Advertisement
Close to play

Treme Season 2 Episode 2 - Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky

Treme is not the plot in the traditional sense. Just had none of that in the first season and second season premiere, "Accentuate The Positive" is not that much of it either. Instead, we get a look at what everyone is doing fourteen months after Hurricane Katrina. Pop-up characters for a scene and two, but that's OK. The wheels are in motion for another season methodically script about good music, good food, good atmosphere, and how the good people of New Orleans persevere. The only way to review this episode is giving everyone a summary of their favorite Treme residents:

This trend, of course, opens the Police Department in New Orleans for the treatment of Simon, one of the most interesting aspects of this new season. With David Morse is giving a larger role as Lt. Terry Colson NOPD, NOPD could see him get further brought to life, dissected and laid bare, for better or worse like 'The Wire' for Baltimore PD. Hearing lines like "a shooting in the neighborhood called the attention of the people" is a good sign for fans of 'The Wire' Treme that can go in that direction brave, which is right in the wheelhouse of Simon.

'Treme release introduces a new character, and opens another field of plodding of the city, recovering corrupted to explore: John Sena as a "rainmaker Texas" with political connections that come to New Orleans for to make money with government reconstruction contracts. Bringing "greetings" from Texas Governor Perry, citing Rahm Emanuel infamous "a disaster never let go to waste" line, your character will be a vehicle through which co-creator Simon and Eric Overmyer can explore the nexus of policy, procurement and construction speculation that came to characterize the economy of the city's reconstruction.

Annie has toured with The Subdudes, and his musical career really seems to be taking off. She followed the advice of last season Steve Earle: She's singing now and go all out on stage, playing with players of success because "the violin goes with everything, it's like hot sauce," as Davis said. Kicking the drug addict, going nowhere Sonny boyfriend on the street seems that freed them to reach their potential.