Name Ronnie Virgets | Role Writer | |
![]() | ||
Books Say, Cap!: The New Orleans Views of Ronnie Virgets, Lost Bread: Flavored with a Little Steen's Cane Syrup |
Award-winning, longtime New Orleans writer Ronnie Virgets dies at 77
Ronnie Virgets is a New Orleans, Louisiana writer, commentator, and journalist. He is a native of New Orleans and has lived there for most of his life.
Contents
- Award winning longtime New Orleans writer Ronnie Virgets dies at 77
- Ronnie Virgets veteran journalist and voice of New Orleans dead at 77
- Background
- Personal life
- Hurricane Katrina
- Books by Ronnie Virgets
- References

Ronnie Virgets, veteran journalist and voice of New Orleans, dead at 77
Background

Virgets attended Sacred Heart Academy, St. Aloysius High School and graduated from Loyola University New Orleans in 1965.

Virgets joined WDSU TV NewsChannel 6 in September 2000 as a feature reporter for Sunday's 10 p.m. newscast. Before that he spent several years as WWL-TV's feature reporter.
He has written for New Orleans area publications including The Times-Picayune, Gambit Weekly, New Orleans Magazine, and has published several books. He appears regularly on local radio and television, mostly discussing aspects of local culture.
Besides his local fame, Virgets has said that his proudest professional achievement was when he won a regional Emmy award for a 1992 story on the city of New Orleans.
Virgets served as host of Crescent City, a radio program broadcast in New Orleans on the local National Public Radio affiliate, WWNO.
Personal life
Virgets is divorced and has three children and seven grandchildren. Virgets reigned as King of Krewe du Vieux for New Orleans Mardi Gras in 1996. Among his hobbies, Virgets enjoys fishing and thoroughbred racing. At one time, he owned greyhound racing dogs. Virgets and family appeared on the TV series Family Feud in an episode first aired on November 15, 2006.
Hurricane Katrina
Virgets "rode out" Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, in his home in the Navarre neighborhood of New Orleans. The area flooded severely when the Federal levees failed (see: Effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans), and a few days later he was rescued by boat. Virgets wrote an essay giving his impressions of how the storm and its devastation have impacted New Orleans, the Gulf Coast, people living in these areas, and himself. Diary of a Displaced Person: the First 72 Hours was read by Virgets for National Public Radio, and also appears as one of the chapters in his book, Lost Bread.