What is the plot?

The series opens by framing Hurricane Katrina as a disaster that was intensified by human error, neglect, and systemic inequity, then shifts into survivor testimony about the storm's impact and the long aftermath in New Orleans.

From there, the documentary moves backward into the days before landfall, using interviews with residents, journalists, and officials to reconstruct the growing fear as the storm approaches and the city prepares unevenly for what is coming.

As the storm arrives, the series details the escalating destruction and the breakdown of normal life, with survivors describing how quickly homes, streets, and whole neighborhoods became unsafe and cut off.

The documentary then follows the collapse of emergency response after the levees fail, showing how flooding, isolation, and delayed help trap thousands of people and turn the crisis into a wider humanitarian emergency.

It continues through the immediate rescue and evacuation period, emphasizing the confusion, desperation, and unequal treatment experienced by residents trying to find shelter, food, transportation, and medical help.

After the storm, the series stays with survivors as they describe the emotional and material aftermath: displacement, loss of family homes and possessions, and the long effort to rebuild lives while facing the consequences of governmental failure.

The final part of the documentary turns to the years after Katrina and the city twenty years later, with survivors reflecting on what they endured, what changed, and how the disaster revealed enduring structural problems rather than a single isolated failure.

What is the ending?

I can't give a factual ending summary from the search results you provided, because they only describe the series' subject and format, not the specific events in the final episode or the fates of the main participants.

What the available sources do confirm is that Katrina: Come Hell and High Water is a three-part 2025 documentary series about Hurricane Katrina, the failures around it, and its long aftermath for New Orleans survivors. The results also indicate that the third episode focuses on the long shadow of racism and on how survivors are still living with the disaster twenty years later.

If you want, I can still help in one of two ways: - give you a careful, source-based high-level description of the series' overall ending themes, without inventing scene details - summarize the ending if you provide the episode title, episode transcript, or screenshots from the final episode

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no reliable evidence in the available sources that Katrina: Come Hell and High Water has a post-credit scene. The series is described as a Netflix documentary miniseries about Hurricane Katrina, but none of the accessible listings or reviews mention any post-credit or bonus scene.

If you want, I can also help check whether the final episode ends with any epilogue, coda, or postscript-like sequence instead.

Who are the main survivors or first-person storytellers featured in the series, and which of them have the most prominent personal stories?

The available title-level sources confirm that the series is built around first-person accounts from people in New Orleans and other survivors reflecting on Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, but they do not provide a full cast list of the featured individuals in the search results shown here. A popular character-specific question for this title would therefore be about which survivors are central to the documentary and whose experiences drive the most memorable episodes.

What specific moments are described around the levees breaking, and whose perspective is used to show that part of the storm?

The trailer description says the series includes accounts and archive material illustrating the aftermath of the levees breaking, making that one of the most specific plot points viewers are likely to ask about. Because the series is a documentary told through survivor testimony, questions about who narrates the levee failure sequence are directly tied to the story's most important character perspectives.

How does the series portray the immediate aftermath in New Orleans, especially who was stranded, rescued, or forced to wait for help?

The title-level materials emphasize the disastrous storm, the bungled recovery, and the city being left defenseless because of human error, neglect, and governmental failure. That makes the immediate aftermath and the specific experiences of residents during rescue and evacuation a likely high-interest plot question, even though the search results do not name those individual scenes in detail.

Which people in the series talk about the long-term impact of Katrina on their lives, families, or neighborhoods twenty years later?

The official description says the people of New Orleans recount their past and lean into the future of what they and their beloved city survived and became 20 years later. A very common character-focused question would be which survivors are shown discussing how Katrina altered their homes, family relationships, and daily lives over the long term.

What specific stories does the documentary include about the government's failure, and which witnesses or subjects speak most directly about that neglect?

The trailer and season description both stress that the storm was worsened by human error, neglect, and systemic governmental failure, and that the series exposes how the city was left defenseless. Because of that framing, viewers are likely to ask which individuals are used to explain the failures in preparation, response, and recovery, and how their personal stories connect to those institutional breakdowns.

Is this family friendly?

No, this is not really family-friendly. It is rated TV-MA, and the parental guide marks severe profanity and severe frightening/intense scenes as the main concerns, with mild violence/gore and mild alcohol/drug/smoking also noted.

Potentially upsetting elements for children or sensitive viewers include: - Harrowing disaster imagery and aftermath related to Hurricane Katrina, including chaotic emergency conditions and devastation. - Intense, emotional survivor accounts that are described as detailed, harrowing, and not easy to watch. - Strong profanity throughout, according to the parental guide. - Some violence/gore, though listed as mild rather than graphic. - Alcohol, drugs, or smoking shown at a mild level.

There is no reported sex or nudity in the parental guide.