Ryan Coogler’s New Series Exposes the Real Story of Katrina & America
Ryan Coogler’s New Series Exposes the Real Story of Katrina & America

Two decades after Hurricane Katrina drowned much of New Orleans and exposed deep cracks in America’s disaster response and racial divide, Black Panther director Ryan Coogler is helping to tell the story like it’s never been told before.
The Oscar-nominated filmmaker has teamed up with Oscar-winning producers Simon and Jonathan Chinn (Searching for Sugar Man) and director Traci A. Curry (Attica) for Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time, a five-part National Geographic docuseries that brings viewers inside the storm—and the systemic failure that followed.
Radio/TV personality Jazmyn Summers covered the new series for Radio One.
“This series is deeply important to me — and to everyone who worked on it,” Coogler said. “When Katrina hit in 2005, the images on the news were impossible to ignore. But what we didn’t see were the stories behind those images. The people. The decisions. The systems that failed. And the strength it took to survive not just the storm, but the aftermath.”
Premiering July 27, the series opens in the sweltering summer of 2005 as Katrina barrels toward New Orleans. Episode one, The Coming Storm, sets the stage for what would become one of the most devastating natural disasters in U.S. history. But as the series makes clear, the tragedy wasn’t just the hurricane—it was the government’s failure to respond.
Episode two, Worst Case Scenario, captures the terrifying moment the levees broke and the city began to flood “like a bathtub.” With emergency services overwhelmed, everyday people risked their lives to save neighbors and strangers alike.
Coogler, known for using his lens to amplify Black voices and lived experiences, said it was important that the story be told through the people who were there—not pundits or politicians.
“We set out to tell those stories through the voices of the people who lived through the disaster. Residents, first responders, and community leaders—this is their account of what really happened, and why it matters today,” Coogler explained.
As the episodes unfold—A Desperate Place, Shoot to Kill, and Wake Up Call—the series chronicles what happened in the days and weeks after the floodwaters rose. It is an unflinching narrative of survival and strength. Viewers are taken inside the Superdome, where thousands sought shelter in dire conditions. It shines a light on the chaos and confusion at the Convention Center, the militarized response, and the media-fueled narrative of looting that often overshadowed real stories of courage.
Through it all, Race Against Time keeps its focus tight: the people who lived through Katrina. Their testimonies are raw, emotional, and unforgettable.
Director Traci A. Curry brings a cinematic edge to the storytelling, with rare archival footage, urgent pacing, and cliffhanger endings that make each episode feel like a chapter in a larger American epic.
Known for centering truth, dignity, and emotion in his work, Coogler said he approached the series the same way he approached Fruitvale Station or Judas and the Black Messiah—with deep respect for the lives behind the headlines.
The series also tackles the aftermath of the storm—how families were scattered across the country, how the city changed forever, and how, even now, the scars remain.
While Race Against Time arrives 20 years after the storm, its urgency is very much present-day. It speaks to what happens when disaster meets inequality, when bureaucracy fails, and when Black lives are treated as expendable.
Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time premieres July 27 at 8/7c on National Geographic. All five episodes will stream July 28 on Disney+ and Hulu.

Article by Jazmyn Summers. You can hear Jazmyn every morning on “Jazmyn in the Morning “on Sirius XM Channel 362 Grown Folk Jamz . Subscribe to Jazmyn Summers’ YouTube. Follow her on Facebook and Instagram.