allegedly" there were murders and deaths inside the stadium… but the bodies were left on the bunks or where they died.
There were muggins, assaults and stabbings
• Katrina 2005: 1,833 dead
• Guadeloupe River 2025:
at least 134 dead…
The Trump Regime has gutted NOAA and FEMA. The weather events grow more plentiful, yearly. What's next?
Today's CBS executives should take note of this reporting. You see nothing like this today, as they bend the knee to a dictator and their greed. Well done CBS of the past, shame on the CBS today
🎬🎥i remember this episode 👏👏👏👏
I remember this as if it were yesterday…..time flies anymore.
For the last one, the grand jury unanimously refused to indite the 3 accused. The charges were dropped and the state of Louisiana paid all their legal bills. All 3 are still working but have left NO.
That was their mayor? Lol wtf. Quite the hero throwing that water bottle down
The deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history remains to be the Galveston Hurricane in 1900. It was also a category 4 hurricane that killed 8,000 people. Still, Hurricane Katrina stands out due to the lack of response to the disaster. I hope this country has learned from these two catastrophic events, and we never have to watch something like this again.
He wasn't the best mayor but watching this interview I felt his frustration from way back in 2005. I was 25 at the time and I couldn't understand why nobody was helping 😢 I'm 45 now and when natural disasters happen it seems like there's still not enough aid to go to people look at the people who went through hurricane Helene! This nation is descending into the pits of hell if we're not already there. We have a president who's more concerned about being a dictator and more concerned about what his portrait looks like at the White House.
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